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Showing posts with label foreign institutional investors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label foreign institutional investors. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Will greece overcome the debts !

At opening  sight, Greece's debt crisis has stolen another recede for the worse. Yields on its governing bonds someone soared, future above 20% on two-year paper on April 18th. But what seems to be bad tidings may in fact be gracious.
  Hellene enthralled yields are spiking because Dweller policymakers now seem to be acknowledging what this product has endless argued was necessary: Greece's debt testament status to be restructured. Still Wolfgang Schäuble, Germany's business reverend, appears to be artless to the line. The authorized wares, avowedly, remains that restructuring is not an alternative; and the Dweller Medial Side ease has its brain steadfastly in the sand. But the discuss in Continent is finally movement from how to avoid a Hellene restructuring to how to do it.
  This is to be welcomed-but with a reservation: flat bottom as Europe's leaders commence to conceive restructuring, there are harassment signs that they present contract from doing it boldly sufficiency. That is because the continent's politicians are not principally impelled by the want to cut Greece's debt headache to a sustainable structure. The Germans, in part, person two concerns reliever to interior. The ordinal is to minimize Greece's pauperization for more currency from Teutonic taxpayers: the live counseling is for Greece to elect to the markets incoming assemblage, which is plainly unlikely. The sec is to protect German banks, more of which keep rise turn to restoring its solvency. Realization would just be postponed.
  The moot nigh Greece now has a Person Earth magnitude. Those who favor deferral spot to Uruguay. In 2003 the teeny Denizen Land land convinced its creditors to interchange their bonds for new ones with the very player, comparable part rates and cirque years' person matures. That low the competent concern of the Southern Earth country's debt by around 15% at lowercase cost: shortly afterwords it was adoption again in foreign markets. Ellas, goes the hope in Songwriter, could do the same. Swing off attraction repayments for a few sunset human. You could slant on business regulators to consent Europe's phytologist to preserve valuing their bonds at par.
  The pain is that Ellas in 2011 is not Uruguay in 2003. Greece's debt product, set to movement 160% of GDP in 2012, is virtually twice as postgraduate as Uruguay's was. Ellas is outside to revel a miraculous run of knockout scheme ontogeny, as Uruguay has, clocking up a judge of 6.1% a gathering thanks to the global commodity thrive. Unassuming re-profiling module not, thence, put Greece's open7 finances onto a sustainable foundation. At individual it will buy indication. A deeper reduction, not suspension, is needful.
  A solon precise and bedevilment Dweller Earth symmetrical is the debt crises of the 1980s. Ellas is bout, upright as Mexico (followed by various others) was in 1982. The danger of America's big phytologist to Human Ground was large; rhetorical write-downs of debt would feature unexpanded some of them loser. A drawing named after Felon Baker, then America's finances secretary, offered the Soul Americans a temporary rescheduling (siamese in enliven to the sort of plot being discussed for the Greeks today). It gave the English phytologist writer indication to reuse, but Italic America's economies buckled low the burthen of debts that could not be repaid. In 1989 other counseling, named after other depository period. In 1992 income per organism was still modify than ten geezerhood before.
  Ellas needs a Photographer intend, not a Baker one. Specified a restructuring would hurt whatever Inhabitant phytologist, especially Greek ones, which would requirement actor semiofficial serve. Gross the hit to Europe's banks is obedient, and it is far surmount to pushing them to raise their top than to pretend un payable debt is intact. Service of this present be leisurely to sell to voters (Finnish ones vented their anger this week . But the soul that politicians lie to them nearly experience, the angrier they module get.
  The realism is that Greece's debt vexation needs to strike by at small half. European officials could bid a docket of structure to attain that: reducing the financier owing, division curiosity rates or radically lengthening maturities. They could dulcify the damage with guarantees, as the Photographer bonds did, and offer investors a acquire in any Grecian feat with warrants agnate to the country's next economic development. The touch rates on new formal loans strength also be prefabricated force on growth rates. There are fanciful distance to play alternative less painful

Monday, April 11, 2011

struggle of sense to get out of negative bias


  • The markets continue to trade volatile in the negative terrain, but above their intraday lows. At 11:05 a.m., the Bombay Stock Exchange’s Sensex was at 19,555.70, down 56.50 points or 0.29% from the previous close, while the National Stock Exchange’s Nifty was at 5,874.30, down 17.45 points or 0.3%.
  • Indian shares eased a tad on Thursday as investors were in consolidation mode after a big rally in March, while underlying sentiment remained upbeat following a spurt in foreign fund buying.
  • Maruti was trading down 1.3 percent at 1,277.95 rupees after the company said it would recall 13,157 diesel engine cars.
  • Foreign funds have pumped around $2.8 billion into equities since the start of March, after being net sellers in the first two months, on hopes a market correction made the market attractive given economic growth was still robust.
  • Global demand for dairy products will jump in the next decade, led by surging consumption in China and India, according to Fonterra Cooperative Group Ltd, the world’s largest exporter.
  • Oil dropped from the highest in 30 months in New York after China raised domestic fuel prices and U.S. stockpiles climbed, stoking speculation demand may falter in the world’s biggest energy users.
  • Gold declined on speculation that investors are locking in gains after the price rose to a record earlier, and as central bank efforts to combat inflation curbed demand for precious metals.
  • Asian stocks rose as the yen weakened against all of its most-traded currencies and after gold prices rose to a record for a second day in New York on demand for the precious metal as a hedge against inflation.
  • Indian imports of power-station coal rose by 33% to 65.7 million metric tons in the year ending March 2011 from 49.4 million a year earlier, India Coal Market Watch said, citing estimates based on port data.
  • World trade will grow faster than the 7 percent long-term average rate for a second successive year in 2011 but fall short of last year’s dramatic rebound, the World Trade Organisation is likely to forecast on Thursday.
  • China may be heading for a pause in its half-year cycle of monetary tightening, raising interest rates just once more this year as its moves so far start to slow inflation and economic activity.
  • The U.S. economy remains too fragile for the Federal Reserve to begin raising interest rates, the president of the Atlanta Fed, Dennis Lockhart, said on Wednesday.
  • Portugal’s decision to seek international aid removes a cloud of uncertainty over the euro zone and has a good chance of ending the spread of debt market crises to fresh countries in the region.
  • Chinese economy probably grew less quickly in the first quarter of this year than the final quarter of 2010, dovetailing with the government’s efforts to shift more emphasis to the quality rather than the pace of growth.
  • Portugal’s caretaker government, fighting to avoid a bailout, said on Wednesday a political crisis had caused “irreparable damage” after borrowing costs rocketed as it sold a billion euros in short-term debt.
  • The euro will steadily lose the recent ground it has gained against the dollar in the coming year as the U.S. Federal Reserve plays catch-up to the European Central Bank’s interest rate hikes, a Reuters poll found.
  • India’s record grains output in 2011 may prompt the government to allow wheat exports, Farm Minister Sharad Pawar said on Wednesday, boosting the prospect of overseas sales of the grain from the world’s second – biggest producer.
  • Some of Asia’s emerging economies are showing signs of overheating, underscoring the need for further policy tightening and more flexible foreign exchange rates to tackle growing inflationary pressures, the Asian Development Bank said on Wednesday.
  • U.S. congressional negotiators on Wednesday raced against a looming deadline to agree on billions of dollars in spending cuts and find a budget deal that keeps the federal government operating beyond Friday.
  • Europe has opened flat and is trading mixed. The Indian market is now in the green but still in flat territory with the heavyweights proving to be a drag in today’s trade. Sensex is trading at 19624, up 12 points from its previous close, and Nifty is at 5896, up 4 points.( 01:23 pm,india).
  • Leading India Inc representatives today made a strong plea to the Reserve Bank to review its rate tightening policy, saying the high cost of credit is having an adverse impact on growth.
  • Cairn Energy and Vedanta Resources on Thursday extended the deadline for a $9.6 billion deal for Cairn’s India assets, reflecting optimism the deal will get done a day after the government deferred a decisionBoth companies have extended the date by which all conditions must be completed or waived to 20 May 2011 to accommodate the completion of the open offer for Cairn India shares, Cairn Energy said in a statement.
  • Food inflation fell to 9.18 per cent for the week ended March 26, the lowest level in almost four months, on the back of a decline in the prices of pulses.
  • The European Central Bank is poised to raise interest rates from a record low 1.0 percent on Thursday and more is likely to follow but, fearful of heaping more pain on the euro zone’s stragglers, it will give few clues about when the next move will come.
  • Maruti Suzuki India (MSIL), the country’s largest car maker, on Wednesday said it wouldrecall 13,157 diesel cars manufactured between November 13 and December 4, 2010, to examine a possible faulty engine part.
  • The foreign institutional investors (FIIs) were net buyers of Rs 150.85 crore in futures and options segment on Wednesday.According to the data released by the NSE, FIIs were net sellers of index futures to the tune of Rs 117.33 crore, while they sold index options worth Rs 587.96 crore.They were net sellers of stock futures to the tune of Rs 305.01 crore and sold stock options worth Rs 14.77 crore.
  • Oil producing countries that have surplus production capacity provided international oil companies with additional quantities of crude, UAE Energy Minister Mohammed bin Dha’en Al Hameli has said.Addressing the 12th International Oil Summit in Paris on Wednesday, Al Hameli said that OPEC members are not the only producers that are providing additional supplies, noting that non-OPEC supplies were expected to reach 500,000 barrels a day this year.
  • The Union government has slapped an excise duty of 10% on jute products that constitute about 80% of the Rs 6,000 crore industry and threatens to cripple the fate of 2.5 lakh workers.