Economic Calendar

Thursday, December 11, 2008

FX Thoughts for the Day

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by Kshitij Consultancy Services | Dec 11 08 13:36 GMT |

USD-CHF @ 1.1924/28...Projected Max Low at 1.1795

R: 1.1981-2004 / 1.2013-47 / 1.2095
S: 1.1894 / 1.1858-40 / 1.1795

Swiss has broken the Support at 1.1934 (8-week SMA) during the day and recorded a low of 1.1891. It continues to be pressured lower and may potentially find Support at 1.1840 during the US session. However, over a longer time frame, it could potentially move towards 1.1750 as it has once again moved on to the wider band as indicated by the daily chart of Swiss. To see the chart, click on:

http://www.kshitij.com/graphgallery/chfcandle.shtml#candle

The projected Max Low for the day at 1.1795 looks possible to be tested during the US session. Monthly chart indicates that Long Term consolidation may take place in a wide range of 1.12-1.26 over longer period of time going forward.

GBP-USD @ 1.4876/81...Holding Short

R: 1.4992-5019 / 1.5097 / 1.5243
S: 1.4854-33 / 1.4821-06 / 1.4509

Cable did manage to spike above the 13-day MA at 1.4493 when it touched a high of 1.4998, however has been trading little lower from there. Till this holds, a fall towards 1.48 is possible during the US session. Whether it can become bullish from hereon can only be confirmed if the 13-day MA continues to hold.

We are presently at the money on our present holding in Cable and we feel there are more chances of an downslide than of an upside.

Holding:

  • Short GBP 10K at 1.4916, SL 1.5055, TP 1.4878
AUD-USD @ 0.6654/58...Resistance at 0.6714

R: 0.6714 / 0.6892-0.6900 / 0.6931
S: 0.6593-85 / 0.6557-37 / 0.6527-04

The pair manages to move ahead taking Support of the 13-day MA and looks good to move towards 0.6800 having broken the Resistance at 0.6625 which con be confirmed once the pair is able to stay above 0.6651 over a considerable time frame. But on the way up, there is another important Resistance at 0.6714 [61.8% fibonacci retracement of the rise from 0.4775 (Apr 2001) to 0.9851 (July 2008)].

The important thing to see would be if this long Term Resistance at 0.6714 is broken and if the pair has the ability to move further up from there. A downside could possibly be restricted to 0.6490 (21-day MA).

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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Daily Technical Strategist

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by FXTechstrategy | Dec 11 08 12:13 GMT |

Today's Focus: EURUSD & GBPUSD

  • EURUSD: Clears Its Declining Trendline, Turns Focus To The 1.3298 Level.
  • GBPUSD: The 1.5048 Level Remains The Trigger For A Retest Of The 1.5534 Level.
EURUSD

EUR shot through its ST declining trendline Tuesday and was seen cutting through its Nov 25 & 05'08 highs at 1.3081/1.3116 in early morning trading today. This development has now left the pair targeting its broader range top/Oct 30'08 high at 1.3298 with a break of there though not envisaged on first test aiming at the 1.3531 level, its Oct 20'08 high. Supports are presently located at the 1.3081/1.3116 zone and the 1.2814 level, its Nov 19'08 high followed by the 1.2330 level, its YTD low with a loss of there resuming its medium term downtrend started at 1.6038 towards the 1.2134 level, its .50 Ret (its 0.8231-1.6038 high, monthly chart).On the whole, unless a break and hold above the 1.3298 level occurs, its present range trading environment is expected to continue until any meaningful directional moves is seen either way.

Support Comments
1.3081/1.3116 Nov 25 & 05'08 highs
1.2814 Nov 19'08 high
1.2330/24 Oct 28'08 low/Jan/April'06 highs
Resistance Comment
1.3298 Oct 30'08 high
1.3531 Oct 20'08 high
1.3785 Oct 09'08 high

GBPUSD

As consolidation to upside strength continues to build up following the pair's sell off from the 1.5534 level, its Nov 25'87 high, a break and close above its minor resistance at the 1.5048 level, its Dec 08'08 high will open up upside risk towards the 1.5534 level. While this level remains unbroken, we expect the pair to turn back down again. In such a case, the 1.4558 level, its Nov 13'08 low and then its recent medium term low at the 1.4470 level will be aimed at with a penetration and negation of the latter putting the next downside objective at the 1.4045 level, its Jan'02 low. The only risk to this view will be a break and hold above the 1.5534 level which should set the pair up for further strength towards the 1.5885 level, its Nov 10'08 high. All in all, the pair may be undergoing corrective price activities but its overall medium to long term bearishness remains in force.

Support Comments
1.4558 Nov 13'08 low
1.4470 Dec 04'08 low
1.4045 Jan'02 low


Resistance Comments
1.5048 Dec 08'08 high
1.5534 Nov 25'08 high
1.5250/65 Nov 19'08 high/Oct 24'08 low

Mohammed Isah
Market Analyst
www.fxtechstrategy.com

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



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Forex Technical Analysis

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by DeltaStock Inc. | Dec 11 08 11:31 GMT |

EUR/USD

Current level-1.3115

EUR/USD is in a downtrend, after finalizing the rebound from 1.3882 (Sept. 11 2008) at 1.3882. Technical indicators are falling, and trading is situated below the 50- and 200-Day SMA, currently projected at 1.3292 and 1.4866.

As expected, last week's dip to 1.2547 has built a reliable ground for next advance towards 1.3281. With the recent break above 1.3080, the pair has confirmed it is in an uptrend, targeting 1.3502. Crucial for the rise from 1.2547 is 1.2901 and from an intraday point of view, current consolidation should be limited above 1.3080-70, followed by the next leg upwards, to 1.3281.

Resistance Support
intraday intraweek intraday intraweek
1.3157 1.3281 1.3080 1.2901
1.3281 1.3502 1.2901
1.2547

USD/JPY

Current level - 92.25

The pair is in the second part of the broad consolidation since 90.95 short-term bottom, aiming at 103.52. Trading is situated below the 50- and 200-day SMA, currently projected at 107.61 and 105.76.

We believe, that Friday's low at 91.61 was the final of the downtrend from 97.48 and probably has finalized the slide since 100.53. We will expect the pair to mantain its positive bias, towards 93.56 and 94.69. Crucial is 91.61.

Resistance Support
intraday intraweek intraday intraweek
93.99 97.48 92.91 93.35
94.83 100.53 92.06 86.01

GBP/USD

Current level- 1.4961

The pair has finished the broad consolidation above 1.9338 and the general downtrend has been renewed, targeting levels around 1.37+. Trading is situated below the 50- and 200-day SMA, currently projected at 1.8391 and 1.9421.

Friday's dip was a little bit deeper than anticipated, but the pair has found good support at 1.4541, advancing lately all the way up to 1.5046. As expected an uptrend emerged from 1.4683, currently testing the dynamic resistance at 1.5027 and we will expect a break above that level to clear the way for our next target at 1.5148.

Resistance Support
intraday intraweek intraday intraweek
1.5027 1.5531 1.4901 1.4302
1.5148 1.6490 1.4766 1.4103

DeltaStock Inc. - Online Forex & Securities Broker
www.deltastock.com

RISK DISCLAIMER: These analyses are for information purposes only. They DO NOT post a BUY or SELL recommendation for any of the financial instruments herein analyzed. The information is obtained from generally accessible data sources. The forecasts made are based on technical analysis. However, Delta Stock’s Analyst Dept. also takes into consideration a number of fundamental and macroeconomic factors, which we believe impact the price moves of the observed instruments. Delta Stock Inc. assumes no responsibility for errors, inaccuracies or omissions in these materials, nor shall it be liable for damages arising out of any person's reliance upon the information on this page. Delta Stock Inc. shall not be liable for any special, indirect, incidental, or consequential damages, including without limitation, losses or unrealized gains that may result. Any information is subject to change without notice.



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Technical Analysis Daily

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by iFOREX.bg | Dec 11 08 11:24 GMT |

USD/JPY 92.26 - 11 December

USD/JPY Open 92.82 High 92.89 Low 91.93 Close 92.74

As expected, Dollar/Yen made a rising movement yesterday. The currency pair reached a peak at 93.03 and closed the day at 92.75. The descending channel was penetrated upwards. However, the ascending impulse seems rather limited for now, as the pair traded at lower levels during the Asian session than yesterday. Currently the signals are descending in the short term. Immediate resistance is yesterday's top 93.00. The nearest support is 91.80. The CCI is in downward direction towards the 100 line on the four hour chart, assuming potential decreasing pressure.

Technical resistance levels: 93.00 93.55 94.65
Technical support levels: 91.80 91.10 90.30

Trading range: 92.40 - 92.75
Trend: Downward
Sell at 92.26 SL 92.56 TP 91.86

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


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Currency Pair Daily Forecasts

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by Finotec Group | Dec 11 08 10:03 GMT |

EUR/USD Daily Technical Reports

EUR/USD-market strategy can be a buy from the level 1.3090$

Technical oscillators supporting the bullish trend for the currency pair

To strengthen our analysis; we use many other indicators, starting with MACD (Moving Averages convergence divergence); we notice the MACD lines in a bullish direction and crossing above the zero line. In order to find the power of the market, we use RSI (Relative Strength Index).With RSI; we can determine that the market is in a bullish direction.

USD/JPY Daily Technical Reports

USD/JPY-market strategy can be a sell form the level 92.80

Technical oscillators supporting the bearish trend for the currency pair

To strengthen our analysis; we use many other indicators, starting with MACD (Moving Averages convergence divergence); we notice the MACD in a bearish direction below the zero line. In order to find the power of the market, we use RSI (Relative Strength Index).With RSI; we can determine that the market is in a bearish direction. Also, MA oscillators indicate a bearish cross on the short MA line.

GBP/USD Daily Technical Reports

GBP/USD-market strategy can be a buy from the level 1.4850$

Technical oscillators supporting the bullish trend for the currency pair

To strengthen our analysis; we use many other indicators, starting with MACD (Moving Averages convergence divergence); we notice the MACD lines are in a bullish direction. In order to find the power of the market, we use RSI (Relative Strength Index).With RSI; we can determine that the market is in a bullish direction. Also, MA oscillators indicate a bullish cross on the short MA line.

USD/CHF Daily Technical Reports

USD/CHF-market strategy can be a sell from the level 1.1980

Technical oscillators supporting the bearish trend for the currency pair

To strengthen our analysis; we use many other indicators, starting with MACD (Moving Averages convergence divergence); we notice the MACD lines in a bearish direction below the zero line. In order to find the power of the market, we use RSI (Relative Strength Index).With RSI; we can determine that the market is in a bearish direction. Also, MA oscillators indicate a bearish cross on the short MA line.

Finotec Group Inc.
http://www.finotec.com/

Disclaimer: FINOTEC Tradings Market Commentaries are provided for informational purposes only. The information contained within these reports is gathered from reputable news sources and not intended as investment advice. FINOTEC Trading assumes no responsibility or liability from gains or losses incurred by the information herein.


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Central Bank Rate Cuts in Korea, Taiwan and Switzerland

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by CurrencyThoughts | Dec 11 08 13:21 GMT |

Dollar downward momentum picked up. The U.S. currency lost 1.8% against the kiwi, 1.5% against the euro, 1.4% against the Australian dollar, 1.1% against the yen, 0.9% against the Canadian dollar, 0.8% against sterling, and 0.6% against the Swiss franc.

Stock market movements have generally small by recent standards. U.S. futures indicate likely rise at open. Nikkei up 0.7%. German Dax and Paris Cac are flat. British Ftse up 0.8%. Australia -1.2%. South Korean Kospi up 0.7%. Chinese CSI -2.4%.

Commodities extended their recent rally. Oil up 4.9%. Gold up 2.3%. 10-year JGB yield firmed 1.5 bp to 1.425%.

The Bank of Korea repo rate was reduced 100 bps to 3.0%. Four reductions since October 9 add up to 225 basis points. Largest cut since present policy framework began in 1999.

Taiwan's discount rate cut by 75 basis points to 2.0%, lowest since September 2005 and biggest reduction in 26 years. Intent is to boos personal consumption. Five reductions since September 26th total 162.5 basis points. The target for M2 growth was also raised.

The Swiss National Bank cut its 3-month Libor rate target by 50 basis points to a range of 0.0-1.0% with a mid-point aim of 0.5%. Four cuts since October 8th total 225 basis points. The central bank expects GDP to drop next year by 0.5-1.0% and inflation, which may dip below zero at some points, to be 0.9%, revised from 1.9%, and to fall further in 2010 to 0.5%. Street analysts had looked for reductions of 50 basis points in Korea, Taiwan, and Switzerland.

Chinese consumer price inflation fell sharply to 2.4% in November, a 22-month low, from 4.0% in October and 8.7% last February. Food rose 5.9% year/year, down from 23.3% in the year to Feb 2008, while other consumer prices went up 0.6%, down from a peak of 1.9% year/year.

Japanese stock and bond transactions generated a Y 580 billion outflow last week, similar to the outflow in the week to November 29th.

Australian jobs fell 15.6K last month, less than feared, after net gains of 30.4K in September-October. The jobless rate rose to 4.4% from 4.3% in October and a 2008 low-point of 3.9%.

South Africa's confidence indicator climbed to a 19-month high of 260.65 in November. Markets expect a 50-bp rate cut in South Africa to be announced later today.

Peru's central bank kept its benchmark rate at 6.5% but loosened reserve requirements.

Brazil's central bank retained a 13.75% Selic rate.

Chile's central bank extended liquidity-supporting measures to the end of next year.

Britain's quarterly survey of expected inflation posted the biggest drop since 1999, falling to 2.8% in November from 4.4% in August. Construction orders in the U.K. fell 21% from a year earlier in August-0ctober. The CBI industrial trends index for orders firmed three points to -35, still implying a very sharply declining trend.

Officials in Russia widened the trading range for the ruble, effectively broadening the scope for depreciation. Russian reserves are down more than 25% since August.

The ECB monthly Bulletin foresees economic recovery in the second half of 2009. Stark of the Governing Council spoke of limited scope for additional rate cutting.

In the U.S., the auto rescue plan is now in the Senate, where it faces tougher going than in the House of Representatives. U.S. and Canadian trade data arrive at 13:30 GMT. U.S. import prices and Canadian house prices will also be announced.

Larry Greenberg
CurrencyThoughts


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London Session Recap

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by Forex.com | Dec 11 08 13:18 GMT |

The US dollar was clobbered some more in London trading as the recent deterioration in the economic outlook continues to weigh on the currency. Risk taking in equities was nonexistent as European bourses were basically flat on the day at last look. US stock futures are also pretty well unchanged at the moment as well. FX was really on its own here as EUR/USD added more than 100 points to overnight gains and was sitting near 1.3220/30 ahead of the NY open. The 1.3330/50 area now looks like the next critical hurdle and this is where the sharp break to the downside first occurred back in late October. We would expect a break above here would see a likely try for 1.35 next.

Dollar selling was also prevalent against the yen. USD/JPY plunged about -100 pips in the session into the 91.50/60 zone as the pair continues to follow US yields lower. The 91.50 level looks like critical support here and a break should usher in a move back to the 2008 lows of 90.90 initially. GBP/USD shed -90 pips despite the weakness in the buck and despite the Confederation of British Industry’s monthly survey of UK manufacturers showing total orders improving to -35 in December from -38 previously. The expected volume of output for the next three months, however, remained dismal at -42 and unchanged from the prior month.

The price action should be good in early NY as top-tier data for the US looms. Initial jobless claims for the week are expected to grind higher to 525K from 509K while the US trade balance is forecast to print -$53.5 billion in October from -$56.5 previously. The jobless number is likely to be more closely watched here and a number approaching the -600K mark should see further weakness in the greenback. Stay tuned!

Upcoming Economic Data Releases (NY Session) Prior Estimate

  • 12/11 8:30 ET OCT CA Int'l Merchandise Trade 4.5B 3.3B
  • 12/11 8:30 ET OCT CA New Housing Price Index MoM 0.10% -0.10%
  • 12/11 8:30 ET OCT US Trade Balance -$56.5B -$53.5B
  • 12/11 8:30 ET NOV US Import Price Index (MoM) -4.70% -4.90%
  • 12/11 8:30 ET 6-Dec US Initial Jobless Claims 509K 525K
  • 12/11 8:30 ET 29-Nov US Continuing Claims 4087K 4100K
  • 12/11 13:00 ET 11-Dec GE ECB's Weber Speaking in Frankfurt
  • 12/11 16:45 ET OCT NZ Retail Sales (MoM) 0.10% 0.00%
  • 12/11 16:45 ET OCT NZ Retail Sales Ex-Auto (MoM) -0.50% 0.80%

Forex.com
http://www.forex.com

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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Negative SNB Undermines Franc

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by Investica | Dec 11 08 11:51 GMT |

The very negative National Bank assessment of conditions will maintain a lack of confidence in the Swiss economy and currency.

The Swiss currency found support on dips towards 1.21 against the dollar on Wednesday and strengthened through the 1.20 level as the US currency had a generally weaker tone. The franc also found some support weaker than the 1.56 level against the Euro.

At Thursday's policy meting, the National Bank cut interest rates by 0.50% to a band of 0.0 - 1.0% with a central rate of 0.50% which was in line with market expectations.

The bank downgraded its outlook for 2009, forecasting that the economy would contract for the year, and it took a notably pessimistic stance towards the economy as a whole. The bank stated that it may have to consider alternative quantative measures to support the economy while the weakening of the franc was a deliberate policy.

In response to the bank's comments, the franc weakened to beyond 1.57 against the Euro while the advance against the dollar stalled.

Investica
http://www.investica.co.uk

Disclaimer: Investica's market analysis is not investment advice and must not be taken as recommending particular market positions. Investica can take no responsibility for any actions taken by investors.





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Euro Maintains Momentum on Speculations ECB Will Pause Easing in Jan

Market Overview | Written by ActionForex.com | Dec 11 08 11:01 GMT |

Euro maintains upside momentum and rises further to as high as 1.3172 against the greenback on speculation that ECB would pause rate cut in Jan. In the monthly bulletin published today, ECB expects 'global economic weakness and very sluggish domestic demand are seen as persisting in the next few quarters' but 'a subsequent recovery should then gradually take place, supported by the fall in commodity prices and assuming that the external environment improves and the financial tensions weaken'. Moreover, there are chances that the central bank will pause rate cut at the January meeting. Executive Board member Jurgen Stark said that the ECB may not need to cut policy rate next month as the committee may want to wait for some new information for assessing price stability which is not available until February and March.

Following Euro, Swiss Franc extends strength against the greenback too. SNB announced to cut the 3-month Libor by 50 bps to 0.5%, the lowest in 4 years. From the accompanying statement, it’s likely the more easing policies (other than rate cut) will come in 2009. More on SNB here.

In the UK, David Blanchflower, the first Bank of England official to predict the recession, is going to step down in May. CBI distribution trade unexpectedly improved from -38 to -35 in Nov. EUR/GBP retreats mildly from record high of 0.8821. Where there is not confirmation of a top yet, we'd still expect it's around the corner with bearish divergence condition in 4 hours MACD.

Australia's employment fell -15 .6K in November, worse than a -15K drop as market expected and growth of 34.3K in October. Unemployment rate rose to 4.4% from 4.3% last month.

Later in US session, US jobless claims should have increased 525K, higher than 509K in the previous week. Concerning trade balance, the world's largest economy is anticipated to record a deficit of -$53.5B in October, improved slightly from a deficit of -$56.47B in September. Both export and import price index should have fallen -1.5% and -4.9% respectively in November.

On the other hand, Canada is expected to record a trade surplus of CAD 3.45B, the contracted figure was brought by reduction of export to CAD 41.6B from CAD 45.51B and an increase of imports to CAD 38.1B from CAD 38.02B. Canada will also report Oct new housing price index which is expected to have declined 0.1%.

Economic Indicators Update
GMT Ccy Events Actual Consensus Previous Revised
0:30 AUD Australia Employment Change Nov -15.6K -15.0K 34.3K
0:30 AUD Australia Unemployment rate Nov 4.40% 4.40% 4.30%
8:30 CHF SNB rate decision Q4 0.50% 0.50% 1.00%
9:00 EUR ECB Monthly Bulletin



11:00 GBP U.K. CBI distribution trade Dec -35 -44 -38
13:30 USD U.S. Jobless claims
525.0K 509.0K
13:30 USD U.S. Trade balance (usd) Oct
-53.5B -56.47B
13:30 USD U.S. Export price index M/M Nov
-1.50% -1.90%
13:30 USD U.S. Import price index M/M Nov
-4.90% -4.70%
13:30 CAD Canada Trade balance (cad) Oct
3.45B 4.49B
13:30 CAD Canada Exports Oct
41.6B 45.51B
13:30 CAD Canada Imports Oct
38.1B 38.02B
13:30 CAD Canada New housing price index Oct
-0.10% 0.10%
15:35 USD Natural Gas Storage

-64B


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‘Cassandra’ Blanchflower Leaves BOE After Rate Battle

By Brian Swint

Dec. 11 (Bloomberg) -- David Blanchflower, the first Bank of England official to predict the recession, plans to step down in May after winning a year-long campaign to take an ax to interest rates.

Blanchflower, 56, called for rate cuts every month since October 2007, arguing that weakness in the labor market warranted a stronger response from the Monetary Policy Committee. While his push put him at odds with Governor Mervyn King, the economy is now contracting and the Bank of England has reduced the benchmark rate three times in as many months to a five-decade low of 2 percent.

“He’s a Cassandra,” said Neil Mackinnon, chief economist at ECU Group Plc in London and a former U.K. Treasury official. “The important thing now is that the MPC understands the severity of the situation. It would have been worse had they continued to bury their heads in the sand.”

Blanchflower’s decision to leave after his term expires will deprive the Bank of England’s nine-member board of its most vocal dissenter and a job-market economist at a time when unemployment is rising the most since 1992. Since October 2007, he voted against King nine times and was the lone rate-cut advocate on seven occasions.

“He deserves credit to take a view so much at odds with the rest of the committee,” said Michael Saunders, chief Western European economist at Citigroup Inc. in London. “To do that and be right: that’s an achievement. He would have prefered to have persuaded the others as well.”

Letter to Darling

Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling announced Blanchflower’s intention to step down yesterday, along with the appointment of Paul Tucker as the central bank’s deputy governor for financial stability. Blanchflower wasn’t immediately available for an interview.

“I have much valued the independence given to me as an external member of the committee,” Blanchflower wrote in a letter to Darling. “It is crucial that membership of the MPC fully represents a broad range of views.”

Blanchflower, an economics professor at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire, has commuted across the Atlantic each month since he took up his post in June 2006. He promised in an interview in March of that year to be a “free thinker.”

His research interests are less conventional than those of his colleagues. He co-wrote an article called “Money, Sex and Happiness” in the Scandinavian Journal of Economics in 2004 which said that “money does seem to buy greater happiness. But it does not buy more sex.”

Scottish Research

Blanchflower also revealed research in March 2007 that showed Scottish people are more unhealthy, unhappy and likely to kill themselves than those in the rest of Britain.

He said as early as November 2007 that the U.K. economy may face a recession, before any other member of the committee. King didn’t acknowledge that one was likely until Oct. 21 and Prime Minister Gordon Brown followed a day later.

Gross domestic product fell 0.5 percent in the third quarter, and King’s central bank now predicts economic contraction through most of next year.

“Above all, he was the one voting for lower interest rates early and history will prove him right,” said Stewart Robertson, an economist at Aviva Investors Ltd. in London, which manages about $230 billion in assets. “They should have listened.”

The Treasury will advertise for Blanchflower’s replacement, the government said yesterday in a statement.

“I felt this was about trying to do the right thing, I felt recession was coming,” he told the Guardian in an interview broadcast Nov. 27. “I’m very upset that I got it right. I mean in a way, I think it’s the winner’s curse.”

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





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ECB Sees 2009 Rebound; Stark Says Rate-Cut Room Small

By Gabi Thesing

Dec. 11 (Bloomberg) -- The European Central Bank said the euro-region economy may start to recover in the second half of next year and Executive Board member Juergen Stark signaled the bank is reluctant to keep cutting interest rates aggressively.

“Global economic weakness and very sluggish domestic demand are seen as persisting in the next few quarters,” the Frankfurt- based central bank said in its monthly bulletin published today. “A subsequent recovery should then gradually take place, supported by the fall in commodity prices and assuming that the external environment improves and the financial tensions weaken.”

The ECB last week delivered the biggest interest-rate cut in its ten-year history, lowering its benchmark by 75 basis points to 2.5 percent to contain fallout from the global financial crisis. Stark said last night that the scope for further reductions is “very limited, potentially allowing for small steps only.”

The Swiss National Bank today halved its benchmark rate to 0.5 percent and the Bank of Korea cut its key rate by a percentage point to 3 percent. The U.S. Federal Reserve has lowered its benchmark by 325 basis points this year to 1 percent.

Investors are betting the ECB will lower rates by a further 50 basis points at its next policy meeting on Jan. 15, Eonia forward contracts show, even as policy makers strike a more cautious tone. ECB council member Yves Mersch said last week that rate reductions of 25 basis points are more likely in future, and ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet has said he wants to avoid being “trapped” by rates that are “too low.”

‘Protesting’ Expectations

Stark, speaking in Tuebingen, Germany, last night, suggested the ECB won’t necessarily cut rates again next month.

New information needed for a “serious re-assessment of the outlook for price stability will very likely not be available before February or March,” he said. The ECB’s “appropriate” monetary-policy stance “depends exclusively on its assessment of the balance of risks to price stability and nothing else.”

ECB council member Erkki Liikanen said in Helsinki today that, while risks to the growth outlook are currently on the downside, “when the economy starts to recover, we must bring interest rates up quickly too to combat inflation.”

“The ECB is protesting market expectations of further easing,” said Julian Callow, chief European economist at Barclays Capital in London. Still, “given the economic and inflation environment for now, the euro-area economy will need aggressive further easing in monetary policy to enable it to recover.”

Slowing Inflation

The ECB forecasts the economy will contract about 0.5 percent next year, which would be the first full-year decline in gross domestic product since 1993. The bank said today that “the level of uncertainty remains exceptionally high.”

Oil prices have collapsed to $45 a barrel from a record $147 in July. The inflation rate fell the most in almost 20 years last month, to 2.1 percent from 3.2 percent in October.

The ECB “has observed increased evidence that inflationary pressures are diminishing further, and, looking forward, inflation rates are expected to be in line with price stability over the policy-relevant horizon,” the ECB said in the bulletin, which echoes Trichet’s Dec. 4 policy statement.

The bank expects inflation to average about 1.4 percent in 2009 and 1.8 percent and 2010. It aims to keep the rate just below 2 percent.

Depending on future oil and commodity price developments, a “faster” drop in inflation rates “cannot be excluded around the middle of next year,” the ECB said. Still, any “sharp fall in HICP inflation should be short-lived and is therefore not relevant from a monetary policy perspective,” it added.

Stark said there may be “negative inflation rates for a couple of months in some regions of the euro area” next year.

At the same time, “upside tail-risks to inflation receive less attention” than fears about potential deflation “but may be more relevant and a stronger source of concern in the medium to longer term,” he said.

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





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U.K. BOE Inflation Expectations Drop Most Since 1999

By Svenja O’Donnell

Dec. 11 (Bloomberg) -- U.K. consumers’ predictions for inflation in the next year recorded the biggest drop since at least 1999 in November as the recession intensified, a survey for the Bank of England showed.

The median forecast on increases in consumer prices for the coming 12 months fell to 2.8 percent, compared with 4.4 percent in August, the central bank said today in London. That’s the biggest drop since the quarterly survey began nine years ago. GfK NOP surveyed 2,065 people from Nov. 13 to Nov 18.

The Bank of England must avert the risk of deflation as the economy sinks into a recession that may be as long and deep as those since the mid-1970s, policy maker Andrew Sentance said this week. The central bank has cut the benchmark interest rate to the lowest since 1951, on concern it will miss the 2 percent target for inflation.

“Sharply retreating inflation expectations gives the Bank of England further scope to enact another sharp interest rate cut in January,” said Howard Archer, chief European economist Global Insight in London. “Consumer price inflation will continue to plummet over the coming months.”

Archer predicts the Bank of England will cut the interest rate by at least 0.75 percentage points in January.

Consumers, when asked what the current rate of inflation was, said 4.9 percent, compared with 5.4 percent in August, the biggest drop since the survey began.

Deflation Risk

The U.K. inflation rate fell the most in at least 11 years in October to 4.5 percent. The Bank of England predicts that it will undershoot the target next year and Governor Mervyn King has refused to rule out the risk of deflation.

Britain’s economic prospects are worsening as it slips into its first recession since 1991. The economy contracted 0.5 percent in the third quarter, and the Bank of England predicts it will shrink next year. U.K. policy makers cut the key rate by a percentage point to 2 percent on Dec. 4, following a 1.5 percentage-point reduction the previous month.

“Inflation expectations are coming down and will come down further next quarter,” said Alan Clarke, an economist at BNP Paribas SA in London. “Interest rates have further to fall, and there’s a high probability that they will go to zero.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Svenja O’Donnell in London at sodonnell@bloomberg.net.





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Iceland Forecasts Record $1.4 Billion Budget Deficit

By Helga Kristin Einarsdottir

Dec. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Iceland’s economic contraction next year will push the budget into its biggest deficit on record, a government forecast showed, forcing the country to deplete emergency loans granted last month.

Iceland will post a budget deficit of between 165 billion kronur ($1.43 billion) and 170 billion kronur, the government told reporters in Reykjavik today.

The deficit implies the country will burn through much of a $2.1 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund granted last month. The economy may shrink 10 percent next year, the IMF estimates, the island’s deepest recession since at least 1945, following the collapse of its banking industry and currency. Aside from the IMF loan, Iceland has pledges from the Nordic countries and Poland for a further $2.7 billion in loans.

“It doesn’t look good,” said Lars Christensen, chief analyst at Danske Bank A/S in Copenhagen. “It’s clear that a substantial portion of the IMF loan will be used to finance the deficit and they may well need to seek additional funding.”

The deficit corresponds to about 15 percent of the economy, based on 2007 GDP data from Statistics Iceland adjusted for the IMF’s forecast of a 10 percent contraction.

Kaupthing Bank hf, Landsbanki Islands hf and Glitnir Bank hf all collapsed in October after the lenders were unable to secure enough short-term funding to operate their business.

The government will cut spending by 45 billion kronur next year to prevent an even bigger gap, it said today.

‘Tragic Story’

“The income basis of the previous budget proposal has been greatly distorted in the wake of the collapsed banking system,” Prime Minister Geir Haarde told reporters. “Whole revenue contributions are disappearing; we need to react.”

The failure of the banks crippled the krona, forcing Iceland to limit official trade in the currency to daily central bank auctions. The krona was returned to a managed free float on Dec. 4 after the government passed a bill imposing capital restrictions lasting two years.

“It’s a deeply tragic story,” Christensen said. “One wants to be positive but the scope of the collapse has exceeded our worst-case scenario.”

The proposed spending cuts were presented to the parliament’s budget committee today.

To contact the reporter on this story: Helga Kristin Einarsdottir in Iceland at einarsdottir@bloomberg.net.





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Wall Street Bonus Season to End All Bonus Seasons: David Pauly

Commentary by David Pauly

Dec. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Congratulations to E. Stanley O’Neal and Charles O. Prince III. They got theirs when they could.

Before he was fired as chief executive officer of Merrill Lynch & Co. in October 2007, O’Neal received $33 million in bonuses for his previous two years’ work.

A month later, Prince quit as CEO of Citigroup Inc., after getting $49 million in bonuses for 2003 through 2007.

Can you imagine the uproar in Brooklyn, Washington and Dubuque today if O’Neal, Prince or any of their compatriots were getting bonuses of that magnitude?

The traditional Wall Street pay system -- where bonuses accounted for 60 percent of pay -- died this year. Its demise was inevitable after the U.S. government committed $700 billion to save investment banks and commercial banks from their mind- numbing mortgage losses.

John Thain, Merrill’s current CEO, was slow to catch on to the new reality.

Thain, who has negotiated the sale of his 94-year-old firm to Bank of America Corp., asked Merrill directors for a year-end bonus of $5 million to $10 million. He came to his senses after a Wall Street Journal report of his request created a political dust-up. Government bailout capital was supposed to be for lending, not paying executive bonuses. On Monday, Merrill said Thain and four other top executives would forgo any 2008 bonuses.

Slashing Away

At the same time, Morgan Stanley chief John Mack gave up his bonus for the second straight year and his two co-presidents went without a 2008 payout. Total pay for the 14 members of the company’s operating committee was slashed by an average of 75 percent.

Morgan Stanley also started a “clawback” plan, whereby the firm will take back part of bonuses if recipients act in ways detrimental to the company. God help anyone who cooks the books or makes wild bets on the markets.

Executives at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., which has been the most profitable U.S. investment bank, had joined the choir earlier, forgoing bonuses for 2008. A year ago, CEO Lloyd Blankfein and co-presidents Gary Cohn and Jon Winkelried each got a total annual package of about $70 million, including bonuses of $27 million.

Considering their past pay, none of these people will starve. Thain got a $15 million bonus for taking charge at Merrill Lynch a year ago and might get a $5.2 million change-of- control payment for selling the firm to Bank of America. Morgan Stanley’s Mack got a bonus of about $40 million in stock and options two years ago.

Looking Ahead

Thain and three other top Merrill executives now will be paid by Bank of America. Congress, its bailout money at stake, will be watching to see how much they get.

The old bonus system is history now that Wall Street firms have become commercial banks. Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley have made the switch. Merrill Lynch will be part of Bank of America. Bear Stearns Cos. was subsumed by another commercial bank, JPMorgan Chase & Co. Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. failed.

As commercial banks, Wall Street players are required to keep more capital in relation to their debts. No more deals with 50-to-1 leverage. Less debt leverage will mean lower profit and lower bonus expectations.

Wall Street will strive to build checking and savings accounts -- perhaps through acquisitions. They will find it’s safer to finance their investments with deposits rather than overnight loans.

A year ago, Wall Street’s then-Big 5 investment houses paid their employees bonuses totaling $39 billion. That was a record amount. It should stand forever.

(David Pauly is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.)

To contact the writer of this column: David Pauly in Normandy Beach, New Jersey dpauly@bloomberg.net





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Lukoil Profit Rises 40% on Oil Prices, Hedging Gain

By Stephen Bierman

Dec. 11 (Bloomberg) -- OAO Lukoil said third-quarter profit advanced 40 percent as Russia’s largest non-state oil producer benefited from hedging after crude prices fell from a July record.

Net income rose to $3.47 billion, or $4.09 a share, from $2.48 billion, or $3 a share, in the same period last year, the Moscow-based company said today in a statement. That beat the $3.16 billion median estimate of six analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News.

“Results came in much stronger than expected, the main reason being the company posted a hedging gain of $623 million in the third quarter,” Igor Kurinnyy, an oil and gas analyst with ING Groep NV, said by telephone from London.

Lukoil had a $719 million loss through hedging practices in the first half of 2008, as Urals crude export prices grew, which contracted to $96 million in the first nine months of the year, the company said. Revenue in the quarter increased 52 percent to $32.6 billion.

Lukoil rose 30.28 rubles, or 3.2 percent, to 978.30 rubles on Moscow’s Micex Stock Exchange at 3:56 p.m. The 30-stock Micex index advanced 2.1 percent.

Operating expenses grew 25 percent on the previous quarter to $2.2 billion, driven by costs for labor, water pumping, fuel and electricity. Second-quarter net income was $4.13 billion.

“Some trends should not be ignored in 2009 where lower oil prices are expected,” Artyom Konchin, an energy analyst with UniCredit SpA in Moscow, said by telephone. “The ability to control costs will be the primary focus.”

Falling Oil Price

Urals crude, Russia’s export blend, climbed to a record $142.50 a barrel on July 3. It traded at $40.32 a barrel today after averaging $113.48 in the third quarter, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

OAO Rosneft, Russia’s largest oil producer, cut operating expenses in the third quarter in comparison with the previous three months, Konchin said, adding that the company’s younger resource base requires less spending.

Lukoil exported 765,000 barrels of oil a day in the third quarter, 8 percent less than the previous year, as domestic refining increased. The company boosted processing 10 percent to 13.96 million tons of products.

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s government increased the oil export duty to $495.90 a metric ton on Aug. 1 from $398.10. It has since slashed the tax and may reduce it further to as little as $117 a ton from Jan. 1, the Finance Ministry said yesterday.

Arctic Production

The producer said the Aug. 28 start of production at the Arctic Yuzhno-Khylchuyu field will compensate for declines at units in western Siberia. Naryanmarneftegas, the joint venture with ConocoPhillips that operates the field, expects output to increase to 150,000 barrels a day next year, driving the company’s production growth plans.

Lukoil paid an installment of $250 million on Nov. 24 for Turkey’s Akpet, whose 693 filling stations account for about 5 percent of the Turkish retail market. The Russian company agreed in July to buy the retailer for $555 million to expand downstream plans overseas. It also paid 600 million euros ($778 million) Dec. 1 as the first of four parts for 49 percent of a refining venture in Italy with ERG SpA.

To contact the reporter on this story: Stephen Bierman in Moscow sbierman1@bloomberg.net.





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Oil Rises After Saudi Arabia Says Production Is Near OPEC Quota

By Alexander Kwiatkowski

Dec. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Oil rose a second day after Saudi Arabia signaled the world’s biggest exporter cut output more than analysts expected to stem a five-month plunge in prices.

Saudi Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi said the kingdom pumped 8.493 million barrels of oil a day in November, close to its OPEC production quota of 8.477 million barrels a day. The total is 287,000 barrels a day less than estimated by the Paris-based International Energy Agency.

“Everybody was looking to Saudi Arabia and saying they have to do something, otherwise we will have even lower prices,” said Ehsan Ul-Haq, head of research at Vienna-based JBC Energy GmbH. “Now Saudi Arabia can say they are complying fully and everybody should do the same.”

Crude oil for January delivery rose as much as $2.41, or 5.5 percent, to $45.93 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. It traded at $45.87 a barrel at 12:40 p.m. in London.

Saudi Arabia’s oil output was “absolutely” in line with its OPEC quota, al-Naimi said today in an interview in Poznan, Poland. He declined to comment further on OPEC policy.

Oil has tumbled 30 percent since the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, which supplies about 40 percent of the world’s oil, announced a 1.5 million-barrel-a-day output cut on Oct. 24 in Vienna. Prices fell as fuel demand slumped and speculation grew that some members weren’t complying with their agreed-on quotas.

‘Deadly Serious’

“The Saudis might have been impatient with the market’s skepticism, so they’ve decided some transparency is needed,” said Mike Wittner, head of oil market research at Societe Generale SA in London. “It shows they’re deadly serious about cutting already and serious about cutting more.”

OPEC’s previous oil-supply cuts aren’t enough and the group will need to make a “substantial” reduction at its next meeting, on Dec. 17, in Algeria, Libya’s top oil official Shokri Ghanem said in a Bloomberg TV interview today.

Brent crude oil for January settlement rose as much as $2.75, or 6.5 percent, to $45.15 a barrel on London’s ICE Futures Europe exchange. It traded at $45.06 a barrel at 12:41 p.m. local time.

The IEA, an adviser to 28 nations, said global oil demand will contract this year for the first time since 1983 and cut its outlook for 2009.

Consumption worldwide will shrink in 2008 by 200,000 barrels a day, or 0.2 percent, the IEA said in a monthly report today. The reduction in demand is led by developed economies in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, where consumption will tumble 3.3 percent. Next year’s growth may be wiped out if the economic slump deepens, the agency said.

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





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Saudis Signal Deeper Oil Output Cuts Than Expected

By Katarzyna Klimasinska and Grant Smith

Dec. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Saudi Arabia, the world’s biggest oil exporter, cut production more than traders and analysts had estimated last month, reflecting the nation’s commitment to halt the $100 plunge in crude prices.

Oil rallied after Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi said in an interview in Poznan, Poland, that the kingdom pumped 8.493 million barrels of oil a day in November. That’s 287,000 barrels a day less than estimated by the International Energy Agency, and close to Saudi Arabia’s OPEC quota of 8.477 million barrels. Libya’s top oil official Shokri Ghanem said previous OPEC cuts haven’t been enough.

The comments suggest that the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries will cut production for a second time when it meets next week in Oran, Algeria. Last month, al-Naimi said $75 a barrel is a fair price for crude, which slumped to a four- year low near $40 a barrel on weaker demand and concern OPEC members weren’t fully complying with their agreed quotas.

“The Saudis might have been impatient with the market’s skepticism, so they’ve decided some transparency is needed,” said Mike Wittner, head of oil market research at Societe Generale SA in London. “It shows they’re deadly serious about cutting already and serious about cutting more.”

November data on OPEC indicated the 11 members bound by quotas were producing nearly 1 million barrels a day in excess of the formal limit agreed in October. The group pledged to slash output by 1.5 million barrels a day on Oct. 24 to arrest the slide in prices.

‘Substantial Reduction’

OPEC will need to make a a “substantial” reduction when it meets on Dec. 17, Ghanem said in a Bloomberg TV interview today.

“These cuts which we decided in October and are trying to implement fully are not taking the excess quantities in the market,” he said. “There is still a lot of oil in the market.”

The 11 members subject to formal limits pumped 28.24 million barrels a day last month, according to Bloomberg estimates, compared with a ceiling of 27.3 million barrels a day.

“Everybody was looking to Saudi Arabia and saying they have to do something otherwise we will have even lower prices,” said Ehsan Ul-Haq, head of research at Vienna-based JBC Energy GmbH. “Now Saudi Arabia can say they are complying fully and everybody should do the same.”

Crude oil futures traded in New York rose as much as $2.41 a barrel to $45.93 a barrel. They traded at $45.67 at 12:20 p.m. London time.

Reverse Slide

OPEC President Chakib Khelil, along with officials from Libya, Qatar, Venezuela and Iran, have said the organization will need to announce further cuts at next week’s summit to reverse oil’s 69 percent slide from its July record.

“ We also would like to see the non-OPEC members taking steps in this regard,” Ghanem said.

Russia, the largest exporter outside OPEC, will co-ordinate with the group to stabilize prices, President Dmitry Medvedev said Nov. 27. Norway, the fifth-largest producer, has refused to co-operate.

To contact the reporter on this story: Katarzyna Klimasinska in Warsaw at kklimasinska@bloomberg.net





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Pound Falls to Record Versus Euro a Fourth Day as Index Tumbles

By Matthew Brown

Dec. 11 (Bloomberg) -- The British pound declined to a record low against the euro for the fourth day after a U.K. index of manufacturers’ output expectations matched the lowest in 30 years, strengthening the case for interest-rate cuts.

The currency also fell versus the South Korean won and the New Zealand dollar after the Confederation of British Industry’s gauge of expectations for the next three months held at minus 42, the same as November and the lowest since September 1980. The pound weakened 17 percent against the euro this year as the economy slipped into its first recession in 17 years.

“The U.K. output data is a confirmation that the base rate is on a downward trajectory,” said Neil Jones, head of European hedge fund sales at Mizuho Capital Markets in London. “As long as the U.K. continues to move towards a zero interest-rate policy then the pound will underperform.”

The pound weakened to 88.16 pence as of 11:26 a.m. in London, from 88.08 pence yesterday. Against the dollar, the British currency climbed to $1.4946, from $1.4785.

The Bank of England reduced its benchmark interest rate to 2 percent from 5.5 percent this year as it sought to fend off the fallout from the global financial turmoil. The European Central Bank cut its main rate to 2.5 percent on Dec. 4.

British consumers’ predictions for inflation in the next year dropped the most since at least 1999 in November as the economic slump deepened, a survey for the Bank of England showed today, giving policy makers more reason to lower borrowing costs.

The pound may weaken to 91.5 pence per euro this year, the equivalent of an all-time low for the pound versus the German mark, Jones said.

U.K. two-year government bonds advanced, pushing the yield on the gilt down four basis points to 1.79 percent as of 12:17 p.m. in London. The 4.75 percent security due June 2010 gained 0.06, or 60 pence per 1000-pound ($1,492) face amount, to 104.32. The yield on the 10-year security was at 3.59 percent. Yields move inversely to bond prices.

The U.K Debt Management Office told sold 3.5 billion pounds of 4.5 percent gilts due 2013. Demand was 1.96 times the securities, compared with 2.10 times at an auction on Oct. 16.

To contact the reporter on this story: Matthew Brown in London on mbrown42@bloomberg.net





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Russia Devaluation Gathers Pace as Central Bank Loosens Control

By Emma O’Brien

Dec. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Russia devalued the ruble for the fifth time in a month, widening its trading band against the dollar and euro after reserves fell $161 billion as the central bank tried to defend the exchange rate.

Bank Rossii extended the amount the ruble can decline against a target exchange rate to 7.7 percent, from 6.7 percent yesterday and 3.7 percent a month ago. The band was widened on both sides by 30 kopeks today, said a spokesman who declined to be identified on bank policy. The currency weakened 0.7 percent against the basket used to manage its fluctuations.

“They don’t have a choice but to let it weaken and the faster they do it the better,” said Beat Siegenthaler, head of emerging markets strategy in London at TD Securities Ltd. “Regular weekly steps are now the most likely scenario.”

Russia has drained 27 percent of its reserves since the start of August to stymie a 16 percent decline in the ruble versus the dollar as tumbling oil prices, the war in Georgia and the worst global financial crisis since the Great Depression caused investors and locals to remove about $211 billion from the country, BNP Paribas SA data shows.

The world’s biggest energy producer is suffering as the price of Urals crude, its main export blend, has dropped 71 percent from a July record to $40.32 a barrel, below the $70 average required to balance the nation’s 2009 budget.

The ruble fell 4.7 percent against the central bank’s dollar-euro basket in the past month. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. predicts the sliding price of oil will force a ruble drop of as much as 25 percent over the next 12 months. Troika Dialog, Russia’s oldest investment bank, is calling for a one-time, 20 percent devaluation in late January, when there is less risk of bank runs during the New Year’s holidays. UniCredit SpA forecasts a 15 percent decline by end-2009.

Bank Withdrawals

Russians withdrew 6 percent from their savings accounts in October, the most since Bank Rossii started collecting the data two years ago. Deposits in foreign currency, meanwhile, rose 11 percent as the currency’s decline sparked concern. Russians lost life savings in 1998 after the ruble plunged 71 percent versus the dollar and the government defaulted on $40 billion of debt.

The central bank’s foreign-exchange reserves decreased by $17.9 billion to $437 billion in the week to Dec. 5, more than the $11.25 billion decline that was the median estimate of five economists surveyed by Bloomberg. Prime Minister Vladimir Putin pledged last week to use the nation’s reserves stockpile, the world’s third largest, to prevent “sharp” movements in the currency.

The ruble dropped as much as 1.4 percent to 36.7130 per euro, the weakest since Sept. 25. It was at 36.7066 per euro by 1:56 p.m. in Moscow, from 36.6603 yesterday. Against the dollar, the currency fell as much as 0.5 percent to 27.9647.

More Devaluations

Those movements left the ruble at 31.8370 versus the basket, which is made up of about 55 percent dollars and the rest euros, and is used to protect exporters from currency swings.

The weakest end of the trading band is now about 31.90, from the previous 31.60, said Siegenthaler, who predicts a further 20 percent drop versus the basket should oil prices stay at current levels.

“It seems that they will continue at this pace of small devaluations,” said Elisabeth Andreew, chief currency strategist at Nordea AB in Copenhagen, Scandinavia’s biggest bank. “But we can’t rule out a bigger devaluation.”

The ruble may drop 19 percent to 34.51 per dollar, according to 12-month non-deliverable forward contracts, used by traders to speculate on the currency. NDFs are contracts used to fix a currency at a particular level at a future date and are used by companies seeking to protect against foreign-exchange fluctuations.

‘One-Way Bet’

“I don’t see how they can possibly do this without a one- off devaluation because at the moment it is just a one-way bet for fund managers,” said Paul McNamara, a London-based fund manager at Augustus Asset Management Ltd., which oversees about $1.2 billion of emerging markets assets. “No one will put any money into Russia unless they do this.”

Augustus sold Russian bonds before the country’s five-day war with Georgia in August and won’t resume investing in the country until the currency is weakened to a “sustainable” level, McNamara said.

The devaluation has to be big enough to inject “two-way risk back into the ruble-dollar rate,” he said. “If they devalue 15 percent and still have $400 billion of reserves they’ll be in a much better position than if the do this gradually and end up with $200 billion.”

Wasting Reserves

The central bank will probably widen the band another three times this month by steps of 1 percent, Elina Ribakova, Moscow- based chief economist for Citigroup Inc., wrote in a research note today. The brokerage forecasts the ruble will decline as much as 20 percent versus the basket.

Russia is wasting its reserves supporting the ruble as the oil price drops, Win Thin, a senior currency strategist in New York at Brown Brothers Harriman & Co. said Dec. 4. Central bank intervention have just prevented the ruble from the fate of other currencies of commodity-exporting nations, such as Mexico, where the peso has dropped 26 percent versus the dollar since August, he said.

A gradual weakening of the ruble “is not a catastrophic idea because any kind of sharp move would surely create more panic,” said Tatiana Orlova, an economist in Moscow at ING Groep NV, who forecasts the ruble will be 15 percent weaker against the basket by the end of the first quarter on 2009.

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





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Brazil’s Real Rises as Central Bank Holds Interest Rates Steady

By Adriana Brasileiro

Dec. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Brazil’s real gained for a third day after the central bank held the target lending rate at 13.75 percent yesterday, maintaining the yield advantage of the nation’s fixed-income assets.

The currency gained 2.3 percent to 2.3927 per dollar at 6:55 a.m. New York time, from 2.4466 yesterday.

The yield on Brazil’s overnight futures contract for January 2010 fell 17 basis points, or 0.17 percentage point, to 12.77 percent.

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





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Dollar Falls on Speculation Senate Will Reject Automaker Deal

By Bo Nielsen

Dec. 11 (Bloomberg) -- The dollar fell against the yen as a bill to prevent the collapse of U.S. automakers met with opposition in the Senate amid concern the global economic slowdown is broadening.

The U.S. currency also weakened to a six-week low versus the euro after a report yesterday showed the U.S. government’s budget deficit for the fiscal year that started in October rose to a record $401.6 billion. The Swiss franc dropped against the euro and the yen after the central bank reduced its interest rate to a four-year low 0.5 percent today.

“From a fundamental basis, there’s a case for avoiding the dollar,” said Adrian Schmidt, a London-based senior foreign- exchange strategist at the Royal Bank of Scotland Plc, the fourth-biggest currency trader. “For the moment the dollar’s on the back foot.”

The U.S. currency weakened to 92.24 yen as of 7:44 a.m. in New York, from 92.76 yesterday. It fell 0.9 percent to $1.3144 after declining to $1.3158, the lowest level since Oct. 30. Schmidt said the euro may rise to $1.36. The euro rose to 121.02 yen from 120.78 yen.

The Swiss franc traded at 1.5649 per euro from 1.5611 and was down 0.3 percent to 77.19 yen. The Swiss National Bank, led by Jean-Pierre Roth, reduced the three-month Libor target by 50 basis points to 0.5 percent today, as predicted by 13 of the 18 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News.

Haven Currency

“Risk aversion is out there even as markets are recovering,” said Geoffrey Yu, a currency strategist in London at UBS AG, the world’s second-largest foreign-currency trader. “The problems with the U.S. automakers make a case for risk aversion. We’re getting close to year-end and liquidity in the markets is thin so we’ll see moves being exaggerated.”

The dollar fell as the MSCI World Index of stocks added to a gain of 6.6 percent this week, reducing the need for investors to buy the U.S. currency as a haven.

“We’ve seen a gradual improvement in financial-market conditions in the last couple of weeks,” said Lee Hardman, a currency strategist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi Ltd. in London. “That has put pressure on the dollar.”

The ICE’s Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against the euro, the yen, the pound, the Canadian dollar, the Swiss franc and Sweden’s krona, fell 1.2 percent at 84.449, below the 55-moving-day average of 84.5, as traders took advantage of the low liquidity to test how far it may fall, Hardman said. They will drive the dollar to $1.345 per euro this year, he said.

Yen Gains

The dollar has gained 11 percent against the euro in 2008 as the credit-market seizure and $980 billion of losses on mortgage-related securities worldwide led investors to repatriate overseas investments to the U.S. and seek shelter in government debt.

The yen gained versus all 178 currencies tracked by Bloomberg this year as the global recession encouraged Japanese investors to bring funds back home and global equities plunged.

Japan’s currency jumped 21 percent versus the dollar, 34 percent against the euro and 66 percent against Brazil’s real as the financial crisis prompted investors to reverse so-called carry trades, in which they purchase higher-yielding assets funded in countries where borrowing costs are lower.

Japan’s benchmark rate of 0.3 percent is the lowest among major economies.

The dollar fell after Republican Senator George Voinovich said yesterday that legislation to provide $14 billion in federal loans to General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC may not have enough votes from his party.

Automaker Bailout

“It will be a rocky ride for this bill to pass but something will come through eventually,” said Ian Stannard, a senior currency strategist at BNP Paribas SA in London. “The dollar will move a bit lower from here but then we’ll see a sharp rebound in January. Deleveraging is still a theme.”

The U.S. budget deficit in November swelled to $164.4 billion, from $98.2 billion in the year-earlier period, as the government used taxpayer money to shore up the financial system by buying stakes in banks, the Treasury Department reported yesterday. Government revenue fell 4.2 percent, while spending soared 24 percent.

The dollar may extend its decline as the U.S. government increases its budget deficit by spending “trillions of dollars” to revive the economy, said Bill Gross, manager of the world’s biggest bond fund at Pacific Investment Management Co. in Newport Beach, California.

‘Some Risk’

“There’s some risk” for the dollar to weaken, Gross said in an interview on Bloomberg Television yesterday. “It is fair to say other economies are doing much the same thing. The dollar doesn’t have to go south if all the economies reflate at the same time.”

South Korea’s won rose 2.6 percent to 1,358.40 per dollar, after touching 1,330.35, the strongest level in a month. The Bank of Korea lowered its benchmark rate a larger-than-forecast 1 percentage point to 3 percent to prevent the economy from slipping into a recession.

The won, Asia’s worst performer, declined 32 percent against the dollar this year.

Japan will expand its currency-swap agreement with South Korea to help its neighbor obtain foreign exchange, Naoyuki Shinohara, vice finance minister for international affairs, told reporters in Tokyo today. Policy makers are discussing the amount of the swap increase, Japan’s top currency official said.

To contact the reporters on this story: Bo Nielsen in Copenhagen at bnielsen4@bloomberg.net; Stanley White in Tokyo at swhite28@bloomberg.net.





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