Economic Calendar

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Japan Stocks Drop on Bank Concern; Nikkei Set for 7-Week Low

By Masaki Kondo and Shani Raja

Jan. 21 (Bloomberg) -- Japanese stocks fell, driving the Nikkei 225 Stock Average to a seven-week low, on concern a deepening economic slump will force banks to raise more capital.

Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc. and Mizuho Financial Group Inc., Japan’s largest listed banks, dropped more than 4 percent as speculation global banks need to bolster capital sent U.S. financial shares to an almost 14-year low yesterday. Sony Corp., which gets a quarter of its sales from the U.S., lost 3.5 percent after the yen appreciated against the dollar. Mazda Motor Corp., Japan’s fourth-largest automaker, slid 4.4 percent on a Nikkei newspaper report it’s seeking aid to help pay salaries.

“The concern is that banks around the world are short of capital,” said Philip Schwartz, who directly manages $800 million of international equities at ING Investment Management in New York. “As we increasingly come to that realization, stocks are just getting hammered.”

The Nikkei declined 196.73, or 2.4 percent, to 7,869.06 as of 9:42 a.m. in Tokyo, set for the lowest close since Dec. 2. The broader Topix index fell 17.17, or 2.1 percent, to 787.86, with four stocks falling for each that rose.

The Nikkei lost a record 42 percent last year as global financial companies posted more than $1 trillion in writedowns and credit losses and the world’s biggest economies slipped into recession. Japan’s slump will be “very severe” and may last for three years, Hiroshi Yoshikawa, head of the government committee that charts the economic cycle, said in an interview this week. That would mark the country’s longest downturn in the postwar era.

Capital Concern

Mitsubishi UFJ sank 5.2 percent to 476 yen, while smaller rival Mizuho lost 4.4 percent to 218 yen. Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group Inc. dropped 6.2 percent to 3,310 yen. Banks contributed the most to the Topix’s decline, followed by makers of electronics and cars.

Yesterday, U.S. financial shares plummeted on concern mounting losses will force companies to raise more capital. Bank of America Corp., which last week posted its first quarterly loss since 1991, dropped 29 percent after Friedman, Billings, Ramsey Group Inc. said the bank needs at least $80 billion to restore its capital. State Street Corp., the largest money manager for institutions, tumbled 59 percent after its unrealized losses almost doubled as of Dec. 31 from three months earlier.

Sony, the world’s second-biggest maker of consumer electronics, retreated 3.5 percent to 1,954 yen, and Funai Electric Co., which counts North America as its biggest market by sales, fell 2.2 percent to 2,035 yen in Osaka trading. Nintendo Co., which sells four times more Wii game machines in the Americas than in Japan, lost 2.8 percent to 31,550 yen in Osaka.

Government Aid

The yen appreciated to as much as 89.69 today from 90.28 at the 3 p.m. close of stock trading in Tokyo. A stronger Japanese currency cuts the value of overseas sales for the nation’s companies.

Mazda slumped 4.4 percent to 153 yen, while bigger rival Nissan Motor Co. fell 3.1 percent to 317 yen. Mazda asked the government for financial assistance to pay salaries at its Hiroshima and Yamaguchi plants, while Nissan plans to seek support, the Nikkei newspaper reported today. Toyota Motor Corp., poised to become the world’s largest automaker after sales results today, slipped 2.9 percent to 3,010 yen.

Nikkei futures expiring in March retreated 2.4 percent to 7,860 in Osaka and slumped 2.5 percent to 7,860 in Singapore.

To contact the reporters for this story: Masaki Kondo in Tokyo at mkondo3@bloomberg.net; Shani Raja in Sydney at sraja4@bloomberg.net.


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Asia Stocks Slump on Concern Bank Losses Will Prolong Recession

By Shani Raja

Jan. 21 (Bloomberg) -- Asian stocks fell for a second day, led by financial companies and metals producers, on concern mounting bank losses worldwide will deepen the global recession and squeeze demand for the region’s commodities.

Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc. slumped 4 percent in Tokyo as speculation global banks need to bolster capital sent U.S. financial shares to an almost 14-year low. BHP Billiton Ltd., the world’s biggest mining company, retreated 3 percent after saying it will take a charge after closing a nickel mine as the metal’s price slumps. Sony Corp., which gets a quarter of its sales from the U.S., lost 3.1 percent after the yen rose.

“The concern is that banks around the world are short of capital. As we increasingly come to that realization, stocks are just getting hammered,” said Philip Schwartz, who directly manages $800 million of international equities at ING Investment Management in New York. “We’re very concerned about metals and overall industrial demand.”

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index dropped 1.7 percent to 81.80 as of 10:40 p.m. in Tokyo, with four of its members falling for each that advanced. Japan’s Nikkei 225 Stock Average lost 2.1 percent, while South Korea’s Kospi Index dropped 2.1 percent. All markets open for trading declined.

MSCI’s Asian gauge lost a record 43 percent last year as global financial companies posted more than $1 trillion in writedowns and credit losses and the world’s biggest economies slipped into recession. Singapore’s economy may shrink as much as 5 percent this year, the trade ministry said today.

Lower Profit Forecast

Harvey Norman Holdings Ltd. led Australian retailers lower after David Jones Ltd., the country’s second-biggest department store chain, cut its profit forecast on concern the nation’s economy is slowing. KT Corp. rallied 7.4 percent in Seoul on plans to take over its mobile-phone unit.

Futures on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index added 0.3 percent. Financial stocks led U.S. equities lower yesterday, dragging the S&P 500 down by 5.3 percent.

State Street Corp., the largest money manager for institutions, tumbled 59 percent after unrealized bond losses almost doubled. Wells Fargo & Co. and Bank of America Corp. slumped more than 23 percent on an analyst’s prediction that they’ll need to take steps to shore up their balance sheets.

Mitsubishi UFJ, Japan’s largest listed bank, lost 4 percent to 482 yen. National Australia Bank Ltd., the nation’s biggest by assets, declined 3.4 percent to A$17.76.

BHP dropped 3 percent to A$28.07. The company said it will book a $1.2 billion pretax charge for the six months ended Dec. 31 after shutting the Ravensthorpe mine and closing part of a refinery. It’s also cutting coking coal output as much as 15 percent, Chief Financial Officer Alex Vanselow said.

Safe Haven

Rio Tinto Group, the third-biggest mining company in the world, slipped 3 percent to A$36.87. The company announced plans to cut aluminum production and eliminate about 1,100 jobs.

Newcrest Mining Ltd., Australia’s largest gold producer, jumped 7.6 percent to A$32.85 after gold rose to the highest in more than a week in New York as investors sought a haven.

Sony lost 3.1 percent to 1,962 yen as a stronger currency cuts the value of overseas sales. Canon Inc., which gets a third of its sales from the Americas, fell 1.6 percent to 2,740 yen. The currency rose to as much as 89.69 from 90.28 at the close of stock trading in Tokyo yesterday.

Harvey Norman, Australia’s biggest furniture and electronics retailer, tumbled 7 percent to A$2.14. David Jones slumped 6.1 percent to A$2.48 after saying earnings may be flat this year and fiscal 2010, compared with an earlier forecast of 5 percent to 10 percent profit growth annually.

KT Corp., South Korea’s largest phone and Internet company, climbed 7.4 percent to 42,650 won after saying it plans to buy the shares of KT Freetel Co. it doesn’t already own. KT Freetel, KT Corp.’s wireless unit, gained 6.2 percent to 30,850 won.

To contact the reporter for this story: Shani Raja in Sydney at sraja4@bloomberg.net.





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Natural Gas Falls on Concern Energy Demand to Decline Further

By Reg Curren

Jan. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Natural gas in New York fell for the fifth consecutive trading day on speculation energy consumption will slide further amid a deepening global recession.

Industrial demand for gas was 2 billion cubic feet a day less in December than a year earlier, Cameron Horwitz, an analyst at Sun Trust Robinson Humphrey in Houston, said in a note, citing Federal Reserve data. Industrial users accounted for 29 percent of U.S. consumption in 2007, according to the Energy Department.

“The economic concerns are first and foremost right now,” said Phil Flynn, senior trader at Alaron Trading Corp. in Chicago. “It’s going to be a very tough year for natural gas.”


Natural gas for February delivery fell 9.5 cents, or 2 percent, to $4.706 per million British thermal units at 9:21 a.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The futures touched $4.761, the lowest price since Sept. 27, 2006. Gas futures have declined 16 percent this month.

Demand from chemical makers and other large consumers of gas may fall 3 percent in 2009, the Energy Department said in a report on Jan. 13.

Crude oil for February delivery fell $1.59, or 4.4 percent, to $34.92 a barrel in New York.

“Oil being down because of the Gaza Strip and gas flowing from Russia is also putting pressure on prices,” said Flynn.

Ukraine and Russia reached an agreement to end a dispute that had disrupted flows of natural gas to Europe. A cease-fire in the Gaza Strip began on Jan. 18 and is holding so far.

Inventories of natural gas stood at 2.736 trillion cubic feet in the week ended Jan. 9, the department said last week. The surplus to the five-year average was 3.1 percent.

To contact the reporter on this story: Reg Curren in Calgary at rcurren@bloomberg.net.




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TNK-BP Restricts Its Gas Production on Gazprom Curbs

By Eduard Gismatullin

Jan. 20 (Bloomberg) -- TNK-BP, the Russian joint venture of Europe’s second-biggest oil company, said natural-gas production is below expectations because of OAO Gazprom-imposed curbs.

Gazprom, Russia’s gas monopoly, today resumed gas pumping to Europe via Ukraine, ending almost two weeks of supply disruptions because of a price dispute. Domestic gas demand has declined because of the economic slowdown, Gazprom Deputy Chief Executive Officer Alexander Medvedev said.

“Gas production is below plan because of the off-take by Gazprom,” Tim Summers, TNK-BP’s chief operating officer, said today in a phone interview.

He declined to specify volumes sold and why Gazprom is taking less gas. “Our oil production is on plan, in fact it’s very slightly ahead of our plan.”

Ukraine’s extended delays in purchasing gas from Gazprom may force the Russian company to reduce extraction because it is committed to buying the fuel from Turkmenistan, Dmitry Loukashov, a Moscow-based analyst at UBS Ltd., wrote in an e-mailed report today.

“We are performing in accordance with contracts signed,” Medvedev said on a conference call with reporters. Independent producers and oil companies should recognize that demand is being affected by slower economic growth, he said.

‘Performing as Normal’

Moscow-based TNK-BP “is performing as normal,” while shareholders, BP Plc and Russian investors, pursue talks on finding a new chief executive officer, said Summers. He has been acting CEO since Dec. 1. after the departure of Robert Dudley.

“The management team and the company are focused very clearly on dealing with the challenges of the external environment at the moment,” Summers said. “The shareholders are in the process of selecting a new chief executive” and “in the meantime we continue to operate.”

The top candidate for the CEO job is Denis Morozov, the former chief executive of OAO GMK Norilsk Nickel. He has a “high” chance of being appointed to the post, Vekselberg said on Nov. 13.

The negotiations come as TNK-BP is installing new management and seeking to put a damaging power struggle between the two groups of shareholders behind it. The oil company is 50 percent owned by BP and the rest by an entity controlled by billionaires Mikhail Fridman, Len Blavatnik, German Khan and Viktor Vekselberg.

On Jan. 15, BP said that Gerhard Schroeder, the former German chancellor, would join the TNK-BP board as a non- executive director. James Leng, chairman of Corus Group Plc, and Alexander Shokhin, president of the Russian Union of Industrialists, will also become non-executive directors.

The management looks “forward to meeting with the new board members at the next board meeting, which is scheduled” for mid-February, Summers said.

To contact the reporters on this story: Eduard Gismatullin in London at egismatullin@bloomberg.net





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Exxon, Hess Find Oil in Brazil’s Tupi Pre-Salt Area

By Jeb Blount and Joao Lima

Jan. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Exxon Mobil Corp., Hess Corp. and Petroleo Brasileiro SA found evidence of oil at an offshore block in Brazil’s Santos Basin in an area that’s close to the Americas’ largest oil discovery in three decades.

The discovery in the country’s so-called “pre-salt cluster” was in water 2,223 meters (7,294 feet) deep and in a well expected to have a final depth of 4,974 meters, the National Petroleum Agency said today on its Web site. The companies haven’t determined if the find can be developed commercially.

The BM-S-22 block operated by Irving, Texas-based Exxon is adjacent to the Carioca field, where Petrobras, as the Brazilian state-controlled oil company is known, along with Repsol YPF SA and BG Group Plc have found oil. It is also about 40 kilometers (25 miles) south of Tupi, a field that Petrobras says holds as much as 8 billion barrels of oil, making it the biggest discovery in the Americas since 1976.

“It’s only a matter of time before this area in Brazil becomes a major future oil supply,” Fadel Gheit, managing director for oil and gas research at Oppenheimer & Co., said in a phone interview from New York. “Still, we don’t want to celebrate this new find too early because very often you get very disappointed. These are difficult areas.”

Wild-Cat Exploration

Exxon and Hess each own 40 percent of the concession, while 20 percent is held by Petrobras.

Hess spokesman John Pepper confirmed that Exxon had notified Brazilian officials of the discovery. Exxon executives were not immediately available to comment, while Petrobras’s press office was closed for a Rio de Janeiro holiday.

BM-S-22 has the potential to be “the most significant wild- cat exploration well in Exxon Mobil’s portfolio,” Neil McMahon, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., said in a note to clients earlier this month. “The company is going back to basics with a renewed focus on exploration.”

The block is one of 13 so-called wild-cat exploration projects that involve wells far from previous discoveries that Exxon is drilling or is scheduled to begin worldwide.

The pre-salt cluster, in the Atlantic Ocean, is part of a region that extends about 800 kilometers along the coast of Brazil from Espirito Santo state to Santa Catarina state. The cluster’s oil has been found in waters as deep as 3,000 meters and as much as 7,000 meters below the seabed beneath a layer of salt.

High Temperatures

BM-S-22 is more than 350 kilometers south of Rio de Janeiro. It was drilled using the “West Polaris” drilling rig, the petroleum agency said.

The oil discovered in areas nearby will take 5 to 10 years to begin producing in large quantities, Gheit said. The fields are also complex and have some of the highest pressures and temperatures that any company has dealt with, he said.

Exxon shares fell $1 to $77.10, while Hess declined $1.12 to $51.86 at 10 a.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. Petrobras preferred shares, the company’s most-traded class of stock, declined 24 centavos, or 1 percent, to 23.59 reais in Sao Paulo trading.

To contact the reporters on this story: Joao Lima in Lisbon at jlima1@bloomberg.net; Jeb Blount in Rio de Janeiro at jblount@bloomberg.net





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Goldman to Buy Constellation’s U.K. Trading Business

By Jim Polson

Jan. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Goldman Sachs Group Inc., the largest adviser on mergers and acquisitions, agreed to buy overseas commodities-trading assets from U.S. power producer Constellation Energy Group Inc.

The sale includes coal, freight and European energy-trading operations, Baltimore-based Constellation said today in a statement. Terms weren’t disclosed.

The London-based trading business was among operations Constellation put up for sale in August to raise cash and reduce collateral requirements. Constellation accepted a $4.7 billion takeover bid from Warren Buffett’s MidAmerican Energy Holdings Co. to avert a credit downgrade it said would likely lead to bankruptcy, then dropped that deal to instead sell a stake in its nuclear plants to Electricite de France SA for $4.5 billion.

The asset sale to a Goldman affiliate, expected to close in the current quarter, includes trading of power, natural gas and greenhouse-gas credits, Constellation said. Company spokesman Larry McDonnell declined to comment on how much the transaction will reduce collateral requirements.

“These businesses complement our existing operations in London,” Goldman spokesman Michael DuVally said. He declined to comment on prospects for the operations.

Goldman dropped $6.23, or 8.5 percent, to $66.82 at 10:04 a.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. Constellation fell 46 cents, or 1.7 percent, to $27.15.

To contact the reporter on this story: Jim Polson in New York at jpolson@bloomberg.net.





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U.S. Refinery Margins Fall After Russia-Ukraine Gas Agreement

By Robert Tuttle

Jan. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Refinery margins narrowed the most this month as OAO Gazprom’s resumption of gas shipments to the European Union may have reduced demand for heating oil.

Gas flows entered Slovakia early today after Ukraine and Russia resolved a dispute on gas prices and transit. Heating oil, a competing heating fuel to natural gas, fell as much as 7 percent, the biggest decline since Dec. 24.

The Russia-Ukraine agreement “pressured distillate in Europe and there is a knock-on effect over here,” said Andy Lipow, president of Houston-based Lipow Oil Associates LLC.

The margin earned by refiners for turning three barrels of oil into two of gasoline and one of heating oil fell $1.852, or 11 percent, to $15.604 a barrel at 10:14 a.m., the biggest decline since Dec. 22, based on New York futures prices.

Heating oil for February delivery fell 5.31 cents to $1.4203 a gallon on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Gasoline futures for February delivery fell 3.05 cents, or 2.6 percent, to $1.1367 a gallon in New York.

Crude oil for February delivery fell 30 cents to $36.21 a barrel in New York.

To contact the reporter on this story: Robert Tuttle in New York at rtuttle@bloomberg.net





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Suncor Reports Quarterly Loss on Tumbling Oil Prices

By Joe Carroll

Jan. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Suncor Energy Inc., the world’s second-largest oil-sands producer, reported the first quarterly loss in company history and cut spending in half after crude plunged 35 percent. The shares had the biggest drop in a month.

The fourth-quarter net loss was C$215 million ($170.4 million), or 24 cents a share, compared with net income of C$1.04 billion, or C$1.10, a year earlier, the Calgary-based company said today in a statement. Excluding one-time items, Suncor had a profit of 46 cents a share, exceeding by 6 cents the average estimate of 15 analysts in a Bloomberg survey.

Margins from producing synthetic crude from the tar-soaked bogs of western Canada dwindled as New York oil futures fell 35 percent in the quarter from a year earlier to an average of $59.08 per barrel for the biggest quarterly decline in four years. Chief Executive Officer Rick George cut spending plans and delayed work on some of the company’s biggest projects to cope with tumbling prices and faltering demand for crude.

“Both crude-oil and natural-gas prices were in free fall in the last three months of 2008, cratering in response to a global economic meltdown and reduced expectations for global energy demand,” Chris Feltin, an analyst at Tristone Capital Inc., who rates Suncor “market perform,” said in a note to clients.

The quarterly loss was the company’s first since Philadelphia-based Sunoco Inc. sold its controlling stake in 1995. Full-year net income dropped to C$2.14 billion from C$2.98 billion in 2007. For 2009, Suncor expects its oil to sell for C$4.50 to $5.50 per barrel below benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude.

Shares Fall

Suncor fell C$2.26, or 8.6 percent, to C$24 at 10:10 a.m. in trading on the Toronto Stock Exchange, the largest decline since Dec. 22. Before today, Suncor had gained 11 percent this year after plunging 56 percent in 2008 for its worst performance in at least 14 years.

Shrinking margins from processing crude into fuels such as gasoline and diesel will force some U.S. refiners to close plants during the next two years, George said today during a conference call with investors and analysts. U.S. gasoline prices will remain “under pressure” because of a glut, he said.

Suncor isn’t considering any acquisitions because asset prices remain inflated from the rally in energy prices during the first half of 2008, George said.

“I think there’re some people hanging on to the history of it rather than the go-forward basis,” George said during the call.

Output, Costs

Suncor’s oil-sands and natural-gas production for the fourth quarter was 279,400 barrels of oil equivalent a day, compared with 290,700 barrels a year earlier, the company said.

Operating costs at the company’s oil-sands facilities surged 48 percent to C$41.30 a barrel, partly because of a November fire that temporarily shut some production, Suncor said.

The company has pre-sold about 23 percent of its 2009 and 2010 crude output for at least $60 a barrel under hedging agreements.

Most of Suncor’s operations extract oil-soaked sand from northern Alberta with mechanical shovels and process the bitumen into synthetic crude. The oil is shipped to refiners in southern Canada and the U.S. Midwest for processing into gasoline, diesel, jet fuel and chemicals.

Capital Spending

The board this month approved a revised 2009 capital spending program of C$3 billion, with about one-third of that for “growth projects” and the remainder for the “base business,” Suncor said in the statement. An October plan had targeted spending of C$6 billion this year, 21 percent less than in 2008.

With the revised investment forecast, construction of the Voyageur plant, a C$20.6 billion facility for processing bitumen, and Stage 3 of the Firebag venture will be suspended and the projects placed in “safe mode” pending the resumption of expansion work, the company said. Dates for restart and completion haven’t been determined, it said.

George said in October that the Voyageur plant would open a year later than planned. The Firebag project involves injecting steam into the ground to coax heavy crude to the surface.

Syncrude Canada Ltd., a joint venture led by Canadian Oil Sands Trust of Calgary, is the biggest oil-sands producer based on 2007 annual output.

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





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Gazprom Resumes Natural-Gas Shipments to Europe Via Ukraine

By Lucian Kim and Daryna Krasnolutska

Jan. 20 (Bloomberg) -- OAO Gazprom, Russia’s natural-gas exporter, resumed supplies to the European Union via Ukraine, almost two weeks after a price dispute halted deliveries.

“Gas is not only flowing in the direction of Europe but is flowing to Europe,” Deputy Chief Executive Officer Alexander Medvedev said today after the taps were switched on at 10.05 a.m. Moscow time. Slovakia and Hungary have already started receiving Russian gas.

“This finally puts the bulk of the issues to bed,” said Ronald Smith, chief strategist at Alfa Bank in Moscow. Gazprom may face EU lawsuits because of the disruption, he said.

Russia, which supplies a quarter of Europe’s gas, cut off shipments to Ukraine on Jan. 7 after accusing it of siphoning off EU-bound gas, a charge the country denies. More than 20 European countries were affected, as 80 percent of Russian gas exports pass through Ukraine’s pipeline network.

Gazprom and Naftogaz signed a 10-year contract yesterday in a ceremony overseen by Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and his Ukrainian counterpart, Yulia Timoshenko. The agreement sent gas prices lower in the U.K., Europe’s biggest market for the fuel, and pushed up the hryvnia and ruble.

European Commission President Jose Barroso said the cut-off should never have happened and that both countries -- Ukraine and Russia -- had damaged their credibility.

RWE AG, Germany’s second-largest utility, estimates Russian gas will arrive in western Europe one to three days after the resumption of supplies.

The new contracts stipulate the transit of as much as 120 billion cubic meters of Russian gas to Europe this year through Ukraine, which will buy 40 billion cubic meters for its own market, Gazprom said in a statement.

Gas Prices

The price of gas for Ukraine will be $360 per 1,000 cubic meters in the first quarter and adjusted quarterly until next year, when the country moves to a “European market price,” the Moscow-based company said.

European consumers can expect an average price of $280 per 1,000 cubic meters of gas this year, while Ukraine will pay an average of $250, Medvedev told reporters on a conference call.

Ukraine plans to “minimize” the use of Russian gas and will use fuel in storage while the price remains high, Timoshenko told reporters in Kiev. Experts are expected to confirm that Ukraine didn’t steal gas from Gazprom during the dispute, she said during a meeting with the EU’s energy commissioner, Andris Piebalgs.

EU Taskforce

The supply cutoff has already prompted renewed calls for the region to consider developing alternative sources of energy and nuclear power.

The EU needs to set up a taskforce to deal with future energy crises, German Economy Minister Michael Glos said.

The standing body would bolster the role played by observers, Glos said at an energy conference in Berlin today. The 27-member bloc should also improve its distribution network by investing in pipelines to move gas from suppliers in the north to customers in the south of Europe, he added.

European alternatives to supplies from Gazprom are limited and no final decision has been made on financing the planned Nabucco pipeline, a rival route intended to carry central Asian gas to Europe by 2013.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan yesterday threatened to “review” his support for Nabucco in light of the slow of progress in Turkey’s EU membership bid, before later backing down.

Nabucco

“It can’t be that we swap one form of blackmail for another,” Glos said.

Russia and Ukraine must “honor their commitments so the full flow of natural gas is not disrupted again,” the EU said in a statement.

The suspension of shipments led to gas shortages in many part of central Europe and the Balkans, causing factories to be shut down and gas rationing to be introduced.

“To rebuild European consumers’ confidence is now a challenge for both Russia and Ukraine,” according to the Czech Republic, the holder of the EU’s rotating presidency.

Gazprom said the EU could have done more to help resolve the crisis.

“I wouldn’t hide my disappointment with the role of the European Union,” Medvedev said. While Gazprom’s partners such as Eni SpA and E.ON AG were ready to help resolve the question of gas transit with Ukraine, the EU wasn’t supportive of the idea, he said.

‘Absolutely Wrong’

The settlement came under attack from some quarters in Ukraine.

Oleksandr Shlapak, the first deputy chief of Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko’s staff, said the deal was worse than an offer made by Gazprom at the end of last year.

The agreed base price is “absolutely wrong,” he told reporters in Kiev today.

U.K. gas for delivery in February fell 1.7 percent to 54 pence a therm, according to broker Spectron Group Ltd.

The hryvnia strengthened as much as 3.6 percent to 10.1471 per euro today, the strongest since Dec. 12. The ruble climbed for the first time in five days against the euro, gaining 0.5 percent to 43.4190.

To contact the reporters on this story: Lucian Kim in Moscow at lkim3@bloomberg.net; Daryna Krasnolutska in Kiev at dkrasnolutsk@bloomberg.net





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Pemex Oil Output Declines at Fastest Rate Since World War II

By Andres R. Martinez

Jan. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Petroleos Mexicanos, Mexico’s state oil company, will probably report its fastest drop in production since 1942, eroding revenue as plunging crude prices limit the amount of cash available to drill for new reserves.

Pemex last year likely extracted 2.8 million barrels a day, down about 9 percent from the 3.08 million a day pumped in 2007, representing a total of $20 billion in lost sales, according to data compiled by the government and Bloomberg. The Mexico City- based company, which had revenue of $104 billion in 2007, plans to report annual production figures tomorrow.

Falling output is leading Pemex into deepwater exploration as state-run peers Petroleo Brasileiro SA in Rio de Janeiro and Ecopetrol SA in Bogota invest billions to boost production. Costs are rising at Cantarell, Pemex’s largest field, after declining pressure reduced output in the past five years. Oil tumbled 77 percent from its July record to $34.08 a barrel in New York.


Pemex’s “biggest problems have yet to come,” said Alejandro Schtulmann, head of research at Empra, a political- risk consulting firm in Mexico City, in an interview. “The fall in oil prices and lower production is going to make expensive exploration projects less attractive now.”

Mexico relies on Pemex for 40 percent of its budget. Falling sales may cut into funding for a 570 billion-peso ($41 billion)-a-year infrastructure plan President Felipe Calderon is counting on to keep the country out of recession this year, Schtulmann said.

Sliding Output

Sliding Pemex output risks cutting supply to the U.S., which gets more oil from Mexico than all countries except Canada and Saudi Arabia. Lower production also comes as Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, who has threatened to end oil shipments to the U.S. and opposes U.S. influence in Latin America, holds a referendum that would end term limits on his presidency.

Crude touched a record $147.27 a barrel on July 11.

To offset declines at aging fields, Pemex is focusing on tapping oil under seas deeper than 500 meters (1,640 feet), where the government estimates it has 30 billion barrels of crude oil equivalent. That would be enough to supply the U.S. for four years, according to BP Plc.

Deepwater discoveries or finds at the onshore Chicontepec field may help counter a decline at the Cantarell field, the world’s third largest. Pemex is betting it can produce about 500,000 barrels a day from Chicontepec, a series of small, connected deposits spread across Veracruz and Puebla states, by 2021. The first deepwater well is due to come on line by 2015.

Cantarell Declines

By then, Cantarell may be producing less than 500,000 barrels a day of oil, Chief Executive Officer Jesus Reyes Heroles said last year. Output at the field, falling more than twice as fast as government estimates, dropped to 862,060 barrels a day in November from a year earlier, according to Mexican energy ministry data.

Cantarell, struck in 1976, was the biggest oil find in the Americas until last year, when Petroleo Brasileiro, known as Petrobras, discovered the Tupi field. Pemex estimates that Cantarell had 17 billion barrels of crude oil equivalent in reserves when it was found, compared with Tupi’s 8 billion barrels. Cantarell represents about one-third of Pemex’s output today, down from 65 percent at its peak in December 2003.

Petrobras may spend $112 billion through 2013 to explore the so-called pre-salt fields that lie offshore Brazil and which include Tupi. Colombia’s Ecopetrol is planning to increase spending by 35 percent to $6.22 billion this year to meet a goal of almost doubling output to 1 million barrels a day.

“Lazy´´

Pemex became “lazy” after Cantarell´s discovery, relying on the field instead of focusing on further exploration during the next 30 years, Carlos Morales, the company’s exploration and production director, said in a November interview.

Mexico’s finance ministry hedged against Pemex’s drop in production and the slump in prices by purchasing an option to sell all its oil for export at $70 a barrel this year, securing short-term financing for the government’s budget.

The country hasn’t allowed foreign companies to explore or produce oil in the country since Pemex was formed from the expropriated assets of Chevron Corp. and Exxon Mobil Corp. in 1938. That may now change after Congress approved legislative changes to the industry in October to help boost output.

To contact the reporter on this story: Andres R. Martinez in Mexico City at amartinez28@bloomberg.net.




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Russian Ruble, Ukraine’s Hryvnia Climb as Gas Supplies Resume

By Emma O’Brien and Laura Cochrane

Jan. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Russia’s ruble strengthened for the first time in five days against the euro and the Ukrainian hryvnia advanced as OAO Gazprom resumed shipments of natural gas to Europe after a two-week shutdown.

The ruble gained 2.2 percent to 42.6678 per euro by 5 p.m. in Moscow, while the hryvnia appreciated to a one-month high after Russia’s gas exporter said it will ship about 430 billion cubic meters of gas today. Currencies in eastern Europe pared declines.

“The lack of gas was creating a negative dimension for industry,” said Roderick Ngotho, an emerging-markets currency strategist in London at UBS AG. “The resumption of gas means industry can do the best it can given the current downturn in external demand without the added negative of disruptions to energy flow.”

Moscow and Kiev have been locked in a dispute over higher gas prices and alleged siphoning, causing disruption in supplies through Ukraine to countries from Austria to Poland and threatening industry as Hungary and Slovakia imposed limits on energy usage. Ukraine, which had to be rescued with $16.5 billion of loans from the International Monetary Fund, may suffer from the deal as increased gas prices force some companies out of business and worsen the country’s economic slump, according to ING Groep NV.

The hryvnia strengthened as much as 3.6 percent to 10.1471 per euro today, the highest since Dec. 12, and rose 0.7 percent to 8.1300 per dollar. Russia’s currency earlier weakened against the euro and the dollar as the nation’s central bank devalued the ruble for the fifth straight day. The ruble strengthened for the first time in official trading this year against the U.S. currency, advancing 1.2 percent to 32.9928.

Eastern Europe

Hungary’s forint recouped some losses after Gazprom’s statement, and last traded 0.3 percent weaker at 286.33 per euro in Budapest. The Romanian leu fell 0.7 percent, and the Serbian dinar appreciated 0.1 percent to 94.3745 per euro, after earlier declining as much as 0.3 percent.

Disruptions to Serbia forced gas utility Srbijgas to borrow money for alternative imports and led the company to forecast a $270 million loss for the three months through February. Slovakia’s Finance Minister Jan Pociatek said the impasse will probably force the country to cut its economic forecast. ArcelorMittal, the world’s biggest steelmaker, suspended production at its plant in Bosnia because of a “serious reduction” in gas supply.

“The normal operations of companies will be possible now,” said Barbara Nestor, an emerging-markets currency strategist in London for Commerzbank AG. “Big producers of cars and steel in central Europe probably suffered production limitations in early January because of the stoppage in gas supplies.”

EU Threats

Ukraine’s NAK Naftogaz Ukrainy today confirmed gas was flowing into its transit pipes, after signing a 10-year natural gas agreement with Gazprom in Moscow yesterday. Russian gas flows were halted Jan. 7, disrupting supplies to the European Union, after Gazprom accused Ukraine of siphoning off transit flows for its own needs, a charge the country denies.

The dispute showed Russia and Ukraine are “incapable” of delivering on their agreements to provide gas to European Union member states, European Commission President Jose Barroso said last week. He threatened to urge companies in the 27-nation bloc to go to court on the disruption in supplies as factories shut down because of lack of fuel.

Gazprom shares gained as much as 2.5 percent to 108.15 rubles in Moscow trading, after sliding as much as 2.6 percent before the announcement.

Gas Prices

U.K. gas for delivery in February fell 1.5 pence, or 2.6 percent, to 53.5 pence a therm, according to broker Spectron Group Ltd. Russia’s Micex stock index pared a decline of as much as 5.1 percent, dropping 3.3 percent to 567.42.

The extra yield investors demand to own Ukrainian bonds instead of U.S. Treasuries plunged by the most in 10 weeks, falling 1.23 percentage points to a seven-week low of 23.80 percentage points, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. That compares with a 0.1 percentage point decline in JPMorgan’s main emerging- market bonds index to a week-low of 6.69 percentage points.

Russia has accused Ukraine of siphoning gas since at least 2005, and in August 2006 the nation cut off all Ukrainian gas exports for three days, causing volumes to fall in the EU. Gazprom also cut shipments by 50 percent last March during a spat over debt repayments.

‘10-Year Commitment’

“This is positive because we’ve got a 10-year commitment here,” said Ali Al-Eyd, an emerging markets fixed-income strategist in London at Citigroup Inc. “Near term, if what we’re reading comes to fruition, then we have an improvement on Ukraine’s previous experience with gas pricing.”

Oleksandr Shlapak, first deputy chief of Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko’s staff, said today the deal is worse than an offer made by Gazprom at the end of 2008.

The price of gas for Ukraine will be $360 per 1,000 cubic meters in the first three months this year and adjust quarterly next year, when the nation moves to a “European market price,” Gazprom said. Ukraine will have to transit as much as 120 billion cubic meters of Russian gas to Europe this year, and buy 40 billion cubic meters for its own market under the new agreement. Ukraine earlier rejected a price of $250.

Ukraine’s average gas price this year will probably be less than $250 per 1,000 cubic meters, Gazprom’s Deputy Chief Executive Officer, Alexander Medvedev, said on a conference call today.

‘Can-Do Politician’

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and his counterpart in Ukraine, Yulia Timoshenko, brokered yesterday’s agreement. The accord sidelined Putin’s political foe, Yushchenko, who has pushed for Ukraine to join the E.U. and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, amid Russian objections.

The parliamentary alliance between Timoshenko and Yushchenko, forged during 2004’s Orange Revolution, collapsed in September after the pair tussled over economic policy and relations with Russia following Moscow’s August invasion of nearby Georgia.

Timoshenko “has emerged as the can-do politician,” said Chris Weafer, chief strategist at UralSib in Moscow.

Russia’s 30-year government dollar bonds fell, pushing the yield 13 basis points higher to 9.51 percent.

Higher demand for rubles by banks also supported the Russian currency today, according to Natalia Orlova, chief economist at Alfa Bank, Russia’s biggest privately owned lender. Banks need to pay as much as 150 billion rubles ($4.5 billion) in value-added tax to the government today, according to Moscow’s Trust Investment Bank. The central bank offered 20 billion rubles at its cash auction yesterday, less than a quarter of as much as 90 billion demanded, said Alfa’s Orlova.

‘Liquidity Squeeze’

“The liquidity squeeze is the main explanation for the strength we’re seeing in the ruble today,” she said. “One of the best way to stop capital outflows is to reduce liquidity and that seems to be what the central bank is doing.”

Bank Rossii has devalued the ruble 19 times since Nov. 11, as it seeks to mitigate the effect of the ruble’s drop on consumer sentiment and the manufacturing sector. Policy makers have drained their foreign-currency reserves by almost 30 percent since August, intervening in the currency on a daily basis. The bank sold as much as $11 billion yesterday, a record one-day sale, according to Trust Investment Bank in Moscow.

To contact the reporters on this story: Emma O’Brien in Moscow at eobrien6@bloomberg.net; Laura Cochrane in London at lcochrane3@bloomberg.net





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Merrill Says Euro-Pound Gains Not Substantiated by Rate Spreads

By Daniel Tilles

Jan. 20 (Bloomberg) -- The euro’s gains against the pound aren’t justified by differences in interest rates, according to Merrill Lynch & Co.

“While the moves down in euro-dollar and pound-dollar are substantiated by interest-rate spreads, the move up in euro-pound is not,” Steven Pearson, a strategist at Merrill Lynch in London, wrote in an e-mailed report today. The pound weakened 0.8 percent against the euro to 91.36 pence as of 7:24 a.m. in London.

Investors should sell the U.K. currency against the dollar with a target of $1.32, Merrill Lynch said. The pound was at $1.4185, down 1.6 percent.

“Waning foreign demand for U.K. government-backed debt will make financing the U.K.’s stubbornly wide current-account deficit problematic,” Pearson also said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Daniel Tilles in London at dtilles@bloomberg.net





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U.K. Inflation Rate Falls Most Since at Least 1997

By Svenja O’Donnell

Jan. 20 (Bloomberg) -- The U.K.’s inflation rate fell the most since at least 1997 in December as tax cuts and the deepening recession eased price pressures across the economy.

Consumer prices rose 3.1 percent from a year earlier, compared with 4.1 percent the previous month, the Office for National Statistics said today in London. That was still more than the median forecast of 2.6 percent in a Bloomberg News survey of 33 economists. On the month, prices fell 0.4 percent.

Inflation is slowing as Britain faces a recession that may be the worst since the aftermath of World War II. Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s government yesterday gave the Bank of England unprecedented powers to buy assets, which could be used as a tool to fight deflation, and unveiled its second rescue package for banks. The pound fell to a record against the yen today.

“In the next couple of months the consumer price index will come down very sharply indeed and it will allow the bank to cut rates,” said Trevor Williams, chief economist at Lloyds TSB Group Plc in London. “There will certainly be further easing. As interest rates approach zero, you have to put in place other measures to boost liquidity.”

The Bank of England this month cut its benchmark interest rate to 1.5 percent, the lowest since it was founded in 1694. Core inflation, which strips out costs of energy, alcohol, tobacco and food, slowed to 1.1 percent in December, the lowest since August 2006, the statistics office said.

Tax Cut

The pound was little changed at $1.4010 as of 10:30 a.m. in London, after dropping below $1.40 today for the first time since 2001. The currency reached an all-time low of 126.66 yen today and had the biggest drop against the euro in a month.

The government’s 2.5 percentage-point cut in value-added tax, part of a package to boost the economy, weighed down on inflation in December, the statistics office said. Two thirds of goods in stores carried through the reduction, as did most items on the Internet. The effect on services was less marked, officials said.

The only upward effect on consumer prices from a year earlier was from alcohol and tobacco, the statistics office said.

Stores reduced prices to boost flagging sales and attract shoppers in the holiday season. Ninety of Britain’s 100 largest retailers offered pre-Christmas discounts, according to PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, with Tesco and Debenhams Plc reducing prices by up to 50 percent.

Energy Costs

Lower energy costs also weakened inflation. Oil prices have dropped by almost three-quarters since reaching a record $147 a barrel in July, easing pressure on prices. Tesco Plc, the U.K.’s biggest supermarket chain, on Dec. 31 lowered costs of gasoline and diesel fuel to help draw customers.

Deputy Governor John Gieve said last week that inflation will continue to slow this year as the economy endures its “sharpest fall in output for decades.”

The U.K. economy may contract 2.7 percent this year, the most since 1946, the Ernst & Young Item Club said yesterday. Data on Jan. 23 will show that the economy shrank 1.2 percent in the fourth quarter as Britain officially succumbed to a recession, according to the median of 33 forecasts in a Bloomberg news survey.

The Bank of England has cut the benchmark rate from 5 percent in Oct. to 1.5 percent this month. The Treasury said that the central bank can make asset purchases of up to 50 billion pounds ($74 billion) and the government will indemnify the purchases against any losses in the facility, which will start on Feb. 2.

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





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Colombia’s Peso Falls on Crude Oil; Chile’s Currency Drops

By Andrea Jaramillo

Jan. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Colombia’s peso weakened amid a drop in oil, the nation’s biggest export, and on concern the financial crisis is deepening, hurting investor appetite for higher- yielding, emerging-market assets.

The peso dropped 0.5 percent to 2,242.1 per dollar at 9:08 a.m. in New York, from 2,230.1 on Jan. 16, according to the Colombian foreign-exchange electronic transactions system, known as SET-FX. Because of the U.S. holiday yesterday, Colombia’s currency and bonds traded in the so-called next-day market, in which payment and delivery are made the following trading day.

The yield on Colombia’s 11 percent bonds due in July 2020 rose for a second day, increasing six basis points, or 0.06 percentage point, to 10.12 percent, according to Colombia’s stock exchange. The price fell 0.382 centavo to 105.694 centavos per peso.

Crude oil for February delivery fell to as low as $32.70 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, its weakest since Dec. 19.

In Chile, the peso fell 0.3 percent to 625.8 per U.S. dollar from 623.8 yesterday. The yield for a basket of five-year peso bonds in inflation-linked currency units, known as unidades de fomento, fell three basis points to 3.15 percent, according to Bloomberg composite prices.

Argentina’s peso was little changed at 3.4554 per dollar from 3.4560 yesterday.

To contact the reporter on this story: Andrea Jaramillo in Bogota at ajaramillo1@bloomberg.net





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Canadian Dollar Weakens as Central Bank Cuts Borrowing Costs

By Chris Fournier

Jan. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Canada’s currency fell after the central bank cut its target lending rate by half a percentage point, crude oil fell below $33 and the U.S. dollar rallied against most major currencies.

“The Canadian dollar is still weighed down by global issues,” said Firas Askari, head currency trader in Toronto at BMO Nesbitt Burns, a unit of Bank of Montreal.

The Canadian dollar fell 0.7 percent to C$1.2622 per U.S. dollar at 10:12 a.m. in Toronto, from C$1.2539 yesterday. One Canadian dollar buys 79.23 U.S. cents.

The loonie, as Canada’s dollar is known, fell as much as 1.3 percent after the Bank of Canada slashed its key interest rate to 1 percent, the lowest since the bank was established in 1934. Nineteen of 20 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News predicted the reduction. The bank signaled more cuts may be needed.

“The statement appears to leave the door open for additional easing,” said George Davis, Toronto-based chief technical analyst at RBC Capital Markets. “I don’t think this does anything to unravel or change the uptrend” that the U.S. dollar is in right now versus the Canadian dollar.

The U.S. Federal Reserve cut its target rate for overnight loans between banks in the U.S. to as little as zero in December.

The U.S. dollar rose against all the 16 most actively traded currencies, except for the yen. The Japanese currency tends to strengthen during times of economic turmoil as investors unwind purchases of higher-yielding assets financed with the yen.

‘Great Guns’

“The U.S. dollar is going great guns,” said David Watt, a senior currency strategist in Toronto at RBC Capital Markets, a unit of Canada’s biggest bank by assets and the largest Canadian-based currency trader. Falling oil prices are also weighing on the Canadian dollar, Watt said.

Canada’s currency will strengthen to C$1.20 against the U.S. dollar by the end of 2009, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey of 34 economists. RBC predicts the currency will weaken to C$1.31 by the end of next quarter.

The Canadian central bank has cut its target rate eight times since December 2007 from 4.5 percent. That combined with the fiscal stimulus governments in both the U.S. and Canada will announce later this month “may bear fruit by the end of 2009,” Paul-Andre Pinsonnault, a senior fixed-income economist at National Bank Financial in Montreal, a unit of Canada’s sixth largest bank, said in an interview before the decision.

More Rate Cuts

“Markets were anticipating a little bit more, perhaps 75 basis points,” said Martin Lefebvre, a senior economist at Montreal’s Desjardins Group, Quebec’s largest credit union. “The bank is calling for more rate cuts, but still it seems they’re not as dovish as some would have anticipated.”

Canada’s currency, dubbed the loonie for the aquatic bird on the one-dollar coin, has weakened 3.3 percent this year after losing 18 percent last year, its worst annual performance. A global recession decimated demand for raw materials such as oil, gold and copper, which account for about half the country’s export revenue.

Crude oil for February delivery fell to $32.70, down 10.4 percent from last week’s close and the lowest since Dec. 19, on the New York Mercantile Exchange today.

The yield on the two-year government bond rose one basis point, or 0.01 percentage point, to 1 percent. The price of the 2.75 percent security due in December 2010 fell 2 cents to C$103.21.

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





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Zero Rates Push Traders to Cash-Rich Swiss Franc, Yen

By Matthew Brown and Ye Xie

Jan. 20 (Bloomberg) -- At a time when interest-rates are sinking toward zero around the world, the biggest currency traders are recommending countries that have the largest trade surpluses, led by Japan, Norway and Switzerland.

BNP Paribas SA, the best currency forecaster in a 2007 Bloomberg survey, says the yen will strengthen about 14 percent against the dollar by June. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. made Norway’s krone one of its top 2009 picks, with possible gains of 17 percent versus the dollar. Bank of America Corp., the largest U.S. lender by assets, says the Swiss franc will advance against every major currency.

The global economic crisis that forced central banks from the U.S. to New Zealand to cut interest rates last year also reduced earnings from so-called carry trades by about half, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Currencies of countries with trade surpluses are perceived as safer because governments don’t have to brave credit markets in a year when sovereign bond sales are likely to exceed $3 trillion.

“The tide has turned,” said Jens Nordvig, a senior currency strategist in New York at Goldman Sachs. “Surplus currencies such as the franc and the yen are likely to perform well, while the deficit countries are pretty vulnerable.”

Yen Gains

Switzerland’s current-account surplus was 8 percent of gross domestic product last year, while Japan’s was 3.8 percent and Norway’s 16 percent, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. That compares with deficits of 4.9 percent of GDP in the U.S., 5.1 percent in Australia and 9.5 percent in New Zealand.

The yen rose against all 16 of the world’s most-traded currencies today, including the euro and the dollar. It climbed 3.7 percent versus the British pound. The Swiss franc advanced against the euro and fell versus the dollar.

Buying the currencies of nations with the six largest trade surpluses and selling those with deficits returned 4 percent this month, the most since October, according to Goldman Sachs’s CA Outperformance index.

The same wager would have lost 5.9 percent in the six months through September, the index shows. Carry trades -- where investors seek profits buying higher-yielding assets with money borrowed from low interest-rate countries -- were the mainstay of the foreign-exchange market for six years until investors started unwinding the strategies in 2008 after central banks reduced borrowing costs as a global recession began.

Carry Trades

The best carry trade within the Group of 10 economies is the 4.90 percentage-point difference between Japan’s 0.10 percent key rate and the 5 percent rate set by the Reserve Bank of New Zealand. A year ago, the spread between the two rates was 7.75 percentage points.

Carry trades became less popular last year as volatility grew, increasing the risks that profits would be wiped out by sudden changes in exchange rates. Fluctuations among major currencies doubled to 19 percent since the end of 2007, according to data compiled by New York-based JPMorgan Chase & Co. In emerging markets, they tripled to 24 percent.

“Markets tend to pay more attention to fundamental valuations in times of high volatility and uncertainty,” said Henrik Gullberg, a strategist in London at Deutsche Bank AG, the world’s biggest foreign-exchange trader. The current account, the broadest measure of trade, “goes into any fundamental valuation of a currency.”

Franc Rally

The Australian dollar weakened 6.3 percent against the U.S. dollar this year, after a 20 percent slide in 2008. The yen is little changed, after appreciating 23 percent. The Swiss franc declined 6.5 percent against the dollar this year, compared with a 6.1 percent advance in 2008.

“Switzerland has a double-digit current-account surplus in a world where interest-rate differentials are less important,” said David Powell, a currency analyst in London at Bank of America. “The franc will rally across the board.”

The Swiss franc will rise 1 percent this year, according to the median of 34 estimates compiled by Bloomberg. The yen will end the year 8.2 percent weaker and the krone will advance 5.9 percent, separate surveys show. The Australian and New Zealand dollars will be little changed, Bloomberg surveys show.

Volatility increased because investors fled to the perceived safety of dollars as credit markets seized up following the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. in September and the U.S., Japan and Europe slid into recessions. Banks posted more than $1 trillion in writedowns and losses since the start of 2007.

Surpluses Versus Deficits

In the past month, a basket of high-yielding currencies including the Norwegian krone, the euro and the Australian and New Zealand dollars would have lost 42 percent against the yen on an annualized basis, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The same wager lost 31 percent last year and gained 8.7 percent in 2007.

Between 2002 and 2008, currencies of countries with current-account surpluses lagged behind those with deficits. Goldman Sachs’s CA Outperformance index declined 40 percent in the five years through October 2007.

Betting on gains in so-called surplus currencies ignores the risk that global trade will nosedive, said Chirag Gandhi, a money manager of a $2.5 billion fund at the Investment Board of State of Wisconsin in Madison, Wisconsin, who cut his bets on gains in the yen. International trade will shrink in 2009 for the first time in more than 25 years, the Washington-based World Bank said in December.

‘Crowded Trade’

The record $6 billion in bets that hedge funds and large speculators put on a yen rally created a “crowded trade,” New York-based Merrill Lynch & Co. said in a Jan. 6 report, citing Commodity Futures Trading Commission data. The yen strengthened 14 percent against the euro in the past three months and 12 percent versus the dollar.

There’s also the risk that central banks will take steps to prevent their currencies from strengthening. Japan Finance Minister Shoichi Nakagawa signaled last month policy makers were ready to intervene in foreign exchange market for the first time in four years. Thomas Jordan of the Swiss National Bank said Jan. 15 the central bank was watching foreign-exchange markets “very closely.”

As investor appetite for risk returns “to more normal levels, you’ll see yen selling,” said Steven Englander, a currency strategist at Barclays Capital in New York. “You want to be prepared for the market sentiment to turn around.”

Narrowing Rate Differentials

Economies around the world are showing few signs of a rebound any time soon. Barclays predicts global economic growth of 0.8 percent this year, the slowest pace in more than half a century.

Buying currencies with surpluses “will gain more credibility as interest rates narrow,” said Paresh Upadhyaya, who helps manage $50 billion in currency assets as a Putnam Investments senior vice president in Boston. “Relative economic performance will become important.”

Investors should buy the yen against the British pound, the Australian dollar and eastern European currencies such as the Hungarian forint and Polish zloty, Upadhyaya said.

The Reserve Bank of Australia reduced its main interest rate to 4.25 percent from 7.25 percent in August. The Bank of England cut borrowing costs to 1.5 percent from 5 percent in the period. Hungary, which received an emergency loan from the International Monetary Fund last year, cut rates half a percentage point yesterday to 9.5 percent.

‘Running From Risk’

Countries with trade deficits are preparing to borrow record sums to finance economic-stimulus programs. Euro-region nations will borrow about $1.1 trillion in 2009, according to Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc. The U.S. Treasury will borrow about $2 trillion this fiscal year ending Sept. 30, compared with $892 billion in notes and bonds last year.

“It’s about preservation of capital rather than return on capital,” said Scott Ainsbury, who helps manage about $12 billion in currency in New York at FX Concepts Inc. and is buying the franc and the yen while selling the New Zealand dollar. “People who say the bottom is in are kidding themselves. What you see is people basically running away from risk.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Matthew Brown in London at mbrown42@bloomberg.net; Ye Xie in New York at yxie6@bloomberg.net


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Pound Tumbles as U.K. Bank Plan Fuels Concern Crisis Deepening

By Ye Xie and Lukanyo Mnyanda

Jan. 20 (Bloomberg) -- The pound dropped to a record low against the yen and breached $1.40 for the first time since 2001 as the U.K.’s second bank bailout in three months raised concern the financial crisis is deepening.

Sterling had its biggest drop against the euro in a month on Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s plan to support U.K. banks and boost the government’s stake in Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc. The euro fell below $1.30 for the first time since Dec. 10 on concern European banking losses will deepen.

“The currency market is telling us that there’s risk for a debt crisis in the U.K.,” said Benedikt Germanier, a currency strategist at UBS AG in Stamford, Connecticut. “The U.K. and Europe need more capital injection into the banking system. Until that happens, money flows back to the U.S.”

The pound slid 3.5 percent to 126.18 yen at 9:14 a.m. in New York, from 130.71 yesterday, after touching the all-time low of 125.25. It weakened 3.3 percent to $1.3939 from $1.4420, after reaching $1.3863, the lowest level since June 2001. The U.K. currency will weaken to $1.30 in the next few months, according to Germanier. Against the euro, the pound weakened as much as 2.8 percent to 93.25 pence per euro, from 90.60, the biggest intraday decline since Dec. 18. It depreciated to a record of 98.03 on Dec. 30.

Japan’s yen strengthened to 117.06 per euro from 118.47, and 90.26 per dollar from 90.64.

The FTSE 100 Index gained 0.3 percent as the pound’s decline buoyed exporters such as GlaxoSmithKline, Europe’s largest drugmaker, and Vodafone Group Plc, the world’s biggest mobile-phone company.”

Financial Services

Financial services account for almost 30 percent of the U.K. economy, according to data from the Office for National Statistics. Manufacturing accounts for 14 percent.

Yesterday’s 50 billion pound British government package to stabilize the financial industry followed October’s 50 billion- pound bank recapitalization program. U.K. debt may now be greater than the government forecast on Nov. 24, said Richard Grace, chief currency strategist in Sydney at Commonwealth Bank of Australia, which cut the June forecast for the pound today to $1.50 from $1.60.

“I would urge you to sell any sterling you might have,” Jim Rogers, chairman of Singapore-based Rogers Holdings, said in an interview on Bloomberg Television. “It’s finished. I hate to say it, but I would not put any money in the U.K.”

The pound weakened versus all of the 16 most-active currencies as a government report showed the inflation rate fell in December to the lowest level since April, giving the Bank of England more room to cut interest rates. U.K. consumer prices rose 3.1 percent from a year earlier, the Office for National Statistics said today. Inflation is tumbling as the U.K.’s first recession in 17 years curbs price increases.

Brown’s Leadership

Worsening economic indicators have stoked concern among voters about Brown’s leadership, both as prime minister since Tony Blair stepped down in 2007 and as finance minister for a decade before. An Ipsos-Mori survey today showed the opposition Conservative Party 14 points ahead of Brown’s Labour Party. An election is due by June 2010.

“The realization that the banking sector is in an even worse state than previously thought, and the significance of that sector to the U.K. economy, is really hurting the pound,” said Jeremy Stretch, a senior currency strategist in London at Rabobank International.

The Bank of England reduced its benchmark rate to 1.5 percent this month, the lowest in the bank’s history. Policy makers will probably cut the rate to 1 percent at their Feb. 5 meeting, according to a separate Bloomberg survey.

Trade Surpluses

At a time when interest-rates are sinking toward zero around the world, the biggest currency traders are recommending countries that have the largest trade surpluses, led by Japan, Norway and Switzerland.

BNP Paribas SA, the best currency forecaster in a 2007 Bloomberg survey, says the yen will strengthen about 14 percent against the dollar by June. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. made Norway’s krone one of its top 2009 picks, with possible gains of 17 percent versus the dollar. Bank of America Corp., the largest U.S. lender by assets, says the Swiss franc will advance against every major currency.

Europe’s single currency declined for a second day versus the yen after the Brussels-based European Commission said yesterday the region’s economy will probably shrink 1.9 percent in 2009 and grow 0.4 percent next year.

“We still believe that these estimates are likely to be surprised on the downside,” analysts led by Hans-Guenter Redeker, global head of foreign-exchange strategy at BNP Paribas in London, wrote in a research note yesterday. “We expect the euro to remain under pressure.” The euro will decline to $1.20 and to 94 yen by the end of June, BNP Paribas forecast.

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





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