Showing posts with label trade. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trade. Show all posts

Prince William is trade currency record €17bn

Trade FX €17bn has been the biggest trade exchange broker votes, before, ever undertaken.

Prince William wrestled with two handsets as he spoke to the large banks to close agreements. He was joking with: "I Batman and Robin standing next to me...". They are very slow here. I had to come and give them a little bit of help. ?

There is loud applause when the prince eventually completed the agreement, which saw the trade 17bn Barclays € (£ 14 5.3) with Credit Switzerland based on the value of the currency scheduled for Wednesday and Thursday.

The princes was joined by celebrities including James Bond star Daniel Craig, Geri Halliwell singer and former doctor who actor David Tennant to work the phones on the trading floor pica.

All day profits go to charity. Last year raised £ 11 ICAP. 5 m.


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Trade unions should consider the good side of life

Monty Python life of Brian is BA Chief Executive Willie Walsh's favorite film. Then, how appropriate that unite this misnomer a Union exerts on a scene just for him.

Tony Woodley, is this week leading 11,000 BA crew to a second ballot strike, seems poised to reproduce the scene 8: Judea Grumpy people's front.

You remember. John Cleese as Reg, asked whether it Front populaire Judea. Two word answer is memorable Anglo-Saxon until it says: "" people only we hate most Romans are the - popular Front Judah.' " Who is except, of course, popular popular front of Judea.

More to unite, is a familiar script, probably inspired by the line "anti-imperialist group like ours must reflect a divergence of interests within its database power...". Unite is the product of coupling the transport and General Workers Union with Amicus. Both wings were their own domestic crew - T & g activist British Airlines Stewards and stewardesses Association; and 89 amicus cabin staff.

Trying to control them are the T & G Woodley - and of the Amicus retirement Derek Simpson, another joint General Secretary. Simpson, you will recall, is the Twitterer sent the "I'm at Wembley England match" - like a BA strike began in May.

"Dysfunctional" is term Walsh this lot, with whom he has negotiated since February 2009. But ask him, asked Sir Christopher Holland - the judge who ruled that BA not interupt contracts when he cut cabin on long-haul flights from 15 to 14.

"Ostensibly, representation is by this single Union," Holland wrote in his judgment. "However - once again at any material time - old allegiances are held right, from time to time, result of mutual rivalry, hostility and suspicion". He emphasized how "Bassa and Amicus factions were separately represented and assies in separate rooms. Once again, they had a "heated argument.

It is worth remembering that we have taxi to another potential strike the voices of cabin crew at least half members BA aboard. A few recall now, that the conflict is still about having morphed line working arrangements for BA refusal to reinstate travel perks to allegations of intimidation.

Woodley, tight last hand BA offers and reneged on top, then said that he will get a viable agreement. But who knows? Maybe we'll have to wait first single Secretary-General Unite, Len McCluskey, although it only supports up to the next year-round playgroup. It is promising, accused a set of BA managers behave like "Pontius Pilate. This is a scene later film, old chap.

And let's be whatever it McCluskey, it is not the Messiah.


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Asian markets mixed in early trade amid concerns (AP)

TOKYO – Asian markets were mixed in late morning trade Monday amid caution over tensions on the Korean peninsula and the debt crisis in Europe.

The Nikkei 225 stock average rose 0.30 percent to 10,069.38 at the end of morning trade, buoyed largely by a stronger dollar.

Electronics, auto and other exporter issues led morning gains, as a higher dollar benefits exporters as it increases the value of their repatriated profits.

The dollar rose to 84.09 yen from 82.55 yen late Friday. The euro stood at $1.3217 from $1.3726.

Worries about an escalation between the Koreas weighed heavily on rest of Asian stocks, while investors were also concerned about debt problems in Ireland.

Taiwan's Taiex rose 0.46 percent to 8,349.99, while South Korea's Kospi fell 0.31 percent to 1,895.44, and Australia's S&P/ASX200 index dropped 0.65 percent, to 4,568.40. Shares in Shanghai, the Philippines and New Zealand also fell.

European Union nations agreed Sunday to give euro67.5 billion ($89.4 billion) in bailout loans to Ireland to help it weather the cost of its massive banking crisis, and sketched out new rules for future emergencies in an effort to restore faith in the euro currency.

Joint military exercises involving a nuclear-powered U.S. supercarrier and a South Korean destroyer continued Monday, nearly a week after a deadly attack on a South Korean island sent tensions soaring in the region.

In New York on Friday, the Dow Jones industrial average fell 95.28, or 0.9 percent, to 11,092.


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SEC mulls plans for real-time swap trade data (Reuters)

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The securities regulator on Friday started sketching out how the market will start receiving "real-time" information about trading in the roughly $600 trillion over-the-counter derivatives market.

The Securities and Exchange Commission and fellow market regulator the Commodity Futures Trading Commission are writing dozens of rules for the opaque market.

On Friday, both regulators started to define parameters for the warehouses or repositories that will store the swaps trade data.

The SEC is mulling registration of the so-called swaps data repositories and requiring the warehouses to give the agency access to security-based swaps data among other things.

The SEC and CFTC are also starting to determine what kind of information and how quickly the trades must be reported to the so-called swaps data repositories.

Under the SEC's swaps plan, parties to a security-based swap transaction would be required to report real-time information about each transaction to the warehouse.

The off-exchange derivatives are used by companies, municipalities and others to hedge against fluctuations in commodity prices and interest rates.

The Swap Financial Group, which advises nonfinancial corporations on derivatives strategy, said there should be a delay in the real-time reporting of block trades or large deals for end users.

"There is competing public good between an entity like the city of Los Angeles and an entity like a hedge fund and a speculative trader seeking to get price discovery," said Peter Shapiro, managing director with the Swap Financial Group.

The SEC plans to solicit comment on the general criteria that would be used to determine the size of a block trade.

The SEC has already proposed rules to mitigate conflicts of interests at venues that will handle the swaps and a plan to prohibit fraud and manipulation in the derivatives market.

The agency must write more than 100 rules for financial players before mid-July 2011.

FUND SUPERVISION

The SEC will also vote on a proposal that would require the registration of advisers to hedge funds and private equity funds with more than $150 million in assets under management.

The increased oversight is intended to help the SEC root out fraud in the $1.6 trillion hedge fund industry, although players do not believe the new rules will burdensome.

"They are not going to be hard to comply with," said Ron Geffner, who works with hedge funds as a partner at Sadis & Goldberg LLP. "If people have adopted policies and procedures and try to live with them before they register, it will be less of a going concern."

The SEC tried to regulate the private pools of capital a few years ago, but a lawsuit overturned the rule.

Now, the agency has the power to impose such rules with the enactment of the Dodd-Frank financial reform bill in July.

Advisers to smaller private pools of capital would be required to supply the agency with some information such as the disciplinary history of the adviser and its employees, according to the SEC's plan.

As required by the Dodd-Frank bill, the SEC must craft a rule that will shift the oversight of thousands of smaller investment advisers to the states.

Investment advisers with more than $100 million in assets will be supervised by the SEC instead of advisers with $25 million in assets.

The SEC will decide whether to advance that proposal on Friday.

(Editing by Andre Grenon and Steve Orlofsky)


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Barack Obama closes the G20 with pop China trade

International support for attempts to Mr. Obama occurs on China has been muted.?Photo: EPA

Korea South Summit ended as it began, dominated by the gaps and surplus line which sees China accused of keeping the yuan artificially low to boost exports to the detriment of American jobs.


"He (yuan) is undervalued and China spending huge sums intervening in the market to keep undervalued", Mr. Obama said, adding that China should move to a market-oriented system.


"No nation should assume that their path to prosperity is open just with exports to the United States", he added.


But Beijing is, in turn, angry that the United States decided recently pump a $600bn additional (£ 370bn) in the US economy by quantitative easing, listening as a move to weaken the dollar. International support for attempts to Mr. Obama occurs on China has been muted.


The final document of G20 thrashed in the negotiations saw leaders accept various measures to economic stability, including a commitment to systems of exchange rate determined by the market.


But a commitment to refrain from "competitive undervaluation" - allowing does not a currency to rise, as China is accused-was buried for "competitive devaluation" - the difficult task of a currency.


The subtle but instructive difference was interpreted as put less pressure on China.Meanwhile, "indicative guidelines" commitments for rebalancing between nations trade falls far from hopes for limits of 4pc United States surpluses and deficits, due to the strength of China and other large exporters.


Prime Minister David Cameron submitted the dispute would never be "resolved the overnight" and took a more diplomatic tone on China, Mr. de Obama.


"There was some progress on this issue of imbalances - slowly, slowly China is evolving in a position to increase domestic consumption, rebalancing the economy," he said. "I have always said that it has not been is going to be heroic, but I think it is good and steady progress.?


Mr. Cameron has used the G20 call to conclude the Doha negotiations to liberalize trade leaders and leaders agreed 2011 represents a "critical opportunity window", an agreement eliminating obstacles.


The United States and its host, Korea South, could not revive their agreement to a standstill.


The event also saw the leaders to sign the agreement Basel III raise capital for banks buffers and approved the recommendations of global financial stability to regulate those considered "too big"failure .Cependant, what is regarded as a so-called global systemic important financial institutions (SIFIs) remains uncertain.


Leaders also approved reforms agreed by their finance ministers to shake up the international monetary fund to better represent emerging markets.


Summit "successfully lined on the numerous cracks between the positions of the participants, at least for a few hours", said the economic capital analysts.


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FTSE drops at start of trade (AFP)

LONDON (AFP) – London's main stock market tumbled at the start of trading on Friday amid increased investor worries about eurozone debt.

The FTSE 100 index shed 1.26 percent to 5,742.12 points in early deals.

Asian stocks closed sharply down on debt fears and also owing to possible further measures by Beijing to restrain a surging economy, traders said.

Shanghai's Composite index ended down 5.16 percent at 2,985.44 points, with across-the-board profit-taking after Chinese inflation data showed inflation roaring ahead of central bank targets, raising expectations of a rate hike.


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Why plan Bernanke raises trade tensions

 WASHINGTON?— The Federal Reserve's plan to buy more Treasury bonds has incited critics at home to complain of inevitable high inflation and financial turmoil.


It turns out many foreigners are pretty angry, too. They say the Fed's $600 billion program is a scheme to give U.S. exporters an unfair edge — one that endangers the global economy.


Is it? Or is the Fed's plan a credible way to help end a desperate jobs crisis and revitalize a still-tepid economy?

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In either case, few dispute that Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke is taking a gamble. Whether or not his plan succeeds in aiding the U.S. economy, it risks triggering a trade war and encouraging dangerous speculation in financial markets.


Already, the finger-pointing threatens to wreck this week's summit of world leaders in Seoul, where the Fed's plan has set off vociferous debate. President Barack Obama on Thursday was forced to defend U.S. policies at the summit, saying "the most important thing that the United States can do for the world economy is to grow."


Many economists say the Fed didn't have much choice — not with U.S. unemployment stalled at 9.6 percent, short-term interest rates already near zero and Congress refusing to spend more to jolt the economy.


"They've run out of bullets," says Uri Dadush, director of the international economics program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.


So the Fed announced plans to print enough money to buy an average of $75 billion in Treasury bonds each month for eight months. And it left the door open for more. The bond-purchase program is intended to energize the economy by forcing down long-term interest rates. Those lower rates might encourage some consumers and businesses to borrow and spend more.


Will the Fed's program do that?


Not likely, its critics say. For one thing, mortgage rates have already dipped to record lows without reviving the housing market, reducing high unemployment or stimulating much growth. Would people and businesses that can't or won't borrow now at super-low rates start borrowing if interest rates on loans dip a bit more — and borrow enough to rejuvenate the economy?

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A bigger hope is that lower rates will lift stock prices. That's because, as Bernanke has suggested, investors will shift money out of low-yielding bonds and into stocks. Higher stock prices make people feel wealthier — and more willing to spend.


Business leaders are no different. They become more confident when their personal wealth rises and when their company's stock goes up. They're more likely to hire and expand. Once they do, the economy strengthens.


Yet the Fed's move threatens to inflame global tensions. That's because of what happens when it prints more dollars to lower interest rates: More dollars flooding the financial system will cause the dollar's value to fall. That will make U.S. products cheaper around the world. It will also make foreign goods costlier in the United States. Americans will be less likely to buy foreign products.


Economies like Germany and China, which have ridden a wave of exports out of the recession, complain that the Fed's main goal is to lower the dollar's value to give U.S. exporters an unfair price advantage. They call the move hypocritical because Washington has long complained that Beijing keeps its currency, the yuan, artificially low to boost Chinese exports.

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In September, the U.S. trade deficit with China amounted to $27.8 billion. That's just short of August's record high. And it exceeds the U.S. trade gap with the rest of the world combined.


Critics also warn that rates kept too low for too long could inflate new bubbles in the prices of commodities, stocks and other assets. That's what happened before with technology stocks and home prices. Developing countries like Thailand and Indonesia fear that falling yields on Treasuries will send money flooding their way in search of higher returns. Such emerging markets could be left vulnerable to a crash if investors later decide to pull out and move their money elsewhere.


China this week unveiled plans to limit the inflow of so-called hot money. Other countries are considering similar controls on capital.


U.S. stocks have been surging and the dollar sliding since Bernanke said in a speech in Jackson Hole, Wyo., in late August that the Fed was ready to act further to help the U.S. economy. The Dow Jones industrial average has jumped nearly 14 percent. And the dollar has sunk more than 7 percent against the euro and more than 2 percent against the Japanese yen.


"For the rest of the world, the benefits are tenuous, but the risks are hitting them right in the face," Eswar Prasad, professor of trade policy at Cornell University, says of the Fed's bond-purchase program.


The acrimony over currencies and trade reflects global pressures that might be hitting a breaking point. For too long, many economists say, China, Germany and other big exporters have depended on U.S. consumers, instead of their own, to buy their goods and power their economies.


A weaker dollar "topples their entire strategy of relying on exports rather than internal reforms to fix the problems that ail them," says Diane Swonk, chief economist at Mesirow Financial.


Joseph Gagnon, a former Fed official and now senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, calls the charge that the U.S. is manipulating the dollar "outrageous." He notes that China and other exporting nations have been buying dollars and each other's currencies to keep their own artificially low - a tactic the U.S. hasn't taken.


"We unilaterally disarmed," Gagnon says.


The U.S. trade deficit — the amount by which the value of imports exceeds the value of exports — narrowed 5 percent in September, to $44 billion. But through the first nine months of 2010, the trade gap is still running 40 percent higher than it was a year earlier.


And the broadest measure of trade — the current account trade deficit — will reach 3.2 percent of U.S. gross domestic product in 2010, up from 2.7 percent in 2009, TD Economics forecasts. The current account gap includes not only goods and services but also investment flows between countries. By contrast, TD expects current account surpluses of 4.7 percent of economic output in China and 6.1 percent in Germany.


China said this week that its trade surplus with the world rose in October to its second-highest level this year. That performance is likely to heighten pressure on Beijing to raise the value of the yuan as the Group of 20 summit of world leaders begins. A higher yuan would make U.S. goods cheaper for Chinese consumers to buy.


Carnegie's Dadush warns that individual countries must solve problems in their own economies, rather than point fingers at each other's. He says U.S. lawmakers should pass a short-term spending plan to jolt the economy, instead of leaning on a Fed program that could rattle world markets.


Then they should draft a long-term plan to shrink the federal budget deficit. The leaders of President Barack Obama's bipartisan deficit commission weighed in Wednesday: They proposed to pare annual cost-of-living increases for Social Security, gradually raise the retirement age to 69 and end some popular tax breaks like the mortgage interest deduction.


Dadush says China should let the yuan rise, to encourage its consumers to spend. China might then rely less on exports and more on its own consumption to fuel its growth.


Yet he fears countries will be tempted instead to further rig their currencies and impose barriers to imports.


"I've been watching trade for 35, 40 years," Dadush says. "I'm more worried about a protectionist resurgence than I've been in my professional lifetime."


Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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G20 struggles to find common ground on the war of the currency, raises U.S. trade caps push

U.S. Secretary of the Treasury Timothy Geithner speaks with the Minister of French finance Christine Lagarde to the g-20. He wants that countries commit to specific commercial plugs. Photo: EPA

With China resolutely refusing the yuan to rise more quickly, the United States has moved the discussion on the first day of the G20 Summit to address trade imbalances, the issue of root behind the confrontation of exchange rate.


Timothy Geithner, US Treasury, said Secretary G20 members that they must commit to specific commercial plugs, allowing the surpluses and deficits in their account current, widest is exchanges of goods and services, not more than the gross domestic product 4pc.


China's current account surplus has been 5 9pc in 2009, with almost half of its peak 10 6pc in 2007.United States, on the other hand, had a deficit of 3pc last year.


In a letter addressed to G20, Mr. Geithner claimed a "collaborative effort" on the issue, but he said it should be "exceptions" for countries which have imported large quantities of raw materials.


The u.s. strategy was seen as a way to side-step a direct confrontation on the monnaies.Elle was supported by United Kingdom Korea, Australia and the Canada, but opposition from large exporters such as the Japan and the Germany immediately.


Rainer Bruederle, Minister of finance Germany rejected approach "command economy", while the Japan Noda Yoshihiko said "setting numerical targets would be unrealistic.


The India also stated that trade plugs would be hard at work, while the Russia stated that there is no numerical limits set in the final Declaration of the Summit.


Mr. Geithner has also called for g-20 countries to refrain from "weakening of their currency or preventing an undervalued currency appreciation" Mr. Geithner, also called the IMF monitored the G20 commitments added: "Advanced G20 countries ensure to against excess volatility and disorderly movement in exchange rates.


Guido Mantega, Minister of finance Brazilian, who was not of the G20 Summit also revealed that Mr. Geithner had called him to reassure that the United States had no intention of allowing the dollar weakened further.


"It guarantees us policy is not to weaken the dollar, on the contrary, it is to strengthen the dollar,", said Mantega."He said that the impact of the policy of the Federal Reserve has be overestimated .c ' is difficult, if you weaken the dollar and the Chinese to let the yuan appreciate", he added.


The comments of Mr. Mantega helped move the dollar against the euro of $1.3918 euro at $1.3895 prior undermining later in the dollar journée.Le also stabilized as a whole against the Japanese yen.


However, as the first day of closed meetings, there was little sign that currency problems could be resolved.


With certain growing scepticism that the g-20 is an instance sufficiently targeted at overcoming the global economic problems, Lee Myung-bak, South Korean President, welcomes the Summit, warned Ministers only if they have not reached a compromise "we do not operate bus, train or plane services you back".


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Ministers of Finance of the g-20 plan as head of global war currency in the midst of growing trade tensions

A leakage of the said members of the G20 Summit communiqué draft would be willing to "refrain from competitive undervaluation. Photo: Bloomberg

George Osborne and Timothy Geithner, Secretary of the Treasury of the United States will meet their counterparts from China, the India and Japan Friday in the city of Gyeongju Korea South for the last round of negotiations the G20.


The threat of a "currency war" with countries manoeuvres to devalue their currency in order to increase exports, is squarely at the top of the agenda.


Draft leak the communiqué said Summit G20 members would agree to "move to a more determined by the market exchange rate system" and "refrain from competitive undervaluation.


Brazil, Australia Canada urged G20 to reach a solution on this issue, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, Brazilian President, saying: "the world knows the currency war there and we need to discuss in the g-20 and find a definitive solution to it."


The United States are determined to reach agreement on "fair" in the exchange rate rules, and Mr. Geithner, told the Wall Street Journal that he would "like countries to move towards a set of standards on exchange rate policy.


While he believes that the euro, yen and the dollar are almost "alignment", he repeated that the Chinese yuan is undervalued.


Mr. Geithner said it would be even push his colleagues agree on numerical targets for their trade balance, a manoeuvre which India scrapped immediately. " "I am not sure that this will be supported by a large number of emerging countries", said an Indian agent.


Mr. Geithner said encouragement from the rest of the G20 could persuade China to accelerate the increase of the yuan.


Given that China depegged currency dollar in the middle of June, the yuan has increased some 2 6pc. ""If China knew only if it is moved faster, other emerging markets would move with them, it would be easier for them to move," said Mr. Geithner.


However, Chinese officials have argued that any sudden increase in their currency could sink tens of thousands of export companies that operate on thin margins.


"Many of our export companies shall close migrant workers would have to return to their villages," said Wen Jiabao and the earlier this month, the Chinese Prime Minister. "If China has seen social and economic turbulence, then it would be a disaster for the world.?


The release of the project, which is likely to change to the Summit, said the G20 would minimize the "negative effects of disordered in rates of Exchange and excessive volatility movements", a sop akin to the concerns of China.


China also stated United States print new funds to stimulate its economy trend is originally a gross distortion in the global economy as investors are fleeing the dollar and seek more returns elsewhere, particularly in markets émergents.Le project the G20 would "work to more effectively manage the influx of capital volatile and rapidly emerging countries".


Since the financial crisis, G20, a disparate collection of rich and developing countries, has replaced the G7 as the most important economic policy forum mondiales.Cependant, it remains largely skeptical about whether a collection of countries as various the Indonesia Turkey Japan, the Germany can agree on something else than the broad brush strokes.


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