bund, t-bond t-note ecc SOLO LONG FOR EVER

ditroo vieni qui a smaltire la tensione, ng completamente pazzoide , ho una r2 daily a 8,72 azzarola ho messo un allarme a 8,70 , se sono al desk un tentativo mi forzo a farlo
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sui report scrivono di problemi alle raffinerie

Oil Prices Rise Despite Positive Inventory
Thursday August 4, 10:18 am ET
By Edith Balazs, Associated Press Writer
Oil Price Rises to $61.19 a Barrel, Despite Positive U.S. Inventory Data

BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) -- Oil prices rose Thursday, despite positive U.S. inventory data, as traders remained wary over possible supply woes because of refinery shutdowns and forecasters predicted a busy hurricane season that could hurt Gulf of Mexico output.

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Light, sweet crude for September delivery rose 33 cents to $61.19 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

"Years of underinvestment in the refinery sector have led to a very tightly supplied market, which in return pushed prices to current levels," said Alex Scott, a senior research analyst at Seven Investment Management in London.

"Direct market participants seem to believe that prices are to stay at current levels for years to come and the fact that there's very little evidence to show a slowdown in global demand is broadly supportive of their bullish argument," Scott said.

Prices had soared to a record intraday high of US$62.50 Wednesday before retreating to settle at US$60.86 after the U.S. Department of Energy released its better-than-expected petroleum report, showing an increase in oil inventories for the first time in a month.

The data showed domestic inventories of crude oil and diesel grew, but gasoline stocks fell sharply.

It said there was an increase of 200,000 barrels in the U.S. inventory of crude oil last week, putting the supply at 318 million barrels, or 8 percent above year-ago levels.

Gasoline inventories declined by 4 million barrels to 205.2 million barrels, or 3 percent below last year's level. The supply of distillate fuel, which includes heating oil and diesel, rose by 1.5 million barrels to 127.3 million barrels or 5 percent above last year.

Gasoline rose one and a half cents to US$1.7850 a gallon (3.8 liters), while heating oil rose marginally to US$1.6915 a gallon.

Brent for September delivery on London's International Petroleum Exchange was up 41 cents at US$60.06 per barrel.

Production suspensions at several key U.S. plants was the catalyst for a price spike last week as analysts said the snags could hurt oil products supply and fail to meet demand in an extremely tight market. At least four plants, including the third-largest refinery in the country, were shut down from late last week either from fires or unscheduled maintenance.

Aging refineries in the United States are running at nearly 100 percent utilization, and this increases the likelihood of operational problems as companies begin to slow down production of gasoline for summer and turn to heating oil for winter.

"Gasoline markets have been hit with a rash of unplanned refinery outages in the last couple of weeks," said Energyintel analyst Tom Wallin. "Even with U.S. retail pump prices at record highs, the economy continues to surge ahead and with it gasoline consumption. The extreme price strength clearly seems to be demand-led."

Oil markets have been roiled in recent days over the death of King Fahd in Saudi Arabia, weather patterns that could hurt Gulf of Mexico output down the line and Iran's nuclear ambitions, which could raise tension between OPEC's No. 2 producer and the West.

The U.S. Weather Service has predicted 11 to 14 more tropical storms, including seven to nine more hurricanes, by the end of November.
 
Fleursdumal ha scritto:
la situescion diventa interessante, indici giù bonds&energetici sù con domani la mannaia dei payroll
solo per cuori impavidi
1123166196bleone.gif

Infatti... domani mi fai la diretta... sul dato e sulle chiusure..... se ti ricordi :rolleyes:

Treasuries flat after jobless claims, payrolls key
Thu Aug 4, 2005 09:41 AM ET
NEW YORK, Aug 4 (Reuters) - U.S. Treasury debt prices were mostly steady on Thursday after weekly jobless claims came in largely as expected.
The market was subdued as traders squared positions and looked ahead to Friday's non-farm payrolls report, easily the single most influential economic indicator in U.S. financial markets.

"Jobless claims: The non-event of the day," said Don Kowalchik, a debt strategist with at A.G Edwards & Sons in St. Louis, Missouri. "Everybody is on the sideline waiting for tomorrow."

Weekly first-time jobless claims came in at 312,000 in the week ended July 30, down 1,000 from the prior week's upwardly revised result of 313,000. Wall Street economists had expected claims to move up to 315,000 from the original reading of 310,000 reported for the prior week.

The four-week moving average, which smooths out volatility, also showed a dip, falling to 316,750. It suggested the job market may be firming and that Friday's monthly report may end up on the strong side.

"The only thing this gives us is a trend being in place for a potentially strong number tomorrow," Kowalchik added. "That plus we've had fairly strong economic numbers lately. It's starting to look like if there's a surprise tomorrow, it'll probably be on the upside."

In a Reuters survey conducted last week, economists' median forecast was that the economy probably generated 183,000 new jobs in July.

The 10-year note (US10YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) was steady to yield 4.30 percent, as were the two-year note (US2YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) , which was yielding 4.02 percent and the five-year note (US5YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) at a yield of 4.13 percent. The 30-year bond (US30YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) was down 3/32 to yield 4.51 percent.

Separately, investors in the second leg of a derivatives auction bet on Thursday that July payrolls data would come in at 188,000 jobs, up from 185,000 new jobs in Wednesday's initial auction. Two more payroll-linked auctions are scheduled: One later on Thursday, and a final one on Friday just ahead of the data.
These types of economic derivatives, offered by Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs and interdealer broker ICAP, have had a good track record at revealing how market participants are positioned ahead of important economic indicators relative to economists' consensus forecasts.


© Reuters 2005. All Rights Reserved.
 
Fleursdumal ha scritto:
ditroo vieni qui a smaltire la tensione, ng completamente pazzoide , ho una r2 daily a 8,72 azzarola ho messo un allarme a 8,70 , se sono al desk un tentativo mi forzo a farlo
1123167280new_all_coholic.gif

questi sono pazzi persi !!! :eek: :eek: :eek: :eek:


... kamikazeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee ...altri 2 a 8.6 ed 8.68 !!!! :eek: :eek: :eek: :eek:
Incrocio dita ed orecchie !!!! ... adesso la situazione si fà pesante. :( :rolleyes:

1123167435azz5.jpg
 
gastronomo ha scritto:
Fleursdumal ha scritto:
la situescion diventa interessante, indici giù bonds&energetici sù con domani la mannaia dei payroll
solo per cuori impavidi
1123166196bleone.gif

Infatti... domani mi fai la diretta... sul dato e sulle chiusure..... se ti ricordi :rolleyes:

Treasuries flat after jobless claims, payrolls key
Thu Aug 4, 2005 09:41 AM ET
NEW YORK, Aug 4 (Reuters) - U.S. Treasury debt prices were mostly steady on Thursday after weekly jobless claims came in largely as expected.
The market was subdued as traders squared positions and looked ahead to Friday's non-farm payrolls report, easily the single most influential economic indicator in U.S. financial markets.

"Jobless claims: The non-event of the day," said Don Kowalchik, a debt strategist with at A.G Edwards & Sons in St. Louis, Missouri. "Everybody is on the sideline waiting for tomorrow."

Weekly first-time jobless claims came in at 312,000 in the week ended July 30, down 1,000 from the prior week's upwardly revised result of 313,000. Wall Street economists had expected claims to move up to 315,000 from the original reading of 310,000 reported for the prior week.

The four-week moving average, which smooths out volatility, also showed a dip, falling to 316,750. It suggested the job market may be firming and that Friday's monthly report may end up on the strong side.

"The only thing this gives us is a trend being in place for a potentially strong number tomorrow," Kowalchik added. "That plus we've had fairly strong economic numbers lately. It's starting to look like if there's a surprise tomorrow, it'll probably be on the upside."

In a Reuters survey conducted last week, economists' median forecast was that the economy probably generated 183,000 new jobs in July.

The 10-year note (US10YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) was steady to yield 4.30 percent, as were the two-year note (US2YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) , which was yielding 4.02 percent and the five-year note (US5YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) at a yield of 4.13 percent. The 30-year bond (US30YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) was down 3/32 to yield 4.51 percent.

Separately, investors in the second leg of a derivatives auction bet on Thursday that July payrolls data would come in at 188,000 jobs, up from 185,000 new jobs in Wednesday's initial auction. Two more payroll-linked auctions are scheduled: One later on Thursday, and a final one on Friday just ahead of the data.
These types of economic derivatives, offered by Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs and interdealer broker ICAP, have had a good track record at revealing how market participants are positioned ahead of important economic indicators relative to economists' consensus forecasts.


© Reuters 2005. All Rights Reserved.

ok ric , mandami uno squillo sollecitatore qualche minuto dopo le 14,30 casomai nel chaos mi passasse di mente
 
haaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa !!!!!!!!!!

stò impazzendo col gas !!!
:eek: :eek: :eek: :eek:


... ricorro alle cure pesanti !!! :-D :-D :-D
 

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