Kamis, 23 Juni 2011

Kepercayaan Italia minus


 konsumen Italia menurun  pada bulan Juni sebagai dampak pesimisnya prospek lapangan kerja dan pertumbuhan ekonomi.
Kantor statistik nasional (ISTAT) mengatakan telah terjadi penurunan indeks sentimen dari 106.5  menjadi 105.8  bulan lalu. Bahkan para ekonom memperkirakan penurunan berlanjut ke 105.3.
 
Moody Investors Service menempatkan peringkat kredit Italia yang dikaji minggu lalu mungkin mengalami downgrade demi hambatan pada pertumbuhan. Langkah serupa bulan lalu, Standard & Poor menurunkan rating kredit outlook Italia menjadi negatif dari stabil karena pemulihan ekonomi yang lambat.
 
Dalam kesempatan yang sama, demi merangsang kembali pengeluaran konsumen dan pertumbuhan ekonomi, Perdana Menteri Silvio Berlusconi merencanakan untuk merombak sistem perpajakan negara.

The Fed Seret Emas dari High 7-pekan


 turun dari level tertinggi 7 minggu di Pasar London karena bank sentral AS menghapus spekulasi bahwa akan menambah stimulus dan dollar AS menguat, memangkas permintaan logam mulia ini sebagai investasi alternatif.
 
Dollar menguat terhadap 6 mata uang utama dunia karena kebijakan Fed semalam dan kemungkinan PM Yunani George Papandreou akan mengalami kesulitan untuk mendapatkan persetujuan parlemen untuk rancangan paket pemangkasan anggaran dan penjualan aset minggu depan.
 
“Orang saat ini mengharapkan tidak ada QE3,” dan itu merupakan faktor yang menekan harga emas, kata Bernard Sin, kepala perdagangan mata uang dan logam di MKS Finance SA. “Pasar bereaksi sedikit terhadap dollar dan kita melihat sedikit terjadi aksi profit taking. Dalam jangka panjang, orang akan kembali ke emas.”
 
Emas jatuh sebanyak $20 dari level tertingginya semalam ke $1537.20 per troy ons di pasar London. Emas kemarin mencetak level tertinggi di $1558.25, harga tertinggi sejak 2 Mei. 

Faktor akan penguatan EMAS


Emas terlihat masih di dalam jalurnya menuju $1600 tahun ini. Berikut adalah faktor-faktor fundamental pendukung kenaikan harga emas:
  • Dollar AS yang belum akan menguat secara konsisten karena masih belum pulihnya perekonomian AS ditambah dengan beban hutang dan defisit anggaran AS yang membesar. Rasio hutang AS terhadap GDP-nya sudah hampir 100%.
  • Tingkat inflasi dunia yang cenderung naik. Emas sering dijadikan instrumen lindung nilai aset terhadap inflasi.
  • Ketidakpastian penyelesaian krisis hutang di Eropa yang menimbulkan kekhawatiran bagi pelaku pasar akan terjadinya resesi lanjutan di Eropa dan mungkin bisa berkembang ke negara lain.
  • Permintaan Emas yang meningkat lebih tinggi dibandingkan produksi Emas. Menurut catatan World Gold Council (WGC), permintaan emas mengalami kenaikan 11% pada kuartal pertama 2011 dibandingkan dengan tingkat produksi emas yang malah turun 4% pada periode yang sama.
  • Tren penambahan kepemilikan emas oleh bank-bank sentral dunia. Menurut WGC, pada Q1 2011, jumlah pembelian emas oleh bank sentral telah mencapai 129 ton. Jumlah ini lebih tinggi dari total pembelian emas bank sentral selama 2010.

Bernanke: Don’t Blame The Fed For Currency Wars And (Commodity) Inflation


WASHINGTON - DECEMBER 07:  Federal Reserve Ban... a speech at the International Monetary Conference on Tuesday, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke once again tried to distance his institution’s policies from the current explosive rise in commodity prices, which in turn has triggered inflation to become a major concern in the U.S.  Claiming that the rise in oil, food, and other raw materials is an effect of supply and demand (i.e. strong demand growth emanating from emerging market growth along with lagging supply growth), Bernanke told critics that both the Fed’s program of long term asset purchases and extremely low interest rates are not responsible for causing imbalances in the world economy.
As has been the case for a while, Bernanke attempted to downplay fears of inflation, calling the phenomenon transitory, while asking market followers to look at developing economies for explanation instead in solid growth from emerging markets. (Read Steve Schaefer’s take, Bernanke Calls Slow Recovery ‘Frustrating,’ Sticks To Second Half Optimism).
The bearded academic noted that prices for oil, corn, and industrial metals such s aluminum and copper saw substantial gains in recent years.  In terms of oil, Bernanke pointed one finger at OPEC, noting that while non-OPEC production has lagged, OPEC member countries haven’t stepped up to compensate for lost production stemming from a protracted civil conflict in Libya, where Colonel Muammar al-Gadhafi refuses to step down.  “With the demand for oil rising rapidly and the supply of crude stagnant, increases in oil prices are hardly a puzzle,” said Bernanke.
As the U.S. economy shows increasing signs of cooling, with unemployment rates still stubbornly high and an ailing housing market, American consumers, responsible for sixty to seventy percent of GDP, have felt the sting of rising food and gas prices, which have remained at or near $4.00 a gallon for much of the first quarter.  Bernanke, though, noted that most of the rise in consumer price inflation stems from a rise in gas prices.  “The rise in commodity prices has directly increased the rate of inflation while also adversely affecting consumer confidence and consumer spending,” explained the Bernank, adding that “most FOMC participants currently see the recent increase in inflation as transitory and expect inflation to remain subdued in the medium term.” (Read No Recovery Possible While U.S. Consumer Continues Deleveraging).
Admitting that the foreign exchange value of the dollar has fallen substantially, Bernanke sought to dispel claims that the Fed’s ultra accommodative monetary policy, most clearly seen in both programs of quantitative easing, has caused developing economies much pain.  From the speech:
Slow growth in the United States and a persistent trade deficit are additional, more fundamental sources of recent declines in the dollar’s value; in particular, as the United States is a major oil importer, any geopolitical or other shock that increases the global price of oil will worsen our trade balance and economic outlook, which tends to depress the dollar. In this case, the direction of causality runs from commodity prices to the dollar rather than the other way around. The best way for the Federal Reserve to support the fundamental value of the dollar in the medium term is to pursue our dual mandate of maximum employment and price stability, and we will certainly do that.
At the same time, loose monetary policy and exceptionally low interest rates aren’t responsible for currency appreciation and the risk of over-heating in developing economies.  Even though policymakers in China and Brazil, with the latter’s Finance Minister Guido Mantega leading the way, have blamed U.S. monetary policy for causing excessive capital flows to their economies, Bernanke said he’s just been trying to respect the Fed’s dual mandate of price stability and full employment.  “Whatever the source of the recent growth in the emerging markets, the authorities in those economies clearly have a range of fiscal, monetary, exchange rate, and other tools that can be used to address any overheating that may occur,” explained the Fed Chairman.
Finally, after adding that QE2 would conclude at the end of June, with accommodative monetary policy continuing until the U.S. economy stabilizes, Bernanke praised his institution’s role in stabilizing the U.S. and global financial system and averting a much deeper recession.  “The Federal Reserve’s actions in recent years have doubtless helped stabilize the financial system, ease credit and financial conditions, guard against deflation, and promote economic recovery. All of this has been accomplished, I should note, at no net cost to the federal budget or to the U.S. taxpayer,” concluded the Bernank.

Apocalyptic Bernanke: Raise The Debt Ceiling Or Else


 to an audience that included Republican Congressman Paul Ryan, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke called the status quo“unsustainable” while warning that failing to raise the debt ceiling could have disastrous consequences.  A few weeks from the end of QE2, Bernanke gave no hint as to the path for monetary policy after June 30.
“Perhaps the most important thing for people to understand about the federal budget is that maintaining the status quo is not an option,” warned Bernanke.  The bearded academic laid his grain of salt for the ongoing deficit debate that is currently dividing Washington.
Weighing in, he told policymakers that “the debt limit is the wrong tool” for the important job of “forc[ing] some necessary and difficult fiscal policy adjustments.”
In what appeared to be a comment directed at the Republican Party, Bernanke said “failing to raise the debt ceiling in a timely way would be self-defeating if the objective is to chart a course toward a better fiscal situation for our nation.”  Referencing the Hippocratic Oath, he asked policymakers to not do harm and “avoid unnecessary actions or threats that risk shaking the confidence of investors in the ability and willingness of the U.S. government to pay its bills.” (Read Dodd-Frank Failing On Volcker Rule, Derivatives, Credit Rating Agencies).
A little more apocalyptic than usual, the Fed chairman urged both parties to leave behind their bickering and solve the problem at hand.  “Creditors will not lend to a government whose debt, relative to national income, is rising without limit; so, one way or the other, fiscal adjustments sufficient to stabilize the federal budget must occur at some point,” he said. (ReadBernanke To Rep. Paul Ryan: QE2 Created 600,000 Jobs).
Those adjustments could come from a “careful and deliberative process” or as “a rapid and much more painful response to a looming or actual fiscal crisis in an environment of rising interest rates, collapsing confidence and asset values, and a slowing economy.”
The choice, Bernanke, said, “is ours to make,” but the central banker also made it clear that using the debt ceiling debate as an opportunity to draw a line in the sand on issues that have been a long time coming and require a long-term solution is misguided.
Bernanke only used the word default once.  Speaking of the possibility of prioritizing Treasury payments to meet principal and interest payments on debt outstanding, the Fed Chairman said the Treasury would soon find it very hard, if not impossible, to continue paying for Social Security, Medicare, and the military.
Failing to raise the debt ceiling would effectively amount to a perfect storm, hitting the U.S. economy where it hurts, according to Bernanke.  It would “cause severe disruptions in financial markets,” harm the reserve status of the U.S. dollar (along with the “special role of Treasury securities in global markets”), lead to credit downgrades, and “create fundamental doubts about the creditworthiness of the United States.”
In other words, Bernanke told lawmakers to stop fighting and raise the budget deficit, while keeping the spending coming in the immediate term.  In order to keep the dollar’s reserve currency status and allow it to continue borrowing at rates that only the U.S. can have (given its debt level), the policy should be aimed at solving problems in the short to long-term, finding “substantial savings in the 10-year budget window.”  Bernanke, therefore, was just giving his support for those who want to raise the debt ceiling.

Bernanke Admits He’s Clueless On Economy’s Soft Patch


His second post-FOMC press conference, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke touched on every topic, admitting that the recovery was weaker than expected and that beyond temporary factors like supply chain disruptions in Japan and high energy prices, he was at a loss as to what was causing the soft patch.  In a Q&A session with reporters, Bernanke said a disorderly default in Greece would have significant effects on the U.S. economy, while adding that the Fed still had several tools at its disposal to pump up the economy.
If the central bank actually does have more in its tool kit, they will be deployed in a weakening economy. Just before Bernanke spoke the Fed issued its revised forecast, dulling growth estimates for 2011 and now calling for gross domestic product to expand between 2.7% and 2.9%.
Bernanke’s statements rattled the markets, which had remained virtually flat for most of the day.  Equities sold-off as the Chairman began talking, with all three major U.S. equity indices closing at their lows for the day.  The Dow shed 80 points or 0.7% to close at 12,110 in New York, while the S&P 500 fell 8 points or 0.7% to 1,287; the Nasdaq lost 18 points or 0.7% to 2,669.
On the bond front, yields on benchmark 10-year Treasuries hit their lows for the day just before the release of the FOMC state, only to bounce up to a few basis points from 3%, marking a sell-off as prices move opposite yields, and playing into Bill Gross‘ investment thesis. (Read PIMCO’s Bill Gross Shorts Treasuries As Experts Eye Inflation).
With markets at a crossroads, amid a cooling economic recovery and a dangerous Greek crisis threatening the euro and the global economy, reporters grilled Bernanke and asked many of the right questions.
Brutally honest, Bernanke admitted that he had no clue what was actually causing the current fragility in the U.S. economic recovery.  While theFOMC statement assigned blame outside of the U.S., pointing at Japan along with rising food and oil prices, Bernanke was put on the spot by a reporter who noted the inconsistency behind that explanation and a lowering of long term forecasts.  Bernanke took the hit, admitting only some of the factors were temporary and that he didn’t know exactly what was causing the slowdown, but that it would persist.  “Growth,” said Bernanke, “will return into 2012.” (Read No Recovery Possible While U.S. Consumer Continues Deleveraging).
“Bernanke was just summing up what has happened in the markets, what has been priced in,” explained Nick Kalivas of MF Global.  “But the Fed has taken extraordinary measures to support the economy, they have done what they can and monetary policy isn’t a solution for everything,” added Kalivas, pointing at problems with the fiscal situation and the debt ceiling debate.
While Wednesday’s remarks came as little surprise, the blunt discussion of inflation and slowing economic growth offered little inspiration to load up on risk assets like equities.
The Fed chairman was explicit about the situation in Washington, directly slapping Republicans in the face saying “I don’t think sharp immediate cuts in the deficit would bring more jobs.”  Having made clear before that Congress should raise the debt ceiling, Bernanke explained budgetary problems are very long run in nature.

Could 'Rip-Off Britain' Really Print More Money?


Big BenWith Jean-Claude Trichet warning that the debt crisis lights are flashing red and Ben Bernanke telling investors the US slowdown is temporary, but could have longer lasting effects, Mervyn King at the Bank of England is discussing pumping more money into the UK economy.



Minutes from the last meeting of the BoE’s monetary policy committee showed that despite two members wanting to hike rates, others are considering another round of quantitative easing.
“For some of these members, it was possible that further asset purchases might become warranted if the downside risks to medium-term inflation materialized” said the statement from the Bank of England.
The biggest concern for the UK central bank's policy committee appears to be the lack of consumer spending that has led to uncertainty over the level of spare capacity in the economy and the subsequent direction of inflationary pressures.
Stephen Lewis, the chief economist at Monument Securities believes this uncertainty leaves Mervyn King and his team in a difficult position.
“It is supposedly what the MPC wants to see as the chief element in a rebalancing of the UK economy away from domestic demand towards net exports,” said Lewis in a research note.
“If the MPC were to revert to its pre-2007 strategy of pumping up the economy whenever domestic demand falls below the trajectory that the Bank’s forecasting equations indicate as consistent with achieving the inflation target, its action would tend to frustrate the necessary rebalancing,” said Lewis.

Inflation Greater Challenge

Given the UK has historically had to fight inflation rather than worry about falling prices, Lewis questions if deflation could be a real threat.
“In Rip-off Britain, where price gouging is not unknown, central bankers have, in fact, experienced much more testing challenges in containing inflation than in heading off deflation,” he said. 
Risks to the UK come from both sides of the Atlantic. The US slowdown and Greek debt crisis have intensified since the BoE last met and this is causing concerns.

“Since the June MPC meeting, the scale of these worries has, if anything, grown with the Greek government’s next bailout tranche still balanced on a knife edge as it battles to pass austerity measures," Victoria Cadman, an analyst at Investec in a research note following the BoE minutes.
"The run of US data has, on the whole, also continued to soften throughout the month,” Cadman said.


With a number of factors clouding the UK growth picture Cadman said it will take time for the true health of the British economy to become clear.
"The likely, but as yet undefined in size, drag to second quarter growth resulting from the Royal Wedding holiday, the increase in oil prices earlier this year, and supply chain disruptions from the Japanese tsunami, complicate the committee’s assessment considerably,” she wrote.

With austerity measures weighing on sentiment for Britain’s millions of public sector workers and strikes on the way there will be little help for the UK economy from Chancellor George Osborne who consistently said there is no plan B on attempting to reduce the deficit.

Despite this uncertainty Cadman sees little chance of the quantitative easing debate at the BoE being anything more than a debate.
“Our central view however is for a return to somewhat more robust UK and US growth in the third quarter of this year. We therefore consider that while the committee may be happy to add the prospect of QE more centrally back into its policy debate, the prospect of further QE remains unlikely,” she explained.

Like Cadman, Lewis can see little reason for pumping more money into the system on monetary policy grounds but questions if the motivation for debating more QE could be the banks, not the consumers.

“They would not easily justify such action on monetary grounds. As the minutes state, nominal consumption has continued to rise at a substantial rate, albeit largely on account of inflation, despite weakness in broad money growth,” Lewis wrote.

“There are no surprises there, since only the crudest of monetarists would look for a close correlation. MPC members, though, seem to be turning their attention to problems of banks’ capital-raising, where QE is widely regarded to have been helpful in the past,” he added.

Bernanke 'Quietly Risk Negative': Dennis Gartman


Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke’s statement on expectations for the US economy on Wednesday was "quietly risk negative," Dennis Gartman, author of The Gartman Letter, told CNBC Thursday.



After a two-day Federal Open Market Committee meeting, the Fed slashed its growth forecast for this year and said unemployment will still remain high.
"The most important statement that he made was that there will be at least two more FOMC meetings before a change in interest rates. That’s gloomy," Gartman said.
"He was less than optimistic, but I don’t think really pessimistic."
The Fed now predicts that the economy will grow between 2.7 percent and 2.9 percent this year, down from its April estimate of between 3.1 percent and 3.3 percent.
Bernanke said that interest rates would remain at current levels for at least two more meetings of the FOMC.

"As the Fed Chairman became more risk-averse, so did the markets," Gartman said. "If you look at the US balance sheet, it’s actually doing quite well. Corporate America is replete with cash, so if you are a value investor, you would just want to go out and buy everything."
Gartman is not optimistic about employment figures in the US.

"Businessmen and women see Obama Care and other left-wing measures, and they are absolutely unwilling to add more employees to their businesses," he said.
He added that he will keep his gold holdings for the moment, and said: "I’ve been long on gold for a long time and I’m not going to change that at this point."
The British pound is not looking great at the moment, according to Gartman. "I am short on sterling. I think the comments coming out of the MPC are to be taken seriously."
"It is the one to sell if you’re selling anything in Europe. Until the market tells me I’m wrong, I’ll continue to do the same," he added.

Minat Resiko Tinggi, Sterling Bidik 1.6000

 terus melemah terhadap greenback selama sesi Asia, terkait pernyataan BoE kemarin (22/06) yang memicu pelemahan.

Secara teknikal, “grafik 1 dan 4 jam masih menunjukkan sinyal pelemahan dan belum menunjukkan sinyal penguatan. Mata uang dapat terus melemah jika minat resiko masih mendominasi,” kata Valeria Bednarik, kepala analis FXstreet.com. GBP/USD  melemah ke area 1.6035, turun 30 poin dari harga pembukaan.

Level support di 1.6020, 1.5970 dan 1.5920. Level resistance di 1.6070, 1.6110 dan 1.6150. 

USD Kuat


Logam mulia tertekan oleh penguatan USD meski pelemahan tampaknya hanya bersifat terbatas terkait tindakan investor untuk  mencari aset yang lebih aman.
Emas diperdagangkan di range sempit di kisaran $1,546.10/ons dan $1,548.69/ons. Terakhir di $1,546.40/ons, turun $1.60 dari level penutupan sebelumnya. EUR/USD melemah sampai 1.4285 dari sebelumnya di level 1.4354. Daya tarik emas sebagai safe-haven bagaimanapun masih ada karena logam mulia merupakan alat lindung nilai yang cenderung lebih aman saat kondisi ekonomi tidak menentu.
Spot perak di $36.18/ons, turun 16 sen dari level penutupan.

Emas Dalam Sterling Raih Diatas 968 Pounds


 dalam denominasi Sterling naik ke level tingginya selama ini diatas 968 Pounds hari Kamis seiring mata uang Inggris anjlok ke rendahnya 3 minggu di Asia setelah BoE menaikkan prospek penawaran stimulus tambahan.
Hasil pertemuan BoE bulan Juni hari Rabu memberikan sinyal suku bunga yang cenderung tetap dari rekor rendahnya 0.5% tahun ini dan menandakan kemungkinan lebih besar bahwa BoE memilih adanya QE lanjutan, kontras dengan dengan Feds dari AS yang tidak memberikan sinyal dukungan moneter.
 
Harga emas dalam Sterling menyentuh rekor tingginya di 968.64 Pounds per ons.

Euro Analysis : Terlihat Melemah, Uji Support 1.4285


EURUSD terlihat mengakhiri uptrend setelah menembus trendline. Saat ini tengah menguji support
di 1.4285 namun sinyal bullish dari stochastic dan CCI membuka peluang koreksi hingga 1.4363. 
Waspadai tembusnya support di 1.4285 karena berpotensi diikuti oleh pergerakan turun menuju 1.4189.



Sterling analisa : Melemah Signifikan, Koreksi ke 1.6109


Sterling melemah signifikan terhadap USD hingga ke 1.6016. Stochastic dan CCI mengindikasikan
sinyal bulish sehingga kemungkinan akan terjadi koreksi hingga ke 1.6109. Waspadai tembusnya
support di 1.6016 karena akan berpotensi diikuti oleh pergerakan menuju 1.5958.




Rabu, 22 Juni 2011

Pasar Eropa Berhati-Hati Jelang FOMC


Eropa tertekan dalam sesi perdagangan hari Rabu meskipun pemerintah telah berhasil mempertahankan kepercayaan perlemen Yunani. Investor nampaknya masih skeptis mengingat belum ditemukannya solusi tepat untuk masalah hutang Yunani yang masih menyisakan ancaman default. Pasar juga tengah menantikan pengumuman hasil pertemuan kebijakan Federal Reserve AS yang diharapkan dapat memberikan gambaran yang lebih jelas tentang laju pemulihan ekonomi serta memberikan petunjuk tentang langkah-langkah stimulus moneter.

Indeks Eurostoxx 50 melemah sekitar 0,4%, sedangkan indeks DAX Jerman dan CAC Perancis masing-masing harus kehilangan 0,11% dan 0,56%. Di Inggris, FTSE bergerak 0,55% lebih rendah dalam 2 jam pertama perdagangan.
Yunani maish tetap menjadi fokus meskipun voting kepercayaan kemarin berhasil dimenangkan pemerintahan George Papandreu, namun pemerintah harus segera menghadapi tantangan lain dimana mereka harus berjuang meloloskan rencana langkah-langkah penghematan baru dalam voting parlemen 28 Juni mendatang guna memastikan pencairan paket bailout tahap berikutnya dari Uni Eropa dan IMF.
Sementara Federal Reserve dijadwalkan akan merilis keputusan kebijakan moneternya hari ini, yang telah mendorong pasar Eropa untuk lebih berhati-hati.

Bernanke to Walk a Fine Line on Inflation, Growth


Federal Reserve Bank Chairman Ben BernankeFederal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke is unlikely to announce a major change in monetary policy at his second-ever news conference later Wednesday, but investors will hang on his every word for clues on whether the Fed will scale back its presence in financial markets, analysts said.

"I don't think there's going to be any surprise… I don't really see any major changes coming up right now, I think they're going to see how the data are evolving," former Fed Governor Randall Kroszner told CNBC.

The central bank will release quarterly economic forecasts and analysts expect them to be revised lower to reflect the recent weakness, but they said Bernanke will be quick to say he sees an acceleration in the recovery.
"I'm sure he'll predict one," John Wraith, fixed income strategist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch (BAML), told CNBC. "I'm sure he won't announce any reversal of the stimulus."

The Federal Open Market Committee is likely to take the formal decision to end the second round of quantitative easing – a program under which it pumps liquidity in markets by buying assets – at the end of June but to leave the reinvestment policy in place, according to analysts from Barclays Capital.

"This could be accomplished by changing the language in the statement from 'will purchase' to 'will complete' its purchases of $600 billion in Treasury securities and 'will maintain its existing policy of reinvesting principal payments from its securities holdings,'" they wrote in a market note.
Some market observers said that weak jobs data could prompt the Fed to relax monetary conditions even further, but Kroszner said the central bank will need to see the employment report in July to decide whether the weakness was transitory or it indicated a downward trend.
"I think there's a belief there's an underlying strength in the economy," he said, pointing to the fact that "productivity numbers have been very good" and investment in equipment and software was "pretty good."

Yields on the 10-year US Treasury note stayed below 3 percent, in part pushed down by worries regarding the debt crisis in the euro zone, and some analysts have said this shows the Fed can brush aside fears of price rises because of its extra-loose monetary policy.
"The bond market is telling you there's no worry about inflation out there," Gary Baker, head of European equities strategy at BAML global research, told CNBC.

Inflation Target?

The Fed's statement is due at 12:30 pm New York time and Bernanke's news conference is expected to start at 2:15 pm.
"We expect the Fed to revise down its GDP projections for 2011 and likely raise the core inflation forecast, which should not come as a surprise," the analysts from Barclays Capital wrote.


"We will monitor the press conference to see if the committee's characterization of inflation risk has changed given the trend in core inflation," they added.

The consumer price index for all items excluding volatile food and energy increased 0.3 percent in May, its largest increase since July 2008, while overall inflation was 0.2 percent month-on-month.
The statement is likely to say that headline inflation was pushed higher by a rise in commodity prices but that these have fallen back somewhat and inflation expectations remain stable, Barclays Capital analysts wrote.

"Several FOMC members have made comments in support of a formal inflation target. We expect the committee to discuss this topic in depth during its June meeting and would not be surprised to hear the chairman characterize the committee's views on the adoption of an explicit inflation target," they added.

Gold : Uji Kembali Resistance di 1,548.55, Incar 1,557.39


Emas kembali menguji resistance dikisaran 1548.55. Secara teknikal pecahnya level resistance tersebut
dapat memicu penguatan menuju area 1557.39. Namun waspadai kondisi CCI dan juga Stochastic
yang saat ini berada dalam area overbought dan memungkinkan terjadinya koreksi bearish menuju area
support dikisaran 1539.71 hingga area 1529.82 jika resistance tersebut mampu bertahan.



Surviving Greek Government to Approve New Austerity


Greece's government will approve a new austerity package on Wednesday after it survived a confidence vote that was a crucial hurdle in a battle to avert the euro zone's first sovereign debt default.

Prime Minister George Papandreou's reshuffled cabinet aims to get parliamentary approval for a package of spending cuts, tax hikes and state asset sales by June 28 and implement it by July 3 to secure 12 billion euros ($17 billion) in aid that is vital to avoid bankruptcy.



The vote follows a European ultimatum linking the release of the next installment of a 110 billion euro EU/IMF aid package to the tougher new five-year belt-tightening plan.
Without the loans, Athens would plunge into default next month, sending shock waves through the global financial system. The euro rose in hopes that the immediate threat of market chaos could be avoided.

But the gains were short-lived as traders remained worried about the will to implement harsh austerity measures against fierce public resistance and by doubts about Greece's ability to reduce its debt burden without some form of restructuring.
The yield on Greek government bonds tightened slightly against benchmark German Bunds, with the 2-year bond yield dropping 28 basis points, while Greek banking stocks opening flat after strong gains on Tuesday.

After some brief scuffles between police and protesters after the late night vote, the streets of Athens were calm on Wednesday with traffic running normally through Syntagma square where 20,000 demonstrators besieged parliament on Tuesday night.

The government won the late night confidence motion by 155 to 143 with two abstentions after all of Papandreou's Socialist Party deputies voted solidly with the government.
But with unions bristling for a fight and much of the public outraged by new austerity measures, implementing any reforms will be a challenge as Greece struggles in its worst recession in 37 years.
"Within the parliament there is no problem at all, the real problem is in society," said Costas Panagopoulos of pollster ALCO.
"There's a lot of disappointment in the Greek society, there's a lot of anger and there's no hope at all. The new minister of finance and the government...have to offer some hope otherwise I cannot see how the government could remain stable."

Default Only Way Out?

Euro zone creditor governments were starting talks with commercial banks and insurers on Wednesday about a "voluntary" private sector contribution to a second rescue program for Greece, a source in the German government said.


"The finance ministry has invited banks and insurers for talks on a working group level in Frankfurt," the source told Reuters, adding that the same would begin elsewhere in the 17-nation single currency area.

Private bondholders will be asked to commit to rolling over their Greek bonds when they mature, but Berlin was forced to drop a more ambitious plan for a bond swap extending maturities by seven years after the European Central Bank objected.

Speaking hours after the vote, Mohamed El-Erian, head of Pimco, the world's biggest bond fund, said he expected Greece to end up defaulting on its debt.
"For the next three years, we're going to see different economies work out different problems.
For European economies, especially Greece, it would be through default," El-Erian told a conference in Taipei.

Papandreou managed to stifle dissent within his party last week, replacing unpopular government figures with critics of the austerity plan and repeatedly hammering home the message of what was at stake.

"If we are afraid, if we throw away this opportunity, then history will judge us very harshly," Papandreou said in a final appeal for support before the confidence vote.
Having already missed targets agreed in its first, year-old bailout, Athens needs the reforms to keep receiving those funds and secure a second bailout worth an estimated 120 billion euros.
The new mid-term plan envisions raising 50 billion euros by selling off state firms and includes 6.5 billion in 2011 fiscal consolidation, almost doubling existing measures that have helped extend a deep recession into its third year.

Most analysts remain skeptical that Greece will be able to repay its vast public debt pile of 340 billion euros, 1.5 times its annual economic output and more than 30,000 euros for each of its 11.3 million people, even if the reforms are implemented.
But for now both markets and European policymakers are willing to give Greece the benefit of the doubt.
"Although this clearly is not going to be a long-term fix, investors see this as a chance that the can will be kicked further down the road," said David Dietze, Chief Investment strategist at Point View Financial Services.

Anger Builds in Athens

European Commission President Manuel Barroso, who had piled on pressure before the vote, expressed relief.
"Tonight's vote in the Greek Parliament removes an element of uncertainty from an already very difficult situation," he said, adding that Papandreou could now concentrate on implementing the reforms.
Acting IMF chief John Lipsky said international lenders were willing to help peripheral euro zone economies as long as they tried to carry out reforms. He said the Greek fiscal system was broken but could be fixed with the right political will.
Greek Protest



The cabinet will meet on Wednesday afternoon to approve a draft bill implementing the austerity plan, officials said.
It will aim to get it passed in parliament by June 28 and then it must push through laws implementing the reforms — potentially more difficult as it will tackle individual privatizations, tax measures and spending cuts — in time for an extraordinary meeting of euro zone finance ministers on July 3.
New Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos, in an attempt to answer a key grievance of protesters, told parliament the government's top priority would be to build a fairer tax system.
He is expected to drop plans for an increase in fuel tax and for a special levy on real estate, instead targeting the self-employed — who are widely believed to be amongst the worst tax evaders — while lowering the burden on low-paid employees.
Inspectors from the International Monetary Fund and European Union arrived on Tuesday to examine a request by Venizelos for changes to the mid-term plan. The government said the mission would discuss changes "at a technical level."
Euro zone officials have told Reuters the plan for the new bailout, meant to extend Greece's year-old 110-billion-euro deal and fund it into late 2014, would feature up to 60 billion euros of fresh official loans, 30 billion euros from the private sector and 30 billion euros from privatizations.
Leading global credit ratings agencies have warned, however, that changes to terms of existing government bonds could be considered as a default.

Caution About Greece Returns to the Markets


All eyes are on Greece yet again Wednesday morning after the Greek parliament backed Prime Minister George Papandreou's new cabinet Tuesday in a midnight vote, with some analysts saying much more is needed for markets' confidence to come back.

George Papandreou


The boost for Papandreou’s government means it is more likely that the country's new austerity package will be approved later on Wednesday, which should restart the flow of bailout funds that are staving off default.

Worries about how far the contagion could spread if Greece defaults on its debt have weighed on the markets in recent weeks.
On Wednesday, European markets opened down slightly ahead a meeting of the U.S. Federal Reserve, after posting their biggest gain in two months on Tuesday as optimism that Greece will receive a fresh bailout and avoid defaulting spread. The euro lost grounds on Wednesday morning on profit-taking, after the enthusiasm immediately after the vote vanished.
However, it still remains to be seen whether Papandreou can successfully implement his austerity programme, as protestors take to the streets of Athens.
“The important thing is the implementation, and that will become more visible in the next few months,” Michael Massourakis, Senior Manager Economic Research at Alpha Bank in Athens, told CNBC Wednesday.
He added that the first hurdle will be whether the government can reach its target of cutting the budget deficit to 7.5 percent of gross domestic product by the end of the year.


The new Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos, who was given the job after a cabinet reshuffle last week, has more “gravitas” than his predecessors and should do a good job, Massourakis said.

“Investors will be watching to see whether Greece can bring it to fruition,” he said. “The whole thing will unravel and either we are going to see the collapse of the euro or Europe will have more political integration than we have seen up to now."

One commentator said that the situation may not lead to the financial Armageddon pessimists predict.

“I think it’s actually not that bad,” Edmund Shing, head of European equities at Barclays Capital, told CNBC. “Everyone seems to be obsessed by Greece, but in other parts of the world, and Europe, there are reasons why people have been pessimistic over the last couple of months."
“However, if you look at the backdrop for equities, which is not fantastic this year, not in the first phase of an economic recovery, over the last few months analysts have been revising their predictions up overall,” Shing added.

If the European Central Bank "does something that threatens the euro" we will see a crisis, according to Steve Barrow, head of G10 Research at Standard Bank.
“If people start saying: ‘Will the euro survive?’ then it’s in trouble,” Barrow said.
But the Greek tragedy has been a long-drawn one, according to Massourakis.
“The whole world, and the whole financial market, has been waiting for Greece to default for 12 months,” he said. “At the same time, if Greece proves that it is able to start implementation of the five-year programme of austerity, it will allow government to start coming back into the markets slowly.”

The euro is not in as big a danger as some analysts believe, Barrow said.
“There’s not a lot of competition for reserve currencies,” he said.
“I think in this case they don’t have to push so hard as the UK did in 1992,” he said, talking about the UK’s exit from the Exchange Rate Mechanism on what was known as Black Wednesday, when the government was unable to keep the currency above the lower end of the exchange rate's fluctuation band because of speculative attacks.

"We are confident that Greece will find a way of not defaulting in the short term and hopefully we will see some sort of debt rollover, some sort of Vienna Initiative kind of solution as a default wouldn't be very supportive of the periphery," Ana Armstrong, CEO of Armstrong Investments, told CNBC Wednesday. Armstrong believes her investment in short-term Greek government bonds will pay off.

The Vienna Initiative saw a group of about a dozen Western-owned banks pledge to keep their exposure to Central and Eastern European countries during 2009 when they were badly hit by the crisis.

The agreement was reached after the European Union and the International Monetary Fund helped the hardest hit Eastern European countries with funds, which were used in part to boost liquidity for foreign-owned commercial banks in those countries.

IMF Lihat Resiko di Spanyol


Dana Moneter Internasional (IMF) mengatakan Spanyol harus meningkatkan upaya reformasi ekonomi akibat krisis utang Eropa yang mengancam pertumbuhan negara tersebut.
"Perbaikan ekonomi  tidak lengkap dan resiko cukup besar, pemerintah harus lanjutkan reformasi untuk mendukung pemulihan dan mengurangi tingkat pengangguran 21%  yang sangat tinggi," kata IMF  dalam laporan penilaian tahunan Spanyol.
 
Pemerintah Sosialis Spanyol sedang melaksanakan pemotongan anggaran terbanyak dalam  tiga dekade terakhir dengan cara tingkatkan usia pensiun dan mengurangi biaya dunia usaha. Pemerintah prediksi pertumbuhan Spanyol sebesar 1.3 % tahun ini,  2.3 % tahun depan dan 2.4 % pada tahun 2013. 
 
"Kondisi keuangan bisa menjadi lebih buruk, mencerminkan meningkatnya kekhawatiran tentang risiko default di kawasan Eropa," kata IMF. 

Pasar Eropa Berhati-Hati Jelang FOMC


Pasar Eropa tertekan dalam sesi perdagangan hari Rabu meskipun pemerintah telah berhasil mempertahankan kepercayaan perlemen Yunani. Investor nampaknya masih skeptis mengingat belum ditemukannya solusi tepat untuk masalah hutang Yunani yang masih menyisakan ancaman default. Pasar juga tengah menantikan pengumuman hasil pertemuan kebijakan Federal Reserve AS yang diharapkan dapat memberikan gambaran yang lebih jelas tentang laju pemulihan ekonomi serta memberikan petunjuk tentang langkah-langkah stimulus moneter.
Indeks Eurostoxx 50 melemah sekitar 0,4%, sedangkan indeks DAX Jerman dan CAC Perancis masing-masing harus kehilangan 0,11% dan 0,56%. Di Inggris, FTSE bergerak 0,55% lebih rendah dalam 2 jam pertama perdagangan.
 
Yunani maish tetap menjadi fokus meskipun voting kepercayaan kemarin berhasil dimenangkan pemerintahan George Papandreu, namun pemerintah harus segera menghadapi tantangan lain dimana mereka harus berjuang meloloskan rencana langkah-langkah penghematan baru dalam voting parlemen 28 Juni mendatang guna memastikan pencairan paket bailout tahap berikutnya dari Uni Eropa dan IMF.
 
Sementara Federal Reserve dijadwalkan akan merilis keputusan kebijakan moneternya hari ini, yang telah mendorong pasar Eropa untuk lebih berhati-hati.