Re: [ob] Europe’s Recovery Almost Stalls as German y Stagnates

2010-02-12 Terurut Topik Dean Earwicker
Yang bagus yang ijo. Yang jelek yang merah. Yang kuning, tergantung megang
dollar apa euro.

Jadi ini berita sideways ga jelas, alias bingung, jadi tektok aja dulu..
hehe

2010/2/12 JsxSniper jsxsni...@yahoo.co.id

 BERITA BAGUS ATO JELEK NEH ??

  Feb. 12 (Bloomberg) -- Europe’s recovery almost stalled in the fourth
 quarter as waning spending and investment in Germany unexpectedly brought
 growth in the region’s largest economy to a halt.

  Gross domestic product in the 16-nation euro region rose 0.1 percent from
 the third quarter, when it gained 0.4 percent, the European Union’s
 statistics office in Luxembourg said today. Economists forecast expansion of
 0.3 percent, the median of 34 estimates in a Bloomberg survey showed. The
 recession in Greece deepened, with GDP falling 0.8 percent in the fourth
 quarter after a 0.5 percent slump in the previous three months.

  European governments are struggling to contain the fall-out from Greece’s
 budget crisis as they phase out the stimulus measures used to pull the
 economy out of a recession. As market turmoil pushes bond yields higher
 across southern Europe, the recovery is in danger of losing momentum.

  It’s “another piece of bad news for policymakers as they struggle to come
 up with a plan that soothes worries about the credit worthiness of the euro
 zone’s peripheral economies,” said Nick Kounis, chief European economist at
 Fortis Bank Nederland in Amsterdam. The recovery is “continuing, but at a
 snail’s pace.”

  Greek Debt

  The euro fell for a third day and was down 1 percent to $1.3558 as of
 11:00 a.m. in London. German government bonds rose, pushing the yield on
 10-year bunds down 3 basis points to 3.20 percent.

  The euro has fallen 7 percent in the last two months on concern that
 Greece’s fiscal problems will spread to other countries.

  From a year earlier, euro-area GDP declined a seasonally adjusted 2.1
 percent in the fourth quarter. For the full year, the economy contracted 4
 percent. Separate data showed that industrial production in the region fell
 1.7 percent in December, the most in 10 months.

  The German economy stagnated in the fourth quarter after recording 0.7
 percent growth in the previous three months, while Italian GDP fell 0.2
 percent. France’s economic expansion accelerated to 0.6 percent from 0.2
 percent. Greece today revised down its data for GDP for the first three
 quarters of 2009, indicating its recession was deeper than earlier thought.

  ‘Serious’

  Europe’s governments face a growing dilemma as they seek to fortify
 recoveries at a time when rising sovereign-debt burdens threaten to hobble
 expansion. EU leaders yesterday ordered Greece to get its deficit under
 control and pledged “determined and coordinated action” to protect the
 currency region in a statement that stopped short of setting out concrete
 steps.

  “It’s too dangerous to try to call the bluff of the bond market,” said
 Rossa White, chief economist at Dublin-based securities firm Davy. “For
 clarity, the euro area will have to outline a backstop tied to much stricter
 enforcement of Greece’s consolidation plan.”

  With governments phasing out incentives and unemployment at 10 percent,
 the highest in more than 11 years, Europe’s recovery is showing signs of
 waning. Expansion in service and manufacturing industries slowed in January
 and investor confidence fell for the first time in seven months in February.

  Renault SA, France’s second-largest carmaker, on Feb. 11 forecast a 10
 percent contraction in European auto demand this year. Chief Executive
 Officer Carlos Ghosn said there’s “still a lot of uncertainty and
 volatility.” Bernd Scheifele, CEO of HeidelbergCement AG, is planning an
 additional 300 million euros in cost cuts this year after he said on Feb. 10
 that the company’s markets “showed no recovery in the fourth quarter.”

  Export Boost

  Still, central banks have begun to scale back some of the measures
 introduced during the recession. The European Central Bank is phasing out
 its emergency lending programs, while the U.S. Federal Reserve has said it
 may raise the interest rate paid on deposits to slow lending. China today
 ordered banks to set aside more deposits as reserves for the second time in
 a month to cool the world’s fastest-growing major economy.

  Weaker domestic demand may be countered by an export boost from expansion
 in Asian economies. The International Monetary Fund last month forecast 2010
 economic growth of 9.7 percent and 7.8 percent in China and India,
 respectively, compared with 1.6 percent expansion in the euro area and 2.4
 percent in the U.S. The IMF sees the global economy expanding 3.9 percent.

  Bayerische Motoren Werke AG, the world’s largest maker of luxury cars,
 forecast on Feb. 5 that China deliveries may increase at least 10 percent
 this year.

  “The paltry pace of fourth-quarter growth makes crystal clear that the
 euro zone economy cannot yet stand on its own 

Re: [ob] Europe’s Recovery Almost Stalls as German y Stagnates

2010-02-12 Terurut Topik Cougar Boy
kalau gak ada posisi sih tektok

yang ada USD hold..

yang ada EUR.. bikin kuburan dulu... dah babak belur.. serba salah

wakakaka

On Fri, Feb 12, 2010 at 7:22 PM, Dean Earwicker dean.earwic...@gmail.comwrote:



 Yang bagus yang ijo. Yang jelek yang merah. Yang kuning, tergantung megang
 dollar apa euro.

 Jadi ini berita sideways ga jelas, alias bingung, jadi tektok aja dulu..
 hehe

 2010/2/12 JsxSniper jsxsni...@yahoo.co.id

 BERITA BAGUS ATO JELEK NEH ??

  Feb. 12 (Bloomberg) -- Europe’s recovery almost stalled in the fourth
 quarter as waning spending and investment in Germany unexpectedly brought
 growth in the region’s largest economy to a halt.

  Gross domestic product in the 16-nation euro region rose 0.1 percent from
 the third quarter, when it gained 0.4 percent, the European Union’s
 statistics office in Luxembourg said today. Economists forecast expansion of
 0.3 percent, the median of 34 estimates in a Bloomberg survey showed. The
 recession in Greece deepened, with GDP falling 0.8 percent in the fourth
 quarter after a 0.5 percent slump in the previous three months.

  European governments are struggling to contain the fall-out from Greece’s
 budget crisis as they phase out the stimulus measures used to pull the
 economy out of a recession. As market turmoil pushes bond yields higher
 across southern Europe, the recovery is in danger of losing momentum.

  It’s “another piece of bad news for policymakers as they struggle to come
 up with a plan that soothes worries about the credit worthiness of the euro
 zone’s peripheral economies,” said Nick Kounis, chief European economist at
 Fortis Bank Nederland in Amsterdam. The recovery is “continuing, but at a
 snail’s pace.”

  Greek Debt

  The euro fell for a third day and was down 1 percent to $1.3558 as of
 11:00 a.m. in London. German government bonds rose, pushing the yield on
 10-year bunds down 3 basis points to 3.20 percent.

  The euro has fallen 7 percent in the last two months on concern that
 Greece’s fiscal problems will spread to other countries.

  From a year earlier, euro-area GDP declined a seasonally adjusted 2.1
 percent in the fourth quarter. For the full year, the economy contracted 4
 percent. Separate data showed that industrial production in the region fell
 1.7 percent in December, the most in 10 months.

  The German economy stagnated in the fourth quarter after recording 0.7
 percent growth in the previous three months, while Italian GDP fell 0.2
 percent. France’s economic expansion accelerated to 0.6 percent from 0.2
 percent. Greece today revised down its data for GDP for the first three
 quarters of 2009, indicating its recession was deeper than earlier thought.

  ‘Serious’

  Europe’s governments face a growing dilemma as they seek to fortify
 recoveries at a time when rising sovereign-debt burdens threaten to hobble
 expansion. EU leaders yesterday ordered Greece to get its deficit under
 control and pledged “determined and coordinated action” to protect the
 currency region in a statement that stopped short of setting out concrete
 steps.

  “It’s too dangerous to try to call the bluff of the bond market,” said
 Rossa White, chief economist at Dublin-based securities firm Davy. “For
 clarity, the euro area will have to outline a backstop tied to much stricter
 enforcement of Greece’s consolidation plan.”

  With governments phasing out incentives and unemployment at 10 percent,
 the highest in more than 11 years, Europe’s recovery is showing signs of
 waning. Expansion in service and manufacturing industries slowed in January
 and investor confidence fell for the first time in seven months in February.

  Renault SA, France’s second-largest carmaker, on Feb. 11 forecast a 10
 percent contraction in European auto demand this year. Chief Executive
 Officer Carlos Ghosn said there’s “still a lot of uncertainty and
 volatility.” Bernd Scheifele, CEO of HeidelbergCement AG, is planning an
 additional 300 million euros in cost cuts this year after he said on Feb. 10
 that the company’s markets “showed no recovery in the fourth quarter.”

  Export Boost

  Still, central banks have begun to scale back some of the measures
 introduced during the recession. The European Central Bank is phasing out
 its emergency lending programs, while the U.S. Federal Reserve has said it
 may raise the interest rate paid on deposits to slow lending. China today
 ordered banks to set aside more deposits as reserves for the second time in
 a month to cool the world’s fastest-growing major economy.

  Weaker domestic demand may be countered by an export boost from expansion
 in Asian economies. The International Monetary Fund last month forecast 2010
 economic growth of 9.7 percent and 7.8 percent in China and India,
 respectively, compared with 1.6 percent expansion in the euro area and 2.4
 percent in the U.S. The IMF sees the global economy expanding 3.9 percent.

  Bayerische Motoren Werke AG, the world’s largest maker of luxury