Tag Archives: Shutdown

Another Shutdown? Nasdaq Error Closes Options Market

Nasdaq OMX Group Inc. closed the sixth-largest U.S. options exchange more than five hours early last Friday because of a technical error, the latest malfunction to disrupt trading last week. The Nasdaq Options Market which handled 8.1 percent of American trading in September, was shut at 10:36 a.m. New York time and didn’t reopen because a “significant increase in order entries inhibited the system’s ability to accept orders and disseminate quotes” for some contracts, the company said. Trading continued on the 11 other U.S. venues, including two owned by New York-based Nasdaq. The mishap followed others earlier in the week. An Oct. 30 malfunction interrupted data transmission at Deutsche Boerse AG’s International Securities Exchange, while Nasdaq was unable to distribute prices for its benchmark stock indexes for almost an hour on Oct. 29. The breakdowns refocused concern that the distribution of trading over dozens of mostly automated venues has made U.S. securities markets fundamentally flawed. The company’s stock price dropped following the disruption, slumping 0.4 percent to $35.30, as the Bloomberg World Exchanges Index of 27 bourse operators fell less than 0.1 percent. Nasdaq has suffered several high-profile malfunctions, including its mishandling of Facebook Inc.’s initial public offering in May 2012 and an Aug. 22 outage in its pricing feed, which prompted a three-hour halt for thousands of U.S. stocks. The breakdown was also triggered by Nasdaq’s computers being unable to handle the amount of information being sent their way. The Nasdaq Options Market will open today (Nov. 4).

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Raw Gold

Gold Lingers At Five-Week High

After the release of U.S. economic data backing the maintenance of the stimulus by the Federal Reserve, gold remained near its highest level in five weeks, before the central bank policy makers meet later today to discuss recovery.

The precious metal rose 0.6 percent to $1,360.76 an ounce, traded at $1,354.12 at 2:46 p.m. in Singapore. Prices climbed to $1,361.93 yesterday, the highest since 20th September. Holdings in the SPDR Gold Trust, the biggest gold-backed exchange-traded product, remained steady at 872.02 metric tons yesterday.

Gold gained in October following the 16-day U.S. government as lawmakers warred over the U.S. budget and debt ceiling, and which may have impeded growth in the nation’s economy.

Gold trading has been low as investors seem to be waiting for the Fed’s official decision regarding quantitative easing and the stimulus reduction plan.

After a 12-year gain, gold dropped 19 percent in 2013 on expectations that the Fed would reduce its $85 billion in monthly body buying as the economy strengthened. The unexpected decision of Fed policy makers to continue providing the economic stimulus at the same levels in their September meeting, has lured investors back to the safe-haven commodity

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U.S. Shutdown Damaged Harvest Too?

Fruit and vegetables growers in the U.S. see their harvests failing as a result of the 16-day government shutdown earlier this month. Delays in processing visa applications during the public sector’s halt has left short of immigrant workers and should the process not be expedited they stand to lost their entire crops.

A spokesman of the Labor Department said that 10,600 workers’ applications from 230 employers have been delayed due to the shutdown. The DHS announced on 23rd October that in efforts to speed the process it would temporarily accept copies of visa applications from the Labor Department instead of applications with original signatures.

The measures taken so far by the government agencies, however, are only expected to shave one day off the process of seasonal H2-A visas, which typically takes about two months.

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money-laundering

Dollar falls after lower-than-expected NFP report

Following yesterday’s release of U.S. Non-Farm Payrolls which showed slow growth and suggested that the Fed will not be easing its stimulus plan, the dollar fell to a two-year low against the euro. The much-awaited report by the Labor Department which had been delayed by the U.S. government shutdown showed yesterday that employers had added fewer jobs in the American than economists expected.

The yen also saw a rise against all major counterparts as investors seek for alternative refuge assets. The yen can be seen strengthening in periods of global economic turmoil because Japan does not rely on foreign capital to fund its deficit.

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White House

The Real Cost of the U.S. Shutdown

In recent years the U.S. government has accustomed global audiences to subpar behaviour, from crippling budget cuts, to debt crises, and most recently a near-universal government shutdown that threatened to turn into debt-default. Although none of these events has been severe enough to push the U.S. economy into another recession, Washington’s policy blunders come not without consequences and beg the question about their real cost to the American economy and the country’s international reputation. Not only has recovery from the 2008-2009 recession been unusually slow, but the government standoff has also put added stress on the country’s economy and garnered a negative watch on U.S. credit rating by Fitch Rating Service last week.

The 16-day halt of government operations itself has taken $24 billion out of U.S. economy, according to Standard and Poor’s, but the buck does not stop there. Although the cost of restarting the government is hard to tabulate precisely, financial experts expected it to reach billions of dollars as it includes interest payments to third parties and additional personnel costs to deal with backlogged work. Workers handling time-sensitive information and procedures, moreover, such as IRS payments and Medicare claims, face additional challenges as leads that have grown cold over the period of the shutdown prevent them from carefully auditing the slew of accumulated claims. Others, like analysts working in the collection of electronic data, will have to check three-week’s worth of information in a faster-than-usual pace, increasing error margins significantly.

Washington’s growing trend of governance-by-crisis, coupled with steep budgetary cuts, has been discouraging businesses from further expansion due to the unstable political climate, and it is estimated to have kept roughly 2 million people out of work. Last-minute decisions, moreover, such as the latest agreement reached by the government to lift the debt ceiling, send the dollar spiralling down rabbit holes where investors are unwilling to tread. The general apprehension created by Washington may have hindered the U.S. economy from shifting into a higher gear, as the brinkmanship of the last few years has also pushed consumer confidence to extremely low levels. But it is not only American businesses and consumers who have been sceptical of the U.S. government’s aggressive approach to its debt problems: The International Monetary Fund has called the U.S. deficit-reduction measures “excessively rapid and ill-designed” in June.

The truth remains that the eleventh-hour deal reached by U.S. government does not resolve the underlying disputes that launched the country-wide paralysis and many fear that the standoff will be repeated again in a few months, when the next deadline approaches in February 2014. Fitch Rating Service, in fact, has warned that the use of the debt ceiling as an extortionist political tool “risks undermining confidence in the role of the U.S. dollar as the preeminent global reserve currency, by casting doubt over the full faith and credit of the U.S.” and added that the U.S. may deserve to be downgraded from its ‘AAA’ debt rating even if it paid its debts this time, for it can no longer be trusted.

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