Posts tagged: Wall Street

Go-slow reforms, repression keep lid on potential turmoil in Syria

The Media Line Staff

Damascus, Syria David Rosenberg – Syria sits on the same economic and social tinderbox as Egypt and other Arab countries, but the government’s go-slow approach to reform and tight control over information puts it in a better position to avoid the kind of turmoil that has enveloped much of the Middle East, according to economists.

Officially, the Syrian government is portraying the mass protests around the region as a rebellion against U.S. hegemony and Israel. After an on-line call for a “day of Rage” in Damascus on Feb. 4 and 5 fell flat, the government announced it was ending a 3-year-old ban of the Facebook and YouTube social networking sites. But analysts said Damascus shouldn’t think it is immune from unrest.

“The Syrian regime has to be worried about turmoil,” Lahcen Achy, an economist with the Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut, told The Media Line. “They are trying to implement fixes to quell potential anger. The social situation in Syria is similar to Egypt and Tunisia.”

Even as Syria’s gross domestic product has grown a fairly brisk 5 percent annually on average over the past five years, that hasn’t been fast enough to keep up with population growth. Syria’s unemployment rate is probably about 10 percent and among the country’s large young population it may three times that level. Some 36 percent of all Syrians are under age 14, which means the pressure on the government to create jobs will only grow.

Corruption is pervasive, with Transparency International ranking it among the world’s worst. And, if only about 12 percent of the population is below the country’s official poverty line, Syria is on the whole a poor country, with GDP per capita of $4,800, less than its neighbors Jordan and Turkey. The Ba’ath Party has ruled Syria uninterrupted since 1963.

Syria’s all important agricultural sector, which is a critical source of employment, has been hit by drought in the east and by mismanaged water resources. That causes a flood of immigrants into Syria’s cities over the last few years, creating an unprecedented level of urban poor. Syria’s limited reserves of oil are rapidly depleting.

Syrian President Bashar Assad said in a Jan. 31 interview with The Wall Street Journal that he was confident his government faced no threat of popular unrest. But he also promised to implement reforms, and the government has restored some subsidies. Right after Tunisia’s leader Zine El Abidine Ben Ali went into exile, Damascus announced it was increasing the heating oil allowance for public workers by 72 percent to the equivalent of $33 a month. This week it reduced tariffs on many imported food items.

That marked an about-face for the government, which like its peers elsewhere around the region, had been slashing subsidies.

The Syrian government was late in taking up economic reforms and has implemented it slowly. Change only got underway a decade ago after Bashar Assad succeeded his father to the top office in 2000 and only picked up momentum in the last three or four years, economists said.

Most of those reforms have focused on the financial sector – allowing private banks, easing rules on foreign investment and allowing a small stock exchange to open in Damascus, Said Hirsh, Middle East economist for Capital Economics in London, told The Media Line what reform hasn’t included is widespread privatization.

That has left Syria’s industry inefficient and uncompetitive globally and largely in state hands. But, it also means that a class of wealthy, connected businesspeople, like the Egyptian entrepreneur Ahmed Ezz, who enriched himself through close ties to the family of President Husni Mubarak and became the target of popular wrath, doesn’t exist in Syria for now, said Achy.

Officials in the government, army and the ruling Ba’ath Party have grown rich in the state-dominated economy – and analysts said they constitute a major obstacle to the economic reforms Syria needs — but the average Syrian probably isn’t aware of it. The government’s pervasive control of information and an elaborate domestic intelligence operation ensures that.

“The regime in Syria is very close, so there is some opacity about who is benefiting,” Achy said.

Thus, Syria’s first casino in nearly four decades on the highway between Damascus and the airport is shrouded in mystery. When it opened last December, the event received almost no local coverage. Reportedly owned by Khaled Houboubati, it apparently was never awarded a license even though it could not have been opened without official permission. Admission is mostly limited to foreign tourists and Syrian expatriates. Visitors report that Assad’s portrait, ubiquitous everywhere in the country, is not to be found.

Syria has the financial resources to buy time for its economy by increasing subsidies and by preserving jobs and entitlement with an inefficient state sector because the government holds a large $18 billion in foreign currency reserves and has relatively little debt on its books, said Hirsh. The reforms that have been implemented should encourage more foreign investment from the large Syrian expatriate community, he said.

“With economic reforms, workers’ remittances have been increasing and that has been an important source of investment,” Hirsh said. “The economic reforms are important to give some confidence for Syrian expatriates to start putting money back into the country.”

Tourism is a growth industry. The number of arrivals, including one-day visitors, jumped 42 percent to 9.5 million last year as visa restrictions have been eased with Turkey. Although regional unrest may put a damper on foreigners visiting the Middle East, Syria was listed among Lonely Planet’s top 10 countries for 2011.

Growing trade with Turkey, which wants to form a free-trade area with Syria, Jordan and Lebanon, may also help the Syria economy, Hirsh said.

Article © AHN – All Rights Reserved

View full post on All Stories

Wall Street Stories

Product Description
The 1901 investment masterpiece from the bestselling author of Reminiscences of a Stock Operator. The rarest and most-prized work published by Edwin Lefvre, Wall Street Stories is a delightful literary romp through the habits and customs of 19th century Wall Street. Now, this timeless work is being reissued in a fantastically lush new edition befitting this masterwork. In his distinctive and humorous style, Lefvre gives us a glimpse into the gilded age of Wall Stree… More >>

Wall Street Stories

Electronic Day Traders’ Secrets: Learn From the Best of the Best DayTraders

Product Description
Today’s hottest electronic traders tell others how to get in the game. More than 3 million investors trade electronically today…14 million accounts are predicted by 2002…Business Week, The Wall Street Journal, and The New York Times sing the praises of electronic trading. From the authors of the investing bestseller of 1998 comes Electronic Day Traders’ Secrets. Featuring exclusive tales of the e-traders who are setting the curve–and making up to 80,000 a d… More >>

Electronic Day Traders’ Secrets: Learn From the Best of the Best DayTraders

Morgan Stanley reports share profits of 43 cents in Q4

Linda Young – AHN News Writer

New York, NY, United States (AHN) – Wall Street firm Morgan Stanley announced Thursday that profits increased during the last three months of 2010.

Morgan Stanley reported fourth-quarter net revenues of $7.8 billion and income from continuing operations of $0.43 per diluted share.

The nation’s second largest investment bank said its wealth management and asset management business lines had strong performance while it had poor client activity in its investment bank unit.

Rivals Citigroup and Goldman Sachs also had poor client activity in their investment bank units.

Article © AHN – All Rights Reserved

View full post on All Stories

Trend Trading for a Living: Learn the Skills and Gain the Confidence to Trade for a Living

  • ISBN13: 9780071544191
  • Condition: New
  • Notes: BRAND NEW FROM PUBLISHER! BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed

Product Description
Trade the trend and you can trade for a living If you’re going to play the stock market, play to win by using a fundamental strategy of most hedge fund managers-trend trading. In Trend Trading for a Living, the trading coach and hedge fund manager known on Wall Street as “Dr. Stoxx” shares his personal strategies for analyzing markets, picking stocks, and knowing when to buy and sell. This step-by-step book offers a practical road map to ge… More >>

Trend Trading for a Living: Learn the Skills and Gain the Confidence to Trade for a Living

President Hu preempts American attack on yuan, ensuring smooth U.S. visit

Tejinder Singh – AHN News Correspondent

Washington, DC, United States (AHN) – Chinese President Hu Jintao, who will arrive in the U.S. on Tuesday for a state visit, refused to even accept Washington’s explanation of American economic woes, completely ignoring a U.S. demand for an appreciation of the Chinese currency.

Hu negated the concerns expressed by U.S. officials including Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton about China’s need to strengthen the “substantially undervalued” yuan because it puts other countries at a competitive disadvantage.

According to calculations with inflation counted in, the yuan is rising at a rate of about 10 percent a year, causing Geithner to add, “so if that appreciation was sustained over time, it would make a very substantial difference.”

Cautioning that China faces inflation problems that could lead to global concerns, Geithner said, “China presents enormous economic opportunities for the United States and for the world, but its size, the speed of its ascent, and its policies are a growing source of concern in the United States and in many other countries.”

Hu shrugged off these inflation related concerns, saying inflation was not the main pointer in assessing yuan’s value. He noted that a mechanism has been set to take care of fluctuations of the Chinese currency.

Speaking on U.S.-China relations at the state department last week, Hillary Clinton reiterated Secretary Geithner’s comments.

Clinton said,”China still needs to take important steps toward reform,” and urged China to allow its “currency to appreciate more rapidly.”

“These reforms, we believe, would not only benefit both our countries, but contribute to global economic balance, predictability, and broader prosperity,” she added.

According to media reports citing answers submitted to written questions from The Wall Street Journal and the Washington Post, Hu noted trade, energy and terrorism as areas for cooperation, cautioning the U.S. to “respect each other’s sovereignty, territorial integrity and development interests.”

The battle of words began last year when President Barack Obama, during a hectic schedule in New York, described the yuan exchange rate as a “real issue” and called for Beijing to let the yuan rise.

The following day at a dinner event hosted by the National Committee on U.S.-China Relations and the U.S.-China Business Council, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao, who is responsible for managing the Chinese economy, the world’s second-largest behind the United States, told his audience, “If the renminbi [yuan] appreciates by 20 percent to 40 percent according to the requests of the U.S. government, we do not know how many Chinese companies will go bankrupt and how many Chinese workers will be laid off and how many rural workers will go back to homes and there will be major turbulence in the Chinese society.”

Even after Obama had spent most of a two-hour meeting with the Chinese premier in New York pressing for a stronger yuan, according to White House officials privy to the meeting, Wen later told journalists that “common interests far outweigh our differences” and that despite “disagreements of one kind or another between our two countries, the differences can be resolved.”

In the global economy, the West has criticized China for months for keeping the yuan at an exceptionally low value, claiming Beijing enjoys an advantageous position due its manipulated lower yuan value, as it makes Chinese exports cheaper.

China abandoned a fixed exchange rate to the dollar in June, but the present exchange rate is controlled by the People’s Bank of China, which sets a daily rate.

The dispute is now that Beijing has allowed the yuan to appreciate only 1.9 percent since abandoning the peg.

According to White House sources, although the currency exchange rate will be high on the agenda, the Obama administration will continue to follow a softer diplomatic route.

Article © AHN – All Rights Reserved

View full post on All Stories

Market Maker`s Edge Day Trading Tactics from a Wall Street Insider

Market Maker`s Edge Day Trading Tactics from a Wall Street Insider

UNDERSTANDING ELECTRONIC DAY TRADING Every Investor’s Guide to Wall Street’s Hot

UNDERSTANDING ELECTRONIC DAY TRADING Every Investor’s Guide to Wall Street’s Hot

The Market Maker’s Edge, Day Trading Tactics from a Wall Street Insider – 2000 publication

The Market Maker’s Edge, Day Trading Tactics from a Wall Street Insider – 2000 publication

Day Trading Basics – Do You Have What it Takes to Be A Day Trader?

Product Description
What is Day Trading? Most financial markets are open between certain hours on a daily basis. Wall Street, for example, officially the New York Stock Exchange, is open Monday to Friday from 9am to 5pm Eastern Standard Time. Between those hours, Monday to Friday, hundreds of people trade units, buying and selling in accordance with the shifts and trends of individual markets. People trade everything from stocks to currencies, stock options to future contracts. Some m… More >>

Day Trading Basics – Do You Have What it Takes to Be A Day Trader?

Dansette

Powered by Yahoo! Answers