Monday, August 29, 2011

Libya



The Economist
The birth of free Libya
After a six-month struggle, Libya’s rebels have seized power. We look at Tripoli in rebel hands and, in a second article, at the new people now in control.
WESTERN governments could hardly have hoped for a better finale. Libyans themselves finished off the regime’s reign in the capital, enabling NATO to retreat to the wings and refute the last flourish of the colonel’s spokesman, Musa Ibrahim, delivered on a crackly radio, that the conquest was the work of imperialism. Liberation came from the west, not the east, allaying Tripoli’s fears of a Benghazi takeover. The doomsday scenarios of a bloody civil war in the streets proved mercifully overblown.

Gloom Settles on Central Bankers


The Wall Street Journal
By JON HILSENRATH
JACKSON HOLE, Wyo.—After years fighting crises and pumping money into the financial system, the world's central bankers are coming to grips with the realization that the global economy is still in a very dangerous place.
Their problem is compounded by the fact that for some—notably the Federal Reserve—there isn't much more they can do to spur the economy. They have already pushed short-term interest rates to near zero and tried other, unconventional measures. In Europe, three years into crisis, the banking system is exposed to highly indebted European governments like Greece and remains short of capital, many say.
The angst was underscored in a blunt speech Saturday by the International Monetary Fund's new managing director, Christine Lagarde, at the Fed's annual retreat here.
"We risk seeing the fragile recovery derailed," the former French finance minister said. Those risks have been aggravated, she said, by the public's sense that top policy makers aren't adequately addressing the problems they face. "We are in a dangerous new phase," she said.
Ms. Lagarde, though neither a central banker nor an economist, articulated a sense of worry that representatives from many major central banks expressed, mostly behind the scenes, during the two-day conference.
The IMF chief pointedly called on leaders of major central banks to keep interest-rate policies "highly accommodative," a reference to the European Central Bank, which has begun to raise rates.
She directed sterner words at politicians. Europe needs to bolster the capital in its banks and—along with the U.S.—needs to strike the delicate balance of reducing government debt in the long run without cutting so aggressively in the short run that damage is done to tenuous economic growth.
Her remarks could presage an effort by leaders of G-20 nations meeting in Cannes, France, in November to develop more aggressive responses to fiscal crises and the weak economy.
Ms. Lagarde's comments amplified a speech made by Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke, who scolded U.S. politicians for undermining public confidence during the messy debate over raising the U.S. debt limit. He also called for fiscal belt-tightening that wasn't too aggressive at first because the economy is so weak.
Coming weeks pose important challenges for financial markets. "I'm concerned about a risk of events this autumn," said Robert Zoellick, president of the World Bank.
Officials here were especially worried about several fraught negotiations in Europe. European parliaments need to approve an expansion of the powers of the European Financial Stability Facility, which is seen as critical to stabilizing strained government finances in Greece, Portugal and elsewhere. Leaders in Finland are demanding hefty collateral in return for their support of Greece. Other creditors are contemplating a debt exchange with the Greek government that could lead to more turmoil if it fails.
ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet sought to dispel worries that European banks could be threatened by a loss of short-term funding. Banks have ample assets to use as collateral for borrowing from the ECB, he said. Worries that they will become short of cash are "just plain wrong," he said.
The Fed is also in a tough spot. Mr. Bernanke said almost nothing in a speech Friday about what the Fed might do next to support tepid U.S. growth. He did point to a Sept. 20-21 policy meeting at which officials could take new actions.
The central bank's choices aren't appealing. The Fed could restart a bond-buying program, or take smaller steps, including shifting the portfolio of bonds it already holds toward securities with longer maturities to bring down longer-term interest rates. But each step comes with costs, and the benefits aren't seen as very great.
One risk is political. "As the central banks in advanced countries continue to pursue easy monetary policy and unconventionally easy monetary policy, the political pressure on central bankers to do more to help finance budget deficits may grow," said Haruyuki Toyama, the general manager of the Bank of Japan's U.S. branch.

Friday, August 26, 2011

EU Leaders Face Busy Fall, Tight Deadlines



The Wall Street Journal
By CHARLES FORELLE
When Europe's leaders return from their summer break next week, they'll find plenty of work waiting. And, once again, little time in which to do it.
The European Central Bank held back a destabilizing rout that flickered earlier this month in Italian and Spanish government bonds, by continually buying them on the secondary market. But that, as a top ECB official said in a magazine interview this week, is "not a permanent structure."
It will be up to euro-zone politicians to build one. Their pre-vacation summit on July 21 laid a few bricks, but the rest exists just as conceptual drawings.

European banks



Chest pains
Europe’s sovereign-debt crisis is constricting the flow of money to its banks
“I’VE never seen risk aversion this intense,” says the chief executive of a large European bank. “It is unsustainable.” His anxiety is understandable given the wild gyrations that rocked bond and commodity markets in early August and continued through the slow trading days of mid-August, when gold hit new highs and the yields on government bonds touched new lows in Britain and America. Steep falls in stock prices this month have erased all the gains made over the past year.

Gold falls again after jump in dealing costs


25 August 2011 Last updated at 11:15 GMT
BBC

The price of gold has fallen again after the cost of dealing in the metal jumped sharply on two key exchanges.
Hopes the global economy will stabilise also prompted sales.
Fears about European and US debt and growth prospects had led investors to buy gold - which is seen as a safer investment - in recent months.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Climate science (II)



Clouds in a jar
A new experiment with old apparatus reveals a flaw in models of the climate
The Economist
CLOUD chambers have an honoured place in the history of physics. These devices, which generate vapour trails that mark the passage of high-energy subatomic particles, were the first apparatus that allowed such passage to be tracked. That was in the 1920s and led, among other things, to the discovery of cosmic rays. Science has moved on since then, of course, and cloud chambers are now largely museum pieces. But the world’s leading high-energy physics laboratory, CERN, outside Geneva, is dusting the idea off and putting it into reverse. Instead of using clouds to study cosmic rays, it is using cosmic rays to study clouds. In doing so, it may have thrown a spanner into the works of the world’s computer models of the climate.

Euro-Zone Data Show Rough Path Lies Ahead



The Wall Journal
By ALEX BRITTAIN And TOM FAIRLESS
LONDON—A slump in German business confidence and an unexpected fall in euro-zone factory orders marked the latest in a string of forward-looking data to suggest the currency bloc's economy is losing momentum.

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

One giant step to EU fiscal union


BBC

Watching the French president and the German chancellor in Paris yesterday I tried to imagine myself a Dutch or Italian voter.
Here, in the middle of August, the two leaders of the eurozone's most powerful countries had interrupted their August to announce that, in future, there would be a eurozone government with an elected president.

Delivering a Franco-German Bouquet of Irony



The Wall Street Journal
By ALEN MATTICH
This week's Franco-German deal to save the euro is a collection of ironies, not least that it's likely to precipitate an early withdrawal from the single currency by some of its beleaguered member states.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel drew up a plan to fix the euro zone's problems by making sure member countries stick to sound fiscal policies. And by sound they mean budget deficits of no more than 3% of gross domestic product, with the aim they balance their budgets over the economic cycle, and gross-debt-to-GDP ratios of below 60%.

Euro Zone Weighs New Plan on Greek Bailout Collateral



The Wall Street Journal
By MATTHEW DALTON, RIVA FROYMOVICH and BERND RADOWITZ
BRUSSELS—Euro-zone governments are discussing a plan to have noncash Greek government assets, including real estate, offered as collateral for a new round of rescue lending to Greece, backing away from a bilateral agreement reached last week between Greece and Finland, officials said Tuesday.

Greek Cuts Erode Livelihoods



The Wall Street Journal
Households, Small Businesses Wilt Under Strain of Austerity Measures; Holiday Bonuses for Pensioners Are Cut
By COSTAS PARIS And ALKMAN GRANITSAS
ATHENS—Greek households and small businesses show growing signs of strain as knock-on effects of government cutbacks ripple through the country's fragile economy.

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Analysis: Stocks' volatility keeps forecasters busy



(Reuters) - Nobel Laureate Paul Samuelson is famous for saying the stock market predicted nine of the last five recessions.
This joke by the first American to win the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences is not lost on economists as they repeatedly downgrade U.S. growth forecasts in response to the exceptional turmoil in financial markets.

Monday, August 22, 2011

Global Markets Move, but Merkel Won't



The Wall Street Journal
Never say that euro-zone countries can't agree on anything. A consensus is rapidly forming: Germany should transfer to its euroland partners more of its hard-earned money, either by lending its impeccable credit to an issue of euro bonds, or contributing more to a much-enlarged European Financial Stability Facility.

Thursday, August 18, 2011

U.S. investigating S&P over mortgages: report



(Reuters) - The U.S. Justice Department is investigating whether Standard & Poor's improperly rated dozens of mortgage securities in the years before the financial crisis, The New York Times reported on Thursday, citing sources familiar with the matter.

Growth worries hobble stocks, Swiss franc slips



(Reuters) - European equities followed Asian stockslower on Thursday as investors fretting about the global growth outlook cut exposure to riskier assets, while the Swiss franc fell on talk the central bank was intervening in the forwards market.

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

Franc Gains as Switzerland Stops Short of Peg



Bloomberg
The Swiss franc strengthened after the country’s central bank announced additional liquidity measures while refraining from announcing tougher moves such as adopting a currency target or a temporary peg.

Franco-German Proposal Disappoints



Sarkozy and Merkel Propose Euro-Zone Council for Better Governance
By NATHALIE BOSCHAT, BERND RADOWITZ and GABRIELE PARUSSINI
PARIS—The plan by France and Germany to create a head of the euro zone to shore up economic governance of the monetary union stopped short of more fundamental steps toward refashioning the area into a federal entity that would issue its own debt, disappointing investors hungry for a more radical solution to the euro-zone crisis

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Poor German data hits stocks and euro



(Reuters) - Stagnant growth in Europe's powerhouseGermany knocked stocks lower on Tuesday and hit the euro, adding to investor fears that the world economy is slowing more than expected.
Focus was also on a meeting in Paris between French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, with investors looking for any signs of new measures to contain the spreading euro zone debt crisis.

U.K. Leader Blames Riots on 'Moral Collapse'



U.K. Prime Minister's Promise to Use Policy to Remedy Social Ills Comes Amid Debate Over His Cuts to Police
The Wall Street Journal
By ALISTAIR MACDONALD
LONDON—Prime Minister David Cameron sought to bolster his law-and-order credentials Monday with a speech promising a root and branch review of all government policy to tackle the "slow-motion moral collapse" he believes led to the U.K.'s worst rioting in decades.
Mr. Cameron faces many obstacles in turning round what he described as "broken Britain"—including his government's cuts to police forces, and divisions between the police and government that have erupted since the unrest.

Selloff raises stakes in Sarkozy-Merkel talks



(Reuters) - The leaders of France and Germany face a stark choice in talks on Tuesday over whether to begin steering the embattled euro zone toward closer fiscal union or risk watching the bloc unravel.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel meet in Paris to discuss what further measures they can take to contain Europe's debt crisis, which is now spreading to the continent's core.
Italy has been forced to ramp up its austerity measures and financial market jitters hit France last week with French banks' shares subject to panic selling following rumors that the country could be next to lose its prized AAA debt rating.