FTSE Mib Futures solointraday - Cap. 2 (5 lettori)

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Forumer storico
Reuters) - The Federal Reserve is actively preparing for the possibility that the United States could default as a deadline for raising the government's $14.3 trillion borrowing limit looms, a top Fed policymaker said on Wednesday.

Philadelphia Federal Reserve Bank President Charles Plosser said the Fed has for the past few months been working closely with Treasury, ironing out what to do if the world's biggest economy runs out of cash on August 2.

"We are in contingency planning mode," Plosser told Reuters in an interview at the regional central bank's headquarters in Philadelphia. "We are all engaged ... It's a very active process."

Plosser said his "gut feeling" was that President Barack Obama and Congress will come to an agreement to increase the Treasury's borrowing authority in time to avert a default on government obligations.

Obama was due to meet with top Republicans in Congress on Wednesday to discuss the latest attempts to end the dispute over raising the country's debt ceiling, a row which has raised the prospect of the Treasury Department running out of money to pay its bills next month.

The Treasury has repeatedly said default was unthinkable and that there was no alternative to raising the debt ceiling, and Plosser's remarks marked the most extensive public comments on the matter from a U.S. official.

One aspect of the Fed's contingency planning is purely operational: the Fed is developing procedures about how the Treasury will let it know which checks will get cleared and which won't, Plosser said.

The Fed effectively acts as the Treasury's bank -- it clears the government's checks to everyone from social security recipients to government workers.

"We are developing processes and procedures by which the Treasury communicates to us what we are going to do," Plosser said, adding that the task was manageable. "How the Fed is going to go about clearing government checks. Which ones are going to be good? Which ones are not going to be good?"

"There are a lot of people working on what we would do and how we would do it," he said.

Plosser added that there are difficult questions that the Fed itself had to grapple with.

The Fed lends to banks at the discount window against good collateral. But what happens if U.S. Treasuries no longer fit that bill?

"Do we treat them as if they didn't default, in which case we would be saying we are pretending it never happened? Or do we treat them as if they defaulted and don't lend against them?" Plosser said. "Those are more policy questions."

Plosser, who was a vocal critic of some of the Fed's extraordinary lending during the financial crisis -- which he said veered into fiscal policy and risked the central bank's independence -- warned it would be crucial for the Fed not to do the Treasury's work for it.

"We have to be very careful that we don't become, that we don't conduct fiscal policy in this context," he said. "That we don't substitute for the inability of the Treasury to borrow in some circumstances."

That said, the Fed, which is charged with ensuring financial stability, would clearly feel the responsibility to step in as a lender of last resort if markets seized up after a U.S. default, he added.

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke last week warned that a default could have "catastrophic" effects on financial markets.

Plosser, a former dean of the Simon School of Business at Rochester University, was more circumspect.

"It could be very bad. At some level we don't really know what the consequences could be. It could be very serious. It could be less serious. Do we really want to run that experiment?"

Plosser is a voting member of the Fed's monetary policy-setting committee this year.
 

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Forumer storico
Reuters) - Stocks closed near unchanged on Wednesday, a day after Wall Street's best rally since March, as the oncoming debt ceiling deadline overshadowed strong earnings from Apple Inc.
 

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Forumer storico
Reuters) - American Express Co (AXP.N) said second quarter earnings rose, as customers spent more on their cards and the company's processing revenue rose.

The New York-based company posted quarterly earnings for common shareholders of $1.32 billion, or $1.10 a share, compared with $1.00 billion, or 84 cents a share, in the same quarter last year.
 

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Forumer storico
Reuters) - Minnesota Governor Mark Dayton on Wednesday signed several budget bills approved by the legislature in a marathon special session to end a state government shutdown that has lasted nearly three weeks.

Called to a special session on Tuesday afternoon, the state House and Senate approved all 12 bills put to it, including mammoth health and human services and education bills that were approved in the early hours of Wednesday morning.

"It is not what I wanted, but it was the best option that is available and would be for any time," Dayton told reporters after signing the budget bills.

State operations will take some time to return to normal. Officially, dollars won't begin to flow until Thursday morning, but state officials were already starting to get operations up and running on Wednesday.

Minnesota leaders failed to reach a deal to close a $5 billion budget deficit before the new fiscal year started July 1, leading to the longest government shutdown in state history.

The new budget delays school payments and uses bonding based on revenue from a settlement with tobacco companies, leaving long-term fiscal issues unresolved, economists have said.

The debates leading up to the shutdown included Democratic calls for additional revenue and Republican vows to halt spending increases that have mirrored those in the nation's capital over the debt ceiling.

Like many states, Minnesota has divided executive and legislative branches. In November voters elected a Democratic governor and Republican majorities in the House and Senate. Still, Minnesota is the only state thus far this year to shut down.

Nearly two weeks into the shutdown, Dayton brokered a deal with Republican House Speaker Kurt Zellers and Republican Senate Majority Leader Amy Koch. They worked out the details over the next several days, then Dayton called lawmakers back.

The state's political leaders agreed to put strict limits on the session, limiting it to a dozen bills over two days, with no amendments.

The House and Senate approved the bills and adjourned less than 13 hours after the sessions opened.

The governor estimated the two-year budget at about $35.7 billion and said it preserved essential services. What was not in the budget was as important as what it contained, he said.

The budget did not contain restrictions on stem cell research, abortions or collective bargaining rights for state workers among other changes Republicans had sought.

Dayton said he was relieved the shutdown was ending, but still believed a tax increase was the best solution for the state's budget. Cuts at the state level also will push local governments to raise property taxes, he said.

AN UNHAPPY COMPROMISE

The bills approved Wednesday provide for a variety of spending programs and include about $500 million of bonding for capital projects. The legislature normally passes bonding bills in even-numbered years.

More than 22,000 state workers were furloughed when the state shut down. They have up to three days to return to work and will not receive retroactive pay because they were allowed to file for unemployment during the shutdown.

State parks, historic sites, rest stops, the state lottery and two horse tracks were closed in the shutdown, and about 100 road construction projects were suspended.

Some state parks could reopen shortly, but others may take longer to reopen if they sustained damage during the shutdown.

The budget gives some relief to about 300 bars, restaurants and liquor stores that were unable to buy alcohol because state permits had expired and could not be renewed during the shutdown. They may resume liquor purchases Thursday.

The Legislature approved big budget items along party lines including the education, health and human services and omnibus tax bills. The capital spending bill drew broad support and Dayton said it could account for up to 14,000 jobs.

Democratic House Minority Leader Representative Paul Thissen called the framework a "beg, borrow and steal budget" and had urged a "no" vote on the proposed tax bill.

Dayton and Republican legislative leaders were unhappy about the details, but resolved to approve the agreement.

"While the budget agreement was not the most ideal to anyone, it was time to compromise, end the shutdown and put Minnesota back to work," Republican Senate Deputy Majority Leader Geoff Michel said afterward in a statement.

The negotiations over the budget details occurred behind closed doors at the Capitol over the last several days. Nonpartisan staff estimated spending at about $34.3 billion for the fiscal years 2012 and 2013.

The deal closed a gap between the Dayton and Republican spending plans by delaying more than $700 million of payments to schools and issuing $640 million of bonds using revenue from a tobacco industry settlement.

Economists have said those proposed budget fixes would push Minnesota's longer term fiscal problems into the next two-year state budget and also make them slightly worse. Fitch debt ratings agency stripped Minnesota of its AAA bond rating during the shutdown citing in part use of one-time budget fixes.

Dayton said the budget approved Wednesday would not change the state's outlook.

"This is not by itself a dramatic change, but it is a change for the worse not the better," Dayton said.
 

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Forumer storico
Crisi/ Anche Trichet partecipa a colloquio Merkel-Sarkozy

di: TMNews Pubblicato il 20 luglio 2011| Ora 21:59
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STAMPA INVIA1
Bruxelles, 20 lug. (TMNews) - L'incontro in corso a Berlino fra il Cancelliere tedesco Angela Merkel e il presidente francese Nicolas Sarkozy sulla crisi del debito nell'Eurozona è stato allargato anche al presidente della Banca Centrale Europea, Jean-Claude Trichet: lo hanno reso noto fonti diplomatiche. Trichet dovrebbe trovare una mediazione tra le posizioni dei due Paesi sul piano di salvataggio della Grecia: Berlino insiste perché gli investitori privati apportino un loro contributo, mentre Parigi - appoggiata in questo anche dalla Bce - teme invece il rischio di un default di Atene che possa scatenare una crisi incontrollabile. I colloqui in corso a Berlino precedono il vertice dei Paesi dell'Eurozona in programma domani a Bruxelles. (fonte Afp)
 

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Forumer storico
Usa/ Debito, Obama riceve dirigenti Repubblicani della Camera

di: TMNews Pubblicato il 20 luglio 2011| Ora 21:29
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Washington, 20 lug. (TMNews) - Il presidente degli Stati Uniti Barack Obama riceverà i due principali dirigenti del partito Repubblicano della Camera dei Rappresentanti, John Boehner ed Eric Cantor alle 23 ora italiana, per discutere della questione relativa al debito, sulla quale la Casa Bianca cerca un accordo bipartisan. (fonte Afp)
 

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Forumer storico
Reuters) - Fitch Ratings said on Wednesday it will decide next month whether the United States deserves to keep a stable outlook on its AAA credit rating as it concludes a review of the country's economic and fiscal outlook.

David Riley, Fitch's main analyst for the United States, said the decision will take into account a final budget agreement in Washington to reduce the country's deficit in the medium to long term.

"To some extent we are a little bit on hold because we want to see what comes out from the current negotiations," Riley told Reuters in an interview, welcoming the apparent progress being made by a group of six Democrat and Republican senators to cut the deficit by $3.7 trillion.

"As soon as an agreement is reached and has been announced, we will incorporate that into our analysis and we'll make a comment on the U.S. sovereign rating and its outlook -- hopefully by the mid of August."

Fitch is the only of the three big ratings agencies to have a stable outlook on U.S. ratings. Both Moody's and Standard & Poor's have put the ratings on review for a possible downgrade to account for a growing risk that the country's debt ceiling is not raised in time to avoid a default next month.

Fitch still believes the likelihood of a debt default is low, said Riley.

He added it's too early to analyze the impact of Washington's deficit-reduction plans on the country's ratings, but sounded positive on the plan being worked out by the so-called "Gang of Six" Democrat and Republican senators.

"It's encouraging that it does appear to be progress being made in getting at least an agreement in principle on a substantial debt reduction plan," Riley said.

He stressed, however, that the credibility of the final plan will be as important as the headline savings number.

"Most governments can typically come up with a big number and say 'that's what we're going to save', but the issue is how you're going to get from A to B."
 
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