SYDNEY (Dow Jones)-- European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said Tuesday the future of the euro is safe and the single monetary bloc is meeting its sovereign debt crisis head on.
The remarks came in a speech in Sydney as Barroso sought to shore up global confidence in the ailing euro bloc as markets continue to drive up borrowing costs for heavily indebted member states and as question marks are raised over a pledged new bailout for Greece .
"Some like to ask these days: 'Will the euro and EU survive?' My plain and direct answer is, "Yes". You can bet your money on that and I guarantee you don't need to take insurance," said Barroso.
Monday, 5 September 2011
EU's Barroso Says Euro Will Survive
Hmmm, more market manipulations in the works :
Dark View At An Italian Idyll
Villa d'Este isn't a bad place to spend a long weekend. Nestled on the banks of Lake Como in northern Italy , the splendid 16th-century former abode of European aristocratic families last week served as the idyllic backdrop for an annual symposium on the state of the global economy.
Part uber-networking event a la Davos and part platform for serious policy discussion, like the Federal Reserve's annual event in Jackson Hole, Wyo. , this gathering offers financial, political and economic leaders the chance to mingle behind closed doors (sessions are off the record) and exchange ideas.
Or should I say "idea"? As top central bankers such as Jean-Claude Trichet rubbed shoulders with economists like Nouriel Roubini while being brushed aside by the bodyguards of heads of state such as Israel's Shimon Peres , there was really only one thought making the rounds: Major Western economies and their capital markets are in deep trouble.
The contrast couldn't have been starker. Outside, the stunning beauty of verdant hills plunging into the lake. Inside, a bunch of powerful people getting gloomier and gloomier about the economic environment in the U.S. and Europe .
Events didn't help the mood. Friday's news that the U.S. had added precisely zero jobs in August landed with a thud on Villa d'. I saw superstar economists like Mr. Roubini and Martin Feldstein , the Harvard professor who has advised numerous U.S. presidents, revise their chances for another recession (upward) live, while the nonfarm payroll numbers were rolling in.
As for Europe , the sight of Mr. Trichet, the president of the European Central Bank , imploring the Italian government to stop squabbling and finally approve much-needed austerity measures didn't fill investors with confidence about the troubled euro zone. As the manager of a big hedge fund said while listening to the ECB chief's impassioned plea, "this screams 'short the euro' to me."
Part uber-networking event a la Davos and part platform for serious policy discussion, like the Federal Reserve's annual event in Jackson Hole, Wyo. , this gathering offers financial, political and economic leaders the chance to mingle behind closed doors (sessions are off the record) and exchange ideas.
Or should I say "idea"? As top central bankers such as Jean-Claude Trichet rubbed shoulders with economists like Nouriel Roubini while being brushed aside by the bodyguards of heads of state such as Israel's Shimon Peres , there was really only one thought making the rounds: Major Western economies and their capital markets are in deep trouble.
The contrast couldn't have been starker. Outside, the stunning beauty of verdant hills plunging into the lake. Inside, a bunch of powerful people getting gloomier and gloomier about the economic environment in the U.S. and Europe .
Events didn't help the mood. Friday's news that the U.S. had added precisely zero jobs in August landed with a thud on Villa d'. I saw superstar economists like Mr. Roubini and Martin Feldstein , the Harvard professor who has advised numerous U.S. presidents, revise their chances for another recession (upward) live, while the nonfarm payroll numbers were rolling in.
As for Europe , the sight of Mr. Trichet, the president of the European Central Bank , imploring the Italian government to stop squabbling and finally approve much-needed austerity measures didn't fill investors with confidence about the troubled euro zone. As the manager of a big hedge fund said while listening to the ECB chief's impassioned plea, "this screams 'short the euro' to me."
Global Regulators To Amend New Rules on Bank Liquidity
The farce continues :
DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision is looking to soften the technical definitions in the "liquidity coverage ratio," which requires banks globally to hold enough assets to withstand a 30-day run on their funding, the Financial Times reported Monday citing people familiar with the discussions.
Banks have complained that the new Basel III standards on liquidity, to be implemented in 2015, would force them to sharply curtail lending to consumers and businesses, the newspaper said.
The planned changes would have the effect of reducing how much liquidity banks have to hold, and allow them to count more corporate and covered bonds toward the total, the people told the newspaper.
German Court's Bailout Ruling Looms
BERLIN (Dow Jones)-- Europe's bailouts of struggling euro-zone countries could face fresh obstacles on Wednesday, when Germany's constitutional court rules on the bailouts' legality.
The court's judgment, highly anticipated in European capitals and financial markets, will settle whether Chancellor Angela Merkel's government breached the German people's property rights in agreeing to the initial bailout of Greece in 2010.
The court also is due to rule on whether the German government should have asked the country's parliament before taking part in the bailouts of Ireland and Portugal , as well as on the legality of the European Central Bank's purchases of government bonds.
September Could Be Worse Than August
From Market Oracle :
September notoriously often leaves markets in negative territory. Since the start of the Dow Jones Industrial Average in 1896, the index has lost an average of 1.07% in September, with a 0.71% average gain for all other months.
That's a 1.78-point spread - enough to be "statistically significant at the 95% confidence level," and be considered a genuine pattern by statisticians.
More discouraging, the market has performed especially poorly in past Septembers when the preceding months were weak.
And that's where we are today.
August took markets on a wild ride. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index fell 5.7% and the Dow 4.4%. The month included two of the top ten worst-performing Dow days ever - a 635-point drop on Aug. 8 and a 513-point drop on Aug. 4.
Now with investors digesting a slew of disappointing economic reports, and the U.S. Federal Reserve unlikely to announce any stimulus measures until the end of the month at the earliest, it doesn't look like this September will buck the trend.
In fact, it could easily be worse.
September notoriously often leaves markets in negative territory. Since the start of the Dow Jones Industrial Average in 1896, the index has lost an average of 1.07% in September, with a 0.71% average gain for all other months.
That's a 1.78-point spread - enough to be "statistically significant at the 95% confidence level," and be considered a genuine pattern by statisticians.
More discouraging, the market has performed especially poorly in past Septembers when the preceding months were weak.
And that's where we are today.
August took markets on a wild ride. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index fell 5.7% and the Dow 4.4%. The month included two of the top ten worst-performing Dow days ever - a 635-point drop on Aug. 8 and a 513-point drop on Aug. 4.
Now with investors digesting a slew of disappointing economic reports, and the U.S. Federal Reserve unlikely to announce any stimulus measures until the end of the month at the earliest, it doesn't look like this September will buck the trend.
In fact, it could easily be worse.
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