Economic Calendar

Wednesday, September 2, 2009

FX Thoughts for the Day

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by Kshitij Consultancy Services | Sep 02 09 12:22 GMT |

USD-CHF @ 1.0671/74...Resistance at 1.0700

R: 1.0700 / 1.0750-60 / 1.0800-10
S: 1.0630-00 / 1.0570/ 1.0530-00

Swiss is trading in a very narrow range of 1.0650-80. As any significant move on either side was not seen during the day, our view continue to remain the same on the pair. On the upside 1.0700 is the significant level to watch for. A strong break above 1.0700 might see a rise towards the Resistance at the 55-DMA (1.0750) during the day. Note that the projected Max-High for the day is 1.0759. A further strong upmove above 1.0750 might take it up towards 1.0850 over the next few days.

However if it continues to trade below 1.0700 we might see a downmove towards 1.0630-00 in the US session. A break below 1.0600 might further pull it down towards 1.0550-30.

Cable GBP-USD @ 1.6223/26...Strong Support zone 1.60-61

R: 1.6222-44 / 1.6278 / 1.6350
S: 1.6113 / 1.6069 / 1.6029-20 / 1.5750

Cable has risen once again on the Support of 1.6113. And as mentioned in the morning, till this holds, we would continue to bet in favour of the Support zone of 1.60-1.61. We also continue to mention that if broken, it could be very bearish targeting 1.5750 (38.2% retracement of the rise since March 2009) initially and 1.5600 thereafter.

Though the weekly charts suggest bearishness immediately, the same shall be comfirmed on a break of the Support zone mentioned above.

Aussie AUD-USD @ 0.8303/07...Holding long

R: 0.8338-53 / 0.8378 / 0.8450-70
S: 0.8280 / 0.8250-30 / 0.8175

Aussie traded in a range of 0.8280-0.8340 during the day. Failure to see a strong downmove below 0.8300 during the day is still keeping the bullish sentiment intact. on the upside a break above 0.8350 might see a rally once again towards the significant Resistance region 0.8450-70 over the next few sessions/days. On the downside as mentioned earlier significant Support is seen in the region 0.8250-30 which we expect to hold on any downmove below 0.8300.

Holding:

  • AUD 10K Long at 0.8280, SL 0.8210, TP Open.
  • As soon as the market trades 0.8360 bring the SL up to 0.8290

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

Legal disclaimer and risk disclosure

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





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The Euro Area Narrowed Contraction was Confirmed Today

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by ecPulse.com | Sep 02 09 13:23 GMT |

Day after day, the European outlook brightens significantly boosted by the ongoing improvements in fundamentals, as activity is being revived once again from the protracted measures taken by policy makers to end the drastic downturn seen previously. The taken measures came to push two of the sixteen nations into an unexpected expansion, where France and Germany faced 0.3% expansion. However, the narrowed contraction seen in the second three months of the year records the fifth consecutive contraction.

The gained back activity in the euro area was one of the reasons to narrow the pace of contractions in the second quarter, where the national governments of Germany and France introduced new measures in order to bolster the economy and stop the bleeding of unemployment rates. As we all know, Germany devoted some of it’s the money to support the car industry which was teetering on the brink of fading away, therefore a total of 2500 euros was givens to individuals in order to scarp their cars and purchase new ones.

However, what really grabbed our attention today was the improvements seen to the Consumer spending where it added 0.2% in the second quarter, whereas the ongoing bailout finally came to create a sense of stability and encourage households to consider spending at the time prices plummet heavily into the negative levels giving the chance for households to use the increased purchasing power of the euro.

The surprising thing seen today was the improvement seen in the export levels, as it contributed in narrowing the contractions seen previously. We can take those reading positively because the main reason behind the stalled activity in the sixteen nations was the drastic fall in export levels seen since the dilemma started, where Germany, the European economy which depends heavily on the levels of exports to external rivals faced a stalled demand, along with a weakened new orders to the manufacturing sector.

Okay, projections in markets project further contractions this year, where according to the IMF a 4.8% contraction will be seen this year, as it would extend further in 2010 to -0.3%. However, personally I believe if improvements are taking place that rapid then economies will be heading toward an expansion faster than markets already projected, therefore an expansion would be taking place in the before the end of the 2010, but the threat of surging unemployment rates along with the threats of easing spending would stand as an obstacle in the path of improvements.

Nevertheless, with the extensive actions taken by the European Central Bank and National governments the euro area will remain under prolonged stresses from the falling consumer prices, as it currently struggling in the negative levels. Yet we can’t really call a deflation in the sixteen nations because according the seen CPI readings we’ve seen it fall down to -0.7% but as seen in the last flash estimate it narrowed to -0.2% as a positive levels might take place in the upcoming periods.

The sixteen nations are finally headed in the safe zone, because the pace of contractions had narrowed significantly given out some hopes of an expansion in the upcoming year, yet policy makers have to take actions in order to end the bleeding in some sectors.

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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USD Lower, AUD Rallies on Strong Q2 GDP

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by Easy Forex | Sep 02 09 12:20 GMT |

FX Highlights

  • USD is opening mixed to lower and JPY rises as investors are cautious and fear recent rise in stocks and commodities is ahead of the economic news, AUD outperforms supported by strong Australian Q2 GDP, EU producer prices decline at a record pace, UK construction PMI declines
  • Focus turns to today's release ADP employment, productivity unit, labor cost and factory orders
  • Australia's Q2 GDP rises 0.6%, a 0.2% rise was expected, Australia's Swan says the government stimulus will be withdrawn and interest rates will have to be adjusted at some point, unemployment to remain elevated, AUD higher
  • JPY trades at a seven week high supported by rising risk aversion, Japanese officials try to reassure the US about US and Japanese relations, DPJ party says they will not interfere with BOJ policy
  • EU GDP falls 0.1% in Q2, producer prices decline at a record annual rate of 8.5% in June, EUR higher
  • UK construction PMI comes in weaker than expected, GBP higher
  • CAD lower, pressured by report that Canada's Liberals said they will no longer support the minority government
  • Libor euro and sterling rates at record lows
  • Challenger says job cuts were down 14% lower than a year ago
  • International Financial Services says currency trading volume slumped by 25% form the same month last year from a record high, FX trading nearly doubled from April 2005 to April 2008
  • August auto sales up 1% above 14.1 mln for the first time since 2008, Ford sales rise 17% in August but Chrysler and GM sales lag as the cash for clunker program ends
  • Economists declare the recession has ended as ISM rises above 50, S&P says it may not be until Q4 before we see solid evidence of recovery
  • US equity markets set to open mixed, European equities 0.5% lower, Nikkei closed 250 points lower

Upcoming Events

  • US- Wednesday, ADP employment will be released expected at -250k compared to -371k last month along with Q2 final productivity and unit labor costs expected at -5.9% and -5.8% respectively and July factory orders expected at 1.8% compared to 0.4% last month,
  • CAN- Wednesday, no major Canadian economic data is scheduled for release today

By Michael J. Malpede

Easy Forex

Michael J. Malpede is Chief Market Analyst with Easy-Forex® and has previously been featured on Bloomberg TV, Bloomberg radio, Reuters, MarketWatch, Wall Street Journal, Chicago Tribune, Chicago Sun Times, Toronto Star and Nikkei press. In analyzing the markets, he draws from 29 years of Foreign Exchange Research as a Foreign Exchange Analyst.

Please note that Forex trading (OTC Trading) involves substantial risk of loss, and may not be suitable for everyone. This report is provided by Easy- Forex® for informative purposes only. In no way it is a recommendation by Easy-Forex® for you to engage in any trade. It is your sole responsibility and you will have no claims with regards to this report against Easy-Forex®. If you do not agree to this, you are strongly advised not to use this report. Hence, Easy-Forex® shall not be held responsible for any outcome of trading decisions, in regards with this report or similar reports.





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South Korea Ratings Outlook Raised to Stable by Fitch

By Heejin Koo

Sept. 2 (Bloomberg) -- South Korea’s credit-rating outlook was raised to “stable” from “negative” by Fitch Ratings, citing the resilience of the nation’s economy and banks.

The country’s investment grade A+ is the same the company applies to Taiwan and China. Fitch lowered the outlook to negative in November on concern South Korea’s foreign-exchange reserves may decline due to its unstable financial system and widening current deficits.

“The term structure of banks’ debt has improved,” Fitch said in an e-mailed statement today. “On the public-finances front, Korea is likely to have avoided large fiscal costs associated with the deleveraging of the banking sector.”

Asia’s fourth-largest economy expanded 2.3 percent last quarter, the fastest pace in almost six years, as exports and household spending jumped. South Korea’s foreign-exchange reserves rose for a sixth month in August and it posted a current-account surplus in July, boosted by exports.

Fitch’s outlook “appears to reflect increased confidence on the Korean economy,” said Kim Seung Hyun, head of research at Taurus Investment Securities Co. in Seoul.

The Bank of Korea will probably report tomorrow the economy grew at a faster pace in the second quarter than initially estimated, Finance Minister Yoon Jeung Hyun said. Yonhap News cited Yoon as saying today second-quarter growth was probably between 2.6 percent and 2.7 percent.

Exports Improve

“The Korean economy has been resilient in the latest global economic downturn compared to the past,” said Taurus’s Kim. “That’s because exporters successfully boosted their global market share by increasing technological competitiveness, and reduced volatility arising from the global economic performance.”

South Korea’s foreign-exchange reserves rose to $245.5 billion in August after it received funds from the International Monetary Fund and as a weaker U.S. dollar increased the value of holdings in other currencies.

“Korea’s economic resiliency and the authorities’ upcoming efforts to re-establish a conservative fiscal agenda will likely provide scope for the government to revert to a fiscal balance position by 2011, with Korea being only one of six amongst all Fitch-rated sovereigns to do so from a deficit position,” Fitch said in the statement.

North Korea

South Korea slashed interest rates to a record low 2 percent to try to boost exports and encourage corporate and consumer spending. The government also allocated extra funds and spent 68 percent of this year’s budget through July in an effort to boost the economy.

South Korea’s sovereign ratings continue to balance its credit strengths, including fiscal prudence and external finance improvements, against potential security risks and reunification costs from North Korea, Fitch said.

North Korea today re-established telephone lines with the South Korean military, a year after severing them, in the latest reconciliatory gesture from the regime since last month.

North Korean leader Kim Jong Il also met with South Korea’s Hyundai Group Chairwoman Hyun Jeong Eun and released a worker detained for more than four months after criticizing the regime at a jointly run industrial park.

The moves contrast with North Korea’s military threats earlier this year, when the regime also launched a ballistic missile and conducted its second nuclear-weapons test.

To contact the reporter on this story: Heejin Koo in Seoul at hjkoo@bloomberg.net





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Thai Government to Spend $5.9 Billion on Economy by End of 2010

By Daniel Ten Kate and Haslinda Amin

Sept. 2 (Bloomberg) -- Thailand’s government will inject 200 billion baht ($5.9 billion) into the economy by the end of next year to bolster growth as a revival in export orders helps the nation recover from its first recession in a decade.

The spending is about a fifth of a 1.06 trillion-baht, three-year investment program on transportation, health and education projects, which will boost economic growth by as much as 2.5 percent a year, Finance Minister Korn Chatikavanij said in an interview today. Gross domestic product will expand in the fourth quarter from a year earlier as the spending kicks in this month and overseas demand improves, he said.

“Our forecast looks on solid ground,” Korn, a former chairman of JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s Thailand unit, told Bloomberg Television. “Every indication in terms of export orders has significantly improved in key sectors.”

Thailand’s benchmark stock index has surged 58 percent from this year’s low in March as companies from Hana Microelectronics Pcl to Delta Electronics (Thailand) Pcl report higher orders. The central bank has kept its key interest rate unchanged at 1.25 percent for three meetings after four cuts from December to April as a brighter global outlook bolster economic prospects.

“We have passed the bottom, but the recovery process will be gradual and take some time,” Prasert Bunsumpun, chief executive officer of PTT Plc, Thailand’s biggest energy company, said in Bangkok yesterday. “If the government can restore confidence, everything will come back.”

Australia’s economic growth unexpectedly accelerated to 0.6 percent in the second quarter on consumer spending, according to a Bureau of Statistics report today.

‘Stimulative’ Spending

Thailand’s planned government stimulus totals about 15 percent of GDP, Korn, 45, said.

“It will hit the economy in the month of September and onwards,” he said. “We have reason to be confident that it will be stimulative and lead to improved GDP growth later.”

The economy shrank 4.9 percent in the second quarter from a year earlier, after contracting 7.1 percent in the previous three months, the government said Aug. 24. GDP may decline as much as 3.5 percent in 2009 before expanding as much as 3 percent next year, it predicts.

Southeast Asia’s second-largest economy grew 2.3 percent in the second quarter from the previous three months, and may expand at a “similar” pace this quarter, Korn said.

Political turmoil since a 2006 coup has compounded Thailand’s economic woes as rival demonstrators seized airports, streets and government buildings in the past year. Anti- government protesters have pledged to continue targeting Abhisit, who they say lacks a popular mandate to govern.

Election Schedule

After his opponents forced the cancellation of an Asian summit in April, Abhisit set up a panel to recommend constitutional changes and said he wouldn’t call a new election until they were approved. Korn said his ruling Democrat party, which Abhisit heads, was “not stuck on that issue” and the timetable for amendments is not tied to a new election.

“Ideally, from an economic perspective, we want to be in position at least for another year in order to make sure our key policies are implemented before a general election is called,” he said. “That should give us sufficient time for political reform.”

Korn is “confident” his party’s key coalition ally Bhum Jai Thai, which left the previous government last year to shift power to Abhisit, is “on board” and won’t leave to trigger a new election. The Democrat party hasn’t won the most seats in an election since 1992.

“Our recovery will be very fast if we have political stability,” said Anant Asavabhokhin, president of Land & Houses Pcl. “The economy will turn around very quickly if people feel secure and come out to eat food and start spending.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Haslinda Amin in Singapore at hamin1@bloomberg.net; Daniel Ten Kate in Bangkok at dtenkate@bloomberg.net





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G-20 Risks ‘Catastrophe’ as Political Push Ebbs for Regulation

By Rich Miller and Simon Kennedy

Sept. 2 (Bloomberg) -- Economic policy makers from the Group of 20 nations gathering this week in London are finding that their drive to prevent the next financial crisis may be jeopardized by their success in countering the current one.

Stock markets are rebounding, with the MSCI World Index of 23 developed nations gaining 59 percent since March 9, when it reached its lowest level since 1995. Signs of economic revival are also appearing in countries such as the U.S. and U.K. after the worst slumps since World War II.

The rally is sapping the political push to impose tougher regulations on financial-services companies. While that might help earnings for New York-based Citigroup Inc., the third- largest U.S. bank, and Barclays Plc, the U.K.’s second-biggest lender, it may also leave the global economy susceptible to a fresh cycle of boom then bust.

“We’re getting a recovery, so dealing with the true problems is going to be more difficult,” said Raghuram Rajan, a former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund who is now a professor at the University of Chicago. “The risk is that we’re just going to tool around until the next crisis.”

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, Bank of England Governor Mervyn King and other G-20 finance ministers and central bankers meet Sept. 4 and Sept. 5 to prepare for the Pittsburgh summit of leaders three weeks later. They are convening five months since their governments blamed “major failures” in supervision as one of the “fundamental causes” of the worldwide credit crunch and vowed to “strengthen financial regulation to rebuild trust.”

Expanding Economy

That drive is now in jeopardy as the crisis ebbs. The IMF predicted in July that the global economy will expand 2.5 percent in 2010 after contracting 1.4 percent this year. Banks are regaining lobbying strength, and other political goals such as health-care reform in the U.S. have captured the attention of legislatures. International differences, including over how to restrain bonuses, are also undermining the G-20’s united front.

Central bankers are already pressing governments not to slow the pace. “It would be a catastrophe not to draw all the lessons from the present crisis in terms of regulation,” European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet told a symposium in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, on Aug. 21.

“Much remains to be done,” Bank of Israel Governor Stanley Fischer told attendees the same day. The former Citigroup vice chairman suggested the global banking system may need to undergo “radical restructuring,” perhaps by imposing limits on the size of individual financial companies.

Monitoring Power

Fischer also recommended that banks be forced to set aside more capital and central banks be given the power to monitor financial systems.

“What I’m very worried about is the recovery is going to come and the political will is going to disappear to actually repair the system,” said Stephen Cecchetti, head of the monetary and economic unit at the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland, which serves as a bank for central banks.

Financial institutions may be the winners of a regulatory impasse because their profits would be spared, said Simon Johnson, a former chief IMF economist who is now a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, a Washington-based research organization.

President Barack Obama in June proposed the most sweeping overhaul of the U.S. financial-regulatory system in 75 years, calling for the creation of an agency to monitor mortgages and other consumer products and tighter oversight of the country’s biggest banks and institutions.

‘Material’ Effect

Congressional passage of his revamp would have a “material” effect on bank earnings, said Andrew Laperriere, a Washington-based managing director at International Strategy & Investment Group, an institutional brokerage. The MSCI World Financials Index has jumped 132 percent since its low of 35.01 on March 9.

Unless steps are taken to reduce complexity and leverage in financial markets, “we’re going to have a replay of what has just happened over the last few years,” said Richard Bookstaber, a former trader at New York-based Morgan Stanley, the sixth-biggest U.S. bank by assets.

He warned in 2007 that risks in the markets were becoming unmanageable. Since then banks, brokers and insurers have racked up more than $1.6 trillion of writedowns and credit losses, data compiled by Bloomberg show, and the world economy fell into recession.

Fastest Pace

Financial firms are showing signs of reverting to their old ways, Johnson said. Zurich-based Credit Suisse Group AG, Switzerland’s second-largest bank, and Scotia Capital, the investment-banking unit of Bank of Nova Scotia, Canada’s third- largest bank, are among those increasing lending to buyers of high-yield company loans and mortgage bonds at what may be the fastest pace since the crisis began.

In the U.S., Obama’s plans face resistance from lawmakers, overseers and the banking industry.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Chairman Sheila Bair and other regulators have opposed giving up their consumer-protection powers under an administration plan to set up a new agency to police financial products. Banks have also opposed the new regulator, arguing it would add a layer of expense to their operations and raise borrowing costs for customers and companies.

“The industry has gotten really organized since the crisis began to ease,” said Johnson, who is also a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge.

Risk Regulator

A number of lawmakers, including Christopher Dodd, a Connecticut Democrat and chairman of the U.S. Senate Banking Committee, have voiced unease about another administration proposal to give the Fed powers overseeing systemic risks. Dodd has said he is leaning toward giving that power to a council of regulators.

“There’s no chance reform gets done this year,” said Laperriere, noting the breadth of changes proposed by the administration. “It’s not very likely it gets done in the current Congress,” which concludes at the end of 2010, he said.

It also may take more than a year for the European Union to unify market oversight in its 27 nations. While leaders agreed in June to sharpen scrutiny of banks, the EU’s executive arm must now draft legislation that then goes to the European Parliament and individual governments.

National Money

The risk watchdog the EU has proposed will lack powers to enforce its warnings and won’t automatically be run by the ECB as originally planned. The U.K. has won a compromise to prevent the panel from making decisions involving national money.

Executive pay is an area of disagreement that may become a point of contention at this week’s meeting of financial officials from China, India, Canada and other G-20 countries. German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy are urging the G-20 to impose tougher limits on bank bonuses. U.K. Prime Minister Gordon Brown sees a cap as difficult to enforce, the Financial Times reported yesterday, citing an interview.

“Bonus payments are the thing that quite rightly drives a lot of people up the wall,” Merkel said in Berlin on Aug. 31 with Sarkozy beside her. The two leaders said they want the G-20 to limit the size of banks and tighten capital rules.

France drew criticism from U.S. analysts and investors last week by announcing it won’t hire financial firms unless they follow their French counterparts and apply rules that include a three-year deferral on two-thirds of bonus payments.

‘Tug of War’

“We’re in a tug of war between national political pressures and the desire to coordinate,” said Charles Dallara, managing director of the Washington-based Institute of International Finance, which represents the world’s biggest financial firms. “Right now the nationalist forces have the upper hand.”

He said that may lead to regulatory “fragmentation,” with supervisors trying to “protect their own backyard” and making the global system less stable in the process.

The longer the delay in adopting reforms, the more likely the drive will be dominated by politicians as opposed to “technocrats,” said Mohamed El-Erian, chief executive officer of Newport Beach, California-based Pacific Investment Management Co., manager of the world’s largest bond fund. In that case, reforms may end up being too “blunt,” he said.

“The run-up to the Pittsburgh G-20 meeting has attracted little attention,” said El-Erian, a former IMF official. “There is a risk that, after a successful London meeting in April, the G-20 process may lose momentum.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Rich Miller in Washington rmiller28@bloomberg.netSimon Kennedy in Paris at skennedy4@bloomberg.net.





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Norway’s Krone Slides After Manufacturing Industry Contraction

By Bo Nielsen

Sept. 2 (Bloomberg) -- Norway’s krone fell against the euro for the second consecutive day after a report showed the nation’s manufacturing industry unexpectedly shrank in August.

The krone also declined versus the dollar. A seasonally adjusted index based on responses from purchasing managers slid to 42.3 from a revised 50.1 in July, Fokus Bank ASA said in a statement today. A reading below 50 signals contraction. The median forecast of seven analysts surveyed by Bloomberg was for a reading of 51.

“The development is deviating sharply from developments in other countries,” Camilla Viland, a currency strategist in Oslo for DnB NOR ASA, Norway’s biggest bank, said in a note following the report.

Norway’s currency dropped 0.3 percent to 8.6981 per euro at 9:49 a.m. in Oslo, after weakening as much as 0.5 percent after the Fokus Bank figures. It declined 0.4 percent to 6.1192 against the dollar.

To contact the reporter on this story: Bo Nielsen in Copenhagen at bnielsen4@bloomberg.net





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Australian Economic Growth Accelerates, Points to Rate Increase

By Jacob Greber

Sept. 2 (Bloomberg) -- Australia’s economic growth unexpectedly accelerated in the second quarter, driving the nation’s currency higher on expectations the central bank will raise borrowing costs from a half-century low.

Gross domestic product rose 0.6 percent, the biggest gain in more than a year, from the previous three months when it grew 0.4 percent, the Bureau of Statistics said in Sydney today. The median estimate of 20 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News was for a 0.2 percent expansion.

Today’s report confirms central bank Governor Glenn Stevens’ view that the economy has been “stronger than expected” as A$20 billion ($16.6 billion) of government cash handouts boosted spending at retailers such as Woolworths Ltd. and Harvey Norman Holdings Ltd. Australia joins other developed nations, including France and Germany, that are rebounding from the deepest global recession since the Great Depression.

“Australia clearly is in a sweet spot, one that we expect to extend through to year end,” said Glenn Maguire, chief Asia- Pacific economist at Societe Generale in Hong Kong. The Reserve Bank will raise interest rates by a quarter-percentage point in November, he added.

The Australian dollar rose to 83.04 U.S. cents at 12:38 p.m. in Sydney from 82.73 cents just before the report was released. The two-year government bond yield gained 7 basis points to 4.39 percent. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point. The benchmark S&P/ASX 200 index has climbed 41 percent since March 6.

Government Stimulus

Governor Stevens and his board left the overnight cash rate target at a 49-year low of 3 percent yesterday for a fifth month as the economy strengthens. GDP may expand further in coming quarters as the government spends A$22 billion on roads, railways and schools.

Traders forecast the central bank’s overnight cash rate target will be 175 basis points higher in 12 months, according to a Credit Suisse Group AG index based on interest-rate swaps at 12:35 p.m. in Sydney.

Consumer spending jumped 0.8 percent in the second quarter, the largest gain since the three months through December 2007, adding 0.5 percentage points to GDP.

The economy grew 0.6 percent from a year earlier, twice the pace forecast by economists, today’s report showed.

Analysts had cut their growth forecast in the past two days after reports showed a widening current account deficit in the second quarter and a record drop in business inventories.

Global Rebound

Government stimulus also helped lift Germany out of it its worst recession since World War II, a report showed on Aug. 25. Europe’s largest economy grew 0.3 percent from the first quarter, after four quarters of contraction. France’s economy, the second-biggest in the euro region, unexpectedly exited a year- long recession, gaining by the same amount as Germany.

By contrast, the U.K.’s economy shrank 5.5 percent in the second quarter, the most since records began in 1955, and U.S. GDP dropped 1 percent.

Today’s report showed engineering construction jumped 5.2 percent in the second quarter. The government last month approved Chevron Corp.’s A$50 billion liquefied natural gas venture, which will leapfrog Australia to second place behind Qatar as the world’s biggest LNG producers.

The Reserve Bank scrapped its forecast last month for the economy to contract this year, instead predicting gross domestic product will expand 0.5 percent. The bank expects growth will accelerate to 2.25 percent in 2010 and 3.75 percent in 2011.

Retail Profits

Reports this week showed building approvals rose for a second month in July and manufacturing expanded in August for the first time in 14 months. Consumer and business confidence have also surged to the highest levels in almost two years.

Woolworths Ltd., Australia’s largest retailer, said last week that profit in the six months ended June 28 jumped 16 percent.

“The troubles are probably behind us now and things are looking a lot better,” Gerry Harvey, chairman of Australia’s biggest electronics seller, Harvey Norman, said on Aug. 28. “Consumer sentiment is much higher than it was six months ago and there’s no reason to believe that won’t continue.”

Harvey Norman’s earnings in Australia, where it gets three quarters of its revenue, rose 4 percent in the year ended June 30.

“The stimulus is helping Australia defy global economic gravity,” Treasurer Wayne Swan told reporters in Canberra today. “Without economic stimulus, our economy would have contracted.” The government would start withdrawing its stimulus from the fourth quarter, he said.

The chain price index, a measure of retail prices, declined 2.2 percent in the second quarter from the previous three months, today’s report showed.

To contact the reporter for this story: Jacob Greber in Sydney at jgreber@bloomberg.net





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Norway’s Krone Won’t Suffer from PMI Drop, Credit Suisse Says

By Bo Nielsen

Sept. 2 (Bloomberg) -- Norway’s krone won’t suffer long from an unexpected August contraction in the manufacturing industry as the rest of the Scandinavian nation’s economy continues to improve, according to Credit Suisse Group AG.

“Given the recent data releases in Norway have all surprised the market on the upside, and the Norwegian economy should continue to benefit as oil prices drift higher, we doubt such a drawback in PMI is persistent,” Credit Suisse analysts led by London-based Ray Farris wrote in a note today. “We maintain our three-month krone forecast at 8.50 per euro.”

The krone fell 0.1 percent to 8.6750 per euro at 1:37 p.m. in Oslo, after falling as much as 0.5 percent after the manufacturing report was released today.





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Russia May Cut Rates This Month After Economy Slumped

By Alex Nicholson and Paul Abelsky

Sept. 2 (Bloomberg) -- Russia’s central bank may cut its key interest rate this month for the sixth time since it started easing policy in April after output contracted at a record pace and as the economy faces a slow recovery, a survey showed.

Bank Rossii may lower the refinancing rate by 0.25 of a percentage point to 10.5 percent this month, according to the median estimate of 12 economists surveyed by Bloomberg. The rate may fall to 10 percent by year-end, the survey showed. The bank, which doesn’t publish a timetable for rate meetings, began cutting on April 24 for the first time since 2007.

The economy of the world’s biggest energy exporter shrank a record 10.9 percent last quarter after a decline in global trade undermined demand for exports of raw materials from steel to oil. Lower rates have failed to revive credit flows and Prime Minister Vladimir Putin is urging bankers receiving state bailout funds to ramp up lending to resuscitate domestic demand.

“The central bank will continue to ease rates from historically tight levels,” said Rory MacFarquhar, a Moscow- based economist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. “As the ruble remains comfortably within the 26-41 band against the basket, we see” a further 0.75 point in cuts in the next few months.

Russian policy makers are cutting rates as central banks in Europe and the U.S. turn their focus to the timing of possible rate increases to match an economic recovery. The Russian economy will shrink 6.8 percent this year, compared with a 4.8 percent decline in the euro region and a 2.8 percent contraction in the U.S., the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said on June 24.

‘Crisis’

“We’re not out of the crisis yet,” Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin said yesterday.

While most of Russia’s economic decline has stemmed from its reliance on commodity exports, reluctance amongst the country’s banks to lend funds has scuppered a domestic recovery. Overdue loans rose to 5.5 percent of total lending in July from 5 percent in June, central bank figures showed yesterday.

“High lending risks, the growth of overdue debt and high interest rates meant the necessary rate of lending to the economy could not be attained, despite active steps by the government and Bank Rossii,” the bank said on Aug. 26.

The pace of rate cuts will be constrained by inflation that’s hovered above 10 percent since October 2007, economists said. Consumer price growth accelerated to 12 percent in July, the Federal Statistics Service said on Aug. 4.

‘More Sticky’

“Inflation was showing signs of being a little bit more sticky on the way down than they would have liked,” said Manik Narain, a strategist at Standard Chartered in London. “We are seeing a more conservative stance, quite a watchful stance.”

Government stimulus measures are also impeding central bank efforts to ease policy. Russia will post its first budget deficit since 1999 this year, and the Finance Ministry forecasts a shortfall of 8.9 percent of gross domestic product.

“State financing is already sufficient -- it mustn’t be increased,” Kudrin said yesterday. Widening the deficit would require a tighter monetary stance, “and we are trying to do the opposite,” he said, warning against additional fiscal easing.

Inflation will accelerate and the ruble will weaken as the government taps its $88.5 billion Reserve fund to plug the deficit, Standard & Poor’s said in an Aug. 31 report.

“Russia’s past struggle with persistently high domestic inflation suggests further constraints on monetary policies in the future on the back of a fresh surge in inflation,” the ratings agency said.

‘In Sync’

With the scope for rate cuts limited, the central bank may seek to penalize banks that don’t release credit. Lenders may face limited access to the bank’s cash and other funding instruments if they fail to lower interest rates on deposits and credit facilities, First Deputy Chairman Alexei Ulyukayev warned in July.

“They are keeping liquidity conditions tight, which is in sync with keeping inflation stable,” Narain said.

The ruble may trade around 38 against its target dollar- euro basket by the end of September and weaken to 39.7 by the end of the year, according to the median estimate in the survey. That compares with 38.0546 at 12:35 p.m. in Moscow today.

The Russian currency lost as much as 0.6 percent and was down 0.5 percent to 31.9752 per dollar by 12:35 p.m. in Moscow, its weakest level since Aug. 19. It was little changed at 45.4755 per euro.

Investors are betting the ruble will depreciate to 32.68 per dollar in three months, according to non-deliverable forwards. NDF agreements gauge expectations of a currency’s movements by fixing an exchange rate at a particular level in the future.

Signs of Working

Central bank policy is showing some signs of working. Bank interest rates on loans to companies in July were the lowest in nine months as the slump in industrial production eased.

The average rate on loans in July was 14.7 percent, compared with 15.4 percent in June, Bank Rossii said on Aug. 26, though that report didn’t include data for OAO Sberbank, the biggest lender.

Industrial production rose for a second month in July, and gross domestic product also expanded for a second month in July, growing a seasonally adjusted 0.5 percent in the month, according to the Economy Ministry.

‘So-Called Bottom’

“The real economy saw a change in trends in June and July,” Ulyukayev said on Aug. 20. “The lowest point of the downturn was probably passed in May. The so-called bottom is behind us.”

Any recovery will fall short of the boom years Russia enjoyed between 2003 and 2007, when output expanded about 7 percent on average a year, some economists said.

“It’s still very much a case of the pace of contraction easing rather than the economy actually recovering,” said Neil Shearing, emerging-Europe economist at Capital Economics in London. “We’ll be lucky to get much more than stagnant growth next year.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Alex Nicholson in Moscow at anicholson6@bloomberg.net.





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G-20 Risks ‘Catastrophe’ as Push Ebbs for Regulation

By Rich Miller and Simon Kennedy

Sept. 2 (Bloomberg) -- Economic policy makers from the Group of 20 nations gathering this week in London are finding that their drive to prevent the next financial crisis may be jeopardized by their success in countering the current one.

Stock markets are rebounding, with the MSCI World Index of 23 developed nations gaining 59 percent since March 9, when it reached its lowest level since 1995. Signs of economic revival are also appearing in countries such as the U.S. and the U.K. after the worst slumps since World War II.

The rally is sapping the political push to impose tougher regulations on financial-services companies. While that might help earnings for New York-based Citigroup Inc., the third- largest U.S. bank, and Barclays Plc, the U.K.’s second-biggest lender, it may also leave the global economy susceptible to a fresh cycle of boom then bust.

“We’re getting a recovery, so dealing with the true problems is going to be more difficult,” said Raghuram Rajan, a former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund who is now a professor at the University of Chicago. “The risk is that we’re just going to tool around until the next crisis.”

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, Bank of England Governor Mervyn King and other G-20 finance ministers and central bankers meet Sept. 4 and Sept. 5 to prepare for the Pittsburgh summit of leaders three weeks later. They are convening five months since their governments blamed “major failures” in supervision as one of the “fundamental causes” of the worldwide credit crunch and vowed to “strengthen financial regulation to rebuild trust.”

Global Growth

That drive is now in jeopardy as the crisis ebbs. The IMF plans to raise its global growth forecast to “just below” 3 percent for 2010 from its 2.5 percent estimate of July, Jorg Decressin, a division chief in the lender’s research department, said yesterday. Banks are regaining lobbying strength, and other political goals such as health-care reform in the U.S. have captured the attention of legislatures. International differences, including over how to restrain bonuses, are also undermining the G-20’s united front.

Central bankers are already pressing governments not to slow the pace. “It would be a catastrophe not to draw all the lessons from the present crisis in terms of regulation,” European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet told a symposium in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, on Aug. 21.

‘Radical Restructuring’

“Much remains to be done,” Bank of Israel Governor Stanley Fischer told attendees the same day. The former Citigroup vice chairman suggested the global banking system may need to undergo “radical restructuring,” perhaps by imposing limits on the size of individual financial companies.

Fischer also recommended that banks be forced to set aside more capital and central banks be given the power to monitor financial systems.

“What I’m very worried about is the recovery is going to come and the political will is going to disappear to actually repair the system,” said Stephen Cecchetti, head of the monetary and economic unit at the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland, which serves as a bank for central banks.

Financial institutions may be the winners of a regulatory impasse because their profits would be spared, said Simon Johnson, a former chief IMF economist who is now a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, a Washington-based research organization.

Sweeping Overhaul

President Barack Obama in June proposed the most sweeping overhaul of the U.S. financial-regulatory system in 75 years, calling for the creation of an agency to monitor mortgages and other consumer products and tighter oversight of the country’s biggest banks and institutions.

Congressional passage of his revamp would have a “material” effect on bank earnings, said Andrew Laperriere, a Washington-based managing director at International Strategy & Investment Group, an institutional brokerage. The MSCI World Financials Index has jumped 132 percent since its low of 35.01 on March 9.

Unless steps are taken to reduce complexity and leverage in financial markets, “we’re going to have a replay of what has just happened over the last few years,” said Richard Bookstaber, a former trader at New York-based Morgan Stanley, the sixth-biggest U.S. bank by assets.

Fastest Pace

He warned in 2007 that risks in the markets were becoming unmanageable. Since then banks, brokers and insurers have racked up more than $1.6 trillion of writedowns and credit losses, data compiled by Bloomberg show, and the world economy fell into recession.

Financial firms are showing signs of reverting to their old ways, Johnson said. Zurich-based Credit Suisse Group AG, Switzerland’s second-largest bank, and Scotia Capital, the investment-banking unit of Bank of Nova Scotia, Canada’s third- largest bank, are among those increasing lending to buyers of high-yield company loans and mortgage bonds at what may be the fastest pace since the crisis began.

Still, stocks fell around the world this week on concern that their rally has outpaced the prospects for earnings and economic growth. U.S. stocks dropped for a third day yesterday, the longest losing streak for the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index since June, amid worry banks will post more losses.

In the U.S., Obama’s plans face resistance from lawmakers, overseers and the banking industry.

Risk Regulator

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke, Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Chairman Sheila Bair and other regulators have opposed giving up their consumer-protection powers under an administration plan to set up a new agency to police financial products. Banks have also opposed the new regulator, arguing it would add a layer of expense to their operations and raise borrowing costs for customers and companies.

“The industry has gotten really organized since the crisis began to ease,” said Johnson, who is also a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge.

A number of lawmakers, including Christopher Dodd, a Connecticut Democrat and chairman of the U.S. Senate Banking Committee, have voiced unease about another administration proposal to give the Fed powers overseeing systemic risks. Dodd has said he is leaning toward giving that power to a council of regulators.

“There’s no chance reform gets done this year,” said Laperriere, noting the breadth of changes proposed by the administration. “It’s not very likely it gets done in the current Congress,” which concludes at the end of 2010, he said.

National Money

It also may take more than a year for the European Union to unify market oversight in its 27 nations. While leaders agreed in June to sharpen scrutiny of banks, the EU’s executive arm must now draft legislation that then goes to the European Parliament and individual governments.

The risk watchdog the EU has proposed will lack powers to enforce its warnings and won’t automatically be run by the ECB as originally planned. The U.K. has won a compromise to prevent the panel from making decisions involving national money.

Executive pay is an area of disagreement that may become a point of contention at this week’s meeting of financial officials from China, India, Canada and other G-20 countries. German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy are urging the G-20 to impose tougher limits on bank bonuses.

Bonus Pools

France will suggest curbing bonus pools as a percentage of a bank’s revenue, imposing a ceiling on payments or taxing them, a finance ministry official told reporters yesterday. U.K. Prime Minister Gordon Brown sees a cap as difficult to enforce, the Financial Times reported yesterday, citing an interview.

“Bonus payments are the thing that quite rightly drives a lot of people up the wall,” Merkel said in Berlin on Aug. 31 with Sarkozy beside her. The two leaders said they want the G-20 to limit the size of banks and tighten capital rules.

France drew criticism from U.S. analysts and investors last week by announcing it won’t hire financial firms unless they follow their French counterparts and apply rules that include a three-year deferral on two-thirds of bonus payments.

“We’re in a tug of war between national political pressures and the desire to coordinate,” said Charles Dallara, managing director of the Washington-based Institute of International Finance, which represents the world’s biggest financial firms. “Right now the nationalist forces have the upper hand.”

Regulatory ‘Fragmentation’

He said that may lead to regulatory “fragmentation,” with supervisors trying to “protect their own backyard” and making the global system less stable in the process.

The longer the delay in adopting reforms, the more likely the drive will be dominated by politicians as opposed to “technocrats,” said Mohamed El-Erian, chief executive officer of Newport Beach, California-based Pacific Investment Management Co., manager of the world’s largest bond fund. In that case, reforms may end up being too “blunt,” he said.

“The run-up to the Pittsburgh G-20 meeting has attracted little attention,” said El-Erian, a former IMF official. “There is a risk that, after a successful London meeting in April, the G-20 process may lose momentum.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Rich Miller in Washington rmiller28@bloomberg.net;





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U.S. Bond Yields May Lose Appeal in Japan: Technical Analysis

By Wes Goodman

Sept. 2 (Bloomberg) -- The two-month gain in Treasuries has pushed yields down to levels investors in Asia may find unattractive, Mitsubishi UFJ Trust & Banking Corp. said, citing trading patterns.

Ten-year Treasuries yield 2.08 percentage points more than same-maturity securities in Japan, narrowing from this year’s high of 2.41 percentage points set last month. The spread has shrunk to the 500-day moving average and will be at the 100-day moving average should it narrow another four basis points, or 0.04 percentage point.

“U.S. Treasuries are less attractive,” said Takashi Yamamoto, chief trader in Singapore at Mitsubishi UFJ Trust & Banking, part of Japan’s biggest bank. “Yields are too low.”

Benchmark 10-year notes yielded 3.36 percent in the U.S. and 1.28 percent in Japan as of yesterday. Those figures will rise to 4 percent and 1.6 percent by year-end, widening the spread to 2.4 percentage points, Yamamoto said.

The last time the rate gap was below the 100-day average was on April 15 when it was 1.33 percentage points. The spread then widened over a six-week period.

Japan is the second-largest foreign holder of U.S. government securities after China, according to the Treasury Department. The two Asian nations hold a combined $1.49 trillion of the $6.78 trillion in marketable U.S. debt.

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

To contact the reporter on this story: Wes Goodman in Singapore at wgoodman@bloomberg.net.





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Mortgage Bankers Push for New Federal Loan Guarantee Program

By Dawn Kopecki

Sept. 2 (Bloomberg) -- Mortgage bankers are pushing Congress to expand the U.S. government’s support of the market by guaranteeing private-industry home-loan securities and replacing finance companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

The first step builds off the model for Ginnie Mae, the agency that guarantees payments on bonds backed by government- insured mortgages, according to a report today by the Washington-based Mortgage Bankers Association. The second part involves winding down government-seized mortgage buyers Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and creating “two or three” new privately funded, government-chartered companies to back individual loans.

“We wanted to put forth a structure we think that has elements in it that respond to a lot of the discussion and debate on Capitol Hill,” Mortgage Bankers Association President John Courson said in an interview.

Putting the “full faith and credit” of the U.S. Treasury behind a portion of the $1.8 trillion non-agency mortgage market would help boost a once-dominant form of home-loan financing that almost collapsed in 2007 as delinquencies rose. The association, which represents about 2,400 lenders, mortgage brokers, commercial banks, thrifts and other companies, said the importance of housing to the U.S. “economic and social fabric” warrants a federal government role in mortgage liquidity.

“There’s a lot of white canvas that has yet to be painted on,” said Courson, who is also president and chief executive officer of Central Pacific Mortgage Co. in Citrus Heights, California. “. We don’t have all the answers. We just wanted to put a structure out there to guide the debate.”

Fannie, Freddie

The new structure would remove the credit risk from the mortgages and leave investors with the interest-rate risk, the association said in the report. In a separate statement, the group said the government guarantee is intended only to support “products needed to keep the secondary market for core mortgage products liquid and functioning.”

The infrastructure of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac should be used as a foundation for the new initiative, the association said. Washington-based Fannie Mae was created in the 1930s under President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s “New Deal” plan to revive the economy. McLean, Virginia-based Freddie Mac was started in 1970, largely to create competition for Fannie Mae.

The companies were designed primarily to lower the cost of home ownership by buying mortgages from lenders, freeing up cash at banks to make more loans. They make money by financing mortgage-asset purchases with low-cost debt and on guarantees of home-loan securities they create out of loans from lenders.

Good Bank/Bad Bank

The Mortgage Bankers Association said it advocates a “good bank/bad bank resolution” for the companies. Two or three mortgage credit-guarantor entities should be created to replace the companies, the association said. The entities would own and guarantee loans that they then package into bonds. A new agency similar to Ginnie Mae would then guarantee those securities, according to the association’s plan.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which own or guarantee about $5.2 trillion in residential mortgage debt, were seized by regulators a year ago as their losses threatened to further disrupt the housing market. The companies have booked a combined $165.3 billion in quarterly net losses over the past two years and have received or requested $95.6 billion in taxpayer aid since November.

The Obama administration and Congress are considering options to restructure the companies, which are relying on an investment and credit package from the Treasury Department that is set to expire at the end of the year. The options include a wholesale liquidation and splitting off the companies’ bad assets into a separate government-backed entity.

No “Underlying Value”

House Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank, a Massachusetts Democrat, has said he may look to use the companies to boost subsidization of rental housing.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac fell in New York trading this week after FBR Capital Market’s Paul Miller said the mortgage- finance companies have no “underlying value” to justify a more than tripling in their share prices this month.

“There is no fundamental value remaining in Fannie and Freddie, particularly since the government owns 80 percent of each company,” Miller, a banking analyst based in Arlington, Virginia, said in an August 31 note to investors.

Fannie Mae has dropped 22 percent this week, closing at $1.59 yesterday on the New York Stock Exchange, after more than tripling in the previous four weeks. Freddie Mac is down 21 percent this week to $1.90 after a similar rally.

To contact the reporter on this story: Dawn Kopecki in Washington at dkopecki@bloomberg.net.





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Wells Fargo to Repay TARP ‘Shortly’ as Loan Losses Stabilize

By Erik Schatzker and Dakin Campbell

Sept. 2 (Bloomberg) -- Wells Fargo & Co. plans to repay the U.S. bank bailout program “shortly” without raising equity, a tactic that would protect the value of stakes held by investors including Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc.

“We will pay it back, but we’re going to pay it back in a shareholder-friendly way,” John Stumpf, president and chief executive officer of the San Francisco-based lender, said yesterday in an interview on Bloomberg Television. “We are now earning capital so quickly, organically, we don’t want to dilute our existing shareholders.”

Ten of Wells Fargo’s biggest rivals repaid the U.S. Troubled Asset Relief Program in June after passing “stress tests” to measure how they would fare in a deeper recession. The bank, ranked No. 1 among U.S. home lenders this year, has chafed under extra government oversight that came with the $25 billion public stake, and the stock has dropped 11 percent this year. The KBW Bank Index is little changed in that period.

“We will pay it back shortly,” Stumpf said in the interview. He declined to give a date, saying an agreement depends on talks with the Federal Reserve, adding that he’s confident about reaching an accord. “Of all the issues I’m dealing with, this one doesn’t keep me up at night,” he said.

Wells Fargo generated $14.2 billion in the second quarter to satisfy demands from regulators for new capital after the stress tests, surpassing the $13.7 billion goal. Assets no longer collecting interest in the quarter climbed 45 percent to $18.3 billion from the first quarter, the bank said July 22.

Loss Peak

“There are some indications that we’re seeing a top in some of our problem loan areas,” Stumpf said in the interview. In some businesses, the bank is seeing “very high levels of loss, but they look like they’re flattening out.”

Stumpf said costs tied to troubled loans may be reaching a peak, and loss rates on auto loans in particular are stabilizing.

“They probably need a few more quarters to build up their capital levels before I would feel comfortable seeing them pay back TARP,” Jennifer Thompson, an analyst at Portales Partners LLC in New York who has a “hold” rating on Wells Fargo, said in an interview yesterday. “But they certainly are generating a tremendous amount of capital internally each quarter.”

Wells Fargo declined $1.31, or 4.8 percent, to $26.21 yesterday in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. Berkshire Hathaway, the insurance and investment holding company based in Omaha, Nebraska, is the bank’s biggest shareholder with a stake of about 6.5 percent, according to Bloomberg data.

Points of View

Stumpf, 55, said President Barack Obama’s plan for a single regulator to monitor risk-taking by major banks is “a mistake” because a group of watchdogs would provide the benefit of differing points of view.

Obama’s plan would merge the Office of Thrift Supervision with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency to establish a National Bank Supervisor. It would also create a new agency to oversee consumer financial products.

“The dual banking system has served this country exceedingly well for 150 years or more,” Stumpf said. “You have all different flavors and sizes of financial institutions. To have one place domiciled with all that, I think you’ve missed differing points of view.”

By favoring a council, Stumpf is siding with Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Chairman Sheila Bair. She argued in Congress in July that a council of regulators would benefit from the expertise each brings to specific areas of the industry, while preventing big banks from having too much sway with one agency, such as the Fed.

To contact the reporters on this story: Erik Schatzker in New York at eschatzker@bloomberg.net; Dakin Campbell in San Francisco at dcampbell27@bloomberg.net





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