'sharply'에 해당되는 글 4건

  1. 2008.12.16 Oil up sharply near $50 as OPEC readies output cut by CEOinIRVINE
  2. 2008.12.11 Downturn Choking Global Commerce by CEOinIRVINE
  3. 2008.12.02 Stocks fall sharply on consumer spending worries by CEOinIRVINE
  4. 2008.11.29 EU: Euro-zone jobless rate hits two-year high by CEOinIRVINE

Oil prices rose sharply toward $50 a barrel Monday as investors anticipated OPEC will announce a large production cut at its meeting this week.

Light, sweet crude for January delivery was up $3.24 to $49.52 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange by mid-afternoon in Europe. The contract briefly reached $50.05 before falling back. On Friday, it fell $1.70 to settle at $46.28.


In London, January Brent crude gained $3.40 to $49.81 on the ICE Futures exchange.

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, which accounts for 40 percent of global supply, has signaled it plans to announce a substantial reduction of output quotas at its meeting Wednesday in Algeria.

"The extent of such cuts is still unclear and this uncertainty has been a source of continuing volatility in futures markets," said a report by analysts at KBC Market Services in Great Britain.

Kuwaiti oil minister Mohammed al-Eleim said Monday that OPEC was "undoubtedly inclined" to cut production. But he added that any decision would balance the need for a cut with its impact on the ailing world economy and producer nations' need for revenue to fund development projects.

Iranian Oil Minister Gholam Hossein Nozari was quoted Sunday on his ministry's Web site saying that Iran would push for a production cut of 1.5 to 2 million barrels per day.

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Posted by CEOinIRVINE
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Sharply lower consumer spending in the United States and other high-income countries is stalling global trade, causing a surprise downturn in exports from China that is dramatically slowing its economy and rippling through other countries that rely on international commerce.

With recessions hitting the United States, Europe and Japan at the same time, China yesterday said its November exports took their biggest dive in seven years. Weak holiday spending is taking a particularly hard toll on toymakers: Two-thirds of China's small-toy exporters closed in the first nine months of 2008, according to government statistics. At the same time, tight credit and falling global demand are setting off the first decline in world trade in a quarter century, touching off a wave of job losses in rich and poor countries alike.

The drop in trade is both sharper and faster than many analysts had predicted only weeks ago, with freight lines that were sailing full this summer now slashing prices by as much as 90 percent as cargo traffic plummets and unsold goods pile up at ports from Baltimore to Shanghai. The World Bank this week said global trade is set to fall by 2.1 percent in 2009, marking the first decline since 1982. The drop is contributing to a more dire outlook for the world economy, which the World Bank said is close to falling into a global recession.
 

The slowdown illustrates how globalization, which fed rapid growth during times of plenty, can quickly turn against nations during times of bust. Depressed car sales in the United States, for instance, are spreading through the global supply chain, eliminating jobs for contract auto workers in Japan and laborers in South Africa who mine the metals used in car parts.

The impact on China, one of the rare lights in an otherwise gloomy global economy, is particularly troubling. Beijing announced yesterday that its November exports dropped 2.2 percent after a 19.2 percent surge in October. Imports took an even steeper drop, falling 17.9 percent. Analysts now say growth there is slowing to its lowest level since 1990, curbing Chinese demand.

Reversing Course

That is bad news for the United States and other high-income countries that were counting on sales to China and other emerging markets to help combat recessions at home. Earlier this year, an array of U.S. exports including Boeing jets and Caterpillar tractors were at least partially offsetting weak domestic demand. U.S. trade data to be released today are expected to show another jump in October exports. But analysts say those numbers do not reflect industry estimates that U.S. exports reversed course in November as the financial crisis deepened worldwide.

"You can essentially say the U.S. export boom is over," said Brian Bethune, chief U.S. economist for IHS Global Insight.

In recent weeks, the World Bank has had to step in with loans to exporters in developing countries because the global credit crunch dried up short-term trade financing needed to ship goods overseas. In one case, World Bank officials say, a Brazilian company had an overseas buyer for a large shipment of soy beans, but they rotted on the docks because the exporter could not secure the funds for shipping and insurance.

"Global trade is reversing course because it is a function of industrial production, and we're seeing the biggest coordinated slump in industrial production since the early 1930s," said Philip Suttle, director of Global Macro Analysis at the Institute of International Finance. "In the old days, you'd get weakness in one part of the world, and it would take three to six months to impact another part. But now, everybody is so interconnected through trade that the impact is happening instantaneously."

Sharp Slowdown

The sharp slowdown has caused commodity prices to plummet, ending a historic five-year boom in prices for oil, food and metals. That is helping importer nations like the United States, where the steep drop in gas prices is providing a market-based fiscal stimulus to Americans by allowing them to save cash at the pump.

But in South Africa, the fall in prices for commodities like platinum -- an industrial metal now 50 percent off its March peak as the auto industry, which uses it for car parts, suffers deeply depressed sales -- has caused mining companies to issue layoff notices to thousands of workers hired in recent years.

The biggest cuts in South Africa are likely to be at Lonmin, the world's third-largest platinum mining firm, which has announced plans to lay off 5,500 workers at two of its mines. The effects of such cuts will radiate far beyond the mines, analysts and union officials say.



Posted by CEOinIRVINE
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Investors uneasy about the holiday shopping season gave back some of Wall Street's recent gains Monday, sending the Dow Jones industrial average down more than 360 points.

While initial reports about the start of holiday shopping this weekend suggested sales were better than some retailers and analysts expected, Americans are clearly extremely cautious. That has Wall Street concerned about the impact of a continuing drop in consumer spending on the economy.

According to preliminary figures released by RCT ShopperTrak, a research firm that tracks total retail sales at more than 50,000 outlets, sales rose 3 percent to $10.6 billion on Black Friday - the day after Thanksgiving that is traditionally one of the biggest shopping days of the year. But some analysts are concerned that Black Friday's results aren't indicative of the rest of the weekend.

"After a slow start to November, we believe strength on Black Friday was not enough to save the month," said John Morris, an analyst at Wachovia Capital Markets. "The strength did not carry through the remainder of the weekend, as business fell off sharply on Saturday, according to our field team."

RCT ShopperTrak is expected to release data for the combined Friday and Saturday period on Monday.

Wall Street is concerned that consumers, by curtailing their spending further, won't be able to help lift the economy from its slump.

Meanwhile, a pair of downbeat economic reports did little to alleviate investors' concerns. The Institute for Supply Management, a trade group of purchasing executives, said its index of manufacturing activity fell to a 26-year low in November. At the same time, the Commerce Department said construction spending fell by a larger-than-expected amount in October.

Both the housing and manufacturing sectors have been suffering for some time, so the reports were ultimately unsurprising. Still, they served as further evidence that the economy remains under pressure.

Some stock selling was to be expected Monday considering the magnitude of last week's advance, when stocks posted some of their steepest gains in decades. The Dow has gained 16.9 percent and the S&P 500 index 19.1 percent since a rally that began Nov. 21; it was the first five-day string of gains for both the Dow and the S&P 500 since July 2007.

In midmorning trading, the Dow Jones industrial average fell 365.66, or 4.14 percent, to 8,463.38. Standard & Poor's 500 index dropped 42.36, or 4.73 percent, to 853.88, while the Nasdaq composite index fell 69.64, or 4.54 percent, to 1,465.93.

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Posted by CEOinIRVINE
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Unemployment in the 15 nations that share the euro shot up to 7.7 percent in October - the highest level in two years - as growth dropped sharply, the EU statistics agency Eurostat said Friday.

Prices also plunged with the annual inflation rate sinking to 2.1 percent in November from 3.2 percent in October, Eurostat said. Lower inflation gives the European Central Bank more room to reduce interest rates, which would help stoke growth.


The euro area officially went into a recession in spring and summer this year when growth shrank in the second and third quarters, as a financial crisis curbed global demand.

In real terms, this means job losses - lots of them and more to come.

Eurostat said some 225,000 more people were seeking work in October from the previous month. That means some 12 million people in the euro area were out of work last month. It also said unemployment in September was worse than it had first estimated, revising the rate upward to 7.6 percent from the 7.5 percent it reported last month.

Across all the EU's 27 states, some 17 million people were job-hunting in October, 290,000 more than a month earlier. The EU jobless rate was 7.1 percent in October, up from 7 percent in September.

The EU's executive Commission forecasts that the labor market will get even worse next year, with the euro-zone rate climbing to 8.4 percent in 2009 from a decade-low of 7 percent at the end of 2007. This will see an extra 2 million people out of work.



Posted by CEOinIRVINE
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