November 22, 2024

U.S. Stocks Slightly Higher

Before trading began, the Commerce Department said that both personal income and spending rose 0.4 percent in April, in line with what economists expected. Higher food and gas prices accounted for most of the spending increase.

A cut in the amount withdrawn from paychecks for Social Security has given incomes a boost this year. But that extra take-home pay has been pinched by higher prices for gasoline.

But the government’s figures do not account for the dip in gas prices in May because they lag by a month. The Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment index, a closely watched measure of consumer confidence, rose to 74.3 in May, above analysts’ estimates of 70. Concerns about higher gas prices and inflation had knocked the gauge down in March and April.

“That’s what a 25-cent drop in gas prices will do,” David Ader, bond strategist at CRT Capital Group, wrote in an email to clients. At the close of trading, the Dow Jones industrial average was up 38.82 points, or 0.31 percent. The Standard and Poor’s 550-stock index rose 5.41 points, or 0.41 percent. The Nasdaq composite index was up 13.94 points, or 0.5 percent.

Markets are closed Monday for Memorial Day.

European and Asian stock markets mostly rose Friday as a recovery in commodity shares helped investors look past weak economic data from the United States and worries about Greece’s debt troubles.

Sentiment has been dented in recent weeks by fears that the American economy, the world’s largest, is running out of steam. In a revised look at economic growth, the Commerce Department reported Thursday that the economy grew at a tepid annual rate of 1.8 percent in the first quarter, lower than many economists expected. Gasoline prices that reached $4 a gallon and sharp cutbacks in government spending hindered growth. The Labor Department also said more people applied for unemployment benefits last week.

Traders have also been shaken by worries that Greece may not get its next rescue loan installment, with a top European Union official reportedly warning that the International Monetary Fund may hold back on its part of the bailout. Those jitters hurt the euro and stocks on Thursday.

Then on Friday, Greece’s main opposition conservative party rejected a government plea for cross-party agreement on new austerity measures, despite strong pressure from the European Union and investor worries about a default. The party’s leader, Antonis Samaras, said he could not endorse a program that would “flatten the Greek economy and destroy Greek society.”

Mr. Samaras and other opposition party leaders met with Greece’s prime minister, George Papandreou, for more than three hours in a failed effort to reach a deal that would extend debt reduction measures to 2015, two years beyond the present government’s mandate.

Amid the uncertainty, the main stock index in Athens closed down 1.7 percent on the day.

The euro recovered strongly from a sell-off on Thursday, rising to $1.4263 from $1.4140 the day before.

European shares posted solid gains. Britain’s FTSE 100 was 1.1 percent higher; Germany’s DAX rose 0.7 percent and France’s CAC 40 was 1 percent higher.

Commodities stocks led the gains, with Rio Tinto and Antofagasta up 1.8 percent and 2.4 percent.

In Asia, most indexes rose, though Japan’s Nikkei 225 index drifted down to close 0.4 percent lower at 9,521.94.

Sony fell 3.2 percent, a day after reporting a 259.6 billion yen ($3.2 billion) loss for the fiscal year ended March 2011 and its third straight year of losses. Costs of online security breaches around the world and the March 11 earthquake in northeastern Japan battered the electronics and entertainment giant.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng gained 1 percent to 23,118.07. South Korea’s Kospi finished 0.4 percent higher at 2,100.24. Australia’s S. P./ASX 200 added 0.5 percent to 4,684.

Mainland Chinese shares sank to their lowest level in nearly eight months as investors, succumbing to gloom over the outlook for the latter half of the year, unloaded shares.

The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index lost 1 percent to 2,709.95, its lowest close since Sept. 30. The Shenzhen Composite Index fell 2 percent to 1,101.11. Shares in coal companies advanced while agricultural-related and textile shares fell sharply.

Benchmark oil for July delivery was up 25 cents to $100.48 per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

The dollar fell to 81.09 yen from 81.30 yen.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=634bbb0ab16d754e00e42dad817f8270

U.S. Stocks Higher as Report Shows Rise in Personal Income

Before trading began, the Commerce Department said that both personal income and spending rose 0.4 percent in April, in line with what economists expected. Higher food and gas prices accounted for most of the spending increase.

A cut in the amount withdrawn from paychecks for Social Security has given incomes a boost this year. But that extra take-home pay has been pinched by higher prices for gasoline.

The Dow Jones industrial average was up 56.99 points, or 0.5 percent. The Standard and Poor’s 550-stock index rose 6.73 points, or 0.5 percent. The Nasdaq composite index was up 11.23 points, or 0.4 percent.

Trading is expected to be light before the long weekend. Markets are closed Monday for Memorial Day.

European and Asian stock markets mostly rose Friday as a recovery in commodity shares helped investors look past weak economic data from the United States and worries about Greece’s debt troubles.

Sentiment has been dented in recent weeks by fears that the American economy, the world’s largest, is running out of steam. In a revised look at economic growth, the Commerce Department reported Thursday that the economy grew at a tepid annual rate of 1.8 percent in the first quarter, lower than many economists expected. Gasoline prices that reached $4 a gallon and sharp cutbacks in government spending hindered growth. The Labor Department also said more people applied for unemployment benefits last week.

Traders have also been shaken by worries that Greece may not get its next rescue loan installment, with a top European Union official reportedly warning that the International Monetary Fund may hold back on its part of the bailout. Those jitters hurt the euro and stocks on Thursday, and on Friday Greek politicians, meeting in a cross-party crisis meeting, failed to reach a consensus on new austerity measures, as demanded by the European regulators, to convince investors it can help finance its debt for the next year.

The euro recovered from a sell-off on Thursday, rising to $1.4247 from $1.4140 the day before.

European shares posted solid gains in early trading. Britain’s FTSE 100 was 1 percent higher; Germany’s DAX rose 0.4 percent and France’s CAC 40 was 1 percent higher.

Commodities stocks led the gains, with Rio Tinto and Antofagasta up 1.8 percent and 2.4 percent.

In Asia, most indexes rose, though Japan’s Nikkei 225 index drifted down to close 0.4 percent lower at 9,521.94.

Sony fell 3.2 percent, a day after reporting a 259.6 billion yen ($3.2 billion) loss for the fiscal year ended March 2011 and its third straight year of losses. Costs of online security breaches around the world and the March 11 earthquake in northeastern Japan battered the electronics and entertainment giant.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng gained 1 percent to 23,118.07. South Korea’s Kospi finished 0.4 percent higher at 2,100.24. Australia’s S. P./ASX 200 added 0.5 percent to 4,684.

Mainland Chinese shares sank to their lowest level in nearly eight months as investors, succumbing to gloom over the outlook for the latter half of the year, unloaded shares.

The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index lost 1 percent to 2,709.95, its lowest close since Sept. 30. The Shenzhen Composite Index fell 2 percent to 1,101.11. Shares in coal companies advanced while agricultural-related and textile shares fell sharply.

Benchmark oil for July delivery was up 25 cents to $100.48 per barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

The dollar fell to 81.09 yen from 81.30 yen.

On Wall Street, all three indexes are down for the week. Stock markets took a hard fall Monday with a batch of bad news from Europe. Another downgrade of Greece’s weak credit rating, a warning on Italy’s debt and a major defeat of Spain’s ruling party over the weekend deepened worries about Europe’s debt crisis. But strong earnings and a plea to push Microsoft’s chief executive officer aside helped push stocks higher Thursday. The report pointing to a weaker economic recovery sent government bond yields to their lowest levels this year.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=52942ab795a1ce26db797001d198754a

Stocks Drop at Open as Oil Prices Decline

Crude oil was trading around $97 a barrel Thursday morning, down more than 1 percent. Oil and gas futures dropped sharply Wednesday after a government report showed demand for gasoline fell by the largest amount in seven weeks.

Silver dropped more than 6 percent, extending a deep slide from $48.60 an ounce at the end of April.

The government released reports on unemployment benefits, wholesale prices and retail sales before the stock market opened. The Labor Department said applications for unemployment benefits fell last week to 434,000, after surging the previous week. Economists expected a slightly bigger drop in claims.

Retail sales rose for the tenth straight month in April, but much of the gain came from surging gasoline prices. Excluding the 2.7 percent jump in gasoline sales, retail sales rose just 0.2 percent.

Higher energy costs also pushed wholesale prices up 0.8 percent in April. That marked the seventh month in a row that companies had to pay more for raw materials.

Cisco Systems fell 5 percent in early trading, the largest drop among companies in the Standard Poor’s 500-stock index. The company said earnings slid 18 percent and lowered its earnings forecast. It plans to eliminate jobs to cut costs.

The Dow Jones industrial average was down 69.93 points, or 0.6 percent, to 12,560.10. The S. P. 500 was down 7.62 points, or 0.6 percent, to 1,334.46, and the Nasdaq composite index fell 13.83 points, or 0.5 percent, to 2,831.23.

Major indexes in Europe and Asia were also lower. The CAC 40 in France was down 1.2 percent.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=53ad67fd4f6253062214a3308ea3c85a

A Robust Rise in April’s Retail Sales Comes With a Hint of Concern

Sales at stores open at least a year, a measure of retail buoyancy known as same-store sales, increased 8.9 percent on average in April, according to Thomson Reuters’ tracking of 25 retailers. That was one of the biggest increases in the last few years, and it topped analyst expectations of 8.2 percent.

Chris Donnelly, a senior executive in the retail practice at Accenture, said the results were good but no one should get carried away.

“It was expected to be a big jump — if you look at analyst expectations, and even the companies’ own expectations,” he said, “and frankly, some companies didn’t jump as much as they were expected to do.”

Even so, the companies that missed forecasts by the biggest margin — Kohl’s, Saks Fifth Avenue and J. C. Penney — still posted good results. Kohl’s same-store sales increased 10.2 percent, compared with analyst estimates of 15.1 percent. Sales at Saks rose 5.8 percent, compared with estimates of 10.3 percent. And J. C. Penney increased 6.4 percent; analysts had expected 8.5 percent.

“Everyone’s pretty happy that April turned out so well, but looking forward, there’s still a lot of concern,” Mr. Donnelly said, noting that gasoline prices and raw material costs are rising sharply.

Gasoline prices are up about 30 percent so far this year — close to an average of $4 a gallon — and retailers are trying to figure out the impact if prices stay there or continue to rise. Higher gas prices tend to affect traffic at physical stores.

“When the national average price of gasoline exceeds $3.20 a gallon, that’s when we start to see indications of change,” said Michael McNamara, vice president for research and analysis at SpendingPulse, which also tracks gas sales. “People pump fewer gallons, and drive less, and that tends to have impact on retail because people cut back on Saturday driving.”

Stage Stores, which reported results on Thursday, said its first-quarter sales increase of just 0.2 percent was damped by gas prices.

“Rising gas prices made for a more cautious consumer,” Andy Hall, president and chief executive, said in a statement.

Last week, Wal-Mart’s chief executive, Michael T. Duke, issued the same warning. “There’s no doubt that rising fuel prices are having an impact on our customers,” Mr. Duke said at an event in New York. “There’s more pressure.” The sharp drop in oil prices over the last four days has not yet begun to affect prices at the gasoline pump, but if sustained, it could provide relief.

Three of the midrange department stores reporting sales on Thursday had some of the best results, with Macy’s, Dillard’s and Kohl’s all posting increases of same-store sales between 10.2 and 11 percent.

The companies attributed the increase in large part to Easter coming in late April, as opposed to last year when most of the Easter-related shopping occurred in March.

Even so, comparing combined March and April results from this year to last year, the stores were improving. Dillard’s, for instance, said its combined March and April same-store sales were up 4 percent over 2010, and Macy’s said the combined months’ results were up 5.3 percent this year over last.

Limited Brands had an increase of 20 percent for all its brands, bolstered by a 25 percent increase at its Victoria’s Secret unit. Analysts had expected a 12.2 percent increase for Limited over all, and a 16.3 percent increase at Victoria’s Secret.

The Limited said in a recorded message that pretty much everything at Victoria’s Secret was performing well, from yoga shorts to new packaging for its fragrances. It also increased its earnings guidance for the second quarter, to 37 to 39 cents a share, up from its previous guidance of 26 to 31 cents a share.

Gap Inc. had one of the most surprising results.

Gap’s sales have been faltering so badly that when Thomson Reuters reports same-store sales for the apparel category, it also includes a number that excludes Gap, to more accurately reflect where the majority of stores are. On Thursday, Gap Inc. announced that it had dismissed its head designer for the Gap brand, Patrick Robinson. Three months ago, it dismissed the Gap brand’s top business-side executive.

In April, however, Gap posted an 8 percent increase in same-store sales in a month analysts had expected a 0.8 percent decrease. The Old Navy and Banana Republic divisions pushed that increase, rising by 14 and 11 percent respectively. But the Gap unit was also in positive territory for the first time in 2011, with an increase of 2 percent.

Spending in the apparel sector over all increased 10.4 percent in April as compared with April a year ago, according to MasterCard Advisors SpendingPulse, which estimates sales from cash, check and credit cards.

“Sectors like apparel had a significant Easter bump, and they are really inflating the growth rate,” Mr. McNamara of SpendingPulse said.

E-commerce sales were up 19.2 percent, according to SpendingPulse, the largest increase since July 2007. And luxury spending continued to be strong, increasing 9.6 percent.

High gas prices can be a boon for e-commerce sales, as customers save gas by having clothing shipped directly to their houses.

“Almost in conjunction with the lower pumping numbers, we’ve seen acceleration of the e-commerce growth,” Mr. McNamara said.

And while high gas prices affect discount stores’ customer base, they also means the stores might attract more affluent customers. Discount stores as a sector had the highest same-store sales increase in April, rising 12.1 percent, which was 1.3 percent higher than analysts had expected.

“It hurts the spending power of your folks, but at the same time a lot of people tend to trade down,” Mr. Donnelly said.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=4ae8ba988ec36d1a4cfa1b1817dd17b1

Price of Crude Oil Falls Again, but Analysts Warn It Will Remain at Lofty Levels

 HOUSTON — With the Memorial Day weekend and summer driving season coming soon, the sudden drop in oil prices could mean that drivers will find moderately lower gasoline prices at just the right moment.

But many energy analysts and economists predict that oil and gas prices will remain stubbornly high.

Supplies remain constrained by turmoil in the Middle East and North Africa, oil specialists said, and there is always the possibility that conflict could cut production in Nigeria. At the same time, expanding economies like China and India continue to drive the growth in oil consumption.

“Nothing has changed, except psychology and taking profits,” Allen Sinai, chief global economist of Decision Economics, a consulting firm, said of this week’s selloff in the oil futures market. “This is a correction, and not a shift in trend.”

Light sweet crude, the benchmark of New York trading, fell below $100 on Thursday for the first time since March, but it remains almost 30 percent higher than a year ago. At the close on Friday, oil for June delivery was down $2.62 at $97.18 a barrel.

Gasoline prices fell a fraction of a penny on Friday, according to AAA’s daily gas gauge. But with the average regular gallon costing $3.98, that is still 28 cents higher than a month ago and a $1.06 more than a year ago.

Other commodities were mixed after a sharp selloff on Thursday. Gold and cocoa were higher, while silver, wheat, cotton and copper were lower again on the day.

Tom Kloza, chief oil analyst of the Oil Price Information Service, predicted that the average price for a gallon of regular gasoline would fall to $3.75 by Memorial Day and to $3.50 later in the summer. Those are still historically high prices, taking consumers back to a level they were paying earlier this year.

President Obama, speaking to auto plant workers in Indiana on Friday, acknowledged the public frustration over high gas prices. “We’ve got high gas prices that have been eating away at your paychecks and that is a headwind that we’ve got to confront,” he said.

Meanwhile Attorney General Eric H. Holder directed a special task force to examine whether reductions in oil prices were being passed on to consumers. “Fraud or manipulation must not be allowed to prevent price decreases,” Mr. Holder said in a memo.

Corrections, even sharp ones, are not unusual as commodity prices follow longer trends up. A Barclays Capital research note on Friday observed that on several occasions last year, weak economic data pushed oil prices down to $70 a barrel. “Those periods were indeed short-lived,” Barclays noted, before oil prices continued their march upward.

While commodity traders move oil markets up and down from day to day, the fundamentals of supply and demand are the drivers from month to month and year to year. Though the fundamentals continue to point higher, oil prices are not expected, at least anytime soon, to return to the levels reached in 2008 when a barrel of crude neared $150 a barrel.

The Energy Department predicts moderately tightening world markets. The department last month estimated that world consumption would grow by an average of 1.5 million barrels a day in both 2011 and 2012. Despite more drilling in OPEC and non-OPEC countries, the department projected that supplies would increase to meet only roughly half the added demand this year and roughly 80 percent of the added demand in 2012.

International financial analysts and oil experts have been predicting a correction for some time in oil prices, since there are ample supplies at the moment. But many think oil prices are going higher in the second half of the year.  

“Worldwide, the macro picture has not changed,” said Andy Lipow, a former Amoco trader who is president of his own Houston consulting firm. “Oil demand around the world continues to increase at the same time we are experiencing a supply disruption in Libya as well as a reduction of supplies from the Gulf of Mexico.”

He predicted that the price of oil would return to the $110 a barrel level by the end of the year. The Macquarie Group projected in a commodities research note this week that light sweet crude would average $110 a barrel this year, $115 in 2012 and $117 in 2013.

The military stalemate in Libya has taken over a million barrels a day of high-quality crude off the market, and oil fields and terminals have been damaged in the fighting. Meanwhile nearly half of Yemen’s 260,000 barrels of daily production is offline. That is a relatively small amount, but Yemeni crude is also a high-quality product that refiners find difficult to replace.

Saudi Arabia promised earlier in the year to increase its production capacity, but it actually cut production recently, claiming that the world markets were flush. Whether the kingdom steps up production remains to be seen, and energy experts are watching closely to see what if any decisions are made on OPEC production and prices at the organization’s next meeting in June.

Recent International Energy Agency and Energy Department reports predict that China, India, other developing nations and the Middle East itself will continue to consume more oil as they build factories and their middle classes add thousands of cars every week to the world fleet.

The Energy Department reported that crude inventories last week had risen by 3.4 million barrels, because American gasoline consumption has been slowing. Consumption may rebound somewhat as prices ease again, energy experts say. Meanwhile, after the earthquake in Japan, demand for oil was down by about 30,000 barrels a day. That reduction was less than expected, and Japan will almost certainly import more oil as its economy recovers and it replaces some nuclear generation with heating oil.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=b43eed09084c323479fc891a863822d7

After Oil Spill, Shell Tries to Calm Fears on Drilling in Alaska

The forbidding ice-clogged region is believed to hold vast reserves of oil, potentially enough to fuel 25 million cars for 35 years. And with production in Alaska’s North Slope in steep decline, the oil industry is eager to tap new offshore wells.

Shell has led the way, working for five years to convince regulators, environmentalists, Native Alaskans and several courts that it could manage the process safely, protect polar bears and other wildlife, safeguard air quality for residents and respond quickly to any spill in the region. But BP’s Deepwater Horizon disaster a year ago put a chill on new offshore drilling.

Shell’s renewed application will pose a test for President Obama, who promised to put safety first after the BP spill. But he has also reiterated his support for offshore drilling amid voter worries about rising gasoline prices.

Environmental groups say a spill in the Arctic’s inaccessible waters could be even more catastrophic than the Gulf of Mexico accident. Republicans, meanwhile, are threatening to excoriate the president for turning his back on energy security if he says no to Shell.

“Americans are reeling from staggering prices at the pump,” said Representative Cory Gardner, a Colorado Republican on the House Energy and Commerce Committee. “So the president has to justify to the American people why we are not replacing Saudi Arabian oil imports with U.S.-produced oil.”

Whatever the administration decides, it will anger somebody. “If the Obama administration approves drilling in the Arctic, it will demonstrate that they have learned nothing from the gulf spill,” said Brendan Cummings, senior counsel at the Center for Biological Diversity, which is suing to stop Shell.

Administration officials say only that they will thoroughly review Shell’s new proposal. “We need to continue to take a cautious approach in the Arctic that is guided by science and the voices of North Slope communities,” said Kendra Barkoff, a spokeswoman for the Interior Department, which oversees most of the process.

The politics extend as far as Alaska’s remotest villages, where support from Native Alaskans, or at least their acquiescence, is essential to win several permits. With that in mind, Pete Slaiby, Shell’s top executive in Alaska, was glad-handing last week in Savoonga, a village on an island in the Bering Sea. He passed out raffle tickets, bought a trinket and congratulated the Yupik hunters for harpooning two bowhead whales.

One hunter waved a copy of the movie “An Inconvenient Truth,” and launched into an attack on oil as a cause for the warming temperatures that are melting the Arctic ice. Other hunters pressed Mr. Slaiby on concerns that the migrating walruses they depend on for food would suffer from the noise if drilling operations began north of here.

Mr. Slaiby said Shell was concerned about climate change too, and promised that the company would take painstaking precautions to protect wildlife. “We won’t be successful here if we deprive people of their subsistence,” he said. “If the oil companies are doing well and the people living around them are not, it’s a recipe for disaster.”

Shell has already spent $3.7 billion on the 10-year offshore leases and preparations for exploration, although the company has yet to drill a single hole. Shell will formally present its new proposal — to drill up to 10 wells over the next two years in remote waters north of Alaska, in the Chukchi and Beaufort seas — in the next few days. If the plan is approved within nine months or so, exploration could begin next year.

Just as in the past, executives realize they need to fight the battle on multiple regulatory and legal fronts. “It’s like holding a bunch of pins in your hand, and trying to make sure not one drops,” said Brian Malnak, Shell’s vice president of government affairs.

Perhaps the toughest hurdle this year will be convincing the government that Shell could protect the Arctic from a devastating spill. An Interior Department agency recently estimated that a “hypothetical” blowout of an oil well in the Chukchi Sea could release 1.4 million barrels of crude over a 39-day period before a relief well could be drilled. A leak of that magnitude would severely test the capacity of the boats, barges, skimmers and a spill containment tanker that Shell plans to deploy around its rigs, although the company promises to add whatever equipment regulators find necessary.

Shell is proposing to use two drill ships, each capable of drilling a relief well for the other in case of the kind of blowout that destroyed the Deepwater Horizon rig. The company is also promising to add more testing and an extra set of shears to its blowout preventers and to keep emergency capping systems near drilling sites to capture any potential leaks.

Alaska once accounted for a third of the nation’s oil production, but its fields are now in steep decline. The decrease in production threatens the continued safe use of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline System, also known as TAPS, which requires a steady flow of oil to avert corrosion and spills.

The Alaskan Arctic potentially holds 27 billion barrels of oil. “If we could open the Arctic to oil exploration,” said Alaska’s governor, Sean Parnell, “we can fill that TAPS line in a way to preserve it for another 50 to 100 years.” Major production from the Arctic would probably be a decade away, however.

Environmentalists contend that the risks of drilling are too great. They warn that hurricane-force winds, high seas, and frigid cold and ice would make cleaning up a spill far more difficult than in the gulf, and they say that oil operations could disturb migration and reproduction of marine mammals.

“We believe there need to be more spill drills, more testing, more inspections of the drill rig and blowout preventer before they begin,” said Marilyn Heiman, director of the United States Arctic Program of the Pew Environment Group.

In his presentation in Savoonga, Mr. Slaiby said Shell and other companies had safely drilled in Alaska’s Arctic waters in the 1980s and 1990s, without a spill or major damage to wildlife. And he noted that the wells Shell intended to drill here were far shallower than BP’s ill-fated Macondo well, making the possibility of a blowout more remote.

“We’ve never told people that what we do doesn’t entail risk,” Mr. Slaiby said, “but the risks are different from the Gulf of Mexico.”

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/02/business/energy-environment/02shell.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Economix: Fed Existentialism

Questions at the Federal Reserve’s first-ever press conference broadly fell into three categories:

  1. Why isn’t the Fed doing more to ward off inflation?
  2. Why isn’t the Fed doing more to lower unemployment?
  3. Can the Fed actually do more?

The first two kinds of questions sort of canceled each other out, in that “doing more” on one-half of the dual mandate would undermine efforts to “do more” on the other half. It was the third category of questions that was more provocative, and that provided an important reminder that economics is not as precise or powerful a “science” as we often imagine or hope it to be.

In one case Ben S. Bernanke, the Federal Reserve chairman, was asked “whether there’s anything that the Fed can or should do about” rising gasoline prices. And Mr. Bernanke lightheartedly acknowledged that this was beyond the Fed’s control:

There’s not much that the Federal Reserve can do about gas prices per se. At least not without derailing growth entirely, which is certainly not the right way to go.

After all, the Fed can’t create more oil. We don’t control the growth rates of emerging market economies. What we can do is basically try to keep higher gas prices from passing into other prices and wages throughout the economy and creating a broader inflation which will be much more difficult to extinguish.

Fair enough. The Fed doesn’t have the power to fix this particular problem. But then, at the very end, a thematically similar question came up, about the Fed’s ability to solve economic problems in general these days:

Mr. Chairman, [Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff] wrote a book looking at 800 years of financial history and discovered when you have a financial crisis it takes a lot longer for the economy to recover.

Are people expecting too much from the Federal Reserve in terms of helping the economy recover? Has that complicated your monetary policy making?

Mr. Bernanke wasn’t ready to concede that the Fed is quite as powerless as the questioner suggested:

I enjoyed that book very much. I thought it was informative and as you say, it makes the point that as a historical matter, recoveries following a financial crisis tend to be slow.

What the book didn’t do is give a full explanation of why that’s the case. Part of it has to do with the problems in credit markets. My own research when I was in academia focused a good deal on the problems in credit markets on recoveries.

Other aspects would include the effects of credit problems on areas like housing and so on. We are seeing all that, of course, in our economy.

That said, another possible explanation for the slow recovery from financial crises might be that policy responses were not adequate. That the recapitalization of the banking system, the restoration of credit flows and the monetary fiscal policies were not sufficient to get as quick a recovery as might otherwise have been possible.

And so we haven’t allowed that historical fact to dissuade us from doing all we can to support a strong recovery. That being said it is a relatively slow recovery.

In other words: Monetary policy makers just didn’t know what to do before! But now we do! Even though we, uhh, still don’t completely understand what went wrong before.

This is the perpetual problem with economics, with economists and with others who look to their expertise.

Economics includes a lot of technical, specific theories, formulated by a lot of brilliant people, about how the economic world works and what the effects of various economic policies would be. But despite the mathematical precision of these many theories and forecasts, economics is still a relatively primitive science, especially since it’s impossible to run controlled macroeconomic experiments the way you can in a physical science like chemistry.

As Guy Sorman, a French economist, once said to me, economics is roughly where medicine was about 200 years ago. Its “experts” can give you rudimentary guidelines for how to stay alive and such, but when it comes to complicated diagnoses and specific treatments, there’s still a lot of guesswork involved.

Acknowledging this lack of control and certainty, though, can be very discomforting for all parties.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=72d580186851a406276acf0a98ff0b2b

Light Trading Ahead of Earnings Season

With oil prices reaching a 30-month high of $108 a barrel, some investors are waiting for Alcoa to report its first-quarter earnings next Monday, the unofficial start of the earnings season, before making any big moves. Traders are hoping to see how rising gasoline prices and other commodity costs are affecting corporate profits.

The Dow Jones industrial average rose 23.31 points, or 0.19 percent, to 12,400.03. The Standard Poor’s 500-stock index gained 0.46 points, or 0.03 percent, to 1,332.87, and the Nasdaq composite index fell 0.41 points, or 0.01 percent, to 2,789.19.

Materials companies gained 0.7 percent, the most of any of the 10 company groups that make up the S. P. 500, as commodity prices increased. Futures contracts for corn, wheat and sugar each rose more than 2 percent.

In company news, Pfizer, the world’s largest drug maker, said it would it sell its Capsugel unit to an affiliate of the private equity firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts for $2.4 billion in cash. Capsugel makes capsules for oral medicines and dietary supplements. Pfizer rose less than 1 percent.

Southwest Airlines fell nearly 2 percent as the company continued to inspect its planes after the fuselage of one jet ripped open Friday, forcing it to make an emergency landing. Southwest grounded 79 planes after the incident and canceled about 700 flights over the weekend. The company canceled 70 flights on Monday.

Ford Motor rose 2.6 percent. The company’s sales rose 16 percent in March, in part because of the success of its new Explorer crossover vehicle. A Credit Suisse analyst upgraded the automaker, citing an improved balance sheet.

Vivus rose nearly 7 percent after the drug developer said patients taking its diet pill Qnexa over two years saw reductions in blood pressure in addition to significant weight loss.

Interest rates were lower. The Treasury’s benchmark 10-year note rose 7/32, to 101 23/32, and the yield slipped to 3.42 percent from 3.44 percent late Friday.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/05/business/05markets.html?partner=rss&emc=rss