Full Bernanke Speech: Nothing Now, But Wait For Sept 20 FOMC Meeting Which Has Been Extended To "Allow Fuller Discussion Of Tools"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2011 - 10:01 Ben Bernanke Bond Capital Formation Central Banks Credit Conditions Debt Ceiling default Federal Reserve Federal Reserve Bank Financial Regulation Global Economy Great Depression Housing Market Meltdown Monetary Policy Purchasing Power RANSquawk Rating Agencies Recession recovery Risk Management Trade Deficit Transparency Unemployment VolatilityBottom line: nothing now, QE3 now expected to be delivered Sept. 20? or not...
- BERNANKE SAYS FED HAS LIMITED ABILITY TO ENSURE LONG-RUN GROWTH
- BERNANKE DOESN'T SIGNAL NEW STEPS FOR PROMOTING U.S. GROWTH
- BERNANKE SAYS EXTRA DAY TO ALLOW `FULLER DISCUSSION' OF TOOLS
- BERNANKE SAYS FED TO EXTEND SEPT. FOMC MEETING TO TWO DAYS
- BERNANKE SAYS FED HAS `RANGE OF TOOLS' FOR STIMULATING GROWTH
- BERNANKE SAYS `FINANCIAL STRESS' WILL BE A `DRAG' ON RECOVERY
Guest Commentary: Disappointment - Has The Helicopter Stalled Out?
All we get is that the meeting in September will be 2 days instead of 1? With Europe being so weak and the market having been so resilient in the face of bad news this week and exuberant about good news, I think we have room to sell off. I really think we have to head towards the lows. Weirdly enough, AAPL, is once again outperforming the rest of the Nasdaq. I don't see that lasting forever. For the shorts, there is now no obvious event to be scared of. Obama's 212th jobs in the future speech? I find it hard to believe that will be anything more than a yawn. Scared that Ben will intimidate Washington into doing something? Yeah, we saw their reaction to S&P - raid the offices and get the CEO fired.Kneejerk Market Response To Jackson Hole Speech
Complete summary of the market response.
Game Over Sino Forest
Sino Forest: date of death - August 26, 2011.Game Over For Gadaffi?
Summary Of Kneejerk Wall Street Responses To Latest GDP Disappointment
The soundbite response from Wall Street on the latest GDP disappointment is, as expected, decidedly not bullish.Revised Q2 GDP Prints At 1.0%, Below Expectations Of 1.1%, Down From Preliminary 1.3%
The first revision to Q1 GDP printed at 1.0%, down from the preliminary Q2 GDP print of 1.3%, and as expected was worse than Wall Street consensus of -1.1%, although it was certainly not as bad as the miss to the preliminary number. Stone McCarthy's forecast of 0.7% is not necessarily wrong: it is probably just early: the final revision to Q2 GDP will come on September 29, one week after the next FOMC meeting, and will be the last sub 1% GDP growth number before we see a negative GDP print for Q3. Personal Consumption printed a little better than expected at 0.4%, higher than consensus of 0.2%. Alas, this number will be whacked massively in Q3. Core PCE was also slightly higher than expectations of 2.1%, coming at 2.2%. The components of the 1.0% revised GDP were: PCE: 0.3%; Fixed Investment: 1.01%, Change in Private Inventories: -0.23%; Exports: 0.41%; Imports -0.31%; and Government consumption -0.18%. This is the third consecutive quarter in which the government has taken away from growth.
Guest Post: "Flash" Crashes and Government Boondoggles
For what it's worth, the DAX is almost back to yesterday's "flash" crash lows. I'm not sure what is going on there (Greece, sovereign debt in general, slowing economy) but it is unlikely that yesterday's move was solely related to a fat finger or rumors of a downgrade. The Dax is now down over 20% for the year. I think the weakening economy and horrible stock performance will further impact Germany's willingness to fund bailouts across Europe. Yes, maybe it would help their market, but I suspect the average German is going to be more worried about sending money out the door at a time of weakness, than what is the "right" decision longer term.Daily US Opening News And Market Re-Cap: August 26
- Markets focus on Fed Bernanke’s Jackson Hole speech in anticipation of getting a glimpse into the Fed’s monetary policy stance going forward
- S&P sovereign ratings head, David Beers, said that the AAA rating for the US is not likely in the near term, and S&P is looking very carefully at France’s evolving fiscal strategy
- Speculation that the German Chancellor Merkel may be ousted as early as September weighed on the DAX future
- RBA’s chief Stevens said that the central bank may act to lessen the upward pressure on inflation, which helped AUD
- CHF weakened on the back of market talk that the SNB may announce further measures to curb the currency's strength
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