Paulson says dollar peg has served Mideast well (Reuters)

Reuters - U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson
said on Saturday the dollar peg for currencies in the Gulf Arab
countries had served the region well and any changes to the peg
would be a sovereign matter.

JPMorgan completes takeover of Bear Stearns (Reuters)

People walk past the Bear Sterns building after JPMorgan Chase  and  Co said yesterday it was buying Bear Sterns for $2 a share in New York March 17, 2008. (Chip East/Reuters)Reuters - JPMorgan Chase & Co said on
Saturday it completed its $1.4 billion Bear Stearns Cos
takeover, capping the demise of a Wall Street firm that
survived the Depression and numerous slumps in its 85 years but
could not navigate the mortgage crisis.

Changes to commodities regulations expected: report (Reuters)

A man holds raw wheat at the Nebraska university in Lincoln, Nebraska, May 5, 2008. (Carlos Barria/Reuters)Reuters - The U.S. commodity markets’ chief
regulator will unveil policy changes next week meant to address
public and political concerns that market malfunctions may be
contributing to rising food and energy prices, The New York
Times reported on Saturday.

India's Sterlite to buy Asarco for $2.6 bln (Reuters)

Reuters - India’s Sterlite Industries
on Saturday agreed to buy the operating assets
of bankrupt copper miner Asarco for $2.6 billion, the latest in
the series of overseas acquisitions by Indian firms.

Incomes and spending both slow in April (AP)

A man shops for clothing inside a store in Chicago, 2004. US consumer spending and incomes both rose 0.2 percent in April, data showed, suggesting sluggish growth in the world's biggest economy is continuing.(AFP/Getty Images/File/Tim Boyle)AP - The first round of economic stimulus checks gave a boost to personal incomes in April but a huge question remains: Will people spend the checks quickly enough to keep the economy afloat?

Incomes and spending both slow in April (AP)

A man shops for clothing inside a store in Chicago, 2004. US consumer spending and incomes both rose 0.2 percent in April, data showed, suggesting sluggish growth in the world's biggest economy is continuing.(AFP/Getty Images/File/Tim Boyle)AP - The first round of economic stimulus checks gave a boost to personal incomes in April but a huge question remains: Will people spend the checks quickly enough to keep the economy afloat?

Incomes and spending both slow in April (AP)

A man shops for clothing inside a store in Chicago, 2004. US consumer spending and incomes both rose 0.2 percent in April, data showed, suggesting sluggish growth in the world's biggest economy is continuing.(AFP/Getty Images/File/Tim Boyle)AP - The first round of economic stimulus checks gave a boost to personal incomes in April but a huge question remains: Will people spend the checks quickly enough to keep the economy afloat?

Tech jumps on Dell optimism; broader market flat (Reuters)

Traders work on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange after the announcement that the Federal Reserve cut interest rates April 30, 2008. (Brendan McDermid/Reuters)Reuters - U.S. technology shares rose on Friday
as strong results from computer maker Dell Inc
signaled that business and consumer spending was holding up,
driving the Nasdaq to end the month up 4.6 percent.

Inflation outlook makes consumers' mood grim (Reuters)

A shopper loads cartons of water onto his cart at the Costco Warehouse in Arlington, Virginia, May 29, 2008. (Molly Riley/Reuters)Reuters - U.S. consumer confidence fell to a
28-year low in May, a survey showed on Friday, as soaring
prices for food and fuel soured sentiment and pushed long-term
inflation expectations to the highest in more than a decade.

German retail sales post surprise fall (AFP)

A customer walks past organic wine for sale in Berlin. German retail sales released Friday posted a surprise monthly fall in April, adding to evidence that rising prices are keeping consumers away from the shops.(AFP/File/John Macdougall)AFP - German retail sales released Friday posted a surprise monthly fall in April, adding to evidence that rising prices are keeping consumers away from the shops.

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