News Breaks |
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| August 2, 2011 |
| 14:52 EDT |  | | ProShares UltraShort MSCI Europe volatility flat as European markets sell off ProShares UltraShort MSCI Europe September and January put option implied volatility of 56 is near its 26-week average of 53 according to Track Data, suggesting non-directional price movement. |
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News For NOSYMBOL From The Last 14 Days Check below for free stories on NOSYMBOL the last two weeks. |
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| May 24, 2013 |
| 02:01 EDT |  | | Week of 5/27 Money Supply to be released at 16:30
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| 02:01 EDT |  | | Week of 6/5 Fed Balance Sheet to be released at 16:30
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| 02:01 EDT |  | | May Treasury STRIPS to be released at 15:00
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| 01:15 EDT |  | | Japan's Nikkei set the tone for the second session
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| May 23, 2013 |
| 16:37 EDT |  | | Fed Balance Sheet Total Assets data reported Week of 5/22 Fed Balance Sheet Total Assets at $44.4B |
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| 16:37 EDT |  | | Fed Balance Sheet Reserve Bank credit data reported
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| 16:32 EDT |  | | Switzerland's Aaa rating affirmed by Moody's, outlook stable Moody's Investors Service has affirmed the Aaa government bond rating of Switzerland. The outlook remains stable. The key drivers for the rating and outlook affirmation are: the government's very high financial strength, a broad consensus on fiscal discipline and a favorable public debt burden; Switzerland's very high economic strength, as reflected in its open, highly diversified economy and high average incomes, both of which are expected to be maintained over the long term; the country's proven resilience, as is demonstrated by Switzerland's ability to weather the global financial crisis and the euro area crisis. Reference Link |
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| 16:31 EDT |  | | Week of 5/31 EIA Natural Gas Report to be released at 10:30
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| 16:31 EDT |  | | Quarterly Services Survey to be released at 10:00
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| 15:25 EDT |  | | Treasury Closing Summary: Treasury Closing Summary: Despite extreme moves on global stocks on Thursday, Treasuries sustained only a shallow bid and then resumed their defensive position as Wall Street dusted itself off from early lows. With JEC testimony and Chinese PMI still ringing in their ears, the markets found some fresh equilibrium in the U.S. after firmer home sales and prices offset a dip in Markit flash PMI, while jobless claims sank back down to lows again. Fedspeak was mostly dovish from SF Fed's Williams, while St. Louis Fed hawk Bullard continued to sound more dovish in an early speech from London. WSJ Fedwatcher Hilsenrath seemed to underscore the Fed's symmetric stance on policy, rather than a tapering bias per se, though the damage done by Bernanke's "next few meetings" remark Weds remained in focus. |
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| 14:36 EDT |  | | Bank of Spain sees banks needing added EUR10B in provisions, FT says
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| 14:05 EDT |  | | Averages lower, but off worst levels The major equity indices remain in negative ground, but well off their early session lows. The declines in equity markets abroad, particularly the steep 7.3% drop in the Nikkei, carried over to U.S. markets at the outset, but the averages climbed as several domestic data points came in better than expected. During the afternoon, crude oil was down over 1%, gold was up almost 2%, and the Yen had strengthened against the dollar to below the Y102 level. The Dow is down 8 points, the S&P is down 6 points and the Nasdaq is down 7 points. |
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| 13:50 EDT |  | | Treasury Action: yields continue to consolidate below highs
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| 13:25 EDT |  | | FX Action: The dollar moved another leg lower earlier
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| 13:25 EDT |  | | U.S. Durable Goods Preview U.S. Durable Goods Preview: April durable goods figures will be released on Friday and analysts expect to see orders grow by 2.5% (median 1.7%) following the big 5.8% decline in March. Shipments should decline by 0.5% with inventories growing by 0.4%. Data in line with these forecasts would have the I/S ratio increasing to 1.67 from 1.65. |
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| 13:10 EDT |  | | Treasury's $13 B 10-year TIPS reopening was on the soft side Treasury's $13 B 10-year TIPS reopening was on the soft side. The security stopped at -0.255% versus -0.243% at the bid deadline and the -0.602% for the March reopening. There were $32.7 B in bids for a weak 2.52 cover, compared to 2.74 at the March reopening, and 2.71 for the January new issue. Indirect bidders took 56.8% versus 51.3% in March and 53.3% in January. |
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| 13:08 EDT |  | | Three executives at SAC Capital receive subpoenas, WSJ reports
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| 13:02 EDT |  | | Week of 6/1 Jobless Claims to be released at 08:30
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| 13:02 EDT |  | | May Challenger Job-Cut Report to be released at 07:30
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| 12:40 EDT |  | | Treasury $13 B 10-year TIPS reopening: Treasury $13 B 10-year TIPS reopening: the offering has pretty much been lost in the Fed QE shuffle and given it's already limited audience. The subdued inflation outlook is the main problem for the auction, according to sources, which limited demand at last month's 5-year TIPS. However, the issue has been cheapening and that could bring in some buyers looking for some cheap insurance. The wi 10-year trades at -0.255% versus a -0.602% award rate at the March reopening and -0.630% at the January new issue. The breakeven trades around 224 bp versus 243 bps in mid March. The March reopening saw a 2.74 bid cover, up fractionally from the 2.71 in January. |
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