Posted on 09 July 2009
Tags: Alcoa Inc., bank, Bank of America Corp., Business, Dow Jones Industrial Average, drugmakers, economy, fall in the initial jobless claims, fall in Treasuries, Goldman Sachs Group Inc., government stimulus, Kennametal Inc., Merck & Co., natural gas, Recession, S&P 500, Southwestern Energy Co., Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, Stock Markets, U.S. Stocks Rise, US Treasuries, Warren Buffet
As an analyst upgrade of Goldman Sachs Group Inc. spurred a rally in financial shares, most U.S. stocks gained, tempering a drop in drugmakers and it has been concerned that the economy will require more government stimulus to end the recession.

Goldman Sachs rallied 3.8 percent as it is said by Bank of America Corp. that record trading revenue may be posted by the firm. Southwestern Energy Co. led energy shares higher as for the first time in eight days natural gas has shown an upward movement.
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Posted on 30 January 2009
Tags: 42nd President, Abbi Cohen, AIG, Alan Greenspan, America, american, American International Group, analyst, Andrew Lada, author, bank, Banks, Bark up the wrong tree, Ben Bernanke, Bill Clinton, Bill Gates, Britain, California, Case Study, crisis, derivatives, Doom, Europe, Federal Reserve System, Finance, financial, financial crisis, financial markets, founder, Franklin, Geir Haarde, George Soros, George W Bush, Goldman Sachs, Goldman Sachs Bank USA, Gordon Brown, greed of Businessmen, Guardian, Hank Greenberg, head, Henry Paulson, Iceland, idiots gave opportunity, idiots who gave me the opportunity to become rich, influential financier, investment, investment banks, John Paulson, Kathleen Corbet, Lehman Brothers, Lewis Raneri, market, Meredith Whitney, Minister of Finance, New York University, North America, Nuriel Rubin, people, political short-sightedness, President, Prime Minister, Professor, Richard Fuld, S&P 500, Sleeping over the Crisis, Standard & Poor's, Steve Jobs, strategist, the Guardian, U.S. Federal Reserve, U.S. Treasury, United Kingdom, United Socialist States of America, united states, United States Congress, United States of America, Wall Street, Warren Buffett, world
Guardian in a recent report revealed the perpetrators of the global financial crisis. It revealed their names and photos too. The British Guardian newspaper on Monday published a list of people whose work has proved fatal for the world economy. Lies have been told by both policy makers and business sharks.
The publication also listed visionaries who, warned us long before the actual crisis hit our shores. Unfortunately for the all us, these people were not involved in the process of decision-making.

In its famous “black list” Guardian has 25 spots. Almost half of them are filled with the people that have something to do with economic crisis of today. here are some of political and financial heavy weights.
Bark up the wrong tree “guru”
Alan Greenspan, head of the U.S. Federal Reserve( 1987 to 2006), is on the list at number one. The most influential financier has received from fans the world title of “guru”, “oracle” and “maestro”. In the delight of observers led his calmness with which Greenspan has held America through crises of 1987 and 1991, as well as the collapse of IT-industry in 2000 and panic in the markets that followed the September 11, 2001. It was Greenspan in early 2000 pursued a policy of low rates of the Fed, which led to easy money and irresponsible distribution of loans by banks. Moreover, the head of the Fed encouraged mortgage borrowers to take loans with floating rates. When rates inevitably increased after the tightening of fiscal policy in the middle of this decade, the people proved to have nothing to pay sharply increased the cost of credit.
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Posted on 19 December 2008
Tags: bank, bank cuts rate, bank of japan, central bank, central bank cuts, chief Japan economist, deep recession, Dow 30, Federal Reserve System, General Electric Co., Goldman Sachs, Interest Rates, Japan, Japan Central Bank, key interest rate, key policy rate, P500, S&P 500, Tetsufumi Yamakawa, The Bank of Japan, TOMOKO A. HOSAKA, United Kingdom, US Federal Reserve Bank, US Federal Reserve cut rate, Wall Street, Zero Interest Rate, zero rate policy
Is the world heading toward a zero rate policy? This question is being asked by hundreds of economists and businessmen. As evidence of deep recession is unfolding, bankers and economists are predicting that UK interest rates can hit zero any time now. The Bank of Japan’s decision to lower its key policy rate to 0.10 percent from 0.30 percent followed by US Federal Reserve Bank’s dramatic move is more proof to that fact that world is heading toward a global flat zero interest rate.
The Bank of Japan’s policy board voted 7-1 to cut the uncollateralized overnight call rate target from 0.3 percent. It was the second cut in less than two months. Japan’s interest rates have gone lower — they were effectively at zero from 2001 to 2006. TOMOKO A. HOSAKA of AFP reports
“The BOJ is in a similar situation to the Fed — the policy rate is down to a critical point, and policy conduct will inevitably shift to full-blooded quantitative easing,” said Tetsufumi Yamakawa, chief Japan economist for Goldman Sachs.

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Posted on 29 October 2008
Tags: 50 basis points, Bloomberg, economy, Fed, Fed Cuts Rates, Fed Rate, Federal Reserve System, fiscal tools, interest rate, News, S&P 500, Stock Markets
Moments Ago Fed Funds Rate was cut to down to 1.00% bringing it down 50 basis points. It was expected as 25 basis was too low and 75 basis points were thought as too high.

This new kind of pushed Fed into corner. It is running out of Monetary options. few fiscal tools are left. It is very unlikely that Fed will lower the rates below One Percent. but some sources says that this option is still on tables. we did an article on Zero interest rate a few days back.
We at FLR don’t think that Fed cutting rate will ease the credit market. The current problem is about stinking balance sheets. Govt Bail outs Or Easy Credit from Fed can not do any thing but to inflate them by putting either equity or credit on these balance sheets. It does not take away the stink from the balance sheet. The problem with liquidity of commercial paper will not be solved unless all those toxic assets like sub prime credit are removed from them.
DOW and S&P 500 took a dip after rate cut. and 10 year bond yields rallied upwards….. watch Bloomberg for more details.