Economic Calendar

Monday, August 10, 2009

Morning Forex Overview

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by Dukascopy Swiss FX Group | Aug 10 09 07:01 GMT |

Previous session overview

The dollar and euro gave up some ground to the yen in Asia Monday, as investors took profits following a sharp rise in those currencies against the Japanese unit Friday, while Japanese exporters joined in the selling on a regular settlement day.

But market participants said the yen, considered one of the safest currencies to buy in times of economic turmoil, and may decline ahead on growing expectations of a global economy recovery.

The U.S. dollar stood at JPY97.11, compared to JPY97.48 in New York late Friday, when it surged almost JPY2.5 to briefly mark a two-month high of JPY97.79 on better-than-expected U.S. jobs data.

The euro also declined to JPY138.03, well below the more-than two-month high it hit Friday in New York at JPY138.72, and lower than its JPY138.20 level late in that session.

The euro was one of the weakest major currencies on Friday, but it has little to do with European data. Instead, the release of US non-farm payrolls triggered a surge in the US dollar, which led EURUSD to break out of a tight range and down roughly 200 points.

The British pound fell on the back of the stronger U.S. jobs report. The sterling started to weaken after the Bank of England left rates at a record low 0.5 percent and unexpectedly increased its asset-purchase plan, indicating that financial conditions remain weak.

The Australian dollar traded sideways in Asia Monday as the U.S. dollar broadly held its ground, while shorter dated bond futures fell to fresh lows on increasing expectations for monetary policy tightening in coming months.

Market expectation

The euro, pound and yen are all higher against the dollar Monday due to demand from Japanese exporters, yet those moves seem tentative and could reverse later. Meanwhile, the pound is seeing some buying against the euro.

European stock markets are expected to open lower Monday, as investors bank gains as the second-quarter earnings season draws to a close and after the release of the key employment data in the U.S. Friday.

GBPUSD posted lows at USD1.6653 before recovering back, edging to USD1.6692 before meeting further headwinds. Rate currently trades around USD1.6665. Bids remain in place on the approach to USD1.6650, a break below USD1.6640/35 to open a deeper move toward USD1.6610/00. Resistance seen placed at USD1.6700/05 ahead of USD1.6720. A break here may open a move on toward USD1.6750.

EURUSD bids seen placed toward USD1.4180 (USD1.4182 76.4% USD1.4172/1.4216), a break below to open a retest on the overnight low. Through here and stronger demand interest reported in place ahead of USD1.4150 (USD1.4154 NY low Friday). Stops noted on a break of this level, which if triggered to open a deeper move toward USD1.4130/20 ahead of USD1.4100. Resistance now seen placed toward USD1.4220, a break above to allow for any recovery to extend toward USD1.4230/40 ahead of USD1.4270/80.

The yen may face downward pressure in the near term due to mounting expectations for a global economic pickup, dealers said. The dollar may climb to JPY98.00, while the euro may rise to JPY140.00, they added.

Looking forward, players' attention will be focused on a planned two-day Federal Open Market Committee meeting starting Tuesday. In addition, they will be watching U.S. data including retail and good sales on Thursday, and the consumer price index and industrial production, all for July.

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...

Correlation In Question

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by AC-Markets | Aug 10 09 07:55 GMT |

Market Brief

The Greenback rallied on Friday, erasing its huge losses from the beginning of the week, after dropping to a new 2009 low against most major currencies. The comeback of the US Dollar was supported by US unemployment data and nonfarm payrolls. Even though employment market is still weak the US nonfarm payrolls fell just by 247K below the 320K expected. The bigger surprise was the drop in unemployment rate which fell down to 9.4% from 9.5%, being the first drop in unemployment since April 2008, while most analysts forecasted the rate to jump by 0.1% to 9.6%.

The first reaction on the employment data was sending the dollar lower, because as we used to see, good economic data boosts risk appetite and traders move towards high yielding currencies and sell the US Dollar. This time USD ignored risk sentiments and responded positively on the released data, arguing that investors are possibly back to fundamentals, where positive data in the US pushes the dollar higher and vice versa.

Friday's employment data generated speculations that the US will be leading the way to economic recovery outperforming other developed countries, and reinforcing the expectations that Fed will start changing its monetary policy and possibly raise its current funding rate from 0 - 0.25% by the beginning of 2010.

Is it possible the correlation between stocks/high yielding currencies/risk appetite and US Dollar begins to delink? Are we back to Fundamentals? Has the Dollar Bottomed? Those questions could be on everyone's mind now, but in my opinion it's still early to judge! We have to watch the market closely this week and see how it will respond to coming data.

Other important events last week was ECB and BOE meeting, where both decided to keep their interest rate unchanged at 1% and 0.5% respectively. There was nothing surprising in ECB's press conference regarding exit strategies, interest rates, or monetary policy, but the surprise came from BoE which decided to extend the asset purchase program by 50 Billion Pounds, as recessions was deeper than expected. This had put pressure on the pound and led the GBP/USD pair to drop approximately by 200 pips.

This week Focus will turn on FOMC meeting. Even nothing is expected to change regarding interest rate or the QE program, but we'll see whether Mr. Bernanke's tone will be more hawkish this time, especially after the Job data released on Friday. Other Important data from the US to watch closely this week would be trade balance, retails sales, CPI, and consumer confidence. From the Eurozone, the Q2 GDP will be released and expected to show that economic contraction had slowed, we'll also have the EU CPI. From UK, employment report will be released, and the Bank of Japan will be meeting for the rate decision where no changes are expected.

ACM FOREX

Disclaimer: This report has been prepared by AC Markets (thereof ACM) and is solely been published for informational purposes and is not to be construed as a solicitation or an offer to buy or sell any currency or any other financial instrument. Views expressed in this report may be subject to change without prior notice and may differ or be contrary to opinions expressed by Salesperson or Traders of ACM at any given time. ACM is under no obligation to update or keep current the information herein, the report should not be regarded by recipients as a substitute for the exercise of their own judgment.





Read more...

U.S. Recovery Woes Push Traders To Sell The Pound

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by Finotec Group | Aug 10 09 08:12 GMT |

The U.S. economy may be on the cusp of a recovery and the impact of the nation's stimulus plan should increase this quarter, said Laura Tyson, an adviser to President Barack Obama. 'We may have hit stability, we may be in the beginning of an upturn' based on the latest economic data, Tyson, a member of the White House's Economic Recovery Advisory Board, said yesterday during an interview in Kuala Lumpur. Nobel Prize- winning economist Paul Krugman said the deepest slump since the Great Depression may be ending.

Trading Tactics

Sell GBP/USD on sign of a clear downtrend.

The buying point is at 1.6720; previous resistance is the take profit at 1.6800;

Pivot point is the stop loss at 1.6620

The selling point is at 1.6625; Pivot point is the take profit at 1.6545;

Fibonacci 61.8% is the stop loss at 1.6695

Technical: Sterling breaks previous support and continues its downtrend. A move back lower could set up a test of 1.6545

The following analysis is for information only; Finotec is not responsible for any decisions or misinterpretations based on the given text.

Finotec Group Inc.
http://www.finotec.com/

Disclaimer: FINOTEC Tradings Market Commentaries are provided for informational purposes only. The information contained within these reports is gathered from reputable news sources and not intended as investment advice. FINOTEC Trading assumes no responsibility or liability from gains or losses incurred by the information herein.



Read more...

Daily FX Report

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by Varengold Bank | Aug 10 09 08:00 GMT |

Good morning and welcome to the new week. The USD made record movements against a basket of currencies on Friday after the U.S. unemployment rate fell from 9.5% to 9.4%. The economists expected a rise of 0.1%. Have a nice start in the new week

Markets review

On Friday the strong USD climbed against the EUR and reached the level at around 1.42 on signs that the U.S. economy is emerging from recession, boosting the appeal of the nation's assets. The USD has reached a level near to a seven-week high against the JPY as U.S. employers eliminated fewer jobs last month than economists expected. U.S. employers eliminated 247,000 jobs in July after a revised decrease of 443,000 in the previous month, the Labor Department reported on Friday. The USD-Index recovered on Friday from its lowest level this year. It climbed to a high of 79.073 after it opened around 78.00. Today it pulled a little back and trades at 78.76. The USD climbed over 200 pips against the JPY and fell back from its record low against the EUR. The gains in the USD on August 7th marked a return to the view that good U.S. economic news should benefit the currency as traders speculated that the Fed may boost interest rates sooner rather than later. The GBP also fell against the USD, touching a low at 1.6684 and rebounded in the early Tokyo trading hours and trades currently around 1.6710

Technical analysis

AUD/USD

Since the beginning of August the AUD has been moving under the resistance level of 0.8450. After touching the 0.8340 support level for the first time since the end of the last month, the market has crossed the bearish trend line. This movement could be a sign for a trend reversal and an increase to the resistance around 0.8450. If the market crosses the 0.8340, it could come down to the 0.8240 support level.

USD/CHF

The volatile USD/CHF is trading under a downward trend line. There are three resistance lines, which could be a sign for a further weak USD against the CHF. One resistance is around the 1.098, one around the 1.094 and furthermore there is one bearish resistance trend line. If the market doesn't break the downward line clearly, it could continue the bearish trend and pull back to the downside

Pivot Points - Daily FX Support and Resistance Levels

Daily Calendar & Key FX Events

Varengold Bank

IMPORTANT NOTIFICATION TO BE READ IN CONJUNCTION WITH THE CONTENTS OF THIS DOCUMENT

This document is issued and approved by Varengold WPH Bank AG. The document is only intended for market counterparties and intermediate customers who are expected to make their own investment decisions without undue reliance on the information set out within the document. It may not be reproduced or further distributed, in whole or in part, for any purpose. Due to international laws/regulations not all financial instruments/services may be available to all clients. You should have informed yourself about and observe any such restrictions when considering a potential investment decision. This electronic communication and its contents are intended for the recipient only and may contain confidential, non public and/or privileged information. If you have received this electronic communication in error, please advise the sender immediately, and delete it from your system (if permitted by law). Varengold does not warrant the accuracy, completeness or correctness of any information herein or the appropriateness of any transaction. Nothing herein shall be construed as a recommendation or solicitation to purchase or sell any financial product. This communication is for informational urposes only. Any market or other views expressed herein are those of the sender only as of the date indicated and not of Varengold. Varengold reserves the right to consider any order sent electronically as not received unless it is confirmed verbally or through other means.


Read more...

China July New Lending Probably Fell on Credit Risks

By Bloomberg News

Aug. 10 (Bloomberg) -- China’s new lending in July may have fallen to a third of June’s level as banks sought to limit credit risks and slow the flow of money into stocks and property.

New loans cooled to 500 billion yuan ($73.2 billion), from 1.53 trillion yuan, according to the median estimate of 11 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. The central bank may release a preliminary figure today.

Policy makers are struggling to prevent bad loans and asset bubbles without derailing the recovery of the world’s third- biggest economy. Premier Wen Jiabao reiterated in a statement yesterday that monetary and fiscal policy will remain unchanged because of “difficulties and challenges” including sliding export demand and industrial overcapacity.

“Credit risk has been a concern in China since loans started surging at the start of the year,” said Sherman Chan, an economist with Moody’s Economy.com in Sydney. “We’re definitely seeing bubbles in the stock market.”

The government will scrutinize gains in stock prices without capping new lending after a record $1.1 trillion in loans in the first half, officials said Aug. 7.

Exports probably fell for a ninth month in July from a year earlier, sliding 23 percent, economists’ forecasts showed. Imports may have declined 15 percent, resulting in a trade surplus of $10.6 billion. Those numbers are scheduled to be released tomorrow.

Investment, Output

Most other key economic data for July are also due tomorrow, after the statistics bureau altered its schedule.

Surging lending helped power a 34 percent increase in urban fixed-asset investment in the seven months through July from a year earlier, according to economists’ forecasts.

Industrial production growth may have accelerated to 11.5 percent in July, after gaining 10.7 percent in June, as stimulus spending stoked domestic demand, countering the slump in exports.

Consumer prices declined for a sixth month in July, dropping 1.6 percent, while producer prices fell a record 8.3 percent, according to economists’ forecasts.

“We expect deflation to moderate,” said Wang Qian, an economist with JPMorgan Chase & Co. in Hong Kong. “Although global oil and commodity prices eased somewhat in July, prices of onshore industrial metals, such as steel, have started to rise given the strong growth outlook.”

Inflation is not a concern, Su Ning, a deputy central bank governor, said Aug. 7.

Surging Money Supply

M2, the broadest measure of money supply, probably rose by a record 28.7 percent last month from a year earlier, according to the economists’ forecasts.

The Shanghai Composite Index has rallied almost 80 percent in 2009 and real-estate prices have rebounded, fueling concern that loans meant for infrastructure projects are being used for speculation. The central bank said Aug. 5 that it will use “dynamic fine-tuning” and guide “appropriate” lending growth.

“Authorities have quietly reinstated the loan-quota controls on banks,” said Kevin Lai, an economist at Daiwa Institute of Research in Hong Kong. “We expect short-term loans and discount bills to retreat most dramatically, while medium and long-term loans take up a bigger share overall.”

China Construction Bank Corp. President Zhang Jianguo said last week that the world’s second-largest bank by market value will cut new lending by about 70 percent to avert a surge in bad debt.

“We noticed that some loans didn’t go into the real economy,” Zhang said in an Aug. 6 interview in Beijing. “I feel that some industries are expanding too rapidly. For example, housing prices are rising too fast, and housing sales are growing too fast.”

China’s gross domestic product grew 7.9 percent in the second quarter after a 4 trillion yuan ($585 billion) stimulus package spurred lending and boosted consumption and investment.

Retail sales may have climbed 15 percent last month from a year earlier, matching June’s pace, economists’ forecasts showed.

To contact the Bloomberg News staff on this story: Shamim Adam in Singapore at sadam2@bloomberg.net





Read more...

French Industrial Output Rises; Confidence Increases

By Francois de Beaupuy

Aug. 10 (Bloomberg) -- French industrial production rose more than expected in June and business confidence gained, adding to signs of recovery in the euro region’s second-largest economy.

Output at factories and utilities climbed 0.3 percent from May, when it gained a revised 2.8 percent, Paris-based statistics office Insee said today. Economists had forecast that production would advance 0.2, according to the median estimate of 19 economists polled by Bloomberg News.

“The pickup in industrial production represents a rebound following a period of rapid inventory adjustment,” said Dominique Barbet, an economist at BNP Paribas, in a research note released before the report. “But sustained strong growth will require sustained final demand.”

There have been signs that Europe is starting to pull out of its worst recession since World War II as the global recovery fuels demand for exports. French manufacturing confidence rose in July to the highest level in 11 months, a Bank of France report showed today. Still, the economy will probably stagnate in the third quarter, the Bank of France also said.

In France, factory output is being helped by a reduction in inventories and a government payment of 1,000 euros ($1,400) for buyers who trade in cars that are at least 10 years old.

Activity in the French auto industry advanced 5.3 percent in June from May, Insee said. Production of planes, boats and trains, and output of chemicals, pharmaceutical goods and energy also climbed. Production of electronic goods, paper, wood and metal declined.

Manufacturing production, which excludes energy and food, rose 0.4 percent from a month earlier.

Insee initially reported output in May gained 2.6 percent.

To contact the reporter on this story: Francois de Beaupuy in Paris at fdebeaupuy@bloomberg.net.





Read more...

Indian Growth May Be Hurt by Weak Monsoon, Rajan Says

By Barry Porter and Liza Lin

Aug. 10 (Bloomberg) -- A below-average monsoon may shave as much as one percentage point off India’s economic growth this year, an adviser to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said.

“The monsoon will have an effect, but not as devastating as it would have been in the past,” said Raghuram Rajan, who is also a professor of finance at the University of Chicago. “Now hopefully it takes a fraction of a percentage point or a percentage point off growth, which still looks reasonably healthy.”

The weather office today lowered its forecast for monsoon rainfall for a second time this season, saying the rain in the June-September season will be 87 percent of the average between 1941 and 1950, compared with a 93 percent forecast on June 24, said Ajit Tyagi, director general at the India Meteorological Department.

India’s monsoon rain, the main source of irrigation for the nation’s 235 million farmers, were 28 percent deficient as of Aug. 8, threatening harvests of crops such as sugar cane and rice. A normal monsoon is key to Prime Minister Singh’s efforts to push economic expansion back to a 9 percent pace and cool prices of essential commodities such as sugar and lentils.

South Asia’s largest economy may now grow about 6 percent this fiscal year, said Rajan, a former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund.

Indian stocks declined today, with the Bombay Stock Exchange’s Sensitive Index falling 0.5 percent at 11:51 a.m. in Mumbai on concern below-average monsoon rainfall may slow the country’s economic growth.

Rural Weakness

“What a monsoon does is create wide bands around any forecast,” Rajan said in an interview in Kuala Lumpur yesterday, ahead of the World Capital Markets Symposium starting today. “The weakness in the rural areas will be offset by urban growth.”

India now aims to increase production of winter-sown crops to compensate for a possible shortfall in summer-sown rice, Singh said last week. The area under rice cultivation, the worst hit by delayed rain, has declined by 15 million acres, he said.

Rajan said India’s central bank should think “carefully” about whether it should maintain an expansionary monetary policy, predicting less-than-normal monsoon rain and government payments to villages through a national employment-guarantee scheme could spur food-price inflation.

Food-Price Inflation

“Food-price inflation especially catches the eyes of politicians,” he said, declining to give an inflation forecast. “The large government deficit could play a role down the line and it shouldn’t appear that the central bank is going to accommodate that on its balance sheet,” he said.

India’s benchmark wholesale-price index declined 1.58 percent in the week to July 25 from a year earlier after falling 1.54 percent in the previous week, the government said Aug. 6. That was the eighth straight weekly decline.

The current negative spell of inflation shouldn’t be interpreted as deflation as there is no evidence of demand contraction and food-price inflation remains “elevated,” Central Bank Governor Duvvuri Subbarao said last month.

Inflation has slowed from a 16-year high of 12.91 percent in August 2008 as oil prices fell from an unprecedented $147.27 a barrel in the previous month. Global crude prices have gained more than 50 percent this year, rekindling inflation concerns.

India’s budget deficit is likely to widen to 6.8 percent of gross domestic product in the fiscal year to March 2010 as the government seeks to borrow an unprecedented 4.51 trillion rupees ($94 billion) this year to fund spending on creating more rural jobs and building roads, ports and utilities.

Subbarao, who last month left borrowing costs unchanged at record lows, said a higher deficit may lead to inflation and require the central bank to “reverse” its expansionary policies.

To contact the reporters responsible for this story: Barry Porter in Kuala Lumpur at bporter10@bloomberg.net; Liza Lin in Kuala Lumpur at llin15@bloomberg.net





Read more...

U.K. Companies Get New Loans More Easily, CBI Survey Shows

By Brian Swint

Aug. 10 (Bloomberg) -- U.K. companies are having an easier time getting access to loans in a sign the credit crunch is abating, the Confederation of British Industry said.

A net 18 percent in a survey of 73 firms said credit availability improved in the past three months, compared with a net 20 percent reporting a deterioration in May, Britain’s biggest business lobby said today in London. The CBI questioned companies between July 15 and July 24.

The Bank of England last week pledged to increase the amount of money in the economy by an additional 50 billion pounds ($84 billion) to encourage credit growth and pull the economy out of recession. Governor Mervyn King said in a letter to the government that the need for banks to repair their balance sheets is likely to restrict lending.

“Credit availability has been getting more difficult for many months, so today’s results are positive news,” Richard Lambert, director-general at the CBI, said in a statement. “It is unclear when bank lending will be flowing freely again, but for many firms credit conditions are at least moving in the right direction.”

While loans may be easier to get, they are also more expensive, the report showed. Half of the companies surveyed said the cost of new credit had risen in the quarter, with a fifth reporting an increase of more than 1 percentage point.

The improvement in availability of credit was reported more by large companies with at least 5,000 employees, the report said. Smaller firms on balance said the supply of existing credit had declined.

‘Challenging’ Conditions

“Smaller and medium-sized businesses are still facing challenging credit conditions and have fewer funding options open to them,” Lambert, a former Bank of England policy maker, said in the statement.

Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc, the biggest bank controlled by the U.K. government, last week reported a first-half loss and said results will be poor for two years. Chief Executive Officer Stephen Hester has pledged to reduce loans and sell assets overseas to reduce a balance sheet that climbed to 2.2 trillion pounds under predecessor Fred Goodwin.

“In the United Kingdom, the recession appears to have been deeper than previously thought,” the Bank of England said in a statement with its decision on Aug. 6. King will present the bank’s new forecasts for the economy and inflation on Aug. 12 at a press conference in London.

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





Read more...

Japan’s Machinery Orders Rebound as Recession Eases

By Jason Clenfield and Keiko Ujikane

Aug. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Japanese machinery orders rose for the first time in four months in June and the current-account surplus widened, the latest signs that the nation’s worst postwar recession is easing.

Orders climbed 9.7 percent from May, the Cabinet Office said today in Tokyo, more than the 2.6 percent expected by economists. The surplus more than doubled from a year earlier to 1.15 trillion yen ($11.8 billion), expanding for the first time since February 2008 as exports improved.

The Nikkei 225 Stock Average advanced, extending its rally in the past month to 13 percent as the global recession abated and cost cuts helped earnings at companies from Honda Motor Co. to Sony Corp. exceed analysts’ expectations. Even so, a separate report showed corporate bankruptcies increased in July, signaling unemployment may soon rise to a postwar high.

“We shouldn’t be too optimistic about capital spending yet,” said Yoshiki Shinke, a senior economist at Dai-Ichi Life Research Institute in Tokyo. “Companies are still burdened with excess labor and capacity and the outlook for the economy is uncertain.”

The Nikkei rose 1.1 percent, its highest close since Oct. 3. The yield on 10-year government bonds rose 2.5 basis points to a seven-week high of 1.455 percent. The yen traded at 97.25 per dollar at 3:26 p.m. in Tokyo from 97.39 before the machinery report.

Election This Month

Prime Minister Taro Aso is struggling to steer the economy toward a recovery as his ruling Liberal Democratic Party trails the opposition Democratic Party of Japan in polls ahead of an Aug. 30 election. A separate report today showed sentiment at merchants rose to a 22-month high, bolstered by the stock- market gains and Aso’s 25 trillion yen in stimulus spending.

Machine orders, an indicator of capital investment in the next three to six months, will fall 8.6 percent in the current quarter, the government said. June’s gain was mostly due to a purchase of equipment used to generate nuclear power. Without that, orders would have risen about 2 percent or 3 percent, said Shigeru Sugihara, head of statistics at the Cabinet Office.

Today’s figures add to signs the global economy is recovering from the worst recession since the Great Depression. The U.S. unemployment rate dropped for the first time in 15 months in July, prompting Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman to say yesterday that the economy “may be in the beginning of an upturn.” Analysts expect data next week will show the European economy shrank at a slower pace last quarter.

Global Stimulus

More than $2 trillion in spending by governments worldwide has stabilized global demand, helping Japanese manufacturers such as Kubota Corp., which is selling more farming equipment in China. Japan’s factory production rose 8.3 percent last quarter, rebounding from a record 22.1 percent plunge in the previous period.

The current-account surplus rose 144 percent in June from a year ago, the Finance Ministry said. Exports fell 37 percent, less than the 42.2 percent in May. Imports slid 43.8 percent.

The world’s second-largest economy probably grew for the first time in a year last quarter, expanding at an annualized 3.8 percent pace after a record 14.2 percent contraction in the first quarter, according to the median estimate of 20 analysts.

Companies have raised earnings predictions and beaten analysts’ expectations over the past month. Some 15 percent of firms listed on the first section of the Tokyo Stock Exchange raised first-half earnings estimates since June, according to Tokyo-based Shinko Research, while 10 percent cut projections.

Honda, Sony

Honda Motor, Japan’s second-largest carmaker, last month reported net income of 7.5 billion yen in the quarter ended June 30, compared with a 40 billion yen loss forecast by analysts. Sony posted a net loss of 37.1 billion yen, half the 80 billion yen shortfall analysts predicted.

“The worst is definitely over in terms of earnings, but the incentive to invest is very limited in a world in which production levels are so low,” said Junko Nishioka, chief economist at RBS Securities Japan Ltd. in Tokyo.

Toyota Motor Corp. last week narrowed its loss forecast for the current business year, citing government incentives introduced in Japan, the U.S. and Europe to encourage car- buying. The company still estimates it will sell 3 million fewer cars than it has the capacity to build. The automaker plans to cut capital spending 36 percent this year.

Smaller firms are struggling to get access to cash that would keep them in business. Corporate bankruptcies climbed 1.02 percent in July from a year earlier to 1,386 cases, Tokyo Shoko Research Ltd. said in Tokyo today.

“Financial conditions aren’t stable yet on the whole,” said Masayuki Kichikawa, chief Japan economist at Merrill Lynch & Co. in Tokyo. “Corporate funding is improving among large companies, but not yet at small businesses.”

Kichikawa said the increase in business failures puts pressure on the unemployment rate, which climbed to a six-year high of 5.4 percent in June, close to a record 5.5 percent.

To contact the reporters on this story: Jason Clenfield in Tokyo at jclenfield@bloomberg.net; Keiko Ujikane in Tokyo at kujikane@bloomberg.net





Read more...

U.K. Pound Weakens Against Euro, Pares Advance Versus Dollar

By Daniel Tilles

Aug. 10 (Bloomberg) -- The pound fell against the euro and pared its gain versus the dollar.

The British currency slipped 0.2 percent to 85.15 pence per euro as of 6:50 a.m. in London. Sterling traded at $1.6687, from $1.6684 on Aug. 7, after rising to $1.6719.

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





Read more...

Swiss Franc Weakens Against Euro, Little Changed Versus Dollar

By Daniel Tilles

Aug. 10 (Bloomberg) -- The Swiss franc fell against the euro and was little changed versus the dollar.

The Swiss currency slipped 0.2 percent to 1.5356 per euro as of 7:33 a.m. in Zurich. Against the dollar, the franc was at 1.0807, from 1.0811 on Aug. 7.

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





Read more...

Mysterious Currency Inflows Aid Turkey's Central Bank: Week Ahead

By Steve Bryant

Aug. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Turkey’s central bank will adjust its current-account records this week as it struggles to explain the origin of $18 billion in foreign currency inflows that have reduced the need for International Monetary Fund loans.

The inflows since October, which economists say came from companies paying down debts using bank accounts abroad, have helped drive the lira to a nine-month high and trimmed the current account deficit, reducing the need for a new IMF loan.

“It appears that corporates are repatriating cash holdings from abroad to pay debt,” said Inan Demir, an economist for Finansbank AS in Istanbul. “The problem is that the central bank doesn’t seem to have detailed knowledge about the liquid assets Turks have abroad.”

The foreign debt of Turkish companies has declined $8 billion since October, according to the central bank, while domestic debt has also probably declined. As the source of funds for those repayments is not always clear, much has ended up in the net errors and omissions section of the current account.

The central bank will go some way to resolving the mystery today when it transfers $4.4 billion of the inflows in the last quarter of 2008 from the errors and omissions section to the capital account, attributing them to cash transfers from foreign bank accounts held by Turks, according to a July 29 statement.

That leaves $13.6 billion still unaccounted for, equivalent to about 2 percent of last year’s gross domestic product.

The unexplained money has sparked newspaper reports of trucks laden with gold and banknotes rumbling across the Iranian border into Turkey, which the central bank on June 30 dismissed as false.

Lira Strength

The strengthening lira prompted the bank last week to resume auctions to buy $30 million of foreign currency a day. The bank had reserves of $65.8 billion on July 24.

Because of the unexplained inflows, “there’s been no pressure on the lira and no problem with debt dynamics, so the government doesn’t feel any urgency to agree to an IMF deal,” said Yarkin Cebeci, an economist for JPMorgan Chase & Co. in Istanbul.

Turkey has been discussing new loans from the IMF since May last year and negotiations have stalled over fund demands for a plan to reduce the budget deficit and improve tax collection.

The current-account deficit for June is expected to narrow for a tenth consecutive month, contracting to $2 billion from $5.5 billion a year earlier, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of 14 economists. Declining demand for imports, cheaper oil and the cash inflows, are all helping reduce the shortfall.

The benchmark stock index gained 5 percent last week to 44,767.58. The lira weakened to 1.4741 to the dollar at 5:18 p.m. in Istanbul on Aug. 7 from 1.4707 a week earlier. The yield on the benchmark lira bond tracked by ABN Amro fell to 10.15 percent from 10.69 percent.

The following is a list of events in Turkey next week:


Event                          Survey     Prior        Date
Industrial output data -12.5 -17.4 Aug. 10
Capacity utilization data 74% 72.7% Aug. 10
Current-account figures -2.0B -1.5B Aug. 10

To contact the reporter on this story: Steve Bryant in Ankara at sbryant5@bloomberg.net.





Read more...

Mysterious Currency Inflows Aid Turkey's Central Bank: Week Ahead

By Steve Bryant

Aug. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Turkey’s central bank will adjust its current-account records this week as it struggles to explain the origin of $18 billion in foreign currency inflows that have reduced the need for International Monetary Fund loans.

The inflows since October, which economists say came from companies paying down debts using bank accounts abroad, have helped drive the lira to a nine-month high and trimmed the current account deficit, reducing the need for a new IMF loan.

“It appears that corporates are repatriating cash holdings from abroad to pay debt,” said Inan Demir, an economist for Finansbank AS in Istanbul. “The problem is that the central bank doesn’t seem to have detailed knowledge about the liquid assets Turks have abroad.”

The foreign debt of Turkish companies has declined $8 billion since October, according to the central bank, while domestic debt has also probably declined. As the source of funds for those repayments is not always clear, much has ended up in the net errors and omissions section of the current account.

The central bank will go some way to resolving the mystery today when it transfers $4.4 billion of the inflows in the last quarter of 2008 from the errors and omissions section to the capital account, attributing them to cash transfers from foreign bank accounts held by Turks, according to a July 29 statement.

That leaves $13.6 billion still unaccounted for, equivalent to about 2 percent of last year’s gross domestic product.

The unexplained money has sparked newspaper reports of trucks laden with gold and banknotes rumbling across the Iranian border into Turkey, which the central bank on June 30 dismissed as false.

Lira Strength

The strengthening lira prompted the bank last week to resume auctions to buy $30 million of foreign currency a day. The bank had reserves of $65.8 billion on July 24.

Because of the unexplained inflows, “there’s been no pressure on the lira and no problem with debt dynamics, so the government doesn’t feel any urgency to agree to an IMF deal,” said Yarkin Cebeci, an economist for JPMorgan Chase & Co. in Istanbul.

Turkey has been discussing new loans from the IMF since May last year and negotiations have stalled over fund demands for a plan to reduce the budget deficit and improve tax collection.

The current-account deficit for June is expected to narrow for a tenth consecutive month, contracting to $2 billion from $5.5 billion a year earlier, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of 14 economists. Declining demand for imports, cheaper oil and the cash inflows, are all helping reduce the shortfall.

The benchmark stock index gained 5 percent last week to 44,767.58. The lira weakened to 1.4741 to the dollar at 5:18 p.m. in Istanbul on Aug. 7 from 1.4707 a week earlier. The yield on the benchmark lira bond tracked by ABN Amro fell to 10.15 percent from 10.69 percent.

The following is a list of events in Turkey next week:


Event                          Survey     Prior        Date
Industrial output data -12.5 -17.4 Aug. 10
Capacity utilization data 74% 72.7% Aug. 10
Current-account figures -2.0B -1.5B Aug. 10

To contact the reporter on this story: Steve Bryant in Ankara at sbryant5@bloomberg.net.





Read more...

Euro Failing to Heed Goldman Doesn’t Mean Dollar Drop

By Matthew Brown

Aug. 10 (Bloomberg) -- The euro’s biggest drop in more than two months against the dollar may signal the best is over this year for Europe’s common currency.

The euro fell 1.1 percent on Aug. 7 as the MSCI World Index of stocks rose 0.4 percent, the second time in a month the currency failed to appreciate as it did earlier this year when equities gained. For BNP Paribas SA, which correctly forecast in May that it would rise to $1.40 from $1.3390, the breakdown means the euro’s strength is ebbing. Goldman Sachs Group Inc., which earned more than $100 million from trading for a record 46 days last quarter, says the euro is going to “stall.”

“Upside potential is limited as euro-dollar has been quite disappointing in recent weeks, given that we’ve had near perfect conditions for a rally,” said Ian Stannard, a currency strategist in London at BNP.

Growing evidence the economy of the 16-member euro region will lag behind the U.S. is turning investors against the currency. The dollar jumped Aug. 7 as the pace of U.S. job losses slowed in July, with the euro ending last week at $1.4183, down from this year’s high of $1.4447 on Aug. 5.

In the two weeks through July 27, the euro strengthened 2.1 percent against the dollar as the MSCI World Index rose 12 percent. That compares with a 12 percent gain when the index added 45 percent between March 9 and June 11.

The euro was little changed today at $1.4198 as of 7:08 a.m. in London.

Correlation Fades

The euro’s 0.48 correlation with the MSCI World Index in recent weeks compares with the Canadian dollar’s 0.71, the Swedish krona’s 0.72 and Australian dollar’s 0.76, Bloomberg data show. A higher number shows markets move closer to lock- step.

The 12 percent gain in the European currency from its 2009 low of $1.2457 on March 4 was fueled in part by rising investor appetite for higher-risk assets, such as stocks, and by central banks moving some of their reserves out of dollars.

For much of the past five months the euro benefited from a renewal of the carry trade, where investors borrow funds in countries with low interest rates such as the U.S. and Japan and invest the proceeds in those with higher returns, allowing them to profit from the difference. The euro was a beneficiary as the European Central Bank kept its main refinancing rate at 1 percent, compared with between zero and 0.25 percent for the Federal Reserve.

German Bunds

German bunds due in 10 years yielded 74 basis points, or 0.74 percentage point, more than similar-maturity Treasuries at the start of the year. Now, 10-year U.S. note yields are 37 basis points higher than bunds. The U.S. premium reached 41 basis points on Aug. 5, the most in two years.

With no yield advantage, traders have little incentive to keep pushing the euro higher with the economy likely to recover more slowly than the U.S. The median forecast of 17 strategists surveyed by Bloomberg is for the region’s economy to shrink 4.3 percent this year and grow 0.5 percent in 2010. That compares with a contraction of 2.5 percent for the U.S. in 2009 and expansion of 2.1 percent next year, a separate poll shows.

“The euro is strong against the dollar because the dollar is weak against everything,” said Thomas Stolper, a global markets economist in London at Goldman Sachs, which lost money through trading on only two days in April, May and June, according to an Aug. 5 regulatory filing. “The euro is going to stall against the dollar.”

Dollar Index

The Dollar Index, which IntercontinentalExchange Inc. uses to track the U.S. currency against the euro, yen, pound, Canadian dollar, Swiss franc and the Swedish krona, dropped 11 percent to 78.975 last week from its high this year of 89.624 on March 4. It gained 1.1 percent since July 29, when New York- based Goldman Sachs recommended dropping bets that the euro will keep rising versus the dollar.

The likelihood that central banks keep diversifying their foreign reserves from the dollar may underpin the euro, Stolper said. At the end of the first quarter the dollar accounted for 65 percent of allocated global central bank reserves, down from 73 percent in 2001, the International Monetary Fund said June 30.

Gains ‘Unavoidable’

The euro’s “rise as the second-most important international currency is almost unavoidable,” Otmar Issing, the former chief economist at the European Central Bank and one of the architects of monetary union, said in a telephone interview from Frankfurt on Aug. 5.

Most strategists say the euro won’t continue to strengthen. The median of 46 estimates compiled by Bloomberg is $1.40 by the end of the year, the same as in mid-June. Frankfurt-based Deutsche Bank AG and UBS AG in Zurich, the two biggest currency traders, predict a decline to $1.30 by January.

Purchasing power parity, a measure of the cost of similar goods in different countries, indicates the euro is overvalued by 28 percent against the dollar, Bloomberg data show. The last time it reached that level, in September 2008, the euro fell 8.4 percent the next month, tumbling to the lowest level in more than two years. The IMF said July 30 it’s as much as 15 percent overvalued.

On a trade-weighted basis, the euro has fallen this year. The Bank of England Calculated Effective Exchange Rate for the euro fell to 102.50 on Aug. 7 from 105.2 on Jan. 1.

Initial Phase

“The initial phase of the risk rally has been indiscriminate, as people bought anything but the dollar and the yen,” said Derek Halpenny, the London-based European head of foreign-exchange strategy at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. “As it becomes more evident that some economies are outperforming others, the markets will become more choosy about which currencies they buy.”

Europe’s economy may prove the euro’s biggest hurdle. Retail sales in Germany, Europe’s largest economy, unexpectedly dropped for a second month in June, slipping 1.8 percent. European producer prices tumbled 6.6 percent, the most in at least 28 years. In the U.S., sales at retailers rose 0.6 percent from May, the biggest gain since January, while the Labor Department’s producer-price index increased 1.8 percent, twice as much as anticipated.

“We have a strong conviction that the euro will eventually have to weaken because the economy is not strong enough,” said Ken Dickson, who oversees currency investments in Edinburgh at Standard Life Investments, which manages $194 billion in assets.

Options Signal

Options show the rally may be over, after bets that the European currency will rise against the dollar reached the most in more than two months on Aug. 4. Contracts to sell the dollar against the euro, or puts, cost 0.7 percentage points more than options to buy, or calls, on Aug. 4., the biggest difference since June 2, according to Bloomberg data.

Bollinger bands, the most-accurate of eight technical indicators for predicting moves on the euro over the last six months, according to Bloomberg data, show that the currency is unlikely to move much higher against the dollar. The upper band was at $1.4447 compared to the euro’s spot price of $1.4183 at the close of trade on Aug. 7.

“The euro has been overbought in the last month and as a fundamental instrument of value it’s the weakest in terms of growth potential,” said Stuart Thomson, an international fixed- income fund manager who helps oversee about $107 billion of assets at Ignis Asset Management in Glasgow, Scotland.

To contact the reporter on this story: Matthew Brown in London at mbrown42@bloomberg.net





Read more...

U.S. to Grow More Slowly Over Next Few Years, Tyson Says

By Shamim Adam

Aug. 10 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. economy will grow more slowly over the next few years compared to the 1990s, said Laura Tyson in a speech in Kuala Lumpur today.

The U.S. must shift towards investment and export growth, said Tyson, a member of the White House’s Economic Recovery Advisory Board. The world has avoided protectionist measures in the crisis, she said, speaking in a personal capacity and not on behalf of the Obama administration.





Read more...

VIX Shows S&P 500 Swoon in September as Worst Month Approaches

By Jeff Kearns and Michael Tsang

Aug. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Options traders are increasing bets that the steepest rally in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index since the 1930s won’t survive September, historically the worst month for U.S. equities.

Traders are betting the VIX, a gauge of expected stock swings, will increase 13 percent in the next five weeks, according to futures prices compiled by Bloomberg. That’s the biggest spread since August 2008, right before the S&P 500 suffered the steepest two-month plunge in 21 years. The indexes have moved in the opposite direction 81 percent of the time over the past five years, Bloomberg data show.

VIX futures above the level of the index show investors expect fluctuations to widen and stocks to retreat. The S&P 500 has rallied 49 percent in five months, pushing valuations to the highest levels since December 2004. The S&P 500 gained 2.3 percent last week as reports showed home sales rose and the unemployment rate fell.

“It’s a danger sign,” said Ronald Egalka, a 36-year options trader who oversees $8 billion as chief executive officer of Rampart Investment Management in Boston. “People expect volatility to pick up in the future, and that implies that there’s going to be a downward movement in the market.”

History shows that U.S. investors lose the most in September. The benchmark index for American equities fell 1.3 percent on average since 1928 that month, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

9.1% Retreat

The S&P 500 plunged 9.1 percent last September after New York-based Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. collapsed. The biggest drop occurred in September 1931 during the Great Depression, when the S&P 500 tumbled 30 percent. February is the only other month when stocks fell on average since 1928, losing 0.3 percent, Bloomberg data show.

The VIX, as the Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index is known, usually moves in the opposite direction of the S&P 500 because demand for insurance rises as stocks fall. VIX futures expiring in September are 3.29 points higher than the index, and last month were as much as 5.91 points higher, a record gap for so-called second-month contracts. The current spread is comparable to the one in August 2008.

The index has averaged 20.22 over its 19-year history and surpassed 50 for the first time in October after Lehman filed for the biggest U.S. bankruptcy. Frozen credit markets and bank losses approaching $1 trillion tied to subprime loans pushed the measure to a record 89.53 on Oct. 24. Losses at the world’s biggest financial companies now exceed $1.5 trillion, according to Bloomberg data.

‘Break in the Market’

The current reading indicates a 68 percent likelihood the S&P 500 will fluctuate as much as 7.2 percent in the next 30 days, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

“VIX futures are telling you that investors are willing to pay a premium for protection,” said David Palmer, who helps oversee $300 million as volatility portfolio manager at Hudson Bay Capital Management LLC, a New York-based hedge fund that returned 11 percent last year, according to Absolute Return magazine. “People expect some sort of a break in the market.”

Hedge funds lost an average 18.3 percent in 2008, according to Chicago-based Hedge Fund Research Inc. The S&P 500 declined 38 percent, the worst performance since 1937.


Options strategists saw the same upward-sloping curve last August, before the S&P 500 tumbled 9.1 percent in September and 17 percent in October. VIX futures two months from expiration were 4.11 points higher than the VIX on Aug. 22, when the index slumped to an 11-week low of 18.81.

Closing Bearish Bets

Volatility may be increasing for reasons unrelated to stock prices, according to Macro Risk Advisors LLC, a New York-based options brokerage. Traders who sold bullish options when the rally began on expectations the advance would fizzle may be buying them back now, Dean Curnutt, the firm’s president, wrote in a note to clients. That demand could be artificially boosting the VIX.

U.S. companies are also beating analysts’ earnings estimates at an almost record rate, making investors more bullish, according to Rob Morgan, who helps oversee $6 billion as market strategist at Clermont Wealth Strategies in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.

For the second quarter, 72.2 percent of S&P 500 companies surpassed consensus estimates for profit, just below the 72.3 percent ratio five years ago that was the highest since at least 1993, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

$3.6 Trillion in Cash

Investors still hold more than $3.6 trillion of their assets in money-market funds, equal to about 30 percent of the total market capitalization of U.S. companies, according to data compiled by the Washington-based Investment Company Institute and Bloomberg. That’s double the percentage when the S&P 500 reached its all-time high in October 2007, the data show.

The number of contracts to buy previously owned homes in the U.S. rose 3.6 percent in June, the fifth straight monthly increase and more than economists estimated, as lower prices and mortgage rates lured buyers, the National Association of Realtors said Aug. 4. The unemployment rate fell for the first time in more than a year, dipping to 9.4 percent from a 26-year high of 9.5 percent, the Labor Department said Aug. 7.

“There’s a good underpinning to the market here, and the VIX is just one tool in the toolbox,” Morgan said. “Stocks follow earnings and revisions are going up and you also have a boatload of cash still sitting on the sidelines as the economy is turning.”

Expecting a ‘Pause’

Paul Tudor Jones, the hedge fund manager whose $8.9 billion Tudor BVI fund gained 10 percent this year through July, said he expects that global stocks may “pause in September” on slower Chinese economic growth. The advance since March is a “bear- market rally,” Jones wrote in a report to clients last week. “We are not inclined to aggressively chase the market here.”

The S&P 500 is trading for 18.6 times its companies’ average earnings this year, the highest since December 2004, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The first global recession since World War II may worsen as more Americans get thrown out of work and the benefits of government spending wear off, according to Martin Feldstein of Harvard University.

“There is a real danger this is going to be a double dip and that after six months or so we’ll have some more bad news,” Feldstein, the former head of the National Bureau of Economic Research, said on Bloomberg Television last month. “We could slide down again in the fourth quarter.”

Consumer Spending Falls

The U.S. economy contracted at a 1 percent annual pace in the second quarter, less than economists forecast, as government spending increased the most since 2003. The outlays, part of President Barack Obama’s $787 billion stimulus package approved in February, masked a 1.2 percent drop in consumer spending, which accounts for more than two-thirds of the economy.

Almost half of U.S. homeowners with a mortgage are likely to owe more than their properties are worth before the housing recession ends, Karen Weaver and Ying Shen, New York-based analysts at Deutsche Bank AG, wrote in a report dated Aug. 5. The percentage of “underwater” loans may rise to 48 percent, or 25 million homes, as prices drop through the first quarter of 2011, according to Frankfurt-based Deutsche Bank. As of March 31, the share of homes mortgaged for more than their value was 26 percent, or about 14 million properties.

‘Very Reasonable’

Profit for companies in the S&P 500 will fall 22 percent this quarter before an earnings rebound by financial institutions spurs a 61 percent increase in the last three months of the year, according to analysts’ estimates. Excluding banks, brokerages and insurance companies, profits are projected to drop 8.6 percent in the fourth quarter. U.S. stock trading has also slowed by the most in at least two decades. An average of 1.34 billion shares changed hands daily on the New York Stock Exchange between May 1 and Aug. 7, about 16 percent less than the average from Jan. 1 to April 30. That’s the biggest drop since at least 1989, according to data compiled by Harrison, New York-based research firm Bespoke Investment Group LLC.

“There’s always a real risk that a rally is going to be tested,” said Stephen Wood, New York-based chief market strategist for North America at Russell Investments, which had $151.8 billion in assets under management as of June 30. “Investors are thinking that giving up some upside to hedge the downside is a very reasonable investment profile.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Jeff Kearns in New York at jkearns3@bloomberg.net; Michael Tsang in New York at mtsang1@bloomberg.net.




Read more...

Krugman Says Bernanke Should Be Reappointed to Fed

By Shamim Adam and Liza Lin

Aug. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Ben S. Bernanke deserves another term as Federal Reserve Chairman based on his success in battling the financial crisis, said Princeton University Economist Paul Krugman, a winner of the Nobel Prize.

“He’s earned the right to a second term,” Krugman, 56, said yesterday in an interview in Kuala Lumpur. “He turned the Fed into the financial intermediary of last resort. When the banking system failed to deliver capital where it was needed, he put the Fed into the markets.”

Debate over the fate of Bernanke, 55, is intensifying as he nears the end of his four-year term as chairman on Jan. 31. While Krugman and economist Nouriel Roubini have voiced support for the former Princeton economist, others including Anna Schwartz have said a lack of transparency exacerbated the financial crisis.

“I think Bernanke has done a really good job,” Krugman said. “He failed to see this coming and he was behind the curve in early phases. But he’s been really very good in the sense that it’s really very hard to see how anyone could have done more to stem this crisis.”

As his terms draws near an end, Bernanke has written in the Wall Street Journal and appeared on television to defend the unprecedented actions he took during the financial crisis.

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

Zero Rates

Under Bernanke’s stewardship, the Fed cut the benchmark lending rate to as low as zero and expanded credit to the economy by $1.1 trillion over the past year.

Joseph Stiglitz, another Nobel Prize-winning economist, said on Aug. 5 that he expects a “very slow recovery” and that a replacement for Bernanke should be considered.

“There are lots of potholes in the road,” Stiglitz, a Columbia University economics professor, said in an interview. “There are problems in commercial real estate. We know that there will be more foreclosures in the mortgage market” and “we know we don’t know the state of the banks.”

Squared Off

Economists Roubini and Schwartz squared off in the New York Times last month over Bernanke’s fate. Roubini, the New York University professor who predicted the credit crisis, voiced support for the central banker, while Schwartz, co-author with Milton Friedman of a history of U.S. monetary policy, wrote that the chairman should be replaced because of policy missteps and a failure to clearly articulate the bank’s goals.

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

Schwartz said Bernanke failed to explain why the Fed supported the rescue of Bear Stearns and not Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., whose bankruptcy in September 2008 added to the severity of the credit crisis.

President Barack Obama said last month that Bernanke has done “a fine job” as Fed chairman while declining to comment on the possible reappointment of the former Princeton University economist, which is subject to Senate approval.

To contact the reporter on this story: Shamim Adam in Kuala Lumpur at sadam2@bloomberg.net; Liza Lin in Kuala Lumpur at llin15@bloomberg.net





Read more...

Fed Focusing on Real-Estate Recession as Bernanke Convenes FOMC

By Scott Lanman

Aug. 10 (Bloomberg) -- The collapse in commercial real estate is preventing Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke from declaring the economy and financial markets are healed.

Property values have fallen 35 percent since October 2007, according to Moody’s Investors Service. That’s making it tough for owners to refinance almost $165 billion of mortgages for skyscrapers, shopping malls and hotels this year, pressuring companies such as Maguire Properties Inc., the largest office landlord in downtown Los Angeles, to put buildings up for sale.

The industry is likely to be high on the agenda when Bernanke and his colleagues sit down in Washington tomorrow for the Federal Open Market Committee meeting on monetary policy. Lawmakers including Barney Frank and Carolyn Maloney are pushing the central bank to extend an aid program designed to restore the flow of credit.

If nonresidential real estate remains in the doldrums, the Fed may be forced to leave emergency-lending programs in place and keep its benchmark interest rate close to zero for longer than some investors expect, given positive signs elsewhere in the economy.

Commercial property is “certainly going to be a significant drag” on growth, said Dean Maki, a former Fed researcher who is now chief U.S. economist in New York at Barclays Capital Inc., the investment-banking division of London-based Barclays Plc. “The bigger risk from it would be if it causes unexpected losses to financial firms that lead to another financial crisis.”

‘Close Attention’

The Fed is “paying very close attention,” Bernanke, 55, told the Senate Banking Committee on July 22, the second of two days of semiannual monetary-policy testimony before the House and Senate. “As the recession’s gotten worse in the last six months or so, we’re seeing increased vacancy, declining rents, falling prices, and so, more pressure on commercial real estate.”

The pressure may be easing in other areas of the economy. Gross domestic product shrank at a better-than-forecast 1 percent annual pace in the second quarter after a 6.4 percent drop the prior three months, and residential housing starts rose unexpectedly by 3.6 percent in June as construction of single- family dwellings jumped by the most since 2004, according to data from the Commerce Department.

Employers cut fewer workers than anticipated last month as the jobless rate fell to 9.4 percent from 9.5 percent in June -- the first decline since April 2008, based on Labor Department figures.

‘Danger Zone’

Amid such glimmers of improvement, commercial real estate is a “particular danger zone,” said Janet Yellen, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, in a July 28 speech in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho. The market may be “under stress for some considerable period of time,” William Dudley, chief of the New York Fed bank, said the following day in New York.

Nonresidential construction may decline as much as 9 percent this year and another 5 percent in 2010, predicts Kenneth Simonson, chief economist at Associated General Contractors of America, an Arlington, Virginia, trade group whose members include Essen, Germany-based Hochtief AG’s Turner Construction Co. in New York, one of the largest U.S. builders. In the second quarter, it accounted for 3.6 percent, or $509 billion, of U.S. gross domestic product on an annual basis, down from 4.3 percent in the final three months of 2008.

A dozen lawmakers questioned Bernanke on the topic during his July testimony. Some asked about extending the Term Asset- Backed Securities Loan Facility, the emergency program the Fed began in March to restart the market for securities backed by auto, credit-card and education loans. The central bank expanded the facility in June to cover as much as $100 billion in loans to support commercial mortgage-backed securities.

One-Year Extension

Forty-one House members -- including Frank, 69, a Massachusetts Democrat who chairs the Financial Services Committee, and Maloney, 61, a New York Democrat who heads the Joint Economic Committee -- signed a July 31 letter seeking a one-year extension through December 2010 and asking for a decision by mid-August.

Fed policy makers will prolong the program if they judge financial markets are still “some distance from normal operation,” Bernanke said during his July 22 testimony. “We will certainly be monitoring the situation.”

The Fed likely will change the end date -- just not right away, said former central-bank Governor Lyle Gramley.

Market Developments

“They’re probably going to want to wait a while to see how markets develop,” said Gramley, 82, now senior economic adviser with Soleil Securities Corp., a New York-based investment- research firm.

A six-month continuance is more likely than the one year industry officials want, said former Fed Governor Laurence Meyer, Washington-based vice chairman with consultant Macroeconomic Advisers LLC of St. Louis.

That would still be useful and “provide more of a runway” for the TALF to be effective, said Jeffrey DeBoer, president of the Real Estate Roundtable, a Washington group representing 16 trade associations and property owners including New York-based Vornado Realty Trust, the third-largest U.S. real-estate- investment trust by market value.

Any sales of mortgage-backed bonds would be the first new issues in the $700 billion U.S. market for commercial-mortgage- backed securities since it was shut down by the credit freeze in 2008.

About $3 billion are in the pipeline, and the success of these sales may foster as much as $25 billion in total deals in the next six months, said Kenneth Rosen, who runs a $310 million hedge fund in real-estate securities and heads the University of California’s Fisher Center for Real Estate and Urban Economics in Berkeley.

Signs of Improvement

The market is showing some signs of life: The Bloomberg REIT Office Property Index of 14 companies, while down 56 percent from its February 2007 peak, has gained 41 percent in the past six months. Also, the yield gap, or spread, on top- ranked commercial mortgage-backed bonds relative to U.S. Treasuries is about 4.49 percentage points compared with 8 percentage points at the start of May, according to Barclays data.

The Fed’s efforts to revive credit may be overpowered by continuing job losses, even as the pace of those losses slows. U.S. employers eliminated 247,000 workers from payrolls last month, according to an Aug. 7 Labor Department report, bringing the cumulative reduction to about 6.7 million since the start in December 2007 of the worst contraction since the Great Depression.

‘Negative Fundamental’

“Demand for commercial space comes from employment and the income generated by that employment,” said University of Pennsylvania Professor Joseph Gyourko, director of the Wharton School’s Samuel Zell and Robert Lurie Real Estate Center in Philadelphia. Mounting job losses are a “really significant negative fundamental,” signaling that “conditions are going to be tough for the industry for a while,” he said.

That may spill over into mounting losses at some banks. Forty-seven percent of loans at the 7,000-plus smaller U.S. lenders are in commercial real estate, compared with 17 percent for the biggest banks, according to New York-based Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

Regions Financial Corp., the Birmingham, Alabama, lender that accepted $3.5 billion in U.S. rescue funds, had $36.9 billion in nonresidential real-estate and construction loans at the end of the second quarter, 38 percent of its overall total. Regions posted a net loss for the period of $188 million compared with a profit of $206.3 million a year earlier as more developers and home builders fell behind on payments.

Third Straight Loss

Salt Lake City-based Zions Bancorporation, which operates in 10 Western states, reported its third straight quarterly loss July 20 on a surge in commercial-property defaults. Thirty-five percent of its loans for the period were in nonresidential real estate and construction, and its provision for loan losses rose to $762.7 million from $297.6 million in the first quarter.

One developer based in U.S. Representative Walt Minnick’s district is in a bind because a lower appraisal means he can’t renew the full amount of a $10 million, three-year loan he took out for a recent project, the first-term Democrat from Idaho said in an interview last week. The person may be forced into bankruptcy, said Minnick, 66, without identifying the developer.

“That is a microcosm of what is happening to commercial property” everywhere, he said. “It’s the next shoe to drop.”

Maguire bought 24 properties and 11 development sites for $2.88 billion in 2007 from New York-based Blackstone Group LP, the world’s largest private-equity company. Later that year, credit markets froze, blocking the Los Angeles-based company’s efforts to refinance its mortgages. As a result, Maguire said in April it would accelerate its property sales to raise cash and pay down debt from the purchases.

Refinancing Debt

New York-based Brookfield Properties Corp. faces a $1.8 billion debt maturity in October 2011 arising from the 2006 purchase of Trizec Properties Inc., which made it the second- biggest owner of U.S. office buildings by square footage. Brookfield has said it expects to refinance some of its obligations and sell buildings to cover the rest.

Commercial real estate remains “an important downside risk,” said Gramley, a Fed governor from 1980 to 1985. “I don’t think it’s going to be a blockbuster negative, but it’s one additional reason why this recovery is going to be of modest dimensions.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Scott Lanman in Washington at slanman@bloomberg.net.





Read more...