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Thursday, May 22, 2008

FOOD FUTURES: Record oil could give corn prices another boost

FOOD FUTURES: Record oil could give corn prices another boost
 
Strong crude-oil prices could push corn prices, which were already at record levels, even higher as an increasing portion of corn would be set aside for ethanol use.
[full article]
 
The front-month corn futures contract hit a record high of $6.375 a bushel on May 9 on expectations corn stockpiles will drop to the lowest level in more than a decade in the 2009 crop season. Prices had since eased back to below the $6 level. But as crude futures broke the $130 a barrel level and surpassed $135 Thursday, corn prices also climbed back.
Corn futures for July delivery hit an intraday high of $6.22 a bushel Thursday in electronic trading, the highest since May 12. Futures closed down 11.4 cents at $5.956 a bushel on the Chicago Board of Trade. Crude-oil futures hit a record high of $135.09 earlier, but also eased backed to below $131. Read Futures Movers.
"Energy prices really are a powerful inflationary force that could spill over to the rest of our economy," said Austin Damiani, a futures broker at Frontier Futures Inc. "Corn has really large biofuel usage and there is certainly a correlation [between prices of corn and oil]."
The U.S. Department of Agriculture projected corn for ethanol production will reach 4 billion bushels next year, up more than 30% from this year and accounting for nearly 40% of domestic corn consumption.
Corn prices have been moving in tandem with ethanol futures. When corn hit a record high on May 9, ethanol futures also touched a high of $2.61 a gallon on the CBOT.
Rising oil prices "should continue to drive strong ethanol pricing and trump the high corn prices currently in the market," said David Driscoll, an analyst at Citigroup, in a note earlier this month.
The Energy Independence and Security Act that Congress passed with bipartisan support in 2007 requires U.S. biofuel production to increase to 36 billion gallons by 2022 from 4.7 billion in 2007. The act also specifies that 21 billion gallons of the 2022 mandate must be derived from non-cornstarch products, such as sugar or cellulose.

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

NY Finance Job Losses Worsen

More dark job forecasts for New York finance
The Independent Budget office now predicts that the city will lose 33,300 financial jobs through the second quarter of 2009, up significantly from previous predictions.
[full article]
 
The forecasts for the city's economy keep getting worse.
 
A year ago, the mayor's economic advisers predicted the city would lose 2,000 jobs at securities firms this year. Then, last winter, the city's Independent Budget Office said the number of financial sector layoffs would reach 12,000 in 2008 and 20,000 over the next two years.
 
But now, with Wall Street investment firms posting enormous losses, the IBO estimates the city will lose 33,300 financial jobs through the second quarter of 2009.
"Certainly our economic forecast has gotten darker," says Doug Turetsky, chief of staff of the IBO.
 
The loss of more than 33,000 financial activities jobs would be a 17% reduction in the city's highest-paid workforce and would be the steepest drop since 2001-2003, when 40,000 securities industry employees lost their jobs.
 
"We didn't know that the Wall Street firms had had such a disastrous fourth quarter," says George Sweeting, deputy director of the IBO. "We said 'let's assume they have zero profits in the fourth quarter,' and it turned out they lost 16 point something billion in the fourth quarter. That was a big adjustment."
 
As the outlook for the financial industry dims, the IBO's picture for the wider city economy has soured. In its winter forecast, it predicted the city would lose 2,000 jobs this year. But because the city relies so heavily on the financial sector, the prospect of widespread losses on Wall Street has resulted in a revised estimate for the overall economy.
 
The IBO now sees a decline of 59,400 jobs between the city's most recent employment peak in the first quarter of this year and the expected trough in the second quarter of 2009.
On Tuesday, McGraw-Hill Cos. said it would eliminate about 400 employees, including 250 from its Standard & Poor's credit-rating division. S&P will have about 8,000 employees after the layoffs, a spokesman said.
 
A recession is imminent, if it has not already begun, according to the report, and will last longer than the national one, with recovery not coming until that second quarter of 2009. Recent employment statistics have been ambiguous, showing slight gains, but it is just a matter of time before the numbers start to catch up with announced layoffs.
 
The grim job front has resulted in an equally pessimistic tax revenue forecast. The IBO estimates that tax revenue will be flat this year as compared to last and will then fall by 5.2% to $35.8 billion in 2009 before growing modestly in 2010.
 
Despite the economic doom, the IBO forecasts the city will have a balanced budget through 2010. A $4.6 billion surplus and $1 billion in proposed spending cuts by Mayor Michael Bloomberg mean the city will avoid any shortfalls in the next two fiscal years.
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NY Finance Job Losses Worsen

More dark job forecasts for New York finance
The Independent Budget office now predicts that the city will lose 33,300 financial jobs through the second quarter of 2009, up significantly from previous predictions.
[full article]
 
The forecasts for the city's economy keep getting worse.
A year ago, the mayor's economic advisers predicted the city would lose 2,000 jobs at securities firms this year. Then, last winter, the city's Independent Budget Office said the number of financial sector layoffs would reach 12,000 in 2008 and 20,000 over the next two years.
But now, with Wall Street investment firms posting enormous losses, the IBO estimates the city will lose 33,300 financial jobs through the second quarter of 2009.
"Certainly our economic forecast has gotten darker," says Doug Turetsky, chief of staff of the IBO.
The loss of more than 33,000 financial activities jobs would be a 17% reduction in the city's highest-paid workforce and would be the steepest drop since 2001-2003, when 40,000 securities industry employees lost their jobs.
"We didn't know that the Wall Street firms had had such a disastrous fourth quarter," says George Sweeting, deputy director of the IBO. "We said 'let's assume they have zero profits in the fourth quarter,' and it turned out they lost 16 point something billion in the fourth quarter. That was a big adjustment."
As the outlook for the financial industry dims, the IBO's picture for the wider city economy has soured. In its winter forecast, it predicted the city would lose 2,000 jobs this year. But because the city relies so heavily on the financial sector, the prospect of widespread losses on Wall Street has resulted in a revised estimate for the overall economy.
The IBO now sees a decline of 59,400 jobs between the city's most recent employment peak in the first quarter of this year and the expected trough in the second quarter of 2009.
On Tuesday, McGraw-Hill Cos. said it would eliminate about 400 employees, including 250 from its Standard & Poor's credit-rating division. S&P will have about 8,000 employees after the layoffs, a spokesman said.
A recession is imminent, if it has not already begun, according to the report, and will last longer than the national one, with recovery not coming until that second quarter of 2009. Recent employment statistics have been ambiguous, showing slight gains, but it is just a matter of time before the numbers start to catch up with announced layoffs.
The grim job front has resulted in an equally pessimistic tax revenue forecast. The IBO estimates that tax revenue will be flat this year as compared to last and will then fall by 5.2% to $35.8 billion in 2009 before growing modestly in 2010.
Despite the economic doom, the IBO forecasts the city will have a balanced budget through 2010. A $4..6 billion surplus and $1 billion in proposed spending cuts by Mayor Michael Bloomberg mean the city will avoid any shortfalls in the next two fiscal years.

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