Saturday, June 29, 2013

Italy to cut spending, sees risks of protests: report

Well it is not over or even close to being over with the economy. It is not just hitting one country this thing is global. Here is a report from Reuters about Italy:


 
New Italian Economy Minister Saccomanni attends at the Lower house of the parliament in Rome
.
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New Italian Economy Minister Fabrizio Saccomanni attends at the Lower house of the parliament in Rome, …
MILAN (Reuters) - Italy will resume public spending cuts to find resources for tax cuts to kick start growth, Economy Minister Fabrizio Saccomanni told daily Corriere della Sera on Saturday.
He warned, however, that cuts could spark social unrest in the euro zone's third largest economy, where lobbies have so far resisted previous government attempts to reduce state spending.
"We aim to support economic growth through a reduction of taxes on labor and companies," said Saccomanni, former deputy governor at the Bank of Italy.
"We can't do it by raising public debt, so we have to cut public spending," he said in an interview with the Italian daily.
Italy issues some 400 billion euros ($520 billion) of bonds each year to fund its 2-trillion-euro debt pile, Saccomanni said, reiterating that Rome could not put at risk its credibility on the markets by spurring growth with new debt.
Rome has committed to maintaining a budget deficit of 2.9 percent of gross domestic product in 2013, just under the European Union's 3 percent ceiling, and has just emerged from the EU so-called excessive deficit procedure.
Saccomanni, under pressure from the centre-right party in the coalition government to relax austerity in the country, said the government will launch a new round of spending reviews.
The process, aimed at finding savings from the state's huge balance sheet, would take time and could be painful.
"No one should expect we will find hidden expenses we can cut without raising protests," the minister said, adding he did not have a "magic wand".
Few positive signs in the economy, however, could help the government in its difficult task.
"We are confident we will see a recovery towards the end of the year," Saccomanni said, adding he expects the cost of servicing Italy's public debt could be lower than estimates, freeing resources for growth.
The right-left government headed by Prime Minister Enrico Letta is struggling to balance Italy's commitments to the EU with coalition promises to cut taxes.
At the insistence of Silvio Berlusconi's centre-right, a crucial part of the ruling coalition, the government has suspended a housing tax on primary residences and has also temporarily blocked an increase in sales tax due to take effect next Monday.
($1 = 0.7693 euros)
(Reporting by Francesca Landini; Editing by David Cowell)

Friday, June 28, 2013

GLOBAL MARKETS-Volatile quarter takes shares down, gold plunges!!


Fri Jun 28, 2013 5:19pm EDT

 
* As fears of stimulus pullback ease, world equity markets
gain
    * Gold to close worst quarter on records going back to 1968
    * Dollar/yen at three-week high, edges close to 100 yen


    By Rodrigo Campos
    NEW YORK, June 28 (Reuters) - World equity markets rose for
a fourth day on Friday, but a gauge of world stocks and other
assets still ended in the red for the month of June and for the
second quarter as fears that U.S. monetary stimulus could soon
be pared back drove volatility and weighed on sentiment.
    Spot gold prices recorded their biggest quarterly decline in
at least 45 years, even as prices on Friday marked the biggest
daily percentage gain in a year.
    The broad S&P 500 index fell for the day, but upbeat
economic data from Japan and efforts by China's central bank to
ease credit concerns gave other equity markets support. MSCI's
world equity index rose 0.15 percent Friday to
gain more than 1.3 percent for the week, though for the quarter
it was down 0.01 percent.
    Markets were volatile as the second quarter drew to a close,
and investors pondered the likely impact of an end to the era of
easy money from the Federal Reserve and other central banks that
has been driven rallies in various markets.
    "The market is continuing to adjust as we try to figure out
what's going on with respect to Fed policy, and we should
continue to see volatility as things get sorted out," said Rex
Macey, who helps oversee $20 billion in assets as chief
investment officer at Wilmington Trust in Atlanta.
    "We're cooling off a little bit after a few days of strong
action."
    At the close of trading on Friday on Wall Street, the Dow
Jones industrial average fell 114.89 points or 0.76
percent, to 14,909.6, the S&P 500 lost 6.92 points or
0.43 percent, to 1,606.28 and the Nasdaq Composite added
1.38 points or 0.04 percent, to 3,403.25.
    Unlike other markets, however, Wall Street's three major
indexes finished the quarter higher, with the Dow up 2.27
percent, the S&P 500 up 2.36 percent and the Nasdaq up 4.15
percent.

 
    Global stock, bond and commodity markets have been highly
volatile since Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke signaled
last week that the U.S. central bank would soon cut the pace of
its stimulative bond buying unless the economic recovery slows.
    Markets had taken heart on Thursday after two Fed officials
seemed to back away from Bernanke's comments, but two other
policymakers of the U.S. central bank who spoke on Friday -
Governor Jeremy Stein and Richmond Fed President Jeffrey Lacker
- showed a more aggressive tone on when the central bank's
unprecedented policy accommodation might be reduced.
 
    Talk of the Fed tapering its bond buying has hit Treasury
prices hard. The slump in prices started in May, gaining
momentum with Bernanke's words last week.
    With quarter-end adding to volatility, exposure to U.S.
Treasuries through the iShares Barclays 20-year-plus
exchange-traded fund fell 8.9 percent in the last three
months, its worst performance over the last 10 quarters.
    The recent choppiness could linger in markets in the coming
days, said Justin Lederer, strategist at Cantor Fitzgerald in
New York, especially going into the release next Friday of the
government's closely watched monthly U.S. payrolls report.
    "That could definitely set the tone for a date for QE" to
start winding down, he said.
    The benchmark U.S. 10-year Treasury note fell
4/32 in price to yield 2.4894 percent, compared with 2.476
percent late on Thursday.
    A Reuters survey of 53 investors across the United States,
Europe and Japan released on Friday found that funds had already
cut their average equity holdings in June to a nine-month low
due to the recent volatility and held more cash. 
    Gold, which had soared in value as a hedge against higher
inflation from the cheap central bank money being printed, has
slumped. Despite posting on Friday its largest daily percentage
gain in a year, spot gold prices fell about 23 percent
for the quarter, the largest quarterly percentage drop on
records going back to 1968.
    Gold was recently trading at $1,233 an ounce, its lowest
level since August 2010.

    WINDOW DRESSING
    End-of-quarter maneuvering was cited for volatility in the
euro on Friday. The euro zone common currency was off 0.2
percent to $1.3014.
    Against the yen, the dollar was up 0.8 percent at
99.16 yen.
    The broad FTSEurofirst 300 index closed down 0.45
percent to end June 5.3 percent lower after a record 12 monthly
rises.
    Earlier, MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares
outside Japan climbed 1.4 percent, pulling
further away from an 11-month low and wiping out this week's
losses. It was still down around 7 percent for the year. 
    China's stock markets had also seen their biggest gains in
two months after the country's central bank, which had let
short-term borrowing costs spike to record highs, said it would
ensure its policy supported a slowing economy. 
 
    Brent crude oil futures fell 0.7 percent but were up
1.7 percent for the month, the first positive month in five.
    Copper edged up but its more than 10 percent decline
for the quarter was the worst performance in almost two years.

Thursday, June 27, 2013

The interest rates are creeping up!!! Is this the start of inflation?

I cannot help but think that the feds are just printing more money. As they keep on with this same old tired pattern two things will happen. The first is that they will have forced the dollar into an unfavorable position globally. The second is that inflation will ensue. In case you didn't notice the interest rate just jumped almost two percent in one month. That is the highest jump like that in twenty plus years. Is this the start of the inflation that we all know is coming? It could be. Th real problem is if both of these circumstances hit us at the same time. Imagine the dollar losing more of its value coupled with the inflation rate at the same time. This could make the super economic storm known as hyper inflation. What that means is that things are so out of control that people would not be able to afford food. It would be like the stock market crash in the 1920's all over again. Only this time it would be closer to the 2020's. What are most peoples reaction? They are in denial. If you bring this up they will say that wont happen or some other excuse to make themselves feel better.  Always remember if you fail to plan you plan to fail. I hope for the sake of everyone that this is just going to be normal inflation. I can't help but be very suspicious though.