http://www.reuters.com/article/hotStocksNe...lBrandChannel=0Housing, dollar, oil on stocks' radarSun Nov 25, 2007 10:22am EST
By Cal Mankowski
NEW YORK (Reuters) - New data on a depressed housing sector figures large in
a fairly heavy schedule of economic reports due this week, while the dollar and oil approach threshold levels that could prove unsettling.
"Investors are anxious to see any kind of bullish news because we sure haven't seen much lately," said Fred Dickson, market strategist and director of retail research at D.A. Davidson & Co. in Lake Oswego, Oregon.
Key concerns include whether the dollar falls through $1.50 against the euro and sets a new low, and whether oil hits $100 per barrel or higher, Dickson said. On Friday, U.S. crude oil for January delivery (CLF8: Quote, Profile, Research) settled at a record $98.18 a barrel, up almost 1 percent on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Credit card groups will have reports on spending at the start of the Christmas shopping season for an early tip-off as to how the consumer is bearing up, Dickson noted.
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Coming reports this week:Tuesday _ Oct. durable goods orders. Consumer confidence for November
Wednesday _ The Beige Book- business activity of the 12 Fed Reserve Bank Districts. Existing home sales,
Thursday _ Third Quarter GDP and the Core Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index - showing economic growth and inflation.
Friday _ Personal income and spending data; and construction spending for October is due.
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Despite the heavy calendar of economic releases and a small number of quarterly earnings reports, many analysts are saying
concerns about the credit markets are paramount.
"The market's going to have its ear cocked for news about financial stress," said Michael Metz, chief investment strategist at Oppenheimer & Co in New York. "The market is not really dependent on economic or earnings news."
D.A. Davidson's Dickson notes that the stock market has been closely tracking the pricing of mortgage debt obligations since July.
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The Europeans are also scurrying...http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/euro...28644C5B167D%7DEuropean Central Bank in move to calm marketsBy Greg Robb, MarketWatch
Last Update: 12:24 PM ET Nov 25, 2007
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- The European Central Bank has pledged to provide extra funds into the money markets this week and continuing through the beginning of 2008 in a move designed
to ease mounting stress.
The central bank for the 13 countries that use the euro as their currency said it will "reinforce" its policy of providing more than usual liquidity "in the upcoming main refinancing operation as well as in the following ones for as long as it is needed and at least until after the end of the year."
The ECB has a regular refunding operation scheduled for Tuesday.
Analysts said
stress in the money market intensified last week after a spate of negative news confirmed fears of widespread exposure of European financial institutions to the aftershocks of the collapse of the American mortgage market.
European bond insurers appear to be the latest victims of the turmoil. A pair of French banks said they will invest about $1.5 billion in French-owned bond insurer CIFG Services.
And Swiss Re, the Zurich-based reinsurance giant, surprised analysts with a write-down of $1.07 billion in the value of derivatives backed by U.S. mortgage loans.
The ECB statement was seen as an effort to ease fears that money will not be available in the market. Facing many challenges to their balance sheets, banks have been hoarding cash and this, if taken too far, can freeze financial markets.
Markets have been under pressure since August, when worries that rising defaults in U.S. subprime mortgages caused financial markets to question the value of securities that consisted of pools of these loans and any derivative tied to mortgages.
This led banks to pull back from lending each other funds and markets only began to recover after the ECB and the Federal Reserve injected billions of dollars into the market.
There have been some improvements in markets over the past few months. For instance, the ECB has not added emergency funds since Sept. 6. But the tensions remained just below the surface and seem to be intensifying in recent days, analysts said.
"Global money markets appear to be crunching up again," said Andrew Cates, an economist at UBS.
"Much of the financial system is not working," agreed analysts at BNP Paribas in a research note Friday.
"A number of markets are closed, term finance is illiquid, sources of funding are shrinking, liquidity is thin and more demands are being placed on bank capital," BNP Paribas said.
The situation "calls out for monetary ease," said the BNP Paribas analysts.
(Greg Robb is a senior reporter for MarketWatch in Washington.)
CYA