Blogi

Blogi ekonomistów z kraju i ze świata. Treści publikowane poniżej są przedrukami artykułów zamieszczanych przez autorów na ich oryginalnych blogach.
Zamieszczane tu opinie, oceny bądź przewidywania w żadnym przypadku nie powinny być utożsamiane ze stanowiskiem Narodowego Banku Polskiego ani redakcji Obserwatora Finansowego.

Ostatnie wpisy

Euro Area GDP

Marc Chandler / 17-05-2013
The euro area provided its first estimate of Q1.  The 0.2% decline in GDP comes after a 0.6% contraction in Q4 and confirms the euro area as the weakest among the high income  regions.  It is the sixth consecutive quarterly contraction, a record of dubious distinction. This Great Graphic was posted on lemasabachthani blog. The first chart shows [...]

Moody’s upgrades Turkey’s government bond ratings to Baa3, stable outlook

Moody's / 17-05-2013
[Full text] Editors note: Moody’s released the following press release yesterday in conjunction with a ratings action it took on Turkish sovereign debt. Moody’s Investors Service has today upgraded Turkey’s government bond ratings by one notch to Baa3 from Ba1, and has assigned a stable outlook. The key drivers for today’s rating action are: 1. Recent and expected future improvements [...]

What Japanese Investors Bought

Marc Chandler / 15-05-2013
Country specific data on Japanese portfolio capital outflows is lagged, like the US TIC data, by two months.  The March data was recently released.  This Great Graphic from Bloomberg shows Japanese investors bond purchases between US Treasuries (green), French bonds (red) and Australian bonds (blue). One of the key take aways is the Japanese appetite for [...]

Euro Zone Members GDP Performance since 2007 in One Table

Marc Chandler / 14-05-2013
This Great Graphic was spotted by a colleague Andrew Hofer. He saw it on the Nikos Tsafos’ blog Greek Default Watch blog.  It is a color-coded tracking of how the individual members of the euro  have done in terms of GDP and its composition since 2007. The first column shows GDP relative to 2007.  Germany, third [...]

Asset Managers Embrace ETFs

Marc Chandler / 13-05-2013
This Great Graphic was in a report by Chris Flood of the Financial Times. It shows the increased use of ETFs by asset managers.  Flood reports that ETFS are now used by 18% of US institutional fund managers, up 4 percent points over the past year, based on figures from Greenwich Associates. A study by Blackrock of the [...]

Some thoughts on negative deposit rates at the ECB

Marc Chandler / 10-05-2013
Since the ECB’s decision not to pay interest on reserves, when it brought the deposit rate to zero last July, banks have shifted their funds out of the deposit facility and into current balance.  At the same time, they moved funds out of the ECB altogether. On May 8th, banks further trimmed their overnight deposits at [...]

Portugal’s Step Forward

Marc Chandler / 08-05-2013
This is an important day for Portugal. It is selling 10-year bonds for the first time in more than two years. Demand is reportedly strong. Today’s 10-year sale follows the 5-year bond sale in January and heralds to full return of Portugal to the capital markets. Portugal’s success in returning to the capital markets is [...]

No Surprises from the Fed-QE on Course

Marc Chandler / 01-05-2013
The Federal Reserve delivered as expected. Its economic assessment was little changed, not being swayed one way or the other by most of the high frequency data. It did recognize that inflation has been “running somewhat below” the FOMC’s longer-term objective, when adjusted for energy prices. The FOMC reiterated that its monthly purchases can be adjusted [...]

Euro Area and US Consumer Prices

Marc Chandler / 30-04-2013
There is much talk of an ECB rate cut on Thursday. Many economists have forecast a cut after a disappointing series of German data last week. Even if the German economy did not contract in Q1 after contracting in Q4, it is off to a poor start in Q2. The case for an ECB rate cut, [...]

Sinn kontra Soros, czyli co mają zrobić Niemcy

Metablog Obserwatora Finansowego / 30-04-2013
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Czy Niemcy powinny wyjść ze strefy euro? A gdyby tak się stało, kto by na tym zyskał, a kto stracił? Zapoczątkowana tymi pytaniami  na przełomie 2011 i 2012 roku debata szczególnie intensywnie żyła latem ubiegłego roku w europejskiej ale też i amerykańskiej blogosferze. Teraz powraca.


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