There is no good economic news. The only bright side is that people were too focused on the Supreme Court and the Sandusky Trial to let this bother them. *sigh* That is a sad state of affairs.
For the preoccupied, this is how it all unfolded over the past few days: Ben Bernanke, Head of the Federal Reserve, held a press conference on Wednesday in which he basically said our economy is going sideways and he's not going to do too much about it except keep the interest rates near zero. The Stock Market reacted today by going down . . . down . . . down. Then to top that off, Moodys announced late in the day that they were downgrading nearly every major bank In THE WORLD.
That can't be good.
About Bernanke, from Wall Street Journal:
During his press conference Wednesday, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said monetary policy had been helping the general public. In particular, borrowers are benefiting from extremely low interest rates.
. . . Policy makers hope cheap borrowing will spur businesses and consumers to finance big purchases to boost demand.
What tends to be glossed over is the flip side to the Fed’s zero-rate strategy: Savers are getting whacked. And while some portion of interest earned is left to accumulate in savings account, any loss of income is a drag on consumer spending and consumers’ sense of financial well-being.
Bernanke mainly said that the Fed would act more aggresively if things got worse, implying that the economy will certainly get worse. That was not the optimistic message that markets wanted to hear, according to Nasdaq:
"Growth in employment has slowed in recent months," the Fed said in its policy statement, adding that "household spending appears to be growing at a somewhat slower pace than earlier in the year" and that financial strains from overseas posed "significant downside risks to the economic outlook."
Investors were initially disappointed the Fed didn't take more aggressive action Wednesday. The Dow Jones Industrial Average finished the day down 12.94 points, or 0.1%, to 12824.39, after at one point dropping by nearly 100 points.
Bloomberg: Stocks Tumble Due to Global Slowdown
U.S. stocks tumbled, while commodities entered a bear market, after signals of a global slowdown in manufacturing added to disappointing housing and labor market data at the world’s largest economy.
Stocks from Hong Kong to London and Sao Paulo slumped on concern about a global slowdown. Data showed euro-area manufacturing shrank at the fastest pace in three years and a Chinese output gauge indicated contraction. More Americans than forecast filed claims for jobless benefits, manufacturing in the Philadelphia region shrank and sales of existing homes fell.
The reports came out a day after the Federal Reserve lowered its growth and employment estimates while signaling it may add to its record stimulus. The central bank yesterday extended its so-called Operation Twist program to replace short- term bonds with longer-term debt, disappointing some investors who expected more asset purchases. Former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan today said the U.S. economy “looks very sluggish.”
Reuters: Moody's Downgrades 15 Banks
Financial markets have been bracing for the credit rating actions since February, when Moody's Investors Service said it had launched a review of 17 banks with global capital markets operations. These companies face diminished profitability and growth prospects due to difficult operating conditions, increased regulation and other factors, Moody's said.
. . . "The biggest surprise is the three-notch downgrade of Credit Suisse, which no one was looking for," said Mark Grant, managing director at Southwest Securities Inc. "In fact, it was Morgan Stanley that was supposed to be downgraded by that amount and Morgan received only two notches of cuts."
. . . Bank stocks fell on Thursday as investors prepared for an announcement, which leaked to the market as Moody's informed banks that it was coming, according to sources.
Morgan Stanley shares declined nearly 1.7 percent to $13.96 (8.94 pounds), while Bank of America shares fell nearly 4 percent to $7.82. The KBW Banks Index was down 2.3 percent.
But after suffering only a two-notch cut, instead of three as anticipated, Morgan Stanley shares rose about 3 percent in after-hours trade.
In addition to Morgan Stanley, downgraded by two notches were Barclays, BNP Paribas, Royal Bank of Canada, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs Group, JPMorgan Chase, Credit Agricole, Deutsche Bank, and UBS. Falling one notch were Bank of America, HSBC Holdings, Royal Bank of Scotland and Societe Generale.
Nomura and Macquarie were included in an original list of global banks, but have already been downgraded.
People should focus there attention in our economy today. Not on Supreme Court and Sandusky Trial. Specially our government. They should find more ways in dealing with our economic ratings.
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