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  • Interest Rates Will Rise in `Golden Age' of Growth, BIS Says.

    http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...Q&refer=europe


    Interest Rates Will Rise in `Golden Age' of Growth, BIS Says

    By Gabi Thesing

    June 25 (Bloomberg) -- Central banks will need to continue raising interest rates to quell inflation as the ``golden age'' of global economic expansion continues, the Bank for International Settlements said.

    ``Inflationary pressures might turn out to be more significant than anticipated,'' BIS General Manager Malcolm Knight told a press conference in Basel, Switzerland, yesterday. ``Authorities should continue gradually to normalize the level of policy interest rates'' as the global economy extends what ``may well go down in history as a `golden age.'''

    The world's major central banks have raised borrowing costs over the past year to contain inflation, marking the first synchronized tightening of monetary policy since 2000. Policy makers are concerned that the longest streak of sustained global growth in 30 years will fuel wage and price increases as companies operate at full capacity and unemployment drops.

    ``Economic growth has been much stronger than expected,'' said Thorsten Polleit, chief Germany economist at Barclays Capital in Frankfurt. ``That's stoking inflation, so central banks will have to keep raising interest rates.''

    The European Central Bank, the Bank of Japan, the People's Bank of China and the Bank of England have all indicated that further rate increases may be in the pipeline this year, while economists at Merrill Lynch & Co. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. now expect the U.S. Federal Reserve to leave rates at a six-year high rather than cut them.

    China, Europe

    Companies appear to be ``regaining pricing power'' while ``rapidly rising wages in countries such as China'' suggest ``the tailwinds of globalization may have abated, at least temporarily,'' Knight said.

    Chinese central bank Governor Zhou Xiaochuan said on the weekend he can't rule out raising rates a third time this year to curb inflation and take the steam out of a surging stock market.

    The ECB raised its benchmark rate to a six-year high of 4 percent this month and President Jean-Claude Trichet left the door open for another move.

    ``We have never said that the tightening cycle has ended,'' ECB council member Guy Quaden told reporters in Basel yesterday. ``Central banks have to closely monitor risks for inflation, which seem to be oriented upwards.''

    Globally, ``inflation continues to be a concern,'' said Mexican central bank governor Guillermo Ortiz. ``The latest data and information certainly point to a stronger global economy.''

    Bankers Meet

    Trichet, Zhou, Bank of Japan Governor Toshihiko Fukui and U.S. Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Donald Kohn were among more than 100 central bankers attending the annual general meeting of the BIS in Basel over the weekend.

    Known as the central banks' central bank, the BIS holds currency reserves on behalf of its members, produces research on everything from derivatives to inflation-targeting and provides policy makers with a forum for discussion.

    The International Monetary Fund forecasts global economic expansion of 4.9 percent this year after 5.4 percent growth in 2006. That will mark five consecutive years of growth above 4 percent, the longest streak since the early 1970s.

    ``It is not clear whether inflationary pressures have been contained,'' the BIS said in its annual report, published yesterday. ``Economic slack has more or less been used up in the major advanced economies'' and ``vanishing slack might have increased inflationary risks.''

    New Zealand, Sweden

    Central banks may also have ignited inflation by keeping borrowing costs ``so low for so long,'' the BIS said. In the period under review, to May 2007, interest rates ``remained highly accommodative in the industrial countries'' after being raised only ``moderately.''

    New Zealand unexpectedly increased its key interest rate to a record 8 percent earlier this month and Sweden's central bank last week raised borrowing costs for the eighth time in 18 months. It said further increases are in store.

    ``The next few years could continue to produce good global economic performance,'' BIS's Knight said. ``We are confident that central banks will strive to meet the challenges they face in pursuing price stability.''

    To contact the reporter on this story: Gabi Thesing in Basel at gthesing@bloomberg.net

    Last Updated: June 24, 2007 19:50 EDT
    Wow, these guys are good, no wonder they are the best money can buy.

  • #2
    List of countries by current account balance

    See this list and try to find out who is the country that is exporting all that inflation:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of...ccount_balance

    Comment


    • #3
      BIS warns credit spree could produce 1930s-style depression

      BIS warns credit spree could produce 1930s-style depression

      http://www.marketwatch.com/news/stor...&dist=hplatest

      By Leslie Wines
      Last Update: 8:17 AM ET Jun 25, 2007


      NEW YORK (MarketWatch) - The Bank for International Settlements is warning that years of loose monetary policy have fuelled a dangerous credit bubble, leaving the global economy more vulnerable to another 1930s-style slump is than generally understood, the U.K.'s Telegraph newspaper reported on its website. Virtually nobody foresaw the Great Depression of the 1930s, or the crises which affected Japan and Southeast Asia in the early and late 1990s. In fact, each downturn was preceded by a period of non-inflationary growth exuberant enough to lead many commentators to suggest that a 'new era' had arrived", the bank was quoted as saying. The BIS, the ultimate bank of central bankers, pointed to multiple worrying signs, including mass issuance of new types of credit instruments, soaring levels of household debt, extreme appetite for risk shown by investors, and entrenched imbalances in the world currency system, the report said.
      Ha ha ha, they sure are good!

      Comment


      • #4
        BIS 77th Annual Report

        http://www.bis.org/publ/arpdf/ar2007e.htm

        BIS 77th Annual Report

        Full Text .pdf : http://www.bis.org/publ/arpdf/ar2007e.pdf

        an ever increasing number of economic and financial variables have
        been observed to deviate significantly from what might be deemed traditional
        “norms”. In particular, easy financial conditions have led to an unprecedented
        drop in the household saving rate in the United States and an equally
        unprecedented rise in the investment rate in China. Whether these will
        eventually prove sustainable, with new “norms” being generated consistent
        with underlying structural changes, or whether they will rather prove subject
        to a more traditional form of mean-reversion, remains to be seen.
        Last edited by Sapiens; June 25, 2007, 09:03 AM.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Interest Rates Will Rise in `Golden Age' of Growth, BIS Says.

          Sounds like the US is losing it's abilities to borrow. Public debt has dropped $90 billion in the last two months. US needs a war, the surge didn't increase spending as much as they hoped it would. Only one problem, who do we invade? We need somebody that can't fight back and it looks like we've run out of takers. Chinese are having to purchase bonds from other countries now that the Fed isn't creating enough of our own. Maybe an earthquake or a hurricane or a nuke on one of our own cities will stimulate some borrowing.
          "Men, it has been well said, think in herds; it will be seen that they go mad in herds, while they only recover their senses slowly, and one by one."
          - Charles Mackay

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Interest Rates Will Rise in `Golden Age' of Growth, BIS Says.

            I been saying this for months!!!!!
            The FED CAN'T CUT RATEs!!!! If they do it will stall OUT!!!!!!

            Rates EVERYWHERE are going Up, Up,UP!
            Mega

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Interest Rates Will Rise in `Golden Age' of Growth, BIS Says.

              Originally posted by Tet View Post
              US needs a war, the surge didn't increase spending as much as they hoped it would. Only one problem, who do we invade?

              http://www.itulip.com/forums/showthr...0229#post10229

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Interest Rates Will Rise in `Golden Age' of Growth, BIS Says.

                Originally posted by Tet View Post
                Sounds like the US is losing it's abilities to borrow. Public debt has dropped $90 billion in the last two months. US needs a war, the surge didn't increase spending as much as they hoped it would. Only one problem, who do we invade? We need somebody that can't fight back and it looks like we've run out of takers. Chinese are having to purchase bonds from other countries now that the Fed isn't creating enough of our own. Maybe an earthquake or a hurricane or a nuke on one of our own cities will stimulate some borrowing.
                Not only the U.S.; Japan needs one too in order to save face. Their insolvent banks are forcing Mom and Pops and Institutional investors to send their Yen overseas looking for better returns:

                http://www.fxstreet.com/technical/an...007-06-16.html
                Yen was also pressured on speculations that rising global bond yields will trigger more off shore investments from Japanese investors that will prompt more selling of the Japanese yen to foreign currencies. In particular, there was reports that raised the possibility that Japanese life insurers will start to look into US treasuries if the yield continues to rise. BoJ kept rates unchanged at 0.5% as widely expected. In the monthly report, economic assessment remains unchanged with moderate expansion expected. BoJ reiterates that CPI will likely continue to trend up and notes that long-term interest rates have moved higher. BoJ Governor Fukui said BoJ Governor said in the post meeting press conference that BoJ need to be "more confident about the outlook for the economy and prices" before increasing benchmark borrowing costs from the lowest rate among major economies. Also, the board members are "in absolute agreement that there are still many factors that need to be examined closely." This was taken as the reiteration that BoJ's tightening pace will remain slow and triggered further selling in the Japanese yen
                Chart: http://www.futuresource.com/charts/c...=RSI%287%29%3B

                The more they sell the Yen, the weaker it gets, the better their returns; really vicious cycle.

                On your war comment, I think Iran is looking mighty tasty.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Treasuries Advance as Investors Move Away From High-Risk Assets

                  Originally posted by Mega View Post
                  I been saying this for months!!!!!
                  The FED CAN'T CUT RATEs!!!! If they do it will stall OUT!!!!!!

                  Rates EVERYWHERE are going Up, Up,UP!
                  Mega
                  Treasuries Advance as Investors Move Away From High-Risk Assets
                  http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...0K4&refer=home

                  Treasuries Advance as Investors Move Away From High-Risk Assets

                  By Elizabeth Stanton and Deborah Finestone

                  June 25 (Bloomberg) -- Treasuries extended a week-long advance fueled by concern hedge fund losses on bets linked to subprime mortgages will become more widespread. A measure of home sales fell to the lowest in almost four years.

                  The rally pushed yields on two-year notes to the lowest this month as losses at Bear Stearns Cos. and the U.K.'s Queen's Walk Investment Ltd. sent investors to the safety of government notes. Benchmark 10-year yields reached a five-year high less than two weeks ago as traders pared bets the Federal Reserve will lower interest rates this year.

                  ``People are looking for safety here,'' said Charles Comiskey, head of U.S. government bond trading in New York at HSBC Securities USA Inc.

                  The 10-year yield fell 4 basis points, or 0.04 percentage point, to 5.09 percent at 3:45 p.m. in New York, according to bond broker Cantor Fitzgerald LP. The yield, which moves inversely to the note's price, touched 5.327 percent on June 13, the highest since April 2002. The price of 4 1/2 percent securities due in May 2017 rose 10/32, or $3.13 per $1,000 face amount, to 95 14/32.

                  Two-year note yields dropped 4 basis points to 4.88 percent after touching 4.86 percent, the lowest since May 30. Two-year notes lagged behind longer-maturity debt before the government's monthly auction of the securities tomorrow. Bids on $18 billion of notes maturing in June 2009 are due at 1 p.m. New York time.

                  European and Japanese government bonds also advanced on speculation other institutional investors will mark down the value of securities linked to pools of mortgage loans.

                  Home Resales Drop

                  Treasuries remained higher after the National Association of Realtors reported purchases of existing homes declined last month to an annual rate of 5.99 million, the lowest since June 2003, from a revised 6.01 million in April. The supply of unsold homes jumped to the highest in almost 15 years.

                  ``The U.S. housing market isn't out of the doldrums yet and will continue to be a drag on U.S. growth,'' said Christoph Rieger, fixed-income strategist in Frankfurt at Dresdner Kleinwort.

                  A Commerce Department report tomorrow is forecast to show the pace of new home sales fell to 925,000 in May from 981,000 the previous month, according to the median forecast of 68 economists polled by Bloomberg. The annual rate of new home sales fell to a six-year low of 844,000 in March.

                  Fed Rate Forecast

                  All 110 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News said the Fed will keep its target rate for overnight bank lending at 5.25 percent for an eighth straight time on June 28.

                  Government debt will rise by the end of the year, according to a survey of investors published today by Ried, Thunberg & Co., a research unit of ICAP Plc, the world's largest interbank broker. The end-of-December index of sentiment rose to 53 from 52. Readings above 50 indicate the investors, who manage more than a combined $1.38 trillion, expect prices to increase.

                  The premium 10-year yields offer over two-year rates was near the widest since October 2005 as investors sought a haven in shorter maturities from possible hedge fund losses. Ten-year yields were less than their two-year counterparts as recently as June 5, inverting the so-called yield curve.

                  Two-year notes gained last week after Bear Stearns said it planned to make $3.2 billion in loans to bail out a money-losing hedge fund, the biggest rescue since 1998. Bear Stearns may have to salvage the second of its two teetering hedge funds, Merrill Lynch & Co. analyst Guy Moszkowski wrote in a note today.

                  Subprime Defaults

                  The hedge funds speculated in so-called collateralized debt obligations -- securities backed by bonds, loans and derivatives -- that were hurt as defaults on subprime mortgages to people with poor or limited credit histories increased.

                  Queen's Walk, a fund run by London-based Cheyne Capital Management Ltd. investing in the riskiest portions of bonds backed by mortgages, today reported a net loss caused by the slump in the U.S. subprime market and fewer U.K. borrowers paying penalty charges.

                  The perceived risk of owning U.S. corporate bonds rose for a sixth straight day and emerging-market bonds declined on concern over hedge fund losses.

                  ``At the margin, the Bear Stearns story is making people buyers in a flight to quality,'' said Jason Brady, a portfolio manager in Santa Fe, New Mexico, at Thornburg Investment Management Inc., which oversees $4 billion in fixed income.

                  China, with a record $1.2 trillion of foreign-exchange reserves, will keep the ``bulk'' of its U.S. dollar holdings because the currency is one of safest investment options, a People's Bank of China assistant governor said.

                  The dollar is ``vulnerable'' to a drop in the investment inflows that the U.S. relies on to fund its trade and current- account deficits, the Basel, Switzerland-based Bank for International Settlements said in a report today.

                  The currency has been supported by purchases of Treasuries by foreign investors attracted to U.S. yields and central banks that buy dollars to curb appreciation in their exchange rates.

                  To contact the reporters on this story: Elizabeth Stanton in New York at estanton@bloomberg.net ; Deborah Finestone in New York at dfinestone@bloomberg.net .

                  Last Updated: June 25, 2007 15:48 EDT

                  Well Gentlemen, Here it is!

                  It has commenced, let see where it will take us... It was only fair for Merrill Lynch to begin it by kicking Bear Stearns teeth in.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    U.S. monitors market liquidity after fund bailout

                    U.S. monitors market liquidity after fund bailout
                    http://today.reuters.com/news/articl...REGULATORS.XML

                    By John Poirier

                    WASHINGTON, June 25 (Reuters) - U.S. banking regulators are monitoring liquidity in the markets after Bear Stearns Cos. Inc.'s (BSC.N: Quote, Profile , Research) $3.2 billion bailout of a struggling hedge fund, Comptroller of the Currency John Dugan said on Monday.

                    The High-Grade Structured Credit Strategies Fund suffered big losses after making bad bets in the repackaged subprime mortgage loan market when homeowner defaults started rising. Concerns have been raised about other funds that invested in similar bonds linked to subprime mortgages, which are known as a collateralized debt obligations (CDOs).

                    "I couldn't say that it was the tip of the iceberg," Dugan told reporters when asked if the Bear Stearns fund indicated similar problems may be on the horizon.

                    Reuters Pictures

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                    "I think there has been and continues to be lots of liquidity in the market but obviously we'll continue to monitor that situation closely," Dugan said after addressing a home foreclosure prevention event.

                    CDOs have been a widely used financial instrument for a number of years, Dugan said.

                    When asked if federal banking regulators are aware of the level of CDOs in the underlying assets of hedge funds, he said: "Yes, we are."

                    Dugan said federal banking regulators were not directly involved in the Bear Stearns bailout of the fund it manages.

                    "Of course we were monitoring the situation closely but this was something that was done by private parties working with private parties," Dugan said.

                    In the bailout announced on Friday, Bear Stearns will provide secured financing to the fund so it can sell assets in an orderly fashion. The rescue plan of up to $3.2 billion has been described as the biggest since Wall Street's 1998 rescue of Long-Term Capital Management.

                    Separately, BusinessWeek reported that a restatement by another Bear Stearns fund -- the High-Grade Structured Credit Strategies Enhanced Leverage Fund -- is facing a preliminary inquiry from another regulator, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

                    The SEC declined to comment and a spokesman for Bear Stearns was not immediately available for comment.

                    Bear Stearns shares closed down 3.2 percent on Monday at $139.10 in trading on the New York Stock Exchange.
                    They can try all bailout they want, it is Joe Sixpack they should worry about. Joe has thrown in the towel and the cash flow has dried up.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Interest Rates Will Rise in `Golden Age' of Growth, BIS Says.

                      Originally posted by Sapiens View Post
                      On your war comment, I think Iran is looking mighty tasty.
                      For some reason Iran seems to not want to play along.

                      http://www.alalam.ir/english/en-News...20070623143835
                      Iran: 'Zero Chance' of US Attack

                      A top Iranian security official said Saturday that there is "zero chance" of a US attack on Iran to thwart its nuclear energy program, the state IRNA news agency reported.

                      Deputy interior minister Mohammad Baqer Zolghadr said, "There is about zero possibility of a US military attack on Iran."


                      I think Canada looks like an easier target and Canada is sitting on top of a lot of oil.
                      "Men, it has been well said, think in herds; it will be seen that they go mad in herds, while they only recover their senses slowly, and one by one."
                      - Charles Mackay

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Interest Rates Will Rise in `Golden Age' of Growth, BIS Says.

                        http://www.breitbart.com/article.php...show_article=1

                        Jun 25 07:23 PM US/Eastern

                        Iranian Revolutionary Guard forces have been spotted by British troops crossing the border into southern Iraq, The Sun tabloid reported on Tuesday.

                        Britain's defence ministry would not confirm or deny the report, with a spokesman declining to comment on "intelligence matters".
                        An unidentified intelligence source told the tabloid: "It is an extremely alarming development and raises the stakes considerably. In effect, it means we are in a full on war with Iran -- but nobody has officially declared it."
                        "We have hard proof that the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps have crossed the border to attack us. It is very hard for us to strike back. All we can do is try to defend ourselves. We are badly on the back foot."
                        The Sun said that radar sightings of Iranian helicopters crossing into the Iraqi desert were confirmed to it by very senior military sources.
                        In response to the report, a British defence ministry spokesman said: "There is evidence that explosive devices used against our troops in southern Iraq originated in Iran."
                        "Any Iranian link to armed militias in Iraq either through weapons supply, training or funding are unacceptable."
                        Britain has about 7,100 soldiers in Iraq, most of whom are based in the southern city of Basra and surrounding areas, though the government has pledged to reduce that to between 5,000 and 5,500 this year.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: BIS 77th Annual Report

                          Originally posted by Sapiens View Post
                          Interest Rates Will Rise in `Golden Age' of Growth, BIS Says

                          BIS warns credit spree could produce 1930s-style depression

                          so what's the deal? are there two banks of international settlement?

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: BIS 77th Annual Report

                            Originally posted by metalman View Post
                            Interest Rates Will Rise in `Golden Age' of Growth, BIS Says

                            BIS warns credit spree could produce 1930s-style depression

                            so what's the deal? are there two banks of international settlement?
                            Ah you are catching on, this is the art of disinformation...

                            Read the report to find out...Nothing. There are no conclusions there.

                            So what is it? What you already know, there is a major credit crunch on the way.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Interest Rates Will Rise in `Golden Age' of Growth, BIS Says.

                              Originally posted by bill View Post
                              Some funny stuff from the link.
                              Britain's defence ministry would not confirm or deny the report
                              It's not important whether the report is confirmed just so long as it's printed.
                              An unidentified intelligence source
                              This usually refers to an israeli, who is not inclined to tell the truth but certainly wants to keep the rumor going.
                              we are in a full on war with Iran -- but nobody has officially declared it."
                              Certainly, we're at war it's just that nobody knows.
                              confirmed to it by very senior military sources.
                              I think very senior means retired in this case.
                              a British defence ministry spokesman said
                              The fact that nobody goes on record as saying anything means once again the AFP is making the bullshit up as they go along, same with their business news. This propaganda can't even get an author to give his name for the article. Once again proving the first casualty of war is the truth.
                              "Men, it has been well said, think in herds; it will be seen that they go mad in herds, while they only recover their senses slowly, and one by one."
                              - Charles Mackay

                              Comment

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