Shanghai Daily: Business - shanghaidaily.com
WALL Street skidded yesterday after the assassination of Pakistani opposition leader Benazir Bhutto and after the Commerce Department's durable goods orders exacerbated concerns about the US economy. The major indexes each lost well over 1 percent and the Dow Jones industrial average fell 192 points. Bhutto's assassination raised the possibility of increasing political unrest abroad, always an unsettling prospect for investors who have already been contending with domestic economic concerns for months. Oil prices rose following the news, and that unwelcome inflationary trend only added to Wall Street's uneasiness. Meanwhile, the government said orders for durable goods, big-ticket items from commercial jetliners to home appliances, rose by just 0.1 percent last month. Economists had been looking for a rise of 2.2 percent. Still, November saw the first rise in durable goods orders in the last four months. The Labor Department said the number of workers seeking unemployment
Shanghai Daily: Business - shanghaidaily.com
STOCKS sold off yesterday after a jump in consumer inflation raised concerns about how much freedom the Federal Reserve has to continue cutting interest rates. The Dow Jones industrial average gave up more than 178 points. The Labor Department said the consumer price index rose 0.8 percent in November amid a spike in gasoline prices. The report also found large increases in the cost of clothing, airline tickets and prescription drugs. The report raises questions about the Fed's options for priming the economy. The Fed this week lowered interest rates and announced a plan to align with other key central banks and offer loans to pressed lenders around the world. But while it wants to stimulate the U.S. economy and make lending easier among banks wary of faltering debt, the Fed also has to keep a watchful eye on inflation. Robert Dye, senior economist at PNC Financial Services Group, said the economic readings this week painted a mixed picture for investors, spurring some of the
Investor's Business Daily: NEWS
Consumer prices soared at the fastest pace in two years in November on red-hot energy costs, the Labor Department said Friday. That's the latest...
Shanghai Daily: Business - shanghaidaily.com
OIL futures fell yesterday to their lowest level in six weeks after a mixed government inventory report failed to offset a belief that supplies are growing faster than demand. Investors shrugged off OPEC's decision to keep production levels steady, a possible sign prices have peaked for the year, analysts said. In its weekly inventory report, the Energy Department's Energy Information Administration said crude supplies plunged by 8 million barrels last week, much more than the expected 700,000 barrel decline. That caused oil prices to jump briefly above US$90 a barrel. But other aspects of the report weighed on prices as the day wore on. Crude supplies grew at the closely-watching Nymex delivery terminal in Cushing, Oklahoma. Inventories of heating oil rose when analysts had expected a decline, and gasoline supplies rose more than expected. "Overall, this is a mixed report," said Tim Evans, an analyst at Citigroup Inc, in a research note. Earlier yesterday,
MarketWatch.com - MarketPulse
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) - Growth in U.S. consumer spending ground to a halt in October, while inflation eroded American households' modest gains in income, the Commerce Department reported Friday. Nominal incomes rose just 0.2% in October. But after accounting for the 0.3% rise in prices, real after-tax incomes fell 0.1%. Consumer spending increased 0.2% in nominal terms and was flat after adjusting for inflation. Both incomes and spending were slightly weaker than expected on Wall Street. Inflationary pressures were steady in October. The personal consumption expenditure price index rose 0.3% for a second straight month. Core prices, which exclude food and energy prices, rose 0.2% for the second straight month. Core inflation was steady at 1.9% over the past year, just within the Fed's unofficial comfort zone.
azcentral.com | business
Early holiday shoppers are finding a windfall of closeouts and deep discounts as department stores and wholesalers unload a glut of fall and winter fashions.{l} Creno's BuyingCentral blog
Shanghai Daily: Business - shanghaidaily.com
ENERGY futures fell yesterday after the government reported unexpected increases in crude oil and gasoline inventories last week and OPEC forecast fourth-quarter demand for oil would be less than expected. In its weekly inventory report, the Energy Department's Energy Information Administration said oil inventories rose by 2.8 million barrels during the week ended November 9. Analysts surveyed by Dow Jones Newswires, on average, had expected a decline of 300,000 barrels. That helped send light, sweet crude for December delivery falling 66 US cents to settle at US$93.43 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange after trading off more than US$2 a barrel earlier. Crude prices have been volatile this week, falling more than US$3 on Tuesday and rising more than US$2 on Wednesday after hitting a record of US$98.62 one week ago. The drop in crude was limited, however, by an unexpectedly large drop in heating oil supplies, a mixed report on Iran's compliance with UN demands over
Shanghai Daily: Business - shanghaidaily.com
US stocks rose for a fifth straight week, the longest stretch of gains since May, after minutes from the Federal Reserve and better-than-expected retail sales bolstered hopes that the economy will keep expanding. Wal-Mart Stores Inc, the world's largest retailer, climbed to a two-month high after boosting its third-quarter profit forecast. Yum! Brands Inc, owner of the Pizza Hut and Taco Bell restaurant chains, jumped the most since September 2005 on earnings that topped analysts' estimates. Exxon Mobil Corp, the biggest oil company, led a gauge of energy shares to a record after crude prices rose to an all-time high. Minutes from the Fed's September 18 policy meeting showed central bankers avoided language that might have suggested the economy would fall into a recession. The Commerce Department said retail sales added 0.6 percent last month, from the 0.2 percent gain predicted by analysts in a Bloomberg News survey. "The consumer is a staying force, earnings growth is
Shanghai Daily: Business - shanghaidaily.com
THE widening gap between crude oil and the relatively low price of gasoline is signaling the first quarterly decline in oil prices in a year. While oil has fallen in the fourth quarter during 13 of the past 20 years because of the transition from peak summer demand, the pressure for another drop in the months ahead is the most intense since 2004 and may defer any rebound to record crude prices until the first half of 2008. Citigroup Inc, Deutsche Bank AG and HSBC Holdings Plc anticipate that oil will slide from last month's record US$83.90 a barrel as gasoline sales weaken to the lowest level this year and a slowing US economy curbs demand. Profits from making fuels are so low that refiners have 12.5 percent of capacity off line, the second-highest rate of the past two decades for this time of year, data from the US Department of Energy show. "Refinery profit margins are being squeezed at a time when significant maintenance is scheduled," said Tim Evans, an energy analyst with Citigroup Global Markets Inc in New York. "The combination of these factors should send crude oil lower." Oil traders and analysts have never been more pessimistic, with 75 percent of respondents anticipating prices will fall, according to a weekly survey by Bloomberg News that started in April 2004. Crude may end the year below US$70 a barrel, compared with US$81.66 at the end of the third quarter, according to a forecast by Adam Sieminski, a global oil analyst at Deutsche Bank in New York. If he's right, a US$1 million investment in crude oil futures in New York would more than double to US$2.3 million, assuming speculators used the exchange's minimum deposit to conduct the transaction. Not everyone forecasts that oil will move lower by the end of the year. Goldman Sachs Group Inc is the most bullish commodities trading firm on oil, forecasting on September 17 that crude will end the year at US$85 a barrel, with a "high risk" of a jump above US$90, according to a report from analysts including Jeffrey Currie in London. Its two current trading recommendations on oil are both money-losers. One of them was to buy the gasoline refining margin, which has lost more than half its value since then, Goldman's research shows.
Shanghai Daily: Business - shanghaidaily.com
CRUDE oil may decline on speculation that near-record prices are unjustified because of rising US inventories and increased OPEC output. Twenty-three of 32 analysts surveyed, or 72 percent, said oil prices will fall from October 5, the most bearish response since the survey began in April 2004, Bloomberg News reported. Five, or 16 percent, said prices will increase and four said there will be little change. Last week, 59 percent of respondents said prices would fall. US crude-oil inventories rose 1.84 million barrels in a week, the Energy Department said in a report on September 26. The gain left supplies 8.5 percent higher than the five-year average for the period, the department said. Stockpiles at Cushing, Oklahoma, where New York-traded West Texas Intermediate oil is delivered, dropped 209,000 barrels, the report said. "While the market may be vulnerable to a squeeze based on low physical inventories at Cushing, Oklahoma, overall US commercial crude-oil stocks are comfortably above their five-year average," said Tim Evans, an analyst with Citigroup Global Markets Inc in New York. "It also looks like OPEC production is rising and the fourth-quarter demand may be revised lower." The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries agreed on September 11 to produce an extra 500,000 barrels a day starting in November. World oil demand peaks in the fourth quarter when refiners make heating fuel for the Northern Hemisphere winter. Crude oil for November delivery rose four cents to US$81.66 a barrel last week on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Friday's close was the second-highest since trading began in 1983.
MarketWatch.com - MarketPulse
SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) -- The dollar took a breather from its recent drop Wednesday, gaining on its major counterparts as stock prices rose on news of a tentative deal ending a two-day United Auto Workers strike against General Motors Corp. Currencies markets largely shrugged off dismal data released by the Commerce Department revealing that durable goods plunged 4.9% last month, the biggest monthly decline in orders for big-ticket items since January. A sharp fall had been expected, with the consensus forecast calling for a 4.5% drop. The dollar was at 115.55 yen, up from 114.68 yen in late U.S. trading Tuesday. The euro was at $1.4122, below $1.4144 Tuesday and down from a fresh record high of $1.4162 hit overnight.
CBC | Money News
Prices for consumer goods in the United States fell last month on lower energy costs, the U.S. Labour Department reported Wednesday.
StarTribune.com | Business
WASHINGTON Wholesale prices fell in August by the largest amount in 10 months, reflecting a plunge in the price of gasoline and other energy products and the fourth straight month of falling food costs. The Labor Department said Tuesday that wholesale prices fell by 1.4 percent last month, the best showing since a 1.5 percent fall last October. It was a much bigger decline than the 0.3 percent drop that had been expected and was led by a 6.6 percent plunge in energy costs, the biggest drop in more than four years. Core inflation, which excludes food and energy, was also w
MarketWatch.com - MarketPulse
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) - Wholesale prices plunged 1.4% in August, led by falling food and energy prices, the Labor Department reported Tuesday. Energy prices dropped 6.6% in August, while food prices fell 0.2%, the fourth straight decline after five months of hefty increases. Excluding volatile food and energy, however, the core producer price index climbed a greater-than-expected 0.2% on higher drug and car prices. Economists expected the PPI to fall 0.4% and the core to rise 0.1%. The report on producer prices shows few inflationary pressures in the production pipeline as of August. But energy prices have soared since then, taking some of the luster off what was a generally favorable report.
FT.com - UK Equities
The department store chain forecast a 5% fall in like-for-like sales this year but said it expected profits to be in line with expectations as moves to cut prices and improve design paid off
MarketWatch.com - Top Stories
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- Prices of goods imported into the U.S. registered an unexpected fall in August, led by drops in imported petroleum and fuel prices, the Labor Department reported Friday.
MarketWatch.com - MarketPulse
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- Prices of goods imported into the U.S. declined by 0.3% in August, taking their first drop since January, the Labor Department reported Friday. Imported petroleum prices fell by 1.3% in August. It follows a revised increase of 6.4% in July. Imported natural gas prices fell by 12.9% in August. Excluding all fuels, import prices rose by 0.2% in August. The report suggest inflationary pressure from overseas is declining.