Economic Calendar

Friday, February 20, 2009

Commodity Currencies Decline as Risk Aversion Sweeps Forex Market

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by DailyFX | Feb 20 09 14:39 GMT |

Commodity currencies pulled back against the US Dollar this week as capital poured out of risky assets following a clearly negative reaction to US policy efforts and a decidedly ominous G7 summit. The MSCI index of world stock performance already pulled back over 6% and is on pace to issue the worst 5-day strech since the week ending November 20th. Are the Australian, Canadian and New Zealand Dollars positioning for another major collapse as risk aversion gears up in earnest? Our DailyFX Analysts offer their thoughts on the commodity bloc and reveal their picks for trading these currencies in the short term.

Chief Strategist
Antonio Sousa

My picks: Buy USD/CAD
Expertise: Global Macro
Average Time Frame of Trades: Buy USD/CAD

High yielding commodity currencies like the Canadian dollar are in my trading radar screen and I'm waiting for a good risk/reward technical setup to appear before I enter a long position in the USD/CAD. Indeed, I expect the world economy to continue to deteriorate significantly in 2009 which could create additional pressure on export dependent countries and lead to a significant shift of interest rate differentials in favor of safe-heaven currencies like the U.S. dollar. Moreover, investor's aversion towards risk taking remains the main driver of price action in the currency market and I believe the unwinding of carry trades is not over yet.

Senior Currency Strategist
Jamie Saettele

My picks: stay long USDCAD, against 1.2278, in preperation for breakout, target 1.4
Expertise: Technical
Average Time Frame of Trades:

As I've favored the last few weeks, the triangle that has been underway since October is probably complete at 1.2020. Price has rallied above the upper triangle line (although has pulled back today), which warns of a break above 1.2770 and then 1.3025. The breakout scenario is favored as long as price is above 1.2278.

Open trades:

short GBPUSD, move risk to 1.4450, target 1.38
short USDCAD, against 1.2278, target 1.4

Currency Strategist
John Kicklighter

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

Though risk trends may have stirred the dollar and yen crosses this past week, the commodity bloc hasn't shown nearly as much volatility and certainly little in terms of direction. Despite its exposure to the US dollar (or perhaps because of it), the USDCAD setup I laid out last week has treaded water ever since it was initiated this past Tuesday. As I had feared, the presence of stepped resistance beyond the short-term ceiling I was watching at 1.2525 would start curbing the market's advance quickly. In fact, the confirmed close above the aforementioned level would be the highest for the week - indicating a clear lack of follow through. And, though a short-term rising trend has developed to keep lows on the rise, I cut out when it was clear short-term momentum was turning back into the former resistance, new resistance. Entering a reduced position was the right thing to do (I am still waiting to take a full-sized speculative position when the pair overtakes 1.30). Looking across the Aussie, kiwi and Canadian dollar crosses, the same hesitancy is reflected. Significant levels have been - or are currently being - tested; yet there the necessary driver for a broad, fundamental shift in the market does not look to be on the horizon. This suggests that major breakouts and trend revival will defer to chop and ranges. This lack of drive represents a strong setup for AUDUSD. Broad congestion has developed; and the outlook for both the Australian and American economies are on generally even ground. Both are considered strong economies for their respective regions and their policy efforts have been extensive on both accounts. However, we should not simply expect calm markets ahead. There is a considerable yield differential between the two and they come in at opposite ends of the risk appetite spectrum.

For setup, the technicals are very promising. A rising trend from the October swing low has a very easy slope underneath four distinct swing lows. It is better to have a shallow pitch on trendlines as there is less pressure for retracements. What's more, this moving floor completes a very wide range with the double top at 0.7250/75. This offers a lot of room to move within the resulting range; so there is little impetus to force a breakout merely on the need for relief. Without a strong fundamental driver to dramatically shift risk trends (or specifically rally the dollar or drop the Aussie), this pair will find a natural pull to pull back within its range. I will look for for entry near the rising trend (now near 0.6340) and set a stop below the Feb 2nd swing low at 0.6250. My first target will equal risk. A second objective can look for a far greater percentage of the overall range with a trailing stop.

Currency Strategist
Terri Belkas

My picks: Long USD/CAD
Expertise: Fundamentals Combined With Technicals
Average Time Frame of Trades: 1 Day - 1 Week

USD/CAD has been holding within a large triangle formation for quite some time now, but we've started to see smaller consolidations lead to breaks higher. In fact, Tuesday's pop higher in the pair was one instance, and with USD/CAD having already testing the trendline that formerly served as resistance near 1.25, I think there are still bullish opportunities. Looking to get in near current levels, I would place a stop below yesterday's spike low of 1.2466 and set an initial limit of roughly 1.3000, where there are a series of spike highs from late 2008 , though I would also consider leaving positions open (and moving my stop higher) in the case we see USD/CAD break those highs.

Currency Analyst
David Rodriguez

My picks: Sell rallies in the AUD/USD
Expertise: System Trading
Average Time Frame of Trades: 2-10 weeks

I believe the Australian Dollar will continue on its overall downward trajectory, but I don't necessarily believe selling is a good idea at the moment. The currency has fallen substantially in the past several days, and though I consider myself a momentum trader, I think selling at this point offers pretty poor risk/reward. As such, I will be looking to sell big rallies in the pair in the weeks ahead. The combination of an outright rout in industrial commodity prices and a clear-as-day bear market in global equities leaves outlook for the risk-sensitive Australian Dollar very bearish. I will be on the lookout for good entry prices through the immediate future.

Currency Analyst
Ilya Spivak

My picks: Remain Long USDCAD
Expertise: Macro Fundamentals, Classic Technical Analysis
Average Time Frame of Trades: 1 week - 6 months

I bought USDCAD as the pair broke above a bearish channel. This week, prices rallied above the near-term range top at 1.2460. Continue holding long, looking for USDCAD to surpass the recent swing high near 1.2670 for another test of the triple top at 1.30.

Currency Analyst
John Rivera

My picks:Long USD/CAD
Expertise: Fundamentals Combined With Technicals
Average Time Frame of Trades: 2-4 Days

My long AUD/USD pick last week was good for 100 pips at the onset but failed to reach my target of the 50-Day SMA at 0.6739. The disappointing G-7 summit and more banking concerns offset any potential risk appetite that could be generated by the U.S. fiscal stimulus plan. Traders have had their hand on the trigger for sometime looking for any signs that a bottom is in place, but we may have seen them put their guns back in their holsters as it becomes clear that the current global downturn will deepen, which has lowered expectations for commodity prices. Therefore, I must take a bearish bias against the commodity dollars and with projections of oil inventories remaining elevated we may see oil prices continue to fall which may weigh on the Canadian dollar. The USD/CAD has been in a triangle formation since November which should lead to a breakout soon. However, I am concerned about Bollinger band resistance just ahead. A move below 1.2500 would change my bias.

Currency Analyst
Joel S. Kruger

My picks: Pending Buy USD/CAD @1.2635 for 1.3020 Objective, Stop @1.2535
Expertise: Technical Analysis
Average Time Frame of Trades: 1-3 Days

We have seen an ongoing contraction in volatility over the past several months to the point where we have finally reached the apex of a very prominent triangle that has defined trade since late October. Falling triangle resistance comes in by Tuesday's 1.2675 highs and we will be looking for a daily close above the latter to confirm a breakout which will ultimately trigger a fresh upside extension exposing a direct retest of the 1.3020 October 28 trend highs. Ultimately, the upside break should project gains back towards 1.4005 (2004 Highs) over the coming months (measured move objective based off of widest point of triangle). In the interim, the market has now taken out Thursday's high in the overnight session to trade to 1.2630 ahead of the latest minor retreat. We will use 1.2635 (just over today's high) as an entry point for a long trade in anticipation of this triangle break.

Fundamental Catalyst - Yesterday's close in the DJIA below the November 20 bear market low now officially confirms that the intense bear market remains in force. A well known economist and Dow Theorist cites in his daily piece that "most major bear markets end with stocks at "great values" or as some Dow Theorists put it, "below known values." This has meant in the past that price/earnings ratios for the Dow and the S&P have fallen to single digit numbers. It has also meant that dividend yields have moved into to the 5-6% zone. He goes on……"according to the latest Barron's, the P/E ratio for the Dow is now 18.62, 17.90 for the S&P. The dividend rate for the Dow is now 3.98%, for the S&P it is 2.78%. These are hardly the kind of figures I'd expect at a great bear market low."

This paints an extremely gloomy picture going forward and as things have been correlating, should once again translate into a flight to safety in the form of the USD. It would stand to reason that the bearish consolidation in the stock market over the past few months has coincides with the bullish consolidation in Usd/Cad. Therefore if equities are on the verge of another down-leg after yesterday's new low, this could prove to be a useful leading indicator for price direction in the currency pair.

DailyFX

Disclaimer

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





Read more...

U.S. CPI Rises as Gasoline Prices Rebound

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by RBC Financial Group | Feb 20 09 14:26 GMT |

Consumer prices rose for the first time in six months in January, increasing 0.3% following particularly large declines of between 1% to 2% during the last three months of 2008. These earlier large declines reflected tumbling gasoline prices. Markets had expected the January CPI to rise 0.3% in the month on indications that gasoline prices had started to trend up going into 2009. These earlier price declines contributed to the year-over-year remaining low in January at 0.0% despite the monthly increase.

Core prices, which eliminate the effect of energy and food prices, rose 0.2% in the month after showing no change in December. This was slightly stronger than the 0.1% expected within financial markets. This did not prevent the year-over-year rate falling slightly to 1.7% from 1.8% in December.

The report showed that a number of components reversed declines recorded in December. For example, new vehicle prices rose 0.3% in January after a 0.3% decline the previous month. This increase occurred despite autos sales sinking to an abysmal 9.5 million units, at an annualized rate, in January. As well, apparel prices rose 0.3% following a 0.6% decline in December. Some offset to this upward pressure came from airfares which fell 2.1% in the month.

Today's CPI report showed a return to price gains after five months of decline largely reflecting the trend in gasoline prices that steadily dropped through the final quarter of 2008 before moving up going into 2009. These earlier declines contributed to the year-over-year rate barely remaining positive the end of last year rising only 0.1% in December and contributed to a 0.0% rate in January.

Even excluding the volatile energy and food prices, price increases, though higher, remain relatively benign with so-called core measure up only 0.2% in the month and 1.7% over the past year. This will allow the Fed to remain focused on keeping policy very accommodative as it attempts to limit the extent and depth of the recession. With official interest rates already as low as they can go with Fed funds targeted in a range of 0% to 0.25%, the central bank will continue to address pressures in the financial system and attendant high market interest rates by directly injecting liquidity as needed via so-called "credit easing."

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

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





Read more...

Canada's Headline Inflation Rate Falls to 1.1%; Bank of Canada's Core Tumbles to 1.9%

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by RBC Financial Group | Feb 20 09 14:25 GMT |

Canadian consumer prices slid 0.3% in January, slightly more than the forecasted 0.2% dip. The year-over-year rate edged down to 1.1% from 1.2% in December. The seasonally adjusted index fell 0.1%. The Bank of Canada's core measure, which eliminates the impact of eight volatile series plus indirect taxes, fell 0.4%, more than the expected 0.1% on a not seasonally adjusted basis (and fell by 0.3% on a seasonally adjusted basis). The year-over-year core rate slipped to 1.9%.

The decline in the monthly all-items CPI index in January reflected a sharp decline in the prices to purchase or lease passenger vehicles. This component has been extremely volatile in recent months with January's 5.3% drop largely working to reverse the unexpectedly sharp 7% jump in November with prices moving only slightly in December. Travel tour prices and natural gas prices were also lower in the month. Moderating the impact of these declines was an as-expected 5% rise in gasoline prices. The sharp movements in the motor vehicle prices appear to have swamped the impact of the January 2008 cut in the GST, which fell out of the year-over-year calculations and we expected would result in the headline CPI index rising in January.

Relative to a year earlier, prices for gasoline remain the major negative contributor as they were 23.5% lower than in January 2008. The purchase/lease price for autos also exerted downward pressure on the index with the rate of decline picking up significantly in January to 8.2% from December's 3.5% decrease. Other fuel prices were also lower than a year earlier. Once again it was higher mortgage interest costs, which were up 5.8% from January 2008, fresh vegetables prices (+19.9%) and natural gas prices (+12.8%) which exerted upward pressure on the annual increase in the headline CPI. Notably the pace of increase in these three components was slower than in December.

The core rate fell more than expected in January due to the sharp decline in auto prices which, as indicated above, reversed much of the November's unexpected increase.

Recent data on Canada's economy have been dismal highlighted by slumping manufacturing and wholesale sales, a record month of job cutting and housing starts falling to their lowest level since 2001. In all, these data signal that the economy slipped into recession in late 2008 and continued to contract in early 2009. RBC forecasts that real GDP contracted at a 3.1% annualized rate in the fourth quarter and will fall by 2.8% in the first quarter. This sub-standard performance will increase the amount of slack in the economy and lead to an easing in core prices in the months ahead, which together with year-over-year declines in energy prices will likely see the all-items inflation rate drop significantly and tip into negative territory mid-year.

With the economy in recession and risks to inflation to the downside relative to the Bank's target we expect that the Bank of Canada to lower the overnight rate again on March 3 to 0.50% from the current 1% as policymakers aim to contain the slide in the economy and return the inflation rate to the 2% target over the medium-term.

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

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





Read more...

Brazil’s Jobless Rate Jumps the Most in Seven Years

By Andre Soliani and Joshua Goodman

Feb. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Brazil’s unemployment rate jumped the most in seven years last month as companies prepared to weather the first global recession since World War II.

Unemployment in Brazil’s six largest metropolitan areas rose to 8.2 percent in January from 6.8 percent in December, the national statistic agency said in a report distributed today in Rio de Janeiro. The rate was higher than the median forecast of 7.8 percent in a Bloomberg survey of 24 economists.

Brazilian companies are slashing output and staffing levels as the global financial crisis chokes demand and commodity prices plummet. Empresa Brasileira de Aeronautica SA, the world’s fourth-largest aircraft maker, yesterday said it will cut its workforce 20 percent. Cia. Vale do Rio Doce, the world’s biggest iron-ore producer, fired 1,300 workers in December.

Policy makers next month will cut the benchmark rate by a full-point for a second straight time in a bid to revive Latin America’s biggest economy, according to the median forecast of 25 economists surveyed by Bloomberg. Zero economic growth for 2009 may “soon start looking optimistic,” Morgan Stanley said in a report published Feb. 17.

Brazil’s consumer prices in the month through mid-February rose 0.63 percent, the national statistics agency said today in a separate report.

The inflation rate as measured by the benchmark IPCA-15 index increased from 0.40 percent through mid-January. It was in line with the 0.64 percent median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of 35 economists.

The yield on Brazil’s overnight futures contract for July 2009 slid two basis points, or 0.02 percentage point, to 11.39 percent at 7:46 a.m. New York time. The yield on Brazil’s zero- coupon local-currency bonds due in January 2010 slid five basis points to 10.97 percent.

To contact the reporter on this story: Andre Soliani in Brasilia at asoliani@bloomberg.net or Joshua Goodman in Rio de Janeiro at Jgoodman19@bloomberg.net





Read more...

Canada Consumer Prices Fall for Fourth Month on Autos

By Greg Quinn

Feb. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Canadian consumer prices fell a fourth consecutive month in January, the longest stretch since the Great Depression, led by reduced costs for natural gas and motor vehicles.

The consumer price index fell a more-than-expected 0.3 percent from December, as natural gas declined 6 percent and automobiles were down 5.3 percent, Statistics Canada said today in Ottawa. The year-over-year inflation rate slowed to 1.1 percent, the least in two years, from 1.2 percent in December. Annual inflation peaked at 3.5 percent in August 2008.

“We are in a deep recession, inflation should continue to fall,” said Sal Guatieri, a senior economist at BMO Capital Markets in Toronto. “It’s clear annual inflation will turn negative fairly soon, it’s a question of whether we see a broader decline in prices.”

Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney says the annual inflation rate will fall below zero in the second and third quarters on a drop in energy prices. The bank sets interest rates to keep inflation between 1 percent and 3 percent. Carney has said he may cut borrowing costs again if needed to ease a recession and bring inflation back to the target range within two years.

Core Inflation

Economists surveyed by Bloomberg predicted the monthly inflation rate would fall 0.2 percent, and the year-on-year pace would stay at 1.2 percent. The last time monthly prices fell for four straight months or more was from December 1930 to July 1931.

The Canadian currency weakened 0.4 percent to C$1.2637 per U.S. dollar at 8:17 a.m. in Toronto, from C$1.2580 yesterday.

Inflation excluding gasoline and seven other volatile items, the so-called core rate, slowed to 1.9 percent in January from December’s 2.4 percent pace. On a monthly basis, core prices fell 0.4 percent. Economists predicted core prices would advance 2.2 percent from a year earlier and fall 0.1 percent on a monthly basis.

Bond investors are predicting long-term inflation below 2 percent. The gap between yields on regular 15-year government bonds and securities that are protected against inflation was 1.56 percentage points today.

The central bank forecasts prices will decline by 0.6 percent in the second quarter and 1 percent in the third. Inflation won’t return to the bank’s 2 percent target until the first half of 2011, giving policy makers room for more cuts in borrowing costs.

Remote Chance

Consumer prices haven’t fallen for two straight quarters since 1953, according to Statistics Canada figures.

Carney said in a Jan. 27 speech deflation is a “remote” possibility, and more than half of the items in the consumer price index are rising faster than 2 percent. Carney, who cut the key interest rate to 1 percent on Jan. 20, the lowest since the central bank was founded in 1934, also says he has “considerable flexibility” to take further action to keep inflation close to target.

Deflation can freeze spending by business and consumers if they hold off on purchases in anticipation of ever-lower prices. Reversing deflation can be harder than inflation because central banks can only cut interest rates so low to encourage demand.

The Bank of Canada will probably cut the rate to 0.5 percent at the next decision on March 3, Charmaine Buskas, senior economics strategist at TD Securities in Toronto, wrote in a note to clients.

To contact the reporter on this story: Greg Quinn in Ottawa at gquinn1@bloomberg.net.





Read more...

Consumer Prices in U.S. Increased 0.3% in January

By Shobhana Chandra

Feb. 20 (Bloomberg) -- The cost of living in the U.S. rose in January for the first time in six months as gasoline stopped sliding and retailers tried to push through start-of-year increases even as sales slumped.

The consumer price index rose 0.3 percent, as forecast, Labor Department data showed today in Washington. Excluding food and fuel, the so-called core rate, prices advanced 0.2 percent, due to autos, clothing, and medical care. The CPI was unchanged on an annual basis -- the first time it hasn’t risen since 1955.

Prices may moderate in coming months as more companies follow Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and Macy’s Inc. in offering discounts as the economy sinks into what may be the worst recession in the postwar era. The Federal Reserve this week said some its officials were concerned about a rising risk of deflation, or a prolonged drop in prices that erodes profits and hurts lenders.

“We’re in the heart of the recession right now, and with demand falling rapidly, we can expect downward pressure on prices,” said Chris Rupkey, chief financial economist in New York at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd., which accurately forecast the CPI. “Everything is heading in the same direction, which is down. Sales are down, profits are down, prices are coming down.”

Treasuries, which had risen earlier in the day, remained higher after the report. Yields on benchmark 10-year notes dipped to 2.74 percent at 9:40 a.m. in New York from 2.86 percent late yesterday. Stocks fell, with the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index sliding 1.8 percent to 765.04.

Energy Costs

The projected gain in the CPI was based on the median forecast of 71 economists in a Bloomberg News survey. Costs excluding food and energy were projected to rise 0.1 percent.

Consumer prices were unchanged over the last 12 months. The core rate climbed 1.7 percent from January 2008, the smallest gain since March 2004.

Energy expenses rose 1.7 percent, led by a 6 percent increase in gasoline prices. The fuel’s price fell 50 percent in the last three months of 2008.

The CPI is the broadest of the three monthly price gauges from Labor, because it includes goods and services. Almost 60 percent of the CPI covers prices consumers pay for services ranging from medical visits to airline fares and movie tickets.

Food prices, which account for about a fifth of the CPI, increased 0.1 percent.

Car Prices

New vehicle prices climbed 0.3 percent, the most in three years, and clothing costs also rose 0.3 percent. The cost of medical care increased 0.4 percent.

Rents, which make up almost 40 percent of the core CPI, also accelerated. A category designed to track rental prices climbed 0.3 percent.

Plummeting sales at General Motors Corp., Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler LLC may keep vehicle prices depressed.

Houston-based Group 1 Automotive Inc., the owner of 100 U.S. and U.K. car dealerships, said yesterday it posted a fourth- quarter net loss, will cut 1,450 jobs and suspended its dividend. Tight credit continues to make it difficult for some consumers to buy vehicles, Chief Executive Officer Earl Hesterberg said in an interview.

“All the brands are pretty much created equally,” he said. “They’re all suffering.”

Retailer Discounts

Macy’s, Kohl’s Corp. and AnnTaylor Stores Corp. last month offered discounts of as much as 70 percent, while low-priced food and drugs helped lift purchases at Wal-Mart, the world’s largest retailer.

Starbucks Corp., the world’s largest chain of coffee shops, is trying other ways to lure cash-strapped customers. It began selling $3.95 breakfast meals and will introduce Via instant coffee, at $2.95 for a packet of three individual servings.

Economists caution that disinflation could lead to outright deflation, which erodes profits and makes debts harder to repay. Still, others worry that in the longer term, the unprecedented fiscal stimulus and the Fed’s policy of buying more assets and pumping money into the financial system will reignite inflation.

Fed officials introduced long-term inflation estimates, with most favoring a 2 percent rate, according to minutes of their January meeting released this week.

The step should “help to better stabilize the public’s inflation expectations, thus contributing to keeping actual inflation from rising too high or falling too low,” Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said in a Feb. 18 speech in Washington. “We expect inflation to be quite low for some time.”

Other labor reports this week showed the cost of goods imported into the U.S. fell in January for a sixth consecutive month and wholesale prices rose 0.8 percent in January, more than anticipated, as fuel prices climbed.

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





Read more...

Acciona, Endesa Suspended After Report of Enel Deal

By Gianluca Baratti and Adam L. Freeman

Feb. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Endesa SA was suspended from trading in Madrid after El Pais reported Enel SpA had agreed to take full control of the Spanish power producer.

Enel, Italy’s largest utility, will purchase Acciona SA’s 25 percent stake in Endesa, the Spanish newspaper said on its Web site, citing unidentified people close to the talks. Trading in Acciona also halted, according to Spain’s stock-market regulator.

An Enel official, who asked not to be named, said no accord had yet been reached when contacted by Bloomberg News. An Endesa official, also declining to be identified, said the company’s board had not yet met. A spokeswoman for Acciona didn’t immediately respond to a voicemail message seeking comment.

Any deal would require Enel, which became Europe’s most indebted utility when it bought Endesa with Acciona in 2007, to increase borrowing. For Madrid-based Acciona, an agreement may give it control over Endesa renewable-energy assets as it seeks to become the world’s second-largest operator of wind parks, after fellow Spaniard Iberdrola Renovables SA.

Enel dropped 0.6 percent to 4.35 euros in Milan trading at 1:15 p.m. local time. The benchmark S&P/MIB Index fell 3 percent to 16,000.

Enel was saddled with 51 billion euros ($64.4 billion) of debt as of Sept. 30 following its 42.5 billion-euro Endesa takeover. The Rome-based company will agree on a loan of about 8 billion euros as soon as today to finance the acquisition of the Endesa stake, two bankers with knowledge of the deal said.

Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria SA, Mediobanca SpA and Banco Santander SA are arranging the loans, said the bankers, who declined to be identified before the transaction is completed. The arrangers are syndicating part of the debt to about nine other lenders, the bankers said, without giving further details.

To contact the reporters on this story: Gianluca Baratti in Madrid at gbaratti@bloomberg.net; Adam L. Freeman in Rome at afreeman5@bloomberg.net





Read more...

Oil Falls as Equities Drop on Concern Recession Is Deepening

By Grant Smith

Feb. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Crude oil fell, paring its largest gain in seven weeks, as stock markets in Europe and Asia dropped on concern the recession is deepening.

Oil declined as Europe’s Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index fell to a five-year low. Miner Anglo American Plc suspended its dividend and announced 19,000 job cuts, saying it expected continuing weakness in commodity prices. Crude jumped yesterday after a report showed U.S. stockpiles unexpectedly fell last week.

“Equities are in bad shape today and so commodities are suffering,” said Hannes Loacker, an analyst at Raiffeisen Zentralbank Oesterreich AG in Vienna. “The economy has to recover before we see any substantial increase in oil prices.”

Crude oil for March delivery fell as much as $2.02, or 5.1 percent, to $37.46 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange at 1:09 p.m. London time. Yesterday, the contract gained $4.86 to settle at $39.48 a barrel.

The March contract expires today. The more active April contract was at $38.31 a barrel, down $1.87.

Barclays Capital said it was cutting its forecast for average 2009 Brent crude oil prices to $60 a barrel from $71 a barrel because of the weakening global economic outlook. The bank expects global oil demand to drop 1.25 million barrels a day this year.

“The start of sustainable price recovery may have to wait for a clearer bottoming of the economic cycle,” Barclays analysts led by Paul Horsnell said it a report yesterday.

Sustained Rally

Futures need to close above their five-day moving averages to make a sustained rally, broker PVM Oil Associated Ltd. said. The April contract on the New York Mercantile Exchange will have to settle above its five-day average of around $39.48 a barrel, according to PVM.

Brent crude oil for April settlement fell as much as $1.82, or 4.3 percent, to $40.17 a barrel on London’s ICE Futures Europe exchange. It was at $40.21 a barrel at 1:10 p.m. in London.

A U.S. Energy Department report showed inventories dropped 138,000 barrels to 350.6 million barrels last week, the first decline this year. Analysts had forecast an increase in U.S. crude inventories of 3.2 million barrels, according to a Bloomberg News survey.

“The market has been used to seeing bigger-than-expected builds in U.S. supplies each week and to get an actual negative number gave the market a fresh dose of optimism,” said Mark Pervan, a senior commodity strategist at Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. in Melbourne. “Still, I can’t see anything that’s shown the demand in the market has started to pick up. I think it’s just a matter of limiting supply.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Grant Smith in London at gsmith52@bloomberg.net;





Read more...

Pound Headed for Weekly Loss as BOE’s Gieve Says U.K. at ‘Risk’

By Lukanyo Mnyanda

Feb. 20 (Bloomberg) -- The U.K. pound headed for a second weekly loss versus the dollar as U.K. home repossessions rose to a 12-year high and Bank of England Deputy Governor John Gieve said Britain is threatened with a decade-long slump.

The U.K. currency also weakened as the FTSE 100 Index of equities dropped more than 6 percent this week and Europe’s Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index slid to a five-year low. Policy makers are fighting to protect Britain from the “serious risk” of a depression similar to that suffered by Japan in the 1990s, Gieve said yesterday.

“The financial sector is still in disarray and there’s a high degree of risk aversion,” said Lee Hardman, a London-based currency strategist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. “Any kind of recovery in the pound will look futile.”

The pound was little changed at $1.4282 by 1:13 p.m. in London, leaving it 0.3 percent lower in the week. The U.K. currency bought 134.54 yen, from 134.65 yesterday and 131.89 a week ago. It was at 88.12 pence per euro, from 88.66 pence yesterday and from 89.63 on Feb. 13.

“Do we face a 10-year depression like Japan? That is a risk, and a risk that we and other policy makers are taking very seriously,” Gieve said after a speech at the London School of Economics. “It’s a serious risk but we are addressing it. There’s a huge amount of policy easing in the pipeline.”

The central bank this month cut its main rate to a record 1 percent, as its struggles to prevent the recession from deepening. As rates head to zero, policy makers are preparing for so-called quantitative easing. The Bank of England bought 340 million pounds in commercial paper during the first week of operations for its asset purchase facility, according to a statement today.

Home Repossessions

Banks took possession of 40,000 properties last year, a 54 percent increase from 2007, the London-based Council of Mortgage Lenders said. It predicted the total will reach 75,000 this year. Ministry of Justice data showed 142,626 repossession proceedings began in courts in 2008, the most since 1991.

The pound pared losses today after retail sales climbed an unexpected 0.7 percent in January, according to the Office for National Statistics. That compared with the 0.1 percent drop predicted in a Bloomberg survey.

“We’ve had some nice retail data,” said Elisabeth Andreew, chief currency strategist in Copenhagen at Nordea AB, Scandinavia’s biggest bank. “There’s already a lot of bad news priced in the pound.”

U.K. government bonds rose as slumping equity markets spurred demand for the relative safety of fixed-income debt.

The gains pushed the yield on the 10-year gilt down seven basis points to 3.44 percent, a decline of 11 basis points in the week. The 4.25 percent security maturing March 2019 rose 0.60, or 6 pounds per 1,000-pound face amount, to 108.93. The two-year yield fell two basis points to 1.46 percent. Yields move inversely to bond prices.

To contact the reporter on this story: Lukanyo Mnyanda in London at lmnyanda@bloomberg.net





Read more...

ECB At Loss on More Steps as Rates Fall to Record Low

By Jana Randow

Feb. 20 (Bloomberg) -- European Central Bank policy makers are at a loss for what additional steps to take as record low interest rates fail to stem the deepening recession.

Officials are hemmed in by European Union rules that forbid the ECB from buying bonds directly from governments and any decision to buy debt in the open market may spark a dispute over which country’s securities to purchase. Options are also limited by the lack of a single euro-region Treasury that would underwrite central bank losses incurred from any new measures.

“The problem is that they don’t know themselves what they’ll exactly have to do in the future,” said Juergen Michels, chief euro-area economist at Citigroup Inc. in London. “They are probably very divided on the range of measures available to them.”

The danger is that the ECB, led by President Jean-Claude Trichet, slips into paralysis just as the 16-nation euro region spirals deeper into recession and other central banks get permission from their governments to create money or buy securities.

“We exchange very different viewpoints” on the need for non-standard measures, Trichet said Feb. 5. Nine days later he said that “no decision has been taken yet.”

Governing Council member George Provopoulos said Feb. 16 the ECB hasn’t even discussed buying government bonds in the secondary market, which some economists say it may be entitled to do.

Alarming Policies

Purchases of national debt may suppress yields and help governments criticized by ECB board member Juergen Stark for running “alarming” budget policies.

At the same time, Finnish board member Erkki Liikanen says the ECB, hasn’t “exhausted” its creativity, without commenting on specifics.

The ECB’s silence on the concrete steps open to it is starting to spook investors as financial tensions in Europe worsen and is leading to calls for more clarity on the central bank’s thinking.

“We’re desperately spinning around to get a proper handle on the issue,” said Ken Wattret, senior economist at BNP Paribas SA in London. “The worst-case scenario is that the ECB is hoping they don’t need to do things like this because the economy will pick up again. If that’s plan A, then that’s rather disturbing.”

German Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck this week became the first senior official to say a euro nation could run into fiscal difficulty. Bond spreads are also widening and the gap between Austrian and German yields swelled to a record yesterday on concern about Austria’s exposure to eastern European banks.

Zero Rates

As rates head towards zero around the world, the Federal Reserve and Bank of England are turning to their governments for help as they ramp up their response. The U.S. has issued special Treasury bills to help buttress the Fed’s balance sheet. The U.K. central bank has asked the Treasury for permission to start quantitative easing and increase the supply of money.

The problem for the ECB is that its room for maneuver is constrained by the euro’s governing rules. The Maastricht Treaty never created a Europe-wide finance ministry, a fact that Billionaire investor George Soros said Feb. 17 “must be confronted.”

The treaty forbids the ECB from bailing out any distressed nations and limits its scope to purchase securities in the market as part of a quantitative easing policy.

Left Alone

Buying bonds “might constitute as direct monetary finance of fiscal deficits, which isn’t allowed by the ECB’s rules,” said Greek central banker Provopoulos. The bank’s “position is that every country is responsible for resolving its own fiscal difficulties.”

Quantitative easing would be “much more complicated in the euro-zone context than some people might believe,” council member Yves Mersch told the Financial Times in an interview published Jan. 26. The ECB could buy government securities -- “but the bonds of which country?” -- the FT cited him as saying.

Purchases might help nations such as Ireland, Spain and Greece just as the European Commission urges them to get their budgets back in line. Stark said Feb. 11 that the “fiscal situation in some country is alarming.” The spread between the yields on Spanish and Greek debt and 10-year German bunds this week ballooned to the most since before they joined the euro.

Out of Room

“They have much more issues to address than the Fed or the BOE,” said Aurelio Maccario, chief euro-area economist at UniCredit Group in Milan. “Probably they would want to be more transparent but there’s much discussion going on and they really can’t.”

The ECB is running out of room to help the economy with standard rate policy. While the central bank has cut its benchmark rate four times to 2 percent since early October, the International Monetary Fund forecasts the economy will contract 2 percent this year, the worst on record for the currency union.

For now, some economists say they’d like more insight into the ECB’s thinking, even if officials haven’t made up their minds yet. Analysts expect the ECB to cut the benchmark rate to 1.5 percent next month, the lowest in the euro region’s 10-year history and just half a point above the Bank of England’s rate.

“It would be better to know what they’re discussing than only to know that they argue intensively,” said Michels.

To contact the reporter on this story: Jana Randow in Frankfurt jrandow@bloomberg.net.





Read more...

Canada’s Dollar Falls as Waning Earnings Spur Haven Demand

By Molly Seltzer

Feb. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Canada’s dollar depreciated for the first time in three days as equity markets slumped on concern waning company earnings indicate a deepening recession, driving investors to the relative safety of the U.S. dollar.

“Today it’s all about equities,” said Jonathan Gencher, Toronto-based director of currency sales at BMO Capital Markets, a unit of Canada’s fourth-largest bank. “When equities don’t do well, the Canadian dollar generally doesn’t do well. The U.S. has been the primary currency benefiting from bad economic news because people see the dollar as a safe haven from riskier asset classes, and the loonie is seen as a riskier currency.”

The loonie, as Canada’s dollar is known, fell 0.4 percent to C$1.2617 per U.S. dollar at 8:04 a.m. in Toronto, from C$1.2580 yesterday. It touched C$1.2674 on Feb. 17, the weakest since Jan. 22, when it reached C$1.2740. One Canadian dollar buys 79.25 U.S. cents.

Futures on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index slid 1.7 percent before the market opened in New York. The MSCI World Index, a gauge of 23 developed countries, decreased 1.2 percent in London, extending its nine-day retreat to 11 percent. Japan’s Topix Index fell to its lowest level since 1984, while Europe’s Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index slid to a five-year low.

Anglo American Plc, which controls the world’s biggest platinum producer, dropped 15 percent in London after posting earnings that missed analysts’ estimates. The company suspended dividends and share buybacks and will cut 19,000 jobs after copper, zinc and platinum prices collapsed. Commodities such as crude oil, copper and aluminum account for about half of Canada’s export revenue.

The loonie reached a four-year low of C$1.3017 on Oct. 28, and has touched the C$1.30 level twice since before rebounding.

The yield on the two-year government bond dropped three basis points, or 0.03 percentage point, to 1.229 percent. The price of the 2.75 percent security due in December 2010 climbed five cents to C$102.65.

To contact the reporter on this story: Molly Seltzer in New York at mseltzer4@bloomberg.net





Read more...

Mexico Bond Risk Tops Brazil for 1st Time Since 2001

By Lester Pimentel

Feb. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Mexico is riskier than Brazil in the bond market for the first time since at least 2001 as a war with drug traffickers, slowing exports to the U.S. and a record-low peso drive away investors.

Five-year credit-default swaps tied to Mexico’s bonds and used to hedge against losses traded at 4.19 percentage points yesterday, compared with 3.94 points for Brazil, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The gap widened to a record 0.43 percentage point on Feb. 17, reversing a seven-year stretch when the cost to protect against a default in Brazil was higher.

Mexican bonds are this year’s worst performers in Latin America after drug-related deaths climbed to 5,300 in 2008, the peso sank 32 percent in six months and a recession deepened in the U.S., the buyer of 80 percent of the country’s exports. In Brazil, which relies on the U.S. for 14 percent of overseas sales, the Bovespa Stock Index is up 5.8 percent this year, compared with a 16.5 percent decline for Mexico’s Bolsa.

“The death numbers are pretty scary,” said Michael Atkin, who helps oversee $12 billion in fixed-income assets as head of sovereign research at Putnam Investments in Boston. “Mexico is much more integrated with the U.S. Brazil is more able to ride out the economic downturn.”

Yields on Mexico’s 6.75 percent dollar bonds due in 2034 are higher than those on similar-maturity Brazilian bonds even though Mexican debt is rated higher. Mexico’s bonds yielded 7.55 percent, 10 basis points, or 0.1 percentage point, more than the yield on Brazilian securities.

Failed Bond Sale

Mexico’s dollar bonds on average lost 4.8 percent since Dec. 31, the biggest decline in the region, according to Merrill Lynch & Co. The debt is rated Baa1 by Moody’s Investors Service and BBB+ by Standard & Poor’s. Brazil is rated three levels lower by Moody’s and two lower by S&P.

It costs $419,000 to insure $10 million of Mexican debt with credit-default swaps, compared with $394,000 for Brazil. Credit- default swaps pay the buyer face value if a country defaults in exchange for the underlying securities or the cash equivalent.

The gap may keep growing, said Edwin Gutierrez, who manages $5 billion of emerging-market debt at Aberdeen Asset Management Plc in London. “You don’t want to stand in front of that train,” he said. “People are concerned about the sensitivity of Mexico to the U.S.”

Investors scuttled Mexico’s planned sale of 21-year bonds on Feb. 11, the first time that weak demand forced a Latin American country to cancel part of a debt offering since Uruguay did in 2005, according to Royal Bank of Scotland.

Budget Deficits

Earlier this decade, prices for the countries’ credit default swaps were reversed. Protecting Mexican debt cost an average of $129,000 from 2001 to 2008, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. In Brazil, which has posted budget deficits as big as 7.9 percent of gross domestic product in the past 10 years, the average cost was $563,000.

“Mexico does have a longer and better track record of managing fiscal downturns,” Atkin said.

Brazil had an average budget deficit equal to 3.1 percent of gross domestic product over the past six years. Mexico, Latin America’s second-biggest economy after Brazil, posted an average gap of 0.2 percent.

Debt prices are bound to flip back, said Paul Biszko, a senior emerging-markets strategist with RBC Capital Markets in Toronto. “A reversal is quite likely” once investors realize Brazil is almost as vulnerable as Mexico to the global slump that began in the U.S., he said.

Gang Violence

Credit-default swap rates converged as the U.S. recession cut Mexican exports by 14 percent in the fourth quarter and reduced migrant worker remittances for the first time since the central bank began tracking transfers in 1995.

The drug war is eroding investor confidence and reducing annual gross domestic product by 1 percentage point, according to the government. Narcotics-related deaths more than doubled last year as President Felipe Calderon’s crackdown increased competition between gangs for the best supply routes to the U.S.

“There’s a lot of focus on drugs and crime in Mexico,” said Jonathan Binder, who manages more than $2 billion at INTL Consilium LLC in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. “It’s one of the hot topics that has come through.”

Atkin said the war, which has deteriorated into decapitations and grenade attacks, raises questions about “the fundamental stability of the country.”

1994 Peso Devaluation

Mexico’s economy will shrink 1.2 percent this year, the first contraction since 2001, according to the average estimate of 31 analysts in a central bank survey published Feb. 3. Brazil will expand 1.5 percent, a central bank survey of about 100 economists showed on Feb. 13.

Brazil “is not as exposed to the U.S.,” said Cathy Elmore, who manages $700 million of emerging-market debt at WestLB Mellon Asset U.K. Ltd. in London. “It’s been operating more on domestic demand.”

Mexico had a current account deficit, the broadest measure of trade, of $6.6 billion in the fourth quarter, according to the median of six economists in a Bloomberg survey. That would be the widest since the 1994 deficit that triggered a 49 percent peso devaluation.

Oil is responsible for much of the decline because Mexico is the third-biggest supplier to the U.S. The country’s crude production fell last year at the fastest pace since 1942 at the same time that prices plunged 74 percent from a July record.

Banco de Mexico spent $18 billion in the foreign exchange market in the past six months in a bid to shore up the peso. The currency dropped to a record low of 14.8150 per dollar today.

“The Mexican peso is on its backfoot and requiring intervention,” said Aberdeen’s Gutierrez. “The world is negative on Mexico.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Lester Pimentel in New York at lpimentel1@bloomberg.net





Read more...

Dollar May Rise to Four-Month High Against Yen, Citigroup Says

By Ron Harui

Feb. 20 (Bloomberg) -- The dollar may rise to a four-month high against the yen should it close above a so-called neckline at 94.65, Citigroup Inc. said, citing technical charts.

The level of 94.65 yen represents the neckline of a “very well defined double-bottom” pattern, New York-based Tom Fitzpatrick and London-based Shyam Devani wrote in a research note yesterday. A double bottom forms when a currency makes two consecutive troughs of about the same depth, and indicates a currency may rebound. The neckline passes through the highest point of the double bottom.

“The target on a close above here would be for a move to 102,” the Citigroup analysts wrote. “There are increasing signs that, contrary to popular wisdom, we may be starting a period of broad-based yen weakness that could see both dollar- yen and the yen crosses higher in the weeks ahead.”

The dollar traded at 94.14 yen as of 10:33 a.m. in Tokyo from 94.20 yen late in New York yesterday when it reached 94.46 yen, the highest level since Jan. 6. The 102 yen level was last seen on Oct. 21. The greenback has risen 3.8 percent against the yen this year after a 19 percent decline in 2008, the most in more than two decades.

The U.S. currency also may gain versus the yen as it has “moved decisively above the 55-day moving average in recent days,” Fitzpatrick and Devani wrote. The 55-day moving average was 90.75 yen, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

In technical analysis, investors and analysts study charts of trading patterns and prices to forecast changes in a security, commodity, currency or index.

To contact the reporter on this story: Ron Harui in Singapore at rharui@bloomberg.net





Read more...

Dollar, Yen Gain as Global Financial Losses Spur Haven Demand

By Ye Xie and Anchalee Worrachate

Feb. 20 (Bloomberg) -- The dollar and yen advanced against most of their major counterparts as concern losses at financial firms will deepen encouraged demand for havens.

Japan’s currency strengthened versus the euro for the first time in three days as global stocks tumbled. The euro was headed for its biggest weekly decline against the dollar in a month as European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said the financial crisis poses a serious challenge.

“The pattern has been consistent with risk-off trades,” said Robert Blake, head of strategy for North America in Boston at State Street Global Markets LLC, which has about $12 trillion in assets under custody. “The banking sector is front and center again. Our view is that the flows into the dollar will continue for a while as risk aversion persists.”

The dollar advanced 0.6 percent to $1.2593 per euro at 8:57 a.m. in New York, from $1.2674 yesterday. The yen appreciated 0.5 percent to 118.81 per euro from 119.37. Japan’s currency declined 0.1 percent to 94.33 per dollar from 94.20, weakening beyond 94 yen yesterday for the first time since Jan. 7.

The U.S. currency rose against the yen as the Labor Department said consumer prices increased 0.3 percent last month after dropping 0.8 percent in December.

The greenback was headed for a 2 percent gain versus the euro this week. The yen was poised for a weekly decline of 2.4 percent versus the dollar, the biggest drop since October. Japan’s currency was down 0.3 percent versus the euro this week.

Financial Turmoil

The yen is attractive in times of financial turmoil because Japan’s current-account surplus reduces the country’s reliance on overseas lenders.

Stocks dropped today, with the MSCI World Index falling for a ninth day. Standard & Poor’s 500 Index equity futures expiring in March slid 1.6 percent. JPMorgan Chase & Co. lost 3.6 percent after Meredith Whitney forecast banks won’t continue to pay their existing dividends.

“Some people are buying yen as a hedge against falling stocks,” said Neil Jones, head of hedge fund sales in London at Mizuho Corporate Bank.

The global credit crisis poses a “serious challenge” to the financial system and economic policy makers around the world, Trichet said today in a speech in Paris. The ECB will provide financial institutions with unlimited cash for as long as needed to help them through the crisis, he said.

‘Short’ on Euro

“We have gone short euro-dollar as a trade recommendation because prospects of rising growth risks up ahead point to the need for the ECB to apply more aggressive policy steps and investor-growth expectations remain at risk of being too optimistic,” Brian Kim, a currency strategist at UBS AG in Stamford, Connecticut, wrote in a note yesterday.

Europe’s manufacturing and service industries unexpectedly contracted at a record pace in February, an index based on a survey of purchasing managers by Markit Economics showed. A composite index of both industries fell to 36.2, a record low. Economists forecast an increase to 38.5, according to the median of 13 estimates in a Bloomberg survey.

The euro headed for a weekly loss against the dollar after ECB council member Erkki Liikanen said policy makers haven’t used all the tools at their disposal to revive the region’s flagging economy.

ECB’s ‘Creativity’

“I’m convinced that we have not exhausted our creativity and our capacity to take initiatives,” Liikanen, who also heads the Bank of Finland, said in an interview with Finnish newspapers Turun Sanomat and Kaleva published today.

The ECB cut its benchmark interest rate by 2.25 percentage points to 2 percent since October. The bank may lower it again at its next meeting on March 5, Trichet and Liikanen said. Policy makers will reduce the rate to 1.5 percent, according to a Bloomberg News survey of economists.

The ECB’s main refinancing rate compares with 1 percent in the U.K., zero to 0.25 percent in the U.S. and 0.1 percent in Japan.

“The outlook for a narrowing interest-rate differential is negative for the euro,” said Akio Yoshino, chief economist in Tokyo at Societe Generale Asset Management Ltd., a unit of France’s third-largest bank. “The euro may fall to below $1.25 in the near future.”

Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel said yesterday the region is “strong.” She declined to comment on whether Europe’s largest economy would step in to bail out any of the 16 euro members, saying she won’t speculate on the relative health of other countries.

To contact the reporters on this story: Ye Xie in New York at yxie6@bloomberg.net; Anchalee Worrachate in London at aworrachate@bloomberg.net





Read more...

Cocoa Heads for Biggest Weekly Decline in Four Months in London

By M. Shankar

Feb. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Cocoa headed for its biggest weekly drop in four months in London, falling with other commodities as gains by the dollar curbed raw materials’ appeal as an alternative investment. Robusta coffee and sugar also declined.

The U.S. Dollar Index, which measures the currency against six counterparts, rose for a fourth day this week. Crude oil and industrial metals dropped, tracking shares in Europe, where the Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index slid to a five-year low.

“The currency, the global macroeconomic situation and the equities position are adding pressure on commodities,” said William Adjadj, a cocoa trader at Sucden in Paris.

Cocoa for May delivery fell 37 pounds, or 2 percent, to 1,811 pounds ($2,592) a metric ton at 12:25 p.m. local time on the Liffe exchange. The beans have dropped 4.9 percent this week, the most since the week ended Oct. 17. The UBS Bloomberg CMCI Index of 26 commodities has slid 7.2 percent this year.

Cocoa for May delivery declined $58, or 2.3 percent, to $2,512 a ton in after-hours trading on ICE Futures U.S.

Bean deliveries to Ivory Coast ports for shipment abroad more than doubled in the week ended Feb. 15, an industry official with access to the information said yesterday. Ivory Coast is the world’s biggest producer of the chocolate ingredient.

Among other agricultural commodities traded on Liffe, robusta coffee for May delivery fell $7, or 0.4 percent, to $1,579 a ton. White sugar for May delivery dropped $4.40, or 1.1 percent, to $389.60 a ton.

Sugar prices may rise 17 percent by the end of the year as falling output in India turns the country into an importer of the sweetener, Commerzbank said today in a report.

Prices in New York may rise to 15 cents a pound this year, analysts Eugen Weinberg, Barbara Lambrecht and Carsten Fritsch wrote. Use of sugar cane to produce ethanol will support demand in the long term, helping to lift the sweetener’s price to 17 cents a pound by the end of 2010, they wrote.

To contact the reporter on this story: M. Shankar in London at mshankar@bloomberg.net





Read more...

Copper Accelerates Decline in London After Jump in Inventories

By Claudia Carpenter

Feb. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Copper accelerated declines on the London Metal Exchange as stockpiles of the metal jumped to a five-year high, reviving speculation that demand is falling more quickly than supply. Aluminum slid to a six-year low.

Copper inventories in LME-monitored warehouses rose 3.3 percent, the most since Jan. 29, to 545,600 metric tons. Locations in New Orleans -- a destination for metal from Chile, the world’s largest producer -- received 14,350 tons, or 83 percent of today’s total increase.

“That could be an entire vessel,” said Kevin Tuohy, a trader at MF Global Ltd. in London. “It’s more than you expect on a daily basis.”

Copper for delivery in three months fell $130, or 4 percent, to $3,160 a ton at 2:05 p.m. local time on the LME. The contract was down 1.9 percent before the inventory report and has slid 7.9 percent this week. Support lies between $2,950 and $3,000 a ton if prices drop below $3,150 a ton, Tuohy said.

Aluminum for three-month delivery lost $50, or 3.7 percent, to $1,300 a ton. The contract fell as far as $1,296.50 a ton, the lowest since Oct. 10, 2002. Asian production of the metal rose 6.9 percent in January from December even as overall output fell 1.7 percent, the International Aluminium Institute said today.

‘Oversupply’ of Aluminum

The market for aluminum, used in industries from packaging to aerospace, has “significant oversupply,” said Michael Widmer, an analyst at BNP Paribas SA in London. Producers in India, Qatar and Oman are maintaining projects while companies in other regions cut output, he said.

Copper, which is employed in plumbing and electrical wiring and viewed by some analysts as an indicator for economic growth, has added 2.9 percent in 2009 after falling 54 percent last year. Demand in the U.S. will drop 5.6 percent this year, according to London-based researcher Bloomsbury Minerals Economics Ltd.

The contract for immediate delivery traded $35.25 a ton below three-month copper yesterday, the smallest discount since Feb. 6 based on closing prices. In a market with limited supply, the immediate-delivery contract would have a premium to three- month copper, something that last happened Nov. 4.

LS-Nikko Copper Inc., operator of the world’s third-largest copper refinery and smelter, shut one of its two smelting plants for maintenance, earlier than planned. The plant, with about 300,000 tons of annual capacity, will be shut for a month, said a company official.

Inventories of lead jumped 1.4 percent to 56,425 tons, the first increase in a week. The metal, used mainly in automotive batteries, fell $20.50 to $1,050 a ton.

Three-month tin lost $310 to $10,590 a ton, and nickel declined $240 to $9,660 a ton. Zinc fell $37 to $1,095 a ton.

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





Read more...

Oil Falls as Equities Drop on Concern Recession Is Deepening

By Grant Smith

Feb. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Crude oil fell, paring its largest gain in seven weeks, as stock markets in Europe and Asia dropped on concern the recession is deepening.

Oil declined as Europe’s Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index fell to a five-year low. Miner Anglo American Plc suspended its dividend and announced 19,000 job cuts, saying it expected continuing weakness in commodity prices. Crude jumped yesterday after a report showed U.S. stockpiles unexpectedly fell last week.

“Equities are in bad shape today and so commodities are suffering,” said Hannes Loacker, an analyst at Raiffeisen Zentralbank Oesterreich AG in Vienna. “The economy has to recover before we see any substantial increase in oil prices.”

Crude oil for March delivery fell as much as $2.02, or 5.1 percent, to $37.46 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange at 1:09 p.m. London time. Yesterday, the contract gained $4.86 to settle at $39.48 a barrel.

The March contract expires today. The more active April contract was at $38.31 a barrel, down $1.87.

Barclays Capital said it was cutting its forecast for average 2009 Brent crude oil prices to $60 a barrel from $71 a barrel because of the weakening global economic outlook. The bank expects global oil demand to drop 1.25 million barrels a day this year.

“The start of sustainable price recovery may have to wait for a clearer bottoming of the economic cycle,” Barclays analysts led by Paul Horsnell said it a report yesterday.

Sustained Rally

Futures need to close above their five-day moving averages to make a sustained rally, broker PVM Oil Associated Ltd. said. The April contract on the New York Mercantile Exchange will have to settle above its five-day average of around $39.48 a barrel, according to PVM.

Brent crude oil for April settlement fell as much as $1.82, or 4.3 percent, to $40.17 a barrel on London’s ICE Futures Europe exchange. It was at $40.21 a barrel at 1:10 p.m. in London.

A U.S. Energy Department report showed inventories dropped 138,000 barrels to 350.6 million barrels last week, the first decline this year. Analysts had forecast an increase in U.S. crude inventories of 3.2 million barrels, according to a Bloomberg News survey.

“The market has been used to seeing bigger-than-expected builds in U.S. supplies each week and to get an actual negative number gave the market a fresh dose of optimism,” said Mark Pervan, a senior commodity strategist at Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. in Melbourne. “Still, I can’t see anything that’s shown the demand in the market has started to pick up. I think it’s just a matter of limiting supply.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Grant Smith in London at gsmith52@bloomberg.net;





Read more...

Gold Tops $1,000, First Time Since March as Recession Deepens

By Nicholas Larkin

Feb. 20 (Bloomberg) -- Gold rose to more than $1,000 an ounce for the first time in almost a year in New York as investors, spooked by plunging stocks and a deepening recession, sought to protect their wealth.

Gold futures for April delivery rose as much as $23.80, or 2.4 percent, to $1,000.30 an ounce and traded at $999.30 at 9:04 a.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange’s Comex division. Gold, the only metal to advance in 2008, has rallied every year since 2000.

To contact the reporter on this story: Nicholas Larkin in London at nlarkin1@bloomberg.net





Read more...