Thursday, March 12, 2009

Banks Say- Recession Will Be Long + OPC,TLM-BNK-QEC Houses

The Toronto-Dominion Bank has sharply downgraded its economic forecast for Canada and expects more than 500,000 jobs to disappear by the end of the year compared with the peak of the job market, casting more doubt on the prospects for a painful but short-lived recession.

"There is no doubt that 2009 will go down in the history books as one of the most difficult economic years for Canadians," wrote Beata Caranci, TD's director of economic forecasting.

The bank sees Canada's economy shrinking by 2.4 per cent this year, with the first three quarters in negative territory, before posting sluggish growth of 1.3 per cent in 2010. It had previously forecast a contraction of 1.4 per cent this year and growth of 2.4 per cent in 2010.

That gloomy forecast suggests the recession will be deeper and longer than the Bank of Canada has predicted.

In January, the central bank said real gross domestic product would decline by 1.2 per cent this year and rebound by 3.8 per cent in 2010, a far rosier view than most private-sector economists. But when it cut its key policy rate earlier this month to 0.5 per cent, it noted that the outlook for the global economy had continued to deteriorate, a sign that it may be preparing to lower its forecast.

Caranci emphasized that "this is not a made-in-Canada recession, but the country has certainly imported all the problems surrounding financial market uncertainty, a weakened export market and the plunge in commodity prices that comes with a global recession." As a result, Canada's economy won't recover until conditions in the global economy, particularly in the United States, stabilize, she said.

"We feel that too many issues related to the health of the global financial system remain unresolved for a speedy economy recovery," Caranci added.

Canada's job market will be particularly hard-hit as the recession and plummeting commodity prices eat into national income. The bank expects that 583,000 jobs will be lost by the end of this year compared with the peak of the job market, more than the total employment losses in the recession of the early 1990s. Those losses will push the country's unemployment rate to nearly 10 per cent by the last quarter of 2009, a level that will persist through much of next year, the bank said.

In its forecast, the bank said corporate profits, which dropped sharply in the fourth quarter of 2008, will continue to tumble this year. It also expects nominal gross domestic product, a rough measure of the over-all tax base, to contract by 4.5 per cent in 2009, a factor that will "come to bear on employment, wages, capital investment and government revenues as the year rolls forward."

TD's forecast calls into question the planning assumptions of the federal government, which based its January budget on a more modest drop of 2.7 per cent in nominal GDP this year.

Also yesterday, the Royal Bank of Canada lowered its 2009 economic forecast. It now sees real GDP contracting by 1.4 per cent, compared with its previous forecast for a decline of 0.5 per cent. It maintained its 2010 forecast for growth of 2.6 per cent.

The downgrades came a day after the International Monetary Fund warned that Canada's economic output "is likely to contract significantly in the near term" before recovering as government stimulus starts to gain traction. The international body said that Canada is better positioned than many countries to weather the economic storm, but warned that "downside risks predominate, including negative spillovers if the global environment worsens more than expected."


TLM-T





Stewart, Cramer get ready to rumble

Stewart, Cramer get ready to rumble

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BARRIE McKENNA
Thursday, March 12, 2009

WASHINGTON — It was a rant worthy of actor Peter Finch's famous "I'm as mad as hell" outburst in the movie Network.

Standing in the pits at the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, CNBC correspondent Rick Santelli openly mocked "the losers" who can't pay their mortgages and exhorted traders around him to dump on U.S. President Barack Obama's homeowner rescue plan.


It might have ended there. But the theatrics proved too much for late-night comedian Jon Stewart of The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, who mocked the ubiquitous cable business network with a clever montage of wildly off-base predictions by some of its leading stars, including high-strung stock picker Jim Cramer.

"If I had only followed CNBC's advice, I'd have a million dollars today," Mr. Stewart deadpanned last week, "provided I'd started with $100-million."

In what is being dubbed the "Anchor War," Mr. Stewart and Mr. Cramer have been going at each other almost daily on their respective networks. And tonight, the two will square off on The Daily Show in what promises to be must-watch late-night TV.

"Two men will enter! Only two men will leave!" previewed the Comedy Central network, which airs the popular satire.

The sometimes nasty and often hilarious feud, dubbed Cramer vs. Not Cramer by The Daily Show, has dredged up long-standing criticism of CNBC, including allegations of excessive cheerleading in good times, scaremongering on the way down, uncritical interviewing of business leaders and the theatrics of its star performers, such as Mr. Cramer, host of Mad Money.

With the stock market in the tank, the blame game has become increasingly political, too. An outspoken critic of the Obama administration, Mr. Cramer has even attracted the ire of White House spokesman Robert Gibbs.

"You can go back and look at any number of statements he's made in the past about the economy and wonder where some of the backup for those are," Mr. Gibbs said.

CNBC spokesman Brian Steel vigorously defended the network's record, pointing out that it typically does 850 interviews a week, from every point of view imaginable.

"Our viewers like a point of view and we do commentary from both sides of every issue," he said, adding, nonetheless, that the network is "unabashedly a pro-capitalist, pro-business network."

He would not comment on which side initiated tonight's appearance on The Daily Show.

All kidding aside, CNBC is serious business. It's the undisputed king of U.S. business news in a crowded cable field. The network is a fixture on trading floors and brokerage offices. When chief executives, politicians and other key decision makers have something to say, they typically go to CNBC first. And the rest of the business crowd, including fund managers and analysts, crave its limelight.

In the other corner is Mr. Stewart, the edgiest of the late-night comics, with a sharp satirist's eye for news and a loyal following among educated young viewers.

His half-hour show, which typically draws four times as many viewers as CNBC's top rated shows, apparently boasts influence of its own. In 2004, Mr. Stewart, a frequent critic of news-as-entertainment, attacked CNN shows such as Crossfire as shout-fests that distort the news. Within months, Crossfire was gone.

So when Mr. Stewart lambasted Mr. Cramer for supposedly touting the merits of investment banks Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers not long before they crashed, the former hedge fund manager went on the attack.

 

 

 

In appearances on various NBC news shows, Mr. Cramer accused Mr. Stewart of perpetuating an "urban legend" that he recommended Bear Stearns and accused the show of taking his recommendations out of context. And he portrayed himself as a defender of small investors.

Mr. Stewart was back at it on Tuesday night, poking fun at Mr. Cramer and CNBC parent NBC by using other Viacom properties (Viacom owns Comedy Central) - appearing to talk about his situation on shows from Nickelodeon's Dora the Explorer to MTV's The Hills.

And Mr. Stewart took a swipe at CNBC for promoting their star as if he was the god of stock-picking with its "In Cramer We Trust" ads.

"I don't know about the markets. That's why I don't make claim to any authority," Mr. Stewart told his audience. "Now, of course, I probably wouldn't have a problem with CNBC if Cramer's slogan was 'Cramer: He's Right Sometimes' or 'He's Like a Dartboard That Talks' or 'You Feel Lucky, Punk? Do You?' "

Then, he showed several clips of Mr. Cramer touting Bear Stearns.

"Jim Cramer, you said it here. Buy Bear. [Expletive] you," Mr. Stewart said.

© Copyright The Globe and Mail

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