|
|
| 03.10 20:01 |
UBS about passes TARP
UBS post TARP is calling for the Oct FOMC to ease 50bp, to 1.5% and
says there're 25% odds of an intermeeting ease before the meeting. UBS
sees Dec FOMC easing to 1.25% and Jan FOMC to 1.0 %, where funds should
remain until end-Q2:09.
|
| 03.10 19:03 |
Dow +89.04 at 10571.89, Nasdaq +20.94 at 1997.66, S&P +13.15 at 1127.43
A knee-jerk selling effort has followed the announcement that the House of Representatives approved the ammended asset purchase plan. That reaction erased more than 300 points from the Dow Jones Industrial Average. The Dow actually fell all the way into the red, though only for a moment. It quickly pulled back into positive ground. The concerted selling effort follows the build up that led up to the House vote. That build up had each of the major indices sporting gains of at least 3.0%. Advancing issues in the S&P 500 are now relatively in balance with declining stocks. There had been an overwhelmingly bullish tone early on.
|
| 03.10 18:45 |
EUR/USD: Pushes to $1.3860 in the wake of the TARP vote, returning to the high area seen ahead of the vote though shy of post-payroll high at $1.3880. |
| 03.10 18:23 |
House vote so far is 222 for, so bill passes. |
| 03.10 18:10 |
Dow +264.19 at 10747.04, Nasdaq +59.01 at 2035.73, S&P +33.31 at 1147.59 |
| 03.10 18:07 |
American focus: dollar stable as House to vote on bailout package
The dollar headed for its biggest weekly gain
ever against the euro on a surge in demand for U.S. currency funding
amid a worldwide credit crunch.
The greenback advanced versus the yen on speculation the U.S. House of
Representatives will approve a $700 billion financial bailout after
rejecting the plan Sept. 29. The government's payroll report showed the
U.S. lost the most jobs in five years last month.
``Very strong demand for dollars is still evident,'' said Marc
Chandler, global head of currency strategy at Brown Brothers Harriman
& Co. in New York. Traders waited until after the payroll data to
buy dollars against the euro because they wanted to ``clear the event
risk,'' he said.
The London interbank offered rate, or Libor, that banks charge each
other for three-month loans in dollars increased to 4.33 percent, the
most since January, the British Bankers' Association said. The
Libor-OIS spread, a gauge of cash scarcity among banks, widened to a
record.
By a vote of 223-205, the U.S. House prevented members from offering
amendments that could snarl passage of the bailout. The tally signaled
the plan has enough support to clear Congress and be sent to President
George W. Bush to be signed into law.
At least 12 House members said they will drop their opposition to the
plan and support it. The measure failed by a dozen votes earlier this
week. The Senate voted 74-25 on Oct. 1 in favor of legislation that
links the rescue to an increase in bank-deposit insurance limits and
tax breaks.
``The scarcity of the dollar in the market is keeping it supported,''
said Samarjit Shankar, director of strategy for the global markets
group in Boston at Bank of New York Mellon, the world's largest
custodial bank, with more than $23 trillion in assets under
administration. ``The bailout plan could take the dollar further up.''
The dollar also benefited from a ``relief rally'' today, according to
Andrew Busch, a currency strategist at BMO Capital Markets in Chicago.
He said the payroll data was not as bad as some people thought after
last month's bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. sent the
financial market into turmoil.
U.S. payrolls shrank by 159,000 last month, following a revised decline
of 73,000 in August, the Labor Department said today in Washington.
It's the biggest loss since 2003. The jobless rate stayed at 6.1
percent.
``It's not doing any good for money markets and liquidity given the
real economy is starting to freeze up,'' said Alan Ruskin, head of
international currency strategy in North America at RBS Greenwich
Capital Markets Inc. in Greenwich, Connecticut. ``The market is short
of dollar liquidity, so the dollar remains bid.''
The euro was headed for a record weekly drop against the dollar after
European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said yesterday
policy makers discussed cutting the main refinancing rate. European
economies face ``increasing downside risks,'' he said at a press
conference following the decision to keep the benchmark at a seven-year
high of 4.25 percent.
Five European banks including Dexia SA, the world's biggest lender to
local governments, and Fortis, Belgium's largest financial-services
firm, accepted government-backed bailouts this week.
Futures on the Chicago Board of Trade showed an 84 percent chance that
the Federal Reserve will cut the 2 percent target lending rate for
overnight lending between banks by a half- percentage point at its Oct.
29 meeting, with the balance of bets on a reduction of 0.75 percentage
point. Futures showed no chance of lower borrowing costs a month ago.
|
| 03.10 18:04 |
US POLITICS: House prepares to vote. |
| 03.10 17:41 |
Dow +169.25 at 10652.10, Nasdaq +49.38 at 2026.10, S&P +23.97 at 1138.25
Stocks continue to move lower, but have recently pulled upward. There is no news item immediately related to the moves.
Though the decline has pulled the S&P 500 off its session high,
where it sported a gain of 3.2%, its gain is still strong at 2.0%.
Most influential in the advance of the S&P 500 is Exxon-Mobil (XOM
80.01, +2.51). Shares of Exxon Mobil and other integrated oil and gas
players (+3.2%) are gaining attention after being sent lower in
previous sessions. A rise in oil prices has also helped.
Oil is currently up just 0.5% to $94.40 per barrel. It was up 2.2% earlier.
|
| 03.10 17:18 |
Mizuho on US data
Economist Steven Ricchiuto at Mizuho says
"The details of the latest factory orders report came in decidedly
weak" and the 4% drop was broad based. He now ests Q3 GDP growth will
be negative.
|
| 03.10 16:45 |
Dow +203.74 at 10686.51, Nasdaq +58.29 at 2035.01, S&P +29.18 at 1143.56 |
| 03.10 16:27 |
MS on Fed policy
"The pace of deterioration in labor market
conditions appears to be accelerating as the economy rapidly loses
momentum. As a result, we believe that the Fed will announce an
intermeeting 50 bp cut in the official fed funds target rate at some
point in the coming days. However, it is worth noting that the Fed has
already engineered a steal ease since the effective average funds rate
has averaged 1.32% over the past two weeks.
|
| 03.10 15:59 |
Dow +157.94 at 10640.79, Nasdaq +44.76 at 2021.48, S&P +24.06 at 1138.34
Stocks have fluctuated in recent minutes as Republican leaders from the
U.S. House of Representatives sounded optimistic about their progress
in discussions related to the federal asset purchase plan. However,
they remain noncommittal.
The gains in the financial sector have eased, but remain impressive. The sector is up 2.6% currently.
According to a CNBC spokesman, Citigroup (C 20.20, -2.30) is
considering a lawsuit against Wachovia Bank (WB 6.81, +2.90). Citi
planned to acquire Wachovia's banking operations in a deal brokered by
the FDIC. Wells Fargo (WFC 37.12, +1.96) emerged to make a
stock-for-stock transaction with Wachovia, in which it will acquire all
of Wachovia without the help of a government agency. Although, Wells
Fargo will issue $20 billion in securities to help maintain its capital
position.
|
| 03.10 15:34 |
HSBC on ISM non-manufacturing
Economist Ryan Wang at HSBC says ISM non-manufacturing at 50.2 shows
an above average gap to Mfg ISM at 6.7 pts, showing divergence. He says
details were "solid."
|
| 03.10 15:23 |
Sept nonmfg ISM text:
"10 non-manufacturing industries reported growth in September.
Respondents' comments are positive about the reduction in fuel and
commodity costs; however, they remain concerned about overall market
conditions and the economy."
|
| 03.10 15:10 |
US: Sept nonmfg ISM data show Prices Paid at 70.0 vs 72.9, and new orders 50.8. |
| 03.10 15:00 |
US: Sept nonmfg ISM 50.2 vs 50.6. |
| 03.10 14:56 |
Due up at 1400GMT is Sept nonmfg ISM. Was 50.6. Median est 49.7. |
| 03.10 14:49 |
Dow +136.04 at 10618.89, Nasdaq +45.43 at 2022.15, S&P +23.21 at 1137.49
Stocks start the session with strong gains. The advance is the most pronounced in the financial sector, which is up 3.5%.
Participants are pushing shares of financial companies higher since the
sector will be the most immediate beneficiary of a federal plan to
acquire distressed assets, particularly difficult to trade
mortgage-backed securities. The plan proposes to fund the purchases
with $700 billion and is currently up for vote in the House of
Representatives.
Though the plan would help create a market for many of the distressed
assets that are driving losses at financial institutions, threats to
the broader economy loom.
September nonfarm payrolls declined 159,000, exceeding the consensus
forecast of a 105,000 decline. The decline was the largest since early
2003. Losses continue in construction, manufacturing, and retail. The
unemployment rate remains at 6.1%.
|
| 03.10 14:38 |
Mizuho on US data
Mizuho economist Steven Ricchiuto says details of employment report
were as weak as the headline of -159,000 jobs. He says "the job losses
were broad based" and "the only reason the jobless rate did not rise
was a downward adjustment in the number of worker counted as in the
labor force. The monthly jobs data imply a another month of
disappointing industrial production, capacity utilization, and personal
income."
|
| 03.10 14:30 |
Before the bell: market to open higher.[M]
Stock futures continue to trade in front of fair value. S&P futures
vs fair value: +11.50. Nasdaq futures vs fair value: +14.00.
 Nonfarm payrolls fell 159,000
in September, marking the ninth consecutive month of declines.
Economists, on average, were looking for a loss of 105,000 jobs. The
unemployment rate continues to stand at 6.1%. The unemployment rate of
6.1% remains the highest since 2003. The change in nonfarm payrolls
for August was revised upward to reflect a loss of 73,000 jobs. Though
the data are rather disappointing, traders are keeping a watchful eye
on the House of Representatives vote for the the asset purchase plan.
Wells Fargo (WFC) is merging with Wachovia Bank (WB) in a stock-for-stock transaction. Wachovia had been looking to combine its banking business with Citigroup (C)
in a deal facilitated by the FDIC. The transaction between Wells Fargo
and Wachovia does not require any assistance from a government agency,
and has been approved unanimously by the boards of both companies. The
transaction is valued at $15.1 billion, or $7.00 per WB share. Just a
day after announcing it expected to earn a modest profit in its latest
quarter, UBS (UBS) announced it is cutting 2,000 investment banking jobs, according to Reuters.
|
| 03.10 14:05 |
Bank of America: "We now expect a 50 bp cut in the Federal funds rate at or before the October 28-29 FOMC meeting." |
| 03.10 13:58 |
HFE: Fed have to cut rates
Ian Shepherdson, Chief U.S. Economist at HFE, says employ data mean
"The U.S. economy is shrinking, and there will be many more awful
reports like this. Payrolls were weak everywhere except govt and
education; big change is in services, down a huge 2K, way below the
-15K prior trend. Note that the core unadjusted numbers even worse than
the headline; the seasonal was 80K better than Sep last year. Q4 should
see much more adverse seasonals which, together with the deteriorating
trend, implies payrolls similar or worse than Sep. Fed has more to do,
50bp ease Oct 29 or sooner."
|
| 03.10 13:52 |
USD/JPY falls under Y105.00
Below Y104.80 support losses widen to Y104.50
and then may reach Y104.20/10 and Y103.80/60. Offers Y105.50. Resistance is around Tuesday’s
high on Y106.50, then – at Y107.00 should recovery
extend.
|
| 03.10 13:46 |
Cable under pressure in the wake of US jobs data
Pressed back under $1.7700 on reaction to the US data. The pair comes
to $1.7650 at time of writing. Bids seen at $1.7630 and $1.7610/00,
with a break below exposing Thursday's base at $1.7550.
|
| 03.10 13:31 |
US: Sept Civ Unempl Rt 6.1% |
| 03.10 13:29 |
Due up at 1230GMT is a release of non-farm payrolls, which are expected to fall 100,000 in September$+0.3% AHE. |
| 03.10 13:29 |
US: Sept payrolls -159k and Aug-Jul rev was just +4k. |
| 03.10 13:26 |
European session: [M]
The dollar fell against the yen, headed for a third weekly loss, before
a government report that will probably show the deepening credit crunch
contributed to the biggest drop in employment in more than five years.
The currency also fell against the euro on speculation the U.S. economy
will weaken regardless of whether lawmakers pass a bill to buy troubled
assets from banks in a vote today. The dollar retreated from the
highest in more than a year against the currencies of the U.S.'s six
major trading partners.
``The risk is that the jobs data will come in below market consensus,''
said Adam Cole, head of global currency strategy in London at Royal
Bank of Canada. ``That will put pressure on the dollar in the near
term.''
U.S. employers probably eliminated 105,000 jobs last month, after
slashing 84,000 in August, according to the median forecast of
economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. The Labor Department's report is
due at 8:30 a.m. in Washington. The unemployment rate held at a
five-year high of 6.1 percent, according to a separate survey.
``There's a high chance the dollar falls against the yen,'' Masafumi
Yamamoto, head of foreign-exchange strategy for Japan at Royal Bank of
Scotland in Tokyo and a former Bank of Japan currency trader, wrote in
a research note today. ``The market is likely to price in bad jobs
numbers and the chance of a Fed rate cut. We're in the middle of a
string of disappointing economic data.''
Futures on the Chicago Board of Trade yesterday showed a 94 percent
chance the Fed will cut its 2 percent target rate for overnight lending
between banks by a half-percentage point on Oct. 29, with the balance
of bets on a quarter-point reduction. Futures showed no chance of lower
rates a month ago.
The U.S. House of Representatives will vote on the latest version of a
$700 billion bank rescue plan at about 12:30 p.m. in Washington. The
Senate voted 74-25 on Oct. 1 in favor of legislation that links the
rescue of the financial industry to an increase in bank-deposit
insurance limits and tax breaks after the House rejected an earlier
version of the bill.
The euro was still set for a record weekly drop against the dollar
after European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said
yesterday policy makers discussed cutting the benchmark interest rate
before holding it at 4.25 percent. The 15-nation currency declined 5.1
percent versus the dollar, the biggest weekly drop since its debut in
January 1999. It fell 5.8 percent against the yen, the biggest weekly
decline since March 2000.
Investors should sell the euro at 145 yen with a target of 135 yen
after the ECB signaled it may lower borrowing costs for the first time
in five years, Morgan Stanley said.
``Growth prospects in the eurozone are dimming quickly and may force
the ECB's easing hand sooner rather than later,'' New York-based Sophia
Drossos and Yilin Nie, strategists at Morgan Stanley, wrote in a
research note yesterday.
US data sees the 1230GMT release of non-farm payrolls,
which are expected to fall 100,000 in September, as the impact of
Hurricanes Gustav and Ike impacted work conditions in the affected
regions. Educational workers should return to work in the September
data, though seasonal factors should anticipate this jump.
Manufacturing payrolls are expected to fall 40,000 in September. The
unemployment rate is expected to stay at 6.1%. Hourly earnings are
forecast to rise 0.3% in the month, while the factory workweek is
expected to stay at 33.7. Later US data sees the 1400GMT release of the ISM's non-manufacturing index, which is forecast to fall to a reading of 49.7 in September after nching above 50 in August.
|
| 03.10 13:22 |
HFE on payrolls
"The official payroll numbers have tended to be rather weaker than
ADP (-8k); the spread is typically about 60K, suggesting we should look
for headline payrolls closer to -70K than our -100K forecast."
|
| 03.10 12:47 |
Major banks changed their ECB rate call
Joining Citigroup and JPMorgan economists are also Royal Bank of
Scotland, Barclays Capital and BNP Paribas, who have also changed their
ECB rate call. RBS & BarCap are now going for a November rate cut
vs December previous, whilst BNP look for a rate cut in Q4 2008 vs
pervious forecast of a cut in Q1 2009.
|
| 03.10 12:37 |
RDQ Economics reaffirms payroll est at -125k. |
| 03.10 12:17 |
European focus: [M]
The dollar fell against the yen, headed for a third weekly loss, before
a government report that will probably show the deepening credit crunch
contributed to the biggest drop in employment in more than five years.
The currency also fell against the euro on speculation the U.S. economy
will weaken regardless of whether lawmakers pass a bill to buy troubled
assets from banks in a vote today. The dollar retreated from the
highest in more than a year against the currencies of the U.S.'s six
major trading partners.
``The risk is that the jobs data will come in below market consensus,''
said Adam Cole, head of global currency strategy in London at Royal
Bank of Canada. ``That will put pressure on the dollar in the near
term.''
U.S. employers probably eliminated 105,000 jobs last month, after
slashing 84,000 in August, according to the median forecast of
economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. The Labor Department's report is
due at 8:30 a.m. in Washington. The unemployment rate held at a
five-year high of 6.1 percent, according to a separate survey.
``There's a high chance the dollar falls against the yen,'' Masafumi
Yamamoto, head of foreign-exchange strategy for Japan at Royal Bank of
Scotland in Tokyo and a former Bank of Japan currency trader, wrote in
a research note today. ``The market is likely to price in bad jobs
numbers and the chance of a Fed rate cut. We're in the middle of a
string of disappointing economic data.''
Futures on the Chicago Board of Trade yesterday showed a 94 percent
chance the Fed will cut its 2 percent target rate for overnight lending
between banks by a half-percentage point on Oct. 29, with the balance
of bets on a quarter-point reduction. Futures showed no chance of lower
rates a month ago.
The U.S. House of Representatives will vote on the latest version of a
$700 billion bank rescue plan at about 12:30 p.m. in Washington. The
Senate voted 74-25 on Oct. 1 in favor of legislation that links the
rescue of the financial industry to an increase in bank-deposit
insurance limits and tax breaks after the House rejected an earlier
version of the bill.
The euro was still set for a record weekly drop against the dollar
after European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said
yesterday policy makers discussed cutting the benchmark interest rate
before holding it at 4.25 percent. The 15-nation currency declined 5.1
percent versus the dollar, the biggest weekly drop since its debut in
January 1999. It fell 5.8 percent against the yen, the biggest weekly
decline since March 2000.
Investors should sell the euro at 145 yen with a target of 135 yen
after the ECB signaled it may lower borrowing costs for the first time
in five years, Morgan Stanley said.
``Growth prospects in the eurozone are dimming quickly and may force
the ECB's easing hand sooner rather than later,'' New York-based Sophia
Drossos and Yilin Nie, strategists at Morgan Stanley, wrote in a
research note yesterday.
|
| 03.10 12:06 |
Wells Fargo and Wachovia agree to merge
-- Wells Fargo to pay 0.1991/share for each Wachovia share.
|
| 03.10 12:04 |
USD/JPY techs:
Resistance 3: Y108.00
Resistance 2: Y107.00
Resistance 1: Y106.50
Current price: Y105.06
Support 1: Y105.00
Support 2: Y104.50
Support 3: Y103.50
Comments: the
dollar headed for a third weekly decline against the yen. The dollar
fell for the third day against the yen on speculation the U.S. economy
will weaken regardless of whether lawmakers pass a bill to buy troubled
assets from banks in a vote today. For the week, theUSD/JPY fell 1%.
Support is around Y104.80/Y105.00. Below losses may widen to Y104.50
and then – to Tuesday’s low on Y104.50. Resistance is around Tuesday’s
high on Y106.50, then – at Y107.00.
|
| 03.10 11:41 |
USD/CHF techs:
Resistance 3: Chf1.1580 Resistance 2: Chf1.1420 Resistance 1: Chf1.1380 Current price: Chf1.1307 Support 1: Chf1.1275 Support 2: Chf1.1180 Support 3: Chf1.1120 Comments: The dollar is under pressure after yesterday’s rise before a government
report that may show U.S. companies reduced workers for a ninth month
amid the worst financial market meltdown since the Great Depression.
U.S. employers probably eliminated 105,000 jobs last month, after
slashing 84,000 in August, according to the median forecast of
economists. The Labor Department's report is due at 12:30 GMT. The
unemployment rate held at a five-year high of 6.1%, according to a
survey. Futures on the Chicago Board of Trade
yesterday showed a 94% chance the Fed would cut its 2% rate for
overnight lending between banks by a half-percentage point on Oct. 29.
Futures showed no chance of lower rates a month ago. Support comes
atFibo level on Chf1.1275/80 (23.6% of the Chf1.0820 – Chf1.1420
upmove), Break under will point to further losses to Chf1.1180 and then
– to Chf1.1120. Strong resistance is around yesterday’s high on
Chf1.1420. Next band of resistance is near Dec’07 highs on
Chf1.1580/00.
|
| 03.10 11:36 |
GBP/USD techs:
Resistance 3: $1.7880 Resistance 2: $1.7820 Resistance 1: $1.7720 Current price: $1.7696 Support 1: $1.7600 Support 2: $1.7550 Support 3: $1.7440 Comments: GBP/USD slowly recovers following the EUR/USD. Minor support is around session low on $1.7600 with
stronger level is around yesterday’s low on $1.7550. Resistance
mentioned at $1.7720, stronger – at $1.7820 (23.6% of the $1.8670 -
$1.7550 decline). Above the target comes at yesterday’s high on
$1.7880.
|
| 03.10 11:07 |
BOE KING: BoE to take all action needed to ensure liquidity
-- BoE taking action in "extraordinary market condition".
|
| 03.10 10:41 |
Options expiries of note for today's 1400GMT cut:
EUR/USD $1.3850
USD/JPY Y105.40, Y105.45, Y105.50
USD/CAD C$1.0600, C$1.0800
|
| 03.10 07:01 |
EUR/USD techs:
Resistance 3:$1.3960
Resistance 2: $1.3900
Resistance 1: $1.3840
Current price: $1.3875
Support 1: $1.3740
Support 2: $1.3680
Support 3: $1.3550
Comments: The euro headed for its largest ever weekly decline versus
the greenback after European Central Bank President Jean- Claude
Trichet said yesterday policy makers discussed cutting the benchmark
interest rate before holding it at 4.25%. The euro declined 5.3% versus
the dollar for the week. Currently EUR/USD challenges resistance at
Fibo level on $1.3840 (23.6% of $1.4170 - $1.3743 decline from Oct 01
to Oct 02). Above there is a chance for recover up to $1.3900/10
(38.2%) and $1.3960 (50%). Strong support is around $1.3740
(yesterday’s low) with a break under will widen losses to $1.5680 and
stronger level on Sep 02 of 2007 low on $1.3540/50.
|
| 03.10 06:40 |
Daily History for Okt 02, 2008
High Low Close
EUR/USD 1.4023 1.3742 1.3799
USD/JPY 106.28 105.08 105.34
GBP/USD 1.7727 1.7550 1.7623
USD/CHF 1.1412 1.1248 1.1371
EUR/JPY 148.67 144.85 145.36
EUR/GBP 0.7919 0.7821 0.7828
GBP/JPY 188.09 184.69 185.66
GBP/CHF 2.0091 1.9904 2.0039
Change % Change Last
Nikkei -213.50 -1.88% 11,154.76
Topix -24.16 -2.20% 1,076.97
FTSE -89.25 -1.80% 4,870.34
DAX -145.70 -2.51% 5,660.63
CAC -91.26 -2.25% 3,963.28
Dow -348.22 -3.22% 10,482.85
NASDAQ -92.68 -4.48% 1,976.72
S&P -46.78 -4.03% 1,114.28
10yr Note -1.2200 -0.324% 3.646%
NYMEX Crude Oil -4.56 -4.63% 93.97
Gold -43.00 -4.85% 844.30
|
| 03.10 06:25 |
Schedule for today, Friday, Okt 03, 2008
05:45 Swiss Consumer Price Index (Sep) -0,3% 05:45 Swiss Consumer Price Index (YoY) (Sep) 2.9% 08:00 Е15 PMI services (September) 48.2 48.5 08:30 UK CIPS services index (September) 48.0 49.2 09:00 Е15 Retail sales (August) adjusted -0.4% 09:00 Е15 Retail sales (August) adjusted Y/Y -2.8% 12:30 USA Nonfarm payrolls (September) -84К 12:30 USA Unemployment rate (September) 6.1% 12:30 USA Average hourly earnings (September) 0.4% 12:30 USA Average workweek (September) 33.7 14:00 USA ISM Non-mfg composite index (September) 50.6
|
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