The Singapore economy grew 1.5% yoy in the 4th qtr of 2012, more than the 1.1% official advance estimates issued in Jan showed. As a result, Singapore's GDP grew a larger 1.3% in 2012, the Ministry of Trade and Industry said on Fri, revising up its advance estimate of 1.2% growth.
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Monday, February 25, 2013
Singapore's 2012 GDP growth revised up to 1.3%
The Singapore economy grew 1.5% yoy in the 4th qtr of 2012, more than the 1.1% official advance estimates issued in Jan showed. As a result, Singapore's GDP grew a larger 1.3% in 2012, the Ministry of Trade and Industry said on Fri, revising up its advance estimate of 1.2% growth.
Saturday, February 23, 2013
Euro Touches Six-Week Low as ECB Bank Repayments Miss Forecast
Friday, February 22, 2013
EU Says Euro Zone to Shrink in 2013 as Unemployment Rises
Wednesday, February 20, 2013
20-Feb-2013 (Binary Trades)
Friday, February 15, 2013
15-Feb-2013 (Binary Trades)
Monday, February 11, 2013
11-Feb-2013 (Binary Trades)
Obama to Propose Spending to Boost Jobs in State of Union Speech
Friday, February 08, 2013
Happy New Year of the Snake
Wednesday, February 06, 2013
Nikkei 225 (06-Feb-2013)
How will the Nikkei 225 perform today? It has been undecided yesterday with price action close below opening.
Eaton CEO Says China GDP Report Overstates Growth Rate
Eaton Corp. (ETN) Chief Executive Officer Sandy Cutler said China’s official 7.8 percent economic growth for 2012 may have overstated expansion by twice the real rate, and is only now headed for a “legitimate” 8 percent gain.
Based on indicators such as consumer consumption and electric power usage, China’s gross domestic product probably grew 3 percent to 4 percent last year, Cutler said today in a telephone interview. The economy is accelerating now that China is past the distractions from its leadership change, he said.
“That’s what we and so many multinational companies have been feeling there in China for the last year and a half, the economy really hasn’t been growing at 7 or 8 percent,” Cutler said. “If we could get back to an 8 percent growth rate in China for 2013, that would be a pretty darn good year.”
Cutler’s assessment, delivered after Eaton’s quarterly earnings report, suggested that China masked the extent of the slowdown preceding Xi Jinping’s elevation to general secretary of the ruling Communist Party in November. The government reported that GDP growth decelerated from 9.3 percent in 2011 and 10.4 percent in 2010.
China tended to “tamp down” reported GDP expansion as it ran at 12 percent or more in 2006 and 2007, Cutler said. The government boosted the official tally after slowing growth to quell inflation, said Cutler, 61, who presides over a manufacturer that got more than half its 2012 revenue of $16.3 billion from outside the U.S.
Euro Extends Gains Amid Bets ECB Won’t Weaken Currency
The euro gained against the dollar on speculation that European Central Bank policy makers aren’t concerned a stronger currency will slow the economic recovery.
The 17-nation common currency advanced versus the majority of its 16 most-traded peers as the ECB’s balance sheet shrank to the smallest in almost a year on early loan repayments by euro- area banks even as French President Francois Hollande warned that a rising currency may deepen the recession. The yen touched the weakest in almost three years against the dollar as the Bank of Japan (8301) Governor Masaaki Shirakawa said he will step down on March 19, three weeks early. The ECB meets on Feb. 7.
“I think that the euro could continue to climb higher,” Douglas Borthwick, a managing director and head of foreign exchange at Chapdelaine FX in New York, said in a telephone interview. “The Japanese said ‘we are weakening our currency,’ the British are staring down the barrel of a downgrade and the U.S. is weakening the dollar through quantitative easing. The euro should be trading at the $1.40 level in the next few months.”
The euro strengthened 0.5 percent to $1.3583 at 5 p.m. in New York, lower than its five-year average of $1.3715. The yen slid 1.4 percent to 93.63 per dollar after touching 93.66, weakest since May 2010. The euro rose 1.9 percent to 127.18 yen after reaching 127.22, the highest since April 2010.
Dell Taken Private as PC Slump Hastens $24 Billion Buyout
Dell Inc. (DELL) is going private in a $24.4 billion leveraged buyout that signals the waning of the personal-computer industry it once dominated.
In the largest LBO since the financial crisis, Chief Executive Officer Michael Dell and Silver Lake Management LLC are paying $13.65 a share, the companies said today in a statement. That’s 25 percent more than the closing price of $10.88 on Jan. 11, the last trading day before Bloomberg News reported the discussions.
Michael Dell is taking back majority control of the company he started in a University of Texas dormitory almost three decades ago after struggling to equip the PC maker for a new generation of competitors in mobile and cloud computing. He’s wagering that he can more effectively transform Dell into a provider of a broad range of products for corporations outside the scrutiny of public investors, even while encumbering it with about $17 billion in additional debt.
Tuesday, February 05, 2013
Shirakawa Accelerates BOJ Exit as Abe Presses for Stimulus
Euro Remains Lower Versus Yen on Italy, Spain Uncertainty
The euro fell against the yen, following yesterday’s drop which was the biggest since June, amid corruption allegations against Spanish Premier Mariano Rajoy and uncertainty ahead of Italian elections this month.
The 17-nation currency halted this year’s climb against the dollar before European Central Bank policy makers meet on Feb. 7. The yen rose against most major peers as investors bought haven assets after Asian equities slid. Australia’s dollar fell after the central bank kept interest rates unchanged while saying the inflation outlook allows scope further easing.
Asian Stocks Fall From 18-Month High on Europe as Aussie Weakens
Asian stocks fell from an 18-month high on renewed concern about Europe’s debt crisis and as forecasts from HTC Corp. to Hitachi Ltd. (6501) disappointed investors. Metals declined and Australia’s dollar weakened.
The MSCI Asia Pacific Index (MXAP) lost 0.8 percent at 12:53 p.m. in Tokyo, as Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index slumped 1.6 percent. Standard & Poor’s 500 Index futures were little changed after a 1.2 percent slump yesterday. Palladium slipped 0.8 percent and zinc retreated 1 percent. The Australian dollar fell 0.4 percent versus the greenback after the central bank left interest rates unchanged. The euro weakened against the dollar after falling the most in a month yesterday.
Monday, February 04, 2013
Too-Big-to-Fail Too Hard to Fix Amid Calls to Curb Banks
Officials leading the debate, including Federal Reserve Governor Daniel Tarullo, Dallas Fed President Richard Fisher and Senator Sherrod Brown, share the view that the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act failed to curb the growth of large banks after promising in its preamble to “end too big to fail.”
Strategies under consideration range from legislation that would cap the size of big banks or make them raise more capital to regulatory actions to discourage mergers or require that financial firms hold specified levels of long-term debt to convert into equity in a failure.
The push for revisiting the law or writing new rules “is absolutely driven by a sense that Dodd-Frank did not end too big to fail,” said Mark Calabria, director of financial-regulation studies at the Cato Institute in Washington and a former aide to Senator Richard Shelby of Alabama when he was the ranking Republican on the Banking Committee.
Three of the four largest U.S. banks -- JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM), Bank of America Corp. and Wells Fargo & Co. (WFC) -- are bigger today than they were in 2007, heightening the risk of economic damage if one gets into trouble. JPMorgan’s 2012 trading loss of more than $6.2 billion from a bet on credit derivatives raised questions anew about whether the largest institutions have grown too complex for oversight.