Economic Calendar

Monday, July 27, 2009

Morning Forex Overview

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by Dukascopy Swiss FX Group | Jul 27 09 07:13 GMT |

Previous session overview

The dollar rose against the yen Monday in Asia on the back of a recovery in risk appetite, but dealers said further gains are likely to be limited due to selling orders related to forex options contracts.

The dollar climbed as high as JPY94.93, as rising Japanese stocks prompted players to buy risk-sensitive currencies such as the dollar and the euro, dealers said. Japan's benchmark Nikkei 225 Stock Average rose above 10,000 for the first time since July 1.

Still, the greenback won't be able to rise far above JPY95.00 in this global day because some players want to sell a massive amount of dollars around this level, dealers said.

The EUR strengthened against the dollar on Friday as data showed the euro zone economy is stabilizing and German business sentiment is also rising; the data suggested that economic activity in the region is improving. The German Ifo business climate index increased to 87.3 in July fm 85.9 (compared to the consensus forecast of a reading of 86.5) while German PMI manufacturing and services indices rose by more than expected. These 2 stronger-than-expected data boosted euro to intra-day high of USD1.4255 against the dollar in Europe; however, price later retreated in New York session as a drop in the U.S.

The British pound fell against the dollar after a report that showed the UK economy shrank more than expected. Domestic gross domestic product fell 0.8% in the second quarter, compared to forecasts of a 0.3% fall. The economy shrank 5.6% from the previous year. Also hurting the sterling is an index of services which fell 1.0% in May.

The Australian dollar pushed higher in thin trading Monday, while bond futures fell as risk appetite again ticked higher ahead of a keynote speech by Reserve Bank of Australia Governor Glenn Stevens on Tuesday.

Market expectation

The euro and dollar are little-changed against each other and the yen Monday, while sterling is slightly lower against its major rivals from some light technical pressure.

Meanwhile, traders are likely to watch resurging stock markets for hints about this week's risk tolerance.

European stocks are seen opening higher Monday as optimism remains infectious within the asset class with traders predicting there are still more gains to come in global equities following several days of rallies.

EURUSD currently trades around USD1.4245 with the underlying tone remaining positive. Above USD1.4260 to expose stops, which if triggered to open a move toward USD1.4290/00. Above USD1.4300 and the early June 2009 highs at USD1.4339 may move back into view. Support seen at USD1.4220, a break below to allow for a move toward USD1.4200/1.4190 with stops placed on a break below. Further demand placed toward the overnight low at USD1.4170.

Sellers include Japanese exporters and currency options players, who sold dollar-call/yen-put options contracts, with a JPY95.00 strike that will expire later in the global day analysts said. The sellers will lose money if the dollar is traded above the strike price when contracts expire.

Later this week, market attention will turn to moves in U.S. Treasury yields as the market prepares to absorb a record amount of bond supply, dealers said.

Analysts expect the RBA Governor will map out the near-term direction on monetary policy, in turn setting fresh direction for the local currency and interest rates market.

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.

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Confidence In South Korea Improves After The Government Interventions

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by ecPulse.com | Jul 27 09 07:11 GMT |

The South Korean economy started its fist steps toward recovery, since it started benefiting not only from the government interventions but also from the improvement in worldwide demand, increasing the chances that the economy might avoid seeing contraction, and this was good enough to ensure people and increase their confidence that reached to a seven years high.

The sentiment index in South Korea rose to 109 in July from the 106 in June, as any reading over 100 points to optimism while any reading below it indicates pessimism; this reading marks the highest in almost seven years, as people felt more confident since their government adopted the right policies to help the economy cope with the most severe worldwide financial crisis since World War II.

South Korea's economy grew by 2.3% during the second quarter of this year after avoiding in the first quarter as well to fall into contraction since it grew by 0.1%, and this expansion in the second three months of these years marks the best performance seen by the economy in almost six years.

This improvement is attributed to several factors, from which the most important are the stimulus policies adopted by the government which spent 67 trillion won or 52 billion dollars to labor market aid and infrastructure spending while 17.2 trillion won were given to households in order to support spending.

There is also the most aggressive easing in the monetary policy in 10 years, as the central bank cut the benchmark interest rate by 3.25% from October to February, this encouraged people to spend regardless the developments in the worldwide economy as sales in major department stores rose for the fourth consecutive month during June, and this was able to compensate for the decline in exports and the deterioration in worldwide trade.

Since the second quarter global demand also started to pick up as China started to see real recovery while many major economies stopped deteriorating and stability is finding its place now, this was able to give a considerable support to consumers and investors confidence, to get reflected not only on sales but also on The Kospi stock index which climbed 34% this year.

The only problem which the economy still faces in the weak job sector, as companies are still reluctant to start hiring since their income and profits didn't rise enough to determine them start spending, investing and increasing their working staff, therefore the unemployment levels remain elevated so the government should concentrate more on how to determine businesses to start hiring.

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






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Forex Technical Analysis

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by DeltaStock Inc. | Jul 27 09 07:41 GMT |

EUR/USD

Current level-1.4247

EUR/USD is in a broad consolidation, after bottoming at 1.2331 (Oct.28,2008). Technical indicators are neutral, and trading is situated above the 50- and 200-Day SMA, currently projected at 1.3064 and 1.3524.

The pair is in the third leg of the minor corrective wave above 1.4117, so expect a reversal around current levels, that should initiate a downtrend below 1.4171, towards 1.4050 support zone. Intraday bias is still positive and the expected reversal will be confirmed after a break below 1.4225

Resistance Support
intraday intraweek intraday intraweek
1.4274 1.4338 1.4171 1.3746
1.4338 1.4720 1.4050 1.35+

USD/JPY

Current level - 94.82

A short-term bottom has been set at 87.12 and a large consolidation is unfolding since. Trading is situated below the 50- and 200-day SMA, currently projected at 98.13 and 97.75.

Still in the minor consolidation below 95.29 and there is still a chance for on more downswing to 94.31 before next advance towards 96.12 resistance level.

Resistance Support
intraday intraweek intraday intraweek
95.29 96.52 94.31 89.60
96.52 101.45 93.07 87.12

GBP/USD

Current level- 1.6488

The pair is in an downtrend, after peaking at 1.6746. Trading is situated above the 50- and 200-day SMA, currently projected at 1.4778 and 1.5510.

After bottoming at 1.6379, the pair is in a minor uptrend, that is expected to peak around 1.6530 before next leg downwards, to 1.6292. The intraday bias is positive with a risk limit below 1.6470 support level.

Resistance Support
intraday intraweek intraday intraweek
1.6585 1.6746 1.6472 1.6030
1.6663 1.7440 1.6307 1.5352

DeltaStock Inc. - Online Forex & Securities Broker
www.deltastock.com

RISK DISCLAIMER: These analyses are for information purposes only. They DO NOT post a BUY or SELL recommendation for any of the financial instruments herein analyzed. The information is obtained from generally accessible data sources. The forecasts made are based on technical analysis. However, Delta Stock’s Analyst Dept. also takes into consideration a number of fundamental and macroeconomic factors, which we believe impact the price moves of the observed instruments. Delta Stock Inc. assumes no responsibility for errors, inaccuracies or omissions in these materials, nor shall it be liable for damages arising out of any person's reliance upon the information on this page. Delta Stock Inc. shall not be liable for any special, indirect, incidental, or consequential damages, including without limitation, losses or unrealized gains that may result. Any information is subject to change without notice.





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South Korean Consumer Confidence Rises to a Seven-Year High

By Shinhye Kang

July 27 (Bloomberg) -- South Korean consumer confidence rose to the highest in almost seven years in July as government stimulus policies and record interest-rate cuts began leading the economy toward recovery from the global recession.

The sentiment index rose to 109 from 106 in June, the Bank of Korea said in Seoul today. That’s the highest level since the third quarter of 2002, when the bank published its confidence survey on a quarterly basis. A score of more than 100 indicates optimists outnumber pessimists.

South Korea’s economy expanded at the fastest pace in almost six years last quarter as exports and household spending jumped. Gross domestic product rose 2.3 percent from the first quarter, when the nation skirted a recession by growing 0.1 percent, the Bank of Korea said last week.

The Kospi stock index has climbed 34 percent this year. Sales at the nation’s major department stores rose for a fourth month in June as consumers bought more home appliances.

The government has pledged about 67 trillion won ($52 billion) in stimulus measures, including a 17.2 trillion won package of cash handouts, cheap loans, labor-market aid and infrastructure spending. The central bank pared the benchmark interest rate by 3.25 percentage points between October and February, the most aggressive easing in a decade.

The consumer confidence index is based on a survey of 2,200 households in 56 major cities, conducted by mail and telephone between July 13 and July 20.

To contact the reporter on this story: Shinhye Kang in Seoul at skang24@bloomberg.net.





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German Consumer Sentiment Increases for Third Month

By Jana Randow

July 27 (Bloomberg) -- German consumer confidence rose for a third month on retreating inflation and signs the economy is starting to recover.

GfK AG’s sentiment index for August, based on a survey of about 2,000 people, increased to 3.5 from a revised 3 for July, a 14-month high, the Nuremberg-based market-research company said in a statement today. Economists expected the index to hold at the initially reported July reading of 2.9, according to the median of 12 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey.

German business confidence rose more than expected this month, suggesting Europe’s largest economy is shaking off its worst recession since World War II. The Bundesbank said on July 20 that the economy shrank “only slightly” in the second quarter after its record 3.8 percent contraction in the first three months of the year.

“Economic pessimism on the part of consumers has declined,” GfK said. “Inflation is disappearing and people have more money in their pockets.” As a result, “private consumption currently remains a significant support for the economy.”

Germany’s inflation rate remained at zero in June, the lowest level in at least 13 years, due to falling energy costs and weakening demand. Oil prices have dropped by more than half from their peak last year.

GfK’s measure of economic expectations rose to minus 14 from minus 22.6. A gauge of income expectations increased to 1.8 from minus 3.3 and an index of consumers’ propensity to spend surged to 25.1 from 14.5.

National Elections

The government of Chancellor Angela Merkel, who will seek a second term in office in national elections in September, is spending about 85 billion euros ($121 billion) to revive the economy, which it predicts will contract 6 percent this year.

While German investor confidence unexpectedly dipped this month, there are signs that the worst may be over. Manufacturing orders rose for a third month in May, while exports and retail sales gained and industrial output surged the most in almost 16 years.

Stimulus packages will support household income while the “favorable price climate” and a car-scrapping incentive should encourage private consumption, the Bundesbank said on July 20.

“A sustained stabilization in the consumer climate will depend above all on the further development of the labor market,” GfK said. “Should there be a considerable rise in the number of unemployed,” it would “become an endurance test for consumer sentiment.”

Germany’s jobless rate rose to 8.3 percent last month. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development on June 24 predicted it will surge to 11.6 percent next year.

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





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King May Raise Rates Before Bernanke as U.K. Inflation Tops G-7

By Brian Swint

July 27 (Bloomberg) -- Bank of England Governor Mervyn King may beat Ben S. Bernanke to the emergency exit.

King, 61, will be in the vanguard of a global push to raise interest rates next year as he grapples with the highest inflation expectations in the Group of Seven industrialized nations, say economists at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Deutsche Bank AG.

Higher rates may bolster the pound, which has slumped about 17 percent against the dollar in the past year, and keep a lid on inflation as Britain’s economy rebounds from its deepest contraction in half a century. Those gains may come at the expense of exporters, such as building materials supplier SIG Plc, that have reported increased sales on the lower currency.

“The Bank of England could be the first out of the stable,” said Willem Buiter, a professor at the London School of Economics and a former central-bank policy maker. “If it goes too early, it might abort a fragile recovery and create a painful appreciation in the pound. If too late, it may be perceived as weak on inflation.”

The Monetary Policy Committee will prepare new forecasts this week for the Aug. 6 interest-rate decision. After the nine- member panel cut the benchmark rate to a record-low 0.5 percent in March, the U.K. should see “some evidence of positive growth in the second half of the year,” policy maker Andrew Sentance said in a July 23 Bloomberg Television interview.

The British economy contracted 0.8 percent in the second quarter, the government reported last week. That followed a 2.4 percent decline in gross domestic product in the first three months of the year, the most in half a century.

Inflation Outlook

The U.K. inflation rate will be the fastest in the G-7 next year, the Paris-based Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development predicts. Investors expect it to be the highest on average among major industrial economies over the next decade.

Britain’s 10-year break-even inflation rate is 2.36 percent, compared with 2 percent in Canada, 1.98 percent in Italy, 1.88 percent in the U.S. and 1.77 percent in Germany. The rate, an indicator of inflation expectations, is the difference in yield between index-linked government debt and conventional bonds of equivalent maturity.

“The U.K. has had more stimulus relative to elsewhere, as well as lower sterling,” said George Buckley, chief U.K. economist at Deutsche Bank in London. “We may well be the first to hike rates. The pound will recover if the economy recovers more quickly than elsewhere.”

Underestimating Strength

Investors may be underestimating the strength of the British economy, said Stephen Jen, managing director of macro and currencies at BlueGold Capital Management LLP in London, which has $1.3 billion in assets under management. The pound’s decline has gone too far, he said.

The currency’s depreciation, which raises the cost of British imports, is one source of inflationary pressure. Another will come with the Jan. 1 expiration of a tax break that will raise the U.K. sales tax to 17.5 percent from 15 percent.

The lower pound is a boon to exporters such as London-based Smiths Group Plc, the world’s biggest maker of mechanical seals for energy and marine customers. The company made almost half its sales last year from North America. For every cent the pound drops, the company’s earnings before interest and tax rise by 1.2 million pounds ($1.9 million), according to analysts at Numis Securities Ltd. in London.

Sheffield, England-based SIG, Europe’s largest supplier of insulation and roofing materials, said July 10 that sales in the first six months of 2009 climbed 1 percent in pounds from a year earlier, while falling 9 percent in euros. SIG says it generates about 50 percent of its revenue from the European continent. The pound has declined 8.8 percent versus the euro in a year.

Competitive Currency

“The U.K. has got a really competitive currency for the first time in 20 years,” said Jim O’Neill, Goldman Sachs’s chief economist in London. “It’s something you want to hold on to. If I were on the Monetary Policy Committee, it’s something I’d think about.”

HSBC Holdings Plc increased its forecast for the pound’s appreciation on July 23, saying the currency will rise to $1.75 by the end of next year, from about $1.64 last week. Previously, the bank had projected it would stay near $1.61 in 2010. The HSBC team led by David Bloom, global head of currency strategy in London, predicted that the Bank of England may stop buying assets next month and will lift rates before the Federal Reserve.

Brown’s Prospects

Higher borrowing costs may further dim prospects for Prime Minister Gordon Brown, who has trailed the opposition Conservatives in opinion polls for more than a year and must call an election by June 3.

Brown gave the Bank of England operational independence in 1997, soon after taking over as Chancellor of the Exchequer under Tony Blair. The decision now prevents him from controlling the central bank’s actions.

“Gordon Brown won’t like any rate increase early next year,” said Stewart Robertson, an economist in London at Aviva Investors, which manages 236 billion pounds of assets. “But it’s an independent central bank, so tough.”

Buiter said the Bank of England may start increasing interest rates around the middle of 2010 and the Fed may wait until 2011. Chairman Bernanke said July 21 that while there are “tentative signs of stabilization” in the economy, the Fed will be “highly accommodative” for “an extended period.”

Flooring It

“Central banks have got their foot to the floor and the wheels are spinning in the mud,” said Steven Bell, who runs a $222 million hedge fund at GLC Ltd. in London. “But if the wheels get traction, we could get a very sharp recovery. The U.K. has the best prospects of the major countries, and growth will be stronger than people expect.”

The Bank of England has been a trendsetter before: King’s decision to buy gilts in March came before Bernanke’s purchases of government bonds, an approach sometimes called “quantitative easing.” Now, King’s exit strategy may give global policy makers a model to follow or show them pitfalls to avoid.

“The Bank of England has been by far the most aggressive major central bank in what they’ve done with quantitative easing,” said John Wraith, head of sterling product development at RBC Capital Markets in London. “They need to be careful about overdoing it because inflation has been sticky.”

BOJ’s Blunder

Clamping down too early on incipient inflation has come back to haunt policy makers in the past. The Bank of Japan raised interest rates in 2000 only to cut them again months later after the dot-com boom went bust.

The Fed, by contrast, kept rates low through the first half of 2004, and its hesitation to start lifting them helped fuel the housing bubble that preceded the start of the U.S. recession at the end of 2007.

Bank of England policy makers said the economy may be stronger than expected and the inflation outlook a little higher than in the last projections published in May, according to minutes of the July 9 meeting published last week. They declined to extend the program to buy 125 billion pounds of assets with newly created money until they come up with forecasts for the August decision.

“A key aspect to the strength of recovery is how central banks navigate out of the stimulus,” said Scott Thiel, the London-based head of European fixed-income at BlackRock Inc., which has $1.37 trillion under management. “An ill-timed exit strategy is potentially disastrous.”

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





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Crude Oil Rises as Asian Equity Gains May Spur Demand for Fuels

By Christian Schmollinger

July 27 (Bloomberg) -- Crude oil rose to the highest in more than three weeks on expectations that gains in Asian equity markets are the precursor to a recovery in the global economy that will spur fuel demand.

Oil also gained after investors sought commodities as a hedge against inflation as the dollar traded near a seven-week low against the euro. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index climbed 1.3 percent today, the 10th straight increase and the longest winning streak since January 2004.

“Investors see the equity markets as a good lead for what you can expect oil demand to be going forward,” said Ben Westmore, an energy and minerals economist at National Australia Bank Ltd. in Melbourne. “At times when you’ve got high inflation expectations, investors tend to move toward real assets such as commodities.”

Crude oil for September delivery gained as much as 94 cents, or 1.4 percent, to $68.99 a barrel in after-hours electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. That was the highest intraday price since July 2. Futures were at $68.80 a barrel at 3:07 p.m. in Singapore. The contract earlier fell as much as 0.5 percent to $67.68 a barrel.

Oil last week posted its biggest weekly gain since May, and followed a 6.1 percent increase the week before, when U.S. equities climbed 7 percent.

The dollar traded at $1.4262 per euro as of 2:56 p.m. in Singapore from $1.4202 in New York on July 24. It touched $1.4291 on July 23, the lowest level since June 3.

Correlation

Oil has moved in tandem with benchmark stock indexes. The MSCI Asia-Pacific Index and U.S. crude futures showed a correlation of 0.5 in the past month, compared with -0.1 a month earlier, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. A correlation of 1 means the two moved in lockstep.

Crude’s gains may be limited as inventories of gasoline and diesel fuel in the U.S., the world’s biggest oil user, have climbed, National Australia’s Westmore said.

Gasoline inventories climbed 813,000 barrels to 215.4 million in the week to July 17, the sixth straight gain, according to an Energy Department report on July 22. Stockpiles of distillate fuel rose 1.22 million barrels to 160.5 million, the highest since January 1985.

“Although crude inventories are falling, it’s just going into gasoline supplies and we haven’t seen much evidence of the summer driving season,” Westmore said. “Eventually these fundamentals will correct and you see that in these gasoline and distillate inventories getting drawn down.”

Oil Inventories

Crude-oil supplies dropped 1.8 million barrels to 342.7 million last week, the Energy Department report showed. The reduction left nationwide crude stockpiles 7.3 percent higher than the five-year average for the period.

Brent crude oil for September settlement rose as much as 96 cents, or 1.4 percent, to $71.28 a barrel, and traded at $71.15 on London’s ICE Futures Europe exchange at 3:08 p.m. Singapore time. The contract rose 1.6 percent to $70.32 on July 24, the highest settlement since June 29.

Speculators’ net-long positions in New York oil, the difference between contracts to buy and sell the commodity, plunged 86 percent in the week ended July 21, the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission reported.

To contact the reporter on this story: Christian Schmollinger in Singapore at Christian.s@bloomberg.net





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Darling to Call on U.K. Banks to Offer Cheaper Company Loans

By Gonzalo Vina

July 27 (Bloomberg) -- Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling will call on Britain’s banks to reduce the cost of loans to small companies as he seeks to prevent the economy from slipping further into recession.

In a meeting at the Treasury in London today, Darling will tell chief executive officers from companies including Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc and Barclays Plc that they must do more to help the economy in return for government assistance.

“I am extremely concerned about what the banks are doing for small companies,” Darling told BBC Television yesterday. “What companies are being charged seems to have gone up relative to what they have to pay.”

The U.K. economy shrank more than twice as much as economists forecast in the second quarter as a record annual slump in construction, banking and business services kept Britain mired in the recession. The British Bankers’ Association said loans to small companies increased by 23 percent in June compared with a monthly average for the year.

Angela Knight, chief executive of the BBA, told BBC News television that banks are “stepping up” lending. Figures compiled by the lobbying group showed loans to companies with sales of less than 1 million pounds ($1.6 million) increased to 366 million pounds in June compared with a monthly average of 297 million pounds this year.

The BBA said later in a written statement that capital requirements imposed by the government that are twice as high as those of other countries and a higher default risk were pushing up lending costs.

“Thousands of businesses likely to go to the wall, so how can banks in all conscience be irresponsible over their lending policies?” said David Buik, Market Analyst at of BGC Partners in London. “Ill considered remarks by the Chancellor from the cheap seats will fall on very deaf ears. He cannot have it both ways.”

Darling said a government rescue, which totals 1.4 trillion pounds in capital and potential liabilities to taxpayers, wasn’t an act of charity and that lenders must do more to support economic activity.

Rescue Costs

“They’ve got to live up to the promises they made,” he said.

The Libor rate at which banks lend to each other over 12- months was 1.46 percent on July 24. The annual interest rate for HSBC Plc’s Small Business Loan for loan up to 25,000 pounds can cost as much as 19.9 percent.

The Treasury took majority stakes in Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc and Lloyds Banking Group Plc in addition to nationalizing Northern Rock Plc and Bradford & Bingley Plc after financial turmoil brought the industry near collapse in 2007.

To contact the reporter on this story: Gonzalo Vina in London at gvina@bloomberg.net.





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Darling to Call on U.K. Banks to Offer Cheaper Company Loans

By Gonzalo Vina

July 27 (Bloomberg) -- Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling will call on Britain’s banks to reduce the cost of loans to small companies as he seeks to prevent the economy from slipping further into recession.

In a meeting at the Treasury in London today, Darling will tell chief executive officers from companies including Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc and Barclays Plc that they must do more to help the economy in return for government assistance.

“I am extremely concerned about what the banks are doing for small companies,” Darling told BBC Television yesterday. “What companies are being charged seems to have gone up relative to what they have to pay.”

The U.K. economy shrank more than twice as much as economists forecast in the second quarter as a record annual slump in construction, banking and business services kept Britain mired in the recession. The British Bankers’ Association said loans to small companies increased by 23 percent in June compared with a monthly average for the year.

Angela Knight, chief executive of the BBA, told BBC News television that banks are “stepping up” lending. Figures compiled by the lobbying group showed loans to companies with sales of less than 1 million pounds ($1.6 million) increased to 366 million pounds in June compared with a monthly average of 297 million pounds this year.

The BBA said later in a written statement that capital requirements imposed by the government that are twice as high as those of other countries and a higher default risk were pushing up lending costs.

“Thousands of businesses likely to go to the wall, so how can banks in all conscience be irresponsible over their lending policies?” said David Buik, Market Analyst at of BGC Partners in London. “Ill considered remarks by the Chancellor from the cheap seats will fall on very deaf ears. He cannot have it both ways.”

Darling said a government rescue, which totals 1.4 trillion pounds in capital and potential liabilities to taxpayers, wasn’t an act of charity and that lenders must do more to support economic activity.

Rescue Costs

“They’ve got to live up to the promises they made,” he said.

The Libor rate at which banks lend to each other over 12- months was 1.46 percent on July 24. The annual interest rate for HSBC Plc’s Small Business Loan for loan up to 25,000 pounds can cost as much as 19.9 percent.

The Treasury took majority stakes in Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc and Lloyds Banking Group Plc in addition to nationalizing Northern Rock Plc and Bradford & Bingley Plc after financial turmoil brought the industry near collapse in 2007.

To contact the reporter on this story: Gonzalo Vina in London at gvina@bloomberg.net.





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Darling to Call on U.K. Banks to Offer Cheaper Company Loans

By Gonzalo Vina

July 27 (Bloomberg) -- Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling will call on Britain’s banks to reduce the cost of loans to small companies as he seeks to prevent the economy from slipping further into recession.

In a meeting at the Treasury in London today, Darling will tell chief executive officers from companies including Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc and Barclays Plc that they must do more to help the economy in return for government assistance.

“I am extremely concerned about what the banks are doing for small companies,” Darling told BBC Television yesterday. “What companies are being charged seems to have gone up relative to what they have to pay.”

The U.K. economy shrank more than twice as much as economists forecast in the second quarter as a record annual slump in construction, banking and business services kept Britain mired in the recession. The British Bankers’ Association said loans to small companies increased by 23 percent in June compared with a monthly average for the year.

Angela Knight, chief executive of the BBA, told BBC News television that banks are “stepping up” lending. Figures compiled by the lobbying group showed loans to companies with sales of less than 1 million pounds ($1.6 million) increased to 366 million pounds in June compared with a monthly average of 297 million pounds this year.

The BBA said later in a written statement that capital requirements imposed by the government that are twice as high as those of other countries and a higher default risk were pushing up lending costs.

“Thousands of businesses likely to go to the wall, so how can banks in all conscience be irresponsible over their lending policies?” said David Buik, Market Analyst at of BGC Partners in London. “Ill considered remarks by the Chancellor from the cheap seats will fall on very deaf ears. He cannot have it both ways.”

Darling said a government rescue, which totals 1.4 trillion pounds in capital and potential liabilities to taxpayers, wasn’t an act of charity and that lenders must do more to support economic activity.

Rescue Costs

“They’ve got to live up to the promises they made,” he said.

The Libor rate at which banks lend to each other over 12- months was 1.46 percent on July 24. The annual interest rate for HSBC Plc’s Small Business Loan for loan up to 25,000 pounds can cost as much as 19.9 percent.

The Treasury took majority stakes in Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc and Lloyds Banking Group Plc in addition to nationalizing Northern Rock Plc and Bradford & Bingley Plc after financial turmoil brought the industry near collapse in 2007.

To contact the reporter on this story: Gonzalo Vina in London at gvina@bloomberg.net.





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Euro May Rise to Three-Week High Versus Yen: Technical Analysis

By Kazumi Miura

July 27 (Bloomberg) -- The euro may extend its advance against Japan’s currency to a three-week high of 136.89 yen, Ueda Harlow Ltd. said, citing trading patterns.

The 16-nation currency is poised to make further gains after it broke through the top of a so-called ichimoku cloud last week when it climbed above 134 yen, said Toshiya Yamauchi, manager of the foreign-exchange margin trading department in Tokyo at Japan’s largest currency broker. The euro is also poised to gain after it completed a so-called golden cross when its short-term “conversion line” rose above the longer-term “baseline” on the ichimoku chart, he said.

“The euro will likely be the currency of choice, while demand for other currencies starts to falter,” Tokyo-based Yamauchi said.

The euro rose to 135.27 yen as of 8:43 a.m. in London from 134.63 in New York last week, when it gained 1.3 percent. The currency last reached 136.89 yen on July 1.

An ichimoku chart analyzes the midpoints of historic highs and lows. The conversion line is the same calculation over the past nine trading days. The baseline on the ichimoku chart is the sum of the highest high and the lowest low over the past 26 trading days. A golden cross, which some chartists see as a sign to buy, appears when a short-term moving average line rises over a longer-term average.

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

To contact the reporter on this story: Kazumi Miura in Tokyo at kmiura@bloomberg.net





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British Pound Advances Against Dollar, Climbs 0.2% to $1.6455

By Daniel Tilles

July 27 (Bloomberg) -- The pound rose 0.2 percent to $1.6455 as of 6:26 a.m. in London.

Against the euro, the British currency was little changed at 86.51 pence.

To contact the reporter on this story: Daniel Tilles in London at dtilles@bloomberg.net





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Krone Favorite as 11% Plunge Leaves Norway ‘Hugely Undervalued’

By Bo Nielsen and Oliver Biggadike

July 27 (Bloomberg) -- The Norwegian krone, the third-worst performer against the euro since mid-2008, has become currency strategists’ favorite bet.

Buying kroner versus euros will return more in the next year than all 48 other foreign-exchange trades tracked by global investment banks, according to median predictions in Bloomberg analyst surveys. Norway’s currency will rise 9 percent by June to 8.2 per euro, from 8.8680 on July 24, the median of 19 forecasts shows. The krone is “hugely undervalued” after falling 11 percent since June 30, 2008, Citigroup Inc. said.

“The krone is due for a good bounce,” said Peter Lucas, who helps manage about $199 billion at RBC Wealth Management in Jersey, U.K. “In an environment of rising commodity prices and moderate risk appetite, the krone will be one of the strongest currencies in the world,” probably strengthening to below 8 per euro within “months,” he said.

Forecasters say the currency will gain as Norway’s economic recovery prompts policy makers led by Norges Bank Governor Svein Gjedrem to increase interest rates for the first time since June 2008 to control inflation, boosting returns on krone-denominated investments. The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development predicts the country’s GDP will shrink less than the euro region this year and gain more in 2010.

After trading at an average of 8 per euro over the previous year and a half, the krone began slumping in mid-2008 as oil and natural gas, which account for 48 percent of Norway’s exports, tumbled in a slowdown that the World Bank says will shrink the global economy 2.9 percent this year.

Oil, Natural Gas

The krone weakened 19.5 percent from June 30, 2008, to its record low on Dec. 26 of 10.1595 per euro as oil and natural gas fell 73 percent and 56 percent, respectively. The currency lost 8.4 percent in December, its worst month since the euro’s 1999 debut, as investors shifted money into the most actively traded securities -- U.S. Treasuries, German bunds and Japanese government bonds.

Policy makers cut interest rates seven times in eight months to a record low 1.25 percent as of June 17 to boost the economy as growth slowed from an annual 5.5 percent in the second quarter of 2008 to 1.5 percent or less in the next three. The reductions weakened the currency by limiting returns on krone deposits.

The krone, which had rebounded 19 percent from its December low to this year’s high on March 24, fell 3.1 percent the next day after the central bank said it may need to cut the benchmark rate to 1 percent. It’s now trading at about the same level and ended last week up 1.6 percent against the euro.

Faster Inflation

Prices in Norway are rising faster than the central bank’s 2.5 percent inflation target, fueled by a 3.4 percent increase in retail sales through May this year, and a 53 percent rise in oil prices since Dec. 31. Inflation unexpectedly accelerated to an annual 3.4 percent in June, the highest in eight months, Statistics Norway said on July 10. Producer prices jumped 8.7 percent from the previous month, the most since December 2002.

Seven of 11 strategists surveyed by Bloomberg see Gjedrem, 59, raising borrowing costs to at least 1.5 percent by the fourth quarter.

Norges Bank plans to keep the rate between 0.75 percent and 1.75 percent until October and it “may then be set higher than currently envisaged” as “a more rapid turnaround or a weaker krone may result in higher-than-projected inflation,” policy makers said after their June 17 meeting.

Market ‘Disappointment’

“The krone has been a disappointment to the market,” said Jeremy Hale, head of macroeconomic strategy in London at Citigroup, which sees the currency strengthening to 8.5 per euro in six to 12 months and 7.52 thereafter. “For the krone to unlock its potential the Norges Bank needs to get cautious about inflation, and we’re seeing some signs of that.”

Higher interest rates may make the krone more attractive than currencies of countries with lower borrowing costs, including the U.S., Canada, the euro zone, Sweden and the U.K., all now at 1 percent or less. Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc advised buying krone against Britain’s currency on July 14, predicting a gain of as much as 5.6 percent to 9.7699 per pound as Norway’s economy rebounds and the U.K.’s downturn continues.

Norway’s economy will shrink 1 percent this year and grow 0.8 percent next year, while the euro region will contract 4.8 percent in 2009 and have no growth in 2010, according to the OECD. U.S. GDP will fall 2.8 percent this year and then rise 0.9 percent.

The OECD predicted Norway’s jobless rate will be lower than the rest of the Nordic region into next year. Unemployment was 2.7 percent in June, down from this year’s 2.8 percent high in April, said the Oslo-based Labor and Welfare Organization. Unemployment reached 9.5 percent in the euro region during May and the U.S. hit that level in June.

Global Leader

“Fundamentals in Norway remain some of the best globally,” Citigroup’s Hale said.

Bank of America Merrill Lynch figures the krone is 29 percent undervalued versus the U.S. dollar and 35 percent against the euro, citing differences in prices and growth rates in the three economies. Only the ruble was cheaper among the 30 currencies it tracked, the bank said in a July 13 note.

Norway is the world’s fifth-biggest oil exporter and second-largest natural gas shipper and has a growing trade surplus, helping the krone by reducing the country’s dependence on foreign investment.

The current-account surplus will increase to 20.6 percent of the economy next year from 18.2 percent, already the developed world’s biggest relative to GDP, the Paris-based OECD says. The U.S. and the euro region have account deficits of 2.3 percent and 1.1 percent of GDP, the OECD says.

Risk Reversals

Options traders are becoming less bearish on the krone, according to one-month risk reversals comparing prices for contracts to buy and sell the currency. Options to sell krone at a specified price, or puts, cost 1.4975 percentage points more than options to buy, or calls, on July 24, the least at closing since Oct. 21. The gap narrowed from the record high on Dec. 24 of 3.8 points.

Some strategists say other so-called commodity currencies will do better than the krone. They already have outperformed Norway since investors’ began regaining confidence in the global economy in early March.

The krone has appreciated little since then as oil prices soared 48 percent and the Australian dollar appreciated 13.5 percent. The krone dropped 16 percent against the New Zealand dollar, 5 percent versus the Canadian dollar and 2 percent to the ruble, its peers in the Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s Energy FX basket of currencies that benefit the most from rising fuel prices.

BNP Pessimism

Goldman Sachs predicts oil, which traded at $68.11 on July 24 on the New York Mercantile Exchange, will rise to $82.50 a barrel by the end of 2009 and to $94.70 by Dec. 31, 2010.

BNP Paribas SA, the most pessimistic bank toward the krone in Bloomberg’s survey of first-quarter predictions, sees the currency falling 5.7 percent to 9.4 per euro by the end of March.

“We’re going to see the general deterioration in the economic outlook,” said Ian Stannard, a BNP currency strategist in London who predicts Norges Bank will cut its rate to 1 percent this year. “Most of the market’s expectations are still quite optimistic, and they’re going to prove to be disappointed.”

The country is struggling to emerge from its first recession in two decades after the only global downturn since World War II sapped demand for exports and forced companies to cut jobs, choking domestic demand.

Job Losses

They have fallen 31 percent to 58.9 billion kroner ($9.4 billion) in June since peaking at 84.9 billion kroner in April last year. Companies including Norske Skogindustrier ASA, the world’s second-biggest newsprint maker, have fired staff to reduce costs.

“We would rank Australia first, Norway second, and Canada last,” among currencies of developed, commodity-rich countries, said Jonathan Xiong, who helps oversee $18 billion as a senior money manager at Mellon Capital Management Corp. in San Francisco.

“Europe is obviously in flux, and just being within that particular region could have some effect on the krone,” he said.

Andreas Burhoi, who manages about 800 million euros at Deutsche Bank AG’s DWS investment unit in Frankfurt, said he plans to increase krone holdings to as much as 5 percent of his funds’ total, from 1 percent now.

“Investors will feel more comfortable and send funds to Norway,” Burhoi said. “It’s not that Norway is so great, but that other countries are so much weaker.”

David Bloom, the head of currency strategy at HSBC Holdings Plc in London, is even more bullish: “There’s nothing better than the Norwegian krone,” he said. “It’s safe, man.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Bo Nielsen in Copenhagen at bnielsen4@bloomberg.net; Oliver Biggadike in New York at obiggadike@bloomberg.net





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China May Press Geithner on Dollar, Economy in Washington Talks

By Bloomberg News

July 27 (Bloomberg) -- The dollar may be the focus of Chinese-U.S. talks starting in Washington today as China presses the Obama administration on how it will tame the fiscal deficit and protect the U.S. currency’s value, Morgan Stanley said.

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will host two days of meetings spanning topics from the economic crisis to North Korea. The Strategic and Economic Dialogue is the Obama administration’s first with China.

“If the key issue in the past was the renminbi’s exchange rate, now it’s the U.S. dollar,” said Wang Qing, an economist at Morgan Stanley in Hong Kong. The yuan is a denomination of the renminbi. “What China cares about the most is the stability of the dollar and the stability of U.S. policy.”

The global slump has highlighted the common interests of the economies, ranked first and third largest in the world, as Vice Premier Wang Qishan seeks to preserve the value of the world’s biggest Treasury holdings and the U.S. pushes China to rely more on domestic demand and not exports for growth.

“Raising personal incomes and strengthening the social safety net to address the reasons why Chinese feel compelled to save so much would provide a powerful boost to Chinese domestic demand and global growth,” Geithner and Clinton wrote in a joint article published in today’s Wall Street Journal.

The talks this week will move beyond economic matters for the first time.

‘Fragile States’

Few global problems “can be solved without the U.S. and China together,” Geithner and Clinton wrote. “The strength of the global economy, the health of the global environment, the stability of fragile states and the solution to nonproliferation challenges turn in large measure on cooperation between the U.S. and China.”

The two sides will probably discuss ways to revive the dormant six-party negotiations aimed at persuading North Korea to give up its nuclear program, a U.S. official said last week.

“From the provocative actions of North Korea, to stability in Afghanistan and Pakistan, to the economic possibilities in Africa, the U.S. and China must work together to reach solutions to these urgent challenges,” Geithner and Clinton wrote.

China’s exchange-rate policy will be discussed, an Obama administration official said at a press briefing last week. The U.S. wants a more flexible yuan, though Geithner has avoided a showdown on the issue, declining to repeat comments he made in written remarks to lawmakers after his Senate confirmation hearing in January that China was “manipulating” its currency.

‘Unfortunate Timing’

“This was a most unfortunate thing to say publicly,” said Donald Straszheim, managing principal of Straszheim Global Advisors in Los Angeles. “They think the playing field is basically tilted by China managing its currency.”

Both nations are pumping cash into their economies to revive growth in the face of the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. Though Premier Wen Jiabao said in March he was worried about the safety of the nation’s U.S. assets, China bought $38 billion of U.S. notes and bonds in May, taking its holdings to $801.5 billion.

The U.S. deficit may reach a record $1.85 trillion for the fiscal year ending Sept. 30, almost four times the previous fiscal year’s $455 billion shortfall, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke will brief Chinese officials about how the U.S. plans to keep inflation in check over the next few years, people advised of the plan said this month. In June, Geithner told China that the U.S. wants to shrink its budget gap as soon as an economic recovery takes hold.

“Both nations must avoid the temptation to close off our respective markets to trade and investment,” Geithner and Clinton wrote. “Both must work hard to create new opportunities for our workers and our firms to compete equally, so that the people of each country see the benefit from the rapidly expanding U.S.-China economic relationship.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Paul Panckhurst in Beijing at ppanckhurst@bloomberg.net





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Bernanke Says Fed Sought to Avert a ‘Second Great Depression’

By Scott Lanman and Timothy R. Homan

July 27 (Bloomberg) -- Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke defended bailouts by the central bank and other unprecedented efforts to end the credit crisis, saying he sought to avoid a “second Great Depression.”

“In a financial crisis, if you let the big firms collapse in a disorderly way, it will bring down the whole system,” Bernanke said yesterday at a town-hall-style meeting in Kansas City, Missouri, taped for broadcast this week on PBS television. “I was not going to be the Federal Reserve chairman who presided over the second Great Depression.”

Bernanke’s appearance indicates he’s stepping up public- relations efforts while confronting criticism from lawmakers over government aid to big financial firms. His first term at the Fed’s helm ends Jan. 31, and President Barack Obama needs to decide whether to reappoint him for another four years.

Vincent Hogan of Kansas City, a human resources manager at General Motors Co. and a member of the forum’s audience, said he believed Bernanke showed “honesty and candor.”

Before the meeting, Hogan, 45, said he thought Bernanke acted under political pressure during the height of the financial crisis last year. “I understand now there were some dire economic situations back then,” he said in an interview.

The Fed rescued Bear Stearns Cos. and American International Group Inc. last year while backing creation of the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program.

Bernanke, 55, said he had to “hold his nose” over the bailouts of large financial firms. Responding to a small- business owner “frustrated” over the billions of dollars in aid, Bernanke said, “I understand your frustration.”

‘Working Really Hard’

“We’re working really hard to try to make it better,” Bernanke said, referring to Fed efforts to improve credit for small businesses.


The questioner, David Huston, said in an interview after the forum that he hasn’t yet seen positive results. “They can say they’re putting money into the banks to help distribute loans, but I don’t see it,” said Huston, 56, president of Olson Manufacturing and Distribution Inc. in Shawnee, Kansas.

At the one-hour event moderated by Jim Lehrer, a PBS news anchor, Bernanke said he expects the U.S. economy to grow at an annual rate of 1 percent in the second half of 2009, while unemployment will exceed 10 percent before beginning to decline. At the same time, “we want to make sure that we don’t overstimulate the economy” and spur inflation, Bernanke said.

For the next couple of years, “inflation will be quite low,” Bernanke said. Asked about the dollar, he said that “the best way to have a strong dollar is to have a strong economy.”

‘Back on Track’

“I have a lot of confidence that within a few years that we will be not only back on track but that we will be growing strongly again,” Bernanke said.

Lehrer questioned the Fed chief about criticism from Anna Schwartz, the 93-year-old monetary scholar who wrote a New York Times opinion column yesterday arguing against his reappointment. In a companion piece, Nouriel Roubini, the New York University professor who predicted the credit crisis, said Bernanke deserves another term for averting a “near depression.”

“What Ms. Schwartz wanted us to do was to state in advance what our strategy was for saving firms,” Bernanke said. “We had no idea which firm was going to fail and we didn’t have a system, we didn’t have a structure.”

The Fed is “putting the pedal to the metal” with its policy actions, and it’s too early to judge the impact of the $787 billion fiscal stimulus law, he said.

Overstepped Authority

Voter concern that the Fed overstepped its authority prompted a majority of House lawmakers to co-sponsor a bill allowing for audits by the Government Accountability Office of the central bank’s monetary policy and other operations. Bernanke opposes the measure, which was introduced by Representative Ron Paul of Texas, a Republican.

Asked yesterday about the audit bill, Bernanke said it could result in lawmakers issuing subpoenas over potential decisions to raise interest rates. “I don’t think the American people want Congress running monetary policy,” he said.

The central bank chairman said independence from political interference in setting interest rates produces “much better results” for the economy. “We are very, very sensitive to this issue,” Bernanke said at the forum.

Participating in yesterday’s meeting was an “enormously smart decision” for Bernanke, said Gregory Hess, an economics professor at Claremont McKenna College in California and a member of the Shadow Open Market Committee, a group of economists that critiques the Fed.

‘Big Questions’

“People still have big questions, which are, how did we get in this mess, how do we get out of this mess, how are we going to make sure this mess never happens again?” Hess said. “It’s a time where he can really leverage his ability to communicate.”

Bernanke appeared on the CBS program “60 Minutes” in March, his first televised interview since becoming Fed chairman in 2006.

His comments are scheduled to air in three segments this week as part of “The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer” on U.S. stations affiliated with PBS, the Public Broadcasting Service.

To contact the reporters on this story: Scott Lanman in Washington at slanman@bloomberg.net; Timothy R. Homan in Kansas City at thoman1@bloomberg.net.




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June Sales of U.S. New Houses Probably Rose to Four-Month High

By Courtney Schlisserman

July 27 (Bloomberg) -- Sales of new homes in the U.S. probably rose in June to the highest level in four months, adding to evidence the housing slump that began in 2005 is stabilizing, economists said ahead of a government report today.

Sales increased 2.9 percent to a 352,000 pace, according to the median forecast of 60 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. Purchases reached a record-low 329,000 pace in January.

Falling prices and near record-low mortgage rates have started to lure buyers even as the unemployment rate rises. The worst recession in five decades may end in coming months as the housing and manufacturing downturns ease.

“Home demand is stabilizing and that’s not surprising given the improvement in affordability,” said Zach Pandl, an economist at Nomura Securities International Inc. in New York. “Home sales are likely to pick up from here.”

The Commerce Department is scheduled to release its report at 10 a.m. in Washington. Estimates in the Bloomberg News survey ranged from 335,000 to 377,000.

New-home sales have risen in two of the four months since the January low.

Other reports underscore the stabilization in housing. The Wells Fargo/National Association of Homebuilders sentiment index has risen in five of the past six months and existing home sales have increased for three months in a row.

Job Losses

Job losses threaten to limit any housing recovery. The U.S. has lost 6.5 million jobs since the recession began in December 2007 and economists surveyed by Bloomberg News forecast the unemployment rate will top 10 percent in early 2010. The jobless rate reached a quarter-century high of 9.5 percent in June.

Lower prices, while helping to revive demand, are hurting builders’ bottom lines. Record foreclosures have depressed the value of competing existing homes, prompting construction firms to also lower prices.

Builder shares have retreated in recent months on signs housing will not lead a recovery from the U.S. recession that began in December 2007. The Standard & Poor’s homebuilder supercomposite index is down 3 percent since April 30, even as the S&P 500 index is up 12 percent.

Federal Reserve policy makers have committed to a $1.25 trillion program to purchase securities backed by home loans in an effort to put a floor under the housing market and lower borrowing costs. Those purchases, as well as direct government purchases of Treasuries, drove the rate on 30-year mortgages to a record-low 4.78 percent in April, according to figures from Freddie Mac. Rates have since hovered around 5 percent.

Bernanke’s View

Fed Chairman Bernanke said July 21 that the economy is showing “tentative signs of stabilization” and the “decline in housing activity appears to have moderated.”

Another incentive is the $8,000 tax credit for first-time buyers that is part of the Obama administration’s economic stimulus plan. Purchases have to be completed before Dec. 1.

NVR Inc., the fourth-largest U.S. homebuilder, said last week that new orders increased 2 percent in the second quarter compared with a year earlier. The rate of cancellations fell to 14 percent from 19 percent in the second quarter of 2008 and 15 percent in the first three months of this year.


                        Bloomberg Survey

================================================================
New Home New Home
Sales Sales
,000’s MOM%
================================================================

Date of Release 07/27 07/27
Observation Period June June
----------------------------------------------------------------
Median 352 2.9%
Average 354 3.5%
High Forecast 377 10.2%
Low Forecast 335 -2.1%
Number of Participants 60 60
Previous 342 2.7%
----------------------------------------------------------------
4CAST Ltd. 375 9.7%
Action Economics 360 5.3%
AIG Investments 362 5.9%
Aletti Gestielle SGR 358 4.7%
Ameriprise Financial Inc 350 2.3%
Argus Research Corp. 345 0.9%
Bank of Tokyo- Mitsubishi 350 2.3%
Barclays Capital 350 2.3%
BBVA 344 0.6%
BMO Capital Markets 350 2.3%
BNP Paribas 360 5.3%
C I T I C Securities 347 1.5%
Calyon 350 2.3%
Capital Economics 370 8.2%
CIBC World Markets 345 0.9%
ClearView Economics 350 2.3%
Commerzbank AG 360 5.3%
Credit Suisse 360 5.3%
DekaBank 350 2.3%
Desjardins Group 355 3.8%
Deutsche Bank Securities 350 2.3%
DZ Bank 360 5.3%
Exane 360 5.3%
First Trust Advisors 352 2.9%
Fortis 350 2.3%
FTN Financial 340 -0.6%
Helaba 350 2.3%
Herrmann Forecasting 354 3.5%
HSBC Markets 365 6.7%
IDEAglobal 355 3.8%
Informa Global Markets 355 3.8%
ING Financial Markets 360 5.3%
Insight Economics 350 2.3%
Intesa-SanPaulo 340 -0.6%
J.P. Morgan Chase 350 2.3%
Janney Montgomery Scott L 352 2.9%
Johnson Illington Advisor 355 3.8%
JPMorgan’s Private Wealth 350 2.3%
Landesbank Berlin 350 2.3%
Landesbank BW 350 2.3%
Merrill Lynch/BAS 335 -2.1%
Moody’s Economy.com 360 5.3%
Morgan Keegan & Co. 363 6.1%
Natixis 350 2.3%
Nomura Securities Intl. 355 3.8%
PNC Bank 370 8.2%
Raymond James 345 0.9%
RBS Securities Inc. 355 3.8%
Schneider Foreign Exchang 377 10.2%
Scotia Capital 356 4.1%
Societe Generale 355 3.8%
Standard Chartered 370 8.2%
Stone & McCarthy Research 360 5.3%
TD Securities 360 5.3%
UniCredit Research 335 -2.1%
University of Maryland 350 2.3%
Wells Fargo & Co. 345 0.9%
WestLB AG 350 2.3%
Westpac Banking Co. 363 6.0%
Wrightson Associates 350 2.3%
================================================================

To contact the reporter on this story: Courtney Schlisserman in Washington cschlisserma@bloomberg.net





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