Economic Calendar

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Bahrain Petroleum Exports Drop 11% in 2008 on Refinery Repair

By Abdulla Fardan

Jan. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Bahrain, the smallest oil producer in the Persian Gulf, said exports of petroleum products declined 11 percent last year because of shutdowns and maintenance work at the country’s sole refinery.

Bahrain exported 9.2 million tons of oil products in 2008, compared with 10.3 million tons a year earlier, the National Oil & Gas Authority said in an e-mailed statement today. The products exported include diesel, gasoline, kerosene, naphtha and heavy fuel oil.

Bahrain Petroleum Co., the only oil producer in the country, pumps about 190,000 barrels a day of crude oil, mostly from the offshore Abu Safa’ oilfield that it shares with Saudi Arabia.

To contact the reporter on this story: Abdulla Fardan in Bahrain at afardan@bloomberg.net





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Investment Dar Appoints Credit Suisse Its Financial Adviser

By Fiona MacDonald

Jan. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Investment Dar Co., the Kuwait-based financial services company that owns half of Aston Martin, appointed Credit Suisse Group AG to advise the firm on its financial strategy.

Investment Dar hired Credit Suisse “to consider the options available to us in this market,” Chief Executive Officer Adnan al- Musallam said in an e-mailed statement today.

Credit Suisse will work as the financial adviser to review Investment Dar’s debt, prepare a repayment plan and arrange new finances, the Kuwait-based newspaper Al-Qabas reported Jan. 11, without citing anyone. Credit Suisse will also be authorized to negotiate with the Investment Dar’s creditors on the repayment plan, it said.

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





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Qatar Islamic Bank Receives 956 Million Riyals From Qatari Fund

By Shaji Mathew

Jan. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Qatar Investment Authority, the country’s sovereign wealth fund, bought 5 percent of the share capital of Qatar Islamic Bank.

The fund paid 956 million riyals ($263 million) for the shares in the Gulf country’s second-biggest bank by market value, according to a statement on the Doha bourse Web site. QIA will buy another 5 percent of Qatar Islamic in December.

QIA said last year it would contribute between 10 percent and 20 percent of Qatari banks’ capital to guarantee financing for development projects in the country, seeking to protect the nation from the global credit crisis.

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





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Petrofac, Tecnicas Win $3.5 Billion Abu Dhabi Deal

By Ayesha Daya

Jan. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Petrofac Ltd., the U.K. oil-services provider that’s part of a joint venture with the Abu Dhabi government, won a contract worth $2.3 billion to develop the Asab oilfield in the United Arab Emirates.

Tecnicas Reunidas SA, the Spanish builder of oil and gas plants, and Consolidated Contractors International SAL won another contract worth $1.2 billion to develop the Sahil and Shah oilfields, the Abu Dhabi Co. for Onshore Oil Operations said in a statement published on the state-run WAM news agency today.

The three fields will help Abu Dhabi Co., the onshore unit of state-owned Abu Dhabi National Oil Co., raise crude oil output to 1.8 million barrels a day by 2017 from 1.4 million barrels now, general manager Abdul Munim al-Kindi said in a newsletter last month. The U.A.E., the fourth-largest oil producer in the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, produced 2.35 million barrels a day of oil in December, Bloomberg data show.

Abu Dhabi Co. had planned to reach the 1.8 million barrels a day target by the end of 2011, assistant general manager Fareed Abdulla told Bloomberg in November. The company had received the green light from shareholders including Royal Dutch Shell Plc and Exxon Mobil Corp. to seek renewed bids from oil services companies as energy prices dropped, Abdulla said.

Lump-Sum Contract

Petrofac will provide engineering, procurement and construction services to upgrade the production capacity of the Asab field under a 44-month lump-sum contract, the London-based company said in a statement received by e-mail today.

Abu Dhabi, which holds almost all of the country’s oil and gas reserves, has delayed its output target of 3.5 million barrels a day by eight years to 2018, Adnoc’s deputy chief executive officer Abdulla Nasser al-Suweidi said in November. The country was initially expected to reach the production level as early as next year, according to comments made by Oil Minister Mohamed al- Hamli in June 2007.

To contact the reporter on this story: Ayesha Daya in Dubai adaya1@bloomberg.net





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Deyaar Fourth-Quarter Net Advances 59% on Home Sales

By Arif Sharif

Jan. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Deyaar Development PJSC, the real- estate company part-owned by Dubai Islamic Bank PJSC, said fourth-quarter profit jumped 59 percent as sales of homes and offices increased and on revaluation gains.

Net income in the three months to December rose to 343 million dirhams ($93 million) from 216 million dirhams a year earlier, the Dubai-based company said in a statement posted on the Dubai Financial Market Web site today. The results are inclusive of “portfolio revaluation and adjustments.” Revenue rose 10 percent to 676 million dirhams.

Deyaar achieved fourth-quarter earnings “despite growth challenges to the real estate sector,” Chief Executive Officer Markus Giebel said in the statement. It cut debt-to-equity ratio to eight percent to “strengthen the company’s capital position even further.”

Dubai is bracing for a slowdown of its once booming property industry as the global financial crisis crimps mortgage lending and speculators desert the market. Villa prices dropped 30 percent last month from a record high in September and apartment prices declined by 20 percent, according to a survey by HSBC Holdings Plc published on Jan. 21.

Deyaar introduced nine new residential projects in 2008, all of which received an “exceptional” response, Chairman Nasser Bin Hassan al-Shaikh said in the statement.

The company will aim to build larger mixed-use communities instead of just residential towers and will diversify into leasing as well as asset and fund management, according to the statement. It will also aim to develop middle-income housing projects in 2009.

Deyaar’s shares rose 4.4 percent to 0.48 fils on the Dubai Financial Market today, paring this year’s loss to 4 percent.

Set up in 2002, Deyaar raised $871 million in an initial public offering in May 2007 for projects in the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Kazakhstan. Deyaar’s developments include residential towers in Dubai Marina, Business Bay and Jumeirah Lake Towers in Dubai.

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





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Kuwait Reports $34 Billion 9-Month Provisional Budget Surplus

By Fiona MacDonald

Jan. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Kuwait’s government had a preliminary budget surplus of 9.824 billion dinars ($34.1 billion) in the first nine months of the fiscal year, the Finance Ministry said.

Income was 18.554 billion dinars and spending 8.73 billion dinars, or 46 percent of projected expenditure for the year ending March 31, according to data posted on the ministry’s Web site. Some 10 percent of revenue will be saved in the Reserve Fund for Future Generations.

Oil revenue was 17.57 billion dinars in the first nine months of the year, 50.8 percent more than budgeted, the data showed. Non-oil revenue was 979.4 million dinars. Total revenue for December was 827.7 million dinars, the lowest monthly income so far in the current fiscal year due to the drop in oil prices. Revenue was estimated with an assumed oil price of $50 per barrel.

Kuwaiti crude oil dropped to $36.42 on Jan. 20, falling 73 percent since its July record of $135, the state-run KUNA news agency reported. The Gulf state, which is the third-largest oil producer in the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, produced 2.5 million barrels of oil a day in December.

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





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Abu Dhabi Bourse Expects Market Recovery Late 2009

By Zainab Fattah and Arif Sharif

Jan. 25 (Bloomberg) -- The Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange, one of three stock markets in the United Arab Emirates, expects the local benchmark index to recover later this year after it lost 47 percent in 2008.

“One of the signs markets are very close to the bottom is very low liquidity,” Tom Healy, director general of the Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange, said in an interview today. Average volume on the Abu Dhabi bourse dropped 55 percent to 123 million shares in the second half of 2008 from 275 million shares in the first half, Bloomberg data show.

Gulf Arab stock markets, seen as a diversification hedge against global routs in the past, have become increasingly correlated with world markets as foreign investors and investments increased. Stock markets in the U.A.E., the second- biggest Arab economy, are not immune to turmoil in global financial markets, Healy said in March.

Share prices in the region have slumped since the onset of the global credit crisis as foreign investors fled, lending grew scarce and on concern the region’s once booming real-estate industry is poised for a slowdown. Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul All Share Index fell 56 percent in 2008, while the benchmark index in Dubai dropped 72 percent. Abu Dhabi’s benchmark index has fallen 8.4 percent this year.

Share Offers

Companies around the world are showing no interest in initial public offerings temporarily and will wait “until markets settle down and a recovery starts,” Healy said. “At that stage, we’ll get the IPOs coming back and there will be a strong pipeline here.”

The Emirates Securities and Commodities Authority, the United Arab Emirates’ market regulator, is studying several applications for IPOs from companies in Dubai and Abu Dhabi.

The regulator expects “few” IPOs this year and will consider their size and timing to avoid “sucking lots of liquidity out of the market,” Abdullah Al Turaifi, chief executive of ESCA, said in an interview today.

The Abu Dhabi exchange has spoken to index provider MSCI Inc. about including Abu Dhabi companies in its measures. The bourse currently lists companies including Emirates Telecommunications Corp., the second-biggest Arab phone company by market value, and National Bank of Abu Dhabi PJSC, the United Arab Emirates’ second- largest bank by assets.

Abu Dhabi’s benchmark index rose 2.4 percent to close at 2,188 points today, its first advance in four days.

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





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Persian Gulf Shares Gain on Government Intervention, Oil’s Rise

By Haris Anwar

Jan. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Persian Gulf shares rose on speculation governments in the region will intervene to bolster market confidence and as crude oil climbed to a two-week high.

Kuwait Finance House KSC, the state’s largest Islamic bank, gained the most in a month after state news agency KUNA reported the central bank is preparing proposals to bolster the country’s economy. Qatar Islamic Bank increased for a second day as the country’s sovereign wealth fund bought a stake. Aramex PJSC advanced for the first time in five days after it bought Metrofile Middle East LLC. Crude oil surged 9.2 percent last week.

The Dubai Financial Market General Index gained 1.1 percent to 1,488.68. The Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange General Index added 2.4 percent, while Kuwait’s index rose 0.2 percent. Oman’s Muscat Securities Market Index jumped 5.2 percent.

“We’re getting positive signals from the government side,” Faisal Hasan, head of research at the Kuwait-based Global Investment House KSCC, said in an interview from Kuwait City. “It seems they are ready to step in and use their financial muscles to revive the confidence.”

Kuwait’s Central Bank will tomorrow present to the government proposals to bolster the country’s economy amid the global financial crisis, KUNA reported, citing Governor Sheikh Salem AbdulAziz al-Sabah. The plan includes help for financial institutions, the state-run news agency said yesterday. Kuwait’s banking index added 2.5 percent.

Liquidity

An Omani government fund created to help restore confidence in the stock market will start investing in a “few weeks,” said Abdulmalik Al-Hinai, Oman’s Undersecretary for Economic Affairs on Jan. 16. The 150 million-rial ($390 million) fund will invest in companies listed on the country’s stock market.

Gulf shares lost more than half their value since July as the global credit freeze halted a fourfold surge in Dubai home prices at the same time as a 70 percent drop in oil eroded export revenue.

Dubai’s benchmark index is down 9 percent this month following its 72 percent slump in 2008. It is valued at 3.57 times the earning of its 29 companies. Abu Dhabi’s index is valued at 5.49 times earnings, compared with a 12-month high of more than 16 reached in January last year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Volumes

“One of the signs markets are very close to the bottom is very low liquidity,” Tom Healy, director general of the Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange, said in an interview today. Daily average volume on the Abu Dhabi bourse dropped 55 percent to 123 million shares in the second half of 2008 from 275 million shares in the first half, Bloomberg data show.

Crude rose in New York on Jan. 23 on speculation that stockpiles will decline as OPEC implements promised production cuts and investors purchased commodities as an alternative to stocks and bonds. Oil for March delivery added 6.4 percent to $46.47 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, the highest settlement since Jan. 6.

Kuwait Finance House gained 5.7 percent to 930 fils.

Qatar Islamic Bank climbed 3.2 percent to 65.1 riyals after Qatar Investment Authority bought 5 percent of the share capital.

Aramex, the Middle East’s biggest courier company, added 2.4 percent to 0.84 dirham after it bought Metrofile for an undisclosed amount to merge the documents and records management company with its unit Infofort.

Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul All Share Index gained 0.5 percent to 4,810.04. Qatar’s DSM 20 Index climbed 2 percent and the Bahrain All Share Index rose 0.5 percent.

Al-Salam Bank BSC, the Bahrain-based Islamic lender founded by investors from the U.A.E., climbed 9.4 percent to 0.093 dinar. The bank’s full-year profit rose 10 percent to 25.5 million dinars ($67.6 million).

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





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Toyota’s 2009 Global Output to Fall 20%, Tokyo Shimbun Says

By Makiko Kitamura

Jan. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Toyota Motor Corp., the world’s biggest automaker, will cut worldwide vehicle production by at least 20 percent this calendar year as a global recession damps demand, the Tokyo Shimbun reported today, without citing sources.

The carmaker will produce about 6.5 million vehicles this year, down from an estimated 8.21 million vehicles in 2008, the newspaper said. The figure excludes output by units Daihatsu Motor Co. and Hino Motors Ltd., it said.

Toyota is scheduled to release 2008 global production figures on Jan. 28.

Toyota said last week worldwide vehicle sales fell 4 percent to 8.972 million in 2008, the first drop in 10 years. The automaker, based in the central Japan city of Toyota, expects to post its first operating loss in 71 years for the 12 months ending March 31, as the credit crunch discourages consumers from buying new cars.

Toyota spokesman Paul Nolasco could not be reached immediately on his cell phone for comment.

To contact the reporter on this story: Makiko Kitamura in Tokyo at at Mkitamura1@bloomberg.net.





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Nomura to Post Record Loss on Brokerage, Lehman, Nikkei Reports

By Makiko Kitamura

Jan. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Nomura Holdings Inc., Japan’s biggest securities firm, will post a record 300 billion yen ($3.4 billion) third-quarter loss, the Nikkei newspaper reported.

The loss stems from operations at Nomura’s brokerage unit as well as costs related to its acquisition of Asian and European assets of failed Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., Nikkei reported today, without saying where it got the information.

Nomura’s Tokyo-based spokesman Tohru Namikawa declined to comment on the report, saying the firm is scheduled to announce earnings for the three months ended December on Jan. 27 at 3 p.m.


To contact the reporter on this story: Makiko Kitamura in Tokyo at at Mkitamura1@bloomberg.net.




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Beni Stabili Sees Operating Profit at EU190 Million, Sole Says

By Steve Scherer

Jan. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Beni Stabili SpA, the Italian real estate company controlled by France’s Fonciere des Regions SA, will post an operating profit including one-off gains of 190 million euros ($246.4 million) in 2008, Il Sole-24 Ore said, citing Chief Executive Officer Aldo Mazzocco.

This year “will be objectively difficult,” the newspaper cited Mazzocco as saying, without elaborating.


To contact the reporter on this story: Steve Scherer in Rome at scherer@bloomberg.net




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UniCredit’s Profumo Will Extend Credit to Fiat, Il Sole Reports

By Steve Scherer

Jan. 25 (Bloomberg) -- UniCredit SpA Chief Executive Officer Alessandro Profumo said his bank is willing to extend credit to Fiat SpA to support Italy’s “economic engine,” Il Sole-24 Ore newspaper reported.

“Regarding a line of credit for Fiat, we must make a choice, and I believe it’s important to support Fiat,” the newspaper said, citing comments Profumo made yesterday on the sidelines of a conference in Roncade, in Northern Italy.

Italian banks including UniCredit may make available 1 billion euros ($1.3 billion) to Fiat, Italy’s biggest manufacturer, Il Sole said, citing no one.

To contact the reporter on this story: Steve Scherer in Rome at scherer@bloomberg.net





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Blanchflower Says U.K. Rates Should Be Near Zero, Times Reports

By Laura Cochrane

Jan. 25 (Bloomberg) -- U.K. interest rates should “obviously” be cut to the near-zero level, Bank of England policy maker David Blanchflower said, according to the Sunday Times.

Rates should be at the 0 to 0.25 percent level to aid economic recovery, after the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee kept borrowing rates too low during the good times, the paper cited Blanchflower as saying in an interview.


“It certainly appears that the housing market was a bubble,” Blanchfower said, according to the report.

The U.K. economy will continue to shrink in the third quarter and unemployment will rise to 3 million in the next year from 1.92 million, Blanchflower said in the interview.

To contact the reporter on this story: Laura Cochrane in London at lcochrane3@bloomberg.net




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Australia May Cut Interest Rates Again, Daily Telegraph Says

By Rebecca Keenan

Jan. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Australia’s central bank may cut its benchmark interest rate again as the global credit crisis continues, the Daily Telegraph reported, citing the nation’s treasurer.

Australia has the capacity to take further action amid the crisis through monetary and fiscal policy, the newspaper reported, citing Treasurer Wayne Swan, who was speaking in New York after a conference. Australia is not immune from the financial crisis, the newspaper reported Swan saying.

To contact the reporter on this story: Rebecca Keenan in Melbourne at rkeenan5@bloomberg.net





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Cyclone Builds Off North Australia, May Threaten Oil Production

By Rebecca Keenan

Jan. 25 (Bloomberg) -- The oil and gas-producing region of West Australia state may be affected by a cyclone tomorrow as a tropical low develops, said the Bureau of Meteorology, which warned of strong winds.

The weather system is building over Western Australia state, about 500 miles southeast of Darwin, and has a 20 percent to 40 percent probability of developing into a cyclone tomorrow, the bureau said on its Web site. The system is likely to move west over the next few days, it said.

The region hosts most of Australia’s oil and gas production, which may be threatened by more tropical cyclones than average this season, according to an October forecast by the bureau. The region may experience five to seven cyclones between Nov. 1 to April 30, up from four last year, the bureau said.

A storm would be the third of the season, following Tropical Cyclones Billy and Anika. Billy, the second cyclone of the season, forced the closure of some oil and gas operations off the northwest coast of Western Australia. Anika, the first storm of the season, developed far offshore last month and had no effect on resources production.

To contact the reporter on this story: Rebecca Keenan in Melbourne at rkeenan5@bloomberg.net





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Japan’s Long-Term Bonds Complete Weekly Loss on Supply Concerns

By Yasuhiko Seki

Jan. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Japan’s long-term bonds completed a weekly decline on concern an increasing supply of debt will deter investors at an auction of 20-year securities.

Twenty-year yields approached a two-week high yesterday before the Ministry of Finance sells 900 billion yen ($10.1 billion) of 20-year bonds on Jan. 27. The government may need to auction a record 38.1 trillion yen of bonds in the fiscal year starting April 2011, the ministry said last week.

“The market is gradually becoming aware of budget and fiscal risks stemming from active policy actions,” said Hirokata Kusaba, a Tokyo-based senior economist at Mizuho Research Institute, the research arm of Japan’s second-biggest banking group, Mizuho Financial Group Inc.

The yield on 20-year government bonds rose 6.5 basis points to 1.865 percent this week, according to data from Japan Bond Trading Co., the nation’s largest interdealer debt broker. Thirty-year yields climbed 3 basis points to 1.92 percent. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point.

Benchmark 20-year yields reached 1.875 percent yesterday, the highest since Jan. 9, after U.S. and Britain stepped up steps to shore up their financial system, sparking fears about further increases in debt sales.

The previous auction of 20-year Japanese debt on Dec. 16 drew bids for 2.6 times the amount on offer, down from a so- called bid-to-cover ratio of 3.1 at the November sale.

Pre-auction trading suggests that the coupon rate may be lowered to around 1.9 percent from last month’s 2.1 percent, said Masashi Shimominami, a market analyst at Mizuho Securities Co. in Tokyo. “This will be a challenge for investor appetite,” Shimominami said.

BOJ Buys Bonds

The BOJ announced Jan. 22 that it will buy back 800 billion yen of securities with maturity dates of one year to 10 years, 460 billion yen of debt due in less than a year and 75 billion yen of debt with maturities ranging between 10 and 30 years.

“The announced plan of purchases of longer tenors by the Bank of Japan was smaller than the market had expected, which will support” rises in long-term debt yield, said Kazuhiko Sano, chief strategist in Tokyo at Nikko Citigroup Ltd., the Japanese unit of the second-largest bank in the U.S.

Losses in government bonds were tempered after the Bank of Japan also cut its 2009 economic growth forecast and signaled a return to deflation, after leaving its benchmark interest rate unchanged at 0.1 percent.

The bleak outlook helped drive the yield on Japan’s five- year bond as low as 0.66 percent yesterday, the least since September 2005. The yield fell 3 basis points during the week.

Focus on Fed

The Bank of Japan’s economic outlook “may trigger some speculation about more policy response by the central bank, thereby supporting the bond market,” said Atsushi Ito, strategist at Morgan Stanley Japan Securities Co. in Tokyo.

The near-term outlook for Japanese bonds is likely to be influenced by whether or not the U.S. Federal Reserve announces it will also repurchase government debt, said Takeo Okuhara, a strategist at Daiwa SB Investments in Tokyo.

The Federal Open Market Committee will hold a two-day policy meeting on Jan. 27-28.

“The focus is whether the Fed will announce outright purchases of the government debt, as had been widely expected by the market,” Okuhara said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Yasuhiko Seki in Tokyo at Yseki5@bloomberg.net.





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Toyota Says Domestic Output to Decline This Quarter

By Kanoko Matsuyama

Jan. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Toyota Motor Corp., the world’s biggest automaker, expects domestic production to decline in February and March as it will halt factory operations for 14 days more than usual in the current quarter.

“We are reducing factory operations to trim inventory,” Hideaki Homma, a Toyota spokesman based in Tokyo, said by telephone today.

Toyota’s domestic production will probably fall about 40 percent from a year earlier in the January-March quarter and a surging Japanese currency may prompt further cuts in April, Shinya Naruse, an equities analyst at Nomura Holding Inc., said by telephone today.

“It’s cheaper to make cars overseas,” Naruse said. “Toyota may have to cut local production if the yen remains strong.”

Japan’s currency strengthened to a record 118.85 against the pound and near a seven-year high versus the euro this week, after trading at its highest to the dollar since July 1995.

Toyota may reduce its domestic output target for April by 60 percent from a year earlier to some 148,000 units, the Tokyo Shimbun newspaper reported earlier today, without saying where it obtained the information.

“A 60 percent decline for the month would be large, but it could happen,” Naruse said.

Homma said the automaker, based in the central Japan city of Toyota, usually schedules production runs a month in advance, adding it’s too early to estimate output for April.

Jobs Threatened

Tokyo Shimbun said today Toyota might be forced to change domestic staffing plans if it curtailed production to 40 percent of capacity for a full year.

“We have no plan to change our full-time payroll in Japan,” Homma said.

The Japanese carmaker yesterday said it would reduce production at U.K. plants without cutting permanent jobs, after the Nikkei newspaper reported Toyota might eliminate more than 1,000 positions in North American and Britain because of declining sales.

The carmaker, which last year passed General Motors Corp. in total sales for the first time, has trimmed output as the global recession cools car demand.

In the U.S., the world’s biggest auto market, Detroit-based GM has predicted industry sales may drop to as low as 10.5 million units this year from 2008’s 16-year-low of 13.2 million.

Toyota earlier this week said it planned no “involuntary” job cuts in North America after announcing further production cuts in the U.S. and Japan.

To contact the reporter on this story: Kanoko Matsuyama in Tokyo at at kmatsuyama2@bloomberg.net.


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Rudd Pledges A$4 Billion Fund for Commercial Property

By Gemma Daley and Rebecca Keenan

Jan. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd pledged A$4 billion ($2.6 billion) for a lending fund for commercial property companies should foreign banks fail to roll over as much as A$75 billion in business loans.

The Australian government will provide A$2 billion and the remainder will come from equal contributions from the nation’s four largest banks Commonwealth Bank of Australia, Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd., Westpac Banking Corp., and National Australia Bank Ltd., according to a statement from Rudd. The fund could be accessed by March, the statement said.

A shortfall in credit could push Australia’s economy into its first recession since 1991, worsening a surge in job cuts at companies including BHP Billiton Ltd. following a drop in demand from China and waning consumer spending. Governments in the U.S. and Europe are bolstering measures to underwrite bank lending after recapitalization efforts failed to restore credit flow.

“I think we will see some withdrawals,” of foreign bank lending in Australia, Finance Minister Lindsay Tanner told journalists in Melbourne today. “Nobody can be certain how large that degree of withdrawal may be.”

Overseas banks accounted for more than half the A$285 billion in syndicated loans issued to Australian businesses since 2006, Rudd said this week, citing Merrill Lynch & Co. figures. Some A$75 billion is due to be rolled over in the next two years.

The new fund will only offer loans to companies on commercial terms when the Australian government and the banks agree the property assets and income would be economically viable, he said. It could be used to refinance existing syndicated loans if a member of the lending group withdraws.

Stimulus

The fund may also lend up to another $26 billion for commercial property projects by government guaranteed debt, he said. The commercial property sector employs about 150,000 jobs and one third of these could be lost without the additional lending.

Since October, Rudd and Treasurer Wayne Swan have announced almost A$45 billion in aid for families, pensioners, bond markets, home buyers, and extra spending on schools and roads to boost growth in the economy.

The spending boost came after credit markets froze following the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. on Sept. 15, prompting governments and central banks around the world to bail out financial institutions and try to revive growth.

The British government on Jan. 19 announced a 50 billion pound ($69 billion) plan to stabilize the financial industry, following a 50 billion pound bank recapitalization in October.

To contact the reporters on this story: Gemma Daley in Canberra at gdaley@bloomberg.net; Rebecca Keenan in Melbourne at rkeenan5@bloomberg.net


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Yen Rises to Strongest Versus Dollar Since 1995 on Haven Demand

By Ye Xie

Jan. 24 (Bloomberg) -- The yen advanced to the strongest level against the dollar since 1995 and a seven-year high versus the euro as concern the global economic slowdown will deepen spurred investors to take refuge in Japan’s currency.

Sterling fell to a 23-year low versus the dollar and dropped to a record against the yen as Britain’s plan for a second bank bailout in three months raised concern the nation’s budget deficit will widen. The Federal Reserve is forecast on Jan. 28 to maintain a range of zero to 0.25 percent for the target lending rate after saying in December that it would focus on buying debt to boost liquidity.

“It’s a broad-based flight to quality,” said Fabian Eliasson, vice president of currency sales at Mizuho Corporate Bank Ltd. in New York. “Nothing has changed in terms of yen strength going forward.”

The yen gained 2.2 percent this week to 88.75 per dollar yesterday from 90.72 on Jan. 16. It reached 87.13 on Jan. 21, the strongest level since July 1995. Japan’s currency appreciated 4.5 percent to 115.12 per euro from 120.37 a week earlier after touching 112.12 on Jan. 21, the strongest level since March 2002. The euro fell 2.2 percent against the dollar to $1.2975.

China’s commerce ministry said the country isn’t curbing appreciation of the yuan to promote exports after Timothy Geithner, President Barack Obama’s nominee for Treasury secretary, told lawmakers this week that China is “manipulating its currency.” He made the remarks in written responses to questions from Senate Finance Committee members that were posted on the panel’s Web site.

China’s Yuan

China’s yuan was little changed at 6.8380 per dollar this week, according to the China Foreign Exchange Trade System. It gained 21 percent since a dollar peg was scrapped in 2005.

Russia’s ruble weakened 1 percent to 32.8590 per dollar this week as the central bank widened its trading band in a move toward a free float. The ruble has lost 29 percent in the past six months.

The yen advanced against all of the major currencies this week, rising 5.7 percent to 46.92 against New Zealand’s dollar and 5.2 percent to 58.05 versus Australia’s dollar. Investors tend to purchase the yen in times of market turmoil because Japan has a current-account surplus. Japan’s benchmark interest rate of 0.1 percent compares with 4.25 percent in Australia and 5 percent in New Zealand.

“I am very bearish on the global economy, and I don’t see anything there to stop the dollar-yen from getting down to 80,” said Adam Fazio, a currency strategist at CIBC World Markets Inc. in New York. That level would be near the lowest since World War II.

Yen’s Gain

Japan’s currency gained 9.8 percent versus the Aussie in January, after appreciating 54 percent last year. The yen advanced 12 percent this month versus the kiwi, as New Zealand’s currency is known, following a 65 percent rally in 2008.

The yen is “overvalued significantly,” according to Robert Blake, head of strategy for North America in Boston at State Street Global Markets LLC, which has $15.3 trillion in assets under custody.

The amount wagered in long yen-dollar positions tracked by State Street over the past six months is higher than in 90 percent of six-month periods since 1997, Blake said.

The rally “won’t last unless the market continues to be under extreme risk aversion,” he said.

Sterling dropped 8 percent versus the yen this week and reached a record low of 118.85 yesterday. The pound depreciated 6.3 percent against the dollar to $1.3809, touching $1.3503 yesterday, the lowest level since September 1985.

U.K. Bank Rescue

Prime Minister Gordon Brown announced on Jan. 20 a plan to support U.K. financial institutions and boost the government’s stake in Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc, raising concern the country’s banking crisis may be deepening.

Britain’s gross domestic product fell 1.5 percent during the fourth quarter, the Office for National Statistics said yesterday in London. That’s the biggest decline since 1980. The economy has now shrunk for two consecutive quarters, matching the definition of a recession.

“The pound looks set to weaken further as risks surrounding the U.K. continue to ratchet higher,” Ned Rumpeltin, a London-based currency strategist at Morgan Stanley, wrote in a research note on Jan. 22. Sterling will weaken to $1.30 and reach parity with the euro by the end of June, Morgan Stanley forecasts.

The euro had a fourth weekly decline against the dollar, the longest losing stretch since August, as Europe’s manufacturing and service industries contracted this month.

European Factories

A composite index of European manufacturing and service industries based on a survey of purchasing managers by Markit Economics was at 38.5 in January, compared with 38.2 in December, which was the lowest since the survey began in 1998. A reading below 50 indicates contraction.

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, touched 86.81 yesterday, the highest level since Dec. 8, as investors sought safety in the world’s reserve currency. It gained 1.7 percent this week.

The Fed last month cut its target lending rate to as low as zero for the first time and shifted its focus to the amount and type of debt it buys, seeking to revive credit and end the longest slump in a quarter-century.

To contact the reporters on this story: Ye Xie in New York at yxie6@bloomberg.net; Bo Nielsen in Copenhagen at bnielsen4@bloomberg.net


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China Rebuts Geithner, Denies Currency Manipulation

By Li Yanping

Jan. 24 (Bloomberg) -- China’s commerce ministry said the country hasn’t manipulated the value of its currency to promote exports and that accusations of government tampering in foreign exchange will fuel U.S. protectionism.

“China will keep its currency stable and will not depreciate the currency to support exports,” said a ministry spokesman who couldn’t be identified under ministry rules.

The official statement today followed comments released on Jan. 22 by Timothy Geithner, President Barack Obama’s nominee for Treasury secretary, that Obama believes China is “manipulating its currency.”

Clashes over the yuan’s value threaten to stoke tension between two of the world’s biggest economies and undermine cooperation to counter the global recession. China limited appreciation of the yuan against the dollar in July 2008 after the currency rose 21 percent against the dollar following the end of a fixed exchange rate three years earlier.


“China has never tried to gain advantage in international trade by manipulating its currency,” the commerce ministry official said. “This kind of wrong accusation against China on exchange rate issues will intensify protectionism within the U.S., and it will not help resolve the problem.”

People’s Bank of China Vice Governor Su Ning echoed the commerce ministry comments in an article published by the official Xinhua News Agency today that called Geithner’s allegations “untrue and misleading.” An official in the central bank’s press office declined to comment further.

‘Optimal Strategy’

Geithner’s remarks on manipulation were a shift from policy pursued by the Bush administration, which stopped short of using the term in criticizing China’s exchange-rate management. Some U.S. lawmakers are seeking measures to punish trading partners perceived to have undervalued exchange rates.

“China will first protect its interest before addressing concerns from other economies,” said Sherman Chan, a Sydney, Australia-based economist at Moody’s Economy.com. “The optimal strategy for China is to keep its currency steady.”

Geithner made the remarks in written responses to questions from Senate Finance Committee members that were posted on the panel’s Web site. The committee voted 18-5 to approve the nomination of Geithner, 47, who is the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

Senator Richard Durbin of Illinois, the second-ranking Senate Democrat, said the chamber will start debating Geithner’s nomination at 4 p.m. Washington time on Jan. 26 and will vote at about 6 p.m.

‘More Aggressive’

“Obama -- backed by the conclusions of a broad range of economists -- believes that China is manipulating its currency,” Geithner said. “The question is how and when to broach the subject in order to do more good than harm.” Obama’s team will “forge an integrated strategy on how best to achieve currency realignment in the current economic environment.”

The new U.S. administration will also press China to “adopt a more aggressive stimulus package” to boost its domestic economy, Geithner said.

A worsening slowdown in China’s economy, the world’s third biggest, may encourage policy makers to limit gains in the currency to help exporters as factories close, throwing millions of people out of work.

“China should be expecting a very tough relationship with the new administration,” according to Frank Gong, China strategist at JPMorgan Chase & Co. “China will be a natural scapegoat for the problems in the U.S.”

Gong doesn’t expect China to devalue its currency because the drop in exports is related to a decline in demand, not the price of goods.

Value ‘Manipulation’

“China can’t increase exports by making them cheaper because there is no demand,” he said, adding that a devaluation may prompt similar moves around Asia, heightening the risk of trade war.

The ministry statement isn’t the first time the Chinese government has responded to comments on its currency from Obama. In October, a letter from Obama, released by a U.S. textile industry group, linked China’s trade surplus with “manipulation” of the yuan’s value.

“The yuan exchange rate is not the cause of the U.S. trade deficit,” Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman Jiang Yu said at the time. “I hope the U.S. can expand its exports to China and reduce barriers to trade and investment.”

Geithner’s comments also stoked concern that demand from China, the largest foreign investor in U.S. government debt, may wane. China held about $682 billion of Treasuries as of November, and overtook Japan as the biggest overseas owner of the debt last year.

To contact the reporters on this story: Li Yanping in Beijing at yli16@bloomberg.net


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Australia Won’t ‘Hesitate’ to Boost Economy, Treasurer Says

By Gemma Daley

Jan. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Australia’s government won’t hesitate to stimulate the economy further should the need arise amid the global recession, Treasurer Wayne Swan said.

Swan, speaking to the New York investment community, said the government could add to some A$45 billion ($29 billion) in stimulus already announced should economic conditions worsen.

“We will not hesitate to take whatever further action is necessary to support growth and jobs,” Swan, 54, said in speech notes received via e-mail. “Major financial institutions, some of which have withstood world wars and the Great Depression, have either collapsed or been bailed out.”

Since October, Australia’s government has announced almost A$45 billion in aid for families, pensioners, bond markets, home buyers, and extra spending on schools and roads. Reserve Bank of Australia Governor Glenn Stevens, meanwhile, has embarked on the biggest round of interest-rate cuts in almost two decades.

Australia’s “strong balance sheet” and positive net worth position have given the government and central bank “more room” than most countries to adjust settings, Swan said.

The government’s recent spending boost came after credit markets froze following the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. on Sept. 15, prompting governments and central banks around the world to bail out financial institutions and try to revive growth.

Trading Partners

Australia’s biggest trading partners of China and Japan are suffering as the global recession pummels exports. China, which accounts for a fifth of global growth, expanded at its weakest pace in seven years in the fourth quarter; Japan’s first recession since 2001 is deepening.

Australia’s economy expanded at its weakest pace in eight years in the third quarter. The unemployment rate rose to 4.5 percent in December, the highest in almost two years, as mining companies, airlines, and automakers fired full-time workers, adding to signs the economy faces its first recession since 1991.

The nation’s economy is not immune to the global financial crisis, but is nonetheless well-placed to weather it, Swan said.

“The appreciation of the Australian dollar is helping provide a substantial stimulus to the domestic economy,” Swan said. “Australia’s housing market also has positive characteristics.”

The government, in its latest forecast, said the economy will grow 2 percent in the year ending June 30, 2009. The central bank in November lowered its 2008 economic growth forecast to 1.5 percent from 2 percent.

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


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Price Waterhouse Auditors Arrested in Satyam Inquiry

By Harichandan Arakali and Saikat Chatterjee

Jan. 24 (Bloomberg) -- PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP’s Indian affiliate, the auditor of Satyam Computer Services Ltd., said two partners were arrested by police as authorities extended the nation’s largest fraud inquiry.

Srinivas Talluri and S. Gopalakrishnan were remanded to judicial custody on charges of “conspiracy and co- participation,” A. Shivanarayana, a police spokesman in Andhra Pradesh state, said from the province’s capital Hyderabad, where Satyam is based. Price Waterhouse said in an e-mailed statement it didn’t know why two partners were detained.

Seven years after the implosion of Enron Corp. led to the dissolution of accounting firm Arthur Andersen LLP, the Satyam case has put PricewaterhouseCoopers in the spotlight. Indian police, fraud squad, markets regulator and accounting body have started investigations after Satyam founder Ramalinga Raju said Jan. 7 that he had fabricated $1 billion of assets.

“Over the last fortnight, the firm has fully cooperated in all inquiries and has provided the documents called for by the Indian authorities,” Price Waterhouse said today in a statement from New Delhi. “We greatly regret that two Price Waterhouse partners have been detained today for further questioning.”

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP may also face scrutiny in the U.S. after Satyam’s New York-listed equities lost 82 percent of their market value in two weeks. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is investigating whether Satyam misled investors and officials from the SEC plan to coordinate inquiries with counterparts in India.

Fudged Accounts

The auditing firm said Jan. 15 that its reports could no longer be relied on after former chairman Raju said he’d fudged the accounts. The Institute of Chartered Accountants of India, a statutory body which oversees auditors, will report on its investigation into Price Waterhouse on Feb. 11.

Prosecutors allege Satyam padded employee numbers to siphon off cash and forged documents to support fake bank deposits.

Satyam had about 33 billion rupees ($674 million) of “fictitious and non-existent” accounts, public prosecutor K. Ajay Kumar told a hearing on Jan. 22. The company had about 40,000 employees, compared with the 53,000 claimed by Satyam, he said.

India’s biggest corporate fraud investigation is being led by teams from the Andhra Pradesh state police’s criminal investigation department, the markets regulator, the independent accounting body and the government’s serious fraud office.

Separate Entity

Satyam’s state-appointed board has almost arranged funds to help tide over a cash crunch till the end of March, the company said yesterday. The board has hired KPMG and Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu to restate the accounts.

Satyam is struggling to raise cash to pay salaries after Raju said he had falsified accounts for several years. It is also battling to stop off customers from joining State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. in canceling contracts.

Price Waterhouse has offices in nine Indian cities, according to the firm’s Web site. The Indian operation is a separate legal identity from PricewaterhouseCoopers International Ltd., according to the Web site.

The auditor’s clients include Maruti Suzuki India Ltd., maker of half the cars in the country, and the local units of Colgate-Palmolive Co., the world’s largest toothpaste maker.

PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP has a “vigorous global network” allowing member firms to “operate simultaneously as the most local and the most global of businesses,” the firm says on its Web site. The site also includes a disclaimer that each member firm “is a separate and independent legal entity.”

Larsen & Toubro

Larsen & Toubro Ltd., India’s biggest engineering company, yesterday tripled its stake in Satyam to give it greater say in the rescue of the software exporter.

Larsen bought shares in the open market to triple its holding from 4 percent, Chief Financial Officer Y.M. Deosthalee said in by telephone from Mumbai, where the company is based.

Satyam’s board has short-listed three candidates each for the positions of chief executive officer and chief financial officer and an announcement will be made in the coming week, Satyam said yesterday.

Delays in raising funds and appointing a chief executive officer are costing Satyam customers. At least two of them have given notice about terminating their contracts, board member Kiran Karnik said on Jan. 21.

To contact the reporters on this story: Harichandan Arakali in Bangalore at harakali@bloomberg.net; Saikat Chatterjee in New Delhi at schatterjee4@bloomberg.net.


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State Bank of India, ICICI Profits Advance on Bond Investments

By Sumit Sharma

Jan. 25 (Bloomberg) -- State Bank of India and ICICI Bank Ltd., the nation’s two largest lenders, said third-quarter profit increased after government bonds posted their biggest quarterly gains in at least a decade, boosting investment returns.

State Bank, which accounts for almost a fifth of the nation’s loans, yesterday posted a 37 percent advance in net income to 24.8 billion rupees ($503 million), matching analyst forecasts. At Mumbai-based ICICI, profit rose 3.3 percent to 12.7 billion rupees, more than analysts had expected.

India’s central bank cut interest rates four times in the final three months of 2008 as inflation slowed, helping 10-year bonds complete their best year since 2001. That boost may not sustain banks going forward, as they set aside more funds to cover loan delinquencies by corporate clients and consumers.

“Gains from treasury will be limited as we go ahead,” U.P. Bhat, who manages 43 billion rupees at Canara Robeco Asset Management Co. in Mumbai, said by telephone. “Economic activity is unlikely to pick up before the second-half and banks may find it difficult to increase lending.”

Growth in Asia’s third-largest economy has slowed for two straight quarters, and the government forecasts an expansion of 7 percent in the fiscal year ending March 31, the weakest since 2003, after recording average annual growth of more than 9 percent in the previous three years.

In the most recent quarter, bond holdings buoyed both banks. At ICICI, income from treasury operations, which includes trading in bonds and currencies, climbed more than three-fold from a year earlier to 9.76 billion rupees. At State Bank, also based in Mumbai, treasury income jumped 51 percent climb to 60 billion rupees.

Diverging

In other areas, the performances of the two lenders diverged. State Bank’s deposits climbed 36 percent in the quarter, and advances rose 29 percent, with large companies’ borrowings rising 47 percent and retail credit increasing 27 percent.

ICICI’s deposits fell 9 percent to 2.09 trillion rupees. Advances dropped 1.3 percent, even as loan growth for Indian banks averaged 28 percent in the three months ended Dec. 31, according to central bank data.

State Bank’s gross non-performing assets as a percentage of loans shrank to 2.61 percent, from 2.82 percent a year earlier. The lender increased the funds set aside to cover defaults by 16 percent to 5.15 billion rupees.

ICICI increased its provisions by 33 percent to 10.1 billion rupees.

Bad Debts

“Banks will have to watch out for rise in bad debts, especially from the real estate sector,” said Canara Robeco’s Bhat.

ICICI last year racked up the largest losses tied to the global financial crisis among Indian lenders, leading to a run on the bank in September as depositors grew concerned about the company’s capital adequacy.

ICICI reduced operating expenses by 19 percent during the quarter, without specifying how it did so.

“ICICI will have to cut its rates to once again get competitive,” said R.K. Gupta, who manages 2.5 billion rupees at Taurus Mutual Fund in New Delhi including ICICI shares. Still, “the results are better than expected and will ensure that investor confidence isn’t shattered. The worst seems to be over for the bank.”

ICICI fell 64 percent in 2008, surpassing the 52 percent drop in the nation’s benchmark Sensitive Index and 42 percent decline in State Bank’s stock, as investors shunned the company on concern that it might record bigger losses on overseas investments tied to failed U.S. financial institutions.

ICICI fell 3.8 percent to 363.85 rupees on Jan. 23, valuing the company at 405 billion rupees. The shares have declined 19 percent this year. That compares with a 10 percent retreat in the Sensex.

State Bank declined 4.5 percent to 1,041.5 rupees on Jan. 23, valuing the company at 661 billion rupees. Like ICICI, its shares have fallen 19 percent in 2009.

To contact the reporters on this story: Sumit Sharma in Mumbai at sumitsharma@bloomberg.net


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Rand Posts Third Weekly Decline Against Dollar as Economy Slows

By Garth Theunissen

Jan. 24 (Bloomberg) -- South Africa’s rand posted a third week of declines against the dollar on more evidence the continent’s biggest economy is slowing while a deepening global recession makes investors wary of riskier assets.

The rand weakened versus 12 of the 16 most actively traded currencies monitored by Bloomberg this past week, with its biggest loss against the yen, as the nation’s retail industry contracted for a seventh month. South Africa’s benchmark equities index had its largest weekly drop in seven weeks, reducing demand for the currency needed to purchase the nation’s stocks.

“Negative sentiment toward the rand is being fueled by the poor growth story, which was highlighted by the poor domestic retail figures,” said Evan Robins, head of fixed-income investing for BOE Stockbrokers, a unit of Johannesburg-based Nedbank Group Ltd. “Guys are also very worried about the global economy, which means there’s a lot of general aversion toward riskier, emerging markets.”

The rand dropped 2.6 percent to 10.3276 per dollar as of 5:23 p.m. in Johannesburg on the last day of trading, extending its weekly decline to 3.8 percent from Jan. 16 when it closed at 9.9500. It slipped 5.5 percent against the Japanese currency this week to 11.6 cents per yen, from 10.97 cents on Jan. 16. Against the euro, it lost 0.4 percent to 13.2500, from 13.1996 at the end of last week.

South African government bonds advanced in the week. The yield on the 13 percent note maturing in August 2010, which is more sensitive to interest-rate expectations, declined 31 basis points to 7.08 percent. The yield on the benchmark 13.5 percent security due September 2015 lost six basis points to 7.54 percent. Yields move inversely to bond prices.

Slowing Economy

Retail sales in November slid 4 percent, after a revised drop of 2.2 percent the month before, a Jan. 21 government report showed.

Growth in South Africa’s $278 billion economy slowed to a decade low of 0.2 percent in the third quarter as the first simultaneous recession in the U.S., Japan and the euro region since the end of World War II deepened.

South Africa’s rate of economic expansion will fall below 1 percent in 2009, prompting the South African Reserve Bank to cut its key interest rate 3.5 percentage points to 8 percent by year-end, Barclays Plc-owned Absa Group Ltd. said in a client note this week.

“There is such conviction that rates are going to fall dramatically this year that the bond market just keeps on rallying,” said Robins. “It’s not just the amount of cuts but the speed, as the majority of rate cuts will come in the first half of this year.”

The central bank may reduce borrowing costs by 100 basis points in each of their next two interest rate meetings, scheduled for February and April, Absa said. Policy makers on Jan. 21 brought forward the date of their next Monetary Policy Committee by a week, meaning rate cuts are likely to come sooner than expected.

To contact the reporter on this story: Garth Theunissen in Johannesburg gtheunissen@bloomberg.net





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