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Natural gas futures gain on weather forecasts, supply concerns

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 11 Januari 2014 | 08.10

Investing.com - Natural gas futures rose on Friday on speculation that a recent blast of arctic air will take its toll on U.S. inventories, while forecasts for a warming trend to end soon also pressured prices higher.

On the New York Mercantile Exchange, natural gas futures for delivery in February traded at USD4.072 per million British thermal units during U.S. trading, up 1.66%. The commodity hit session high of USD4.099 and a low of USD3.954.

The February contract settled down 5.00% on Thursday to end at USD4.005 per million British thermal units. Natural gas futures were likely to find support at USD3.951 per million British thermal units, the low from Dec. 5, and resistance at USD4.428, Tuesday's high.

The U.S. Energy Information Administration said in its weekly report that natural gas storage in the U.S. in the week ended Jan. 3 fell by 157 billion cubic feet, towards the lower end of expectations, especially in wake of a blast of cold air that sent temperatures falling to dangerously cold levels in many cities.

Inventories fell by 191 billion cubic feet in the same week a year earlier, while the five-year average change for the week is a decline of 131 billion cubic feet.

Total U.S. natural gas storage stood at 2.817 trillion cubic feet.

By Friday, prices rose on sentiments that the cold air mass will reflect more in next week's inventory report, which gave the commodity room to rise.

Meanwhile, updated weather forecasting models called for a warming trend across much of the U.S. to end next week.

A fresh blast of cold air should return and edge out milder temperatures around Jan. 14, according to Natgasweather.com.

Elsewhere on the NYMEX, light sweet crude oil futures for delivery in February were up 0.91% and trading at USD92.49 a barrel, while heating oil for February delivery were up 0.45% and trading at USD2.9345 per gallon.

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Dollar drops on weak U.S. December jobs data

Investing.com - The greenback slumped against most major currencies on Friday after official data revealed the U.S. economy picked up a fraction of the new jobs in December that markets were expecting, which fanned concerns the Federal Reserve will take its time dismantling stimulus programs.

U.S. trading on Friday, EUR/USD was up 0.43% at 1.3667.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported earlier that the U.S. economy added 74,000 jobs in December, well below expectations for a 196,000 increase and below an upwardly revised 241,000 rise the previous month.

The U.S. private sector added 87,000 jobs last month, disappointing expectations for 195,000 rise, after an upwardly increase of 226,000 in November.

The report also showed that the U.S. unemployment rate fell to 6.7% in December due to a weak participation rate, down from 7.0% in November. Analysts had expected the rate to remain unchanged last month.

The numbers weakened the dollar by fueling expectations for the Federal Reserve to trim its USD75 billion monthly bond-buying program at a slower pace than once expected.

Fed asset purchases tend to weaken the dollar by suppressing long-term interest rates.

Still, sentiments began to build in the session that one disappointing jobs report may not be enough to prompt the Fed to overlook several weeks of positive data as it decides when to scale back asset purchases, which gave the dollar some support.

Talk cold, wintry weather may have prompted businesses to put off hiring also curbed the greenback's losses.

The euro rose on the disappointing data though it still faced headwinds after ECB President Mario Draghi on Thursday reinforced the bank's forward guidance on rates and said the bank was still ready to ready to take "further decisive action" if needed.

Draghi reiterated that monetary policy will remain accommodative for as long as is needed in order to assist the economic recovery in the euro area. The ECB expects interest rates to remain at present or lower levels for an extended period of time, he said.

Elsewhere on Friday, official data showed that industrial production in France climbed 1.3% in November, exceeding expectations for a 0.4% rise, after a downwardly revised 0.5% decline the previous month.

The greenback was up against the pound, with GBP/USD down 0.05% at 1.6474.

The dollar was down against the yen, with USD/JPY down 0.76% at 104.05, and down against the Swiss franc, with USD/CHF down 0.40% at 0.9033.

The dollar was mixed against its cousins in Canada, Australia and New Zealand, with USD/CAD up 0.48% at 1.0894, AUD/USD up 1.08% at 0.8996 and NZD/USD trading up 0.56% at 0.8300.

The dollar index, which tracks the performance of the greenback versus a basket of six other major currencies, was down 0.38% at 80.76.

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Gold futures gain on bargain hunting, jobs data uncertainty

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 10 Januari 2014 | 08.10

Investing.com - Gold futures rose on Thursday after bargain hunters snapped up nicely-priced positions in the yellow metal, especially after uncertainty over Friday's jobs report softened the dollar, which trades inversely with the yellow metal.

On the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange, gold futures for February delivery traded at USD1,228.00 a troy ounce during U.S. trading, up 0.20%, up from a session low of USD1,223.10 and off a high of 1,230.60.

The February contract settled down 0.33% at USD1,225.50.

Futures were likely to find support at USD1,217.80 a troy ounce, Wednesday's low, and resistance at USD1,247.70, Monday's high.

Gold prices fell this week on solid data, especially after payroll processor ADP reported that U.S. private-sector nonfarm payrolls rose by 238,000 in December, surpassing consensus forecasts for an increase of 200,000.

The numbers fueled hopes that the official December jobs report due out on Friday will meet or beat expectations as well.

The Federal Reserve has said it will pay close attention to indicators when deciding the fate of its USD75 billion monthly bond-buying program — Fed bond purchases aim to prop up the economy by suppressing long-term borrowing costs, weakening the dollar as a side effect as long as they remain in effect, thus making gold an attractive hedge.

By Thursday, however, the dollar cooled its gains as the rally ended ahead of the Friday release of official U.S. December jobs figures, which gave gold prices room to rise on demand from bottom fishers.

Earlier Thursday, the Labor Department said the number of individuals filing for unemployment assistance in the U.S. last week fell by 15,000 to 330,000 from the previous week's revised total of 345,000.

Economists had expected jobless claims to decline by 10,000, though investors were largely eager to see the December jobs data by afternoon trading on Thursday.

Meanwhile, silver for March delivery was up 0.24% to trade at USD19.585 a troy ounce, while copper futures for March delivery were down 1.37% and trading at USD3.297 a pound.

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Dollar softens ahead of December jobs data, Draghi supports

Investing.com - The greenback traded largely lower against most major currencies on Thursday after investors sold the greenback for profits ahead of the release of the official December jobs report on Friday, though dovish comments from European Central Bank head Mario Draghi cushioned the greenback's losses.

U.S. trading on Thursday, EUR/USD was up 0.21% at 1.3604.

Profit takers sent the dollar inching lower on Thursday as investors fled to the sidelines to await the release of the December jobs report on Friday.

The dollar gained this week after payroll processor ADP reported that private-sector nonfarm payrolls rose by 238,000 in December, surpassing consensus forecasts for an increase of 200,000, while the Federal Reserve said in the minutes of its December policy report that authorities felt the decision to trim its monthly bond purchases in January was the right one and stressed the need to follow up in "measured" steps.

Earlier Thursday, the Labor Department said the number of individuals filing for unemployment assistance in the U.S. last week fell by 15,000 to 330,000 from the previous week's revised total of 345,000.

Economists had expected jobless claims to decline by 10,000.

The euro, meanwhile, faced pressures of its own after ECB President Mario Draghi 'strongly' reiterated the bank's forward guidance on interest rates, saying monetary policy will remain accommodative for as long as necessary, which cushioned the dollar's losses.

Draghi said the ECB was ready to take "further decisive action" if monetary authorities detected unwarranted short-term tightening in the money markets or if the outlook for inflation worsened in the medium term. The ECB would consider "all possible instruments" to tackle these contingencies, he added.

Draghi's comments came after the ECB left interest rates on hold at 0.25%, in a widely anticipated decision.

Also in Europe, Germany's industrial production rose 1.9% in November, beating market calls for a 1.5% gain, which helped push the single currency higher against the dollar.

The greenback was down against the pound, with GBP/USD up 0.20% at 1.6482.

The Bank of England earlier left rates on hold at 0.5% and announced no change to the size of its GBP375 billion asset purchase program, as was widely expected.

The dollar was down against the yen, with USD/JPY down 0.06% at 104.79, and down against the Swiss franc, with USD/CHF down 0.43% at 0.9073.

The dollar was up against its cousins in Canada, Australia and New Zealand, with USD/CAD up 0.30% at 1.0854, AUD/USD down 0.08% at 0.8992 and NZD/USD trading down 0.16% at 0.8253.

The dollar index, which tracks the performance of the greenback versus a basket of six other major currencies, was up 0.17% at 81.07.

On Friday, markets will move on the U.S. December jobs report.

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08.10 | 0 komentar | Read More

Dollar rises vs. yen on robust U.S. private-sector jobs report

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 09 Januari 2014 | 08.10

Investing.com - The dollar firmed against the yen on Wednesday after industry data revealed the U.S. private sector added more payrolls in December than anticipated.

In U.S. trading, USD/JPY was up 0.24% and trading at 104.85.

The dollar firmed after payroll processor ADP reported that private-sector nonfarm payrolls rose by 238,000 in December, surpassing consensus forecasts for an increase of 200,000. November's figure was revised up to a gain of 229,000 from a previously reported increase of 215,000.

The numbers fueled hopes that the official December jobs report due out on Friday will meet or beat expectations as well.

The Federal Reserve has said it will pay close attention to indicators when deciding the fate of its USD75 billion monthly bond-buying program, and Wednesday's data fueled expectations for the U.S. central bank to scale down purchases even further this year.

Fed bond purchases aim to prop up the economy by suppressing long-term borrowing costs, weakening the dollar as a side effect as long as they remain in effect.

Elsewhere on Wednesday, the Federal Reserve released the minutes of its December policy meeting that revealed most monetary authorities felt January was the right time to trim its monthly bond-buying program to USD75 billion from USD85 billion, which also gave the greenback some support.

"Many members judged that the Committee should proceed cautiously in taking its first action to reduce the pace of asset purchases and should indicate that further reductions would be undertaken in measured steps," the minutes read.

"Members also stressed the need to underscore that the pace of asset purchases was not on a preset course and would remain contingent on the Committee's outlook for the labor market and inflation as well as its assessment of the efficacy and costs of purchases."

The yen, meanwhile, was up against the euro and down against the pound, with EUR/JPY trading down 0.08% at 142.30, and GBP/JPY trading up 0.49% at 172.39.

On Thursday in the U.S., the Labor Department is to release its weekly report on initial jobless claims.

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08.10 | 0 komentar | Read More

Dollar gains on upbeat U.S. private-sector jobs report

Investing.com - The greenback moved higher against most major currencies on Wednesday after industry data revealed more hiring took place in the U.S. private sector last December than anticipated.

U.S. trading on Wednesday, EUR/USD was down 0.26% at 1.3581.

The dollar firmed after payroll processor ADP reported that private-sector nonfarm payrolls rose by 238,000 in December, surpassing consensus forecasts for an increase of 200,000. November's figure was revised up to a gain of 229,000 from a previously reported increase of 215,000.

The numbers fueled hopes that the official December jobs report due out on Friday will meet or beat expectations as well.

The Federal Reserve has said it will pay close attention to indicators when deciding the fate of its USD75 billion monthly bond-buying program, and Wednesday's data fueled expectations for the U.S. central bank to scale down purchases even further this year.

Fed bond purchases aim to prop up the economy by suppressing long-term borrowing costs, weakening the dollar as a side effect as long as they remain in effect.

Elsewhere on Wednesday, the Federal Reserve released the minutes of its December policy meeting that revealed most monetary authorities felt January was the right time to trim its monthly bond-buying program to USD75 billion from USD85 billion, which also gave the greenback some support.

"Many members judged that the Committee should proceed cautiously in taking its first action to reduce the pace of asset purchases and should indicate that further reductions would be undertaken in measured steps," the minutes read.

"Members also stressed the need to underscore that the pace of asset purchases was not on a preset course and would remain contingent on the Committee's outlook for the labor market and inflation as well as its assessment of the efficacy and costs of purchases."

U.S. news overshadowed upbeat indicators out of Europe.

Data released earlier revealed that the euro zone's unemployment rate remained unchanged at 12.1% in November, in line with expectations, while euro zone retail sales posted solid gains in November.

Retail sales rose 1.4% in November, the biggest rise since November 2001 according to Eurostat, the European Union's statistical arm, recovering from a 0.4% fall in October and well above analysts' forecasts for a 0.2% gain.

A separate report showed that German factory orders surged 2.1% in November, surpassing expectations for a gain of 1.5%.

The greenback was down against the pound, with GBP/USD up 0.33% at 1.6455.

In the U.K., data earlier showed that house prices fell for the first time in 11 months in December.

Mortgage lender Halifax said house prices fell by 0.6% last month compared to expectations for a 0.6% increase. However, prices were still up by 1.9% in the last three months 2013, compared to the third quarter.

Still, the pound traded higher on broader sentiment that the U.K. economy has demonstrated enough improvement in the recent past that monetary policy shifts may loom on the horizon.

The dollar was up against the yen, with USD/JPY up 0.14% at 104.74, and up against the Swiss franc, with USD/CHF up 0.14% at 0.9104.

The dollar was up against its cousins in Canada, Australia and New Zealand, with USD/CAD up 0.35% at 1.0804, AUD/USD down 0.16% at 0.8912 and NZD/USD trading down 0.21% at 0.8266.

The dollar index, which tracks the performance of the greenback versus a basket of six other major currencies, was up 0.19% at 81.16.

On Thursday in the U.S., the Labor Department is to release its weekly report on initial jobless claims.

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08.10 | 0 komentar | Read More

Gold futures dip on upbeat U.S. trade data

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 08 Januari 2014 | 08.10

Investing.com - Gold futures edged lower on Tuesday after official data showed that the U.S. trade deficit narrowed to a four-year low in November, which bolstered the dollar by fanning speculation that the recovery will remain strong enough to prompt the Federal Reserve to continue withdrawing support through 2014.

Gold and the dollar tend to trade inversely with one another.

On the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange, gold futures for February delivery traded at USD1,229.60 a troy ounce during U.S. trading, down 0.68%. Gold prices held in a tight range between USD1,233.20 a troy ounce and USD1,244.60 a troy ounce.

The February contract settled down 0.05% at USD1,238.00.

Futures were likely to find support at USD1,215.00 a troy ounce, Monday's low, and resistance at USD1,247.70, Monday's high.

Demand for the greenback jumped after the Commerce Department said the U.S. trade deficit narrowed to USD34.25 billion in November from a revised deficit of USD39.33 billion in the previous month.

Economists were expecting the U.S. trade deficit to widen to USD40 billion.
U.S. exports rose 0.9% to a record high of USD194.9 billion, while imports fell 1.4% to USD229.1 billion.

Investors applauded the data, which weakened gold, but remained cautious ahead of the release of the Federal Reserve's December meeting minutes on Wednesday as well as Friday's U.S. December jobs report, with many eager to see fresh indications on the possible timing of further Fed stimulus tapering.

The Federal Reserve is currently buying USD75 billion in Treasury holdings and mortgage debt a month to spur recovery by suppressing long-term borrowing costs, which weakens the dollar as a side effect.

Talk of cuts to the stimulus program tends to bolster the dollar and weaken gold.

Monetary authorities have said they'll pay close attention to economic indicators when deciding the fate of stimulus measures.

Meanwhile, silver for March delivery was down 1.62% to trade at USD19.778 a troy ounce, while copper futures for March delivery were up 0.07% and trading at USD3.362 a pound.

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Pound takes back losses, steady as U.S. trade gaps contracts unexpectedl

Investing.com - The pound dipped against the dollar on Tuesday after official data revealed the U.S. trade deficit narrowed unexpectedly in November, though the pound took back earlier losses.

The data sparked demand for the greenback by fueling sentiments the Federal Reserve will continue winding down its monthly asset-purchasing program this year.

In U.S. trading on Tuesday, GBP/USD was trading at 1.6413, up 0.05%, up from a session low of 1.6375 and off a high of 1.6438.

Cable was likely to find support at 1.6338, Monday's low, and resistance at 1.6604, Thursday's high.

Demand for the greenback jumped after the Commerce Department said the U.S. trade deficit narrowed to USD34.25 billion in November from a revised deficit of USD39.33 billion in the previous month.

Economists were expecting the U.S. trade deficit to widen to USD40 billion.
U.S. exports rose 0.9% to a record high of USD194.9 billion, while imports fell 1.4% to USD229.1 billion.

Investors applauded the data but remained cautious ahead of the release of the Federal Reserve's December meeting minutes on Wednesday as well as Friday's U.S. December jobs report, with many eager to see fresh indications on the possible timing of further Fed stimulus tapering.

The Federal Reserve is currently buying USD75 billion in Treasury holdings and mortgage debt a month to spur recovery by suppressing long-term borrowing costs, which weakens the dollar as a side effect.

Monetary authorities have said they'll pay close attention to economic indicators when deciding the fate of stimulus measures.

Sterling was higher against the euro, with EUR/GBP down 0.09% to 0.8298.

In Europe, the yield on Irish 10-year government bond fell to its lowest level since 2009 following strong demand at auction, the country's first offering since it exited its bailout last month.

Dampening spirits, however, was a report revealing that the annual rate of inflation in the euro zone slowed to 0.8% in December from 0.9% the previous month, which stoked deflationary concerns that softened demand for the single currency.

Elsewhere, data showed that the number of people out of work in Germany fell by 15,000 in December to 2.96 million, beating expectations for a decline of 1,000.

The country's unemployment rate remained steady at 6.9%.

A separate report showed that German retail sales rose 1.5% in November, more than double expectations for an increase of 0.6%.

On Wednesday, the U.S. is to release the ADP report on private-sector job creation, which leads the government's nonfarm payrolls report by two days.

Investors will also pay close attention to the Federal Reserve's minutes of its latest policy meeting.

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08.10 | 0 komentar | Read More

Dollar slumps on soft U.S. service-sector report

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 07 Januari 2014 | 08.10

Investing.com - The greenback traded lower against most major currencies on Monday after U.S. service-sector data missed consensus forecasts and rekindled expectations for the Federal Reserve to take its time winding down its dollar-weakening USD75 billion monthly asset-purchasing program.

In U.S. trading on Monday, EUR/USD was up 0.32% at 1.3633. The dollar slumped after the Institute of Supply Management said its non-manufacturing purchasing managers' index fell to 53.0 in December from 53.9 in November.
Analysts were expecting the index to increase to 54.5. The data rekindled concerns that the Federal Reserve may go slower than once expected when it comes to dismantling its USD75 billion in monthly bond purchases.

Fed officials have said they will pay close attention to data when deciding to taper the program any more.

Fed asset purchases weaken the dollar by keeping interest rates low and sending investors to asset-classes like stocks or gold as long as they remain in effect.

A separate report showed that U.S. factory orders rose 1.8% in November, in line with expectations, after a 0.9% fall the previous month.

Meanwhile, in the euro zone, data released on Monday showed that the bloc's services PMI came in at 51.0 in December, unchanged from the preliminary estimate and down slightly from 51.2 in November.

Separate reports showed that activity in Spain's private sector expanded at the fastest rate in 77 months, but activity in France and Italy contracted last month.

The greenback was down against the pound, with GBP/USD down 0.08% at 1.6406. Markit Economics reported earlier that its Markit/CIPS Services Purchasing Managers Index declined to a six-month low of 58.8 in December from 60.0 in November.

Analysts had expected an unchanged reading, and the data sent the pound in and out of negative territory. Despite the slowdown the index still remained well above the 50.0 level that indicates expansion.

The report said confidence rose and the economy still looks likely to have expanded strongly in the fourth quarter.

The dollar was down against the yen, with USD/JPY down 0.52% at 104.30, and down against the Swiss franc, with USD/CHF down 0.12% at 0.9042.

The dollar was mixed against its cousins in Canada, Australia and New Zealand, with USD/CAD up 0.14% at 1.0651, AUD/USD up 0.17% at 0.8964 and NZD/USD trading up 0.20% at 0.8288.

The dollar index, which tracks the performance of the greenback versus a basket of six other major currencies, was down 0.26% at 80.81.

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U.S. stocks fall on soft service-sector data; Dow dips 0.27%

Investing.com - U.S. stocks edged lower on Monday after a weaker-than-expected U.S. service-sector report stoked concerns the December jobs report due for release on Friday as well as earnings may disappoint.

At the close of U.S. trading, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.27%, the S&P 500 index fell 0.25%, while the Nasdaq Composite index fell 0.44%.

Stock prices held lower after the Institute of Supply Management said its non-manufacturing purchasing managers' index fell to 53.0 in December from 53.9 in November. Analysts were expecting the index to increase to 54.5.

The data served as a reminder for many investors that the U.S. economy is still battling headwinds on its road to recovery, which sent investors jumping to the sidelines.

Fourth-quarter earnings begin publishing this week, while on Friday, the Bureau of Labor Statistics will release its December jobs report, and uncertainty over the health of which kept many investors out of stocks on Monday.

Leading Dow Jones Industrial Average performers included Goldman Sachs, up 0.70%, Verizon, up 0.63%, and JPMorgan Chase, up 0.58%.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average's worst performers included Microsoft, down 2.13%, Caterpillar, down 1.32%, and DuPont, down 1.24%.

European indices, meanwhile, finished largely lower.

After the close of European trade, the EURO STOXX 50 fell 0.19%, France's CAC 40 fell 0.47%, while Germany's DAX 30 fell 0.08%. Meanwhile, in the U.K. the FTSE 100 finished flat.

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U.S. Senator Paul wants light punishment of Snowden for NSA leaks

Written By Unknown on Senin, 06 Januari 2014 | 08.10

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The public debate over the fate of former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden intensified on Sunday with conservative U.S. Senator Rand Paul calling for a light prison term as punishment for Snowden's disclosure of information on government surveillance programs.

Paul, a Republican, said in an interview on ABC's "This Week" that Snowden does not deserve the death penalty or life in prison for the leaks, which have rattled the U.S. intelligence community, not to mention an American public that had been unaware of the extent of NSA data collection.

Instead, Paul spoke favorably of "some penalty of a few years in prison" if Snowden were to return to the United States from Russia, where he currently is living, to face trial.

Paul, a freshman senator from Kentucky and a Tea Party favorite who has his eye on running for president in 2016, made his remarks a few days after a New York Times editorial said Snowden had done the United States "a great service" in divulging details of NSA surveillance.

The newspaper said the U.S. government should offer Snowden "a plea bargain or some form of clemency that would allow him to return home."

Senator Charles Schumer, the third-ranking Democrat in the Senate, also on ABC, said Snowden should return to stand trial but that the United States should not offer a plea bargain to him.

Schumer said a trial could help clarify several issues, including whether the vast amounts of data being collected by the NSA actually help the United States root out terrorists and how much damage Snowden's leaks have done to American intelligence agents.

Last month, a federal judge criticized the NSA's metadata counter-terrorism program, saying that he could not imagine a more "indiscriminate" and "arbitrary invasion."

The Obama administration on Friday appealed that court's ruling: that the NSA's gathering of Americans' telephone records was probably unconstitutional.

(Reporting By Richard Cowan; Editing by Bill Trott and Steve Orlofsky)



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Syria rebels push al Qaeda back; U.S. open to Iran role

By Khaled Yacoub Oweis and Arshad Mohammed

AMMAN/JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Syrian rebel fighters loyal to al Qaeda ceded ground near the Turkish border to rival Islamists on Sunday, activists said, in what seemed to be a tactical withdrawal to end clashes between Syrian- and foreign-led opponents of President Bashar al-Assad.

As Syria's civil war gets ever more complex amid a broad regional confrontation between Sunni and Shi'ite Muslims, the United States raised the prospect of Assad's sponsor Iran, the Shi'ite power long at odds with Washington and its Sunni Arab allies, playing some role in this month's Syrian peace talks.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said Tehran still should not take formal part in the peace conference scheduled to start on Lake Geneva on January 22 because it had not endorsed a 2012 accord calling for a new Syrian leadership. But he said there might be ways that Iran could "contribute from the sidelines".

There is little prospect of a rapid end to the Syrian conflict but the resurgence in Iraq of mutual enemy al Qaeda, and a recent rapprochement with the new Iranian president, have raised speculation about a common effort between the United States and Tehran to contain instability in the region.

Kerry, visiting Jerusalem, pledged to help Iraq's Shi'ite-led government fight al Qaeda but said Washington was not considering sending U.S. troops, two years after they withdrew.

SYRIA FACTION FIGHTING

Syrian opposition activists said the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), allied to al Qaeda and featuring foreign jihadists among its commanders, had pulled back on Sunday from strongpoints including al-Dana and Atma in Idlib province and that fighters from the Nusra Front and Ahrar al-Sham moved in.

"The Islamic State is pulling out without a fight. Its fighters are taking their weapons and heavy guns," activist Firas Ahmad said. He added that the ISIL fighters headed in the direction of Aleppo, where Assad's troops have stepped up pressure on rebel forces who captured the city 18 months ago.

Another activist, Abdallah al-Sheikh, said that some Syrian ISIL fighters had stayed in place but switched allegiance to the Nusra Front, whose commanders are mostly Syrian rather than foreign. Nusra coordinates with the Islamic Front, a coalition of Syrian Islamist brigades that includes Ahrar al-Sham.

Syrian opposition supporters and diplomats said that, despite days of skirmishing in the northwest between ISIL and other rebel factions, a broad alliance involving these groups seemed to be holding in the desert east of the country.

"There is certainly competition between ISIL and the other Islamist militants, but it does not appear there is full-scale confrontation," a Middle Eastern diplomat said.

The strength of radical Islamists, nearly three years after popular revolt broke out against Assad, has caused Western powers to hold back on practical support for the rebels despite endorsing the goal, shared with Sunni Arab states such as Saudi Arabia and Qatar, of overthrowing the Syrian president.

QAEDA IN IRAQ

Across the border in Iraq, ISIL seized key towns last week, confronting Sunni tribal forces and the Iraqi government and making their greatest territorial gains since U.S. troops ended a nine-year occupation of Iraq in December 2011.

On Sunday, Baghdad officials met Sunni tribal leaders to seek their help against a bid by ISIL to consolidate a hold on desert territory straddling the Iraqi-Syrian frontier and Iraq's U.S.-armed air force struck the city of Ramadi, killing 25 Islamists, according to local officials.

Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki has secured pledges of more U.S. military aid, despite concerns in Washington that his government has failed to share power with the once-dominant Sunni minority and has helped Iran channel supplies to Assad.

In the eastern Syrian province of Raqqa, Sunni Islamist activist Khaled Abu Alwalid said that the presence of Iraqi Shi'ite militia fighters in Syria was galvanising a common front against them by ISIL and other Islamist factions.

"This is a religious war encompassing Iraq, Syria and Lebanon," Alwalid said.

Like Iraq, Lebanon has seen violence linked to the Syrian war, and its Hezbollah militia, backed by Iran, has sent fighters into Syria to help Assad. There were clashes on Sunday in the Lebanese city of Tripoli between Sunnis and members of the Shi'ite-linked Alawite sect to which Assad belongs.

SYRIA PEACE TALKS

Western powers preparing for the peace conference in Montreux later this month have been pressing other opposition groups, friendlier to Western interests, to resolve their own factional disputes and take a full role in negotiations.

The Syrian National Coalition (SNC), a Western-backed umbrella body formed largely by exiles, was meeting in Istanbul to elect new leaders and vote, probably on Monday, on whether to take part in talks with Assad's representatives.

One contender for SNC leader is Riyad Hijab, Assad's prime minister until he defected in 2012. He will stand against the incumbent, Ahmad al-Jarba, SNC officials said.

Many in the SNC are concerned that it could jeopardise what support it enjoys inside Syria by taking part in the talks with Assad's delegates at what is known by the U.N. organisers as "Geneva 2" - a sequel to international talks in Geneva in 2012.

While the Islamic Front and others fighting in Syria have ruled out negotiations, the SNC has said it would take part on certain conditions - though few of these, such as the release of prisoners and more aid to rebel areas, have been met.

Nonetheless, senior SNC member Anas Abdah told Reuters the Coalition was under pressure to take part in talks, if only to avoid losing the goodwill and support of Western powers: "The only clear political option is Geneva 2," he said.

"If we don't explore this option, the international community might lose interest and not do anything."

Monzer Makhous, the SNC envoy in Paris, said: "There cannot be a political solution from Geneva because the terms set out by the international community at previous meetings have not been met ... But at this stage we have no other option." (Additional reporting by Dasha Afanasieva in Istanbul; Writing by Alastair Macdonald; Editing by Kevin Liffey)



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Not giving up on India; media long-term pick: Akash Prakash

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 05 Januari 2014 | 08.10

Despite the economic gloom of the last few years, Akash Prakash believes it would be "wrong to give up" on India.

"Whatever we have gone through in the last three-four years, the pain, policy paralysis, scandals is ultimately par for the course for democracy maturing and trying to improve and do things in a better way," CEO of Amansa Capital, told Ramesh Damani in a freewheeling conversation.

A general complacency emanating from the mid 2000s' global economic boom, coupled with a complete lack of governance by UPA II, was the script that became the Indian economy's undoing, he said.

Prakash said that whichever government comes to power, "it has to recognize the way we govern, the way our bureaucracy, systems of approvals and processes are, it doesn't work for a USD 2 trillion economy trying to grow at 9-10 percent a year. We have to redesign the way we govern and approach economic growth and large projects."

Also read: China 'major' uncertainty facing global economy: Soros

Among his long-term bets in the Indian stock market, the veteran hedge fund manager said media remains a robust play on consumption. "Digitisation is a huge discontinuity. It is a huge disruption in the media space. It is not very clear who will benefit but it is going to fundamentally change the media."

Below is the transcript of the interview.

Q: You published an article in July, which was headlined 'India's darkest hour'. [They were] prophetic words: markets collapsed after that but isn't it true in markets that in the depths of depression a new bull market begins?

A: I ended the article by saying that when things seem so grim and bleak, that is normally a time you should be working the hardest to find investment opportunities.

The idea of the article was just to say that at that time people had become little over optimistic because there was a new finance minister. People thought that economy was on the verge of recovering immediately.

My point was that things are going to take longer than people expected and things were going to get worse first before they get better.

Q: Would you say the low we saw during those grim days of August are the lows of the market and the market is now discounting a better future?

A: I think so.

Q: What leads you to believe that?

A: Two, three things. One is, the government genuinely has started functioning economically in the sense that some of the stuff that Chidambaram is doing, some of the steps to clear bottlenecks in projects, some of the decisions being taken in terms of natural gas pricing and trying to move to coal block allocations, trying to get things resolved, I think there is a sense that the Indian government is once again functioning and some decisions are getting taken.

Also the sentiment was incredibly negative at that point in time. Sentiment is also starting to stabilize a little bit. People are starting to believe that for India, 5 percent gross domestic product (GDP) growth is probably the bottom of the cycle and that growth will tick up from here.

I do believe that is the bottom. I think that was the time of maximum pain partly because of the over enthusiasm on India on a short-term basis. Plus also the fact that you had this whole crisis of tapering and there was perceived extreme vulnerability of India to external capital flows, which I think also is far reduced today with the USD 35 billion it has got with the FCNR deposits.

Also the current account itself on a sustainable basis has pretty much halved. So, India is far less vulnerable today.

Q: 2008 India was the BRICS poster boy. 2013 we are world's basket case again. What went wrong first?

A: In hindsight, we being considered a part of BRICS probably laid the seeds of our own doom. We became incredibly complacent, the politicians became incredibly complacent. We started believing that we are destined to grow.

I said to you earlier that there is no God-given right for any country to grow 8-9 percent if you look at economic history.

Instead of saying BRICS is a pathway which we should aspire to and if we take the right steps we can get to, we started believing that this has already happened. There was tremendous complacency on the part of policymakers and politicians and even business men that India has arrived. Our moment in the sun is here, nothing more needs to be done and we will just grow. That complacency is what has been our undoing.

Q: You are saying it seeped into the government and industry. In the government are you referring to the tax cases that the government launched against Vodafone, IBM? Are you saying that a country dependent on foreign investment should be more welcoming of it?

A: There are two things. One, the government, UPA-II, in the last five years has been almost zero economic reform. It has been so embroiled in one scam after the other that they just haven't been -- I don't think there is any sense of a long term vision of what they want India to deliver on the economic front. There is no sense of a coherent master plan of what they want to do for India economically.

There is a sense that ministers are doing their things on their own, there is no cohesive binding force or vision behind everything.

The tax case is just a manifestation of that. At USD 90 billion, India has the absolute largest of the current account deficit after the US. With the deficit at 4.8 percent, with that type of dependence on foreign capital, you can't go out and start shooting yourself in the foot by putting case after case on foreign multi-nationals. It will totally vitiate the investment environment.

I don't know right or wrong, I am not a tax lawyer. So, I am not sure who is in the right and who is in the wrong.

But the reality is whenever you talk to any investor in the US they constantly ask you these questions because they read the same headlines.

Q: You said India corporates have been complacent also. Where would you fault Indian corporates in the last five years? They have been pleading policy paralysis.

A: They have been pleading but if you look at the infrastructure developers – Credit Suisse, Barclays and CLSA have written all these have interesting research notes on the extent of over leverage among a part of corporate India.

The developers who built 65 percent of India's infrastructure in the last five years in the private sector are all massively over-leveraged. They can't meet debt payments, corporate governance, bust balance sheets, no cash flows. So, there was a feeling in a huge part of corporate India that the gravy train in terms of access to capital is unending.

That they can constantly access capital at any point in time they want which obviously was true in 2005-06-07 and before the crisis but it stopped. When the music stops, we will see who is left standing.

Q: Someone who follows British elections told me that in America when they vote it is like choosing between Tweedledum and Tweedledee because the right and the far right are fairly close in terms of economic policy. Is there any difference that you see looking ahead between Manmohanomics and Modinomics as far as India is concerned?

A: Manmohan Singh is an outstanding economist. Look at his credentials, his background and track record. The difference is just in terms of decision making. The impression being created today to the external world is in Manmohanomics, there is no decision being taken, either good or bad.

A lot of the good economics are being held hostage to a Congress high command, which seems to believe entirely in populism.

The Congress view of the world seems to be that we just need to constantly dole out more money and freebies.

Q: The other party has also supported the massive food bill, NREGA. So, what are we fighting for?

A: I have never met Modi personally but I have spoken to many people, industrialists and businessmen who have met him extensively, who have extensive dealings in Gujarat. There is a sense that he is a very decisive individual and he is willing to take decisions yes or no, so, one is that.

Second is, it is undoubted that the BJP's economic gameplan is more pro-business than the Congress. If you can say both are centrists, BJP is right-of-center and the Congress is left-of-center.

Q: This is the same government that opposed FDI in retail. So, where is it right-of-center?

A: There are sound bytes that everyone makes and does to cater to their respective electoral constituencies.

Q: You think they would have a more aggressive economic reform programme?

A: You look at history. If you look at 1998 to 2004, a lot of building blocks of the growth acceleration that India got were laid in that time. They that time had the same issues, they had the RSS, they had the pro-Swadeshi movement, a lot of stuff was done then which this current government for 10 years has not been able to do.

I don't think any of us are against social transfers or against more money being pumped into rural India. How can you be against that? You see how poor India is. The dispute we have with Congress is they don't seem to understand that if you don't have economic growth where will the money come to redistribute?

Q: Let me make a simple hypothesis to you about India: a burgeoning middle class that might become as much as 400-500 million is that the romance? Is that the promise of India that you still bet on?

A: India is still a market which attracts stock-pickers because you can find the individual companies, which you think have outstanding long-term prospects, have good governance and the market values them and you get rewarded for that.

Q: Tell me where do you stand? You are still bullish on India, you believe a new bull market may have started?

A: I think it is possible.

Q: New bull market creates new leaders, new opportunities, new money. Where do you sense the opportunity?

A: We are still very optimistic on media. We think digitization is a huge discontinuity. It is a huge disruption in the media space. It is not very clear who will benefit but it is going to fundamentally change the media.

Ad spend to GDP is very low in India, at less than 0.3 percent. It is far lower than any global averages. The ticker price for ad spots is very low. Media is a derived play on consumption.

The whole economics of the media business are going to undergo a significant change.

Q: Content or distribution where would you bet?

A: I think both. As of right now, we bet on content because that is an easier to play on. Distribution between DTH and cable it is still not clear. How much time it will take for the cable players to cut the local cable operator layer out and make it a proper B2C model is not very clear. So, we are still doing some more work but undoubtedly in my mind huge value will be created here.

Q: Would you be more pro-active towards the electronic media or the electronic and print media?

A: More [towards] electronic. We own one company in print:  DB Corp that owns Dainik Bhaskar. We think they are an outstanding management team, vernacular media in six-seven states. Readership in India is still growing as you know.

The electronic media in Indian language is not yet that much of a competition. You don't have the Google, Yahoos of the world like you have in English, which is already hurting the English print. So, vernacular print is a very interesting area to be in and electronic of course.

Q: But in India, a lot of government control is exercised on the media.

A: Much less than other markets. If you talk to any multi-national, Comcast, Disney or Viacom, they will say India is the single most exciting media opportunity in the world today because it is the only market in the world where they can come in and take 75, 100 percent stakes in the distribution part. Even in the channel part they can take 51 percent. They can take more.

Q: What other sectors? You mentioned media and the great management teams that is the perfect combination of a bull market -- unloved sector, great management team and great opportunity, media is one example. Any other way to express your hypothesis?

A: Others are very stock specific, it is not a broad theme. For example we own a NBFC called Cholamandalam Investment and Finance . We think they are a great management. The CEO of Cholamandalam is an outstanding individual, very aggressive, he talks a lot of sense, a young guy.

Others are more stock-specific stuff like we own something in IT services, we own 2-3 medium size IT services companies.

Q: How about pharma?

A: We own two pharma stocks. We own  Lupin and we own Cadila . We owned Lupin for seven years.

Q: Still a good prospect for a bull market?

A: I think so.

Q: Cadila because of the new molecule, new drug?

A: Because of the molecule and partly because Cadila has really done very poorly in the last year. If you look at Cadila's absolute EBITDA, it has been flat for three years.

It has put a lot of money upfront in terms of new facilities for vaccines, for biologicals and there is no revenue coming. 35-40 percent of the current gross block is into assets which are earning not even Rs 1 today.

So, the bet we are making is Pankaj Patel -- who owns 75 percent of the company -- is a good capital allocator and operating leverage will kick in.

Q: If you were to go by your gut and tell me this is the sector that will lead this whole market higher, which one would you say?

A: It can't be FMCG or pharma and unlikely to be IT. Pharma has done reasonably well, but it is also well valued.

So, media could be one. It will probably have to be some banks or may be PSU banks. I am not a fan of PSU banks, I don't like to buy them but it could be a cyclical trade. So, they may lead a rally or something in a cyclical sector, may be cap goods.

There are two big valuation disparities in the market, one is between defensives and cyclical sectors. The rally will be led by something which is a cyclical sector. I am not sure whether it is natural resources or infrastructure or it is petroleum, if the government totally decontrols stuff. It has to be something cyclical.

Q: In the 20 years that you have been following India who are heroes and who are the villains of the India story over the last 20 years period? Who would you say has done an outstanding job recognized or unrecognized?

A: There are many corporates. They have got the valuations, they are well recognized. They have put the India story on the map. It is universally acknowledged that we have some very good companies with some very good management teams.

The villain has been the whole system. We have shot ourselves in the foot. It is complacency, it is our system and everything else, the way our governance systems work, the inability to execute large projects, inability to get clearances in time.

We had an outstanding opportunity in 2007-08 where we were the toast of the world. We were seen as a country which will emulate what China has done – grow for 20 years at 8-9-10 percent and will do it in a democratic way which would create huge shareholder value.

The Chinese economy has been a home run but the Chinese stock market has done very poorly in the last 10-15 years. It has not been a great investment to be in China for the last decade.

India was seen as a place where you could make very good financial returns because there is capital discipline, there is a focus on RoE, there is democracy, it is a well functioning stock market and we were being seen as the next big thing.

Through our own complacency and partly some bad decisions, partly the economic environment turning, we have totally taken the air out of our own balloon effectively.

Q: A bull market needs various things, I am going to give you three or four things. Tell me which are the important ones for the bull market to continue. Continuing of quantitative easing, FII inflows into India, a stable government at the centre and fiscal discipline. Out of these 3-4 things what is important that the market has in order to get a new leg up?

A: A new leg-up in my view has to be a government that comes to power -- either Congress or BJP -- which is willing to break the mould and recognize that we have some serious flaws in our governance model that's holding us back from getting to 8-9-10 percent economic growth.

If we get a government – it could be BJP or Congress, I am no fan of either and don't care which comes -- they have to come and recognize the way we govern, the way our bureaucracy, systems of approvals and processes are, it doesn't work for a USD 2 trillion economy trying to grow at 9-10 percent a year. It has to be broken. We have to redesign the way we govern and approach economic growth, large projects.

Q: But it doesn't happen with a coalition government, right?

A: That is an excuse. What is the coalition government being voted into power for? To govern and to get economic growth. That cannot be an excuse. Is there anybody in India today who doubts that we can grow at 10 percent if we are unshackled? I don't doubt, I don't think anybody doubts that. So, what holds us back? It is our own system of governance, our own mindset and lack of decision making.

You just have to reexamine the way we do a lot of things.

Q: Does it help that you are in Singapore and away from Dalal Street?

A: I think so.

Q: How so?

A: Less noise. India is a very noisy place in the sense that six business newspapers, four business news channels, you can get obsessed all the time just trying to find the next data point on something.

Being outside you get a better sense of what's going on globally. What are the major trends globally, what are people thinking and talking.

If you ask me more than anything else, it is ultimately improvement in governance because in my view the next stage of the Indian bull market will come when local investors come in back. This market has been entirely propped up by foreigners. The entire mutual fund industry in equities is less than USD 25 billion. It is a joke.

Q: 20 years. Lots of ups and downs, do you still have a romance for Indian equities?

A: Of course. I always had the choice to do something else. When I started the fund I had the option to do a pan-Asian fund instead of an India-only fund. I am an Indian, I am an Indian passport holder, I have tremendous belief and faith in India even today.

I have great passion for the country. I do believe that our best years are still very much ahead of us and I believe that we have the building blocks in place. All the stuff we have gone through the last three-four years, the pain, the policy paralysis, all the scandals is ultimately par for the course for democracy maturing and trying to improve and do things in a better way. I still believe that India is a huge story waiting to unfold. It will be wrong to give up on India.



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USA experiences its first deadly snowstorm of 2014

The first winter storm of the year, named Hercules, struck the northeastern region of United States and parts of Canada on Friday. Boston was one of the worst hit cities where very high snowdrifts were reported. A state of emergency was declared in New York and New Jersey. Life came to a standstill as people were urged to stay indoors and schools extended the winter vacations.

Vehicular traffic disruption

Air, rail and road traffic was disrupted as icy cold wailing winds piled up almost two feet of snow in some areas. A chaotic situation prevailed in the major airports across the country with more than 3,000 flights being cancelled and around 10,000 delays. The John F Kennedy Airport in New York was forced to halt operations for a long time due to extremely poor visibility and strong winds.

The fierce storm also caused road accidents and claimed around nine lives. Driving would be treacherous in the heaps of snow piled up on streets and therefore, major highways in the New York state were shut down. The state government of Massachusetts has taken substantial steps to remove snow and ice.

Government efforts

The government has assured people that steps will be taken to prevent any fatal accident. Considering the freezing temperatures and wind chill readings touching around (-25°C) outreach teams were sent in the New York City's streets to stretch a helping hand to homeless people. Bill de Blasio was sworn in as the Mayor of New York City just a day before the storm arrived and to quote him, is "focused like a laser on protecting this city."

picture courtesy- nationalturk.com

By: Skymetweather.com



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