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Monthly Archives: March 2012

The Dollar Halts its Downtrend Against the Euro

“The dollar snapped a two-day decline versus the euro before a U.S. report that economists said will show the drop in house prices slowed, undermining the case for more stimulus from theFederal Reserve.

The U.S. currency strengthened from the lowest level this month against its European counterpart before another report forecast to show U.S. consumer confidence stayed near the highest level in a year. The Dollar Index dropped 0.9 percent over the past two days amid speculation the Federal Reserve will start a third round of quantitative easing, or QE3. The pound pared an advance after a report showed U.K. retailers expect conditions to worsen next month.

“The dollar-negative mood will fade,” said Geoffrey Kendrick, head of European currency strategy at Nomura International Plc in London. “If today’s data is better than expected people might start to think there’s no need for QE3, which could be dollar positive. I think euro-dollar is a good sell here.”

The dollar was unchanged at $1.3359 per euro at 6:47 a.m. New York time, after depreciating to $1.3386, the weakest level since Feb. 29. The yen was little changed at 82.83 per dollar. The euro traded at 110.66 yen, after gaining 1.6 percent over the past two days….”

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China’s Industrial Companies Post Their First Loss Since 2009

“Chinese industrial companies had their first January-February profit decline since 2009 as slowing exports and a government campaign to cool property prices damped earnings.

Net income dropped 5.2 percent from a year earlier to 606 billion yuan ($96 billion), the National Bureau of Statistics said on its website today. That compared with a 34.3 percent gain in the first two months of 2011. The bureau didn’t release a figure for January because of a weeklong Chinese New Year holiday that disrupted production.

Today’s data may boost odds Premier Wen Jiabao adds to policy stimulus that has included two cuts since November in banks’ required reserves. A preliminary gauge of Chinese manufacturing fell in March to a four-month low, according to a report last week, sending stocks and commodities down worldwide.

The decline is “clearly alarming,” said Chang Jian, an economist at Barclays Capital in Hong Kong who formerly worked for the Hong Kong Monetary Authority and the World Bank. “More policy easing should be on the way, though at a measured pace,” she said. At the same time, the government is unlikely to reverse property-market curbs, Chang said….”

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Australian Watchdog Accuses Apple of Misleading Customers

Source

Apple Inc. (AAPL) misled customers in Australia with claims the new iPad connects to 4G networks, when that’s not the case, the competition regulator said.

The Australian Competition & Consumer Commission said in a statement today it will seek court orders in Melbourne tomorrow that will include injunctions, monetary penalties and refunds to customers. Fiona Martin, an Apple spokeswoman in Sydney, didn’t immediately respond to an e-mailed request for comment.

“The ACCC alleges that Apple’s recent promotion of the new ‘iPad with WiFi + 4G’ is misleading,” the regulator said in a statement today. “It represents to Australian consumers that the product ‘iPad with WiFi + 4G’ can, with a SIM card, connect to a 4G mobile data network inAustralia, when this is not the case.”

The new iPad, advertised as 4G compatible, uses the 700 megahertz and 2,100 megahertz frequencies for 4G services. Telstra Corp. operates Australia’s only working 4G network, which uses the 1,800 megahertz frequency.”

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Stocks Higher After Worst Week of 2012

Stocks opened higher Monday after their worst week this year.

The Dow Jones industrial average was up 99 points at 13,179 in the first minutes of trading. The Standard & Poor’s 500 was up 11 at 1,408. The Nasdaq composite index was higher by 26 at 3,093.

Last week, the S&P lost half a percent and the Dow more than 1 percent in a break from a strong rally in stocks this year.

Traders were digesting remarks from Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, who said the U.S. job market remains weak despite three months of strong hiring and that Fed’s existing policies will help increase growth.

Bernanke told a conference in Arlington, Va., that more job gains will probably require more robust demand from Americans and businesses. His comments suggested the Fed is ready to keep short-term interest rates near zero.

All 10 industry groups in the S&P 500 opened higher. Health care companies and industrial and materials stocks led the way with gains of more than 1 percent apiece. Fewer than 20 stocks in the S&P 500 were lower in the early going.

Lions Gate Entertainment was among the early winners on Wall Street. The stock climbed more than 5 percent after its movie “The Hunger Games” made $155 million on its opening weekend.

European markets were mostly higher. The benchmark index in Germany added more than 1 percent, and stocks also climbed in France and Germany. The euro gained half a penny against the dollar.

Wall Street this week will closely watch consumer confidence numbers due to be released Tuesday, as well as the final March numbers for consumer sentiment on Friday.

Source

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Asia welcomes comments from Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke

SYDNEY (MarketWatch) — Asian shares rallied Tuesday, with investors welcoming comments from Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke that signaled U.S. monetary policy will remain accommodative.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index HK:HSI +1.33%  rose 1.3%, Shanghai Composite CN:000001 +0.32%  advanced 0.3%, and Japan’s Nikkei Stock Average JP:100000018 +1.75%  jumped 1.7%, hitting a fresh 2012 high in the session.

South Korea’s Kospi KR:0100 +0.56%  and Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 index AU:XJO +0.66%  each rose 0.8%.

Bernanke remarks, German data boost U.S. stocks

Stocks rise after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke signals more easy monetary policy and positive German business confidence data cheers Europe. (Photo: AP/Seth Wenig)

The gains in Asia followed a strong performance for U.S. stocks Monday, after Bernanke said that it’s not yet certain the recent pace of improvement in the nation’s labor market will be sustained but improvements may be supported by “continued accommodative policies.” Read more on U.S. stockmarket action.

“Chairman Bernanke’s palpable disappointment in terms of jobs growth played out like music to the ears of market sentiment,” said Stewart Hall at RBC Capital Markets.

Read More…

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Former NAACP Leader Accuses Sharpton and Jackson of ‘Exploiting’ Trayvon Martin

By Alex Pappas – The Daily Caller

Former NAACP leader C.L. Bryant is accusing Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton of “exploiting” the Trayvon Martin tragedy to “racially divide this country.”

“His family should be outraged at the fact that they’re using this child as the bait to inflame racial passions,” Rev. C.L. Bryant said in a Monday interview with The Daily Caller.

The conservative black pastor who was once the chapter president of the Garland, Texas NAACP called Jackson and Sharpton “race hustlers” and said they are “acting as though they are buzzards circling the carcass of this young boy.”

Jackson, for example, recently said Martin’s death shows how “blacks are under attack” and “targeting, arresting, convicting blacks and ultimately killing us is big business.”

George Zimmerman, a neighborhood watch captain, killed Martin, a 17-year-old black man who was unarmed at the time of his death, last month. Zimmerman has claimed to have shot Martin in self-defense and has not been charged with a crime.

But Bryant, who explores the topic of black-on-black crime in his new film “Runaway Slave,” said people like Jackson and Sharpton are being misleading to suggest there is an epidemic of “white men killing black young men.”

“The epidemic is truly black on black crime,” Bryant said. “The greatest danger to the lives of young black men are young black men.”

Read the rest here.

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Comverge Agrees to Be Taken Private

Source

“Comverge Inc. (NASDAQ: COMV), a maker of intelligent control systems for electricity utilities and their customers, has agreed to be taken private by an affiliate of private equity firm H.I.G. Capital LLC for a price of about $49 million, or $1.75/share. Shares closed Friday at $1.88.

The company didn’t have any choice:

The transaction addresses the risks associated with the Company’s liquidity position, provides for our financial viability going forward and allows Comverge to continue to execute on its business plan with the financial backing of H.I.G. Capital.

Shareholders won’t be happy with these deal, and the shareholder law firms are already lining up. But Comverge may have had no choice — the company’s auditors released a “going concern” letter about 10 days ago and the company said it had received default notices from some lenders.

Shares are down about -7.5% at $1.74.”

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FB files evidence Ceglia ownership claim ‘forged’

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Paul Ceglia’s claim on Facebook may finally face the music.

Citing a wealth of forensic evidence, Facebook on Monday filed a motion to dismiss what it labelled a “shakedown” lawsuit by Paul Ceglia, who sued the world’s biggest social network in June 2010 for breach of contract — claiming a document entitles him to ownership of 85 percent of the company.

“Today’s motion proves what Facebook and Mark Zuckerberg have emphatically stated all along: this case is a fraud,” said Orin Snyder, partner with Gibson Dunn and the attorney for Facebook and Mark Zuckerberg.

Along with the motion, Facebook filed what it described as a “treasure trove” of evidence attacking the authenticity of the contract and a series of emails between Zuckerberg and Ceglia.

“The motion … demonstrates that Ceglia has forged documents, destroyed evidence, and abused the judicial system in furtherance of his criminal scheme. Ceglia must be held accountable,” Snyder said.

Digital forensics experts with Stroz Friedberg hired by Facebook uncovered what they call the authentic contract between Ceglia’s company StreetFax and Zuckerberg on hard drives submitted by Ceglia as evidence. That contract dates to 2003 — before the creation of the social network.

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Is Gold Just getting Started ? Canadian Investment Firm Sees $2250 Soon

Source

“Gold is likely to bust through its previous nominal highs and hit $2,250 before, according to Canadian investment advisory firm Macquarie Private Wealth.

Gold touched $1,923.70 per ounce in September of last year and since has retrenched. It trades now at $1,685, up about 1 percent on comments from Federal Reserve Chief Ben Bernanke that suggested further monetary easing is ahead.

It’s just getting started, Macquarie is telling clients, according to a report from Business Insider.

Among the reasons cited: A weak recovery will keep the Fed at virtually zero rates through late 2014, as it has promised; more easing is likely; and various trading and seasonal indicators suggest that investors have oversold the metal.

Expect Indian and Chinese demand — which accounts for 42 of total gold consumption — to recover, mining executives tell Reuters.

“Those are two economies that are likely to grow at a significant pace, certainly relative to the West,” Nick Holland, chief executive of miner Gold Fields, told the news service.

“They have a strong affinity for gold, and they also have an increasing number of the population who are being urbanized. Of the extra income they get, some will find its way into gold.”

The uptick in buying could be felt quite soon, according to a report in the Indian daily The Hindu Business Line.

A five-day strike among jewelry shops in protest over the doubling of duty on gold imports has ended. Reopened shops and lower prices should spur consumer buying, the newspaper suggested.”

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LOL: Osama bin Laden’s family to be tried for illegally entering Pakistan

What they mean to say is that bin Laden and his family were invited to receive asylum by Pakistan, and now the fire is too hot so Pakistan is going to pretend like they had no idea bin Laden and his kin were there, and prosecute all of them, including the women, who probably are so devoid of civil rights they have no idea what is even going on.

ISLAMABAD – A Pakistani court is set to charge five members of Usama bin Laden’s family with illegally entering and living in the country, their defense lawyer said Monday.

The Al Qaeda chief’s family has been in Pakistani detention since last May, when U.S. commandos raided the house where they were living in the northwest army town of Abbottabad and shot and killed bin Laden.

Pakistan was outraged by the raid because it was not informed beforehand. Officials have insisted they did not know the Al Qaeda chief was living there, and the U.S. has not found any evidence that they did.

A Pakistani court will charge three of bin Laden’s widows and two of his daughters on April 2 when the hearing against them resumes, said their lawyer, Mohammad Amir. The court gave the five women copies of the case and evidence against them on Monday, he said.

Pakistani legal experts have said the maximum punishment the women could receive is five years in jail.

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Chinese Media Asserts a Japanese Bond bubble is About to Burst; Yen to Take a 40% Hit

“It is a fact that when it comes to the oddly resilient Japanese hyperlevered economic model, the bodies of those screaming for the end of the JGB bubble litter the sides of central planning’s tungsten brick road. Yet in the aftermath of last month’s stunning surge in the country’s trade deficit, this, and much more may soon be finally ending. Because as Caixin’s Andy Xie writes “The day of reckoning for the yen is not distant. Japanese companies are struggling with profitability. It only gets worse from here. When a major company goes bankrupt, this may change the prevailing psychology. A weak yen consensus will emerge then.” As for the bubble pop, it will be a sudden pop, not the 30 year deflationary whimper Mrs. Watanabe has gotten so used to: “Yen devaluation is likely to unfold quickly. A financial bubble doesn’t burst slowly. When it occurs, it just pops. The odds are that yen devaluation will occur over days. Only a large and sudden devaluation can keep the JGB yield low.Otherwise, the devaluation expectation will trigger a sharp rise in the JGB yield. The resulting worries over the government’s solvency could lead to a collapse of the JGB market.” It gets worse: “Of course, the government will collapse with the JGB market.” And once Japan falls, the rest of the world follows, says Xie, which is why he is now actively encouraging China, and all other Japanese trade partners of the world’s rapidly declining 3rd largest economy to take precautions for when this day comes… soon. Oh, and this: ” If the bond yield rises to 2 percent, the interest expense would surpass the total expected tax revenue of 42.3 trillion yen.”

Why has Japan been able to sustain its deflationary collapse for over 3 decades? Simply – an ever rising currency.

A strong yen, deflation and rising government debt form a short-term equilibrium that lasts as long as the market believes it is sustainable. The yen has seen a relentless upward trend since it depegged from the dollar in 1971, up to 83.4 from 360 again to the dollar. When wages and asset prices rise, a strong currency can be justified. When wages and asset prices fall, a strong currency is suicide. Japan’s nominal GDP peaked in 1997 and its nominal wages did too. Its property prices have declined every year since. The Nikkei rose in only four out of the last fifteen years and is still close to a three-decade low.

 

Japanese policymakers, businesses, academics, currency traders and the average Mrs. Watanabe all believe in a strong yen. This belief is wrong but self-fulfilling. It has lasted so long because the Japanese government adopts policies to offset the destabilizing effects of deflation due to a strong yen. Hence, Japan’s national debt has marched upwards along with the value of yen. It is expected to top yen 1,000 trillion in 2012, 215 percent of GDP, 7.8 million yen (or roughly US$ 94,000) per person, and about half of net household wealth per capita.

 

The sustainability of Japan’s deflationary path depends on the market’s confidence in Japan’s debt market. As Japanese institutions and households hold almost all of the government’s debts, their faith in the government’s creditworthiness is the mojo for Japan’s seemingly harmless deflationary spiral.

There’s that. And also that it is nothing but a ponzi. In Xie’s words.

The justification for the low JGB yield is deflation. The real interest rate (the nominal rate plus deflation) is comparable to that in other countries. This rationale requires deflation to persist. But, deflation shrinks the nominal GDP or tax base. How could the government pay back its escalating debt by taxing a shrinking economy? It can only sustain its debt by borrowing more. This fits the definition of a particular type of Ponzi scheme.

Deflation is ok, if in addition to collapsing GDP, it is paralleled by declining wages.

The JGB bubble explains the seeming lack of pain in Japanese society. A strong yen and deflation haven’t led to an employment crisis because the government deficit is pumping up aggregate demand. As long as wages decline in line with prices, one doesn’t feel the pain. Japan’s household debt is only half of GDP, about half of the level in the United States. Deflation doesn’t cause much balance sheet trouble.

Unfortunately this is unsustainable by definition, as the divergence is a finite series at which point it become self-destructive. And yet the strong Yen is the glue that ties the rickety house of cards together… for now.

Despite the fact Japan has had a bad economy for so long, the yen has remained strong. It reinforces the Japanese psyche on the issue. The strong yen has become a cult.

 

The international financial market believes in a weak yen from time to time. In 1998, the short-selling by foreigners briefly caused the yen to touch 140 against the U.S. dollar. But, as the Japanese hold all of the yen, if they believe in the yen, foreign short-sellers get punished eventually. Over time, yen bears are all weeded out of the market. The remaining yen traders are all believers in a strong yen.

So far so good: any cult can exist in its own bubble if left to its own devices. However, as much as it is trying to avoid it, Japan’s secular role in international society is changing, and very soon the habitual self-delusion of its citizens, politicians, and FX traders will do nothing to offset the advent of reality….”

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25 journalists in Wi. disciplined for Gov. Walker recall petition

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Twenty-five journalists with the Gannett media group in Wisconsin signed a petition calling for the recall of Republican Gov. Scott Walker, according to a Green Bay newspaper where some of those journalists work.

Kevin Corrado, publisher of the Green Bay Press-Gazette, disclosed the actions of Gannett Wisconsin Media employees in a recent column and said they are facing disciplinary action.

“It was wrong, and those who signed the petition were in breach of Gannett’s principles of ethical conduct,” Corrado wrote.

The state’s Gannett investigative team recently broke the story about how 29 circuit court judges had signed the very same recall petitions.

Corrado said nobody involved in that project, or in “our news or political coverage,” had signed the petitions. “Had they been directly involved, we would identify them,” Corrado wrote.

Still, he said the fact that any employees signed it — including seven at the Press-Gazette — is “disheartening.”

Corrado wrote that some of the journalists equated signing the petition to casting a vote in an election — something journalists routinely do.

But Corrado suggested that signing the petition got them “personally involved” in the issue.

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