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(MENAFN) Official data showed that German factory orders grew in December, as the demand from outside the euro area helped avoiding sovereign debt crisis, Bloomberg reported. According to the …

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German factory orders grow 1.7% in January

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Europe Ahead: Inflation figures after the decisions with eyes still on the euro

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Europe Ahead: Inflation figures after the decisions with eyes still on the euro

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Dollar slips against the euro before jobs data

June 3, 2011

Dollar slips against the euro before jobs data

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Guest Commentary: Why is Today an Important Day for the Euro?

June 2, 2011

Guest Commentary: Why is Today an Important Day for the Euro?

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Trichet/Merkel Talk Up the Euro- Loonie Losses Steepen

June 2, 2011

Trichet/Merkel Talk Up the Euro- Loonie Losses Steepen

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Major pairs narrow trading after a strong strengthening of the euro…

May 31, 2011

Major pairs narrow trading after a strong strengthening of the euro…

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Another test to the euro area outlook with confidence figures

May 27, 2011

Another test to the euro area outlook with confidence figures

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Guest Commentary: Another bad omen for the Euro – Euro Sterling

May 26, 2011

Guest Commentary: Another bad omen for the Euro – Euro Sterling

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Nancy Birdsall: IMF Leader Selection: It’s the Process, Stupid

May 24, 2011

A Bretton Woods project statement issued on April 6 was prescient indeed: The MD must be, and must be seen to be wholly independent of any national or regional interest. This is particularly important when the home state is a powerful member of the IMF. In practical terms therefore, recent or sitting ministers should be ruled out. Who’s that? The candidate now supported by France and the UK: Christine Lagarde is, of course, a sitting minister of a powerful member country. Well at least she is a woman — widely discussed now as a good idea for the male-dominated IMF (compared to the World Bank and in culture as well as numbers) — and is said to be independent-minded. But would she be able to eschew “representing” France or the powerful France/Germany/UK triad in the tense discussions that seem to pit Greece (and other peripheral countries of the euro zone) against the banks in Germany? Would she not seem to be biased even if she wasn’t — beholden to Sarkozy and Merkel generating immoral hazard for the IMF (or the euro or Greece… )? Won’t she represent, whether she wants to or not, the stench of colonialism wafting around the IMF? The Bretton Woods project statement also emphasizes the logic of locking in a process including: a short and open list of candidates made public; no need for a candidate to have his/her own country’s support (Arminio Fraga headed the Brazilian Central Bank under the party now out of power; that is also Gordon Brown’s problem of course); an open voting process based on formal voting (as proposed by the Indian ED Arvind Virmani — go here; the need for any candidate to have a majority of country members not just a majority of weighted votes (the “double majority” idea ). (Our IMF leader survey includes creation of an eminent persons group to propose a short list of candidates (adding to country members’ nominees) that could include nominees their own country might not nominate, and also refers to double majority voting. I hope survey takers who favor “open, transparent and merit-based” agree strongly with those proposals too.) These changes are less likely to happen between now and end of June (by when IMF Board promises it will have selected a new leader) but pumping for them now could help improve the process in the next round. By the way, any of these changes in process would be a step in the direction of legitimacy for the new leader. None would take away the ability of the United States and of Europe to block candidates. For all practical purposes the large and powerful economies have effective vetoes (Europe if its triad of France/Germany/UK collaborates). With double majority voting other country groups in a coalition would also have veto power… and with an open list there would be more time for the public scrutiny that helps provide a new leader legitimacy. Related Content: About IMF Survey and Candidate Bios Take the Survey and View Results More IMF Blog Posts

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Video: Yu Sees Dollar Gains on Further Euro Zone Challenges

May 22, 2011

May 23 (Bloomberg) — Geoffrey Yu, a currency strategist at UBS AG, talks about the outlook for the dollar and Federal Reserve monetary policy.¶¶ He also discusses the impact of the European debt crisis on the euro and his top trade. Yu speaks with Bloomberg’s Oliver Joy.

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Video: Merk Expects Greece to Delay Default, Sees Euro Strength: Video

May 20, 2011

May 20 (Bloomberg) — Axel Merk, president and chief investment officer at Merk Investments LLC, discusses the Greek fiscal crisis, the outlook for the euro and Portugal’s bailout from the International Monetary fund. He speaks with Matt Miller on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Merk Says IMF Loan Is `Step Along the Way’ for Portugal

May 20, 2011

May 20 (Bloomberg) — Axel Merk, president and chief investment officer at Merk Investments LLC, talks about the International Monetary Fund’s approval of a 26 billion-euro ($36.8 billion) loan to Portugal, the potential for default by Greece on its sovereign debt and the outlook for the euro. He speaks with Matt Miller on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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James Berman: DSK and the Greek Myth of "Reprofiling"

May 18, 2011

With IMF leader Dominique Strauss-Kahn under arrest for sexual assault, many have predicted the Euro’s demise. After all, DSK is a founding father of the common currency and the architect of bailouts that have propped up the euro zone. Whether or not the euro follows his steep downward arc, Greek debt, like the Greek word hubris , comes to mind. The euro authorities claim Greek bonds would be “reprofiled” not “restructured” and the financial world is left to parse the difference. A liquid bond market is like a well-functioning justice system: transparent and fair. But as we all know, markets and trials can both hit the skids. Just as lawyers mangle language to fix the truth, countries resort to euphemism to craft their economic image. Underpinning both louche pursuits is the fear that if you don’t spin the news, the news will spin you. It’s true that a world leader cannot really admit a country is broke. The very words will prompt a “run on the bank” as bondholders sell, causing interest rates to rise and a self-fulfilling death spiral. So too a lawyer must advocate to avoid a conviction in the press. Too often the maneuvers themselves are the only things transparent. When lawyers cobble together sentences like “The evidence, we believe, will not be consistent with a forcible encounter” as Ben Brafman did on DSK’s behalf, it rings less like a declarative statement than a poorly-hedged bon mot crafted by the billable hour. And when Euro-group Chairman Jean-Claude Juncker says that “A large [Greek debt] restructuring is no option” then breathlessly adds “I wouldn’t exclude in a definite way a kind of reprofiling,” we sit and snicker. The not quite artful distinction without a difference hangs in the air. Apparently a “reprofiling” would only lengthen maturity dates, not cause a haircut to debt principal. But as any first year B-school student knows, when you lengthen maturity dates (given the time value of money), you alter terms in a material way. If the present value of the loan changes as it does with the maturity date, then the loan has been “restructured.” If interest rates are adjusted upward to compensate, then a “restructuring” rears its singular head again. Semantics alone can’t change the truth. The evidence or lack thereof of DSK’s alleged assault hasn’t been released, but the finances of Greece are better known. The markets, unlike the jury, have spoken on the latter. We can’t know whether DSK did it or not, but I do know that Greece is broke in any language.

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Video: Bauer Says Some Euro Members May Need Debt Restructuring

May 13, 2011

May 13 (Bloomberg) — Bob Bauer, chief global economist at Principal Global Investors, discusses the euro-area economy and debt crisis. He talks with Francine Lacqua on Bloomberg Television’s “On The Move.”

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Dollar continues to rise against the euro

May 13, 2011

Dollar continues to rise against the euro

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Antonio Borges: More, Not Less, Financial Integration Needed in Europe

May 12, 2011

Banks — and the loans they provided in the run-up to the crisis — are at the heart of Europe’s problems today. Yet it would be wrong to conclude that the crisis was caused by too much financial integration. In fact, the real problem may have been that there was too little financial integration. Policies to promote deeper integration of Europe’s banks — including through cross-border merger and acquisitions — should be part of the solution. Further progress in strengthening the institutions of the European Union (EU) is also needed. In the run-up to the global crisis, countries in the euro area periphery, and countries in emerging Europe that had fixed their currency to the euro, had very high current account deficits. These deficits turned out to be dangerous: when the capital flows suddenly slowed, the result was a deep crisis. European financial integration, and in particular the introduction of the euro in 1999, likely facilitated these high current account deficits. Interest rates in Europe converged at low levels, as foreign exchange risk was eliminated within the euro area (and reduced in those countries that were on the road to euro area membership), and as confidence in macroeconomic stability increased. The result was a big boost to investment and reduced saving in countries that previously had been living with high interest rates. Yet, as discussed in the IMF’s Regional Economic Outlook for Europe , it would be wrong to conclude that the crisis was caused by too much financial integration. The problem was not that capital flows were too large — it was that they were not used wisely. Capital flows boosted demand rather than supply, and imports rather than exports, and thereby contributed to large, and ultimately unsustainable, increases in external debt. Too many were oblivious of these risks — financial markets paid little attention until it was too late, and government policies did too little to address market failures. The real problem may have been that there was too little financial integration: Although some elements of the financial system are highly integrated, cross-border mergers and acquisitions in the euro area are still limited. As a result, banking flows to the euro area periphery during the boom years largely took the form of debt rather than equity, which exposed banks in the periphery to rollover risk. Europe has been integrated enough to foster large credit inflows, but not integrated enough to resolve crises quickly. The European Union fostered financial integration by adopting a common currency in the euro area, but it did not put in place effective instruments to handle cross-border risks or mitigate the build-up of imbalances financed by cross-border financial flows. With banking problems addressed at the national rather than EU level, banking and sovereign problems in euro area periphery countries exacerbated each other. Sovereign debt problems worsened as a result of the fiscal costs of banking problems, and concerns about the public sector increased the problems for the banking sector. How would more complete financial integration, together with pan-European institutions, have made it easier to resolve the crisis? Banking problems would have had fewer fiscal consequences. If domestic markets had been more open to foreign bank ownership, national public sector policies for supporting and recapitalizing banks would not have been the only options. Banks would have suffered less spillover from sovereign debt problems, as deposit guarantees and other implicit guarantees would not have depended on underwriting by the state. It would have been easier to consolidate the financial sector. Consolidation is now occurring slowly, if at all, and often within borders. In many cases, restructuring has led to refocusing on the domestic market and sales of foreign operations, thus reducing financial integration. If a pan-EU supervisory regime had been in place, excessive exposures or expansions of banking systems might have been spotted, and ill-considered unilateral policy moves avoided. With all that said, financial integration alone is not enough to address the current crisis — ideally, the best solution will rely on restoring growth in the crisis-affected countries. Ultimately, economic growth depends on productivity, which some countries have struggled to raise over the past decade, despite ample access to foreign capital. To boost sustainable growth, better policies are needed at the national level, while better governance at the EU level would help enforce such policies. Further European economic integration would unlock substantial efficiency gains, in particular if it dismantled many obstacles to cross-border competition that still exist, in spite of all the efforts to build the single market. To prevent future crises, we need more vigilance, both nationally and across borders, better institutions to deal with financial sector problems, and more, rather than less, financial and economic integration. From iMFdirect blog

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Guest Commentary: When Will the Euro get Exhausted? Ask Asia!

May 12, 2011

Guest Commentary: When Will the Euro get Exhausted? Ask Asia!

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Greece eased bailout prospects relieves markets and supports the euro

May 9, 2011

Greece eased bailout prospects relieves markets and supports the euro

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Video: Sentinel’s Thwaites Says U.S. Economy `Healthy, Robust’

May 6, 2011

May 6 (Bloomberg) — Christian Thwaites, chief executive officer of Sentinel Investments, David Semmens, U.S. economist at Standard Chartered Bank, and Jeanne Branthover, managing director of Boyden Global Executive Search, talk about today’s report showing American employers in April added more jobs that forecast. Thwaites, Semmens and Branthover also discuss speculation that Greece may withdraw from the euro. They speak with Pimm Fox on Bloomberg Television’s “Taking Stock.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: ECRI’s Achuthan Says U.S. Economic Revival Is `Intact’

May 6, 2011

May 6 (Bloomberg) — Lakshman Achuthan, managing director at the Economic Cycle Research Institute, and Nariman Behravesh, chief economist at IHS Inc., talk about the outlook for the U.S. economy and labor market. Achuthan and Behravesh, speaking with Tom Keene on Bloomberg Television’s “Surveillance Midday,” also discuss the potential for a withdrawal by Greece from the euro region. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Lagarde Says She Would Like to See a Strong U.S. Dollar

May 4, 2011

May 4 (Bloomberg) — French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde talks about the euro and U.S. dollar. She also discusses Portugal’s bailout package and the outlook for European economies. Lagarde speaks with Bloomberg’s Phillip Yin in Hanoi. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Dollar falls to lowest level in 16 months against the euro

April 27, 2011

Dollar falls to lowest level in 16 months against the euro

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Video: Wideroos Says Finland’s Support for Bailouts Is Unclear

April 18, 2011

April 18 (Bloomberg) — Ulla-Maj Wideroos, a former minister in Finland’s Finance Department, talks about the prospects for the country supporting the Portuguese bailout package after the euro-skeptic True Finns jumped almost 15 points to 19 percent in the country’s elections. She speaks with Maryam Nemazee on Bloomberg Television’s “The Pulse.”

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Dollar falls to the lowest level in 15 months against the euro

April 14, 2011

Dollar falls to the lowest level in 15 months against the euro

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José Viñals: Avoiding Another Year of Living Dangerously: Time to Secure Financial Stability

April 13, 2011

In various guises, the “Year of Living Dangerously” has been used to describe the global financial crisis, the policy response to the crisis, and its aftermath. But, we’ve slipped well beyond a year and the financial system is still flirting with danger. Durable financial stability has, so far, proven elusive. Financial stability risks may have eased, reflecting improvements in the economic outlook and continuing accommodative policies. But those supportive policies–while necessary to restart the economy–have also masked serious, underlying financial vulnerabilities that need to be addressed as quickly as possible. Many advanced economies are “living dangerously” because the legacy of high debt burdens is weighing on economic activity and balance sheets, keeping risks to financial stability elevated. At the same time, many emerging market countries risk overheating and the build-up of financial imbalances–in the context of rapid credit growth, increasing asset prices, and strong and volatile capital inflows. Here is our suggested roadmap for policymakers to address these vulnerabilities and risks, and achieve durable financial stability. Heeding the warning signs Challenges in four key areas put financial stability at risk. Confidence in the banking system has yet to be fully restored, nearly four years since the start of the global financial crisis. Progress in strengthening capital positions and reducing leverage has been uneven. There is considerable uncertainty about the quality of some bank assets, particularly exposures to higher-risk sovereigns and real estate in some countries. And a weak tail of undercapitalized banks remains. We have analyzed the sample of banks that European authorities used in last year’s stress tests. This snapshot of end-2010 data revealed that 30 per cent of these banks–representing a fifth of their total assets–have Core Tier 1 capital ratios of less than 8 percent. This makes them less able to withstand shocks and secure cost-effective funding. To solve these problems, we need comprehensive policies to increase bank transparency, raise capital buffers, and restructure and resolve weak banks. The forthcoming stress tests by the European Banking Authority are an important opportunity to assess the health of the EU banking system. But the tests need to be credible, stringent, and part of a broader crisis management strategy that includes backstops against capital shortfalls. Sovereign balance sheets remain under strain in several advanced economies. Certain countries in the euro area are especially at risk, because market concerns about the sustainability of public debt have prompted a sharp increase in funding costs and restricted credit supply, creating an adverse feedback loop with the real economy. These financial stability risks need to be addressed through strategies that combine medium-term budget deficit reduction with adequate multilateral backstops for crisis countries. Sovereign funding challenges could extend beyond the euro area. Both the United States and Japan are sensitive to higher funding burdens if interest rates increase substantially from current levels. Consequently, these countries need to take decisive action to ensure the sustainability of their public finances over the medium term. Household indebtedness in the United States remains elevated. This could negatively affect bank balance sheets, credit availability, and house prices. And, this could be a drag on the global economic recovery. More structural policies may be needed to address high household debt, including principal write-downs on mortgages. Our analysis shows that US banks are strong enough to withstand sizeable reductions in the principal of risky mortgages. Policymakers in emerging markets need to guard against overheating and a buildup of financial imbalances. A number of factors point to the incubation of financial imbalances, including: Exceptionally strong bank credit growth in some countries. Experience shows that there is a close connection between high credit growth and future increases in non-performing loans. Strong, and more volatile, capital inflows. Capital inflows are not yet excessive, but recent volatility has already tested the absorptive capacity of some emerging markets. Putting danger behind us So what can policymakers do to achieve durable financial stability? Advanced economies need to deal with the legacy of the crisis–effectively and immediately. They must reduce their reliance on policies that mainly responded to the symptoms of the crisis, and increase their focus on measures that address the underlying causes. In particular, they need to fully repair their banking systems, strengthen sovereign balance sheets, and reduce household debt burdens. By contrast, emerging economies need to act–before it’s too late–to avoid future crises. Given the risk of overheating and financial imbalances, policymakers need to make more, and better, use of macroeconomic measures, such as official rate hikes, more flexible exchange rates, and fiscal tightening. Macroprudential policies and, in some cases, capital controls can play a supportive role. Of course, internationally consistent regulation is the cornerstone on which a safer global financial system can be built. Advanced economies and emerging markets, therefore, have a shared responsibility to press ahead with regulatory reforms. No one said it was going to be easy The task ahead is not easy. There are very real risks: risks of complacency; of fatigue; or reluctance to make hard policy choices. Action is needed now to ensure that the outstanding threats to global financial stability are dealt with once and for all. And only through international cooperation can those actions prove fully effective. The global economic recovery will be on firmer ground only if we achieve durable financial stability. From iMFdirect blog

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Speculative Sentiment Index Steers Forex Traders through Stormy Euro Trading

April 13, 2011

Speculative Sentiment Index Steers Forex Traders through Stormy Euro Trading

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EUR/USD: Trading the Euro-Zone Consumer Price Report

April 13, 2011

EUR/USD: Trading the Euro-Zone Consumer Price Report

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EU Finance Ministers Urge Austerity Reforms As European Unions Protest

April 9, 2011

GODOLLO, Hungary (Marton Dunai) – EU finance ministers on Saturday urged Portugal to commit to reforms and defended the region’s austerity steps as tens of thousands of European workers protested in Budapest against spending cuts. Finance ministers and central bankers from the 27-nation bloc held a second day of informal talks outside the Hungarian capital on their response to the euro zone debt crisis after Portugal on Wednesday became the third euro zone country to ask for EU and IMF financial aid. EU ministers said that in return for an estimated 80 billion euros in emergency loans over three years, Lisbon would have to commit to further structural reforms to bring down its budget deficit and debt in a sustainable way. “The rules are very clear. Whoever needs assistance by other European member states and member states of the euro zone, he has to deliver sustainable measures for reducing the deficits because the deficits are the reason why they need help,” German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble told reporters. Some 30,000 people from all over Europe marched in central Budapest in protest against austerity measures at a rally organized by the European Trade Union Confederation (ETUC). Demonstrators blew horns and chanted slogans, one of which read: “We want jobs! Create, do not abolish (jobs)!” One of the demonstrators, Christian Guldentops from CNE, the Christian Belgian trade union, told Reuters: “We are coming here to say no to the plan of Angela Merkel, Nicolas Sarkozy, and to the EU ‘s austerity plan.” John Monks, General Secretary of ETUC, said Europe should not “panic” over high debts and said the cost of paying back the debt for countries like Greece and Ireland was too high. “If we’re all in it together, then what are the banks, what are the financial markets, what are the rich and comfortable doing? We want the broadest shoulders to bear the heaviest burden, not for the whole weight of the adjustment to fall on the poor, the low paid, the unemployed …” FUTURE GROWTH IN FOCUS European Union leaders agreed last month that all EU countries would start consolidating budgets this year as Europe seeks to reassure financial markets that its fiscal policies are sustainable and draw a line under the year-long debt crisis. Olli Rehn, the EU’s Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner told a news conference on Saturday that reducing the debt burden was essential for future economic growth. “In many countries we have unsustainable debt burdens and therefore it is important also for the sake of economic growth and economic dynamism to ensure that this consolidation can be achieved with full determination and concrete results,” he said. Spanish Economy Minister Elena Salgado said growth and deficit reduction were essential to ensure governments could keep funding the welfare state. “We know that the decisions that are being taken assume efforts and are difficult. But (these decisions) are necessary because we need to grow and we need to reduce our deficit to keep funding the welfare state,” Salgado told reporters. “So, we understand their position (of trade unions) but we would also like that they understand ours,” she said. But in the streets of Budapest protesters said the measures devised by EU leaders would make workers in Europe poorer instead of leading economies out of the crisis. “These measures will take us back to the 1930s. They will cut masses of people out of work — the rich will become richer, the poor will become poorer,” said Fritz Keller from the Austrian trade unions. (Reporting by Ecofin team, writing by Jan Strupczewski, editing by Susan Fenton) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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No revisions for growth in the Euro-Zone, while UK’s manufacturing sector’s conditions drop

April 6, 2011

No revisions for growth in the Euro-Zone, while UK’s manufacturing sector’s conditions drop

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No revisions for growth in the Euro-Zone, while UK’s manufacturing sector’s conditions drop

April 6, 2011

No revisions for growth in the Euro-Zone, while UK’s manufacturing sector’s conditions drop

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No revisions for growth in the Euro-Zone, while UK’s manufacturing sector’s conditions drop

April 6, 2011

No revisions for growth in the Euro-Zone, while UK’s manufacturing sector’s conditions drop

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Video: Kraemer Says S&P to Reassess Greece, Portugal Amid ESM

March 25, 2011

March 25 (Bloomberg) — Moritz Kraemer, managing director of European sovereign ratings at Standard & Poor’s, discusses the outlook for the sovereign debt ratings of Greece and Portugal once full details of the European Stability Mechanism, the euro area’s permanent rescue fund, are disclosed. Kraemer speaks with Erik Schatzker on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Forrester Says European Debt Contagion Has Decreased

March 25, 2011

March 25 (Bloomberg) — David Forrester, a Singapore-based currency economist at Barclays Capital, discusses the outlook for the euro and the risk of contagion from the debt crisis in Portugal. He talks with Linzie Janis on Bloomberg Television’s “Global Connection.”

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Portugal Unlikely To Seek EU Bailout Package

March 24, 2011

LISBON/BRUSSELS – The resignation of Portugal’s prime minister will dominate a summit of EU leaders on the European economy on Thursday and Friday, with pressure intense on Lisbon to seek a bailout package. Prime Minister Jose Socrates resigned on Wednesday after parliament rejected his government’s latest austerity measures aimed at avoiding EU financial assistance. But he said he would still attend the two-day summit in a caretaker capacity. Socrates remains adamantly opposed to requesting EU/IMF aid and has made it clear he intends to hold that line, at least until a new Portuguese government is formed in the weeks ahead. That leaves Portugal in limbo, but the likelihood remains that a bailout will have to be taken in the end. Asked if Socrates would ask for aid at the summit, a senior EU official said: “I would be surprised. There is a doubt on whether he has any mandate right now to do so … But I would not rule out.” Lisbon needs to refinance 4.5 billion euros of sovereign debt in April, which may prove a trigger for finally making the request for aid. One problem complicating Portugal’s situation is that any bailout request would have to be approved by parliament and the majority is opposed to asking for help. “I have always warned of the profoundly negative consequences of seeking foreign aid,” Socrates said as he resigned, vowing to continue to do everything to avoid it. If aid were to be requested — and EU officials have made clear they stand ready to provide one — it is estimated that Lisbon would need 60-80 billion euros. Portuguese benchmark 10-year bond yields rose further on Thursday, climbing to 7.90 percent, far above the 7.0 percent that is regarded as long-term sustainable. The euro weakened to $1.4070 from $1.4117. China, which has offered to buy Portuguese government debt in the past, said it saw continued risks from the euro zone debt crisis but added that it had increased its holdings of European government bonds to help the region. SUMMIT PROBLEMS The summit, which was originally expected to sign off on a “comprehensive package” of measures that EU leaders thought would help resolve their year-long debt problems, is now not expected to take any firm decisions on central issues. “We think that no agreement at the EU summit on the bailout facilities should erode euro support further in the near term,” said Valentin Marinov, currency analyst at CitiFX. Draft conclusions drawn up ahead of the summit showed that a decision on how to increase the effective lending capacity of the current bailout fund, the European Financial Stability Facility, would not now be taken until mid-year, probably ahead of a summit in late June. While a technical issue — it centers on whether euro zone member states will provide capital or guarantees to raise the effective capacity of the EFSF from 250 billion euros to the full 440 billion — it risks further undermining market confidence in EU policymakers’ ability to resolve the crisis. Finland is one of the main obstacles to a decision, since it has dissolved parliament ahead of elections on April 17 and cannot therefore sign off on a deal. Helsinki opposes using more guarantees to increase the effective size of the EFSF. A new Finnish government is only likely to be formed by May at the earliest, and that government may include the euroskeptic True Finns party, which opposes some of the EU’s proposed crisis steps, further complicating the outlook. Over the last few months, EU leaders have made considerable progress in putting together the crisis package. They have decided in principle to expand the EFSF, agreed to create a permanent crisis fund — the European Stability Mechanism — to replace the EFSF from 2013, and agreed to strengthen economic coordination and increase productivity. But as well as being unable to agree on exactly how the EFSF’s capacity should be increased, there are doubts about how they will finance the 500 billion euro ESM using paid-in capital, callable capital and guarantees. A German official said on Wednesday that Berlin now wanted this week’s summit to alter a timetable agreed by EU finance ministers on Monday for injecting cash into the ESM. While this is another nitty-gritty issue, it contributes to a sense in financial markets that EU member states are endlessly at odds over how best to handle the debt crisis, and that everything could yet unravel. NO MOVE ON IRELAND The summit is also unlikely to make progress on reducing the interest rate on bailout loans extended to Ireland. Dublin says the rate is so high that it cripples the Irish economy, but agreement on cutting it has been held up by Dublin’s refusal to give in to German and French pressure for Ireland to raise its low corporate tax rate. “There is almost certainly not going to be a resolution of the Irish issues tomorrow or Friday,” an EU diplomat said on Wednesday. “The feeling is that the outstanding issues for Ireland, which are not just the interest rate but the banking question, that they are better dealt with as a package.” Dublin and the EU are only expected to start detailed talks on how to rescue the Irish banking system after the central bank publishes its assessment of Irish commercial banks on March 31. (Editing by Mike Peacock) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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What’s Up with the Euro? Remains Well Bid Despite Weighing Developments

March 16, 2011

What’s Up with the Euro? Remains Well Bid Despite Weighing Developments

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Confidence drop while employment increased in the Euro Area

March 15, 2011

Confidence drop while employment increased in the Euro Area

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The US dollar reaches the highest in a week versus the euro

March 10, 2011

The US dollar reaches the highest in a week versus the euro

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PIMCO CIO Urges ‘Gradually’ Cutting Deficit

March 3, 2011

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Bill Gross, co-chief investment officer of PIMCO, the world’s biggest bond fund manager, on Thursday urged lawmakers to cut the massive federal deficit but not so swiftly as to choke off the nascent economic recovery. Speaking exclusively to Reuters Insider, Gross said: “Let’s cut the deficit, but let’s do it gradually,” so that real economic growth can take hold. Lawmakers struck a deal on Wednesday that delays for two weeks a showdown over the current year’s spending plan. Republicans are seeking some $61 billion of cuts to help reduce the deficit, estimated to hit $1.65 trillion this year, but Senate Democrats are preparing a measure that would keep funding essentially flat. The first negotiations on the budget are expected to take place on Thursday, according to congressional aides. Wednesday’s deal averted a government shutdown as funding for daily operations had been due to expire on Friday, March 4. Gross, who oversees $1.2 trillion of assets at the Newport Beach, Calif.-based, investment management firm, said he does not expect a credible deficit reduction plan until after the 2012 elections. Addressing the risk to markets from the mushrooming budget deficit, Gross said Treasuries are moving toward being “less of a triple-A credit,” echoing a concern many bond investors have how long the United States can retain the highest possible rating designated by credit rating agencies. Gross, who has been avoiding U.S. government debt securities recently, said he suspects the yield on Treasuries will move higher this summer after the Federal Reserve brings an end to its $600 billion Treasury purchasing program. In a more normal environment, the yield on benchmark U.S. 10-year notes would more closely track the nominal rate of gross domestic product growth, which Gross estimates to be roughly 5 percent. A yield that high is not likely in this environment, but a 4.0 percent yield for 10-year notes is a “rational expectation” if the Fed “disappears as the buyer of last resort,” Gross said. The note currently yields 3.56 percent. Turning his attention away from the situation, Gross saw European Central Bank President Jean Claude Trichet’s comments Thursday on the inflation threat in the euro zone as signaling a near-term rate hike but not the beginning of a trend. Trichet’s use of the term “strong vigilance” following the ECB’s monthly policy meeting was “tough talk, there’s no doubt about it,” Gross said. The ECB left benchmark rates for the region unchanged at a record low 1.0 percent. Gross said he now expects 25 basis points of increase thanks to high prices for oil and other commodities, which feature more prominently in the ECB’s inflation math than in the Fed’s. Still, Gross said sufficient headwinds remain in the euro zone recovery to prevent any near-term rate increase from becoming a trend any time soon. (Reporting by Dan Burns, Jennifer Rogers and Jennifer Ablan) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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The Japanese Yen declines versus the euro and the dollar during the Asia session

March 1, 2011

The Japanese Yen declines versus the euro and the dollar during the Asia session

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Raising Wages Would Be ‘Stupid,’ Europe’s Trichet Says

February 20, 2011

(Reuters) – European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet warned on Sunday against raising wages in the euro zone as inflationary pressures heat up in the bloc. “It would be the stupidest thing to do,” Trichet told France’s Europe 1 radio, asked about pressure in countries like Germany for wage rises as economies emerge from the economic crisis and as higher commodity prices fan inflation. “We can’t do anything about the current rise in fuel and commodity prices but we must do everything to avoid what we call second-round effects, the fact that other prices start moving and settle at a higher level than complies with our definition (of stability),” Trichet said. “I am thinking of the whole range of other prices, including of course, salaries, and we say to employers and unions: remember that we are in a medium to long-term perspective, to maintain price stability.” Trichet was speaking the day after a Paris meeting of G20 finance ministers and central bankers where inflation was a key topic of discussion. ECB governing council member Christian Noyer commented there that pay demands should be limited. Euro zone inflation stands at 2.4 percent, above the ECB’s 2 percent target, and the ECB has warned that its inflation outlook could move to the upside. Meanwhile German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Economy Minister Rainer Bruederle have called for bigger pay rises for workers in 2011 after unions accepted modest increases in recent years as Germany was battling with recession. Trichet said inflation remained the ECB’s top concern and noted that it was those countries in the euro zone that had kept a lid on costs that had managed to reduce unemployment. The Spanish government, keen to convince markets of its long-term growth prospects, is pushing to de-link wage increases from inflation, something Germany wants to make the rule across the euro zone as part of a new competitiveness pact. (Reporting by Catherine Bremer; editing by Sophie Walker) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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The dollar rises on the euro’s behalf during the first session of this week

February 14, 2011

The dollar rises on the euro’s behalf during the first session of this week

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Inflation will continue its rally in UK and the euro zone set to expand 0.4% in the fourth quarter

February 14, 2011

Inflation will continue its rally in UK and the euro zone set to expand 0.4% in the fourth quarter

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Ahead of inflation and growth data, the euro drops

February 14, 2011

Ahead of inflation and growth data, the euro drops

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Mark Weisbrot: Spain’s Troubles Are Tied to Eurozone Policies

February 11, 2011

It has become fashionable since Spain’s economy began to decline to make comparisons to Germany, which is rebounding strongly. The idea is that the Germans went through their restructuring, got organized labor under control, and thereby made their economy more competitive. According to this narrative, this is the key to their economic success — so Spain should do the same if the Spanish economy is to recover. This fits well with various stereotypes of Germans as disciplined and hard working, willing to do what is necessary to be competitive in the global economy, while their counterparts in Europe’s periphery are seen as undisciplined and indulgent. However, the story does not fit the economic facts very well. Spain’s problems are mostly associated with the euro, combined with some bad economic policy decisions that have nothing to do with “labor inflexibility,” the strength of unions, or government spending. And its recovery is being delayed as a result of decisions made by the European authorities: the European Commission, the European Central Bank, and the International Monetary Fund (IMF). When Spain joined the euro in 1999, its level of productivity in manufacturing was about 63.6 percent of Germany’s. Over the next 10 years, productivity grew at about the same rate in both countries, so that by 2009 the ratio was about the same: 63 percent. Hourly wages in manufacturing also increased by about the same amount in both countries, so Germany kept its large, productivity-based cost advantage over Spain. Of course, this arrangement has worked out much better for Germany — during the upswing from 2002-2007, more than 120 percent of Germany’s growth was due to exports — with most of these exports going to other Eurozone countries. This is the basic problem when a country decides to adopt a common currency with other countries that have much higher levels of productivity. They can’t really be competitive in tradable goods — which includes not only exports but industries that compete with imports. If Spain had its own currency, it could let the value of its currency fall to a level that would make the country’s tradable goods sectors competitive. In a situation where the economy is in recession or is weak — Spain’s economy shrank by 0.2 percent in 2010 — the increased exports and reduced imports from such a devaluation would also help get the economy growing again. Instead, the European authorities have prescribed what is called an “internal devaluation” — shrink the economy and raise unemployment enough so that the country can become competitive, through lower prices and wages, without changing the exchange rate (i.e. keeping the euro). Unemployment in Spain is now 20 percent, and although exports have picked up some over the last year or so, it is not nearly enough to pull the economy out of its slump. Spain needs expansionary fiscal and monetary policy to boost the economy. But monetary policy is controlled by the European Central Bank — which just last week announced that it may raise interest rates, despite Europe’s anemic recovery and crushing unemployment in the Eurozone’s weakest economies (Spain, Ireland, Portugal). Expansionary fiscal policy is prohibited by pressure from the European authorities — who are actually pushing Spain to do the opposite, i.e. cut spending and raise taxes — and the fact that, not having its own monetary policy, Spain cannot engage in “quantitative easing,” as the US has done recently, or Japan has done for decades, to finance government spending without adding to the country’s net debt burden. Now back to Spain’s decade of experience with the euro. The adoption of the euro opened up a period of bubble growth, with big capital inflows from other European countries, and the country experienced a vast run-up in the stock market and a huge housing bubble. Spain’s economy grew by a third between 1999 and 2007, and its net debt fell to just 26.5 percent of GDP in 2007. But it was bubble-driven growth: the stock market peaked at 125 percent of GDP in November 2007 and dropped to 54 percent of GDP a year later. A housing bubble increased construction from 7.5 percent to 10.8 percent of GDP (2000-2006), and housing starts dropped by 87 percent when the bubble burst. It was the bursting of these bubbles, and not any lax spending policies by the government, that crashed Spain’s economy and caused its budget troubles. And it is Spain’s subordination to the European authorities, which prohibits it from using any of the three most important macroeconomic policies — fiscal, monetary, and exchange rate — to get out of its slump. Furthermore, although it was theoretically possible for Spain to have narrowed the productivity gap with Germany — since it was starting out at a much lower level of productivity — the bubble-driven growth of the last decade, spurred by the adoption of the euro and large capital inflows, is not the kind of growth that drives up manufacturing productivity. So the neoliberals have it backwards: it is the neoliberal macroeconomic policies, locked in with the euro, that are the source of both its recession and continuing troubles. Spain should refuse to accept any policies that prolong its slump and prevent it from reducing unemployment. If that means restructuring its debt or even leaving the euro, then these options should be on the table in any negotiations with the European authorities. These choices would better than suffering through many more years of sluggish growth and high unemployment. This column was published by the Guardian Unlimited (UK) on January 29, 2011.

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Mark Weisbrot: Spain’s Troubles Are Tied to Eurozone Policies

February 11, 2011

It has become fashionable since Spain’s economy began to decline to make comparisons to Germany, which is rebounding strongly. The idea is that the Germans went through their restructuring, got organized labor under control, and thereby made their economy more competitive. According to this narrative, this is the key to their economic success — so Spain should do the same if the Spanish economy is to recover. This fits well with various stereotypes of Germans as disciplined and hard working, willing to do what is necessary to be competitive in the global economy, while their counterparts in Europe’s periphery are seen as undisciplined and indulgent. However, the story does not fit the economic facts very well. Spain’s problems are mostly associated with the euro, combined with some bad economic policy decisions that have nothing to do with “labor inflexibility,” the strength of unions, or government spending. And its recovery is being delayed as a result of decisions made by the European authorities: the European Commission, the European Central Bank, and the International Monetary Fund (IMF). When Spain joined the euro in 1999, its level of productivity in manufacturing was about 63.6 percent of Germany’s. Over the next 10 years, productivity grew at about the same rate in both countries, so that by 2009 the ratio was about the same: 63 percent. Hourly wages in manufacturing also increased by about the same amount in both countries, so Germany kept its large, productivity-based cost advantage over Spain. Of course, this arrangement has worked out much better for Germany — during the upswing from 2002-2007, more than 120 percent of Germany’s growth was due to exports — with most of these exports going to other Eurozone countries. This is the basic problem when a country decides to adopt a common currency with other countries that have much higher levels of productivity. They can’t really be competitive in tradable goods — which includes not only exports but industries that compete with imports. If Spain had its own currency, it could let the value of its currency fall to a level that would make the country’s tradable goods sectors competitive. In a situation where the economy is in recession or is weak — Spain’s economy shrank by 0.2 percent in 2010 — the increased exports and reduced imports from such a devaluation would also help get the economy growing again. Instead, the European authorities have prescribed what is called an “internal devaluation” — shrink the economy and raise unemployment enough so that the country can become competitive, through lower prices and wages, without changing the exchange rate (i.e. keeping the euro). Unemployment in Spain is now 20 percent, and although exports have picked up some over the last year or so, it is not nearly enough to pull the economy out of its slump. Spain needs expansionary fiscal and monetary policy to boost the economy. But monetary policy is controlled by the European Central Bank — which just last week announced that it may raise interest rates, despite Europe’s anemic recovery and crushing unemployment in the Eurozone’s weakest economies (Spain, Ireland, Portugal). Expansionary fiscal policy is prohibited by pressure from the European authorities — who are actually pushing Spain to do the opposite, i.e. cut spending and raise taxes — and the fact that, not having its own monetary policy, Spain cannot engage in “quantitative easing,” as the US has done recently, or Japan has done for decades, to finance government spending without adding to the country’s net debt burden. Now back to Spain’s decade of experience with the euro. The adoption of the euro opened up a period of bubble growth, with big capital inflows from other European countries, and the country experienced a vast run-up in the stock market and a huge housing bubble. Spain’s economy grew by a third between 1999 and 2007, and its net debt fell to just 26.5 percent of GDP in 2007. But it was bubble-driven growth: the stock market peaked at 125 percent of GDP in November 2007 and dropped to 54 percent of GDP a year later. A housing bubble increased construction from 7.5 percent to 10.8 percent of GDP (2000-2006), and housing starts dropped by 87 percent when the bubble burst. It was the bursting of these bubbles, and not any lax spending policies by the government, that crashed Spain’s economy and caused its budget troubles. And it is Spain’s subordination to the European authorities, which prohibits it from using any of the three most important macroeconomic policies — fiscal, monetary, and exchange rate — to get out of its slump. Furthermore, although it was theoretically possible for Spain to have narrowed the productivity gap with Germany — since it was starting out at a much lower level of productivity — the bubble-driven growth of the last decade, spurred by the adoption of the euro and large capital inflows, is not the kind of growth that drives up manufacturing productivity. So the neoliberals have it backwards: it is the neoliberal macroeconomic policies, locked in with the euro, that are the source of both its recession and continuing troubles. Spain should refuse to accept any policies that prolong its slump and prevent it from reducing unemployment. If that means restructuring its debt or even leaving the euro, then these options should be on the table in any negotiations with the European authorities. These choices would better than suffering through many more years of sluggish growth and high unemployment. This column was published by the Guardian Unlimited (UK) on January 29, 2011.

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The dollar tries to incline, while the yen drops against the euro

February 10, 2011

The dollar tries to incline, while the yen drops against the euro

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Germany, France Reveal Plan To Boost Euro

February 4, 2011

BRUSSELS — Initiating a bold effort to strengthen the euro, Germany and France on Friday laid down far-reaching plans to deepen integration among the 17 nations that use the currency. The move prompted immediate opposition, but could lead to embryonic economic government for Europe.

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Video: Ferguson Says Euro Outlook Improved After Merkel Meeting

February 3, 2011

Feb. 3 (Bloomberg) — Niall Ferguson, a history professor at Harvard University, discusses the European sovereign debt crisis and the outlook for the euro. German Chancellor Angela Merkel met with Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero in Madrid today. Both will attend a leaders’ summit in Brussels tomorrow. Ferguson speaks with David Tweed in Madrid on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Investors eye Trichet as the euro trades with high volatility 

February 3, 2011

Investors eye Trichet as the euro trades with high volatility

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eFUEL EFN Corp. Is Pleased to Announce the Names of the Euro-American Finance Network Inc. (EAFN) Slate of the New Members to the Board of Directors of eFUEL

January 28, 2011

TAMPA, FL–(Marketwire – January 28, 2011) – eFUEL EFN Corp. ( PINKSHEETS : EFLN ) is pleased to announce the names of the Euro-American Finance Network Inc. (EAFN) slate of the new members to the Board of Directors of eFUEL.

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