Greece throws the world in turmoil as France and Germany says that the Greece referdum is a vote on whether Greece wants to stay in the Euro Zone. In the mean time, Big Bad Ben Bernanke says that QE 3d is a real possibility as he lowers the growth and jobs forecast for the US economy. The Energy Information agency added a few surprises with a big build in crude oil and a disturbing drop in distillates that could send chills across your spine if you heat your home with heating oil. Yet the markets seemr to hope that the nova convening G20 can bring order back to the market place in a world where we don't know where the next crisis might come from.
Now austerity is one issue but having a sugar daddy to pay your bills is another. Greek PM Papandreou threw caution to the wind for what purpose no one is quite sure. If it was to save his political backside well perhaps he is one. European leaders on the other hand reframed the debate by telling the people of Greece that the referendum vote about the Greek bailout package may be a vote on whether they want to be in or out of the EU.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy has pulled the plug on the euro zone rescue aid driving Greek bonds to 100% and perhaps putting the country on the verge on bankruptcy. Sarkozy says that there will be, "no French taxpayer money, no German taxpayer money" until the question is answered. In the meantime global markets tank but are finding hope that somehow the G20 will restore sanity or a split in Papandreou inner circle might find hope that Greece will accept its partners handout.....Read Phil's entire article.
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Showing posts with label Nicolas Sarkozy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nicolas Sarkozy. Show all posts
Thursday, November 3, 2011
Phil Flynn: Greased Lightening!
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bailout,
Crude Oil,
EU,
George Papandreou,
Greece,
Nicolas Sarkozy,
Phil Flynn
Saturday, October 22, 2011
Crude Oil Rises On Hopes of Euro Zone Deal
Crude oil futures rose Friday amid high hopes going into a weekend summit of European leaders working to resolve the sovereign debt crisis, following equities and the euro higher.
Prices jumped as trading opened in New York and were up as much as 3% in midmorning trade before settling back. Light, sweet crude for December delivery ended the day up $1.33, or 1.6%, to $87.40 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent crude on the ICE Futures Europe exchange settled 20 cents lower, or 0.2%, to $109.56 a barrel.
Traders and analysts said the market rose on the belief that European leaders will finally put forth a comprehensive settlement to the European credit crunch that has plagued markets on and off for the last year and a half. Government and finance officials were to hold a series of meetings in Brussels this weekend; French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel issued a joint statement saying they would put forth a plan by Wednesday......Read the entire Rigzone article.
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Prices jumped as trading opened in New York and were up as much as 3% in midmorning trade before settling back. Light, sweet crude for December delivery ended the day up $1.33, or 1.6%, to $87.40 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent crude on the ICE Futures Europe exchange settled 20 cents lower, or 0.2%, to $109.56 a barrel.
Traders and analysts said the market rose on the belief that European leaders will finally put forth a comprehensive settlement to the European credit crunch that has plagued markets on and off for the last year and a half. Government and finance officials were to hold a series of meetings in Brussels this weekend; French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel issued a joint statement saying they would put forth a plan by Wednesday......Read the entire Rigzone article.
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Angela Merkal,
Crude,
equities,
Euro Zone,
INO TV,
Nicolas Sarkozy,
Rigzone
Monday, October 10, 2011
Crude Oil Rallies on Euro Zone Pledge
Trading was light on the holiday that commemorates Christopher Columbus' arrival in the New World, but news from the other side of the Atlantic helped crude oil start the week with a rally.
Light sweet crude oil for November delivery gained nearly three percent Monday, settling at $85.41 a barrel, after the leaders of France and Germany reported progress in developing a comprehensive plan to stabilize the euro zone's economy. The Brent contract price rose at a similar rate, ending the day at $108.95 a barrel.
Presenting a united front during a Sunday press conference in Berlin, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel pledged to unveil by month's end a complete plan to recapitalize ailing banks, bolster the euro zone's bailout fund and provide financial aid to Greece. Although the announcement was short on specifics, it prompted rallies in equity markets and helped the euro to strengthen against the U.S. dollar. Because crude oil is priced in dollars, a weaker greenback tends to be bullish for oil and other commodities.
The WTI traded within a range from $82.75 to $86.09 while the Brent fluctuated from $105.78 to $109.20.
November natural gas also finished the day higher, gaining 1.7 percent to settle at $3.54 per thousand cubic feet. Natural gas peaked at $3.56 and bottomed out just under $3.46.
Reformulated gasoline for November delivery rose by nearly two percent, settling at $2.70 a gallon after fluctuating from $2.65 to $2.72.
Posted courtesy of Rigzone.Com
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Light sweet crude oil for November delivery gained nearly three percent Monday, settling at $85.41 a barrel, after the leaders of France and Germany reported progress in developing a comprehensive plan to stabilize the euro zone's economy. The Brent contract price rose at a similar rate, ending the day at $108.95 a barrel.
Presenting a united front during a Sunday press conference in Berlin, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel pledged to unveil by month's end a complete plan to recapitalize ailing banks, bolster the euro zone's bailout fund and provide financial aid to Greece. Although the announcement was short on specifics, it prompted rallies in equity markets and helped the euro to strengthen against the U.S. dollar. Because crude oil is priced in dollars, a weaker greenback tends to be bullish for oil and other commodities.
The WTI traded within a range from $82.75 to $86.09 while the Brent fluctuated from $105.78 to $109.20.
November natural gas also finished the day higher, gaining 1.7 percent to settle at $3.54 per thousand cubic feet. Natural gas peaked at $3.56 and bottomed out just under $3.46.
Reformulated gasoline for November delivery rose by nearly two percent, settling at $2.70 a gallon after fluctuating from $2.65 to $2.72.
Posted courtesy of Rigzone.Com
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Labels:
Barrel,
German,
Greece,
Nicolas Sarkozy,
Rigzone
Monday, October 25, 2010
Phil Flynn: Currency Détente
All we are saying is give peace a chance. Global leaders on a collision course towards an all out currency war pulled back from the brink of conflict by vowing not devalue their respective currencies to try and help their export markets. Forget the fact that the US is on the precipice of a major announcement involving the printing of a bunch of greenbacks and China is looking around saying “who us?”.
The perception by the market place that the G20 will do nothing to stop a drubbing of the dollar is sending the yen soaring to a 15 year high and the oil and other commodities soaring in early trade. In fact you might wonder why the oil market is not even stronger than it is considering the fact that not only is the dollar giving us support, but also the impact on the strikes in France that are going to take a toll on US supply. The AP reports that, “French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde says the country's massive strikes are costing the economy up to euro400 million ($562 million) each day.
Protests over President Nicolas Sarkozy's plan to raise the retirement age from 60 to 62 have left France struggling with fuel shortages, travel chaos and uncollected garbage. Lagarde told Europe-1 radio Monday that the daily economic cost is between euro 200 million and euro 400 million. The minister also says the strikes are damaging France's image abroad......Read the entire article.
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The perception by the market place that the G20 will do nothing to stop a drubbing of the dollar is sending the yen soaring to a 15 year high and the oil and other commodities soaring in early trade. In fact you might wonder why the oil market is not even stronger than it is considering the fact that not only is the dollar giving us support, but also the impact on the strikes in France that are going to take a toll on US supply. The AP reports that, “French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde says the country's massive strikes are costing the economy up to euro400 million ($562 million) each day.
Protests over President Nicolas Sarkozy's plan to raise the retirement age from 60 to 62 have left France struggling with fuel shortages, travel chaos and uncollected garbage. Lagarde told Europe-1 radio Monday that the daily economic cost is between euro 200 million and euro 400 million. The minister also says the strikes are damaging France's image abroad......Read the entire article.
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Labels:
China,
Crude Oil,
Nicolas Sarkozy,
PFG Best,
Phil Flynn
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