c*t
2 楼
发信人: walstudio (午夜未眠人), 信区: Stock
标 题: Re: 大本说话怎么听着有点抖?
发信站: BBS 未名空间站 (Wed Apr 27 14:51:07 2011, 美东)
Boring, nothing new,
Key words: Oil, inflation, jobs.
标 题: Re: 大本说话怎么听着有点抖?
发信站: BBS 未名空间站 (Wed Apr 27 14:51:07 2011, 美东)
Boring, nothing new,
Key words: Oil, inflation, jobs.
b*t
3 楼
没有精神,就是老调重弹,基本上是保持货币政策不变。
k*n
6 楼
说老实话,俺一周前就脱离熊队了,唉 。。。
不知道现在熊队还剩几人?
不知道现在熊队还剩几人?
c*t
8 楼
no QE3 anymore?
b*t
10 楼
Live coverage from a Guardian reporter
3.02pm ET: I don't know about Ben Bernanke but this live press conference
makes me think American economics journalists aren't coping with it too well.
2.58pm: A question about the global economy. "The central bank of Japan has
done a good job," says Bernanke – the question came from a reporter for
Asahi Shimbun.
2.54pm ET: Interesting question from Fox Business News about the S&P outlook
revision of US sovereign debt last week.
"I'm hopeful this event will provide one more incentive for Congress and the
political leaders to take action ... it's the most important economic
problem in the long term that the US faces," says Bernanke.
2.51pm: Why are reporters asking if the Fed can do anything about long-term
unemployment?
Is it out of the scope of what the Fed can do? "We don't have any tools for
targeting long term unemployment specifically," says Bernanke.
Hello? Is anyone with a clue going to ask about house prices?
2.44pm: A silly question from a nameless interlocator, asking what can the
Fed do about providing more jobs. Oh god, it was from the New York Times.
Really.
"Clearly it is the case that we have done extraordinary things" to get the
economy moving, Bernanke argues.
And now a question about the ineffectiveness of the second round of
quantitative easing – in which the Fed attempted to push on a piece of
string using a wodge of cash.
Bernanke unsurprisingly thinks that the policy he piloted was effective. It
wasn't going to be a panacea, Bernanke says.
Now the housing market ... that is something the Fed can do something about.
2.43pm ET: And now a question about the end of quantitative easing.
Something something something.
2.38pm ET: At last a lovely British accent, via a question from Robin
Harding of the FT, looking like a young Michael Caine. The question was
about inflation expectations.
The answer is so fascinating that words alone can't convey it.
2.37pm ET: For how long will US economic growth and growth in the labour
market continue to be moderate, asks a polite man from Bloomberg.
"The pace of improvement is still quite slow, we are digging ourselves out
of quite a big hole," Bernanke says. Basically, a while yet.
2.33pm ET: What can or should the Fed do able Americans being upset about
high gas and food prices, wonders the Wall Street Journal.
"Gas is of course a necessity, people need to drive to get to work," notes
Bernanke. Well I walked to work this morning, but his broad point is
accurate.
Demand from growing economies has driven up the demand for oil, while
disruptions in the Middle East has restricted supply. "This is a very
adverse development," says Bernanke. "There's not much the Federal Reserve
can do about gas prices per se."
"Our view is that gas prices will not continue to rise at the recent pace...
that will provide some relief on the inflation front but we'll have to
wtach that very carefully."
2.30pm ET: Critics say Fed policy has driven down the value of the US dollar
. What does Mr Bernanke have to say to those critics? (That's asked by
someone called Steve.)
Bernanke doesn't really answer the question, and basically says that if the
US economy is strong then the US dollar will be strong. Which is true. Low
inflation and a strong economy, that's the ticket.
2.28pm ET: Not a huge PR success so far, based on this tweet from uber-
blogger Felix Salmon of Reuters.
3.02pm ET: I don't know about Ben Bernanke but this live press conference
makes me think American economics journalists aren't coping with it too well.
2.58pm: A question about the global economy. "The central bank of Japan has
done a good job," says Bernanke – the question came from a reporter for
Asahi Shimbun.
2.54pm ET: Interesting question from Fox Business News about the S&P outlook
revision of US sovereign debt last week.
"I'm hopeful this event will provide one more incentive for Congress and the
political leaders to take action ... it's the most important economic
problem in the long term that the US faces," says Bernanke.
2.51pm: Why are reporters asking if the Fed can do anything about long-term
unemployment?
Is it out of the scope of what the Fed can do? "We don't have any tools for
targeting long term unemployment specifically," says Bernanke.
Hello? Is anyone with a clue going to ask about house prices?
2.44pm: A silly question from a nameless interlocator, asking what can the
Fed do about providing more jobs. Oh god, it was from the New York Times.
Really.
"Clearly it is the case that we have done extraordinary things" to get the
economy moving, Bernanke argues.
And now a question about the ineffectiveness of the second round of
quantitative easing – in which the Fed attempted to push on a piece of
string using a wodge of cash.
Bernanke unsurprisingly thinks that the policy he piloted was effective. It
wasn't going to be a panacea, Bernanke says.
Now the housing market ... that is something the Fed can do something about.
2.43pm ET: And now a question about the end of quantitative easing.
Something something something.
2.38pm ET: At last a lovely British accent, via a question from Robin
Harding of the FT, looking like a young Michael Caine. The question was
about inflation expectations.
The answer is so fascinating that words alone can't convey it.
2.37pm ET: For how long will US economic growth and growth in the labour
market continue to be moderate, asks a polite man from Bloomberg.
"The pace of improvement is still quite slow, we are digging ourselves out
of quite a big hole," Bernanke says. Basically, a while yet.
2.33pm ET: What can or should the Fed do able Americans being upset about
high gas and food prices, wonders the Wall Street Journal.
"Gas is of course a necessity, people need to drive to get to work," notes
Bernanke. Well I walked to work this morning, but his broad point is
accurate.
Demand from growing economies has driven up the demand for oil, while
disruptions in the Middle East has restricted supply. "This is a very
adverse development," says Bernanke. "There's not much the Federal Reserve
can do about gas prices per se."
"Our view is that gas prices will not continue to rise at the recent pace...
that will provide some relief on the inflation front but we'll have to
wtach that very carefully."
2.30pm ET: Critics say Fed policy has driven down the value of the US dollar
. What does Mr Bernanke have to say to those critics? (That's asked by
someone called Steve.)
Bernanke doesn't really answer the question, and basically says that if the
US economy is strong then the US dollar will be strong. Which is true. Low
inflation and a strong economy, that's the ticket.
2.28pm ET: Not a huge PR success so far, based on this tweet from uber-
blogger Felix Salmon of Reuters.
b*t
11 楼
脖难骑一说话就画圈,你想找到一个方向根本连门儿都没有。现在开记者会,干脆画球
,觉得他说话和那个国防部长蜡不是飞的特像。
,觉得他说话和那个国防部长蜡不是飞的特像。
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