Archive for October, 2008

Capital Gold Group Report: Fed Cuts Rates by Half Point Amid Economic Deterioration

October 29, 2008

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OCTOBER 29, 2008, 2:27 P.M. ET
WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve on Wednesday slashed interest rates to four-year lows, capping a dramatic policy turn in October as the U.S. confronts a severe financial crisis and almost-certain recession.

Fed officials even left the door open to additional rate cuts to below levels not seen in a half-century, putting rates on the once-unthinkable path towards zero.

The Federal Open Market Committee voted unanimously to lower the target federal funds rate at which banks lend to each other by 0.5 percentage point to 1%, its lowest since between June 2003 and June 2004. That outcome was universally expected by Wall Street economists in a Dow Jones Newswires survey.

The Fed also reduced the discount rate charged for direct loans to banks by 0.5 percentage point to 1.25%.

“The pace of economic activity appears to have slowed markedly, owing importantly to a decline in consumer expenditures,” the FOMC said, while the financial crisis “is likely to exert additional restraint on spending.” (Read the statement)

Though the fed funds rate was 1% as recently as 2004, few if any on Wall Street thought officials would revisit those levels again.

After all, the 2001 to 2003 easing campaign was seen by some, in hindsight, as an overreaction to the mild 2001 recession and overhyped deflation fears. Those cuts and the slow pace of tightening thereafter were criticized as the root cause of the ensuing U.S. housing bubble, the collapse of which is at the heart of the current economic storm.

But this time is different. Far from a mild downturn, the U.S. economy is poised to contract sharply. Economists expect third quarter gross domestic product figures, due for release Thursday, to show a 0.5% contraction, at an annual rate. The forecasting firm Macroeconomic Advisers expects an accelerated decline of 2.8% in the current quarter followed by another GDP dip in early 2009.

Meanwhile, the unemployment rate is expected to climb well above 7% in coming months from its current level of 6.1%. And inflation rates, though still quite elevated on an annual basis, should come down quickly in response to falling oil and gasoline prices.

“In light of the declines in the prices of energy and other commodities and the weaker prospects for economic activity, the Committee expects inflation to moderate in coming quarters to levels consistent with price stability,” the Fed said.

As recently as the FOMC’s last scheduled meeting, on Sept. 16, officials had warned that inflation remained a “significant” concern. But as the credit crunch claimed more victims and showed signs of spilling over to consumer and business spending, Fed officials on Oct. 8 — in an unprecedented joint rate cut with other major central banks including the European Central Bank and Bank of England — lowered official rates by 0.5 percentage points.

Those actions should promote growth over time, the Fed said, though “downside risks to growth remain.”

Fed officials will monitor the economy and markets and “act as needed” to promote economic growth and price stability, the Fed said.

Also this month, the Fed announced a series of programs to help ailing short-term debt markets, particularly by easing corporations’ access to loans they need to fund their daily operations. The market for those IOUs, or commercial paper, has suffered as money market funds — the largest group of investors in the market — remain spooked in wake of the collapse of Lehman Brothers. Some money funds had incurred significant losses from defaulted Lehman debt.

Under the Money Market Investment Funding Facility the Fed announced last week, the Fed will provide funding to help money market funds purchase certificates of deposits and commercial paper. And through its Commercial Paper Funding Facility, a complementary program that started Monday, companies such as American Express and General Electric can sell their three-month commercial paper to the Fed.

The Fed has also extended loans to banking organizations to purchase asset-backed commercial paper, started paying interest on banks’ required and excess reserve balances and boosted the size of its Term Auction Facility auctions — all in effort to encourage lending.

There are preliminary signs the Fed’s backstop programs are working. A key lending rate, the London interbank offered rate, for instance, was lower Wednesday, extending a streak of consecutive daily declines over the past two weeks.

“The real story regarding the Federal Reserve is its various liquidity operations; the federal funds rate is second fiddle,” said Miller Tabak bond strategist Tony Crescenzi in a research note before the FOMC decision.

Still, the fed funds rate remains a powerful tool given the new global nature of rate cuts. Until recently, the U.S. was largely alone in easing rates given that the root cause of the global downturn has been the bursting of the U.S. housing bubble.

And even if the Fed is entering the final phase of its 13-month fed funds easing cycle, other central banks may just be starting. China’s central bank lowered rates Wednesday for the third time in two months, following an unexpected rate reduction on Monday by the Bank of Korea. Norway’s central bank also lowered rates Wednesday.

The ECB and BOE are expected to cut interest rates further when those central banks meet next month.

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Capital Gold Group Report: GOLD AND OIL RESPOND TO U.S. DOLLAR DECLINE ON RATE CUT SPECULATION

October 29, 2008
NEW YORK (MarketWatch) — Gold futures gained more than 3% Wednesday, heading for the biggest one-day gain in more than five weeks, as rallies in global stock markets and expectations of a possible interest-rate cut in the U.S. pushed prices for commodities broadly higher.
The U.S. dollar fell sharply against the euro and the British pound on speculation the Federal Reserve will cut its key interest rate by a half percentage point. The weakening dollar pushed gold and other dollar-denominated commodities higher.

Gold for December delivery rose $24.90 to $765.40 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange, rallying 3.4% — its biggest daily percentage gain since Sept. 22.
Also in metals, the benchmark silver contract jumped 13%. Copper, a metal seen as an economic barometer, moved up 8%, rebounding for a third day from its three-year low.
“Recent movements in both the equity and currency markets suggest some risk appetite is beginning the return,” said TheBullionDesk.com analyst James Moore in a note to clients.

“This, coupled with the fact gold is considerably lower than at the start of the year and investors may look to further diversify their asset holdings, may allow gold to begin recouping some of its losses,” he wrote.

Gold’s gains coincided with broad rallies in other commodities, including crude oil’s surge of more than 6%. The Reuters/Jefferies CRB Index, a benchmark gauging the prices of major commodities, jumped 3.9%.
Fed Decision
Helping boost commodities, the U.S. dollar weakened ahead of the Fed decision, due at 2:15 p.m. EDT. The dollar index which tracks the value of the greenback against other major currencies, lost 1.4%. A weaker dollar tends to increase investors’ demand for gold as an alternative investment.
Also boosting commodities, stocks rallied around the world. Following a sharp rise in U.S. stocks Tuesday, markets made major gains in Asia and Europe on Wednesday. U.S. stocks erased earlier losses, trading higher.

In gold spot trading, the London gold-fixing price — used as a benchmark for gold for immediate delivery — stood at $764 an ounce Wednesday afternoon local time, up $33.50 from Tuesday afternoon.

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Capital Gold Group Report: Alpha Bank of Georgia Closed Down

October 27, 2008
AOL_Money_pf_logo.gif16th Bank to Close – Depositors to Lose Millions

ALPHARETTA, Ga. (Oct. 24) – Georgia has shut down a failed suburban Atlanta bank.

The Georgia Department of Banking and Finance closed the two branches of Alpha Bank and Trust in Alpharetta on Friday. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation has transferred all accounts to Stearns Bank, based in St. Cloud, Minn.

It will be business as usual for most of the bank’s customers because they are covered by FDIC insurance. But 59 of Alpha’s bank accounts whose assets total $3.1 million exceed the federal limit of $250,000.
It is the 16th FDIC-insured bank closure this year in the U.S. and the most recent in Georgia since August.

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Capital Gold Group Report: GLOBAL STOCKS TUMBLE ON ECONOMIC CONCERNS

October 24, 2008

Oct. 24 (Bloomberg) — Global stocks from Seoul to Stockholm tumbled to the lowest since August 2003 on concern the deepening economic slump will damage earnings. Oil dropped to a 16-month low and the yen reached the highest since 1995 against the dollar.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index lost 3.5 percent, a smaller decline than European and Asian equities, even after futures on the U.S. measure fell so far that trading was curbed. The U.K.’s FTSE 100 Index sank 5 percent and the pound had the biggest drop versus the dollar since 1971 following a government report showing the economy shrank for the first time in sixteen years. South Korea’s economy grew at the slowest pace in four years, driving the Kospi Index down 11 percent.

“There’s a worldwide fear of a worldwide recession,” said Michael Binger, Minneapolis-based fund manager at Thrivent Asset Management, which oversees about $70 billion. “The concern has moved to being about which banks and companies will fail to which countries could fail, with Iceland and some of the smaller countries around the world being on life support.”

The MSCI World Index of developed markets declined 4.3 percent to 871.64. MSCI’s emerging-markets benchmark fell 7.8 percent to 473.98, completing eight straight weeks of losses, the longest stretch since 1998. The MSCI index covering both regions slumped to the lowest since August 2003. Russia’s Micex Stock Exchange halted trading until next week following today’s 14 percent retreat.

$10 Trillion

More than $10 trillion has been erased from the market value of equities so far this month. That accounts for about one-third of the total value wiped off world equities this year. MSCI’s measure tracking both developed and emerging markets is heading for the worst year on record, plunging 47 percent in 2008, amid $660 billion in global credit-related losses and the biggest financial crisis since the Great Depression.

The Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index surged to 79.13, the highest in its 18-year history. The VIX measures the cost of using options as insurance against S&P 500 declines.

“We’re getting very close to the emotional blow-off where everybody says, `I don’t care; I want out,”’ said E. Craig Coats Jr., who co-heads fixed income at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Inc. in New York. “Everybody seems to be saying `I want to be in cash or Treasuries.”’

More than 200 companies in the S&P 500 have reported quarterly results since the start of October, posting an average profit slump of 23 percent, according to Bloomberg data.

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Capital Gold Group Report: GLOBAL MELTDOWN CAUSES RUSH FOR GOLD; MERRILL LYNCH STUDY SHOWS GOLD AT $1500/OZ IN NEAR FUTURE

October 20, 2008

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ASHOK B SHARMA

Posted: Oct 20, 2008 at 2350 hrs IST

The host of problems in the global economy, like the subprime meltdown, the financial crisis downturn in the equity markets, along with commodity prices still remaining at high levels, are all forcing investors to rediscover the lustre in gold.

According to a recent report by team of analysts headed by Kevin Norrish from Barclays Capital, investing in gold will be seen as a way out of the global economic turmoil. A study made by Merrill Lynch & Co Inc under the team leader Francisco Blanch shows gold prices can shoot up to $ 1,500 an ounce in the near future. The $700-billion US bailout package for financial institutions and billions of dollars being infused into the system by governments and central banks across the world and the contemplated cut in interest rates would fuel inflation. Crude oil prices would reach $150 a barrel. However, other experts have predicted higher prices for crude oil.

“Despite prices of gold reaching all-time high levels, people do consider spreading their investments partly in gold, as it has always acted as a safe haven for panicked investors. The investment value has never eroded. Rather, gold has given better returns in the last few years. There are predictions that gold prices may soon touch Rs 15,000 per 10 gm,” said the CMD of MMTC India, Sanjiv Batra. MMTC is India’s largest trading company in the public sector, responsible for importing commodities like gold, silver and platinum. As fears of a likely global recession remain high and the fluctuations of forex rates continues, investors are lining up for investment in the yellow metal, which has been the place for investment through the centuries.

Global prices of gold still continue to remain high, after reaching a peak of over $863 an ounce last month. At LME, on Friday, prices eased slightly below $800 an ounce.

India, like many other countries, is currently facing the impact of a global economic crisis in terms of a meltdown in the equity market and high commodity prices. The price inflation rate measured on point-to-point movement in the wholesale price index still remains at 11.44%. Recently, the Indian rupee has begun depreciating against the dollar by more than 20%. With a view to save the economy from the impact of a global crisis, the Reserve Bank of India has taken some measures for infusing liquidity in the market, but fell short of calling for a cut in interest rates.

Commenting on the current situation, the investment research manager of the World Gold Council, Rozanna Wozniak said, “We are not surprised by the way gold has reacted. The gold price initially dipped slightly because it was acting as an insurance policy and coming to the aid of stricken investors or holders and being sold accordingly. With the cataclysmic downfall of financial institutions that was seemingly indestructible, investors around the world are on tenterhooks for the next piece of bad news. This follows evidence of widespread physical buying in the key gold markets around the world. Gold, as no one’s liability, is looking like a good place to be right now.”… ..

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Capital Gold Group Report: Nobel Prize Winning Economist Krugman Sees ‘Nasty’ Recession, ‘”A Lot of Suffering’

October 17, 2008

In an interview on Bloomberg.com, Paul Krugman, recent winner of the Nobel Prize for Economics, says that if credit does not start flowing in the next couple of weeks, the results will be catastrophic.

He stated that even though unemployment is already over 6%, we are used to unemployment of 5% or below and that if the markets don’t unfreeze fairly soon, unemployment will almost certainly reach 7%, and more than likely 8%. “There is a calamity happening as we speak,” Krugman said.

“We have a pretty skimpy social safety net.” Along with a prolonged weak job market, he stated that people will lose their health benefits, and their unemployment benefits will expire in a fairly short period of time. “There is going to be a lot of suffering”, Krugman stated.
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Capital Gold Group Report: Dow Declines 733; S&P Tumbles 9%

October 15, 2008

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OCTOBER 15, 2008, 5:47 P.M. ET
Dire economic data knocked stocks sharply lower Wednesday, with the S&P 500 posting its worst single-day percentage decline since Black Monday 1987, as investors braced themselves for an ugly recession.

The session’s drop rekindled debate on Wall Street about whether last week’s lows will hold up. Increasingly, it seems the record 936-point gain registered by the Dow Jones Industrial Average Monday wasn’t enough to put the market on sure footing.

“I don’t just think we’re going to test the lows. I think we’re going to violate them and break lower in a big way,” said Kent Engelke, managing director at the brokerage Capitol Securities Management, in Richmond, Va. Referring to the possible fallout in the broader economy from the credit crisis, he added: “We don’t yet know what that is, because this situation is so unprecedented. Every road sign has been obliterated.”

The Dow’s losses accelerated as the closing bell approached, leaving the blue-chip measure down 733.08 points for the day, off 7.9%, at 8577.91, hurt by losses in twenty-nine of its 30 components. The only exception was Coca-Cola, which climbed 1.1% after posting a strong profit report. The Dow has retraced more than half of its point gain between Friday’s low and Monday’s close. The decline Wednesday was the worst on a percentage basis since Oct. 26, 1987.

Citigroup and American Express each fell about 13%. The Dow’s energy and raw-materials names were also at the forefront of the selloff amid fears that a U.S. slowdown will hurt the global economy and, in turn, lead to lower demand for an array of commodities. Alcoa was off 12.8%. Chevron and Exxon Mobil each fell more than 12% as oil prices hit their low for 2008, settling below $75 a barrel. Other commodities suffered on worry about falling industrial demand. The Dow Jones-AIG Commodity Index fell 4.3%.

Markets were hit with a stampede of selling during the final hour. Traders said some fund managers are unloading stocks to raise money for redemptions from investors burned in the recent selloff.

“We continue to see a vortex of selling, led by a levered, scared hedge fund community stepping on each other trying to get in front of the other guy to liquidate, based upon the real investment losses that they’ve experienced, coupled with the threat of year-end redemptions,” said Doug Kass, president of Seabreeze Partners.

The S&P 500 plunged 9% — its worst percentage slide since the 20.47% plunge recorded on Black Monday — to 907.84. Basic materials, energy, and consumer discretionary dropped sharply. The Nasdaq Composite Index declined 8.5% to 1628.33. The tech-rich benchmark has lost more than a quarter of its value over the past 14 days. The small-stock Russell 2000 was off 9.5% at 502.11, for the largest one-day drop in its history.

The Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index, a popular fear gauge for the stock market, surged 26% to 69.25.

A cluster of disappointing economic reports set a downbeat tone for the market. Retail sales fell 1.2% last month, the worst slide in three years. A report on New York factory activity was bleak, and core wholesale prices surged, suggesting earnings could be pressured by still-high expenses and declining demand. The Federal Reserve’s beige book of regional economic indicators showed the job market and business activity weakening throughout the U.S.

In a speech to the Economic Club of New York, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said recent efforts by the central bank and other government agencies represent “powerful steps” to resolve Wall Street’s crisis. Mr. Bernanke said that policy makers have avoided the “critical errors” made by their counterparts during the Great Depression.

Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at Avalon Partners in New York, fretted at the comparison of the current crisis to the Depression. Many commentators have drawn such comparisons recently, but for the Fed chairman himself to do so struck Mr. Cardillo as worrisome.

Traders on the New York Stock Exchange’s floor said that the market’s losses seemed to feed on themselves late in the day. As hedge funds and other players racked up losses, their brokers issued margin calls. That sparked more selling to raise cash — a pattern that has played out on other days lately when the market has suffered steep drops.

“Yesterday, that [type of selling] was starting to dissipate — a small sign of hope,” said Andrew Frankel, co-president of Stuart Frankel & Co., a New York floor brokerage. “But today we’ve seen a return.”

There were lingering signs of upset in the credit markets. Libor rates continued to ease, but risk premiums on agency debt widened sharply. Treasurys moved higher, in a hint that many investors remain in a defensive mood amid the bleak backdrop. Three-month Treasury yields hovered near 0.2%, down from more than 0.3% late Tuesday.

Underlining the general sense of malaise, gold prices rose. Gold futures were up $8.20 at $847.70 per ounce in New York.

The dollar was mixed against major rivals. One euro cost $1.3495, down from $1.3654. A dollar bought 100.12 Japanese yen, down from 102.04 yen.

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Capital Gold Group Report: Why should gold stop at $1,500?

October 15, 2008

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Commentary: There are plenty more shoes to drop

By MarketWatch

Last update: 9:52 a.m. EDT Oct. 14, 2008

The following First Take is real-time analysis and opinion by the MarketWatch commentary team.

LONDON (MarketWatch) — Euphoria over bank bailouts and the temporarily buoyant stock markets is masking a sober reality.

The piper still has to be paid.

One fairly sanguine estimate of the cost of salvaging Wall Street came Tuesday morning from analysts at Merrill Lynch. They figure the inflationary effect of all the bank bailout measures now underway will push gold to $1,500 an ounce and oil back to $150 a barrel.

The analysts don’t offer a timeline, but the way markets have been jumping around lately it could be any day now.

Perhaps the real question is: why stop at $1,500?

All the world’s governments have managed to do so far is to stop the bleeding from the credit crunch injuries that we actually know about.

There’s still going to be a very nasty recession. And it will happen simultaneously in most of the developed world.

Fewer people will have jobs. The interest rate on their adjustable mortgages will be shooting up. There are bound to be more foreclosures, and more toxic debts.

That doesn’t even begin to look at what happens as more credit card debt goes bad, or the truly enormous derivatives markets.

For its part, Wall Street has completely lost any credibility in arguing against increased governmental spending. They are the first and biggest pigs at the troughs each day, even if they are being force fed.

And with a U.S. administration that’s overseen the biggest deficits in history about to be replaced by the closest thing to a socialist government America’s ever had, “stimulus” spending will likely remain high on Washington’s agenda.

Given all that, $1,500 for gold looks more like a floor than a ceiling in the years to come.
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Capital Gold Group Report: Investors Gobble Up World Gold Supplies

October 15, 2008

Traditional ‘safe haven’ proving popular as global equity markets continue to fall

Carla Wilson, Times Colonist

Published: Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Gold fever is spreading around the world.

Mints are cranking out as many gold coins as they can to meet international demand by investors jittery over the global financial crisis.

The gleaming financial security blankets sport likenesses of Canadian maple leaves, pandas, musical instruments, eagles, buffalo, kangaroos and more, all denoting their country of origin.

Brian Kotila shows off some of his gold at his Old N Gold store.

“Right now, our stocks (of bullion) are down to zero,” says Brian Kotila, manger of the Old ‘N’ Gold store on Fort Street. Bullion refers to precious metals in the form of coins or bars.

The store typically hears from about six people per month wanting to buy bullion or sell it. Now, four or five calls are coming in daily and they are “all wanting to buy,” Kotila said yesterday.

Last week, two buyers each purchased a 10-ounce gold wafer, said Bob McDonald, who owns Old ‘N’ Gold and Barclay’s Exchange Inc. on Douglas Street. Gold prices vary daily depending on the markets but each wafer would have been close to $10,000 in value.

“We are getting more calls from buyers than we can presently supply,” said McDonald, who also buys gold jewelry to sell in the store and for melting.

Canadian Maple Leaf one ounce gold coins are currently worth about $900, depending on the market, he said.

London gold futures for December delivery closed yesterday at $839.50 US, down $3, below March’s record high of $1,033.90 US an ounce. As for its future value, Peter Munk, chairman of Barrick Gold Corp., owner of the world’s largest gold reserves, predicts that bullion prices will continue rising, pushed by large-scale purchases by “major, major” holders of dollars worried about the U.S. government’s bailout plan impact on currency.

Gold buyers would include central banks and sovereign wealth funds wanting to diversify investments and hedge against a weaker U.S. dollar, he said.

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Capital Gold Group Report: Gold could hit $1,500, say Merrill analysts

October 14, 2008
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By Moming Zhou

Last update: 8:26 a.m. EDT Oct. 14, 2008

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) — Gold prices could hit $1,500 as global plans to rescue the financial industry are set to increase inflation pressures, according to analysts led by Francisco Blanch at Merrill Lynch. “The unintended consequence of the ongoing financial bailout will be a return of inflationary pressures to the commodity markets,” wrote the analysts in a note released Monday. The analysts didn’t say when gold would hit the price target. They also predicted oil prices will rise to $150 a barrel.

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