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Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Crude Oil Falls on Euro Zone Worries, Dollar

Brent crude oil fell more than $1 to below $108 per barrel on Tuesday, on worries over the health of Europe's economy as its top financial watchdog said the euro zone's sovereign debt crisis threatened global economic stability.
Oil Rig
European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet issued the dramatic warning amid growing fears that Greece would default on its massive sovereign debt [cnbc explains] .
European shares fell and the dollar rose on Tuesday, with investors increasingly edgy ahead of a vote by Slovakia's parliament to ratify an expansion of the euro zone's rescue fund.
Brent futures for November delivery [LCOCV1  110.22    1.27  (+1.17%)   ] fell $1.50 to a low of $107.45 before recovering to trade around $109.33.
U.S. November crude oil futures [CLCV1  85.15    -0.26  (-0.3%)   ] dipped to a low of $83.97, down $1.44 before climbing back up to around $85.19. Both contracts jumped nearly 3 percent on Monday.
Financial markets are deeply skeptical over the chances of success of a financial package to be put together by France and Germany to stem the euro zone debt crisis, help Greece and recapitalize European banks.
"The last few days have seen a relief rally on hopes that policymakers would do something radical to sort out the euro zone debt mess," said Standard Bank oil analyst James Zhang. "But optimism is fading and there is a feeling that the problem may not be properly addressed and profit-taking has kicked in."
Investors remain cautious due to the lack of detail about the Franco-German plan and worry it could be derailed by political deadlock in Slovakia, the one euro country that has yet to approve the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) [cnbc explains] expansion.
The global economic outlook is sending increasingly gloomy messages to the oil market, encouraging economists to trim their expectations for future oil use.
OPEC Cuts Demand Growth Forecast
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), which pumps a third of the world's oil, cut its global oil demand growth forecast for a fourth consecutive month on Tuesday, citing the downturn in developed countries and efforts by China and India to curb fuel use.
"The economic downturn is taking its toll on the world oil demand," OPEC said in its monthly oil market report. "The decelerating U.S. economy, high unemployment rate and feelings of uncertainty among consumers, has damped U.S. oil demand. Similarly, debt problems in the euro zone are causing EU economies to lose some of their estimated growth this year."
OPEC cut its forecast of global oil demand growth this year by 180,000 barrels per day to just 880,000 barrels per day. Next year it sees oil demand growing slightly faster — by 1.19 million barrels per day, down 70,000 barrels per day from its previous estimate in September.
Traders were closely watching oil exports from Kuwait, one of OPEC's top five producers, after a strike by customs workers shut ports and halted vessel traffic on Monday.
A spokesman for the country's oil sector said on Tuesday exports of crude and oil products were moving normally from Kuwaiti ports, but it was not clear whether there would be any further disruption of cargo movements.
Kuwait accounted for about 7.7 percent of OPEC's overall crude output in 2010, Reuters data showed.
Investors were also keeping an eye on oil inventories in the U.S. for demand cues in the world's largest consumer. U.S. commercial crude stockpiles probably rose last week as imports rebounded and refinery runs fell, a preliminary Reuters poll of analysts found on Monday.
Refinery capacity utilization was forecast to have slipped for a third week, with analysts expecting runs to have fallen by 0.85 percentage point last week.
The decline is expected to come as some plants take units offline for maintenance between the end of the summer driving season and the rise in winter demand for heating oil.
cnbc.com

Obama Jobs Council Makes Urgent Plea for Changes

Decrying the human toll of the nation's economic and financial crisis, a group of corporate and labor leaders advising President Barack Obama is calling for sweeping and urgent changes in government policies, from liberalized immigration and less restrictive regulations to a more business friendly tax system and greater spending on infrastructure.
CNBC
U.S. President Barack Obama

In tackling the nation's economic crisis and its stubborn 9.1 percent unemployment rate, the president's Council on Jobs and Competitiveness is putting the names of some of the country's top corporate CEOs, as well as the head of the AFL-CIO behind, proposed initiatives and policy overhauls sure to please and irritate Democratic and Republican partisans alike.
The council, headed by GE Chairman and CEO Jeffrey Immelt, will release its 50-page report Tuesday during a meeting with Obama in Pittsburgh. The Associated Press obtained a copy of the report Monday night.
Topping the council's list is a plea for improvements in the nation's network of roads and bridges, for airport upgrades and modernized ports, and for updated electric grids, water, and wastewater systems.
"If Washington can agree on anything, it should be this — and it should be now," the report states.
Others on the 27-member council include AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka, AOL co-founder Steve Case, and Facebook Chief Operating Officer Sheryl Sandberg.
The report notes that 1 million construction workers are unemployed and points to the declining state of U.S. infrastructure. It also says that China now has six of the world's top 10 seaports and that the U.S. can't claim a single one of the other four.
It calls on Congress to reauthorize surface transportation legislation instead of simply approving temporary extensions. It proposes additional ways of leveraging private sector investment in public works projects, including a national infrastructure bank that would be seeded with public money to attract private money — a proposal that has bipartisan support.
To speed up projects, the council has recommended a streamlined approval process that prevents delays over environmental reviews or other permits.
As a start, the Obama administration on Monday announced 14 major public works projects across the country that will receive accelerated environmental and permit reviews. The projects include replacing the Tappan Zee Bridge over the Hudson River in New York to a wind generation project in California's San Bernardino National Forest.
In the midst of an uphill fight with Congress to win approval of his $447 billion jobs bill, Obama is eager to use means that don't require congressional approval to demonstrate action against the weak economy and an unemployment rate that has not budged in three months. The new review process incorporates the council's recommendations, but it's also a nod to Republicans and the construction industry — both have long complained about government bureaucratic delays and regulatory red tape.
Last June, Obama conceded that even public works projects financed by his 2009 economic stimulus faced permitting delays. "Shovel ready was not as shovel ready as we expected," he said.
The administration's goal is to complete federal review of those 14 projects within 18 months.
The projects listed by the administration include a highway connector in Provo, Utah; a 14-mile rail transit line in and around Baltimore; an Interstate 95 bridge over the Merrimack River in Massachusetts; a light rail project extension near Los Angeles International Airport; and a series of pending oil and gas applications for wells and pipelines in the Dakota Prairie and Little Missouri National Grasslands in North and South Dakota.
While in Pittsburgh, Obama will tour an International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers training center and continue his push for his jobs bill. The Senate has scheduled a vote Tuesday on whether to take up the legislation.
Later, Obama will travel to Orlando, Fla., where he will attend to fundraising events for his presidential campaign and for the Democratic National Committee.
The jobs council's report, which will be the centerpiece of the president's meeting with council members, also calls for eased immigration rules for high-skilled foreigners, including automatic work permits or provisional visas to all foreign students after they earn science, technology, engineering or math degrees from U.S. colleges or universities.
"We are sympathetic to the political sensitivities around the topic of immigration reform," the council report states. "But when it comes to driving job creation and increasing American competitiveness, separating the highly skilled worker component is critical. We therefore call upon Congress to pass reforms aimed directly at allowing the most promising foreign-born entrepreneurs to remain in or relocate to the United States." 
cnbc.com

Indonesian Central Bank Makes Surprise Rate Cut

Indonesia's central bank unexpectedly cut its benchmark policy rate on Tuesday, the first such move by a G20 economy after Brazil, as it seeks to stimulate domestic demand as global growth slows.
Getty Images

Bank Indonesia cut the rate by 25 basis points (bps) to a record-low 6.50 percent, saying it expected a weaker global economy to weigh on demand for the country's exports next year.
Just a month ago, many analysts still expected Bank Indonesia to raise rates once more this year to curb inflation, but recent turmoil in global financial markets had led some to forecast a 25 bps rate cut in November or December to boost growth.
In a Reuters poll, all 11 analysts had forecast that BI would leave the rate unchanged at 6.75 percent on Tuesday, though three of the 11 forecast a cut to 6.50 percent by year-end.
In September, annual inflation slowed to 4.61 percent due to easing food prices, and a central bank official told Reuters in an interview last week that inflation would be below 4.9 percent by the end of the year, within BI's target of 4 to 6 percent.
The central bank has shifted its policy focus from fighting inflation to stimulating growth.
It last raised the policy rate in February to address inflation worries, and recently said it was ready to cut rates to boost growth that is now seen at 6.5 percent next year, lower than a previous estimate of 6.7 percent.
"We are bringing the policy rate to a level that is more reasonable," Governor Darmin Nasution told reporters. "We saw the 6.75 percent rate as too high, unless we estimated inflation next year to be very high."
As global funds saw Europe's debt crisis intensify, they pulled money out of riskier emerging market assets such as Indonesian stocks and bonds.
In early September, foreigners owned 251.23 trillion rupiah ($28.3 billion) in bonds, or 35.7 percent of the total. Between then and Oct. 5, they sold 37.13 trillion rupiah worth, reducing their ownership to 30.7 percent.
"The decision to cut the benchmark rate confirms the central bank's view of a slowdown and that they may feel that the external shocks to the economy are more than previously expected," said David Sumual, economist at BCA in Jakarta.
The rupiah [IDR=  8905.00    20.00  (+0.23%)   ]has slid 5 percent since the end of August amid global market turmoil, though BI has heavily intervened in the foreign currency market to cushion its fall, causing the country's forex reserves to fall to $114.5 billion as of Sept. 30 from $124.6 billion a month earlier.
BI issued a regulation this month requiring local exporters and firms to bring home offshore earnings and debt proceeds starting next year, estimating this could add $30 billion to the local financial system, reducing dependency on dollars from short-term inflows.
Indonesia's economy is expected to post solid 6.6 percent growth this year as exports remain strong despite the global slowdown. It grew by 6.5 percent in the first half on buoyant household consumption and investment.
Economists say Indonesia is in better shape to face a global crisis than in 2008 and will likely expand above 6 percent next year even with an international slowdown.
cnbc.com

US to Unveil Criteria for Picking ‘Systemic’ Firms

U.S. regulators on Tuesday are set to give nervous insurance companies, mutual funds and other big players in financial markets a better idea of whether they will be tapped for the same type of additional government scrutiny facing large U.S. banks.
Paul Volcker
AP
Former U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker

None of these industries are eager to be on the receiving end of the added attention that comes with being named "systemic" and have spent the past year lobbying to be ignored.
The concern is that new scrutiny will mean new restrictions that could hit firms' bottom lines.
On Tuesday, the Financial Stability Oversight Council is scheduled to release a new proposal on how it will determine which non-bank firms are important enough to the financial system that they merit greater oversight by the Federal Reserve [cnbc explains] .
Also on Tuesday, banking regulators are scheduled to vote on a proposal banning most proprietary trading done by banks, known as the Volcker rule.
Companies that are tapped for greater Fed supervision will be designated systemically important financial institutions (SIFIs), and will be subject to new capital and liquidity rules.
They will also be required to draft detailed plans on how they could be broken up if the company falters and is seized by the government.
The SIFI rule is in large part a response to the market havoc caused during the 2007-2009 financial crisis by American International Group [AIG  22.60    0.41  (+1.85%)   ], an insurer not overseen by banking regulators.
Bank holding companies with more than $50 billion in assets, such as Goldman Sachs [GS  98.11    1.97  (+2.05%)   ] and JPMorgan Chase [JPM  32.34    0.04  (+0.12%)   ], are automatically subject to the added scrutiny.
For months insurance, hedge fund [cnbc explains] , and mutual fund lobbying groups have been working to convince regulators thattheir industries do not hold the potential to wreak havoc on financial markets.
The Managed Funds Association, for instance, said in a letter to regulators in February that "it is highly unlikely that any hedge fund is systemically significant at this time."
It is unclear when FSOC will get around to naming SIFIs, but it is not expected before next year.
Volcker Rule
In another area of critical importance to major financial players, the board of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp will officially release on Tuesday a proposed version of the Volcker rule.
The rule aims to prevent banks from recklessly engaging in risky trades by prohibiting them from trading for their own profit in securities, derivatives and certain other financial instruments.
The law contains some exemptions to the ban for trades done to make markets for customers and for those used to hedge against certain risks.
How these exemptions are crafted will have a major impact on large banks such as Goldman and Morgan Stanley [MS  15.60    0.31  (+2.03%)   ].
A draft of the proposed Volcker rule leaked last week and it received a mixed reaction from industry groups.
The Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, for instance, raised concerns about whether the exemption for trades intended to make markets for customers is too narrow.
cnbc.com

Global Debt Crisis to Help Dollar, But Nothing Else: Faber

Suffocating global debt problems and overreaching intervention programs will be good for the U.S. dollar but bad for asset prices otherwise, investment guru Marc Faber said.
Dr. Marc Faber
Axel Griesch | ASFM | Getty Images
Dr. Marc Faber

The uneasy time for financial markets will lead to an extended period of high volatility—both up and down—for the markets as economies grow slowly, the author of the Gloom Boom and Doom report said in a CNBC interview.
His dollar call is based on the notion that investors will turn to the safety of the U.S. currency even as governments try to inject liquidity into the market to save the ailing financial system.
"Despite the fact that the (European Central Bank) and the European government will flood the market with liquidity to bail themselves out, global liquidity is tightening," Faber said. "Whenever global liquidity is tightening it is bad for asset prices but good for the U.S. dollar, as was the case in 2008."
The dollar has been on the rise recently against global currencies, gaining more than 5 percent since late August. The U.S. currency has posted a nearly 7 percent gain against the euro during the same period as policy makers have struggled to come up with a solution to the Greek debt crisis.
However, a strong dollar for several years has been poison for risk assets, particularly a stock market that has come to depend on a weak currency to boost exports as domestic consumption has lagged.
For Faber, government meddling in the free markets is one of the primary reasons why growth will lag and recession [cnbc explains] looms.
"We've had far too many interventions in the Western world where the share of total economy that goes to government and is government-sponsored has grown," he said. "That essentially makes it very difficult for the Western world to grow sustainably...I don't see how the Western world including the U.S., Japan and Western Europe can grow. They're going to stagnate."
Faber suggested that Occupy Wall Street protesters "go to Washington and occupy the Federal Reserve [cnbc explains] along the way."
"We have expansionary fiscal policies, we have expansionary monetary policies but we have restrictive regulatory policies and it curtails any initiative by the small businessman and the large businessman," he said. "He doesn't employ and invest capital in the U.S. He does that in China or somewhere else in the world where the regulatory environment is more favorable."
cnbc.com

Monday, October 10, 2011

Brent Gains on Euro Zone Debt Plans

Brent crude futures extended gains on Monday after France and Germany said they would come up with a plan to contain the euro zone crisis, but details will not emerge until the end of the month.
Norwegian Oil Rig
Source: olf.no

Market sentiment improved after leaders of the two countries vowed on Sunday to develop a new plan to deal with Greece's debt [cnbc explains] issues and recapitalize euro zone banks, although a breakdown of the plan would not be available until the Cannes G20 summit on Nov. 3-4.
A spokesman for the German government emphasized that the confidential talks, aimed to help the euro zone regain the confidence of investors, are no 'miracle cure'.
Crude futures [cnbc explains] and the euro [EUR=X  1.3651    0.0255  (+1.9%)   ] rose, even as analysts warned about the continued lack of leadership on the euro zone crisis.
"All that has happened is they've postponed the decision once more: they've kicked the can down to Cannes," CMC markets analyst Michael Hewson said. "We're slightly more positive, but we're not out of the woods yet."
November Brent crude futures [LCOCV1  108.87    2.99  (+2.82%)   ] were $2.36 firmer at $108.24 a barrel. The contract posted an increase of 4.5 percent last week, its best performance since the week to July 8.
U.S. November crude [CLCV1  85.67    2.69  (+3.24%)   ] led the gains and was up $2.49 at $85.47 a barrel, after hitting highs of $85.50 a barrel earlier.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy said on Sunday their goal was to come up with a sustainable answer for Greece's woes, agree how to recapitalize European banks and present a plan for accelerating economic coordination in the euro zone by the Cannes meeting.
"Merkel and Sarkozy met again and could not decide anything apart from trying to reassure us that they will have some proposals out before the G-20 meeting," Petromatrix's Olivier Jakob said in a note to clients. "New proposals by the end of the month do not necessarily translate into any action in the short term."
"At some point, words will need to be replaced by concrete action," MF Global analysts wrote in their morning note.
Longs cut, Saudi supply
The recent gains in crude prices could be undercut by investor positioning. IntercontinentalExchange (ICE) data showed on Monday that speculators had cut their net long positions on both ICE Brent crude oil and gasoil futures in the week to Oct. 4.
Last week, U.S. speculators opened new short positions to bet on further price falls on U.S. crude, data from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission showed on Friday.
Top world crude exporter Saudi Arabia in November will supply full contracted volumes of crude oil to at least four Asian term buyers and also keep steady the supply to customers in Europe, with both regions little changed from October, industry sources said on Monday. 
Saudi Arabia sees neither a decline in global oil demand nor a reduction in the kingdom's exports due to increased output from Libya, Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi said on Sunday.
On the day before, Naimi said September output fell to 9.39 million barrels per day (bpd) from around 9.8 million bpd in August. 
CNBC.COM

Need Work? US Has 3.2 Million Unfilled Job Openings




Want to add about $100 billion more annually to the US economy and lower the unemployment rate by more than a percentage point—all without spending a dime of taxpayer money?
Fill America’s more than 3.2 million open jobs.
Getty Images

That’s the hidden story of America’s lousy jobs picture. Though there are more than 14 million unemployed, there are

Sunday, October 9, 2011

The Depression: If Only Things Were That Good

Underneath the misery of the Great Depression, the United States economy was quietly making enormous strides during the 1930s. Television and nylon stockings were invented. Refrigerators and washing machines turned into mass-market products. Railroads became faster and roads smoother and wider.
As the economic historian Alexander J. Field has said, the 1930s constituted “the most technologically progressive decade of the century.”
Economists often distinguish between cyclical trends and secular trends — which is to say, between short-term fluctuations and long-term changes in the basic structure of the economy.
No decade points to the difference quite like the 1930s: cyclically, the worst decade of the 20th century, and yet, secularly, one of the best.
It would clearly be nice if we could take some comfort from this bit of history. If anything, though, the lesson of the 1930s may be the opposite one. The most worrisome aspect about our current slump is that it combines obvious short-term problems — from the financial crisis — with less obvious long-term problems.
Those long-term problems include a decade-long slowdown in new-business formation, the stagnation of educational gains and the rapid growth of industries with mixed blessings, including finance and health care.
Together, these problems raise the possibility that the United States is not merely suffering through a normal, if severe, downturn. Instead, it may have entered a phase in which high unemployment is the norm.
On Friday, the Labor Department reported that job growth was mediocre in September and that unemployment remained at 9.1 percent. In a recent survey by the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, forecasters said the rate was not likely to fall below 7 percent until at least 2015. After that, they predicted, it would rarely fall below 6 percent, even in good times.
Not so long ago, 6 percent was considered a disappointingly high unemployment rate. From 1995 to 2007, the jobless rate exceeded 6 percent for only a single five-month period in 2003 — and it never topped 7 percent.
“We’ve got a double-whammy effect,” says John C. Haltiwanger, an economics professor at the University of Maryland. The cyclical crisis has come on top of the secular one, and the two are now feeding off each other.
In the most likely case, the United States has fallen into a period somewhat similar to the one that Europe has endured for parts of the last generation; it is rich but struggling. A high unemployment rate will feed fears of national decline. The political scene may be tumultuous, as it already is. Many people will find themselves shut out of the work force.
Almost 6.5 million people have been officially unemployed for at least six months, and another few million have dropped out of the labor force — that is, they are no longer looking for work — since 2008. These hard-core unemployed highlight the nexus between long-term and short-term economic problems. Most lost their jobs because of the recession. But many will remain without work long after the economy begins growing again.
Indeed, they will themselves become a force weighing on the economy. Fairly or not, employers will be reluctant to hire them. Many with borderline health problems will end up in the federal disability program, which has become a shadow welfare program that most beneficiaries never leave.
For now, the main cause of the economic funk remains the financial crisis. The bursting of a generation-long, debt-enabled consumer bubble has left households rebuilding their balance sheets and businesses wary of hiring until they are confident that consumer spending will pick up. Even now, sales of many big-ticket items — houses, cars, appliances, many services — remain far below their pre-crisis peaks.
Although the details of every financial crisis differ, the broad patterns are similar. The typical crisis leads to almost a decade of elevated unemployment, according to oft-cited academic research by Carmen M. Reinhart and Kenneth S. Rogoff. Ms. Reinhart and Mr. Rogoff date the recent crisis from the summer of 2007, which would mean our economy was not even halfway through its decade of high unemployment.
Of course, making dark forecasts about the American economy, especially after a recession, can be dangerous. In just the last 50 years, doomsayers claimed that the United States was falling behind the Soviet Union, Japan and Germany, only to be proved wrong each time.
This country continues to have advantages that no other country, including China, does: the world’s best venture-capital network, a well-established rule of law, a culture that celebrates risk taking, an unmatched appeal to immigrants. These strengths often give rise to the next great industry, even when the strengths are less salient than the country’s problems.

Current DateTime: 08:31:59 09 Oct 2011
LinksList Documentid: 22528753
THAT’S part of what happened in the 1930s. It’s also happened in the 1990s, when many people were worrying about a jobless recovery and economic decline. At a 1992 conference Bill Clinton convened shortly after his election to talk about the economy, participants recall, no one mentioned the Internet.
Still, the reasons for concern today are serious. Even before the financial crisis began, the American economy was not healthy. Job growth was so weak during the economic expansion from 2001 to 2007 that employment failed to keep pace with the growing population, and the share of working adults declined. For the average person with a job, income growth barely exceeded inflation.
The closest thing to a unified explanation for these problems is a mirror image of what made the 1930s so important. Then, the United States was vastly increasing its productive capacity, as Mr. Field argued in his recent book, “A Great Leap Forward.” Partly because the Depression was eliminating inefficiencies but mostly because of the emergence of new technologies, the economy was adding muscle and shedding fat. Those changes, combined with the vast industrialization for World War II, made possible the postwar boom.
In recent years, on the other hand, the economy has not done an especially good job of building its productive capacity. Yes, innovations like the iPad and Twitter have altered daily life. And, yes, companies have figured out how to produce just as many goods and services with fewer workers. But the country has not developed any major new industries that employ large and growing numbers of workers.
There is no contemporary version of the 1870s railroads, the 1920s auto industry or even the 1990s Internet sector. Total economic output over the last decade, as measured by the gross domestic product, has grown more slowly than in any 10-year period during the 1950s, ’60s, ’70s, ’80s or ’90s.
Perhaps the most important reason, beyond the financial crisis, is the overall skill level of the work force. The United States is the only rich country in the world that has not substantially increased the share of young adults with the equivalent of a bachelor’s degree over the past three decades. Some less technical measures of human capital, like the percentage of children living with two parents, have deteriorated. The country has also chosen not to welcome many scientists and entrepreneurs who would like to move here.
The relationship between skills and economic success is not an exact one, yet it is certainly strong enough to notice, and not just in the reams of peer-reviewed studies on the subject. Australia, New Zealand, Canada and much of Northern Europe have made considerable educational progress since the 1980s, for instance. Their unemployment rates, which were once higher than ours, are now lower. Within this country, the 50 most educated metropolitan areas have an average jobless rate of 7.3 percent, according to Moody’s Analytics; in the 50 least educated, the average rate is 11.4 percent.
Despite the media’s focus on those college graduates who are struggling, it’s not much of an exaggeration to say that people with a four-year degree — who have an unemployment rate of just 4.3 percent — are barely experiencing an economic downturn.
Economic downturns do often send people streaming back to school, and this one is no exception. So there is a chance that it will lead to a surge in skill formation. Yet it seems unlikely to do nearly as much on that score as the Great Depression, which helped make high school universal. High school, of course, is free. Today’s educational frontier, college, is not. In fact, it has become more expensive lately, as state cutbacks have led to tuition increases.
Beyond education, the American economy seems to be suffering from a misallocation of resources. Some of this is beyond our control. China’s artificially low currency has nudged us toward consuming too much and producing too little. But much of the misallocation is homegrown.
In particular, three giant industries — finance, health care and housing — now include large amounts of unproductive capacity. Housing may have shrunk, but it is still a bigger, more subsidized sector in this country than in many others.
Health care is far larger, with the United States spending at least 50 percent more per person on medical care than any other country, without getting vastly better results. (Some aspects of our care, like certain cancer treatments, are better, while others, like medical error rates, are worse.) The contrast suggests that a significant portion of medical spending is wasted, be it on approaches that do not make people healthier or on insurance-company bureaucracy.
In finance, trading volumes have boomed in recent decades, yet it is unclear how much all the activity has lifted living standards. Paul A. Volcker, the former Fed chairman, has mischievously said that the only useful recent financial innovation was the automated teller machine. Critics like Mr. Volcker argue that much of modern finance amounts to arbitrage, in which technology and globalization have allowed traders to profit from being the first to notice small price differences.
IN the process, Wall Street has captured a growing share of the world’s economic pie — thereby increasing inequality — without doing much to expand the pie. It may even have shrunk the pie, given that a new International Monetary Fund analysis found that higher inequality leads to slower economic growth.
The common question with these industries is whether they are using resources that could do more economic good elsewhere. “The health care problem is very similar to the finance problem,” says Lawrence F. Katz, a Harvard economist, “in that incredibly talented people are wasting their talent on something that is essentially a zero-sum game.”
In the short term, finance, health care and housing provide jobs, as their lobbyists are quick to point out. But it is hard to see how the jobs of the future will spring from unnecessary back surgery and garden-variety arbitrage. They differ from the growth engines of the past, which delivered fundamental value — faster transportation or new knowledge — and let other industries then build off those advances.
The United States has long overcome its less dynamic industries by replacing them with more dynamic ones. The decline of the horse and buggy, difficult as it may have been for people in the business, created no macroeconomic problems. The trouble today is that those new industries don’t seem to be arriving very quickly.
The rate at which new companies are created has been falling for most of the last decade. So has the pace at which existing companies add positions. “The current problem is not that we have tons of layoffs,” Mr. Katz says. “It’s that we don’t have much hiring.”
If history repeats itself, this situation will eventually turn around. Maybe some American scientist in a laboratory somewhere is about to make a breakthrough. Maybe an entrepreneur is on the verge of creating a great new product. Maybe the recent health care and financial-regulation laws will squeeze the bloat.
For now, the evidence for such optimism remains scant. And the economy remains millions of jobs away from being even moderately healthy. 
cnbc.com

Regulators Clamping Down on High-Speed Stock Trades

Regulators in the United States and overseas are cracking down on computerized high-speed trading that crowds today’s stock exchanges, worried that as it spreads around the globe it is making market swings worse.
NYSE trader
Photo: Oliver P. Quilla for CNBC.com
NYSE trader

The cost of these high-frequency traders, critics say, is the confidence of ordinary investors in the markets, and ultimately their belief in the fairness of the financial system.
“There is something unholy about them,” said Guy P.Wyser-Pratte, a prominent longtime Wall Street trader and investor.
“That is what caused this tremendous volatility. They make a fortune whereas the public gets so whipsawed by this trading.”
Regulators are playing catch-up. In the United States and Europe, they have recently fined traders for using computers to gain advantage over slower investors by illegally manipulating prices, and they suspect other market abuse could be going on.
Regulators are also weighing new rules for high-speed trading, with an international regulatory body to make recommendations in coming weeks.
In addition, officials in Europe, Canada and the United States are considering imposing fees aimed at limiting trading volume or paying for the cost of greater oversight.
Perhaps regulators’ biggest worry is over the unknown dynamics of the computerized stock market world that the firms are part of — and the risk that at any moment it could spin out of control.
Some regulators fear that the sudden market dive on May 6, 2010, when prices dropped by 700 points in minutes and recovered just as abruptly, was a warning of the potential problems to come.
Just last week, the broader market fell throughout Tuesday’s session before shooting up 4 percent in the last hour, raising questions on what was really behind it.
“The flash crash was a wake-up call for the market,” said Andrew Haldane, executive director of the Bank of England responsible for financial stability. “There are many questions begging.”
The industry and others say that the vast majority of trading is legitimate and that its presence means many extra buyers and sellers in the markets, drastically reducing trading costs for ordinary investors.
James Overdahl, an adviser to the firms’ trade group, said that they favor policing the market to stamp out manipulation and that they support efforts to improve market stability.
The traders, he said, “are as much interested in improving the quality of markets as anyone else.” Some academic studies show that high-frequency trading tends to reduce price volatility on normal trading days.
And while a recent analysis by The New York Times of price changes in the Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index over the past five decades showed that big price swings are more common than they used to be, analysts ascribe this to a variety of causes — including high-speed electronic trading but also high anxiety about the European crisis and the United States economy.
“We are just beginning to catch up to the reality of, ‘Hey, we are in an electronic market, what does that mean?’ ” said Adam Sussman, director of research at the Tabb Group, a markets specialist.
High-frequency trading took off in the middle of the last decade when regulatory reforms encouraged exchanges to switch from floor-based trading to electronic.
As computers took over, daily turnover of stocks rose to 8 billion shares in the United States from about 6 billion in 2007, according to BATS Global Markets.
The trading, done by independent firms or on special desks inside big Wall Street banks, now accounts for two of every three stock market trades in America.
Such trading has expanded into other markets, including futures markets in the United States.
It has also spread to stock markets around the world where for-profit exchanges are taking steps to attract their business.
When British regulators noticed strange price movements in a range of shares on the London Stock Exchange, they tracked them to a Canadian firm issuing thousands of computerized orders allegedly designed to mislead other investors.
In August, regulators fined the firm, Swift Trade, £8 million, or $13.1 million, for a technique called layering, which involves issuing and then canceling orders they never meant to carry out.
The action was challenged by Swift Trade, which was dissolved last year.
Susanne Bergsträsser, a German regulator leading a review of high-speed trading for the International Organization of Securities Commissions, said authorities have to be alert for “market abuse that may arise as a result of technological development.” The organization will present its recommendations to G-20 finance ministers this month.
In the United States, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority last year fined Trillium Brokerage Services, a New York firm, and some of its employees $2.3 million for layering.
Even the traders’ authorized activities are coming under fire, especially their tendency to shoot off thousands of orders a second and suddenly cancel many.
Long-term investors like pension funds complain that the practice makes their trading harder.
Global regulators are considering penalizing traders if they issue but then cancel a high degree of orders, or even making them keep open their orders for a minimum time before they can cancel.
Long-term investors worry that some traders may be using their superior technology to detect when others are buying and selling and rush in ahead of them to take advantage of price moves.
This is driving some investors who buy and sell in large blocks to move to new so-called dark pools — venues away from public exchanges.
As more trading takes place in these venues, prices on exchanges have less meaning, critics say.
In the United States, the Securities and Exchange Commission has been looking into the new market structure for almost two years.
In July, it approved a “large trader” rule, requiring firms that do a lot of business, including high-speed traders, to offer more information about their activities in case regulators need to trace their trades.
After the flash crash, exchanges introduced circuit breakers to halt trading after violent moves.
Bart Chilton, a commissioner at the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, called for regulators to go further.
He wants compulsory registration of high-frequency firms and pre-trade testing of their algorithms.
One of the most controversial actions has been the European Commission’s recent proposal for a financial transaction tax on speculators, which would hit high-frequency firms and curtail volumes.
The proposed tax would apply to all trades in stocks, bonds and derivatives, and may face stiff opposition from European governments.

Current DateTime: 06:26:38 09 Oct 2011
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Many such firms are based in Britain or the Netherlands, and authorities fear a loss of business.
In Canada, a top regulator is proposing higher fees on the biggest players. Last year, the country put in place a monitoring system to track the 200 million to 250 million orders its exchanges receive daily — up from 70 million a year and a half ago.
And the S.E.C. last year proposed what would be an even more high-powered monitoring system called a consolidated audit trail that would gather data on trades in real time from all United States exchanges, and be a powerful tool in helping regulators piece together events in case of another flash crash.
The monitoring “will provide regulators a critical new tool to surveil the securities markets and pursue wrongdoers, in a much more efficient and effective way than we can today,” said David Shillman, associate director of the S.E.C.’s trading and markets unit.
cnbc.com

Market Focus Will Shift to Earnings in the Week Ahead Published: Sunday, 9 Oct 2011 | 9:24 AM ET Text Size

Investors tiring of the euro zone's debt crisis dragging the market all over the place are hoping to focus on something else next week — earnings.
NYSE trader
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But will third-quarter results be enough to drive the S&P 500 higher? Or will Europe's woes get in the way?
The unofficial start of earnings season begins on Tuesday, when Dow component Alcoa [AA  9.71    -0.17  (-1.72%)   ] reports third-quarter results after the close of trading.
The earnings and guidance that may follow could give investors some clues on the health of the global economy, including any impact the euro-zone debt [cnbc explains] crisis has had and might continue to have on profits.
But even if earnings paint a rosier picture than anticipated, stocks may face a stiff test in climbing much further, as analysts pointed to the declining 50-day moving average as a key resistance point that could limit gains. That level now sits around 1,178.
This week's sharp gains were built on improved hopes that European officials will get a handle on the euro-zone debt crisis. That fed a massive bout of short-covering as those betting against stocks were forced to buy shares to avoid losing money.
The benchmark S&P 500 index [.SPX  1155.46    -9.51  (-0.82%)   ] rose 2.1 percent for the week, buoyed by a 6-percent jump mid-week, as it appeared plans in the euro zone to get a grip on the debt crisis were moving forward. The region remains a wild card, which could cause any gains to quickly vanish.
"For the next three weeks, in this country, earnings will be the focus and the subplot is going to be Europe — Europe is always going to be just under the surface," said Ken Polcari, managing director at ICAP Equities in New York. "But if all of a sudden in the middle of next week, some catastrophe happens in Europe, the focus is immediately going to be headline driven and goes back to Europe."
Other companies expected to post quarterly results next week include PepsiCo, tech giant Google, JPMorgan Chase and toy maker Mattel.
Clouding the picture for profits is the fact that many earnings estimates have been trimmed by analysts in light of the turmoil in Europe, a staggering global economy and other events which resulted in a more cautious forecast. "You've got to remember what was going on in July with the debt-ceiling crisis, credit default — companies were not willing to go out on a limb and make any big expectations," said Marc Pado
, U.S. market strategist at Cantor Fitzgerald in San Francisco.
"So they were conservative going in, and we have not seen a whole lot of downward revisions, which suggests companies are probably going to be able to make those numbers."
The economic calendar for next week includes the FOMC minutes from the two-day meeting in late September, along with import prices and retail sales for September, in addition to the preliminary reading on October consumer sentiment from the Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan surveys.
Economic data of late has been better than expected, helping to quell fears that the economy was headed for a double-dip recession. Once again, that leaves the euro-zone crisis as a potential landmine to disrupt a slow move higher.
"The reason we have lifted in the past week is the rhetoric has improved and we are seeing progress, not necessarily a plan, but you are getting countries to admit to the problem, and that is a step in the right direction — you have to seek help before you can get help," Pado
said.
"That is all we really need in order to get beyond this, and start focusing on the future and focusing on our own data. We have plenty of data that suggests slow growth, but nothing that suggests waving the red flag like a crazy person saying, 'How can you not see this?'"
cnbc.com
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