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ING dinsdag 12 oktober

105 Posts
Pagina: «« 1 2 3 4 5 6 »» | Laatste | Omlaag ↓
  1. [verwijderd] 12 oktober 2010 17:09
    quote:

    Tatan schreef:

    [quote=JeffJeff]
    [...]

    Word Zware Strijd

    [/quote]

    denk het niet meer er is al te veel gedumpt zijn nu op de terug weg.

    anders had je wel eerder gedumpt...

    straks de terugkopers mee in de rug in de usa en dan gaan we los...

    die twijfelen nog...
    Ik vind het best Tata!!
  2. [verwijderd] 12 oktober 2010 20:27
    .Fed Minutes: Debt purchases dominate Sept. meeting
    Fed Minutes: More government debt purchases dominate Fed discussions at September meeting

    .
    Topics:Economy, Government & Policy.Jeannine Aversa, AP Economics Writer, On Tuesday October 12, 2010, 2:02 pm
    WASHINGTON (AP) -- A new program to pump up the economy through the purchase of government debt dominated Federal Reserve officials' discussions at their September meeting.

    Minutes of the closed-door deliberations, released Tuesday, suggest Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and his colleagues were closing in on a consensus to launch such a program to rejuvenate the economy and help lower unemployment.

    Members, however, didn't settle on how big the program should be or exactly how it should be structured.
  3. [verwijderd] 12 oktober 2010 21:18
    October 12, 2010, 12:35 PM ET
    Fed’s Hoenig Again Attacks Asset Buying
    By Michael S. Derby

    The Federal Reserve’s leading dissident policymaker mounted another attack Tuesday on those who favor the central bank restarting its asset buying program.

    “Dumping another trillion dollars into the system now will most likely mean they will follow the same path into excess reserves, or government securities, or “safe” asset purchases,” with a “minor” impact on stock prices, Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City President Thomas Hoenig said. “There simply is no strong evidence the additional liquidity would be particularly effective in spurring new investment, accelerating consumption, or cushioning or accelerating the deleveraging that is hopefully winding down,” the official said.

    Hoenig is a voting member of the interest rate setting Federal Open Market Committee. His comments came from the text of a speech to be delivered in Denver before a gathering of the National Association for Business Economics. The central banker has been a persistent critic of Fed policy throughout the year, fretting that the current policy of zero interest rates is risking trouble. He has dissented against the majority at every FOMC meeting this year.

    Weak activity, ebbing inflation and very high levels of unemployment have pushed financial markets to expect the Fed will again restart a program of buying long-term assets relatively soon. Some key Fed officials, like New York Fed President William Dudley, have said some sort of new action to support the economy is likely needed, although he did not say what path he would prefer to pursue.

    But some officials, like Hoenig, don’t see the Fed having much to offer in the current circumstances, and doubt that making more credit available will help all that much. Officials like Hoenig and others point to $1 trillion in reserves banks have parked at the Fed as evidence there’s not a huge demand for more credit.

    In his remarks Tuesday, Hoenig was relatively upbeat about the economy and he continued to argue in favor of rate hikes.

    “With a modest recovery underway and inflation low and stable, I believe the economy would be better served by beginning to normalize monetary policy,” Hoenig said. “This is not a call for high rates but a call for non-zero rates,” he said, explaining the Fed should “turn to determining the pace at which we return the funds rate to 1%.”

    Hoenig is alone among Fed official in advocating tighter monetary policy. But he does share concern over the state of the labor market, and said given the current level of unemployment, “there is, understandably, a desire and considerable pressure for the Federal Reserve to “do something, anything” to get the economy back to full employment.”

    Hoenig’s opposition to renewed Fed bond buying goes beyond his concern that providing more credit won’t do much to help the economy. While such action might work “in clean theoretical models, I am less confident it will work in the real world.” Hoenig said “the FOMC has never shown itself very good at fine-tuning exercises or in setting and managing inflation and inflation expectations to achieve the desired results.”

    Hoenig was worried that there isn’t enough knowledge about additional bond buying to make the program effective. He believes that to the extent the program was effective in its first iteration, it was because financial markets were in distress. They no longer are, which means purchases would likely get less bang for the buck.

    “Even if we achieved slightly lower interest rates, the effect on economic activity is likely to be small,” Hoenig said. Already, “interest rates have systematically been brought down to unprecedented low levels and kept there for an extended period,” and “the economy’s response has been positive but modest.”

    Hoenig also fretted that “there is no working framework” on managing asset purchases, and “while I agree that the tools are available to reduce excess reserves when that becomes appropriate, I do not believe that the Federal Reserve, or anyone else, has the foresight to do it at the right time or right speed.” All of this risks undermining the Fed’s inflation mandate, and risks compromising the Fed’s independence, as well.

    blogs.wsj.com/economics/2010/10/12/fe...
  4. [verwijderd] 12 oktober 2010 21:52
    October 11, 2010, 4:22 PM ET
    Fed’s Yellen Acknowledges Risks To Low Rates
    By Luca Di Leo and Michael Derby

    Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Janet Yellen, one of the U.S. central bank’s key defenders of low interest rates to support a weak economy, warned on Monday there may be dangers to an overly easy monetary policy.

    In her first remarks since becoming the Fed’s No. 2 official last week, Yellen said low interest rates can lead to excessive risk-taking in the economy, adding she couldn’t rule out using monetary policy to limit such risk.

    “It is conceivable that accommodative monetary policy could provide tinder for a buildup of leverage and excessive risk-taking in the financial system,” Yellen said in prepared remarks to the annual meeting of the National Association for Business Economics, or NABE, in Denver.

    Yellen has been one of the Fed’s key supporters of low interest rates to fight a stubbornly high unemployment rate. But she’s bristled at the widespread perception on Wall Street that she is one of the Fed’s most dovish members, supporting overly easy monetary policy amid few worries about the risk of unintended consequences, such as a new asset bubble or inflation. Yellen has countered that her outlook flows from her expectations of the economic outlook, and that if price pressures are ebbing and the jobless rate remains high, it is entirely appropriate to support an aggressive stance for monetary policy.

    As it seeks to achieve full employment and price stability, the Fed must be aware that its decisions may, in some circumstances, affect the development of risk in an economy, Yellen said. For example, if Wall Street banks don’t have an adequate pay structure for their employees, low rates can become a problem. “Low interest rates might heighten the ability and desire of financial market participants to reach for yield and take on risk,” Yellen warned.

    Though supervision and regulation must serve as the first and main line of defense in addressing risk, the former Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco president said she couldn’t rule it out using the blunt tool of higher interest rates.

    To fight the financial crisis and ensuing recession, the Fed slashed short-term rates close to zero and pledged to keep them there for a long time. Some economists — and one of a dozen Fed officials who vote on policy this year — worry low rates may be sowing the seeds of a new crisis.

    Some top global regulators have also warned about the risk of low rates. European central banker Mario Draghi, who is chairman of an international body of regulators, said Sunday they can hide the deterioration in bank credit quality and lead banks to make riskier loans to offset low margins on rates.

    Most of Yellen’s speech was dedicated to the challenges for supervision following the severe financial crisis. She said regulators must strike the right balance between being prudent without adopting an overly strict approach that would stifle capital formation.

    In her brief remarks about the economy, Yellen underlined how the U.S. recovery has been “agonizingly slow” and how the economy was still reeling from an “epic financial disaster.”

    Despite her comments about the dangers of low rates, there was nothing in Yellen’s speech to indicate the Fed would stop its easy money policy. Investors are expecting the Fed to ease further following a disappointing jobs report released last week.

    In response to audience questions following the speech, Yellen said the nation’s financial authorities are now much better
    equipped to deal with the failure of a large financial institution.

    “I am very hopeful about the resolution regime” that was created as part of the Dodd-Frank financial regulation overall legislation, she said.

    “I believe the new tools will permit an orderly wind down” of a failing firm, although it will be a challenge to create a resolution mechanism in the face of the complexity of the nation’s largest financial firms, she said. Yellen added that the nation’s largest and most critical financial institutions need to be held to higher standards, given the risk a collapse could pose to the broader economy.

    blogs.wsj.com/economics/2010/10/11/fe...
  5. [verwijderd] 12 oktober 2010 22:14
    OCTOBER 11, 2010

    Wall Street Pay: A Record $144 Billion
    Financial Overhaul Has Affected Structure but Not Level; Revenue-to-Compensation Ratio Stays Flat

    By LIZ RAPPAPORT, AARON LUCCHETTI and STEPHEN GROCER

    Pay on Wall Street is on pace to break a record high for a second consecutive year, according to a study conducted by The Wall Street Journal.

    online.wsj.com/article/SB100014240527...
  6. [verwijderd] 12 oktober 2010 22:39
    AMSTERDAM (Dow Jones)--Intel corp. (INTC) heeft in het derde kwartaal een 59% hogere nettowinst geboekt, maakt de chipfabrikant dinsdag nabeurs bekend.

    "De resultaten werden gedreven door een solide vraag van zakelijke klanten, de omzet van onze belangrijkste producten en aanhoudende groei in opkomende markten", zei president en Chief Executive Paul Otellini in een verklaring.

    De winst bedroeg in het derde kwartaal $2,96 miljard, of 52 dollarcent per aandeel, tegenover $1,86 miljard, of 33 dollarcent per aandeel in dezelfde periode een jaar eerder.

    De omzet steeg in de afgelopen periode tot een recordhoogte van $11,1 miljard, van $9,4 miljard een jaar eerder.

    Vooraf door Thomson Reuters geraadpleegde analisten hadden gerekend op een winst van 50 dollarcent per aandeel op een omzet van $11 miljard.

    Voor het huidige kwartaal verwacht Intel een omzet van $11,4 miljard met een marge van $400 miljoen.

    Door Levien de Feijter; Dow Jones Nieuwsdienst +31 20 57 15 201; levien.defeijter@dowjones.com

    (END) Dow Jones Newswires

    October 12, 2010 16:37 ET (20:37 GMT)

    Copyright (c) 2010 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
  7. [verwijderd] 12 oktober 2010 22:40
    quote:

    zjeeraar schreef:

    Computers staan vandaag weer op de automatische piloot.

    AEX 334 en de DOW op bijna 11000, het is te belachelijk voor woorden...........

    Wedden dat we na 17.30 uur weer omhoog gaan.
    We laten ons maar steeds weer foppen en we trappen er steeds weer opnieuw in.
    Het is niet zo moeilijk om gelijk te krijgen, omdat dit ritueel zich bijna dagelijks herhaald.
    Alleen wij zijn echt stom om er steeds weer in te trappen.
  8. [verwijderd] 12 oktober 2010 22:47
    quote:

    zjeeraar schreef:

    [quote=zjeeraar]
    Computers staan vandaag weer op de automatische piloot.

    AEX 334 en de DOW op bijna 11000, het is te belachelijk voor woorden...........

    Wedden dat we na 17.30 uur weer omhoog gaan.
    We laten ons maar steeds weer foppen en we trappen er steeds weer opnieuw in.
    [/quote]

    Het is niet zo moeilijk om gelijk te krijgen, omdat dit ritueel zich bijna dagelijks herhaald.
    Alleen wij zijn echt stom om er steeds weer in te trappen.
    Goedenavond zjeeraar, deze namiddag weer stukjes aangenaam laag ingekocht, morgen wordt daar dan kleingeld van gemaakt en vervolgens zien we wel weer verder.

    Een gezonde nachtrust gewenst.

    APPIE.
  9. [verwijderd] 12 oktober 2010 22:54
    quote:

    APPIEZELF schreef:

    [quote=zjeeraar]
    [quote=zjeeraar]
    Computers staan vandaag weer op de automatische piloot.

    AEX 334 en de DOW op bijna 11000, het is te belachelijk voor woorden...........

    Wedden dat we na 17.30 uur weer omhoog gaan.
    We laten ons maar steeds weer foppen en we trappen er steeds weer opnieuw in.
    [/quote]

    Het is niet zo moeilijk om gelijk te krijgen, omdat dit ritueel zich bijna dagelijks herhaald.
    Alleen wij zijn echt stom om er steeds weer in te trappen.
    [/quote]

    Goedenavond zjeeraar, deze namiddag weer stukjes aangenaam laag ingekocht, morgen wordt daar dan kleingeld van gemaakt en vervolgens zien we wel weer verder.

    Een gezonde nachtrust gewenst.

    APPIE.
    Slaap lekker..........
105 Posts
Pagina: «« 1 2 3 4 5 6 »» | Laatste |Omhoog ↑

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