Actual finance blog

September 30, 2011

Austria approves expanding eurozone rescue fund

Filed under: USA, online — Tags: , , , — Professor Besto @ 8:40 am

Austrian lawmakers have voted to expand the powers of the eurozone’s bailout fund, which is designed to help Greece and other potentially struggling countries deal with their debts.

Friday’s passage means that Austria guarantees to provide euro21.6 billion ($29.4 billion) to the fund, compared to euro12.2 billion previously.

If all 17 eurozone nations agree to increase their share, the fund will have euro440 billion ($600 billion) at its disposal.

Parliament’s backing had been expected, with the governing center-left coalition supported by the opposition Greens in backing the measure. Only two rightist parties opposed the bill.

Austria’s endorsement comes a day after German parliamentarians approved beefing up the so-called European Financial Stability Facility.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.

VIENNA (AP) _ Austrian lawmakers have voted to expand the powers of the eurozone’s bailout fund, which is designed to help Greece and other potentially struggling countries deal with their debts.

Friday’s passage means that Austria guarantees to provide euro21.6 billion ($29.4 billion) to the fund, compared to euro12.2 billion previously.

If all 17 eurozone nations agree to increase their share, the fund will have euro440 billion ($600 billion) at its disposal.

Parliament’s backing had been expected, with the governing center-left coalition supported by the opposition Greens in backing the measure. Only two rightist parties opposed the bill.

Austria’s endorsement comes a day after German parliamentarians approved beefing up the so-called European Financial Stability Facility.

Source

September 28, 2011

Stock futures rise ahead of durable goods report

Filed under: Loans, stocks — Tags: , , , — Professor Besto @ 7:20 pm

Stock futures are rising, signaling another day of gains on Wall Street. Investors will assess fresh U.S. economic data and closely watch developments in Europe.

The government is expected to report Wednesday that factory orders for long-lasting manufactured goods fell in August after rising in July. Manufacturing has been one of the strongest parts of the economy since the recession ended.

Investors also remain focused on Europe. Stocks have soared this week on hopes that the region is moving closer to resolving its debt crisis.

About 90 minutes before the opening, Dow Jones industrial average futures are up 64 points, or 0.6 percent, at 11,184. Standard & Poor’s 500 futures are up 7, or 0.6 percent, at 1,176. Nasdaq 100 futures are up 11, or 0.5 percent, at 2,265.

Source

September 27, 2011

China orders tighter controls on rare earths

Filed under: online, term — Tags: , , , — Professor Besto @ 6:04 am

China’s Ministry of Land and Resources has ordered a further tightening of controls on strategically vital rare earths used in advanced manufacturing, for the sake of what it says is “sustainable and healthy development.”

The order seen Tuesday on the ministry’s website calls for tighter controls over unauthorized exploration, mining, processing and sales of such minerals, which are used in mobile phones and other high-tech products.

It cites vice minister Wang Min as calling the materials _ which are not rare but have unique qualities that make them useful for high-tech applications _ the “vitamins” of modern industry.

China accounts for 97 percent of world production of rare earth metals. It has alarmed global manufacturers by reducing exports while it tries to build up its own industry, prompting pressure from Europe and the United States to treat foreign and domestic buyers equally.

Wang emphasized the need for vigilance over use of China’s “21st century treasure trove of new materials.”

The crackdown is focused on three regions with abundant rare earth reserves _ Inner Mongolia, Shandong and Sichuan. Officials from those areas agreed to cooperate in controlling rare earths reserves, production and trading.

Generally, repeated crackdowns suggest earlier restrictions may not have been fully enforced.

The latest move followed an industry gathering in Baotou, a major center for rare earths and other raw materials such as coal.

Rare earths are a group of 17 minerals used in manufacturing flat-screen TVs, mobile phones, batteries for electric cars, wind turbines and weaponry.

China has about 30 percent of the world’s rare earths. The United States, Canada and Australia also have deposits but stopped mining them in the 1990s as lower-cost Chinese ores flooded the market. Companies are restarting production in North America and elsewhere but the Chinese restrictions have pushed up global prices.

China has said it is restricting exports of rare earths to conserve scarce supplies and curb environmental damage caused by mining. But foreign governments complain similar limits were not applied to domestic manufacturers that use rare earths.

Source

September 25, 2011

Nicklaus: Will 9 percent unemployment become the norm?

Filed under: money, online — Tags: , , , — Professor Besto @ 2:00 pm

Debra Fox lost her management job at a St. Louis technology company in February, more than a year after the recession officially ended. As far as she’s concerned, it’s still going on.

Fox is among 6 million Americans who have been out of work for six months or more, a group that seems in jeopardy of becoming a permanent underclass if the job market doesn’t turn around soon.

It’s not the first time she’s been unemployed, but Fox, 55, of Creve Coeur, says this is by far the most difficult job search she’s undertaken. She believes employers are pickier simply because they can be.

“If there are 10 attributes they are looking for and you have eight of the 10, you won’t make the cut,” she says. “It’s the whole cyclical thing. It’s something that needs to get kick-started somehow.”

But how? That’s the question being asked as Congress considers President Barack Obama’s proposal for an $447 billion jobs program. Some Democrats say it should be bigger, while Republican leaders say it will just inflate the budget deficit without creating many jobs.

Much of the debate is partisan posturing, but it also involves a difficult economic question. Does today’s 9.1 percent unemployment reflect long-lasting structural changes, like the housing downturn that has cost legions of construction workers their jobs, or is it just a cyclical problem that can be cured by faster economic growth?

David Andolfatto, a vice president and economist at the St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank, believes it’s probably a bit of both. The debate, he says, is between Humpty Dumpty and a deflated balloon.

Deflated-balloon thinkers attribute the economy’s ills to a severe lack of demand. If the government could just stimulate more spending, the balloon would reinflate.

The Humpty Dumpty hypothesis holds that the economy is badly broken, and stimulus won’t work until we’ve repaired the structural issues.

The severe financial crisis that accompanied the recession certainly did leave parts of the economy looking shattered. General Motors and Chrysler laid off thousands of people as they went through bankruptcy. When the housing bubble collapsed, so did the job market for construction workers.

Growing industries, like health care, don’t have much use for the specialized skills of an auto worker or a carpenter. A worker displaced by structural change may need to retrain, accept a much lower wage or wait out a long stretch of unemployment - or all three.

The story also has a geographic element. Normally, we’d expect workers to move from areas where jobs are scarce, like Michigan, to states where unemployment is low, like North Dakota. Moving becomes difficult, though, when a lot of people are locked into mortgages that exceed their houses’ worth.

Conventional policy measures, like stimulus spending by the government or monetary easing by the Federal Reserve, may not help workers much in such an environment. “The Fed can’t train a construction worker to become a nurse,” Andolfatto says.

The best evidence for the Humpty Dumpty hypothesis may be a couple of numbers from the Bureau of Labor Statistics: Between July 2009 and July 2011, employers reported 52 high risk personal loans.8 percent more job openings, but they increased hiring by just 8.7 percent. In other words, companies are having a hard time matching the skills they need with the workers who are available.

“It’s not a slam dunk, but it certainly does suggest that perhaps structural factors are playing some role,” Andolfatto says.

Data on business confidence, however, support the deflated-balloon story. A survey by the National Federation of Independent Business says that more companies expect their sales to fall than to rise in the months ahead.

When you’re pessimistic about future orders, you’re likely to put any hiring plans on hold. That may be why employers, as Fox says, are being picky.

Are they being rational, though? That’s a key question, Andolfatto says: If they are, and they’re reacting to deep-seated problems like the federal budget deficit, then a government spending spree won’t help.

If, on the other hand, employers are succumbing to emotion and panic, the government should make investments that will help break the cycle of fear.

Ken Matheny, an economist at Macroeconomic Advisers in Clayton, acknowledges that some structural factors are at work, but he thinks unemployment is mostly stuck in “a long and severe cycle that takes a long time to overcome.”

Obama’s proposed American Jobs Act would have some benefits, but they’d be temporary, Matheny says. His firm’s base forecast is for unemployment to fall slowly, to 8.9 percent next year and 8.4 percent in 2013. If all of the president’s stimulus measures are enacted, Matheny says, the jobless rate would drop faster, to 8.6 percent in 2012 and 8 percent in 2013.

For the long-term unemployed, such slow improvement is cold comfort. Ruth Ann Edwards, 58, was laid off from a health care call center last October, and she doesn’t think her job skills are out of date. She enrolled in a community college program to earn a certificate as a health-information professional, but she’s landed only three job interviews in 11 months.

“I don’t think there are very many opportunities out there,” she says.

D.C. Cooper, 50, has been out of work even longer: He was part of an AT&T downsizing in December 2008. Cooper’s résumé features a four-year-old master’s degree and a recently earned certificate in Lean Six Sigma, a quality-improvement discipline, but he says his long spell of unemployment seems to count against him.

“If you’ve been out for over six months, companies won’t interview you,” he says. They feel as though you’ve been out that long, so there must be something wrong with you.”

In reality, the flaw is with the economy itself. Whether it’s a deflated balloon or a shattered egg is open to debate, but either way, the repairs are going to take a very long time.

 

Source

September 23, 2011

First China cargo flight lands at Lambert airport

Filed under: legal, technology — Tags: , , , — Professor Besto @ 11:12 pm

A China Cargo flight carrying 80 tons of manufactured products touched down at Lambert-St. Louis International Airport on Friday afternoon.

The Boeing 777 marked the inaugural cargo flight between St. Louis and Shanghai, China. In the future, weekly cargo flights will arrive in the form of larger 747 jets, said Lambert Director Rhonda Hamm-Niebruegge.

“This is the start of what could be a big thing for St. Louis and a big thing for Shanghai,” St. Louis Mayor Francis Slay told a group of dignitaries who gathered near the airport cargo facilities to welcome the first flight.

The plane will return to Shanghai with a fairly large shipment of components from 3M and a large shipment of compressors manufactured by St. Louis-based Emerson, Hamm-Niebruegge said.

Emerson President Edward Monsor told a group of business leaders earlier in the day that the region could turn the weakness of an underutilized airport into a potential strength

September 22, 2011

Poverty extends reach across St. Louis region

Filed under: Mortgage, online — Tags: , , , — Professor Besto @ 8:20 am

ST. LOUIS 

September 20, 2011

Nordstrom Rack to open second location in west St. Louis County next year

Filed under: marketing, news — Tags: , , , — Professor Besto @ 6:48 pm

The St. Louis region is not only getting its second Nordstrom department store this week — it will also soon have a second Nordstrom Rack.

A 35,000 square foot Nordstrom Rack, the retailer’s smaller off-price store, is scheduled to open in fall 2012 in Manchester. The store will be located on Manchester Road next to a Weekends Only Furniture Outlet. It is just east of the Manchester Highlands where there is a Costco, Walmart, Best Buy and more.

It will be about three miles from West County Center, where Nordstrom opened its first full-line department store in the region back in 2002.

On Friday, Nordstrom will open its second full-line department store at the St. Louis Galleria, just down the street from the Nordstrom Rack it opened last year.

“We find that our Racks do well when they’re located near full-line department stores,” said Brooke White, a Nordstrom spokeswoman. “That’s something that’s worked well for us.”

So I guess this must mean that the first Rack here has done well?

“Yes, we’re happy with our business at our store in Brentwood,” White said. “That’s really what helps us decide that we should move ahead.”

Nordstrom announced the new location in St. Louis today after the Post-Dispatch inquired about it on Monday.

Construction of the store is to begin immediately, according to Pace Properties, which will develop and own the building.

Nordstrom has been on a expansion boom with its Rack stores in recent years, especially as customers have gravitated toward more discount offerings in this economy. It opened about 17 Rack stores last year and plans to open 18 this year. The Manchester store is one of six stores planned for next year, White said.

Nordstrom Rack carries merchandise that is 50 to 60 percent off Nordstrom department store prices. About 20 percent of it comes from full-line Nordstrom stores. The rest is specially-purchased from the same brands, but will often be the previous year’s designs and will often have fewer bells and whistles.

Source

September 19, 2011

World stocks, euro fall sharply as Greek default fears mount

Filed under: money, technology — Tags: , , , — Professor Besto @ 10:00 pm

LONDON — World stocks and the euro fell sharply on Monday as investors feared a messy Greek default within weeks unless Athens implements the austerity measures demanded by its international lenders.

International lenders told Greece on Monday that it must shrink its public sector and improve tax collection to secure a vital 8 billion euro rescue payment next month.

After a rare four-day rally in world stocks last week, markets fear the crisis is worsening again after Greece’s prime minister cancelled a U.S. trip to chair an emergency cabinet meeting at home and German Chancellor Angela Merkel suffered a regional election loss.

EU finance ministers also failed to make progress on the debt crisis at the weekend, and the focus is now shifting to a conference call between Greece and its international lenders at 1600 GMT to see how Greece plans to make up its budget shortfall and avoid a disorderly default.

With the gloom so widespread, investors took little comfort from expectations that the Federal Reserve would introduce new measures to stimulate the U.S. economy later this week.

“It’s no more a link between markets and economics, but a link between markets and politics. The politicians should have seen the crisis coming and done more, but the problem is they are not proactive,” said Koen De Leus, strategist at KBC Securities, in Brussels.

“We are just going from one crisis to another. It’s a nightmare for the markets.”

The MSCI world equity index fell 1.1 per cent on the day, after posting its biggest weekly gain since early July last week in buying largely driven by short-term players.

Long-term asset managers have been either staying on the sidelines, or steadily cutting back on exposure to risky assets. The MSCI index is around 5 per cent above its one-year low hit earlier in September.

European stocks lost nearly 2 per cent, led by sharp losses on the banking sector, while emerging stocks dropped nearly 2.2 per cent. U.S. stock futures pointed to a weaker open on Wall Street later.

The euro fell more than 1 per cent to $1.3632.

POLICY RISKS

Events this week promise a heavy dose of policy action.

Finance ministers of the BRIC emerging economies — Brazil, Russia, India and China — meet later this week to discuss steps to offer support to the euro zone.

Market sentiment may change if they buy euro-denominated bonds, as suggested in preliminary talks, after the European Central Bank’s 70 billion euro bond-buying spree over the last five weeks or so failed to stop the crisis from spreading to Spain and Italy.

Investors will also be watching U.S. President Barack Obama’s deficit-reduction plan on Monday aimed at covering the cost of his recent jobs bill.

U.S. crude oil was down 1.4 per cent to $86.76 a barrel.

Bund futures rose 78 ticks.

The dollar gained 0.7 per cent against a basket of major currencies, supported by expectations that new Fed measures would be focused on the maturities of the debt it buys rather than on expanding its already swollen balance sheet.

Source

September 18, 2011

Obama: Pass jobs bill without ‘division or delay’

Filed under: USA, technology — Tags: , , , — Professor Besto @ 8:08 am

President Barack Obama is keeping up his appeal for public support of his $447 billion proposal to boost jobs and consumer spending by urging Americans to press Congress to pass the legislation. “No more division or delay,” he said.

In his weekly radio and Internet address Saturday, he focused on a message that has become central to a presidency struggling to address stubbornly high unemployment numbers and dipping approval of his handling of the economy.

The president announced his jobs legislation to a joint session of Congress last week and has since gone outside Washington to build a case for its passage. He has been to Virginia, Ohio and North Carolina.

“The No. 1 issue for the people I meet is how we can get back to a place where we’re creating good, middle-class jobs that pay well and offer some security,” he said.

His address Saturday came in the face of sobering public opinion ratings for the president.

A New York Times/CBS News poll released Friday showed nearly half of those surveyed worried the economy was headed for another recession and nearly three out of four said they believe the country is on the wrong track.

Obama’s proposal would reduce payroll taxes on workers, cut them in half for most businesses and offer incentives for employers to hire. It would spend tens of billions of dollars on new public works projects, extend unemployment benefits for long-term jobless and help states and localities avoid layoffs of teachers and emergency workers.

On Monday, Obama plans to spell out a long-term debt stabilizing plan that aims to cut the deficit by about $2 trillion over 10 years. Obama is making his proposal to a special congressional committee that has been charged with lowering deficit by $1.2 trillion to $1.5 trillion.

“But right now, we’ve got to get Congress to pass this jobs bill,” Obama said.

Obama’s jobs plan has received a tepid reception from Republicans, who are willing to consider some of his tax relief proposals, but not his spending plans. His proposal to pay for the plan with limits on tax deductions and closing corporate tax loopholes is facing stiff GOP resistance and even Democrats have pushed back on some of those provisions in the past.

In an interview with MSNBC that aired Saturday, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said simply approving tax cuts without including spending on public works and local and state government assistance would not do enough to spur the economy.

“To take one piece or another, it doesn’t create the dynamism we need,” she said.

Still, despite his demand for quick passage, Obama is not likely to get immediate action even in the Democratic-led Senate, where Majority Leader Harry Reid has said there are some other issues that need to be dealt with first, including transportation money.

In the Republican address, Rep. Peter Roskam of Illinois called on Obama to reduce regulations on businesses, saying government agency rules were choking off hiring. “Washington has become a red tape factory,” he said.

He acknowledged Obama’s decision to scrub a clean-air regulation that aimed to reduce health-threatening smog. “He can cancel more,” Roskam said.

He pressed Obama to push the Democratic-controlled Senate to adopt House Republican initiatives, including legislation that would give Congress veto power over certain high-cost regulations.

“Job creators should be able to focus on their work - not on Washington’s busy-work,” he said.

Source

September 16, 2011

Nevermind: Ameren accidentally promises to test for contamination

Filed under: news, technology — Tags: , , , — Professor Besto @ 4:28 pm

Ameren Missouri Vice President Mark C. Birk went to considerable lengths in a Post-Dispatch guest column last week to explain why the utility’s leaking coal ash pond at the Labadie power plant doesn’t pose a risk to groundwater — an argument that members of the Labadie Environmental Organization still don’t accept.

So it was surprising to see on Ameren’s website Wednesday afternoon a statement that the utility planned to place monitoring wells around all of its Missouri coal ash ponds.

Specifically, Ameren’s website said:

We have also volunteered to implement the Utility Solid Waste Activities Group’s (USWAG) Action Plan. USWAG is a consortium of more than 80 utility operating companies that generate more than 70% of the electricity used in the United States. Compliance with the USWAG Action Plan will result in the placement of monitoring wells around our Missouri ash ponds and other surface impoundments.

The mention of a groundwater monitoring plan (you can see a cached version of the web page on the left) prompted several questions, such as: When would monitoring wells be installed? When did Ameren commit to the USWAG plan? How often would sampling be done? What pollutants would be tested for?

On Thursday, after a Post-Dispatch inquiry, the company deleted the paragraph. Utility spokeswoman Rita Holmes-Bobo explained that the web page was out of date payday loan companies. Ameren has no plans to monitor groundwater at existing Labadie ash ponds.

Holmes-Bobo said that Ameren put the monitoring plan on hold when the Environmental Protection Agency began developing rules for coal ash disposal.

Mike Menne, an Ameren vice president, told the Post-Dispatch last month that the utility was part of an industry group, presumably USWAG, that was working with the EPA to voluntarily implement groundwater monitoring before the 2008 Kingston, Tenn., ash spill.

It was that disaster that renewed the debate over coal waste and prompted the EPA to propose the first national rules for coal ash disposal. Two coal ash disposal rules were issued in May 2010, but implementation of a final rule has been delayed.

Meanwhile, the utility does plan to fix the leaks, or “seeps,” as it calls them.

And discussion over a proposed coal waste landfill at Labadie continues. A draft of proposed land use regulations to accommodate utility waste landfills was supposed to be complete by July 19. But the Franklin County counselor went on medical leave for a month before the draft was complete. There’s no word yet on when the draft will be complete.

Source

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