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Financial crisis – How to handle your money in latest financial crisisMoney blog on financial crisis Financial crisis is here.How to handle our money in this financial trouble. Latest financial crisis is an unpleasant event for global economic activity. However history is full of financial crisis and economic turmoil. The main question in a financial crisis is how to handle our money in such an economic slowdown with prudence, care and effectiveness. In the following lines we present some money ideas. Buyer's power is essential as it means more money buying powerBuyer’s power is our first concept. Do the words bargains, deals, discounts, offer seem familiar to you? Buyer’s power is the ability a buyer or consumer has in terms of determining the final price of any product or service. Fixed prices are put aside in any financial crisis and the idea of bargain becomes a natural habit. In an era of financial trouble with liquidity constraints where cash is the king any smart business owner will be more than happy if you give a great incentive to pay for cash in exchange of a severe discount. And by cash we do not mean payment via credit card but simply payment with notes. The concept of buyer’s power is often associated only with seasonal offers such as Christmas. This is a mistake simply because you just have to do one thing, which is ask for a discount or bargain-shopping in everyday life from cheap goods to more expensive products. A classical example is the offers that almost all auto-makers are doing. If they can make you a brave discount of a couple of thousands dollars even without asking for it, then don’t you think that at your local mall any store will be willing to save you some money shopping or buy more goods with the same amount of money? Try it and ask for discounts daily. With this practice you will save a few or more money depending on your personal shopping style. Personal financePersonal finance is very important especially in modern times where financial needs, styles and habits are changing. The main cause of this recent financial crisis was the broken link between risk management and anticipated or expected return. Inadequate supervising measures caused a domino of economic slowdown in global economies. So an education about personal finance is crucial and could be accompanied with prioritizing needs from absolute necessary to possibly lavish ones. A priority list that has all our income sources and not only our current but also the possible expenses is very practical when a decision on how to spend our limited is reached. The happy even of a child birth in following month could possibly postpone definitely the new car purchase. A conservative approach in spending money is most appropriate in this money and business crisis underlined by the fact that we do not know and cannot guess the duration of the economic slowdown. Loans can be renegotiated with financial institutions as lower interest rates make money cheaper and if you can afford to prepay in advance any business or mortgage loan then a great boost in liquidity constraint can happen. It is now the time to fix your personal finance balance sheet removing troubled assets and placing more efficient money making sources. InvestingInvesting in latest days seems like a bad joke to many people. But investing is different than speculation. Most investment opportunities appear in extreme times where fear, anxiety and despair are intense like the last few months. Many stocks have lost a significant percentage of their values and seem real bargains at current levels. But investing simply because cheap is attractive is not enough. Investing is not simple. And often cheap gets cheaper. Instead of investing blindly and speculating on assumptions that a 5 dollar stock that has lost almost 90% of its value must be cheap although it could go to 2 dollars in a matter of weeks or days and then be a really bargain try to educate yourself and read behind the lines, the boring balance sheet and financial reports of companies that have strong cash flow. We mentioned before that cash is king. Same rule applies to stock investing. Companies with solid balance sheet and low or moderate debt with sustainable cash flow will be able to survive the financial restriction. When people prioritize and restructure their spending lifestyle what are safe companies and not safe bets because a bet is mere speculation. Have the odds with your favor. Picking tops or bottoms is very dangerous but defining an investment plan with quality versus quantity orientation and with a time horizon of a couple of years does not seem totally out of date or irrational. Make a detailed research and analysis. One last thought. Companies on front page of magazines may not be a good example of buying prospects because many people will push artificially their stock prices up. And one fundamental investment rule is buy low and sell high. Differentiate yourself from the speculators herd. Latest financial crisis as it seems is severe and will be present for an unknown time. Best practice to face it is to educate ourselves and think for practical ideas outside the box. Money & Business Resources Internet money Internet income Money blog Internet business blog Make money - Make money online Internet business Money blog Money blog linksLink to our money blog copying the following text Money blog, Money blog http://www.themoneyblog.eu If you like our blog then spread it over the internet!Email us at themoneyblog@gmail.com sending us your link text and soon we will have a reciprocal link exchange. Reciprocal linkswe prefer are about money, business, financial, entrepreneurial websites. Our niche and focus is money & business.LINKS ON MONEY & BUSINESS1.Internet money 2.Internet income 3.Internet business blog 4.Make money online 5.Make money 6.Make money online 7.A keyword map for the whole internet 8.Incorporation Legal Ace can help you incorporate your business online with quick and easy document preparation services. Does Obama know any basic,elementary economics?He said to apply fiscal restraint and create or save lots of jobs to stimulate the economy. Money and economics may be simple or hardIf you reduce unemployment then you inevitably create inflation.Inflation in all cases is bad! Of course between high inflation and high unemployment it is better to have low unemployment and possibly lower inflation.But these two have an inverse relation. It is easy to promise good money and economic news, as long as they are for real.Tough times ahead for new president.Very tough. MONEY & BUSINESS Internet money Internet income Money blog Internet business blog Make money - Make money online Money & Business News 20/11/2008Stocks set to extend losses NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- U.S. stocks were poised to extend losses Thursday, a day after a rout on Wall Street sent the blue-chip Dow average below 8,000 for the first time since 2003. At 7:45 a.m. ET, Dow Jones industrial average, Standard & Poor's 500 and Nasdaq 100 futures were lower. However, they had pulled out of their earlier lows. "The futures are headed a little bit lower, but we have regained some of the steeper losses from earlier," said Peter Cardillo, analyst for Avalon Partners. Stock futures measure current index values against perceived future performance and give an indication of how Wall Street will open when trading begins in New York. U.S. stocks fell sharply Wednesday as economic fears and uncertainty about the future of the auto industry pummeled the market. The Dow lost 5%, while the Standard & Poor's 500 (SPX) index slid 6% to its lowest level since March 2003. And the Nasdaq composite (COMP) lost 6.5% to settle at its lowest point since April 2003. "New lows in the S&P and Nasdaq were made yesterday," said Peter Cardillo, analyst for Avalon Partners. "There's a continuation of negative news that is going to continue to weigh on the market. Oil prices are hitting new lows, and there's a flight to quality to gold." Cardillo said the new multi-year lows for the stock indexes are a "major negative setback, from a psychological effect." Overseas markets took a cue from Wall Street. Major Asian markets posted heavy losses, with Japan's Nikkei losing nearly 7%. European shares were solidly in negative territory in morning trading. Auto bailout: Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid called off a planned vote this week on a $25 billion auto industry bailout. The chiefs of General Motors (GM, Fortune 500), Ford Motors (F, Fortune 500) and Chrysler have been on Capitol Hill this week to plead for aid. They have found some support in Congress but have also faced heavy criticism. Economy: A weekly report on jobless claims is due at 8:30 a.m. ET. First-time unemployment claims are expected to fall in the week ended Nov. 15. For that week, the Labor Department is expected to report 505,000 jobless claims, according to a consensus of economist projections compiled by Briefing.com. That's down from the prior week's figure of 516,000. A reading on leading economic indicators comes out at 10 a.m. ET. For this index on previously-announced economic reports, the Conference Board is expected to report a 0.7% dip in economic activity in October, according to a consensus of economists compiled by Briefing.com. The Philadelphia Fed's survey of regional manufacturing activity is also due out at 10 a.m. ET. The Philadelphia Federal Reserve Bank is expected to announce a 35-point decline for its November index measuring industrial factors like new orders and employment, according to a consensus of economist opinion from Briefing.com. Companies: The personal computer maker Dell (DELL, Fortune 500) is due to report its financial results after the market close. The company is expected to post a 9% drop in earnings to 31 cents per share, according to a consensus of analysts surveyed by Briefing.com. Money and oil: The U.S. dollar rose against the British pound, but slipped versus the euro and the yen. Oil continues to plunge toward the $50 mark. Oil prices fell $1.41 a barrel to $52.21. US Futures cut losses after PepsiCo, Citi news NEW YORK - US stock index futures cut losses after PepsiCo, a food and beverage company, reaffirmed its 2008 profit and CNBC television reported that Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal planned to boost his stake in Citigroup to five per cent, a day after the bank's shares plummeted. Futures also got a lift as news of a surprise interest rate cut by the Swiss National Bank helped European stocks pare some of their losses. S&P 500 futures slipped three points, but were above fair value, a formula that evaluates pricing by taking into account interest rates, dividends and time to expiration on the contract. Dow Jones industrial average futures dipped 22 points, and Nasdaq 100 shed seven points. Source: businessspectator.com Japan economy expected to contract for two straight fiscal years TOKYO - Japan's economy is expected to contract for two straight fiscal years as the global financial crisis takes a toll on exports and corporate activity, a Reuters poll showed. The gloomy forecast comes after government data said on Monday the world's second-largest economy slipped into its first recession in seven years in the third quarter, meeting the widely used definition of two consecutive quarters of contraction. Japan's economy is expected to shrink 0.5 per cent in the current fiscal year to next March, followed by a 0.3 per cent contraction in fiscal 2009/10, according to the median forecast of 25 economists polled from Nov 17-19. In the previous month's survey, economists forecast growth of 0.3 per cent for the current fiscal year and a 1.1 per cent increase in the following year. "Downward pressure on the economy are now at Japan's front door. The moment of truth would come in the final quarter of this year and January-March next year, when Japan will face a test of how resilient domestic demand is," Kyohei Morita , chief economist at Barclays Capital Japan, said. Economists see another three quarters of contraction in Japan's economy to come , bringing the sequential decline to five straight quarters, or the longest on record, as slowing global growth hampers the nation's export-reliant economy. The financial turmoil has put most developed nations into recession. The euro zone is already in recession and the US economy is widely expected to follow after having shrunk in the third quarter. Steady rates Median forecasts show analysts expect the Bank of Japan to keep interest rates on hold at 0.3 per cent until the second quarter of 2010. But among the 65 economists polled on rates, six expect a cut in Japan's key policy rate sometime by the end of this year - with three of them seeing rates hitting zero. A total of 27 economists predict a rate cut sometime by the end of next year. "As the downturn is expected to deepen in the coming quarters due to sliding exports, the BOJ may need to consider cutting interest rates further around the start of 2009," said Takeshi Minami, chief economist at Norinchukin Research Institute. The Bank of Japan cut the overnight call rate by 20 basis points to 0.3 per cent in October, its first rate reduction in over seven years, acknowledging increased downside risks to the growth and slight waning of inflationary pressure. The monthly poll suggests Japan could teeter on the verge of deflation in the next fiscal year, starting in April 2009, after emerging from persistent price declines dating back to fiscal 2005/06. Core consumer inflation is now seen sliding back into negative territory, at a fall of 0.5 per cent, as early as the third quarter next year as demand for crude oil and other resources is quickly declining in line with the slowdown of the global economy. Still, the median forecast for core consumer inflation in the current fiscal year was at 1.5 per cent, while that for fiscal 2009/10 is for zero growth. In the October poll, the median forecast for the core inflation was at 1.8 per cent for fiscal 2008/2009 and at 0.9 per cent for fiscal 2009/2010. Source: businessspectator.com RBS shareholders vote on $30B bail-out LONDON, England (CNN) -- Shareholders in Royal Bank of Scotland are Thursday due to vote on whether to accept a $30 billion bail-out plan to survive the credit crunch. Under the deal, 60 percent of the UK bank, one of hardest hit by financial turmoil in the wake of the collapse of the U.S. sub-prime mortgate sector, could could be placed in government hands. At a meeting in Edinburgh, shareholders are expected to approve the creation of $22 billion worth of ordinary shares but at a price that only the government is expected to be interested in buying them. The move follows a $17.8 billion rights issue by RBS earlier this year as the bank struggled in the wake of its acquisition of Dutch Bank ABN Amro -- turmoil that cost chief executive Fred Goodwin his job. RBS is expected to make its first full-year loss as a public company. The UK Press Association reported that more than half of RBS investors have to approve the latest fundraising exercise. Behind newbuilding cancellations FALLING freight rates have combined with the global economic downturn to cause widening newbuilding cancellations. ?Shippers depend a lot on their freight rate,? Ken Tai, technical specialist with KE Live Research, told reporters. ?These freight rates are actually declining and with the volume declines, trade between countries start to decline. It's going to be a double whammy situation for these shippers." Jimmy Ng Hwee Khoon, head of Jenjosh, also pointed to the issue of falling freight rates and their impact on yard cancellations. He warned Fairplay that ?container vessels will be affected? in view of sector corrections taking place in the sector. The global fall in demand for goods, Fairplay understands, will also potentially herald more layoffs in seafarers, because river ports such as China and Vietnam are ill equipped to accommodate Capesizes. But the market for niche vessels like AHTs and FPSOs is expanding, Fairplay was told. Source: Fairplay Shipping News Politics to decide ?Panama lottery? WHICH US ports reap the returns from Panama Canal expansion is being determined by political influence, not sound economic policy, according to a leading port finance consultant. Speaking at the TOC Americas conference, independent consultant Laurie Mahon cited the focus of US East and Gulf Coast ports on preparing for the canal expansion in 2014. ?For many of these ports, the canal expansion is not an opportunity ? it is actually a fear, because there is an absolute recognition that not every port will win,? she said. A vital factor for access to future canal trade will be whether US ports can get channels dredged to 15m. As Mahon put it: ?Draught is the ticket to winning the Panama sweepstakes.? But she warned that scarce federal funding ?is being allocated on a purely political basis. The question of who?s going to win is not being decided on which ports are the best places economically to make investments. "It?s being decided based on whether a port?s senator is on the appropriate committee,? she said, arguing that funding allocations would be better served by a national policy framework. WHICH US ports reap the returns from Panama Canal expansion is being determined by political influence, not sound economic policy, according to a leading port finance consultant. Source: Fairplay Shipping News Novorossiysk aims to beat crunch A KEY RUSSIAN port is trying to offset declines in lower-value cargo tonnage by increased handling of more lucrative cargoes. A report issued by Moscow brokerage firm Troika Dialog said Russia's largest publicly listed port company, Novorossiysk Commercial Seaport, will continue to see rising volume and growth in revenues ? though at a slower pace than expected before the global financial pinch. Financial data for the first half of this year suggested that revenues earned by boxes almost doubled to 10%; the share of oil products grew to 16% and the share of ferrous metals to 19%. Ten-month results by 31 October indicated aggregate tonnage handled by the port company is up 8.6% from the same period of 2007. But much larger year-on-year growth was posted for oil products, grain and containers. Kirill Kazanli, transport analyst for Troika Dialog, expects most cargo volumes will remain flat in 2009. The cement import boom, in which last month's tonnage jumped almost fourfold from October 2007, has run its course. Total tonnage projected for next year will be 83.9M tonnes, up 2%. Tariffs and freight charges are expected to remain as they are, while the falling rouble will add to the company's foreign exchange costs. Assuming worst-case trading conditions next year, Kazanli predicted growth in revenues by 19%, to $784M, and after-tax income by 27%, to $139M. Source: Hellenic Shipping News Fire halts Nigerian oil terminals ROYAL Dutch Shell, which operates the Forcados terminals in Nigeria, has advised that oil production has been cut back because of an explosion and fire at one of their work sites which resulted in the loss of lives. "Production has been cut back to allow investigation and repairs to take place. There will be some delays to Forcados liftings, and the terminal operator is working with offtakers to minimise delays," a GAC spokesman said. Source: Fairplay Shipping News EU calls for cleaner scrapyards THE EU has called for a new scrapping strategy to reduce pollution and improve working conditions for scrapyard workers. EU Environment Commissioner Stavros Dimas told reporters in Brussels yesterday: ?The problem of ship dismantling remains acute. Workers in south Asia are being exploited and their lives put at risk working in deplorable conditions, while coastal areas are being polluted and ecosystems threatened.? A great number of European ships are sent to yards in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, mainly because of a scarcity of scrapyards in the EU and inexpensive fees. Dimas proposed that the EU offers South Asian yards aid and technical help and called for stricter procedures and checks on scrapyard-bound European ships. New rules should include certification and compulsory inventories of hazardous materials on ships, he added. THE EU has called for a new scrapping strategy to reduce pollution and improve working conditions for scrapyard workers. Source: Fairplay Shipping News Denying pirates an AIS trace SPOOKED by the piracy surge, South Korean companies are adopting new measures to pre-empt attacks. The maritime ministry is requiring ships to turn off their AIS power in pirate waters to make them harder to detect and to hide log books. The measures are to apply when ships pass the Sri Lanka-Gulf of Aden route in the approach to the Suez Canal. The AIS power is turned off when ships sail within 500 miles of coastal regions on the route. But ships have also been warned to turn the AIS back on in the event of any attack. The ministry is also urging ships cruising at less than 15kt to post security guards on deck, although other authorities view that move as likely to endanger crews in firefights. There has been no debate as yet on the effectiveness and legality of equipping such vessels with sonic cannons, which create ear-splitting noises. A cruise liner used them in 2005 to deflect a pirate attack. SPOOKED by the piracy surge , South Korean companies are adopting new measures to pre-empt attacks. Source: Fairplay Shipping News GMAC files with Fed for bank holding status NEW YORK (AP) -- GMAC Financial Services has applied to the Federal Reserve to become a bank holding company, which would allow General Motors' financing arm to be eligible for aid under the Treasury's $700 billion bank rescue plan. GMAC says the change in status would shore up its capital position and allow it to continue providing automotive and mortgage financing. GMAC is majority owned by private equity firm Cerberus, which also owns most of Chrysler. General Motors Corp., which itself is running out of cash, owns a 49 percent stake in GMAC. GMAC also is launching cash tender offers to buy or swap debt held by its units and mortgage business Residential Capital LLC for cash, new notes or preferred stock, in a move to boost capital levels and reduce debt. $25m - or else Pirates who hijacked the Vela VLCC Sirius Star (built 2008) have demanded a ransom of $25m to release the vessel and its 25 crew. The cash must be handed over within 10 days, a man named Mohamed Said, who claimed to be one of the gang, told the AFP news agency. He warned of "disastrous" consequences unless the money was paid. The ransom is a sizeable chunk of the $115m value of the 2m barrels of crude on board, but add in P&I cover worth as much as $300m for the hull and crew and the pay-out begins to seem less onerous. The British foreign secretary, David Miliband, signalled that Britain would not pay a ransom for the two British crew members held hostage. Speaking to reporters, he said the international community must "stand firm" against hostage-taking in all its forms. He insisted that making payments in return for the release of hostages would only encourage further such incidents. "There is a strong view of the British government, and actually the international community, that payments for hostage-taking are only an encouragement to further hostage-taking and we will be approaching this issue in a very delicate way, in a way that puts the security and safety of the hostages to the fore." The 318,000-dwt Saudi VLCC was taken at the weekend more than 400 miles off Kenya and moved to an anchorage off Somalia. Source: Tradewinds.com Credit buster! Korean yard Samsung Heavy Industries has won a credit-crunch busting order for two drillships worth $1.44bn. The unnamed European owner will take delivery of the vessels by 31 March, 2012. They will be used for drilling activities offshore Brazil, Samsung said. They can drill as deep as 11 kilometres and have dynamic positioning systems (DPS) that can keep them stable in waves of up to 16 metres and winds of up to 41 metres per second. The shipbuilder expects to win more offshore orders by the end of the year and is in talks with clients in the US and Europe for more drillships and other vessels. It has won new contracts worth $10.2bn for drillships, FPSOs and other offshore units this year already ? more than for regular merchant ships for the first time. Source: Tradewinds.com Spill fear passing Fears of an oil spill from a vessel grounded in the Oslo Fjord appear to have passed, the shipowner says. The 4,556-dwt Crete Cement is now settled on the sea bed and divers are exploring how best to remove fuel oil and diesel from the ship, a spokesperson for Kristian Gerhard Jebsen Skipsreder tells TradeWinds. He says an ROV unit has confirmed the 2002 built vessel is stable; with the pumping away of pollutants expected to begin this afternoon. ?Planning on how best to salvage the vessel is going on now and there has been no spill so far,? the spokesperson said. ?There are booms all around the ship, so should a few drops of oil escape it will be catered for.? Kristian Gerhard Jebsen has scheduled a press conference in Oslo this afternoon where further details about the operation will be revealed. The Crete Cement was beached at Fagerstrand, 20km south of Oslo, yesterday after an earlier grounding had punctured its hull, TradeWinds reported. All 12 crew and the Norwegian pilot were evacuated from the fully loaded vessel , which has 150 tons of fuel oil and 19 tons of diesel on board. Source: Tradewinds.com Scan gets cash Norwegian shipowner Scan Geophysical has bagged NOK 117.65m ($16.65m) from a private placement to help cover newbuilding costs. And it can add an extra NOK 20m to the pot if it takes an option to issue 20 million new shares to Deep Sea Supply. Lars Johan Frigstad, CEO of Oslo-listed Scan, says the move is in response to the failed sale-and-leaseback of three newbuildings to John Fredriksen?s Ship Finance International. The collapse of the SFI deal created an unexpected capital expenditure burden for the company, he adds. Scan originally hoped to collect between NOK 120m and NOK 150m from the placement of 117.65 million shares. But Frigstad says the outcome is satisfactory as it can take the additional NOK 20m from Deep Sea Supply if required. The private placement can only be completed if a replacement sale-and-leaseback deal for the Scan Express, Scan Finder and Scan Superior is finalised with PFS Shipping. The issue to Deep Sea Supply is a substitute for committed cash payments related to the delivery of the newbuildings, which are being built at India's ABG Shipyard, Scan says. Source: Tradewinds.com Tamai triumphs Japanese bulker owner Tamai Steamship has banked much more money in strong dry cargo markets in the six months to 30 September. It said net earnings were JPY 915m ($9.58m), against JPY 354m in the same half of the previous year. Revenue was JPY 4.37bn from JPY 3.23bn over the same period. With bulker markets subsequently collapsing, the second half will inevitably be less profitable. It is forecasting profit of JPY 1.18bn in the 12 months to 31 March next year. But this will still beat the JPY 994m recorded in the previous full year. Established in 1932, Tamai is primarily engaged in shipping mainly bauxite for Nippon Light Metal, as well as vessel chartering and real estate rental. Source: Tradewinds.com Mermaid minted Soaring revenue has fired full-year profit at Thai offshore operator Mermaid Maritime. Mermaid pocketed THB 1.16bn ($33.09m) in fiscal 2008, trumping the THB 553.29m it snared last year by 117.9%. The offshore unit of Thoresen Thai Agencies (TTA) says income picked up 28% to THB 5.29bn. It said: ?The higher revenues were primarily a result of a strong performance in our subsea engineering group, including higher day ratesa and higher utilization of our subsea assets, which was partially offset by lower than expected contributions from our drilling group as a result of rig downtime.? Operating profit for the quarter jumped 59.7% to THB 434.59m, helped by a THB 95.12m insurance claim following a fire at the end of last year. Mermaid said: ?Although we have not yet directly experienced a fall out from financial crisis or oil price reductions, there does exist a possibility that some of the smaller oil and gas companies may have to reduce or postpone some services. ?As both our subsidiaries provide services to the production arm of the business, we feel less exposed than other companies.? Source: Tradewinds.com Up for grabs Australia?s Dalrymple Bay Coal Terminal (DBCT), one of the world?s largest coal export facilities, could be up for sale. Owner Babcock & Brown Infrastructure Group (BBI) is examining the potential sale to help cover its debt, according to Australian media reports. BBI is said to have been approached by a consortium of miners interested in buying DBCT and has issued confidentiality agreements to interested parties. ?Where we know there is strong interest, it?s appropriate that we test out appetite and pricing for co-investing,? BBI managing director Jeff Kendrew was quoted as saying. The process could take three to four months and will probably attract interest from financial players as well as users of the port. Earlier this year BBI said it would seek to sell stakes in some of its principal assets to cut borrowing and provide funds for investment. BBI holds a 50-year leasing and development rights for Dalrymple, with an option for a further 49 years. Capacity at the port, which mostly exports coal for steelmaking, is being expanded to 85m tons with an AUD1.3bn ($823m) investment. BBI also counts a number of ports in Europe, including in Belgium, Spain, Finland, Germany, Italy and Bulgaria, amongst its assets. Shares in BBI, which is listed on the Australian Stock Exchange, have slumped 96% in the past six months. Source: Tradewinds.com Top breached loan Top Ships warns it may be forced to sell ships or tap the money market if it breaches further loan agreements. Nasdaq-listed Top broke the covenants of one loan last year and is offering no guarantees about the security of others due to the present dire market conditions. But new Top finance chief, Alexandros Tsirikos, tells TradeWinds there is no need to panic as he expects such warnings will become standard practice for shipping companies going forward. In its third quarter report Top said: ?As of 31 December 2007, the company was not in compliance with one of its financial covenants, but has obtained waivers up to and including 31 December 2008. ?No assurance can be given with respect to future compliance with covenants.? Top adds if it breaches debt covenants or derivatives agreements and is unable to secure further waivers banks may step in and seize assets. If this happens, ?there can be no assurance that the company will be able to continue as a going concern,? it said. Top added: ?The current significant decline in charter rates in the shipping market coupled with the prevailing difficulty in obtaining financing for vessel purchases has adversely affected vessel values. ?A continuation of these conditions would lead to a significant decline in the fair market values of company's vessels, which may result in company's not being in compliance with these loan covenants.? If this happens and waivers or refinancing can?t be arranged, Top would ?have to sell vessels and or seek to raise additional capital in the equity markets,? it said. Tsirikos was dismissive of the warning, stressing it was simply a sign of the times. He said: ?This sort of warning will become standard for shipping companies in the coming quarters due to events in both the sale and purchase and charter markets.? Top posted a profit of $41.64m in the quarter, compared to a loss of $21.98m in the corresponding period a year ago. Tsirikos added: ?Overall we are happy. Compared to other companies we are in good shape.? Source: Tradewinds.com Manila rejects training appeal THE FAR East Maritime Foundation training centre has failed to have its accreditation reinstated by the Philippines government. Its accreditation was revoked in August 2007 because as a foundation, it was ruled not entitled to offer training courses for a fee to non-members. It responded that the government?s action had been politically and financially motivated because of the role of a competing academy. But Manila rejected that view. Source: Fairplay Shipping News Saudi prince increasing stake in Citigroup NEW YORK (AP) -- Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal says he plans to increase his stake in Citigroup to 5 percent. Prince Alwaleed, who currently holds less than a 4 percent stake, has been buying shares of Citi believing they are undervalued and that the New York-based bank has been taking necessary steps to improve its operations amid the ongoing credit crisis. Prince Alwaleed also provides full support for Citi's chief executive, Vikram Pandit, in a statement. Citigroup Inc. has been battered during the credit crisis, having posted four consecutive quarterly losses. Earlier this week it said it plans to cut an additional 53,000 jobs on top of 22,000 cuts previously announced. Shares of Citi hit a 15-year low Wednesday. Jobless claims reach 16-year high NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- The number of Americans filing new claims for unemployment insurance surged to the highest levels in 16 years, and the number of people continuing to collect benefits neared a 26-year high, the government said Thursday. The U.S. Department of Labor reported that initial filings for state jobless benefits increased by 27,000 to 542,000 for the week ended Nov. 15. This marks the third time in 16 years that initial claims have exceeded 500,000. Claims are at the highest total since the week ended July 25, 1992, when 564, 000 initial claims were filed. Economists surveyed by Briefing.com expected 503,000 claims. Last year, the figure stood at 333,000. The number of Americans collecting unemployment benefits for one week or more surged by 109,000 to 4,012,000. The data comes from the week ended Nov. 8, the most recent available. The last time the figure was this high was for the week of Dec. 12, 1982, when it reached 4,381,000. The four-week moving average of unemployment claims, used to smooth fluctuations in the data, increased by 15,750 to 506,500. A reading above 400, 000 has been present during the past two recessions. This is the 18th week the four-week moving average has exceeded that benchmark. U.S. job losses have been mounting for months. Earlier this month, the Labor Department reported the economy lost 240,000 jobs in October, bringing the total number of jobs shed in 2008 to nearly 1.2 million. The unemployment rate rose to 6.5%, a 14-year high, last month. Imarex Daily Brief Tankers Crude VLCC Ag/East: ws 70 ($53k/day) Suezmax Wafr/Usac: ws 100 ($35k/day) Turkish Straits Delays: 1.5 n / 1.5 s (unchanged) Though the pirates are still in the headlines, V rates remain flat. We are at the point in the fixing cycle where rates should have turned up?and of course we are knee deep into Q4, as Afra magnate J Fitzgerald would phrase it. With that said, tankers have held up well while the rest of the world faces a barrage of whoopass. Suezmaxes have continued their slide. Again, their earnings are good ? but in this business we are nothing but trend watchers, and the trend is softer. Black gold is now below $51 ? and that loud scream you just heard was the High Priest of the Orinoco demanding to know who kicked the oil majors out of his country. His next move might be to nationalize an airline , any airline ? but it seems Team Kirchner is a step ahead. I can understand the smash-and-grab maneuver on private pensions, but why anyone would want to steal something that is worth only a headache or two is beyond me. I thought the goal of appropriating private assets was to take stuff that was worth something. Maybe they will nationalize Detroit on our behalf. It appears that more vessels are being taken for storage. While a handful of ships might not provide for a market spike, each incremental ship taken out of service helps Owners make their case for stronger rates. The pirate story might also be playing a small role ? as the ton mile equation is under the microscope. As things stand now ? there doesn?t seem to be an effect on spot rates ? but keep an eye on incremental changes in this story ? as well as the storage issue . If we have learned anything the past few years, it is that tanker Owners are simply alchemists with brass cajones. Fairly good action on TD3 today as prices trade up. Dec gains 3 points to 75 while Jan adds 5 points tov 49. Even the Feb contract saw good volume and adds one point to 45. My hunch is that the storage issue, combined with piracy, is nudging forward prices up. Supply and demand don?t appear much different from yesterday. TD5 Dec loses 4 points to 108. Clean 37k Cont/Usac: ws 180 ($16.5k/day) 38k Caribs/Usac: ws 165 ($14k/day) 55kt Ag/East: ws 230 ($39k/day) Plus c?est la meme chose, plus c?est la meme chose. Some Atlantic basin cgos get fixed, some get failed ? and rates sit tight. On the macro front, the US Department of Transportation announced that Americans drove 4.4 pct less in Sep 2008 than in Sep 2007. While this in itself does not portend Armageddon, it does reinforce the concept that a general slowing is underfoot. The slow bleed in the East continues as rates remain soft and softer. Today?s WSJ reports that BASF will idle 80 plants worldwide and cut output as much as 25%. TC2 still has not awoken from its slumber. Trading is thin, though we see the Q1 add 1 point 139. In the East, paper is slow as well. TC5 Dec trades up 7 points to 200, some 25-30 points below spot. Dry Bulk BDI 847 down 12 BCI 976 down 13 BPI 927 down 51 BSI 623 up 17 BHSI 314 up 4 Here we go again. At one point recently, the Panamxes showed promise. Not big promise, not even slightly-smaller-than-a-breadbox promise. But ? they showed hope ? and now?they have faded once again. Too many ships, not enough cgos. Commodore Landsberg: ?Easy come, easy go. Although Capesize rates peeked their heads above the water yesterday, day rates for the big boys are back down again . The old man at sea continues to play the same sad tune: credit crunch, crashing equity markets, and declining steel and iron ore demand are all contributing to very low dry bulk freight rates. To paint an even gloomier picture, there are rumors of yet another bulk vessel being hijacked by pirates. I doubt Edgar Allen Poe could have written a darker tale. Optimists ? the few of you out there ? will continue to be comforted by China?s infrastructure-intensive stimulus plan. In order to keep their domestic economy afloat, China is supposedly planning on spending over $500 billion in the next three to five years on rail, roads, and urbanization. At the end of the day, dry bulk to a large degree is infrastructure and China. We?ll see if the infrastructure plan can go off without a hitch.? Dry Bulk FFAs Contract Close Current Diff ====================================== BDI Nov 900 850 -50 BDI Q1 1850 1800 -50 BDI Q2 2550 1500 -50 CS4 Q1 $12,531 $12,000 -$531 CS4 Cal 09 $19,370 $18,250 -$1120 PM4 Q1 $12,625 $12,250 -$375 PM4 Cal 09 $15,723 $15,250 -$473 SM6 Q1 $9,594 $9,500 -$94 SM6 Cal09 $12,453 $12,250 -$203 Thin trading as prices move down a touch. Following from Justin Yagerman at Wachovia (from Monday): How Does The Long-Term Supply/Demand Outlook Impact Our Views On Dry Bulk Day Rates? We believe current and near-term fundamentals illustrate a potential ?worst case scenario? for dry bulk day rates. Spot rates are below break-even cash costs and even operating expenses for most owners; however profitability is still possible in some cases in the thin period charter market, and players remain hopefully for improvement, as reflected in the FFA curve and our proprietary industry channel checks with owners, charterers, and brokers. While current rates do appear oversold in our opinion, the hope of a return to better times coupled with cash rich owners may keep ship orders on the books providing enough swing capacity to cap potential longer-term day rate upside. However, as rates remain at current levels we expect to see both increased scrapping and orderbook cancellations, which may serve to alleviate some of the supply headwind which is currently quite large. Either way, we expect rates to remain in a lower band than we have seen in the past few years with potentially shorter peak-to-trough cycles. Equities DS Norden: 1 BUY and 2 HOLD - Lars Heindorff maintains a HOLD on DS Norden, though reduces target price to $25 (from $30). He sees current valuation as fair despite a bleak outlook. - Johannes Moller maintains a HOLD on DS Norden (DKK 170), calling it ?Best in Class, Worst Class Ever?. He also notes that should it slip below DKK 100, it would look interesting. - Natasha Boyden maintains a BUY on DS Norden, though she lowers her price target to DKK 320 (from dkk 510). She cites a strong balance sheet and significant industry presence, though mentions concerns of counterparty risk and uncertain 2009 forecasts. How Does The Long-Term Supply/Demand Balance Impact Our Views On Dry Bulk Stocks? While we remain cautious on the group as a whole, we continue to favor dry bulk companies with long-term charter coverage, clean balance sheets, and limited paper and physical counterparty risk. Recent weakness, however, has shown that a prolonged decline in the rate environment is detrimental to all dry bulk stocks, regardless of charter coverage and counterparties, though we have observed that less debt-laden companies such as DSX fare better in plummeting rate environments. The recent weakness in day rates, leading into a period of material supply growth, will likely force continued consolidation within the sector, likely leading to fewer listed dry bulk companies, and differentiation within the group?s trading patterns relative to fleet profiles (age, quality of assets, etc) and chartering strategies (spot versus period, etc). We believe this differentiation process has already started, as dry bulk stocks with limited debt leverage have maintained relatively more value in the difficult freight environment. That said, given the cascading weakness in day rates and the likelihood of continued dividend cuts, we have recently downgraded our ratings on the shares of EGLE ($8.71), ESEA ($4.37), and DSX ($10.59) to Market Perform, with a preference towards DSX due to its lower leverage, high quality fleet, and transparent first-class counterparty roster. We would look to get more constructive on the group if and when the freight markets normalize and counterparty risk becomes less of an issue industry wide. Source: files.irwebpage.com BNP dismisses speculation over capital increase LONDON (MarketWatch) -- BNP Paribas late Wednesday dismissed speculation it was considering a move to strengthen its capital base, saying it met all the standards required by regulators. The French bank made the announcement after fears of a rights issue helped push its shares down around 23% in the first three sessions of the week. The stock was down roughly another 1% on Thursday, but outperformed heavier falls for the rest of the European banking sector. "BNP Paribas confirms that its capital ratios fully satisfy the requirements set by its regulator, given its risk profile," the bank said in a brief statement. "As a consequence, no capital increase is currently under consideration," apart from the issuance already announced to finance its acquisition of parts of Fortis the bank added. The French government has also agreed to inject around 10.5 billion euros into the French banking sector, including 2.55 billion euros for BNP Paribas, in the form of loans. The government, however, has said those loans are needed to ensure banks continue lending to individuals and small businesses, rather than to strengthen capital. BNP's Tier 1 capital ratio was 7.6% at the end of September and had remained roughly steady from six months earlier. The ratio is set to grow to around 9% once the government loans have been completed, but that's still below the levels being targeted in other European countries, which has led some analysts to forecast further steps to reduce the gap. "BNP's capital is well below that of its peer group. Over the medium term, we see risk of BNP opting to correct this gap via measures which would be dilutive for shareholders," said Marta Sanchez, an analyst at Ahorro Corporacion Financiera, following the bank's third-quarter earnings earlier this month. Oil dips below $50 a barrel Prices fall as worry about the economy continues to drag on demand. NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- The plunge in oil prices continued Thursday with prices falling below $50 a barrel as growing concern about the economy weighed on demand. In the final day of trading for the December contract, U.S. crude futures fell $3.35 to $50.27 a barrel in electronic trading, but not before dipping as low as $49.91. Oil last dipped below $50 on Jan. 18, 2007, when it traded at $49.90, according to CME Group, which operates the New York Mercantile Exchange. A week of negative economic reports, combined with falling equities and indecision from Congress on a bailout of major U.S. automakers GM (GM, Fortune 500) and Ford (F, Fortune 500), have painted a dismal picture of fuel demand. The economic slowdown continues to weigh on oil demand, according to Phil Flynn , senior market analyst with brokerage Alaron Trading in Chicago. News has been "pretty doomy and gloomy on the oil outlook front," said Flynn. On Thursday, the government reported that jobless claims reached a 16-year high . Earlier in the week, the government said its measurement of consumer prices had fallen the most since 1947, adding to worries about falling demand for all goods and services. A read on new home construction also hit its lowest level since 1959, and the struggling U.S. automobile industry continues to clamor for a government bailout that will keep them, and the thousands they employ, above water. Meanwhile equity markets, which many investors have been using to get a read on the health of the economy, continued to retreat this week, with the Dow Jones industrial average closing below 8,000 for the first time since March 2003 on Wednesday. Crude prices have been on the decline as investors worry about recession in developed nations such as the United States, the world's largest oil consumer, and in the developing world, where fuel demand had been rising the fastest. Concern about demand for petroleum products has driven crude oil prices down from a record high of $147.27 a barrel in mid-July. The decline has also driven down the price of unleaded gasoline by over a half since July to $2.02 a gallon , motorist group AAA reported Thursday. Meanwhile the capture of a Saudi Arabian supertanker this week by pirates off the Somalian coast has prompted many tanker companies to consider routing their shipments around South Africa, avoiding the quicker route through Egypt's Suez Canal. Rerouting could add to the cost and the length of time it takes for oil shipments to reach the U.S. from the Middle East. Source: CNNMoney.com Leading economic indicators decline in October LEI, a predictor of the economy's future performance, fell more than expected in October, says Conference Board. NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- An indicator of the economy's future performance dropped in October, reversing a September gain, according to The Conference Board. The index of leading economic indicators, released by the business research group Thursday, decreased by 0.8% in October. This brings the index down to 99. 6, from 100.4 in September. This erases the gains from the prior month. The Conference Board initially reported that the index rose 0.3% in September, but that was revised downward to an increase of 0.1%. The October figure was slightly worse than expected. According to a consensus compiled by Briefing.com, economists had expected the index to drop 0.6%. The Conference Board blamed the decline on "negative contributions" from stock prices, building permits, consumer expectations and the index of supplier deliveries. This was in spite of "positive contributions" from real money supply and the interest rate spread, the Conference Board said. Before September, the index had been on the decline. It fell by 0.9% in August and dropped 0.7% in July. The index is designed to predict economic activity six to nine months in to the future. It incorporates a variety of economic data including jobless claims, manufacturers' orders and personal income. Source: CNNMoney.com Dow keeps dropping Wall Street slides further as spike in jobless claims keeps recession fears front and center. NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Stocks plunged Thursday morning, after a report showing U.S. jobless claims at a 16-year high gave investors a reason to extend the selloff. News that Citigroup's largest shareholder plans to up his stake in the company failed to lift its shares or the broader market. The Dow Jones industrial average (INDU), the Standard & Poor's 500 (SPX) index and the Nasdaq composite (COMP) all dropped in the early going. The Dow was down 160 points, or 2.13%, about 15 minutes into the session. A rout on Wall Street Wednesday pushed the blue-chip average to close below 8, 000 for the first time since 2003. Before the open, Saudi Prince and long-time Citigroup (C, Fortune 500) investor Alwaleed Bin Talal said he increased his stake to 5% following the U.S. government's $25 billion bailout for the troubled bank. Before the bailout, the prince held a 4% stake. Also, the Labor Department announced that first-time jobless claims during the week ended Nov. 15 surged to 542,000, a 16-year high. This trumps expectations of 505,000 jobless claims, from a consensus of economist projections compiled by Briefing.com. In the prior week, jobless claims totaled 516,000. U.S. stocks fell sharply Wednesday as economic fears and uncertainty about the future of the auto industry pummeled the market. The Dow lost 5%, while the Standard & Poor's 500 (SPX) index slid 6% to its lowest level since March 2003. And the Nasdaq composite (COMP) lost 6.5% to settle at its lowest point since April 2003. "New lows in the S&P and Nasdaq were made yesterday," said Peter Cardillo, analyst for Avalon Partners. "There's a continuation of negative news that is going to continue to weigh on the market. Oil prices are hitting new lows, and there's a flight to quality, to gold." Cardillo said the new multi-year lows for the stock indexes are a "major negative setback, from a psychological effect." Overseas markets took a cue from Wall Street. Major Asian markets posted heavy losses, with Japan's Nikkei losing nearly 7%. European shares were solidly in negative territory in morning trading. Auto bailout: Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid called off a planned vote this week on a $25 billion auto industry bailout. The chiefs of General Motors (GM, Fortune 500), Ford Motors (F, Fortune 500) and Chrysler have been on Capitol Hill this week to plead for aid. They have found some support in Congress but have also faced heavy criticism. On Thursday, GMAC Financial Services, a subsidiary of General Motors which holds 49% of its stock, applied to the Federal Reserve to become a bank holding company. In this way, GMAC is trying to tap into the $700 billion bank bailout from the Troubled Asset Relief Program, which has so far been denied to automakers. Economy: A reading on leading economic indicators comes out at 10 a.m. ET. For this index on previously announced economic reports, the Conference Board is expected to report a 0.6% dip in economic activity in October, according to a consensus of economists compiled by Briefing.com. The Philadelphia Fed's survey of regional manufacturing activity is also due out at 10 a.m. ET. The Philadelphia Federal Reserve Bank is expected to announce a 35-point decline for its November index measuring industrial factors like new orders and employment, according to a consensus of economist opinion from Briefing.com. Companies: Dell (DELL, Fortune 500) is due to report its financial results after the market close. The company is expected to post a 9% drop in earnings to 31 cents per share, according to a consensus of analysts surveyed by Briefing.com. Money and oil: The U.S. dollar rose against the British pound, but slipped versus the euro and the yen. Oil continues to plunge, momentarily dipping below the $50 mark. At 9:37 a.m. ET, oil prices were trading about $2.61 lower to $51 .01 a barrel. Source: CNNMoney.com UPDATE 1-US weekly jobless claims surge to 16-year high WASHINGTON, Nov 20 (Reuters) - The number of U.S. workers filing new claims for jobless benefits surged last week to their highest level in 16 years, Labor Department data showed on Thursday, as a harsh economic environment forces employers to cut back on hiring. Initial claims for state unemployment insurance benefits were a seasonally adjusted 542,000 in the week ended Nov. 15 from a revised 515,000 the previous week. That was higher than analysts' forecast for a reading of 505,000 new claims. U.S. stock futures tumbled on the data and Treasury debt prices edged higher, attracting a safe-haven bid. The U.S. dollar deepened losses against the yen. The latest data has added to fears that the U.S. economy faces a deep recession and paints a gloomy outlook for the labor market. "This report paints a pretty bleak job picture for mid-November and reinforces the comments from the Fed yesterday almost guaranteeing a sizable Fed rate cut at the next Fed meeting on Dec. 16," said Cary Leahey, economist at Decision Economics in New York. "It means we're probably facing another payroll employment report showing November job losses in the vicinity of 200,000." The Federal Reserve has slashed its economic growth outlook through 2009 to minimal levels, minutes from the central bank's Oct 28-29 policy meeting released on Wednesday showed. A Labor Department official said there were no special factors influencing the report. The four-week moving average of new jobless claims, a better gauge of underlying labor trends because it irons out week-to-week volatility, rose to 506,500 from 490,750 the week before, the highest since the start of 1983. Continuing claims were 4.012 million in the week ended Nov. 8, the latest data available, up from 3.903 million the prior week and the highest since December 1982. Analysts estimated so-called continued claims would be 3.92 million. The insured unemployment rate, a measure of the workforce receiving unemployment benefits, was 3.0 percent in the week ended Nov 8, rising from 2.9 percent the prior week. Russia sending more ships in pirate crack down (CNN) -- Russia will send additional ships to the Horn of Africa in an effort to crack down on the recent wave of hijackings by Somalia-based pirates, its navy chief said Thursday. The Russian frigate Neustrashimy is already in the region and has helped repel pirate attacks on at least two ships. Adm. Vladimir Vysotsky told the official news agency Ria Novosti that more ships would be joining it soon. "After Neustrashimy, Russia will be sending warships from other fleets to this region," Vysotsky said. No additional details were provided. A NATO-led international fleet has attempted to crack down on the attacks. An Indian frigate battled a pirate ship in the Gulf of Aden on Tuesday, leaving the ship ablaze and likely sunk, the country's defense ministry reported. In September, Vysotsky said Russian ships would be operating on their own. But the crews of the Neustrashimy and the British frigate HMS Cumberland teamed up to chase off pirates who attacked a Danish ship in the gulf earlier this month. More than 90 ships have been attacked off eastern Africa so far this year, according to the International Maritime Bureau, which monitors piracy. The pirates, who operate from largely lawless Somalia, still hold 17 vessels -- including the Saudi-owned supertanker Sirius Star, the largest ship captured to date. The pirates typically hold the ships and their crews for ransom, and Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud Al-Faisal said Wednesday that the tanker's owners were in talks with the hijackers. "We do not like to negotiate with either terrorists or hijackers, but the owners of the tanker are the owners of the tanker and they are the final arbiters of what happens there." Two of the 25 crew members aboard the Sirius Star are Britons, Peter French and James Grady. The British Foreign Office released a statement on their families' behalf Thursday, saying they "greatly appreciate the concern that has been expressed." Money blog.Money blogging.Crisis in the shipping industryMoney and financial crisis has hardly hit the shipping industry as freight rates have collapsed with a warp speed!Financial Times Hopes ride on simpler payments to salvage dry bulk shipping rates ---------------- Radical steps to tackle the crisis in the shipping industry triggered by a collapse in dry bulk freight rates will be proposed at emergency talks in London today. The conference will consider plans to simplify payments in the complex chains of transactions whereby operators charter dry bulk ships from owners, then charter them on to others. Many in the industry believe shipowners' fears about the financial stability of other parties in such long chains are exacerbating a crisis of confidence that has seen many activities grind to a halt in the past six weeks. Banks are increasingly unwilling to finance vessel purchases, give guarantees for payments to shipyards or guarantee payments for the goods such as iron ore and coal that the sector handles. Shortage of finance has combined with fading confidence and falling demand to create a collapse in short-term dry bulk shipping rates. The average rate to charter a Capesize dry bulk carrier, which hit a record of $233,988 a day on June 5, has fallen 98.4 per cent to an average $3,670, far below operating costs. Bankruptcies among shipowners unable to service debts will worsen conditions. Forced sales of vessels could push values down even more, prompting banks to call in loans secured against ships. Two operators - Ukraine's Industrial Carriers and London-based Britannia Bulk - have gone into administration. Freight Investor Services, a London-based shipping derivatives broker, will make proposals to simplify payments to the conference, which has been organised by the Baltic Exchange. In a letter sent to clients and seen by the Financial Times, FIS suggests an arrangement for dry bulk markets similar to one it has implemented to settle freight futures contracts. FIS suggests participants in its suggested pool for physical ships would make a single net payment into or out of the pool every 15 days for all the vessels they either chartered or owned. /// Dry bulk goods growth to halt in 2009 --------------- The double-digit growth in seaborne trade of dry bulk commodities, such as iron ore and grains, over the past few years will come to a halt in 2009 as economic growth in China and elsewhere slows down, commodity analysts and shipbrokers say. "We will see some growth next year, but nothing close to the strong increases of the last few years," says Peter Norfolk, director of research at London-based shipbrokers Simpson Spence and Young. "It is a big slowdown," he adds. The International Monetary Fund forecasts that the world's trade volumes - including dry bulk, container shipping and services - will grow next year by 2 per cent, the lowest rate since 2001, down from 4.6 per cent this year. The drop comes as the econ-omic slowdown spreads from the US into Europe and Japan and also hits emerging economies such as China and India. Analysts and shipbrokers are cautious about their forecast for dry bulk commodities trade in 2009 because of changing economic conditions, but most of them forecast little if any growth. Some foresee a decline in trade. UBS estimated seaborne iron ore trade would drop next year to 741m tonnes, down 4.1 per cent from this year's record of 775m tonnes, because of the slowdown in Chinese demand, which accounts for almost half of the world's imports. The Swiss bank forecast that trading in coking coal - another ingredient in steelmaking - would also fall next year. It said about 222m tonnes of coal would be shipped, down 2.4 per cent from this year's record 227m tonnes. But the drop in volumes transported could be also mirrored by shipments being concentrated in a shorter time frame, supporting the market, according to Philippe Van den Abeele of the shipping hedge fund Castalia. The iron ore and coal markets - the two most important for dry bulk commodities and critical for freight prices for large vessels such as Capesize - will come with a reduction in grains such as corn and rice trading, which are important for smaller vessels. The United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organisation forecast that global cereal trade would drop in the 2008-09 harvest season to 264m tonnes, down 2.9 per cent from the 2007-8 -season. "Reduced trade in coarse grains is the main reason for the world cereal trade decline, although a small contraction in global rice transactions is also anticipated," the Rome-based FAO said in its recent Food Outlook report. MONEY BLOGMAKE MONEY - MAKE MONEY ONLINE - INTERNET BUSINESS - INTERNET BUSINESS BLOGMoney and business news 17/11/2008Forecasters: tough road ahead for the economy WASHINGTON (AP) -- The country is sinking deeper into the economic doldrums, and it's likely to stay there for a while. That's part of the latest outlook from forecasters in a survey to be released Monday by the National Association for Business Economics, also known by its acronym, NABE. Approximately 96 percent of the economists polled believe that a recession has started, and nearly three-fourths think it could persist beyond the first quarter of 2009. Under one definition, a recession happens when the economy shrinks for two quarters in a row. The economy contracted 0.3 percent in the third quarter as battered consumers cut back sharply on spending, the government reported last month. It was the worst showing since 2001, when the country was last in a recession. NABE economists, among other experts, predict activity will continue to shrink in both the final quarter of this year and the first quarter of next year as weary consumers hunker down further under the stresses of rising unemployment, shrinking nest eggs and falling home values. "Business economists became decidedly more negative on the economic outlook for the next several quarters as a result of the intensification of credit market stresses and evidence of spillover to the real economy," said NABE president Chris Varvares, president of Macroeconomic Advisers. NABE economists are now forecasting the economy to shrink at a 2.6 percent pace in the final quarter of this year and then at a 1.3 percent pace in the first three months of 2009. The new projections marked downgrades from the association's previous survey, which called for growth of just 0.1 percent in the final quarter of this year and a 1.3 percent growth rate in the following quarter. Money bad news : Recession is hereFor all of 2008, the association's economists are predicting the economy's growth will slow to 1.4 percent, down from 2 percent in 2007. If the new, lower projection proves correct, it would mark the weakest performance since the 2001 . The picture would turn worse in 2009. The NABE economists are projecting the economy will jolt into reverse, shrinking by 0.2 percent for all of next year. If that happens, it would mark the worst showing since 1991, when the country was starting to pull out of a recession. With the economy losing traction, the nation's unemployment rate will climb to 7.5 percent by the end of next year, the economists predict. Other analysts think it could rise to 8 percent at that time, or even hit 10 percent or higher if a U.S. auto company were to go under. The nation's unemployment rate bolted to 6.5 percent in October, a 14-year high , the government reported earlier this month. To cushion the fallout, the Federal Reserve has slashed a key interest rate, dropping it to just 1 percent, a level seen only once before in the last half-century. Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke has warned that the country's economic weakness could last for some time - even if the government's unprecedented $700 billion financial bailout package and other steps do succeed in getting financial and credit markets to operate more normally. In a speech Friday, Bernanke left the door open to another rate reduction, warning that financial markets remain under "severe strain." Wall Street investors and economists believe the Fed probably will lower interest rates again on Dec. 16, its last regularly scheduled meeting this year , by one-quarter or even one-half percentage point. The NABE survey of 50 forecasters was taken Oct. 28 through Nov. 7. The raft of grim economic news prompted Sandra Pianalto, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, to say in a speech Friday that the data to date "tells me that the economy is now in a recession." "At the moment, the signs point to a recession beyond just a 'garden variety' downturn," she said. "The length and severity of the recession will depend on how quickly credit markets return to normal." Citigroup chairman doesn't deny job cuts are near DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) -- Citigroup's chairman is hinting the banking giant will announce more job cuts Monday, and isn't ruling out the possibility executives will follow peers at Goldman Sachs and forgo bonuses. Various reports have suggested Citi may be looking to shed thousands of jobs through layoffs and attrition. Speaking briefly to The Associated Press in Dubai on Monday, Chairman Winfried Bischoff said the company will make an announcement about its plans at 9 a.m. New York time, an hour after a town-hall meeting for employees is scheduled. He did not deny that job cuts are coming but declined to comment further. Citigroup has been among the banks hardest hit by the ongoing credit crisis. The New York-based bank has posted four consecutive quarterly losses including a loss of $2.8 billion during the third quarter. As part of its plan to return to profitability, Citigroup is already in the midst of cutting 22,000 jobs worldwide. Through the end of the third quarter, it shed 12,900 jobs and it expects to cut the remaining 9,100 jobs over the next 12 months. Citigroup had about 352,000 employees at the end of the third quarter. The bank has a companywide meeting scheduled for 8 a.m. EST that is expected to last about an hour. Citigroup spokeswoman Christina Pretto in New York declined to elaborate on what would be said during the town hall meeting. Bischoff's comments came shortly after he told attendees at the Leaders in Dubai Business Forum that it would be irresponsible for Citi and other companies not to look at staffing needs in the event of a prolonged economic downturn. "What all of us have done - and perhaps injudiciously - we've added a lot of people over ... this very benign period," he said. "If there is a reversion to the mean ... those job losses will obviously fall particularly heavily on the financial sector," he added. "Certainly they will fall particularly heavily on London and New York." Some reports have suggested Citi could be eyeing cutbacks of up to 10 percent of its work force. Bischoff said the company loses about 8 percent of its employees annually through natural turnover. In his comments to the AP, Bischoff did not rule out the likelihood that Citi's leaders would go without bonuses this year - a move that would effectively amount to a substantial pay cut for the company's executives. "Watch this space," he said when asked about lost bonuses. On Sunday, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. said seven top executives, including Chief Executive Lloyd Blankfein, will not receive cash or stock bonuses for 2008 amid the ongoing credit crisis. The seven Goldman executives made the decision to not take bonuses themselves, the compoany said. China central bank says risk of downturn growing BEIJING - The risks of a downturn in the Chinese economy are on the rise and will require steps to ensure adequate liquidity in the banking system, the central bank said on Monday. In its third-quarter monetary policy report, the People's Bank of China (PBOC) said that inflationary pressures had eased alongside falling commodity prices, and that it would focus on preventing deflation in the short term. The PBOC said it would use open market operations to help increase liquidity, and would ensure that adequate credit is available in the financial system to complement the government's fiscal stimulus policies. "Uncertainties in the domestic economy are increasing, and the risk of an economic downturn is getting bigger. China's macroeconomic controls are facing a more complicated and fast-changing situation," the central bank said in the report. Annual economic growth slowed to nine per cent in the third quarter from 11.9 per cent all of last year, and indicators for October showed factory output and investment slowing further. The central bank singled out the property sector as one facing troubles, cautioning that problems there could spread to other parts of the economy. However, it did not provide specific economic forecasts. The central bank's assessment follows the cabinet's announcement earlier this month of a four trillion yuan ($US586 billion) fiscal stimulus package, which came alongside a shift to an "appropriately relaxed" monetary policy. The central bank has already cut interest rates three times since mid-September to support growth, as well as encouraged banks to lend more to worthwhile projects. Deputy central bank governor Yi Gang signalled last Friday that the central bank had shifted its focus to avoiding deflation, saying the risk of inflation had virtually disappeared. In its report on Monday, the PBOC cautioned that it had to tread carefully to make sure that its current stimulative policies did not sow the seeds of inflation down the road. "Monetary policy should prevent deflation in the short term but prevent inflation in the long run," it said, adding that rising labour costs and the potential for a rebound in resource prices could eventually put upward pressure on prices. Lower inflation could provide more room for reform to the pricing of energy, transport, power, gas and water, the central bank said. The government currently controls such prices, which analysts say often leads to market distortions. The central bank noted that a global economic slowdown could strike a blow to the export sector, which is an important driver of growth. Data in recent days has confirmed that both Japan and the euro zone are technically in recession. "The United States, Europe and Japan are facing recession, and emerging economies are also seeing a bigger risk of slowing down, which may have a relatively big impact on external demand for Chinese products," it said. The central bank did not provide forward-looking comments on the yuan's exchange rate, but it said that it would promote the currency's convertibility on the capital account. It is currently not freely exchangeable for purely financial transactions. Source: businessspectator.com Gold supported, but gains seen capped LONDON - Physical demand helped support gold, but analysts say a higher dollar, lower oil prices and receding inflationary worries will cap prices in the short term. However, analysts said that over the longer term, a substantial depreciation of the dollar will help boost the precious metal. A weaker US currency makes gold priced in dollars cheaper for holders of other currencies. Spot gold The dollar slipped on Monday, but it is higher than in July when it hit record lows against the euro under $US1.60. "We are quite bullish for gold the long term, primarily because we see the dollar weakening substantially on all this liquidity being pumped into the system," Dan Smith, analyst at Standard Chartered, said. To ease the credit crunch and financial crisis, central banks around the world have slashed interest rates and made available large amounts of cash to the banking sector. The realisation that financial problems would not be confined to the United States has helped bolster the dollar. But expectations of an acceleration of government debt issuance in the United States is likely to hit dollar sentiment over the coming year, analysts said. "Given ... the unprecedented demand for physical, particularly gold coins and bars, and the possibility that the dollar strength is unsustainable longer term , we believe that precious metals could outperform," UBS said in a note. Struggle Gold has struggled to maintain an uptrend since hitting a two-month high of $US931 an ounce in early October. It is down nearly 30 per cent since hitting a peak at $US1,030.80 in March. Reasons for gold's tumble since March include an easing of fears about runaway inflation, partly due to falling commodity prices, including oil, which is now trading around $US56 a barrel from record highs above $US147 an ounce in July. Also behind gold's fall has been investors' need for liquidity and cash to cover losses on stock markets. Gold is often used as a hedge against inflation and financial market uncertainty, which was not allayed by a meeting of the Group of 20 countries over the weekend. Governments from Washington to Beijing agreed to a raft of fiscal and monetary steps to rescue the global economy but it was left to individual countries to tailor their responses to their particular circumstances and industries. A major industry in trouble is the auto sector, which has reported a rapidly deteriorating outlook and undermined confidence in the platinum market. Prices of platinum, used to make autocatalysts, have collapsed by more than 60 per cent since a record high of $US2,290 an ounce in March. The platinum market is looking ahead to a report on the platinum and palladium markets from the world's top platinum refiner, Johnson Matthey, due on Tuesday. Platinum was at $US823/843 an ounce from $US833.50 late in New York on Friday, palladium at $US216/221 from $US213 and silver at $US9.56/9.64 from $US9.48. Source: businessspectator.com Oil falls to near two-year low, below $US56 LONDON - Oil fell more than $US1 to below $US56 a barrel on Monday, close to its lowest in almost two years, after a meeting of the Group of 20 major economies ended with few concrete proposals on dealing with global recession. News that the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) may wait until its meeting on December 17, instead of the end of November, to make a decision on whether to cut production targets again also weighed on prices. US light crude for December fell $US1.55, or 2.7 per cent, to a low of $US55.49 a barrel before recovering a little to around $US55.79 by 2210 AEDT. Last Thursday, US crude reached a low of $US54.67 a barrel, its weakest since January 2007. London Brent crude fell $US0.98 to $US53.26. Simon Wardell, analyst at economic consultancy Global Insight, said the lack of any solid action plan from the G20 had provided a weak undertone to the oil market: "The economic outlook is worrying and no solution has been found short term. People are expecting things to get worse as the economic data continues to look poor and, in the absence of anything else, that is helping to push prices lower ." Governments from Washington to Beijing agreed on Saturday to a raft of fiscal and monetary steps to rescue the global economy but it was left to individual governments to tailor responses to their circumstances and troubled industries. Although the package of economic rescue measures agreed by the G20 countries sought to settle volatile markets and calm consumer anxieties about leaders' ability to work together, the proposals did little to alleviate investors' fears. OPEC uncertainty The worst financial crisis since the 1930s has pushed a growing number of countries into recession, heightening fears of a sharp slowdown in near-term world energy demand and accelerating oil's tumble from its July peak of over $US147. Japan provided more gloomy economic news on Monday with data showing the world's second-biggest economy was in recession. The Japanese economy shrank 0.1 per cent in the third quarter, marking its first recession in seven years. Oil fell over two per cent on Friday after news of a euro zone recession and data showing a record decline in US retail sales stirred concerns of a further drop in fuel demand. OPEC may have to wait until December to take action to reach a preferred oil price range of between $US70-$US90 a barrel because the effect of its latest cut is not yet clear, the group's president said on Sunday. Chakib Khelil said he saw a meeting of OPEC ministers in Cairo on November 29 as more of a brainstorming session that might formulate recommendations for action at OPEC's gathering in Algeria on December 17. Several OPEC members want another production cut in the face of falling revenues. Iran wants OPEC to cut output by a further 1-1.5 million barrels per day (bpd) when it meets in Cairo. "Market focus in energy will again be on what OPEC will be up to," brokers MF Global said in a note to clients. "We suspect that should the cartel put through another 1.0-1.5 million bpd cut ... a good part of the current supply/demand imbalance will be redressed. However it remains to be seen how quickly this excess crude will be taken off the market." Source: businessspectator.com UK port workers threaten strike WORKERS at the UK?s Port of Dover threatened today to strike for 48 hours over a manning dispute. Members of the UNITE union plan to walk out tomorrow over a harbour board decision to outsource 190 jobs at the port, which employs 570 workers and staff . ?We are transferring 190 jobs in the ferry mooring operations, trailer-handling and security departments to third parties, which will mean the loss of a few jobs,? a port spokesman told Fairplay. Advisory service ACAS has been asked to arbitrate between the board and UNITE members. Source: Fairplay Shipping News Historic UK shipyard reopens ONE OF the great names in shipbuilding, Cammell Laird, has been revived by a management team led by MD John Syvret. "It has taken seven years of grit and determination, commitment and long hours ? to rebuild a thriving business here," Syret told Fairplay today. The original Merseyside company was closed in 2001, but Syvret formed a new company, Northwestern Shiprepairers & Shipbuilders, at the yard the same year. In just seven years, the new company carved a niche in ship repair, conversion and refits, with a full orderbook and forecast turnover of £90M ($134M). It also has a defence contract worth £1Bn. So now Syvret has decided it will be timely to revive the famous yard. The new Cammell Laird yard has already forged an alliance with Europe?s largest shipbuilder, Fincantieri of Italy. Source: Fairplay Shipping News Opec wants oil at $70-$90 a barrel The Opec oil cartel wants oil prices of $70-90 a barrel, Chakib Khelil, Algeria?s energy minister and the group?s president, said on Sunday, suggesting the group would try to defend this level with further production cuts in the coming months. Opec no longer has an official price band, which it tries to maintain, but several countries, including Venezuela, have pushed for its resurrection. However, Saudi Arabia has so far resisted the idea, analysts and Opec delegates said. The group, which control?s 40 per cent of the world?s supplies, will next meet this month in Egypt and in Algeria in mid-December. Analysts have said the organisation would need to take 1-2m further barrels of oil out of the market to rebalance supply with falling demand. Iran at the weekend called for Opec to agree a 1-1.5m b/d cut when it meets later this month. Opec has already begun to cut its production in an effort to adhere to its recent decision to reduce its output by as many as 1.8m a day from November 1. Mr Khelil said: ?Our objective is to reach a price of $70-$90?Because it?s the price of the marginal cost for new developments, whether that?s Canadian bituminous sands, the Brazilian deep offshore or even Venezuelan heavy crude. If we don?t have $70-$90 in the next few years then eventually we?ll go much higher [in price] because we will have no production from these deep reserves, from the bituminous sands or from the kind of reserves that need $70.? Source: ft.com Citigroup to cut another 53,000 jobs NEW YORK (AP) -- Citigroup Inc. is cutting approximately 53,000 more jobs in the coming quarters as the banking giant struggles to steady itself after suffering massive losses from deteriorating debt. The plans, posted on the company's Web site, are being discussed by CEO Vikram Pandit at the company's town hall meeting in New York Monday with employees. The company said total headcount is being reduced by 20 percent from its peak of 375,000 at the end of 2007; the company had already announced in October that it was eliminating about 22,000 jobs from those levels. The New York-based bank has posted four straight quarterly losses, including a loss of $2.8 billion during the third quarter. Shortly before the town hall meeting in New York, Citigroup Chairman Win Bischoff said at a business forum in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, that it would be irresponsible for Citi and other companies not to look at staffing in the event of a prolonged economic downturn. "What all of us have done - and perhaps injudiciously - we've added a lot of people over ... this very benign period," Bischoff said. "If there is a reversion to the mean ... those job losses will obviously fall particularly heavily on the financial sector," he added. "Certainly they will fall particularly heavily on London and New York." In his comments to the Associated Press, Bischoff did not rule out the likelihood that Citi's leaders would go without bonuses this year - a move that would effectively amount to a substantial pay cut for the company's executives. "Watch this space," he said when asked about lost bonuses. On Sunday, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. said seven top executives, including Chief Executive Lloyd Blankfein, opted out of receiving cash or stock bonuses for 2008 amid the ongoing credit crisis. Mundra Port to set up second dedicated automobile terminal Developer and operator of the Mundra Port, Mundra Port & Special Economic Zone Ltd (MPSEZ), is expected to announce a partnership with Wallenius Wilhelmsen Logistics (WWL) and NYK Line this week to set up a dedicated automobile terminal at the western coast port, according to an executive at the Adani group. ?Wallenius Wilhelmsen Logistics, NYK Line and MPSEZ will sign a memorandum of understanding in the next few days to set up a multi-user dedicated automobile terminal at Mundra port,? said the executive who didn?t want to be named ahead of the announcement, which could come as early as Monday . ?We want to turn Mundra port into a hub for automobile exports.? Being a private port, Mundra is free to set its own tariffs unlike the 11 Union government-owned major ports. The expected announcement of the partnership with WWL and NYK Line comes weeks after Tata Motors Ltd picked Sanand near Ahmedabad as the site to manufacture the Nano car. A spokesperson for Adani Group, which is promoted by billionaire Gautam Adani, declined to comment. WWL and NYK Line could not be reached for comment over the weekend. WWL, owned jointly by Swedish shipping firm Wallenius Lines AB and Oslo-listed Norwegian shipping group Wilh. Wilhelmsen ASA, is a leading independent provider of global factory-to-dealer transport solutions for the automotive, agricultural and construction equipment industries. It operates about 65 pure car and truck carriers and roll-on roll-off vessels. Tokyo-headquartered NYK Line is one of the biggest pure car carriers, or PCC in the world. In October, MPSEZ had signed an agreement with India?s largest car maker Maruti Suzuki India Ltd to develop a dedicated Rs100 crore, 250,000-units-a-year car export terminal, also to be managed by NYK Line. That terminal is expected to start operations in December, and the car handling capacity will be raised by an additional 400,000 units by 2010. ?Mundra will provide cost competitive support to Indian automobile industry for international trade and our aim is to make Mundra a hub for automobile exports, ? Gautam Adani, MPSEZ?s chairman and managing director, had said in February while signing the agreement with Suzuki. The setting up of a new dedicated facility to handle automobiles is part of Adani?s plan to expand Mundra?s cargo handling capacity to 50 million tonnes (mt) by 2010, from 30mt now and further to 120mt by 2015, the same executive said. India is gradually becoming an export hub for small and mini cars, led by Japan?s Suzuki Motor Corp. and Korea?s Hyundai Motor Co. Currently, Mumbai and Chennai are the only two ports that have terminals to handle export of automobiles. Pure car carriers and roll-on roll-off vessels operated by NYK Line, Mitsui OSK Lines (MOL) and K-Line, regularly call at these ports. While Tata Motors, Suzuki, Ashok Leyland Ltd and Eicher Motors Ltd depend on Mumbai owing to the proximity to their production centres, Hyundai and Ford export cars through Chennai for the same reason. In October, Nissan Motor India Pvt. Ltd had signed an agreement with union government-owned Ennore Port Ltd near Chennai to export automobiles manufactured at its Oragadam plant, also close to Chennai. Source: Hellenic Shipping News Gulftainer cracks the whip on idle cargoes at ports Following the move of DP World, Gulftainer Company Limited is set to tighten its rules over incoming full containers and increase demurrage rates at Sharjah's terminals by as much as 275 per cent, starting next month, sources told Gulf News last week. The new rates, intended to prevent congestion and discourage use of the ports as long-term storage facilities, will cover imports of full containers at Port Khalid, Khor Fakkan and Sharjah Inland Container Depot. While it now appears that most major ports in the UAE are resorting to higher demurrage rates to drive away long-term idle cargoes, ports in Fujairah will keep their storage rates to a minimum. Some cargoes reportedly spilled over in Sharjah recently, threatening to clog the emirate's ports, even as Dubai's terminals at Jebel Ali were congested, following the closure of Port Rashid months ago. However, shipping companies interviewed by Gulf News said traffic at the Dubai and Sharjah terminals has eased since DP World increased its storage rates. Effective December 1, the free period at Sharjah's ports will be reduced from 10 days to 7. Daily rates for storage between the 8th and 12th days will increase 275 per cent from Dh20 to Dh75 for every 20-foot container, and from Dh40 to Dh150 per 40-foot container. The same rates will be charged from the 13th to 17th days, but it will apply from the first day, as the free use of port facilities will be forfeited. The daily rates will go up further to Dh130 per 20-foot container and Dh260 per 40-foot container from the 18th day onwards. Smooth traffic Gulftainer clarified that cargo traffic at their terminals has always been smooth, adding that the new tariff structure, which has not yet been finalised, is intended to prevent future congestion. "The Sharjah terminals are not currently congested. These new storage terms are rather intended to prevent [future] congestion from occurring, particularly in the light of the new rates being implemented in Dubai," Gulftainer commercial manager Keith Nuttal told Gulf News. "Congestion at the Dubai ports stemmed from the fact that many people wanted to use the facilities as long-term storage facilities and the new storage terms are intended to prevent this happening at the Sharjah terminals," Nuttal added. In Fujairah port general manager Mousa Murad said they noticed a sizeable increase in cargo business in recent weeks, but their policy has always been to keep fees low. "And that will not change. Our container terminals are very busy, but given the current limited storing capacity, it's fair to say we do better with deliveries which could be transferred immediately. From early next year we will have more container terminals to handle increasing demand," Murad told Gulf News. Shaji Lakshman, assistant operations manager of Seatrade Shipping, said some ships spilled over to Khor Fakkan from Jebel Ali when Dubai's ports were congested. However, traffic has eased since DP World decongested Jebel Ali's ports. "We had problems when Jebel Ali was clogged. Now we only have congestion on certain days," Lakshman told Gulf News. Source: Hellenic Shipping News India: Secondary steel producers oppose move for 10% import duty The tug of war between the primary and secondary steel manufacturers for Government protection has flared up again ? this time on the issue of imposition of import duty on steel products. The Cold Rolled Steel Manufacturers? Association (Corsma), representing secondary steel producers, has written to the Finance Ministry urging it not to go ahead with the Steel Ministry?s recommendation of imposing a 10 per cent import duty on steel products. The Steel Ministry has recommended the imposition of an import duty following representations made by primary steel manufacturers seeking protection against falling international prices and allegations that some CIS countries and China are dumping steel in India. Falling international prices encourages secondary producers to import since it works out cheaper than domestic supplies. Imposition of an import duty will make imports dearer and secondary manufacturers would be pushed towards buying from domestic primary producers who have piled up huge inventories. Corsma had sent the letter to the Finance Ministry earlier this week following the Steel Ministry?s recommendations made to the Finance Ministry last week. Pointing out that India is committed to retain duty rates at ASEAN levels, the communication from Corsma states that ?protection to any industry should be provided only through statutory authorities which is the Anti-Dumping Directorate rather than distortion and dislocation of the entire customs duty structure?. Falling prices and poor demand has forced all primary steel manufacturers to reduce prices and cut down production in the last few weeks. However, despite production cuts prices continue to slide as the glut situation in the global market continues. Domestic prices down Domestic steel prices, which peaked in July to Rs 46,000 a tonne (excluding all central, State and local taxes), is now down to Rs 36,000 a tonne in November, while international prices are still lower. Corsma, however, feels that reduction in global prices of steel and its raw materials augurs well for developing countries such as India since it will bring down costs of infrastructure and housing costs as well as for engineering and manufacturing. Urging the Finance Ministry not to go ahead with the duty proposals, the Corsma letter states that the ?Government should not interfere to block reduction in the prices of raw materials and steel to normal levels as availability of key inputs at fair prices is key to industrial growth?. Source: Hellenic Shipping News Experts predict US coal market will cool off in 2009 It is reported that industry experts earlier speaking at the US Coal Imports and Exports conference have predicted that the perfect storm of events that caused a surge in coal prices and international demand this year and boosted activity at the port of Hampton Roads probably will pass in 2009. Mr Ed Roarty director of commercial fuels for Virginia Power Energy Marketing Inc said that those conditions, including flooding in Australian mines, the weak dollar and transportation shortages, are not sustainable. Mr Lloyd Kelly president of Greenmont Energy Consulting added that as a result, coal exports from the United States, including from Hampton Roads, probably will slow next year. Mr Frank Kolojeski MD for TransGlobal Ventures Corporation, which hosted the conference with The McCloskey Group commented that for the first time since the event started in 2001, the conference included coal exports, reflecting changes in the worldwide market. Mr Kolojeski also said that if US coal exports fall softly, they'll return to normal levels during the next few years, but in a sharp decline scenario, coal exports could fall by more than 30 million tonnes in 2009 with prices also dropping by as much as USD 100 per tonne. Source: Hellenic Shipping News Meltdown: Plunging Oil prices hit refinery projects Finally the global recession has done it! The deepening economic crisis that has gripped the world has pulled down crude oil prices back to the ground. It is the lack of demand for energy in the aftermath of global credit crisis that helped combat the ever increasing oil prices. Global oil prices have dropped almost more than 200 percent from its high of $147 a barrel not long ago. The prices now is hovering around $ 55 a barrel now a days. In which way could the lower prices affect various refinery projects across the world just like the way it affected some banks during the beginning of the credit crisis? It was reported that more than four-out-of-five refinery construction projects face cancellation as the worldwide collapse in fuel demand has wiped out all but those developments with strong government backing. Only 30 of the 160 refining projects announced since 2005, which should be completed in the next two to seven years, would now go ahead. Until a few months ago profit margins were strong and refiners were struggling to meet high demand. Of the 30 refineries still on track, almost all have the backing of large national oil companies, which are set to provide 11 million of the 12 million barrels of new refining capacity expected to come on stream. The sharp drop in the number of new refineries is related to the collapse in the refiner's profit margins, known in the industry as crack spreads. The scale of the cutback is the starkest illustration yet of the severity of the collapse in fuel demand and the effect on refining industry. A widely touted supply bottleneck had been caused by the lack of investment in refining in the lean years of the 1990s. Saudi Arabia's Saudi Aramco and China's Sinopec will aggregate account for two million of those barrels. This will significantly shift the balance of power in refining away from the West, whose integrated oil companies and independent refiners have dominated the sector from the start more than a century ago. Two-thirds of the refining capacity additions are expected to be in Asia and the Middle East, but even there, delays are being announced. Source: Hellenic Shipping News How low can it go? Economists ponder crude oil price's bottom A little more than four months ago, there appeared to be no end in sight to oil/s spectacular run, with some calling for prices to hit US$200 a barrel. But crude has been on a steep, virtually uninterrupted downward slide since hitting a record of US$147 on July 11. Crude for December delivery closed at US$57.04 per barrel Friday on the New York Mercantile Exchange _ a more than60 per cent decline from its all-time high. Economists, who mere months ago struggled to pinpoint crude/s peak, are now pondering just the opposite question: how much lower can it go? The answer, they say, lies in how severe the current economic downturn ends up being and how long it lasts. Vincent Lauerman, president of energy consultant Geopolitics Central, said prices are likely near their short-term lows and that there/s a good chance they may recover somewhat in the next few months. "But at the same time, where prices are ultimately going to land really depends on how this global financial crisis plays out," he said. Lauerman looks at two scenarios, dubbed "Love Thy Neighbour" and "Beggar Thy Neighbour." In the first case, world leaders work together to get a handle on the credit crisis that has gripped global markets in recent months. Under that scenario, oil prices would recover and average a sturdy US$80 for the next five years. However, in the "Beggar Thy Neighbour" scenario, global players begin to work against each other, tossing world markets into deeper and deeper turmoil. Crude would be an average of US$40 for the next five years in that case. "If the global economy really tanks, of course oil demand will tank right along with it and we could end up with substantially lower prices than we/re seeing even currently down the road," Lauerman said. TD economist Derek Burleton says oil prices will likely fall to US$45 by early next year, and perhaps even lower in the short term. Under a more pessimistic scenario _ with global growth at 0.9 per cent rather than two per cent _ oil could dip below US$30 periodically, he said. "That/s going to be the near-term trend until we get some signs of firming in the global economy and we/re a couple of quarters off from that occurring," he said. TD sees prices rising to the $70-$75-a-barrel range by the end of next year _ but not flirting with the US$150 mark again. "Many of the factors that contributed to oil/s sharp rise in were an aberration . We don/t see them being repeated nearly to the same extent going forward," Burleton said. The world will likely not see the same feverish economic growth, especially from China and other emerging economies, that ramped up demand. Investors probably won/t stampede toward commodities to the same degree they did ahead of the runup earlier this year and conservation measures will likely stick around. There are some factors that should, in theory, rein in the selloff as well. Many institutional investors have been bailing out of their commodity positions in droves as a means to raise cash recently. But that phenomenon should subside as calm gradually returns to rattled markets, Burleton said. There are also more production cuts expected by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries. At a meeting three weeks ago, OPEC slashed its quotas by 1.5 million barrels a day in an effort to buoy prices. Those cuts do not appear to have had much of an effect, as the market focuses more on a gloomy demand picture than a more bullish supply picture. But when the organization holds another emergency meeting later this month in Cairo, many expect further reductions. As for what oil/s decline means for Canada/s economy, a report by the Bank of Montreal last week said the picture looks quite grim. Provincial and federal coffers had seen windfall corporate taxes and royalties as a result of high commodity prices. "The combination of rapidly deteriorating economic outlook and plunging commodities threatens a broad based return to deficits in many jurisdictions," wrote deputy chief economist Douglas Porter, adding that he predicts Ottawa is headed for a budget deficit of up to $7 billion in the next fiscal year. Ontario has been slammed by cuts in the manufacturing and automotive sectors, but a weaker loonie and lower energy costs could be a few positive by-products of oil/s downturn, Porter wrote. "However, recent developments are unambiguously bad news for Western Canada, which had already been showing some signs of cooling even prior to the commodity collapse." Source: Hellenic Shipping News RBS plans to lay off 15% of its investment bankers Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) is planning to cut about 3,000 jobs in its investment banking division as the bank braces for a tough year. The cuts, equivalent to about 15 per cent of the workforce of RBS' investment banking division, come as rival banks are planning similar cutbacks in response to the slowdown in financial markets. Nevertheless, the cuts are a further indictment of RBS's previous strategy, most notably its participation last year in a hostile break-up bid for ABN Amro, the Dutch lender. The 71 billion euro (Dh330 billion) deal boosted RBS's investment banking operations just as markets were beginning to seize up. The move comes as Stephen Hester, RBS's new chief executive, embarks on a fundamental review of the bank's operations in an effort to shrink the size of its balance sheet. RBS is expected to report a loss this year, largely because of heavy write-downs on leveraged loans and other complex debt securities on its balance sheet. The bank is under pressure to scale back riskier and more capital-intensive activities after raising A£20 billion (Dh109 billion) in fresh capital as part of the UK government's rescue of the banking system. The bailout could give the state a near-60 per cent stake. The bank would not confirm details of the cuts, which came as no surprise in the current market climate. "We constantly review our business model to make sure its is appropriate for the market conditions," RBS said. The cuts are expected to fall relatively evenly across the division, which operates in 50 countries, as a result of a general retrenching rather than any decisions to get out of some business lines entirely. The cuts will not affect RBS's retail banking operations. The bank employs about 170,000 staff in total. RBS had previously cut about 7,000 jobs, largely in its investment banking arm, as part of the integration of ABN Amro. The move comes as banks around the globe are trimming their investment banking divisions as a result of the slowdown. Last week, Morgan Stanley said it planned to chop about 2,000 jobs, or four per cent of its workforce. Source: Hellenic Shipping News B&B/GPT joint venture faces up to $US82m loss Babcock & Brown Ltd (B&B) says a joint venture fund the investment firm holds with GPT Group Ltd in the United States faces up to a $US82 million loss from a potential asset liquidation. The news comes as Babcock's wind-energy subsidiary Babcock & Brown Wind Partners sold its Portuguese business Enersis for ?1.2 billion ($A2.31 billion) . Babcock said a special purpose vehicle, which holds US loan asset investments on behalf of the B&B/GPT joint venture, received a notice of acceleration under a debt facility provided by Wachovia Bank after it failed to provide additi |