Economic Calendar

Monday, March 23, 2009

Currency Technical Report

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by FX Greece | Mar 23 09 13:23 GMT |

EUR/USD

Resistance: 1,3680/ 1,3720-30/ 1,3760-70/ 1,3820/ 1,3850-60/ 1,39103
Support: 1,3600-10/ 1,3530-40/ 1,3450/ 1,3400-10/ 1,3360/ 1,3320-30/ 1,3270/ 1,3230

Comment: Euro rallied last week against the dollar after FED's announcement and the positive sentiment remains also this week.
First basic targets are set at 1,3800-80, while a move resumption could lead to a triangle formation towards 1,4500 area. These scenarios are clear in the weekly chart. If the longer term scenario is accurate, euro should return to 1,3000 or even 1,2500 area.

In the short term, Friday's correction remained in terms of the uptrend and bulls gained momentum at the last tops (hourly chart). As long as prices remain above (1,3410-3510), a sideways consolidation and a move towards our higher targets at 1,3800 and 1,3850-80, is the most possible scenario.

Below 1,3410, a move towards 1,3300-20 or 1,3250-70 would be more likely.

Our upward scenarios will be cancelled if we see clear reversal signs in the daily chart, or after a break of 1,3230.

*STRATEGY :

The trend remains bullish and buy orders at the retracements remain our basic strategy, until reversal signs appear. We will use the lower Bollinger in the hourly chart or previous tops to set our entry levels… A rise resumption towards important resistance levels at 1,3800-10 or 1,3880-00, may be used for sell orders with stops above 1,3950.

FX Greece

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Technical Analysis Daily

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by iFOREX.bg | Mar 23 09 11:39 GMT |

USD/JPY 96.37 - 23 March

USD/JPY Open 95.95 High 96.60 Low 94.23 Close 95.90

In February, the Dollar/Yen increased sharply on the background of negative data on the Japanese economy after two unsuccessful attempts to drop under 88.00. Last week the currency couple sharply corrected after two weeks of consolidation and managed to hold above 94.50. On the weekly chart USD/JPY overcame the 94.60 resistance and formed a double bottom, suggesting development of technical growth with objectives towards the region of 101.50. On a daily chart the currency pair sharply dropped and settled under 96.50. And if USD/JPY remains under the above level, the risk of further decrease remains. At the same time we have a 4 hour chart there is a hammer formation, which provides valid signals for reduced bearish power and potential bullish correction towards the region of 97.40. Strengthening under the 94.50 support will signal for potential further reduction. Back above 96.50 may provoke growth.

Technical resistance levels: 97.00 98.15 99.35
Technical support levels: 95.45 94.55 93.60

Trading range: 96.25 - 96.90
Trend: Upward
Buy at 96.37 SL 96.07 TP 96.77

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



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Britain Should Refrain From Further Fiscal Stimulus, CBI Says

By Kitty Donaldson

March 23 (Bloomberg) -- The U.K. public finances are in an “alarming state” and Prime Minister Gordon Brown risks prolonging the economic slump if he embarks on a further budget giveaway, the Confederation of British Industry said today.

More tax cuts and spending pledges may encourage households to save rather than spend in anticipation of future tax increases and undermine the appeal of U.K. government debt, the business lobby said in a submission to Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling before the April 22 budget.

With the deficit soaring, the 20 billion-pound ($29 billion) stimulus package announced in November and monetary easing being undertaken by the Bank of England should instead be given time to work, the CBI said.

“There is no room for a fiscal stimulus of any kind in this budget,” Ian McCafferty, the CBI’s chief economic advisor, told reporters in London.

The government is receiving less money in taxes and increasing welfare spending as the worst recession since at least 1980 reduces profits and drives up unemployment. The CBI said the budget deficit is set to exceed 10 percent of gross domestic product, higher than Darling forecast in November.

The business lobby urged the government to maintain investment in capital projects such as schools and transport, and minimize the need for tax increases once the recession is over by freezing day-to-day spending at 587 billion pounds for several years from April 2011.

“Significant tax rises would act as a formidable barrier to private sector investment and net exports at a time when these will need to play a crucial role in driving the economy forward,” the business lobby said.

The CBI called on the government to drop plans to raise the rate of national insurance contributions, a payroll tax, on employers from 2011.

It also demanded the restoration of tax relief on empty properties to pre-2008 levels, saying firms were finding it hard to sell properties or find tenants and that there is evidence some were demolishing empty premises rather than pay business rates on them.

To contact the reporter on this story: Kitty Donaldson in London at kdonaldson1@bloomberg.net





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China’s Economy May Recover First From Global Slump

By Irene Shen

March 23 (Bloomberg) -- China’s economy may be the first to recover from the global recession as a 4 trillion yuan ($585 billion) stimulus package takes effect, a senior government researcher said.

“China has the ability to become the first in the world to step out of the crisis and keep stable growth for the mid and long term,” Zhang Yutai, director of the Development Research Center of the State Council, said in a live broadcast from the China Development Forum in Beijing yesterday.

The stimulus plan, which runs through 2010 and includes spending on roads, railways and houses, may add as much as 1.9 percentage points to this year’s expansion, Zhang said. Vice Premier Li Keqiang reaffirmed the government’s goal of 8 percent growth, saying some industries “have seen signs of recovery.”

The world’s third-biggest economy is showing “early signs” of stabilizing as government-backed investment counters a slump in exports, the World Bank said March 18. China is targeting an expansion even as world trade collapses and the global economy faces its first contraction since World War II.

Zhang’s comments echoed a state media report last month that quoted Premier Wen Jiabao as saying that China was likely to be the first major economy to recover.

The research head’s prediction of the likely contribution from stimulus spending was lower than some economists’ estimates. “Government-influenced” spending will account for three- quarters of the expansion this year, according to a World Bank report last week. Standard Chartered Bank says stimulus will contribute 3 percentage points.

Unemployment, Property

China faces tumbling exports, rising unemployment, and a sagging property market. Millions of migrant workers have lost their jobs as declining overseas orders force factories to scale back production or shut.

The World Bank cut last week its forecast for China’s growth this year to 6.5 percent from a previous 7.5 percent. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said it will reduce its estimate this month to between 6 percent and 7 percent as the global slump deepens. The International Monetary Fund sees a 6.7 percent expansion.

Gross domestic product expanded 6.8 percent in the fourth quarter, the weakest pace in seven years. The economy grew 9 percent for all of last year, down from 13 percent in 2007.

Lending and spending have surged as the stimulus package kicks in. Urban fixed-asset investment rose 26.5 percent in the first two months of 2009 and bank loans quadrupled in February.

“China has the potential to further boost domestic spending,” Zhu Zhixin, vice director of the National Development and Reform Commission, said at the forum.

Premier Wen said on March 13 that China has “adequate ammunition” to revive the economy and can add to the stimulus package at any time.

The government is planning a record 950 billion yuan budget deficit this year. The risk posed by the deficit is “under government control,” Wang Jun, vice minister of finance, said at the forum.

To contact the reporter on this story: Irene Shen in Shanghai at ishen4@bloomberg.net





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Trichet Says ECB May Be Unorthodox on Bank Financing, WSJ Says

By Simon Kennedy

March 23 (Bloomberg) -- European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said it is “pretty possible” that policy makers will keep taking unorthodox steps to spur bank lending, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing an interview.

“It’s pretty possible that we would continue to be non- conventional through the channel of bank financing,” Trichet told the newspaper, according to a transcript on its Web site. “This channel remains for us essential.”

With the 16-nation euro-area now in its worst recession since World War II, the ECB has sought to revive bank lending by offering financial companies unlimited amounts of cash for refinancing and widening the scope of debt it accepts as collateral.

“We will certainly continue to do whatever we think optimizes our situation,” he said. He repeated that the bank could cut its benchmark interest rate below the current record low of 1.5 percent and defended European governments against U.S. criticism that they haven’t eased fiscal policy enough.

Trichet told the newspaper that the strategy of focusing on banks was based on the fact that 70 percent of the euro-region’s financing comes from commercial banks and 30 percent by selling securities other than stocks, the reverse of the situation in the U.S.

He urged banks “to pass on to the real economy” the effects of low interest rates and high liquidity. “If I am shipping this message, it’s because we trust that this is not yet entirely done,” Trichet told the newspaper. He denied there was a “generalized case” of European banks derailed by toxic assets.

Zero Rates

While the Federal Reserve and Bank of Japan have cut their key rates to close to zero and the Bank of England’s is at 0.5 percent, Trichet said such low rates have “drawbacks” and are not “appropriate” in Europe. What counts is borrowing costs in markets, which are lower in Europe than in the U.S., he said.

“At times I see some observers looking at central banks as if they were participating in a race,” he said, according to the Journal. “But it is not a race.”

The Fed, Bank of Japan and other central banks have also begun buying assets to help reduce long-term rates, yet the ECB has so far resisted doing so. Trichet said the ECB had been generous with what collateral it accepts when making loans and that the European corporate securities market had “behaved properly in terms of volume” since January. As for government securities, it is important to note that the “risks” of central banks and governments are “clearly separated” in Europe, he said.

Regarding “possible outright purchases of securities in general I said that we are not pre-committed for any new decisions,” he said.

‘Gradual recovery’

Trichet repeated that 2009 would be a “very, very difficult” year for the European economy. He said there was scope for a “progressive gradual recovery” in 2010 even though most economies are in a “situation where the trend is downward.” The ECB would be “alert” to the risk of deflation although no expert anticipates it and wage and money supply data suggest it is not a threat, he said.

“We remain permanently alert,” he told the Journal.

The ECB president said it wasn’t justified to criticize European governments for not doing enough to end the slump. Rather than increasing spending, plans already hatched in the U.S. and Europe should be introduced as “efficiently and rapidly as possible,” he said.

Europe spends more on public programs and has a bigger social safety net than the U.S., he said. He urged the U.S. to be “quick” in enacting its plans to ease fiscal policy and to stabilize its financial system.

“There is a mutual understanding that when you take all into account, you see that on both sides of the Atlantic, what has been done on the fiscal side corresponds to the gravity of the situation,” he said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Simon Kennedy in Paris at skennedy4@bloomberg.net or





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Japan Manufacturer Sentiment Tumbles Most on Record

By Lily Nonomiya

March 23 (Bloomberg) -- Confidence among Japanese manufacturers slid the most in at least five years as a deepening global recession spurred record declines in exports and factory output, a government survey showed.

Sentiment among manufacturers was minus 66 points this quarter compared with minus 44.5 three months earlier, a joint survey by the Cabinet Office and Finance Ministry showed today. The drop was the biggest since the report began in 2004. A negative number means pessimists outnumber optimists.

Businesses said they will cut spending next fiscal year as the global collapse in demand erodes earnings. Prime Minister Taro Aso is preparing a stimulus package that may be twice as big as the 10 trillion yen ($104 billion) already pledged to revive an economy facing its worst recession since 1945.

“We’re far from an environment where companies can be optimistic,” said Yoshiki Shinke, a senior economist at Dai- Ichi Life Research Institute in Tokyo. “Companies may cut business investment more next fiscal year and we’re going to see job and wage cuts intensify.”

The yen traded at 96.18 per dollar at 9:48 a.m. in Tokyo from 95.93 before the report was published.

Finance Minister Kaoru Yosano told TV Asahi’s “Sunday Project” yesterday that additional stimulus of 20 trillion yen is “not out of line.”

Companies surveyed said they plan to slash spending on plant and equipment 29.4 percent in the year starting April 1, more than the 10.3 percent cutbacks projected this fiscal year.

Profit Outlook

Profits are estimated to slide 10.7 percent, less than the 41.2 percent drop anticipated in the year ending March 31.

“Companies think things will get better in the second half of the year; I think they’re over-optimistic,” said Masamichi Adachi, senior economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in Tokyo. Adachi said a worsening job market will put pressure on consumers.

The ratio of jobs available to each applicant fell at the fastest pace since 1992 in January. Toyota Motor Corp., which is forecasting its first net loss in almost six decades, said last week it will recruit the fewest graduates in Japan in 14 years next fiscal year.

The ruling Liberal Democratic Party may ask the government to bail out large companies struggling to obtain cash, LDP Secretary-General Hiroyuki Hosoda said in an interview on March 18. “Should a big company go bankrupt, 10,000 people could lose their jobs,” he said.

Tankan Survey

Today’s report offers a hint of the results likely to emerge in the Bank of Japan’s Tankan survey due April 1. That report, the nation’s most closely watched gauge of corporate confidence, will probably show sentiment among large manufacturers plunged to the lowest in more than 30 years, according to economists surveyed.

Unlike the Tankan, which measures the level of confidence, today’s survey examines the degree of change in sentiment from the previous quarter.

The Bank of Japan is surveying companies through the end of this month, making the Tankan Japan’s most current gauge of business confidence. The responses for today’s survey were collected through Feb. 25.

To contact the reporter on this story: Lily Nonomiya in Tokyo at lnonomiya@bloomberg.net





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New South Wales to Set Reserve Prices in Power Sale

By Angela Macdonald-Smith

March 23 (Bloomberg) -- New South Wales, Australia’s most- populous state, will set reserve prices for the power assets to be sold by the government to ensure taxpayers get “the best possible returns,” Energy Minister Ian Macdonald said.

While there should be no political impediment to the planned sale of electricity retailers, power trading contracts and new generator development sites, the economic crisis may affect the timetable, Macdonald said today at a conference in Sydney. Opposition to the sale from labor unions should be less than for an earlier, larger-scale sale plan, he said.

The state aims to complete the sale by year-end after it carries out consultations with potential bidders on the details of the process, Finance Minister Joe Tripodi said March 5. The sale may raise half the A$10 billion ($6.9 billion) earlier estimated after the plan was scaled back and as the credit crisis discourages bidders, Fitch Ratings said.

“We’re confident that this will be a contested process,” Macdonald said. “There’s no doubt market conditions are going to have to play a role in this strategy.”

AGL Energy Ltd. and Origin Energy Ltd., the nation’s two biggest electricity and gas retailers, have both said they may bid for assets in the sale. TRUenergy Pty, owned by CLP Holdings Ltd., said last week any investments in Australia are on hold due to uncertainty about the government’s carbon trading plans.

A government-backed carbon capture and storage project being carried out at Delta Electricity’s Munmorah power station on the state’s central coast may be expanded, Macdonald said. The investment cost would be shared between the state and federal governments, the coal industry and the generator, he said.

Japan, South Korea and China have expressed interest in the technology, which can be bolted onto existing coal-fired generators to reduce emissions blamed for global warming, the minister said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Angela Macdonald-Smith in Sydney at amacdonaldsm@bloomberg.net





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Crude Oil Rises as Dollar’s Decline Increases Commodity Demand

By Gavin Evans

March 23 (Bloomberg) -- Crude oil rose to the highest in almost four months in New York as the dollar extended its losses against the euro, increasing the investment appeal of commodities.

Oil advanced for a third day as the dollar’s decline improved the appeal of hard assets as an inflation hedge and made commodities cheaper for non-U.S. buyers. Crude for May delivery jumped 11 percent last week as the U.S. Federal Reserve announced new initiatives to lower interest rates and speculators turned bullish on oil for the first time in three weeks.

“Sentiment has definitely improved on the back of the Fed announcement,” said Toby Hassall, a research analyst at Commodity Warrants Australia Pty in Sydney. “We’re going to need further weakness in the dollar to really establish a base at $50.”

Crude oil for May delivery rose as much as 83 cents, or 1.6 percent, to $52.90 a barrel in after-hours electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. That was the highest since Dec. 1. Futures were at $52.51 at 9:45 a.m. in Singapore.

The contract rose 3 cents to $52.07 a barrel on March 20, taking its gain for the week to 11 percent. Prices surged after plans by the Federal Reserve to spend $1.15 trillion buying Treasuries and mortgage bonds sent the dollar to a 10-week low, making the commodity cheaper for buyers outside the U.S.

“There’s not much out there that suggests demand is really going to pick up in the near term,” Hassall said. “It will take time to flow through” and oil may prove vulnerable unless the dollar continues to push lower, he said.

Dollar, Economy

The dollar fell to $1.3619 per euro in early Asian trading from $1.3582 late in New York last week. The U.S. currency touched $1.3738 on March 19, the weakest level since Jan. 9.

Brent crude oil for May settlement rose as much as 98 cents, or 1.9 percent, to $52.20 a barrel on London’s ICE Futures Europe exchange, and was at $51.71 at 9:35 a.m. in Singapore. It climbed 1.1 percent to $51.22 on March 20, taking its gain for the week to 12 percent.

Gasoline consumption in the U.S., the world’s largest oil user, usually peaks during the nation’s summer holidays June through August. Memorial Day on May 25 marks the start of this year’s holiday season.

While the U.S. economy remains weak, oil should still get some benefit from that seasonal influence, Hassall said. The nation’s stockpiles of the fuel held the equivalent of 23.9 days of demand in the week ended March 13, down from 25.6 days a year earlier, the Department of Energy said last week.

Hedge-fund managers and other large speculators turned bullish on oil prices last week, according to U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission data.

Speculative long positions, or bets prices will rise, outnumbered short positions by 13,507 contracts on the New York Mercantile Exchange on March 17, the Washington-based commission said last week. Traders had bet on price declines in the previous two weeks.

To contact the reporter on this story: Gavin Evans in Wellington at gavinevans@bloomberg.net





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Nothing Creative About Newspapers’ Destruction: Albert R. Hunt

Commentary by Albert R. Hunt

March 23 (Bloomberg) -- The survival of Bank of America Corp. and American International Group Inc. may be critical to resolving the global financial crisis. A guess is that the bank will emerge as considerably smaller and stable, and AIG, like the Hindenburg zeppelin, will splinter into many pieces.

The fate of the New York Times, Los Angeles Times and other American newspapers, much less important economically, may more profoundly affect the destiny of the U.S.

Many industries are reeling these days. Austrian economist Joseph Schumpeter wrote of capitalism’s creative destruction where innovation generates new industries and companies and destroys older ones. A similar process takes place during slumps, where the economically unfit don’t survive.

The value of major banks and financial institutions has fallen some 75 percent during the economic decline; the devastation of American newspapers appears as great.

The Tribune Co. -- whose holdings include two once- towering papers, the L.A. Times and the Chicago Tribune -- has declared bankruptcy; so has the Philadelphia Inquirer. In the last month, a major newspaper in Seattle ended its print edition and another in Denver closed.

Survivors are floundering. The Star-Ledger of Newark, New Jersey’s largest newspaper, cut its staff almost in half; McClatchy Co., arguably the highest-quality chain, with papers in places like Miami and Charlotte, North Carolina, has reduced its editorial staff by a third since the middle of last year.

Overseas and Washington coverage has been decimated. The Baltimore Sun and Boston Globe have closed their foreign bureaus. In Washington, major organizations such as Newhouse, Copley and Media General have eliminated their bureaus, while others have downsized dramatically.

Borrowing From Slim

The New York Times, considered by many the world’s greatest newspaper, has seen its market value decline to about $635 million, less than one-tenth of what it once was. The company had to turn to Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim for a loan.

Some political conservatives thoughtlessly relish the prospect of a world without the New York Times and L.A. Times. What they ignore is that “about 85 percent of the news people get is initially generated by newspapers,” says Alex Jones, director of Harvard’s Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy.

As much as Rush Limbaugh may say he hates the New York Times, the newspaper is a feeder for him.

Many younger, upscale consumers say this isn’t a big deal, because the Internet is producing a plethora of news and information.

Walter Reed

There’s a two-word rejoinder: Walter Reed. A couple of years ago, two of the Washington Post’s best reporters spent nine months probing the maltreatment of wounded veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars at the Walter Reed Medical Center, supposedly the military’s finest rehabilitation center.

The stories generated outrage and produced real reforms. Disabled military men and women, as a result, receive far better care today.

No Internet outlets have the resources to do that story. Most scandals and revelations of corruption are exposed by newspapers. The crooked congressman, Randall “Duke” Cunningham of California, was sent to prison because of exposes by Copley News Service’s Washington bureau.

“In a world where power always seeks advantage, there is a critical need for a counter, and that takes resources,” says Jones, who’s publishing a book, “Losing the News.” Under current trends, he says, “it’s hard to calculate the damage that will be done to society by stories that aren’t done.”

Beyond Scandals

More than uncovering scandals is at stake. New York Times Managing Editor Jill Abramson says the newspaper has spent millions of dollars to maintain its Iraq coverage with multiple correspondents, photographers, videographers and Iraqi assistants. No Web site will do that.

What Web sites and blogs often do, for all their value, is polarize; liberals gravitate toward sites on the left, conservatives on the right.

Solutions are plentiful and thin. For newspapers, online services haven’t attracted the advertising that print editions enjoyed, and probably never will. Critics say news organizations made a mistake in not charging for content.

Sobering Reality

That may be, but the model for that approach is the Wall Street Journal, which started charging for its online site 13 years ago, attracted readers and didn’t cannibalize the print edition. Yet a sobering reality is that the Journal’s parent company, Dow Jones, not too long ago had a market capitalization of almost $7 billion; it was bought by Rupert Murdoch a year and half ago for $5.2 billion and experts say today its value is about 20 percent of that.

The French government is talking about subsidizing newspapers. Most newspaper people are adamant about keeping the government out of the business; some say that’s more rhetoric than reality.

“Whether it’s postal rates or exemptions from child-labor laws or joint-operating agreements, government has been involved,” says Jack Hamilton, dean of the School of Mass Communication at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge. “With today’s problems, we may have to think of where government can be helpful in encouraging newsgathering.” This might include targeted tax breaks or a new look at antitrust provisions on information sharing.

Looking to Foundations

Others look to the largess of foundations or wealthy individuals. The Poynter Institute has long run the St. Petersburg Times and Congressional Quarterly, two high-caliber newsgathering organizations, and the Christian Science church published the prestigious Christian Science Monitor.

Yet this year the print edition of the Monitor went out of business, and Poynter is looking to sell Congressional Quarterly. Grants for foreign coverage or specialized reporting might help, though only minimally.

Conceivably, new economic models will evolve. (Bloomberg News, where I work, is one of the few flourishing news organizations in the world, as readers pay a premium for Bloomberg’s data, analytics and news.)

Or maybe when the economy rebounds, newspapers will get a bounce, too, although the structural problems predated the financial crisis. And there may be costly casualties in the interim. That may not matter much for a vibrant economy. It matters a lot for a vibrant democracy.

(Albert R. Hunt is the executive editor for Washington at Bloomberg News. The opinions expressed are his own.)

To contact the writer of this column: Albert R. Hunt in Washingtont .





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Yen, Dollar Slide on Optimism Obama Plan to Aid Risk Appetite

By Yasuhiko Seki and Ron Harui

March 23 (Bloomberg) -- The yen and the dollar fell, with Japan’s currency touching a five-month low against the euro, on speculation new U.S. government steps to help banks deal with toxic assets will boost demand for higher-yielding currencies.

The dollar extended last week’s biggest decline since the 1985 Plaza Accord on speculation U.S. yields will drop following the Federal Reserve’s plan to buy Treasuries. South Korea’s won and Australia’s dollar surged against the yen as a government survey showed confidence among Japanese manufacturers fell the most on record this quarter, diminishing the currency’s allure as a shelter from the financial crisis.

“The so-called bad bank plan, aimed at removing bad loans from private banks, may improve prospects for riskier assets, including stocks and higher-yielding currencies,” said Yasuhide Yajima, senior economist at NLI Research Institute Ltd., a unit of Japan’s second-largest life insurer. The improved outlook for riskier assets “should reduce demand for safe-haven currencies,” he said.

The yen dropped to 131.30 per euro as of 11 a.m. in Tokyo from 130.29 on March 20. It touched 131.36, the lowest since Oct. 22. Japan’s currency eased to 96.22 per dollar from 95.94.

The dollar weakened to $1.3649 per euro from $1.3582 late in New York on March 20. The U.S. currency reached $1.3738 on March 19, the lowest level since Jan. 9.

The Obama administration outlines today regulatory changes aimed at avoiding a repeat of the financial crisis that’s crippled the U.S. banking system.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner intends to expand the Federal Reserve’s $1 trillion Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility to buy frozen assets, according to unidentified people familiar with the proposal.

Political Turmoil

Japan’s currency fell against the euro for a second day after the Asahi newspaper reported today that prosecutors will tomorrow indict an aide to Ichiro Ozawa, leader of the opposition Democratic Party of Japan, signaling further turmoil.

The yen dropped against all of the 16 most-traded after a survey by the Cabinet Office and Finance Ministry showed today that sentiment among large manufacturers was minus 66.0 points this quarter compared with minus 44.5 points three months earlier. A negative number means pessimists outnumber optimists. The government began compiling the report in 2004.

“Japan’s fundamentals including its economy are still deteriorating, casting doubt over the appeal of its currency,” said Tsutomu Soma, a bond and currency dealer at Okasan Securities Co. in Tokyo. “The trend for the yen is to weaken” to 131.05 per euro and 96.25 against the dollar today, he said.

Takanori Okubo, arrested March 3 on suspicion of falsely reporting donations, will be indicted by prosecutors for campaign funding violations, Asahi reported, without saying where it obtained the information.

Dollar Index

The ICE’s trade-weighted Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against the currencies of six major U.S. trading partners, fell 0.4 percent to 83.5. It dropped 4.1 percent last week, the biggest decrease since September 1985, when the U.S., U.K., France, Japan and West Germany agreed at New York’s Plaza Hotel to coordinate the devaluation of the dollar against the yen and the deutsche mark.

The Fed unexpectedly announced on March 18 that it will buy as much as $300 billion of Treasuries and increase purchases of agency mortgage-backed securities, to lower consumer borrowing costs, sparking speculation that dollar-denominated assets will lose yield advantage.

Yields Dropping

The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note dropped 0.26 percentage point last week in its biggest decrease since December. The difference in yield between 10-year debt in the U.S. and Japan narrowed to 122 basis points on March 18, the least in almost two months, down from 173 basis points on Feb. 27. It widened to 136.4 basis points today.

Foreigners hold about half of marketable Treasury debt outstanding. China, the biggest foreign holder, with $740 billion, is “worried” about its investment in Treasuries and wants assurances its money is safe, Premier Wen Jiabao said at a press briefing in Beijing two weeks ago.

Demand for the euro also increased after European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said in an interview with the Wall Street Journal that zero interest rates have “drawbacks” and would not be “appropriate.”

“The ECB is most reluctant to lowering interest rates,” said Yuji Saito,” Tokyo-based head of the foreign-exchange group at Societe Generale SA, France’s third-largest bank. This, combined by an additional support measure for eastern Europe, “should support the euro,” he said.

ECB council member Axel Weber also dismissed speculation the crisis might prompt a euro-region government to default.

Asian Currencies

“All this talk of euro-area sovereigns being in a long- term problem with fiscal budgets is just a lot of nonsense,” Weber told a German Marshall Fund conference in Brussels yesterday. “There is no sustainability problem whatsoever, it’s a pricing issue.”

South Korea’s won was the strongest among the 16 most-traded currencies against the U.S. dollar. The won gained 1.3 percent to 1,394.50 per dollar, according to Seoul Money Brokerage Services Ltd. It reached 1,373.50 on March 19, the highest since Feb. 9. Korea’s currency advanced 1.3 percent to 14.535 against the yen.

The currency strengthened 10 percent this month against the greenback, the best performance among Asia’s 10 most-traded currencies outside Japan, on speculation a widening current- account surplus will ease a shortage of dollars needed to pay overseas debt.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. today revised up its forecast for Korea’s current-account surplus in the first half of 2009 to $11 billion, from $7 billion, and reiterated its forecast that the won will gain 7.3 percent to 1,300 versus the U.S. currency within 12 months.

To contact the reporter on this story: Ron Harui in Singapore at rharui@bloomberg.net; Yasuhiko Seki in Tokyo at yseki5@bloomberg.net





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Euro Currency of Choice as Fed Easing Devalues Dollar

By Oliver Biggadike

March 23 (Bloomberg) -- Less than a month after lambasting European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet for failing to keep up with Ben S. Bernanke’s efforts to stem the recession, foreign-exchange traders are glad he’s behind the curve.

The 16-nation currency strengthened 7.5 percent versus the dollar since February, after tumbling 9.3 percent in the first two months of the year. JPMorgan Chase & Co., Morgan Stanley and Citigroup Inc. are advising investors to buy euros.

Traders are looking past forecasts from Germany’s Kiel- based IfW institute for the European Union economy to shrink 3.3 percent this year, and snapping up currencies where central bankers are resisting calls to purchase debt securities as a way of lowering interest rates and pump cash into their financial systems. Those options are becoming scarce after Federal Reserve Chairman Bernanke joined the Bank of England, Bank of Japan and Swiss National Bank in so-called quantitative easing.

“The dollar is a sell near term versus those currencies where quantitative easing is off the table,” said John Normand, head of currency strategy at JPMorgan in London. “The top on euro-dollar will come when the ECB looks likely to join the quantitative easing crowd. For now, it’s content to stay on the sidelines.”

The euro will probably rise 2.8 percent to $1.40 in a month after soaring 5.1 percent last week as long as the ECB refrains from purchasing assets, Normand predicted. The Euro Index, which tracks the currency against the dollar, pound, yen, Swiss franc and Swedish krona, climbed 2.6 percent to 118.03. The euro gained 0.4 percent today to $1.3630 as of 9:41 a.m. in Tokyo.

Fed Spending

The Fed said March 18 that it plans to expand its balance sheet by as much as $1.15 trillion as it buys up to $300 billion of U.S. government bonds and steps up purchases of mortgage securities. Bernanke’s goal is to reduce consumer borrowing rates such as those for mortgages and encourage banks to lend in an effort to boost the economy.

The trade-weighted Dollar Index, measured against the euro, yen, pound, Canadian dollar, Swiss franc and Swedish krona, posted its biggest one-day drop since 1971, tumbling 2.69 percent, and fell 4.1 percent for the week to 83.841.

“This is a historic moment -- the start of debasement of the world’s reserve currency,” wrote Alan Ruskin, head of international currency strategy in North America at RBS Greenwich Capital Markets Inc. in Greenwich, Connecticut. “It feels to many participants that in the grand sweep of history we are witnessing the end of ‘Rome’ on the Potomac.”

Shrinking Economy

U.S. gross domestic product shrank 6.2 percent last quarter, the most since 1982. The Congressional Budget Office said March 20 that President Barack Obama’s administration will generate a budget deficit of $1.85 trillion this year, and expenses will exceed revenue by a total $9.27 trillion between 2010 and 2019. That’s about $2.3 trillion more than the administration forecast. At 8.1 percent, the unemployment rate is the highest in more than a quarter century.

The flood of dollars also increases the chances for quicker inflation in the global economy, spurring demand for commodities and currencies of raw materials producers. The Standard & Poor’s GSCI Index of commodities is up 21 percent since Feb. 18 to 372.1680, and last week posted its biggest gain in two months, rising 8.6 percent.

“Quantitative easing across the board will diminish the fiat currencies as a store of value,” said Lee Hardman, a foreign-exchange strategist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. in London. “Investors may then seek refuge in harder currencies such as commodities.”

BHP’s Gain

Hardman recommends Norway’s krone, the Australian dollar and New Zealand dollar. Demand for Australian coal, iron ore and wool drove 17 consecutive years of economic expansion. Norway is the world’s fifth-largest oil producer and New Zealand relies on sales of milk powder, butter, cheese and aluminum.

Australia’s dollar climbed 4.4 percent last week to 68.69 U.S. cents, while the krone rallied 6.5 percent to 6.3773, the biggest gain since 1973 and the most among the 16 most-traded currencies. New Zealand’s dollar appreciated 6.4 percent to 55.87 U.S. cents. Melbourne-based BHP Billiton Ltd., the world’s largest mining company, climbed 1.6 percent to A$32.18 on the Australian stock exchange.

Trichet, 66, took over the ECB from the Netherlands’ Wim Duisenberg in November 2003. Under his watch, the euro appreciated to a peak of $1.6038 in July 2008 from about $1.15.

The currency began to slide as the ECB waited until October 2008 to cut interest rates as the global economy slowed, more than a year after Bernanke began slashing borrowing costs. The ECB’s main rate is 1.5 percent, compared with a target range of zero to 0.25 percent for the Fed.

‘Behind the Curve’

A drop in two-year German bund yields in February to the lowest relative to longer-maturity debt since 1997 was a sign that the ECB needs “to wake up to reality,” Komal Sri-Kumar, chief global strategist at Los Angeles-based TCW Asset Management, which oversees about $118 billion, said last month.

“European policy makers are behind the curve,” said Neil Mackinnon, chief economist and partner at ECU Group, a London- based hedge fund with about $1 billion in assets. “The European economy will sink deeper into depression.”

While the ECB has refrained from quantitative easing, the European Union has taken other steps to bolster the economy. EU leaders said March 20 that they will double to 50 billion euros ($68 billion) a credit line for countries in financial distress.

Even Mackinnon says the euro rally may be short-lived as the ECB cuts its main refinancing rate close to zero. He expects the currency to depreciate to $1.245. None of the 53 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg forecast the currency will return to its previous high of $1.6038.

Sufficient Strategy

“All major central banks will have to follow the Fed and adopt quantitative easing,” said Mackinnon, a former economist for the U.K. Treasury. “If the European policy makers are hoping they will get a free ride on the U.S. stimulus, hoping they will look more prudent, they are deluding themselves.”

Trichet said March 17 in a speech to business leaders in Paris that his policy of loaning banks unlimited funds is sufficient for now.

“In the context of the euro area, guaranteeing firms and households a steady access to credit largely means ensuring the banking system has appropriate liquidity,” Trichet said. “In the euro area, it is natural for ‘credit easing’ to be implemented primarily through the participation of banks.”

In a March 19 report titled ‘Sprint to Print,’ Morgan Stanley recommended selling the dollar against the euro, forecasting it will depreciate to $1.45 in a year.

‘Turning Point’

“This move may mark the turning point for the dollar,” wrote Morgan Stanley currency analysts led by Sophia Drossos and Ron Leven in New York. “The Fed’s action exposes the dollar to its vulnerabilities, but this leaves the euro and the yen facing appreciation.”

Citigroup’s London-based global head of currencies, Jim McCormick, said in a research report to clients last week that the euro may rise to $1.40. “We’ve been selling dollars and we’re now adding to that short,” he wrote in the report.

Samarjit Shankar, a director of strategy for the global markets group in Boston at Bank of New York Mellon, which administers more than $23 trillion, also predicts $1.40.

“You have Bernanke taking a page from Greenspan’s book and reflating assets,” said Shankar. Former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan cut interest rates to 1 percent in 2003, the lowest level since World War II, to boost growth after the 2001 recession. The ECB takes “a very orthodox, almost straitjacketed approach,” he said.

Buying Euro Calls

Werner Eppacher, head of foreign exchange at Deutsche Bank AG´s DWS Investment unit in Frankfurt, said he bought call options on the euro versus the dollar and used forwards to bet on the common currency gaining versus the greenback.

Calls give the buyer the right to purchase an asset at a predetermined price, and forwards are agreements to trade a currency pair in the future.

“The U.S. is facing more structural problems than other regions,” Eppacher said. “As soon as we have some moderation in financial markets, the conversation will go back to U.S. households deleveraging and external deficits, fiscal deficits, money printing.”

He predicts the euro will rise to $1.40 in six months, and the Australian dollar will appreciate to 75 U.S. cents.

“The euro is not rising on its own merits,” said Hans- Guenter Redeker, the London-based global head of currency strategy at BNP Paribas SA, France’s biggest bank. “The U.S. is exporting its expansionary monetary conditions abroad, which ultimately is very positive for equity markers and is going to be very positive for risk takers.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Oliver Biggadike in New York at obiggadike@bloomberg.net.





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BHP, Macarthur, Qantas Airways, Rio: Australia Equity Preview

By Shani Raja

March 23 (Bloomberg) -- The following is a list of companies whose shares may rise or fall in Australia. This preview includes news announced after markets closed on Friday. Prices are from Friday’s close unless otherwise stated.

The S&P/ASX 200 Index futures contract due in March dropped 0.6 percent to 3,467 at 6:59 a.m. in Sydney. The Bank of New York Australia ADR Index lost 0.9 percent. The S&P/ASX 200 Index slipped 0.4 percent to 3,465.80.

Mining shares: BHP Billiton Ltd. (BHP AU), the world’s largest mining company, advanced 3 percent to A$32.18. The company’s U.S.-traded receipts declined 1.3 percent in New York trading to the equivalent of A$32.23.

Aluminum Corp. of China, known as Chinalco, will get two seats on the board of Rio Tinto Group (RIO AU), according to Rio spokesman Nick Cobban. The world’s third-biggest mining company rose 3 percent to A$46.85.

Macarthur Coal Ltd. (MCC AU): Nathan Tinkler, the Australian investor who sold his 10 percent stake in Macarthur Coal Ltd. in May, said the stock represents “value for money” and won’t rule out a takeover bid, the Australian Financial Review said, citing an interview with Tinkler.

Macarthur Coal jumped 12 percent to A$3.50.

Qantas Airways Ltd. (QAN AU): Australia’s largest airline is set to cut as many as 100 senior executive jobs in a reorganization to cope with a slump in global air travel, the Australian Financial Review said, citing people it didn’t identify. Qantas fell 3.1 percent to A$1.69.

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





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Australian Resource Shares Rise; Japan Futures Fall on Earnings

By Masaki Kondo

March 23 (Bloomberg) -- Australian resource shares advanced as higher oil and metal prices lifted producers’ earnings prospects. Japan’s stock futures fell on concern earnings will deteriorate further.

BHP Billiton Ltd., the world’s biggest mining company, climbed 0.8 percent in Sydney after prices for crude and copper rose. U.S.-traded receipts of Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc. and Mizuho Financial Group Inc., Japan’s biggest banks, lost at least 3.3 percent from the closing price in Tokyo, after Credit Suisse Group AG said rising bad loans may cause the lenders to post annual losses. Sony Corp. slumped 3.4 percent after its mobile-phone affiliate predicted a first-quarter loss.

“Earnings for fiscal 2008 will undoubtedly turn out bad,” said Yoku Ihara, head of equity research at Retela Crea Securities Co. “Rising bankruptcies are putting pressures on banks, and nobody knows when demand for electronics and cars will recover.”

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index swung between gains and losses, and was up 0.3 percent to 3,477.30 as of 10:23 a.m. in Sydney. New Zealand’s NZX 50 Index was little changed at 2,599.40 in Wellington. In New York, the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index slid 2 percent on March 20.

Futures on Japan’s Nikkei 225 Stock Average expiring in March closed at 7,825 in Chicago, 0.4 percent lower than 7,860 in Osaka on March 19. Japan’s market was closed on March 20 for a national holiday.

Last week, the MSCI Asia Pacific Index gained 6.4 percent, the biggest weekly rally since August 2007, on optimism central banks and governments will step up efforts to avert a deepening of the global recession. Japanese Finance Minister Kaoru Yosano said yesterday that a new stimulus package would require trillions of yen and that a figure of 20 trillion yen ($209 billion) is “not out of line.”

Sony Ericsson

Crude oil for May delivery added as much as 1.6 percent to $52.90 a barrel today in after-hours electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Copper rose as much as 0.7 percent.

Mitsubishi UFJ may post a net loss of 430.9 billion yen and Mizuho may lose 436.6 billion yen as the value of shareholdings fall and bad-loan costs swell, Shinichi Ina, a Tokyo-based analyst for Credit Suisse, wrote in a report on March 19. He cut Mizuho to “neutral” from “outperform.”

Sony Ericsson, 50 percent owned by Tokyo-based Sony, said on March 20 that a pretax loss will reach as much as 390 million euros ($530 million) in the first three months of this year as demand wanes. Sony, the world’s second-biggest maker of consumer electronics, expects a record $2.7 billion operating loss for the year to March 31.

To contact the reporter for this story: Masaki Kondo in Tokyo at mkondo3@bloomberg.net.





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