Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Financial Update for Feb. 11, 2009

"We don't do optimism; we don't do pessimism; we do realism at the Bank of Canada," he said.

"We don't do spin." Mark Carney

· TSX -229.39(Reuters) Snapping a 5 session winning streak, the TSX and the Canadian dollar tumbled on disappointment with U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner's plan to help the financial sector.
· DOW -381.99 The new bank rescue plan in the US landed with a thud on Wall Street. Worried that the revamped financial bailout was far too short on details, especially on how to clean up the books of the banks, investors sent the Dow Jones industrials tumbling
· Dollar -1.97c to 80.24USD
· Oil -$2.01 to $37.55US per barrel.
· Gold +21.40 to $914.20 USD per ounce
· Canadian 5 yr bond yields +.4bps to 1.97
· http://www.financialpost.com/markets/market_data/money-yields-can_us.html

Julian BeltrameThe Canadian Press OTTAWA

Canada's economy can bounce back next year, but only if the United States and other world governments take "exceptional'' measures to end the crisis in financial markets, says Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney.

The hopeful and sobering assessment comes a month after the central banker put his credibility on the line with what other economists called an overly optimistic forecast pointing to a strong rebound next year after a tough 2009.

''Decisions taken in the coming weeks in the United States and in other major economies to isolate toxic assets in order to create a core of 'good' banks will be critical,'' Carney said in his first appearance before the House of Commons finance committee since the recession hit Canada in the fall.

'If these national and multilateral measures are not timely, bold, and well-executed, Canada's economic recovery will be both attenuated and delayed.''

Shortly after Carney spoke, the U.S. Senate approved President Barack Obama's giant economic stimulus measure, part of a string of powerful government steps that could marshal close to $3 trillion US in taxpayer and private money to revive the collapsing U.S. economy.

The 61-37 vote by the Senate was a key victory for Obama but sets up tough talks with the House of Representatives, which passed a slightly different version than the $838 billion bill approved yesterday.

In another development yesterday, a senior Canadian Finance Department official called the U.S. Senate approval and the pending passage of a bailout package helpful in helping stabilize the financial system and restarting the flow of credit.

The U.S. plan will be a topic at the weekend meeting in Rome of G7 finance ministers and central bank governors where Finance Minister Jim Flaherty is expected to be the lead speaker on a discussion on financial markets.

In his Commons committee appearance, Carney pointed to the U.S. bailout bill as an example of the extraordinary policy initiatives he believes can rescue the global economy. In Canada, MPs approved in principle last week the federal government's budget containing a $40-billion stimulus -- initiatives Carney believes will fully kick in in 2010.

Under skeptical questioning from MPs, the central banker stuck to his prediction of a 3.8 per cent growth in 2010 and dismissed criticism that his forecast was overly rosy.

''We don't do optimism; we don't do pessimism; we do realism at the Bank of Canada,'' he said.

"We don't do spin.''

Liberal finance critic John McCallum was encouraged by Carney's optimism, but said he is not convinced the Harper government is committed to rolling out the $40-billion stimulus contained in the budget as quickly and effectively as possible.

Although Canada is doing slightly better than the U.S., McCallum noted that 129,000 jobs were lost in January alone, while personal bankruptcies soared by 51 per cent nationally in December from a year ago -- indications the slump is broadening.

The TD Bank has estimated job losses could hit 325,000 by year's end, pushing the unemployment rate to 8.8 per cent.

In another sign of the bleak times, General Motors Corp. became the latest of a growing list of companies announcing massive layoffs. It said it is cutting 10,000 salaried employees worldwide, including an unspecified number in Canada, where the company has 2,000 white collar workers.
Economists expect the Canadian economy to shrink by more than one per cent this year as the troubled manufacturing sector in Ontario and Quebec continues to shed employment and resources industries in Western Canada cut jobs to cope with lower prices for oil, grain, metals and minerals.