European union posts
FeedPosted Mar 16th 2011 9:30AM by Jason Raznick (RSS feed)
Finance ministers in the European Union agreed Tuesday to new reforms designed to improve market confidence, penalize governments that do not follow budget rules, and increase budget discipline. A key aspect of these proposed rules is that any sanctions against E.U. members will be more automatic and less open to any political intervention.
However, Jean Claude Trichet, the head of the European Central Bank, does not believe these reforms go far enough to address the existing problems, stating that the reforms were "insufficient to draw the lessons from the crisis we had to cope with."
Continue reading Trading the European Union's New Enforcement Rules
Posted Nov 29th 2010 3:30PM by Sheldon Liber (RSS feed)
Filed under: International Markets, International Business Machines (IBM), Chasing Value™, Financial Crisis

This past weekend the
European Union cast a bailout plan for Ireland that should be noted as another highlight reflecting not just the problems in Ireland but more broadly the lackluster potential for anything but a meager increase in the world economy over the next few years. Some will be affected more the others and today Ireland just happens to be the attention grabber, with passions running deep:
- "This is not a rescue plan. It is the longest ransom note in history: Do what we tell you and you may, in time, get your country back," said Fintan O'Toole, a commentator and author who led a weekend protest by labor-union activists in central Dublin against the imminent bailout. He called the average interest rate being demanded "viciously extortionate."
Despite all the government printing presses running overtime, inflation does not appear to be on the horizon. Wages are going nowhere, rents are stagnant, and pricing power is modest except for the very few. The biggest inflationary pressure has come from oil prices over the past decade, and that is still the most likely commodity to wreak havoc going forward if there is inflationary pressure. Though the clouds over the global economy are thick, there still will be rays of sunshine in the stock market.
Continue reading Chasing Value: Stocks and Irish Bailout -- ACN & IBM
Posted Jun 17th 2010 5:30PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: Good news, Financial Crisis

Thursday's good new data point comes from the
International Monetary Fund, which said Greece's budget deficit reduction plan and economic overhaul appears to be on-track.
The IMF termed fiscal developments as "positive with central government revenue coming in closely as expected" and with expenditures under control.
The group also said pension reform has advanced and an agreement has been reached on many key parameters as outlined in the memorandum or understanding. Structural reforms are also progressing, including in the areas of local administration, privatization, labor market, and tax administration.
Continue reading Ray of Light: IMF Says Greece's Deficit-Cutting Plan On-Track
Posted May 9th 2010 10:10AM by Connie Madon (RSS feed)
Filed under: International Markets, Market Matters, Politics, Financial Crisis
European Union leaders have agreed to set up an emergency fund to stop the spread of the Greek crisis and shore up the euro. The amount of the fund was not disclosed, but leaders say it will be in place before Asia starts trading.
The catalyst for setting up the fund was the collapsing euro, which fell 4.3% last week. In addition, spreads on Greek, Spanish and Portuguese bonds widened last week, further indicating a lack of confidence in the EU. European banks have suffered big losses, especially those with exposure to Greece, Portugal and Spain.
Continue reading EU Emergency Fund to Prevent Spread of Greek Crisis
Posted May 8th 2010 10:30AM by Ted Allrich (RSS feed)
Filed under: Ford Motor (F), Toyota Motor Corp. (TM), Comfort Zone Investing
If you believe the economic recovery is just beginning, then the sell-off this week was a welcome opportunity. If you bought any stocks two weeks ago, you were hurting, but if you were looking to buy, opportunity was at the front door. Will the rally that started last July when the DJIA traded at 8058 continue? Or is this the apex, having touched 11,309 (up 40% in less than a year), and the only direction is down? I don't think so. Here's why.
The U.S. economy is recovering. All the data from manufacturing to housing sales, even employment (224,000 non-farm workers were added in April, 290,000 total workers found new jobs), show improvement.
Car sales were up 25% for most automakers in the month of April compared to last year's April. Factory orders rose 1.3% in March, helped by higher demand for machinery, appliances, and primary metals. Analysts thought the number would be negative .1%. Pending home sales rose a seasonally-adjusted 5.3% in March. Again, analysts thought the number would be 4%. Pending home sales for the year to date are now up 21.1% from a year ago.
Continue reading Comfort Zone Investing: If You Believe ...
Posted May 2nd 2010 9:40AM by Connie Madon (RSS feed)
Filed under: International Markets, Market Matters, Politics, Financial Crisis
When the financial meltdown struck in the United States in 2008, the contagion quickly spread throughout the world, including the European Union (EU). However, unlike the Federal Reserve, which has unilateral authority to act on behalf of the United States, the EU has no such authority.
The EU barely survived 2008 and 2009. Then this year, Greece had difficulty refinancing its sovereign debt. Again, unlike the United States, where the debt came from financial institutions, in Greece the debt is government debt.
Continue reading The European Banking Crisis: An Overview
Posted Apr 30th 2010 12:30PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: Financial Crisis
Thursday's events in Europe provided some encouragement, if not universal calm, regarding the Greek debt saga, including the promise that Europe and the International Monetary Fund will now move relatively swiftly to put together a suitable package that will assist the Mediterranean nation's transition to fiscal solvency.
But even if Europe again show signs of "snatching defeat from the jaws of victory," investors should not anticipate a sudden return to the barter system, globally.
Continue reading One 'Trump Card' Left Should EU, IMF Talks Disappoint Again
Posted Apr 12th 2010 4:40PM by Joseph Lazzaro (RSS feed)
Filed under: International Markets

A week or so ago, there was talk of the euro's demise. Today's there's talk of the E.U. stabilization plan for budget-beleaguered Greece as being
"a defining moment" for the euro. Such is the fickle sentiment (and futile attempts at prognostication) amid objective economic conditions that are continually shifting.
Further, those with even a modest amount of investment experience knew from the start that the euro would not be going away at the sign of its first hic-cup (Greece). Similarly, those with investment experience also know that the stabilization plan for Greece does not mean Europe will not see another fiscal crisis in a second country: one could surface in a year, or a quarter, or a month, if the right economic conditions line up.
Continue reading EU-Greece Pact Means Dollar Will Now Have to Earn All Gains
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