Economic Calendar

Friday, September 12, 2008

U.S. Retail Sales Flag as Support from Tax Rebates Wane

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by RBC Financial Group | Sep 12 08 14:15 GMT |

Retail sales were much weaker than expected in August, dropping -0.3% compared to expectations of an increase of 0.2%. The growth rate was expected to stay in positive territory largely on the basis of earlier indications of a rebound in auto sales, which did, in fact, rise 1.9% in August. However, this was more than offset by the sizeable, and unexpected, drop of 0.7% in the ex auto component.

The bad news contained in this morning's report was further exacerbated by the sizeable downward revision to growth in retail sales in July to a drop of 0.5% from the previously reported drop of 0.1%. However, the lion's share of the revision was concentrated in the motor vehicle component, with growth in sales excluding autos revised down only slightly to 0.3% from 0.4% previously.

Some weakness in the ex auto component had been anticipated with falling gasoline prices expected to send service station receipts down in the month. The service station component was reported this morning to be down 2.5% in August. However, what was of greater downward surprise was the broad-based weakness in a number of other components, led by drops in building materials and garden equipment stores (down 2.2%), department stores (down 1.5%) and electronic and appliance stores (down 1.3%).

The disappointing retail sales numbers are flagging a fairly significant slowing in consumer spending in the third quarter and may even result in growth in this expenditure area turning slightly negative after the annualized 1.7% gain in the second quarter.

With support from the tax rebates waning, the impact of declining employment and falling net worth are likely starting to have the more dominant impact on household spending. One recent development that will help temper the dampening impact on spending going forward are the recent declines in energy prices that allow more disposable income outside of energy purchases. However, today's report makes clear the continuing downside risks to growth coming from this key expenditure area of the economy. This is expected to keep the Fed on the sidelines near-term, maintaining Fed funds at a still stimulative 2.00% through the remainder of this year and during the first half of 2009.

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

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






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U.S. Producer Prices Slump on Energy Price Decline

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by RBC Financial Group | Sep 12 08 14:14 GMT |

Producer prices declined 0.9% in August, a much larger dip than the 0.5% drop predicted by forecasters and in sharp contrast to the 1.2% surge recorded in July. Energy prices alleviated some of the pressure on producer prices as the index fell 4.6% in the month. The core measure, which excludes both energy and food prices, increased at a 0.2% rate, much slower than the unexpectedly robust 0.7% increase recorded in July but bang on market expectations. On a year-over-year basis, the pace of increase in producer price inflation eased to 9.6% from 9.8% in July with the core measure edging up to 3.6% from 3.5%.

The decline in the energy price index reflected falling prices for natural gas, gasoline and heating oil, the latter was down 13.6% in the month. Despite the monthly dips, however, prices for overall energy products stood 27.4% higher than in August 2007. Passenger car prices also declined in August and were off 0.3%. On the upside, tobacco products, capital equipment and pharmaceutical preparation prices all posted gains. Intermediate goods prices dropped 1% in August, although they were 16.7% higher than a year ago while crude goods prices fell 11.9% in August to be up 38.1% relative to August 2007.

Despite the monthly dip in producer prices in August, the elevated level of annual price increase for both the all-items and core measures will keep the Fed wary that the past strong gains in energy prices will start to lift inflationary expectations. The annual increase in the core measure stood at it highest level in 17 years and the Fed will be watching to see if these upward price pressures will be sustained and passed through to the consumer level.

The core consumer inflation rate rose to 2.5% in July, although it remains entrenched within its range of 2.1% to 2.9%. The PPI report is likely to be overshadowed by this morning's release of August retail sales which showed an unexpected decline in overall sales in the month and a bigger-than-expected drop in ex-auto retail activity. We expect the Fed will hold the policy rate steady at 2% at next week's meeting as concerns about the prospect of weaker growth faces off against worries that the elevated annual inflation rates will eventually fuel a pop in inflation expectations.

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

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






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Relief from Commodities Helps Restrain August PPI

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by Wachovia Corporation | Sep 12 08 13:38 GMT |

The Producer Price Index (PPI) fell 0.9 percent in August led by a 4.6 percent decline in energy prices. The core PPI moderated from July as well but saw a sizable 0.9 percent increase in apparel goods. Inflation further back in the pipeline also showed signs of deceleration which the Fed should take comfort in at next week’s FOMC meeting.

First Decline of the Year

  • Headline PPI fell on a monthly basis for the first time since December 2007. Year-over-year, headline PPI is up 9.6 percent.
  • Core finished goods prices remained well behaved in August, rising 0.2 percent. Year-over-year, however, core PPI remains uncomfortably high. Even further back in the pipeline, intermediate core prices continued to climb, up 1.7 percent.

Lower Commodity Prices Brighten Outlook

  • Pipeline inflationary pressures remain worrisome. Prices for intermediate goods are up 16.7 percent while crude goods are up 38.1 percent. This has to be taken in context.
  • As long as commodity prices continue to recede on the back of slower economic growth, wholesale price inflation should trend lower in the coming months.

Wachovia Corporation
http://www.wachovia.com

Disclaimer: The information and opinions herein are for general information use only. Wachovia Corporation and its affiliates, including Wachovia Bank, N.A., do not guarantee their accuracy or completeness, nor does Wachovia Corporation or any of its affiliates, including Wachovia Bank, N.A., assume any liability for any loss that may result from the reliance by any person upon any such information or opinions. Such information and opinions are subject to change without notice, are for general information only and are not intended as an offer or solicitation with respect to the purchase or sales of any security or any foreign exchange transaction, or as personalized investment advice. Securities and foreign exchange transactions are not FDIC-insured, are not bank-guaranteed, and may lose value.





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It's Retracements Versus Dominant Trends For The Australian And New Zealand Dollars

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by DailyFX | Sep 12 08 13:51 GMT |

It has been an arduous few months for the high-yielding Australian and New Zealand dollars. With both the RBA and RBNZ proven their willingness to cut both currencies' primary attraction (a high yield), both have tumbled significantly against most of their counterparts. However, this drop may be long overdue for at least a temporary retracement. See what each DailyFX Analyst thinks and how they are positioning below:

Currency Strategist - John Kicklighter

My picks: Short NZDUSD
Expertise: Combining Money Management with Fundamental and Technical Analysis
Average Time Frame of Trades: 3 days - 1 week

From a fundamental perspective, there is no currency in worst shape than the New Zealand dollar. The RBNZ recently cut its overnight lending rate by 50 basis points. Far more important (as the market's outlook usually is) was Governor Bollard's comments that the economy was already in a recession and that further easing was likely. With such economic malaise, cooling inflatio and a proven willingness to delivering large rate cuts to the benchmark rate, the true international value of the New Zealand dollar (as a carry currency) is essentially put into jeopardy. Technically, NZDUSD is in a strong downtrend, though there have been significant retracements along the way (unlike other dollar denominated pairs).

When considering a setup though, it is always best to approach as a skeptic. The issue here is in the trend itself. It's wise to always go with the trend; but the longer it is has been in place, the more likely there are to be significant retracements. There is also fundamental concern in the US dollar's strength. We have seen the currency pull back across the market as financial market concerns have grown and the probabilities of a possible interest rate cut have grown (there is a 20 percent chance of a 25bp cut in October according to Fed Fund futures). So, now we have a inflection point in a dominant technical and fundamental trend. The best way to approach a short NZDUSD now is through a sound setup. Now testing 0.66, we are at a former support level and just above a major retracement level (going back 7 years). Stops can be set relatively close, but still be conservative. A falling trend on the lower time frame (240 minutes) that is now within 0.67 will stand as the line in the sand.

Currency Strategist - Terri Belkas

My picks: Long GBP/AUD
Expertise: Fundamentals Combined With Technicals
Average Time Frame of Trades: 1-3 Days

While there's immediate resistance looming at 2.2000/93, I like GBP/AUD to the upside. On the daily charts, it looks like we have a bit of an inverse head-and-shoulders formation, and I'll be looking for a break above the neckline at the 50% fib of 2.3892 - 2.0300 at 2.2093 to target 2.2500. Meanwhile, on the 240 minute charts, GBP/AUD is holding within a rising channel formation. As long as price holds above the supporting line of that channel at 2.1825, I see no reason to doubt that the GBP/AUD rally will continue.

Currency Analyst - Ilya Spivak

My picks: Short AUDUSD below 0.8357
Expertise: Macro Fundamentals, Classic Technical Analysis
Average Time Frame of Trades: 1 Week - 6 Months

Having sold off sharply since mid-July, the AUDUSD has shown a bullish Hammer candlestick squarely above support at the psychologically significant 0.80 level and the 138.2% Fibonacci extension of the 01/22-07/15 rally. A pullback eyes resistance at 0.8357, the 23.6% retracement of the most recent down leg starting 07/15. Look for a pullback to this level and look for signs of a reversal to enter short.

Currency Analyst - David Song

My picks: Short AUDNZD
Expertise: Fundamentals Combined with Technicals
Average Time Frame of Trades: 2 Days - 2 Weeks

After hitting an intraday high of 1.2996 on 7/24/08, the AUDNZD has moved lower to hold within a range between 1.1980 and 1.2510. After finding short-term support around 1.2000 earlier this week, price action has moved to the upside to hold above 1.2215. The significant decline in the Australia dollar crosses suggests that the depreciation of the aussie will continue, and I expect the downward momentum to lead the AUDNZD below 1.2000 over the next few days.

DailyFX

Disclaimer

Investment in the currency exchange is highly speculative and should only be done with risk capital. Prices rise and fall and past performance is no assurance of future performance. This website is an information site only. Accordingly we make no warranties or guarantees in respect of the content. The publications herein do not take into account the investment objectives, financial situation or particular needs of any particular person. Investors should obtain individual financial advice based on their own particular circumstances before making an investment decision on the basis of the recommendations in this website. While we try to ensure that all of the information provided on this website is kept up-to-date and accurate we accept no responsibility for any use made of the information provided. All intellectual property rights are the property of Daily FX. Daily FX and its affiliates, will not be held responsible for the reliability or accuracy of the information available on this site. The content herein is provided in good faith and believed to be accurate, however, there are no explicit or implicit warranties of accuracy or timeliness made by Daily FX or its affiliates. The reader agrees not to hold Daily FX or any of its affiliates liable for decisions that are based on information from this website. Daily FX highly recommends that before making a decision, the reader collects several opinions related to the decision and verifies facts from at least several independent sources.





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US Dollar Decline Underway Across Major Forex Pairs

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by DailyFX | Sep 12 08 13:48 GMT |

The US dollar has finally shown signs that it may post a near-term correction, as a previous forex market sentiment extreme clearly hinted at a USD pullback. We have accordingly shifted our technical forecasts across major forex pairs.

EUR/USD

After setting a fresh RSI extreme through recent trade and flirting with the 50 percent retracement of the 1.1600-1.6000 move, the EURUSD finally rallied off of its recent lows. A hammer formation on yesterday's candle suggests that this may be the start of a larger reversal—especially as recent EURUSD COT data shows that forex positioning reached an extreme through recent trade. Short-term targets to the topside now become previous spike-highs at 1.4180.

USD/JPY

According to our recent analysis, "Bigger picture, the advance from 95.72 is in 3 waves (corrective) and has retraced 50% of the decline from 124.13. As such, we are looking for the longer term downtrend to continue. This is our stance as long as price is below 110.65." Shorter-term, a hold of nearby trendline support and the pair's 200-day Simple Moving Average supports a near-term bounce.

GBP/USD

We continue to claim that the British Pound is headed for further recovery against the US dollar, as sentiment had clearly reached extremes on GBPUSD declines. Such dynamics are visible in our recent GBPUSD COT Analysis and increased financial media attention on GBP weakness. We wrote recently, "A rally through 1.7705 would signal that the short term trend is up." The next noteworthy resistance mark now becomes previous spike-highs at 1.7978.

USD/CHF

Our recent analysis on the US Dollar/Swiss Franc holds true: "The USDCHF advance from 96.47 is nearing potentially major resistance from a Fibonacci confluence and former congestion area. The 61.8% of 1.2566-.9647 is at 1.1453 and the 161.8% extension of the .9647-1.0624 rally is at 1.1590. The December 2007 high is at 1.1594. Like the GBPUSD, yesterday's inside day warns of a change in trend."

USD/CAD

"The high last week at 1.0775 was just pips away from an important Fibonacci confluence at 1.0791/98 (61.8% ext. of the .9055-1.0378 advance and 61.8% retrace of the decline from 1.1875 to .9055). If the A-B-C count above is correct, then the USDCAD is headed back to parity at minimum but possibly to a new low in the next year.

AUD/USD

We have been calling for counter-trend moves in the US dollar across the board, and the AUDUSD is no exception. A bearish AUDUSD extreme invites further topside corrections, and yesterday's impressive reversal suggests that a short-term low is in place at 0.7899. Next noteworthy resistance comes at the 38.2 percent retracement of 0.8814-0.7898 at 0.8246.

NZD/USD

As with other US Dollar pairs, it seems increasingly likely that the NZDUSD has set a short-term bottom at 0.6437. Next topside targets include yesterday's open price at 0.6632 and spike highs on 9/08 at 0.6846.

DailyFX

Disclaimer

Investment in the currency exchange is highly speculative and should only be done with risk capital. Prices rise and fall and past performance is no assurance of future performance. This website is an information site only. Accordingly we make no warranties or guarantees in respect of the content. The publications herein do not take into account the investment objectives, financial situation or particular needs of any particular person. Investors should obtain individual financial advice based on their own particular circumstances before making an investment decision on the basis of the recommendations in this website. While we try to ensure that all of the information provided on this website is kept up-to-date and accurate we accept no responsibility for any use made of the information provided. All intellectual property rights are the property of Daily FX. Daily FX and its affiliates, will not be held responsible for the reliability or accuracy of the information available on this site. The content herein is provided in good faith and believed to be accurate, however, there are no explicit or implicit warranties of accuracy or timeliness made by Daily FX or its affiliates. The reader agrees not to hold Daily FX or any of its affiliates liable for decisions that are based on information from this website. Daily FX highly recommends that before making a decision, the reader collects several opinions related to the decision and verifies facts from at least several independent sources.





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Mid-Day Report: Dollar Retreats Further on Poor Retail Sales

Market Overview | Written by ActionForex.com | Sep 12 08 13:35 GMT |

Dollar retreats further against most major currencies in early US session after disappointing retail sales. Headline sales unexpectedly dropped for the second consecutive month by -0.3% in Aug versus expectation of 0.2% growth. Jul's data was also revised down from -0.1% to -0.5%. Ex auto sales dropped sharply by -0.7% versus expectation of -0.2%. PPI inflation was also tamer than expected in Aug. Headline PPI dropped -0.9% versus consensus of -0.5%. Yoy rate retreated back from 9.8% to 9.6%. Core PPI rose 0.2% with yoy rate up from 3.5% to 3.6%. Dollar index retreats further to 79.38.

As pointed out earlier today, the greenback might be turning around considering that it's being held by key medium term resistance against Euro, Sterling, Loonie, Oil and Gold. While there is no confirmation yet, an intraday top should at least be formed and further retreat in dollar is in favor as the week closes.

Other data released today saw Eurozone industrial production dropped more than expected by -0.3% in Jul, dragging yoy rate sharply lower to -1.7%. Q2 employment grew 0.2% qoq, 1.2% yoy. Japanese Q2 GDP annualized growth. was revised slightly higher from -4.0% to -3.0%. Industrial production was up from 2.0% to 2.4% yoy in Jul. New Zealand retail sales dropped more than expected by -0.8% in Jul.

GBP/USD Mid-Day Outlook

Daily Pivots: (S1) 1.7483; (P) 1.7537; (R1) 1.7631; More

Cable's recovery from 1.7445 continues today and extends further to as high as 1.7794 so far. While the rebound from 1.7445 is strong, there is no confirmation of a short term bottom yet. Another fall is still mildly in favor as long as 1.7974 resistance holds. However, break of 1.7974 will confirm that the decline from 2.0158 has made a bottom at 1.7445, after being supported slightly above medium term support of 50% retracement of 1.3680 to 2.1161 at 1.7421, on bullish convergence condition in 4 hours MACD. In such case, stronger rebound should be seen to resistance zone of 1.8512 and 1.8794 to correct the decline from 2.0158 before resuming the down trend.

In the bigger picture, medium term fall from 2.1161 (07 high) is still in progress and should be targeting next key support at 1.7047 first. On the upside, break of 1.7974 resistance will indicate that a short term bottom is finally formed and bring stronger rebound and longer consolidation. But upside should be limited well below 1.9337 support turned resistance and bring another fall.

In the longer term picture, last week's development further confirms that a long term reversal has happened at 2.1161 with monthly MACD turning negative and RSI diving into oversold region. The impulsive nature and the scale of the fall from 2.1161 also provides strong evidence to the case of the start of a long term down trend. Next downside target will be 61.8% retracement of 1.3680 to 2.1161 at 1.6538. Break of 2.0158 resistance is needed to invalidate this view.

GBP/USD 4 Hours Chart - Forex Chart, Forex Rates, Forex Directory, Forex Portal


Economic Indicators Update

GMT Ccy Events Actual Consensus Previous Revised
22:45 NZD New Zealand Retail sales M/M Jul -0.80% -0.30% 0.90%
23:50 JPY Japan GDP Q/Q Q2 -0.70% -1.00% -0.60%
23:50 JPY Japan GDP annualised Q2 -3.00% -4.00% -2.40%
04:30 JPY Japan Capacity utilisation Jul 1.40% N/A 1.70%
04:30 JPY Japan Industrial prod'n M/M Jul 1.30% N/A 0.90%
04:30 JPY Japan Industrial prod'n Y/Y Jul 2.40% N/A 2.00%
09:00 EUR Eurozone Employment Q/Q Q2 0.20% N/A 0.30%
09:00 EUR Eurozone Employment Y/Y Q2 1.20% N/A 1.60%
09:00 EUR Eurozone Industrial prod'n M/M Jul -0.30% -0.20% 0.00% -0.20%
09:00 EUR Eurozone Industrial prod'n Y/Y Jul -1.70% -0.70% -0.50% -0.80%
12:30 CAD Canada Capacity utilisation Q2 78.90% 79.30% 79.80% 79.60%
12:30 USD U.S. PPI M/M Aug -0.90% -0.50% 1.20%
12:30 USD U.S. PPI Y/Y Aug 9.60% 10.20% 9.80%
12:30 USD U.S. PPI core M/M Aug 0.20% 0.20% 0.70%
12:30 USD U.S. PPI core Y/Y Aug 3.60% 3.70% 3.50%
12:30 USD U.S. Retail sales M/M Aug -0.30% 0.20% -0.10% -0.50%
12:30 USD U.S. Retail sales less auto M/M Aug -0.70% -0.20% 0.40% 0.30%
13:55 USD U.S. U. Michigan survey Prel. Sep
64 63
14:00 USD U.S. Business inventories Jul
0.50% 0.70%



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Europe Says No Plan to Follow U.S. Taxes, Rate Cuts

By Simon Kennedy

Sept. 12 (Bloomberg) -- European policy makers signaled little intention of pursuing U.S.-style tax and interest-rate cuts to support their stumbling economy.

Meeting for the first time since the 15-nation euro region's economy contracted in the second quarter, finance ministers and central bankers in Nice, France, said restraining inflation and budget deficits remained more important than stimulating expansion.

Spending taxpayers' funds on fiscal programs to spark growth would be ``like burning money,'' German Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck told reporters. European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said inflation remains ``much higher than our definition of price stability.''

Europe's economy is struggling even as declines in the euro and oil prices provide some relief amid slowing global demand and the lingering credit squeeze. Payrolls grew at the slowest pace in almost two years in the second quarter and industrial output fell more than forecast in July, reports showed today.

``The situation is not easy,'' Luxembourg Finance Minister Jean-Claude Juncker said after being re-elected chairman of the group of euro-area finance chiefs. ``There is a slowdown in the euro area and it's more marked than we expected.''

Limiting the scope of the ECB to respond is inflation, which held above the 2 percent limit for a 12th straight month in August and close to its highest in 16 years. Interest rates are ``adequate'' and there is no need to change them ``at this very moment,'' ECB Governing Council member Nout Wellink said in an interview today in Nice.

Hands Tied

Governments have their hands tied by EU rules that require budget deficits be kept below 3 percent of gross domestic product.

The European approach contrasts with that adopted by the U.S., where the Federal Reserve has cut its benchmark interest rate by 3.25 percentage points to 2 percent and the government enacted $168 billion of stimulus including tax rebates.

Juncker denied European officials were ``standing by with phlegmatic indifference'' as the economy tumbled, arguing that they were seeking to avoid a repeat of the 1970s and 1980s when sweeping tax cuts failed to stimulate growth. He also questioned whether the U.S. ``has achieved all that was hoped'' amid signs the economy is fading after a second-quarter rebound.

The European Commission this week predicted recessions in Germany and Spain this year and stagnation in France and Italy as it forecast growth of 1.3 percent in the region as a whole, which would be the weakest since 2003. The speed of the downturn has surprised policy makers who had hoped demand from emerging markets and productivity gains in Germany would shield their economy from the U.S. slump.

`Pronounced Fall'

``Everyone was surprised by the contraction in economic activity,'' Juncker said. ``We were expecting a slowdown but not such a pronounced fall in economic activity.''

The chairman of the so-called eurogroup welcomed recent declines in the euro and oil prices as sources of support for the economy. Since reaching a record $1.6038 against the dollar on July 15, the currency has dropped around 13 percent to its lowest in a year, while crude oil has fallen almost 30 percent in the last two months.

Budget deficits are increasing even without tax cuts as so- called automatic stabilizers such as welfare payments kick in. JPMorgan Chase & Co. estimates the euro area's deficit grows 0.5 percentage point for every 1 percentage point the economy grows below its 2 percent trend.

Further Steps

Some governments are already taking further steps. Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero has announced 38 billion euros ($53.5 billion) in additional fiscal stimulus for the next three years as his economy feels the pain of a housing bust. That may push his budget gap close to the 3 percent limit next year, with the shortfalls of France, Italy and Ireland also at risk of breaching the ceiling, according to Citigroup Inc.

EU Monetary Affairs Commissioner Joaquin Almunia urged governments not to let their budgets run out of control even after the Stability and Growth Pact was revised in 2005 to allow for fiscal easing during slowdowns. ``We need to maintain our medium-term policy,'' Almunia said.

The ECB will eventually be forced to cut lending rates as the economy falters, BNP Paribas economist Ken Wattret said today in revising his forecast to show three rate cuts next year. He previously predicted the bank would keep its benchmark at 4.25 percent next year.

``With the economy entering a recession, we believe that the ECB will ultimately capitulate,'' Wattret said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Simon Kennedy in Nice, France, at skennedy4@bloomberg.net.



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South Korea Faces `Moderating' Growth, Inflation Risk, IMF Says

By Shamim Adam

Sept. 12 (Bloomberg) -- South Korea's economic growth is ``moderating'' and a weakening currency is adding to inflationary pressures, the International Monetary Fund said.

South Korea's $970 billion economy grew 4.8 percent in the second quarter from a year earlier, the slowest pace in more than a year. Household spending fell for the first time in four years as rising living costs prompted consumers to cut discretionary purchases.

``Growth has softened, equity prices and the won have weakened, and high oil prices have contributed to higher inflation,'' the fund said. ``While projections point to only a modest slowing of growth and a return of inflation to the Bank of Korea's target band during 2009, risks are skewed to the downside.''

The won has declined as investors sold the nation's stocks and bonds because of the dimming outlook for economic growth and signs of increased overseas debt. The currency is Asia's worst performer this year and its 16 percent slump has driven up the cost of imported goods.

Gross domestic product will advance 4.1 percent this year, and climb 4.3 percent in 2009, the IMF predicts.

``This outlook is subject to substantial uncertainty, with the possibility remaining of a deeper global slowdown, further volatility in global financial conditions or still higher oil prices,'' the fund said in a report today.

The won's slump has ignited concern the nation may face a financial crisis like that of 1997, when the currency lost half its value and the government was forced to turn to the IMF for a $57 billion bailout to help businesses repay overseas debt.

`Appropriately Valued'

``Despite the recent sharp depreciation, the exchange rate remains broadly in line with fundamentals,'' the fund said in the report, known as an Article IV Consultation. ``The won remains broadly appropriately valued.''

While the central bank's inflation-targeting framework remains the ``most effective policy tool'' to contain inflation, some IMF directors said management of the exchange rate may also help to keep prices in check, according to the report.

Consumer prices increased 5.6 percent in August from a year earlier, moderating from July's 10-year high of 5.9 percent. Price gains have breached the central bank's 2.5 percent-to-3.5 percent inflation target for 10 consecutive months.

The Bank of Korea left the benchmark interest rate at an eight-year high of 5.25 percent yesterday, after raising borrowing costs in August for the first time in 12 months. IMF directors were divided on future rate moves, the statement said.

``Some directors suggested that the balance of risks may call for further tightening, while some others saw merit in proceeding cautiously,'' the IMF said. ``A more accommodative monetary policy could be envisaged if inflation eases and growth remains soft.''

The IMF expects South Korea's inflation rate to reach 5.6 percent at the end of the year, and ease to 3.3 percent at the end of 2009, it said.

``Slowing domestic demand and moderating food and fuel- price inflation should help bring headline inflation down early next year,'' the statement said. ``Keeping expectations well- anchored is crucial to avoid more forceful and more damaging tightening later.''

To contact the reporter on this story: Shamim Adam in Singapore at sadam2@bloomberg.net



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Wellink Says Rates `Adequate', ECB to Act as Needed

By Christian Vits and Rainer Buergin

Sept. 12 (Bloomberg) -- European Central Bank Governing Council member Nout Wellink said he sees no need to change interest rates any time soon as the bank weighs the economic slowdown against inflation risks.

``I've always been a little bit more pessimistic on the real economy than other people,'' Wellink, who also heads the Dutch central bank, said in an interview in Nice late yesterday. Still, if so-called second-round effects endanger the bank's aim of bringing inflation below 2 percent, the bank ``would react.''

The ECB is concerned companies will raise prices to pass on higher raw-material costs and unions will push through bigger raises to compensate workers for the increased cost of living. The bank kept its benchmark rate at 4.25 percent this month, a seven- year high, to contain price growth even as the 15-nation euro region struggles to recover from a second-quarter contraction.

``The ECB isn't happy with inflation, but with everyone talking of a recession, a rate increase would be difficult to explain,'' said Karsten Junius, senior economist at Dekabank in Frankfurt and co-author of a book on the ECB. ``That's why they'll keep rates on hold into 2009.''

``From the beginning I had the feeling that we were in for a little bit more prolonged period of slow growth and this is still my view,'' Wellink, 65, said. ``I think we should congratulate ourselves at the end of the second half of next year if our economy is again back on track'' and growing by about 2 percent.

Shrinking Economy

Europe's economy shrank 0.2 percent in the second quarter from the previous three months and may not recover in the third as exports falter and consumer spending slumps. The contraction was the first since the introduction of the euro in 1999.

Interest rates are ``adequate'' and there's no need to change them ``at this very moment,'' Wellink said. While a cooling economy and falling oil prices may have a positive impact on inflation, ``it all depends on a very large extent on how wages are going to behave in the period ahead.''

Wellink's Portuguese counterpart, Vitor Constancio, told reporters in Nice today that inflation would slow in 2009.

IG Metall, Germany's biggest labor union representing 3.5 million workers, said Sept. 8 it will seek a pay increase of between 7 percent and 8 percent when wage negotiations start on Oct. 2. That would be the biggest wage increase in at least 16 years. Workers at Ireland's Electricity Supply Board are demanding an 11.25 percent raise.

``There is reason to be worried'' about wages, Wellink said.

`Unknown Factor'

The ECB raised its inflation projections this month to around 3.5 percent for 2008 and 2.6 percent for 2009. Wellink noted that it's ``still possible'' that average inflation will fall below 2 percent in 2010. At the same time, ECB staff lowered their growth forecasts for this year and next to about 1.4 percent and 1.2 percent respectively.

While the ``trough'' in economic growth may be over in the fourth quarter ``there is quite a lot of uncertainty,'' Wellink said. He added that the impact of the recent financial market turmoil on the economy is an ``unknown factor.''

The U.S. housing slump has driven up the cost of credit and roiled financial markets for the past year. The world's biggest financial companies have posted more than $500 billion in writedowns and credit losses after the subprime mortgage market collapsed.

Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. announced the biggest loss in its 158-year history on Sept. 10, as devalued real-estate assets led to $5.6 billion of writedowns in the third quarter. The New York-based investment bank's market value dropped 70 percent in the past three days.

Wellink said investors shouldn't react too quickly to news.

``If you're overreacting immediately then you have to address that overreaction the next day,'' he said. ``That is what's also happening now with respect to the stocks of certain financial institutions. I always say, don't react too quickly, reflect on it a bit longer.''

To contact the reporters on this story: Christian Vits in Nice at cvits@bloomberg.net; Rainer Buergin in Nice at rbuergin1@blomberg.net



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Bernanke May Be Wrong: Next Fed Rate Move Might Be Down, Not Up

By Rich Miller

Sept. 12 (Bloomberg) -- Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and his fellow policy makers agreed at their August meeting that their next move on interest rates would probably be up. They may turn out to be wrong.

Inflation looks likely to ebb, thanks to falling commodity prices and contained labor costs. The U.S. economy, meanwhile, may be set to take another lurch down as consumer spending gives way and the credit crunch intensifies with the plunge in Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.'s shares.

``If the consumer balance sheet starts to unwind quickly, you'd get another disinflationary force and then the Fed would be brought back into play with lower rates,'' says Mohammed El- Erian, co-chief executive officer of Pacific Investment Management Co. in Newport Beach, California.

Bernanke and his colleagues are likely to hold their benchmark rate at 2 percent when they meet Sept. 16 and may keep it there until 2009, trading in federal funds futures indicates. Still, the odds of a rate cut by year-end have been growing. As of yesterday, futures trading showed about a one-in-three chance of a December reduction, up from zero odds at the beginning of September.

San Francisco Fed President Janet Yellen left open the possibility of a rate cut in comments to reporters after a Sept. 4 speech in Salt Lake City. ``There is some chance'' of easing credit ``if things start going seriously wrong,'' she said.

Policy Decision

She made clear, though, that she agreed with her fellow policy makers, who ``generally anticipated that the next policy move would be a tightening,'' according to the minutes of the Fed's last meeting on Aug. 5.

If the Fed instead ends up lowering borrowing costs, it wouldn't be the first time Bernanke and his colleagues have been forced to shift their stance from fighting inflation to supporting growth. When the credit crisis first struck in August 2007, the Fed cut its discount rate on loans to banks just 10 days after declaring that inflation was its overriding concern.

Investors have remained on edge since then, even after the Fed-assisted takeover of Bear Stearns Cos. in March and the rescue of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac this month. Shares in Lehman Brothers dropped more than 70 percent this week as the firm reported a record $3.9 billion loss for the third quarter and concern mounted about its capital levels.

`Feedback Loop'

The big risk is what some at the Fed have called an ``adverse feedback loop'' as the credit crisis and the weak economy aggravate each other. Now, officials also fear that another spiral could take hold as the U.S. housing collapse and credit crunch weaken economies overseas, in turn curbing U.S. exports.

``The balance of risks in the American economy is now towards contraction and a vicious cycle in which declining economic performance exacerbates financial strains, which feeds back to hurt the economy,'' Harvard University professor and former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers said in congressional testimony Sept. 9.

Jan Hatzius, chief U.S. economist at Goldman, Sachs & Co. in New York, reckons that the credit squeeze will bring the economy to a halt in the fourth quarter of this year and the first quarter of next, after growth of 2 percent this quarter.

``The headwinds pushing against the economy look to be a good bit stronger than those experienced in the early 1990s,'' when the country last faced a credit crunch, Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren said in a speech Sept. 3.

`Tapping the Brakes'


Wachovia Corp. of Charlotte, North Carolina, the fourth- largest U.S. bank, is ``tapping the brakes'' on lending as credit losses mount, Chief Executive Officer Robert Steel told investors Sept. 9.

Debt-laden consumers appear particularly vulnerable as house prices continue to fall and unemployment rises. Credit- card payments 30 or more days overdue rose to 4.7 percent of total card debt in the second quarter, the highest level in 4 1/2 years, according to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.

The Fed reported in its latest regional economic survey, released Sept. 3, that consumer spending was slow in most of the country, ``with purchasing concentrated on necessary items.'' Nondiscretionary outlays -- including rent, taxes, food and fuel -- accounted for a record 57.8 percent of expenditures in July, up from 56.3 percent a year earlier.

Even some well-off consumers are feeling the pinch. Cie. Financiere Richemont SA, the Geneva-based maker of Cartier necklaces and Piaget watches, said Sept. 10 that the lower and middle range of the luxury-goods market in the U.S. is facing ``difficult'' market conditions.

Threat to Exports

The spread of the weakness abroad is threatening to undercut one of the U.S. economy's few strengths: exports, which accounted for virtually all of the growth in second-quarter gross domestic product. On Sept. 10, the Japanese government said the world's second-largest economy is ``deteriorating,'' and the European Commission forecast a recession for Germany.

``Not only is the U.S. in a recession, but the rest of the world is slowing down,'' Ford Motor Co. Chief Executive Officer Alan Mulally said in a Sept. 8 speech. ``I've never seen anything quite like it.''

The global slowdown does have one silver lining: It's sapping demand for everything from oil to soybeans, dragging down their prices and taking the edge off inflation. The Reuters/Jefferies CRB Index of 19 raw materials has tumbled 25 percent since hitting a record in July. Crude-oil prices dropped close to $100 a barrel this week from a high of $147.27 just two months ago.

`Very Hopeful'

``I am very hopeful that inflation will come down quite substantially,'' Yellen said in a Sept. 5 speech, pointing in particular to the drop in commodity prices.

Consumers' troubles will also help to temper inflation -- which ran at a year-over-year rate of 5.6 percent in July, the fastest pace in 17 years -- by making it tougher for companies to raise prices. Some may even be forced into reducing them.

Medford, Oregon-based Harry & David Holdings Inc., which markets gift baskets and other products, said Sept. 7 that it is cutting shipping charges to its customers by as much as one- third from last year as it prepares for what analysts expect will be a tough holiday-selling season.

``With the risk of inflation steadily disappearing and the economic risk rising, the Fed will cut rates,'' says Ethan Harris, chief U.S. economist at Lehman Brothers in New York.

To contact the reporter on this story: Rich Miller in Washington at rmiller28@bloomberg.net




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U.S. Producer Prices Drop 0.9%, More Than Forecast

By Shobhana Chandra

Sept. 12 (Bloomberg) -- Prices paid to U.S. producers fell in August for the first time this year, as lower energy costs eased inflation pressures.

The 0.9 percent drop was more than forecast and followed a 1.2 percent increase in July, Labor Department figures showed today in Washington. So-called core producer prices that exclude fuel and food rose 0.2 percent, matching forecasts.

The figures bolster the forecast of Federal Reserve policy makers that prices will moderate this year as economic growth slows. Oil's retreat to about $100 a barrel from a record in July is helping contain business expenses, making it less likely companies will raise prices for consumer goods.

``We're seeing a partial reversal of the huge price increases we've had the past few months,'' said Michael Englund, chief economist at Action Economics LLC in Boulder, Colorado, who accurately predicted the drop in producer prices. ``It is good news for the Fed. There's still upward pressure on core prices, but this report puts a positive light on an unpleasant inflation picture.''

The Commerce Department separately reported that retail sales fell 0.3 percent in August, more than forecast, after a 0.5 percent drop in July.

Treasuries gained after the figures, sending benchmark 10- year note yields to 3.64 percent at 8:48 a.m. in New York, from 3.65 percent late yesterday.

Economists' Forecasts

Prices paid to factories, farmers and other producers were forecast to decline 0.5 percent, according to the median of 77 forecasts in a Bloomberg News survey. Estimates ranged from a gain of 0.2 percent to a drop of 1.2 percent.

Core prices were projected to rise 0.2 percent, according to the survey median.

Producers paid 9.6 percent more for goods than in August 2007, compared with a 9.8 percent gain in the 12 months ended in July.

Excluding food and energy, the gain was 3.6 percent from a year earlier, the biggest year-over-year increase since May 1991, after a 3.5 percent increase in the prior month.

Producer prices are one of three monthly inflation gauges reported by the Labor Department. Import costs fell in August by the most in almost two decades of record-keeping, Labor figures showed yesterday. Consumer prices, due next week, may be unchanged after rising in July, the Bloomberg survey shows.

Food Prices

In today's producer price report, food prices rose 0.3 percent for a second consecutive month. Energy prices fell 4.6 percent, the biggest decline in almost two years, as petroleum, home heating oil, natural gas and gasoline all became less expensive.

The wholesale-price report is based on figures for the Tuesday of the week that includes the 13th of the month. On that basis, crude oil costs on the New York Mercantile Exchange were down 19 percent in August from the prior month.

Oil, which reached a record $147.27 a barrel on July 11, fell as low as $100.10 this week.

``Inflation risks have diminished somewhat in recent months as commodity prices have come down from their highs,'' Fed Bank of San Francisco President Janet Yellen said after a speech last week. ``But they have by no means disappeared and are very much at the forefront'' of policy makers' attention.

Fed's Rate

The Fed will keep the benchmark interest rate unchanged at 2 percent through the first three months of 2009, according to the median forecast in Bloomberg's monthly survey released this week.

Costs of intermediate goods, those used in earlier stages of production, fell 1 percent from July and were up 16.7 percent from a year ago. Excluding food and energy, intermediate prices rose 1.7 percent.

Prices for raw materials, or so-called crude goods, fell 11.9 percent, following a 4.2 percent jump the prior month.

Passenger car prices fell 0.3 percent after a 1.4 percent gain, and the cost of light trucks dropped 1.9 percent, the most since October 2006.

Prices for capital equipment rose 0.1 percent and consumer goods prices fell 1.2 percent.

Some companies are trying to recoup higher expenses from prior months. Titan International Inc. will charge more for Titan, Goodyear and General off-road farm and construction tires to help offset costlier rubber, steel, carbon black and energy. Prices on most tires will increase 10 percent, starting Oct. 1, the Quincy, Illinois-based company said.

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



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Retail Sales in U.S. Unexpectedly Dropped in August

By Timothy R. Homan

Sept. 12 (Bloomberg) -- Sales at U.S. retailers unexpectedly dropped in August as Americans retrenched in the face of mounting job losses and record foreclosures.

The 0.3 percent fall followed a 0.5 percent drop in July, the Commerce Department said today in Washington. Excluding automobiles, purchases were down 0.7 percent, the most this year. The Labor Department separately said prices paid to producers fell for the first time this year as energy costs declined.

Consumer spending is faltering as wages haven't kept pace with inflation and the effect of the government's tax rebates fades. Americans are also confronting declining property values and stock prices, indicating even the recent retreat in fuel costs may not be enough to boost sales.

``There's a big question mark over the performance of the economy over the next six months,'' John Lonski, chief economist at Moody's Investors Service Inc. in New York, said before the report. ``We have to be braced for a decidedly slower pace of consumer spending.''

Producer prices fell 0.9 percent, more than forecast, in August. So-called core producer prices, which strip out fuel and food costs, rose 0.2 percent.

Treasuries rose after the reports, sending benchmark 10-year note yields down to 3.63 percent at 8:35 a.m. in New York, from 3.65 percent late yesterday. Futures on the Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index lost 0.8 percent, at 1,242.40.

Economists' Forecasts

Retail sales were projected to rise 0.2 percent after an originally reported 0.1 percent drop the prior month, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey of 80 economists. Forecasts ranged from a drop of 0.5 percent to a gain of 1.1 percent.

Non-auto sales were forecast to drop 0.2 percent from the prior month, according to the median of 76 forecasts. Estimates ranged from a 0.6 percent gain to a drop of 0.6 percent.

Electronics, building material, clothing and department stores all saw a drop in sales last month. Service station receipts also fell as gasoline prices retreated.

Excluding gasoline, purchases were unchanged last month after a 0.6 percent decline in July.

Automakers boosted incentives in August to revive demand as the economy lost jobs for an eighth straight month and the unemployment rate reached a five-year high of 6.1 percent. Sales at car dealers and parts stores increased 1.9 percent, the first increase since January and the biggest in a year.

Sales Incentives

General Motors Corp. offered all customers the same prices paid by employees, helping boost sales in the second half of the month. GM this month said it will extend the incentive through September and has offered 72-month, no-interest financing on some vehicles since late June.

``Not only is the U.S. in a recession, but the rest of the world is slowing down,'' Ford Motor Co.'s Chief Executive Officer Alan Mulally said in a speech this week. ``I've never seen anything quite like it.''

Filling station sales decreased 2.5 percent in August after a 0.2 percent gain the prior month, today's report showed. The average pump price of a gallon of regular gasoline dropped to $3.76 last month from $4.06 in July, according to AAA.

The 1.5 percent decrease in purchases at department stores was the biggest since April 2007. Sales at non-store retailers, reflecting demand from Internet merchants and catalogs, declined 2.3 percent, the most since March 2007.

GDP Impact

Excluding autos, gasoline and building materials, the retail group the government uses to calculate gross domestic product figures for consumer spending, sales fell 0.2 percent, the most this year. The government uses data from other sources to calculate the contribution from the three categories excluded.

Industry figures earlier this month showed demand weakened at retailers such as Gap Inc., Target Corp. and Abercrombie & Fitch Co., signaling merchants may be heading for the worst back- to-school season in seven years.

Sales at stores open at least a year climbed 1.7 percent in August, the smallest gain in five months, the International Council of Shopping Centers said last week. Purchases from July through September, retailing's second-biggest season after Christmas, may climb 1 percent, according to the ICSC. That would be the smallest gain since 2001.

``By July, essentially all the rebates had already been distributed, and so were no longer providing support to incomes,'' Goldman Sachs Group Inc. economist Seamus Smyth said in a note to clients on Sept. 2. ``Combined with weak job growth and tight credit, consumers had no way to fund additional consumption.''

Consumer spending will stall from July to September, three months earlier than predicted last month, according to the median estimate of economists polled from Sept. 2 to Sept. 9. The slump will slow growth to less than half the prior quarter's pace.

To contact the reporter on this story: Timothy R. Homan in Washington thoman1@bloomberg.net





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European Industrial Output Falls More Than Forecast

By Fergal O'Brien

Sept. 12 (Bloomberg) -- European industrial production fell more than economists forecast and payrolls grew at the slowest pace in almost two years as the region's economy teetered on the brink of a recession.

Output in the 15-nation euro area fell 0.3 percent from June, its third consecutive drop, the European Union statistics office in Luxembourg said today. The drop exceeded the 0.2 percent median forecast of 31 economists in a Bloomberg news survey. A separate report showed employment growth eased to 0.2 percent in the second quarter from 0.3 percent in the first.

Europe's economy is showing few signs of recovery after shrinking in the second quarter as investment, exports and consumer spending declined. The European Commission, which cut its growth forecasts for the region this week, has forecast recessions in Germany and Spain, the region's largest and fourth-largest economies.

``Today's figures provide further evidence that the economic cycle is probably hovering around its trough, as the European Central Bank itself is acknowledging,'' said Aurelio Maccario, chief euro zone economist at Unicredit MIB in Milan. ``The problem is that the recovery will be slow and timid.''

Germany, France

From a year earlier, euro-area output fell 1.7 percent in July after declining 0.8 percent in June, the industrial production report showed. Production in Germany fell 1.8 percent in July from the previous month, while French output rose 1.2 percent after declining in the previous two months. Italian production slipped 1.1 percent.

A separate report from the Bank of France showed that French manufacturing confidence held near a five-year low in August as orders declined.

Annual growth in payrolls slowed to 1.2 percent in the second quarter from 1.6 percent in the previous three-month period, according to the EU data. That's the slowest pace since the final quarter of 2005. The statistics office estimates that the total number of people employed in the euro area was 146 million in the second quarter. The total in the 27-nation EU was 226.4 million.

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





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Shell Extends Suspension on Nigeria Crude Obligations

By Alexander Kwiatkowski

Sept. 12 (Bloomberg) -- Royal Dutch Shell Plc, Europe's biggest oil producer, extended a suspension of export obligations for its Bonny Light crude after discovering further leaks on a pipeline attacked by militants in July.

Shell Petroleum Development Co., the company's local unit, ``is extending the force majeure it declared on July 29 on the Bonny light offtake program,'' spokesman Rainer Winzenried said in an e-mailed statement today. The extent of the suspension will ``depend on the progress of repair work,'' he said.

Force majeure is a legal clause that allows producers to miss contracted deliveries because of circumstances beyond their control.

Nigeria has fallen behind Angola as Africa's biggest oil exporter this year as militant attacks on oil installations and pipelines crimp production. Bonny Light is the light, sweet variety of oil, typically pumped by Nigeria and favored by U.S. refiners for the quantity of gasoline it produces.

Shell originally declared force majeure on Bonny deliveries in July, August and September after militants attacked the Nembe Creek trunk-line in the Kula area of Rivers state, shutting some crude production. Nigeria's main militant group, the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, or MEND, claimed responsibility for the attack.

``The company had worked hard to repair the pipeline and bring back production only to discover more leaks from the effects of the attack,'' Winzenried said.

Exports of Bonny Light were originally scheduled to increase 24 percent in October as production resumed. Shipments were scheduled to average 196,774 barrels a day, compared with 158,333 barrels a day in September. Bonny Light production is normally in excess of 300,000 barrels a day.

To contact the reporters on this story: Alexander Kwiatkowski in London at akwiatkowsk2@bloomberg.net



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BP Shuts Baku-Ceyhan Pipeline After Leak in Turkey

By Ayla Jean Yackley and Alaric Nightingale

Sept. 12 (Bloomberg) -- BP Plc shut a pipeline carrying Azeri crude oil from Baku to Turkey's Mediterranean coast near Ceyhan after a leak in the Turkish section required repairs.

Production in Azerbaijan and tanker loadings at Ceyhan weren't disrupted by the leak, which occurred yesterday, said Murat Lecompte, a spokesman for BP in Turkey, by telephone.

Flows through the pipeline, which has a capacity of 1 million barrels of oil a day, were due to be started today, he said. The pipeline was shut for three weeks in August after an explosion engulfed a Turkish section of the link in a fire.

``There was an operational problem on the pipeline in Turkey that was a small volume leak that was contained in the pumping station,'' Lecompte said in a telephone interview. ``The leak had no impact on loadings or on production in'' Azerbaijan.

Two tankers loaded yesterday and another one was loaded today, he said.

Oil from the 1,100-mile pipeline, which begins in Baku and crosses Georgia and Turkey, is sold to markets in Europe and the U.S.

Turkey's government said a malfunction was behind the Aug. 5 explosion that shut down the link and rejected a claim of responsibility from Kurdish guerrillas who said they bombed the pipeline.

To contact the reporter on this story: Ayla Jean Yackley in Istanbul at ayackley@bloomberg.net.



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UN Carbon Credit Backlog Slows Climate Change Efforts

By Mathew Carr

Sept. 12 (Bloomberg) -- The backlog of United Nations greenhouse gas-reduction projects seeking emission credits surged more than sevenfold since the beginning of August, undermining efforts to curb climate change.

The number of projects awaiting completeness checks before they can be registered jumped by 253, said David Abbass, a spokesman at the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, or UNFCCC. That compares with 37 projects beforehand, Abbass said yesterday by e-mail.

UN emissions trading ``is in danger of suffocating before our eyes,'' said Henry Derwent, chief executive officer of the Geneva-based International Emissions Trading Association, whose members include E.ON AG and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. ``It is essential that the UNFCCC grips this problem'' this month, smoothing investment in projects that tackle global warming.

The backlog suggests supplies of emission credits from UN- approved projects will be gradual. The allowances can be used by factories and power stations in the European Union carbon dioxide program, the world's biggest greenhouse gas trading market. About 391 projects have received credits so far, as of Sept. 1, UN data shows.

``The secretariat has acted to increase, on a temporary basis, the number of staff working in this area, and therefore it is expected that in the final four months of 2008 more than 50 requests will be processed per month,'' Abbass said.

Six Months

At this rate, the backlog would take almost 6 months to clear, without accounting for additional projects entering the pipeline in future. In its 2008 management plan, the UNFCCC budgeted to process 600 requests for registration, or 50 a month, he said. Projects are registered under the so-called Clean Development Mechanism executive board overseen by the UN.

``If there is an ongoing need to increase the number beyond the 50 case limit, the board would assess this in the context of the revision of its management plan for 2009,'' Abbass said.

EU carbon dioxide allowances for December rose 68 cents, or 3 percent, to 23.75 euros a metric ton ($33.51) on the European Climate Exchange in London, extending their gain for the past year to 12 percent. UN emission credits for December added 3.4 percent to 19.65 euros. They're up 21 percent since the start of trading on the ECX on March 14.

`Markedly Below'

EcoSecurities Group Plc, the Dublin-based greenhouse-gas credit developer, slumped 14 percent yesterday after warning that the issuance of credits during the next 12 months will be ``markedly below previous expectations'' because of regulatory scrutiny.

CDM regulators and auditors are taking more time to complete verification of emission-reduction projects and issuance, EcoSecurities said. Adrian Fernando, the company's chief operating officer, called on the UN to drop limits on processing project registrations.

The CDM is ``expensive and time consuming'' because it requires project managers to abide by new rules governing the technologies used to reduce emissions, the World Bank said last month.

The world's second-biggest greenhouse-gas market, the CDM allows rich nations to buy emission credits from projects including wind farms and industrial-gas combustion plants in developing nations. It must become more effective in reducing gases blamed for climate change, the World Bank said on the UNFCCC Web site.

``These systems are viewed as cost effective, but they have the drawback of the initial distribution of allowances that are difficult to determine,'' the World Bank said at the time.

To contact the reporter on this story: Mathew Carr in London at m.carr@bloomberg.net





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Hurricane Ike Set to Slam Texas Coast; Thousands Flee

By Brian K. Sullivan and Tom Korosec

Sept. 12 (Bloomberg) -- Hurricane Ike bore down on Texas, heading for landfall as early as today in Galveston, where forecasters warned residents of ``certain death'' if they ignore a mandatory evacuation order.

The warning from the National Hurricane Center also applies to coastal areas around Galveston, southeast of Houston, where highways were jammed yesterday as thousands fled inland. Galveston Bay will be pounded by an ocean surge as high as 25 feet (7.6 meters), with water levels a mile in from the coast possibly exceeding 9 feet, the center said on its Web site.

``All neighborhoods and possibly entire coastal communities will be inundated during the period of peak storm tide,'' the center said. ``Persons not heeding evacuation orders in single family, one- or two-story homes may face certain death.''

Ike, which tripled in size in the Gulf of Mexico in the past two days, was a Category 2 hurricane with sustained winds of 105 miles per hour (169 kph), the center said just before 7 a.m. Houston time today. Ike is following a track similar to the 1900 Galveston hurricane that killed 8,000 people, the deadliest storm in U.S. history.

Ernest Baddeaux, a 66-year-old welder living a half-block from Galveston Bay in La Porte, said he was going to stay put.

``The officials and media tell you to evacuate but they don't necessarily tell you where or how you're going to pay for it,'' he said as he hammered plywood over his windows.

Food for Weeks

Baddeaux said he was reasonably confident his house, one of the few in the neighborhood raised on piers, would protect him. Hurricane Alicia, which hit the Houston area in 1983, brought a 12-foot storm surge that didn't reach his property.

``I think one other family on the street is staying, too,'' he said, adding that he has an electric generator, a supply of gasoline and enough food and water to last for weeks.

Ike's projected path would make it the first storm to hit a major U.S. metropolitan area since Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans in 2005. Ike has the potential to cost insurers $25 billion, ranking it behind Katrina as the second-most expensive storm in U.S. history, Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu estimated.

Ike was approaching the upper Texas coast, with the eye 230 miles southeast of Galveston, the center said. The system was moving west-northwest at 13 mph. Because of its wide diameter, Ike's hurricane-force winds will be felt along the Texas coast long before landfall, which is forecast for near Galveston late today or early tomorrow.

Local officials issued a mandatory evacuation order as of noon yesterday for areas including Galveston and communities south of Houston and near the coast.

`A Little Late'

``I think the call for evacuation came a little late,'' Jamie Ybarra, a 32-year-old safety coordinator in La Porte, said yesterday as he packed up and prepared to leave with his wife, April, their two children, two dogs and cat. ``You hear the roads are crowded. You hear people are losing their cool.''

Storm-force winds may reach the coast by 8 a.m. local time today and hit Houston around 11 a.m. The hurricane winds may reach coastal counties in the early evening and Houston between 9 and 11 p.m. Those winds may last 10 to 12 hours.

``The wind field surrounding Ike is unusually large,'' the hurricane center said.

The storm left more than 70 people dead in Haiti and killed four in Cuba as it swept through the Caribbean earlier this week.

Category 3

The U.S. weather center's forecasters said Ike may strengthen to at least Category 3 intensity, meaning sustained winds of at least 111 mph, before the eye crosses the coast. Other forecasters predict Ike may become a Category 4 storm, with sustained winds of at least 131 mph, the second-strongest on the five-step Saffir-Simpson scale.

Hurricane-force winds extended 120 miles from Ike's center, while tropical-storm force winds of at least 39 mph extended out 275 miles, according to the hurricane center.

Ike's winds cover an area larger than that of Katrina, said Jeff Masters, director of meteorology at private forecaster Weather Underground Inc.

President George W. Bush declared an emergency for Texas, his home state. As many as 7,500 Texas National Guard members are on standby.

Houston's population is 2.2 million, making it the fourth- biggest U.S. city, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, and its metropolitan area, with a population of 5.6 million, is the sixth-largest in the U.S.

NFL Game Postponed

Ike forced the Houston Texans to push back their National Football League home-opener against the Baltimore Ravens by a day to Sept. 15. The Houston Astros postponed two baseball games against the Chicago Cubs that were scheduled for today and tomorrow.

Oil prices rose on concern that Ike will crimp production. Crude oil for October delivery rose $0.78, or 0.8 percent, to $101.65 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, after touching the lowest since April yesterday.

About 19 percent of U.S. refining capacity was shut in preparation for Ike's arrival. The Gulf Coast is home to 26 percent of U.S. oil production.

The storm has shut 97 percent of Gulf oil production and 93 percent of natural gas output, the Minerals Management Service said yesterday.

To contact the reporters on this story: Brian K. Sullivan in Boston at bsullivan10@bloomberg.net; Tom Korosec in Houston, via the New York newsroom at mschoifet@bloomberg.net



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U.S. Refiners Accelerate Closings as Ike Strengthens

By Christian Schmollinger and Nidaa Bakhsh

Sept. 12 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. refiners are speeding up plant closures as Hurricane Ike gathers strength toward the Texas Gulf Coast, home to 23 percent of domestic oil-processing capacity.

About 19 percent of U.S. refining capacity is being shut before Ike makes landfall today. Royal Dutch Shell Plc, Europe's largest oil company, started shutting down its Port Arthur, Texas, refinery because ``of shifts in Hurricane Ike's track,'' the company said on its Web site.

``Ike is headed into the heart of the refining industry,'' Bruce Bullock, director of the Maguire Energy Institute at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, said in an interview. ``The damage is likely to come in flooding, a lack of power for an extended period of time.''

Ike is forecast to ``become a major hurricane prior to reaching the coast,'' the U.S. National Hurricane Center said. Refiners including BP Plc, ConocoPhillips and Exxon Mobil Corp. are securing plants from Texas City, Texas to Houston.

A hurricane warning was issued from Morgan City, Louisiana, to Baffin Bay, Texas, after Ike strengthened to a Category 2 storm, the center said. The storm has sustained winds of 100 miles per hour (160 kilometers per hour) and ``strengthening is forecast during the next 24 hours.''

Houston Area

The Houston area's eight refineries have a processing capacity of 2.22 million barrels a day, which represents 13 percent of the U.S. total, according to their owners and the National Petrochemical and Refiners Association.

Shell operates the 285,000 barrels-a-day Port Arthur facility with Saudi Aramco through its joint venture Motiva Enterprises LLC.

Exxon Mobil began shutting its Baytown, Texas, plant, the largest in the U.S, with processing capacity of 590,500 barrels of oil a day. The Irving, Texas-based company started shutting down its 363,100 barrels-a-day Beaumont plant yesterday.

BP is closing its 475,000 barrel-a-day Texas City, Texas, refinery. ConocoPhillips, the second-largest U.S. refiner, said its 260,000 barrel-a-day refinery in Sweeny, Texas, is closing. LyondellBasell Industries, a unit of Access Industries Holdings LLC, is shutting its 299,300 barrel-a-day Houston refinery.

Biodiesel

GreenHunter Energy Inc., an alternative energy producer, said it will shut its Houston biodiesel plant, the largest such U.S. refinery, according to a Business Wire statement.

Valero Energy Corp., the largest U.S. refiner, shut three Texas oil refineries with a combined capacity of 700,000 barrels a day because of the danger posed by the hurricane.

Valero will close its 325,000 barrel-a-day Port Arthur, Texas, refinery, a Texas City plant with a capacity of 245,000 barrels and a Houston facility which can process 130,000 barrels, spokesman Bill Day said yesterday in an e-mail.

Marathon Oil Corp., the fourth-largest U.S. oil company, began to shut its Texas City refinery, which can process about 81,500 barrels of oil a day, according to the Energy Department.

Shell earlier said it was closing its Deer Park, Texas, plant. Deer Park refines 340,000 barrels a day of oil.

Port Closed

The U.S. Coast Guard closed Houston, the nation's largest petroleum port before the storm, according to a statement on its Web site. Ships, barges and tugs were ordered yesterday to leave the port or obtain Coast Guard permission to remain.

The storm ``could also impair the ability to import refined products because Houston is a major port,'' Bullock said. ``You have a double whammy here.''

The Louisiana Offshore Oil Port, the biggest U.S. oil- import terminal, shut marine operations as did Port Fourchon.

U.S. energy producers have idled about 97 percent of oil production and 93 percent of natural-gas output in the Gulf of Mexico, the Minerals Management Service said on its Web site.

Gulf fields produce 1.3 million barrels a day of oil, about a quarter of U.S. production, and 7.4 billion cubic feet a day of natural gas, 14 percent of the total, government data show.

Exxon Mobil, the world's biggest oil company, shut down Gulf wells as it evacuated offshore platforms. The company said yesterday that 26,000 barrels of daily oil production and 130 million cubic feet of gas output was halted. Chevron Corp., the second-largest U.S. energy company, evacuated all of its Gulf oil and gas production platforms and drilling rigs.

Creole Trail

Murphy Oil Corp. shut Gulf of Mexico production at two facilities, said Dory Stiles, a company spokesman, in an e- mailed statement. Hess Corp., the fifth-biggest U.S. oil producer, also said it has shut in all Gulf output.

Cheniere Energy Inc. is closing its Sabine Pass liquefied- natural-gas terminal and Creole Trail pipeline. Sabine can move up to 2.6 billion cubic feet per day of gas to Creole Trail and has 10 billion cubic feet of storage, according to Cheniere.

To contact the reporter on this story: Nidaa Bakhsh in London at nbakhsh@bloomberg.netChristian Schmollinger in Singapore at christian.s@bloomberg.net



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Oil, Gasoline Rise, as Hurricane Ike Heads for Texas Refineries

By Mark Shenk

Sept. 12 (Bloomberg) -- Crude oil and gasoline rose as Hurricane Ike headed toward the Texas coast, home to 23 percent of U.S. refining capacity, shutting almost all Gulf of Mexico oil production as it passes.

About 19 percent of U.S. oil processing capacity has been shut before Ike makes landfall today. More than a quarter of U.S. crude production is based in the Gulf Coast region. Evacuations have halted 97 percent of Gulf oil output, the Minerals Management Service said yesterday.

``The big concern is about the products because the refineries aren't running,'' said Tom Bentz, senior energy analyst at BNP Paribas in New York. ``It remains to be seen how much damage will occur, but nobody wants to take chances.''

Crude oil for October delivery rose 63 cents, or 0.6 percent, to $101.50 a barrel at 9:01 a.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Futures touched $100.10 yesterday, the lowest since April 2. Prices are up 27 percent from a year ago.

``Without Ike crude prices would be below $100,'' Bentz said.

Ike's eye was 230 miles (370 kilometers) southeast of Galveston, Texas, and moving west-northwest at 13 miles per hour, the National Hurricane Center said in an advisory at 7 a.m. Houston time today. The hurricane, which tripled in size in the Gulf of Mexico, was a Category 2 hurricane with sustained winds of 105 miles per hour.

Gasoline for October delivery rose 10.1 cents, or 3.7 percent, to $2.8498 a gallon in New York. Heating oil climbed 3.71 cents, or 1.3 percent, to $2.9526 a gallon.

Most offshore production platforms have been shut since Hurricane Gustav entered the Gulf last week.

`Critical Levels'

``The closures from Gustav and the looming closures from Ike are the focus of the market,'' said Rick Mueller, director of oil markets at Energy Security Analysis Inc. in Wakefield, Massachusetts. ``We've seen big draws in gasoline stocks, and even though the driving season is over there are worries that supply will fall to critical levels.''

Brent crude oil for October settlement rose 93 cents, or 1 percent, to $98.57 a barrel on London's ICE Futures Europe. Prices touched $96.99 yesterday, the lowest since March 4.

To contact the reporter on this story: Mark Shenk in New York at mshenk1@bloomberg.net.



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Nordic Currencies: Krona Snaps 11-Day Decline Against Dollar

By Bo Nielsen

Sept. 12 (Bloomberg) -- Sweden's krona climbed against the dollar, ending the longest losing run in 33 years, as gains in stocks spurred demand for higher-yielding currencies. Norway's krone rose for the first time in six days versus the euro.

The Swedish currency also advanced versus the euro as optimism Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. will find a buyer pushed equities higher in Asia and Europe. A technical indicator showed the krona's 2.6 percent drop against the dollar in the past 11 days was excessive.

``The krona is a risk trade and when the attitude toward risk improves, people tend to buy it,'' said Anders Eklof, a currency strategist in Stockholm at Nordea AB, the region's biggest bank. ``In the longer run the krona looks vulnerable after the Riksbank confirmed the economy is moving down faster than expected.''

The krona rose 0.8 percent to 6.7546 per dollar by 1:31 p.m. in Stockholm, from 6.8063 yesterday and 6.6353 on Sept. 5. Its 11-day slump was the longest since July 24, 1975. The currency was also at 9.5152 per euro, from 9.5280 and 9.4653 a week ago.

Europe's Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index climbed 0.8 percent, while the MSCI Asia Pacific Index gained 0.9 percent as speculation Lehman will be rescued in a takeover eased concern about bank failures.

Trading envelopes, which measure how far from the mean a price has strayed, show the krona's slide versus the dollar was more than double the typical changes in the past 20 days. The krona's 14-day relative strength index against the dollar fell to 18.72, below the level of 30 that signals a change in price direction.

The krona slipped 0.9 percent versus the dollar and 0.7 percent against the euro and in the past five days.

Yield Premium

The Riksbank last week lifted its main interest rate a quarter-percentage point to 4.75 percent and said growth and inflation will slow in Scandinavia's largest economy. The rate is only topped by New Zealand, Australia and Norway among the Group of 10 nations.

The Norwegian krone rose 0.8 percent to 5.7652 per dollar, also snapping an 11-day decline, for a weekly loss of 2.8 percent. It climbed to 8.1189 per euro, from 8.1320 yesterday, the first gain since Sept. 4.

Barclays Capital yesterday revised down its forecast for the krone versus the euro as the price of oil, Norway's biggest export, headed for a weekly decline.

The krone will trade at 8.15 per euro in one month, from a previous estimate of 7.95 per euro, Adarsh Sinha, a London-based analyst at Barclays, wrote in a note to clients. He also changed his six-month forecast to 7.90 krone per euro from 7.75 per euro and his one-year prediction to 7.75 per euro from 7.65 per euro.

Oil Prices

The price of oil rose today from a five-month low as Hurricane Ike headed toward a near-direct hit on Houston, the busiest U.S. refining center. Crude has fallen about 30 percent from the July 11 record of $147.27 a barrel.

In other trading, Iceland's krona gained 0.3 percent to 90.86 per dollar after the central bank, or Sedlabanki, yesterday kept its benchmark interest rate at a record 15.5 percent, in line with a Bloomberg survey. The krona headed for a loss of 3.2 percent, its third weekly decline.

Nordic government bonds were mixed, with the yield on Sweden's 5.25 percent note due March 2011 little changed at 4.15 percent, from 4.18 on Sept. 5. The yield on Norway's 6 percent bond maturing May 2011 rose 2 basis points to 5.04 percent, according to Danske Bank prices. Yields move inversely to bond prices.

To contact the reporter on this story: Bo Nielsen in Copenhagen at bnielsen4@bloomberg.net



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