Posts Tagged ‘Japan QE’

Week of Oct 31 2014 Weekly Recap & The Week Ahead

Monday, November 3rd, 2014

“Don’t worry about the world ending today. It’s already tomorrow in Australia.” — Charles Schultz

1. European Central Bank: 25 banks fail stress testsMarketWatch, the European Central Bank and the European Banking Authority on Sunday unveiled the results of a nearly yearlong effort to assess the finances of 150 banks, identifying 12 that still need to come up with a total of EUR9.5 billion ($12.04 billion) in extra capital. Four lenders need to come up with €3.31B in new capital, with Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena – the world’s oldest bank – needing €2.11B. Overall, 25 out of around 150 lenders technically failed the tests, but 13 have already taken the required remedial steps.
2. Smart Money (Commercial Hedgers & Large Speculators ) Decreases Crude Oil Shorts By Record Amount — the chart below shows “dumb money” versus “smart money” and how the two sides are playing oil prices. Hedgers have already cut their net short position by a record 205,000 contracts. Historically, there have been just 5 other occasions in which hedgers have gotten “net longer” by at least 150,000 contracts. Those dates were in December 1997, September 2003, November 2008, October 2011 and June 2012. The last four of those such occasions led to intermediate-term rallies in crude oil of roughly 105%, 150%, 50% and 30%, respectively. Only the 1997 instance did not lead to a rally.

3. Newly Re-Elected Rousseff says Brazil will recover, avoid credit downgradeReuters, newly re-elected President Dilma Roussef has promised that Brazil(EWJ) will avoid a downgrade in her second term, and that the country’s economy will recover. Brazil currently stands two notches into investment-grade zone for Moody’s and Fitch, although Standard & Poor’s previously cut the government’s debt to near-junk level.
4. Fed Ends Historic Bond Buys — the Central Bank said it sees enough progress in employment and the economy to finish its 3rd round of stimulus since. 2008. Policy makers said again interest rates will stay low for “a considerable time” but gave no additional guidance.

5. U.S. economy grows 3.5% in third quarter — the U.S. economy grew by a 3.5% annual rate in the third quarter, fueled by a surge in exports and the biggest jump in federal spending in five years. Consumers spent at a moderate 1.8% pace, businesses invested at a steady clip and government is no longer a major drag on the economy.
6. Japan Surprises With Stimulus Boost as Japan Struggles — japan raise the BOJ’s annual target for enlarging the monetary base to 80 trillion yen ($724 billion), up from 60 to 70 trillion yen, the central bank said. The BOJ also cut its forecasts for inflation and growth in Japan, the world’s third-biggest economy. Facing projections for failure to reach the BOJ’s 2 percent inflation target in about two years, and with the pressure from a higher sales tax, enlarging the stimulus at some point had been anticipated by analysts for months.

The week ahead — Economic data from Econoday.com:

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