T-Bond,T-Note,Bund&others-Quel gran pezzo del Bernakka(v

gastronomo ha scritto:

eseguito ...

1145970306azz.jpg


... ed intanto anche oggi il copper è a +4% ! :eek: :eek: ... ma quanta forza hanno stì cornutazzi ? :specchio: :mad: :mad:
 
Ocio Alpin :eek:

Canada: banca centrale alza i tassi di 25 p.b. al 4%
MILANO (MF-DJ)--La banca centrale canadese ha alzato per la sesta volta
consecutiva il tasso di riferimento di 25 punti base portandolo al 4%, livello
piu' alto dal settembre del 2001. La mossa era stata prevista dagli analisti
e nel documento a commento della decisione, la Bank of Canada ha dichiarato che
potrebbero esserci altri "modesti rialzi" nel medio termine per tenere sotto
controllo le pressioni inflazionistiche in un'economia, quella canadese, che
cresce ad un ritmo "sopra la sua capacita' produttiva". Red/zav (END) Dow
Jones Newswires April 25, 2006 09:52 ET (13:52 GMT) Copyright (c) 2006 MF-Dow
Jones News Srl.
 
Questa mattina dicevo ...

-ditropan- ha scritto:
-ditropan- ha scritto:
Okkio ... oggi l'oro non mi piace per niente, ha una forza peggio che mastro lindo :D ... per mè qualche scherzo oggi lo combinano. :yes: :cool:
.. il silver come conseguenza è già a +4,5% ! :eek: :eek: ... alla facciazza della giornata festiva !!!! ... pure oggi si balla alla grande. :D :D :D

bobusina ha scritto:
ora è su un bel supporto orario. ;)

No, nessun supporto ... è solo sul pivot. Se questo pomeriggio fanno correre l'oro a 635-640 vedi come il t-note torna su S2 come un caccia ! :yes: :yes: :yes: :cool:


... nemmeno a farlo apposta !! :eek: :eek: :eek:

.... e pure il copper a 331 !! :mad: :mad: :angry: :angry:

1145974298azz.jpg
 
:ciao:

Australia's 1st-Qtr Consumer Prices Increase 0.9% (Update3)
April 26 (Bloomberg) -- Australia's inflation accelerated faster than expected in the first quarter as health and education costs increased, suggesting the central bank may raise interest rates this year.

The consumer price index increased 0.9 percent from the fourth quarter, when it gained 0.5 percent, the Australian Bureau of Statistics said in Sydney today. Inflation will accelerate further next quarter because of rising gasoline prices, Treasurer Peter Costello said in Canberra.

Quickening inflation may spur central bank Governor Ian Macfarlane to follow the U.S. and Europe and increase rates as early as June, says economist Stephen Koukoulas. Reports this month have shown a 29-year-low jobless rate and rising business confidence in Asia-Pacific's fifth-largest economy, stoking demand for the Australian dollar and boosting bond yields.

``Inflation is bubbling along and has hit the top end of the Reserve Bank of Australia's target range,'' Koukoulas, chief Asia- Pacific strategist at TD Securities Ltd., said in Sydney. ``The RBA needs to hike, the only question is whether it does so in May, or waits for five weeks of data and raises rates in June.''

The median forecast of 20 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News was for 0.8 percent increase in the quarterly inflation rate. The consumer price index rose 3 percent in the first quarter from a year earlier compared with a 2.8 percent annual gain in the fourth quarter. The central bank aims to keep annual inflation between 2 percent and 3 percent.

The U.S. Federal Reserve increased interest rates for a 15th time to 4.75 percent in March to curb inflation. The Bank of Canada and the European Central Bank also raised borrowing costs last month.

Interest Rates

Crude oil prices have surged 37 percent from a year ago and reached a record $75.35 a barrel this week, which will push up gasoline costs.

A measure of core inflation, which excludes volatile items such as gasoline, education and fruit and vegetables, rose 0.3 percent in the quarter for an annual increase of 1.7 percent.

The Australian dollar traded at 74.47 U.S. cents at 12:31 p.m. in Sydney from 74.51 cents immediately before the report was released as currency traders bet the central bank won't raise interest rates next week.

Australia's dollar has surged the past month on expectations of higher interest rates. The currency gained 5 percent against the U.S. dollar the past month, making it the world's best performer of the 62 currencies tracked by Bloomberg.

The yield on the 6.25 percent bond maturing April 2015 rose 5 basis points to 5.71 percent. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point.

Bank Bill Futures

Macfarlane, who has left the overnight cash rate target at 5.5 percent for 13 months, said in February borrowing costs were more likely to increase than drop. The Reserve Bank of Australia's rate- setting board will meet on May 2 and announce a decision the following day.

Eleven of 22 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News before the first-quarter inflation report forecast the central bank will raise rates this year. The rest predict borrowing costs will remain unchanged. Two say rates may rise as early as May or June.

The implied yield on the September bank bill futures in the past week touched 5.91 percent, the highest in 12 months, signaling investors have increased bets of an interest-rate increase this year. The yield on the benchmark 10-year government bond has risen 30 basis points the past month.

Stoking inflation, education fees gained 5.6 percent and pharmaceutical drug costs jumped 14.2 percent in the first quarter, today's report said.

Fuel costs rose 1.4 percent in the first three months of the year, the report said.

Worse to Come

Rising fuel costs may spur inflation in the second quarter. Distributors including Caltex Australia Ltd. have raised domestic gasoline prices to a seventh-month high of about A$1.30 (97 U.S. cents) a liter amid record global oil prices.

``We have seen a little impact from petrol prices in the March quarter, but unfortunately there is a bigger impact yet to come,'' Australian Treasurer Costello told reporters after the inflation report was released.

Qantas Airways Ltd., Australia's largest airline, is considering raising a surcharge on airfares as jet-fuel costs jump. Air New Zealand Ltd. said last week it will increase ticket prices by 10 percent from May 1.

Child-care costs may also climb after a tribunal awarded pay increases of as much as 8 percent a year to workers in New South Wales state, which may prompt companies such as ABC Learning Centres Ltd. to raise fees.

Wages, another source of inflation, surged 4.2 percent in the fourth quarter from a year earlier, according to a government report released in January. It was the largest annual increase since the wage price index was created in 1997.

Consumer Spending

Australia's A$870 billion economy grew 0.5 percent in the fourth quarter compared with 0.3 percent in the third quarter.

Consumer spending and home building, which slowed last year, are rebounding and may fuel economic growth this year. Retail sales gained 0.7 percent in February, twice as much as economists forecast. Building approvals jumped 2.2 percent and housing finance rose 1.1 percent.

The unemployment rate fell to a 29-year-low 5 percent in March and business confidence rose to a 29-month high in March.

Australia's annual inflation is less than the 3.4 percent rate in the U.S. in March. Neighboring New Zealand's consumer prices rose 3.4 percent in the first quarter.
 

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