Belarus Central Bank Increases Rate 500bps to 40.00%

The National Bank of the Republic of Belarus raised its refinancing rate by 500 basis points to 40.00% from 35.00%.  The Bank said [translated]: “Another increase in the refinancing rate and interest rates on liquidity management operation is a sequential step to curb inflation and stabilize the economy and financial sector in general. Dunn’s measure will also support renewed growth in recent months Urgent rubles deposits in banks and stabilize inflation expectations in the economy, and will become more factor to enhance the balance of payments surplus. National Bank and continues to conduct a balanced monetary policy, with the individual attention necessary to ensure price stability in the economy.”

The latest move marks a continued string of aggressive rate increases, with the Bank previously raising the refinancing rate by 300bps to 30%, 500 basis points to 27% and 200 basis points to 22%.  The total amount of increases since the start of the year is now 2950 basis points.  Belarus reported consumer price inflation at hyperinflationary levels of 92.3% in October, up from 79.6% in September, and 36.2% in the year to June, according to the National Statistic Committee, meanwhile the government is forecasting 2011 inflation of as much as 39%.  


The Bank also said that interest rates on liquidity management operations would also increase, with the overnight deposit rate rising to 30% and the overnight credit rate rising to 60%.  
The USD-Belarussian ruble (BYR) exchange rate has doubled on the black market, rising to as much as 7,000 per dollar (approx. 6,000 in July), and currently trades around 8795 (5350 in September) against the US dollar, according to quotes from Yahoo Finance.

Central Bank of Sri Lanka Holds Rate at 7.00%

The Central Bank of Sri Lanka held its benchmark repurchase rate unchanged at 7.00%, and also kept the reverse repurchase rate at 8.50%, and the Statutory Reserve Ratio at 8%.  The Bank said: “The outlook for Sri Lanka’s economy remains positive with the economy continuing along the high growth trajectory”, and “even though inflation and the inflation outlook remain benign, the Monetary Board is of the view that a change to the existing monetary policy stance is not warranted.


Sri Lanka’s central bank also kept its monetary policy settings unchanged at its October meeting this year, while the Bank last cut its key interest rates in January this year.  Sri Lanka reported an annual headline inflation rate of 6.4% in September, down from 7% in August, 7.5% in July, 7.1% in June, and 8.2% in May.  

Sri Lanka is aiming for 8.5% GDP growth in 2011, after its economy expanded 8% in 2010, meanwhile inflation is expected to slow to 6% by the end of 2011.  Sri Lanka reported 8.2% annual GDP growth in the second quarter (7.9% in Q1).  


The Bank said broad money supply (M2) grew 20.6% year on year in August, while credit to the private sector grew 34.1%.  The Sri Lankan Rupee (LKR) last traded around 110 against the US dollar.  The Central Bank of Sri Lanka next meets on the 20th of December.

Is the Global Economy Heading for Another “Lost Decade?”

Is the Global Economy Heading for Another “Lost Decade?”

by Ryan Fitzwater, Investment U Research
Wednesday, November 16, 2011

According to the International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde, unless nations work together to encourage growth, we risk another “lost decade” for the global economy.

Japan saw what some would call a lost decade in the ’90s. After a real-estate bubble burst, Japan saw its economy jump in and out of recession for over a decade. The economy crept along at an average growth rate of around one percent for years after the real-estate collapse.

This situation sounds eerily similar to the situation in the United States today, and there are even more issues over the pond…

A Scary Movie That Never Ends

In Europe, Italy has become the next country in line to be overwhelmed by a sovereign debt crisis. This brought European leaders together to create another rescue package. Developed by the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF), the next rescue package should be able to start building funds in December.

While more rescue packages are encouraging to some, like Lagarde, to others they’re just another band-aid on the problem.

The good news is that China – a country that isn’t overwhelmed by debt – has become a potential source for funds to hopefully save Italy – the third-largest economy in the European Union.

But bailouts in Europe aside, China could take steps to let its currency rise and help boost consumption to promote economic growth.

Lagarde stated that, as a whole, Asia would have to be ready to respond should conditions become worse. Lagarde recommended that Asian countries take their feet off the fiscal brakes, reactivate central-bank swap lines and lean on reserves should the Global Economy begin to stumble.

And while emerging markets have stronger growth overall, there were obvious signals of slowing as advanced economies began to weigh on them. According to Donald Tsang, Hong Kong’s Chief Executive, the world economy faces a 50-percent chance of a recession.

What History Can’t Teach Us

We know that advanced economies need to restore confidence and lift growth, but for the first time in modern history, we’re seeing a new story…

Everyone is swimming in debt and needs to save themselves from drowning, but who’s on deck to throw the life preserver?

In the past, it was the developed world to the rescue. But then, the entire developed world didn’t have this level of debt.

The developed world, through organizations like the IMF, was the one to help those in trouble. Now that countries like the United States, the largest contributor to the IMF, are extremely underwater, the solution isn’t so easy.

So what do we do? We change the discussion…

The international community needs to get away from more bailout talks and focus on:

  • Ways to restructure the euro.
  • Keeping emerging markets on their current pace.
  • Promoting growth in advanced economies.

If not, we’re destined for 10 more years of volatile markets, high unemployment rates and snail-pace growth.

Good investing,

Ryan Fitzwater

Article by Investment U

Gold Rallies after “Hard Hit”, ECB “Now Only Significant Bond Buyer”, UK “Has Lots More Scope for QE”

London Gold Market Report
from Ben Traynor
BullionVault
Friday 18 November, 08:30 EST

SPOT MARKET prices to buy gold regained some ground on Friday morning – following a sharp drop on Thursday, which saw a disappointing Spanish government bond auction and sustained losses on European and US stock markets.

At one point on Thursday, gold prices fell 1.9% in just one hour – with several analysts suggesting investors ha to liquidate gold holdings to cover positions elsewhere.

An auction of Spanish 10-Year bonds earlier in the day saw the government pay 6.97% to borrow €3.56 billion – a Euro era record, and up from 5.43% when Spain last auctioned 10-Year debt on October 20.

“Precious metals have been hard hit by renewed concerns over the Eurozone, as evidenced by soaring borrowing costs in Spain,” says Marc Ground, commodities strategist at Standard Bank.

“Our main concern for commodities,” says Ground, “is the potential for liquidity squeeze in Eurozone money markets…we caution that all commodities will suffer should money markets dry up, even gold and silver. Despite concerns over the Eurozone, investment demand [for precious metals] seems lackluster as investors seem to prefer the relative safety of the Dollar.”

“The theme in the market is that the Dollar is very expensive to borrow and funding a lot tighter now,” agrees one trader in Singapore – who also suggests many investors were forced to sell gold positions yesterday to obtain Dollars for funding requirements elsewhere.

“It’s a tricky market, as a lot of what’s happening to drive the funding pressure would normally drive investors to buy gold.”

Gold rallied to $1737 per ounce Friday morning – 1.5% above Thursday’s low – while European stocks were broadly flat following heavy falls yesterday. US Treasury bonds also fell, while commodity prices gained.

By Friday lunchtime, spot gold looked to be headed for a 2.9% weekly drop. Based on London Fix prices, the last time gold saw a larger weekly fall was the final week of September, when it ended down 4.1% at $1620.

Prices to buy silver also fell sharply yesterday, before hitting a low of $31.09 per ounce in Friday’s Asian session – 8.4% down on where they began the previous day.

Silver then rallied Friday morning – reaching $32.51 per ounce by lunchtime.

The Shanghai Gold Exchange announced this morning it will raise its margin on silver contracts from 15% to 18% if they hit their daily trading limit today.

The SGE also said it will raise the limit – the maximum amount by which the contract price can move in one day – from 12% to 15% should this occur.

The UK’s biggest four banks cut interbank lending to Eurozone periphery counterparts by over 24% in the third quarter, Friday’s Financial Times reports.

Eurozone banks are also reducing exposure to distressed Eurozone sovereign debt, partly in response to a need to raise capital ratios to 6% by next June, note Standard Bank currency analysts Steve Barrow and Jeremy Stevens.

“The only significant buyer at the moment in many [sovereign debt]markets seems to be the [European Central Bank],” they say.

The ECB however has placed a weekly limit of €20 billion on its government bonds purchases, according to German newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung.

A Reuters poll of European and US bond strategists published today finds an average probability of 48% given to the ECB launching an all-out quantitative easing. Most of those who predicted ECB QE said they believe it will happen before March.

The UK meantime has “quite a lot of scope for further quantitative easing,” Martin Weale, a member of the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee, said Friday.

“If things evolve as the [Bank’s] forecasts suggest, there will be a very strong case [for more QE] in February.”

The Bank last month launched a further round of QE, increasing its asset purchase program from £200 billion to £275 billion.

“There is a strong argument that this Euro crisis should support gold, especially if the solution to it will involve printing money and easing monetary policies ,” says Matthew Turner, precious metals strategist at Mitsubishi.

“On the other hand these big shocks are making investors nervous,” Turner said, adding therewas “a bit of bargain hunting going on” Friday morning, with the Euro price to buy gold flat.

On the currency markets, the Euro rallied against the Dollar Friday morning – though it remains 1.5% down against the US currency for the week.

British prime minister David Cameron meantime is expected to tell German chancellor Angela Merkel today he will support moves towards “more Europe”, which Merkel said this week was the solution to the Eurozone debt crisis.

In return, Cameron will reportedly seek a way to avoid Europe imposing a financial transaction tax on the City of London.

Over in the US, the Congressional ‘super committee’ convened to decide on $1.2 trillion of deficit cuts is reported to be in deadlock over tax increases. The committee has a deadline of midnight next Wednesday to agree, or risk triggering automatic spending cuts beginning January 2013.

Ben Traynor
BullionVault

Gold value calculator   |   Buy gold online at live prices

Editor of Gold News, the analysis and investment research site from world-leading gold ownership service BullionVault, Ben Traynor was formerly editor of the Fleet Street Letter, the UK’s longest-running investment letter. A Cambridge economics graduate, he is a professional writer and editor with a specialist interest in monetary economics.

(c) BullionVault 2011

Please Note: This article is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events – and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it.

Espinasse on Hong Kong IPO Market, Chow Tai Fook

Nov. 18 (Bloomberg) — Philippe Espinasse, author and a former banker, talks about the market for initial public offerings in Hong Kong. Billionaire Cheng Yu-tung’s Chow Tai Fook Group plans to start trading in Hong Kong on Dec. 15 after an initial public offering, according to terms for the transaction. Espinasse speaks with Rishaad Salamat on Bloomberg Television’s “On the Move Asia.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Forex Trading In India

By Johnny Smiths

Forex trading is a global market and although it may be classed as gambling in some countries and illegal, forex trading in India is very legal and becoming a popular legitimate method of making money online.

The Rupee is a highly protected currency and because of this exchanging it has many restrictions. These restrictions have recently been relaxed to accommodate the financial markets to help benefit the economy. Although forex trading is legal it can be restricted to certain currency pairs making profiting a little bit long winded with the slow moving Rupee.

Forex trading in India is no different from trading anywhere else in the world; the market is open 24 hours a day for 5 – days of the week. Anyone in India can be a part of the trillions of Dollars that are traded on the forex market every day, giving any Indian resident the opportunity to be a part of this huge global market.

The restrictions may limit the currency pairs that you can trade through an Indian spread betting company but it does not limit anyone that wishes to fund a managed account from India. A managed account is the simple process of opening a spread betting account for someone else to trade on.

This process is perfectly legal and involves nothing more than using a forex account manager to speculate on the forex market on your behalf. This will give access to all the currency pairs hence a more profitable trading account.

You can have as little interaction in the account as you like, simply go through the set up process with the account manager giving them limited power of attorney and they will use which ever method appropriate to trade on your account.

The benefits of using a forex managed account are fairly obvious; you do not need experience in the forex markets yourself. As forex trading is quite new to Indian residence there is a certain lack of experience in the local vicinity, a managed account can benefit from years of combined professional experience in the market place.

You do not have to worry about the market or even learn how to trade it this is all taken care of, Your simply sit back and let the professionals go to work with your money. There are no security risks with your money as you set up the account money can only be withdrawn to the bank from which it was deposited.

Although forex trading in India is slowly coming of age and it will be a welcoming day when such a huge country can finely get its teeth into the market on an individual basis. Until that day using managed accounts to take a slice of the huge amount of money being made on this financial market is the best way to go.

Take complete advantage of the experience and expertise that is on offer and see you forex trading investments grow in the hands of a professional proven forex trader.

About the Author

If you are looking to take part in forex trading in India then a forex managed account is often the best way to ensure a profitable investment.

Garicano Says Spanish Debt Costs Are ‘Unsustainable’

Nov. 18 (Bloomberg) — Luis Garicano, a professor at the London School of Economics, discusses Spain’s rising borrowing costs and the challenges facing the new goverment following the country’s Nov. 20 election. He speaks from Singapore with Owen Thomas and David Tweed on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown.”

Congressional Insider Trading… It’s Good to Be King

It’s Good to Be King… Or a Member of Congress

by Chris Matthai, Investment U Research
Friday, November 18, 2011

“It’s good to be king.”

I’m not sure who coined the phrase, but I think it was King Louis XIV. However, I can’t help but associate it with the great actor/director, Mel Brooks.

Brooks voiced those words in his comedy, “The History of the World Part I,” as he – the king – used some of his subjects for target practice. Brooks was standing out in a field with a shotgun (don’t ask) and yells “pull,” whereby one of his subjects goes flying – and screaming – across the air in front of Mel, who starts firing away.

The whole movie was a tongue-in-cheek focus on how the kings of medieval times lived like virtual gods, enjoying unimaginable wealth and power that was virtually limitless.

That’s all fine and dandy when it’s a fictional, light-hearted spoof about a long-ago period in history. But if you saw this past Sunday’s “60 Minutes” episode about Congress’ current abuse of power, privilege and authority… it wasn’t so funny.

Modern Day Kings

“60 Minutes” did a segment about how members of Congress have exempted themselves from insider trading laws and policies concerning a conflict of interest. It explained how they and their aides have regular access to powerful political intelligence, and many have made well-timed stock market trades in the very industries they regulate.

In addition, aaccording to former Washington state congressman, Brian Baird, the situation is getting worse… not better. In the past few years, a whole new, totally unregulated $100-million industry has grown up in Washington called “political intelligence.” It employs former congressmen and former staffers to scour the halls of the Capitol, gathering valuable non-public information and then selling it to hedge funds and traders on Wall Street who can trade on it.

Baird says it’s taken what would be a criminal enterprise anywhere else in the country and turned it into a profitable business model.

Needless to say, the “60 Minutes” piece was a real eye-opener to many and spoke volumes about the abuse of power in government. (Let’s not forget that Congress has previously exempted itself from Social Security payments and healthcare reform, plus created its own congressional retirement fund and healthcare system. Members of Congress can retire at full pay after one term, as well as vote on their own pay increases… all funded at taxpayers’ expense.)

Green With Rage

Investment U’s Chief Investment Strategist, Alexander Green, was so incensed about the latest transgressions that he fired off this missive to his Insider Alert subscribers:

“Just when you thought your opinion of Congress couldn’t go any lower, Peter Schweitzer of the Hoover Institution has come out with a new book. It’s called Throw Them All Out: How Politicians and Their Friends Get Rich Off Insider Stock Tips, Land Deals, and Cronyism That Would Send the Rest of Us to Jail. It reveals how members of Congress have exempted themselves from insider trading laws and made millions of dollars for themselves with special deals and trades based on material, non-public information. And because they had knowledge that was virtually guaranteed to move the market – making their trades essentially riskless – they didn’t just buy common stocks, they even cashed in big on options!

“When ‘public servants’ rake in millions for themselves doing the same thing that would send the rest of us to the hoosegow, something is seriously wrong.

“You may not have time to read Schweitzer’s book, but you owe it to yourself to watch a brief segment on this subject that recently aired on “60 Minutes,” indicting self-serving Republicans and Democrats alike.

“This should boil the blood of even the most cynical observer of Washington politics. In fact, it reminds me of something Mark Twain wrote:

‘There is no distinctly American criminal class… except Congress.’”

You can view the “60 Minutes” segment below:

Although we might wish this was another light-hearted spoof on circumstances from thousands of years ago… unfortunately, it isn’t. Use the last vestige of power you have and “pull” the voting lever.

Good investing,

Chris Matthai

Article by Investment U

Sullivan Says Markets’ Downside Risk `Unquantifiable’

Nov. 18 (Bloomberg) — Andrew Sullivan, principal sales trader at Piper Jaffray Asia Securities Ltd. in Hong Kong, talks about Europe’s sovereign debt crisis and its implications for global financial markets. Sullivan also discusses China’s economy and the nation’s real estate market. He speaks with Susan Li, Rishaad Salamat, and John Dawson on Bloomberg Television’s “Asia Edge.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Three Investment Lessons I’ve Learned From Warren Buffett

Three Investment Lessons I’ve Learned From Warren Buffett

by Dr. Mark Skousen, Investment U Contributing Editor
Friday, November 18, 2011: Issue #1646

“Great little book. I plan to shamelessly steal some of the lines.”

– Warren Buffett

For the past 30 years, I’ve been collecting old adages, clever lines and poems about Wall Street, which I’ve now published in a new book called The Maxims of Wall Street. Old canards like, “Sell in May and go away,” and, “Bears make headlines, bulls make money.”

It’s a unique book – surprisingly, nobody in the two hundred years of Wall Street had collected all the financial sayings in one book.

After completing the compilation, I made a discovery: Of the dozens of financial gurus quoted, I ended up cited Warren Buffett the most – 27 times to be exact. More than J. P. Morgan, John Templeton, Ben Franklin, Jim Dines, Jesse Livermore, John Maynard Keynes, Gerald Loeb, Humphrey Neill and a host of others.

Now that I think about it, that makes perfect sense. Warren Buffett is, after all, the world’s wealthiest investor, and a shareholder investing $1,000 in his Berkshire Hathaway at the beginning would be a multi-millionaire today. He has a lot to teach us about how to be a successful investor, and what not to do.

I decided to send a copy to Mr. Buffett. I had met Mr. Buffett last year at the graduation ceremony for Sing Sing inmates who had earned a college degree (my wife and I teach at this incredibly successful program).

Still, I was surprised to get a personal email from him a few days later on 11-11-11 with an unqualified endorsement of the book. He has given permission to publish this letter:

Dear Mark,

I’m really going to enjoy the little book you sent me. In fact, I plan to shamelessly steal some of the lines. Thanks for thinking of me.

Sincerely,

Warren Buffett

Since then, we’ve continued to correspond. What can you learn about investing reading these 27 quotations?

The Three Lessons

First, Buffett says you have to be a contrarian to be successful. A few of his favorite quotes:

  • “If you wait to see the Robins sing, spring may be over.”
  • “You can’t buy what’s popular and do well.”
  • “Be fearful when others are greedy and greedy when others are fearful.”

Right now, as investors are running scared and investing in fixed income and gold, Buffett is on a buying spree in the stock market, adding six new positions in the most recent quarter, including growth companies IBM (NYSE: IBM), Intel (Nasdaq: INTC) and Visa (NYSE: V).

Second, Buffett acts quickly and aggressively when an investment looks right to him. To quote him: “When we see something that makes sense, we act very fast and very big.” So he bought Big Blue! In the past three months, Berkshire Hathaway invested $10.7 billion in International Business Machines – his first in a technology company.

For the first time, he felt comfortable buying a big chunk of the service technology company because IBM follows through with its goals. “I don’t know of any large company that really has been as specific about what they intend to do and how they intend to do it as IBM,” he said. “They did that five years ago, and they’ve done it ever since.”

Third, Buffett is always trying to look for the best prospects in the future. To him future performance is more important than past performance. To quote him: “The investor of today does not profit from yesterday’s growth.”

He adds: “If past history was all there is to the investment game, the richest people would be librarians.”

And: “In the business world, the rearview mirror is always clearer than the windshield.”

Good investing, AEIOU,

Mark Skousen

Editor’s Note: If you would like a copy of The Maxims of Wall Street, click here. If you’d like an autographed copy of the first edition, call Eagle Publishing at 1.800.211.7661. It’s only $24.95 plus $5 P&S. Mention code MAXIMH. (And also ask about discounts for extra copies for holiday giving.)

Article by Investment U