Economic Calendar

Monday, July 6, 2009

Currency Technical Report

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by FX Greece | Jul 06 09 12:57 GMT |

EUR/USD

Resistance: 1,3940-50 / 1,3980-00 / 1,4015-30 / 1,4080-00
Support : 1,3880-90 / 1,3830-40 / 1,3780-00 / 1,3730-50

Comment: The move remains within the sideways formation continues, while the dollar rose within its ranges last week, due to the sharp decline in stock markets and the rise in risk aversion. This week's US calendar is almost empty and dollar bears are likely to take their profits, leading to further dollar rise. Investor's sentiment is still negative, and we will wait for comments from G8 meeting in order to see if they will be able to change it.

Technically, as we can see in the daily chart, euro remains within the sideways formation between 1,3800-30 and 1,4180-00. We will wait for the exit for further signs. A move towards 1,3800 and a downward break should be more possible, while a move below last month's lows at 1,3730-50, would confirm the uptrend reversal.

The day starts negative and first support at 1,3870-90 should be reached. Next support emerges at 1,3820-40, where the lower part of the formation is found. A break would lead to 1,3730-50, which is not likely to be breached without an upward reaction first.

The area of 1,3940-50 is now turned into a resistance, followed by previous tops at 1,4000-20..

*STRATEGY:

We remain bearish, trying sell positions at current levels (1.3940), adding more at any reactions. Our target will be at 1,3880-90 or even 1,3830-40..

FX Greece

DISCLAIMER

  1. The details and information included in the above analysis, are part of research based exclusively on currency charts and are of purely instructional and educational nature. None of the information featuring in the analysis can be considered as an invitation for opening positions in FOREX market or in the market of forward contracts or any securities listed on an organized or unorganized market.
  2. We assume no responsibility for any kind of losses ,profits or property loss resulting, in whole or in part, from acts that are based either directly or indirectly on the processing or the use of information, details and strategies, the reader may find in the analysis. The readers hold full responsibility for the use and the results of their actions.
  3. The recipients of the analysis must acknowledge and accept that investment choices of any kind, especially concerning the FOREX market, contain risks (high, low and occasionally zero) of reduction or even loss of their investment. Therefore, they should always be cautious prior to any kind of action.
  4. We reserve the right to change the terms and the characteristics of the analysis.
  5. The contents of the analysis are solely intended for personal use. They may not be retransmitted, reproduced, distributed, published, adapted, modified or assigned to third parties in any way whatsoever. Anyone having access to them is required to comply with the law provisions on the protection of third party intellectual property rights.




Read more...

FX Thoughts for the Day

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by Kshitij Consultancy Services | Jul 06 09 13:09 GMT |

USD-CHF @ 1.0935/38...Ranged, sell rally

R: 1.0993-1008-1019 / 1.1065
S: 1.0917-0897 / 1.0855 / 1.0805-0795

There is significant Range Resistance + Moving Average Resistance in the 1.0990-1025 region, as mentioned in the morning. Assuming this to hold, there should be good chances of a fall towards 1.0750 over the coming days. A rise past 1.1065 (projected Max High on the 3-day chart) would suggest that the "Range Trade" idea might be wrong.

Limit Sell Order:

  • Sell USD 20K at 1.0980.
  • SL 1.1070 for USD 10K, TP 1.0860
  • SL 1.1090 for USD 10K, TP 1.0770

Cable GBP-USD @ 1.6152/55...Bearish, may be sold on rally

R: 1.6180 / 1.6250-70 / 1.6305-15
S: 1.6082 / 1.6037

The Pound has seen a sharp fall today after having broken below the 200-MA on the 4-hour chart at 1.6294. The fall had started after the Pound closed below the 21-day MA (1.6382) on Friday. By all conventional chart reading, the Pound is now in Bear territory. The chances of a rise to 1.65 are very low now. Instead, the chances of a further fall towards 1.60 and 1.58 have increased.

On the downside, there is some Support at 1.6082, the projected Max Low for the Day. If and while this holds, we might see a small rally towards 1.6180-6205, before the fall resumes. In case of a rise past 1.6180, however, today's fall to 1.6100 may turn out to be a false break of the 1.6180-6610 range and might lead to a further rise towards 1.6280-6320 tomorrow.

Aussie AUDUSD @ 0.7899/7902...Resistance at 0.7925

R: 0.7924/ 0.7989/ 0.8038
S: 0.7835/ 0.7804/ 0.7751

Aussie has fallen below trendline Support on the 4 hr chart (joining lows at 0.7789 on 23-June and at 0.7902 on 02-Jul) and may now fall further towards 0.7835 horizontal line Support. If this support breaks, this pair may see a fall towards 0.7804 (Projected Max low for the day). Else, the pair may bounce back towards 200-MA Resistance on the 4-hr chart at 0.7989 after breaking the trendline Support turned Resistance (joining lows at 0.7789 on 23-Jun and at 0.7902 on 02-Jul).

Limit Sell Order:

  • Sell AUD 10K at 0.7920, SL 1.7955, TP 0.7860

Kshitij Consultancy Service
http://www.fxthoughts.com

Legal disclaimer and risk disclosure

These views/ forecasts/ suggestions, though proferred with the best of intentions, are based on our reading of the market at the time of writing. They are subject to change without notice.Though the information sources are believed to be reliable, the information is not guaranteed for accuracy. Those acting in the market on the basis of these are themselves responsibly for any profits or losses that might occur, without recourse to us. World financial markets, and especially the Foreign Exchange markets, are inherently risky and it is assumed that those who trade these markets are fully aware of the risk of real loss involved.




Read more...

Darling Wants to Give BoE More Powers to Revive UK

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by ecPulse.com | Jul 06 09 13:06 GMT |

Today the United Kingdom lacks major economic data yet the misery remains in the third quarter as they are still trying to contain the worst economic growth that hit them since the post war era despite the slight optimism we saw in the second quarter.

Last week, reminding you dear reader of the major events we saw the UK contract in the first quarter by 2.4 percent, marking the worst quarter since 1958 as it was revised downwards from 1.9 percent revised while the annualized GDP we saw that it contracted by 4.1 percent, the worst since 1948!

It was obvious that the nation contracted as a result of unemployment rates at 7.2% since the lack of pounds being spent in the nation further undermines growth prospects because now the nation needs money flowing to prosper correctly.

The central bank is already trying to exhaust all measures to stimulate economic growth as they have interest rates down to 0.50% the lowest since the banks foundation while later this week the MPC members will meet as they decide to once again leave them unchanged.

Also in other highlights for this week is the Group of Eight summit in which Prime Minister Gordon Brown will state the world economy is at a key point and the governments around the world should support banks as they are still not lending to consumers which will continue to hurt growth.

Brown is doing what it takes to once again gain popularity amongst Britons as lately he has been very unpopular as the people of the UK feel that the Labour Party is not doing enough to shore up economic growth.

While in other news, Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling, says that he will give the Bank of England more powers and the Financial Services Authority to avoid another financial shakedown. The central bank is already applying quantitative easing methods as they are buying gilts worth 125 billion pounds.

From the anticipations in the market that the BoE might continue to use different measures to help a recovery in the UK, right away weighed on the pound causing it to depreciate in the markets as investors feel that a recovery in the Kingdom is still from our sight. As of 12:18 GMT we see that that GBP/USD is being trading at 1.6142 while recording a high of 1.6328 and a low of 1.6096.

The UK stock markets also fell led from declining oil and metal prices which resulted in mining and energy company shares to decline as they marked the lowest level in nearly 2 months. As of 12:20 GMT the FTSE-100 index shed 46.82 points or 1.11% to 4,189.46 points.

As officials are continuing to use all possible measures to boost the economy out of recession, therefore is giving us more support that this crisis we are seeing in the economy will take longer than presumed to fully end.

Ecpulse

disclaimer: The content of ecPulse.com and any page in the website contain information for investors/traders and is not a recommendation to buy or sell currencies, stocks, gold, silver & energies, nor an offer to buy or sell currencies, stocks, gold, silver & energies. The information provided reflects the writers' opinions that deemed reliable but is not guaranteed as to accuracy or completeness. ecPulse is not liable for any losses or damages, monetary or otherwise that result. I recommend that anyone trades currencies, stocks, gold, silver & energies should do so with caution and consult with a broker before doing so. Prior performance may not be indicative of future performance. Currencies, stocks gold, silver &energies presented should be considered speculative with a high degree of volatility and risk


Read more...

Concerns Remain On A Prolonged Recession Prospects

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by ecPulse.com | Jul 06 09 13:21 GMT |

A light week is currently starting, leaving behind us a hectic week full with class “A” fundamentals, where the European Central Bank left their benchmark rates at 1.00%, a historic low, considering those rates the most appropriate at the time being. Moreover, the central bank released out details of the 60 billion euro’s plan, which will start taking place today.

The bank will start purchasing bonds maturing between three and ten years, as the bonds purchased must be eligible under this program. As a start, the bank will use a minimum of 500 million euro’s, the European Central Bank is currently studying the markets, they won’t inject any further cash unless the situation needed, especially they fear any spur of inflationary pressures in the sixteen nations.

The actions taken by the European Central Bank came to follow other policy makers, the endless deterioration which resulted in the first recession sine euro’s inception, is going to take some time to fade away, where the economy will continue to witness further contractions with some projections that it would alter into deflationary threats.

What really concern us now are the elevated unemployment rates, according to the estimated readings the jobless rates reached to 9.5% the highest since 1999, where more downturns are projected as we might see this year a breach of 10.0% to rally reaching 11.5% levels in 2011. The eroded profits seen by companies across the sixteen nations was the main reason behind those elevated levels, because companies and financial institutions had to demobilize workers in order to reduce their expenses that escalated surpassing their revenue, especially they have been reporting losses for a long period of time.

Moreover, we have another issue known as the falling consumer prices that we won’t really consider heavily because the billion injected in financial markets will be enough to spur inflationary pressures in the upcoming period along with the incline seen to crude prices as it diffuse back some inflationary pressures. According to the flash estimate, consumer prices fell into the negative levels for the first time on record to -0.1% from the previous flat estimate.

It is all linked into a closed circle, okay companies are demobilizing workers but those workers are also considered consumers, which mean that narrowed household incomes, more layoffs will continue to anchor spending further more which would eventually cripple the overall growth preventing it from heading into the previously seen wider expansions.

Therefore, we can’t hold on a total optimism that an expansion would take place any time soon because the endless downturn will continue to create serious obstacles in on the recovery path, that why projections of an expansion will take place in the second half of 2010.

Ecpulse

disclaimer: The content of ecPulse.com and any page in the website contain information for investors/traders and is not a recommendation to buy or sell currencies, stocks, gold, silver & energies, nor an offer to buy or sell currencies, stocks, gold, silver & energies. The information provided reflects the writers' opinions that deemed reliable but is not guaranteed as to accuracy or completeness. ecPulse is not liable for any losses or damages, monetary or otherwise that result. I recommend that anyone trades currencies, stocks, gold, silver & energies should do so with caution and consult with a broker before doing so. Prior performance may not be indicative of future performance. Currencies, stocks gold, silver &energies presented should be considered speculative with a high degree of volatility and risk





Read more...

Afternoon Forex Overview

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by Dukascopy Swiss FX Group | Jul 06 09 14:29 GMT |

The Dollar opened the week on a strong foot. EURUSD started trading near the high of 1.3995 this morning in Asia, before Dollar buyers pushed the pair down to reach a low of 1.3880 at midday in Europe. Cable followed, but the move was amplified as the pair shed over 200 points from the 1.6328 top to fall as low as 1.6097. Main reason for the Pound's underperformance can be found in the market's growing worries that the British financial bailout efforts are falling short on expectations after recent data suggests that none of the major UK banks have been making use of the government guarantees since April.

The Japanese Yen was the strongest currency this morning with USDJPY shedding close to 100 pips from the day's high at 96.10. Heavy selling of EURJPY and GBPJPY contributed to the move, after traders reduced their long positions in the crosses. Views that the pre-summer rally in EURJPY ran out of steam ahead of the critical 140 level and that a deeper correction may be on hand, was the driving factor.

Market expectation

Both, the EURUSD and GBPUSD are currently trading at the lowest levels of the past few weeks. Over the course of the last 10 trading days, failure by the Pound and the Euro to rise up to higher levels has come with a reduction of bullish strategies. We have also noticed a number of major market making banks that have lowered their positive currency forecast in favor of a stronger US currency this summer.

Key economic data this week include trade balance in the US and Europe as well as industrial production. The market will particularly be interested to see whether the situation in Europe shows any sign of additional weakness. The 1st quarter GDP estimate may underline the negative development, although we judge that the data is too �old' and should have only limited impact to the current situation.

The Swiss Franc is likely to remain under pressure. As recent SNB action has shown, keeping EURCHF cross above the psychological 1.50 mark is a declared task by the Nationalbank. Since intervening on June 24th, EURCHF has shed roughly 50% of the gains made on that day, in order to keep some upside momentum officials may consider additional intervention rather sooner than later.

The JPY has been the strongest performing currency over the past few days. With a USDJPY low of 94.70 today, the pair has reached levels last seen in May. Strong support is seen at 93.85, a possible break through that level may trigger additional stop-loss selling and drive the pair to the year's low at 87.30.

Dukascopy Swiss FX Group

Legal disclaimer and risk disclosure

This overview can be used only for informational purposes. Dukascopy SA is not responsible for any losses arising from any investment based on any recommendation, forecast or other information herein contained.




Read more...

Treasury Plans to Limit Voting of Shares in Rescued Companies

By Robert Schmidt

July 6 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. Treasury signaled it intends to refrain from using stock acquired in rescued companies to influence corporate decisions, aside from approving board members and major transactions.

The Obama administration is set to release a policy on how it will vote the government’s shares in the coming weeks. On many resolutions offered by investors -- from demanding pro- environment policies to allowing domestic partner benefits to reining in executive bonuses -- the Treasury plans to ask that its ballots be counted in the same proportion as the votes of other stockholders so it won’t impact the results.

The rules are similar to an accord the government reached last month with Citigroup Inc. and guidance issued May 31 on ownership in the auto industry, said Treasury spokesman Andrew Williams. “Those are a good gauge of where we are going on this,” he said in an interview.

While the strategy may ease Wall Street concern of greater federal intrusion into commercial decision-making, it could spark tensions with labor and consumer-rights advocates who often use shareholder votes to advance social agendas in line with the Obama administration.

The Treasury is saying “this is not a policy tool, this is the result of a financial crisis,” said Stephen Myrow, a former department official who is now a consultant to hedge funds and other investment firms.

‘Reluctant’ Owner

The guidelines would also reflect statements from President Barack Obama, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and others that the government is a “reluctant” owner that wants to exit the private sector as soon as possible.

As part of their annual meetings, companies hold non- binding votes on a number proposals sponsored by shareholders, often unions and big pension funds. The resolutions can range in topic from executive pay to climate change to health-care reform.

On such issues, the Treasury plans to use proportional, or “mirror,” voting. The method, which directs that the shares be counted in the same proportion as those that have been already cast, is used by some brokers who hold large amounts of stock on behalf of clients that aren’t interested in exercising their proxy rights.

While the Treasury guidelines will draw a distinction between voting on major corporate matters and other issues, they may garner criticism from some advocates who say the government would be abdicating its responsibilities. The Securities and Exchange Commission, for example, tells investment advisers to vote their clients’ shares on issues that have an impact on a company’s bottom line.

‘Absentee Landlord’

“To say you are going to walk softly and carry a big stake is kind of ridiculous,” said Patrick McGurn, special counsel at proxy advisory company RiskMetrics Group in Rockville, Maryland. “It does beg the question of an absentee landlord, and that usually is a prescription for disaster.”

The government can still have a major influence on the companies it holds stakes in beyond the proxy process. On pay, for example, the administration has appointed Kenneth Feinberg, a Washington lawyer, to regulate executive compensation at seven companies that have received “exceptional” aid from taxpayers.

The Treasury proxy voting rules are being issued in the wake of the government’s agreement with Citigroup last month to trade some of the $25 billion of preferred shares acquired under the Troubled Asset Relief Program for common stock. The deal will make the U.S. the bank’s largest shareholder, giving it about a 34 percent stake.

Citigroup Role

In the Citigroup exchange offering documents, the government said it will mirror the votes of the other common shareholders, except in six areas: the election or removal of directors, approval of mergers or consolidation, the sale of “substantially all” of the assets, dissolution, the issuance of securities or amendments to the bank’s charter or bylaws.

In addition, the Treasury issued principles for managing its ownership stake in General Motors Corp. They say “the government will only vote on core governance issues, including the selection of a company’s board of directors and major corporate events or transactions.”

The Treasury added that while it aims to protect taxpayer interests, “the government intends to be extremely disciplined as to how it intends to use even these limited rights.”

Treasury spokesman Williams said that the department doesn’t have a date yet for releasing the guidelines. The rules aren’t likely to involve the government’s 77.9 percent holding in insurer American International Group Inc. because those shares are held in a trust on behalf of U.S. taxpayers.

‘No Desire’

Herb Allison, the Treasury’s assistant secretary overseeing the $700 billion bailout, told a Senate committee last month that the department will “very shortly” issue the policy.

“We have all heard the president as well as Secretary Geithner say the government has no desire to be a day-to-day manager of these companies,” Allison told the Senate Banking Committee at his June 4 nomination hearing. “It will be a shareholder.”

Such an approach makes sense for both taxpayers wanting their money protected and companies concerned about federal officials telling them what to do, said Kevin Petrasic, a banking attorney at the Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker law firm in Washington.

“It comes down to a balancing act: make sure there is accountability but also that the government doesn’t micromanage,” he said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Robert Schmidt in Washington at rschmidt5@bloomberg.net.





Read more...

Bank of Japan Says Recession Easing in All 9 Regions

By Mayumi Otsuma

July 6 (Bloomberg) -- The Bank of Japan became more optimistic about the economy in all nine regions for the first time since January 2006 and Governor Masaaki Shirakawa said exports and industrial production are recovering.

“The pace of economic deterioration was slower in all regions,” the central bank said in a quarterly report in Tokyo today. “Most regions, however, emphasized that their economies continued to be in a severe situation.”

Japan’s deepest postwar recession is abating, a government index of economic health showed today, yet central bank officials aren’t confident the rebound will be sustained. Shirakawa told the regional managers that while the economy will “show clearer evidence of leveling out over time,” businesses and households are likely to trim spending.


“Production may slow later this year and companies will probably continue to cut jobs and investment,” said Mari Iwashita, chief market economist at Daiwa SMBC Securities Co. in Tokyo. “The economy may resume falling after a temporary rebound, following a W-shaped path.”

Production is picking up because makers of cars, chemicals and electronic parts are shipping more products abroad to replenish inventories, the central bank said in today’s report. Output continues to slump at general machinery makers because companies are trimming investment.

Tankan Survey

The Bank of Japan’s Tankan business confidence survey last week showed companies plan to spend less on factories and equipment in the year ending March 31.

Toyota Motor Corp., which forecasts a second straight loss this year, plans to reduce spending 36 percent and cut pay for factory workers by 15 percent. Hitachi Construction Machinery Co. last month said the world market for digging equipment will contract by more than a third in the first half of the business year and rebound only 6 percent in the second half.

Companies in Osaka say exports and production started to turn around “earlier and stronger than expected,” according to Hideo Hayakawa, head of the central bank’s branch in the area, Japan’s second-largest metropolis and home to Sharp Corp. and Panasonic Corp.

Even so, “business managers are still unconfident about how the situation will develop after autumn,” Hayakawa said at a news briefing in Tokyo. “We can’t be optimistic about the outlook for domestic demand.”

Car Sales

In Nagoya, where Toyota is based, tax incentives for energy-efficient vehicles boosted sales “far beyond expectations,” said Junichi Maeda, head of the local branch. Maeda added that makers “aren’t overly optimistic about the outlook” because the measures will expire next March and sales of vehicles excluded from the program continue to stagnate.

Consumer spending remains “weak in all regions, reflecting the severe employment and income situation,” the central bank said. Japan’s unemployment rate climbed to a five- year high of 5.2 percent in May and job prospects slumped to an all-time low.

The coincident index climbed to 86.9 in May from 86 in April, the Cabinet Office said today in Tokyo. It was the second straight increase in the gauge, which comprises 11 indicators including factory production and retail sales.

Since lowering the overnight lending rate to 0.1 percent in December, the central bank has been buying commercial paper and corporate bonds from lenders in unprecedented steps to funnel cash to businesses. It has also offered to lend to commercial banks limitlessly in exchange for sufficient collateral. The programs expire on Sept. 30.

‘High Downside Risks’

Shirakawa said “high downside risks” to the economy remain and some companies are still struggling to borrow funds. Economists say the fragility of the rebound may prompt the central bank to extend the credit programs beyond September.

“Companies feel the economy is still in a severe state,” said Hiroaki Muto, a senior economist at Sumitomo Mitsui Asset Management Co. in Tokyo. “It’s questionable whether the central bank would dare to take action that could fuel speculation about its existing policy.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Mayumi Otsuma in Tokyo at motsuma@bloomberg.net



Read more...

Darling Promises Increased Powers for Bank of England, FSA

By Svenja O’Donnell

July 6 (Bloomberg) -- Chancellor of the Exchequer AlistairDarling promised more powers for the Bank of England and the Financial Services Authority to prevent a repeat of the crisis that plunged Britain into its worst recession in a generation.

“You’ll see a significant toughening up of the regulatory system,” Darling said in an interview with Sky News yesterday. “The regulators need to learn the lessons of what went wrong and we need to toughen up the regime to make sure that we reduce these risks.”

Darling will this week publish proposals on the future of banking regulation after a drying up of credit forced the government to spend more than a trillion pounds bailing out lenders and sent the economy into a tailspin. Prime Minister Gordon Brown has faced mounting criticism of his 1997 decision to strip the central bank of its supervisory role and hand it to a newly created FSA.

“We’ve got to toughen up the regulatory regime, both the Financial Services Authority and the Bank of England,” Darling said. “We’ve got to make sure we’ve got the right tools to do the job. But we’ve also got to make sure we go back to responsible behavior.”

The proposals “will leave no stone unturned to reform the financial sector and ensure the largest banks are regulated effectively,” according to a briefing note sent by Brown’s office yesterday.

Currently, the FSA regulates banks while the central bank oversees interest rates and assesses threats to the economy. Darling has said he wants to maintain the balance of power in the system as talk of a turf war grew after Bank of England Governor Mervyn King called for more authority.

Bank Bailouts

Since the credit crisis began, the U.K. has committed as much as 1.4 trillion pounds ($2.3 trillion) to underpin the banking system through direct investments, asset insurance and underwriting loans.

The government nationalized Northern Rock Plc after a run on its deposits in September 2007, seized Bradford & Bingley Plc and took controlling stakes in Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc and Lloyds Banking Group Plc.

Last week, the government said that the recession had begun three months earlier than previously thought, in April last year rather than June, and that gross domestic product fell 2.4 percent in the first quarter of this year, the most in 51 years.

Treasury Forecast

It means the recession already rivals that of the early 1980s, and most economists say it will be the worst since World War II. Darling stuck to his prediction of a return to growth by year-end.

Brown will tell Group of Eight leaders in Italy this week that banks are still not doing enough to lend and renew his plea for action as job losses mount, oil prices climb, investment slumps and countries increasingly resort to protectionism, his office said.

The damage wrought on the public finances has sparked a political row over spending, with the opposition Conservatives accusing Brown of misleading voters by claiming he can avoid spending cuts after the next election, due by June 2010.

Darling said the downturn had been sharper than he forecast at the time of the April budget, and signaled Britain’s 6 million public-sector workers face a squeeze on wages, setting the stage for a clash with unions that finance his ruling Labour Party.

‘Fair’ on Pay

“Public sector pay has got to reflect prevailing conditions. Inflation has gone way down,” Darling said. “We’ve got to be fair with regards to people who work in the private sector.” The government would review its pay policy “over the next few weeks,” he said.

The comments come after Steve Bundred, chief executive of the Audit Commission, in an article for the Observer newspaper called for severe pay restraint to help deliver the spending cuts he says are inevitable, whichever party wins the election.

The Sunday Times reported that civil servants are preparing proposals for public spending cuts of up to 20 percent after the next election amid concerns about the fiscal deficit, forecast by the Treasury to reach 12.4 percent of GDP in the year through March 2010.

Brown faces the prospect of a fresh revolt this week over his 2007 decision to abolish the bottom 10 percent tax rate, one of his last acts as finance minister before he succeeded Tony Blair.

Thirty Labour lawmakers led by Frank Field are threatening to block the entire budget in a vote on Tuesday unless the government compensates low-income families they say are still worse off.

The proposed blocking amendment would stop the levying of income taxes until the government agrees to pay full compensation, according to an e-mail sent by Field and fellow Labour lawmaker Greg Pope. The move has been backed by the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats, the statement said.

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




Read more...

India’s Mukherjee to Borrow Record to Fund Budget Gap

By Cherian Thomas and Kartik Goyal

July 6 (Bloomberg) -- India’s Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee announced plans to borrow a record 4.51 trillion rupees ($93 billion) to fund budget spending on roads, power and aid for the poor. Stocks, bonds and the currency slumped.

Unveiling the budget for the year to March 2010, Mukherjee said India’s fiscal deficit is expected to widen to a 16-year high of 6.8 percent of gross domestic product from a revised 6 percent. Indirect taxes will be streamlined through a goods and services tax, he said in his speech in New Delhi today.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s government is spending more to speed up economic growth and reduce poverty in a nation where malnutrition is worse than Sub-Saharan Africa. Stocks and the currency weakened on investor disappointment that Mukherjee didn’t announce major asset sales and concerns a ballooning budget deficit may lead to a credit-rating cut.

“The budget has failed to instill confidence as to how the government will achieve fiscal consolidation,” said Rupa Rege Nitsure, chief economist at state-owned Bank of Baroda in Mumbai. “With this kind of a deficit, there is a possibility that India’s rating may be downgraded.”

The Bombay Stock Exchange’s Sensitive Index fell the most in six months, declining 5.8 percent to 14,043.40 at the 3:30 p.m. close in Mumbai. The rupee weakened 1.3 percent, the most in almost six weeks, to 48.5375 against the dollar. The yield on the most-traded 6.07 percent note due May 2014 surged 22 basis points, the most since March 17, to 6.45 percent.

Election Victory

Mukherjee, 73, provided for only 11.2 billion rupees this year from the sale of stakes in state-run companies. Advisors to the finance minister, in a report on July 2, estimated the government could raise as much as 250 billion rupees annually over the next five years from asset sales.

Investor expectations of an acceleration in asset sales had surged after Prime Minister Singh won a stunning re-election victory in May, reducing his dependence in parliament on allies such as the communists who had opposed such offerings.

“Any downgrade would adversely affect the outlook for foreign investments into the country and hurt growth,” said Chetan Ahya, a regional economist at Morgan Stanley in Singapore.

Standard & Poor’s, which places India’s long-term local currency rating at BBB-, their lowest investment-grade level, said the 6.8 percent budget deficit for the year to March 2010 is “within the boundary of our expectation,” downplaying the risk of an immediate rating downgrade.

Credit Rating

Moody’s Investors Service has a rating of Ba2, two levels below investment grade, on India’s local-term local currency bonds, while Fitch Ratings have a BBB- long-term rating on India, their lowest investment-grade level.

Prime Minister Singh’s government plans to overhaul subsidies and is banking on 8 percent to 9 percent economic growth in the next two years to boost tax revenue and reduce the budget deficit to 5.5 percent of GDP by March 2011 and to 4 percent in the following 12 months.

“The proof of the pudding will be in the eating on this one,” said Robert Prior-Wandesforde, regional economist at HSBC Group Plc in Singapore. “India remains a long way from achieving a 9 percent growth rate on a sustained bases and will need a lot more in the way of infrastructure spending.”

India’s record growth of close to 9 percent in the five years ended March 31 helped tax revenue more than double since 2004. The $1.2 trillion economy expanded 6.7 percent last year, the slowest pace since 2003.

Infrastructure Spending

Today’s budget also allocates more to ports, power, roads and other infrastructure, where inadequacies shave about two percentage points off India’s growth rate, according to the finance ministry.

A goods and services tax will be introduced from April 1 next year, which will subsume all indirect taxes and will levy only value-added production so that manufacturers don’t pay taxes twice. The fringe benefits tax will be scrapped.

Mukherjee, who ran a closed economy as the finance minister in Indira Gandhi’s cabinet from 1982 to 1984, returned to the portfolio this year after serving as the defense and foreign minister during the bulk of Singh’s first five-year term.

To fulfill the government’s election promise, Mukherjee announced plans to provide rice and wheat at a subsidized rate of 3 rupees a kilogram. He also raised wages under the National Rural Employment Guarantee Act, which provides 100 days of work in a year to one member from a poor family.

Singh’s government wants to sustain growth rates of over 9 percent to help reduce poverty. The World Bank estimates 76 percent of Indians live on less than $2 a day, compared with 72 percent in the Sub-Saharan African nations. According to India’s National Family Health Survey, the child malnutrition rate in India is 46 percent, double that in Sub-Saharan Africa.

“The first challenge is to revert the economy back to the high GDP growth rate of 9 percent per annum at the earliest,” Mukherjee told parliament today. “The second challenge is to deepen and broaden the agenda for inclusive development.”




Read more...

Pound Falls on Report of BOE Purchases, Waning Earnings Outlook

By Anna Rascouet

July 6 (Bloomberg) -- The pound tumbled and 10-year gilt yields fell by the most in more than two weeks on speculation the Bank of England plans further action to boost the economy and as forecasts for weakening company earnings hurt stocks.

The British currency extended its first weekly drop against the dollar in a month after the Sunday Times said the central bank may increase its program of asset purchases by 25 billion pounds ($40 billion) amid signs that the economic recovery is petering out. Government bonds rose as the FTSE 100 Index slid to the lowest level in more than two months, boosting demand for the safety of fixed-income assets.

“We’re going to see this sterling move coming further as the market gets increasingly nervous about this recovery,” said Ian Stannard, a currency strategist at BNP Paribas SA in London. “Green shoots might be premature and sterling is going to be vulnerable given its cyclical characteristics.”

The pound dropped 1.5 percent to $1.6096, the lowest level since June 9, before trading at $1.6163 as of 2:01 p.m. in London. It fell 1.9 percent to 153.94 yen and lost 0.6 percent to 86.08 pence per euro.

The U.K. currency gained 11 percent against the dollar and euro this year. In the past two weeks, it dropped more than any of the 16 major currencies as the prospects of an early revival in Europe’s second-largest economy diminish. Gross domestic product will shrink 4.3 percent this year, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said June 2.

Expanded Plan

The Shadow Monetary Policy committee, a group of economists organized by the London-based Institute of Economic Affairs, called for the government to raise the 150-billion-pound limit on the Bank of England’s asset-purchase plan, the Sunday Times reported yesterday. The newspaper didn’t say where it got the information.

“Sterling is coming under increasing pressure as the market focuses on this week’s MPC announcement and the potential expansion of the quantitative-easing program,” Paul Day, chief market analyst at MIG Investments SA in Neuchatel, Switzerland, wrote in an e-mail today. “I continue to favor sterling to underperform after its recent good run.”

The Bank of England pledged to spend 125 billion pounds buying bonds in its so-called quantitative-easing program. The central bank will purchase 3.5 billion pounds in U.K. government bonds today and a further 3 billion pounds on July 8, the day before its next interest-rate decision.

Stocks fell around the world and government bonds advanced amid growing concern earnings at the biggest companies will keep falling in the coming three months. The FTSE fell as much as 1.5 percent to 4172.33, its lowest level since April 30.

Falling Profit

The year-over-year decline in profit for Standard & Poor’s 500 Index members may narrow to 21 percent from July through September, after declines of an estimated 34 percent in the second quarter and about 60 percent in the year’s first three months, according to data compiled by S&P and Bloomberg.

The yield on the 10-year gilt declined seven basis points to 3.66 percent after falling as low as 3.64 percent. The 4.5 percent security due March 2019 rose 0.55, or 5.5 pounds per 1,000-pound face amount, to 106.79. The yield on the two-year note fell five basis points to 1.19 percent.

U.K. government bonds lost investors 0.3 percent this month, compared with a gain of 0.3 percent for U.S. debt and 0.4 percent for German securities, according to Merrill Lynch & Co.’s U.K. Gilts, U.S. Treasury Master and German Federal Governments indexes.

To contact the reporter on this story: Anna Rascouet in London at arascouet@bloomberg.net





Read more...

Euro Won’t Get Support From ‘Fundamental Front,’ Helaba Predicts

By Justin Carrigan

July 6 (Bloomberg) -- The euro is unlikely to get support from fundamental data this week, with technical signals suggesting declines, Helaba Landesbank Hessen-Thueringen said.

If the currency drops below a range of $1.3950 to $1.3925, the next so-called support levels will be at $1.3890, $1.3829 and $1.3806, Ralf Umlauf, head of floor research at Helaba in Frankfurt, wrote in a research report today.

To contact the reporter on this story: Justin Carrigan in London at jcarrigan@bloomberg.net





Read more...

Canada’s Dollar Depreciates to 7-Week Low as Commodities Drop

By Chris Fournier

July 6 (Bloomberg) -- Canada’s dollar fell to the lowest in almost seven weeks against its U.S. counterpart as commodities such as crude oil and copper declined, diminishing the appeal of currencies linked to raw materials.

“The Canadian dollar continues to be pressured by lower crude oil prices,” said Michael Leavitt, a Montreal-based institutional-derivatives broker at MF Global Canada Co. “We’re looking for continued weakness to about the C$1.18 level.”

The Canadian currency fell 0.4 percent to C$1.1650 per U.S. dollar at 7:55 a.m. in Toronto, from C$1.1607 on July 3. It touched C$1.1679, the weakest since May 18. One Canadian dollar buys 85.83 U.S. cents.

Oil, Canada’s largest export, extended a three-week decline, dropping 4.4 percent to $63.78 a barrel. Copper fell for a third day in London. The nation relies on commodities for more than half its export revenue.

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





Read more...

Mexico’s Peso Falls as Calderon’s Party Loses Midterm Election

By Valerie Rota

July 6 (Bloomberg) -- Mexico’s peso fell as a partial vote count showed President Felipe Calderon’s party was defeated in midterm elections, fueling concern the government will struggle to push through laws aimed at buoying tax collection.

The peso weakened 0.4 percent to 13.2878 per U.S. dollar at 9:08 a.m. New York time, from 13.2307 on July 3. It touched 13.3755, the weakest since June 23.

Calderon’s National Action Party took 27.9 percent of the votes in the July 5 elections, while the opposition Institutional Revolutionary Party won 36.6 percent of the vote, according to 96.9 percent of all votes counted by the Federal Electoral Institute.

To contact the reporter on this story: Valerie Rota in Mexico City at vrota1@bloomberg.net.





Read more...

Dollar, Yen Rise as Economic View Encourages Demand for Safety

By Ye Xie and Lukanyo Mnyanda

July 6 (Bloomberg) -- The dollar and yen advanced against the euro on speculation the global economic recovery will be slow, encouraging demand for a refuge.

The U.S. and Japanese currencies rose as stocks around the world tumbled, with the MSCI World Index sliding as much as 0.9 percent. The dollar dropped versus the yen after Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said the world is too reliant on the U.S. currency and French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde called for increased global coordination of foreign exchange.

“We might be heading into an environment where the U.S. dollar can actually be much stronger than many people think,” said Hans-Guenter Redeker, head of global currency strategy at BNP Paribas SA in London, in an interview on Bloomberg Television. “You have to get a clear judgment how the economy is developing globally. The risk is pretty much skewed to the downside.”

The dollar advanced 0.6 percent to $1.3903 per euro at 8:39 a.m. in New York, from $1.3980 on July 3. The yen gained 1.4 percent to 132.44 per euro from 134.26 last week after earlier reaching 132.18, the strongest level since June 23. The yen appreciated 0.8 percent to 95.25 versus the dollar from 96.04.

The U.S. currency dropped against the yen after Russia and India said the global economy is too dependent on the U.S. currency and called for revisions to how $6.5 trillion in foreign-exchange reserves are managed. Their comments came as Group of Eight leaders prepared to meet in Italy this week.

‘Flawed’ System

“The dollar system, or the system based on the dollar and euro, have shown that they are flawed,” Medvedev said in an interview with the Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera, repeating his proposal for a new international reserve currency.

Authorities “must explore better coordination of exchange- rate policy,” Lagarde told reporters yesterday at a conference in Aix en Provence, France. India should diversify its $264.6 billion in foreign-exchange reserves and hold fewer dollars, Suresh Tendulkar, an economic adviser to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, said in a July 3 interview.

Stocks around the world extended losses, with Europe’s Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index sinking 1.6 percent. The MSCI Asia-Pacific Index of regional shares slipped 0.9 percent, and the Nikkei 225 Stock Average dropped 1.4 percent. Equities fell last week as the U.S. unemployment rate rose to 9.5 percent, a 26-year high.

Vice President Joe Biden said yesterday on the ABC news program “This Week” that the administration of President Barack Obama “misread the economy” when it forecast unemployment would peak at 8 percent if Congress enacted a $787 billion fiscal stimulus.

U.S. Jobs Report

“The aftereffects on risk appetite of the weak June U.S. employment report continue to be felt,” Steven Pearson, a foreign-exchange strategist at Bank of America Corp. in London, wrote in a report today. “Additionally, a larger-than-expected loss from a German banking group has served as a reminder that the financial outlook in Europe remains challenging.”

The euro fell against the dollar after IKB Deutsche Industriebank AG, Germany’s first victim of the subprime- mortgage crisis, said on July 4 it lost 580 million euros ($807 million) in the fiscal year ended March 31.

The 16-nation currency is unlikely to get support from fundamental data this week, with technical signals suggesting declines, according to Helaba Landesbank Hessen-Thueringen.

Outlook for Euro

If the euro drops below a range of $1.3950 to $1.3925, the next so-called support levels will be $1.3890, $1.3829 and $1.3806, Ralf Umlauf, head of floor research at Helaba in Frankfurt, wrote in a research report today.

Currency investors that use computer models to spot trends are suffering as markets are pulled in opposing directions. FX Concepts Inc., the world’s largest currency hedge fund, said it lost 5.4 percent in this year’s first five months. John W. Henry & Co.’s foreign-exchange fund told investors it lost 2 percent, after 2008’s 76 percent gain.

Deflationary pressure from the first global recession since World War II is being countered by the inflationary forces of record stimulus spending and currency printing across the globe.

Commerzbank AG is skeptical the yen will emerge as the “winner” against the dollar and euro because the economic slump in Japan is as severe as it is in Europe and the U.S.

“In the current situation, this makes particularly little sense,” a Commerzbank team led by Ulrich Leuchtmann in Frankfurt wrote today in a report. “The fundamental situation in Japan is at least as depressed as in the U.S. and in the euro zone. The green shoots in Japan are much more fragile.”

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





Read more...

Currency Funds Crushed on Dearth of Market Trends

By Ye Xie and Liz Capo McCormick

July 6 (Bloomberg) -- FX Concepts Inc., the world’s largest currency hedge fund, says it lost 5.4 percent in this year’s first five months. John W. Henry & Co.’s foreign-exchange fund told investors it lost 2 percent, after 2008’s 76 percent gain, the best since its 1986 launching.

Both use computer models to spot currency trends and, along with other momentum chasers, are getting hammered by this year’s lack of clear direction as the markets are pulled in opposing directions. Deflationary pressure from the first global recession since World War II is being countered by the inflationary forces of record stimulus spending and currency printing across the globe.

The ICE’s Dollar Index shows the U.S. currency fell 1.4 percent against a basket of six major currencies in this year’s first half, the smallest two-quarter change since 2006. Of four currency trading styles simulated by Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc indexes, trend-following is the year’s only loser, down 4.8 percent after also underperforming in June. In 2008, the tactic gained 9.9 percent, its best in five years.

“I am not trying to make any excuse, but certainly it has been difficult,” said John Taylor, chairman of New York-based FX Concepts, which manages about $12 billion. “Unfortunately, there’s lack of consistence of what’s happening. I am wondering how stupid the market can be for how long.”

‘Extremely Weak’

Deutsche Bank AG, which Euromoney Institutional Investor Plc ranks as last year’s biggest foreign-exchange trader, predicted in April that “extremely weak trends” among Group of 10 currencies in the previous six months “augers strong trends in the coming six months.”

Yet the RBS’s trend index’s 11.3 percent gain the following month, its best on record, was followed by a 1.3 percent drop in June. The Dollar Index -- which tracks the greenback against euros, yen, pounds, Canadian dollars, Swedish krona and Swiss francs -- has traded within 3 percent of its June 5 level for the past four weeks, the smallest such variation since July 2008. It rallied 8 percent in the first two months, only to decline 9 percent in the past four. The Dollar Index rose 0.4 percent today to 80.704 as of 10:43 a.m. in London.

So-called implied volatility on options for major exchange rates is down by half from the record 26.55 percent level it reached on Oct. 24, data compiled by New York-based JPMorgan Chase & Co. show.

Losing Streak

The currency fund of John W. Henry & Co., founded by and named for the owner of the Boston Red Sox baseball team, had a three-year losing streak from 2005 to 2007 as currency volatility dropped to record lows, leaving little room to profit from moves up or down.

It roared back last year along with volatility, gaining 33 percent in October by betting on the dollar and the yen strengthening as the U.S. mortgage market meltdown prompted traders to abandon higher-risk assets and pay back loans taken out in the two currencies.

This year, as last year’s trend evaporated and volatility plummeted, the fund lost money in the first three months, dropping 3.8 percent in March, its biggest decline since April 2008, the firm’s Web site says. It gained an estimated 3.6 percent in May by betting against the dollar, which lost 6.6 percent that month against the euro.

“The positive returns may mark an end to the corrective phase of our programs performance cycle,” wrote Kenneth Webster, the Boca Raton, Florida, company’s president and chief operating officer, in his May results letter to investors. “Whether the movements of May signal the start of another run of good performance based on new trends remains to be seen.”

Last Loss

FX Concepts’ Global Currency Program returned 11.5 percent last year, after gaining 11.9 percent in 2007 and 18.7 percent in 2006, according to Barclay Hedge, a Fairfield, Iowa-based firm that tracks and invests in hedge funds. The last time FX Concepts lost money was in 2004, when it fell 1.8 percent.

“There’s still no certainty,” said FX Concepts’ Taylor, who is betting on the dollar will appreciate. “I feel like I have a very good idea of what’s going to happen. So far it’s not happening.”

The global economy will contract 2.9 percent this year, the World Bank forecast on June 22, compared with a previous estimate of a 1.7 percent decline. The U.S. unemployment rate is likely to rise 9.7 percent next year, the highest since 1983, according to the median forecast of 60 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. To end the recession, the Federal Reserve has more than doubled its balance sheet to about $2 trillion in the past year, stoking inflation concerns.

‘Frustrating Task’

“History shows that the best reward-to-risk trades are in the direction of the long-term secular trend,” said Fall River Capital LLC in its Web site’s May performance note. “The recent rash of government intervention has made trading with this trend a frustrating task as the very rationale for intervention is to reverse the prevailing trend of a market.”

Fall River, which manages $300 million from Mequon, Wisconsin, recorded losses this year through May ranging from 0.28 percent to 4.8 percent in the currency sector of its four trading programs. It lost money betting on the franc’s rise after the Swiss National Bank intervened to weaken it and “caught us on the wrong side,” the company said.

Not all currency investors are doing badly. Half of 54 currency funds tracked by Deutsche Bank, have made money this year, down from 32 of 51 in 2008, said Torquil Wheatley, a manager for the bank in London.

‘High Frequency’

Among this year’s winners are “high-frequency” traders who make hundreds of transactions a day to exploit “micro trends,” he said. “Long-term momentum strategies have lost money since the beginning of the year. The really short-term trend followers have done well. They’ve dominated the year.”

Frank Pusateri, president of Adirondack Portfolio Management, a Cleverdale, New York, consulting firm, said that “trading a time frame beyond a week or two” is problematic this year. “You’ve been getting strong moves in one direction for one, or two, or three days and then they have been chopping back at you real quickly,” he said.

In this environment, humans are beating computers, according to Parker Global Strategies LLC, which tracks about 60 currency funds with $29 billion in combined assets. Discretionary traders, who usually base decisions on economic data, were up 0.92 percent in this year’s first five months, while funds reliant on mathematical models lost 0.28 percent, the Stamford, Connecticut, company said.

Past No Guide

Quantitative approaches based on historic trends will continue to struggle, said Richard Benson, who oversees $14 billion of currency funds at Millennium Asset Management in London. “Past is definitely not the guide to the future because we’ve never been through an environment like this of huge fiscal stimulus,” he said.

Decisions by central banks around the world to lower benchmark interest rates have contributed to lackluster performance, said Roddy Macpherson, investment director in Edinburgh at Scottish Widows Investment Partnership Ltd., which manages about 77 billion pounds ($125 billion). Rates are at 1 percent or less in the U.S., the U.K., Japan and the 16-nation euro-zone.

“Rate differential is moving sideways, and you cannot spot a trend,” he said. “When you have rates being capped, it’s difficult for these things to break out.”

The currency market’s relatively small moves this year may also be hurting U.S. commercial banks that execute transactions for traders and make money on the difference between buy and sell prices.

Consecutive Records

Banks’ revenue from foreign-exchange trading slid 40 percent to $2.4 billion in the first quarter after rising every quarter last year and reaching consecutive record levels in the final two, data from the U.S. Comptroller of the Currency show.

Benson said currency managers’ performance may improve as recovering economies diverge, with China, Brazil and other emerging economies better able to generate domestic growth than the U.S., Europe and Japan.

“Currencies are very attractive as an asset class,” Benson said. “Now we are at good levels especially for discretionary fund mangers to take risk.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Ye Xie in New York at yxie6@bloomberg.net; Liz Capo McCormick in New York at emccormick7@bloomberg.net.





Read more...

Chicago Corn Futures Fall to Lowest Since March; Soybeans Drop

By Luzi Ann Javier and Jae Hur

July 6 (Bloomberg) -- Corn futures fell to the lowest in four months in Chicago as favorable weather in the U.S., the world’s biggest grower and exporter of the crop, improved the outlook for yields. Soybeans also declined.

Sixteen of 23 traders and analysts surveyed by Bloomberg on July 2 said corn will fall this week, while 13 of 24 respondents forecast a decline in soybeans, on speculation warm weather and near-normal rainfall forecast for the Midwest, the largest U.S. growing region, will help crop development. The Lower Midwest will have warm weather this week, after cool temperatures over the weekend, Accuweather.com said on its Web site yesterday.

“We’re seeing some of the yield risk premium perhaps coming out of the market,” Toby Hassall, research analyst at Commodity Warrants Australia Pty in Sydney, said by phone today. “Some of the concerns we had earlier in corn, which came from the delayed planting, are starting to disappear.”

Corn for December delivery slumped as much as 2.9 percent to $3.47 a bushel, the lowest since March 4, in electronic trading on the Chicago Board of Trade and was at $3.50 at 2:11 p.m. Singapore time.

Soybeans for November delivery, after the U.S. harvest, fell as much as 2.5 percent to $9.81 a bushel in Chicago, before trading at $9.895 a bushel.

In India, the world’s fourth-largest soybean meal exporter, the annual monsoon covered the entire country 12 days before the normal date, helping farmers sow corn, oilseeds and rice, according to a July 3 report by the India Meteorological Department. Below-average rains in June had delayed planting.

Monsoon Rains

Monsoon rains, the main source of irrigation water for the nation’s 235 million farmers, normally cover the entire country by July 15, the department said on its Web site.

Soybean meal for December delivery, the most-active contract on the Chicago Board of Trade, lost as much as 2.4 percent to $307.20 per 2,000 pounds, before trading at $310.40.

Wheat for September delivery lost as much as 0.6 percent to $5.26 a bushel and last traded at $5.2775 a bushel.

Western Australia, the nation’s biggest grain-growing region, may produce less grain from the current crop than a year earlier, in part as dry weather stymies yield potential.

Output of all grains may be 10 million tons to 12 million tons, the state’s Department of Agriculture and Food said today in a report on its Web site. Production from the previous harvest was 13.6 million tons, according to data from the Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics.

Wheat is the state’s biggest crop. Grain growers in Australia, the world’s fourth-largest wheat exporter, harvest their current crops starting from about November.

To contact the reporters on this story: Luzi Ann Javier in Manila javier@bloomberg.net; Jae Hur in Singapore at jhur1@bloomberg.net





Read more...

ETF Securities Palladium Holdings Rise 1.4% to Record

By Nicholas Larkin

July 6 (Bloomberg) -- Palladium held in ETF Securities Ltd.’s exchange-traded commodities rose 1.4 percent to a record 321,748 ounces on July 3 from 317,228 ounces the day before, according to the company’s Web site.

ETF Securities’ palladium assets gained 1.6 percent last week as the metal for immediate delivery in London added 0.7 percent to $247.75 an ounce in the period.

The company’s gold holdings, little changed on July 3 from the previous day, gained 0.7 percent last week as spot prices slipped 0.8 percent.

ETF Securities’ silver assets were unchanged on July 3 from the previous day and fell 4 percent last week, the data show. Platinum investment was also unchanged on July 3 and little changed for the week.

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





Read more...

Copper Declines as Inventory Increase Signals Demand Weakness

By Anna Stablum

July 6 (Bloomberg) -- Copper fell in London and New York as inventories continued to rise, signaling softer demand, and the dollar advanced.

Stockpiles in warehouses monitored by the London Metal Exchange, which declined for 40 straight sessions through July 2, gained for a second day. The U.S. Dollar Index, a gauge of the greenback’s value against six other currencies, rose as much as 0.6 percent, making dollar-priced commodities costlier for holders of other monies.

The drop “is a combination of rising stocks, a feeling perhaps that the summer slowdown is with us now and moves in the dollar,” said Alex Heath, head of industrial metals trading at RBC Capital Markets in London.

Copper for September delivery lost 3.9 percent to $2.2155 a pound at 8:50 a.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange’s Comex division. Copper for three-month delivery fell $109, or 2.2 percent, to $4,871 a metric ton by 1:34 p.m. on the LME. The contract slid 1.1 percent last week as government figures showed the U.S. jobless rate climbed to the highest since August 1983.

“You have had this change in sentiment, with the gradual realization that unemployment levels are rising and that this recession is going to run longer,” Heath said by phone.

Inventories of copper in LME-monitored warehouses rose 900 tons to 269,175 tons. Metal earmarked for delivery has declined to 4.8 percent of total stockpiles from 21 percent at the start of May. Stockpiles in Shanghai gained 6.9 percent to 59,980 tons last week, the Shanghai Futures Exchange said on July 3.

More Investment

The increase “puts pressure on the market,” Heath said. “In the short term, higher stocks are likely to continue.”

Lower stockpiles helped copper to jump 58 percent on the LME this year, rebounding with other industrial metals from plunges in 2008. In turn, rising prices helped to draw investors back to raw materials. Commodity assets under management rose $34 billion in the second quarter from the prior three months, Barclays Capital said July 2.

Fund inflows supported copper’s price “well above the marginal cost of production,” Jim Lennon, an analyst at Macquarie Bank Group Ltd. in London, said in a report today. He predicted slower Chinese imports of copper in July and August, citing a narrowing gap between prices of the metal in the London and Shanghai markets.

“Traders will lose about $100 a ton of copper imported into China, compared with receiving $300 a ton of profit in early 2009,” Lennon said. Along with a seasonal slowdown in Chinese domestic demand, this is likely to push the metal’s prices down by 10 percent to 15 percent in the current quarter, Lennon said in the report.

Chinese Imports

China’s fixed-asset investment growth is expected to slow, implying “a significant reduction in copper imports,” Michael Lewis, an analyst at Deutsche Bank AG in London, said in a report today. China now has excess copper inventories amounting to between 700,000 and 1 million tons after imports more than doubled so far this year, the bank said.

“Chinese GDP growth is set to slow from 13 percent in the second quarter of 2009 to under 5 percent by the first quarter of next year,” Lewis said in the report. Deutsche Bank predicted average prices for copper for immediate delivery of $4,197 a ton this year and $4,420 in 2010.

Among other LME metals for three-month delivery, aluminum slipped 1 percent to $1,585 a ton. Nickel fell 4.6 percent to $15,460 a ton. It reached $16,600 on July 1, the highest intraday price since Sept. 29. The metal, used in stainless steel, rose 56 percent in the second quarter.

“We believe prices already discount a strong recovery in the demand for stainless steel,” Eugen Weinberg, an analyst at Commerzbank AG in Frankfurt, said in a report today.

Lead eased 3 percent to $1,658 a ton, zinc declined 2 percent to $1,520 a ton, and tin was 1.2 percent lower at $14,225 a ton.

To contact the reporter on this story: Anna Stablum in London at astablum@bloomberg.net





Read more...