The Rookie DayTrader
Visit our Home Site at The Rookie DayTrader for more tips and training. Learn to trade in the stock market. We provide a step by step learning process for the beginning investor.
We are now Mobile enabled
The Rookie DayTrader Blog is now Mobile enabled for the fillowing types:

iphone, ipod, aspen, incognito, webmate

android, cupcake, dream, froyo

Blackberry Storm/Torch blackberry9500, blackberry9520, blackberry9530, blackberry9550, blackberry9800

Palm webos

Samsung s8000, bada

Just use the address: http://www.rookiedaytrader.net

Your device type will automatically be selected.
World Market Watch
US Stock Market Indexes
Energies Monitor

Posts Tagged ‘Bank Of England’

3 Things You Need to Know Before Trading

*Stocks were generally weak in Asian trade. The Nikkei in particular had a bad day as it fell almost 3.6% on the session; the biggest daily decline in about three months. Australia and the Hang Seng were each down by about one percent and Shanghai lost a half percent. European indexes were also broadly lower with both the Footsie and Dax off by one percent. US stock futures are trading down a half percent.

*The Q2 reading of Australia’s Current Account Balance was a deficit of AD$5.6 billion, about one billion less than forecast. Their Net Exports as a percent of GDP rose 0.4% in the quarter.

*The July reading of Australia’s Retail Sales were +0.7% on a month on month basis, beating the estimate of +0.4%.

*The preliminary July reading of Japan’s Industrial Production is +0.3% on a month on month basis, better than the forecast for a decline of 0.2%.

*The July reading of Japan’s Retail Trade was up 0.7% from the month before; it had been forecast to gain 0.5%.

*The August reading of Germany’s Unemployment Rate was steady at 7.6%, as expected. The net change in the number of Unemployed was -17k, just missing the -20k estimate.

*In July there were 48.7k Mortgage Approvals in the UK, according to the Bank of England; a couple thousand more than expected.

*The weekly report on chain store sales from ICSC shows an increase of 0.1% on a week to week basis for the week ended August 28. The Johnson Redbook report of the same thing is due out at 7:55am CDT.

*The June reading of the Case/Shiller Home Price Index is due out at 8:00am CDT, it is expected to be +3.50% on a year over year basis. The August reading of the Chicago Purchasing Managers Index is due out at 8:45am CDT, three minutes earlier for subscribers. The Chicago PMI is expected to be 57.0, which would be down from 62.3 the month before. The August reading of Consumer Confidence is set to be released at 9:00am CDT, it is forecast to improve three tenths on the month to 50.7.

 

For more information visit  http://www.worldmarketmedia.com/779/section.aspx/2303/post/3-things-you-need-to-know-before-trading

- About the Author: WorldMarketMedia.com (The Global Online Investment Community) is a high traffic stock market, news data website providing cutting edge new media products and services to publicly traded companies worldwide. Our Editor’s Desk authors insightful real-time coverage on the economy, the capital markets and their listed companies. Article Source

Morning Call: Global stocks slump after the Fed signals a slowdown

Overnight Developments

  • European stocks are weaker with the European Stoxx down -1.15% and Sep S&Ps down -15.10 points. The drop in US stocks that began after the FOMC meeting yesterday afternoon accelerated in overnight trade with Sep S&Ps falling to a 1-week low as the Fed signaled the recovery is decelerating. Treasuries around the globe gained, with the US 2-year T-note yield dropping to a record low of 0.4892%, while the yield on the 10-year German bund slipped to a record low of 2.458%. The dollar index rose to a 1-1/2 week high and commodities slumped with copper declining to a 1-week low. Adding to pressure on European stocks was the Bank of England’s quarterly inflation report in which the BOE cut its economic growth estimate for England to a 3.0% annual pace instead of the 3.6% rate forecast in May and said that inflation will be at about 1.5% in 2012, lower than its 2.0% goal, which signals the economy may need more emergency stimulus. July UK nationwide consumer con fidence tumbled a more-than-expected 7 points to a 15-month low of 56, which aided a drop in the British pound to a 1-1/2 week low against the dollar.
  • The Asian markets today closed mostly lower with Japan down -2.70%, Hong Kong -0.83%, China +0.62%, Taiwan -1.02%, Australia -1.88%, Singapore -1.17%, South Korea -1.32%, India -0.82%. Japan’s Nikkei 225 Stock Index fell to a 2-1/2 week low on economic growth concerns after Jun Japan machine orders, an indicator of business investment in 3 to 6 months, rose +1.6% m/m, far less than the expected +5.4% m/m increase. Japan’s exporters also closed lower after the yen surged to a 15-year high against the dollar as a stronger yen reduces the value of overseas income at Japanese companies when converted into their home currency. Chinese bank stocks weakened after China’s banking regulator ordered banks to transfer off-balance-sheet loans onto their books and make provisions for those that may default. Adding to evidence that China’s economy is cooling, China’s July industrial output rose +13.4% y/y, the least in 11 months, while new loans in July were 532.8 billion yuan, be low expectations of 600 billion yuan. China’s July inflation quickened to 3.3% y/y, the fastest pace in 21 months, boosted by a low year-earlier base for comparison and rising food costs.

Overnight U.S. Stock News

  • Sep S&Ps this morning are down -15.10 points. The stock market yesterday traded in negative territory throughout the day, although a late-day rally helped it to close well above its worst levels (Dow -0.51%, S&P 500 -0.60%, Nasdaq Composite -1.24%). Bearish factors included (1) carry-over weakness from a fall in Chinese stocks on evidence that China’s economic growth is slowing after July China imports rose at their slowest pace of growth in 9 months, while July property prices in 70 major Chinese cities posted their smallest increase in 6 months, (2) the unexpected decline in Q2 nonfarm productivity which fell for the first time in over 2 years (-0.9% versus expectations of +0.2%), (3) weakness in materials and energy producers after the dollar index rallied to a 1-week high and the prices of most commodities tumbled, and (4) the fall in technology stocks led by a slump in semiconductor shares after Barclays Plc and R.W. Baird & Co. reduced their rating s on Intel, the world’s largest semiconductor manufacturer, because of weakening orders for personal computer components.
  • Bullish factors included (1) strength in US phone companies after Wells Fargo upgraded the sector to “marketweight” from “underweight,” saying that US telephone stocks are increasingly appealing as a haven from slowing growth in the economy and because the industry pays out historically high dividends relative to the S&P 500 Index and that the industry “appears to be on the verge of a turnaround,” and (2) the post FOMC statement in which the Fed said they will reinvest principal payments on mortgage holdings into long-term Treasury securities as they expand their quantitative easing in an attempt to bolster economic growth and keep the US economy from lapsing back into recession.
  • Cree (CRE) slumped 9.8% in European trading after the company forecast Q1 sales of $280 million at most, below analysts’ estimates of $284.3 million.

A123 Systems (AONE) dropped 4.6% in European trading after the company reported a Q2 loss of 33 cents a share, wider than the 27-cent loss estimated by analysts.

Day Trader: Click here to read the complete Morning Call 

Overnight U.S. Stock News

  • Sep S&Ps this morning are down -15.10 points. The stock market yesterday traded in negative territory throughout the day, although a late-day rally helped it to close well above its worst levels (Dow -0.51%, S&P 500 -0.60%, Nasdaq Composite -1.24%). Bearish factors included (1) carry-over weakness from a fall in Chinese stocks on evidence that China’s economic growth is slowing after July China imports rose at their slowest pace of growth in 9 months, while July property prices in 70 major Chinese cities posted their smallest increase in 6 months, (2) the unexpected decline in Q2 nonfarm productivity which fell for the first time in over 2 years (-0.9% versus expectations of +0.2%), (3) weakness in materials and energy producers after the dollar index rallied to a 1-week high and the prices of most commodities tumbled, and (4) the fall in technology stocks led by a slump in semiconductor shares after Barclays Plc and R.W. Baird & Co. reduced their rating s on Intel, the world’s largest semiconductor manufacturer, because of weakening orders for personal computer components.
  • Bullish factors included (1) strength in US phone companies after Wells Fargo upgraded the sector to “marketweight” from “underweight,” saying that US telephone stocks are increasingly appealing as a haven from slowing growth in the economy and because the industry pays out historically high dividends relative to the S&P 500 Index and that the industry “appears to be on the verge of a turnaround,” and (2) the post FOMC statement in which the Fed said they will reinvest principal payments on mortgage holdings into long-term Treasury securities as they expand their quantitative easing in an attempt to bolster economic growth and keep the US economy from lapsing back into recession.
  • Cree (CRE) slumped 9.8% in European trading after the company forecast Q1 sales of $280 million at most, below analysts’ estimates of $284.3 million.

A123 Systems (AONE) dropped 4.6% in European trading after the company reported a Q2 loss of 33 cents a share, wider than the 27-cent loss estimated by analysts.

Day Trader: Click here to read the complete Morning Call 

 

Morning Call: Strong Asian economic data boosts most global stocks

Overnight Developments

  • Global stocks are mostly higher with the European Euro Stoxx 50 Index up +0.57% and June S&Ps up +12.20 points. The dollar and Treasuries are weaker and commodity prices rose after economic reports from Asia show accelerating growth. China’s exports in May jumped by the most in 6 years, while Q1 Japan GDP was unexpectedly revised higher. Daimler AG climbed 4% after forecasting Mercedes-Benz sales will advance at twice the rate of the overall market on demand from China, while Lafarge SA, the world’s biggest cement maker, gained 4.3% after Citigroup recommended buying the shares. Overnight deposits at the ECB rose to a record 369 billion euros ($444 billion) today, the most since the start of the euro currency in 1999, as an increase in counterparty risks prompts European banks to deposit their excess funds with the ECB’s overnight deposit facility rather than lend. As expected, the Bank of England maintained its benchmark interest rate at 0.50% and held its asset purchase target at 200 billion pounds.
  • The Asian markets today closed mostly higher with Japan up +1.10%, Hong Kong +0.06%, China -1.15%, Taiwan +1.56%, Australia +1.14%, Singapore +1.23%, South Korea +0.22%, India +1.59%. Japanese stocks closed higher after Japan’s Q1 GDP was unexpectedly revised up to a 5.0% annualized rate from 4.9%, driven by exports and an upward revision to consumer spending (+0.4% q/q from the previously reported +0.3% q/q). In a separate report, May Japan CGPI rose +0.4% y/y, the first increase in producer prices in 17 months, which may ease deflation concerns as an increase in raw-material costs fueled price gains. Aussie stocks closed higher after Australia’s jobless rate declined -0.2 to a 16-month low of 5.2% in May when employers added 26,900 to payrolls, more than market expectations of 20,000. China’s May exports rose +48.5% y/y, the biggest gain in more than six years, which indicates the European debt crisis has yet to slow the world’s fastest-growing major economy. Desp ite the strong export figure, China’s Shanghai Stock Index closed lower after China’s property prices jumped +12.4% y/y in May, the second-fastest pace on record, which raises concern the government will step up tightening measures to cool the property market.

 

Click here to read the complete Morning Call and get your own free copy.