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This is Money
The pound rose to its highest level against the dollar in almost six months on Tuesday as better-than-expected data reinforced hopes that the UK economy has passed its lowest point.
Economy may have gone past low point
Pensions. Actuaries. They used to be two words likely to send even an insomniac into a deep slumber. Not any more. Corporates, analysts and politicians are waking up to the fact that pension liabilities may dwarf many other credit crunch statistics.
The forgotten cost of the credit crunch that will hang over us for years to come
Britain's housebuilders gave cautious support today to hopes that the slump in the market for new homes was easing, although they expect 2009 to remain difficult and said it was too early to call a recovery.
Housebuilders see signs of construction slump easing
We noted on Monday to what degree the United States Oil Fund (USO) ETF had reduced its positions in WTI front-month futures since February and how that has coincided with a not disproportionate build-up in positions of the United States Natural Gas fund (UNG), another ETF in the same group of funds.
United States Oil Fund, redux
Forget peak oil -- a series of new estimates of the world's coal supply suggests reserves may be vastly overestimated, and if the planet isn't running on a majority of alternative energies within the next few decades, we could be facing an unprecedented global energy crisis.
Coal Supply May Be Vastly Overestimated
Despite a sharp fall in Chinese imports and exports in April, China has remained a major force within the metals market. As FT Alphaville reported earlier on Tuesday, both copper and aluminum imports hit record highs in the month, mostly due to stockpiling.
The China copper effect
The ailing US carmaker General Motors saw its shares collapse to their lowest level since the Great Depression after six top executives dumped personal stock holdings, fuelling fear of imminent bankruptcy.
General Motors shares plummet to lowest level since Great Depression