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Posted by BradyNet ( Friday, May 9, '03 )
 
*NEW* Stay on top of important market events with the IdeaGlobal/BradyNet Economic Calendar

 GLOBAL MARKET HIGHLIGHTS
*Another Bush, another jobless recovery 05-09-03 (economist.com) OF ALL the signs that America's economy is sputtering, none is more striking than the jobs market. Overall unemployment, at 6%, is still relatively low, but this headline figure masks a much tougher reality. More than 500,000 jobs have disappeared in the past three months, pushing the total lost under George Bush above 2m. Long-term unemployment, at 1.9m, is at its highest for ten years. And these numbers do not include the large number of “discouraged workers” (people who would like to work but have given up looking) and the even larger number of “underemployed” (those who are working, but not as much as they would like to). The weak jobs market is itself harming the chances of recovery. Consumers worried about losing their jobs are more likely to save their cash than spend it. And politically, the risks are even starker. George Bush senior famously lost the 1992 election during a jobless recovery.
*Early deflation alert 05-09-03 (USA Today) Consumers living in an age of saturation Wal-Mart ads may have trouble understanding what could be wrong with deflation -- an economic term that describes falling average prices. In the ads, a smiley face happily rolls back prices on everything from tires to dishwasher detergent. Customers are pleased, and Wal-Mart is hugely successful. Why not? For years consumers have enjoyed the benefits of ever-cheaper products, from computers to video cameras. But while price cuts resulting from improved efficiency for a few specific items are a blessing to budget-conscious families, a drop in overall prices on all products would be devastating. So devastating that the Federal Reserve Board was wise to issue an early warning about the risk of deflation Tuesday after its meeting to decide interest rates. Economists may differ on how to treat deflation, but they agree it is best avoided.
*Burying Budget Reality With Budget Fantasy 05-09-03 (newsday.com) The last remaining architect of the house of cards that is the Bush administration's economic policy is leaving Washington, a change that is certain to bring no change for your average American. As White House budget director, Mitch Daniels' singular achievement has been the meltdown of record federal surpluses into record federal deficits. He also helped put an end to that silly Washington parlor chatter about what might happen if the United States actually paid off its debt - a possibility and, yes, a promise when George W. Bush took office. The Treasury Department just asked Congress instead to lift the debt ceiling again by the end of May, two months earlier than expected.
*Good and bad tax cuts 05-09-03 (boston.com) Who would doubt that working adults, the unemployed, and hard pressed city and state governments reeling from their worst financial crisis since World War II would spend the money as soon as the check arrived? These would be the beneficiaries of a tax cut package offered this week by Democrats as a counterpoint to the president's tax cut proposal, which would fail to help the states and would actually reduce revenue for many of them even as it delivered most of its benefits to the wealthy.
*Pound and dollar hit new euro lows 05-09-03 (BBC) The latest falls came after the European Central Bank left interest rates unchanged at 2.5%. That preserved the interest rate gap between the eurozone and the US, where rates are 1.25%, and that meant the single currency continued to benefit. Investors are selling dollars and buying euros in order to get a better return for their money. "It is business as usual now. The euro's bull run continues," said analyst Jane Foley at Barclays Capital.
*Treasurys Snow: U.S. in Wobbly Recovery 05-09-03 (Yahoo) Treasury Secretary John Snow on Thursday said the United States was experiencing a 'wobbly' recovery as weak global expansion sapped domestic growth. Testifying before the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Transportation, Snow was asked to characterize the economy's performance 'I think the economy is in recovery ... but it's something of a wobbly recovery,' he said.
*New Claims for Jobless Benefits Decline 05-09-03 (Yahoo) Fewer workers sought unemployment benefits last week, but the level of new claims remained high, another sign that cautious companies are keeping their work forces lean amid a muddled postwar economic climate.

 LATIN AMERICA
*Argentinas Menem faces defeat in runoff 05-09-03 (globeandmail.com) Ten days before a landmark runoff election, former Argentine president Carlos Menem is on the ropes. That's not just any old cliché. For the language of pugilism is being used to describe Mr. Menem's predicament by no less than the current President of Argentina, Eduardo Duhalde. "Menem has two possibilities, as in boxing . . .," Mr. Duhalde said on Tuesday during a television broadcast. "He can lose by default, or by a knockout."
*Brazil and Argentina study economic tie-up 05-08-03 (Financial Times) With Brazil and Argentina gradually emerging from financial crisis, South America's two largest economies are relaunching ambitious plans for economic integration. Ahead of Thursday's visit to Brazil by Néstor Kirchner, the favourite in Argentina's presidential race, the Brazilian government announced plans to create a $1bn fund to finance bilateral trade. There is also renewed talk of a common currency and both sides have set up a negotiating framework to move in that direction. Though few analysts expect immediate progress, the efforts signal a break from two years of tense relations. Bilateral trade dropped from more than $13bn in 2000 to $7bn last year, largely as a result of Argentina's debt default and subsequent currency devaluation in January 2002. Trade has begun to recover, rising 24 per cent for the first quarter compared with last year.
*Brazil debates intervention in currency market 05-08-03 (Financial Times) The strength of the Brazilian Real has triggered a national debate over central bank intervention in the currency market. President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva last week shook financial markets with suggestions of government interference. His warning last Thursday that the Real should "not strengthen too much" prompted it to fall by nearly 2 per cent. The next day he backtracked, insisting "the government will not interfere in the question of the dollar". While industry leaders and some ministers warn that a strong Real could weaken Brazil's export growth, the finance minister and central bank chief have insisted on a free-floating currency.
*IMF to relax terms of Argentina accord 05-08-03 (Financial Times) The International Monetary Fund has agreed to relax some of the terms of an interim agreement with Argentina - a clear sign of the IMF's growing confidence in the country's economic recovery and its economic team. More importantly, the IMF team also agreed to give Argentina's central bank greater flexibility in issuing new money. In a press conference late on Tuesday, Roberto Lavagna, Argentina's economy minister, said an IMF mission in Buenos Aires had agreed to increase its estimate for economic growth this year from 1 per cent to 4 per cent. The IMF also agreed to lower its inflation forecast from 35 per cent, outlined in January's agreement, to below 20 per cent, he said.
*Argentina slashes inflation forecast 05-08-03 (Financial Times) Argentina slashed its 2003 inflation forecast yesterday in a further sign of economic recovery just 16 months after the country descended into political and financial chaos. "With the latest data we have, we should be heading towards annual inflation of about 8 per cent," said Alfredo Atanasof, Argentina's cabinet chief. Mr Atanasof's forecast almost halves the government's previous estimate of 14 per cent, and is not much more than a third of the 22 per cent predicted in this year's budget. The government's National Statistics Institute is today expected to confirm the downward trend with the publication of inflation figures for April.

 AFRICA
*East Africa floods may worsen 05-09-03 (BBC) Floods are wreaking havoc in large areas of eastern Africa, ending a harsh drought. The floods have killed at least 40 people in southern Ethiopia, officials say. Another 40 people have died in Kenya, according to Red Cross figures. Tens of thousands of people across the region have fled their homes.

 OIL PRICES
*High gas prices? Just take a walk 05-09-03 (sfgate.com) As we have reported on this page before, one of the the most maddening practices in Sacramento -- almost epidemic in the timidity-plagued Assembly -- involves legislators trying to play both sides of tough issues by simply not voting when the roll is called. It's known as "taking a walk" -- even though the nonvoters are typically present in the Capitol hearing room.
*US Forecasts Lower Summer Gasoline Prices 05-09-03 (Yahoo) U.S. consumers will find more relief at the pump this summer as gasoline prices are expected to be less than previously forecast, thanks to lower crude oil costs, the government said on Thursday. In its monthly forecast, the Energy Department's analytical arm said the price at the pump should average $1.46 a gallon this summer, down 10 cents from the prior estimate.
*Gas prices still fair, oil executives say 05-09-03 (globeandmail.com) Canadians are getting a good deal on gasoline despite record-high prices in March, oil-industry executives told a parliamentary committee yesterday. Executives said prices jumped in March to an average of 84.2 cents a litre because of increases to crude oil and wholesale gas prices.
*Break oil dependence 05-08-03 (orlandosentinel.com) After a war in Iraq, and amid continued instability in the Middle East, it's amazing that some members of Congress still are unwilling to act decisively to reduce America's dangerous oil addiction. Last month the House approved an energy plan that differs little in emphasis from the bad bill members passed two years ago. Most of its $18 billion in tax incentives would go to the oil, gas, coal and nuclear industries just to do what they've always done. Only a third would promote development of new, fuel-saving technologies and alternative energy sources.
*Oil scandal billionaire tells French court of bribes 05-08-03 (guardian.co.uk) An Iraqi-born British billionaire told a French court yesterday how he had paid millions of pounds in kickbacks to French oil executives. Nadhmi Auchi, 65, reputedly Britain's seventh-richest man, is one of 37 company administrators and business partners accused of being involved in France's biggest postwar financial scandal in which the oil firm, now TotalFinaElf, allegedly paid out huge sums in bribes and backhanders to expand its empire. Mr Auchi gave himself up in London after two years resisting French demands for his arrest in connection with Elf's purchase in the 90s of interests in Spanish refineries owned by Cepsa, and petrol stations belonging to Ertoil.
 
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05-09-03  Glutt: <Pateck watches.. > Pilly, you mean those sold by Thais on sea beaches?

05-09-03  amigo latino: Is the Dollar’s Fall: orderly or disorderly ?

<……Analysts view the dollar's fall as orderly, but say a quick and calamitous slide may wreak havoc in financial markets and could yet spark concern in Washington.

'When is the dollar's decline a problem for the likes of Snow and the White House? When it is disorderly,' said David Gilmore, partner at Foreign Exchange Analytics, in an e-mail to clients this week.

'When is it disorderly? When the decline in the dollar is on the front page of The New York Times, Washington Post and Wall Street Journal, U.S. equity and bond markets are selling off and investors and traders are blaming the weak dollar,' he said. > http://biz.yahoo.com/rb/030509/mark...


05-09-03  savonarola: argies have still one week to rethink their votes:

Infobae

<Kirchner quiere que Fidel Castro y Hugo Chávez estén en su asunción

Allegados al candidato santacruceño le pidieron a la Cancillería que realice las gestiones necesarias para contar con la presencia de ambos jefes de Estado el próximo 25 de mayo.>


05-09-03  Glutt: amigo, I agree with this guy saying it is dangerous... but the problem is that you cannot resist huge money inflows to your market... how would you go against billions flowing on you? As we say in Russia it is dangerous to piss against the wind. So people are buying and crying,,, crying and buying...

05-09-03  savonarola: <said American Express Asset Management's Lundgren>

May I ask politely:

WHO THE F*CK IS <LUNDGREN>?????????

WHERE WAS <LUNDGREN> WHEN WE, COLORES, WERE BUYING BRA 40 AT 45??????


05-09-03  PILLZ: <I keep a close eye on prices of 4-hands massages with top veni beauties. To me this is a key indicator of the economy. Right now price is $50 bucks/hour, last year it was $150...life is very difficult!!! > if it go down another 50% we will be inline with fiji3.5 four-hands massage, we could make a Maracaibo-fiji and buy some pinky-real-diamonds instead of Pateck watches..

05-09-03  Glutt: <Since I'm the only serious person down here, besides oil> pana, i like how you start...

05-09-03  Patient-Trader: Merugo, the Russians do not build bad stuff in general because they have good intelligencia class - in fact in some cases they build excellent stuff, Mig29, Soyus etc. The problem is putting their products together and maintaining them. Especially maintenance is a huge downside for Russian products.

I just wanted to import some Russian product which is theoretically excellent in specification and in price. The downside is that they require yearly maintenance where western equivalents need two or three year maintenance schedules. That might not be a problem in Third World countries were soldiers are cheaply replaced if they are sucked out of a plane by "accident" but is definitely a problem in Western markets.


05-09-03  amigo latino: Simply posting without taking sides

<…..POTHOLES ON THE ROAD TO RIO? Data from EmergingPortfolio.com Fund Research showing year-to-data inflows into emerging bonds of $1.556 billion already more than doubles 2002's total, makes plain the grab at higher-yielding investments goes beyond U.S. borders.

Last week, the appetite for risky debt was evident when investors snapped up a Brazilian 10-year bond deal that was increased in size from $750 million to $1 billion because of demand. Surprisingly, interest in the issue was not damped by a clause allowing Brazil to change the bond's terms with less than 100 percent approval from bondholders.

In the face of all this enthusiasm, investors warned that the narrowing in spreads may have been overdone.

"You can argue that spreads were excessively wide last September. It seems the pendulum has blown past fair value as we now appear to be pricing in near-perfection in some of the more risky spread sectors," said American Express Asset Management's Lundgren. "As a portfolio manager it makes you nervous to buy spread product simply because everyone else is buying spread product." >

http://biz.yahoo.com/rf/030509/worl...


05-09-03  Glutt: <you are not uptodate <glut>. no such thing like august but february 2004! > good if opposition learnt this !!! they are weak to remove Hugo but can provoke damaging chaos again.

05-09-03  panasonic: <the problem IMHO is August and whether opposition will try to wreck havoc again> forget about fixing dates on events in Veni, this is a 100% banana republic!

Since I'm the only serious person down here, besides oil, I keep a close eye on prices of 4-hands massages with top veni beauties. To me this is a key indicator of the economy. Right now price is $50 bucks/hour, last year it was $150...life is very difficult!!!


05-09-03  SPAL: SBAC ... $2

Up she goes.


05-09-03  wally: <carib <that was the reason that led me to load three times as much as you did>> fortunately (for you) you don't have my (self-imposed) restrictions. btw, "plan C" was approved without problems in a board meeting yesterday but with the caveat that legal protection of property must exist. <c-banker> is still evaluating and proceeding with "plan A" locally. but "plan B" was dropped completely. details by mail.

05-09-03  carib: Wally <and Brasil was yielding 25%>..true, .that was the reason that led me to load three times as much as you did (in part @35% yield)

05-09-03  carib: Brasília - O ministro-chefe da Casa Civil, deputado José Dirceu (PT-SP), foi enfático e deixou muito claro que apenas o ministro da Fazenda, Antônio Palocci Filho, é quem pode falar sobre a taxa de juros e sobre o câmbio no governo. For the record: Palocci said <free float>

05-09-03  wally: <carib: Merugo: lasy year colombia was yielding 14%> and at the same time Brazil was yielding 25%.

btw, D€ntist FARC11 still yielding 9% and $FARC27 yields 8.5%


05-09-03  panasonic: <savonarola: carib..btw....wasn't it Pana who took his yacht to Fort Lauderdale at the first signs of trouble instead of staying in CCS defending the ideals of the <Bolivarian Revolution>????? Shame on him!> Savo, who said I went directly to Ft. Lauderdale? my first stop was Aruba!!

05-09-03  wally: <... the problem IMHO is August and whether opposition will try to wreck havoc again> you are not uptodate <glut>. no such thing like august but february 2004!

05-09-03  merugo: < Patient-Trader: Who needs terrorists if you have Russian planes serviced by Congolese ? >They were russian doors those of Estonia ferry, and were they mantained by a black scandinavian minority?

05-09-03  panasonic: <PILLZ: <Does anybody hold veni for its non-oil economy???? > Pana> true now my biz is booming!

05-09-03  carib: Merugo: lasy year colombia was yielding 14%, the coca price was no lower...and I bought it. Now I sold it (too early) with a nice capital gain. I do not feel confortable at current levels.

05-09-03  wally: <merugo <did you calculate how much one barrel of white colombian floor is worth in oil barrels>> bingo!

05-09-03  PILLZ: PT again <Pinky is a pure oil play> all the rest is schpeculation-anti-pro-revolutionaire-pinky-pana-literature> but we must stop speaking as Pinky start already to go up..

05-09-03  Patient-Trader: Who needs terrorists if you have Russian planes serviced by Congolese ?

KINSHASA, Congo - The rear door of a Russian-built cargo plane burst open as the aircraft carried police officials and their relatives across Congo, and 129 passengers were sucked out, airport officials said Friday. Defense Minister Irung Awan confirmed there was "a technical problem" http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tm...


05-09-03  Glutt: savo <There is no serious opposition in Veni. > come on, this <no serious opposition> cost Vene 3 months of chaos and much material damages... i am not arguing if opposition can overthrow Chavez, all i am saying is that opposition is able to send my Vene bonds down big way before they return to usual levels. this is valid concern IMHO.

05-09-03  savonarola: carib....<I see the country in a long-term downtrend, unlike Brasil>

Yes.. we heard that many times in the past!


05-09-03  merugo: < carib: Savo: to me the real mistery is why colombia yields 7%..> did you calculate how much one barrel of white colombian floor is worth in oil barrels, and this floor is much less second-sourceable and no less necessary than oil for USA.

05-09-03  savonarola: advice...<e se esta for aprovada vamos a 500bp bem rapido, significando hoje CBond a 100!>

Cs at par would mean 20s at 143%.. I think I will be tempted to sell and run faster than Carl Lewis!!!!


05-09-03  carib: I think Veni needs foreign investmentin the oil field. If Chavez accepts them, he is clever and probably will keep current. But it's too hard to predict for me, I see the country in a long-term downtrend, unlike Brasil.

05-09-03  carib: Russia is using oil sales to beef up reserves. Ovbiously, if oil went down to 10$, RF bonds might drop from the current fancy prices...but nobody would expect RF to default. Chavez uses oil revenues to pay salaries and buy food. if oil drops to 10$, he will prefer to haircut coupons rather than salaries. all IMHO.

05-09-03  Patient-Trader: PILLZ, <Pinky is a pure oil play> As we have seen this is not true. Venis seem to have suicidal tendencies which worse than the Argies.

Besides - why does Veni need to service it's debt if they are have oil and don't want foreign investments ? I cant see any benefit for them to service their debt - given Chavez ideology and general economic situation. It only makes sense if they want to roll their debt eventually but that possibilty is very remote as long as Chavez is around.


05-09-03  carib: Savo: Wally would say the Quatar royal family has more money than the total national debt, so if oil goes down nothing happens. In Veni, if oil goes down, Pinky will remember the speech he made in Porto Alegre. Unlike the Economist, I do not predict where oil price will go.

05-09-03  savonarola: glutt...<the problem IMHO is August and whether opposition will try to wreck havoc again>

There is no serious opposition in Veni. Whatever is left, pinky is taking care of it.

<VIVA PINKY, VIVA LA REVOLUCION!!!!!!!!!>


05-09-03  savonarola: Unfortunately, as we speak, Veni seems to have woken up. Pilly might need to sell again!

05-09-03  savonarola: carib...<What happens when oil price drops?>

I have no clue ... I guess the same that happens to Lybia, Saudi Arabia, Russia and Qatar, among others. Let's worry by one thing at a time. All we are saying here is that Veni is out of wack with the rest of the market. Advice might be right and Brazil might go up faster than Veni.. but I think it is wise to start shifting some risk into Veni ahead of the <monkeys>, which as a by-product, works as an insurance against a sell off. In the meantime we clip 14% current yield, making our life <less difficult>.


05-09-03  carib: <Veni is a pure oil play> I agree, but I would add: complicated by the fact the country is run by a mad coronel...

05-09-03  Glutt: carib, i agree with savo on economy and oil, accurate snapshot and not much to add ... the problem IMHO is August and whether opposition will try to wreck havoc again... but still August is three months away and market euphoria too strong to resist.. I am with savo on Vene upside ... lets go until June when it may come time to worry about August and market euphoria may subside. IMHO

05-09-03  PILLZ: <What happens when oil price drops? > Carib, Pinky is a pure oil play, when you are in , one must pray that oil stay above 18.. all the rest is literature..

05-09-03  savonarola: carib..btw....wasn't it Pana who took his yacht to Fort Lauderdale at the first signs of trouble instead of staying in CCS defending the ideals of the <Bolivarian Revolution>????? Shame on him!

05-09-03  carib: Savo: I guess not. But the question is a country with large population cannot survive on oil exports alone. The proof of this comes when oil price drops. Pinky gets dollars from oil exports and refuses to sell them to the industries that need to import. Reserves go up. Bonds go up. we get paid. Life in veni gets worse. People with brains emigrate. What happens when oil price drops?

05-09-03  PILLZ: Fleming is up a few points to 17-18, conseco still in the 23-24, I am attacking Mirant..

05-09-03  PILLZ: <Does anybody hold veni for its non-oil economy???? > Pana :-))

05-09-03  savonarola: <That loss almost matches oil's one-third contribution to the Venezuelan economy>

By definition. If no oil was produced during three month no oil GDP can be accounted for. Extraordinary journalism. <Mistakes that become common wisdom as they are repeated endlessly>.


05-09-03  savonarola: carib...<But Panas from CCS writes that Veni non-oil economy sucks more than ever>

Does anybody hold veni for its non-oil economy????


05-09-03  carib: Caracas, May 9 (Bloomberg) -- Venezuela's economy probably had its biggest contraction ever in the first quarter as an unsuccessful strike to oust President Hugo Chavez crippled oil production and consumer spending.


Gross domestic product probably shrank 29 percent in the first quarter from the same period a year ago, according the median forecast of seven economists in a Bloomberg survey. That loss almost matches oil's one-third contribution to the Venezuelan economy. The previous worst contraction was 17 percent in the fourth quarter of 2002.


05-09-03  carib: Savo: to me the real mistery is why colombia yields 7%...in a situation where a bomb under Uribe's car could open hell's gates. On Veni, I agree the deval was very positive. But Panas from CCS writes that Veni non-oil economy sucks more than ever....


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