Obbligazioni valute high yield TURCHIA bond in usd e lira turca

Ottimi grafici Bosco :up:

slowdown hai visto subito l'HUF :D
Volevo postare ieri sera ma mi si e' rotto il monitor :(
Per fortuna e' in garanzia :D

Record storico oltre 300


ho pensato che dovevi essere rimasto sotto quattro metri di neve per non postare tale news .... :lol::lol::lol:




South Africa's central bank slashes rates by 1% to 10.5%
10:00 AM ET, Feb 05, 2009 - By Polya LesovaNEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- The South African Reserve Bank cut its benchmark interest rate by 100 basis points to 10.5% Thursday in an aggressive move to boost sluggish economic growth. The rate cut was in line with market expectations. "With respect to economic growth, the domestic economy is being adversely affected by the continuing turbulence in the global economy," the central bank said in a statement. "The widening domestic output gap and declining international commodity prices are expected to exert further downward pressure on inflation going forward."


Czech central bank cuts interest rates to 1.75%
9:49 AM ET, Feb 05, 2009 - By Polya LesovaNEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- The Czech Republic's central bank cut its benchmark interest rate by 50 basis points to 1.75% Thursday, meeting market expectations. The bank voted to cut by only 50 basis points because of the weakness of the Czech koruna, said Stanislava Pravdova, an analyst at Danske Bank. "The monetary easing cycle is not over yet," she said. "However, further significant depreciation by the koruna might convince the CNB [Czech National Bank] to cut rates less aggressively. Additional monetary easing will doubtless impact the currency, which we expect to weaken further." After the rate decision, the euro fell 0.1% against the koruna, while the dollar rose 0.3% against the Czech currency.
 
Segalo questa nuova emissione

isin: US500769DC52
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Emittente: KfWA 18,5% 09-10
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Currency: EGP
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Quando e dove: 11/02/2009
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Bourse de Luxembourg

Affrettatevi ma senza spingere :);):)
 
grazie della segnalazione. Non ero al corrente del fatto che la sterlina egiziana si fosse unita al plotone delle valute high yield.
 
[FONT=Trebuchet MS, Arial] Turchia, fiducia nel settore bancario[/FONT]
Martedì, febbraio 10


[FONT=Trebuchet MS, Arial] Il Governatore della Banca Centrale Turca Durmus Yilmaz ha annunciato che la banca centrale fornirà al sistema bancario liquidità per compensare gli effetti della crisi economica, informa Seeurope.

Intervenendo nel corso del recente World Economic Forum di Davos, Yilmaz ha affermato che la situazione del sistema bancario turco è buona, e che il provvedimento della Banca Centrale è una misura cautelativa, concepita per quelle banche che hanno bisogno di un sostegno per far fronte agli effetti dei cambiamenti nelle condizioni finanziarie e all´atmosfera di instabilità e incertezza nel sistema bancario.
Yilmaz ha evidenziato che i Paesi che hanno agito per mantenere un livello di liquidità adeguato nei propri mercati si riprenderanno dalla crisi più rapidamente, aggiungendo che la banca ha già concepito tutti i piani alternativi in caso di condizioni particolari.
Il Governatore della Banca Centrale ha affermato che che il principale obiettivo della banca è quello di mantenere la stabilità dei prezzi sul mercato domestico, aggiungendo che ciò aprirà la strada a tessi di interesse più bassi e ad una crescita dell´occupazione e dell´economia.
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[FONT=Trebuchet MS, Arial] Turchia: la Banca Centrale rivede le stime di crescita[/FONT]
Martedì, febbraio 10

[FONT=Trebuchet MS, Arial] La Banca Centrale Turca ha annunciato di aver rivisto al ribasso le previsioni di crescita relative al 2009: dal 2 all´1,1 per cento.

Per quanto riguarda il 2010, il dato invece viene incrementato dall´1,2 al 2,8 per cento. Nel report mensile per il 2009, il deficit corrente viene previsto a 29,5 miliardi di dollari rispetto ai precedenti 45,9. La Banca Centrale prevede per la fine dell´anno un tasso di inflazione del 7,84 per cento, invariato rispetto all´ultima stima. Il cambio lira turca - dollaro dovrebbe passare 1,5854 rispetto al precedente 1,5847.
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Bilancia pagamenti dicembre

Tornano a peggiorare le partite correnti in dicembre dopo che a novembre avevano quasi raggiunto il pareggio (il dato rivisto e' di un deficit di appena 378 milioni). Il deficit di dicembre e' di un sonoro 3.003 milioni di $ , al quale si aggiunge un deficit delle partite in conto capitale di altri 3.500 milioni. Per effetto di ben 3.311 milioni di "errori ed omissioni" il saldo della bilancia limita il negativo (con corrispondente erosione di riserve) a 3.192 milioni. Un mese da dimenticare. File allegato per gli amanti delle tabelline.
 

Allegati

non c'è un 3d ""più idoneo"" , ma tanto voi li conoscete tutti


EMERGING MARKETS REPORT
Baltic countries face increasingly gloomy outlook

Downgrades loom, as Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia face uphill struggle

By Polya Lesova, MarketWatch
Last update: 3:24 p.m. EST Feb. 11, 2009

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- It's gloomy in the Baltics.

The three Baltic Sea-hugging neighbors Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia face an uphill struggle to resuscitate their economies, mired in recession or headed there, rein in their current-account deficits and maintain their currency pegs.
Moody's Investors Service placed the bond ratings of Estonia and Lithuania on review for possible downgrade Tuesday, citing severe deterioration in the regional macroeconomic environment.
Analysts said a downgrade was likely.
"Possible? It's a no-brainer," said Win Thin, senior currency strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman & Co. in New York. "The ratings agencies have been overly generous with Eastern Europe, particularly the Baltics."
Within the emerging-markets universe, Eastern Europe is the region most vulnerable to economic and financial risk. Within the region, the Baltic countries stand out as particularly fragile.
"We believe the currency pegs in the Baltics and Bulgaria are likely to come under increasing pressure this year, and that devaluation is a likely outcome for one of them -- Latvia appears to be the weakest weak link -- which in turn would likely set off a chain reaction in the other pegs," Thin said.
"[T]he outlook for the Baltics is nothing short of horrific."
— Neil Shearing, Capital Economics
Latvia is in such bad shape that it was forced to secure a $2.35 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund in December, though IMF aid is no panacea. The economy contracted by 10.5% year-on-year in the fourth quarter of 2008, significantly worse than analysts had anticipated.
Latvian GDP collapse?
Latvia's recession is rooted in its massive current-account deficit, which is indicative of an overvalued real exchange rate, said Neil Shearing, an economist at Capital Economics in London specializing in what's being called emerging Europe, in a note to clients Wednesday.
"Latvia's decision not to devalue its currency raises the prospect of a sustained period of deflation and deep recession, with output falling by a massive 20% over the next couple of years," Shearing said.
An adjustment in the economy could come either through devaluation of the Latvian currency or through a fall in Latvian wages and prices.
Latvia persuaded the IMF that it should keep its currency peg, arguing that devaluation would cause an explosion in debt defaults because of the high number of loans denominated in foreign currencies.
Assuming that Latvia's currency peg against the euro holds, output could fall by 15% this year and another 5% next year, Shearing said. It is also possible that the currency peg could collapse, as was the case in Peru and Venezuela in the late 1980s.
"If Latvia were to follow a similar path, real GDP may contract by 20% this year, although growth could return to trend within two or three years," Shearing said. "What's more, it seems likely that currency boards in Estonia and Lithuania would also collapse. Either way, the outlook for the Baltics is nothing short of horrific."
Downgrades looming
Moody's Investors Service said Tuesday that it might downgrade Estonia's A1 foreign- and local-currency bond ratings as well as Lithuania's A2 foreign- and local-currency ratings.
The primary reason for the potential downgrades is "the severe deterioration in the global and regional macroeconomic environment, which has hit the Baltic countries especially hard," said Kenneth Orchard, a vice president and senior analyst in Moody's Sovereign Risk Group.
"The ongoing decline in economic activity and the shortage of liquidity in the region have led to an adverse feedback loop, whereby declining asset prices are reducing confidence and further weakening the broader economy," Orchard said in a statement.
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Estonia's economic recession, which began in 2008, is expected to be deep and protracted, according to Moody's. Its current-account deficit will likely shrink to the low single digits in 2009 from around 18% of GDP in 2007, the agency estimates.
The Estonian government entered the recession with significant assets and almost no debt. As a result, it has been much less affected by the problems in the capital markets than Latvia or Lithuania, Moody's said.
Estonia could adopt the euro as early as 2011, which could provide "a needed boost to confidence," according to the ratings agency.
As for Lithuania, Moody's expects a recession there in 2009 and 2010 that could be the worst since the transition following the collapse of the Soviet Union.
"Given the scale of the 'boom' and expected 'bust' in the Lithuanian economy, it seems probable that the government will need to provide some form of financial support to locally-owned banks," Orchard said.
The Lithuanian government may be forced to negotiate extraordinary loans from the IMF and the European Union if the economic situation worsens more than expected, or if the degree of liquidity in the international capital markets deteriorates further, according to Moody's.
Polya Lesova is a New York-based reporter for MarketWatch.



 

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