Archive for August 17th, 2007

NFA permanently bars South Florida firm, Forward Forex, Inc.

August 15, Chicago - National Futures Association (NFA) has permanently barred Forward Forex, Inc. (Forward Forex), a Futures Commission Merchant and Forex Dealer Member located in Hollywood, Florida, from NFA membership. The Decision, issued by NFA’s Business Conduct Committee, is based on a Complaint filed in June 2007 and a settlement offer submitted by Forward Forex.

The Complaint charged that Forward Forex made misleading and deceptive sales solicitations to the public, used misleading and deceptive promotional material and failed to supervise its employees and solicitors. Additionally, the Complaint charged that Forward Forex failed to maintain required books and records.

NFA is the premier independent provider of innovative and efficient regulatory programs that safeguard the integrity of the derivatives markets.

Source: www.nfa.futures.org

Barclays Sees Market Falls as Global Slowdown Signal

Aug. 17 (Bloomberg) — Stock market investors are starting to price in a global economic slowdown as a financial crisis triggered by U.S. subprime mortgage losses deepens, according to Barclays Capital.

Equity markets are tumbling around the world this week, sending benchmark indexes in Europe and Asia to the lowest levels in months. U.S. stocks fell for most of yesterday before a late rally in banks and securities firms helped restore about $369 billion to the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index and $105 billion to the Dow Jones Industrial Average.

Fund managers and analysts are urging the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates soon to ease the worsening credit crunch caused by losses in the U.S. housing loan market. Countrywide Financial Corp., the biggest U.S. mortgage lender, had to tap an $11.5 billion bank line yesterday. Australia’s Rams Home Loans Group Ltd. failed to refinance A$6.17 billion ($4.8 billion) of short-term U.S. loans, forcing it to seek emergency funding.

Equity markets “are progressively discounting the demise of the heavily levered lenders, whilst starting to assume that there will be a negative impact on the global economic cycle,” London-based Tim Bond, head of asset allocation at Barclays Capital, said in a research note yesterday. “The equity markets appear to be expecting a much worse outcome for credit than the credit markets themselves are discounting.”

Financial stocks in the U.S. and Europe have fallen to almost the same level or below the lowest in the past 15 years relative to earnings, according to the report by the investment banking unit of Barclays Plc, the third-biggest U.K. lender.

Stocks Tumble

Standard & Poor’s 500 Financials Index has lost 8.3 percent since July. Asian stocks tumbled today, with Toyota Motor Corp. poised for its biggest loss in almost four years, after the yen rose to a one-year high as investors fled high-yielding, higher- risk assets on speculation a credit crunch will damp global economic growth.

“If the recent phase of apparent stability in the CDS market is an illusion borne of low liquidity, then the stock market’s attitude towards financial stocks becomes more understandable,” Bond wrote in the report.

Contracts on the CDX North America Investment-Grade Index, a benchmark for the cost of protecting investment-grade bonds, fell 2.5 basis points to 78 basis points after rising as high as 89 basis points earlier yesterday, according to Deutsche Bank AG. The LCDX index, which allows investors to bet on the U.S. leveraged loan market and rises as confidence improves, rose 0.4 to 94.3 after falling earlier yesterday to as low as 93.25, according to Goldman, Sachs & Co.

Seeking Buyers

In the U.S., mortgage rates for prime borrowers have risen by about 40 basis points compared with May. There is between $1 trillion and $1.5 trillion in mortgage debt seeking buyers and maybe the same amount in asset-backed commercial paper, along with $300 billion of leveraged buyout debt, Bond said.

“In this cycle, it is mostly the lenders, not the borrowers, who are excessively leveraged,” Bond said. As more lenders are forced to go out of business under the weight of subprime-related losses, “fewer lenders, particularly few lenders with apparently unlimited potential leverage ratios, imply less competition to lend and hence a higher overall price for credit.”

Spreads Widen

The spread, or extra yield, of BB rated debt in the U.S. over government debt, widened by an average 84 basis points from 229 basis points at the beginning of July, according to Calyon’s head of Asia credit research Dilip Parameswaran. Before the Asian financial crisis in 1997, the bonds traded at 150 basis points over U.S. Treasuries.

In the five major credit events worldwide since the devaluation of the Mexican peso in 1994, the spread rose between 54 and 224 basis points, he said.

The Fed will cut interest rates significantly after a series of cash injections into the money markets this month had limited effect, Credit Suisse Group said.

The rout in the financial markets is threatening to reverse the outflow of Japanese savings that has been supporting global economic growth, including the capital inflows into China, and it may even be too late to prevent a full unwinding of the carry trade, Credit Suisse analysts led by London-based Jonathan Wilmot wrote in a research report on Aug. 15.

“This is the fundamental source of savings underpinning the global circulation of capital, and the high level of global liquidity, risk appetite and ultimately, economic growth,” Wilmot said.

Taken from Bloomberg.com

Yen Set for Best Week Versus Dollar Since 1998; Carry Trade Cut

Aug. 17 (Bloomberg) — The yen rose, set for the biggest weekly gain versus the dollar and the euro in almost nine years, as traders fled higher-yielding assets funded by loans in Japan.

“Investors have completely lost confidence” in taking risk, said Seiichiro Muta, director of foreign exchange at UBS AG in Tokyo, the second-biggest foreign-exchange trader. “There’s strong interest to buy the yen.”

The yen has strengthened at least 4 percent against all 16 most-active currencies this week as a global rout in equities and emerging-market assets spurred investors to exit so-called carry trades. New Zealand’s dollar declined the most, set for the largest weekly loss since December 1985, after a measure of yen volatility jumped to the highest in eight years.

Japan’s currency climbed 5.1 percent to 112.63 against the dollar at 7:29 a.m. in London from 118.40 a week ago in New York. It touched 112.01 yesterday, the strongest since June 2006. It rose 7.3 percent to 151.04 per euro from 162.13 last week, the biggest gain since the introduction of the euro in 1999. The yen may strengthen to 112 against the dollar and 150 per euro today, Muta said.

UBS AG said its Risk Index reached a record 2.53, higher than after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the U.S. and the collapse of hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management LP in October 1998. The yen, which had been weakening for years, subsequently surged 20 percent in less than two months as investors who’d borrowed cheaply in the currency rushed to exit.

“Our Risk Index signals it’s a crisis that may be similar to or even worse than 1998,” Muta said.

`Thin and Disorderly’

Volatility on one-month dollar-yen options rose to 23.5 percent, the highest since January 1999, and volatility on one- month euro-yen options gained to 23.50 percent, the highest since September 1999. Higher volatility discourages carry trades as it implies the bets will be exposed to greater exchange-rate fluctuations.

“Volatility is extremely high as the markets are staying choppy,” said Masashi Kurabe, currency manager at Bank of Tokyo- Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. in Tokyo. “This is conducive for yen buying.”

The Reserve Bank of Australia propped up its currency yesterday after it tumbled 4.5 percent versus the U.S. dollar, the most since at least 1983.

The global credit crunch has made financial markets “extremely skittish,” central bank Governor Glenn Stevens said today on Queensland’s Gold Coast. “Where market conditions are disorderly, we are prepared to intervene from time to time.”

The Australian dollar traded at 78.02 U.S. cents from 78.68 late in Asia yesterday. Australia’s currency, a favorite of the carry trade because its interest rate is 6 percentage points higher than Japan’s, also reversed gains over the past year, falling 0.6 percent. It fell to 87.87 yen from 90.10 yen in New York yesterday.

ECB Rate Bets

New Zealand’s dollar, another favorite of the carry trade, has reduced gains to 1.6 percent in the past 12 months. It was at 75.42 yen from 78.37 yen.

The euro headed for its biggest weekly loss versus the dollar since June 2006 on speculation the global credit market turmoil will prompt the European Central Bank to delay raising interest rates in September.

“The ECB may postpone a rate hike next month,” said Ryohei Muramatsu, manager of Group Treasury Asia at Commerzbank in Tokyo. “It would be a bit negative for the euro,” which may drop to $1.3380 and 150.30 yen today, he said.

Interest-rate futures show traders pared bets on one more rate increase from 4 percent this year. The implied yield on the December Euribor contract was at 4.295 percent, down from 4.325 percent yesterday. The contract settles to the three-month interbank offered rate for the euro, which has averaged about 16 basis points above the ECB key rate since 1999.

Further Dollar Weakness

The dollar may weaken on speculation a U.S. report today will show U.S. consumer confidence fell in August, backing the case for the Fed to lower interest rates.

The U.S. currency may trim this week’s 2.1 percent advance against the euro after reports yesterday showed builders started work on the fewest homes in a decade in July and manufacturing in the Philadelphia region unexpectedly stalled this month.

“The risk is definitely to the downside in terms of how it should impact the economy,” said Thomas Harr, a senior foreign- exchange strategist at Standard Chartered Plc in Singapore. “In the near term, we can see further dollar weakness.”

The dollar traded at $1.3411 per euro from $1.3426. It may decline to $1.3900 by the end of September, Harr said.

Fed funds futures show traders see a 64 percent chance policy makers will cut the key rate by 50 basis points to 4.75 percent in September, up from zero percent a week earlier.

The Reuters/University of Michigan’s final preliminary index of consumer sentiment fell to 88.0 this month from 90.4 in July, according to a Bloomberg News survey of economists.

Taken from Bloomberg.com



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