Showing posts with label U.S. jobless. Show all posts
Showing posts with label U.S. jobless. Show all posts

Saturday, 12 March 2011

America's jobless recovery Where are the jobs?

ALMOST everywhere you look, the American recovery seems to be picking up pace. The economy grew faster in the third quarter than originally reported. Industrial production continues to grow. Spending has been surprisingly strong, and the latest figures on pending home sales suggest that even housing markets may be stirring from their deep slump. The growth seems to be everywhere except the place it matters most—labour markets. Employment in America turned in a surprisingly poor performance in November, indicating that recovery still hasn't gotten the job creation machine turning steadily.
This morning, the Bureau of Labour Statistics reported a disappointing gain of only 39,000 jobs for the month of November. The figure came in well below expectations. In October, the economy grew by an (upwardly revised) 172,000 jobs, and on Wednesday a private employment report estimated that the economy added 93,000 private sector workers. Markets had expected one of the strongest reports of the recovery so far. That's not what they received.
In November, according to the BLS, private employers added just 50,000 new jobs—the worst performance since April. From that paltry total were subtracted 11,000 in lost government jobs. Small gains in federal and state government employment were offset by a 14,000 job fall in local government employment. Within the private sector, drops in employment among goods-producing and retail trade firms were offset by new hires among professional and businesses services and in the health and education sectors.
The unemployment rate rose to 9.8%—its highest level since April and close to the 10.1% recession peak. At 15.1m, the number of unemployed workers rose back to its April high (though some of this increase was due to new entrants to the labour force). Fully 6.3m people have been out of work for more than 27 weeks. Many of these workers are now cycling off federal emergency unemployment benefits, which expired November 30. Congress has yet to reauthorise the emergency benefits package, as it has done so many times through the recession. Some 2m jobless workers may lose benefits by the end of 2010, and perhaps 4m or more will lose them by April.
There is little to be happy about in this report, in other words. But there are some indications that the November numbers may be an aberration. September's job losses were revised down to 24,000 in this report, while October's job gains were revised upward, from 151,000 to 172,000. Through November, weekly data on initial jobless claims showed significant improvement. And of course, many other indicators have been flashing positive signs in recent weeks.
It's likely, then, that the November figures will be revised up in future months to show a better performance more in keeping with broader trends. And it's important to remember that monthly data are noisy. America's labour markets have yet to generate job growth sufficient to bring down the unemployment rate. But the pace of recovery has been improving. There is good reason to suspect that when all is said and done this report will appear as a blip marring a strengthening upward employment trend. All the same, policymakers in Washington weighing whether to extend unemployment benefits and tax cuts should heed the obvious weakness in labour markets. They can and should make sure that November's number remains an anomaly.

US jobless rate falls to 9% in January

WASHINGTON: The US jobless rate unexpectedly fell in January to the lowest level since April 2009 at 9%, while payrolls rose less than forecast, depressed by winter storms.
Unemployment declined last month from 9.4% in December, the Labor Department said on Friday in Washington. Employment rose by 36,000 workers, the smallest gain in four months, after a 121,000 rise in December that was larger than initially reported . Payrolls are "all about the weather" , David Resler, chief economist at Nomura Securities International Inc. in New York, said in a note before the report.
Underlying job conditions "continue to improve" , Resler said. Payrolls in construction and transportation, industries most affected by bad weather, dropped in January, while factory employment rose the most since August 1998. Federal Reserve chairman Ben S Bernanke is among policy makers still concerned the pickup in growth is failing to revive the labour market quickly, one reason why the Fed said it will continue a plan to add another $600 billion into the economy.

US jobless rate dips to 8.9 per cent, nears 2-year low - Summary

Washington - US unemployment edged down to 8.9 per cent in February, the lowest level in nearly two years as employers added 192,000 jobs to the economy, the Labour Department reported Friday.
It marked the first time the jobless rate fell below 9 per cent since April 2009. The rate dropped from 9 per cent in January and is down from 9.8 per cent in November, a sign that the long-struggling US labour market is beginning to show signs of a turnaround.The February gains were led by sectors that have suffered since the 2008-09 recession, including manufacturing and construction. The 192,000 net jobs added was the largest amount since May 2010."It's a very solid number," said White House economic advisor Austan Goolsbee told US broadcaster CNBC. "What we see today is a promising move forward."Yet US stocks fell slighly on opening in New York as the data was in line with economists' expectations. There was also caution as the size of the labour force remained unchanged, meaning many people who quit during the recession remain reluctant to re-enter the market.President Barack Obama has long been frustrated by a labour market that has remained week despite the country's return to growth. The US economy expanded by 2.8 per cent in 2010, yet unemployment remained between 9-10 per cent through the year.Policymakers have remained cautious about predicting a quick strengthening of the job market. The Federal Reserve has forecast that the unemployment rate will remain near its current level for the remainder of 2011.Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke has warned it will be "several years" until the jobless rate returns to the 4-6 per cent levels seen before the 2008 financial crisis plunged the world into its worst recession in generations.

America’s jobless picture is alarmingly bleak

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We are drifting. We take comfort in bits of good news, but we are in dangerous waters; the Great Recession is being starkly revealed as a global crisis with the US, the traditional engine of recovery, sputtering on every cylinder. The US government responded with dramatic financial support by transferring money to the household sector. But outside of these transfers the personal income of Americans is still declining; the residential market remains stagnant at best; consumer growth is nominal. The only real energy in the economy has come from the cessation of inventory liquidation, which is now the main factor in rising industrial output and any modest improvement in the economy.
The mood of US households is despondent. In May only 11.3 per cent believed they would see their income rise in the following six months, while 16.6 per cent thought they would see it decline. This is the first time in over four decades that more people believe they will be worse off than better. Any massive fiscal and monetary stimulus that might reverse the trend is likely to be politically unsustainable given the growing concern over the exploding national deficit.
Wherever you look the scene is bleak. Leading economic indicators fell in April – unusual at such an early stage in the up-cycle. Jobless claims were up by 25,000 to 471,000. And up again above expectations in the first three weeks of May – raising the four-week moving average to a level consistent with 100,000, or more, net job losses. For the past several months, claims have been nowhere near the levels of 400,000 and less that in the past were consistent with sustained job creation. We are not enjoying the normal cycle of economic improvement. If we were, employment would already have reached a new high and made up all of the jobs lost, as it did during the previous postwar recessions. This time we remain short of the old peak of employment, by an astounding 8.4m jobs. One in six Americans is either unemployed or underemployed. This is not a normal cycle when compared with a typical recession, which sees no more than 2m to 3m jobs lost.
Research by David Rosenberg, chief economist at Gluskin Sheff, reveals jobless statistics behind the headline numbers that are downright scary. More than 6.5m people (more than 45 per cent of the jobless) have not worked for 27 weeks or more, compared with 3.2m this time last year.
Wages are falling; wage cuts are spreading as employers continue to curb costs and remain reluctant to hire. And the amount of excess labour continues to increase. For example, the April payroll surged by 290,000 jobs but the labour force soared by 805,000. In effect, jobseekers are overwhelming the number of jobs that are being created. The broader definition of unemployment, which includes partial unemployment and people who have applied for a job within the past year, is roughly 17 per cent. The headline unemployment rate is back up to slightly under 10 per cent, but this covers only people who sought a job in the previous four weeks.
What is the result of an excessive number of people seeking work, with an average of 5.6 people vying for each job opening? Wage deflation. Average hourly pay has not budged since the turn of the year, including one month in which we had a 0.1 per cent decline in average hourly earnings, something that has not happened since April 2003.
This is an unnervingly jobless recovery. After the kind of strong growth in gross domestic product of approximately 6 per cent we had in the fourth quarter of last year, we would normally anticipate job gains of 250,000 a month. Instead we had an average of 31,000 new jobs in the January and February reports – an unprecedentedly minimal growth after such a strong GDP quarter.
We are going to have to develop policies and government support to deal with the long-term jobless who become less employable the longer they lack a regular job. And long-term unemployment has gone from 2m in June 2004 to 6.7m in April 2010. We may have as many as five to eight years of moderate economic growth. To create the 12m jobs to get back to full employment for both the unemployed and new entries into the labour force, when job losses have not even come to an end, seems almost impossible.

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I seriously do not understand how intelligent people posting here can be so blind to the obvious realities:
1) please don't keep quoting in terms of current dollars and compare salaries or costs to other years without compensating for inflation;
2) please don't pretend that any politician has any idea how to fix this mess.

We have been increasingly operating beyond our collective experience, operating blind in a totally new world. The BP blow out is a good metaphor for our situation is economics and many other branches of what we used to call "science", but more properly today should call raw experimentation.

The rule when doing experiments: control all inputs, measure all outputs, and make changes only slowly, one variable at a time. And when you measure outputs, don't use a "rubber band" as the meansuring stick.

The first part of this translates to practicing extreme financial conservatism until we can develop the knowledge base to move to more dynamic strategies. It was wrong for Bush to leap into TARP without more controls / restrictions on how the money should have been spent; it was at least doubly wrong for Obama to vastly extend the deficit spending and surge forward with massive chances to the economics of the healthcare system.

The second part translates into providing much greater emphasis on REAL results for REAL people rather than the typically easily "spun" double-speak of the media. Without a stable yardstick of what people are actually feeling in the form of their purchasing power, markets will swing and twist in the wind, offering little clear guidance to anyone.

As we sit here.... there is virtual certainty that we will have another recession before we can hope to restore employment to levels we had just a few years ago. You may not want to call this a "double dip recession", and strictly speaking, there may be enough quarters of growth to claim we've exited the recession.... but unless we get jobs back, this nation will never be whole again..... we will institutionalize idleness in ways "America" never before symbolized. It will multiply what is worst in society and destroy the hope of many citizens.

This is not an idle fear, it is a fear of being idle in profound ways... something America has never experienced since the Great Depression. ....and that is very depressing indeed.

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Ever since Mort Zuckerman said the record gas price spikes were due to supply and demand and not speculation, I lost a good deal of respect for his opinion. Imagine highest gas prices ever and not a single line at a single gas station. He also said that China poses no threat to high tech American jobs. Which on the face of it seems absurd both in the long term and the short term. The real reason America is not bouncing back is because a parasitic class of investors specialize in gobbling up successful companies, laying off the redundancies and outsourcing every possible part of their captured business to what amounts to slave labor in other countries. HP just laid off 6000 US workers and is expanding oversees. When these companies bounce back they are not investing here. We are a country run by people who see them selves as citizens of the world. National loyalty is a quaint idea.

Look no further than Foxconn to see how truly soulless some of these titans of industry truly can be..Jobs' reaction to the suicides was not a convincing one. When you realize a 20 % raise means $1.20 instead of $1.00 the lauded wunderkind seems positively reptilian. However we Americans have only our selves to blame for doing nothing. While outside forces ( Murdoch( Fox), Israel(AIPAC), China(US Chamber of commerce) ( to name a few ) tear us apart from the inside and subvert the popular will through never ceasing manipulations of our political process, we fret about American Idol. These destroyers are deconstructing many of the greatest aspects of the American phenomenon. Democracy, economic vitality, tolerance, a love of peace and the rule of justice are all being whittled down one sleazy election and egregious appointment at a time. Can a country that can't bring Israel to heel or get China to play fair, be long for this world as a power player r?. A tiny lunatic minority has seized control of the reins of power and we are letting them drive us to ruin

Spending trillions fighting the longest war in American history to stop the Taliban from creating more Saudi terrorists seems as ludicrous as the idea that states are cutting vital services, raising the cost of education instead of getting some of these war funds.The traitors in congress ( and they are not all traitors) have bankrupted the country lining the pockets of war profiteers. America will not get well until we reestablish the rule of law in the business world and truly punish the corrupt. How many people are in jail for the great recession? Its time to see virtually unregulated mergers an acquisitions and various financial market manipulations as the true enemies of prosperity and American recovery.

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Government (Congress, White House) would have us believe there is some one person or entity (Goldmen Sachs - Warren Buffet) to blame for this mess. The culprit is everyone, all of us collectively. The only ones who knew the sub-prime loans were bad and would be uncollecible were the borrowers who wanted a fancy house for nothing, the realtor and lender who paid a crooked real estate appraiser to appraise the property at an inflated price to increase the real estate commision and the amount of the loan (granted to anyone walking and breathing), and the 'agent who wrote the inflated loan and got a percentage of that amount for just writing it. Low participants. The lender then sold the loan to a larger bank or inurance company who had no inkling of the quality of the loan. 'Factoring' and selling of loans is thousands of years old and not illegal. At this stage all knowledge of the fact that the loan was made to someone who could never in a thousand years repay it was non existent. The banks and insurance companies (Goldman Sachs. Freddie, and Fanny included) were simply doing what they had been doing for decades.

Thw loans were bundled and rebundled countless times so that an original amount of bundled loans of say 10 million dollars was actually the collateral for perhaps 5, 10, or more times that amount in bonds issued to individual investors but particularly to banks, large and small who bought the bonds not knowing that the collateral behind them was not only insufficient to cover the bond (MAYBE 10 PERCENT) most probably totally uncollectable. When a miilion in loans defaulted tens (or more) of bonds were worthless (pennies on the dollar). Congress quickly passed a law allowing banks to keep the bonds on their balance sheets at their face amounts, although the banks should have been showing them for what they were really worth: what they could sell them for in the open market. Congress therefore became a co-conspirator in perpetuating a frau. There are still trillions of these worthless loans still on the balance sheets of banks for their face value and not their real worth.

Now cap that with insurance companies (say AIG) and big banks (say Goldman Sachs, J P Morgan Chase, etc.) who sold Credit Default Swaps (say bets, as at a crap table), betting on the failure ot the bonds, a practice several centuries old, a common and not illegal business practice.

But then, thousands of borrowers, all over the country began defaulting on the loans: no surprise to the borrowers who knew they could never repay the loans, and the crooked realtors and crooked appraisers and 'crooked loan agents.'

The same thing that caused the market crash and depression of 1929 caused this market crash and depression: widespread, nation wide greed. In 1929 it was cheap money at the stock brokers who let anyone who could walk and breathe buy 1,000 dollars in stock for 100 dollars. Everyone had a stock broker. Even a few shoe shine boys. It created a stock market bubble. When enough of these little guys (and some big) were unable to service theloans to their brokers, it all unravelled. This time it was cheap money for inflated-value real estate: hey - the price if the house is going to up forever. Right? Wrong.

And the cheap mkoney? George W. Bush had to be a 'war president' because Sadaam (sic?) wanted 'to kill my daddy.' Gimme a break. Greenspan and Bernanke gave the public cheap money (include a credit card for walking and brething) to let them buy junk gadgets and take their minds away from the wholesale slaughter because 'he wanted to kill my daddy

In 1992 Clinton did away with Glass Steagal, opening the door for banks to once again to bet (stocks and bonds) with dpositors'; money We let him dew it.

Whose fault? Ours. We were, and still are, asleep at the wheel.

We brag about being a 'service economy.' Well. You can't export those. And now we export virtually nothing.

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The answer is simple.

Buy American or domestic produced products wherever you live.

Thw WalMarts oof the World buy 95% of what they sell from China eliminating domestic jobs.

Every time you get sucked into the price rol back another decent paying American or domestic job is ELIMINATED.

A bit like eating yourself

The Private equity short term attitude breeds this thinking.

If you are a skilled worker in manufacturing you are an endangered species smack bang in the sights of Private equity and the WalMarts

Its the old story money talks s*** walks and we the people are taking the s***

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Paul Volcker recently pointed out a series of erroneous assumptions and judgments that caused this crisis in an article called "The Time We Have is Growing Short."

Among them was the erroneous assumption a trade deficit over 5% of GDP ($750 billion in 2008 and $500 billion now) was sustainable and good for America because of the flood of low-priced goods.

Bear in mind that if a job is worth say $50K, this means that over 10 million jobs held by foreigners are producing U.S. goods. We need those jobs here. This is a huge wealth transfer to foreign countries and those cheap goods have a cost in terms of enormous unemployment compensation.

We need to get those jobs back in this country. That is the primary challenge of the President now, as there is no sustainable budget path with 17% of the workforce unemployed or under-employed.


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Carryon - your response to my comments is baffling. On the other hand, it simply confirms that progressives and liberals simply don't understand basic economics. Corporations pay tax at the corporate level and then again on distributions - thats double taxation. That is why businesses have left the United States in droves over the past 40 years. If there are so many darn loopholes, why is it that the top 10% of earners pay 80% of all taxes and the bottom 50% pay NO taxes. You have simply inserted your predjudice for economic thought. As for Death taxes, what in heavens name makes you think that someone with an estate to tax has not paid their fair share of taxes and that their DEATH is a reason to take up to 55% of their accumulated, after-tax wealth? That is simply robbery of the defenseless. You are neither kind or compassionate, you are simply jealous.... and lousy at economics to boot!


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I disagree with the opinion that the long term jobless somehow lose their skills.
I owned a bakery for twenty years. And relied on both new trainees and old timers who needed money to supplement their retirement income. The bakery required a high level of physical and mental skills to produce a large variety of recipes.


The trainees would require constant attention for at least the first two months, and help when something new came along. The old timers who often were away from baking for a year or more, after being told what we needed would go to work without any help, and contributed greatly to the training of the new hires. I'm sure that recruiters and H.R. reps believe the above and other myths being repeated in many articles and reports. It's hard enough for people who have been out of work in this economy to find work, without such inaccuracies being circulated.

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It should be clear enough that we need a comprehensive set of system level changes, and that the 'global economy' as is, is not self sustaining.

The US can not longer be the engine of growth when investments flow abroad, and jobs and industries continue to be exported.

Consider the report today that consumer credit is at an annual rate of 0.5% in April while revolving credit in the US decreased at an annual rate of 12%. Given that M1 is up 6.7% with new consumer borrowing at 0.5%, this implies deflation of 6.2%.

Proof enough that the US will not fund further Chinese, Indian, Indonesian, etc. growth.

When the Chinese realized this several months ago, they stopped pouring in funds from the government into export industries. Last year container ships were sitting in the world's ports stacked hundreds deep and all empty, due to Wall Street's fixation on artificial investments bringing the world economy to the brink, and given that the present world mercantile arrangements are fundamentally unsustainable.

Europe's financial crises and US spending billions on wars for the benefit of the oil industry will not provide for a way out of the debt crises.

Is Obama addressing any of these greater trends? Obama can't even get the Chinese to float their currency, and as is, they (China) are not only stealing jobs from the US, they are stealing them from their Asian neighbors as well.

Didn't Democrats follow Republicans down the path of giving away American jobs, destroying oversight of financial institutions, providing the largest corporations with every tax loophole possible?

Sure, we have the people and material resources to produce wealth, within the US and in the other major world economies, but not when growth in one nation means stealing the jobs and industries from another, or importing cheap labor into the US to undercut the middle class. And the same process is underway in Europe with the importation of an underclass into all of the European nations.

NAFTA forces many tens of thousands of poor Mexican families depending on peasant farming off of the land and into the cities of Mexico, and then into the US.

NAFTA took US jobs in manufacturing and sent them to Mexico where the people who work those jobs live in abject poverty, living in environmentally degraded circumstances, and it leaves them without the resources to deal with public health criseses (including the drug menace) that will be imported into the US with the migrant Mexican population.

No one should expect any real economic recovery until these fundamental problems are resolved with new arrangements, and in fact, we in the US have been on the wrong track for decades in all of these factors.
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America has a ton of resources, a largely educated and professional work-force, ambition and good infrastructure for conducting commerce. What we don't have is a reasonable and free form of exchange. Every time a dollar gets created, it has interest tied to it. If we get rid of the central bank and have the government issue our currency at no interest (like the constitution says), the market will take care of itself. As long as we have a central control of our money - the same central control that has caused every depression and recession we've ever had - we have no chance. Only the bankers get rich. Meanwhile, the rest of us argue about deficits (enabled by a central bank as it makes it simple for the government to "borrow"), debt (ditto), socialism versus capitalism (by definition, there is nothing free about a central bank and fractional reserve)... We are missing the forest for the trees. All problems in the economy are due to INTEREST on money created. It's not hard math, people. If every time I create a dollar (of YOUR money) and charge you interest on it, you have absolutely no way of escaping my clutches and will remain indebted to me FOREVER.

Asian Stocks Fall After Japan Earthquake, U.S. Jobless Claims

March 11 (Bloomberg) -- Asian stocks fell, dragging the regional benchmark index to its biggest weekly drop since August, as a major earthquake hit Japan, violence spread in the Middle East and U.S. unemployment rose.
Honda Motor Co., the Japanese carmaker that gets about 44 percent of sales in North America, dropped 2.7 percent in Tokyo, where losses accelerated after a magnitude 8.9 earthquake shook buildings in the city’s financial center. Daelim Industrial Co., which gets 22 percent of sales from the Middle East, led South Korean construction companies lower after police broke up a protest in Saudi Arabia yesterday. BHP Billiton Ltd., the world’s largest mining company, lost 1 percent in Sydney after copper futures declined.
“The Japan earthquakes added another uncertainty to markets that were already plagued with turmoil in the Middle East and European debt concerns,” said Kang Shin Woo, chief investment officer at Seoul-based Korea Investment Management Co., which manages $17 billion. “This could raise concern for the Japanese economy that has showed some signs of recovery.”
The MSCI Asia Pacific Index fell 1.1 percent to 134.59 as of 8:37 p.m. in Tokyo, the lowest level since Dec. 20. Almost nine times as many shares declined as advanced on the gauge, which lost 3.4 percent this week.
The index climbed 1.9 percent last week as better-than- estimated economic data from South Korea to the U.S. boosted confidence in a global recovery, overcoming concern that Middle East unrest will drive oil prices higher and slow growth.
Tsunami Strikes
Japan’s Nikkei 225 Stock Average decreased 1.7 percent after the country’s strongest earthquake in at least a century struck off the northern coast, shaking buildings violently as far away as Tokyo minutes before stock trading ended. The highest tsunami warning was issued for the northeast coast.
At least 26 people were killed by the 33-foot wave and many are missing, according to state broadcaster NHK Television, which showed footage of waves sweeping away buildings and vehicles as far as 1.5 kilometers inland. Airports were closed and bullet train services suspended. More than 4 million homes are without power, Tokyo Electric Power Co. said.
South Korea’s Kospi Index sank 1.3 percent and Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index closed down 1.2 percent. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index slipped 1.6 percent.
China’s Shanghai Composite Index dropped 0.8 percent as government data showed the nation’s consumer prices rose 4.9 percent in February from a year earlier, exceeding the government’s 2011 target for a fifth month.
U.S. Unemployment
Futures on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index fell 0.5 percent today. The index tumbled 1.9 percent yesterday in New York after the U.S. Labor Department said applications for first-time unemployment benefits rose by 26,000 to 397,000 in the week ended March 5, more than the median estimate of 376,000 forecast by economists in a Bloomberg News survey.
The U.S. Commerce Department separately said the deficit in goods and services increased 15 percent in January as a surge in imports led by costlier crude oil overshadowed record exports.
Honda Motor, which counts North America as its biggest market, slipped 2.7 percent to 3,310 yen in Tokyo. Toyota Motor Corp., the world’s largest carmaker, dropped 1.5 percent to 3,595 yen. Li & Fung Ltd., Wal-Mart Stores Inc.’s biggest supplier, declined 2.9 percent to HK$44.25 in Hong Kong.
The MSCI Asia Pacific Index has almost doubled in the past two years. It sank to an eight-year low on March 9, 2009, following the bankruptcy filing of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. in September 2008.
Debt Concerns
The gauge briefly extended declines yesterday afternoon after Moody’s Investors Service cut Spain’s credit rating, saying the cost of shoring up the banking industry will eclipse government estimates.
“The situation in the Middle East provided a trigger for the market correction and now we’re seeing renewed concerns about European debt, and there’s ongoing worries about monetary tightening in Asia,” Shane Oliver, head of investment strategy in Sydney at AMP Capital Investors Ltd., which manages about $93 billion, said on Bloomberg Television. “All of these concerns are combining and making investors somewhat nervous.”
Crude oil for April delivery declined 1.6 percent to settle at $102.70 a barrel in New York yesterday, after falling as much as 3.6 percent earlier. Oil pared losses after police in Saudi Arabia, the Middle East’s biggest producer of crude, reportedly opened fire at a rally in the east of the country.
Daelim Industrial slumped 4.7 percent to 101,000 won in Seoul. Hyundai Engineering & Construction Co., which counts the Middle East as its biggest market outside of South Korea, dropped 2 percent to 77,200 won. GS Engineering & Construction Corp. declined 3.8 percent to 102,000 won.
‘Chilling Sentiment’
South Korean builders won $47.25 billion of orders from the Middle East last year, according to the Seoul-based Korea Trade- Investment Promotion Agency.
“Some news flow from Saudi are chilling sentiment toward builders again,” said Lee Jin Woo, a fund manager in Seoul at KTB Asset Management Co., which manages about $10 billion in assets. “Uncertainties over the situation in the Middle East may linger for a while.”
Raw material producers fell after the London Metal Exchange Index of six metals including copper and aluminum slid 0.4 percent yesterday, falling for a second day to the lowest level since Jan. 26.
BHP Billiton slid 1 percent to A$44.19 in Sydney. Rio Tinto Group, the world’s second-biggest mining company, declined 2 percent to A$78.80. Jiangxi Copper Co., China’s No. 1 producer of the metal, lost 1.7 percent to HK$23.10 in Hong Kong.
Convertible Bonds
IHI Corp., a Japanese heavy-machinery maker, slumped 4.3 percent to 203 yen in Tokyo after saying it plans to sell 23 billion yen ($278 million) of five-year convertible bonds to overseas investors.
CapitaMall Trust, Singapore’s biggest retail property trust, sank 1.1 percent to S$1.81 after the company increased the size of its convertible bond sale to S$250 million ($197 million) from S$200 million.
The MSCI Asia Pacific Index fell 1.1 percent this year through yesterday, compared with gains of 3 percent by the S&P 500 and 0.8 percent by the Stoxx Europe 600 Index. Shares in the Asian benchmark were valued at 13.9 times estimated earnings on average as of the last close, compared with 13.4 times for the S&P 500 and 11.1 times for the Stoxx 600.
--With assistance from Rishaad Salamat in Hong Kong and Norie Kuboyama and Satoshi Kawano in Tokyo. Editors: Nick Gentle, John McCluskey.

Thursday, 10 March 2011

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Stock Market Quotes

Are you an active stock market participant? Have you ever invested in certain kinds of shares or stocks? In today’s highly competitive world, numerous people are attempting to climb the stock market bandwagon yet several do so without actually knowing much about it. It is imperative that you know what stock market quotes are if you wish to be a stock market winner. Unless you know what stock market quotes are, what they signify and how they operate, it is impossible to make a stock market investment.
Even having a thorough knowledge of the stock market quotes, numerous investors suffer losses. If the stock market plummets, even the most well-informed investor would end up with significant losses. This is the reason it is vital know everything you possibly can about investing. Now this also covers finding out everything relating to stock market quotes. 
Several excellent resources are there to assist you find out a great deal regarding stock market quotes. Moreover, you must also really take pleasure in making investments and participating in trading activity or the determination to remain in the game will be lacking. The stock market indeed is a highly volatile place but there are many ways to discover how to identify particular trends and predict what might happen in a given situation. This is what contributes towards making you a success. 
What Makes Stock Market Quotes Important
So what makes stock market quotes crucial to investment decisions? These are extremely vital to investors as they reveal the prevailing market rates and also assist you in determining what the right time to make stock investments is. Besides, they can also assist you in selecting which stocks are good investment options and which are the ones to reject. The more time you spend in going through stock market quotes, the greater the information you’ll have about stock markets and how they swing. 
You will discover how to identify trends, how to discern potentially lucrative stocks and lots more. 
Selecting a Broker
A further factor to consider with regard to stock market quotes and emerging successful is discovering how to select a broker. When selecting a broker there are two simple choices:
  • Online broker
  • Standard broker
Which one you opt for will truly depend on various factors like your particular requirements, the amount of trading you carry out and your own personal experience. A reliable stock broker can assist you in understanding stock market quotes, how they ought to be interpreted, what to search for, when to make a move and lots more. A proficient stock broker has an excellent understanding of the prevailing market condition and will be capable of giving you sensible, precise advice and tips on what to purchase, when to sell them and how to create a lucrative portfolio. 
About the Author:
Darren Williger is a tea drinking, meditating, low carbohydrate eating, wine making sales maker who writes for MoneyAutoPilots.com, TopSalesMaker.com, and NewTaxSites.com

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How To Create Wealth In The Stock Market


How to create wealth in the stock marketFirst and foremost, an opportunistic strategy for creating wealth in the stock market is needed. And the opportunistic strategy for creating wealth in the stock market must have two ingredients, a plan and a goal. The plan must be a definite, concrete plan of investing that would profit you and your family for the rest of your lives. This opportunistic investment plan you begin should not profit anyone else – not a stockbroker, a mutual fund or a financial advisor. This means you have to have confidence in yourself and in your own judgment as to whether the investment plan you begin has merit.
And this means that the investment plan would and should have already been proven to you!This definite, concrete plan you begin for creating wealth through opportunities in the stock market must also have a goal. The goal should be clear and specific, and once your have made up your mind to achieve that goal, then go forward and make that goal a reality. What are the opportunistic traits of a strategic investment plan built on concrete that would actually allow the shareholder to profit through all the turmoil of an up and down stock market? The secret for creating wealth in the stock market; no matter what direction the market is heading? As in what appears to be the most difficult investment question of all to answer, the answer lies in simplicity itself – investing in those companies that have a historical record of raising their dividend every year. Whether or not you can take this statement of fact to heart is your own judgment call. But it is this opportunistic trait that can and will create wealth for you and your family for the rest of your lives.
A company's ability to raise its dividend every year, coupled with stock appreciation is a very powerful wealth creating formula!I'm going to provide you with two examples, though there are many more, some with even better results. The two examples are from my book, soon to be published by American Book Publishing – The Stockopoly Plan (where an investment plan and a goal are written in stone).The first example would be a stock purchased in 1990, Comerica (CMA). What led to the purchase of CMA? – In 1990 CMA had a 21 year history of raising their dividend every year. Today's CMA has a 35 year history of raising their dividend every year. This opportunistic trait in CMA stock has garnished a little better than a 15 percent return a year, compounded annually (just by having the dividends reinvested back into the stock each quarter through those years – I prove this to you in The Stockopoly Plan), for the past 14 plus years.

Drop in U.S. jobless claims sparks optimism

The job market suddenly looks brighter. The number of people filing for unemployment benefits sank last week to its lowest point in nearly three years, and retailers and other service companies posted strong results Thursday for last month. On the eve of the government's February jobs report, the news suggests the economy may be about to take off despite growing concerns about inflation. The stock market had its best day in three months. The Dow Jones industrial average rose more than 190 points, or 1.6 percent, erasing most of its losses since the unrest in Libya began.

News and Articles

Traders were looking for a positive session as the market continues to edge higher but in today's session tech lagged.
 
Personal income/ spending report and earnings was in focus as well as oil prices.  Oil prices sunk back down into the mid to upper 90's as traders gear-up for the next move in the March market.
 
The market continues to reward traders that are in stocks with another advance as the two month rally, of the year, continues.
 
 
Traders were looking for a neutral flat start and got a mostly negative day as the Middle East unrest, specifically Libya, and earnings was the focus for the session.
 
The Forecast Models indicated that today could be an important session for the stock market.  All eyes were focused on the close as The Market Barometer afternoon model run changed the Bias to neutral from positive.
 
Libya is the latest worry in the middle East for traders as stocks continued moving lower from yesterdays sell off.  Oil prices skyrocket causing more worries over how the economic recovery can proceed with inflation on a distant horizon and with oil prices surging higher as more Middle East countries could fall to the unrest.
 
The afternoon Market Barometer model run changed the Bias to neutral from positive.  More worries are being conjured up as Libya's unrest appears to be spreading to other countries in the Mideast region taking oil prices even higher and stock markets lower.        Wednesday, February 23, 2011
 
Stocks were sluggish most of the morning, ramping into positive territory in late morning trade, as oil prices began to improve and move higher, on Mideast worries as geopolitical turmoil spreads.
 
Two key economical data points were released today that gauge the economical recovery.  The consumer price index (inflation gauge) rose and jobless first time claims (unemployment) rose as well.  Even though last weeks initial claims rose, the initial claims chart continues to show a job market recovery.
 
The small cap market of stocks posted a nice gain today, while mixed economical data-points and geopolitical worries saw the major indexes eke out a small gain.
 
 
 
Earnings and deal making was the focus today as well as the continuing Egyptian unrest crises.
 
It would appear that nothing can get in front of this fright train that just keeps going.  With 25 sessions completed, five were posted as negative, six as mixed, and fourteen as positive.
 
Today the Dow led stock higher as even China's tightening of monetary policy had little or no effect over the steaming U.S. stock market.  Earnings are good and traders might just feel fine in driving stocks higher with no end in sight.  Traders believe that this positive ness will continue, at least through earnings season.
 
The U.S. stock market will run out of steam sooner or later, the question is will the stock market rally continue.        Tuesday, February 8, 2011
 
The Market Barometer close model changed the Barometer Leading Indicator (BLI) to neutral from positive last Monday, January 31, 2011.
 
Egypt unrest concerns and a not-so-good jobs report had little, if any, effect on stocks.  If we didn't have the Egypt worries and if the jobs report was more in line with expectations, we might have had a ramping stock market instead of the inching along, as we have seen.  One thing is real clear.  A pullback is due and it will happen, sooner or later.
 
The BLI will stay at neutral for the time being.  The forecast at CAUTION with a NEUTRAL BLI and a POSITIVE bias indicates continued upside movement can be expected for the short term. 
 
Remember.  Forecasts are good for market fundamentals;  news can and will change market direction;  forecasting cannot predict events with 100% certainty.        Saturday, February 5, 2011
 
Egypt unrest, jobless new claims, productivity report, and earnings set the tone for a flat session.   On deck is the all important nonfarm jobs report which shows how many jobs were created or lost for the month, as well as the unemployment-rate which is expected to drop slightly.   U.S. stocks are overdue for a pullback and if the jobs report comes in short of expectations, stocks could make a beeline to negative territory.   Last Monday the BLI was downgraded to neutral in anticipation of a pullback.   The BLS released the productivity and cost report for Q-4 2010 and revisions to Q-3 2010.   The Government reported initial jobless claims- unemployment- fell, keeping hopes alive for a continuing improving employment picture.        Thursday, February 3, 2011
 
As goes January, so goes the year.  They say.  So if the next two weeks goes as the first two, that saying could translate into a very profitable year in the stock market.  Earnings outlook and the Consumer Price (inflation) report was the focus today, as well as retail sales data.
 
Starting the year off on the right foot for investors as stocks continue the trip higher as traders pooh pooh the slow, most days, snails pace- traders like volatility.  Some say we can look for more gain in the weeks and months to come but most marketeers are looking for a pullback.
 
Retail sales rose in December as consumers continue to buy stuff, helping the recovering economy.  Core CPI:  shelter, airline tickets, medical, and apparel prices rose in December; while recreation, house furnishings, and communication prices slipped in December.  Headline CPI:  Gas prices at the pump inflated consumer prices in December- food helped.  JPMorgan beat most expectations but didn't move Futures but helped move stocks higher in the regular session.        Friday, January 14, 2011
 
The broader market slipped in trading today while tech stocks continue to outperforming, as has been the case for the past two years.
 
Jobless first time claims and earnings was in focus for the session Thursday.  Friday most likely will be a big day for the markets as job creation and unemployment rate will be the hot ticket for the session.  Nonfarm payroll report for December is scheduled for release at 8:30a ET during the pre market and could cause significant volatility when markets open at 9:30a.
 
Unemployment initial claims continues to improve even though last weeks number increased by 18,000.  The initial claims chart shows a definite trend lower that leads analysts to believe the job market is strengthening.        Thursday, January 6, 2011
 
With North and South Korea concerns in the news, the EU continuing debt problems, a lack of positive or negative sentiment, and not to mention being this is a shortened holiday week with Christmas Saturday, many traders were on or leaving for holiday.
 
Short week saw Monday end flat with a mixed touch.  Model data continues to indicate a mostly positive market going into the new year, albeit an inch at a time.
 
The Bush tax cut extension was signed into law which could help markets over the next couple of sessions.        Monday, December 20, 2010
 
 
With a reasonable jobless new claims number this morning and a good looking chart that spells out jobs recovery in our future, stocks went underwater for most of the day but as usual climbed back to end mixed with the broader market and tech making gains. 
 
Unemployment initial claims and earnings outlook was the focus for the session along with the Bush tax cut extension.  Jobless initial claims chart continues to show progress in the jobs market.
 
New claims data was about the only economic data today which showed that the jobs market could be on the mend.  Traders want more pointed data, the kind that just pops out at you, showing a bigger new claims drop.  But some economist believe that wont happen and that this recovery will be one with a high unemployment rate for some time to come.        Thursday, December 9, 2010
 
 
You need a reserve fund, you also need to save and invest for your future. Get this quick 101 on budgeting. You will thank yourself later when you take control of you finances.
 
New to investing? This article is a 101 on how to invest in these troubled times.
 
Did you know that individual investors can buy shares directly from most U.S. companies? This how to article will get you started. Crude oil prices chart:
Chart Of Oil Prices With Current Price Line: 1861 to 1944 US Average oil price; 1945-1985 Arabian Light; 1986-1999 Brent Spot Crude
 
1861-1944 US Average oil - 1945-1985 Arabian Light posted at Ras Tanura - 1986-1999 Brent spot |
 
Oil price per barrel
$102.85
price delayed