Economic Calendar

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

China to Send Investment Mission to Europe This Week

By Li Yanping and Belinda Cao

March 3 (Bloomberg) -- China will send a delegation to Europe this week to investigate investment opportunities, including mergers and acquisitions, Commerce Minister Chen Deming said in Beijing today.

The group will go to Switzerland, Spain, the U.K. and Germany, Chen told reporters before a meeting of the advisory body to the nation’s legislature. Those are the same countries visited by a purchasing mission last month.

Chinese companies spent almost $15 billion in the previous four-country purchasing tour, Chen said. German businesses signed $10 billion of trade agreements with the mission, which China said was intended to bolster global trade and counter the deepening economic slump. Chen said today that China needs to increase outbound investment to help balance its international payments.

China’s exports and imports in February will both lag behind figures from a month earlier, Chen added. The nation had a $39.1 billion trade surplus in January, the second biggest on record, as imports fell 43.1 percent from a year earlier.


To contact the reporters on this story: Li Yanping in Beijing at
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U.K. Helps Finance 13 Billion Pounds of Building Work

By Reed V. Landberg and Kitty Donaldson

March 3 (Bloomberg) -- U.K. Treasury minister Yvette Cooper pledged public funds to rescue 13 billion pounds ($18.2 billion) of construction work at risk of collapse because of a lack of bank finance.

The lifeline, which may cost the Treasury as much as 2 billion pounds, is aimed at safeguarding projects including motorway widening, new schools and incinerators planned under the Private Finance Initiative, where companies pay for government projects in exchange for a share of the income they produce.

About 110 projects struggling to raise debt finance will be eligible for the money. The Treasury will lend alongside commercial lenders and the European Investment Bank, and where necessary provide the full amount of senior debt required. The plan aims to unblock infrastructure contracts and help lift the economy out of its worst recession in at least three decades.

“This action will ensure that crucial and valuable public investment will not be disrupted by problems in the financial markets,” Cooper said in a statement to Parliament. The projects will “help prepare the country for future recovery.”

The U.K. will use the money to support 3.1 billion pounds of transport projects, 3.5 billion pounds of waste treatment and environmental projects and 2.4 billion pounds of school building.

“Equity investors will continue to bear the primary risk in these projects and, where available, private sector debt will continue to be provided,” Cooper said.

Public Investment

PFI projects account for about 10 percent of public capital investment, and the government plans to write contracts worth more than 21 billion pounds in the coming years. The program allowed Prime Minister Gordon Brown to increase investment in public services without significantly adding to government debt. Projects worth almost 59 billion pounds have been signed since the Labour Party took office in 1997.

The projects benefit construction companies including Balfour Beatty Plc, Carillion Plc, John Laing Plc, WS Atkins Plc and Costain Group Plc. Service companies including Serco Group Plc and Jarvis Plc also benefit by operating PFI projects for the government.

The Conservative Party invented PFI finance under Prime Minister John Major, and Brown expanded the program during his decade as finance minister until June 1997. Liberal Democrats say the program should be scrapped so the Treasury can fund the projects directly, making clear the total cost to taxpayers.

‘Dishonest System’

“This was a dishonest system of accounting, designed to hide taxpayers’ liabilities,” said Vince Cable, a Liberal Democrat lawmaker who speaks on finance. “If the private sector cannot now come up with the money, and is unwilling to take the risks, we need to move to a simpler, more honest system of public investment for public projects.”

In all, the program may cost the Treasury between 1 billion pounds and 2 billion pounds in the next year. Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling may provide more solid cost estimates in his annual budget statement on April 22.

“Taxpayers are fed up seeing their money used to bail out failures in the private sector with no return,” Dave Prentis, general secretary of the Unison union, said in an e-mail. “Why doesn’t the government see sense by building and running major public works itself for the benefit of the public, not to line the pockets of big business?”

About 3.1 billion pounds of transportation projects including widening of the M-25 motorway circling London have been delayed by a lack of funds. They will benefit from the Treasury financing along with school building projects worth 2.4 billion pounds and 3.5 billion pounds for waste management and the environment.

‘Excellent Track Record’

“Getting PFI deals moving will help public service improvements continue and protect jobs in the construction and services industries,” John Cridland, deputy director general of the Confederation of British Industry, said in an e-mail. “The private sector has an excellent track record in delivering infrastructure projects on time and to budget, and it would be deeply regrettable if this expertise were lost because of the credit crunch.”

The program is the latest aimed at reviving the economy and bank lending after Brown offered 37 billion pounds to recapitalize Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc and Lloyds Banking Group Plc. He has also promised hundreds of billion pounds of loan guarantees for toxic assets on bank balance sheets.

To contact the reporter on this story: Reed Landberg in London at landberg@bloomberg.net.


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Swiss Economy Enters First Recession in Six Years

By Joshua Gallu

March 3 (Bloomberg) -- Switzerland’s economy contracted by the most since 2004 in the fourth quarter, entering its first recession in six years as a global slowdown strangled exports and companies slashed spending.

Gross domestic product fell 0.3 percent from the third quarter, when it shrank a revised 0.1 percent, the State Secretariat for Economic Affairs in Bern said today. That’s the worst performance since the third quarter of 2004. Exports fell 8.1 percent and investment declined 3.1 percent.

Switzerland’s economic slump may deepen as falling global demand prompts companies to cut production and jobs and financial market turmoil erodes banks’ earnings. The Swiss National Bank has cut its benchmark interest rate by 225 basis points to 0.5 percent since early October in a bid to limit the fallout from the crisis.

“The decline in exports shows that Switzerland has been hit quite hard,” said Jan Amrit Poser, chief economist at Bank Sarasin in Zurich. “The SNB will certainly start taking more unconventional measures like buying corporate or government bonds or intervening in currency markets.”

Watch Sales

Foreign demand is weakening as Switzerland’s biggest export markets shrink. The euro area economy contracted the most in at least 13 years in the fourth quarter, according to figures published on Feb. 13. Swatch AG, the world’s largest watchmaker, has said sales will probably decline in the first three or four months this year.

“In 2009, the Swiss economy will shrink along with the economy in the rest of Europe,” SNB President Jean-Pierre Roth said late yesterday. “Investments and trade will continue to decline and unemployment will increase.”

Imports fell 5.8 percent in the fourth quarter from the third, while household spending rose 0.1 percent, according to today’s report.

“Consumption has so far held up well considering the current environment but may crack as unemployment rises,” Poser said. “Overall, Switzerland is holding up better than the rest of Europe and other export-oriented economies like Germany and Japan.”

Germany’s economy shrank by 2.1 percent in the fourth quarter and Japan’s contracted at the fastest pace since the 1974 oil shock as sales of cars and machines plummeted.

SNB Action

The SNB has joined central banks worldwide in flooding money markets with cash in an effort to jolt frozen credit markets back to life. With rates already near zero, it may buy government or corporate bonds, offer cheaper funds for longer terms, or intervene directly in currency markets to counter the slump, SNB Vice-President Philipp Hildebrand said Jan. 22.

Together with the government, the central bank also bailed out UBS AG, the country’s biggest bank, in October. UBS on Feb. 10 reported a record 19.7 billion-franc ($16.8 billion) loss for 2008 and said it will cut 2,000 more investment bank jobs. Credit Suisse Group AG reported a record fourth-quarter loss a day later.

Georg Fischer AG, Europe’s largest maker of iron castings for cars, last month reported a 72 percent decline in 2008 profit and said it will move some production to China as it budgets for a “deep and long” slump. Chemical company Clariant AG is also cutting jobs, and unemployment reached the highest in almost two years in January.

Economists had forecast that fourth-quarter GDP would shrink by 0.8 percent, according to the median of 15 forecasts in a Bloomberg News survey. From a year earlier, the economy shrank 0.6 percent, today’s report showed, after growing 1.4 percent in the previous three months.

To contact the reporter on this story: Joshua Gallu in Zurich at jgallu@bloomberg.net


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U.K. Construction Contracts the Most Since 1997, Markit Says

By Jennifer Ryan

March 3 (Bloomberg) -- U.K. construction, which accounts for 6 percent of the economy, shrank at the fastest pace in at least 12 years in February as the credit famine hampered building projects.

An index based on a survey of purchasing managers at building companies fell to 27.8, the lowest since data begin in 1997, from 34.5 the previous month, the London-based Chartered Institute of Purchasing and Supply and Markit said today. A reading below 50 indicates contraction.

The U.K. Treasury today unveiled a fund to provide finance to 13 billion-pounds ($18 billion) of government-sponsored building projects that stalled due to a lack of bank finance. Bank of England policy makers may lower the benchmark interest rate to a record low of 0.5 percent this week to spur lending.


“Abysmal February data from the U.K. construction sector marks a whole year of decline in the industry and has put paid to any hopes of improvement,” Roy Ayliffe, director at CIPS, said in an e-mailed statement. “It’s safe to say that the construction sector is some way off being out of the woods as it continues to struggle with extremely weak demand.”

Persimmon Plc, the U.K.’s second-biggest homebuilder by market value, said today it posted a loss in the year through December after writing down the value of its landbank by 652 million pounds. U.K. house prices fell an annual 10 percent last month, the most since at least 2001, Hometrack Ltd. said yesterday.

Policy makers will this week cut the benchmark interest rate by a half-point to the lowest since the central bank was founded in 1694, according to the median of 60 economists’ forecasts in a Bloomberg News survey.

To contact the reporter on this story: Jennifer Ryan in London at Jryan13@bloomberg.net


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Orphanides Takes on Trichet Over ECB’s Rate Policy

By Ben Sills

March 3 (Bloomberg) -- A former Federal Reserve economist who made a name for himself telling his superiors they were wrong is now taking on European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet.

Athanasios Orphanides, who left the Fed in 2007 to become the governor of Cyprus’s central bank, was the first ECB official to argue in favor of zero interest rates, challenging Trichet’s position that cutting them so low would have “drawbacks” and should be avoided. Now, investors and economists are betting Orphanides, 46, is winning the argument as the euro region suffers its worst recession since World War II.

The ECB “can’t stand on the sidelines and use some weird voodoo economics,” said Erik Nielsen, chief European economist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. in London. “Over time, the power of the right argument tends to win out over the wrong.”

At least seven members of the ECB’s 22-member Governing Council have lined up behind Trichet as they struggle to agree on new tools that would be needed with zero rates. Still, some have started to warm to the idea of deploying all the ECB’s rate ammunition and turning to unconventional methods, suggesting Orphanides may be securing support.

Bond markets expect Orphanides to prevail: Yields on two- year German bunds have fallen to their lowest level since at least 1990. All 55 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News predict the ECB will cut its main rate by a half-point to a record level of 1.5 percent on March 5.

Torn by Conflict

The market move accelerated after Orphanides, in a Jan. 28 speech, said the idea that monetary policy becomes ineffective when rates near zero is “dangerous” and a “fallacy.”

Orphanides was born in communist-ruled Czechoslovakia in 1962 to a Cypriot father and Greek mother. He grew up in Nicosia, the capital of Cyprus, a nation torn in two by violence between its Greek and Turkish communities. He was 12 years old when Turkey invaded, occupying a third of the Mediterranean island nation and dividing its main city.

Orphanides cut his teeth at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he studied for his doctorate under Rudiger Dornbusch, the professor who told the Mexican government it was facing a currency crisis before the 1994 peso crash.

In his 17 years at the Fed, from 1990 until 2007, Orphanides became known for his willingness to disagree with bosses, said Vincent Reinhart, a former director of monetary affairs at the central bank and himself a target of the Cypriot’s criticism.

Inflation Forecasts

While Reinhart defended the Fed’s use of inflation forecasts in setting rates, Orphanides countered that such predictions were unreliable. In 2003 and 2004, Orphanides argued that the Fed should raise borrowing costs faster because they could not be sure that inflation would remain subdued.

Reinhardt recalled that when Fed Vice Chairman Donald Kohn asked him to justify his decision to appoint Orphanides as his senior adviser in 2006, he replied: “It shows that I have sufficient self-confidence to be told I am wrong often.”

Orphanides returned to Cyprus to head up the central bank in May 2007 in preparation for the country’s accession to the euro area in 2008. As a result, the ECB gained another 800,000 constituents and a monetary-policy heavyweight.

Orphanides may nevertheless have to adjust to European realities as rates approach zero. While his old Fed colleagues are deploying non-conventional measures, ECB officials are struggling with rules that restrict their room for maneuver.

Ignoring Difficulties

The ECB is forbidden from buying debt directly from governments and purchases in the open market may run into political opposition from some countries.

German council member Axel Weber said today there are “pros and cons” to buying commercial paper and France’s Christian Noyer said the ECB is still examining all its options.

“Orphanides is ignoring the enormous political difficulties that the ECB would actually face,” said James Nixon, an economist at Societe Generale in London and a former ECB forecaster. “That lack of political acumen may limit his chances of higher office.”

That isn’t stopping Orphanides from deploying his scholarship bluntly.

“The fallacy that monetary policy is ineffective when short-term interest rates are close to zero is dangerous because it may promote inaction,” the central banker said in his Jan. 28 speech. A central bank has many policy tools at its disposal once the benchmark rate nears zero, Orphanides argued.

Winning Support

A 1999 research paper co-written by Orphanides may contain the seeds of future ECB action. The paper, titled “Efficient Monetary Policy Design Near Price Stability,” examined how policy makers might deal with deflation by steering market borrowing costs rather than just focusing on the key bank rate.

“This is a solution that may gain consensus in the council more easily than other direct measures of quantitative easing,” said Aurelio Maccario, chief European economist at UniCredit MIB in Milan. Orphanides, he said, “knows what he’s talking about, much more than other council members.”

The Frankfurt-based ECB left its main refinancing rate unchanged at 2 percent on Feb. 5. By contrast, the Fed’s key rate is close to zero and the Bank of England’s is at 1 percent.

Both have now started using other tools to boost their economies: They are buying debt securities in an effort to lower long-term interest rates and revive economic growth, and the Bank of England has asked for permission to create money.

At the ECB, meanwhile, more policy makers are beginning to back Orphanides publicly.

ECB policy makers “have not exhausted our creativity and our capacity to take initiatives,” Finland’s Erkki Liikanen said Feb. 20. A day later, Italian council member Mario Draghi said that “worrying about getting too close to the lower limit for nominal interest rates cannot be a reason for inaction.”

As the economy continues to contract, the ECB will eventually be forced to follow Orphanides’s advice, said Goldman’s Nielsen.

“He shot down all the nonsense,” he said. “Quantitative easing is just a matter of time.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Ben Sills in Madrid at bsills@bloomberg.net


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Almunia Says EU Has Solution for Euro State in Crisis

By Meera Louis

March 3 (Bloomberg) -- European Union Monetary Affairs Commissioner Joaquin Almunia said EU policy makers have “a solution” for any euro-area country in crisis before a government would have to seek International Monetary Fund aid.

“If the crisis emerges in one euro-area country, there is a solution,” Almunia said at a conference in Brussels today. “There is a solution before visiting the IMF.” He declined to give details.

Growing deficits and debt burdens amid the deepening recession have pushed the risk premiums on some euro-area members’ bonds to all-time highs, prompting concerns that investors may shun the securities of some countries and spark a region-wide crisis. Wider bond spreads and record costs for debt- default insurance in Spain, Portugal, Ireland and Greece raised the specter of national bankruptcies.

While few investors are forecasting any defaults, the mere risk may prompt the region’s richest economies to announce their willingness to help a smaller member in trouble. Spain lost its AAA rating at Standard & Poor’s in January, and ratings for Greece and Portugal also were cut. Moody’s Investors Service lowered the outlook on Ireland’s rating to “negative,” increasing the chance the nation’s top grade would be reduced.

German Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck said last month that some of the 16 nations using the euro are “getting into difficulties” and may need help. Budget deficits have ballooned as governments across the continent pour billions into stimulus measures to fight the worst recession since World War II. France today said its 2009 deficit will top 5 percent of output as tax revenue shrinks and spending surges amid the recession.

‘No Indication’

Almunia’s spokeswoman, Amelia Torres, today called it “unlikely” that a euro-area country would face financing difficulties necessitating a rescue. “There is no indication whatsoever that this situation is arising,” Torres told a regular press briefing in Brussels.

The differential between what investors charge to hold Spanish, Greek and Portuguese debt and the rate on comparable German bonds has increased this year to the widest since those countries joined the euro region, and the price of insuring Irish debt against default rose to a record. The European Commission, the EU regulator, has called on governments to curb their widening deficits as soon as possible after the economic crisis.

Almunia wouldn’t give details of any rescue plan, saying “it’s not clever to talk in public about this solution, but the solution exists.” EU officials “are equipped intellectually, politically and economically to face this crisis scenario,” the commissioner said.

‘Downside Risks’

He said “downside risks” for the European economy have increased in recent weeks. The commission in January forecast a 1.9 percent contraction in the euro region this year, which would be the deepest recession since the single currency’s introduction a decade ago. Since then, economic sentiment has fallen to an all-time low and the manufacturing industry contracted at a record pace in February as companies scaled back production.

“The worst point of the crisis, of the recession, is not yet behind us,” Almunia said later at a meeting at the European Parliament. “Probably we are living now these months the worst” part of the crisis, “a period of high uncertainty with a lot of risks,” he said.

“I hope that in a few months we can consider that the worst of a recession is behind us,” Almunia said. “We are considering the beginning of next year a gradual recovery can start.”

The IMF may cut its forecast for the global economy to predict a contraction this year, an IMF official said yesterday. The fund on Jan. 28 forecast 0.5 percent expansion worldwide and a 2 percent contraction in the euro area.

“The IMF is likely to move its global growth forecast down further, probably into negative territory,” said Nicolas Eyzaguirre, director of the IMF’s western hemisphere department, said in notes for a speech in Porto, Portugal.

To contact the reporter on this story: Meera Louis in Brussels at mlouis1@bloomberg.net





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Bank of Canada Cuts Lending Rate to 0.5%, Lowest Ever

By Greg Quinn

March 3 (Bloomberg) -- The Bank of Canada cut its benchmark lending rate to a record, and said it may use policies beyond interest rate moves, if needed, to revive an economy hit by a recession and tight credit markets.

Governor Mark Carney cut the target rate on overnight loans between commercial banks to 0.5 percent from 1 percent today, and signaled he may reduce it again. Fifteen of 23 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News predicted today’s rate cut.

“The Bank is refining the approach it would take to provide additional monetary stimulus, if required, through credit and quantitative easing,” the Ottawa-based central bank said in a statement. Details of how such a plan would be used will be released in April with a new economic forecast, the bank said.

Carney’s view of so-called quantitative easing has changed from January when he said it was a “highly unlikely, remote situation,” because the country’s banks were among the world’s strongest through the biggest global financial crisis in decades. Canada is being pulled into a recession as global demand for its automobiles and lumber plunges and prices fall for the commodities it produces.

Canada’s economy will shrink faster than predicted in January, the Bank of Canada said today. The world’s eighth- largest economy shrank at a 3.4 percent annualized pace in the fourth quarter, Statistics Canada reported yesterday, the most since 1991.

Canada’s dollar was unchanged at C$1.2934 against the U.S. dollar at 9:10 a.m. in Toronto.

‘Or Lower’

“The target for the overnight rate can be expected to remain at this level or lower at least until there are clear signs that excess supply in the economy is being taken up,” the bank said.

Canada’s decision comes two days before the European Central Bank and the Bank of England are also expected to cut their key interest rates to new lows. ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet signaled policy makers may pare their benchmark rate to a record low of 1.5 percent March 5 as a recession in the euro region deepens. The Bank of England cut its policy rate to 1 percent this year, the lowest since it was founded in 1694, and economists expect the rate to fall to 0.5 percent this week.

The U.S. Federal Reserve has reduced its benchmark to a range of between zero and 0.25 percent on Dec. 16.

Job Losses

Carney has cut the central bank’s policy rate from 4 percent since taking over in February 2008.

“Those who have an expectation that things are going to recover dramatically and quickly as we come out of this, that’s less and less likely all the time,” Royal Bank of Canada Chief Executive Officer Gordon Nixon told reporters Feb. 26.

Statistics Canada has reported a record job loss of 129,000 in January, and the agency’s leading economic indicator fell the most since 1982 in January. Bankruptcies in December also jumped 47 percent from a year earlier.

Business executives say they’re struggling with the tightest credit climate since at least 2001, according to a Bank of Canada survey released Jan. 12.

Carney has said the Bank of Canada has already injected as much as C$41 billion into financial markets to spur lending, sought wider legal power to fix markets and accepted new types of collateral. The federal government is also buying up to C$125 billion of mortgages to give banks more cash to use for new loans.

Quantitative easing is designed to leave banks with so much free cash that they stop hoarding and expand lending. It can involve a central bank buying securities and creating money to pay for them. A central bank can also try buying up securities to drive down longer-term market interest rates, extending efforts to keep short-term rates low with their benchmark rates.

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





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Pending U.S. Home Resales Slump More Than Forecast

By Shobhana Chandra

March 3 (Bloomberg) -- Fewer Americans than forecast signed contracts to buy previously owned homes in January as the housing slump deepened at the start of its fourth year.

The index of pending home resales fell 7.7 percent after a 4.8 percent gain in December, the National Association of Realtors said today in Washington.

A lack of credit and record foreclosures that are pushing property values even lower may keep prospective buyers out of the market for much of 2009. President Barack Obama has pledged to keep more Americans in their homes and create jobs, and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke today said policy makers may need to expand aid to the banking system.

“There are just too many headwinds for homebuyers -- tight credit, mounting job losses and fears of further price declines,” said Sal Guatieri, a senior economist at BMO Capital Markets in Toronto. “The housing market is showing no sign of a bottom. This could be the story for the first half of this year.”

Economists forecast a 3.5 percent drop in pending sales after an originally reported gain of 6.3 percent in December, according to the median forecast of 32 economists in a Bloomberg News survey. Estimates ranged from declines of 0.8 percent to 5 percent.

Policy makers may need to boost aid to banks beyond the $700 billion already approved and take other aggressive measures even at the cost of soaring fiscal deficits, Bernanke said in the text of testimony before the Senate today. The chairman last week warned the recession may last into 2010 unless policy makers can stabilize the financial system.

Leading Gauge

Stocks held gains following Bernanke’s comments and Treasury securities fell. The Standard & Poor’s 500 index rose 0.7 percent to 705.81 at 10:21 a.m. in New York. The yield on the benchmark 10-year note rose to 2.94 percent from 2.86 percent late yesterday.

Pending resales are considered a leading indicator because they track contract signings. The Realtors’ existing-home sales report tallies closings, which typically occur a month or two later. The pending index was first published in March 2005 and included data going back to January 2001.

The group’s index decreased to 80.4 in January, the lowest level since records began.

Three of four regions dropped, led by a 13 percent slump in the Northeast and a 12 percent slide in the South. Pending sales increased 2.4 percent in the West.

Compared with January 2008, pending sales decreased 6.4 percent.

Sales of previously owned homes, which account for about 90 percent of the market, fell in January to the lowest level since 1997, according to the Realtors group. New-home purchases, which make up the rest, plunged to the lowest level since records began in 1963, Commerce Department figures showed.

Prices Fall

The median price for existing and new houses decreased in January from a year ago, the reports showed.

Falling prices and lower borrowing costs have brought more homes with reach of buyers. The NAR’s affordability index jumped to 166.8 in January, the highest level since records began in 1970.

“Even with many serious potential home buyers on the sidelines waiting for passage of the stimulus bill, job losses and weak consumer confidence were a natural drag on home sales,” Lawrence Yun, the group’s chief economist, said in a statement. “We expect similarly soft home sales in the near term, but buyers are expected to respond to much improved affordability conditions.”

Builder Shares

The Standard & Poor’s 500 Supercomposite Homebuilding Index fell 20 percent in the first two months of this year as sales plunged. The index dropped 76 percent over the last three years. Pulte Homes Inc., the largest U.S. homebuilder, last month reported its ninth consecutive quarterly loss.

Housing-related companies are also struggling. Home Depot Inc., the largest home-improvement retailer, had a fourth-quarter loss, closed its Expo design unit and is cutting about 7,000 jobs.

“The home improvement market in 2009 will remain just as challenging as 2008,” Chief Executive Officer Frank Blake said in a statement on Feb. 24.

The economy shrank at a 6.2 percent annual rate in the fourth quarter, the most since 1982, revised government figures showed last week. Home construction contracted at a 22 percent pace following a 16 percent decline in the prior quarter.

Policy makers are counting on a series of steps to stem the deterioration. Obama last month introduced a plan to help as many as 9 million people restructure mortgages to avoid foreclosures. The Treasury Department is doubling the amount of stock purchases of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the mortgage-finance companies now under government control.

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


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Bernanke Says U.S. May Need to Expand Bank Rescue

By Craig Torres and Scott Lanman

March 3 (Bloomberg) -- Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said policy makers may need to expand aid to the banking system beyond the $700 billion already approved and take other aggressive measures even at the cost of soaring fiscal deficits.

“Without a reasonable degree of financial stability, a sustainable recovery will not occur,” the Fed chairman said today in testimony prepared for the Senate Budget Committee. “Although progress has been made on the financial front since last fall, more needs to be done.”

Bernanke’s comments suggest he sees a role for bigger federal outlays as the Obama administration seeks congressional approval for a budget of $3.55 trillion for the fiscal year beginning in October. President Barack Obama has already signed into a law a $787 billion economic stimulus package of tax cuts and government spending.

Obama’s first budget seeks standby authority for as much as $750 billion in new aid to the financial industry. Whether those funds will be needed “depends on the results of the current supervisory assessment of banks” and the evolution of the economy, Bernanke said.

Bernanke said policy makers would have “preferred to avoid” what is likely to be the largest ratio of federal debt compared with gross domestic product since the end of World War II, and he urged lawmakers not to lose sight of fiscal discipline.

Cost to Budget

“But our economy and financial markets face extraordinary challenges,” and doing less now would eventually prove to be more costly, he said. “We are better off moving aggressively today to solve our economic problems; the alternative could be a prolonged episode of stagnation” that would cause budget deficits to swell further, increase unemployment and undermine incomes “for an extended period.”

The Fed has more than doubled its assets to $1.9 trillion during the past year by expanding loans to banks, launching programs to revive commercial paper and other markets and backing the merger of Bear Stearns Cos. with JPMorgan Chase & Co.

The 55-year-old Fed chairman told the Senate Banking Committee last week there’s a “reasonable prospect” the recession will end in 2009 “if the actions taken by the administration, the Congress and the Federal Reserve are successful in restoring some measures of financial stability.”

Stock Slump

Fed policy makers face headwinds from equity markets, with the Standard and Poor’s 500 Index falling this year by 22.5 percent and the S&P Financials Index tumbling 44.2 percent.

The government is still trying to stabilize large financial institutions such as Citigroup Inc. and insurer American International Group Inc. Shares of Citigroup traded at $1.33 this morning at 9:33 a.m., and the government expanded its aid to AIG yesterday after the company reported a fourth-quarter loss of $61.7 billion, the worst loss by any U.S. corporation.

The spending blueprint delivered to Congress last month forecasts government spending this year of $3.94 trillion, up 32 percent from a year ago. That would yield a record deficit of $1.75 trillion in the year ending Sept. 30, equal to about 12 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product, the highest since World War II. Government spending of $3.55 trillion next year will include about $350 billion approved as part of the stimulus package.

Stimulus Impact

“By supporting public and private spending, the fiscal package should provide a boost to demand and production over the next two years as well as mitigate the overall loss of employment and income that would otherwise occur,” Bernanke said.

Still, the size of the impact on the economy from government spending is “subject to considerable uncertainty,” Bernanke said. Consumers may decide to pay down debt or save their cash rather than spend it, he noted.

January forecasts by Fed officials suggest “a full recovery of the economy from the current recession is likely to take more than two or three years,” Bernanke told lawmakers last week.

The U.S. unemployment rate rose to 7.6 percent in January, the highest level since 1992. Job losses spanned almost all industries from trucking and construction to retailing and finance.

Fed officials expect unemployment in the fourth quarter to average 8.5 percent to 8.8 percent, which would be the highest since 1983, according to their January forecasts. Gross domestic product will contract 1.3 percent to 0.5 percent, and inflation will run at just 0.3 percent to 1 percent this year, their projections indicate.

Fed Forecasts

Fed officials don’t see labor markets improving until 2011, when growth forecast at 3.8 percent to 5 percent reduces the unemployment rate to a range of 6.7 percent to 7.5 percent.

Economic models used by Macroeconomic Advisers LLC show the Obama stimulus package could keep the jobless rate at about 8.8 percent instead of the 9.5 percent rate that would result without the package.

The Fed is stepping up efforts to stem the worst credit crisis in seven decades by expanding a program aimed at supporting consumer and business loans to $1 trillion from $200 billion and adding commercial real estate. It is also buying $600 billion of debt sold by government-backed housing finance companies and mortgage-backed securities they guarantee.

To contact the reporters on this story: Craig Torres in Washington at ctorres3@bloomberg.net; Scott Lanman in Washington at slanman@bloomberg.net


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Natural Gas Gains on Forecast for Below-Normal Temperatures

By Reg Curren

March 3 (Bloomberg) -- Natural gas rose for the third time in four days in New York on forecasts that below-normal temperatures will cover the eastern half of the U.S. by mid- March, increasing demand for the heating fuel.

The cold will push into parts of the Midwest by March 8 and move eastward through March 17, according to MDA Federal Inc.’s EarthSat Energy Weather. About 72 percent of households in the Midwest rely on natural gas for heating.

“It’s been well below normal in the key heating regions,” said Lisa Zembrodt, an analyst at Summit Energy Services Inc. in Louisville, Kentucky. “And when you look at the eight-to-14-day temperature outlook, it’s all cold. It’s not the thick of winter, but it will be more heating demand than is considered normal.”

Natural gas for April delivery rose 10.2 cents, or 2.5 percent, to $4.254 per million British thermal units at 9:36 a.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Gas futures have declined 24 percent in 2009. Futures are down 69 percent since reaching a 2008 high of $13.964 per million Btu.

Rising prices for crude oil helped to lift natural gas, Zembrodt said.

Oil for April delivery gained 89 cents, or 2.2 percent, to $41.04 a barrel in New York, rebounding after a decline of 10 percent yesterday.

Chesapeake Energy Corp., the Oklahoma oil and gas producer that lost more than half of its market value last year, said yesterday it cut oil and gas production by 7 percent after a plunge in prices made some wells unprofitable.

“The report from Chesapeake shutting down production shows we’re really getting to the point where you’re going to see more of that,” Zembrodt said. “You’re going to see more producers willingly shut in production and announce it.”

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





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Darling Suggests BOE May Print Money This Week

By Brian Swint

March 3 (Bloomberg) -- Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling suggested the Bank of England could start printing money as soon as this week to help revive the economy as interest rates lose their potency.

“We’ve given them the levers,” Darling said, according to an interview in the Daily Telegraph published today in London. “They may decide this month that it’s appropriate to do so.” A Treasury official confirmed Darling’s comments.

Bank of England policy makers sought permission from the Treasury to create money to buy securities after last month’s interest rate decision, when they cut the key rate to a record low of 1 percent. The bank should get authority to use as much as 200 billion pounds ($283 billion) for purchases of government bonds and other assets, Daiwa Securities SMBC Europe Ltd. says.

“If I were the Bank of England, I would start by buying quite a lot of gilts, starting at the short end,” said Daiwa economist Colin Ellis, a former official at the central bank. “We know the bank is nervous about taking the rate all the way to zero. That Darling has given the levers shows the bank is willing to act.”

Data yesterday signaled the recession is intensifying. U.K. manufacturing shrank for a 10th month in February, according to a survey of factories. Consumer lending rose in January at the slowest pace since at least 1993.

Building Industry

Construction companies signaled in a survey last month that the building industry is contracting at the fastest pace in at least 12 years, Markit said today. The Treasury has unveiled a fund to provide finances to 13 billion pounds of government- sponsored building projects that have stalled because of a lack of bank finance.

Seven out 10 of companies in a survey by the Confederation of British Industry, the nation’s biggest business lobby, said access to finance worsened since the start of the credit squeeze. Firms questioned from Feb. 11 to Feb. 19 also expect conditions “to remain difficult” in the next three months, the CBI said in a statement. It surveyed 88 companies.

Bank of England Governor Mervyn King said last month that he hoped to be able to make a decision about so-called quantitative easing at this month’s two-day meeting, which will begin tomorrow.

Policy makers will this week cut the benchmark interest rate by a half-point to 0.5 percent, the lowest since it was founded in 1694, the median of 60 economists’ forecasts shows.

Minutes of the Feb. 5 decision said that the central bank and the Treasury would publish an exchange of letters regarding the details of planned asset purchases. That correspondence has yet to be released.

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





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Algeria Skikda Plant to Start in 2013, Khelil Says

By Ben Farey and Paul Tobin

March 3 (Bloomberg) -- Algeria, Africa’s largest gas exporter, won’t start deliveries from its new Skikda liquefied natural gas plant until 2013, Oil Minister Chakib Khelil said. That’s two years later than the date given on state oil and gas company Sonatrach’s Web site.

“It’s being built, it’s advancing really well,” Khelil said in an interview in Madrid yesterday. Construction of the plant is about 20 percent complete and procurement of 70 percent of materials has been carried out, he said.

KBR Inc., the U.S. engineering company that split from Halliburton Co., is building the 4.5 million-ton-a-year export plant to replace plants destroyed in an explosion in 2004 that killed more than 20 people. Sonatrach will fully finance the plant’s construction.

Three of six so-called production trains were totally destroyed and one was badly damaged when a boiler in one of the units blew up in April 2004. Exports continue from the three remaining units. Algeria exported 24.67 billion cubic meters of the fuel in 2007, BP’s Statistical Review of World Energy shows.

A separate LNG export plant at Arzew, that will take gas from Algeria’s Gassi Touil field, will start at “about the same time” as Skikda, the oil minister said.

Separately, Khelil said bad weather on Algeria’s coast in January and February meant LNG and oil tankers couldn’t be loaded for “at least” 35 days. Sonatrach invoked force majeure, a legal term allowing it to miss deliveries.

It’s unclear whether force majeure terms are still in place. Khelil said Sonatrach can either catch up with deliveries it missed or find replacement cargoes for buyers.

In November, Sonatrach suspended LNG cargoes from its Arzew plant because of a cracked pipeline. The plant was forced to run at 80 percent of capacity.

The Arzew complex, on Algeria’s coast, has 15 production units with a total capacity of 19.3 million metric tons a year, according to World LNG Review, an industry publication.

LNG is gas that’s cooled to a liquid to aid transportation and storage.

To contact the reporter on this story: Ben Farey in London at bfarey@bloomberg.net or





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StatoilHydro Plans to Sell Bonds in Euros, Pounds, Banker Says

By Shelley Smith

March 3 (Bloomberg) -- StatoilHydro ASA plans to sell bonds in euros and pounds, according to a banker involved in the transaction.

A sale of six- and 12-year bonds in euros will be managed by Barclays Capital, BNP Paribas SA, Deutsche Bank AG and Societe Generale SA.

An issue of 22-year pound bonds will be managed by Barclays, Deutsche Bank and Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc.

To contact the reporter on this story: Shelley Smith in London at ssmith118@bloomberg.net





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BP Shuts Units, Cuts Runs at Texas City Oil Refinery

By Nidaa Bakhsh

March 3 (Bloomberg) -- BP Plc was forced to shut units and curtail operations because of a malfunction at its Texas City refinery, the fourth-largest in the U.S.

BP is still determining how long the units will be off line, spokeswoman Sheila Williams said today by telephone from London, where BP, Europe’s second-largest oil company, is based. She couldn’t say which units were forced to shut. The malfunction occurred in a sulfur recovery plant early yesterday morning, Williams said.

The fault may reduce supplies of gasoline as demand recovers before the peak summer driving season. The Texas City refinery, which can process 475,000 barrels of oil a day and is BP’s largest, returned to normal operations at the end of 2008 after a blast killed 15 people three years earlier.

BP expects to flare, or burn off gases into the air, until 2:30 a.m. local time tomorrow, according to a filing with state environmental regulators. An estimated 30,000 pounds of sulfur dioxide may be emitted during the flaring, which began at 2:30 a.m. yesterday, the filing showed.

Gasoline for April settlement rose $1.08, or 0.8 percent, to $1.297 a gallon at 7:02 a.m. local time on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Flares are safety devices that prevent excessive pressure from building up in processing units that are being shut down or started up. Sulfur-recovery plants capture and hold sulfur removed in fuel-processing.

To contact the reporter on this story: Nidaa Bakhsh in London at nbakhsh@bloomberg.net





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Egypt’s Petrobel Terminates $172,000-a-Day Transocean Rig Lease

By Joe Carroll

March 3 (Bloomberg) -- Egyptian General Petroleum Corp., the North African nation’s state oil company, terminated a $172,000-a-day contract for a Transocean Ltd. rig after crude prices dropped more than $100 a barrel.

Geneva-based Transocean, the world’s largest offshore driller, said today in a public filing that it will challenge the validity of the termination by Egyptian General’s Petrobel unit.

The GSF Key Singapore, a so-called jack-up rig with retractable legs that extend to the seafloor, is on its way to an Alexandria, Egypt, shipyard for storage, Transocean said in the filing. Transocean didn’t say why Petrobel terminated the agreement.

Petrobel agreed in September to lease the vessel through June 2010 for $172,000 a day, an 11 percent increase from the previous day rate of $155,000 for the rig. Jack-up rigs generate less than half the day rate of deepwater rigs and contribute less than one-fourth of Transocean’s revenue.

Transocean canceled a record $550,000-a-day contract in January with Burgundy Global Exploration Corp. after the Philippines-based company ran out of cash. A second vessel, the Sedco 712, was idled in January after Oilexco Inc.’s North Sea unit sought protection from creditors.

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





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Libya Urges Conoco, Hess, Marathon to Cut Waha Stake

By Maher Chmaytelli and Nicholas Comfort

March 3 (Bloomberg) -- Libya urged ConocoPhillips, Hess Corp. and Marathon Oil Corp. to agree to lower their share of production from the Waha oil venture as state revenue is squeezed by lower crude prices and OPEC-mandated output cuts.

The government is seeking to speed up talks with the three U.S. companies and Germany’s Wintershall AG following similar discussions with other international explorers, state-run National Oil Corp. said on its Web site, citing a Feb. 28 decision by Libya’s Oil & Natural Gas Council.

National Oil Chairman Shokri Ghanem said last year that Libya sought to cut foreign producers’ oil take to less than 20 percent, from as much as 49 percent. Libya has already revised contracts with Eni SpA, Occidental Petroleum Corp., OMV AG, Petro-Canada and Repsol YPF SA.

“The council agreed that negotiations should continue with the companies that are still procrastinating in approving the contractual changes proposed by National Oil,” the state producer said.

ConocoPhillips and Marathon each hold 16.33 percent of Waha, also known as Oasis, and Hess has 8.17 percent. The stakes were granted under a 2005 accord that allowed the U.S. companies to return to the Libyan venture they had left in 1986, when the U.S. accused Muammar Qaddafi of supporting terrorism and President Ronald Reagan ordered the bombing of sites in Tripoli and Benghazi. National Oil holds the remaining 59.17 percent.

Output Projection

Waha, which develops fields in the Sirte basin, is pumping about 350,000 barrels a day, down from 1 million barrels a day in 1969 and 400,000 barrels a day in 1986, according to the U.S. Energy Department’s fact sheet on Libya. The venture’s partners plan to increase its output by 200,000 barrels a day, it said.

Wintershall’s parent company BASF SE, which has operated in Libya since 1958, is in talks with National Oil over revising contracts for its concessions as well as exploration and production sharing agreements, Wintershall spokeswoman Verena Sattel said today by telephone.

“We aim for an amiable solution,” Sattel said from the company’s headquarters in Kassel, Germany. She declined to comment on what stage talks are at or on how much oil Wintershall pumps in Libya.

The BASF unit has one offshore and eight onshore oil fields in Libya, all of which will be affected by the talks, according to Sattel. The company has invested $1.3 billion on wells in the country and will spend “hundreds of millions” more, she said in an e-mailed statement, without specifying a timeline.

Asset Nationalization

Qaddafi on Jan. 21 said crude prices need to rebound to $100 a barrel to temper calls for the seizure of foreign oil assets, according to state-run news service Jana. Libya, which holds Africa’s largest oil reserves, isn’t considering nationalizing the assets of foreign oil companies that operate under production-sharing agreements, Ghanem said Jan. 22.

Libya and the other members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries are cutting oil output to reverse a slump in prices caused by the global recession.

Crude futures have lost 72 percent since reaching a July record of $147.27 a barrel. Oil for April delivery traded for $40.80 a barrel in New York as of 10:06 a.m. local time.

Libya produced 1.630 million barrels of oil a day in January, down from 1.660 million barrels a day in December, according to Bloomberg estimates. It should be producing at a rate of 1.469 million barrels a day under a December accord to cut OPEC’s collective output.

To contact the reporters on this story: Maher Chmaytelli in Nicosia, Cyprus, at mchmaytelli@bloomberg.net; Nicholas Comfort in Frankfurt at ncomfort1@bloomberg.net





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BP Replaced 121% of Reserves Last Year as Oil, Gas Output Rose

By Eduard Gismatullin

March 3 (Bloomberg) -- BP Plc, Europe’s second-largest oil company, replaced 121 percent of reserves in 2008 after crude and natural-gas production rose for the first time in three years.

Excluding acquisitions and divestments, BP added 1.7 billion barrels of new oil and gas to reserves, the London-based company said today in a statement distributed by the Regulatory News Service. Output climbed 0.5 percent to 3.838 million barrels a day last year, BP said Feb. 3.

The gain follows three major discoveries in Egypt, Algeria and the Gulf of Mexico last year, which each boosted resources by more than 250 million barrels of oil equivalent, according to Andy Inglis, BP’s head of exploration and production. Oil companies worldwide reported about 14 major finds in 2008.

“It’s been our best year this decade” for exploration, Inglis said in an online podcast last month. Reserves were replaced for the 15th year, demonstrating “the strength of the BP portfolio,” he said.

BP held 18.2 billion barrels of oil and gas reserves and 43.4 billion barrels of resources as of the end of 2008, according to today’s statement. It held a total of 61.6 billion barrels of oil equivalent of combined reserves and non-proved resources, sufficient for 43 years of production at the same rates as last year.

The company reiterated its plan to raise output through 2020. Last year, it said it expected to pump more than 4 million barrels a day in 2009 and about 4.3 million barrels a day in 2012. The company is targeting production of at least 4 million barrels a day until 2020 from booked reserves.

Refining Gap

BP plans to increase refining and marketing profit as it seeks to close the gap with Royal Dutch Shell Plc, Europe’s biggest oil company, and Exxon Mobil Corp. A year ago, the U.K. producer said 2007 refining earnings before tax fell short of competitors’ results by an estimated $3.5 billion to $4 billion. It recouped about half that amount last year.

BP may be “completely back performing in line with our super-major competitors” by the end of this year, Iain Conn, who heads the refining and marketing business, said on the podcast last month.

The company will be able to maintain investments and pay dividends with oil prices below $50 or $60 a barrel as production rises, refining throughput increases and costs fall, Chief Executive Officer Tony Hayward said on the podcast. “If I look at BP today we are cash balanced,” he said.

Oil Plunge

Crude traded in New York has dropped about 72 percent since reaching a record $147.27 a barrel in July. Oil for April delivery rose as much as 2.2 percent today to $41.05 a barrel.

BP reported its first quarterly loss in seven years last month and predicted demand for crude will continue to fall in 2009 as the global recession deepens.

The producer was cut to “market-perform” from “outperform” at Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. today because of production concerns.

BP sank as much as 4.1 percent to 405.5 pence in London trading. The stock was at 410.25 pence as of 1:13 p.m. local time, extending its decline this year to 21 percent.

BP gradually restored operations at its Texas City refinery last year after shutting the plant before Hurricane Rita in September 2005, eight months after an explosion that killed 15 workers. The company’s facility in Whiting, Indiana, has raised output since a fire in April 2007 halted operations.

The producer plans to cut supply and field-service costs, which have doubled since 2004 following record oil prices.

“I’m going to optimize the supply chain, in particular where we see a deflating cost rate,” Inglis said. “We need to ensure that every dollar of capital we spend in ‘09 is targeted at projects which are truly ready for execution.”

Last year, BP based its earnings-gap estimates on the Global Indicator Margin, a broad measure of refining profitability, at $7.50 a barrel.

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





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Oil Rebounds After 10% Drop as OPEC May Act to Support Prices

By Robert Tuttle and Grant Smith

March 3 (Bloomberg) -- Oil gained, after dropping 10 percent yesterday, on speculation OPEC may take further steps to support prices at its meeting later this month.

The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, implementing its biggest-ever supply cut, will devise a “solution” to boost oil prices when it meets on March 15, Iran’s oil minister said. The group supplies 41 percent of the world’s oil. Royal Dutch Shell Plc said it shut some production in Nigeria after a pipeline was attacked over the weekend.

“If the market fails to build on last week’s rally and it drops below $40, you are going to hear the drumbeat for another cut,” said Gene McGillian, an analyst at Tradition Energy in Stamford, Connecticut.

Crude oil for April delivery rose $1.61, or 4 percent, to $41.76 a barrel at 9:15 a.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The price has fallen 59 percent in the past year.

Yesterday, futures plunged $4.61, or 10 percent, to settle at $40.15 a barrel, the biggest one-day drop since Jan. 7, after global equity markets slumped on reports of manufacturing declines in China and the U.S. Prices are down 5.8 percent so far this year.

OPEC members “will review the situation of the market on March 15 in Vienna and introduce a new solution to improve oil prices,” Iran’s oil minister, Gholamhossein Nozari, was quoted as saying today by the official Islamic Republic News Agency.

“Even with the economic deterioration that triggered yesterday’s selloff, $40 is so far proving to be a floor,” said Christopher Bellew, senior broker at Bache Commodities Ltd. in London. “The combination of OPEC production cuts and colder weather is tightening the market and giving support.”

Oil May Fall

Oil may fall as low as $32.70 a barrel if prices today close below the highest level reached in 1990 before the conflict between the U.S. and Iraq, according to technical analysis by PVM Oil Associates Ltd. On Oct. 10, 1990, oil rose to $41.15 as the U.S. prepared its military response to Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait.

Brent crude oil for April settlement rose $1.52, or 3.6 percent, to $43.73 a barrel on London’s ICE Futures Europe exchange. It declined 8.9 percent yesterday.

U.S. oil supplies probably rose last week as imports climbed and refineries ramped up operating rates, a Bloomberg News survey showed.

Crude-oil stockpiles increased 1 million barrels in the week ended Feb. 27 from 351.3 million the week before, according to the median of eight estimates by analysts. The Energy Department is scheduled to release its weekly report tomorrow at 10:30 a.m. in Washington.

“With OPEC cutting and the refiners operating at low levels, any builds that we’re seeing are really indicating poor demand,” said Victor Shum, a senior principal at consultants Purvin & Gertz Inc. in Singapore.

Refineries probably operated at 81.9 percent of capacity, up 0.5 percentage point from the week before, the survey showed.

Gasoline Stockpiles

Gasoline stockpiles probably dropped 750,000 barrels from 215.3 million in the prior week, according to the survey. Supplies of distillate fuel, a category that includes heating oil and diesel, probably fell 1.35 million barrels from 141.6 million.

OPEC “will likely” reduce supplies to support prices, Algerian Oil Minister Chakib Khelil said in an interview in Madrid yesterday.

OPEC members have reached almost 100 percent compliance with existing cuts at the end of February, Khelil said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Robert Tuttle in New York at rtuttle@bloomberg.net; Grant Smith in London at gsmith52@bloomberg.net





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Yen Weakens as Australian Rate Decision Boosts Yield Demand

By Ye Xie and Kim-Mai Cutler

March 3 (Bloomberg) -- The yen weakened against all of the major currencies as Australia’s Reserve Bank unexpectedly left its target lending rate unchanged for the first time in seven months, boosting demand for higher-yielding assets.

Japan’s currency declined for the first time in three days versus the euro as stocks climbed. The dollar erased its drop as pending home resales in the U.S. fell in January more than economists forecast and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said aid to the banking system may need to be expanded.

“The decision by the RBA to hold rates steady and a lack of corporate-loss announcements encouraged a less risk- restrictive environment,” said Jack Spitz, managing director of foreign exchange at National Bank in Toronto. “There are momentum traders buying the Aussie and the New Zealand dollar.”

The U.S. currency traded at $1.2577 per euro at 10:12 a.m. in New York, from $1.2578 yesterday, after earlier dropping 0.3 percent. The yen lost 1 percent to 123.78 per euro from 122.58. The dollar gained 1 percent to 98.40 yen from 97.45.

The Dollar Index, which the ICE uses to track the greenback versus the euro, yen, pound, Swiss franc, Canadian dollar and Swedish krona, was little changed after earlier declining as much as 0.7 percent. It reached 89.003 yesterday, the highest since April 2006, as investors sought safety in the world’s reserve currency after insurer American International Group Inc. posted a record $61.7 billion loss in the fourth quarter and got more government support.

South Korea’s Won

South Korea’s won advanced from near an 11-year low against the dollar on speculation policy makers intervened to stem the currency’s slump. It gained 1.2 percent to 1,552.15 per dollar after declining yesterday to 1,595.50, the weakest since 1997.

The yen also slid today as public broadcaster NHK reported that Toyota Motor Corp., forecasting its first loss in 59 years, may seek about $2 billion in government loans.

Japan’s currency weakened 7.9 percent versus the dollar in February, its worst month since August 1995, on concern the deepening recession in Japan undermined the currency as a haven.

The yen is 16 percent “overvalued” against the dollar, which “sits uncomfortably with the challenges facing the Japanese economy and the deterioration in the external balance,” wrote Fiona Lake, a Hong Kong-based analyst at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., in a research note today. “The headwinds facing the Japanese economy warrant an even weaker yen.”

Australian Dollar

Australia’s currency gained as much as 2.6 percent to 64.63 U.S. cents, the biggest intraday advance since Feb. 6, and rose 3.2 percent to 63.36 yen after the Reserve Bank left the overnight cash target at 3.25 percent. Only four of 18 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News forecast the decision, with the rest expecting a cut of at least a quarter-percentage point. The Aussie advanced from a one-month low of 62.87 cents.

New Zealand’s dollar climbed 0.8 percent to 49.65 cents after reaching 49.13 yesterday, the lowest level since November 2002. It added 2.2 percent to 48.56 yen.

Demand for higher-yielding currencies was also supported by speculation an Australian government report tomorrow will show the nation’s gross domestic product rose 0.2 percent last quarter from the prior three months.

“The Aussie dollar should sustain this bounce because people will quickly turn to the GDP number tomorrow,” said Sean Callow, a Sydney-based currency strategist at Westpac, Australia’s fourth-largest bank by assets. “It looks like it will be a positive number, which in global terms is unique.”

Real’s Gain

The Brazilian real and South African rand gained on investors’ increased demand for higher-yielding, emerging-market assets. The real rose 1.3 percent to 2.4169 per dollar after reaching 2.4501 yesterday, the weakest level since Dec. 19. The rand advanced 0.9 percent to 10.4354 per dollar today.

Benchmark rates are 0.1 percent in Japan and as low as zero in the U.S., compared with 3.5 percent in New Zealand, 10.5 percent in South Africa and 2 percent in South Korea. The difference encourages investors to borrow in Japan and the U.S. and invest in higher-yielding assets elsewhere.

The European Central bank will lower the main refinancing rate on March 5 by a half-percentage point to 1.5 percent, and the Bank of England will halve its target to 0.5 percent, according to the median forecasts of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News.

Canada’s dollar slid 0.2 percent to C$1.2931 versus the greenback after the Bank of Canada cut its target lending rate by a half-percentage point to a record low of 0.5 percent. Fifteen of 23 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News predicted today’s reduction.

U.S. Housing

An index of pending home resales decreased 7.7 percent in January after a 4.8 percent gain in the previous month, the National Association of Realtors reported today. The median forecast of 32 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News was for a 3.5 percent drop

Policy makers may need to expand aid to the banking system beyond the $700 billion already approved and take other measures even at the cost of soaring fiscal deficits, Bernanke said today in testimony prepared for the Senate Budget Committee.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index advanced 1.3 percent after closing yesterday at the lowest level since October 1996.

To contact the reporters on this story: Kim-Mai Cutler in London at kcutler@bloomberg.net; Ye Xie in New York at yxie6@bloomberg.net





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