Posts Tagged ‘rate cuts’

The Real News From Omaha: Buffett’s New Managers Are No Buffetts

Category: Forex Video, My Blogroll, Trading & Investing, World News
Date: May 6th, 2009
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Hedge fund manager Jeff Matthews, who wrote “A Pilgrimage to Warren Buffett’s Omaha,” actually made the pilgrimage last weekend, along with 35,000 other Berkshire Hathaway investors.

In Matthews’ opinion, the most disconcerting news from the weekend was that the external managers Buffett has hired to manage Berkshire’s money are doing a lousy job. Specifically, Matthews says, they all lost more than 37% on the year — worse than the stock-market average.

The only reason to hire a money manager is to try to beat the market, because otherwise you should just buy an index fund. The fact that Berkshire’s external managers lost money isn’t surprising — everyone got hammered last year. The amount they lost, however, is. more…

Fed Report Points to Further Rate Cuts, Dollar Accelerates Its Record Breaking Declines

Category: Forex News
Date: February 27th, 2008
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via DailyFX

• Fed Report Points to Further Rate Cuts, Dollar Accelerates Its Record Breaking Declines
• Euro, Backed By Strong Data, Blows Through 1.50 Against The Dollar
• Australian Dollar Joins Its New Zealand Counterpart At Multi-Decade Highs


Fed Report Points to Further Rate Cuts, Dollar Accelerates Its Record Breaking Declines

Since the dollar marked its unfavorable milestones late in the US session yesterday, traders around the world have jumped in to sell the battered currency. Now at record lows, bulls have quickly lost hope in a possible rebound from an overextended greenback. In fact, looking across the market, we have seen the influences of an unwanted dollar on otherwise sound technical formations among the majors. Momentum in EUR/USD pushed the pair through the closely watched 1.50 level and quickly surpassed 1.51 in the same session. Those currencies with high yields and hawkish central banks proved especially attractive to those wanting to short the dollar. NZD/USD rallied to a new multi-decade high of 0.82 while the Australian dollar broke to a new 23 year high. This follow through momentum wasn’t found on sentiment alone, however; Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke’s semiannual testimony before the House Financial Services Committee certainly played its part. Few major changes were made in the central banker’s outlook for economic activity and Fed policy from last week’s minutes from the January 29-30 FOMC meeting; though his commentary did confirm the outlook for further policy easing. In his testimony, Bernanke said the policy group would be “carefully evaluating incoming information bearing on the economic outlook and will act in a timely manner as needed to support growth and to provide adequate insurance against downside risks.” In addition to his concern for growth, Bernanke had also recounted concern over inflation trends. While these worries have been present in the Fed’s commentary for some time, more media outlets and analysts have connected the dots and taken these forecasts to mean the economy will fall into a period of stagflation. Besides the Fed Chairman’s dour commentary, the market had further reason to sell dollars from two disappointing indicators. The Commerce Department reported a 5.2 percent drop in durable goods orders – the biggest such contraction in a year – predominately due to the drop in consumer sentiment and its expected effect on American’s spending habits. And, keeping the pressure on the housing market’s recession, new home sales dropped a greater-than-expected 2.8 percent to a 588,000-annual pace, now the weakest since 1995.