Economic Calendar

Friday, October 31, 2008

U.S. Personal Consumer Spending Takes a Hit

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by RBC Financial Group | Oct 31 08 13:37 GMT |

Personal consumer expenditure (PCE) fell 0.3% in September following unchanged spending in August. Market expectations had been for spending to fall 0.2% in the month. The decline occurred despite a 0.2% rise in personal income.

The decline in consumer spending was led by the durables component, which dropped 3.1% as auto sales fell to an annualized 12.5 million units. Weakness was also evident in the non-durables component, although the decline was a more moderate 0.6%. The services component managed to rise 0.3%. On a constant dollar basis, the pattern of spending was very similar. Overall consumer spending fell 0.4% after no change in August. The drop was led by durables (-2.9%) and to a lesser extent non-durables (-0.8%) with the services component up marginally (+0.2%).

The core PCE deflator rose 0.2%, slightly greater than the 0.1% expected going into the report. However, the increase did not prevent the year-over-year rate dropping slightly to 2.4% from 2.5% in August.

The decline in constant dollar consumer spending in September was already reflected in yesterday's third-quarter advance GDP report showing that consumer spending plunged an annualized 3.1%. Some of the weakness in the quarter may have reflected personal spending returning to its previous trend level after being temporarily boosted by the tax rebate cheques issued in the second quarter.

However, with suggestions that employment declines are possibly intensifying and that spending momentum faltered late in the third quarter, the risks are that consumer spending will likely continue to decline in the final quarter of the year. The Fed's 50 basis-point reduction in the Fed funds rate earlier this week to a highly stimulative 1.00% was in part meant to address these downward pressures to growth. We expect these stimulative conditions to be maintained through next year to help sustain a return to positive growth over the course of 2009.

RBC Financial Group
http://www.rbc.com

The statements and statistics contained herein have been prepared by the Economics Department of RBC Financial Group based on information from sources considered to be reliable. We make no representation or warranty, express or implied, as to its accuracy or completeness. This report is for the information of investors and business persons and does not constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation to buy securities.





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Canadian GDP Moves into Negative Territory

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by RBC Financial Group | Oct 31 08 13:35 GMT |

Canada's economy contracted in August with real GDP falling by 0.3%, a more modest dip than market expectations with forecasters looking for a 0.5% decline, following July's much stronger-than-expected 0.7% surge.

Both goods and services sector output contracted in August with the goods sector slumping by 0.6% on the back of lower output from the mining and oil and gas industries as well as softer manufacturing and construction activity. The decline in output in the energy sector followed an outsized 2.7% increase in July. In the services sector, wholesale trade recorded a 3.1% drop (following a 1.9% surge in July), with transportation and warehousing and health care also posting notable declines. Retail activity was flat in the month and finance, insurance and real estate recorded marginal 0.1% growth.

The decline in GDP in August dented July's strong gain and makes it likely that the economy expanded at a 1.5% annual rate in the third quarter, somewhat slower than our earlier forecast for a 2.5% increase. Even at this slower pace, we still think it is likely that the third quarter will mark the high-water mark for growth this year with financial market stress through the autumn keeping the cost of capital high and the U.S. economy likely having slipped into recession.

In their Monetary Policy Report, the Bank of Canada cut their forecast for GDP growth in the second half of 2008 and first half of next year. By our reckoning today's data provide some upside risk to the Bank’s call that the economy expanded a meagre 0.8% annualized pace in the third quarter, although we agree with its forecast for a mild contraction in the fourth quarter. On balance, today's data support the Bank's statement that "some further monetary policy stimulus will li

RBC Financial Group
http://www.rbc.com

The statements and statistics contained herein have been prepared by the Economics Department of RBC Financial Group based on information from sources considered to be reliable. We make no representation or warranty, express or implied, as to its accuracy or completeness. This report is for the information of investors and business persons and does not constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation to buy securities.






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Daily Technical Strategist

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by FXTechstrategy | Oct 31 08 12:01 GMT |

Today's Focus: EURUSD & GBPUSD

  • EURUSD: Hammer Highlights Completion of Corrective Recovery, Retest Of The 1.2330 Level Envisaged.
  • GBPUSD: Strength Seen Towards the 1.6786 level.

EURUSD

Test and rejection of the 1.3259 level, its Oct 10'08 low Thursday has left the pair halting its recovery off the 1.2330 level and opened up downside risk towards retesting its YTD low. A hammer candle pattern (top reversal candle) is now in place on the daily timeframe and its efficacy remains valid as long as its top (1.3296) is unbroken. Medium term downtrend resumption is in the offing as a follow-through to the downside on the mentioned hammer was seen in early morning trading today pushing the pair to as low as 1.2670.Its Oct'06 low at 1.2484 is now being aimed at ahead of its Oct 28'08 low/Jan/April'06 highs at 1.2330/24.A clean break and hold below here will trigger the resumption of its medium term downtrend towards the 1.1827 level, its Mar'06 low and eventually the 1.1640 level, its Nov'05 low. We continue to watch G10 currency universe and our own 7 currency model which are either spotting one reversal candle or the other suggesting price weakness in the present corrective recoveries. Resistance for EUR are now seen at the 1.2728 level, its Oct 22'08 low and the 1.3005/58 area, its Oct 23'08 high/.618 Ret (0.8231-1.6038 rally, monthly chart) and then the 1.32596 level, its Oct 10'08 low/Oct 30'08 high. On the whole, EUR's medium term decline off the 1.6038 level is now at risk of being activated following its rejection of higher level prices.

Support Comments
1.2484 Oct'06 low
1.2334/24 Jan/April'06 highs
1.1827 Mar'06 low
1.1640 Nov'05 low
Resistance Comment
1.2728 Oct 22'08 low
1.2866 Jan'07 low
1.3058 .618 Ret (0.8231-1.6038 rally, monthly chart)
1.3259 Oct 10'08

GBPUSD

Like its EUR counterpart, GBP is now at risk of facing downside weakness exposing a plethora of support levels following its failure ahead of the 1.6786 levels (Oct 10'08 low) and subsequent collapse forming a long-legged doji on Thursday. A negative close today will complete the formation of an evening star (top reversal formation) candle pattern which will even increase odds of further losses. Downside targets are located at the 1.6000 level, its psycho level before its Aug'2003 low at 1.5471 and subsequently the 1.5265 level, its Oct 24'08 low. Below the latter is required to activate its medium to longer term decline started at the 2.1161 level in Nov'07.Daily RSI which is now turning lower remains supportive of this scenario. On the upside, initial resistance lies at the 1.6347 level, its Oct 23'08 high followed by the 1.6673 level, its 0ct 30'08 high with a break of there paving the way for a move towards the 1.6786 level. In short, loss of momentum ahead of its strong resistance level (1.6786) now highlights lower prices.

Support Comments
1.6000 Psycho Level
1.5471 Aug'03 low
1.5265 Oct 24'08 low
1.5219 Oct'02 low
Resistance Comments
1.6347 Oct 23'08 high
1.6576 Jan, 03 high
1.6786 Oct 10'08 low
1.6857 June'03 high

Mohammed Isah
Market Analyst
www.fxtechstrategy.com

This report is prepared solely for information and data purposes. Opinions, estimates and projections contained herein are the author's own as of the date hereof and are subject to change without notice. The information and opinions contained herein have been compiled or arrived at from sources believed to be reliable but no representation or warranty, express or implied, is made as to their accuracy or completeness and neither the information nor the forecast shall be taken as a representation for which the author incur any responsibility. The does not accept any liability whatsoever for any loss arising from any use of this report or its contents. This report is not construed as an offer to sell or solicitation of any offer to buy any of the currencies referred to in this report





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The Daily Picture: GBP/USD

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by TradeThePound | Oct 31 08 11:57 GMT |

Market Commentary : GBP/USD 1-hour Chart

Rebound we've expected finally occured. After a more than 1,000 pips run, consolidation starts. THe DailyPicture is looking at what Friday price action may be.

On a technical side, 3-days rebound has been effective and the corrective trend is going on. However, it's Friday. A dangerous trading day by definition, as US news, rumours, week close, and even month close for today will brings some stress on currency markets.. We expect spikied moves and highly volatile price action.

On the fundamental side, UK economy, even if still quite robust, is strongly affected by US financial crisis than it's European counterparts, and thus is already 'officially' in recession..

We are entering a game called 'who's the worse', where the goal is to determine possible currency moves according to US & UK situation improvement or deterioration. That means, each bad economic news from US may affect UK currency negatively, while any improvement in UK may affect national currency positively, especially if US situation also improves.

Waiting a global improvement witch may takes weeks and months, volatility remain high as investors are affraid by any worse-than-expected eco. datas witch may be a catalyst for recession confirmation, witch may send the UK currency lower.

On the data front, several 2nd class economic releases may be a catalyst to confirm technical setup. Monitor the 1230 GMT moves..

Chart commentary : GBP/USD 1-Hour Chart

To the downside, Current consolidation pattern is called falling wedge. Appromiately 45% of chances to see a break lower. If price goes below 1.6100 - 1.6090 today's lows, we may see an accelerated downside move to 1.5960. If no rejection here, expect continuation towards 1.5800 levels.

To the upside, we expect a bullish break of current falling wedge, witch has 55% chances to occur. The 1.6330 - 1.6380 resistance zone has to be outperformed in order to expect a test of the 1.6450 wedge high. Break above targets 1.6600/40 highs.

Indicator's Status :

  • Slow MACD neutral. As a lagging indicator, break of wedge with a MACD positive cross above 0 is needed to validate the break.
  • Fast stochastic bottomed and still in a positive cycle, witch will be confirmed once above 50 level.
  • RSI is near oversold lelves and just reversed, giving a good continuation signal. Reading above 50 confirms that view.
  • W%R ended a negative cycle, but still neutral. As RSI, we await a reading above -50 to enter the market with limited risks.

TradeThePound


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Technical Analysis Daily

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by iFOREX.bg | Oct 31 08 11:49 GMT |

USD/JPY 97.65 - 31 October

USD/JPY Open 97.54 High 99.08 Low 96.44 Close 97.38

On Thursday the Dollar/Yen continued its upward adjustment. The currency couple reached a peak at 99.12 closed at 98.57. During the Asian session, however, the pair traded lower around 98.30, and later in The European session it corrected back to the daily low 96.44. The model today is mixed with rising alerts for the longer term. The first support level is 96.45 followed by 95.00. CCI is in the neutral zone on the daily chart.

Technical resistance levels: 99.00 100.10 101.00
Technical support levels: 96.45 95.00 94.05

Trading range: 97.55 - 98.15
Trend: Upward
Buy at 97.65 SL 97.35 TP 98.05

iFOREX.bg Forecasts and Trading Signals
http://www.zifx.com






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Eurozone October Consumer Prices Estimate: Summary

By Kristian Siedenburg

Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) -- Following is the MUICP inflation flash estimate from Eurostat in Luxembourg:


=============================================================================
Oct. Sept. Aug. July June May April March Feb.
2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008
=============================================================================
YoY Estimate 3.2% 3.6% 3.8% 4.1% 4.0% 3.6% 3.3% 3.5% 3.2%
Actual result n/a 3.6% 3.8% 4.0% 4.0% 3.7% 3.3% 3.6% 3.3%
=============================================================================
NOTE: The eurozone inflation is measured by the Monetary Union
Index of Consumer Prices (MUICP). To compute the MUICP
flash estimates, Eurostat uses early price information relating
to the reference month from Member States for which data are
available as well as early information about energy prices.

The estimation procedure for the MUICP flash estimate issued
today combines historical information with partial information
on price developments in the most recent months to give a total
index for the eurozone. No detailed breakdown is available.

SOURCE: Eurostat

To contact the reporter on this story: Kristian Siedenburg at ksiedenburg@bloomberg.net





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ECB's Bini Smaghi Warns Against Cutting Interest Rates Too Much

By Lorenzo Totaro and Gabi Thesing

Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) -- European Central Bank Executive Board member Lorenzo Bini Smaghi cautioned against cutting interest rates too much, saying low borrowing costs contributed to the current financial crisis.

``The present crisis is partially due to interest rates that remained at low levels for too long,'' Bini Smaghi said in Rome today. ``At that time, rates were lowered too much in order to stimulate growth. We need to avoid repeating the same mistakes.''

Central banks are cutting interest rates aggressively as the crisis that started with the U.S. housing slump threatens to tip the global economy into recession. The U.S. Federal Reserve this week reduced its benchmark rate to 1 percent from 1.5 percent and economists say the ECB will deliver a half-point reduction at its next policy meeting on Nov. 6.

To contact the reporters on this story: Lorenzo Totaro at in Rome or ltotaro@bloomberg.net; Gabi Thesing in Frankfurt at gthesing@bloomberg.net





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Spain's Economy Posts First Contraction Since 1993

By Ben Sills

Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) -- Spain's economy shrank for the first time since 1993 in the third quarter, the Bank of Spain said.

The economy contracted 0.2 percent compared with a 0.1 percent expansion in the previous quarter, the central bank said in its monthly bulletin published on its Web site today. From a year earlier, the economy grew 0.9 percent, it said. Spain's statistics institute will publish the first official estimate of economic growth on Nov. 13.

Spain may be heading for its worst recession in as many as 40 years as the global financial crisis strikes an economy already struggling with the end of a 10-year housing boom, economists at BNP Paribas say. The collapse in construction investment is fueling a surge in unemployment just as the global slowdown drags down manufacturers.

``In every area where you might hope to get growth there are impediments,'' Dominic Bryant, an economist at BNP Paribas in London, said. ``What Spain needs more than anything is strong export growth. It's not going to get it from the euro region and it doesn't look like it's going to come from Latin America.''

Spain's benchmark stock index, the Ibex 35, fell 13 percent last week on concern that the global financial crisis may drag down economic growth in Latin America where Spanish companies have made a string of acquisitions. The Ibex is down 42 percent this year, while manufacturing in Spain declined for a 10th month in September as global growth slowed, a survey of purchasing managers said.

Debt Payments

Repsol YPF SA, the Spanish oil company, which has 38 percent of its assets in Argentina, Brazil and Bolivia, posted its biggest decline since it started trading in January 1990 after Argentina proposed a takeover of pension funds. The last time the government sought to tap workers' savings to help finance debt payments was in 2001, just before it stopped servicing $95 billion of obligations.

``The deterioration in the financial situation from the second half of September, after more than a year of persistent instability, set off a serious crisis of confidence and began to reach emerging economies,'' the bulletin said.

The global slowdown is exacerbating Spain's domestic adjustment as the construction industry works out a surplus of around a million unsold homes. Unemployment jumped to 11.3 percent, the highest in the European Union, as home-building activity collapsed.

Housing Slowdown

The number of building permits issued fell by two thirds in August from the previous year while the number of home sales fell by a third as rising interest rates and tighter loan conditions curbed the supply of credit.

Banco Santander SA and Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria SA, Spain's two biggest banks, saw default rates in their home market triple in the third quarter from the year-earlier period while their loan books shrank.

With economic growth slowing across the euro region and inflation easing, the European Central Bank may reduce interest rates for a second month when it meets in Frankfurt next week, Bank of Spain governor Miguel Angel Fernandez Ordonez said yesterday.

``As regards prices, upward pressures are easing in line with the decline seen in commodity prices since the middle of July,'' the bulletin said today. ``This situation, and the weakening in activity, has led to a downward revision in inflation expectations.''

To contact the reporter on this story: Ben Sills in Madrid at bsills@bloomberg.net





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European Inflation Slows as ECB Prepares for Rate Cut

By Fergal O'Brien

Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) -- Europe's inflation rate declined to the lowest since January as the European Central Bank prepares to cut interest rates for the second time in less than a month in response to the financial and economic crisis.

Inflation in the euro area eased to 3.2 percent in October from 3.6 percent in September, the European Union statistics office in Luxembourg said today. That matched the median of 27 economists in a Bloomberg News survey. A separate report showed unemployment stayed at 7.5 percent in September, the highest in more than a year.

The ECB unexpectedly cut its key rate by half a percentage point to 3.75 percent on Oct. 8 as part of a coordinated global action. ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet said Oct. 27 the bank may follow that emergency cut with another reduction at its Nov. 6 meeting and fellow policy maker Miguel Angel Fernandez Ordonez said the sharp drop in inflation is ``very important.''

``Lower inflation plus the gloomy economic outlook will dampen inflation expectations,'' said Christoph Weil, an economist at Commerzbank in Frankfurt. ``The ECB will continue to cut interest rates rapidly over the coming months.''

The figures released today are an estimate. The statistics office will publish a detailed breakdown of the data, including key food- and energy-price inflation, as well as the core rate, on Nov. 14. Crude-oil prices have dropped by 57 percent from their all-time high in the last four months, cutting the cost of gasoline and heating oil. From a year earlier, oil is down 32 percent to around $64 a barrel.

Core Inflation

``Previous sharp increases in costs and the earlier strength of the labor market might still prompt wage growth and core inflation to rise,'' said Jennifer McKeown, an economist at Capital Economics in London. Still, rising unemployment means ``any pick-up in core inflation will not last too long.''

McKweown sees inflation easing to below the ECB's 2 percent ceiling in the first half of 2009. Consumer-price growth has been above that target in every month since September 2007.

As the growth outlook deteriorates and inflation continues to ease, economists at banks including Capital Economics and Royal Bank of Scotland Plc say the ECB will cut its benchmark rate to at least 2.5 percent by mid-2009.

Recent data show that Europe's manufacturing and services industries contracted at a record pace in October, while executive and consumer confidence plunged to the lowest in 15 years. The interest-rate cut this month was the ECB's first since June 2003 and it followed an increase of one-quarter percentage point in July.

`Have Accentuated'

ECB Executive Board Member Jose Manuel Gonzalez-Paramo said this month that downside risks to economic growth ``have accentuated'' and Governing Council member Nout Wellink said growth in Europe may stagnate next year.

``Growth is more likely to be closer to 0 percent than 1 percent next year,'' Wellink said in The Hague yesterday. The global economy ``is looking worse than a month ago.''

To contact the reporter on this story: Fergal O'Brien in Dublin at fobrien@bloomberg.net.



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ECB May Have Embarked on Fastest-Ever Round of Rate Reductions

By Gabi Thesing

Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) -- The European Central Bank has embarked on the fastest round of interest-rate cuts in its history as the financial crisis threatens to cripple the economy, a survey of economists shows.

The Frankfurt-based ECB will slash its benchmark rate to 2.5 percent by April, according to the median of 28 forecasts in the Bloomberg News survey. That would see the rate drop 1.75 percentage points from its 4.25 percent peak in six months, outpacing the ECB's last easing cycle between May 2001 and June 2003. The bank has already lowered the rate by half a point 3.75 percent as part of a globally coordinated move on Oct. 8.

``Desperate times call for desperate measures,'' said Julian Callow, chief European Economist at Barclays Capital in London. ``The economy is fast sinking into recession and as a number of Governing Council members were directly involved in bank rescues it has really brought the crisis home for them.''

Central banks around the world are cutting borrowing costs aggressively as the financial crisis that started with the U.S. housing slump threatens to tip the global economy into recession. The economy of the 15 nations sharing the euro shrank in the second quarter and executive and consumer confidence in the outlook fell the most on record this month to a 15-year low.

ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet said this week a rate reduction at the Nov. 6 policy meeting is likely as inflation pressures ease. The ECB will cut its key rate by another half- point to 3.25 percent next week, a survey of economists shows. Quarter-point cuts will follow in December, February and April, according to the survey.

`Down Rapidly'

Deutsche Bank economists predict the ECB will cut the rate to a record low of 1.5 percent by the middle of next year.

``If the economy cools, then rates have to come down rapidly so one doesn't risk falling behind the curve,'' ECB council member Axel Weber said last night. Fellow council member Nout Wellink told the Dutch parliament yesterday that economic growth in Europe ``is more likely to be closer to 0 percent than 1 percent next year.''

Inflation is slowing as the economy stumbles and oil prices slump. The euro-area inflation rate dropped to 3.2 percent in October from 3.6 percent in September, the European Union statistics office in Luxembourg said today. ECB policy makers including France's Christian Noyer expect the rate to fall below the bank's 2 percent limit by the middle of next year.

``Inflation is easing and we are acting in a progressive way,'' ECB Executive Board member Lorenzo Bini Smaghi told Italian broadcaster RAI. Still, he also said in Rome today that central banks must not repeat mistakes of the past by cutting rates too much.

``The present crisis is partially due to interest rates that remained at low levels for too long,'' Bini Smaghi said. ``At that time, rates were lowered too much in order to stimulate growth. We need to avoid repeating the same mistakes.''

The U.S. Federal Reserve this week reduced its rate to 1 percent from 1.5 percent and the Bank of Japan also lowered borrowing costs. The Bank of England is poised to cut its benchmark rate by half a point to 4 percent on Nov. 6, another survey shows.

To contact the reporter on this story: Gabi Thesing in Frankfurt at gthesing@bloomberg.net





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U.S. Consumer Spending Declined 0.3% in September

By Shobhana Chandra

Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) -- Spending by U.S. consumers dropped more than forecast in September, capping the weakest quarter in three decades and indicating the economic slump is deepening.

The 0.3 percent decrease in purchases was the biggest in four years and followed no change in August and July, the Commerce Department said today in Washington. The report also showed that the Federal Reserve's preferred measure of inflation cooled last month.

``Consumers have thrown in the towel,'' said Nariman Behravesh, chief economist at IHS Global Insight in Lexington, Massachusetts, who correctly forecast the drop in spending. ``They have no choice but to cut back on spending in a very big way. This is going to be a fairly deep, long recession.''

Job losses, increases in food and fuel costs and falling property values brought an end to the longest expansion in spending on record and made the economy the most important issue in next week's presidential election. The collapse in lending and sentiment this month indicate Americans will keep retrenching.

Waning inflation concerns mean the Fed has ``more room to maneuver'' with interest rates, Behravesh said. San Francisco Fed President Janet Yellen said yesterday that the central bank may cut the benchmark rate close to zero percent from the current 1 percent level should the economy remain weak.

Employment Costs

A Labor Department report today showed that employment costs rose 0.7 percent in July to September, the same pace as the previous two quarters. That's a sign that rising unemployment is stifling gains in wages and benefits.

Treasuries added to earlier gains after the report and stock-index futures dropped. Futures on the Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index declined 1.2 percent to 949.60 at 8:50 a.m. in New York. Benchmark 10-year note yields fell to 3.85 percent, from 3.96 percent late yesterday.

Economists forecast spending would fall 0.2 percent, after a previously estimated no change in August, according to the median of 73 projections in a Bloomberg News survey. Estimates ranged from a 0.3 percent gain to a 1 percent drop.

Incomes rose 0.2 percent, after a 0.4 percent gain the prior month. The slowdown reflected uninsured losses from the Gulf Coast hurricanes and smaller gains in wages as the job losses climbed.

Fed Warning

The Fed this week warned of further ``downside risks'' to growth even after cutting interest rates twice in October and injecting billions of dollars to unclog credit. Policy makers on Oct. 29 reduced the benchmark rate by a half percentage point to 1 percent, matching a half-century low. They also forecast inflation will moderate.

Today's report also showed inflation started to cool at the end of the third quarter as the economy stumbled. The price gauge tied to spending patterns rose 4.2 percent from September 2007, down from a 4.5 percent increase in the 12 months ended in August.

The Fed's preferred gauge of prices, which excludes food and fuel, increased 0.2 percent for a second month.

The core-price measure was up 2.4 percent from September 2007, after a year-over-year increase of 2.5 percent in August.

Adjusted for inflation, spending dropped 0.4 percent after being unchanged the prior month.

Because spending dropped, the savings rate improved to 1.3 percent from 0.8 percent the prior month.

Less Spending

Today's report showed inflation-adjusted spending on durable goods, such as autos, furniture, and other long-lasting items, fell 2.9 percent. Purchases of non-durable goods decreased 0.8 percent and spending on services, which account for almost 60 percent of all outlays, climbed 0.2 percent.

The economy contracted at a 0.3 percent annual pace last quarter, Commerce reported yesterday. Consumer spending fell at a 3.1 percent rate, the first drop since 1991 and the biggest since 1980, after President Jimmy Carter imposed credit controls.

Households cut spending on non-durable goods, like clothing and food, last quarter by the most since 1950, and slashed purchases of durable goods by the most since 1987, the GDP report showed.

The flagging economy is the main reason Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama, an Illinois senator, is ahead of Republican rival Senator John McCain of Arizona in most polls. On the question of which candidate they trust most on the economy, voters in Florida picked Obama over McCain by a 9-point margin, and in Ohio, the Democrat leads by 12 points, according to a Bloomberg/Los Angeles Times poll issued this week.

American Express Co., the largest U.S. credit-card company by purchases, said yesterday it'll slash 7,000 jobs as consumers spend less and defaults rise. Cardholders failed to repay loans in the third quarter at almost twice the rate of a year earlier, and the company set aside $1.4 billion for loan losses.

The job cuts ``will help us to manage through one of the most challenging economic environments we've seen in many decades,'' Chief Executive Officer Kenneth Chenault said in a statement.

To contact the reporter on this story: Shobhana Chandra in Washington at schandra1@bloomberg.net





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Commodities Head for Worst Month in 52 Years as Economies Slow

By Chanyaporn Chanjaroen and Grant Smith

Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) -- Commodities headed for their worst month since at least 1956 on concern that a slump in global economic growth will sap demand for raw materials.

The Reuters/Jefferies CRB Index of 19 raw materials has plunged 23 percent this month, the steepest decline in at least a half-century. Crude oil is set for a record monthly drop, copper its biggest retreat in two decades and gold its worst performance in 25 years.

``October is at last ending -- the worst month in commodity history,'' said Eugen Weinberg, an analyst at Commerzbank AG in Frankfurt. ``Investors are expecting lower growth for the longer term and that is putting prices under pressure.''

The world's central banks are cutting borrowing costs as the financial crisis that started with the U.S. housing slump threatens to tip the global economy into recession. UBS AG cut its forecast for global growth next year to 1.3 percent, from 2.2 percent, prompting reduction of as much as 48 percent in its 2009 forecasts for commodities such as copper.

Crude oil for December delivery fell as much as $2.84, or 4.3 percent, to $63.12 a barrel in New York and was at $63.94 a barrel as of 11:28 a.m. in London. The fuel has dropped 36 percent this month, surpassing a record 30 percent plunge in February 1986.

``The outlook for demand remains weak while we wait for economic rescue measures to feed their way through the system,'' said Christopher Bellew, senior broker at Bache Commodities Ltd. in London. ``Even in emerging markets the growth there is likely to be lower than was previously expected.''

Energy Demand

Gross domestic product contracted in the third quarter at the fastest annual pace since 2001, the U.S. Commerce Department said yesterday. The U.S. is the world's biggest energy consumer. Showa Shell Sekiyu K.K., Royal Dutch Shell Plc's Japanese unit, will cut its crude processing by 7 percent during the fourth quarter on falling domestic demand.

On the London Metal Exchange, copper for delivery in three month fell $320, or 7.6 percent, to $3,880 a metric ton, taking this month's loss to 39 percent, the biggest in two decades. The implied volatility of the metal climbed to 90.78 percent this week, the highest since at least 2004. Aluminum fell $57, or 2.8 percent, at $2,003, down 17 percent for October.

The LME index of six industrial metals has dropped 27 percent this month through yesterday, heading for the biggest monthly drop since at least May 2000.

Gold for immediate delivery fell $11.63, or 1.6 percent, to $726.50 an ounce in London. The metal has fallen almost 16 percent this month, the steepest retreat since February 1983, according to data on Bloomberg. The U.S. Dollar Index, which measures the U.S. currency's performance against six counterparts, has risen 7.9 percent this month, the best performance since October 1992.

Dollar Strength

``The dollar is definitely driving the gold market lower,'' Robert Martin, chief executive officer of Dubai-based GTL Trading Ltd., which trades gold and currencies for 4,000 clients, said by phone from Dubai.

Platinum dropped $30.50, or 3.7 percent, to $800 an ounce. The metal, used in car catalysts, has slid 65 percent since trading at a record $2,301.50 on March 4.

Goldenport Holdings Plc, a U.K-listed shipowner, fell by a record amount in London trading after saying trade in commodity shipping has ``virtually halted.''

``Activity in the dry-bulk segment has virtually halted, with minimal trade taking place globally,'' Chief Executive Officer Paris Dragnis said in a statement today. Dry bulk refers mostly to coal, iron ore and grains.

To contact the reporter on this story: Chanyaporn Chanjaroen in London at cchanjaroen@bloomberg.net





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Eni Cedes Control, Output of Kashagan to Kazakhstan

By Adam L. Freeman and Nariman Gizitdinov

(Corrects status of Eni as operator in ninth paragraph.)

Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) -- An Eni SpA-led group of oil companies signed an agreement with the Kazakh government that will give it more royalties and oversight at the Kashagan field when oil starts flowing at the end of 2012.

``I signed; everything is done,'' Eni Chief Executive Officer Paolo Scaroni told reporters today in Astana, Kazakhstan.

The accord sets ``strong mechanisms to control costs'' and gives Kazakhstan a ``priority stake'' in production from the field, the Kazakh Energy Ministry said in a statement. State-run KazMunaiGaz National Co. will raise its interest to 16.81 percent, on par with Eni and partners Exxon Mobil Corp., Royal Dutch Shell Plc and Total SA, according to a statement from Eni.

Scaroni agreed in January to give the Kazakh government a greater share of one of the largest oil discoveries in the last three decades following cost overruns and production delays. The start of production has been pushed back four times. The government today said output should begin in December 2012.

Eni and its partners will ``compensate potential economic losses of Kazakhstan'' by ceding a priority stake, ``increasing Kashagan's production bonus to $4.8 billion in net present value'' based on oil at $55 a barrel, the prime minister's office said today in a statement, without giving a comparative figure. Such an increase had been discussed in January, it said.

Kazakh Stake

The Central Asian country will get 5 percent to 12 percent of the field's production, depending on the cost of crude, according to Kazakh Energy Minister Sauat Mynbayev, who spoke to reporters in Astana following the signing ceremony. KazMunaiGaz will be represented in all areas of operations.

Eni's Kashagan partner Exxon will be responsible for offshore drilling, while Shell will oversee all offshore operations excluding drilling, Mynbayev said. Eni will be in charge of Kashagan onshore operations and Total will direct ``general coordination,'' he said.

``The government for the first time in many years has managed to overcome the domination of foreign capital over domestic capital in strategic industries,'' the prime minister's office said in the statement.

Costs for the so-called experimental phase at Kashagan have risen to $38 billion from $24 billion, according to the statement. Mynbayev said in September that the budget had advanced 33 percent in a year to $36 billion. The experimental period covers exploration and development of the field through the start of production. Eni will lose its position as operator in January 2009, it said today, adding that it retains responsibility for the execution of the experimental phase.

Output

Kashagan's output will total 75,000 barrels a day in 2012 and climb to 1.5 million barrels in nine years, according to KazMunaiGaz Managing Director Aman Maksimov, who briefed reporters today on the agreement in Astana.

The Kashagan field has 13 billion barrels of recoverable oil and 35.8 billion barrels of oil in place, according to a September Eni slideshow for investors and analysts.

To contact the reporters on this story: Adam L. Freeman in Rome at afreeman5@bloomberg.net; Nariman Gizitdinov in Almaty, through the Moscow newsroom at ngizitdinov@bloomberg.net





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Chevron Third-Quarter Profit Rises After Oil Tops $147 a Barrel

By Joe Carroll

Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) -- Chevron Corp., the second-largest U.S. oil company, said third-quarter profit doubled after crude topped $147 a barrel for the first time.

Net income climbed to $7.89 billion, or $3.85 a share, from $3.72 billion, or $1.75, a year earlier, San Ramon, California- based Chevron said today in a Business Wire statement. Per-share profit excluding such items as divestiture gains and damage from hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico was $3.94, 67 cents higher than the average of 12 analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg.

Oil futures in New York averaged more than $118 a barrel, up 57 percent from a year earlier, the biggest third-quarter increase since the contracts began trading in 1983. The price surge outweighed Chevron's eighth straight quarter of declining production. With crude down more than $70 a barrel from the record set in July, producers may have to trim drilling budgets or delay some wells, said John Escario of Rydex Investments.

``Oil's been on a tremendous run, but it's given up more than 50 percent of its value since the summer,'' said Escario, who helps manage $13 billion at Rockville, Maryland-based Rydex. ``In the next year it's hard to see demand picking up because we'll still be trying to put the economy back together.''

Worldwide demand for petroleum-based fuels such as gasoline and jet fuel will grow this year at the slowest pace since 1993, the International Energy Agency said in an Oct. 10 report. The Paris-based group pegged 2008 demand growth at 0.5 percent, one- fourth the average annual rate of the past five years.

Irving, Texas-based Exxon Mobil Corp., the world's largest oil company, reported yesterday that its third-quarter profit rose 58 percent to $14.8 billion. Europe's Royal Dutch Shell Plc posted a 22 percent gain to $8.45 billion.

BP, ConocoPhillips

Both companies exceeded analyst earnings estimates, as did London-based BP Plc and U.S. producers Marathon Oil Corp. and Occidental Petroleum Corp. when they reported profit increases this week. ConocoPhillips, the No. 3 U.S. oil company, posted a 41 percent gain in net income to $5.19 billion last week.

The Chevron earnings statement was released before the opening of regular U.S. stock trading. Chevron rose $3.18 to $74.18 yesterday in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. The shares have fallen 21 percent this year.

Chevron's petroleum production dropped about 8 percent, the biggest quarterly decline since at least 2001, according to Tina Vital, an analyst at Standard & Poor's in New York.

Output fell partly because of contracts with oil-rich nations that inversely link the company's share of output to energy prices, Vital said. Hurricanes Gustav and Ike, which struck the U.S. in September, idled wells and toppled platforms in the Gulf of Mexico.

To contact the reporter on this story: Joe Carroll in Houston at jcarroll8@bloomberg.net.





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Centrica Plans Rights Offer for British Energy Stake

By Lars Paulsson and Nicholas Comfort

Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) -- Centrica Plc, Britain's largest energy supplier, plans to raise 2.2 billion pounds ($3.55 billion) in a rights offer to help fund the potential acquisition of a 25 percent stake in British Energy Group Plc.

Centrica will sell new shares at 160 pence each on the basis of three new shares for every eight held, the Windsor, England-based company said today in a statement. The stock slumped the most in more than five years in London trading.

``It's a good strategic move but a rights issue seems to be dilutive for shareholders,'' said Thierry Bros, a Paris-based analyst at Societe Generale. Earnings per share will be lower in 2009 with the British Energy stake, said Bros, who has a `sell' rating on the stock.

Centrica is seeking production assets to reduce its exposure to energy-market price swings, shielding customers from market volatility and providing more predictable earnings. The company said last month it was in talks with Electricite de France SA on acquiring a stake in British Energy, following the power producer's 12.5 billion-pound takeover by EDF.

``While we see markets as challenging, the company is approaching this from a position of strength,'' Finance Director Nick Luff said today during a conference call with reporters. ``All our major shareholders are on board.''

The shares slid as much as 9.6 percent to 276.75 pence in London, the steepest intraday decline since February 2003. They traded down 16.25 pence at 290 pence at 10:40 a.m. local time.

Debt, Equity

Centrica said last month it would fund the acquisition of its stake in British Energy through a combination of debt and equity. It would pay about 774 pence a share, equivalent to 3.1 billion pounds, the same per-share price EDF agreed for the whole of British Energy.

Luff said the company may also seek to raise capital though asset sales, without elaborating.

``Centrica will remain a significant buyer of gas and power in the U.K. market, for which a strong credit rating is of key importance,'' the company said. The rights offer will ensure that its current credit ratings are maintained, Centrica said.

The rights offer is fully underwritten by Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Credit Suisse Group and UBS AG as joint bookrunners. HSBC Holdings Plc, BNP Paribas SA, RBS Hoare Govett and Barclays Capital are the lead managers.

Centrica said in September it only owns enough power plants and gas fields to meet about one-third of its demand. A British Energy stake would push that up to more than 40 percent, and the company's target is 50 percent.

New Plants

The nuclear power deal would give Centrica output from the existing British Energy stations and the right to participate in new atomic plants.

Centrica, which has about 16 million U.K. electricity and gas customer accounts, said its business performance is ``in line with expectations.'' Full-year earnings will benefit from a lower tax rate because of a one-time deferred tax credit.

Second-half operating margins are expected to be ahead of those achieved in the first half if no abnormal weather patters occur, Centrica said.

The company's upstream gas production and power generation unit, Centrica Energy, expects 2008 gas volumes to be around 10 percent higher than in 2007.

`Several Opportunities'

Centrica is looking to add to its gas production portfolio, in addition to the British Energy stake. The decline in equity markets and stock valuations mean that there are ``several opportunities'' around the U.K. which are ``quite enticing,'' Luff said.

The takeover of British Energy by EDF gives the Paris-based company control of eight British nuclear plant sites with potential for building new reactors. The French utility already owns electricity-production assets in the U.K. that help supply its 5 million household customers.

British Energy had been looking for partners to develop a new generation of nuclear plants in the U.K. as older units need to be replace and to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide from power generation. Nuclear power plants emit virtually no such gases.

To contact the reporter on this story: Lars Paulsson in London at lpaulsson@bloomberg.net





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South African Rand Headed for Biggest Monthly Drop Since 1985

By Garth Theunissen

Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) -- South Africa's rand fell against the dollar, extending its biggest monthly decline in almost a quarter of a century, as investors sold emerging-market assets amid the world's worst financial crisis since the Great Depression.

The rand is poised to weaken the most this month since August 1985, when the government suspended debt payments, as concern the credit-market squeeze would tip the global economy into a recession curbed investment in countries from Korea to Turkey. South Africa's currency also slumped as gold, the nation's biggest export earner, headed for its biggest four-week loss in more than 25 years.

``The extreme sell-off we've seen in emerging markets isn't simply a case of irrational fear but a consequence of the re- pricing of credit and risk taking,'' said Shahin Vallee, an emerging-markets currency strategist in London at BNP Paribas SA, France's largest bank. ``The global credit crunch means there's less money circulating in the world, which makes investors more discriminating when it comes to where they put it.''

The rand fell 0.1 percent to 10.0214 per dollar by 1:34 p.m. in Johannesburg, extending its monthly decline to 21 percent. It was the worst performer of the 16 major currencies monitored by Bloomberg, falling the most in October versus the yen. The Australian and New Zealand dollars had their steepest losses this month versus the U.S. currency since the mid-1980s.

Emerging-market currencies including Hungary's forint, the Chilean Peso and Brazil's real have weakened this past month as investors cut holdings of higher-yielding assets in favor of safer holdings such as U.S. Treasuries. The rand was the second- worst performing emerging-market currency monitored by Bloomberg this past month after the Turkish lira.

`Striking Weakness'

``The weakness in the rand isn't really surprising but the extent of the weakness against its emerging-market peers is quite striking,'' said Vallee. ``It's come under a lot of selling pressure.''

BNP Paribas is advising clients to keep ``buying dollars and selling rand,'' for at least the next week, Vallee said.

The currency of Africa's biggest economy slid versus the dollar and yen this month as interest-rate reductions in Asia, Europe and the U.S. were unable to prevent a global equities sell-off that erased more than $10 trillion of market value.

Stocks slipped in Europe and Asia today, extending the MSCI World Index's worst monthly slump on record. South Africa's FTSE/JSE Africa All Share Index fell for a fifth month, losing 14 percent, its biggest four-week drop since 1998.

Capital Outflows

Foreigners turned net sellers of almost 67 billion rand of South African stocks and bonds this year, data from its exchanges show. It relies on the inflows to finance its current-account deficit which is expected to reach 7.6 percent of gross domestic product this year, Finance Minister Trevor Manuel said Oct. 21.

``South Africa has a gaping current-account hole, which is a severe fundamental imbalance in the economy,'' said Bhanu Baweja, an emerging-markets currency strategist at UBS AG in London. ``It needs large flows of capital to finance its deficit and that's not going to happen when the world wants to hold capital rather than invest it.''

UBS recommends clients continue ``hedging for downside risk'' in the rand against the dollar, euro and yen. ``I think the rand will weaken further,'' said Baweja.

The rand also weakened this month as commodity prices fell, eroding prospects for earnings from exports. Commodities make up about half of South Africa's income from abroad, data from the Department of Minerals and Energy show.

Gold slid almost 17 percent this month, its biggest plunge since February 1983. Platinum, which rivals gold as the country's biggest export, fell 21 percent, its fourth monthly loss.

South Africa produces almost 80 percent of the world's platinum and about 10 percent of its gold, typically causing the rand to move in tandem with the metals' prices.

`Panic Selling'

Government bonds fell in October, with the yield on the 13.5 percent security due September 2015 adding 32 basis points to 9.17 percent. Yields move inversely to bond prices.

The rand slumped more than 28 percent in August 1985 after the then apartheid government declared a ``debt standstill,'' signaling its inability to repay foreign lenders. ``Panic selling'' of the rand forced the central bank to close its foreign-exchange market, according to the nation's treasury.

``It was an absolute disaster for the rand,'' according to Ian Cruickshanks, head of research at Nedbank Treasury in Johannesburg. ``Those were really dark times.''

To contact the reporter on this story: Garth Theunissen in Johannesburg gtheunissen@bloomberg.net





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Ruble Poised for Biggest Monthly Drop Against Dollar Since 1999

By Emma O'Brien

Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) -- Russia's ruble weakened against the dollar and headed for its biggest monthly decline in more than nine years as the global credit crunch reduced demand for emerging-market assets.

Investors took $72 billion out of Russia in October, according to BNP Paribas SA, sending the Micex Index 31 percent lower and pushing the yield on the 30-year government bond to a seven-year high. A decline in crude oil spurred banks such as Citigroup Inc. to predict the ruble will be devalued. Three- month dollar-to-ruble derivatives rose to the highest in 5 1/2 years as traders sought protection from currency volatility.

``Investors were in a total panic in October, and emerging- market currencies worldwide suffered,'' said Evgeniy Nadorshin, a senior economist at Trust Investment Bank in Moscow. ``People saw it as a global economic crisis, the end of the world, and they were trying to sell everything for dollars because it's seen as a safer haven.''

Russia's currency, which the central bank manages against a basket of dollars and euros, weakened 1 percent to 27.0840 per dollar at 2:58 p.m. in Moscow, from 26.8281, bringing its decline this month to 5.6 percent, the most since March 1999. It rose 0.4 percent to 34.5372 per euro, from 34.6572 yesterday, and is 4.7 percent stronger this month.

Bank Rossii, the central bank, buys and sells foreign- currency reserves to keep the ruble within a trading band against the basket. The mechanism comprises about 55 percent dollars and 45 percent euros and is used to protect the competitiveness of Russian exports from currency swings. The ruble was little changed against the basket at 30.3928 today, from 30.3512 yesterday and 30.3675 at the end of September.

Record Sales

The dollar strengthened against all but two of the 26 developing-nation currencies tracked by Bloomberg this month as the International Monetary Fund approved a lending program that almost doubles borrowing limits for emerging markets and waives demands for economic austerity measures.

Russia's government has pledged more than $200 billion to replenish liquidity and bolster companies as the nation experiences its worst financial crisis since it defaulted on $40 billion of sovereign debt in 1998. The Micex slipped 2.5 percent today, while the dollar-denominated RTS Index fell 0.2 percent, extending its October decline to 38 percent, the biggest monthly drop since August 1998.

Bank Rossii sold $40 billion throughout October to prevent the ruble from weakening beyond 30.40 to the basket, a monthly record, said Nadorshin, who predicts the ruble will be steady against the basket for the rest of the year. The 30.40 level is regarded by most analysts, including those at BNP and Citigroup, as the weaker end of the basket band. The central bank doesn't comment on its actions in the currency market.

Spooking Speculators

Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Danske Bank A/S and JPMorgan Chase & Co. joined Citigroup in forecasting the ruble may fall by as much as 5 percent versus the basket next year, as dropping oil prices erase Russia's $91.2 billion current-account surplus. Arkady Dvorkovich, an economic aide to President Dmitry Medvedev, said on Oct. 29 that devaluation ``won't happen,'' echoing Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin's comments last week.

The central bank declined for a second day to offer currency swaps, in which traders are permitted to bet on the exchange rate without having to sell rubles upfront. Bank Rossii warned banks yesterday against increasing the amount of foreign exchange they hold above the average level held from Aug. 1 to Oct. 25, according to a statement on its Web site.

Bonds Advance

Net capital outflow from Russia was $26 billion last month because of ``the growth of the banking sector's net foreign assets,'' central-bank chief Sergey Ignatiev told lawmakers. The real rate, which measures the ruble against the currencies of its 18 major trading partners adjusted for inflation, may rise as much as 4.5 percent this year, Ignatiev said. The bank will allow a ``more flexible'' ruble, he added.

Three-month non-deliverable forward contracts, used by traders to speculate on the currency, had the ruble at 29.83 per dollar today, near the weakest since April, 2003. NDFs are contracts used to fix a currency at a particular level at a future date. They are employed by companies seeking to protect against foreign-exchange fluctuations.

The benchmark 7.5 percent dollar-denominated security maturing in 2030 yielded 10.15 percent, up 2 basis point, or 0.02 percentage point, from yesterday, and up 293 points in October. The yield on the 8.25 percent note due in 2010 gained 7 basis points today and 68 points in the month to 6.44 percent. Bond yields move inversely to prices.

To contact the reporter on this story: Emma O'Brien in Moscow at eobrien6@bloomberg.net





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Pound Is Set for Biggest Monthly Drop Since 1992 as Slump Looms

By Agnes Lovasz and Lukanyo Mnyanda

Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) -- The pound fell versus the dollar, heading for the biggest monthly decline in 16 years, after a report showed U.K. consumer confidence slumped in October.

The U.K. currency snapped a three-day gain against the dollar after an index of sentiment slid to minus 36, close to the weakest level since at least 1974, GfK NOP said today in a report. A gauge of consumer willingness to make major purchases dropped 11 points to minus 42, the lowest since the series began the same year, as a recession in Britain looms.

``The U.K. is in the epicenter of the crisis,'' said Lee Hardman, a currency strategist in London at Bank of Tokyo- Mitsubishi Ltd. ``The Bank of England are now in a position to aggressively ease monetary policy going forward. The removal of the interest-rate support will further undermine the pound from already depressed levels.''

The pound dropped to $1.6155 as of 10:36 a.m. in London, from $1.6451 yesterday. The U.K. currency, higher in the week, is down 9.3 percent since Sept. 30, the steepest monthly decline since 1992. Against the euro, the British currency fell to 78.80 pence, rising for a fourth day, and was poised for a second monthly gain.

The pound will fall to $1.40 in the next six month and trade as low as 81-82 pence versus the euro, Harman predicts.

House prices fell from a year earlier by the most since at least 1991 this month as banks tightened their grip on credit, Nationwide Building Society said yesterday.

Policy makers will probably lower the benchmark interest rate by a half point to 4 percent next week, after they voted for an emergency cut on Oct. 8 to save the financial system from collapse, economists say.

The yield difference between two-year and 10-year government notes widened to the most in 12 years as investors favored shorter-dated securities on expectations the Bank of England will lower interest rates as early as next week to support economic growth.

The yield difference, or spread, increased 3 basis points, to 152 basis points today, to the most since September 1996.

U.K. government bonds gained, snapping four days of declines, pushing the yield on the 10-year gilt down 1 basis points to 4.43 percent. The 5 percent security maturing in March 2018 rose 0.07, or 70 pence per 1,000-pound ($1,618) face mount, to 104.34. The yield on the two-year note dropped 3 basis point to 2.92 percent. Bond yields move inversely to prices.

To contact the reporters on this story: Agnes Lovasz in London at alovasz@bloomberg.net; Lukanyo Mnyanda in London at lmnyanda@bloomberg.net





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Canada's Dollar Falls the Most Since at Least 1950 on Oil, Gold

By Chris Fournier

Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) -- Canada's currency fell and is poised for its worst monthly performance in almost six decades as commodities including oil, natural gas and gold slumped.

The Canadian dollar weakened 13 percent in October, the most since at least 1950, according to Bloomberg and Bank of Canada data. Crude oil, which accounts for 21 percent of the weighting in the central bank's Commodity Price Index, has weakened 37 percent this month.

``This was a month when paradigms were reassessed,'' said David Watt, a senior currency strategist at RBC Capital Markets in Toronto. ``We were part of the global growth story over the past few years and now that's taking on water quickly. Commodity prices are getting buried and the Canadian dollar is getting hammered.''

The Canadian dollar depreciated by as much as 3 percent to C$1.2378 per U.S. dollar, from C$1.2003 yesterday. It last traded at C$1.2261 at 8:02 a.m. in Toronto. One Canadian dollar buys 81.56 U.S. cents.

The currency pared its monthly loss this week, rising 4.2 percent. Watt predicts Canada's dollar will weaken to C$1.30.

To contact the reporter on this story: Chris Fournier in Montreal at cfournier3@bloomberg.net



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Brazilian Real Heads For Biggest Weekly Increase In Nine Years

By Adriana Brasileiro

Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) -- Brazil's real headed for its biggest weekly gain in nine years as the central bank stepped up efforts to shore up the currency and investor aversion to emerging- market assets eased.

The real traded at 2.1060 per U.S. dollar at 8:24 a.m. in New York, from 2.1050 yesterday. It has gained 9.75 percent so far this week, the biggest increase since the currency surged 12 percent in February 1999. The real is down 26 percent from a nine-year high of 1.5545per dollar reached on Aug. 1.

``We seem to have left the intensive care unit this week,'' said Reginaldo Galhardo, currency trading manager at Treviso Corretora de Cambio in Sao Paulo. ``Volatility will remain high through the end of the year and the real still lacks clear trading parameters.''

Brazil's central bank has been offering currency swaps daily to add liquidity to the local currency market and bought reais through repurchase agreements. The Federal Reserve agreed on Oct. 30 to provide $30 billion each to the central banks of Brazil, Mexico, South Korea and Singapore, expanding its effort to unfreeze money markets to emerging nations for the first time.

Banco Central do Brasil has also announced measures to unlock credit markets, such as imposing a limit of 30 percent on the amount of time-deposit reserves banks can use to buy government bonds. The move is aimed at boosting purchases of loan portfolios from faltering lenders. The government also freed more funds for farm lending.

The yield on Brazil's zero-coupon bond due in January 2010 rose 24 basis points, or 0.24 percentage point, today to 15.89 percent, according to Banco Votorantim.

The yield on Brazil's overnight futures contract for January 2009 delivery fell 22 basis points to 13.81 percent.

To contact the reporter on this story: Adriana Brasileiro in Rio de Janeiro at abrasileiro@bloomberg.net



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Yen, Dollar Head for Record Monthly Gains on Slumping Economy

By Ye Xie and Lukanyo Mnyanda

Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) -- The yen and the dollar rose against the euro and headed for record monthly gains as signs of a global recession led investors to take refuge.

Japan's currency also advanced after the Bank of Japan lowered the target lending rate by 0.2 percentage point to 0.3 percent. The euro fell as inflation in the 15 nations that share the currency slowed to the lowest since January, making it easier for the European Central Bank to lower borrowing costs.

``There's decent dollar repatriation, and you cannot fight the flows,'' said Steven Butler, director of foreign-exchange trading in Toronto at Scotia Capital Inc., a unit of Canada's third-biggest bank. ``I cannot remember any time that we had so much volatility and illiquidity.''

The yen climbed 2.2 percent to 124.49 per euro at 8:34 a.m. in New York, from 127.31 yesterday. The yen increased 0.9 percent to 97.74 against the dollar from 98.61. The dollar rose 1.4 percent to $1.2743 versus the euro from $1.2915.

Japan's currency has risen 17 percent against the euro in October, the biggest monthly gain since the European currency's introduction in 1999. The dollar has increased a record 10.6 percent versus the euro. The greenback is down 7.8 percent against the yen, the biggest decline since 1998, when hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management LP collapsed.

Against the Australian dollar, the yen advanced 4.8 percent to 64.24, heading for a 31 percent gain this month. It also rose 3.1 percent to 56.63 versus the New Zealand dollar, and is up 25.6 percent in October.

Carry Trades

The Japanese currency is popular in carry trades, in which purchases of higher-yielding assets are funded in nations with lower rates. The BOJ lowered its benchmark rate from 0.5 percent today. Key borrowing costs are 6 percent in Australia and 6.5 percent in New Zealand.

BOJ Governor Masaaki Shirakawa told a press briefing that the Japanese economy had clearly worsened this month and that three dissenters had wanted a quarter-point cut. One favored no reduction and four voted for the move.

``The reluctance of the BoJ to join the more aggressive moves of the Fed has hit risk appetite,'' analysts led by Hans- Guenter Redeker, London-based global head of currency strategy at BNP Paribas SA, wrote in a client note. The move suggests the Japanese central bank ``is nowhere near ready to introduce quantitative easing steps.''

Volatility implied by dollar-yen options expiring in one month, a measure of expectations for future currency moves, fell to 31.75 percent today from 35.38 percent at the end of last week. It reached 41.79 percent on Oct. 24, the highest since Bloomberg began compiling data in December 1995.

Weaker Pound

The pound weakened 1.7 percent to $1.6165 after London- based researcher GfK NOP Ltd. said U.K. consumer confidence in October fell toward the lowest since at least 1974. It has dropped 9.2 percent this month, the biggest since investor George Soros drove sterling out of Europe's system of linked exchange rates in 1992.

The Bank of England will lower benchmark rates by a half- point to 4 percent when it announces its next decision on Nov. 6, according to a Bloomberg survey of 30 economists.

``We remain concerned about the British pound given the deteriorating economic outlook in the U.K., and recent signals from the BOE suggest scope for more aggressive easing than previously,'' wrote New York-based Sophia Drossos, a strategist at Morgan Stanley in a research note yesterday.

The Federal Reserve reduced the target lending rate by a half-percentage point to 1 percent on Oct. 29, the lowest since June 2004 and matching the level during the Eisenhower administration in the late 1950s. Central banks in China, Taiwan, Hong Kong and the Middle East also cut borrowing costs this week as policy makers race to avert a global recession.

The euro stayed lower as inflation in the countries sharing the currency eased to 3.2 percent in October from 3.6 percent the month before, matching the median of 27 economists in a Bloomberg News survey.

ECB Rate

The ECB participated in a coordinated interest-rate reduction by global central banks on Oct. 8 to prevent the collapse of the global financial system, reducing its benchmark rate by half a point to 3.75 percent.

Policy makers meet Nov. 6, when they will probably cut the region's main refinancing rate by half a percentage point to 3.25 percent, according to a Bloomberg survey of 26 economists.

Spending by U.S. consumers dropped more than forecast in September, capping its weakest quarter in three decades and signaling the economy will continue to slump in coming months.

The 0.3 percent decrease in purchases was the biggest in four years and followed no change in August, the Commerce Department said today in Washington. The Federal Reserve's preferred measure of inflation cooled.

To contact the reporters on this story: Ye Xie in New York at yxie6@bloomberg.net; Lukanyo Mnyanda in London at lmnyanda@bloomberg.net





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Copper May Fall as U.S. Economy Loses More Jobs, Survey Shows

By Claudia Carpenter

Oct. 31 (Bloomberg) -- Copper may drop next week on a slumping economy in the U.S., the second largest user of the metal.

Thirteen of 29 analysts, investors and traders surveyed by Bloomberg yesterday and Oct. 29 said copper will decline. Eleven expected a gain and five were neutral. Copper for delivery in three months on the London Metal Exchange has gained 3.6 percent this week, heading for the biggest weekly jump since Aug. 22.

U.S. employers this month probably slashed 175,000 jobs, the median of 25 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News showed. That would be the most jobs cut since March 2003. The Labor Department report is set for release on Nov. 7. China is the largest buyer of copper used in housing and power plants.

This week's survey results: Bullish: 11 Bearish: 13 Neutral: 5

To contact the reporter on this story: Claudia Carpenter in London at ccarpenter2@bloomberg.net



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