Economic Calendar

Monday, August 11, 2008

London Session Recap

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by Forex.com | Aug 11 08 11:40 GMT |

Elevated inflation data out of the Euro-zone helped EURUSD pare losses in the London session. German wholesale prices rose a higher than expected 1.4% in July after a 0.9% increase the previous month. This took the annual growth rate to a whopping 9.9% from 8.9% -- the highest run-rate on record -- and is likely to keep the inflation hawks on the ECB quite vocal.

The weaker French industrial production, which fell -0.4% on the month in June while the market expected a 0.6% increase, limited the EUR gains however. EURUSD rose from an open near 1.4985 to a close around the 1.5015 mark in London trading.

Inflation data in the UK were more tame than expected, with input producer prices falling -0.6% in July while output prices rose just 0.4%. The trade balance was worse than expected at -£4414 in June from a prior -£4073. Despite the weaker tone to economic data, USD weakness helped GBPUSD rally a touch in London. The pair opened near 1.9200 and was sitting near 1.9215 at the close.

USDCAD continued to trade sideways as the market awaits Canadian housing starts data in the NY morning. The market is looking for a decline to 210K in July from 218K the prior month. Meanwhile, crude oil is trading a touch above Friday's close at just over $116/bbl and this is containing USDCAD gains as well. The pair opened the London session near 1.0660 and was sitting just a touch higher near 1.0665 at the close.

Upcoming Economic Data Releases (NY Session) Prior Estimate

  • 8/11/2008 12:15 GMT CA Housing Starts JUL 217.8K 210.0K
  • 8/11/2008 12:30 GMT CA New Housing Price Index MoM JUN 0.0% 0.1%

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DISCLAIMER: The information and opinions in this report are for general information use only and are not intended as an offer or solicitation with respect to the purchase of sale of any currency. All opinions and information contained in this report are subject to change without notice. This report has been prepared without regard to the specific investment objectives, financial situation and needs of any particular recipient. While the information contained herein was obtained from sources believed to be reliable, author does not guarantee its accuracy or completeness, nor does author assume any liability for any direct, indirect or consequential loss that may result from the reliance by any person upon any such information or opinions.





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Mid-Day Report: Dollar Consolidates, Euro Recovers but Remains Pressured

Market Overview | Written by ActionForex.com | Aug 11 08 12:49 GMT |

Dollar retreats mildly today as markets consolidate last week's sharp gain. Euro, on the other hand, recovers from spike low against other major currencies after opening sharply lower today. ECB Liebscher's hawkish comments provided some support to the common currency but there is still no clear indication of a short term bottom yet, in particular in euro crosses. Also, note that markets are concerned that violence in Georgia could disrupt crude oil supplies and oil recovers as the US session opens. Such development might prompt pullback in the greenback. Otherwise, with lack of important events today, market will probably continue to consolidate in tight range before staging another move.


Canadian data released in early US session saw housing starts dropped to 187k in. New housing price index rose 0.1%. data from US saw PPI output rose by record 10.2% yoy Jul but was below expectation of 10.3%. INput prices climbed 30.1%. Core PPI rose more sharply than expected by 6.7% yoy. Trade deficit in UK widened sharply to -4.74b in Jul. German WPI accelerated to 27 year high of 9.9% in Jul.

RBA monetary policy statement released overnight reiterated the concern that the bank is pathing the way for less restrictive monetary policy. RBA said that it will have more scope to ease because of "significant moderation" in domestic demand and slowing economy will bring down inflation over time. AUD/USD's sharp fall extends further to 0.8841 so far and there is still no sign of a bottom after over 1000 pts decline from 25 year high at 0.9849. The Aussie will probably remains pressured as speculation of an imminent RBA cut of 50bps in Sep continues to grow..

USD/CAD Mid-Day Outlook

Daily Pivots: (S1) 1.0555; (P) 1.0625; (R1) 1.0735; More.

USD/CAD turns sideway after reaching 1.0696 but after all, consolidation should be relatively brief as long as 1.0538 minor support holds and further further rally is still expected to mentioned 1.0791/98 cluster resistance. Though, below 1.0538 will indicate that a short term top is in place and bring correction to 4 hours 55 EMA (now at 1.0422) or lower before staging another rise.

In the bigger picture, break of 1.0378 confirms that medium term rise from 0.9056 has resumed and is now set to test cluster resistance at 1.0791/98 (61.8% retracement of 1.1874 to 0.9056 at 1.0798, 61.8% projection of 0.9056 to 1.0378 from 0.9974 at 1.0791) first. Sustained break of 1.0791/98 will argue that rise from 0.9056 is probably more than just a correction in the long term down trend and will set the stage to test key long term resistance at 1.1874. On the downside, a break below 0.9974 support is needed to confirm that rise from 0.9056 has completed. Otherwise, further rally is still expected even in case of a deep pull back.

USD/CAD 4 Hours Chart - Forex Newsletters, Forex Outlook, Forex Review, Forex Signal


Economic Indicators Update

GMT Ccy Events Actual Consensus Previous Revised
01:30 AUD RBA Monetary Policy Statement



06:00 JPY Japan Machine tools orders Y/Y Jul -8.90% N/A -2.50%
06:00 EUR Germany WPI M/M Jul 1.40% 0.50% 0.90%
06:00 EUR Germany WPI Y/Y Jul 9.90% 9.00% 8.90%
08:30 GBP U.K. PPI input M/M Jul -0.60% 1.00% 2.10% 2.70%
08:30 GBP U.K. PPI input Y/Y Jul 30.10% 30.10% 30.30% 30.80%
08:30 GBP U.K. PPI output M/M Jul 0.40% 0.50% 0.90%
08:30 GBP U.K. PPI output Y/Y Jul 10.20% 10.30% 10.00%
08:30 GBP U.K. PPI core M/M Jul 0.30% 0.40% 0.30% 0.40%
08:30 GBP U.K. PPI core Y/Y Jul 6.70% 6.50% 6.30% 6.70%
08:30 GBP U.K. Trade balance (gbp) Jul -4.74B -4.20B -4.24B -4.04B
12:15 CAD Canada Housing starts Jul 187K 215.0K 217.8K 215.9K
12:30 CAD Canada New housing price index Jun 0.10% 0.10% 0.00%



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Danish Inflation Rate Rises to 18 1/2-Year High of 4%

By [bn:PRSN=1] Tasneem Brogger []

Aug. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Danish inflation accelerated to 4 percent in July, the fastest pace in 18 1/2 years, adding to concern that workers will demand higher pay to compensate for the erosion of spending power.

The inflation rate rose from 3.8 percent the previous month, Copenhagen-based Statistics Denmark said on its Web site today. The median estimate of six economists surveyed by Bloomberg was for price growth of 4 percent. Prices fell 0.3 percent in the month.

Surges in food and oil costs are pushing up inflation worldwide, with price growth accelerating to 4 percent in the euro area in June, the fastest pace in 16 years. Denmark's labor shortage, with unemployment at 1.6 percent in June, means employers are more likely to give in to demands for pay increases as workers try to keep up with the higher cost of living.

``The pace of food price gains is showing no sign of easing,'' Jes Asmussen, chief economist at Handelsbanken in Copenhagen, said in a note to clients. ``Together with high energy prices, this is putting considerable pressure on households' budgets and we're now approaching price gains that are close to eating up pay rises.''

The biggest annual gain came from food and non-alcoholic beverages, which rose 10.2 percent, after jumping 9.4 percent in June, the office said. Salaries rose an annual 4.6 percent on average in the first quarter, the Confederation of Danish Employers said on May 30.

Denmark's European harmonized annual inflation rate was 4.4 percent in July, compared with 4.2 percent in June, the statistics office said. Prices slid 0.3 percent in the month.

The central bank can't use monetary policy to regulate prices as its sole policy mandate is to keep the krone pegged to the euro in a 2.25 percent band. The bank raised the key lending rate in July by a quarter point to 4.6 percent, tracking the European Central Bank.

To contact the reporter on this story: Tasneem Brogger in Copenhagen at tbrogger@bloomberg.net



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European and UK Fixed Income Markets Rangebound Following Overnight Data

Market Updates | Written by CEP News | Aug 11 08 12:01 GMT |
(CEP News) - Fixed income futures overseas are mixed on Monday, but are maintaining their ranges following the release of several pieces of data overnight.

Germany's 10-year Bund future is up three ticks to 113.61 and trading between 113.48-113.68 through the releases of German wholesale price indexes, French production and Italian CPI figures. The 10-year yield is down 0.8 bps to 4.253%, with its U.S. counterpart up 0.4 bps to 3.931%.


Germany's wholesale price inflation continued to rise in July. The index jumped 9.9% year-over-year in the month, up from both the 9.0% gain expected and the 8.9% increase seen in June. July's annualized jump was the largest recorded since November 1981, when the index had risen 10.0%. In monthly terms, wholesale prices rose 1.4% following June's 0.9% increase. Economists, however, had expected a deceleration in the growth rate to 0.5% in July.

Keeping with German fixed income, the five-year Bobl is down ten ticks to 108.20 and the corresponding yield is up 1.3 bps to 4.088%. The two-year Schatz is up 5.5 ticks to 103.245, with the German two-year yield up two bps to 4.075%. The U.S. two-year yield is down 1.7 bps to 2.480%.

In other data, French industrial production fell 1.6% year-over-year, deepening the 1.8% decline seen in May which had been revised down from

-1.2%. Economists had expected the output level to have increased 0.5% over the same period. On a monthly basis, industrial production in France contracted 0.4%, down from the 0.6% gain expected. June's fall adds to the 2.9% drop seen in May, revised down from an initial figure of -2.6%.

The Italian consumer price index reportedly increased 4.1% year-over-year in July as expected, up from June's 3.8% rise. Month-over-month, Italian consumer price inflation was confirmed to have reached 0.5% in July following June's deceleration to 0.4%.

December 2008 Euribor contracts are subsequently down two ticks to 95.050 and March 2009 contracts are down 3.5 ticks to 95.280. Helaba Research's Ulrich Wortberg notes how market sentiment has shifted toward a European Central Bank rate cut in the near future.

"Expectations of rising key rates vanished after ECB chairman Trichet placed greater emphasis on economic risks than he had done previously, claiming that the economic cooldown was expected 'in part' [i.e. not to the extent that is currently evident] and that the bank is 'humble' in the face of incoming economic data," he wrote. "This week's economic data, particularly the European industrial production and growth data, will generally fuel economic concerns."

In the U.K. the 10-year Gilt future is down 11 ticks to 108.27 and the 10-year yield is up 0.8 bps to 4.691%. Each reacted in moderation to the 4:30 a.m. EDT announcement that UK output producer prices rose 10.2% on an annualized basis in July, the largest gain recorded in the series' history, up from June's 10.0% jump. Despite the rise, economists had expected an even, more marked increase in prices and forecast a 10.3% rise, year-over-year. March Short Sterling is down nine ticks to 94.555, conversely dropping 6.3 ticks to that point on the data.

All data taken at 7:33 a.m. EDT.

By Ryan Szporer, rszporer@economicnews.caThis email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it , with contributions from Todd Wailoo, twailoo@economicnews.caThis email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it and Erik Kevin Franco, efranco@economicnews.caThis email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it , edited by Megan Ainscow, mainscow@economicnews.caThis email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it

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FX Thoughts for the Day

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by Kshitij Consultancy Services | Aug 11 08 12:30 GMT |

USD-CHF @ 1.0793/97.... Could test 1.0850

R: 1.0850 / 1.0875 / 1.0909
S: 1.0800 / 1.0750 / 1.0735

After dipping slightly during the day to find Support at 1.0735-48, the pair is once again heading towards the Resistance at 1.0850. The Resistance seems strong and might not break in the day, also because the projected Max High for the day is at 1.0856.

For now, the rise from here could be stronger as the Support at 1.0735 has held after being tested earlier in the day. If 1.0735-50 continues to hold, a break of 1.0850 may be seen in the days to come.

Overall the market direction is bullish and expected to face a major Resistance at 1.1050 over the week. To see the chart click on: http://www.kshitij.com/graphgallery/chfcandle.shtml

GBP-USD @ 1.9192/96... Vulnerable for further dips

R: 1.9225 / 1.9250-9 / 1.9275
S: 1.9150 / 1.9125 / 1.9075


As per expectation a rise in Cable was seen during the day, as the selling pressure over the last week has led the pair being oversold and a bounce seemed quiet likely.

For now, as long as the market trades above 1.9200-9180, there remains a possibility of a re-test of 1.9250-60, the Max High for the day. The pair remains bearish overall, with the possible target of 1.88, if the Support at 1.91 breaks.

To see the chart of Cable click on: http://www.kshitij.com/graphgallery/gbpcandle.shtml

AUD-USD @ 0.8904/08.... Sell rallies

R: 0.8952 / 0.8980 / 0.9025
S: 0.8867 / 0.8835 / 0.8780

After dipping to test 0.8834 early in the day, the pair had risen slightly. However, after facing Resistance at 0.8952, it has once again come lower to trade at 0.89 currently.

Note that RBA monetary policy statement this morning has not been able to impact the pair negatively despite lowering of the growth estimates and also hinting at rate cuts in the near future. The basic reason behind this movement is that a major correction was seen over the last week.

The overall trend remains bearish and could head towards 0.8650 over the latter part of the week. The strategy should remain to sell rallies.

Happy Trading!

Kshitij Consultancy Service
http://www.fxthoughts.com

Legal disclaimer and risk disclosure

These views/ forecasts/ suggestions, though proferred with the best of intentions, are based on our reading of the market at the time of writing. They are subject to change without notice.Though the information sources are believed to be reliable, the information is not guaranteed for accuracy. Those acting in the market on the basis of these are themselves responsibly for any profits or losses that might occur, without recourse to us. World financial markets, and especially the Foreign Exchange markets, are inherently risky and it is assumed that those who trade these markets are fully aware of the risk of real loss involved.





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U.K. Producer Prices Rise by Most Since at Least 1986

By Brian Swint

Aug. 11 (Bloomberg) -- U.K. producer prices increased in July at the fastest pace since records began in 1986, adding to pressure on the Bank of England to wait before cutting interest rates as the economy edges toward a recession.

Prices charged by factories rose 10.2 percent from a year earlier, compared with a 10 percent increase in June, the Office for National Statistics said in London today. Economists forecast 10.3 percent, according to the median of 32 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey. Prices increased 0.4 percent on the month.

Bank of England Governor Mervyn King predicts record oil and food prices will drive inflation to double the 2 percent target later this year while the economy may contract. Policy makers, concerned that workers may ask for more pay to compensate for the higher cost of living, kept the main interest rate unchanged at 5 percent last week.

``Manufacturers are getting some traction to put up prices,'' said James Knightley, an economist at ING Financial Markets in London. ``This suggests that inflation will stay above target for longer. It'll take time for the Bank of England to respond to the recessionary environment with rate cuts.''

The pound was little changed against the dollar following the report, after falling against the U.S. currency for a seventh day. It traded at $1.9232 at 10:39 a.m. in London. It was also little changed against the euro at 78.22 pence per euro.

Inflation Rate

Inflation at factory gates has been slower than raw material cost gains for a year. Companies also aren't passing on those costs to households at the same rate. Consumer-price inflation probably accelerated to 4.2 percent in July, according to the median of 38 economists' estimates in a Bloomberg News survey. The statistics office will publish that report tomorrow.

The pound has fallen 12 percent against a basket of Britain's main trading partners in the past year, fanning the cost of imported raw materials. RPC Group Plc, the U.K. maker of plastic containers for Nivea sun cream, said July 23 that first-half operating profit will fall after polymer prices increased.


The weaker currency also makes British goods cheaper overseas. Exports rose 4.2 percent in June, outpacing the 4.1 percent gain in imports, the statistics office said today. The goods-trade gap still widened to 7.7 billion pounds ($15 billion), as the deficit with countries outside the European Union swelled to a record.

Raw Materials

Raw material costs jumped 30.1 percent from a year earlier, compared with 30.8 percent in June. Imported materials, including oil, rose a record 21.2 percent in the year, the statistics office said today. Input prices fell 0.6 percent from June, on a seasonally adjusted basis.

Oil prices have dropped 19 percent since reaching a record above $147 a barrel on July 11. They are still more than 60 percent higher than a year ago.

``It's early days to say that it's all clear, but the oil drop will have helped to assuage some of the central bank's fears,'' said Nick Bate, an economist at Merrill Lynch & Co. in London. ``The slowing in the economy should reduce the ability of producers to raise prices.''

The International Monetary Fund last week slashed its forecasts for U.K. economic growth to 1.4 percent this year and 1.1 percent in 2009. The economy expanded 3 percent in 2007.

The Bank of England releases new quarterly forecasts on Aug. 13. The next interest rate decision is Sept. 4.

The statistics office said that the producer-price index will be re-based from September to show 2005 as 100, compared with the current index that uses prices in 2000 as 100.

To contact the reporter on this story: Brian Swint in London at bswint@bloomberg.net.





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French Industrial Output Falls; Car Production Drops

By Helene Fouquet and Sandrine Rastello

Aug. 11 (Bloomberg) -- French industrial production, which accounts for 15 percent of the euro-area's second-largest economy, unexpectedly declined in June as car sales fell.

Output from factories and utilities decreased 0.4 percent from May, when it dropped 2.9 percent, Insee, the National Statistics Office in Paris, said today. Economists expected a gain of 0.6 percent, according to the median of 24 forecasts in a survey by Bloomberg News. In the year, output fell 1.6 percent.

Manufacturers are struggling with a stronger euro and rising energy costs at a time when an economic slowdown in the U.S. is damping global expansion. European Central Bank President Jean- Claude Trichet said last week that growth will be ``particularly weak'' through the third quarter.

``It's yet more bad news and more is probably to come given the worsening outlook for growth,'' Cyril Regnat, a strategist with Natixis SA in Paris, said on Bloomberg Television. ``This very bad figure is mostly explained by oil prices and the loss of confidence.''

The cost of crude has gained 63 percent in the past year and the euro has advanced 11 percent against the dollar. Sentiment among French manufacturers fell to the lowest in five years in June, the Bank of France said last month.


Growth is fading across Europe. Italy, the first of the three biggest economies in the euro region to report second-quarter gross domestic product, said its economy shrank, edging closer to the fourth recession in a decade.

Machines, Cars

Production of French consumer goods rose 0.5 percent in June and that of machinery and equipment slipped 1 percent, Insee said. Car manufacture fell 2.9 percent after a 7.6 percent drop in May. Construction expanded 0.7 percent.

French vehicle production plunged 7.1 percent in the first half as Renault SA cut capacity after its flagship Laguna mid- sized car missed sales targets. Output fell to 1.32 million vehicles from 1.42 million a year earlier, according to data published on July 31 by the French carmakers' association.

Michelin & Cie., the world's second-largest tiremaker, cut its full-year target on July 30 for the second time in three months after first-half profit fell on soaring oil, steel and rubber costs and a slump in European sales.

Crumbling Away

The French economy will grow 0.2 percent in the second quarter, the least in almost two years, before stagnating in the next three months, Insee said on June 20.

Still, French exports increased 0.6 percent to 34.9 billion euros ($53 billion) in June, with sales rising in Europe and Asia, the French Finance Ministry said on Aug. 7.

Alstom SA, the world's third-largest power plant maker, won contracts worth 6.55 billion euros through June, beating analysts' expectations of 5.98 billion euros.

Trade may get a boost from a depreciating euro. The common currency sank the most in almost eight years against the dollar on Aug. 8 as traders pared bets the ECB will raise interest rates.

The euro traded at $1.5021 at 12:20 p.m. in Paris after reaching a record $1.6038 on July 15. Oil prices have also receded, with Nymex crude futures 21 percent lower than the record $147.27 a barrel reached on July 11.

``The car industry may find some relief in the likely decrease in inflation in coming months, in the wake of receding commodity prices,'' Mathieu Kaiser, an economist at BNP Paribas SA in Paris, wrote in a note to investors today.

May's decline in industrial output drop was revised down from 2.6 percent, Insee said today.

To contact the reporters on this story: Helene Fouquet in Paris hfouquet1@bloomberg.net; Sandrine Rastello in Paris at srastello@bloomberg.net.





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Indonesia's Rupiah May Drop on Commodities Slump, HSBC Says

By Bob Chen

Aug. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Indonesia's rupiah may drop in the remaining months of the year as rising demand for imported goods and sliding prices of commodities exported by the nation drive the current account to a deficit, according to HSBC Holdings Plc.

A weaker currency boosts the cost of imports, making it harder for the central bank to contain the fastest inflation in 22 months. Bank Indonesia on Aug. 5 raised its key interest rate to 9 percent, a fourth straight increase, and signaled that a stronger currency may be pursued to keep price gains in check.

The rupiah fell 0.2 percent to 9,185 per dollar as of 4:06 p.m. in Jakarta, after posting its first weekly decline since May in the five days ended Aug. 8. The currency will end the year at 9,150 per dollar, according to the median prediction of 21 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. HSBC's forecast of 9,800, 6.3 percent below the current rate, is the weakest of the estimates.

``We believe strong forces will drive dollar-rupiah much higher eventually,'' Daniel Hui, a Hong Kong-based currency strategist at HSBC, said today in a report. A ``sharply deteriorating trade account'' may lead to Indonesia's first current-account deficit in three years, he added.

Indonesia's demand for imports is climbing as the economy improves. Gross domestic product probably rose more than 6 percent for a seventh straight quarter in the three months ended June 30, a Bloomberg survey of economists showed.

Palm Oil, Rubber

At the same time, exports are cooling as prices of palm oil, coal and rubber decline. The Reuters/Jeffries CRB Index of 19 commodities tumbled 10 percent in July, the most in any month since March 1980, and is down a further 7 percent this month. HSBC estimates that 60 percent of shipments from Indonesia, the world's biggest palm oil producer and second-largest rubber exporter, are commodities.

``Higher commodities prices have been a partial offset'' on the trade surplus, HSBC's Hui said. ``But as commodity prices start to decline, this will only exacerbate this trend'' toward a current-account deficit.

The rupiah has retreated 1.3 percent since reaching a five- month high of 9,056 per dollar on Aug. 6.

Bank Indonesia Deputy Governor Hartadi Sarwono said Aug. 8 that the benchmark interest rate may be raised as high as 9.5 percent, adding that the central bank will ensure the currency doesn't average stronger than 9,000 per dollar this year. The rupiah, the third-best performer among Asia's 10 most-traded currencies outside Japan in the past three months, averaged 9,239 per dollar in 2008.

To contact the reporter on this story: Bob Chen in Hong Kong at bchen45@bloomberg.net;



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China Trade Surplus Grows; Producer Prices Climb 10%

By Nipa Piboontanasawat and Kevin Hamlin

Aug. 11 (Bloomberg) -- China's trade surplus unexpectedly widened in July and producer prices rose at the fastest pace in 12 years, adding pressure on the government to let the yuan resume its appreciation.

The surplus climbed 4 percent to $25.3 billion from a year earlier, the first gain in four months, customs bureau figures showed. Factory-gate prices increased 10 percent, the statistics bureau said earlier today.

The benchmark stock index slumped the most in six weeks on concern higher raw-material and energy costs will erode earnings. China halted the yuan's gains and eased lending curbs last month, putting a bigger emphasis on economic growth than fighting inflation as export demand cooled.

``The weakness in exports was always exaggerated,'' said Ben Simpfendorfer, an economist with Royal Bank of Scotland Plc in Hong Kong. ``Producer prices are showing serious inflationary pressures. We expect the pace of yuan appreciation to accelerate.''

The yuan rose 0.02 percent to close at 6.8577 at 5:30 p.m. in Shanghai after the trade numbers were released, reversing an earlier decline. The currency has fallen 0.1 percent against the dollar this quarter after gaining 4.2 percent in the first quarter and 2.3 percent in the second.

The CSI 300 Index fell 5.2 percent to an 18-month low. The gauge has tumbled 54 percent this year after more than doubling in 2007.

Surprise for Economists

The trade surplus and the 26.9 percent increase in exports to $136.7 billion topped the estimates of all 16 economists in a Bloomberg News survey. Overseas shipments grew a revised 17.2 percent in June. Imports increased 33.7 percent in July to $111.4 billion, up from 31 percent.

``Higher valued-added exports such as electronics products are showing more resilience than expected,'' said Glenn Maguire, chief Asia-Pacific economist at Societe Generale in Hong Kong. ``We are seeing that the global economy hasn't been as weak as some of the recent data has suggested -- we're only just starting to see the external environment turn challenging.''

Exports to the U.S. rose 9.9 percent in the first seven months of 2008 from a year earlier after gaining 8.9 percent in the first half. Those to the European Union increased 27.1 percent after climbing 27 percent. Shipments to Japan rose 15.9 percent after increasing 15.1 percent.

Yuan Estimate

The yuan has gained 18 percent against the dollar in the past three years. It's likely to strengthen 3.6 percent to 6.63 against the dollar in the second half of the year, according to the median estimate of 25 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg.

Officials and manufacturers in the U.S. and Europe say the currency is kept artificially weak to help exporters.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, writing this month on the Web site of Foreign Affairs magazine, said yuan strengthening still has ``much further to go.'' Of the advance since a fixed-exchange rate ended in July 2005, Paulson said 70 percent has come about since he initiated semiannual economic talks with China in 2006.

Weaker gains help exporters by keeping their products cheaper in overseas markets, while stronger appreciation counters inflation by lowering import costs.

The government has raised export tax rebates for garments and textiles to protect jobs after economic growth slowed for a fourth quarter to 10.1 percent in the three months through June. China is still the fastest-growing of the world's 20 biggest economies.

10 Million Jobs

Gross domestic product growth below 9 percent would be ``unacceptable'' for a government targeting 10 million new jobs a year, according to a Credit Suisse Group report this month.

Statements last month by the central bank and the Politburo, the Communist Party's top decision-making body, suggested a shift toward growth rather than taming inflation that climbed to a 12-year high of 8.7 percent in February. The statements omitted previous references to a ``tight'' monetary policy.

The increase in factory-gate prices signaled a squeeze on manufacturers' margins and ``high'' inflation pressures, said Ting Lu, an economist with Merrill Lynch in Hong Kong.

SAIC Motor Corp., China's biggest domestic automaker, tumbled 75 percent in Shanghai trading this year, partly on concern that margins are shrinking. China's stockpile of unsold new vehicles reached a four-year high at the end of June.

To contact the reporter on this story: Nipa Piboontanasawat in Hong Kong at npiboontanas@bloomberg.net



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Asian Currencies: Singapore Dollar, Ringgit Slump on Exports

By David Yong and Patricia Lui

Aug. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Asian currencies declined, with Singapore's dollar slumping to a five-month low after a government report showed the economy expanded at the slowest pace in five years.

The local dollar extended last week's slide, which was the most in a decade, after the government on Aug. 8 cut its 2008 growth forecast to ``prepare for a bumpy year ahead.'' The island-state said today that exports will drop as much as 4 percent this year, versus an earlier estimate for growth. South Korea's won dropped 0.4 percent and Malaysia's ringgit posted its biggest loss in more than two months.

``The comments were dovish and the cut in the exports growth forecast is significant for the Singapore dollar,'' said Thomas Harr, a senior currency strategist at Standard Chartered Plc in Singapore.

Singapore's dollar fell as much as 0.8 percent to S$1.4102 versus the U.S. currency, the lowest since Feb. 22, before trading at S$1.4029 as of 4:16 p.m. local time, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Korea's won fell 0.4 percent to 1,031.80 and the ringgit weakened for seventh day to 3.3165.

Singapore's gross domestic product increased 2.1 percent from a year earlier in the second quarter, following a 6.9 percent expansion in the previous three months, the trade ministry said today.

Exports will fall this year for the first time since 2001, the government said, joining Asian neighbors in signaling a deepening economic slowdown.

Feeling the Impact

``Singapore's economy has so far been partly buffered, because we've been carried along by the vibrancy of the Asian region,'' Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said Aug. 8. ``Asian economies are starting to feel the impact of America's problems. We must therefore prepare ourselves for a bumpy year ahead.''

The ringgit headed for its longest losing run since October 2006 after a government report showed industrial production rose at the slowest pace in 10 months in June as export demand waned.

The currency extended last week's 1.2 percent loss, the steepest in almost nine months, after Singapore revised its export and growth outlooks. Singapore this year surpassed the U.S. as Malaysia's biggest overseas market.

``We could be at the start of a slowdown and there is a possible downgrade to the growth projection,'' said Awaluddin Shariff, a currency trader at EON Bank Bhd. in Kuala Lumpur. ``The ringgit will be weaker'' given the drop in Singapore's currency and economic outlook, he said.

Cutting Forecasts

Malaysia's industrial production rose 2 percent in June from a year earlier, the government said today. Factory output increased 2.5 percent in May and 4.8 percent in April.

Citigroup Inc. on Aug. 8 lowered its end-2008 forecast for the ringgit to 3.33 a dollar, and expects its old target of 3.28 to be achieved by end-2009, citing weaker commodity prices and a sell-off in local bond market amid political turmoil.

South Korea's won fell for a third day as demand for the dollar increased from foreign stock sales and importers seeking to pay bills. Global funds sold more Korean shares than they bought for a second day, the stock exchange said.

The currency pared an earlier slump to 1,037.55 against the dollar after a finance ministry official expressed concern, vowing to take steps to slow the ``rapid'' drop.

``Demand from offshore and onshore players was quite strong all day,'' said Ko Yun Jin, a currency dealer with Kookmin Bank in Seoul. ``Actual intervention towards the close helped to temper the won's loss a bit.''

Slowing Demand

Taiwan's dollar weakened 0.2 percent to NT$31.166 to complete a 10-day losing streak, the longest run since December 2001. The island reported its first trade deficit since February 2006 in July as slowing global growth crimped demand for the nation's exports.

``Taiwan is particularly vulnerable to slowing external demand,'' said Callum Henderson, head of currency strategy at Standard Chartered Plc in Singapore. The local dollar ``is under significant pressure lately and is likely to remain so.''

Elsewhere, the Philippines peso traded at 44.32 per dollar versus 44.335 on Aug. 8, and Vietnam's dong advanced 0.5 percent to 16,460. Thailand's baht dropped 0.1 percent to 33.74 while Indonesia's rupiah lost 0.2 percent to 9,185, the lowest level in more than a month.

To contact the reporters on this story: David Yong in Singapore at dyong@bloomberg.net; Patricia Lui in Singapore at plui4@bloomberg.net.



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Citigroup Cuts Forecast for Ringgit on Commodities, Politics

By David Yong

Aug. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Citigroup Inc., the biggest U.S. bank by assets, lowered its year-end forecast for Malaysia's ringgit because a decline in commodity exports may reduce the current- account balance as political turmoil persists.

The ringgit fell, extending last week's 1.2 percent drop, the steepest in almost nine months, on speculation a decrease in crude and palm oil prices will erode the nation's export receipts. Singapore, which surpassed the U.S. as Malaysia's biggest overseas market this year, cut its economic growth estimate last week as exports slumped.

``Concerns over growth, inflation and political uncertainties'' have already led foreigners to sell their holdings of Malaysian debt securities,'' economist Kit Wei Zheng wrote in a research note on Aug. 8. ```The recent fall in commodity prices has also taken part of the shine off the ringgit appreciation story.''

The ringgit declined 0.7 percent to 3.3245 per dollar as of 2:55 p.m. in Kuala Lumpur, the weakest since Dec. 28, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The currency will reach 3.3152 in 12 months, according to non-deliverable forwards contracts, compared with bets for an advance to 3.2520 a week ago.

Forwards are agreements in which assets are bought and sold at current prices for future delivery.

Citigroup trimmed the currency's end-2008 forecast to 3.33 per U.S. dollar, Singapore-based Kit confirmed in a telephone interview today. The bank now expects its old target of 3.28 to be achieved by the end of 2009.

The bank's ringgit revision followed its decision to trim the Singapore dollar forecast to S$1.42 from S$1.36 for end-2008, Kit said. The ringgit weakness may continue into June next year as long as concerns over the economy and politics persist, he said.

Current Account

Crude oil has fallen 17 percent since the end of June and palm oil 23 percent. Both commodities accounted for 14.5 percent of Malaysia's exports in the first half, according to the trade ministry. Malaysia is the world's second-largest palm oil exporter and the second-biggest oil producer in Southeast Asia.

``Net exports of palm oil and crude oil together account for nearly 60 percent of Malaysia's current-account surplus,'' Kit said in the report. ``Any drop in prices would have a material impact on the current-account position.''

Investors have sold local bonds as opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim faces a trial on sodomy allegations on Sept. 10 and kept his Sept. 16 deadline for toppling the ruling government. Anwar pleaded not guilty to the charge, saying it was a ploy to derail his political comeback.

Singapore's dollar fell to a five-month low after the island-state government cut its 2008 forecasts for exports and gross domestic product.

The Monetary Authority of Singapore's willingness to allow the local dollar to weaken from the upper limits of its band may represent ``a de-facto easing of policy without actually making an announcement to this effect,'' Citigroup said.

The weakness in the Singapore dollar, which makes up the second-largest weight in Malaysia's currency basket, will drag the ringgit down as well, the bank said.

To contact the reporter on this story: David Yong in Singapore at dyong@bloomberg.net.



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Nordic Currencies: Norway's Krone Rises as Inflation Quickens

By Emma O'Brien

Aug. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Norway's krone rose against the dollar for the first time in five days and advanced versus the euro as the fastest pace of inflation in 7 1/2 years raised speculation policy makers will increase interest rates.

Norway's central bank boosted the target lending rate to 5.75 percent in June and said inflation may force it to raise the benchmark again. The highest interest rates since 2003 attract carry trade investors, who get funds in countries with low borrowing costs and invest where returns are higher.

``Inflation has been the main driver of the Nokkie,'' said Jostein Tvedt, a currency and debt strategist in Oslo at SEB AB, Scandinavia's third-biggest bank by assets. ``The probability of a hike in October has obviously increased. The central bank has to be more hawkish.''

The krone rose as much as 0.9 percent to 5.3135 per dollar, before trading at 5.3323 at 2:03 p.m. in Oslo, compared with 5.3591 on Aug. 8. It increased 0.5 percent to 8.0042 per euro, from 8.0425 on Aug. 8, when it dropped 0.6 percent against the 15-nation currency.

The underlying inflation rate, which excludes energy costs and taxes, climbed to 2.9 percent in July, Oslo-based Statistics Norway said on its Web site today. It was the highest level since February 2001. The median forecast of 19 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News was for a 2.6 percent pace. Prices rose 0.2 percent in the month.

Norway's target lending rate compares with 4.25 percent in the euro zone, 2.75 percent in Switzerland and 2 percent in the U.S. Japan's 0.5 percent target rate is the lowest among developed countries.

Rate Decision

Norges Bank is next scheduled to announce a decision on its benchmark interest rate on Aug. 13.

In other trading, the Swedish krona gained against the euro and the dollar. The currency increased 0.1 percent to 9.3900 per euro, from 9.4024, and rose 0.2 percent to 6.2516 per dollar, from 6.2648.

Iceland's krona, the worst-performing emerging-market currency against the dollar and the euro over the past 12 months, strengthened for a second day against the euro and rose for the first time in four days versus the dollar. It increased 0.6 percent to 122.44 per euro, from 123.15 at the end of last week, and advanced 0.7 percent to 81.49 per dollar, from 82.06.

In the Nordic government bond market, the yield on Sweden's 5.25 percent note due in March 2011 gained 2 basis points, or 0.02 percentage point, to 4.31 percent. The yield on Norway's 6 percent note maturing May 2011 fell 7 basis points to 4.85 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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South African Rand Gains for First Day in Six as Gold Rebounds

By Nasreen Seria

Aug. 11 (Bloomberg) -- South Africa's rand advanced against the dollar, snapping a five-day decline, as the prices of gold and platinum, the country's biggest exports, gained.

The currency of Africa's largest economy rallied after posting its biggest decline in more than two years last week. Gold rose for the first time in three days, climbing from a 14- week low last week as the euro slumped against the dollar, eroding the appeal of the precious metal as an alternative investment.

``We've seen a pull-back in commodity prices today'' which is helping the rand, said Ion de Vleeschauwer, chief trader in Johannesburg at Bidvest Bank Ltd., which runs the country's biggest chain of moneychangers. A stronger dollar last week ``put pressure on commodity prices and that put pressure on commodity currencies.''

Against the dollar, the rand gained as much as 1 percent to 7.6642 and was at 7.6718 by 10:14 a.m. in Johannesburg, from 7.7375 on Aug. 8. The rand, which dropped 7.2 percent versus the U.S. currency last week, will probably trade in a range between 7.70 to 7.76 today, de Vleeschauwer said.

Gold climbed as much as 1 percent to $865.04 an ounce in London, while platinum rose 1.3 percent to $1,577 an ounce. South Africa produces almost 80 percent of the world's platinum and about 10 percent of its gold, meaning the rand often moves in tandem with the metals' prices.

Government bonds rose, with the yield on South Africa's benchmark 13.5 percent security due September 2015 dropping 13 basis points to 9.38 percent. Yields move inversely to bond prices.

To contact the reporters on this story: Nasreen Seria in Johannesburg at nseria@bloomberg.net



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East European Currencies: Romanian Leu Declines Against Euro

By Yon Pulkrabek

Aug. 11 (Bloomberg) -- The Romanian leu fell against the euro as inflation accelerated less than expected by economists and the trade gap widened. The Czech koruna had its biggest gain in almost a year.

Consumer prices rose 9 percent in July, compared with the 9.3 percent median estimate expected in a Bloomberg News survey of eight economists. Inflation was 8.6 percent in June. The trade gap widened to 2 billion euros in June, from 1.79 billion euros in the same month a year earlier.

The leu dropped as much as a 0.8 percent to 3.5574 per euro, its lowest level in two weeks, and traded at 3.5575 at 10:29 a.m. in Bucharest.

``The Romanian consumer price index has surprised on the downside this morning, helped by a sharp drop in the contribution from food prices, which will be read as a negative for the leu,'' Lucy Bethell, an emerging-markets currency strategist at Royal Bank of Scotland Plc wrote in a client note. ``Fresh Romanian trade data shows the trade deficit as big a headwind for the leu as ever.''

Elsewhere, the Czech koruna had its biggest one-day gain in almost a year, rising 1.2 percent, the most since Aug. 6, 2007. The koruna gained to 24.060, compared with 24.357 late last week.

The koruna is the worst performer against the euro over the past month of the 26 emerging-market currencies tracked by Bloomberg, dropping 2.6 percent.

The Turkish lira snapped a four-day losing streak rising 0.7 percent to 1.1811 per dollar, while the Polish zloty rose for the first time in five days, gaining 0.5 percent to 3.2583.

The Hungarian forint advanced for the first time in six days to 235.94 per euro from 236.44 late on Aug. 8. The Slovak koruna was little changed at 30.364 against the euro.

To contact the reporter on this story: Yon Pulkrabek in Prague at ypulkrabek@bloomberg.net



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Copper Drops as European Slowdown May Limit Use; Aluminum Gains

By Claudia Carpenter

Aug. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Copper fell, extending its drop to a six-month low on the London Metal Exchange, on speculation slowing growth in Europe will limit demand for the metal used in cars and homes. Aluminum rebounded.

Industrial production in France unexpectedly fell in June, led by declining car sales, a report today from the National Statistics Office in Paris showed. European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said last week economic growth will be ``particularly weak'' through the third quarter.

``You now see Europe slowing down quite considerably,'' said Gayle Berry, a metals analyst at Barclays Capital in London.

Copper for delivery in three months fell $16 to $7,384 a metric ton as of 12 p.m. in London and earlier dropped to $7,329.50, the lowest since Feb. 7.

Stockpiles of copper in warehouses monitored by the LME increased 750 tons to 151,625 tons, the highest since Feb. 14.

Declines may be limited on prospects for increased demand from China, the world's biggest buyer of the metal.

China imported 7 percent more copper and copper products in July than in June, the first increase in three months, figures from the customs office today showed. Imports of recycled copper surged. Copper advanced 0.7 percent after the report.

China may have to turn to refined copper imports because mine production is declining and industries that supply recycled copper probably won't keep increasing output as economic growth slows, Berry said. Copper mine production fell 3.3 percent this year through April compared with the same period last year, the Lisbon-based International Copper Study Group said last month.

Zinc declined $10 to $1,675 a ton, and earlier fell to $1,652, the lowest since November 2005. Prices dropped as much as the 4 percent daily limit in Shanghai.

Aluminum, the industrial metal that's the most energy- intensive to produce, climbed $6 to $2,852 a ton. Crude oil jumped as much as 1.5 percent.

Nickel dropped $200 to $17,950, tin decreased $200 to $18,800 and lead dropped $29 to $1,945 a ton.

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



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Canadian Dollar Rises for First Time in Eight Days as Oil Gains

By Cordell Eddings

Aug. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Canada's dollar rose for the first time in eight days as the price of the nation's commodity exports, including crude oil, gold and natural gas, climbed.

The currency declined 3.8 percent last week when oil weakened almost $10 per barrel. Oil prices climbed from a 14- week low today on concern the Russia-Georgia conflict may disrupt crude supplies from the Caspian Sea. Commodities account for about half of Canada's exports. The U.S. is Canada's biggest trading partner.

``The Canadian dollar is up after such a sharp retreat last week, which seemed a little extreme,'' said David Watt, a senior currency strategist at RBC Capital Markets in Toronto, a unit of Canada's biggest bank by assets. ``There is also a feeling that oil may have bottomed, and the market will be looking at the situation with Russia and Georgia, which has pushed the price of oil up.''

The currency rose 0.1 percent to C$1.0655 per U.S. dollar at 7:53 a.m. in Toronto, from $1.0667 on Aug. 8. One Canadian dollar buys 93.84 U.S. cents.

To contact the reporter on this story: Cordell Eddings in New York at ceddings@bloomberg.net



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Euro Little Changed Against Dollar as ECB Cites Inflation Risk

By Anchalee Worrachate

Aug. 11 (Bloomberg) -- The euro was little changed against the dollar, rebounding from a 5 1/2-month low, after policy makers said the European Central Bank remains focused on inflation and traders judged last week's 3.6 percent drop excessive.

The European currency recovered from a two-month low versus the yen on speculation a government report this week will show consumer-price growth in the region accelerated to a 16-year high last month, more than double the ECB's 2 percent ceiling. Central bank council member Klaus Liebscher said policy makers remain focused on the ``worrying'' level of inflation, Market News reported today, citing an interview.

``The euro rebounded mainly because of comments from Liebscher and the fact the currency has moved down too far, too fast,'' said Adam Cole, the head of global currency strategy in London at RBC Capital Markets. ``Inflation remains a threat, and the ECB will keep reminding the market of that. But I suspect a longer-term story is a weak euro. Most bad news in the U.S. seems to already be in the price.''

The euro traded at $1.5010 at 8:01 a.m. in New York after falling to $1.4907, the lowest level since Feb. 26, from $1.5005 on Aug. 8. The single currency weakened to 164.78 yen, from 165.38 at the end of last week. It earlier touched 163.65 yen, the weakest level since June 5. The dollar fell to 109.81 yen, from 110.18.

Ruble Drops

The Russian ruble declined for a second day against the dollar-euro basket used to manage its fluctuations as armed clashes between Russia and Georgia in South Ossetia and Abkhazia deterred investors from holding the currency.

New Zealand's currency was little changed at 70.41 U.S. cents, after reaching 69.82 cents, the weakest since Sept. 11, 2007. Australia's dollar advanced to 89.05 U.S. cents, from 88.87. It touched 88.34 cents, the lowest level since Jan. 31.

``There is of course no bias for the future, and there is no pre-commitment, but what really has to be done in the future depends on the data available,'' Liebscher said, according to Market News. ``For us it's not either-or, growth or price stability. It is price stability. We have to do at a given moment of time what is necessary.''

Traders raised bets that the ECB will lift rates this year after leaving the main rate steady at 4.25 percent last week. The implied yield on December interest-rate futures, an indicator of interest rate expectations, increased 3 basis points from Aug. 8, to 4.96 percent.

Euro Plunge

The European single currency sank the most in almost eight years against the dollar on Aug. 8 as traders pared bets the ECB will raise interest rates as the economy slows. The weekly decline was the most since January 2005.

Further gains in the euro may be limited after a government report showed French industrial production, which accounts for 15 percent of the euro-area's second-largest economy, unexpectedly fell in June. Output slid 0.4 percent from May, when it declined 2.9 percent, according to Insee, the National Statistics Office in Paris. Economists in a Bloomberg survey had predicted an increase of 0.6 percent.

Investors may also be deterred after Moody's Investors Service said defaults on loans included in European commercial mortgage-backed securities rose 80 percent in the second quarter, sparking concern the financial turmoil in the region is deepening.

The ruble fell to 29.8459 against the basket. It earlier had a record 1.3 percent drop after sinking 1.2 percent at the end of last week.

Caucasus Conflict

Russia stepped up its bombing of Georgia, rejecting a proposed cease-fire agreed on by Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili, as the European Union prepared to send a peace mission to Moscow. Russian warplanes dropped bombs on radar for Tbilisi airport overnight, and artillery and planes pounded the central town of Gori today, Georgian officials said. Russian aircraft also bombed the Black Sea port city of Poti, Georgian Deputy Defense Minister Batu Kutelia said by phone.

Five days of clashes between Georgia and Russia have left scores of people dead and threatened to disrupt a major energy transport route, helping push crude oil up from a 14-week low in New York. Oil rose 1 percent to $116.32 a barrel after sliding almost $10 last week. The price is up 62 percent in the past year.


The Swiss franc rose against 13 of the 16 most actively traded currencies tracked by Bloomberg, including the dollar and the euro, as concern the conflict will escalate prompted investors to pare so-called carry trades, in which traders buy higher- yielding assets using loans denominated in the Swiss currency.

The franc rose 0.3 percent to 1.6197 against the euro and advanced 0.3 percent to 1.0796 versus the dollar.

Dollar Bets

Negative economic news in the U.S. may not be over, according to Sophia Drossos, a strategist in New York at Morgan Stanley.

``I would not chase the dollar's strength versus the euro as the pair has moved beyond interest-rate support,'' said Drossos, who also recommended closing out bets on the dollar versus the currencies of Malaysia and Singapore. ``The dollar is not out of the woods. It will take the market a while to come around to our point of view.''

U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said there are no plans to use his new authority to inject capital into mortgage companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which both posted worse-than-expected earnings last week.

``We have no plans to insert money into either of those two institutions,'' Paulson said in an interview with NBC's ``Meet the Press'' broadcast yesterday from Beijing. He added that their earnings results were ``not a surprise'' and that the housing slump will last beyond this year.

Confidence Lacking

Paulson and Congress last month brokered a plan to bolster the two government-sponsored enterprises that includes giving the Treasury the right to buy their shares. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which account for almost half of the $12 trillion mortgage market, reported losses three times worse than estimated, prompting some analysts to predict that Paulson will have to act.

``Paulson's comments may weigh on the dollar,'' said Akio Shimizu, chief manager of foreign-exchange trading at Mitsubishi UFJ Trust & Banking Corp. in Tokyo. ``There may not be enough confidence in the mortgage lenders to assume they can survive without public funds.''

The dollar may decline to 109.40 yen today, he said.

Sales at U.S. retailers fell 0.1 percent in July after rising 0.1 percent in the previous month, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey. The Commerce Department will release the data on Aug. 13.

The Federal Reserve will say on Aug. 15 that industrial production was unchanged in July after rising 0.5 percent the prior month, according to a separate Bloomberg survey.

Dollar Predictions

The dollar's 3.8 percent surge against the euro this month was enough to prompt Bank of America Corp. to tell its customers to exit trades betting on more gains. Morgan Stanley still forecasts the greenback will approach a record low by October as the U.S. housing slump and credit-market losses keep the Fed from raising interest rates this year.

That's mostly because there's no indication the U.S. will return to the late 1990s annualized gross domestic product growth of 4.23 percent with inflation running at no more than 3.3 percent. Since September 2000, the dollar has declined more than 40 percent as inflation accelerated to an annual 5 percent rate, growth slowed to 1.9 percent and U.S. interest rates provide no cushion for holding U.S. assets.

To contact the reporter on this story: Anchalee Worrachate in London at aworrachate@ Stanley White in Tokyo at swhite28@bloomberg.net.





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Euro Little Changed Against Dollar as ECB Cites Inflation Risk

By Anchalee Worrachate

Aug. 11 (Bloomberg) -- The euro was little changed against the dollar, rebounding from a 5 1/2-month low, after policy makers said the European Central Bank remains focused on inflation and traders judged last week's 3.6 percent drop excessive.

The European currency recovered from a two-month low versus the yen on speculation a government report this week will show consumer-price growth in the region accelerated to a 16-year high last month, more than double the ECB's 2 percent ceiling. Central bank council member Klaus Liebscher said policy makers remain focused on the ``worrying'' level of inflation, Market News reported today, citing an interview.

``The euro rebounded mainly because of comments from Liebscher and the fact the currency has moved down too far, too fast,'' said Adam Cole, the head of global currency strategy in London at RBC Capital Markets. ``Inflation remains a threat, and the ECB will keep reminding the market of that. But I suspect a longer-term story is a weak euro. Most bad news in the U.S. seems to already be in the price.''

The euro traded at $1.5010 at 8:01 a.m. in New York after falling to $1.4907, the lowest level since Feb. 26, from $1.5005 on Aug. 8. The single currency weakened to 164.78 yen, from 165.38 at the end of last week. It earlier touched 163.65 yen, the weakest level since June 5. The dollar fell to 109.81 yen, from 110.18.

Ruble Drops

The Russian ruble declined for a second day against the dollar-euro basket used to manage its fluctuations as armed clashes between Russia and Georgia in South Ossetia and Abkhazia deterred investors from holding the currency.

New Zealand's currency was little changed at 70.41 U.S. cents, after reaching 69.82 cents, the weakest since Sept. 11, 2007. Australia's dollar advanced to 89.05 U.S. cents, from 88.87. It touched 88.34 cents, the lowest level since Jan. 31.

``There is of course no bias for the future, and there is no pre-commitment, but what really has to be done in the future depends on the data available,'' Liebscher said, according to Market News. ``For us it's not either-or, growth or price stability. It is price stability. We have to do at a given moment of time what is necessary.''

Traders raised bets that the ECB will lift rates this year after leaving the main rate steady at 4.25 percent last week. The implied yield on December interest-rate futures, an indicator of interest rate expectations, increased 3 basis points from Aug. 8, to 4.96 percent.

Euro Plunge

The European single currency sank the most in almost eight years against the dollar on Aug. 8 as traders pared bets the ECB will raise interest rates as the economy slows. The weekly decline was the most since January 2005.

Further gains in the euro may be limited after a government report showed French industrial production, which accounts for 15 percent of the euro-area's second-largest economy, unexpectedly fell in June. Output slid 0.4 percent from May, when it declined 2.9 percent, according to Insee, the National Statistics Office in Paris. Economists in a Bloomberg survey had predicted an increase of 0.6 percent.

Investors may also be deterred after Moody's Investors Service said defaults on loans included in European commercial mortgage-backed securities rose 80 percent in the second quarter, sparking concern the financial turmoil in the region is deepening.

The ruble fell to 29.8459 against the basket. It earlier had a record 1.3 percent drop after sinking 1.2 percent at the end of last week.

Caucasus Conflict

Russia stepped up its bombing of Georgia, rejecting a proposed cease-fire agreed on by Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili, as the European Union prepared to send a peace mission to Moscow. Russian warplanes dropped bombs on radar for Tbilisi airport overnight, and artillery and planes pounded the central town of Gori today, Georgian officials said. Russian aircraft also bombed the Black Sea port city of Poti, Georgian Deputy Defense Minister Batu Kutelia said by phone.

Five days of clashes between Georgia and Russia have left scores of people dead and threatened to disrupt a major energy transport route, helping push crude oil up from a 14-week low in New York. Oil rose 1 percent to $116.32 a barrel after sliding almost $10 last week. The price is up 62 percent in the past year.


The Swiss franc rose against 13 of the 16 most actively traded currencies tracked by Bloomberg, including the dollar and the euro, as concern the conflict will escalate prompted investors to pare so-called carry trades, in which traders buy higher- yielding assets using loans denominated in the Swiss currency.

The franc rose 0.3 percent to 1.6197 against the euro and advanced 0.3 percent to 1.0796 versus the dollar.

Dollar Bets

Negative economic news in the U.S. may not be over, according to Sophia Drossos, a strategist in New York at Morgan Stanley.

``I would not chase the dollar's strength versus the euro as the pair has moved beyond interest-rate support,'' said Drossos, who also recommended closing out bets on the dollar versus the currencies of Malaysia and Singapore. ``The dollar is not out of the woods. It will take the market a while to come around to our point of view.''

U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said there are no plans to use his new authority to inject capital into mortgage companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which both posted worse-than-expected earnings last week.

``We have no plans to insert money into either of those two institutions,'' Paulson said in an interview with NBC's ``Meet the Press'' broadcast yesterday from Beijing. He added that their earnings results were ``not a surprise'' and that the housing slump will last beyond this year.

Confidence Lacking

Paulson and Congress last month brokered a plan to bolster the two government-sponsored enterprises that includes giving the Treasury the right to buy their shares. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which account for almost half of the $12 trillion mortgage market, reported losses three times worse than estimated, prompting some analysts to predict that Paulson will have to act.

``Paulson's comments may weigh on the dollar,'' said Akio Shimizu, chief manager of foreign-exchange trading at Mitsubishi UFJ Trust & Banking Corp. in Tokyo. ``There may not be enough confidence in the mortgage lenders to assume they can survive without public funds.''

The dollar may decline to 109.40 yen today, he said.

Sales at U.S. retailers fell 0.1 percent in July after rising 0.1 percent in the previous month, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey. The Commerce Department will release the data on Aug. 13.

The Federal Reserve will say on Aug. 15 that industrial production was unchanged in July after rising 0.5 percent the prior month, according to a separate Bloomberg survey.

Dollar Predictions

The dollar's 3.8 percent surge against the euro this month was enough to prompt Bank of America Corp. to tell its customers to exit trades betting on more gains. Morgan Stanley still forecasts the greenback will approach a record low by October as the U.S. housing slump and credit-market losses keep the Fed from raising interest rates this year.

That's mostly because there's no indication the U.S. will return to the late 1990s annualized gross domestic product growth of 4.23 percent with inflation running at no more than 3.3 percent. Since September 2000, the dollar has declined more than 40 percent as inflation accelerated to an annual 5 percent rate, growth slowed to 1.9 percent and U.S. interest rates provide no cushion for holding U.S. assets.

To contact the reporter on this story: Anchalee Worrachate in London at aworrachate@ Stanley White in Tokyo at swhite28@bloomberg.net.





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Crude Oil Climbs in New York on Supply Threat in Caspian Sea

By Grant Smith and Nesa Subrahmaniyan

Aug. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Oil prices climbed from a 14-week low in New York on concern the Russia-Georgia conflict may disrupt crude supplies from the Caspian Sea.

Crude rebounded after five days of clashes in Georgia that threatened alternative export routes from Azerbaijan, needed because of a pipeline fire. The fire on the Turkish stretch of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline was extinguished today following an explosion last week. Prices also gained as some traders deemed last week's 7.9 percent drop as excessive.

``The events in Georgia over the weekend place more concerns in traders' minds over the continuity of supply of crude oil,'' said Rob Laughlin, senior broker at MF Global Ltd. in London. ``The Baku-Ceyhan outages are placing additional strains on a creaking supply chain.''

Crude oil for September delivery gained as much as $1.70, or 1.5 percent, to $116.90 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange, and traded at $116.18 as of 12:33 p.m. in London. Oil settled at $115.20 on Aug. 8, the lowest close since May 1.

Nymex crude futures have fallen 21 percent from the record $147.27 a barrel reached on July 11.

Brent crude for September settlement added as much as $1.99, or 1.8 percent, to $115.32 on the ICE Futures Europe exchange, and last traded at $114.35. Nymex crude traded at a premium of $1.97 a barrel to Brent crude oil, compared with 59 cents a month ago.

`Physical Disruption'

``Whether we get an actual physical disruption in supply to Europe will be critical,'' said Gerard Burg, an energy and minerals economist at National Australia Bank Ltd. in Melbourne. ``If it impacts on Brent, it is going to affect a much wider market and has the potential to send prices higher.''

Georgia is a key link in a U.S.-backed southern energy corridor that connects the Caspian Sea region with world markets, bypassing Russia. The Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline ships Azeri Light crude, which is typically priced based on the Brent contract.

Russian troops entered the breakaway province of South Ossetia on Aug. 8 after fighting between local forces and the Georgian army. Georgia, which has withdrawn its forces, is now under attack from warplanes and artillery fire from neighboring Abkhazia province.

Maintenance Season

``Brent hasn't really narrowed to Nymex futures so it hasn't really affected supplies too much, but if there's a real prolonged disruption, then Brent may get a kick up,'' said Tetsu Emori, a fund manager at Astmax Co. in Tokyo. ``The European refinery maintenance season is also about to start so demand for crude may also drop.''

The fire on BP Plc's Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline in eastern Turkey was extinguished today, enabling officials to assess damage to the link within 12 hours, a spokesman for the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan line said.

``The fire's out and now we're in the cool-down period, which usually takes some time,'' Murat Lecompte, external affairs director for pipeline operator BTC Co., said in a telephone interview.

BP and other companies are pumping crude through the Baku- Supsa pipeline to the Georgian Black Sea coast, after the fire. The pipeline had been delivering about 800,000 barrels of oil a day to the Turkish port of Ceyhan before the shutdown, BP said last week.

The amount represents about 6 percent of the 12.8 million barrels a day produced by the countries of the former Soviet Union, according to data from the BP Statistical Review of Energy.

Oil also rose after falling below the $116.69 a barrel support level this year that marked a 50 percent retracement of the climb to July's record, based on a series of numbers known as the Fibonacci sequence.

``It's a technical bounce up today but doubts remain if it can be sustained,'' said Toby Hassall, analyst at Commodity Warrants Australia in Sydney.

To contact the reporter on this story: Nesa Subrahmaniyan in Singapore at nesas@bloomberg.net



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Gold Miners Cut Forward Sales to Lowest Since 1987, GFMS Says

By Stuart Wallace

Aug. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Gold-mining companies led by AngloGold Ashanti Ltd. reduced their forward sales of the metal by 4.06 million ounces in the second quarter, to the lowest since 1987, research company GFMS Ltd. said.

Gold producers had a total of 18.81 million ounces left in the so-called global hedge book at the end of June, London-based GFMS said in its quarterly Societe Generale Gold Hedge Book Analysis report on its Web site.

For the full year, miners will probably cut about 10 million ounces of hedges, suggesting ``de-hedging levels in the second half of 2008 will slow considerably,'' GFMS said.

Gold averaged $897.40 an ounce in the second quarter, compared with $923.82 in the first quarter. Miners can agree to sell future production at current prices to protect against losses caused by sudden declines, a strategy known as hedging.

To contact the reporter on this story: Stuart Wallace in London at swallace6@bloomberg.net



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Corn, Soybeans Drop as Warm Weather May Boost U.S. Production

By Sungwoo Park and Jae Hur

Aug. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Corn and soybeans fell to the lowest in more than four months on speculation the U.S. crops probably avoided the flood damage investors estimated in June as warm weather dried out fields, raising production prospects.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture will tomorrow project a corn crop of 11.939 billion bushels, according to the average estimate of 23 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News. That's up 1.9 percent from the USDA's July estimate of 11.715 bushels. Since reaching records this year, corn is down 35 percent and soybeans are down 28 percent as favorable weather boosted crops.

``Many are expecting the USDA report to turn out to be a bearish factor for corn price because good weather improved crop condition in the wake of June flooding,'' Han Sung Min, a manager at the international marketing division of Korea Exchange Bank Futures Co. said from Seoul. ``In addition, grains remain pressured by the stronger dollar.''

Corn for December delivery fell as much as 6.25 cents, or 1.2 percent, to $5.12 a bushel, the lowest since March 20, on the Chicago Board of Trade and traded at $5.1575 at 3:51 p.m. Singapore time.

Futures dropped 11.4 percent last week, the biggest such decline since July 1996. The decline was the sixth straight weekly loss. Corn has fallen from a record $7.9925 on June 27.

The dollar rose last Friday to the highest since February against a basket of the euro, yen and four other major currencies, reducing the appeal of commodities as a hedge against inflation.

Soybeans Drop

Soybeans for November delivery lost as much as 12.5 cents, or 1.1 percent, to $11.68 a bushel, the lowest since April 1, and last traded at $11.7125. The most-active contract is down from the all-time high of $16.3675 on July 3. Soybeans tumbled 13.5 percent last week, the biggest such drop since July 1988.

The USDA will issue its crop report tomorrow at 8:30 a.m. in Washington.

Wheat for December delivery was little changed at $7.91 a bushel as of 4:02 p.m. Singapore time after trading between $7.87 and $8.01. The most-active futures have dropped 41 percent since reaching a record $13.495 on Feb. 27.

Australia may harvest more of wheat crop than previously forecast after July rainfall, the Grain Growers Association said. Production may be 24.05 million metric tons, the group said, citing the latest forecast from the Australian Crop Forecasters. That's 500,000 tons higher than ACF's previous estimate, it said, and compares with the government forecast of 23.7 million tons.

To contact the reporters on this story: Sungwoo Park in Seoul at spark47@bloomberg.net; Jae Hur in Singapore at jhur1@bloomberg.net




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Russia's Micex Climbs, Erasing Earlier Decline; Lukoil Advances

By William Mauldin

Aug. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Russia's Micex Index advanced, erasing its earlier decline, after President Dmitry Medvedev said the military had completed a ``significant'' part of its operations in the breakaway Georgia republic of South Ossetia.

OAO Lukoil, Russia's second-biggest oil producer, and OAO Gazprom, the world's largest natural-gas producer, rallied as oil prices climbed from a 14-week low.

The ruble-denominated Micex gained 1.5 percent to 1,379.81 at 1:37 p.m. in Moscow after earlier falling as much as 5.7 percent. The dollar-denominated RTS Index added 0.3 percent to 1,728.46 after sliding as much as 4.3 percent.

Five days of clashes between Georgia and Russia have left scores of people dead and threatened to disrupt a major energy transport route. U.S. President George W. Bush has condemned the Russian bombings as the European Union intensified diplomatic efforts to end the violence in South Ossetia and fighting threatened to engulf a second breakaway region.

Russia has taken under control Tskhinvali, the South Ossetian capital, Medvedev said during a meeting with Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov, the state-run news service RIA Novosti reported.

Lukoil climbed 3.6 percent to 1,904.80 rubles. Gazprom added 3.8 percent to 253 rubles.

Crude oil for September delivery gained as much as $1.70, or 1.5 percent, to $116.90 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

To contact the reporter on this story: William Mauldin in Moscow at wmauldin1@bloomberg.net.



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U.K. Stocks Rise, Led by Shell and BP on Oil Price; BG Advances

By Sarah Thompson

Aug. 11 (Bloomberg) -- U.K. stocks advanced the most in almost a week, led by Royal Dutch Shell Plc and BP Plc as crude rose from a 14-week low in New York and BG Group Plc discovered oil in the North Sea.

The FTSE 100 Index added 42.9, or 0.8 percent, to 5,532.1 at 12:42 p.m. in London. The FTSE All-Share Index gained 0.8 percent and Ireland's ISEQ Index increased 2.7 percent.

Shell, Europe's largest oil company, climbed 1.8 percent to 1,778. BP, the second-biggest, advanced 1.6 percent to 527.75.

Oil prices climbed from a 14-week low in New York on concern the Russia-Georgia conflict may disrupt crude supplies from the Caspian Sea.

Crude rebounded after five days of clashes in Georgia threatened alternative export routes from Azerbaijan needed because of a pipeline fire. Prices also gained as some traders deemed last week's 7.9 percent drop as excessive.

BG increased 1.2 percent to 1,103. The U.K.'s third-largest oil and natural-gas producer found oil in an exploration well in the northern North Sea, the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate said.

Royal Bank of Scotland Plc gained 2.3 percent to 246 after it was upgraded by Societe Generale, which cited lower-than- estimated credit-market losses and integration costs at the bank, the U.K.'s second largest.

The following stocks also rose or fell in the U.K. market. Stock symbols are in parentheses.

U.K. companies:

Aquarius Platinum Ltd. (AQP LN) climbed 18.25 pence, or 4.3 percent, to 443.25. The miner of the metal in South Africa was raised to ``buy'' from ``neutral'' at UBS AG, which noted the share price's 50 percent fall since its peak in mid-May and Xstrata Plc's proposed offer for Lonmin Plc.

DSG International Plc (DSGI LN) jumped 1.25 pence, or 2.3 percent, to 56.25. The U.K.'s biggest consumer-electronics retailer hired Citigroup Inc. to review its Italian and Spanish operations, with a view to selling the electrical goods retailers, the Sunday Telegraph said, without saying where it got the information.

International Personal Finance Plc (IPF LN) dropped 12 pence, or 3.7 percent, to 313.5. The U.K. bank that makes unsecured loans to low-income households overseas was lowered to ``neutral'' from ``buy'' at Merrill Lynch & Co., which said ``although we are very comfortable with IPF's funding, we believe that this could become a focus point in six months time.''

Mapeley Ltd. (MAY LN) slid 4 pence, or 0.4 percent, to 1,014. The real estate investment company controlled by Fortress Investment Group LLC reported a second-quarter net loss of 25.6 million pounds from a 17.2 million pound profit and said market conditions remain ``challenging.''

Irish Companies:

Paddy Power Plc (PWL ID). Ireland's largest betting-shop owner, fell 90 cents, or 5.2 percent, to 16.5 euros. Competitor Ladbrokes Plc restated first-half figures to show that its local winnings declined.

``Concern regarding the deteriorating retail environment in Ireland, combined with an over-supply of Irish bookmaker shops, will rise as a result'' of the announcement, David Jennings, an analyst at Davy Stockbrokers in Dublin, wrote in a note. ``It will be of particular concern to holders of Paddy Power.''

Smurfit Kappa Group Plc (SKG ID) added 30.8 cents, or 6.8 percent, to 4.818 euros. Europe's largest maker of cardboard boxes said second-quarter profit more than doubled on lower finance costs.

To contact the reporter on this story: Sarah Thompson in London at sthompson17@bloomberg.net.



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