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Despite stock rout and more U.S. debt, dollar is firm (so far), except vs yen

Twenty five trillion dollars in global market capitalization wiped out. At least $500 billion -- and most likely in excess of $1 trillion added to the United States' national debt. The Fed has loaned money to corporations, added massive liquidity to banks, cut interest, and the U.S. Treasury may invest directly in private banks, if it doesn't nationalize them.

And the currency of the nation primarily responsible for the global financial crisis -- the dollar -- how has it fared?

The dollar has been firm, for the most part, even rising against the euro and British pound. However, the dollar has fallen against Japan's yen. As of Friday at 2:35 p.m. EDT, the dollar had risen 2 cents versus the euro to $1.3382 and 1.5 cents versus the pound to $1.6947, but had fallen one-half yen to 99.33.

Continue reading Despite stock rout and more U.S. debt, dollar is firm (so far), except vs yen

NYU's Roubini: 'All fronts' approach necessary to end global financial crisis

Nouriel Roubini, the once obscure New York University economics professor who two years ago predicted the current global financial crisis, now says leaders of the world's major industrialized economies and developing countries must implement an 'all fronts' approach to avert a financial calamity and a global depression.

"It will take a significant change in leadership of economic policy and very radical, coordinated policy actions among all advanced and emerging-market economies to avoid this economic and financial disaster," Roubini said on his web site, RGE Monitor.

Roubini urged that national policy makers take immediate action to end the crisis, which has dramatically tightened credit conditions worldwide, constraining the ability of corporations to undertake daily operations, which will hurt GDP growth rates in every region.

And, ironically or by coincidence, leaders will have an opportunity to dialogue and implement a common strategy: officials from the International Monetary Fund, World Bank, and Group of Seven (G-7) nations meet in Washington, D.C. this weekend for their previously-scheduled annual meeting.

Continue reading NYU's Roubini: 'All fronts' approach necessary to end global financial crisis

Exxon Mobil (XOM) hits new 52-week low as oil continues to fall

Shares of Exxon Mobil (NYSE: XOM) fell to set another fresh 52-week low today, as oil continues to fall.

Shares of Exxon have traded down as low as $58.30 earlier in the session, and headed into the afternoon session, the stock has rebounded a bit, but is still trading down 8.7% to $62.20, down $5.80 on the day.

It's been a tough week for the stock, which is now down around 21% from its close last Friday.

As recession fears continue to spread, oil has been moving steadily lower, and once again today the precious crude is down, falling another $5.82 a barrel to $80.77, and was under the psychological $80 earlier in the day, trading all the way to $78.61 earlier in the session.

Continue reading Exxon Mobil (XOM) hits new 52-week low as oil continues to fall

Saudis, sensing ominous global situation, seen letting oil price fall to assist recovery

As national policy makers strive to unfreeze credit markets and end a global financial crisis that threatens to severely damage economies worldwide, Saudi Arabia will not defend an $80 oil price, and instead will let the price of oil fall, to reduce a critical cost stress on the global economy, economists and energy traders say.

Further, despite today's more-diverse oil market characterized by dozens of suppliers, any Saudi decision to not cut production will lower oil prices, Energy Trader Jim Dietz told BloggingStocks Friday.

Saudi Arabia possesses the largest, proven oil reserves in the world. The kingdom also has the biggest, quickly-marketable spare production capacity in the world, estimated to be 1.5-5.0 million barrels of oil per day, depending on the analysis.

'Saudis will let oil price fall, a lot'

"The Saudis are fully aware of the grave situation facing global financial markets and economies. The Saudis are going to let the price of oil fall, a lot. Other OPEC members like Iran or Venezuela may call for a production cut and try to protect their interest, but it's a non-starter, an after thought," Dietz said. "The Saudis know that every stimulative tactic must be used to keep commerce moving and eliminate stress and a lower oil price is part of that solution." (Dietz added that he had no open energy trading positions, his normal stance for a Friday.)

Oil fell $6.94 to $79.65 per barrel Friday at mid-day, as a near-panic atmosphere permeated markets as stocks plunged worldwide and U.S. stock markets declined for an eighth consecutive day. At 12:05 p.m. EDT, the Dow was down 313 points to 8,265 and the S&P 500 was down 38 points to 871.

"An $80 oil price is too high for this economy. It probably was too high for any economy, but that is a debate for another time. Right now, the oil market senses that the Saudis know the price of oil must go lower to reduce financial system stress," Dietz said. "And as the Saudis go, so goes the price of oil."

Continue reading Saudis, sensing ominous global situation, seen letting oil price fall to assist recovery

Time Warner (TWX) hits new low with ad and AOL concerns

Time Warner (NYSE: TWX) hit a new 52-week low today at $9.03. Until recently, it has performed better than most of the other media conglomerates, but it now faces two difficult questions.

Before current CEO Jeff Bewkes took over, it was assumed that Time Warner Cable (NYSE: TWC) would be spun out. Bewkes managed to get over $9 billion from the transaction. That may have been priced into the shares when he stepped into the top job. The other major assumption of shareholders was that AOL would be repaired or sold. The internet unit has been divided into two pieces. The ISP operations will probably be sold to another internet service company. The fate of AOL remains unknown. There are rumors that it could be sold to Yahoo! (NASDAQ: YHOO) or Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT).

Because internet display advertising is facing a downturn, sales at AOL will almost certainly suffer in the fourth quarter and into 2009. If Yahoo! is a reasonable proxy, the fact that it has lost half of its market cap this year and has been downgraded by several analysts cannot be good news for AOL.

Advertising weakness is bound to catch up to Time Warner's magazine unit. Print advertising may never recover entirely if the newspaper industry is any guide. Analysts have frequently said that the magazine unit should be sold. It is no longer a growth operation.

TWX cable units, like CNN, which rely on TV ads, are also certain to face an unpleasant if not vicious environment heading into the winter.

Investors in Time Warner are troubled for a simple reason: The company still looks too much like it did last year.

Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 247wallst.com.

Cramer on BloggingStocks: Buy Procter, General Mills all the way down

TheStreet.com's Jim Cramer says the safety theme will come back if only because these companies' earnings will be good in six months.

Editor's note: Jim Cramer will present his 2009 stock outlook for the first time at TheStreet.com Investment Conference on Saturday, Oct. 25. Click for details.

Now they come after the Procter & Gambles (NYSE: PG) (Cramer's Take) and the General Mills (NYSE: GIS) (Cramer's Take) and the like, betting that the action will be better in the cyclicals with all of this money being printed worldwide.

Commodities are also coming back because of reflation. And we have to feel that many of the infra and ag names are finally sold out by the hedge fund redemptions.

Here I am speaking of a Freeport McMoRan (NYSE: FCX) (Cramer's Take), with its good yield and a belief that the hedge funds are at last done.

I don't buy it. I like a balanced portfolio, but I want to buy the GIS/PG all the way down because we are going into a recession, not going out of one. These companies pay dividends, raise dividends and have great commodity tailwinds.

Colgate's (NYSE: CL) (Cramer's Take) down a lot too, and I am liking that one.

Continue reading Cramer on BloggingStocks: Buy Procter, General Mills all the way down

Trichet's ECB 'cash cavalry' is on the move - and not a moment too soon

The resources of the central bank of the world's second strongest economy have now been marshaled to address the global financial crisis.

The European Central Bank, led by President Jean-Claude Trichet has shifted policy - - a remarkable, historic change - - and is now working in coordination with its companion major central banks - - the U.S. Federal Reserve, Bank of England, Bank of Japan, and the Bank of China - - and others, to end a credit crisis that threatens to cripple international business and seriously damage economies, worldwide.

A legendary inflation hawk,Trichet, whose ECB lowered its key, short-term interest rate by 50 basis points in conjunction with the other major central banks on Wednesday, declined to rule out further steps to solve the crisis, including additional interest rate cuts, Bloomberg News reported Thursday.

ECB: banks offered unlimited cash at 3.75%


Further, and equally significant, Trichet offered banks unlimited cash at 3.75% to help them cope with tight credit markets, Reuters reported Thursday. Previously, the ECB had offered funds to the highest bidders, a tactic that pushed average rates as high as 4.99% - - almost 75 basis points above the official rate.

In addition, the ECB cut in half the premium it charges for overnight emergency loans and increased the interest rate it pays on deposits, Reuters reported Thursday.

Continue reading Trichet's ECB 'cash cavalry' is on the move - and not a moment too soon

IMF: Global economic slowdown a certainty, due to financial crisis

The financial crisis that's constrained credit around the world will slow the global economy considerably and quickly, the International Monetary Fund announced in its October 2008 report.

The IMF now expects global GDP growth to slow to 3.0% in 2009, down from 3.9% forecast in its July 2008 report.

Moreover, economists note it's important to highlight the differences in what constitutes a recession in the developing and developed worlds. Because emerging markets/ developing countries are capable of and require higher growth rates, a low GDP growth rate is roughly equivalent to a negative GDP growth rate in developed countries -- i.e. equivalent to a recession. The average of the two means the global economy can be considered to be in recession when global GDP falls below 3.0%, certainly if it falls below 2.5%.

Worst global GDP growth since 2001-2003


Economist David H. Wang told BloggingStocks the IMF's latest forecast points to a global recession, or the closest condition to it.

"It is a somber report, no question. Many developed nations will now record close-to-negative or negative GDP growth for 2009. Add slowing emerging market growth and a credit market that will be in recovery mode for much of 2009 on to high commodity prices, and it's a formula for the worst global economic conditions since the 2001-2003 period," Wang said.

The IMF now expects the U.S. economy to record 1.6% GDP growth in 2008 and just 0.1% in 2009. IMF 2008/2009 GDP forecasts for other key economies are as follows: United Kingdom, 1.0% / -0.1%; Germany: 1.8% / NA; France, 0.8% / 0.2%; Japan, 0.7% / 0.5%; China, 9.7% / 9.3%; India, 7.9% / 6.9%; Brazil, 5.2% / 3.5%; and Mexico, 2.1% / 1.8%.


Continue reading IMF: Global economic slowdown a certainty, due to financial crisis

IBM's strong earnings: A trap for tech investors?

IBM (NYSE: IBM) had an astonishingly good quarter, especially given the poor state of IT spending. According to CNET, "IBM said earnings per share were at $2.05 for the quarter, up 22 percent from the same period last year. Net income rose 20 percent to reach $2.8 billion, while revenue rose 5 percent to $25.3 billion." Those numbers were higher than analyst estimates. Over the last two weeks a number of researchers who cover the company said they were looking for poor numbers. They were wrong. But their concerns did take IBM down to $90 from $115 just three weeks ago.

The IBM results might tempt investors to moving into other tech shares, especially those of firms which sell to big companies. Most of the stocks in these tech suppliers trade near 52-week lows.

But that would be a mistake. IBM is diversified across a very broad spectrum of international markets, has large hardware, software and services businesses, and has kept costs extremely low. The only tech company with comparable global businesses and remarkable margins is Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT).

IBM is the exception to the rule. Tech stocks are in bad shape because corporate spending is down. The great depth and breadth of Big Blue's business has let it dodge that bullet.

Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 247wallst.com.

Pending home sales rise in August

With all the negative news that we have seen lately, it's nice to hear one piece of positive news regarding the housing market. We got that today on news that pending home sales rose unexpectedly in August.

The National Association of Realtors tracks home sales in its index, and reported today that its pending home sales index rose from 87 in July up to 93.7 in August. Going into today's report, analysts had been expecting to see the index actual fall, and were thinking that we would see the number drop down to 86 in the month, so the increase was definitely a bit of good news in an otherwise rocky market.

The areas of the country that saw the best jump in July were the same ones that have been beaten up the most over the past year, including California, Nevada, Florida, and Arizona.

Continue reading Pending home sales rise in August

Leading technical analyst says U.S. stocks 'halfway through' decline

The S&P 500 has dropped 36% in the past year and the Dow is down about 35% since hitting a high around 14,280 about a year ago.

Each decline is large enough to qualify as a bear market. And yet there's much more downside ahead? Say it ain't so.

Top-ranked analyst is bearish

Top-ranked market analyst Jeffrey de Graaf says it is so, or it will be so, according to his analysis, telling Bloomberg News Wednesday U.S. stocks are only 'halfway through' their current decline. In Wednesday afternoon trading, the Dow was down about 18 points to 9,428 and the S&P 500 was up 1 point to 997.

"The big concern is that we're going into recession,'' de Graaf, a senior managing director at ISI Group Inc. in New York, told Bloomberg News. "The first part is the unwind of the previous boom, the second is the recession that follows. We're in the camp that we're only halfway through this." De Graaf has been the top-ranked technical analyst in Institutional Investor magazine's poll the last four years.

Continue reading Leading technical analyst says U.S. stocks 'halfway through' decline

Fed, ECB, BOE, China cut interest rates to fight global financial crisis

In an unprecedented, emergency, coordinated move, the Fed and other major central banks cut interest rates Wednesday, in an attempt to prevent the global financial crisis from spreading further and damaging economies.

The Fed, European Central Bank, Bank of England, Bank of Canada, Sveriges Riksbank, and the Swiss National Bank each lowered their benchmark rates by 50 basis points. The Bank of Japan was not involved in this round of rate cuts, but said it fully supported the action.

Separately, China's central bank also lowered its one-year lending rate by 0.27 percentage points.

"`The recent intensification of the financial crisis has augmented the downside risks to growth and thus has diminished further the upside risks to price stability,'' the banks said in joint statement. "Some easing of global monetary conditions is therefore warranted."

The action brought the Fed's benchmark rate to 1.5%; the ECB's main rate is now 3.75%; Canada's declined to 2.5%; the U.K.'s rate fell to 4.5%; Sweden's rate declined to 4.25%. China's rate fell to 6.93%.

Continue reading Fed, ECB, BOE, China cut interest rates to fight global financial crisis

UK to buy pieces of large banks, U.S. could follow

The UK government will spend over $87 billion to buy preferred shares in many of the nation's largest banks. The government will also guarantee certain bonds sold by the financial firms. The move amounts to a partial nationalization of the banking system.

According to The Wall Street Journal, "The Treasury also said the Bank of England will make "at least" £200 billion in funds available to the banks through its Special Liquidity Scheme. The scheme was established in April, and allows banks to swap illiquid assets such as mortgage-backed securities for Treasury bills, which they can use to raise money."

The news indicates what a desperate and dark hour the financial industry has fallen into and begs the question of whether the US Treasury will do the same thing. Yesterday, Bank of America (NYSE: BAC) had trouble selling $10 billion in new shares and its stock dropped almost 30%. Shares in Morgan Stanley (NYSE: MS) fell almost 40% on concerns that Mitsubishi UFJ would not complete its purchase of shares in the investment bank.

A direct US investment in large banks could cost much more than in the UK because of the size of the banks here. To mount a similar program could cost the Treasury $300 or $400 billion. If the markets keep falling, it may be necessary. With Treasury already committed to $700 billion for a bailout and the Fed loaning hundreds of billions at its emergency financing window, what is another $400 billion.

The US government may just keep pushing until it is out of cash.

Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 247wallst.com.

If nothing else, gasoline prices are falling!

It seems like there is always something to worry about these days. Over the summer, the economy was showing signs of what was to come, but the main concern on most of our minds was not the overall economy. Instead, we were worried about the $4 gasoline that we were pumping into our cars.

Now, the tables have turned, and all we are thinking about is the crashing economy. But at least we can take a little pleasure out of the fact that gas is falling, and should continue to drop.

It wasn't that long ago that we were feeling the full brunt of record high gasoline prices. It was July 17, in fact, when the national average hit its peak of $4.114 a gallon. While prices are still running at historically high levels, they have come well off their summer highs, and are currently sitting at an average of $3.48 a gallon nationwide for regular unleaded. A pretty nice pullback, to say the least.

Continue reading If nothing else, gasoline prices are falling!

Safeway (SWY) misses, but still gets rewarded on Wall Street

When a stock comes in with earnings under analyst estimates, it usually gets punished. But in today's market any positive news is enough to keep shares in the green, and that is what we are seeing today with Safeway (NYSE: SWY) which is up strongly despite missing estimates for its third quarter.

First, let's get the bad news out of the way. Going into this morning's earnings announcement, analysts had been looking for earnings of 47 cents per share, but the company's actual earnings missed by a penny, with a reported 46 cents a share. With today's market environment, that in and of itself could have been enough to send shares crashing, but instead the stock is actually trading up 5.6% to $23.00, and earlier in the day was up as high as $23.75. Sounds crazy, but there is some good news to follow.

What the market is really interested in now is a company's forward looking estimate. Here the company showed real strength, and stood by its full year forecast of $2.25 to $2.35. Revenues during its third quarter were also strong, as the company showed revenues of $10.17 billion, verses estimates of $10.08 billion.

Continue reading Safeway (SWY) misses, but still gets rewarded on Wall Street

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Last updated: October 11, 2008: 11:28 AM

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