The Wall Street Journal noted last week:Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke on Friday ruled out a central bank bailout of state and local governments strapped with big municipal debt burdens, saying the Fed had limited legal authority to help and l…
Posts Tagged ‘federal reserve chairman ben bernanke’
Government Says No to Helping States and Main Street, While Continuing to Throw Trillions at the Giant Banks
No change: global economy still facing uncertainties
US Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke has made some remarks that have scared the markets a little bit, but what he has said isn’t all that surprising.
He has told the US Senate Banking Committee that record low interest rates would still be needed to support economic recovery, that the outlook for the US economy is ‘unusually uncertain’ and that the Fed is prepared to step in with ‘further policy actions’ to boost the US economy if needed.
It is hardly a surprise. The world economy is still very much in recovery phase and facing imbalances – chiefly in the form of an unprecedented debt hangover and its real-world recessionary consequences. It will take years to put right.
The economic bounce-back – such as it has been – from the depths plummed in 2009 was hugely assisted by fiscal stimulus packages across the world, record low interest rates and an inventory effect (notably strong in the auto industry where the swings in activity have been massaged by scrappage schemes and tax breaks).
But we are now entering a new phase. Unemployment in the US and many parts of Europe is high and economists are concerned that new jobs are not being created in the numbers that they should be at this point in the recovery phase. There is little prospect of certain sectors – like construction – soaking up the excess labour with a rapid return to pre-2009 levels of activity.
Lurking in the background in Europe are persistent worries over public debt, the health of the banking sector and continued strains on the euro currency.
The world economy is still in uncharted territory, this economic recession and recovery – with its financial origins and unprecedented debt overhang – is very different from past experiences. It looks like interest rates will stay very low for the foreseeable future, inflationary pressures not really a significant issue. On the upside, Asia is still looking very strong (though China’s car market and industrial growth is bound to slow in the second half).
Mr Bernanke has effectively reminded everyone that it’s not business as usual and that this economic recovery is likely to be slow and fragile. The rate at which fiscal stimuli can be dialled down without endangering growth prospects is likely to continue to be a contentious issue. I’ll be canvassing auto industry forecasters next week to get their latest take on where auto markets – and ultimately industry output – are heading.
A big concern, it seems to me, is where the major developed world economies will be going in 2011. If this economic recovery runs out of steam with interest rates at record lows, inflationary pressures subdued and many governments hemmed in on spending, getting it going again won’t be easy. And the risk of a Japan-style period of prolonged price deflation and slump would then be higher. I wonder what Obama makes of Cameron’s planned public spending cuts?
Can the Financial Reform Bill Fix the Economy?
Preface: If you’ve been too busy to pay attention to the details, and if you’re hoping that the financial reform bill which has just been passed will fix the economy, this essay will bring you up to date. Congress, Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernan…
US economy ‘not yet out of woods’: Fed chief
The US economy seems to be recovering but it is “far from being out of the woods,” Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said Wednesday.
In prepared remarks to business people in Dallas, Bernanke said that the financial crisis, the worst one since the Great Depression of 1930s, looks to “be mostly behind us.”
“The economy seems to [...]
Feb 11: CapitaLand, ComfortDelgro, Great Eastern Holdings
Singapore’s benchmark Straits Times Index (.FTSTI) fell 0.39% to close at 2,734.39 points yesterday.
US stocks dipped last night as worries over Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke’s strategy after the economy recovers offset optimism about a possible rescue for debt-laden Greece.
Here are some stocks which may see unusual trading today.
CapitaLand (CATL.SI), Southeast Asia’s biggest property firm, posted an 11% rise in quarterly profit, boosted by a one-time gain from the listing of its shopping arm.
Singapore bus and taxi operator ComfortDelgro (CMDG.SI) said today its full-year net profit rose 9.7% to $219.5 million, helped by a drop in fuel and electricity costs.
Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp’s (OCBC.SI) insurance arm Great Eastern Holdings (GELA.SI) posted a 94% rise in fourth quarter net profit to $148 million after a turnaround in its investment performance.
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Ben Bernanke, Federal Reserve Chairman, TIME Magazine Person Of The Year 2009
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, who helped steer the U.S. economy through its most challenging days since the Great Depression, was named TIME Magazine’s 2009 Person of the Year on Wednesday.
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Dec 8: Cosco, Hongkong Land, NOL, M1, StarHub, SingTel
The following companies may have unusual price changes in trading today, say Bloomberg and Thomson Reuters. Share prices are from the previous close. Singapore’s Straits Times Index added 0.2% to 2,796.98 last evening.
US stocks ended slightly lower last night after comments by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke sparked jitters about the economic recovery. Bernanke said the economy faces “formidable headwinds”, including a weak labour market and tight credit conditions.
Bernanke Blames Banks For Slow Recovery and High Unemployment . . . Then Gives Them a Pat on the Back and a Wink
As I have repeatedly written, unemployment will worsen because the too big to fails aren’t lending. See this.Bernanke just said the same thing:Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke on Monday blamed banks for slowing the recovery and keeping unemploymen…
Senator Sanders: “Don’t Believe Anybody Who’s Telling You ‘The Recession is Over’ “
Senator Sanders writes today:Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said, “it is very likely that the recession has ended.” Well, let me just suggest to Mr. Bernanke that today we have about 17 percent of our workforce – 26 million Americans – who are…
Bernanke’s Own Finances Dipped In 2008
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke was among the many Americans whose finances took a sharp hit in 2008, according to disclosure forms released by the central bank on Tuesday.
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Bernanke: “I Had To Hold My Nose” Over Bailouts
WASHINGTON — Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said Sunday that he had to “hold my nose” over last year’s taxpayer-financed bailouts of big financial companies but argued that the action had to be taken to avoid a major meltdown of t…
Bernanke: Jobless Rate To Stay High Even In Recovery
The U.S. jobless rate is likely to stay high even once the nation exits recession some time in the next few months, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said on Sunday.
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Week ahead comment July 27: Breaking new highs
Bernanke To Congress: Fed Has Exit Strategy
WASHINGTON (AP) — Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke sought to assure Wall Street and Congress Tuesday that the U.S. central bank will be able to reel in its extraordinary economic stimulus and prevent a flare up of inflation when the reco…
Bernanke Fends Off Calls To Tame The Fed
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke helped steer the economy away from what he calls “Depression 2.0.” Now he’s trying to defend the Fed itself.
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The Recession is Over
Could our long national nightmare be over? The economic contraction, this Great Recession, began in December 2007, and there’s no apparent end in sight. As the unemployment rate has spiked, analysts have thrown cold water on Federal Reserve Ch…



