Viernes 09/09/11 Comercio Internacional

Los acontecimientos mas importantes en el mundo de las finanzas, la economia (macro y micro), las bolsas mundiales, los commodities, el mercado de divisas, la politica monetaria y fiscal y la politica como variables determinantes en el movimiento diario de las acciones. Opiniones, estrategias y sugerencias de como navegar el fascinante mundo del stock market.

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Re: Viernes 09/09/11 Comercio Internacional

Notapor Victor VE » Vie Sep 09, 2011 11:03 am

Para los fanáticos de Back to the Future:

LIMITED EDITION 2011 NIKE MAG
http://nikemag.ebay.com/shoes

Provecho
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Re: Viernes 09/09/11 Comercio Internacional

Notapor jonibol » Vie Sep 09, 2011 11:12 am

Wall Street amplía caída tras discurso Obama y renuncia en BCE
viernes 9 de septiembre de 2011 11:41 GYT
Imprimir[-] Texto [+] NUEVA YORK (Reuters) - Las acciones estadounidenses ampliaban sus caídas el viernes, tras la inesperada renuncia de un miembro del comité ejecutivo del Banco Central Europeo (BCE) y el escepticismo sobre el plan de estímulo económico del presidente Barack Obama.
El promedio industrial Dow Jones caía un 2,07 por ciento a 11.061,88 unidades y el índice Standard & Poor's 500 perdía un 1,9 por ciento a 1.163,35 unidades.

El índice tecnológico Nasdaq Composite bajaba un 1,43 por ciento a 2.492,9 unidades.

(Editado en español por Javier López de Lérida)
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Re: Viernes 09/09/11 Comercio Internacional

Notapor Agustin » Vie Sep 09, 2011 11:12 am

Para los fanáticos de Back to the Future:

!Qué paja!
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Re: Viernes 09/09/11 Comercio Internacional

Notapor Raiden » Vie Sep 09, 2011 11:28 am

Si el fin de semana declaran el default el lunes seria día para recoger con pala hay varias que están cerca de su soporte... sin embargo el panorama de la semana que viene no es alentador las noticias no creo que vengan buenas asi que por el momento amarrarse al asiento, y darle la instruccion al asesor bursatil que no conteste el celular estos dias je je

Lo cierto que se viene una oleada bajista que coincide con los AT de foristas del grupo...
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Re: Viernes 09/09/11 Comercio Internacional

Notapor El_Diez » Vie Sep 09, 2011 12:26 pm

El grafico Euro / Dólar formó un HCH el dia martes , podria esperarse que forme un pullback bajista ( recupere algo y luego vuelva hacia abajo) ..podria llegar hasta los 1.34 ó 1.28 (niveles donde hay soporte)… .

"No está derrotado quien no triunfa, sino quien no lucha."
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Re: Viernes 09/09/11 Comercio Internacional

Notapor OrlandoR » Vie Sep 09, 2011 12:31 pm

INTERNACIONAL

Samsung no podrá vender en Europa su última tableta Galaxy Tab 10.1
09 DE SETIEMBRE DE 2011

La Audiencia Provincial de Düsseldorf dio la razón a Apple y prohibió a la surcoreana Samsung Electronics vender en Europa su última tableta electrónica, Galaxy Tab 10.1, cuyo diseño es muy parecido al del iPad de la estadounidense. En el proceso judicial que se llevó a cabo en la ciudad alemana sólo se han tenido en cuenta cuestiones relacionadas con el diseño y no patentes de software o tecnología.

El tribunal consideró que Samsung no ha mantenido la distancia necesaria respecto del modelo de Apple, a diferencia de los productos de otros competidores como Asus y Toshiba, que muestran claramente que hay otras posibilidades de diseñar los dispositivos.

La filial alemana de Samsung no puede vender en Europa tabletas con determinadas características muy parecidas al iPad como la forma rectangular, una superficie plana clara, ángulos redondeados y una parte trasera arqueada. La prohibición se extiende también al modelo anterior de la tableta de Samsung, el Galaxy Tab 7.7.
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Re: Viernes 09/09/11 Comercio Internacional

Notapor El_Diez » Vie Sep 09, 2011 12:42 pm

Aun con esta fuerte caida de hoy en los indices norteamericanos….. hasta el momento nada ha cambiado y sigo pensando que esta en tendencia alcista, .. .. el movimientos que tenga en los próximos días será clave y decisivo
"No está derrotado quien no triunfa, sino quien no lucha."
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Re: Viernes 09/09/11 Comercio Internacional

Notapor El_Diez » Vie Sep 09, 2011 12:49 pm

yo solo opino analizando el gráfico unicamente
"No está derrotado quien no triunfa, sino quien no lucha."
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Re: Viernes 09/09/11 Comercio Internacional

Notapor admin » Vie Sep 09, 2011 1:30 pm

Las bolsas de EE.UU. registran fuertes descensos

Por STEVEN RUSSOLILLO
NUEVA YORK (Dow Jones)--Las acciones estadounidenses sufrían fuertes bajas el viernes a media sesión y el euro descendía a un mínimo de siete semanas ante las preocupaciones renovadas sobre Europa y mientras los inversionistas expresaban temor de que el Congreso podría no aprobar el plan de empleos por US$447.000 millones presentado por el presidente Barack Obama.

El Promedio Industrial Dow Jones se negociaba hace unos momentos cerca de sus mínimos de sesión, con una caída de 293 puntos, o 2,6%, a 11.002. La baja del Dow se produce luego que el índice descendiera 119 puntos en la sesión anterior. El índice ha registrado pérdidas en cuatro de las cinco últimas sesiones.

El índice Standard & Poor's 500 retrocedía 29 puntos, o 2,5%, a 1.157, presionado por las acciones de los sectores de los materiales y financieras. Los 10 sectores del S&P 500 se negociaban a la baja. El Compuesto Nasdaq perdía 53 puntos, o 2,1%, a 2.477.

Las acciones caían al mediodía a raíz de rumores que señalaban que Alemania está planeando recapitalizar sus bancos si Grecia cae en cesación de pagos. El gobierno alemán está preparando un plan diseñado para proteger a sus bancos en caso de un posible incumplimiento de deuda griega, según Bloomberg TV.

"Alemania está diciendo que se va a preparar por si hay un incumplimiento", dijo Peter Boockvar, director gerente y estratega de valores de Miller Tabak & Co. "Los mercados están apostando y la gente está empezando a pensar que esto podría ser algo inevitable".

El viernes, el gobierno griego desmintió que planeara incumplir con sus pagos durante el fin de semana, con lo que restó importancia a los rumores, a los que calificó de "tonterías".

La acción se produce luego que Obama hiciera el jueves por la noche un llamado al Congreso para que apruebe un paquete por US$447.000 millones que incluía rebajas de impuestos e iniciativas de gasto para ayudar a impulsar el crecimiento económico. El paquete es levemente superior a lo que anticipaban los inversionistas de Wall Street.

Entre las acciones líderes, McDonald's encabezaba las caídas al descender 4,6% luego que la empresa informara resultados de ventas en tiendas comparables para el mes pasado que decepcionaron a los inversionistas.

Las acciones de Bank of America caían 2,8%. Los ejecutivos del banco han debatido la posibilidad de eliminar cerca de 40.000 puestos de trabajo durante la primera ronda de una reestructuración que se discutirá el lunes, según The Wall Street Journal
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Re: Viernes 09/09/11 Comercio Internacional

Notapor admin » Vie Sep 09, 2011 1:32 pm

Inventarios mayoristas EEUU suben en julio, ventas planas
viernes 9 de septiembre de 2011 10:35 GYT
Imprimir[-] Texto [+] WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Los inventarios mayoristas de Estados Unidos aumentaron a un récord en julio, en parte debido a las mayores existencias de equipos computacionales, maquinaria y vestimenta sin vender, dijo el viernes un informe gubernamental.
Los inventarios mayoristas totales crecieron un 0,8 por ciento a 462.400 millones de dólares, dijo el Departamento de Comercio, en línea con lo previsto por los analistas y tras un alza del 0,6 por ciento en junio.

Los inventarios mayoristas se apoyaron en un aumento del 3,7 por ciento en equipos computacionales y de un 1,3 por ciento en maquinaria. Las existencias de ropa crecieron un 2,9 por ciento.

Las ventas mayoristas permanecieron sin cambios en 396.000 millones de dólares después de alcanzar un máximo histórico en junio.

(Reporte de Rachelle Younglai)
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Re: Viernes 09/09/11 Comercio Internacional

Notapor El_Diez » Vie Sep 09, 2011 1:34 pm

Mario este es mi grafico Euro / Dólar.

Euro Dolar.jpg
Euro Dolar.jpg (90.76 KiB) Visto 3133 veces
"No está derrotado quien no triunfa, sino quien no lucha."
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Re: Viernes 09/09/11 Comercio Internacional

Notapor admin » Vie Sep 09, 2011 1:36 pm

Alemannia salio a proteger su banca contra el default (posible ) de Grecia.

Euro Crisis Prompts Germany to Insulate Banks as Stark Exposes ECB Divide

Germany pivoted to insulate its banks against the fallout of a possible Greek default as Juergen Stark’s resignation from the European Central Bank exposed the policy divisions aggravating the sovereign debt crisis.

The sense of disarray in the euro area drew fire from Group of Seven finance chiefs meeting in Marseille, France, today with U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner lobbying his European counterparts to get their act together for the good of the world economy. Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty even suggested Greece may need to quit the euro.

European authorities “need to do whatever they can do to calm these pressures,” Geithner told Bloomberg Television. “They have to demonstrate they have enough political will.”

Concern policy makers are failing to fix the biggest threat to global growth since the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. prompted investors to sell stocks worldwide and push the euro to a six-month low against the dollar. European bank and sovereign credit risk reached all-time highs as 10-year Treasury and German bund yields fell to record lows on demand for a haven.

Dogged by voter unrest and ideological splits, Europe’s leaders have reignited investor unease less than two months since they detailed their latest remedy for a crisis nearing its second anniversary. Finland is demanding collateral from Greece in return for new aid and German lawmakers want veto power. Governments are also dithering over a revamp and management of their regional rescue fund and fallen short of the closer fiscal ties investors say are needed to guarantee the euro’s future.

Policy Split
Evidence of another split at the heart of policy making was highlighted by Stark’s announcement that he will quit the ECB’s Executive Board, eight weeks before the retirement of President Jean-Claude Trichet and five months since Axel Weber stepped down as Bundesbank president.

Stark made the decision after privately protesting the bank’s program of buying stressed government bonds, which was widened last month to include those of Spain and Italy, a euro- area central bank official said.

The bond buying, which has totalled 129 billion euros ($177 billion) since it began in May, was the ECB’s effort to soothe markets as governments sought longer-term fixes. Not without controversy, it opened the Frankfurt-based central bank to criticism even from within its ranks that it blurs the line between monetary and fiscal policy and risks bloating its balance sheet.

No Advocate
“It’s generally known that I’m not a glowing advocate of these purchases,” Stark told Bloomberg News on Aug. 18.

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said his country will nominate a successor to Stark. Schaeuble’s deputy, Joerg Asmussen, will be the candidate, N-TV reported, without saying where it got the information.

Reflecting mounting concern Greece may default, German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government is preparing plans to shore up its nation’s financial sector. The measures involve aiding lenders and insurers that face a possible 50 percent loss on their Greek bonds if the next tranche of Greece’s bailout is withheld, said three coalition officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the deliberations are private.

The existence of a “Plan B” comes as German lawmakers intensify their criticism of Greece, threatening to withhold aid unless it meets the terms of its austerity package, after an international mission to Athens suspended its report on the country’s progress.

Short-Term Cost
The European discord is antagonizing G-7 finance ministers and central bankers during two days of talks in Marseille. Geithner said today that leaders must swallow the short-term political cost of ending the turmoil.

“It is completely within the capacity of the stronger members of the euro area to absorb those costs,” he said. “Costs would be much, much greater if they were to sit and do nothing.”

In echoing Geithner’s demand for greater “political will” and identifying the restoration of investor confidence in Europe as the “Number One” topic for the G-7 meeting, Flaherty said Greece may have to leave the single currency if it fails to press ahead with budget cuts.

“It’s necessary for the Greek government to stay the course,” Flaherty told reporters. “The alternative is probably that they leave the euro. I expect the Greek government would want to continue their fiscal consolidation.”

‘Organized Speculation’
Greece’s finance ministry said in a statement it is committed to “full implementation” of its rescue agreement and rejected discussion of a potential default as “organized speculation.” Credit-default swaps on Greek debt today climbed to a record, signaling a more-than 90 percent chance the nation will fail to meet debt commitments.

Europe isn’t the only threat to the world economy just two years after its deepest worldwide slump since World War II. International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde today urged officials to “act now and act boldly to steer their economies through this dangerous new phase.”

President Barack Obama yesterday announced a $447 billion plan to cut the 9.1 percent jobless rate, while Japan is struggling to prevent a stronger yen from undermining exports. Central bankers are signalling easier monetary policy may be coming even with benchmark interest rates at record lows.

“There is a pretty good chance of an actual stall which would lead the global economy to slide backward,” Nobel laureate Paul Krugman said in an interview in Yaroslav, central Russia, yesterday, describing the risk of a recession as “quite high, maybe 50 percent.”
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Re: Viernes 09/09/11 Comercio Internacional

Notapor admin » Vie Sep 09, 2011 1:36 pm

Alemania salio a proteger su banca contra el default (posible ) de Grecia.

Euro Crisis Prompts Germany to Insulate Banks as Stark Exposes ECB Divide

Germany pivoted to insulate its banks against the fallout of a possible Greek default as Juergen Stark’s resignation from the European Central Bank exposed the policy divisions aggravating the sovereign debt crisis.

The sense of disarray in the euro area drew fire from Group of Seven finance chiefs meeting in Marseille, France, today with U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner lobbying his European counterparts to get their act together for the good of the world economy. Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty even suggested Greece may need to quit the euro.

European authorities “need to do whatever they can do to calm these pressures,” Geithner told Bloomberg Television. “They have to demonstrate they have enough political will.”

Concern policy makers are failing to fix the biggest threat to global growth since the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. prompted investors to sell stocks worldwide and push the euro to a six-month low against the dollar. European bank and sovereign credit risk reached all-time highs as 10-year Treasury and German bund yields fell to record lows on demand for a haven.

Dogged by voter unrest and ideological splits, Europe’s leaders have reignited investor unease less than two months since they detailed their latest remedy for a crisis nearing its second anniversary. Finland is demanding collateral from Greece in return for new aid and German lawmakers want veto power. Governments are also dithering over a revamp and management of their regional rescue fund and fallen short of the closer fiscal ties investors say are needed to guarantee the euro’s future.

Policy Split
Evidence of another split at the heart of policy making was highlighted by Stark’s announcement that he will quit the ECB’s Executive Board, eight weeks before the retirement of President Jean-Claude Trichet and five months since Axel Weber stepped down as Bundesbank president.

Stark made the decision after privately protesting the bank’s program of buying stressed government bonds, which was widened last month to include those of Spain and Italy, a euro- area central bank official said.

The bond buying, which has totalled 129 billion euros ($177 billion) since it began in May, was the ECB’s effort to soothe markets as governments sought longer-term fixes. Not without controversy, it opened the Frankfurt-based central bank to criticism even from within its ranks that it blurs the line between monetary and fiscal policy and risks bloating its balance sheet.

No Advocate
“It’s generally known that I’m not a glowing advocate of these purchases,” Stark told Bloomberg News on Aug. 18.

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said his country will nominate a successor to Stark. Schaeuble’s deputy, Joerg Asmussen, will be the candidate, N-TV reported, without saying where it got the information.

Reflecting mounting concern Greece may default, German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government is preparing plans to shore up its nation’s financial sector. The measures involve aiding lenders and insurers that face a possible 50 percent loss on their Greek bonds if the next tranche of Greece’s bailout is withheld, said three coalition officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the deliberations are private.

The existence of a “Plan B” comes as German lawmakers intensify their criticism of Greece, threatening to withhold aid unless it meets the terms of its austerity package, after an international mission to Athens suspended its report on the country’s progress.

Short-Term Cost
The European discord is antagonizing G-7 finance ministers and central bankers during two days of talks in Marseille. Geithner said today that leaders must swallow the short-term political cost of ending the turmoil.

“It is completely within the capacity of the stronger members of the euro area to absorb those costs,” he said. “Costs would be much, much greater if they were to sit and do nothing.”

In echoing Geithner’s demand for greater “political will” and identifying the restoration of investor confidence in Europe as the “Number One” topic for the G-7 meeting, Flaherty said Greece may have to leave the single currency if it fails to press ahead with budget cuts.

“It’s necessary for the Greek government to stay the course,” Flaherty told reporters. “The alternative is probably that they leave the euro. I expect the Greek government would want to continue their fiscal consolidation.”

‘Organized Speculation’
Greece’s finance ministry said in a statement it is committed to “full implementation” of its rescue agreement and rejected discussion of a potential default as “organized speculation.” Credit-default swaps on Greek debt today climbed to a record, signaling a more-than 90 percent chance the nation will fail to meet debt commitments.

Europe isn’t the only threat to the world economy just two years after its deepest worldwide slump since World War II. International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde today urged officials to “act now and act boldly to steer their economies through this dangerous new phase.”

President Barack Obama yesterday announced a $447 billion plan to cut the 9.1 percent jobless rate, while Japan is struggling to prevent a stronger yen from undermining exports. Central bankers are signalling easier monetary policy may be coming even with benchmark interest rates at record lows.

“There is a pretty good chance of an actual stall which would lead the global economy to slide backward,” Nobel laureate Paul Krugman said in an interview in Yaroslav, central Russia, yesterday, describing the risk of a recession as “quite high, maybe 50 percent.”
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Re: Viernes 09/09/11 Comercio Internacional

Notapor admin » Vie Sep 09, 2011 1:37 pm

Hay division en Europa, no hay liderazgo ni direccion clara.

Oil down 87.11

-345.23
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Re: Viernes 09/09/11 Comercio Internacional

Notapor admin » Vie Sep 09, 2011 1:45 pm

Grecia dice que ellos implementaran totalmente las medidas de austeridad y que no caeran en default este fin de semana. El ministro de Finanzas dijio que esos rumores eran de muy mal gusto.

Greece Committed to ‘Full Implementation’ of Pact Amid Default Speculation

By Marcus Bensasson - Sep 9, 2011 2:14 PM ET .
Greece Committed to ‘Full Implementation’ of Bailout Kostas Tsironis/Bloomberg
The main headquarters of the Greek Finance Ministry sit in Athens.

.Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos dismissed “rumors” of a Greek default, saying the nation is committed to “full implementation” of the terms of a July agreement for a second aid package.

“This isn’t the first time that this organized wave of rumors over Greece’s default has appeared,” Venizelos said in an e-mailed statement today. “This is a game that’s in bad taste, organized speculation that is directed against the euro region and the euro as a whole.”

Stocks sank and the euro slid to a six-month low against the dollar today as three German officials said that Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government is preparing plans to shore up banks should Greece default. Investors are concerned that Greece isn’t implementing austerity moves fast enough to get a sixth payment from last year’s 110 billion-euro ($151 billion) bailout.

Greece committed is to the “full implementation” of the decisions of a July 21 summit for a second aid package worth 159 billion euros, as well as “its obligations arising from its agreements with its institutional partners,” Venizelos said.

Greece this week pledged to accelerate measures pledged in return for international financing, with EU and International Monetary Fund officials due to return to Athens next week to resume a suspended review of the country’s fiscal performance.

Responses from banks invited to participate in a 50 billion-euro debt swap program that forms part of the July 21 agreement have been “very positive,” Petros Christodoulou, head of the country’s debt management office, said in a telephone interview today. The government is looking for financial institutions holding 90 percent of Greek government debt expiring up to 2014 to take part in the program.
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