Economic Calendar

Monday, September 7, 2009

Asia Session Recap

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by Forex.com | Sep 07 09 05:39 GMT |

With the US out for a bank holiday tomorrow, trading was subdued today in Asia to start off the new trade week. Risk made a subtle move back into the markets as the weekend's G-20 meeting hinted that the global economy was now in the process of shaking off the last remnants of the financial crisis. The Dollar and the Yen suffered on that perception, and the commodity based currencies benefitted greatly. The EUR/USD moved higher right from the 1.4300 open and never looked back as it peaked out at just over 1.4335 for the day. GBP/USD almost reached 1.6420 and then collapsed to near 1.6364 ahead of this week's BoE rate decision. Although the ranges were small, USD/JPY was able to move higher from 92.90 lows to 93.20 highs.

With equities higher in Asia, most notably China's CSI 300 by over 2%, the EUR/JPY pair was able to add 70 pips to its 132.86 opening lows. The other yen crosses followed, although in not as dramatic a fashion. The big movers of the day were the Aussie and Kiwi dollars, both reaching yearly highs as commodity prices gave the currencies a nice boost. AUD/USD reached an 0.8537 level not seen since August of 2008, and NZD/USD fell five pips shy of 0.7000, regardless reaching a high from late September of 2008.

After tomorrows US holiday we should have the makings of a busy week, with an RBNZ rate decision and Australian Trade Balance due on Thursday, and a slew of Chinese data due out on Friday

Upcoming Economic Data Releases (London Session):

9/7/2009 8:30 EC Sentix Investor Confidence SEP -17 -13.7
9/7/2009 10:00 GE Factory Orders MoM (sa) JUL 4.50% 2.00%
9/7/2009 10:00 GE Factory Orders YoY (nsa) JUL -25.30% -20.60%

Forex.com
http://www.forex.com

DISCLAIMER: The information and opinions in this report are for general information use only and are not intended as an offer or solicitation with respect to the purchase of sale of any currency. All opinions and information contained in this report are subject to change without notice. This report has been prepared without regard to the specific investment objectives, financial situation and needs of any particular recipient. While the information contained herein was obtained from sources believed to be reliable, author does not guarantee its accuracy or completeness, nor does author assume any liability for any direct, indirect or consequential loss that may result from the reliance by any person upon any such information or opinions.





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Technical Analysis for Major Currencies

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by ecPulse.com | Sep 07 09 05:46 GMT |

EURO

The 61.8% correction level was able to halt further declines for the pair after Friday's NFP resulting in the pair rebounding to form a bullish technical pattern with a neckline at 1.4345 as seen in the image above. The stochastic indicator shows the pair being overbought which may result in volatile trading as the pair attempts to breach the neckline yet we expect the pair is to incline on the intraday basis targeting 1.4650 confirmed by a four hour close above 1.4300.

The trading range for today is among the key support at 1.3975 and the key resistance at 1.4650

The general trend is to the downside as far as 1.4720 remains intact with targets at 1.2120

Support: 1.4300, 1.4250, 1.4170, 1.4145, 1.4100
Resistance: 1.4345, 1.4375, 1.4430, 1.4475, 1.4550

Recommendation: Based on the charts and explanations above, our opinion is buying the pair with the breach of 1.4345 to 1.4450 and stop loss below 1.4250 might be appropriate

GBP

The 1.6290 level limited further losses for the Cable to rebound to the upside to form a bullish technical pattern with a pivot resistance at 1.6380 as the pair currently trades near it in an attempt to confirm the breakout. From here we expect the pair is to incline today on the intraday basis confirmed by a four hour closing above the mentioned resistance level to push the pair towards 1.6650 as an initial target as far as 1.6250 remains intact.

The trading range for today is among the key support at 1.5870 and the key resistance at 1.6670

The general trend is to the upside as far as 1.4840 remains intact with targets at 1.7100

Support: 1.6305, 1.6250, 1.6180, 1.6155, 1.6095
Resistance: 1.6380, 1.6455, 1.6505, 1.6560, 1.6610

Recommendation: Based on the charts and explanations above, our opinion is buying the pair with the breach of 1.6380 to 1.6560 and stop loss below 1.6305 might be appropriate

JPY

The USD/JPY pair breached the key resistance for the downside channel and as we see in the above image, the stochastic indicator is showing the pair being overbought which may pressure for a slight decline to retest the previously breached key resistance (currently at 92.60) before rebounding to the upside targeting 95.00. Note that the short term trend remains to the downside and this incline may be nothing more than a correction. A four hour closing below 92.60 will continue the decline without the need for a correction.

The trading range for today is among the key support at 90.00 and the key resistance at 95.10

The general trend is to the downside as far as 102.60 remains intact with targets at 84.95 and 82.60

Support: 92.60, 91.91, 91.40, 90.95, 90.40
Resistance: 93.25, 93.80, 94.25, 95.00, 95.55

Recommendation: Based on the charts and explanations above, our opinion is buying the pair from 92.60 to 94.25 and stop loss below 91.90 might be appropriate.

CHF

The Dollar versus Swissy pair surged to the upside in an attempt to breach the key resistance at 1.0675 yet the continuous closing below this level pressures the pair to the downside as we see the possibility of forming a triple top. From here we expect the pair is to decline on the intraday basis to breach the 1.0550 critical support and open the way towards 1.0400 and 1.0000 respectively. Trading below 1.0665 will keep the trend to the downside.

The trading range for today is among the key support at 1.0300 and the key resistance at 1.0915

The general trend so far is to the upside as far as 1.0550 remains intact with targets at 1.2245

Support: 1.0550, 1.0480, 1.0450, 1.0400, 1.0375
Resistance: 1.0665, 1.070, 1.0740, 1.0800, 1.0890

Recommendation: Based on the charts and explanations above, our opinion is selling the pair with the breach of 1.0550 to 1.0400 and stop loss above 1.0675 might be appropriate

CAD

The Dollar versus Loonie pair was able to reach our suggested target at 1.0825 to maintain trading around this level. As we see in the above image, trading below 1.0915 will confirm the downside direction to return within the key descending channel on the medium term. The stochastic indicator may result in a slight upside correction to gather enough bearish momentum before reversing back to the downside to initially target 1.0715 before extending towards 1.0300. 1.0915 remaining intact is vital for the decline to occur.

The trading range for toady is among the key support at 1.0625 and the key resistance at 1.1320

The general trend is to the downside as far as 1.1870 remains intact with targets at 1.0300

Support: 1.0825, 1.0785, 1.0715, 1.0655, 1.0625
Resistance: 1.0915, 1.100, 1.1060, 1.1150, 1.1200

Recommendation: Based on the charts and explanations above, our opinion is selling the pair from 1.0915 to 1.0715 and stop loss above 1.1000 might be appropriate.

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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Daily Technical Outlook

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by Innerfx | Sep 07 09 05:57 GMT |

EURUSD

1.4200 provided a good turning point once again on Friday's test and the euro bounced, returning into the upside zone. Today's trading is expected to be quiet due to the Labor Day holiday in the U.S. Both intra-day and short term studies are positive and won't be affected on pullbacks as long as the intra-day support at 1.4265/70 and short-term's 1.4200 respectively will hold. On the upside, resistance is being challenged at the time of writing this, at 1.4300 – formed by the descendant trend line coming from 1.4405. Next barriers are seen at 1.4385/00 and 1.4450. Current quote is 1.4333 @05:45 GMT

Support: 1.4300, 1.4265/70 and 1.4200
Resistance 1.4330/50, 1.4385/00 and 1.4450

GBPUSD

The Pound is currently retracing after last attempt on 1.6400 and first support comes at 1.6350 which is also the median retracement level of the last upward swing from 1.6285 to 1.6415. It may provide a stable support along with 1.6335 which is the 61.8% of the same up leg. Ultimately, another intra-day support level is formed into the 1.6300/10 region. Short term sentiment is slightly positive but a break above 1.6400 would be a good confirmation of current bias. Buying into the 1.6335/1.6350 is tempting but not during a holiday. Current quote is 1.6373 @05:45 GMT

Support: 1.6335/50, 1.6300/10 and 1.6250
Resistance: 1.6400/20, 1.6450 and 1.6500

Innerfx

Legal disclaimer and risk disclosure

InnerFX and/or its author(s) shall not be responsible for any loss arising from any investment or trading decision based on any recommendation, forecast, strategy or other information herein contained. The contents of this article should not be construed as an express or implied promise, guarantee or implication by InnerFX and/or its author(s) that readers and subscribers will profit from the strategies herein or that losses in connection therewith can or will be limited. Trades in accordance with the recommendations / strategy in an analysis, especially leveraged investments such as Foreign Exchange trading and investment in derivatives, can be very speculative and may result in losses as well as profits, in particular if the conditions mentioned in the analysis do not occur as anticipated. Trading in the Currency Exchange market is a challenging opportunity where above average returns are available to educated and experienced investors who are willing to take above average risk. Past performance does not guarantee similar performance in the future. Check http://www.innerfx.com/disclaimer for full disclaimer. You may not post this (or part of this) article to forums, newsgroups, mailing lists, electronic bulletin boards, websites, or other services, without the prior written consent of InnerFX.

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China Shouldn’t Delay Policy Fine-Tuning, Fan Says

China Shouldn’t Delay Policy Fine-Tuning, Fan Says (Update2)

By Bloomberg News

Sept. 7 (Bloomberg) -- China’s government shouldn’t let market volatility deter it from “fine-tuning” economic policy to avoid drastic adjustments later, central bank adviser Fan Gang said.

“Macroeconomic policies must be preemptive,” Fan said at a trade fair in Xiamen, southern China, today.

The Shanghai Composite Index is down about 16 percent from this year’s Aug. 4 peak on concern that government efforts to cool credit growth after a record 7.37 trillion yuan ($1 trillion) of loans in the first half will choke off the nation’s recovery. China will study the use of “regulatory tools” to adjust bank lending, central bank Deputy Governor Su Ning said Sept. 5.

Shanghai’s stock benchmark was up 1.6 percent as of the 11:30 a.m. local time break in trading.

Bank lending fell in July to less than a quarter of June’s level. Premier Wen Jiabao pledged Sept. 1 to maintain stimulus spending and a “moderately loose” monetary policy, saying the economy is at a critical stage.

China’s commitment to existing policies doesn’t rule out adjustments, Fan said.

“Is it that the policies to tackle the financial crisis can never be changed?” he asked. “New loans totaled almost 8 trillion yuan in the first half. Is it that the government can only wait for another 8 trillion yuan to be extended before it adjusts policies?”

‘Appropriate’ Credit Growth

The People’s Bank of China said Aug. 5 that it would fine- tune monetary policy as needed and guide “appropriate” growth in credit to aid the economy’s revival.

The central bank has left borrowing costs and banks’ reserve requirements unchanged this year after cuts in the final four months of 2008 to counter the deepening global financial crisis. The key one-year lending rate is 5.31 percent and the nation’s biggest banks are required to set aside 15.5 percent of deposits as reserves.

China is unlikely to raise rates or reserve requirements within the next six months, Guosen Securities said in an e- mailed report on Sept. 2, citing an unidentified central bank official.

There is only a small possibility of any increase, Guosen cited the official, a credit-control expert, as saying at an event hosted by the brokerage on Sept. 1. First-half lending growth was not sustainable and new loans will be smaller from August, Guosen cited the official as saying.

--Li Yanping. Editors: Paul Panckhurst, Stephanie Phang.

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Li Yanping in Beijing at +86-10-6649-7568 or yli16@bloomberg.net

Michael Dwyer at +65-6212-1130 or mdwyer5@bloomberg.net





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Australian Building Industry Shrank at Slower Pace in August

By Jacob Greber

Sept. 7 (Bloomberg) -- Australia’s building industry contracted at a slower pace in August as demand for residential dwellings increased.

The index rose 2.9 points to 42.4 from July, according to a survey by the Australian Industry Group and Housing Industry Association released in Sydney today. July was the 18th consecutive monthly reading below 50, which shows the building industry is contracting.

Central bank Governor Glenn Stevens left the benchmark interest rate unchanged at a half-century low of 3 percent last week for a fifth month, partly to spur the construction industry. A report on Sept. 9 may show home loans fell 1 percent in July, the first decline in 10 months, according to a Bloomberg News survey of analysts.

“Industry activity is continuing to fall amid tight credit conditions and ongoing difficulties amongst firms in securing new project work,” said Tony Pensabene, associate director at the Canberra-based association.

“However, more positive developments were the moderation in the pace of the industry’s contraction, and the continued growth in house building,” he added.

A gauge of engineering demand dropped 3.2 points to 31.8 in August, today’s report showed. An index measuring apartment building surged 15 points to 44.4 and commercial construction gained 1.3 to 39.6.

Demand for houses rose 0.6 points to 52.5.

Today’s survey is based on responses from about 100 construction companies on sales, new orders, deliveries, employment and input costs.

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





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New Zealand’s House Prices Rose for a Fourth Month

By Tracy Withers

Sept. 7 (Bloomberg) -- New Zealand house prices rose for a fourth month in August, signaling the property market is recovering and may help the economy emerge from a recession.

Prices rose 0.7 percent from July and have gained 1.9 percent from a low in April, Quotable Value New Zealand Ltd., the government valuation agency, said in an e-mailed report.

Rising consumer confidence, housing demand and immigration are helping New Zealand recover from its worst recession in three decades. Finance Minister Bill English said last week he expects the economy will start growing in the second half of this year.

“The housing market is strongly driven by confidence and that appears to be returning to the wider market,” Glenda Whitehead, valuation manager at Wellington-based Quotable Value, said in the report.

Consumer optimism surged to an 18-month high, according to a Roy Morgan Research poll of 1,026 people taken in the two weeks ended Aug. 31. Forty-two percent of those surveyed expect the economy will improve over the next year, the Melbourne-based company said in an e-mailed statement.

Annual immigration growth accelerated to the highest level in more than two years in July, while house sales rose 34 percent from a year earlier.

House prices slumped last year amid a credit crisis and a plunge in consumer confidence. Price in August remained 7.9 percent lower than a year earlier, today’s report showed.

A shortage of houses being offered for sale has helped fan prices, said Whitehead.

“The recent increases in values are a temporary surge caused by the imbalance between motivated buyers and a shortage of properties available for them to buy,” she said. “If more properties come on to the market as expected, this imbalance could be corrected and values should stabilize.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Tracy Withers in Wellington at twithers@bloomberg.net.





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Australian August Job Advertisements Rise for First Month in 16

By Jacob Greber

Sept. 7 (Bloomberg) -- Australian advertisements for job vacancies rose in August for the first time in 16 months, a sign the nation’s economy is strengthening.

Jobs advertised in newspapers and on the Internet gained 4.1 percent from July, the largest increase since December 2007, according to an Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. report released in Melbourne today. Advertisements were 48.1 percent lower than a year earlier.

Pressure is mounting on central bank Governor Glenn Stevens to raise interest rates from a half-century low of 3 percent after a report last week showed economic growth accelerated at the fastest pace in more than a year, driven by consumer spending. The unemployment rate probably climbed to 5.9 percent last month from 5.8 percent in July, according to a survey of analysts by Bloomberg News.


Today’s report provides “the best evidence we have received to date that the labor market, and the economy more generally, are about to enter the recovery phase,” said Warren Hogan, chief economist at ANZ Bank in Sydney.

National vacancies advertised in newspapers and on the Internet averaged 130,326 a week last month, today’s report showed. Newspaper advertisements jumped 5.5 percent to an average of 8,613 a week. Internet notices gained 4 percent to 121,713.

Employers probably cut 15,000 jobs last month, according to the median estimate of 21 economists surveyed by Bloomberg ahead of a Sept. 10 employment report.

A separate report today showed the building industry contracted at a slower pace last month as demand for residential dwellings increased. The Australian Industry Group’s performance of construction index rose 2.9 points to 42.4 from July. A reading below 50 shows the industry is shrinking.

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




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Poland Will Need to Raise Rates to Stem Inflation, Hausner Says

By Katya Andrusz

Sept. 7 (Bloomberg) -- The Polish central bank’s new rate- setting council will need to raise borrowing costs after it is selected in February to curb inflation, said Jerzy Hausner, an informal adviser to the government.

“Monetary policy in Poland will have to be much tighter than it is now,” Hausner said in an interview in Warsaw on Sept. 2. “Inflation is definitely going to be one of Poland’s future problems.”

The European Union’s largest eastern member and the only one that emerged from the global crisis without falling into recession must balance the need to keep price growth under control and sustain growth as the economy recovers from near- stagnation in the first quarter.

Annual inflation has remained above the target limit of 3.5 percent for 15 of the past 18 months. The Finance Ministry on Sept. 1 said the rate probably rose to 3.7 percent in August. The benchmark interest rate is at a record-low 3.5 percent.

While other post-communist nations in the region suffered from contractions, Poland’s gross domestic product was buoyed by its large internal market, which shielded it from a drop in exports as demand from its rich western neighbors waned.

Even so, rising unemployment and the effect of higher rates on investments are risks to the economy, said Hausner, a former economy minister who heads the economics and public administration department at the Krakow University of Economics.

‘Hit That Hard’

“We’ll start having problems with private consumption soon as a result of the labor market situation, and I don’t believe that we’ll reach our export levels from before the crisis any time soon,” he said. “Investments will be far more important than before, and tighter monetary policy will hit that hard.”

The economy expanded an annual 1.1 percent in the second quarter. Hausner said the recovery will be tentative, without an acceleration in the last two quarters and may last longer than some economists predict. He sees GDP stagnating or rising 1 percent this year.

“It doesn’t make much difference where it is on that scale, growth will be far, far slower than last year,” he said. “We haven’t come out the other side of our difficulties yet.”

Prime Minister Donald Tusk said on Aug. 28 Poland would need “serious fiscal discipline” to rein in the deficit.

The European Commission, the EU’s regulatory arm, in May initiated a so-called excessive budget deficit procedure against Poland after its shortfall shot above the bloc’s limit last year. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development predicted the general government deficit to reach 6.3 percent of GDP this year.

‘Growing Problems’

“Next year’s budget will be extremely difficult, and slightly higher growth than was expected in the second quarter won’t put a stop to the growing problems,” Hausner said. He added Poland needs annual growth of “at least” 4 percent to “put us on the safe side with the budget and allow us to continue catching up with western Europe.”

Hausner said the new Monetary Policy Council will have to ignore pressures to keep rates low at the expense of boosting inflation.

“The current council is coming to the end of its term and is very likely to keep its stance neutral,” he said. “We need to have a balanced Monetary Policy Council that’s composed of people who think independently and don’t make decisions as a result of outside pressure.”

The MPC will end its term early next year. The president and the two chambers of parliament can each recommend three members to the 10-seat body. Bank Governor Slawomir Skrzypek, who took office in January, 2007, is the 10th member, with the power to break potential ties.

To contact the reporter on this story: Katya Andrusz in Warsaw at kandrusz@bloomberg.net





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U.K. Factory Slump is Easing, Recovery Not ‘Strong,’ EEF Says

By Svenja O’Donnell

Sept. 7 (Bloomberg) -- U.K. factories’ output will decline at the slowest pace in more than a year in the next three months as the economy recovers from recession, a survey of manufacturers showed.

An index of manufacturing output is forecast to rise to minus 2 in the next three months, compared with minus 25 in the third quarter, a survey by the Engineering Employers Federation and BDO Stoy Hayward LLP showed.

“Things seem to have stabilized in the past three months but I don’t think there’s anything to suggest a strong recovery,” Steve Radley, the EEF’s chief economist, told reporters in London. “There isn’t a feeling of confidence coming back.”

Britain is showing signs of emerging from the worst recession in a generation after the Bank of England last month voted to buy an additional 75 billion pounds ($123 billion) of bonds with newly created money. The recovery in manufacturing is expected to lag the rest of the economy, the EEF said.

BDO Stoy Hayward also published a report based on business surveys showing that the central bank will probably keep the benchmark interest rate at 0.5 percent until the fourth quarter of next year. The survey covered 11,000 respondents from companies employing approximately five million employees, BDO Stoy Hayward said.

The economy will probably grow 0.6 percent next year, with manufacturing forecast to expand 0.5 percent, the EEF said.

Unemployment is still forecast to increase, with the number of jobs cut in manufacturing companies estimated to total 359,000 for the period from 2008 through 2010, the report showed.

The next interest-rate decision is Sept. 10.

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





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Ruble Set to Fall 10% by March on Russia Deficit, Shearing Says

By Alex Nicholson

Sept. 7 (Bloomberg) -- Russia’s ruble will fall 10 percent by March as the government fails to curb its deficit and the central bank comes under political pressure to keep liquidity flowing and raise the money supply, Capital Economics said.

“We’re walking a tightrope,” Neil Shearing, emerging Europe economist at Capital Economics Ltd. in London, said by telephone. “If the Kremlin could have it their own way, what they would have is unsecured loans to the banking sector and a bigger deficit.”

The buildup of rubles in the economy, as the government taps the oil money in its Reserve Fund to finance the country’s first budget gap since the 1998 default, will push the currency below the lower limit of its trading range against a basket of dollars and euros, according to Shearing. He expects the deficit to exceed 9 percent of gross domestic product this year.

Raw material exports helped Russia amass the world’s fourth-biggest reserves over the past decade as the price of Urals crude oil surged, peaking at a record $141.07 a barrel last July. While the reserves helped shield the nation from the worst of the global credit crisis since 2007, its commodity reliance has left the economy, and the ruble, vulnerable to sudden shifts in energy prices.

Political Pressure

The government’s use of reserves to plug the deficit has so far been partly offset by central bank “sterilizations,” as it scaled back emergency lending and issued notes to suck cash from the economy. That balancing act may be undermined as the bank comes under “increasing political pressure to stimulate bank lending,” Shearing said.

Russia expects to run a deficit equivalent to 8.9 percent of gross domestic product this year after the economy slumped a record 10.9 percent last quarter. The government has signaled it won’t cut spending or raise taxes, though it plans to tap international debt markets. Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin said on Sept. 3 the government may seek $17.8 billion abroad in 2010.

Bank Rossii will “gradually replace” its unsecured credit facilities with short term repurchase agreements, First Deputy Chairman Alexei Ulyukayevsaid in a letter to the Association of Russian Banks on Aug. 26.

“The volume of net credit provided to banks continues to fall,” he said in a Sept. 4 interview with Interfax. “In other words, the negative credit issuance will partly extinguish the positive fiscal issuance.”

‘Sterilization’

The government aims to spend an average of 850 billion rubles ($26.8 billion) to 900 billion rubles a month this year before disbursing 1.5 trillion rubles in December, Kudrin said. Bank Rossii can sterilize about 1 trillion rubles by cutting its loan programs, said Aleksandra Evtifyeva, a senior economist at VTB Capital.

“The Finance Ministry plans to issue more rubles and the central bank will have much less capacity to sterilize the extra liquidity,” she said.

Russia’s $85.7 billion Reserve Fund will be drained by the end of next year, the government estimates, as the money goes toward covering the deficit and funding an “anti-crisis” program worth about 2.5 trillion rubles ($79 billion) when tax breaks, central bank lending and other measures are included.

Kudrin, 48, backed by then President Vladimir Putin, championed the accumulation of reserves and the two oil funds over the past decade to ensure the government wouldn’t default on debt as it did a decade ago, the last time commodities prices plunged. The value of the reserves rose $6.6 billion in the week ended Aug. 28 to $404.9 billion.

Biggest Threat

Bank Rossii drained more than a third of the reserves in the second half of 2008 to stem a 35 percent decline in the ruble as oil dropped and investors shunned riskier assets. The ruble now trades inside a 26 to 41 band that the bank has pledged to defend.

The biggest threat to Russia’s economic stability remains another sudden slump in the oil price, Shearing and Evtifyeva say. Energy prices are far from stable, analysts say.

Crude oil is on a “slippery slope,” according to Auerbach Grayson, a brokerage in New York. Crude may see a “significant decline,” with the price set to fall to about $60 a barrel, Richard Ross, a technical analyst at Auerbach, said on Sept. 4.

“If we do get a fall in the oil price, then any liquidity left floating around in the banking system will quickly find its way into foreign currency and that will lead to a big clampdown by the central bank and a big ramp up in sterilization activity,” Shearing said.

If investors repeat last year’s exodus from the ruble after oil plunged by more than two-thirds from its record, the central bank would be forced to reverse a series of rate cuts to discourage bets against the currency as well as tighten the funds it offers at loan auctions, Shearing said. That would stifle lending and nip signs of recovery in the bud, he said.

VTB Capital’s Evtifyeva agrees. “It’s the biggest internal risk,” she said.

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





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OPEC to Hold Quota After Oil Reaches $75 Saudi Target

By Grant Smith and Ayesha Daya

Sept. 7 (Bloomberg) -- OPEC’s success in more than doubling oil prices since a five-year low in December will probably persuade ministers to maintain production quotas after this week’s meeting.

Reducing shipments beyond record cutbacks last year would endanger the global economic recovery, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries’ president said last week. Oil rose to $75 a barrel on Aug. 25, the price Saudi Arabian King Abdullah says is fair for consumers and producers.

“OPEC countries will be pleased by the price, which they couldn’t have anticipated back in January,” said Edward Morse, the head of economic research at LCM Commodities LLC in New York. “They won’t seriously consider deepening or extending the cuts at this stage. OPEC has taken a lot of oil out of the market, and it’s going to clear the market up.”

Ministers from Kuwait, Iran, Libya, Qatar and Iraq have in the past three weeks made similar comments to OPEC President Jose Maria Botelho de Vasconcelos, signaling they support existing quotas. The group won’t change output at the Vienna meeting, Agence France-Presse reported yesterday, citing comments by Iran’s OPEC Governor Mohammad Ali Khatibi.

All the 26 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News predicted four days ago the group will maintain its target at 24.845 million barrels a day at the Sept. 9 meeting in the Austrian capital. OPEC supplies about 40 percent of the world’s oil.

Crude oil for October delivery was trading at $68.08 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange at 11:23 a.m. in Singapore, recovering from a five-year low of $32.40 in December.

‘Early Stages’


“OPEC is very aware the economic recovery is in the very early stages and that they need to be careful about that,” said Mike Wittner, head of oil market research at Societe Generale SA in London. “If they cut quotas they’d risk pushing the price up too far, too fast.”

OPEC members have shipped more oil onto the market since April to capture the rise in prices. Saudi Arabia, OPEC’s largest exporter, and other Persian Gulf states are pumping near or below their specified allocation.

Countries from Iran to Venezuela are exceeding their production targets to maintain government revenue, and the states will be encouraged to comply with their agreed limits, an official from a Persian Gulf OPEC member said Sept. 2.

The 11 members bound by targets have increased total production, leaving their compliance rate with the 4.2 million barrel-a-day reductions agreed upon last year at about 70 percent. They supplied 26.055 million barrels a day last month, 1.2 million barrels a day more than the limit, according to Bloomberg estimates.

Reduce Cheating

“I expect them to make a valiant effort to reduce the level of cheating that I believe has grown by more than half a million barrels since March,” said Adam Sieminski, chief energy economist at Deutsche Bank AG in Washington.

Stockpiles in the world’s most advanced economies equal about 62 days of consumption, according to the Paris-based International Energy Agency. OPEC ministers have said they want to lower stockpiles to between 52 and 54 days of demand.

“The producer group will undoubtedly express nervousness at the high level of inventory in the system,” Lawrence Eagles, the global head of commodities research at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in New York, said in a Sept. 3 note. “They are not only correct to be biting their fingernails, but may also be forced, in short order, to tighten compliance.”

Oil surged fivefold in five years before peaking at $147.27 in July of last year. In the same period, OPEC oil production rose 23 percent to a record 32.775 million barrels a day. As the financial crisis spread, fuel demand and oil prices collapsed.

December Pact

OPEC responded with three production cuts totaling 4.2 million barrels a day. At its Dec. 17 meeting in Oran, Algeria, the group agreed to lower output by 2.2 million barrels a day, extending curbs announced in September and October.

At subsequent meetings in March and May, ministers decided to hold quotas steady as Saudi Arabian Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi said OPEC was willing to see oil prices below its desired level to help the global economy. King Abdullah said in November that $75 was a price that balanced the interests of oil producing and consuming nations.

“We have been seeing slowly a much reduced variation of oil prices,” OPEC President Botelho de Vasconcelos, who is also Angola’s oil minister, said last week in an interview in Luanda. “This is a sign that the world economy is recovering. Everything shows that they will keep output unchanged.”

Ministers will gather for this week’s meeting at the group’s headquarters at 9:30 p.m. because the summit falls during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

Companies Lose

Lower quotas hurt foreign oil companies working in OPEC countries, such as Paris-based Total SA, which pumps oil in Angola.

“Unfortunately we are losing a good amount in production,” Total Chief Executive Officer Christophe de Margerie told reporters last week in Paris. “They’re often less-profitable barrels than what we produce in other countries so the impact on profit is less.”

While OPEC makes the steepest supply cuts in its history, some producers outside the group have bolstered market share to fill in the gap. Non-OPEC suppliers, including Russia and Brazil, will collectively raise daily output this year by 350,000 barrels to 51 million barrels a day, according to the IEA.

The group’s 12 members are Algeria, Angola, Ecuador, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Libya, Nigeria, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Venezuela. The group is scheduled to meet again in late December in Luanda.

To contact the reporters on this story: Grant Smith in London at gsmith52@bloomberg.net; Ayesha Daya in Dubai adaya1@bloomberg.net




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China Alarmed by U.S. Monetary Expansion Policy, Telegraph Says

By Gregory Turk

Sept. 7 (Bloomberg) -- A Chinese official said Beijing was alarmed by the U.S. Federal Reserves’ loose credit policy, U.K.’s Telegraph newspaper reported.

Cheng Siwei, former vice-chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, said he believed the dollar will “fall hard” if the U.S. continues printing money to buy back government bonds.

Cheng spoke at the Ambrosetti Workshop held at Italy’s Lake Como, the newspaper reported yesterday.





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China Alarmed by U.S. Monetary Expansion Policy, Telegraph Says

By Gregory Turk

Sept. 7 (Bloomberg) -- A Chinese official said Beijing was alarmed by the U.S. Federal Reserves’ loose credit policy, U.K.’s Telegraph newspaper reported.

Cheng Siwei, former vice-chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, said he believed the dollar will “fall hard” if the U.S. continues printing money to buy back government bonds.

Cheng spoke at the Ambrosetti Workshop held at Italy’s Lake Como, the newspaper reported yesterday.





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Euro Rises a 2nd Day Versus Dollar on Optimism Recession Easing

By Yoshiaki Nohara and Ron Harui

Sept. 7 (Bloomberg) -- The euro climbed against the dollar for a second day before a private report forecast to show European investor confidence rose to the highest level since July 2008, signaling the region’s recession is easing.

The euro also gained for a third day versus the yen on expectations a German report will show factory orders expanded in July for a fifth month. Australia’s dollar advanced to a one- year high against the greenback after the Group of 20 nations pledged to maintain economic stimulus, driving up Asian stocks. Treasury futures were little changed ahead of a U.S. holiday.

“The positive economic outlook is causing more risk taking, supporting the euro and commodity currencies, especially the Australian dollar,” said Takashi Kudo, director of foreign- exchange sales in Tokyo at NTT SmartTrade Inc., a unit of Nippon Telegraph & Telephone Corp. “Additional positive economic data would further enhance the trend. The euro may climb to near $1.44 today.”

The euro strengthened to $1.4334 as of 1:49 p.m. in Tokyo from $1.4297 in New York on Sept. 4. Europe’s currency rose to 133.53 yen from 132.98 yen, and climbed to 87.50 British pence from 87.21 pence. The dollar traded at 93.16 yen from 93.01 yen.

Australia’s dollar climbed to 85.14 U.S. cents from 85.07 cents on Sept. 4. It earlier touched 85.38 U.S. cents, the strongest level since September 2008. Australia’s currency advanced to 79.33 yen from 79.11 yen.

The yen weakened versus 14 of its 16 major counterparts as the Nikkei 225 Stock Average climbed 1.2 percent and the MSCI Asia Pacific Index of regional shares rose 1 percent.

Ten-year U.S. bond futures maturing in December 2009 were little changed at 116 31/32 as the Treasury prepared to sell $70 billion in three-, 10- and 30-year debt this week, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. U.S. financial markets are closed today for the Labor Day holiday.

Europe Sentiment

The euro gained for the first time in four days versus the pound as a Bloomberg News survey of economists showed an index measuring euro-region sentiment will rise to minus 13.7 this month from minus 17 in August. The Limburg, Germany-based Sentix research institute is set to report the index today.

Germany’s Economy Ministry in Berlin will say today factory orders gained 2 percent in July after rising 4.5 percent in June, according to a separate Bloomberg survey of economists.

G-20 officials including U.K. Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling and German Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck said in London last week that it was premature to quit emergency measures to fight the global recession, signaling central banks will hold down interest rates.

‘Improved Outlook’

“With an improved outlook for growth and no early unwinding of stimulative policies, this should support investor risk appetite and hence global growth-sensitive currencies such as the Australian dollar,” John Kyriakopoulos, head of currency strategy in Sydney at National Australia Bank Ltd., wrote in a research note today.

The yen fell for a fourth day against Australia’s dollar as signs the global economy may be headed for a recovery gave investors more confidence to seek higher returns overseas.

U.S. companies cut payrolls by 216,000 workers in August, fewer than economists had forecast and following a 276,000 reduction in July, Labor Department data showed on Sept. 4. The jobless rate rose to 9.7 percent from 9.4 percent.

Labor Day Effect

“There’s a sense the worst of the worldwide recession is over, with the equity market rebounding,” said Akifumi Uchida, deputy general manager of the marketing unit at Sumitomo Trust & Banking Corp. in Tokyo. “From a risk-appetite perspective, the yen is likely to be sold.”

The benchmark interest rate is 0.1 percent in Japan, compared with 3 percent in Australia, making the South Pacific nation’s assets attractive to investors.

Losses in the yen may be limited today due to trading patterns during the Labor Day holiday in the U.S., said Tohru Sasaki, chief currency strategist in Tokyo at JPMorgan Chase & Co., citing charts prepared by the bank.

“While we are tempted to say that the market is likely to be range-bound because today is a U.S. holiday, the yen actually has a strong tendency to appreciate on the U.S. Labor Day holiday,” Sasaki wrote in an e-mail to Bloomberg News today.

The yen has appreciated eight out of nine times since 2000 on Labor Day, Sasaki said.

To contact the reporters on this story: Yoshiaki Nohara in Tokyo at ynohara1@bloomberg.net; Ron Harui in Singapore at rharui@bloomberg.net.





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‘Everyone Is Guilty’ of Aid Means U.S. WTO Wins May Be Harder

By Mark Drajem

Sept. 7 (Bloomberg) -- The partial U.S. success in a dispute over European subsidies to Airbus SAS may be difficult to replicate after the Bush and Obama administrations pumped billions of dollars into banks and automakers during the financial crisis.

A World Trade Organization panel issued a preliminary ruling Sept. 4 that some European government aid to Airbus was illegal, according to people familiar with the confidential findings. The trade arbiter acted on a U.S. complaint saying Airbus received $15 billion in unfair assistance that helped it supplant Chicago-based Boeing Co. as the world’s biggest aircraft maker.

Former President George W. Bush put fighting such subsidies at the top of his trade agenda, and the Airbus filing in 2004 was the biggest case he brought. Similar complaints now would be undercut by the bailouts that Bush and President Barack Obama doled out to private companies, said Claude Barfield, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, a public-policy research group in Washington.

“It’s going to be hard to carry out the same agenda,” Barfield said in an interview. “The subsidy rules are still there, but the U.S. is going to be reluctant to bring any new cases because everyone is guilty.”

Instead of leading more fights against subsidies by the European Union, China and Australia, the U.S. may have to fend off trade cases brought by developing nations such as Argentina, India and Brazil, which haven’t resorted to such large-scale bailouts, according to Gary Hufbauer, a fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics.

Global ‘Glass House’

“The subsidies being done now make the amounts in the Boeing-Airbus dispute pale in comparison,” Hufbauer told a forum on Capitol Hill on July 27. The U.S. has given hundreds of billions in aid to companies from General Motors Co. to American International Group Inc.

The U.S. isn’t alone, as European and Asian nations such as Germany, China and Japan provided government money to automakers, shipbuilders, banks and other companies during the worst economic slowdown since the Great Depression.

“We live in a glass house of global subsidies, and new additions to this edifice are being added every day,” James Bacchus, a lawyer in Washington who heads the trade practice at Greenberg Traurig LLP, said in an interview. “Don’t hold your breath” for the U.S. to continue Bush’s push against aid, he said.

Challenges from developing nations also may come as the U.S. and other nations consider giving free permits for greenhouse gas pollution to domestic makers of steel, aluminum and other energy-intensive manufacturers, Bacchus said.

EU’s Boeing Complaint

The U.S. and EU are already losing some cases. The WTO said on Aug. 31 that Brazil can impose $294.7 million in sanctions against U.S. goods to compensate for subsidies paid to American cotton farmers.

The WTO said in its preliminary ruling on Toulouse, France- based Airbus that some of the aid provided by the U.K., France, Germany and Spain amounted to illegal subsidies that damaged Boeing, according to the people, who asked not to be identified because the document wasn’t public. The ruling can be appealed.

The EU countered the U.S. complaint with its own filing, also in 2004, saying Boeing got $23 billion in aid through state tax breaks, U.S. military research and export guarantees. A ruling in that case may not come until next year.

Reducing tariffs was the original mandate of the WTO. In talks leading to its formation in 1995, the U.S. succeeded in adding rules limiting government payments that could give companies an advantage over overseas competitors.

After filing the complaint over Airbus, the U.S. pursued WTO petitions against tax breaks and payments to Chinese manufacturers and cash grants and research funding to Chinese apparel and technology exporters.

China’s Watching

The ability of the U.S. and the EU to respond to subsidies by developing nations such as China may depend on how the countries in the Boeing-Airbus dispute react to eventual final rulings by the WTO, according to former U.S. Trade Representative Susan Schwab.

“What will China think as it endeavors to build an aircraft industry of its own over the next 20 years?” Schwab, a professor at the University of Maryland in College Park, said in an interview on Sept. 1.

In 2007, Schwab proposed that the WTO’s list of illegal subsidies be expanded to include forgiveness of government loans, provision of equity capital and loans given to “uncreditworthy” companies.

The U.S. bailouts have included all the measures the proposal would have banned.

“We have gone on a subsidy binge,” John Magnus, a lawyer who specializes in trade subsidies at Miller & Chevalier in Washington, said in an interview. “We would be ridiculed” if the U.S. began a new drive for limits on subsidies, he said.

U.S. Distinction

The U.S. makes a distinction between short-term emergency assistance and the subsidies, known as launch aid, that Airbus has been receiving for 30 years, according to the U.S. Trade Representative’s office.

“Because launch aid is a long-term problem, it will continue to be relevant well after the current financial crisis is over, and it therefore requires a long-term solution,” Carol Guthrie, a spokeswoman for the trade office, said in an e-mailed response to questions. The U.S. will continue to target “unfair subsidies,” she said.

“It’s apples and oranges,” Robert Novick, a partner at WilmerHale in Washington who represents Boeing, said in an e- mail Aug. 13. “This case is about European governments providing Airbus, a very healthy company, risk-free financing to develop airplanes to compete with Boeing and American workers.”

Call for Negotiations

Airbus says the recent spate of U.S. subsidies shows that the dispute between the aircraft makers should be solved through negotiation rather than litigation.

“The Airbus-Boeing trade case is sort of moot or irrelevant in the face of these massive government supports into private industry,” Allan McArtor, chairman of Herndon, Virginia-based Airbus North America, said in an interview before last week’s WTO ruling. “There’s definitely a new world order.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Mark Drajem at mdrajem@abloomberg.net





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‘Everyone Is Guilty’ of Aid Means U.S. WTO Wins May Be Harder

By Mark Drajem

Sept. 7 (Bloomberg) -- The partial U.S. success in a dispute over European subsidies to Airbus SAS may be difficult to replicate after the Bush and Obama administrations pumped billions of dollars into banks and automakers during the financial crisis.

A World Trade Organization panel issued a preliminary ruling Sept. 4 that some European government aid to Airbus was illegal, according to people familiar with the confidential findings. The trade arbiter acted on a U.S. complaint saying Airbus received $15 billion in unfair assistance that helped it supplant Chicago-based Boeing Co. as the world’s biggest aircraft maker.

Former President George W. Bush put fighting such subsidies at the top of his trade agenda, and the Airbus filing in 2004 was the biggest case he brought. Similar complaints now would be undercut by the bailouts that Bush and President Barack Obama doled out to private companies, said Claude Barfield, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, a public-policy research group in Washington.

“It’s going to be hard to carry out the same agenda,” Barfield said in an interview. “The subsidy rules are still there, but the U.S. is going to be reluctant to bring any new cases because everyone is guilty.”

Instead of leading more fights against subsidies by the European Union, China and Australia, the U.S. may have to fend off trade cases brought by developing nations such as Argentina, India and Brazil, which haven’t resorted to such large-scale bailouts, according to Gary Hufbauer, a fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics.

Global ‘Glass House’

“The subsidies being done now make the amounts in the Boeing-Airbus dispute pale in comparison,” Hufbauer told a forum on Capitol Hill on July 27. The U.S. has given hundreds of billions in aid to companies from General Motors Co. to American International Group Inc.

The U.S. isn’t alone, as European and Asian nations such as Germany, China and Japan provided government money to automakers, shipbuilders, banks and other companies during the worst economic slowdown since the Great Depression.

“We live in a glass house of global subsidies, and new additions to this edifice are being added every day,” James Bacchus, a lawyer in Washington who heads the trade practice at Greenberg Traurig LLP, said in an interview. “Don’t hold your breath” for the U.S. to continue Bush’s push against aid, he said.

Challenges from developing nations also may come as the U.S. and other nations consider giving free permits for greenhouse gas pollution to domestic makers of steel, aluminum and other energy-intensive manufacturers, Bacchus said.

EU’s Boeing Complaint

The U.S. and EU are already losing some cases. The WTO said on Aug. 31 that Brazil can impose $294.7 million in sanctions against U.S. goods to compensate for subsidies paid to American cotton farmers.

The WTO said in its preliminary ruling on Toulouse, France- based Airbus that some of the aid provided by the U.K., France, Germany and Spain amounted to illegal subsidies that damaged Boeing, according to the people, who asked not to be identified because the document wasn’t public. The ruling can be appealed.

The EU countered the U.S. complaint with its own filing, also in 2004, saying Boeing got $23 billion in aid through state tax breaks, U.S. military research and export guarantees. A ruling in that case may not come until next year.

Reducing tariffs was the original mandate of the WTO. In talks leading to its formation in 1995, the U.S. succeeded in adding rules limiting government payments that could give companies an advantage over overseas competitors.

After filing the complaint over Airbus, the U.S. pursued WTO petitions against tax breaks and payments to Chinese manufacturers and cash grants and research funding to Chinese apparel and technology exporters.

China’s Watching

The ability of the U.S. and the EU to respond to subsidies by developing nations such as China may depend on how the countries in the Boeing-Airbus dispute react to eventual final rulings by the WTO, according to former U.S. Trade Representative Susan Schwab.

“What will China think as it endeavors to build an aircraft industry of its own over the next 20 years?” Schwab, a professor at the University of Maryland in College Park, said in an interview on Sept. 1.

In 2007, Schwab proposed that the WTO’s list of illegal subsidies be expanded to include forgiveness of government loans, provision of equity capital and loans given to “uncreditworthy” companies.

The U.S. bailouts have included all the measures the proposal would have banned.

“We have gone on a subsidy binge,” John Magnus, a lawyer who specializes in trade subsidies at Miller & Chevalier in Washington, said in an interview. “We would be ridiculed” if the U.S. began a new drive for limits on subsidies, he said.

U.S. Distinction

The U.S. makes a distinction between short-term emergency assistance and the subsidies, known as launch aid, that Airbus has been receiving for 30 years, according to the U.S. Trade Representative’s office.

“Because launch aid is a long-term problem, it will continue to be relevant well after the current financial crisis is over, and it therefore requires a long-term solution,” Carol Guthrie, a spokeswoman for the trade office, said in an e-mailed response to questions. The U.S. will continue to target “unfair subsidies,” she said.

“It’s apples and oranges,” Robert Novick, a partner at WilmerHale in Washington who represents Boeing, said in an e- mail Aug. 13. “This case is about European governments providing Airbus, a very healthy company, risk-free financing to develop airplanes to compete with Boeing and American workers.”

Call for Negotiations

Airbus says the recent spate of U.S. subsidies shows that the dispute between the aircraft makers should be solved through negotiation rather than litigation.

“The Airbus-Boeing trade case is sort of moot or irrelevant in the face of these massive government supports into private industry,” Allan McArtor, chairman of Herndon, Virginia-based Airbus North America, said in an interview before last week’s WTO ruling. “There’s definitely a new world order.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Mark Drajem at mdrajem@abloomberg.net





Read more...

‘Everyone Is Guilty’ of Aid Means U.S. WTO Wins May Be Harder

By Mark Drajem

Sept. 7 (Bloomberg) -- The partial U.S. success in a dispute over European subsidies to Airbus SAS may be difficult to replicate after the Bush and Obama administrations pumped billions of dollars into banks and automakers during the financial crisis.

A World Trade Organization panel issued a preliminary ruling Sept. 4 that some European government aid to Airbus was illegal, according to people familiar with the confidential findings. The trade arbiter acted on a U.S. complaint saying Airbus received $15 billion in unfair assistance that helped it supplant Chicago-based Boeing Co. as the world’s biggest aircraft maker.

Former President George W. Bush put fighting such subsidies at the top of his trade agenda, and the Airbus filing in 2004 was the biggest case he brought. Similar complaints now would be undercut by the bailouts that Bush and President Barack Obama doled out to private companies, said Claude Barfield, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, a public-policy research group in Washington.

“It’s going to be hard to carry out the same agenda,” Barfield said in an interview. “The subsidy rules are still there, but the U.S. is going to be reluctant to bring any new cases because everyone is guilty.”

Instead of leading more fights against subsidies by the European Union, China and Australia, the U.S. may have to fend off trade cases brought by developing nations such as Argentina, India and Brazil, which haven’t resorted to such large-scale bailouts, according to Gary Hufbauer, a fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics.

Global ‘Glass House’

“The subsidies being done now make the amounts in the Boeing-Airbus dispute pale in comparison,” Hufbauer told a forum on Capitol Hill on July 27. The U.S. has given hundreds of billions in aid to companies from General Motors Co. to American International Group Inc.

The U.S. isn’t alone, as European and Asian nations such as Germany, China and Japan provided government money to automakers, shipbuilders, banks and other companies during the worst economic slowdown since the Great Depression.

“We live in a glass house of global subsidies, and new additions to this edifice are being added every day,” James Bacchus, a lawyer in Washington who heads the trade practice at Greenberg Traurig LLP, said in an interview. “Don’t hold your breath” for the U.S. to continue Bush’s push against aid, he said.

Challenges from developing nations also may come as the U.S. and other nations consider giving free permits for greenhouse gas pollution to domestic makers of steel, aluminum and other energy-intensive manufacturers, Bacchus said.

EU’s Boeing Complaint

The U.S. and EU are already losing some cases. The WTO said on Aug. 31 that Brazil can impose $294.7 million in sanctions against U.S. goods to compensate for subsidies paid to American cotton farmers.

The WTO said in its preliminary ruling on Toulouse, France- based Airbus that some of the aid provided by the U.K., France, Germany and Spain amounted to illegal subsidies that damaged Boeing, according to the people, who asked not to be identified because the document wasn’t public. The ruling can be appealed.

The EU countered the U.S. complaint with its own filing, also in 2004, saying Boeing got $23 billion in aid through state tax breaks, U.S. military research and export guarantees. A ruling in that case may not come until next year.

Reducing tariffs was the original mandate of the WTO. In talks leading to its formation in 1995, the U.S. succeeded in adding rules limiting government payments that could give companies an advantage over overseas competitors.

After filing the complaint over Airbus, the U.S. pursued WTO petitions against tax breaks and payments to Chinese manufacturers and cash grants and research funding to Chinese apparel and technology exporters.

China’s Watching

The ability of the U.S. and the EU to respond to subsidies by developing nations such as China may depend on how the countries in the Boeing-Airbus dispute react to eventual final rulings by the WTO, according to former U.S. Trade Representative Susan Schwab.

“What will China think as it endeavors to build an aircraft industry of its own over the next 20 years?” Schwab, a professor at the University of Maryland in College Park, said in an interview on Sept. 1.

In 2007, Schwab proposed that the WTO’s list of illegal subsidies be expanded to include forgiveness of government loans, provision of equity capital and loans given to “uncreditworthy” companies.

The U.S. bailouts have included all the measures the proposal would have banned.

“We have gone on a subsidy binge,” John Magnus, a lawyer who specializes in trade subsidies at Miller & Chevalier in Washington, said in an interview. “We would be ridiculed” if the U.S. began a new drive for limits on subsidies, he said.

U.S. Distinction

The U.S. makes a distinction between short-term emergency assistance and the subsidies, known as launch aid, that Airbus has been receiving for 30 years, according to the U.S. Trade Representative’s office.

“Because launch aid is a long-term problem, it will continue to be relevant well after the current financial crisis is over, and it therefore requires a long-term solution,” Carol Guthrie, a spokeswoman for the trade office, said in an e-mailed response to questions. The U.S. will continue to target “unfair subsidies,” she said.

“It’s apples and oranges,” Robert Novick, a partner at WilmerHale in Washington who represents Boeing, said in an e- mail Aug. 13. “This case is about European governments providing Airbus, a very healthy company, risk-free financing to develop airplanes to compete with Boeing and American workers.”

Call for Negotiations

Airbus says the recent spate of U.S. subsidies shows that the dispute between the aircraft makers should be solved through negotiation rather than litigation.

“The Airbus-Boeing trade case is sort of moot or irrelevant in the face of these massive government supports into private industry,” Allan McArtor, chairman of Herndon, Virginia-based Airbus North America, said in an interview before last week’s WTO ruling. “There’s definitely a new world order.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Mark Drajem at mdrajem@abloomberg.net





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