VIDEO: Jeff Reeves and Charles Sizemore Discuss Bernanke’s Latest Comments

By The Sizemore Letter

From Jeff Reeves at The Slant:

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said Wednesday that  central bank policy in the U.S. will stay loose “for the foreseeable future” amid low inflation and high unemployment.

It was off to the races for stocks as a result, with the major indexes pushing to new highs.

Bernanke  spoke in Cambridge, Mass., to the National Bureau of Economic Research. But it’s not the first speech of his that investors and market pundits have parsed closely for insights into talk about “tapering” of Fed policy in the coming months.

Bernanke caused waves when he said the Fed likely will reduce its stimulus later this year and end it by mid-2014, with investors worried that the central bank is taking its foot off the gas too soon in regards to its $85 billion monthly bond buying program known as “quantitative easing.”

So is this really news? Charles Sizemore and I don’t think it really is.

And what’s next? Well, we both feel pretty optimistic.

VIDEO: Best Stocks of 2013 Update–Daimler, Intel and More

By The Sizemore Letter

From Jeff Reeves at The Slant:

We’re halfway through 2013 and our Best Stocks for 2013 Buy List on InvestorPlace.com has had plenty of time to shake out.

The good news: Three InvestorPlace contributors including myself, Louis Navellier and Charles Sizemore, are in the top three spots with market-beating returns.

The bad news: As a whole, the list itself is underperforming – including one pick 34% in the red.

As for the winners, paint manufacturer Sherwin Williams ($SHW), automaker Daimler ($DDAIF) and semiconductor stock Intel ($INTC), they happen to share one commonality: an unpopularity several months ago that has been replaced by turnaround hopes and optimism. The reasons are different, but the themes are the same.

Watch or listen in above to get complete details from me and Charles on our picks and the outlook for the next few months.

Chile holds rate, may soon cut on lower growth, inflation

By www.CentralBankNews.info     Chile’s central bank held its benchmark overnight rate steady at 5.0 percent but said it may cut its rate in coming months due to an expected fall in economic growth and inflation.
    The Central Bank of Chile, which has held rates steady since January 2012, said recent information shows that economic output and demand is continuing to slow down, especially investment, but the labor market is still tight.
   “Consumption has remained strong, but the evolution of credit conditions and confidence surveys suggest this variable will lose momentum,” said central bank said. In its June Monetary Policy Report, released on July 1, the bank lowered its 2013 forecast for growth and inflation.
    “The consolidation of the trends outlined in the last Monetary Policy Report could call for adjustments to the monetary policy interest rate in the coming months,” the bank said.
    In the policy report, the central bank cut its 2013 growth forecast to 4-5 percent from a previous estimate of 4.5-5.5 percent and its inflation forecast to 2.6 percent from 2.8 percent.
    Chile’s economic growth has been slowing in recent months, with the annual rate of its Gross Domestic Product in the first quarter slowing to 4.1 percent from 5.7 percent in the previous quarter.
    Chile’s inflation rate rose to 1.9 percent in June from 0.9 percent in May, getting closer to the central bank’s tolerance range of 2-4 percent. The central bank said inflation expectations remain around its target.
    The central bank took note of the recent tightening in international financial conditions, especially in  emerging market economies, following signs of an earlier-than-expected withdrawal of monetary stimulus in the United States.
 
     www.CentralBankNews.info

Precious Metals Cut Weekly Gains as Bernanke’s New QE Commitment Questioned

London Gold Market Report
from Adrian Ash
BullionVault
Friday, 12 July 08:20 EST

BOTH SILVER and gold slipped in London on Friday morning, edging down to $1271 per ounce and $19.80 respectively.

 European equities pushed higher while the US Dollar rallied and major government bond prices rose.

 US crude oil prices headed for their 3rd weekly gain on the trot, rising above $105 per barrel.

 Gold cut this week’s gain to 3.9%. Silver prices held onto 4.2% week-on-week gains.

“A weekly close [in the gold price] above $1267 will bring in fresh buying on the belief [of a] bullish signal,” says a technical note from market-maker Scotia Mocatta.

 Scotia pegs near-term resistance in the gold price just above Thursday morning’s 2-week high of $1299 per ounce – hit after Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke said US monetary policy will remain “highly accommodative for the foreseeable future.”

 Doubting Bernanke’s assurances, however, “You have to be a brave man or woman to hold gold into a Fed tightening cycle and a Dollar rally,” writes The Daily Telegraph’s international business editor  Ambrose Evans-Pritchard.

 “My guess is that the Fed will indeed to have to retreat from [tapering] QE in the end, just as it had to back away from premature tightening after QE1 and QE2.

 “But we are not there yet, and they will take longer to blink this time.”

 A new report from ANZ Bank agrees, saying that the gold price is likely to fall further short term because “volatility remains high, and the drivers that have seen gold drop 25% so far this year remain in place.”

 “With many [gold] investors remaining trapped in a falling market,” says the latest Commodities Weekly from French investment bank and bullion dealers Natixis, “there may be more rounds of bloodletting to go before some degree of sanity returns.”

 Natixis commodities analyst Nic Brown now expects “that the price of gold will drop slightly lower over the remainder of the year [before] the gradual return of net investment demand offers increasing support” in 2014 but the average annual price drops to $1200 per ounce.

 Over in Turkey, a strike by workers at the Turkish State Mint – reputedly the world’s heaviest producer of gold bullion coins between 2000 and 2010 – has crimped supply and started to push local gold prices higher, according to Hurriyet Daily.

 In wholesale trading, “idiosyncratic factors to do with supply are driving up lease rates, and driving up the gold price at the moment,” said Roubini Global Economics analyst Gary Clark to CNBC yesterday.

 “But we haven’t seen a rise in tail risk, so that rally should not be sustained.”

 Yesterday in Frankfurt, European Central Bank president Mario Draghi replied to Portuguese MEP Nuno Melo asking whether Cyprus’ planned sale of some gold bullion means “other member states may be ‘obliged’ to sell their reserves?”

 Most Eurozone reserve assets are now held and managed by the ECB, said Draghi. Even where the national central bank retains control of some reserves, he went on, such transactions are “above a certain limit subject to approval by the ECB in order to ensure consistency with the exchange rate and monetary policies of the Union.”

 In 2009 Draghi famously rejected then Italian prime minister Berlusconi’s attempt to tax Italy’s national gold reserves – the world’s third largest – when head of the Banca d’Italia.

 Over in China meantime, stock markets closed lower as new data showed a surge in consumer credit but a slowdown in money-supply growth.

 Early Monday morning will bring China’s second-quarter GDP data, notes Marc Ground at Standard Bank – “generally not as important” for the gold price as for industrial commodities, but “Asian physical buying (particularly from China) has provided a crucial crutch for gold amid Fed tapering concerns.”

Adrian Ash

BullionVault

Gold price chart, no delay | Buy gold online

 

Adrian Ash is head of research at BullionVault, the secure, low-cost gold and silver market for private investors online, where you can buy gold and silver in Zurich, Switzerland for just 0.5% commission.

 

(c) BullionVault 2013

 

Please Note: This article is to inform your thinking, not lead it. Only you can decide the best place for your money, and any decision you make will put your money at risk. Information or data included here may have already been overtaken by events – and must be verified elsewhere – should you choose to act on it.

 

Russia holds rate, repeats risks of economic slowdown

By www.CentralBankNews.info     Russia’s central bank maintained its policy rate at 8.25 percent, as expected, along with its outlook, saying that “the risks of further economic slowdown remain given the weak investment activity and the sluggish recovery in external demand.”
    The Bank of Russia, which last cut rates in September 2012, added that it would “continue to monitor inflation risks and the downside risks to economic growth,” indicating that a rate cut is not immediate.
   Although economic growth remains low, the bank said the fall in the growth rates of some indicators in May was partly due to calendar effects and “labour market conditions and credit dynamics are still providing support to domestic demand.”
    While economists had expected the Bank of Russia to hold rates steady, the outcome of the meeting was highly anticipated because it was the first board meeting chaired by the new governor, Elvira Nabiullina, former aide to Russian President Vladimir Putin. Nabiullina took over from Sergei Ignatyev who retired after 11 years as governor.
    While the central bank’s economic outlook was a replica of its June statement, it dropped the warning that inflationary expectations could be affected if inflation remains high for a prolonged period.

    Another change during Nabiullina’s first meeting was that the board now provides an exact date for its next meeting compared with a more vague indication in the past, and added a new instrument to its tool box for providing funds to banks.
    Beginning next week, the Bank of Russia will provide banks with funds, secured by non-marketable assets and guarantees, for 12 months with a floating interest rate at 5.75 percent. By reducing the market collateral held by the central bank, this should improve the efficiency of the interbank market.
    “The conduct of the longer-term operations with floating rate will contribute to intensifying the monetary policy signal as the changes in interest rates will be transmitted to the change of the cost of funds, previously provided by the Bank of Russia to credit institutions,” the central bank said.
    Russia’s inflation rate fell to 6.9 percent in June from 7.4 percent in May, but was still above the central bank’s target range of 5-6 percent.
    As of July 8, inflation was estimated a 6.6 percent, the bank said, adding that core inflation in June was 5.8 percent.
    The central bank repeated that it still expects inflation to return to its target range in the second half of the year, barring any adverse food price shocks.
    Russia’s economy shrunk in the first quarter with the Gross Domestic Product falling 0.07 percent from the fourth quarter for annual growth of only 1.6 percent, down from 2.1 percent in the fourth quarter and the fifth quarter with a declining growth rate.
    In June, Nabiullina said in an interview with Reuters that interest rats could be cut in the third quarter of this year but only if inflation is clearly falling.

    www.CentralBankNews.info

WTI opens lower on US Job data

By HY Markets Forex Blog

The West Texas Intermediate crude futures were seen low for the second day on Friday , as the US jobless claims rose to its highest in two months ,while the International Energy Agency (IEA)  said in their monthly forecast that  the oil supply for next year would increase .

The Jobless claims rose by 16,000 in the previous week to a high 360,000, according to reports the from the Labor Department data. Jobless claims were expected to drop by 344,000 last week.

WTI crude futures for the August delivery were seen at 0.17% at $104.74, while the Brent crude dropped by 0.09% at $107.64 a barrel, at the time of writing.

According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), oil consumption will increase by 1.2 million barrels per day by next year, while countries outside of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting countries (OPEC) will increase by 1.3 million barrels a day by 2014, increasing production from North America.

OPEC produces over 40% of the world’s crude, and it’s expected to increase for the rest of the year in the Northern Hemisphere boost demands, according to the Oil movements. OPEC is also expected to ship 24.32 million barrels a day till July 27.

The West Texas intermediate crude is expected to rise next week after the Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke suggested they maintain the QE stimulus until there is more proof of a better economy.

The post WTI opens lower on US Job data appeared first on | HY Markets Official blog.

Article provided by HY Markets Forex Blog

Finance Minister says China can bear growth slowdown

By HY Markets Forex Blog

The Chinese economy is expected to expand less than expected for this year, according to the Chinese Finance Minister Lou Jiwei. While the Chinese government has set this year’s growth target of 7.5%, Lou Jiwei hints at the U.S China Strategic and Economic Dialogue.

“We don’t think 6.5 percent or 7 percent will be a big problem,” Lou Jiwei said at a press briefing “It’s difficult to give you a limit. But from the data we have, we have the confidence.”

He added, “Please don’t forget that our expected GDP growth rate this year is 7 percent.” Lou said “there won’t be much of a problem to meet our expectations this year.”

The Chinese stock had a recent two-day steep fall, their lowest fall in 18 months. The Shanghai Composite Index dropped 0.5% as of 11:30 am local time.

The Nikkei was seen at 0.23% at 14,506.25, while the Hong Kong Hang Seng fell by 0.74% to 21,279.86 and the broader Topic Index closed 0.47% higher at 1,200.25 at the time of writing.

Reports from the Statistics bureau for the second quarter gross domestic product are expected to be released on the 15th of July, which is expected to show a 7.5% increased from last year.

The Chinese officials also cut its Chinese GDP growth forecasts for the next year to 6.9% from the previous prediction of 7.5%.

“The downtrend of growth is a result of the structural problems of the economy. In our opinion, structural reforms aimed at solving these problems could lead to even lower growth,” according to the report released.

Lou also said, China has agreed to proceed reforms with the U.S officials, which could open new business opportunities for both countries.

The post Finance Minister says China can bear growth slowdown appeared first on | HY Markets Official blog.

Article provided by HY Markets Forex Blog

DWave’s Quantam Computers – Why It’s Time to Believe the Unbelievable

By MoneyMorning.com.au

I don’t know about you but it feels like there’s mixed signals coming from our North American neighbours across the Pacific.

There were words to the effect that QE will taper off soon. Then, in a decidedly different angle, the assertion on Wednesday was that for the ‘foreseeable future‘ there would still be easy money.

As a result, the S&P/ASX 200 finished up 1.3%, the Dow up 1.1%, DAX, FTSE, Nikkei and Hang Seng all up by the end of play. What does ‘foreseeable future’ mean? I don’t know, but I do know that it’s good for stocks…

Conventional Science Says This Doesn’t Exist

Actually most things are good for stocks, if you know which ones to pick. Of course, before companies list on an exchange, they exist privately. Therefore it’s often important to look for an unknown company before they make it onto the big stage, so you can be ready to invest when they make their debut. This is part of what Kris Sayce and I do for our subscribers in Revolutionary Tech Investor.

Every now and then something pops up out of nowhere that’s quite unexpected. Initially when you hear or read about it you don’t believe it. It ‘bucks the trend’ – sometimes it’s so unrealistic it’s unbelievable.

And when this happens, there’s two schools of thought to explain it. It was a fluke, or this could be the start of something bigger.

This hit home last night. Like many patriotic Australians I shunned my circadian rhythm to watch a young Melbournian Ashton Agar. Young Ashton is a 19 year old debutant in the Australian cricket side. He’s a spin bowler playing his first Test match in an Ashes series.

Now conventional wisdom says a 19 year old kid, playing his first Test, as a bowler, batting at number 11, is not going to make runs. In fact, conventional wisdom says if he made it to double figures it would be a miracle.

But no, every now and then something unbelievable happens. 98 runs later, a couple of world records under his belt and the highest runs score for a number 11 batter ever, the unbelievable had actually happened.

When watching him in action, I thought, ‘Hang on this kid has technique, he’s actually quite good with the bat. I don’t think this is a fluke, I think he could actually be a very good batsman.’

It reminded of something I’ve came across in the last few days. It’s a small, private Canadian company. I listened to the CEO of the company, Vern Brownell, talk about what they were doing.

You see Brownell is the CEO of DWave. They make quantum computers. To give you a very brief explanation, a quantum computer has the processing power of about a million normal computers. The technical explanation is more complex than that. But what you really need to know is that conventional science still thinks quantum computing doesn’t exist.

So on one hand we have a fully-fledged company that claim to be the world’s first true quantum computer maker. And on the other hand it’s too unbelievable for some to conceive of as a reality.

Bridging the Gap to an Amazing Future

DWave’s customers read like a run sheet of innovation all-stars. Google, Lockheed-Martin, Harvard and NASA are all companies that now use DWave’s quantum computers.

The benefits quantum computers will bring to the world is truly astounding. We live in a world advancing at a rapid pace.

However, there are computational limitations of existing technology and even of the human brain. If computers (as we know them today) can’t get more powerful and faster they will restrict the development of modern civilisation.

As an example, in a molecular age, information sets being analysed are so huge scientists need lots of computing power. Scientists need to solve problems faster than what’s currently possible using ‘normal’ computers.

The aerospace industry also needs more computing power. To explore outside our own solar system, we need to compute and figure out ways to make it possible. With existing computers, that’s going to take a lot longer than we probably have the patience (or lifespan) for. That’s where DWave and quantum computers can bridge the gap. What might take supercomputers weeks to compute will take a quantum computer minutes.

And that’s why a company like Lockheed-Martin has a DWave quantum computer in their research lab.

When Brownell spoke about DWave this week he made a short and simple statement that pinpointed exactly where DWave is at. Brownell said, ‘we’re at [the point] where Intel was when they made the first microprocessor.

The other interesting thing he mentioned is they will be looking to list the company at some stage…in the foreseeable future.

In other words, DWave are at the beginning of their innings. They’re like our young Melbournian off-spinner who went to The Ashes as an enigma. But in his first outing broke records and did what everyone thought wasn’t possible.

It’s no fluke that DWave have a functioning quantum computer. It’s just the start of something much bigger.

Sam Volkering+
Technology Analyst, Revolutionary Tech Investor

From the Port Phillip Publishing Library

Special Report: The Sixth Revolution

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A Two-Faced Shock for the Australian Economy

By MoneyMorning.com.au

Is he Harvey Two-Face or Janus? The ‘he’ we’re referring to is US Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke. He thoroughly confused markets after the US close on Wednesday. On the one hand, the Fed will not necessarily end QE when the US unemployment rate reaches 6.5%. On the other hand, interest rates will not rise even if the Fed ‘tapers off’ bond purchases.

It was a remarkable exercise in speaking out of both sides of the mouth to the consternation and befuddlement of everyone. Only a god or a criminal would even attempt it. Harvey Dent — the one-time district attorney of Gotham — could have done it after he became Harvey Two-Face (tragic acid accident). And Janus, the two-faced Roman god of gates and doors, would have had a go.

In fact Janus is probably the better comparison for Bernanke. There are two doors in front of the Fed Chairman. Behind one door is a world of higher prices, a falling dollar, and inflationary pain. Behind door number two is a world of falling asset prices, a crashing bond market, and the inevitable deflation that comes after a credit boom.

Ben Two-Face has a hand on each handle. But he’s not trying to open the doors. He’s trying to keep them both closed. He will need more hands. In the meantime, the markets have taken the Fed’s indecision as an excuse to rally.

Unfortunately for the Australian economy, there is the complicating factor of China. The IMF lowered its 2014 GDP growth figure in China by 0.3% to 7.8%. That’s still pretty fantastic by most standards. But it might not be enough to prevent Australia from encountering its own little deflationary shock, which we’ll address in a moment.

But back to China quickly. CSLA also downgraded its China growth forecast to 7%. This is a safe prediction. It probably won’t be accurate though. There will be no GDP-boosting stimulus from the central government, according to Chinese Premier Lei Keqiang. He told other government officials that, ‘As long as the economic growth rate, employment and other indicators don’t slip below our lower limit and inflation doesn’t exceed our upper limit, [we’ll] focus on restructuring and pushing reforms.’

That’s a reaffirmation of the idea that China’s economy doesn’t need growth at any cost. It needs to rebalance between exports and domestic consumption. It’s probably the right policy. But there wasn’t any evidence it’s working yet, judging by data released yesterday. This is the data that took the wind out of Australian equity sales mid-afternoon.

Chinese exports were down 3.1% in June from the same time last year. Imports were down 0.7% year-over-year. This was not good news coming from Australia’s largest trading partner. And it wasn’t good news for China either. ‘China faces relatively stern challenges in trade currently,’ said Chinese customs spokesman Zheng Yuesheng. ‘Exports in the third quarter look grim,’ he added.

That’s awfully morose talk for a country that showed a $29 billion trade surplus. And for Australia, the silver lining was that Australian exports to China rose by 11.9% in June compared to last year. The volume of iron ore exports was up 5.1% in the first six months of the year. But now we run into Australia’s problem.

The increase in iron ore export volumes is making up for the decrease in iron ore prices. If China slows down even more, though, Australia’s economy won’t be able to make up the dent to national income with an increase in the volume of exports. The consequences will began showing up like falling dominos.

Professor Bob Gregory, a former Reserve Bank governor, spoke on just this scenario in an interview with the ABC. Professor Gregory warns of a ‘deflationary shock’. The reasoning is easy to understand. The peak in mining investment is behind us, with a genuine ‘tapering off’ in front. At the same time, export prices are on their own not-so-gentle glide path lower.

Like our own Vern Gowdie, Professor Gregory reckons lower export prices and the end of the mining boom will lead to higher unemployment and lower wages, for which there is no quick fiscal or monetary fix. If you wanted to extrapolate that out to a single word you might end up with: recession. It will be the recession Australia cannot avoid having.

Or can it? This is where politics comes in. If you’re reading from the Keynesian hymn-book, you counter-act falling private investment with more government spending. That means larger deficits. In the current political environment, you’re unlikely to see either party arguing for more spending (maybe the Greens might).

So if you can’t borrow and spend your way out of an economic soft patch, what do you do? Well, you might try pulling the interest rate lever. But it might not do anything anyway. Professor Gregory reckons that from this level, marginal declines in interest rates won’t be enough to have any meaningful effect on consumer behaviour. In other words, cutting a few basis points from the cash rate is not going to open up anyone’s wallet enough to keep the economy out of recession.

Your editor chatted about these subjects yesterday on the phone with Vern. His project — which we’ve tentatively named Gowdie Family Wealth — is how to preserve family wealth in a deflationary environment, when wages, stocks prices, houses and growth all shrink. Vern reckons that China’s bubble has truly popped and that only now is Australia starting to feel the consequences.

We’ll keep you posted on Vern’s project. And in the meantime, in the value and sound money sector, our own Greg Canavan is right on the story. Greg is alert to the outlier possibility…that the China story unravels faster than the investment community is prepared for. He’s calling it the Panic of 2013.

Will there be a panic? Well, based on the chart of the XLE energy sector fund we showed yesterday, there are some similarities between now and 2008. After a year of leaks, the levee finally broke and put investors underwater that year. If it happens again like this, there will be a different immediate cause (the bond market). But will it happen?

There are two things we’ve learned in the last few years. First, financial markets have become less stable, not more stable, since the crash began in 2007. Regular interventions make it possible to maintain the status quo for a little while. But they also distort incentives and turn more savers into speculators.

The second thing we’ve learned is that this can go on for much longer than you imagine. As our friend Rick Rule says, just because something is inevitable doesn’t make it imminent. In geologic terms, you live on a fault line that you know will someday result in a big earth quake. But short of packing up and moving out (liquidating your entire stock market portfolio) you live with the risk and hope it doesn’t happen while you’re alive.

And if you’re willing to live dangerously (who has a choice these days, really?) we still reckon you could do worse than look at energy investments. Yesterday we mentioned the coming energy crisis that will triple your electric bill. The politicians know it’s coming so they’re trying to get out in front of it.

Resources Minister Gary Gray made a remarkably sensible suggestion earlier this week. He said Australia should exploit its energy advantage by producing more natural gas. In a functioning free market, prices send signals. High prices (for natural gas) are a signal to producers to make more. More energy is the answer.

Is it that simple? Yes. It is. But not everyone sees it that way. Tomorrow we take on some critics who dispute that idea that credit is a kind of energy. Stay tuned…

Regards,

Dan Denning+
Editor, The Daily Reckoning Australia

[Ed Note: To read more of Dan’s in depth macro-economic analysis, click here to subscribe to the free daily e-letter The Daily Reckoning.]

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From the Archives…

Central Bankers in Driving Seat
5-07-13 – Greg Canavan

China’s Economic Rebalancing and the Impact on the Australian Economy
4-07-13 – Greg Canavan

Gold Market Rhyming
3-07-13 ­– Greg Canavan

How Low Can the Gold Price Go?
2-07-13 – Bill Bonner

No Real Economic Recovery Without “Hitting Bottom” First…
1-07-13 – Bill Bonner
 

Peru holds rate, makes reserve requirements more flexible

By www.CentralBankNews.info     Peru’s central bank maintained its policy rate at 4.25 percent as inflation remains within the bank’s target range and economic growth is close to the “economy’s potential level of growth amid international financial uncertainty.”
    The Central Bank of Peru (BCRP), which has held rates steady since April 2011, also made its reserve requirements regime more flexible and said that “if necessary, the Board will adopt additional measures to make the regime of requirement reserves more flexible in order to promote a more orderly evolution of credit.”
    Under the new measures, the central bank said that a financial institution’s long-term liabilities that are “not subject to reserve requirements was raised in May to 2.3 times the effective equity with the aim of promoting increased long-term financing in soles, and a maximum limit of 20 percent was established in June for the mean rate of reserve requirements in soles in order to reduce the dispersion of required reserves in the different financial entities and promote intermediation in soles, releasing in this way 500 million soles.”
   Peru’s economy has been weakening in recent months due to weaker mining and last month the central bank lowered its 2013 growth forecast to 6.1 percent from a previous forecast of 6.3 percent. In 2012 the economy expanded by 6.3 percent.
     In the first quarter, Peru’s Gross Domestic Product grew by 2.1 percent from the previous quarter for annual growth of 4.8 percent, down from 5.9 percent in the fourth quarter.
    “Current and advanced indicators of activity show that the growth of the Peruvian economy is
close to its long-term sustainable level of growth, even though the indicators associated with
the external market still show a weak performance that affects the prices and volumes of
export products,” the central bank said.
    Inflation in Peru rose to 2.77 percent in June from 2.47 percent in May due to higher prices of some foods and fuels.
    The central bank, which targets inflation of 1.0 to 2.0 percent, said it expects headline inflation to converge to the center of its target range in the next months due to better food supply, economic growth close to the economy’s potential and to inflation expectations that are anchored to the bank’s target range.

    www.CentralBankNews.info