Có tin roài, FED giảm 0.5 mai VNI tăng 40 pts

Chủ đề trong 'Thị trường chứng khoán' bởi Thalamhatmuabay, 18/09/2007.

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  1. Thalamhatmuabay

    Thalamhatmuabay Thành viên rất tích cực

    Tham gia ngày:
    22/07/2002
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    Có tin roài, FED giảm 0.5 mai VNI tăng 40 pts

    Hì hì buồn ngủ quá anh em vào đây giải trí đê...........[​IMG]
  2. chungkhoan_dream

    chungkhoan_dream Thành viên rất tích cực

    Tham gia ngày:
    23/02/2007
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    Mình tin chắc rằng dù FED có đưa ra quyết định thuận lợi với TTCK thế giới thì thị trường VN cũng sẽ ko tránh khỏi 1 cơn bão to dưới tác động chỉ thị 03 bắt đầu từ cuối tháng 9, đầu tháng 10. Rất nhiều cổ phiếu sẽ bị bán tháo ra, nhất là Blue Chips. Đừng quá hy vọng vào 1 sự sáng sủa bởi vì lượng cung tiền vào thị trường ít và ko có sự bổ sung thì thị trường ko bao giờ có thể tăng được. Thử tính qua xem nếu VNI tăng khoảng 50 điểm thì có phải lượng vốn hoá tăng thêm hàng bao nhiêu ngàn tỷ đồng? Từ đó suy ra là FED cũng bó tay với TT VN thôi, may ra thì níu giữ chân Tây là tốt rồi, chúng mà bỏ chạy lúc này thì ko biết VNI trôi về đâu nữa. Đúng là thời loạn lạc quá
  3. nguyentrongduc

    nguyentrongduc Thành viên gắn bó với f319.com

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    trời
  4. Thalamhatmuabay

    Thalamhatmuabay Thành viên rất tích cực

    Tham gia ngày:
    22/07/2002
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    Sept. 18 (Bloomberg) -- Prices paid to U.S. producers fell more than forecast in August, diminishing concern over inflation as the Federal Reserve considers lowering interest rates.

    The 1.4 percent decrease, the biggest since October, followed a 0.6 percent increase in July, the Labor Department said today in Washington. So-called core prices, which exclude fuel and food costs, rose 0.2 percent after a 0.1 percent gain the month before.

    Slower inflation gives policy makers more room to cut their benchmark rate today in an effort to sustain the expansion in the face of a housing recession. A drop in fuel expenses pushed prices down in August and cooling economic growth will continue to restrain raw-material costs, economists said.

    The Fed ``can point to reasonably good news on inflation,'''' said Peter Kretzmer, a senior economist at Banc of America Securities LLC in New York, who accurately forecast the core rate. ``The weakness in the economy is making it difficult for companies to pass along increases. That bodes very well'''' for inflation in coming months, he said.

    The producer-price report is the second of three monthly inflation gauges. The government said on Sept. 14 that import prices dropped 0.3 percent in August, the first decline in seven months. Figures for consumer prices will be issued tomorrow.

    ``There is little residual inflation pressure in the U.S. economy,'''' said Joseph LaVorgna, chief U.S. economist at Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. in New York. ``The fact that most measures of core inflation have shown tame readings as of late gives the Fed the luxury of cutting rates aggressively if need be.''''

    More Foreclosures

    A private survey by RealtyTrac Inc. showed the number of Americans who may lose their homes to foreclosure more than doubled in August from a year earlier as subprime borrowers with adjustable-rate mortgages saw their monthly payments rise.

    The drop in producer prices last month was led by a 6.6 percent decline in energy costs that was the biggest since April 2003. Costs for gasoline, natural gas, heating oil and diesel fuel all fell.

    The Fed cut the rate on loans to banks on Aug. 17 as global stock markets slumped on concern damage from rising mortgage defaults was spreading. At the time, policy makers dropped language indicating their bias toward fighting inflation and instead highlighted a rising threat to economic growth.

    The Federal Open Market Committee will announce its decision at about 2:15 p.m. in Washington.

    Yield Spread

    After the report, the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note yielded 4.49 percent at 11:33 a.m. in New York, up from 4.47 percent late yesterday.

    The spread between the yield on 10-year Treasury notes and inflation-indexed bonds, which reflects investor expectations for price increases, was 2.34 percent today. That was below the 2.39 percent average of the past six months. The spread fell to 2.26 percent on Sept. 5, the lowest since January.

    Economists had forecast producer prices would decline 0.3 percent after a 0.6 percent increase, according to the median of 76 projections in a Bloomberg News survey. Core prices were expected to rise 0.1 percent.

    Over the past 12 months, producer prices rose 2.2 percent, down from a 4 percent increase in July. The year-over-year increase in costs excluding food and energy also eased to 2.2 percent compared with 2.3 percent in July.

    A separate report from the Treasury Department showed foreign buying of U.S. securities slowed in July to the weakest pace in seven months as a rout in the subprime mortgage market sapped demand for American bonds. Total holdings of equities, notes and bonds rose a net $19.2 billion, from a revised $97.3 billion in June.

    Fed Policy

    Economists almost universally forecast the Fed will cut the benchmark overnight lending rate between banks for the first time since 2003. The median calls for a quarter-point cut to 5 percent.

    Costs of intermediate goods, such as steel used in earlier stages of production, fell 1.2 percent in August, after a 0.6 percent increase the prior month, today''s price report showed. They were up 2.4 percent from a year ago.

    Excluding food and energy, intermediate prices fell 0.5 percent and were up 2.4 percent from August 2006.

    Prices for raw materials, or so-called crude goods, dropped 3 percent.

    The cost of consumer goods fell 1.8 percent as food charges fell and prices for capital goods rose 0.1 percent.

    Commodity Costs

    Faced with the prospect of an economic slowdown, some companies are lowering prices to stoke demand ahead of the key holiday-spending season in the last three months of the year. Apple Inc. Chief Executive Officer Steve Jobs earlier this month cut the price of the iPhone by $200 to boost sales. The calendar fourth quarter and the back-to-school season that just ended are Apple''s two busiest periods.

    Others are suffering from increases in commodity costs and are boosting prices as a result.

    ``We''ve already raised prices and have more planned,'''' Sara Lee Corp. Chief Executive Officer Brenda Barnes told analysts last week. ``We are certainly facing these headwinds of increased commodity costs, some of them at unprecedented levels, like wheat.''''

    Sara Lee fell $10 million short of covering the jump in raw-material costs, even after raising prices on bread and coffee, Barnes said.

    To contact the reporter on this story: Courtney Schlisserman in Washington cschlisserma@bloomberg.net .
  5. stockvn

    stockvn Thành viên rất tích cực

    Tham gia ngày:
    25/07/2006
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    đề nghị Mod gắn trên chán bác CK-dream câu "chuyên gia thối mồm"
  6. Thalamhatmuabay

    Thalamhatmuabay Thành viên rất tích cực

    Tham gia ngày:
    22/07/2002
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    Chúc mừng anh em FED cắt giảm 0,5% như dự tính, VNI hnay sẽ tăng mạnh .....

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