July 30th, 2010
jpyforexfan
The US dollar was higher against most of its main counterparts except the Japanese yen as investors’ willingness to move into riskier currencies and assets took a hit from weak Japanese economic data (industrial production going down, unemployment on the rise) and remarks by St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank President James Bullard, who warned that the US economy was in danger of copying Japan’s deflationary “lost decade.”
Will we see the USD/JPY hitting 84.83 and diving below it soon? Take a look at the weekly chart:

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June 23rd, 2010
jpyforexfan
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke’s efforts to keep U.S. prices and employment from falling may get a helping hand from China’s decision to let its currency gain against the dollar.
Greater yuan flexibility will eventually raise prices of goods imported to the U.S. after a decline in the consumer price index for two straight months and as some Fed officials voice concern about inflation slowing too much. The move should also eventually increase U.S. exports of aircraft, steel and wheat to China, said Charles Lieberman, a former New York Fed official.
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June 11th, 2010
jpyforexfan
Upbeat economic data – both from the US and Asia – formed a potent cocktail of optimism. The US Labor Department said first-time unemployment claims fell by 3,000 last week, with total claims depleting by the greatest margin in nearly a year.
In other news, optimists across the globe cheered China’s solid surge in monthly exports, which also lent strength to the weakened euro – the currency of China’s most significant export recipient. Even the embattled BP plc (BP) managed to pare a portion of its recent slide today, rebounding from Wednesday’s 14-year low point.
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June 10th, 2010
jpyforexfan
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said the U.S. recovery, while being sustained by private demand, isn’t as strong as he prefers and faces risks from Europe’s debt crisis that may require further Fed action.
U.S. growth is “not as fast as we would like,” Bernanke told the House Budget Committee in testimony today just hours before the Fed’s regional business survey said the economy expanded in all 12 Federal Reserve districts for the first time in more than two years, with a “modest” pace in many regions.
Bernanke gave no indication he’ll soon back off from the central bank’s pledge to keep interest rates at a record low for an “extended period,” given high unemployment and low inflation. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg News this month pushed back their forecast of higher rates to 2011 from late 2010, based on the median estimates.
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May 26th, 2010
jpyforexfan
Do rising credit spreads and tumbling stock prices signal that the U.S. is in for another shock like the one that sent the economy into free fall in 2008?
Don’t bet on it. While there are problems all over the globe and stocks could easily head still lower after a recent correction, there are signs the domestic economy is strong enough to weather the storm.
“People are completely ignoring any good news domestically,” said Matthew Keator, a partner at the Keator Group wealth management firm in Lenox, Mass. “We’ve been here before, in 1994 and 1997-1998. We can handle an international crisis.”
While the United States faces serious problems, ranging from a persistent trade gap and bloated government spending, to painfully high unemployment, there are signs that conditions are improving. The Philadelphia Fed said Tuesday its coincident indicators of state economic activity — tracking jobs, wages and hours worked — rose in 43 states over the past three months, while falling in four and staying flat in three.
What’s more, Keator said, corporate balance sheets are in good shape after big companies slashed spending and boosted productivity. That should help the biggest corporations to keep growing, even as small businesses struggle to get financing and compete for penny-pinching customers.
Keator concedes that there are plenty of problems around the world for investors to consider, from a double-dip in real estate, to the problems in European banks, to the fiscal health of the United States and other rich countries.
But he says that stocks rallied so sharply from their March 2009 lows that “everyone has been looking for some bad news” that would justify a decision to cut equity exposure. As troubling as the European banking problems are, he believes policymakers will sooner or later devise a response that will stamp out the current political rancor among euro zone members and stabilize the situation.
Ironically, a further source of strength against European contagion may come from a failure to resolve the question of how to deal with too-big-to-fail financial firms.
St. Louis Fed President James Bullard (above), who has previously called the existence of too big to fail firms “intolerable,” said in a speech Tuesday that, for now, regulators’ most vexing problem is actually a plus.
“Governments have made it very clear over the course of the last two years that they will not allow major financial institutions to fail outright at this juncture,” Bullard said. “Because these too-big-to-fail guarantees are in place, the contagion effects are much less likely to occur.”
Naturally, taxpayers enraged at having to pick up the tab as reckless bankers visit their vacation houses in the south of France may not find this comment uplifting. And it’s far from clear how a bank rescue now would be received in the market for sovereign debt, which, like other markets, has been shaken in recent weeks by volatility.
The price of insuring against a default on Spanish government debt surged 22% Tuesday, according to CMA, while the price of credit default swaps on Irish debt rose 16%. Banks in both countries were among the losers Tuesday as investors fled risky trades.
Nonetheless, Bullard sees even creaky government backstops as better than nothing, which is what was in place before the failure of Lehman Brothers pushed the global economy off a cliff.
“‘Too big to fail’ is a controversial policy, but it does have its upside in the current situation,” Bullard said.
\Credits: Colin Barr/CNN
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April 16th, 2010
jpyforexfan