Goldman said its view on Fed policy changed on Friday.
Monday, March 10, 2008
Goldman says can't rule out Fed emergency rate cut
McDonald's February Sales Increase 12%, Led by Europe
The stock rose the most in more than a month in New York trading.
Sales at U.S. outlets open more than 13 months rose 8.3 percent, the Oak Brook, Illinois-based company said today in a statement. Comparable-store sales in Europe advanced 15 percent while gaining 11 percent in the region encompassing Asia, the Middle East and Africa. Last month's extra day for the leap year added 4 percentage points to worldwide same-store sales.
Specialty burger and chicken sandwiches spurred sales in Europe, McDonald's largest region by revenue, while breakfast boosted sales in China and longer hours helped out in Australia. In the U.S., a McSkillet breakfast burrito promotion and dollar- menu advertising lured consumers pinched by declining home values and higher fuel prices.
``McDonald's put up another remarkably strong result in Europe,'' Jason West, an analyst at Deutsche Bank Securities, wrote in a note today. The U.S. results suggest ``McDonald's is not losing share to U.S. competitors as some may have feared.''
McDonald's climbed $1.79, or 3.4 percent, to $54.06 at 10:14 a.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading, the biggest increase since Jan. 31. The stock dropped 11 percent this year through last week after rising in each of the past five years.
ECB's Trichet `Concerned' About Euro's Appreciation
``We're concerned about excessive exchange-rate moves in the present circumstances,'' Trichet told reporters in Basel, Switzerland today. It's the first time Trichet has specifically expressed worry about the currency since November, when he opposed ``brutal'' moves.
The euro fell as much as 0.3 percent after the comments before rebounding, as investors decided Trichet's ability to weaken the currency is limited. The strongest European inflation in 14 years is preventing the ECB from cutting interest rates while the Federal Reserve is slashing borrowing costs to stave off recession in the world's largest economy.
``Trichet is making a distinct change in emphasis,'' said Lee Hardman, a currency strategist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. in London. Still, ``while the ECB is on hold and the Fed is cutting rates, rate differentials will continue to move in support for the euro.''
The euro rose to a record $1.5459 on March 7, a day after Trichet declined to sound a warning following the ECB's decision to leave its key rate unchanged at 4 percent.
`Strong Dollar'
On that occasion Trichet noted only that U.S. authorities support a ``strong dollar,'' an observation he repeated today with ``extreme attention.'' U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said March 7 that a strong dollar is ``in our nation's interest.''
Unlike the Fed, which has cut its benchmark interest rate 2.25 percentage points since September, Trichet's ECB has refused to reduce rates with inflation in breach of its 2 percent goal.
By signaling an unwillingness to take action, the ECB is indicating ``tacit support for its record-high euro as it uses currency policy to contain inflationary pressures rather than monetary policy,'' said Ashraf Laidi, a currency analyst at CMC Markets in New York.