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CFTC Commitments of Traders - week ending March 4

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 08 Maret 2014 | 08.10

Investing.com -

Investing.com - The Commodity Futures Trading Commission released its weekly Commitments of Traders report for the week ending March 4 on Friday.

Speculative positioning in the CME currency futures:

Long Short
Net Prior Change Gross Change Gross Change
EUR 23.5k 13.9k 9.6k 103.9k 10.9k 80.4k 1.3k
GBP 29.6k 28.8k 0.8k 71.0k -3.5k 41.4k -4.3k
JPY -79.7k -85.1k 5.4k 20.4k 5.7k 100.1k 0.3k
CHF 2.2k 0.4k 1.8k 21.8k 2.4k 19.7k 0.6k
CAD -61.1k -58.6k -2.5k 23.3k -1.6k 84.4k 0.9k
AUD -41.1k -39.0k -2.1k 12.3k 2.0k 53.4k 4.1k
NZD 13.4k 11.0k 2.5k 19.3k 2.8k 5.9k 0.4k
MXN -20.8k -21.6k 0.8k 8.2k -1.7k 29.0k -2.6k

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U.S. stocks mixed on jobs report, Ukraine unease; Dow rises 0.19%

Investing.com - Investing.com - Concerns that the Ukraine crisis my heat up anew offset a better-than-expected February jobs report and sent stocks trading mixed to higher on Friday.

At the close of U.S. trading, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.19%, the S&P 500 index rose 0.05%, while the Nasdaq Composite index fell 0.37%.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported earlier that the U.S. economy added 175,000 jobs in February, beating expectations for a 149,000 increase.

January's figure was revised up to 129,000 from 113,000.

The U.S. private sector added 162,000 jobs last month, exceeding expectations for a 154,000 rise. January's figure was revised up to 145,000 from 142,000.

The report also showed that the U.S. unemployment rate ticked up to 6.7% in February, from 6.6% the previous month. Analysts had expected the unemployment rate to remain unchanged last month.

Meanwhile, data also showed that the U.S. trade deficit expanded to $39.1 billion in January, from $38.98 billion in December, whose figure was revised from a previously estimated deficit of $38.7 billion.

Analysts had expected the trade deficit to expand to $39.00 billion in January.

The bullish data sent stocks rising by fueling hopes that an improving economy will bolster corporate fundamentals down the road.

Offsetting gains, however, were concerns the Russian standoff in Ukraine may be heating up anew.

Russian President Vladimir Putin said earlier that he wouldn't ignore pleas for help from Russian speakers in Ukraine, which markets interpreted as rebuff to U.S. President Barack Obama's call to end the crisis.

Leading Dow Jones Industrial Average performers included Nike, up 1.57%, Exxon Mobil, up 1.30%, and Goldman Sachs, up 0.93%.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average's worst performers included Walt Disney, down 1.36%, Microsoft, down 0.72%, and Verizon down 0.68%.

European indices, meanwhile, finished lower.

After the close of European trade, the EURO STOXX 50 fell 1.50%, France's CAC 40 fell 1.15%, while Germany's DAX 30 fell 2.01%. Meanwhile, in the U.K. the FTSE 100 fell 1.12%.

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TEXT - Opening statement by RBA's Stevens in parliament testimony

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 07 Maret 2014 | 08.10

Investing.com - Investing.com - The following is the opening statement by Reserve Bank of Australia Governor Glenn Stevens in testimony before parliament on Friday.

Thank you for the opportunity to meet with you today.

When we met with the Committee just prior to Christmas, I suggested that, taking an international view, 2013 could be described as a year that turned out not to be quite as good as hoped for, but not as bad as feared. Nothing that has occurred in the period since then would change that assessment.

One prominent international event was that, within hours of that hearing, the US Federal Reserve commenced the 'tapering' of its monthly asset purchases. This was a possibility we talked about at the time and, although the timing of it wasn't known, it was considered likely that it would begin before long. A further reduction in asset purchases was decided at the Fed's January meeting.

After all the anticipation of this change, the actual announcement of the Fed's decision caused little disruption in markets in December. During January there was more volatility in markets, and a few emerging economies came under pressure, with bond yields spiking and exchange rates declining.

It is important to keep this in perspective. Periods surrounding changes of course by the Fed have often been times when market participants re-assess their positions and their appetite for risk, and this occasion has been no exception. It isn't necessarily the Fed action per se that is most important, but rather what it conveys about the overall economic and financial environment. At such times investors sometimes start to focus on risks to which they had hitherto been attaching little significance.

Investors have not, however, fled from risk indiscriminately on this occasion, at least to date. They have drawn distinctions between alternative classes of investment and different countries. Long-term sovereign yields of the core advanced countries have increased a little, but they remain low. With compressed risk spreads, this means that borrowing costs for many private-sector borrowers remain very low. The spreads over German yields for European sovereigns have continued to fall. This suggests that actions by European policymakers have had more influence on European markets than actions by the US authorities. This is as one would expect, but it hasn't always been the case in the past.

Moreover, not all emerging markets are experiencing the same pressure. Some that experienced considerable turbulence in the middle of last year, when tapering was first mooted, have seen less of that recently. This owes something at least to policy responses in those countries in the intervening period. Among those countries that have been under most pressure of late, genuine domestic sources of risk can be observed in most instances. In several cases the market pressure has resulted in policy responses, which were perhaps needed anyway.

In general then, tapering is proceeding, so far, about as well as can be expected.

In the meantime, forecasts for the global economy haven't changed much in recent months. If anything they have inched higher. They suggest that 2014 growth will be higher than in 2013, and at about average pace. More of the growth is coming from the advanced countries, and proportionately not quite so much from the emerging ones. That, too, is probably a welcome re-balancing in some respects after the weakness of the advanced countries in recent years. Australia's terms of trade have been little changed over the past year, though we still assume they will decline further in the future.

Turning to the Australian economy, for some time our view has been that growth has been running below its trend pace. The national accounts released a couple of days ago don't significantly change that assessment. For the year to the December quarter of 2013, real GDP rose by about 2¾ per cent. This is roughly in line with the forecasts we have had for a while. The drivers of growth are shifting. As we have been saying for some time now, and as confirmed in the recent survey of capital expenditure intentions by firms, the very high level of investment spending by mining companies has turned down, and the decline will accelerate over the coming year. Other areas of demand will provide at least some offset. Export volumes for resources are growing strongly, as the capacity that has been put in place by the high levels of investment comes on line. For example, iron ore shipments have risen by about 85 per cent from their levels of five years ago, to around 1.5 million tonnes per day. They will rise further over the coming year or two.

It is clear that dwelling investment activity will rise strongly over the period ahead. Over the past three months, approvals to build private dwellings numbered almost 50,000. That is an increase of about 27 per cent from the figures of a year earlier, and is the highest three-month total in the 30-year history of this series.

Consumer demand has had a firmer tone over the summer, after a fairly lengthy period of more subdued outcomes. This is evidence in the retail trade and national accounts data and is confirmed in information from the Bank's liaison. Consumer sentiment does still seem a little skittish, though, and while we expect consumption spending to grow in line with income or perhaps a little faster, consumers are unlikely to be the drivers of growth that they were prior to the financial crisis.

Business investment spending outside mining, which has been very low indeed, is bound to pick up at some stage. The signs of improved conditions and confidence that we have observed in some sectors will help, and the early indications of an improvement in capital spending expectations are apparent. Those are, however, quite tentative at this point and firms are looking for recent signs of improved conditions to persist before committing to expanded investment spending. Public final spending is scheduled, according to the announced plans of federal and state governments, to be quite weak.

The expected ongoing effects of very low interest rates and a somewhat lower exchange rate have resulted in a slight lift in forecast growth for the second half of this year and in 2015. This was reflected in our most recent published forecasts released last month. We haven't made any further changes since then.

With growth having been below trend, job vacancies declined, employment growth weakened and unemployment rose in 2013. Some forward indicators have stabilised and then improved a little of late, which is promising. But even with this, and with a slightly better growth outlook, the labour market will probably remain soft for a while yet, given that it lags changes in activity. This has seen the pace of growth of wages decline noticeably.

Turning to consumer price inflation, the recent data show inflation in underlying terms at about 2½ per cent over the course of 2013, and a pace higher than that in the second half of the year. This is a change from the middle of last year, when we were receiving data that were lower than expected.

Part of the increase in inflation is explained by the effect of the depreciation of the exchange rate, which has resulted in increases in prices of traded goods and services. But that does not account for all the result and it is, at least on the surface, something of a puzzle that underlying inflation moved up while growth in labour costs moved down. There may be a re-building of margins in some areas, particularly those where demand conditions have improved a little from the very weak situation earlier. There may also be an element of noise in the quarterly data.

The view we have taken, pending further evidence, is that there is probably both noise and signal in the result. Hence, our assessment is that inflation is not quite as low as it might have looked six to twelve months ago, but nor is it accelerating to the extent a literal reading of the latest data might suggest. The general situation – 18 months of below-trend growth, a rise in unemployment, a marked slowdown in wages – is not one that would be obviously associated with a sustained rise in price pressures. Our view remains that the outlook for inflation, while a little higher than before, is still consistent with the medium-term target.

Monetary policy is very accommodative. The cash rate has been unchanged since August last year. It and most borrowing rates are at multi-decade lows. The sorts of things that are normally expected to result from low interest rates are increasingly in evidence:

savers are looking for higher return assets as the yield on safe assets has fallen
asset prices have risen
credit growth has picked up somewhat for households, and particularly for investors in housing, where it is running at an annualised pace of close to 9 per cent
construction of dwellings is set to rise, probably quite strongly
liaison suggests that lenders are becoming more accommodating to potential business borrowers and few complain about availability of credit
the exchange rate has depreciated, though it is still high by historical standards.

On the whole, then, accommodative monetary policy is playing its part in supporting sustainable growth in demand, consistent with the inflation target.

Of course, the outlook contains many uncertainties, not least the 'hand over' from mining investment spending to sources of demand outside mining. In some important respects, the basis for such a handover is coming into place, as I have just described. The question then is: will the additional demand likely to be generated outside mining as a result of these trends be just the right amount to offset the large decline in mining investment spending, so keeping the economy near full employment?

No-one can answer that question with great confidence. Moreover, even if it were possible for forecasts to be much more accurate than experience could possibly lead us to hope, it could not be assumed that a shortfall in demand could necessarily be made good in short order by monetary policy. Monetary policy can have a powerful effect on the general environment, but it cannot hope to fine-tune the quarterly or even annual path of aggregate demand.

At the present time we judge monetary policy to be doing the things it can reasonably be expected to do in the circumstances we face. We have signalled the likelihood, if the economy evolves more or less as expected, of a period of stability in the cash rate. As well as the low level of interest rates generally, a sense of stability should be of some help for businesses and households as they form their plans.

My colleagues and I are here to respond to your questions.

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Forex - RBA's Stevens says AUD high by historical standards

Investing.com - Investing.com - The Australian dollar weakened slightly in early trade on Friday after Reserve Bank Governor Glenn Stevens said the exchange rate is "high by historical standards" after reaching $0.9113 overnight on solid retail sales and trade data on Thursday, the highest level traded since Dec. 11 2013.

AUD/USD traded at 0.9084, down 0.06%, after remarks by Stevens before the House ofrepresentatives Economics Committee to provide his twice-yearly update on the economy. At the same time the AI Group/HIA construction index, a private survey, showed a drop of 4.0 points to 44.2 with new orders the lowest since June 2013.

The China National People's Congress until March 13 remains a key background focus for markets in Asia.

In Japan, the only morning release on schedule is trade data for the first 20 days of Feb due at 0850 (2350 GMT).

At 1400 (0500 GMT), Japan's Jan Indices of leading, coincident and lagging indicators are due. This would be followed an hour later (0600 GMT) by the release of the ESP Forecast Survey of economists on GDP, CPI and BOJ policy.

The government will maintain its assessment that the economy is "improving" based on the coincident composite index, which is expected to post a fifth straight month-to-month gain in January, up around 2.6 points. Meanwhile, the leading composite index is also forecast to mark a fifth consecutive rise in January, up about 1.4 points, indicating that the economic recovery remains solid in the three months ahead.

Overnight, the dollar trade largely lower against most major currencies after the European Central Bank left monetary policy unchanged and sparked demand for the euro and other higher-yielding currencies, while hit-or-miss data in the U.S. tarnished the greenback's appeal.

The dollar index, which tracks the performance of the greenback versus a basket of six other major currencies, was down 0.01% at 79.67.

On Friday, the U.S. is to round up the week with its closely watched government data on nonfarm payrolls and the unemployment rate.

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DoT panel for slab-based penalties for violations by telcos

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 06 Maret 2014 | 08.10

A DoT panel has recommended classifying violations committed by telecom operators and introducing slabs with monetary fines ranging from Rs 1 lakh to Rs 50 crore.

Telecom Minister Kapil Sibal had asked the Department of Telecommunications (DoT) to work on rationalising penalties.

Also Read: Open for tower sharing agreement with telecom players: SREI

The industry had repeatedly approached him saying that the maximum penalty of Rs 50 crore was being imposed even for minor mistakes like late submission of a document.

The government has realised little revenue from such penalties because they have been challenged in courts. The DoT panel has suggested examining violations on nine parameters and clubbing them under five heads.

Warnings can lead to penalty of Rs 1 lakh, minor violations with Rs 1 crore penalty, moderate (Rs 5 crore), major (Rs 20 crore) and severe (Rs 50 crore), official sources said.

The suggestions of the panel will be placed before inter-ministerial panel, Telecom Commission (TC) for approval.

Among various parameters, the DoT panel has suggested examining any violation in light of its impact on national exchequer, customers, public interest, national security, policy guidelines.

Repeat violations and the impacted service area (s) will be taken into consideration while imposing any levy, the DoT report has suggested.

The panel has suggested that after examining these parameters, violations can be categorised under functional classifications to measure their impact like company level, commercial, network, equipment, technical, service, operations, security and finance.

The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) in April 2012 had recommended classifying penalties in two categories-minor and major. It had suggested imposition of a maximum penalty of up to Rs 25 lakh in case of minor violation and up to Rs 10 crore for every major violation.

However, the same was not approved by the TC. Industry estimates suggest that the DoT has imposed total penalties of Rs 6,850 crore on telecom companies by mid-2013.

These include fines for minor violations like late submission of papers and absence of placards on mobile towers.


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EUR/USD dips ahead of ECB meet, soft U.S. data support

Investing.com - Investing.com - The euro traded lower against the dollar on Wednesday as investors avoided the single currency ahead of the European Central Bank's Thursday decision on monetary policy, though soft U.S. service-sector data capped the greenback's gains.

In U.S. trading, EUR/USD was trading at 1.3732, down 0.07%, up from a session low of 1.3707 and off a high of 1.3747.

The pair was likely to find support at 1.3643, last Thursday's low, and resistance at 1.3824, Friday's high.

Investors avoided the single currency and remained on the sidelines to await the ECB's policy statement on Thursday.

Concerns persisted that the monetary authority could take steps to help shore up the region's still-fragile recovery, which overshadowed otherwise positive data.

Data on Wednesday revealed that the final euro zone composite purchasing managers' index was revised up to a 32-month high of 53.3 from a preliminary estimate of 52.7.

The euro area services PMI rose 52.6 in February from 51.6 in January and higher than the flash estimate of 51.7.

Germany's composite PMI soared to a 33-month high but France's fell to a two-month low. Italy's service sector grew to an almost three-year high last month.

Separately, Eurostat, the European Union's statistical arm, reported that retail sales in the euro zone rose 1.6% in January, blowing past expectations for a 0.8% gain.

On-year retail sales grew 1.3%, defying expectations for a 0.4% decline.

Separate data confirmed that the euro zone economy expanded 0.3% in the fourth quarter and grew 0.5% on a year-over-year basis, both figures in line with expectations.

Meanwhile in the U.S., investors shrugged off payroll processor ADP's nonfarm payrolls report, which revealed that the U.S. private sector added 139,000 jobs in February, below expectations for an increase of 160,000.

However, the U.S. dollar did take a hit after the Institute of Supply Management said its services purchasing managers' index fell to a 43-month low of 51.6 last month from 54.0 in January. Analysts had expected the index to tick down to 53.5 in February.

The euro was down against the pound, with EUR/GBP down 0.47% to 0.8209, and up against the yen, with EUR/JPY gaining 0.06% and trading at 140.56.

On Thursday, all eyes will focus on the European Central Bank's announcement on interest rates and monetary policy followed by a press conference with President Mario Draghi.

Elsewhere, Germany is to publish data on factory orders.

The U.S. is to publish the weekly report on initial jobless claims and data on factory orders.

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Crude falls on profit taking, waning Ukraine standoff fears

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 05 Maret 2014 | 08.10

Investing.com - Investing.com - Crude prices dropped on Tuesday after investors locked in gains from Monday's robust U.S. spending and factory data and sold the commodity for profits, especially as the Russian standoff in Ukraine began to subside.

On the New York Mercantile Exchange, West Texas Intermediate crude for delivery in April traded at $103.11 a barrel during U.S. trading, down 1.73%. New York-traded oil futures hit a session low of $102.89 a barrel and a high of $104.95 a barrel.

The April contract settled up 2.27% at $104.92 a barrel on Monday.

Nymex oil futures were likely to find support at $101.03 a barrel, the low from Feb. 25, and resistance at $105.22 a barrel, Monday's high.

Oil prices edged lower after the Ukraine crisis subsided and allayed fears of a military conflict in eastern Europe.

Russian President Putin said Moscow reserved the right to use force in Ukraine's Crimea region in the event of 'lawlessness' but added that such a move would be a last resort.

Prices also dipped after the Russian defense minister ordered troops engaged in military exercises near Ukraine's borders to return to their bases.

Russia is the world's second-largest crude oil exporter, and sanctions slapped on the country from the West over Ukraine could have disrupted supply.

Meanwhile, profit taking sent prices edging lower as well, as investors sold to cash in on a rally stemming from Monday's robust U.S. economic indicators.

The Commerce Department reported Monday that personal spending rose 0.4% in January, above expectations for an increase of 0.1%. Personal income rose 0.3%, beating expectations for a 0.2% increase, after a flat reading in December.

Meanwhile, the core PCE price index, which is stripped of food and energy items, inched up by a seasonally adjusted 0.1% in January, in line with expectations, after rising 0.1% in December.

The core PCE price index rose at an annualized rate of 1.2%, above forecasts for a 1.1% increase, after rising at a rate of 1.1% in December.

Consumer spending is the single biggest source of U.S. economic growth, accounting for as much as two-thirds of economic activity.

Oil also saw support after the Institute for Supply Management revealed that its manufacturing purchasing managers' index rose to 53.2 last month from 51.3 in January, beating forecasts for a reading of 52.0.

Elsewhere, on the ICE Futures Exchange in London, Brent oil futures for April delivery were down 1.89% and trading at US$109.10 a barrel, while the spread between the Brent and U.S. crude contracts stood at US$5.99 a barrel.

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Gold falls as subsiding Ukraine crisis tarnishes safe-harbor appeal

Investing.com - Investing.com - Gold prices dropped on Tuesday as the Russia-Ukraine standoff began to ease, which chipped away at gold's image as a safe-haven asset class amid times of crisis.

On the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange, gold futures for April delivery traded at $1,338.80 a troy ounce during U.S. trading, down 0.85%, up from a session low of $1,331.50 and off a high of $1,352.80.

The April contract settled up 2.17% at $1,350.30 on Monday.

Futures were likely to find support at $1,320.10 a troy ounce, Friday's low, and resistance at $1,355.00, Monday's high.

Russian President Putin said earlier that Moscow reserved the right to use force in Ukraine's Crimea region in the event of 'lawlessness' but added that such a move would be a last resort, which sparked a wave of relief across markets and enticed investors out of safe-haven gold positions.

Elsewhere, Russia's defense minister ordered troops engaged in military exercises close to Ukraine's borders to return to their bases.

Still, Russian forces continue to maintain military presence in Crimea, which capped gold's losses.

Concerns that the standoff may result in sanctions slapped on Russia and hamper global economic recovery also supported the yellow metal, especially on fears the rouble could suffer.

Meanwhile, silver for May delivery was down 1.01% and trading at US$21.267 a troy ounce, while copper futures for May delivery were up 1.28% at US$3.213 a pound.

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Dollar gains on solid U.S. manufacturing, personal spending data

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 04 Maret 2014 | 08.10

Investing.com - Investing.com - The dollar firmed against most major currencies on Monday after solid U.S. factory and consumer spending reports sparked a rally, while unease over the Ukraine crisis fueled safe-haven greenback demand as well.

In U.S. trading on Monday, EUR/USD was down 0.50% at 1.3733.

The Commerce Department reported earlier that personal spending rose 0.4% in January, above expectations for an increase of 0.1%. Personal spending for December was revised down to a 0.1% gain from a previously reported increase of 0.4%.

The report added that personal income rose 0.3%, beating expectations for a 0.2% increase, after a flat reading in December.

Meanwhile, the core PCE price index, which is stripped of food and energy items, inched up by a seasonally adjusted 0.1% in January, in line with expectations, after rising 0.1% in December.

The core PCE price index rose at an annualized rate of 1.2%, above forecasts for a 1.1% increase, after rising at a rate of 1.1% in December.

Consumer spending is the single biggest source of U.S. economic growth, accounting for as much as two-thirds of economic activity.

The Federal Reserve pays close attention to personal income and spending when deciding the fate of monetary policy, and Monday's data prompted investors to assume the U.S. central bank will continue scaling back its monthly asset purchases as the year progress.

Fed asset purchases, currently set at $65 billion a month in Treasury and mortgage debt, aim to spur recovery by suppressing long-term borrowing costs, which weakens the dollar as a side effect by sending investors to stocks in hopes investing and hiring accompany rising equity prices.

The dollar also saw support after the Institute for Supply Management revealed that its manufacturing purchasing managers' index rose to 53.2 last month from 51.3 in January, beating forecasts for a reading of 52.0.

The report attributed the rise to an increase in new orders after rough winter weather disrupted commerce at the start of the year.

The euro, meanwhile, came under pressure as escalating tensions over the crisis in the Ukraine sparked a broad-based selloff in risk assets.

Russian President Vladimir Putin over the weekend sent troops into the Crimea region.

The move sparked fears that the West will impose sanctions on Russia. Russia's central bank hiked interest rates from 5.5% to 7% on Monday after the rouble fell to new record lows against the euro and dollar.

In the euro zone, data on Monday confirmed that the region's manufacturing purchasing managers' index declined to 53.2 in February from 54.0 in January. It was the first dip in five months, highlighting the fragile nature of the recovery in the euro area.

The rate of decline in France's manufacturing sector eased in February, while activity in Germany's manufacturing sector rose for the eighth straight month.

Elsewhere, the dollar was down against the yen, with USD/JPY down 0.35% at 101.43, and up against the Swiss franc, with USD/CHF up 0.34% at 0.8834.

The greenback was up against the pound, with GBP/USD down 0.51% at 1.6660.

In the U.K., data revealed that a strong upswing taking place in the U.K. manufacturing sector continued in February, with jobs growth in the sector accelerating to a 33-month high.

The Markit U.K. manufacturing purchasing managers' index for February came in at 56.9, up from a revised 56.6 in January. Analysts had expected the index to tick down to 56.5.

A separate report showed that the number of mortgages approved in the U.K. rose to 76,947 in February, the highest level since November 2007, from 72,798 in January.

The dollar was mixed against its cousins in Canada, Australia and New Zealand, with USD/CAD up 0.15% at 1.1080, AUD/USD up 0.03% at 0.8930 and NZD/USD down 0.20% at 0.8367.

The dollar index, which tracks the performance of the greenback versus a basket of six other major currencies, was up 0.35% at 80.08.

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U.S. stocks drop as Ukraine crisis frays nerves; Dow drops 0.94%

Investing.com - Investing.com - U.S. stocks dropped on Monday as investors ditched risk-on asset classes such as equities and flocked to safe-harbor dollar and yen positions despite better-than-expected U.S. factory and personal spending data.

At the close of U.S. trading, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 0.94%, the S&P 500 index fell 0.74%, while the Nasdaq Composite index fell 0.72%.

Stocks fell due to the Russian standoff over the Ukraine.

Russian President Vladimir Putin over the weekend sent troops into the Crimea region.

The move sparked fears that the West will impose sanctions on Russia. Russia's central bank hiked interest rates from 5.5% to 7% on Monday after the rouble fell to new record lows against the euro and dollar, the latter of which served as the asset class of choice over stocks.

Solid U.S. data did little to boost spirits on Wall Street.

The Commerce Department reported earlier that personal spending rose 0.4% in January, above expectations for an increase of 0.1%. Personal spending for December was revised down to a 0.1% gain from a previously reported increase of 0.4%.

The report added that personal income rose 0.3%, beating expectations for a 0.2% increase, after a flat reading in December.

Meanwhile, the core PCE price index inched up by a seasonally adjusted 0.1% in January, in line with expectations, after rising 0.1% in December.

The core PCE price index rose at an annualized rate of 1.2%, above forecasts for a 1.1% increase, after rising at a rate of 1.1% in December.

Consumer spending is the single biggest source of U.S. economic growth, accounting for as much as two-thirds of economic activity.

Elsewhere, the Institute for Supply Management revealed that its manufacturing purchasing managers' index rose to 53.2 last month from 51.3 in January, beating forecasts for a reading of 52.0.

The report attributed the rise to an increase in new orders after rough winter weather disrupted commerce at the start of the year.

Leading Dow Jones Industrial Average performers included Home Depot, down 0.06%, AT&T, down 0.20%, and United Technologies, down 0.21%.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average's worst performers included Visa, down 2.04%, 3M, down 1.90%, and Walt Disney, down 1.68%.

European indices, meanwhile, finished lower.

After the close of European trade, the EURO STOXX 50 fell 2.94%, France's CAC 40 fell 2.66%, while Germany's DAX 30 fell 3.44%. Meanwhile, in the U.K. the FTSE 100 fell 1.49%.

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Hamilton on top on final day of F1 testing

Written By Unknown on Senin, 03 Maret 2014 | 08.10

REUTERS - Formula One teams wrapped up pre-season testing in Bahrain on Sunday with Lewis Hamilton on top of the timesheets and his Mercedes team looking clear favourites for the opener in Australia on March 16.

The 2008 world champion completed 70 laps of the Sakhir circuit and ended the final day with a time just 0.02 off the best lap of the week set by Brazilian Felipe Massa for Williams on Saturday.

"This has definitely been the most challenging winter I've experienced and the car is still very much a work in progress," said Hamilton, whose team did more laps than any other over the 12 days of testing in Spain and Bahrain.

"But we've learnt a lot over the course of these last few weeks and overall it's been a good winter of testing for us."

Formula One has undergone the biggest technical revolution in more than 20 years, with the introduction of a new turbocharged V6 engine and energy recovery systems.

"There's so much to learn with these new cars; it's just mind-blowing and I don't think anybody can be fully ready for the challenge of this season," said Hamilton. "But I feel as ready as I can be and I'm looking forward to seeing where we are in Melbourne."

Williams were second fastest on Sunday but recorded more mileage than anyone else on the day, with Finland's Valtteri Bottas chalking up 108 laps.

Ferrari's Fernando Alonso was third and did 74 laps in a session that was extended by half an hour to allow teams to test under the floodlights which will be used for next month's night-time Bahrain Grand Prix.

RED BULL BEHIND

While Hamilton can head for Australia with his confidence high, champions Red Bull have plenty of catching up to do.

Four-times world champion Sebastian Vettel recorded his highest single day mileage of the pre-season period with 77 laps completed but was 4.190 seconds slower than Hamilton's best time of one minute 33.278 seconds.

The German has also yet to complete a race distance in testing as Red Bull struggle to get their car working reliably with the new Renault power unit.

"We cannot do the times that the guys at the top are doing for a couple of reasons, but at the moment we have bigger problems to solve than just the pace," said Vettel.

"But surely things will calm down. We have to use the two weeks that we have until then to fit new parts to the car and build it to the best knowledge that we currently have."

Lotus, who missed the first test at the Jerez circuit in southern Spain, also recognised they had plenty of catching up to do.

Frenchman Romain Grosjean managed only 32 laps and was last on the Sunday timesheets after being sidelined by more power unit problems.

"We're not in an ideal situation. There is a lot of new technology for everyone to understand, but even though we have stopped many times and spent a lot of time in the garage, each time we run the car we are learning something new," he said.

"We now have two weeks to find a lot more performance and reliability."

Mercedes-powered McLaren also hit problems, with Jenson Button halted by a high-mileage engine failure and then an electronics problem.

The delays meant the team was unable to get driver feedback on a new front wing that arrived in the morning.

(Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Pritha Sarkar)


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Tired of protests, Venezuelans take politics to the beach

By Esteban Israel

CATIA LA MAR, Venezuela (Reuters) - Thousands of Venezuelans have escaped to the beach for the long Carnival weekend, heeding President Nicolas Maduro's call to leave behind nearly a month of anti-government protests.

But rather than leaving the inflamed partisan politics at home, many have brought it with them.

The small beach of La Morena, about 25 miles (40 kilometers) northeast of the capital Caracas, is packed.

While some take refreshing dips in the turquoise Caribbean waters, others relax with a beer. The smell of fried fish wafts in the air, and children roll in the sand.

But not even the reggaeton pop music blasting at full volume drowns out the discussions about inflation, violent crime, and the political differences that divide Venezuelans and have fed the unrest.

"We're never going to stop talking about this," said Carlos Rivero, a 32-year-old security guard with a shaved head and tattooed arms who was visiting from Caracas with his wife.

"Wherever you go, whether it's good or bad, people are always talking about politics."

Hoping to ease tensions after at least 17 people were killed in the country's worst unrest for a decade, Maduro extended the long Carnival weekend by declaring Thursday and Friday holidays too.

Since then, government officials have flooded social media with images of busy shores and happy holidaymakers, and state television has repeatedly reminded Venezuelans not to forget the traditional family break at the seaside.

"Nobody will be able to take Carnival away from us," said Tourism Minister Andres Izarra. "There's no fascist force that can stop the people from enjoying the happiness."

To help them on their way, new Chinese-made buses wait outside Metro stations to ferry Caracas residents to Catia la Mar and the beaches north of the city such as La Morena.

But even with their toes in the sand, Venezuelans remain divided. About half defend tooth-and-nail what they see as the poverty alleviation enjoyed under the self-styled revolution of the late Hugo Chavez, who died from cancer a year ago this week.

Others say they are sick of shortages of basic products such as milk and toilet paper, with the horrific levels of violent crime, and with annual inflation of 56 percent. And they say things have only got worse since Maduro took office.

In some municipalities with opposition mayors, official carnival activities were canceled.

"People come to the beach to de-stress a bit after all that tension we have in the capital," said Jose Luis Vazquez, a supermarket worker from Guarenas town to the east of Caracas, as he sat and drank a beer with his wife, watching the waves.

The problems tended to start, others said, when the sun set and it was time to pack up and pay the bill. "That's when things turn to politics," said Rivero, the security guard.

"Prices have gone up since the last time, and there's always someone who says that things weren't like this before."

Some of those who resisted temptation and stayed in Caracas responded to the government's Carnival campaign with irony. One group of opposition supporters set up a temporary 'beach' in Plaza Altamira, a square in an affluent eastern part of the city that has been the focus of their protests.

"There's no better beach than this," read a placard waved at pedestrians and drivers by one female demonstrator in a bikini.

(Additional reporting by Efrain Otero; Editing by Daniel Wallis and Phil Berlowitz)


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Supreme Court Ko Gussa Kyon Nahin Aata?

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 02 Maret 2014 | 08.10

Published on Sat, Mar 01,2014 | 17:45, Updated at Sat, Mar 01 at 17:45Source : Moneycontrol.com 

By: Menaka Doshi, Executive Editor, CNBC TV18

Justice Robert H Jackson once famously said about the United States Supreme Court "We are not final because we are infallible, but we are infallible only because we are final."

For the longest time I thought the same applied to India's Supreme Court as well. But according to the Sahara Group and its chief Subrata Roy – India's Supreme Court is neither infallible nor final. Which is probably why for 18 months after it lost a landmark Rs 24000 crore case in the Supreme Court, the Sahara Group has refused to comply with the Court's order - to pay the money to market regulator SEBI so that it may be refunded to 3 crore investors.

That Sahara refuses to do as the Supreme Court ordered it to – is shocking. But not as shocking as the fact that the Supreme Court has sat by patiently, watching Sahara come up with random excuses for not obeying its orders. And in doing so the Supreme Court has sent out a horrible message to all Indians. Yes, we may not be infallible and no – we are not final!

Let's go back to the beginning… this is a Sahara Case timeline (borrowed from the Financial Express, with a minor modification)

* Nov 2010: Sebi restrains Sahara India Real Estate Corp and Sahara Housing Investment Corp from raising funds through optionally fully convertible debentures (OFCDs)

* Dec 2010: Sahara moves Allahabad HC; obtains stay on Sebi order

* Jan 2011: Sebi files petition in SC, which directs Sahara to give details of OFCD investors

* April 2011: Allahabad HC vacates stay; Sahara moves Supreme Court

* June 2011: Sebi directs the two Sahara companies to refund around Rs 24,000 cr to investors

* Oct 2011: SAT upholds Sebi order against Sahara entities

* Nov 2011: Sahara challenges SAT order at SC

* Jan 2012: SC admits Sahara appeal against SAT order

* Aug 2012: SC upholds SAT order; Sahara ordered to refund Rs 24,000 cr to nearly 30 mn investors through Sebi

Given the large amounts and number of investors involved, the Supreme Court was keen the case be heard and decided in a time bound manner. So it gave SAT 8 weeks to decide the matter. And the Supreme Court itself took just 8 months to admit the appeal, allocate the case to a bench, hear SEBI's, Sahara's and the Government's arguments and decide the matter.

In 8 months the Supreme Court decided the case. But for 18 months thereafter the Supreme Court has watched its decision being ignored!

Infact in a curious twist in the case – in December 2012, 3 months after the Sahara order was delivered, Chief Justice Kabir's bench decided to extend the deadline set out in the earlier order – in effect reviewing a decision made by another bench. The impropriety of this was criticised by many senior lawyers but the Supreme Court maintained silence. The second deadline gave Sahara up to February 2013 to pay SEBI the remaining Rs 17400 cr (Rs 5120 cr had been paid in December).

February came and went. SEBI filed a couple of contempt notices…the hearings dragged on. Sahara contended that most of the money had already been refunded to investors in 2011 itself. This even though most of the bonds had no early redemption clause. Nor were the Sahara companies able to explain how they raised close to Rs 19000 crore to make the refunds. The same refund argument did not pass muster even with the CJI's bench in December 2012 - yet Sahara kept beating the same drum. And somehow the Court was convinced to allow Sahara to submit property papers as guarantee for the money. Sahara first submitted papers for a single property in suburban Mumbai, that it claimed, when fully developed would be worth over Rs 20000 cr. SEBI discovered the land suffered development restrictions. Sahara tried every trick in the legal book to drag out what was in fact a concluded case. And the Supreme Court allowed it to do so. 

This generosity is baffling and unprecedented – have you ever heard of a Supreme Court that allows its orders to be negotiated down? Sahara must have been emboldened by this patient leniency. No wonder the Sahara Chief thought it well within his right to ignore a Court summons. Unfortunately for him, the wind turned, and his nth act of disobedience turned out to be the proverbial last straw. His non-appearance in the Supreme Court on 26th February, 2014 lead to the Court issuing a non-bailable arrest warrant against him. The Supreme Court refused to withdraw it when petitioned to do so.

 Mr Roy is now in police custody – not in a jail – but in a state government guesthouse. This after evading arrest for over 24 hours. The same man who claimed he could not attend Court as he had to be at the bedside of his ailing mother, was nowhere to be found the next day. Not even at his mother's bedside.

He will now be produced in the Supreme Court on March 4th. On that day it will have been exactly 550 days since the Supreme Court first decided that Sahara had acted outside the law in raising Rs 24000 crores from 3 crore investors and hence must refund the money with interest. 550 days of disobedience by Sahara. How many more days of Sahara's non-compliance will it take the Supreme Court to be reminded of its own finality?

Here below are excerpts from the Supreme Court decision ( the individual orders and the combined order) on Sahara – August 31st, 2012

But from Saharas' conduct and action, it is clear, that their intention was to issue securities to the public under the garb of private placement.

Facts indicate that, through this dubious method, that SIRECL had approached more than thirty million investors, out of which 22.1 million have invested in the OFCDs and it had raised nearly 20,000 crores, for which it had utilized the services of its staff in 2900 branches/service centers and utilized the services of more than one million agents/representatives. Court can, in such circumstances, lift the veil to examine the conduct and method adopted by Saharas to defeat the various provisions of the Companies Act, already discussed, read with the provisions of the SEBI Act.

I find that Saharas conveniently omitted the reference to SEBI in the declaration given in the prospectus. OFCDs were, therefore, issued by Saharas in contravention of the DIP Guidelines, ICDR 2009, notification dated 17.9.2002 and also overlooking the statutory requirements stipulated in Section 73(1) of the Companies Act.

I am, therefore, of the view that since Saharas had violated the listing provisions and collected huge amounts from the public in disobedience of law, SEBI is justified in directing refund of the amount with interest.

The procedure adopted by the appellant-companies is obviously topsy turvy and contrary to the recognized norms in company affairs. All this makes the entire approach of the appellant-companies calculated and crafty. It is clearly apparent, that the appellant-companies had clearly taken upon themselves to tread a path different from the mandate of law delineated under the Companies Act.

For the first time before this Court, in their challenge to the SAT order dated 26.8.2011 (whereby the SEBI (FTM) order dated 23.6.2011 was upheld), some details were disclosed by SIRECL. On an analysis the material placed before this Court, I have recorded hereinabove, that the same seemed to be unrealistic, and may well be, fictitious, concocted and made up.

it is essential to express, that there may be no real subscribers for the OFCDs issued by the SIRECL or SHICL. Or alternatively, there may be an intermix of real and fictitious subscribers.

Even though I hope that all the subscribers are genuine, and so also, the subscription amount, it would be necessary to modify the operative part of the order issued by the SEBI which came to be endorsed by the SAT, so that the purpose of law is not only satisfied but is also enforced.


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Rain continues in North, East and Central India

Weather in North and East India

 The Western Disturbance and its associated cyclonic circulation over northwest region of the country will continue to pull moisture from the Arabian Sea and keep the weather rainy in almost all the states in the region.

According to latest weather update by Skymet Meteorology Division in India, indicates that in the last 24 hours few places in West Bengal like Purulia, Bankura and Malda received light rain. Yesterday, Delhi recorded 17.2 mm while, Jaipur in Rajasthan received 15 mm of rain. The hill station of Dehradun in Uttarakhand also received 17 mm of rain. In Bihar, Patna and Gaya recorded 33.4 mm and 5.6 mm of rain, respectively in the last 24 hours. Yesterday, few places in Jharkhand received good amounts of rain. Jamshedpur and Ranchi recorded 35 mm and 33.8 mm of rain, respectively.

Tomorrow, rain will decrease significantly over the northern plains including Bihar but light rain is likely to continue over Jharkahnd and Gangetic West Bengal. For the next 24 hours, no significant change in day temperatures is expected in the northern and eastern plains, except for Rajasthan. Here the maximums could witness a rise.

Weather in Central India

The main cyclonic circulation which has brought good amounts of rain at several places in Central India will continue to fetch moisture from the Bay of Bengal. In the last 24 hours, significant amounts of rain were recorded in parts of Chhattisgarh and Madhya Pradesh.

In Chhattisgarg, Ambikapur recorded 17.10 mm of rain, Bilaspur 18.9 mm, Durg 13.2 mm, Pendra 12.9 and Raipur 2.3 mm of rain. Khajurao and Jabalpur in Madhya Pradesh received 10 mm and 2.3 mm of rain, respectively. Tomorrow, light rain is likely to continue north Odisha and Chhattisgarh. Our latest weather update indicates that day temperatures are likely to rise marginally over north Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh and Maharashtra while, the minimums could see a drop in the next 24 hours.

Weather in South India

In peninsular India, Telangana and coastal areas of Maharashtra, Karnataka and Kerala received light rain in the last 24 hours. Nagpur recorded 14 mm of rain yesterday. According to latest weather update by Skymet Meteorology Division in India, scattered is likely over Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, south Karnataka and Kerala in the next 24 hours. Rayalseema region continues to be hottest region in the country with Salem recorded 35.3°C as the maximum temperature on Friday.

By: Skymetweather.com


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