Enter your Email Address


Useful Links

Know What The Insiders Are Doing!
Stock Trading Software

More Links




[Most Recent Quotes from www.kitco.com]

[Most Recent Quotes from www.kitco.com]




Economic Productivity Surges – Analyst Blog

Dirk Van Dijk (November 5th, 2009) Writes:
The economy is recovering, yet the Labor market is still in the doldrums (we will see just how bad tomorrow morning). In other words, output is up, yet the number of hours of work to create that output is down. This, by definition, means that output per hour -- otherwise known as productivity -- is going up. Today we found out by just how much. Non-farm business productivity grew at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 9.5% in the third quarter, the highest rate since the third quarter of 2003 when it hit 9.7%. Output grew at a 4.0% rate, while hours worked fell at a 5.0% rate in the third quarter. On a year-over-year basis, productivity grew 4.3% as output fell by 3.5% while hours worked fell by a staggering 7.5%. That was an all-time record (since the government started keeping track back in 1948). To ...

Will All Be Well, And End Well, In Estonia?

Edward Hugh (January 13th, 2009) Writes:
by Edward Hugh: Barcelonabr /br /Well, there doesn't seem to much room for doubt at this point does there, the Baltic Economies are in the van of the European economic slowdown for 2009, just as they were leading the charge up in 2007, and all that debate about whether we were going to get a hard landing or a soft one seems now so out of date and and old hat as we watch how Estonia's economy contracts almost faster than the body of the incredible shrinking man (by an annual 3.5% in the third quarter of 2008), while Latvia's seems to be rivalling Harry Houdini in the expert art of staged disappearance (dropping as it did by an annual 4.6% in Q3). Even Lithuania's economy - which like a half drunken man still manages to stagger forward before it finally gets to fall over - is now expected by ...

As Hungary’s Recession Deepens The Central Bank Cuts Rates In “Snails Pace” Mode

Manuel Alvarez-Rivera (January 8th, 2009) Writes:
The fact that Hungary's National Bank did not decide to make an unexpected interest rate cut at its meeting earlier this week seems to have a href="http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchiveamp;sid=a84zp9hh0af0"surprised some/a, but it really should not have done. According to James Morsink, head of the IMF delegation to Budapest, Hungary only has room to cut its benchmark interest rate a href="http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchiveamp;sid=aW.6Yo1wzmp4"at a “gradual and cautious” pace/a. The reasoning behind this view is simple, any more rapid reduction in the bank's benchmark rate risks being accompanied by a devaluation of the forint, and and any such devaluation would inevitably lead to a rise in mortgage defaults and problems for the banking system as holders of Swiss Franc forex loans find themselves unable to maintain their payments as unemployment rises and wages and salaries fall.br /br /Thus it is that even though the Hungarian economy is now in its worst recession in over a decade ...

Too Big to Suffer a Loss – Doug Noland

John Lee (September 15th, 2008) Writes:
For the week, the Dow gained 1.8% (down 13.9% y-t-d) and the S&P500 increased 0.8% (down 14.8%). The Utilities rose 2.6% (down 14.8%), and the Morgan Stanley Consumer index gained 2.2% (down 5.1%). The Transports jumped 3.8% (up 11%), and the Morgan Stanley Cyclical index advanced 3.3% (down 13.2%). The small cap Russell 2000 added 0.2% (down 5.1%), and the S&P400 Mid-Caps increased 0.4% (down 8.1%). The NASDAQ100 was about unchanged (down 15.2%), while the Morgan Stanley High Tech index slipped 0.4% (down 15.6%). The Semiconductors lost 2.9% (down 21.2%). The Street.com Internet Index declined 0.3% (down 11%), while the NASDAQ Telecommunications index gained 1.7% (down 10.2%). The Biotechs gained 1.0% (up 3%). The financial stocks were mixed. With Lehman collapsing, the Broker/Dealers sank 11.6% (down 35.9%). Meanwhile, the Banks gained 3.2% (down 19.9%). With Bullion sinking $37, the ...
Tags for this Post:
Abdel Latif Wahba, Abigail Moses, Adam, Aetna, Agrium, Alabama, Alec Phillips, Alex Nicholson, Alex Tanzi, America, Andre Soliani, Andrea Coombes, Asset Backed Securities, Associated Press, Aud, bank credit, Bank Failures, Barack Obama, Barclays Capital, Bear Stearns, Biotechs, bloomberg, Bob Ivry, Bovespa equities, Brazil, Brian Swint, Bush, bush administration, CAD, Camulos Capital LP, Caracas, Cbo, central bank, China, China’s government, Christian Wienberg, Christopher Flanagan, Citigroup, Comptroller of the Currency, Congress, Congressional Budget Office, CP/Money Funds, CRB, currency, Customs Bureau, Dallas Federal, Dallas Federal Reserve, Dan Levy, David Enrich, David Reilly, Dawn Kopecki, DAX equities, Dean Nessen, Deborah Solomon, December Corn, Demand & Checkable Deposits, Denmark, Depression, DKK, Dmitry Medvedev, Donna Kardos, Doug Noland, Dow 30, Dow Jones, Dubai, Dubai government, Edward McKelvey, energy, EUR, eurodollars, Europe, Exports, Fannie Mae, Farhan Sharif, Fed Foreign Holdings, Federal Government, Federal Housing Finance Agency, Federal Reserve System, finance housing, Financial Times, Florida, Food Costs, Freddie Mac, Goldman Sachs, Goldman Sachs Group Inc, goldmau.com, Greg Hitt, Gross Domestic Product, Halliburton, Hedge Fund Research, Henrique Meirelles, Henry Paulson, home-loan banks, Hurricane, India, insurance-like contracts investors, International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Internet Index, Invest Co, Jacqueline Palank, James Lockhart, James R. Hagerty, James T. Areddy, Janet Ong, Japan, Jason Clenfield, Jeremy Leaf, Jeremy R. Cooke, Jim Croft, Johan Carlstrom, John Brinsley, John Lee, john mccain, John Shaw, Jon Hilsenrath, Joshua Goodman, JPMorgan Chase & Co., Jpy, Kathleen Chu, Kevin Hamlin, KRW, Lehman, Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc, Lester Pimentel, Li Yanping, Loans & Leases, Los Angeles, Los Angeles Community College District, Louise Story, Mahmoud Kassem, main mortgage finance firms, Maria Levitov, Market Commentary, Markus Balser, Matthew Brown, Matthew Walter, MBS, Merrill Lynch & Co., Mexican Bolsa, Mexico, Michael Farmer, Michael Quint, mining, Money Fund, Moody's, Morgan Stanley, Mortgage Asset Research Institute, mortgage finance giants, Moscow, MXP, NASDAQ Telecommunications, National Institute for Economic and Social Research, Neil Unmack, New York, New York Times, New York's State Dormitory Authority, New Zealand, Nick Timiraos, Nikkei 225, Nipa Piboontanasawat, North Texas Tollway Authority, Oester Kontrolbank, Oil, oil exporting economy, Oil Imports, olympics, Output, Pakistan, Patrick Yoest, Peter Orszag, Peter Westin, printing press, RAB Capital PLC, Real Estate, RealtyTrac Inc., Retail Money Funds, Retail Sales, Richard Fisher, Richard Shelby, RK Capital Management LLP, Romy Varghese, Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors, Russell 2000, Russia, Saijel Kishan, Savings Deposits, seasonal and retail businesses, Securities Credit, senate banking committee, September Gasoline, SGD, Shamim Adam, Stacy-Marie Ishmael, Standard Poors, Steve Bryant, Stewart Bailey, T.J. Lim, Taiwan, Tennessee, Texas, The Bank of Mexico, The Wall Street Journal, Tim Adams, Timothy R. Homan, Total Money Market Fund, Tracy Withers, Transports, Turkey, Tyson Foods, Unicredit Group, United Kingdom, United States, Us Government, Us Treasury, USD, Utilities, Venezuela, Vietnam, Vince Breitenbach, Wall Street Journal, Wall Street Journal Asia, Washington, Washington Mutual, William Mauldin, yuan, ZAR

China Industrial Output May 2008

Edward Hugh (June 16th, 2008) Writes:
China's industrial-production growth accelerated on rising exports, signaling that the world's fourth-biggest economy is weathering a global slowdown. Output rose 16 percent in May from a year earlier after gaining 15.7 percent in April, the statistics bureau said today.Overseas shipments surged last month and retail-sales growth was close to the highest in nine years, keeping factories busy even as the deadliest earthquake in 32 years disrupted output in Sichuan province. The shortening of a weeklong May holiday to a three-day break boosted production. Sichuan's small role in China's manufacturing limited the May 12 disaster's effect on production. Quake reconstruction work is boosting output of some products like steel sheets for housing. Raw-coal production rose 18.5 percent in May from a year earlier after gaining 13.9 percent in April. Crude-oil output climbed 1.8 percent in May after increasing 0.5 ...

Newsletter

No recommendations, either expressed or implied, are being made to buy, sell, hold or short any of the mentioned stocks. No legal, tax or accounting advice is expressed or implied. Always contact your attorney, CPA, or tax advisor before acting on any legal or tax issues. StraightStocks.com is not responsible for the content, products, or services of any of the advertisers on this site. StraightStocks.com receives compensation from advertisers on this blog. Services and products referred to herein are trademarks, registered trademarks, servicemarks, and/or registered servicemarks of their respective trademark or servicemark owners.