Tag Archives: smartphones

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Just A Minute!

Here’s today’s ‘Just A Minute’ bringing you a 60 second summary of what’s happening in the markets:

Main Trading Events Of The Day: USD Existing Home Sales @ 15.00 GMT

Earnings Reports: N/A

WHAT WE’RE WATCHING TODAY

U.S. New Home Building Plunges As Existing Home Sales Due To Disappoint

U.S. new home construction - housing starts - recorded their biggest drop in almost three years in January, probably weighed down by harsh weather, but the third month of declines in permits pointed to some underlying weakness in the housing market. The Commerce Department said starts plunged 16% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 880,000 units, the lowest level since September. The percentage drop was the largest since February 2011. Starts for December were revised up to a 1.05 million-unit pace from the previously reported 999,000-unit rate. Economists had expected starts to fall to a 950,000-unit rate in January. Freezing temperatures have been blamed for the sharp slowdown in hiring in December and January although there is evidence that the economy was already losing momentum towards the end of the fourth quarter.

Meanwhile, January’s existing home sales are due to be reported today are expected to show a decline of 3.5 percent to 4.7 million. Stocks rallied Thursday and bonds fell, as investors ignored a weak report from the Philadelphia Fed, which showed a plunge in new orders and a surprise contraction in manufacturing activity. Analysts believe that there is a choppy picture in the very short term but housing is basically in good, solid shape from an intermediate point of view, and that with fairly moderate mortgage rates – assuming the economy starts to come back in the spring, a lot of the pent up demand for housing may get stronger as hiring picks up.

A U.S. flag decorates a for-sale sign at a home in the Capitol Hill neighborhood of Washington

China’s Stocks Fall as Yuan Weakens

China’s stocks fell the most in six weeks, while the yuan headed for its biggest weekly slide since 2011 as a manufacturing slowdown fuelled concerns the economic expansion is weakening. Analysts believe the market is worried that the government may tolerate a bigger decline in economic growth amid the restructuring of the economy. The yuan dropped 0.3 percent today to 6.0837 per dollar, extending this week’s loss to 0.8 percent. The currency fell 0.1 percent to 6.089.

In the meantime, as finance ministers and central bank chiefs from the Group of 20 (G20) gather ahead of a weekend meeting in Sydney, the world’s rich nations pushed back against emerging market complaints about the spillover effects of their monetary policies, saying that they had to get their own houses in order and get on with the agenda of lifting global growth. Emerging nations want the U.S. Federal Reserve to calibrate its winding down of stimulus so as to mitigate the impact on their economies. Developed members reply that the troubles in the emerging world are mostly homegrown and domestic interest rates have to be set with domestic recoveries in mind. That was a sentiment very much echoed by the finance ministers of Japan, Britain and Germany. The head of the U.S. Treasury called on China, Japan and Europe to make domestic demand the engine room of growth.

Google Announces Project Tango, A Smartphone That Can Map The World Around It

Google has just announced, under a new initiative called Project Tango, a prototype Android smartphone that can learn and map the world around it. Google says that the phone will learn the dimension of rooms and spaces just by being moved around inside of them. Walking around your bedroom, for example, would help the phone learn the shape of your home. Google hopes that by creating a robust map of the world, the phone could eventually give precise directions to any given point that needs to be reached. The goal of Project Tango is to give mobile devices a human-scale understanding of space and motion. Google has 200 devices that it’s preparing to give out to developers who want to build mapping tools, games, and new algorithms that take advantage of the phone’s sensors, and it expects to send them all out by March 14th. Google stresses that the technology is still in early stages, but it still sees it as on the way to reaching millions of people down the road. Watch out for a major rollout in the future!

That sums up today’s highlights! We hope you have a profitable day on the markets.

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Samsung building

Is Samsung Set For Greater Losses?

Samsung Electronics Co. (005930) has recently experienced a $28-billion loss in a stretch of only six weeks, and the stock’s most accurate forecaster expects the drop to deepen as Apple Inc. (AAPL) and Chinese competitors bite off greater chinks of the market.

Samsung, which is based in Suwon, South Korea, saw its shares plummet 13 percent since 29th November, making it the quickest market-capitalisation losing company worldwide. According to Adnaan Ahmad, the Brerenberg analyst with the most accurate and best-returning forecasts over the last twelve months, the stock is set to decline another 11 percent.

The last quarter of 2013 marked the first quarterly decline for the word’s largest smartphone maker, ending a nine quarter stretch of increases, losing customers not only to Apple’s iPhones, but also to budget solution by Chinese makers. Despite bulls’ expectation for a rebound following the drop that brought the stock to its lowest level in three years, Ahmad anticipates more selling as Samsung’s profit margins shrink.

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morning-coffee

Has the way we shop changed forever?

The Monday after Thanksgiving in the US, labelled as Cyber Monday, is billed as one of the busiest online commerce days of the year. This year, however, it is spilling into the rest of the holiday season as more consumers use mobile devices to shop when and where they please. Equipped with tablets and smartphones, shoppers are ordering online over a longer period, data from ComScore Inc. show, and one third of average monthly traffic for leading retailers is from smartphones and tablets. As a result, more and more stores are offering holiday deals that can reach consumers through these devices. The incentive to the shoppers – apart from the practicality of using your phone to buy stuff – is offers giving them an added discount if they order from their mobile applications. Amazon and Ebay, the world’s largest online retailers, as well as other retailers, are taking advantage of the smartphone industry to create online promotions and mobile apps to attract tech-savvy gift buyers, over the many weeks leading up to the holidays.

The holiday season is crucial for companies such as Amazon which depends on people buying gifts in the lead up to Christmas to fuel its biggest-revenue quarter. The trend is accelerating as commerce on tablets and smartphones grew twice as fast in the third quarter as desktop online spending. According to the National Retail Federation, online holiday sales should increase as much as 15 percent to $82 billion this year. As more purchasing happens over the internet, it won’t be surprising if e-commerce eventually completely overtakes shopping in real-life stores.

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