GM Says ‘Nobody’
Makes
Money Amid European
Car-Price Cuts
28
September, 2012
General
Motors Co. (GM) said Europe’s car industry will remain
unprofitable at current vehicle pricing levels, while Volkswagen AG
(VOW) said some competitors are at risk of going out of business
without state aid.
Fiat
SpA (F) and PSA Peugeot Citroen (UG) are producing “very scary
numbers” with discounts of as much as 30 percent off gross sale
prices, Susan Docherty, who runs European operations for GM’s
Chevrolet unit, told reporters today at the Paris Motor Show.
“Nobody can make money in Europe when you’ve got incentives at
that level.”
Demand
has plunged so much that deliveries continue to tumble, even with
such large price cuts. Although discounting in Germany is at the
highest in more than a year, according to industry publication
Autohaus PulsSchlag, car sales across Europe may fall to a 17-year
low, the region’s main auto- manufacturing trade group has
predicted.
For
article GO
HERE
Barclays Opens Massive Brand New Precious Metals Vault In London
27
September, 2012
It
appears that JPM and HSBC's monopoly in the warehousing
of tungsten gold
is coming to an end. Just two weeks after QEternity was announced, it
has become obvious that the only things, literally, that will matter
in the future are the ABCDs: Anything Bernanke Can't Destroy. And as
a result of a surge in physical purchases, buyers need to store their
metal somewhere. Sure enough, one of the the UK's most insolvent
banks - Barclays - is more than happy to provide its brand spanking
new warehousing services, with the opening of what will be on of
Europe's largest PM vaults. From Dow Jones: "Barclays has opened
its first precious metals vault in London in a bid to satisfy growing
client demand for bullion as a store of value, the bank said
Thursday. The vault, which houses gold, silver, platinum, palladium
and rhodium and began operating earlier this month, is
one of the largest in Europe. While
the bank already has extensive trading and clearing capabilities,
this is the first time that Barclays has been able to offer its own
precious metals storage facility to its customers, having previously
relied on third-party storage." Of course, if and when the
scramble comes and everyone demands their gold from the vault located
in an unknown location, but somewhere in the inner loop of London's
M25, Barclays will just say "Ooops." But we will cross that
bridge when we get to it.
From
DJ:
The vault "is a very significant milestone in the expansion of our physical commodities offering, filling an important gap across metals and energy," said Mike Bagguley, head of commodities and FX at Barclays. "In doing so we further strengthen our metals business, and our presence in the bullion market," he added.
Demand for bullion as an investment vehicle has been rising apace in recent years, with the value of gold almost tripling between the start of the global financial crisis in late 2008 and the metal's record highs of around $1,920 a troy ounce in September last year. According to the World Gold Council, global demand for physical gold bars was 1,159 metric tons in 2011, up 30% on the previous year.
Curious
why Ben Bernanke is a goldbug's best friend? Here it is from the
horse's mouth:
"Since QE3, the number of enquires we're getting about buying gold have gone up," said Jonathan Spall, product manager for metals at Barclays.
Barclays
is not the first, and certainly will not be the last to offer
paid confiscation warehousing services:
Aside from the Bank of England, HSBC Holdings PLC and JPMorgan Chase & Co. are the only other banks with their own precious metal vaults in London, which is the center of the global bullion market. Deutsche Bank AG also plans to open a new precious metals vault in London next year.
Wonder
where the vault will be located in case you want to "check"
the sanctity of its contents? Here:
Like most gold vaults in the U.K., Barclays' facility is located within the area bounded by the M25 road that orbits London. Barclays' vault was designed and built by Brink's Limited UK--a subsidiary of leading global security firm Brink's, Inc.--and is protected by a purpose-built security system.
Finally,
as to who will be able to benefit from the new facility: "The
vault caters for institutional investors, sovereign wealth funds,
central banks and commercial banks."
In
other words, everyone.
So
come one, come all, and hand over your gold to Barclays for
safekeeping. Pretty please.
Beyond Wall St., Curbs on High-Speed Trades Proceed
CNBC,
27
September, 2012
After
years of emulating the flashy United States stock markets, countries
around the globe are now using America as a model for what they don’t
want to look like.
Industry
leaders and regulators in several countries including Canada,
Australia and Germany have adopted or proposed limits on high-speed
trading and other technological developments that have come to define
United States markets.
The
flurry of international activity is particularly striking because
regulators have been slow to act in the United States, where trading
firms and investors have been hardest hit by a series of market
disruptions, including the flash crash of 2010 and the runaway
trading in August by Knight Capital [KCG 2.67 0.06 (+2.3%) ]
that cost it $440 million in just hours. While the Securities and
Exchange Commission is hosting a round table on the topic on Tuesday,
the agency has not proposed any major new rules this year.
In
contrast, the German government on Wednesday advanced legislation
that would, among other things, force high-speed trading firms to
register with the government and limit their ability to rapidly place
and cancel orders, one of the central strategies used by the firms to
take advantage of small changes in the price of stocks. A few hours
later, a committee at the European Parliament agreed on similar but
broader rules that would apply to all 27 member states of the
European Union if governments also give their approval.
For article GO HERE
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