Monday 26 September 2011

US Crisis Effect Asian Market - Nifty will Go downTrend Upto 4315 (IMPORT LEVELS)

  • Monday 26 September 2011
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  •  Nifty Support And Resistance Levels are Give Below.



    Nifty Resistance Level _5078.

    Nifty Support Level    _ 4315.

    Reasons of Crisis: 

    A US government shutdown remains a possibility after the US Senate rejected a stop-gap spending bill that had passed the Republican-controlled House of Representatives hours earlier.

    As voting continued on the measure, Democrats had rounded up enough votes to defeat the bill, which they said did not contain sufficient aid for victims of natural disasters.

    Senate majority leader Harry Reid earlier said he planned to discuss with Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell how to craft a bill that could be more palatable to Democrats.

    Congress is up against a 30 September deadline, when the fiscal year ends and government money runs out.

    Adding to the urgency, aid for American victims of tornadoes, wildfires and other disasters could dry up by Monday if Congress does not replenish a dwindling relief fund. Funding for everything from national parks to law enforcement could expire in a week.

    Even in the face of rock-bottom approval ratings of Congress, the dispute saw lawmakers struggling to bridge their differences to pass even the most essential legislation.

    By a largely party-line vote of 219 to 203, the House approved a bill that would keep the government running through 18 November and provide $3.65bn for disaster relief in one of the most extreme years for weather in US history.

    On Thursday, Reid said of the bill: "It fails to provide the relief that our fellow Americans need as they struggle to rebuild their lives in the wake of floods, wildfires and hurricanes. It will be rejected by the Senate."

    House Republican leaders had to quickly rewrite the bill after an earlier defeat in order to minimise defections from lawmakers aligned with the conservative Tea Party movement.

    Democrats overwhelmingly opposed the bill on the grounds that disaster aid was inadequate. They said a $1.5bn cut to an electric-vehicle programme, included to partially offset the increased disaster aid, would kill some jobs in hard-hit states like Michigan.

    The No2 House Republican, Eric Cantor, brushed off Reid's threat and said the House intended to adjourn for a week-long break on Friday.

    "I guess Harry Reid will have to bear the burden of denying the disaster victims the money that they need," Cantor told reporters.

    House speaker John Boehner said the dispute would not lead to a government shutdown. Congress has more than a week to resolve its differences, and every spending debate this year has gone down to the wire.

    Boehner and other Republican leaders have promised to lower the temperature on Capitol Hill after fierce budget battles with Democrats pushed the government to the brink of a shutdown in April and the edge of default in August.

    The months of turmoil in Washington have spooked consumers, rattled investors and led to a cut in the country's top-notch AAA credit rating.

    Republican leaders have struggled at times to rein in a Tea Party faction that has shown no appetite for compromise, even as a special bipartisan committee searches for hundreds of billions in budget savings that will likely require painful sacrifices for Republicans and Democrats alike.

    At a behind-closed-doors meeting on Thursday, Boehner said that the stubbornness of those Republicans unwilling to compromise would weaken their party's bargaining position with the Senate.

    That was evidently enough to convince 24 Republicans to change their position.

    The revived bill included one tweak: it killed a $100m dollar loan for Solyndra, the failed solar-panel maker that has drawn scrutiny for its ties to the Obama administration. That would have little practical effect, as the company has already declared bankruptcy and the loan programme is set to expire next week.

    Rising foreclosures throughout 2008, preceding the crash in September, no one spoke of the "R-word", perhaps because of the approaching presidential election in Nov 2008. Only after the bottom fell out did the "revelation" come out that we had indeed been in recession since December 2007. I'm sure those people who had been losing homes and jobs all along were grateful for the news flash.

    There are 46 million Americans, or about 15% of the population, on food stamps. Unemployment has barely budged. Corporations are sitting on $2 trillion of cash, and will not spend it because there is no demand, because people aren't working, and those who are are being cautious with their money. This isn't something that ever improved since the crash, and then took another downturn. it's been consistent.

    Economists must, of course, use consistent and measurable definitions and statistics to do their jobs, but it doesn't necessarily mean those statistics reflect how people are living, thinking and feeling.

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