Economic Calendar

Sunday, November 30, 2008

Microsoft Backs New Yahoo Search Team, The Sunday Times Reports

By Caroline Binham

Nov. 30 (Bloomberg) -- Microsoft Corp. is backing a new management team to take control of Yahoo Inc.’s search business following its failed takeover attempt, the Sunday Times of London reported.

Microsoft will put up $5 billion to back Jonathan Miller, the former chief executive officer of AOL and Ross Levinsohn, a former president of Fox Interactive Media, the newspaper reported, without saying where it got the information.

The duo would seek to raise an additional $5 billion from institutional investors to buy a stake of over 30 percent in Yahoo, the Sunday Times said. The terms would give Microsoft a 10-year operating agreement to manage Yahoo’s search business, plus a two-year option to buy it for $20 billion.

Senior directors of the two companies have agreed the outline of the deal, the newspaper said without citing anyone.

A call to Microsoft’s press office in Portland, Oregon, by Bloomberg News outside office hours wasn’t immediately returned. An e-mail and phone call outside office hours to Emily Fox, a Sunnyvale, California-based spokeswoman for Yahoo, wasn’t immediately returned.

To contact the reporter on this story: Caroline Binham in London at cbinham@bloomberg.net





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Kuwait Telecommunications to Start Commercial Operations Dec. 3

By Fiona MacDonald

Nov. 30 (Bloomberg) -- Kuwait Telecommunications Co., licensed to be the Gulf state’s third mobile-phone company, will start commercial operations Dec. 3.

The company, also known as Viva, will enter the market “as a non-traditional Kuwaiti telecommunications company,” it said today in an e-mailed statement.

Viva Chief Executive Officer Najeeb al-Awadi said Sept. 28 the company aims to capture 10 percent of the market share in Kuwait, or 300,000 subscribers, in its first year of operations.

Demand for shares in Viva was three times the number sold to the Kuwaiti public in an initial public offering that ended Sept. 18. The company sold 250 million shares, or 50 percent, in the IPO. Saudi Telecom Co. holds a 26 percent stake in Viva and the Kuwaiti government 24 percent.

To contact the reporter on this story: Fiona MacDonald in Kuwait FmacDonald4@bloomberg.net





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Omantel Group Qualified to Bid for Iran’s Third Mobile License

By Arif Sharif

Nov. 30 (Bloomberg) -- Oman Telecommunications Co., the biggest phone operator in the Persian Gulf country, won preliminary approval to bid for Iran’s third mobile license.

Omantel, as the company is called, is part of a group that has now qualified for the second stage of the bid process in Iran, the company said in a statement to the Muscat bourse today.

To contact the reporter on this story: Arif Sharif in Dubai at asharif2@bloomberg.net





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Morgan Stanley Cuts Jobs at Its Dubai Regional Office

By Arif Sharif

Nov. 30 (Bloomberg) -- Morgan Stanley reduced its workforce at its regional hub in the Dubai International Financial Centre, joining others in the emirate who have cut jobs to manage the impact of the global credit crisis.

The bank cut 10 to 15 jobs last week from more than 110 at its office, Georges Makhoul, Morgan Stanley’s managing director for the Middle East and North Africa, said today in an e-mailed response to questions from Bloomberg News.

“We have no intention at all to redefine our presence here as it is strategic,” he said. The reductions were not made in any particular area or level, he added.

Nakheel, the state-owned developer planning a kilometer- high tower in Dubai, cut its workforce by 15 percent, or 500 jobs, as the company tries to limit the impact from the global financial crisis, it said today in an e-mailed statement.

To contact the reporter on this story: Arif Sharif in Dubai at asharif2@bloomberg.net





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Arabtec Board Approves Bonus Share Offer to Double Capital

By Shaji Mathew

Nov. 30 (Bloomberg) -- Arabtec Holding Co., the construction company building the world’s tallest tower in Dubai, plans to offer one bonus share for each existing share to double its capital.

Arabtec board approved plans to increase the Dubai-based company’s capital to 1.2 billion dirhams ($326 million) from 598 million dirhams, the company said today in a statement on the Dubai bourse Web site.

To contact the reporter on this story: Shaji Mathew in Dubai at shajimathew@bloomberg.net



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Gulf Shares Advance on Global Bailouts; Arabtec, Omantel Gain

By Haris Anwar

Nov. 30 (Bloomberg) -- Gulf shares gained, tracking the global markets, on speculation government bailouts will shore up the global economy and attract investors into the region.

Arabtec Holding Co., the construction company building the world’s tallest tower in Dubai, rose to the highest in almost three weeks after it offered one bonus share for each existing share. Emirates Telecommunications Corp., the United Arab Emirates’ biggest telephone company, advancing for a second day, while Oman Telecommunications Co. rose to the highest since Nov. 11.

The Dubai Financial Market General Index gained 1.9 percent to 1,964.66, advancing 8.3 percent in the past four trading sessions. The Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange General Index advanced 2 percent to 2,775.85, while the Kuwait Stock Exchange Index rose 1.7 percent.

“We’re seeing some shifts in sentiments globally,” said Chamel Fahmy, senior regional sales trader at Beltone Securities Brokerage in Dubai. “Our markets are following that trend. I think there is still 200 points upside in the Dubai market.”

The S&P 500 gained more than 12 percent in the past week, its best weekly performance since 1974, after China cut interest rates and the Federal Reserve committed $800 billion to help resuscitate lending markets, boosting speculation government action will pull the global economy out of recession.

Nakheel Effect

The Dubai index, which surged as much as 6.3 percent, pared gains after the state-owned developer Nakheel PJSC cut its workforce by 15 percent as the company scaled back some of its projects because of the global financial crisis. Nakheel is the developer of palm tree-shaped islands off the emirate’s coast. The company in October announced plans to construct a kilometer- high tower in Dubai.

Dubai is bracing for a slowdown in the property market as economic growth slumps, reducing demand for real estate. Emaar Properties PJSC, the Middle East’s largest real-estate developer, said Nov. 13 it’s reviewing recruitment policies as the global financial crisis squeezes credit facilities and slows the regional property market.

Oman’s Muscat Securities Market 30 Index rose 2.3 percent, while Qatar’s DSM 20 Index increased 6.1 percent. The Bahrain All Share Index added 1.2 percent. Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul All Share Index dropped 2.2 percent to 4,738.14.

Arabtec Gains

Arabtec surged 2 percent to 4.55 dirhams, its highest since Nov. 10. Arabtec’s board approved plans to increase the Dubai- based company’s capital to 1.2 billion dirhams ($326 million) from 598 million dirhams. Emirates Telecommunications, or Etisalat, rose 0.8 percent to 12.45 dirhams.

Oman Telecom, the biggest phone company in the Persian Gulf country, gained 3.2 percent to 1.731 rials after saying it was part of a group that qualified for the second stage of the mobile-phone license bid process in Iran.

The following stocks also rose or fell in the region. Stock symbols are in parentheses after company names.

Kuwait Projects Co. Holding K.S.C. (KPROJ KK), the country’s largest non-state-owned investment company, gained 6.4 percent to 670 fils after it repaid a 200 million-euro ($254 million) medium-term note due this month.

Qatar Telecom QSC (QTEL QD), the telecommunications firm that seeks to control PT Indosat, rose 3.3 percent to 127.1 riyals after the operator agreed to pay its original offer price for more shares in Indonesia’s second-largest telephone company.

Qatar International Islamic Bank (QIIK QD), the emirate’s second-largest bank complying with Muslim law, climbed 9.7 percent to 48.6 riyals after the bank said it may buy back 10 percent of its shares after a board meeting Dec. 14.

To contact the reporter on this story: Haris Anwar in Dubai on hanwar2@bloomberg.net.





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Japan Bond Sales to Exceed $314 Billion Next Year, Nikkei Says

By Toru Fujioka

Nov. 30 (Bloomberg) -- Japanese government bond sales will probably exceed 30 trillion yen ($314 billion) for a second straight year in the 12 months starting April 2009 as corporate tax revenue declines, Nikkei English News reported.

Japan’s tax receipts may fall short of the government’s estimate by about 6 trillion yen ($63 billion), the Asahi newspaper reported earlier this month.

Falling tax revenue and an increase in spending to stimulate growth will make it difficult to achieve the goal of balancing the budget by 2011, though it remains a “necessary first step” toward cutting Japan’s debt, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said last week.

Japan’s public debt at central and local governments will reach 778 trillion yen by March 2009, according to the finance ministry. The OECD estimates the debt stands at more than 1.7 times the economy’s gross domestic product, the highest ratio among the group’s 30 member countries.

To contact the reporter on this story: Toru Fujioka in Tokyo at tfujioka1@bloomberg.net





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Mitsui Taps Fed Program to Get Low-Interest Funds, Nikkei Says

By Toru Fujioka

Nov. 30 (Bloomberg) -- Mitsui & Co., Japan’s second-biggest trading house, is the nation’s first firm to apply for borrowing through the Federal Reserve’s commercial paper purchase program, the Nikkei newspaper reported.

Mitsui applied to the program to secure stable funding at low interest after the borrowing rate rose about 2 percentage points in September because of the impact of the global financial crisis, Nikkei reported, without saying where it got the information.

Mitsui has sold about 50 billion yen ($523 million) of commercial paper a year in the U.S. through a subsidiary, according to the report.

To contact the reporter on this story: Toru Fujioka in Tokyo at tfujioka1@bloomberg.net





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Chidambaram Is New Home Minister, Singh Keeps Finance

By Bibhudatta Pradhan and Pratik Parija

Nov. 30 (Bloomberg) -- Palaniappan Chidambaram took over as India's home minister, replacing Shivraj Patil, who resigned today after owning moral responsibility for the worst terrorist attack in the nation in 15 years.

The attacks in Mumbai, which began on Nov. 26 at two luxury hotels, a railway terminal and a building housing a Jewish center, lasted until yesterday morning, leaving 195 people dead.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh appointed a new home minister after Patil was criticized by opposition parties and others for intelligence and operational failures, apart from decision- making delays, in tackling this and other terrorist attacks in India. About 300 people have died this year in India as bombs have exploded in markets, mosques, bus stations and theaters, with most of the attacks still unsolved.

The new appointment was announced by the president of India in a press release issued in New Delhi. The finance portfolio will be held by Prime Minister Singh, President Pratibha Patil's office said. Singh, a former central bank governor, has served as finance minister before and is credited with starting India's economic-reform program in 1991.

Chidambaram, finance minister since 2004, when Prime Minister Singh's government came to power, will take over the home ministry after having steered India's economy through record growth.

With general elections due by May, the current government won't present a full-fledged budget in February for the next financial year, which starts April 1.

Home Ministry Experience

The new home minister has previous experience of the ministry. He served as junior minister for internal security from 1986 to 1989 under the late prime minister Rajiv Gandhi.

Chidambaram and Reserve Bank of India Governor Duvvuri Subbarao have been seeking to loosen fiscal and monetary policy to shore up growth in Asia's third-biggest economy and unlock a credit freeze that took hold in September.

Economic growth in the year to March 31 will slow to 7-8 percent because of the financial turmoil before rebounding to 9 percent in the following year, Chidambaram has said.

Chidambaram has been a key member of the administration's economic team, along with Prime Minister Singh and Montek Singh Ahluwalia, deputy chairman of the Planning Commission.

To contact the reporter on this story: Pratik Parija in New Delhi at pparija@bloomberg.net.





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India’s Home Minister Patil Quits Over Mumbai Terror Attacks

By Bibhudatta Pradhan and Vipin Nair

Nov. 30 (Bloomberg) -- India’s Home Minister Shivraj Patil resigned today, taking “moral” responsibility after the terrorist attacks in Mumbai that killed 195 people, the deadliest such assault in the country in 15 years.

Patil was criticized by opposition parties and others for intelligence and operational failures, apart from decision-making delays, in tackling this and other terrorist attacks in India. About 300 people have died this year in India as bombs have exploded in markets, mosques, bus stations and theaters, with most of the attacks still unsolved.

The resignation has been submitted to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s office, M. Veerappa Moily, a spokesman for the ruling Congress party, said by telephone. The minister offered his resignation on “moral grounds,” said R.K. Khatri, Patil’s personal assistant in a phone interview. A replacement for Patil hasn’t been announced.

The Mumbai terrorist attacks, which began on Nov. 26 at two luxury hotels, a railway terminal and a building housing a Jewish center, lasted until yesterday morning.

The attacks on India’s financial hub may stall the peace process with Pakistan as Foreign Minister Pranab Mukherjee has held elements from the predominantly Muslim neighbor responsible.

India may halt talks with its neighbor and suspend a five- year-old cease-fire on the Line of Control that separates the two sides in Kashmir, NDTV reported today. It may also boost troops on the Kashmir border and suspend rail and air links with Pakistan, NDTV said.

FBI-Style Agency

Singh is seeking support for a crime-fighting agency modeled on the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation.

Singh has called a meeting this evening in New Delhi with all the political parties in parliament to discuss the measures. In Washington yesterday, President George W. Bush pledged U.S. help to investigate the assault.

“The killers who struck this week are brutal and violent, but terror will not have the final word,” Bush said yesterday as he returned to the White House after spending the Thanksgiving Day holiday at Camp David in Maryland. India “can count on the world’s oldest democracy to stand by their side.”

The 60-hour siege puts a spotlight on security. P.R.S. Oberoi, chairman of the Oberoi Group that owns one of the hotels, urged the government to let businesses defend themselves.

“Their intention was to kill as many people as possible and do as much damage as possible,” Oberoi said of the terrorists. “It takes a long, long time for even one person to be armed. I wanted a security person for me, and it took nearly a year.”

Pakistani Elements

Mukherjee said on Nov. 28 elements from Pakistan, which has fought three wars with India, were behind the attacks. Pakistani Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi challenged India to provide evidence of a link.

Singh yesterday met with chiefs of defense services and intelligence agencies after the opposition Bharatiya Janata Party blamed his government for doing too little, according to the Press Trust of India, which quoted BJP leader L. K. Advani as criticizing the government’s “non-serious approach.”

President-elect Barack Obama, briefed by Bush during the siege, called Singh Nov. 28 to offer condolences and said “he would be monitoring the situation closely,” Nick Shapiro, an Obama spokesman, said in an e-mailed statement yesterday.

Nine Attackers Killed

Vilasrao Deshmukh, chief minister of Maharashtra state, of which Mumbai is the capital, said nine of the 10 attackers were killed. More than 295 people were injured, M.L. Kumawat, secretary of internal security at the Home Ministry, told reporters in New Delhi yesterday. S. Jadhav, an official at the city’s disaster management unit, put the death toll at 195.

The Times of India, the nation’s biggest newspaper, reported the death toll could be the highest from a terrorist attack in the country. The figure may surpass the death toll of 257 in a series of bomb blasts in Mumbai in 1993, it said.

The indiscriminate killing of businessmen and tourists in five-star hotels marks an escalation in India’s battle against Islamic extremism.

The Oberoi Group had tightened security after the Islamabad Marriott hotel was bombed in September and will seek a meeting among all hoteliers and state and national governments to review security, P.R.S. Oberoi said.

Ratan Tata, the head of the Tata Group, which owns the Taj Mahal Palace and Tower Hotel in Mumbai, said there had been warning of a possible terrorist attack, following which security measures had been put in place.

Taj Curbs

The entry curbs, which were relaxed before the attacks, wouldn’t have stopped the attacks, he said.

“It’s ironic that we did have such a warning and we did have some measures,” which included metal detectors and restricted parking, Tata told CNN’s Fareed Zakaria in an interview posted on the broadcaster’s Web site today. “If I look at what we had, which all of us complained about, it could not have stopped what took place.”

Security forces recovered four AK-47s, 55 magazines and four pistols from the Trident-Oberoi hotel complex and Nariman House, Kumawat said. The authorities have yet to compile a list of arms recovered from the Taj Mahal Hotel, he said.

Six Americans died, U.S. Ambassador David Mulford said in New Delhi. More U.S. citizens are missing. Gavriel Holtzberg, the 29-year-old rabbi who ran the Chabad mission in Mumbai, and his wife Rivka, 28, were among five people killed after gunmen raided the five-story Chabad House synagogue. Rabbi Leibish Teitelbaum, a Brooklyn native, was also killed, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg said in a statement.

Foreigners Killed

The attacks killed three Germans, one Japanese, two Canadians and a Briton, chief minister Deshmukh said. Two Australians died and more may have been killed, Foreign Minister Stephen Smith said. Two French nationals died, President Nicolas Sarkozy said.

“No cause can make this acceptable, none, ever,” Sarkozy told reporters in Doha at a United Nations conference. “It’s barbarism.”

Indian forces yesterday combed the Taj Mahal hotel for unexploded devices and weapons after a shootout with three militants ended the siege. The ground floor of the 565-room hotel was flooded and strewn with debris after militants fought special forces in gun and grenade battles.

The terrorists held out because they knew the layout of the century-old hotel and were well trained in explosives and guns, authorities said.

Deccan Mujahedeen

A little-known Islamist group, the Deccan Mujahedeen, claimed responsibility for this week’s shootings and explosions across the western coastal city, Indian Home Ministry official Kumawat said.

The attackers began planning their assaults six months ago, India’s NDTV reported, citing an account from a captured terrorist. A seized global positioning system showed some of the group left Karachi, Pakistan, as early as Nov. 12, NDTV said.

Ten terrorists plotted the attacks for a year, the U.K.’s Sunday Telegraph reported, citing the police interrogation report of a person thought to be a member of the group. The terrorists were dedicated to fighting for an independent Kashmir, the disputed region claimed by India and Pakistan.

The group reached Mumbai in three speedboats from India’s Gujarat region after arriving in one boat from Karachi, the Mumbai Mirror said.

Lashkar, Jaish

Lashkar-i-Taiba or Jaish-i-Muhammad, two Muslim extremist terrorist groups from Pakistan that have attacked India in the past, may be involved, MSNBC reported on its Web site, citing unidentified analysts and counterterrorism officials. The groups are linked to violence in the disputed Kashmir region.

U.S. intelligence and counterterrorism officials said evidence in the past two days points to Lashkar-i-Taiba as being responsible, the New York Times reported. The group has a “maritime capability” and could mount a sophisticated operation in Mumbai, the Times reported, citing counterterrorism officials it didn’t identify.

“We came up against highly motivated terrorists,” Vice- Admiral J.S. Bedi, whose commandos led the assault against the militants, said in televised comments.

India will “go after” individuals and organizations behind the attacks, which were “well-planned with external linkages,” Singh said in a televised address, without identifying nations. “We will take the strongest possible measures to ensure that there is no repetition of such terrorist acts,” Singh said on Nov. 27 in his address to the nation.

To contact the reporters on this story: Bibhudatta Pradhan in New Delhi at bpradhan@bloomberg.net. Vipin V. Nair in Mumbai at vnair12@bloomberg.net;





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Hong Kong Job Vacancies Fall 20% in November, Morning Post Says

By Kelvin Wong

Nov. 30 (Bloomberg) -- The number of daily job vacancies in Hong Kong fell nearly 20 percent in November from a month earlier, the South China Morning Post reported, citing an official from the government’s Labor Department.

The number of jobs available each day in the city fell to about 2,300 last week from 2,800, the Hong Kong-based newspaper cited Assistant Labor Commissioner Stanley Ng as saying.

To contact the reporter on this story: Kelvin Wong in Hong Kong at kwong40@bloomberg.net





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Nakheel Cuts Workforce by 15% to Limit Financial-Crisis Impact

By Glen Carey

Nov. 30 (Bloomberg) -- Nakheel PJSC, the state-owned developer planning a kilometer-high tower in Dubai, has cut its workforce by 15 percent as the company tries to limit the impact from the global financial crisis.

The Dubai-based developer announced the loss of 500 jobs in an e-mailed statement today.

“We have the responsibility to adjust our short term business plans to accommodate the current global environment,” the company said in the statement. “The redundancies are indeed regrettable, but a necessity dictated by operational requirements which are in turn dependent on demand.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Glen Carey in Dubai at gcarey8@bloomberg.net.





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OPEC Defers Decision on Output Cut, Seeks $75 Oil

By Maher Chmaytelli and Ayesha Daya

Nov. 30 (Bloomberg) -- OPEC deferred a decision on reducing production this year by two weeks to gauge the impact of earlier cuts, as it seeks to push oil prices back up to $75 a barrel.

Crude has dropped 62 percent from July’s record of $147.27 a barrel as the global recession erodes sales. Ali al-Naimi, the oil minister of Saudi Arabia, OPEC’s largest exporter and its de facto leader, said yesterday that $75 a barrel represents a “fair price” needed to support investment in new fields.

OPEC, which accounts for more than 40 percent of the world’s supply, will next meet in Oran, Algeria, on Dec. 17. In a statement after yesterday’s meeting in Cairo, the group warned demand will be “much lower” than expected a month ago. The cost of crude has continued to slide even after the group agreed last month to lower production by 1.5 million barrels a day.

“The way demand data continues to come out, especially from the U.S., suggests that they will have to cut,” said Raja Kiwan, a Dubai-based analyst at consultant PFC Energy.

Compliance with existing supply quotas is “not good enough,” based on current forecasts, said OPEC Secretary General Abdalla El-Badri. He also urged non-OPEC members Russia, Mexico and Norway to restrain supply, as they did a decade ago when prices slumped toward $10 a barrel.

The 11 OPEC states subject to output quotas will produce 27.8 million barrels a day in November, according to Geneva- based consultant PetroLogistics Ltd., in excess of their official limit of 27.3 million barrels a day.

‘Additional Action’

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries pledged to take any “additional action” needed to stabilize the market in Oran, according to Chakib Khelil, the group’s president. Asked if OPEC would seek to lower output in Algeria, al-Naimi replied: “A cut is possible, we will have to see.” A reduction would not be needed if members achieve 80 percent compliance with last month’s agreed cuts, al-Naimi told Al Hayat newspaper.

The Saudi oil minister said there was a “good logic” for $75-a-barrel, backing earlier comments from Saudi King Abdullah who told Kuwaiti newspaper Al-Seyassah that this represents a “fair price.” Crude for January delivery traded at $54.43 a barrel in New York on Nov. 28.

OPEC abandoned an official price target almost four years ago and ministers’ expectations have changed throughout 2008 as crude rallied to a record $150 in New York in July, then fell below $50 this month. Ministers from Venezuela, Iraq, Algeria and Nigeria also said yesterday oil should cost at least $75.

Outside Help

Producers and drillers from Exxon Mobil Corp. to BP Plc are already suffering from falling prices. OPEC’s export revenue will be $979 billion in 2008, 9.6 percent less than expected a month ago, because of sinking crude prices, the U.S. Energy Department forecasts.

El-Badri called for outside help to halt the plunge in prices. “All non-OPEC should come and help, it is a big burden for OPEC,” he told reporters. As well as Russia, “the ones we know that have the capability to cut are Norway and Mexico.”

Russia’s energy minister is expected to attend the Algeria meeting, El-Badri said. His plea for help elsewhere may fall on deaf ears after Norway, the world’s fifth-biggest oil exporter, ruled out production cuts earlier this month. “I don’t see any scenarios with regards to that,” Norwegian Oil Minister Terje Riis-Johansen said in a Nov. 18 interview.

OPEC will likely lower supplies before the end of the year, according to 18 of 21 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg last week. About half of those thought an accord would be made in Cairo, while others expected a decision later. Twelve predicted the reduction will be at least 1 million barrels a day, more than is pumped by Qatar.

Cairo Meeting

Venezuelan Energy and Oil Minister Rafael Ramirez said after yesterday’s “consultative” meeting in Cairo that OPEC will still need to cut production by at least 1 million barrels a day by the end of the year.

OPEC called ministers together in Cairo yesterday rather than wait until its next scheduled December conference in Algeria, as the slowing world economy reduced global consumption faster than expected. In September, the group urged greater compliance with existing output limits.

The Cairo meeting, originally intended just for ministers from Arab nations, was expanded into a full meeting for all OPEC members, including countries like Venezuela, Iran and Angola.

OPEC members have a balancing act to perform as they strive to boost prices without overreacting in terms of production cuts and being blamed for exacerbating the economic slowdown.

Demand for oil may fall for the first time since 1983 next year, Merrill Lynch & Co. said, as the U.S., Europe and Japan face their first simultaneous recession since World War II.

Jakarta Meeting

Eleven years ago, OPEC members bickered over quotas as prices slid 28 percent in 10 months amid the onset of the Asian financial crisis. At a meeting in Jakarta in November 1997, they raised quotas, even as economic turmoil in Asia was slowing demand and prices fell another 44 percent by December 1998 to a low of $10.35 in New York.

OPEC’s 13 member nations include Algeria, Angola, Ecuador, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Libya, Nigeria, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates and Venezuela. Indonesia is expected to leave the group at the end of the year.

To contact the reporter on this story: Maher Chmaytelli in Cairo at mchmaytelli@bloomberg.netAyesha Daya in Cairo at adaya1@bloomberg.net





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Gillard Says Government Will Update ABC Strategy This Week

By Gemma Daley

Nov. 30 (Bloomberg) -- Australia’s government will this week update its strategy for ABC Learning Centres Ltd., the Brisbane-based child-care operator seized by lenders this month, Education Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Julia Gillard said.

ABC will review a third of its operations, covering more than 30,000 children, receiver McGrathNicol & Partners said on Nov. 26. All centers will remain open until the end of 2008 and 656 operations will continue into the new year as some 386 centers will be reviewed.

“As this week unfolds, we will be in a better position as the receiver makes more information available,” Gillard told Ten Network television’s Meet the Press program today.

ABC Learning, which looks after one in three Australian children in daycare at 1,042 centers, was seized after the credit crisis drove up its interest payments. The company, which looks after about 110,000 children, will have financing from its lenders to continue trading into 2009, receiver McGrathNicol & Partners said last week.

Australia’s federal government on Nov. 7 pledged A$22 million ($14 million) to keep ABC Learning’s centers open until at least Dec. 31.

“We are trying to lobby the government to extend the closures until April 2009,” Amanda White, a mother of one whose daughter attends an ABC center in the Perth suburb of Madora Bay, said in an e-mail. “Our center is one that will be closing, there is not enough time to find a suitable buyer for our center and have all the paperwork completed to allow the center to remain open with the same staff and have no effect on our children.”

ABC has A$1.66 billion in liabilities in Australia, creditors were told Nov. 18. There are no redundancy plans for workers at ABC Learning and the outside manager doesn’t intend to increase fees in 2009, McGrath’s receiver Chris Honey said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Gemma Daley in Canberra at gdaley@bloomberg.net





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Australia to Further Boost Economy If Growth Slumps, Swan Says

By Gemma Daley

Nov. 30 (Bloomberg) -- Australia’s government will follow up yesterday’s A$15.1 billion ($10 billion) spending package with additional stimulus measures if growth slows more than expected, Treasurer Wayne Swan said.

National and state leaders yesterday agreed on a five-year funding plan focused on education and health, following up A$10.4 billion in grants announced last month, as the country seeks to cope with the global financial crisis.

“It does stimulate the economy; it does create 133,000 jobs over five years,” Swan told Nine Network television. “We will do whatever we need to do in the next period to stimulate the economy should growth slow more than has been expected, or would have been expected some months ago.”

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd announced the spending plan, forecast to create 133,000 jobs, after annual talks with state leaders yesterday on national government funding for the states. The package adds to A$332 billion of spending forecast for this and the next three financial years.

Swan said he doesn’t expect the financial crisis to last five years and the government will accept a budget deficit if needed for extra economic stimulus. Australia’s budget was last in deficit in the year ended June 2002.

“If growth were to slow further than expected, then a temporary deficit would be the responsible thing to do to invest in the strength of the economy and to create jobs,” Swan said. “At the moment we are forecasting a modest budget surplus.”

Surplus Shrinks

Swan on Nov. 5 slashed the forecast budget surplus by 75 percent, citing the slowest economic growth in eight years. Reserve Bank Governor Glenn Stevens said Nov. 19 he would be comfortable if state and federal governments increased public spending, “even if that involves some prudent borrowing.”

Australia would join other developed nations forecasting budget deficits in 2009. The U.S. government shortfall may top $1 trillion next year and spending in the U.K. will push the deficit to 118 billion pounds ($181 billion) in the year starting April 1.

“The global financial crisis is still unfolding,” Deputy Prime Minister Julia Gillard told Channel Ten’s Meet The Press program today. “Its effects on our economy are still unfolding.”

The Reserve Bank of Australia this month reduced its 2008 economic growth forecast to 1.5 percent from 2 percent. The central bank has slashed its benchmark interest rate 2 percentage points since September to 5.25 percent.

Australia’s leading economic index fell in September, signaling the nation may slip into a recession, ending 17 straight years of economic expansion, Westpac Banking Corp. and the Melbourne Institute said on Nov. 19.

Australian business confidence plunged in October to a record low, consumers were pessimistic in November for a 10th straight month and house prices dropped in the third quarter by the most since 1978.

To contact the reporter on this story: Gemma Daley in Canberra at gdaley@bloomberg.net





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China GDP May Expand 10% in 2009, State Analyst Says

By Wang Ying

Nov. 30 (Bloomberg) -- China’s economy may grow 10 percent next year as the “huge” potential of domestic consumption and investments counters the impact of a global slowdown, a State Council researcher said.

The “vast development potential” of the world’s most- populous nation will ensure a fast rate of expansion in 2009, said Zhang Liqun, a researcher with the Cabinet’s Development Research Center, according to the official Xinhua News Agency. “Domestic enterprises need to accelerate the pace in upgrading their business structures to better cope with a severe world economic situation.”

China last week cut its benchmark interest rate by the most in 11 years and has unveiled a 4 trillion yuan ($586 billion) stimulus plan to protect the economy from a global recession. Zhang’s optimism isn’t shared by the World Bank, which on Nov. 25 said the Chinese economy is expected to expand next year at the slowest pace in almost two decades.

“We expect growth more likely to be at a rate of between 8 percent and 9 percent,” Fan Jianping, chief economist at China’s State Information Center, said by phone from Beijing today. “The stimulus package could contribute 1 to 2 percentage points, but the overall trend will be a down arrow.”

Consumer prices in China may increase by 3 percent in 2009, compared with 7 percent in the first nine months of this year, Zhang said in the Xinhua report.

Global Recession

China’s central bank lowered its key lending rate by 108 basis points to “ensure sufficient liquidity in the banking system and to promote steady loan growth so that monetary policy can play an active role in supporting economic growth,” the People’s Bank of China said last week. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point.

China can help cushion the global recession by stoking its own expansion, President Hu Jintao told Group of 20 nation leaders in Washington on Nov. 15.

The World Bank cut its forecast for China’s economic growth next year to 7.5 percent from 9.2 percent previously. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development also lowered its forecast.

China’s economy grew 9 percent, the weakest pace in five years, in the third quarter, slowing from 11.9 percent last year. The slowdown is deepening, after export orders fell last month to the lowest level since 2005 and property price slid.

The country’s cabinet said Nov. 26 it was studying extra measures to help struggling companies in the steel, auto, petrochemical and textile industries; to increase key commodity reserves; and to expand insurance for the jobless.

“The government probably has little choice if it is to follow through on its ambitious plan to revive the economy,” said Mark Williams, an economist at Capital Economics in London. “Beijing has at least signaled its willingness to use fiscal policy to support demand, but so far it has not been convincingly delivered.”

For Related News: Most-read stories on China: MNI CHINA 1W Most-read China economy stories: TNI CHECO MOSTREAD BN For top economic news: TOP ECO





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Nigerian Mobs Burn Churches, Mosques as 10,000 Flee Violence

By Dulue Mbachu

Nov. 30 (Bloomberg) -- Fighting between Christian and Muslims in the Nigerian city of Jos entered a third day as mobs burned churches, mosques and homes, leaving at least 80 dead and forcing 10,000 to flee.

“So far more than 80 bodies have been brought into the mortuary here,” Yakubu Ayuba, a worker at the Jos University Teaching Hospital, the city’s main hospital, said by phone yesterday. “Many more are dead going by the accounts of witnesses.”

About 10,000 people have fled their homes and are taking refuge in military and police compounds, Okon Umoh, a Nigerian Red Cross spokeswoman, said by phone from Abuja, declining to give figures for the dead. The death toll exceeded 350, according to This Day newspaper, based in Nigeria’s commercial capital, Lagos.

The violence followed local elections in Plateau state on Nov. 27, with fighting flaring in the capital Jos between indigenous, mainly Christian Berom people and predominantly Muslim Hausa-speaking settlers supporting rival candidates.

Nigeria, Africa’s most populous country with more than 140 million people, is almost evenly split between a mainly Muslim north and a largely Christian south. Parts of the country’s center fall into a religious fault-line that erupts periodically into violence.

Plateau state Governor Jonah Jang declared a night-time curfew on the city Nov. 28, and ordered troops to shoot rioters on sight in a bid to curb the city’s worst violence in seven years. Rival mobs defied the curfew yesterday, engaging in street battles and attacking people suspected of belonging to the opposing side, witnesses said.

‘Many Houses Burnt’

“Some of the worst fighting has occurred in Bauchi Road and Nassarawa Gwom areas where hundreds of cars and many houses were burnt,” said Chimezie Onuogu. The Jos resident said in a telephone interview yesterday that he fled with his family to a police station for refuge.

The local government elections resulted in victory for the Christian-backed ruling People’s Democratic Party, which won in all 17 councils including Jos city. The results prompted protests by supporters of the Muslim-backed opposition All Nigeria People’s Party.

More than 700 people were killed in sectarian violence which erupted between Christians and Muslims in Jos in September 2001. Another 500 people were killed in 2004 when violence broke out in the Plateau state town of Yelwa between Muslim Hausa- speakers with origins farther in the north and the indigenous Berom people.

Several thousand people have died in ethnic, religious and communal violence in different parts of the country since the end of decades of military rule in Nigeria in 1999 lifted the lid on long-suppressed grievances.

To contact the reporter on this story: Dulue Mbachu in Lagos at dmbachu@bloomberg.net





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Saturday, November 29, 2008

U.S. Treasuries Gain Most Since 1981; Longer-Term Yields Plunge

By Liz Capo McCormick

Nov. 29 (Bloomberg) -- Treasuries gained the most in November since Ronald Reagan was in the White House, in a month that saw voters elect Democrat Barack Obama president and the U.S. government pledge to spend up to $800 billion more to unfreeze credit markets.

Yields on 10- and 30-year U.S. debt touched record lows as investors piled into longer-dated securities on speculation the shrinking economy will subdue inflation. Reports showed durable- goods orders fell more than double the pace forecast, consumer spending dropped the most since 2001 and the economy contracted in the third quarter more than estimated. The cost of living decreased the most on record, a Nov. 19 report showed.

“There is a weak economy with inflation on the backslide now,” said Kevin Giddis, head of fixed-income sales, trading and research at the brokerage Morgan Keegan Inc. in Memphis, Tennessee. “It is a lot easier to buy longer-term Treasuries. You can see easily another 30-basis-point drop in the 10-year yield just on the inflation outlook alone.”

The yield on the 10-year note plummeted 31 basis points, or 0.31 percentage point, this week to 2.93 percent, according to BGCantor Market Data. It touched 2.90 percent yesterday, the lowest since the Federal Reserve’s daily records on the note began in 1962, and since 1958 on a monthly basis. The 3.75 percent security due in November 2018 climbed 2 22/32, or $26.88 per $1,000 face amount, to 107 2/32.

The 30-year bond’s yield tumbled 27 basis points for the week to 3.44 percent. It touched 3.43 percent yesterday, the lowest since regular sales of the security started in 1977.

The two-year note’s yield fell 12 basis points to 0.98 percent, down from 1.1 percent the prior week and from 1.55 percent at the end of October. It touched 0.95 percent on Nov. 20, the lowest since regular sales began in 1975.

Most Since 1981

Treasuries returned 5.07 percent this month, Merrill Lynch & Co. indexes showed. It was the most since October 1981, when former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker was battling to tame inflation that was running at more than 10 percent. Obama on Nov. 26 appointed Volcker, 81, to head a new White House economic board that will propose ways to revive growth.

The difference in yield, or spread, between two- and 10- year notes narrowed for the second week, reaching 1.94 percentage points. The so-called yield curve was at 2.62 percentage points on Nov. 13, a five-year high.

The Consumer Price Index fell 1 percent last month, the Labor Department said this week. Gross domestic product slid an annualized 0.5 percent in the third quarter, more than initially estimated, the Commerce Department said. Orders for durable goods fell by 6.2 percent in October, the Census Bureau said.

Deflation Factor

The reports, and an S&P/Case-Shiller home-price index reading showing that the decline in home prices accelerated, signaled credit markets remain locked. They also raised the possibility of a downward spiral as lenders cut back credit, causing spending to tumble and companies to slash investments and payrolls.

“The primary driver behind the fall in Treasury yields this month was the deterioration in the economy and the sinking realization that deflation could be a factor of life going forward,” said Bulent Baygun, head of interest-rate strategy in New York at BNP Paribas Securities Corp., one of the 17 primary dealers that trade government securities with U.S. central bank. “You put everything together and 10-year and 30-year Treasuries provided a lot of value.”

Supply Issue

Bonds also rallied this week after the U.S. announced a plan to buy as much as $600 billion of debt issued or backed by government-chartered housing-finance companies. The plans spurred demand for Treasuries as a replacement for bonds backed by home loans that now may be repaid early as mortgage rates decrease.

The government also will set up a $200 billion program to support consumer and small-business loans.

Investors seeking the safest assets kept yields on three- month Treasury bills yesterday at 0.04 percent, where they have been since Nov. 26. The yields dropped to 0.01 percent on Nov. 21, the lowest level since the 1940s, according to monthly figures from the central bank.

“The only thing negative for the bond market is the supply itself that the Treasury is going to keep having to bring in to fund its initiatives,” Morgan Keegan’s Giddis said. “It’s almost counterbalanced by the favorable conditions that keep people from walking away from the Treasury market.”

The U.S. government pledged $306 billion this week in guarantees for troubled mortgages and toxic assets of Citigroup Inc. to stabilize the bank after its stock plunged 83 percent this year. Citigroup also will get a $20 billion cash injection from the Treasury, adding to the $25 billion the company received last month under the Troubled Asset Relief Program.

Non-Farm Payrolls

Futures on the Chicago Board of Trade showed 68 percent odds the Fed will lower its 1 percent target rate for overnight lending between banks by a half-percentage point at its Dec. 16 meeting, and a 32 percent probability of a three-quarter- percentage point cut.

Non-farm payrolls shed 320,000 jobs in November, compared with a drop of 240,000 jobs the previous month, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey of economists. The Labor Department is scheduled to release the report Dec. 5.

To contact the reporter on this story: Liz Capo McCormick in New York at emccormick7@bloomberg.net.





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U.S. Stocks Post Biggest Weekly Gain Since 1974 as Banks Rally

By Lynn Thomasson

Nov. 29 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. stocks staged the biggest weekly rally in more than 30 years after the government agreed to protect Citigroup Inc. from more losses and automakers weighed cutting costs to win federal aid.

Citigroup doubled on the government’s plan to insure $306 billion in toxic assets owned by the bank, helping push financial companies in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index to a record 31 percent advance. General Motors Corp. soared 71 percent as the company considered selling some U.S. brands. Ford Motor Co. jumped 88 percent.

The S&P 500 rose 12 percent to 896.24, the steepest weekly gain since 1974. The Dow Jones Industrial Average increased 782.62 points, or 9.7 percent, to 8,829.04. The Russell 2000 Index of small-cap stocks climbed 16 percent to 473.14.

“It’s refreshing to see some rationality returning to stock prices,” said Richard Weiss, chief investment officer at City National Bank in Beverly Hills, California. “The central banks and central finance authorities are doing exactly what’s needed at this point.”

Stocks advanced after the Federal Reserve stepped up efforts to unfreeze credit markets and President-elect Barack Obama picked a team of financial and economic advisers, including former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker. U.S. exchanges were closed on Nov. 27 for the Thanksgiving holiday.

Citigroup Shares Double

The gains ended a three-week slump in the S&P 500 spurred by concern the U.S. auto industry may collapse and profit reports that showed the recession intensifying. The stock benchmark is down 39 percent this year, the worst performance since 1931.

Citigroup, the second-biggest U.S. bank by assets, rose 120 percent to $8.29. A 60 percent plunge in the company’s stock price the previous week pushed regulators to stabilize the bank by injecting $20 billion and agreeing to cover losses related to its troubled assets. The government gets preferred shares and warrants equivalent to a 4.5 percent stake.

Financials in the S&P 500 climbed the past five trading sessions, the longest stretch of gains since October 2007. This week’s advance was the steepest since S&P created the industry group 19 years ago.

JPMorgan Chase & Co., Bank of America Corp. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. surged more than 39 percent each.

‘Relief Rally’

“People are looking for any reason to hope and that’s why this has all the markings of a relief rally,” said Daniel McMahon, director of equity trading at Raymond James & Associates Inc. in New York. “I don’t know how sustainable it is.”

The VIX, as the Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index is known, tumbled 24 percent to 55.28. The index measures the cost of using options as insurance against declines in the S&P 500.

GM had the biggest gain in at least 28 years, rallying $2.18 to $5.24. The largest U.S. automaker is considering shedding its Saturn, Saab and Pontiac brands, according to people familiar with the matter. Ford increased $1.26 to $2.69.

“We envision the current Congress will authorize a short- term bridge loan that carries” GM, Ford and Chrysler LLC to the start of President-elect Obama’s administration in January, JPMorgan analyst Himanshu Patel wrote in a note dated Nov. 25.

Homebuilders Surge

Homebuilders in the S&P 500 jumped 59 percent on a new central bank plan to revive mortgage lending. The Fed pledged to buy $600 billion in debt issued or backed by government- chartered housing finance companies and said it would start a $200 billion program to support consumer and small-business loans.

D.R. Horton Inc., the largest U.S. homebuilder, rose 58 percent to $6.87 even after cutting its dividend and reporting a sixth straight quarterly loss.

Car companies and homebuilders helped lead the S&P 500 Consumer Discretionary Index to a 17 percent advance, the steepest in the history of the group.

Apple Inc. climbed 12 percent to $92.67, the most in two years. JPMorgan analysts boosted the company’s fiscal 2009 profit estimate and said sales growth for notebook computers is accelerating.

Just 17 stocks in the S&P 500 fell this week. Campbell Soup Co. posted the biggest loss, dropping 12 percent to $32.05. The world’s largest soupmaker reported sales that trailed analysts’ average estimate by 2.6 percent, according to Bloomberg data.

Employers probably slashed more jobs and manufacturing may have contracted at the fastest pace in a quarter century as the recession worsened, economists said before reports next week.

Sears Holdings Corp., Big Lots Inc. and Staples Inc. are among the S&P 500 companies scheduled to report earnings next week.

To contact the reporter on this story: Lynn Thomasson in New York at lthomasson@bloomberg.net.





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Saudi Shares Advance on Global Bailouts; Safco, Almarai Rise

By Haris Anwar

Nov. 29 (Bloomberg) -- Saudi Arabia’s benchmark stock index rose for the first day in three, tracking global stock markets, on speculation government bailouts will stimulate the economy.

Saudi Arabian Fertilizer Co., a unit of Saudi Basic Industries Corp., climbed to the highest in more than three weeks. Al-Rajhi Bank, the country’s largest bank by market value, led gains in the financial industry, while Almarai Co., Saudi Arabia’s biggest foodmaker, rose the most in more than a month.

The Tadawul All Share Index advanced 4.1 percent to 4,604.88 at 11:17 a.m. in Riyadh, the highest in two weeks. The S&P 500 has surged more than 12 percent this week, its best weekly performance since 1974, after China cut interest rates and the Federal Reserve committed $800 billion to help resuscitate lending markets, boosting speculation government action will pull the world’s economy out of recession and boost demand.

“The Saudi market is rallying on the global optimism that the worst is probably behind us,” Abdulla al-Aqil, a trader at Samba Financial Group, said in a phone interview from Riyadh. “Stocks with a large capitalization will lead in this upward move, which I think will continue this week.”

The kingdom’s oil surplus and sovereign funds are secure and unaffected by the global financial crisis, Kuwaiti newspaper Al-Seyassah quoted King Abdullah as saying. Saudi Arabia, the world’s biggest oil exporter and de facto OPEC leader, sees $75 a barrel as a fair price for oil, the king said.

Saudi Arabian Fertilizer surged 7.8 percent to 86 riyals. The stock has climbed 19 percent during the past two sessions, to give the company a market value of about 21.875 billion riyals ($5.83 billion). Al-Rajhi Bank advanced 9.3 percent to 59 dirhams. Almarai rose 7.4 percent, the most since Oct. 28, to 127 dirhams.

The Saudi bourse is the only Arab exchange monitored by Bloomberg open on Saturdays.

To contact the reporter on this story: Haris Anwar in Dubai on Hanwar2@bloomberg.net





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Pakistan Won’t Send Intelligence Head to India, Government Says

By Farhan Sharif

Nov. 29 (Bloomberg) -- Pakistan’s government turned down India’s request to send the chief of the military intelligence agency to investigate the terrorist attacks in Mumbai.

Officials of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence, or ISI, will instead be sent to India, said Zahid Bashir, Pakistan premier’s press secretary, in a telephone interview from the capital Islamabad.

Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari said yesterday he will send the intelligence head to India for the first time to counter claims that the attackers are linked to his country.

India will “go after” individuals and organizations behind the attacks, which were “well-planned with external linkages,” India’s Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said in a televised address Nov. 27, without identifying the nations.

At least 195 people were killed in the attacks on the Taj Mahal Palace and Tower and Oberoi-Trident hotels, a Jewish center, railway station and restaurant, said S. Jadhav, an official at the Mumbai’s disaster management unit.

To contact the reporter on this story: Farhan Sharif in Karachi at fsharif2@bloomberg.net.





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Indian Forces Comb Taj Mahal After Militants Kill 195

By Vipin Nair and Stephen Foxwell

Nov. 29 (Bloomberg) -- Indian forces combed the luxury Taj Mahal hotel in Mumbai looking for survivors of the nation’s deadliest terrorist attack in at least 15 years after commandos killed the remaining militants to end a 60-hour siege.

At least 195 people died in the attacks on the Taj Mahal Palace and Tower and Oberoi-Trident hotels, a Jewish center, railway station and restaurant, S Jadhav, an official at the city’s disaster management unit said. “We expect the number to rise as we hear there are bodies inside the Taj,” he said. Chief Minister Vilasrao Deshmukh said nine militants were killed.

The ground floor of the 565-room Taj Mahal hotel was flooded and strewn with debris after militants fought gun and grenade battles with special forces for three days. The terrorists held out because they knew the layout of the century-old heritage hotel and were well trained in the use of explosives and guns, authorities said. Indian Hotels Co. Managing Director Raymond Bickson denied a Zee News report one of the attackers had worked as a chef in the hotel.

“We have had no indications that any employees or contractual staff of the hotel have been involved as part of this terrorist attack as is being reported by some media outlets,” Bickson said in a statement.

Death Toll

More than 295 people were injured in the attacks. Most of those who died were Indians and a final death toll hasn’t been officially released. Six Americans died, U.S. Ambassador to India David Mulford said in New Delhi. More U.S. citizens are missing.

Two rabbis from New York were among five hostages and two attackers died at the Jewish Chabad-Lubavitch Center in Mumbai which was stormed by Indian commandos.

Three Germans, one Japanese, two Canadians and a Briton were killed, chief minister Deshmukh said. Two Australians died and more may have been killed, Foreign Minister Stephen Smith said earlier. Thirty-six Australians were unaccounted for, Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said late yesterday. Two French nationals died, President Nicolas Sarkozy said.

“I have told the Indian prime minister that the French security service would collaborate with all its strength to help this great democracy face this crazy, groundless, barbarian terrorism that killed many innocent people,” Sarkozy told reporters in Doha on the sidelines of a UN conference. “No cause can make this acceptable, none, ever. It’s barbarism.”

Shift in Tactics

The targeting of Westerners marks a shift in tactics for Islamic militants in India as they strike the international links that have helped the country’s economy grow at 9 percent or more for each of the past three years. Elements in Pakistan are responsible for the attacks, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said.

One terrorist arrested on Nov. 26, the first night of the attacks, said the group had planned to blow up the Taj Mahal hotel, Times Now reported. A favorite place for weddings and business meetings, the property has accommodated the likes of Mick Jagger, Jacqueline Onassis, Yehudi Menuhin and Prince Charles, according to Tata Group’s Web site.

“Unlike any similar event of the past, it’s the fear that has affected most people in the city,” said Dr. Geeta Balakrishnan, a director at the College of Social Work in Mumbai, where about a hundred of students along with faculty members were counseling the injured. “They have exposed our vulnerability. They targeted the city’s rich and influential.”

Searching Rooms

The National Security Guard wasn’t declaring an end to the crisis until all rooms at the Taj Mahal hotel were searched, J.K. Dutt, director general of NSG commando unit, said at a briefing, adding some guests may still be in the complex. Three blasts were heard inside the hotel after the NSG said in a public announcement it would set off controlled explosions. Authorities deployed 350 of the elite NSG, Chief Minister Deshmukh said.

Television images showed commandos exchanging gunfire with one of the remaining terrorists just after daybreak before bundling his body out of a hotel window.

Busloads of commandos moved in to the Taj to do a room-by- room search after gunshots and blasts that had rocked the building in the early hours of today subsided.

The main entrances of both the Oberoi and Trident hotels were sealed with wooden planks. Glass windows of the first-floor Kandhar restaurant were peppered with bullet holes, while the 10 foot-high glass partitions in the lobby were shattered.

Twenty-four hours after the siege ended, police and Rapid Action Force personnel were planning to hand over the hotel to its management after re-checking rooms for explosives.

Trident Hotel

Suryakant Mahadik, a deputy leader of the Shiv Sena political party, which has the hotel employees union under its affiliation, said he expects the Trident hotel to open within a week. “The Oberoi will take longer,” he said.

“The terrorists tried to create unrest since there’s no other apparent motive,” Mahadik said. “About 500 employees were present at the two hotels on the fateful evening, about 10-12 employees were killed.”

The attack is the deadliest in India since bomb blasts rocked Mumbai’s commercial landmarks, including the Bombay Stock Exchange building, killing more than 250 people in 1993.

The 1993 blasts were blamed by the police on members of the Mumbai underworld, belonging to Dawood Ibrahim’s gang. India says Ibrahim is hiding in Pakistan, a charge the neighboring country denies.

A little-known Islamist group, the Deccan Mujahedeen, claimed responsibility for the shootings and explosions across the western coastal city, Indian Home Ministry official M.L. Kumawat said.

Attack Planned Six Months Ago

The attackers began planning their assaults six months ago, India’s NDTV reported, citing an account from a captured terrorist. A seized global positioning system showed some of the group left Karachi, Pakistan, as early as Nov. 12, NDTV said.

The group had reached India’s financial hub in three speedboats from Gujarat after arriving in one boat from Karachi, the Mumbai Mirror reported.

The militants broke into groups and four went to the Taj Mahal Palace and Tower Hotel while three groups of two people each went to the Oberoi-Trident hotel complex, a railroad station and a Jewish center, the report said, citing confessions made by the only terrorist arrested by the Indian authorities.

Lashkar-i-Taiba or Jaish-i-Muhammad, two Muslim extremist terrorist groups from Pakistan that have attacked India in the past, may be involved, MSNBC reported on its Web site, citing unidentified analysts and counterterrorism officials. The groups are linked to violence in Kashmir, a region over which India and Pakistan have fought.

‘Highly Motivated Terrorists’

“We came up against highly motivated terrorists,” Vice- Admiral J.S. Bedi, whose commandos led the assault against the militants, said in televised comments. He showed pictures of hand grenades, tear-gas shells and AK-47 ammunition recovered in the battle.

Multiple attacks have hit cities in India, which is mostly Hindu, with bombs planted in markets, theaters and near mosques this year, leaving more than 300 people dead.

India will “go after” individuals and organizations behind the attacks, which were “well-planned with external linkages,” Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said in a televised address, without identifying nations.

Pakistan’s government turned down India’s request to send the chief of the military intelligence agency to investigate the Mumbai terror attacks.

Officials of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence, or ISI, will instead be sent to India, Zahid Bashir, the Pakistani premier’s press secretary, said in a telephone interview from the capital Islamabad.

Zardari’s Fears

Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari said earlier he will send the intelligence head to India for the first time to counter claims that the attackers are linked to his country.

Pakistan’s “government will cooperate with India in exposing and apprehending the culprits and the masterminds behind” the Mumbai terrorist attacks, according to a statement by the president’s office, citing Zardari’s phone conversation yesterday with Singh.

The attacks in Mumbai show a militant movement among Indian- born followers of Islam is aligning its campaign with those from majority-Muslim countries, while seeking to hit economic interests, B. Raman, the former counterterrorism director of India’s intelligence agency, said in a telephone interview yesterday.

To contact the reporters on this story: Vipin V. Nair in Mumbai at vnair12@bloomberg.net; Stephen Foxwell in Mumbai at sfoxwell@bloomberg.net.





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