S&P 500 Le news di oggi (1 Viewer)

gipa69

collegio dei patafisici
Thursday, February 11, 2010




· Market Update/Desk Color – equities stage a decent rally for the session, rallying
higher after opening in the red. Some of the items behind today’s strength: 1)
technically held 1060 support (right after the open); 2) jobless claims #s showed a
nice decline, allaying worries around employment; 3) Greece - while the final
outcome wasn’t everything the markets were hoping for, the message was enough to
remove Greece as a risk/overhang for the time being at least; 4) strategic M&A (in
the utilities today); 5) headlines that a financial regulatory compromise could be in
the works in Washington that wouldn’t include a new consumer protection agency
(although this would theoretically help financials the most and they were laggards
today); 6) pos. comments from CSX at a Stifel conf today. Bottom Line – there was
no great single catalyst to explain today’s “strength”. Volumes weren’t all that high
and there still isn’t a ton of vanilla sponsorship on the long side (although they were
nibbling a bit more today on the long side). A lot of short covering today as well as
shorter-term buying in the higher-beta/momentum groups (metals, semis). For the
last couple days the US markets have slowed markedly coincident w/the Europe
close (around noon), signaling just how much we have become beholden to
sovereign developments across the pond (hopefully this won’t be a major topic for a
few days). All that said, desk noted that buying may abate ahead of the long
weekend (US closed Mon for President’s Day) and ahead of the European Finance
Ministers meeting (this is next Tues and which could bring more Greek
developments). In addition – there is some hesitation about any announcements out
of China in the next 24 hours on the eve of their New Year (i.e. any action taken on
the yuan, RRR, etc). The most interesting action occurred outside of equities today
(TSYs, esp. longer-dated ones, sold off following a weak 30yr auction). Technically
we did finish north of the 1071 level (on sp cash), a mild positive.
· Equity Sectors – pretty broad strength today w/financials being the lone exception
(they were flattish-to-dwn all day). Tech end up >1%, led by the semis (up >2%).
The tech desk notes that buyers are starting to come back into the group ahead of a
very busy week of earnings coming up. Commodity-linked groups led the market
(energy and materials) due to strength in the underlying resources (crude, copper,
etc). Metals stocks were some of the best performing in the whole market – CLF, X,
AKS, FCX, ATI, AA all up >3%. The TRAN index was up 1.5%, led by the rails (CSX
finished up 4% after making sanguine comments at a Stifel conf this morning). A lot
of strength in the homebuilders today (a land transaction helping sentiment a lot in
the group); the builders are up >3% today alone and are up >12% now YTD (best
performing group by far YTD). Some strength in the retailers ahead of the kick-off to
their earnings next week (most retailers have Jan-end qtrs, so their earnings come
later in Feb and into Mar). Financials lagged all day (the broader sp500 fin index
was flattish while banks dipped small).

· Best Performing SP500 stocks (from BBG): AYE, MEE, CLF, X, CNX, WYNN,
CAT, CMI, JDSU

· Weakest performing sp500 stocks (from Bloomberg): BSX, FLIR, ECL, MAS, DF,
PLD, FE, EXPE, SNI, S

· Commodities: Commodities soared today the dollar pared its gains and ended near
the flatline after news that Greece would receive some form of help from the EU,
although nothing specific. Oil was up close to 60c and back above $75after trading
down as low as $73.50. Gold was up nearly $20 and close to its highs, right around
$1095. Copper soared today, finishing up 4.75%, marking four straight days in the
green. Natural gas was also up 10c, finishing right around $5.40.

· FX: USD (DXY) was flat on the day after trading up as much as 0.6%. The dollar
gained 0.4% against the Euro, off 0.6% against the Pound, and down 0.2% against
the Yen. The Euro lost 0.65% against the Yen today.
· Corp Credit: Corp credit was positive today, but HY lagged as it only gained 3/8 of a
pt. IG was much stronger, outperforming the tape as spreads came in 3.25 bps.

· Treasuries - longer-dated TSYs weaken following another weak auction (this
time 30yr) - 2s actually rallied to yield 87 bps while 10s sold off and now yield 3.73%.
The 2-10 year spread saw a moderate steepening today and now sits at 286 bps,
just 2 bps from the all time high on January 11. We also had a 30-year treasury
auction that came in a bit on the weak side, with yields at 4.72% vs the preview of
4.687%. Not only was the 30yr auction weak, but there has been a lot of talk about
the weak indirect bids (signaling tepid overseas CB demand) and high direct bids.
Economics headlines

· Jobless claims for the week ending February 6th fell 43,000 to 440,000,
returning to the level they were at before the recent worrying spike up, which began
in the week ending January 16th. We now know that the cause of that spike, which
persisted for three weeks, was administrative issues in California, which had a
backlog of claims because the labor office was apparently understaffed earlier in
January and so didn't fully count all the claims coming in. A US Department of Labor
official said this week's claims were "as close to clean" as we've seen in a long time.
Claims are not yet below their previous trough of 432,000-433,000 reached
around the end of the year
(though that trough may have partly been due to
California under-reporting), but the reversal of the upward lurch in claims does
allay concerns about a significant further deterioration in the labor market.
Looking forward, claims next week could get very messy due to the effects of the
severe weather issues on the East Coast. Feroli.
Catalysts to Watch
· Chinese New Year - February 14 will mark the first day of the Chinese New Year.
Economics calendar – daily view
· US eco release – updated schedule in light of the snow (from M Feroli): Jobless
claims were released on time this morning at 8:30 a.m.; Retail sales have been
delayed from Thurs 8:30 a.m. to Friday 8:30 a.m.; Business inventories has been
delayed from Thurs 10:00 a.m. to Friday 10:00 a.m.; Preliminary consumer sentiment
is scheduled to be released on time Friday at 9:55 a.m. The federal budget has
been delayed indefinitely.

· Int’l eco releases - Friday, Feb. 12th: Eurozone (German GDP, French GDP,
Eurozone IP, Eurozone GDP); Other (Japan Consumer Confidence).

Corporate Calendar
· Thurs Feb 11: Earnings after the close (MFE, O, AB, CSTR, EPIC, RNWK, ACL,
PRAA, SNWL, GDI, CAKE, NILE, BGC, PNRA, A, SVR, PRO, CHH, ROVI, CMG,
TUNE, CEPH). Analyst meetings (HNT, MU, ZION, QGEN)


· Fri Feb 12: earnings before the open (E, HCP, PDS, FMX, PAS, NAT, KOF,
ThyssenKrupp, IR, DUK)
Europe

· The Euro Stoxx finished dwn 0.74%; Oil & Gas were one of the few sectors to finish
positive, led by Total SA (after earnings) – financials lagged, driven down by Credit
Agricole, who lost nearly 4%. The FTSE outperformed the Euro Stoxx, though it
posted a much smaller gain than the sp500 – basic materials were the strongest
sector, driven higher by Antofagasta; Telecom was weak as BT group lost nearly 9%

· The DAX posted a similar loss to the Euro Stoxx. Healthcare traded higher off the
strength of Fresenius Se-Pre, and tech underperformed off of weakness in SAP.

· The MADX lost 1.75%, where similar to the DAX, healthcare was the best
performing sector, while financials traded lower caused by weakness in Santander.

· The BVLX also finished in the red today, despite a strong consumer services sector,
led by Grupo Media. Financials lagged off of weakness in Banco Popular.
· The ASE barely finished negative losing only .51 pts. to close at 1940.31.
Consumer goods outperformed off of more than a 5% gain in Coca – Cola. Tech
underperformed due to weakness in Hellenic Telecom.

Tech/Telecom

· Tech update – tech was one of the market’s better performing groups today (up
>1%), led higher by the semis. The desk noted buying in a lot of the highbeta/
volatile groups (semis, metals, etc). Nothing too specific behind the strength
although there has been buying in the group ahead of a very busy week of earnings
coming up (we get ADI, AMAT, NTAP, HPQ, NVDA on next Wed night and we get
DELL next Thurs night).

· Hardware – strength across the board today. PALM had a volatile session – opened
at its highs after a Citi upgrade but then came for sale amid worries about production
levels….the stock recovered from its lows after issuing a statement to
Reuters/Bloomberg saying that it only suspended production around Chinese New
Year and will ramp it back up after). NOK has been a laggard all session
(Bloomberg says the co won’t have any new product launches at Mobile World
Congress).

· Semis – have been the standout group all day (SOX up 2%+); MRVL and NVDA are
some of the best performing in the space. MRVL was mentioned positively at
Morgan Stanley and NVDA is seeing buy interest ahead of earnings next Wed.
AMKR a laggard, off 7%, after earnings disappointed (the guidance was light).

· Networking – the group is mostly higher except for a few situations; SWIR drops
20% after earnings disappoint. ALU is down 11% on back of earnings. The rest of
the group is higher. TKLC is up 11% after earnings (SONS up 4% in sympathy).
ARRS is up 4% post earnings.

· Internets – the group is higher for the most part although EXPE dips 4% (earnings)
and AOL is off small. YHOO and AMZN outperform.

· Solars – strength across the board today; JASO rallies 9% after earnings.
(barclays has cautious comments on the entire solar sector)

· Best Performing sp500 tech stocks (from Bloomberg): JDSU, NVDA, TER, XRX,
RHT, YHOO, AMD, ALTR, WFR, SNDK

· Weakest performing sp500 tech stocks (from Bloomberg): FLIR, WU, TDC,
NOVL, ADBE, MU, TSS

Financials

· Brokers – TRAD falls 9% after earnings; weighing on some of the larger online
peers (SCHW and AMTD). FBCM falls 7% after earnings last night (some other
smaller brokers weaker – TWPG and COWN are dwn 2-3%). MS is off 2% and a
notable laggard among the larger caps.

· Asset managers – pretty quiet; group is mixed; LM and BLK are laggards, off 1-2%.
GBL is up 6% after the Goldman upgrade and is outperforming. OZM climbs 4%
after earnings.

· Exchanges – ICE and CME both ramping ~3-4% on the day (the strength in
commodities could be helping).

· Life insurers – busy night w/earnings. PNX and PL both up ~2% while PRU falls
1% - al on earnings. TMK shares are flattish. Canadian life insurers are in the red
small post #s – MFC and SLF down ~1-2% each.

· Banks – the group has been under pressure for most of the day; cautious comments
from the TARP watchdog around CRE exposures being cited for the weakness.
Pretty mild selling though – more a lack of buyers causing the problem than
aggressive selling. STI, ZION, BBT, WFC among the laggards.

· MIs/financial guarantors – MTG, PMI, GNW, RDN, ABK are all in the green while
MBI drops 4%.
· Best Performing SP500 Financials (from Bloomberg): CBG, ICE, XL, CME, ALL,
HST, SPG, ETFC, MCO, NYX
· Weakest performing sp500 financials (from Bloomberg): PLD, AIG, LM, FHN,
STI, ZION, MS, AIZ, IVZ, AMP
 

superbaffone

Guest
oggi ho letto che il dollaro dovrebbe tornare ad indebolirsi per fine anno, mettiamo un grafico contrarian :D
 

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superbaffone

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aggiornamento medie classiche
 

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gipa69

collegio dei patafisici
STOCKS IGNORING WAL-MART'S MISS
By Charles Payne, CEO & Principal Analyst

2/18/2010 1:50:47 PM Eastern Time

There are lots of earnings reports and economic data out today, and the best I can say is that any green is a pleasant surprise. It's not that I was looking for a bloodbath but after Wal-Mart (WMT) reported I was sure there could be some profit taking by traders and mostly rubber-necking by would-be buyers. As it stands now the market is essentially flat, and that's a good sign. Stocks have made a pretty good bounce of late and maybe needed to stall. There is also the issue of leadership, which is sorely missing today and a mystery for tomorrow. The good news is there weren't any disasters today. Moreover, the market hints at possibly making a late move higher. There is much to chew through but when it's said and done the news is okay. I will say that initial jobless claims do stand out like a sore thumb.

Philly Fed: Came in at 17.6 versus the consensus of 17.0, with most components in-line with our expectations. Standouts include:

* Shipment reading climbed to 19.7 from 1.0.
* Prices received continued its steady progression; over the past six-months the reading has improved sequentially.


FEB_18_1.jpg



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PPI: The headline number was worrisome; this isn't the time to see any signs of inflation. Of course, most of the hike came from fuel, but I was surprised at the increase in prices for hides, skins, lumber, and fruits.

LEI: The Leading Economic Indicators climbed less than expected, and for the most part was a non-event.



FEB_18_3.jpg


More Color on Wal-Mart Earnings
By: Brian Sozzi, Research Analyst

This morning we posted a pre-market note detailing the 4Q earnings results from Wal-Mart (WMT). Since then we have had more time to chew on the results, as well as the comments we are hearing out there by those influential on the stock. Most are focusing the debate on Wal-Mart's 4Q comp miss relative to estimates, and 1Q comp/earnings guidance below where some were centered. However, we believe an overarching focus on a one quarter comp miss (which was derived from product deflation that is now abating rather than share loss on a global scale) and 1Q guidance misses the essence of what was in the report. In our view, there is a bigger picture to keep in mind when it comes to Wal-Mart, a picture that is bright.

What we see beneath the headline murmurs:
* A company generating higher profit for each dollar of sales.
* A company that returned to total sales growth in 4Q.
* A company that had a profit ramp on a y/y basis in each quarter of calendar 2009.
* A company that is likely to maintain its gross margin gains from last year and maybe even expand gross margin further going forward. Wal-Mart has brought its gross margin to a range of 24.0% to 25.0% from a once historical range of 20.0% to 23.0%.


* A company transitioning to maximizing its operating expense leverage. By indications of the successes realized on the gross margin line in recent years and programs well underway for the current fiscal year to drive efficiencies, operating margin expansion is quite probable as comps turn positive as soon as 2Q.
* A company increasingly sourcing its products from China, and having an opportunity to expand private label merchandise margins through direct sourcing.
* A company having a durable competitive advantage relative to others in an inflationary environment as a result of unmatched buying leverage and efficiencies flowing from a privately owned truck fleet.
* A company likely to see a trade back up the merchandise price curve (from opening price-point) going forward. It's critical that Wal-Mart sees this trade up as these products, on balance, are not the lowest priced relative to the peer set. Wal-Mart has marketed its EDLP message strongly, so customers believe all products are at rock bottom prices.
* A company with a growing international presence (about 25% of sales at the moment)

In the end, we believe Wal-Mart is on a trajectory to grow earnings in excess of 10% in FY11 through a mix of modest gross margin expansion and more definitive operating margin expansion. We are valuing shares of Wal-Mart on a PE multiple of 15.0x (currently trades at about 13.0x consensus EPS), rendering a price target of $61.00.

The Bad News for Toyota Continues
By: David Silver, Research Analyst

If you thought the 8 million vehicles weren't enough, Toyota announced another potential recall this morning dealing with the most popular vehicle in the world, the Toyota Corolla. The company said it is considering a 500,000 vehicle recall for 2009 and 2010 model year Corollas. This recall is a result of the power steering in the car and possible cracks in the driveshaft. So we have had problems with the accelerator, problems with the brakes, and now it is problems with the steering. We were musing last week about what the next shoe to drop would be; we fully expected another recall, but again we were surprised by the model and severity. It would be one thing for a taillight or turn signal or cruise control recall, but the gas pedal, brakes, and steering seem to be three pretty important components to a car. We thought that Toyota would be able to rebound quickly from this debacle (before the Corolla); however, I am not sure how many more black eyes the company can take.
 

gipa69

collegio dei patafisici
SEEKING THE OTHER FACE OF JANUS
By Charles Payne, CEO & Principal Analyst

2/18/2010 9:41:03 AM Eastern Time


I hope that everyone made it in today sober and clear-headed after what had to be a ruckus night of partying around the country to celebrate the first year anniversary of Stimulus I. Although I'd heard it all before, President Obama spoke yesterday with a little more animation and a little more amplification as if trying to breathe life into the string of stats he was rattling off to prove the success of Stimulus I. I think that he doth protest too much. If billions of dollars are poured into the economy the needle will move, but we are talking about $800.0 billion. There should be no need to explain what should be obvious. Instead, it seems the opposite is true. After the Evan Bayh shocker the item in the news that knocked me most was a CBS/NY Times poll on the stimulus plan. According to the poll, only 6% of Americans believe jobs were created from the plan! That is shocking stuff as there is no doubt those being polled have been vetted, and I'm sure lean sharply left.

So the Administration fanned out its team of high-ranking members to 35 communities to bang the drum, to convince a nation with 9.7% unemployment that things could have been worse. I don't get it. While the President is still popular, his agenda continues to slide, and in the process his messiah image, too. Core believers are core believers but the best way to keep independent-minded folks engaged isn't to layer on the sweet talk but to show and prove. I'm sure the faithful see the President much like the roman god Janus, god of gates, doors, beginnings, and endings. The images of Janus show a figure with two faces, one looking ahead the other looking behind. The Janus America elected only shows/uses one of these faces...the one that looks behind. Hey, maybe that's the face that reads the teleprompter best, who knows? But reminding us how bad it was does nothing to mask how ineffective year one has been.

Janus was also the patron of concrete and abstract beginnings. Well, there you go; it's hard to get more abstract than saved or created jobs. Of course at this point we are looking for concrete leadership and communication. There is nothing wrong with saying we messed up rather than engage in this dishonest game that even liberals are growing weary of. If I took at face value 2 million jobs were created from stimulus that still would be a poor use of $200.0 billion (spending awards on recovery.gov through December). Joe Biden said through January $350.0 billion in stimulus was spent (including tax breaks) which means those mythical jobs would cost about $160,000 each.
How many small businesses could turn their world around with that kind of funding? Just think how many jobs the average entrepreneur could have really created with those funds.

I believe overall confidence plays an important role in economic recovery and for that reason alone I would like to see the White House shift gears. Forget about looking back; the longer that excuse lingers the more it sounds like we elected a spoiled sport rather than someone prepared to get the job done. Moreover, stop bragging in general, and on occasion give Americans credit. There is such a thing as the business cycle and it works because America works. People want results. People are also understanding and also smarter than the left thinks. Pushing for another stimulus plan but not calling it "stimulus" is dishonest and confirms the first plan was supposed to be a jobs bill. It was supposed to be the mother of all job bills, or at least was sold that way. Money was redirected, there was pork spending, and it was a failure.

Just like TARP, the plan was designed to reach certain hot buttons. For TARP, it was about making sure banks continued to lend money. For Stimulus I, it was all about shovel-ready construction jobs. Even though the jobs mentioned in the sales pitch would be temporary it's hard for anyone to argue against giving an unemployed American a job. With that in mind, the thrust of the funds in the plan were never intended to focus on shovel-ready jobs. In fact, construction unemployment now hovers above 23%, or the same rate we are told overall employment would have gone if we didn't give big banks and failed businesses billions of dollars then top it off with a stimulus/jobs bill aimed to bolster union jobs and welfare payments. Since last January, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, more than a million construction jobs have been lost.



FEB_18_A.jpg
The market cycle is working, and all the government needs to do is stay out of the way, stop with the cap and trade, healthcare reform, and consumer protection that only dry up credit to consumers. Stop with the taxes. Stop with the finger wagging and finger pointing. And please...stop with the blame Bush stuff. It's old already. It's time to open the door to listening to the nation and trying to build a new concrete beginning.

By the way the real cost of the Stimulus plan is $826.0 billion and climbing according to the CBO. Let's face it, the bigger cost is we just spend money for political goals and find ourselves in the same situation Greece is in but there will be nobody to come to our aid. These are taxpayer funds we are talking about and its time to stop all the convoluted schemes to get it back to the taxpayer. I actually think these schemes aren't sincere and in the end, why not give taxpayers and businesses tax holidays; I think it's the best and easiest way to help them and in the process help the nation.

Home Modification Bust

The government's mortgage modification program is working better but it's still a colossal failure, and something else that has to be rethought. Permanent modifications as a percentage of active trial modifications are surging, but it's a long way from the 4 million homes hinted when the program was unveiled. Moreover, it's expensive! *As of December, $35.5 billion had been tapped but only $15.4 million dispersed.
FEB_18_B.jpg



FEB_18_C.jpg
* http://blogs.abcnews.com/politicalpunch/2010/02/hamp-champ-what-ever-happened-to-that-obama-mortgage-modification-plan.html
The Fed made slight adjustments to its economic outlook for the next three years.

FEB_18_D.jpg
There is a shocking report out today from the Pew Center that says states face $2.73 trillion in obligations for retiree benefits. The problem is they don't have the money. I will go into more details on tomorrow morning's update.

Economic Data

Initial Jobless Claims

Jobless claims increased last week to 473,000 from 442,000, continuing somewhat of an alarming trend. The average number of claims of the last four weeks has been higher than it was a month ago, indicating that employment trends are not improving anymore, but may in fact be worsening again. The result also came in well above the consensus estimate of 440,000. The number of insured unemployed stayed flat at 4.6 million from the previous week.



FEB_18_E.jpg
 

superbaffone

Guest
USA: LA FED ALZA IL TASSO DI SCONTO (+0.25%) A 0.75%
di WSI
A sorpresa, Bernanke muove un passo decisivo nella exit strategy dalle misure straordinarie di rilancio. Buy frenetici sul dollaro, euro a picco sotto 1.35. Futures S&P500 in calo. Non cambia l'outlook della politica monetaria Usa. Shock sui mercati.

Con una mossa a sorpresa, con Wall Street gia' chiusa, la Banca Centrale Usa ha annunciato di aver alzato il tasso di sconto, ovvero il tasso che devono pagare le banche per ottenere prestiti dalla Fed, allo 0.75% dallo 0.5%. Si tratta del primo incremento da almeno tre anni. Lo spread tra i fed funds e il tasso di sconto adesso e' di 0.50.

La Fed, che ha ribadito che i tassi guida rimarrano ai minimi storici nella forchetta tra 0.00%-0.25% ancora per un periodo prolungato, ha tenuto a precisare che la decisione non e' dovuta a nessun cambiamento sulle prospettive economiche o di politica monetaria (tradotto: l'economia migliora ma e' ancora debole). La modifica avra' effetto a partire dal 19 febbraio.

Dopo la decisione spiazzante della Fed il Dollar Index balza dello 0.6%, attestandosi in area 80.90, che si confronta con gli 80.38 precedenti. Sorte opposta per l'euro che e' invece scivolato a $1.3484.

Gli Stati Uniti possono avere interesse a rafforzare il dollaro, sia perche' nel frattempo l'euro si indebolisce (anche alla luce della crisi dei paesi Club Med/P.I.I.G.S.) sia per non spazientire troppo il maggior creditore del debito pubblico americano, la Cina, che si rischia di trovarsi con dollari eccessivamente svalutati. Dopo la decisione Fed di rialzo del tasso di sconto i prezzi dei Titoli di Stato Usa si sono indeboliti, con il rendimento del 2 anni in crescita di 5 punti base, mentre il 10 anni guadagna 8 punti base.

Il mercato azionario cede nettamente terreno nell'after hours, con il fondo ETF sull'S&P 500 che lascia sul campo lo 0.5%. Ancora peggio va al settore finanziario, che cede lo 0.7%. Un'ora dopo i futures sullo S&P 500 erano in calo di 9.70 punti a 1095.9, 9.05 punti sotto il fair value. In forte discesa anche l'oro, con il future sul gold a picco di $12.10 a quota $1,106.60.

In seguito all'annuncio il mercato ha iniziato a scommettere con piu' decisione su un prossimo rialzo dei fed funds. I futures sui tassi di interesse a breve termine scontano ora una possibilita' piu' alta che la Banca Centrale riveda all'insu' i tassi sui fed funds (le chance sono passate dal 28% prima della decisione, al 50% subito dopo, in merito a una seconda stretta entro la fine dell'anno).

Sui mercati lo shock per la decisione della Fed e' stato molto forte. O Bernanke e i governatori del Federal Open Market Committee sanno qualcosa che ancora il mercato non sa (il che sarebbe magari auspicabile anche se risulta poco trasparente) oppure l'annuncio, un giovedi' pomeriggio a borsa chiusa, prima che domani venerdi' sia annunciato un dato importante come l'indice dei prezzi al consumo, potrebbe essere stato un azzardo. Senza contare che venerdi' e' anche giornata di scadenza di opzioni, per cui c'e' da aspettarsi volatilita'.

Alla luce di un miglioramento delle condizioni dei mercati finanziari il Board della Fed di aver alzato il tasso di offerta minimo per il programma Term Auction Facility (TAF) di 1/4 di punto percentuale allo 0.5%. L'ultima asta TAF si terra' l'8 marzo 2010.

Allentare le condizioni del credito primario e' stata una delle prime risposte della Fed alla crisi finanziaria.

"Questi cambiamenti vanno interpretati come un'ulteriore normalizzazione degli strumenti di prestito della Federal Reserve", ha spiegato il Board della Banca in un comunicato. "Si prevede che le modifiche non porteranno a condizioni finanziarie piu' dure per le famiglire e le aziende e non segnalano alcun cambiamento nell'outlook dell'economia o della politica monetaria".
 

superbaffone

Guest
graficamente un ottimo tempismo questo rialzo dei tassi :-o del bernacca però non c'è da stupirsi.
 

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