Tuesday, 27 September 2011

Fed's 'Twist' Pulling Down Bond Yields-Are Stocks Next?

In addition to bringing down long-term interest rates, the Federal Reserve has accomplished something else with its Operation Twist announcement-lowering expectations for growth.
Investors traditionally look for rates, particularly on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note, for clues about the central bank's economic outlook.
With the 10-year yielding less than 2 percent and the 30-year bond below 3 percent, the message is clear that the Fed does not expect robust growth ahead.
And along with those expectations comes the view from some investors that owning stocks in such a climate isn't a great idea.
"They're just pushing on a string. There's nothing going to happen per se with a ridiculous 30-year and 10-year in terms of rates, except that it's going to force, marginally, some people into dividend stocks," says Michael Cohn, chief market strategist at Global Arena Investment Management in New York. "It's going to be tough for the risk-on trade here for a while."
Under normal circumstances, low yields on bonds are supposed to help stocks as investors tire of poor returns on debt and switch to riskier assets. Indeed, some strategists have advocated holding dividend-paying stocks as the Standard & Poor's 500 (INDEX: .SPX) yield surpasses the 10-year note.
But with an overload of pessimism already in the market, the Fed's "Twist" announced last week-in which it plans to swap out $400 billion of short-term government debt on its $2.8 trillion balance sheet and buy-longer-duration Treasurys-also has dampened enthusiasm for fundamental economic growth.
The Treasury market is sending the message that inflation, in particular the healthy kind that comes from growth, is dead for now as the central bank commits to a zero-interest rate policy for at least the next two years.
"One source of inflation is a healthy economy running at full tilt and companies exercising pricing power over the consumers of their goods and services," Nicholas Colas, chief market strategist at ConvergEx in New York, wrote in his daily market analysis.
"A 10-year note yielding less than 2 percent signals that Treasury buyers do not think such a scenario will play out until 2021 at the earliest," he continued. "That means little domestic earnings growth through the cycle and even less in the way of a recovery in domestic labor markets. Hard assumptions to justify owning equities, to be sure."
That idea of generating positive inflation has gained prominence recently as forecasts for gross domestic product growth come down and the Fed advances its idea to drive down borrowing costs from already near-record lows.

Over the weekend, Goldman Sachs economist Sven Jari Stehn released a bold proposal that would entail a joint effort between the Fed and Congress.
Washington, under Stehn's plan, would embark on an aggressive stimulus program using government debt. The Fed then would crank up the printing presses and simply monetize the debt away once growth has reached a desired level.
It's a dangerous plan that risks inflation, particularly when the headline rate is at 3.6 percent and the core rate-stripping out food and energy-is at 1.8 percent, near the Fed's desired range of 2 percent. The controlling of inflation is half of the central bank's dual mandate, so the idea is representative of how desperate the market is of creating growth.
"Combining fiscal stimulus with a change in the Fed's targeting regime and further purchases of Treasury securities would be a powerful device to enhance the credibility of the Fed's commitment to push up prices," Stehn wrote in a research note. "Such cooperation would be a radical but highly effective tool: fiscal policy would accumulate additional public debt and the Fed would inflate it away."
While the chance of enacting that type of program is unclear, it is much easier to see how such uncertainty has bred some strange trading patterns.
Stock trading has featured wild seesaws, including rallies in the first two trading days this week that seemed to be built on hopes that a European solution is near. Investors, though, have bet on similar scenarios in the past only to be disappointed.
"Investors right now are behaving schizophrenically. They're responding to every little head fake, taking things they've loved and getting rid of them," says Uri Landesman, president of Platinum Partners in New York. "The smart guys are just picking people off."
Landesman says investors for now ought to trade the market in a range-selling when the S&P 500 gets around the 1260 range and buying around 1120.
Simply "avoiding a recession would be positive for the market right now," he says. "We're a lot closer to the bottom than the top and that's bullish. But it's really valuation. It's not like there's some silver bullet coming."

Yahoo! Finance

Sunday, 25 September 2011

World Bank raises Africa aid to $1.88 billion

(CNN) -- The World Bank said that it is increasing funding to the war-wracked and drought-stricken Horn of Africa to $1.88 billion from more than $500 million, a generous gesture that coincides with a U.N. mini-summit on the devastated region.
"Countries in the Horn of Africa that are facing one of the worst droughts in more than half a century, causing mounting malnutrition, food insecurity, and displacement of people," the DC-based bank said in a statement on Saturday.
The announcement comes as the first week of U.N. debates wrapped up Saturday where delegates continued to outline their visions for peace and global security.
"In Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia and Djibouti, more than 13 million people need our help," said U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon during the summit. "In Somalia, famine has spread through large areas of the south."
Ban said three-quarters of a million people are "at imminent risk of starvation" as a result of war, rising food costs and droughts that have continually plagued the region.
He added that $700 million in additional aid is needed this year, describing the Horn of Africa "as the worst humanitarian crisis in the world."
"Somalia will never be free of the threat of famine until it has peace and stability," said the U.N. chief. "We could save many more lives if we were given free access to areas under the control of Al-Shabaab."
The al Qaeda-linked group has been waging an insurgency against Somalia's transitional government since 2006.

CNN

African Development Bank Commits US$7.5 Million to Support IMF Capacity Building in Africa

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the African Development Bank (AfDB) today signed an agreement for a contribution of US$7.5 million by the AfDB to support IMF capacity building in Africa through the third phase of the Africa Regional Technical Assistance Centers (AFRITACs) Initiative.
For more on that please follow the link below
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sec/pr/2011/pr11349.htm

International Monetary fund

Banking Industry In The Gambia

Banking in The Gambia began over a 100 years. Currently there are fourteen banks within the industry of which one is an Islamic Bank and thirteen conventional commercial banks.
Commercial Banks in The Gambia

 ♦ Standard Chartered Bank (Gambia) Ltd

  Mr. Humphrey Mukwereze
  CEO/Manager Director
   Standard Chartered Bank (Gambia) Ltd
   8 Ecowas Avenue
   P O Box 259,
   Banjul
   Tel: (220) 422-8681/3
   Fax: (220) 422-7714

 ♦ Trust Bank Ltd

   Mr Pa Makoumba Njie,
   Managing Director
   Trust Bank Ltd
   4 Ecowas Avenue
   Banjul
   Tel: (220) 422-5777/8
   Fax: (220) 422-5781
   E-mail: trust@gamtel.gm

 ♦ Bank PHB

   Mr. Chuks Chibundu
   Managing Director
   Bank PHB
   11a Liberation Avenue
   Banjul
   Tel: (220) 422-7944 /4 22-8144 /
   422-8145
   Fax: (220) 422-9312
   E-mail: ibc@qanet.gm

 ♦ Arab Gambia Islamic Bank

   Mr. Zakari Abubakar
   Managing Director
   Arab Gambia Islamic Bank
   7 Ecowas Avenue
   P.O. Box 1415
   Banjul
   Tel: (220) 422-2222 / 422-3773/ 422-2244
   Fax: (220) 422-2211
   E-mail: agib@qanet.gm

 ♦ First International Bank

   Mr Richard C. Harrison
   Managing Director
   First International Bank
   6 OAU Boulevard
   P O Box 1997
   Banjul
   Tel: (220) 420-2000/5
   Fax: (220) 420-2000
   E-mail: admin@fib.gm

 ♦ Guaranty Trust Bank (Gambia) Ltd

   Mr. Lekan Sanusi
   Managing Director
   Guaranty Trust Bank
   56 Kairaba Avenue
   P.O.Box 1958.
   Fajara,
   Tel: (220) 437-6371/4
   Fax: (220) 437-6398
   Email: GeNs@gambia.gtbplc.com

 ♦ International Commercial Bank (Gambia) Ltd

   Mr. Venkataraman Muralidhra
   International Commercial Bank (G) Ltd
   48 Kairaba Avenue
   Serrekunda, KMC
   P.O. Box 1600
   Banjul, The Ganbia
   Tel: (220) 4377878
   Fax: (220) 4377880
   Email:icbank@icbank-gambia.com

 ♦ Access Bank (Gambia) Ltd

   Mr. Oleka Ojiogo
   Managing Director
   Access Bank Gambia Limited
   47 Kairaba Avenue
   Fajara
   Kombo St. Mary's Division
   P.O. Box 3177, Serrekunda
   Tel: 220-4398226-7
   Tel: 220-4396678-9
   Fax 220-4396640
   EMAIL:accessgambia@accessbankgambia.com

 ♦ Ecobank (Gambia) Ltd

   Mr. Fitzerald Odonkor
   CEO/Managing Director
   Ecobank (Gambia)Ltd
   42 Kairaba Avenue
   P.O Box 3149
   Sere kunda
   The Gambia
   Tel: (220) 4399033
   Fax: (220) 4399034
   Email: ecobankega@ecobank.com

 ♦ Banque Sahelo-Saherienne Pour L'investissement et commerce (BSIC)

   Mr. Ali Omar Almoktar
   General Manager
   Bank Sahelo-Saherriene Pou L’investissement et le Commerce
   Sankung Sillah Building
   52 Kairaba Avenue
   PMB 204, KMC
   Tel:(220) 4498078/4498077
   Fax: (220) 4498080
   Email: bsic@bsicgambia.gm

 ♦ Oceanic Bank (Gambia) Ltd

   Mr.OlumuyiwaEleazar Ogunmilade
   Managing Director / CEO
   Oceanic Bank (Gambia) Limited.Adams Shopping Centre Bertil Harding Highway
   Kololi
   Tel: (220) 4466711
   Fax: (220) 4466710
   Email:info@oceanicbankgambia.com

 ♦ Prime Bank (Gambia) Ltd

   Mr.Ghassan W. Haikai
   Managing Director
   Prime Bank (Gambia) Ltd
   42 Kairaba Avenue, KMC
   P.O.Box 2073, Serekunda
   The Gambia
   Tel: (220) 4399059/4399060
   Fax: (220) 4399044

 ♦ Skye Bank (Gambia) Ltd

   Mr. Akim Yusuf
   Managing Director / CEO
   Skye Bank (Gambia) Ltd.
   70,Kairaba Avenue
   Fajara, KSMD
   The Gambia
   Tel: (220) 4414370-1
   e-mail info@skyebankgm.com

 ♦ Zenith Bank

   Mr. Emeka Anyaegbuna
   Managing Director
   Zenith Bank (Gambia) Ltd.
   P.O. Box 2823
   The Gambia
   Tel: +220-4399470\71\75

Top Qualities Of An Effective CEO

With Apple's (Nasdaq:AAPL) near-legendary CEO Steve Jobs heading back to semi-retirement and Hewlett-Packard (NYSE:HPQ) recently changing the name on the door of the executive suite once again, the quality of executive management is a hot topic. Time and time again, the markets have proven that even...
For more on this please click on the link below
http://financialedge.investopedia.com/financial-edge/0911/Top-Qualities-Of-An-Effective-CEO.aspx#axzz1YPcnG6xl

Investopedia

SMS Banking In The Gambia

In a bid to make banking more convenient and efficient for its customers and the Gambia at large, Trust Bank Gambia Limited has introduced a new SMS banking service in the country.
 For more on this please click on the link below
http://wow.gm/africa/gambia/article/2008/1/22/trust-bank-introduces-sms-banking-service

WOW-Gambia News Community


For A Safer Portfolio, Should You Invest In Gold Or Not?

Investors can't seem to get enough of stories talking about what this or that famous investor is doing with his or her portfolio. In the latest example, news that George Soros has liquidated his gold holdings has some investors and commentators wondering whether the markets are looking at the end of...
For more on this please follow the link below
http://financialedge.investopedia.com/financial-edge/0911/Should-You-Follow-Soros-Out-Of-Gold.aspx#axzz1YPcnG6xl

Investopedia

U.S. Federal Reserve launches Operation Twist

The Federal Reserve pulled the trigger on Operation Twist Wednesday, exchanging $400 billion in short-term bonds for longer term securities, in an effort to stimulate the economy.
For more on this please click on the link below
http://money.cnn.com/2011/09/21/news/economy/federal_reserve_operation_twist/index.htm?iid=Lead

CNN World Business Today


Tuesday, 20 September 2011

Development of Currency in The Gambia

Until the middle of the nineteenth century the recognised method of payment in The Gambia was by Cowrie Shells. The earliest forms of “coin” were brass or copper rods and sometimes metal tokens.
By 1880 silver coins, mainly in the form of French 5 Franc pieces, were in general use. In 1892 the African Banking Corporation was established in Lagos and one of the Bank’s function was to supply West African countries with new British coin and repatriate redundant silver coin to London. Two years later in 1894 these responsibilities passed to the Bank of British West Africa.
In 1912 a Committee (the architect of the Currency Board) was set up to examine ways of establishing a more uniform currency and to decide on future policy. Although a one-penny and one-tenth of a penny coin had been issued from 1907, and a half-penny from 1911, the French 5 Franc silver pieces still dominated in The Gambia. In 1913 a three-penny, six-penny, one shilling and florin coin were issued.
At the end of 1915 the Committee that had now become the West the West African Currency Board, revised and enlarged its constitution to provide for a note issue. The proposal was put forward that currency notes be issued to each colony but that these should be “under the authority of the Currency Board in London”. The notes were to be a uniform design but bearing the distinguishing mark of each issuing office. This constitution was to remain unchanged until 1949.
An order was thus placed with the London printers, Waterlow & Sons Ltd., for 2 shilling, 10 shilling and £1 banknotes. These entered circulation in The Gambia towards the end of 1917. With the exception of the 2 shilling note, the reception was generally favourable. The following year when a 1 shilling note was printed by the Bank of England it was also found to be as unpopular as the 2 shilling.
1919 marked the issue of a £5 note that was withdrawn only four years later through lack of popularity. It was not until 1954 that this note was reissued in The Gambia
Internal self-government came to The Gambia in October 1963 and on the initiative of the West African Currency Board an order for notes was placed with Bradbury Wilkinson & Co. Ltd. For 10 shilling, £1 and £5 notes. These were put into issue only four days after the new currency ordinance, that formed The Gambia Currency Board, came into force 1st. October 1964.
18th. February 1965 – Independence Day in The Gambia. The Gambia Currency Board issued its own coinage, produced by Royal Mint, to replace the West African Currency Board coin, on 21st. November 1966. The values remained the same although the one-tenth and half-penny coins were not issued, whilst a 4 shilling piece went into circulation. An 8 shilling coin was subsequently struck in 1970.
The assets and liabilities of The Gambia Currency Board were vested in 1971, in the Central Bank Of The Gambia. That same year the currency was decimalised on the basis of 1 Dalasi = 100 Bututs. The coins were minted by the Royal Mint. The notes of 1, 5, 10 and 25 Dalasi denominated were printed by Bradbury Wilkinson & Co. Ltd. With the royal effigy being replaced by the portrait of H. E. The President of the Republic of The Gambia on both the notes and the coin.
To commemorate the tenth anniversary of Independence in The Gambia a new 10 Dalasi coin was produced in 1975.

Central Bank Of  The Gambia

The Stock Market And Your Money

The Wall Street Journal's Marketwatch website recently reported that in the past three years, from September 9, 2008 to September 9, 2011, the S&P has gone nowhere - 0.00% when dividends are factored in. This fact, along with the negative global news surrounding the investment markets, may make you ...
Find out more from the link below.
                                             
                                                                                                                                                Investopedia

Friday, 16 September 2011

Purpose

I created this blog purposely for business purposes. In this blog, I will be updating my followers on business news in The Gambia and abroad. Kindly follow it and you will not miss any business reports in the world.

Wednesday, 14 September 2011

About Me

I'm Sainey Tamba form Gambia, West Africa. I study economics at the University of The Gambia. I'm 22 years old... Aasay is my nickname. My friends have been calling me that name since childhood. I'm an easy going person, very shy and have a sense of humour. I like to know about other people's culture. You are welcome if you want to know mine. I don't care about race. If you are good to me, I will like you. I hate segregation of race and culture. I also hate xenophobia.....XXXD