Economic Calendar

Friday, September 11, 2009

Forex Technical Analytics

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by FOREX Ltd | Sep 11 09 07:51 GMT |

CHF

The pre-planned short positions from key resistance range levels were implemented with the achievement of minimal estimated target. OsMA trend indicator, having marked further activity fall of both parties in the absence of convincing bullish resistance gives grounds to keep sales choice priority for planning of trading operations for today. On the assumption of it we can assume probability of rate return to close 1,0380/1,0400 resistance levels where it is recommended to evaluate the development of the activity of both parties in accordance with the charts of shorter time interval. As for short-term sales on condition of the formation of topping signals the targets will be 1,0320/40, 1,0280/1,0300 and(or) further break-out variant up to 1,0220/40, 1,0140/60, 1,0080/1,0100. The alternative for buyers will be above 1,0460 with the targets of 1,0500, 1,0540/60, 1,0600/20.

GBP

The pre-planned long positions from key supports were implemented with the achievement of minimal anticipated targets. OsMA trend indicator having marked preservation of bullish party activity and gives grounds to preserve accompanying direction for planning of trading operations for today. On the assumption of it, we can assume probability of rate return to close 1,6640/60 supports where it is recommended to evaluate the development of the activity of both parties in accordance with the charts of shorter time interval. As for short-term buying positions on condition of the formation of topping signals the targets will be 1,6700/20, 1,6760/1,6800 and (or) further break-out variant up to 1,6840/60, 1,6900/40, 1,7000/40. The alternative for sales will be below 1,6560 with the targets of 1,6500/20, 1,6440/60, 1,6380/1,6400.

JPY

The preplanned short positions from key resistance levels were implemented with the achievement of main anticipated targets. OsMA trend indicator, having marked activity fall of both parties but with the current tendency of rate fall and gives grounds for sales priorities of planning of trading operations for today. That is why we can assume probability of rate return to close 91,60/80 resistance levels where it is recommended to evaluate the development of the activity of both parties in accordance with the charts of shorter time interval. As for short term sales on condition of the formation of topping signals the targets will be 91,00/20 and(or) further break-out variant up to 90,40/60, 89,80/90,00, 89,20/40. The alternative for buyers will be above 92,20 with the targets of 92,60/80, 93,20/40.

EUR

The pre-planned long positions from key supports were implemented with the achievement of minimal estimated target. OsMA trend indicator having marked activity fall of both parties and the absence of convincing level of bearish resistance and gives ground for preservation of bullish direction of planning of trading operations for today. On the assumption of it we can assume probability of rate return to close 1,4580/1,4600 supports where it recommended to evaluate the development of the activity of both parties in accordance with the charts of shorter time interval. As for short-term buying positions on condition of the formation of topping signals the targets will be 1,4640/60 and (or) further break-out variant up to 1,4700/20, 1,4760/80. The alternative for sales will be below 1,4460 with the targets of 1,4400/20, 1,4340/60.

FOREX Ltd
www.forexltd.co.uk


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China Faces A Price Bubble Formation

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by ecPulse.com | Sep 11 09 07:46 GMT |

As Chinese economy is making steady steps towards a full economic recovery; risks of a price bubble formation are mounting, due to the massive liquidity that exists in markets, which could demolish what was built so far in the third largest economy in the world.

New loans in China rose unexpectedly during the month of August to 410.4 billion Yuan; compared with the previous reading of 355.9 billion Yuan, while it was expected to fall to 320.0 billion Yuan. China also released the annual money supply M2 for August, which rose by 28.5% compared with the previous rise by 28.4%.

This data is considered to be a double-edged sword for the Chinese economy; on the one hand the increase in money supply and loans do help support the economic growth and stimulate many sectors like the housing and real estate sectors, which heavily rely on the crediting; thus helping China avoid the negative impact of the economic crisis so far.

Yet, this rapid increase in liquidity available in the financial markets may result in a new economic bubble, expressed by a sharp rise above its fair value in China's house prices and stocks, especially after the huge expansion in loans given by Chinese banks.

China's stocks index rose by 1.57% today at 04:00 GMT, after the release of some positive data from the industrial sector and retail sales. These fundamentals may increase foreign demand on the Chinese stocks, since the outlook of several sectors is improving; especially since it fell by 23% during last month, after fears of an excess rise in value, in which it does not reflect the real conditions of companies.

China's Prime Minister Wen Jiabao, indicated in a speech yesterday, expressed fears of inflation and an excess rise in shares and asset prices. On the other hand, he pointed out that the government will leave its monetary policy at a moderate level, yet it will continue stimulating domestic consumption until the economy is fully recovered.

It is worth mentioning that the Chinese economy has achieved a growth rate of 7.9%, during the second quarter of this year; compared with a growth rate during the first quarter of 6.1%. The Prime Minister pointed out that the Government was able to provide 6.6 million jobs during the period from January through July, thereby helping to achieve social stability.

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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Shock May Put Global Relapse Odds as High as 1-in-3, Roach Says

By Bloomberg News

Sept. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Odds of a U.S.-led “relapse” into global recession may be as high as one-in-three if any shock to the world’s biggest economy adds to depressed consumer demand, according to Stephen Roach of Morgan Stanley.

Economies emerging from recession need a “growth cushion” to avoid the possibility of a repeated slump, Roach, chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia, said in an interview in Dalian, China, yesterday, where he was attending a World Economic Forum event.

“The consumer is still dead money, the consumer is not coming back,” Roach said. “I’d put the relapse odds one in four, maybe as high as one in three,” he said, referring to the danger of a renewed global slowdown stemming from a shock to the U.S. economy.

U.S. household incomes decreased in 2008 and the poverty rate rose to the highest since 1997, boosting concern that consumer spending will play a limited role in leading any recovery from the worst recession since the 1930s. Plunging home values and stock prices have fueled a record $13.9 trillion loss in household wealth in the U.S. since the middle of 2007.

The Federal Reserve this week said 11 of its 12 regional banks reported signs of a stable or improving economy in July and August, adding anecdotal evidence that the worst U.S. recession in seven decades is over.

The world’s largest economy contracted 1 percent from April through June, according to the Commerce Department. The drop was the fourth in a row, making it the longest contraction since quarterly records began in 1947.

‘Anemic’ Recovery

Roach said that the “anemic” recovery in the U.S. will make the economy more vulnerable to shocks -- anything from storms to strikes -- that could drag down global economic growth next year. While he didn’t rule out the possibility of a relapse into recession, he said he wasn’t “calling for a double-dip because I’m not calling for a shock.”

“The recovery is going to be so anemic, especially in the U.S., that the economy on an underlying basis is going to be a lot closer to the stall speed than would be the case in a normal V-shaped recovery,” Roach said. “Stall-speed economies are risky economies because if you have one of these shocks out of the blue and you’re barely growing at the stall speed or a little bit faster, you can have a relapse pretty darned quickly.”

Officials from the Group of 20 nations this month expressed caution on the world economic outlook and judged it premature to start unwinding record-low interest rates and about $2 trillion in fiscal stimulus.

U.S. Savers

“Over the next three to five years, given the savings imperatives of the American household sector, I think that the growth rate is going to be cut in half,” Roach said, referring to U.S. consumption. “For export-led economies in China and elsewhere in the region, the biggest source of external demand is going to be growing at best, half the clip.”

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner on Sept. 9 said the U.S. savings rate climbed to an average of 5 percent during the second quarter of this year from 1.2 percent at the beginning of 2008.

The U.S. has a “fair chance” of becoming a net saver as households are saving more, Gail Fosler, president of New York- based research group Conference Board, said in a speech in Singapore today.

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





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China Recovery Quickens as Production, Lending Climb

By Bloomberg News

Sept. 11 (Bloomberg) -- China’s industrial production rose at a faster pace than forecast in August and new lending unexpectedly climbed, indicating growth in the world’s third- biggest economy is likely to accelerate.

Output at the nation’s factories gained 12.3 percent from a year earlier, the most since August 2008, the statistics bureau said in Beijing today. Local-currency new loans were 410.4 billion yuan ($60 billion), up from 355.9 billion yuan in July, the central bank reported.

Chinese shares rose after today’s figures, which also included the biggest retail-sales gain this year. At the same time, the reacceleration in credit growth may stoke concern about asset-price inflation. Bank of China Ltd. Vice President Zhu Min yesterday warned that liquidity may cause “asset bubbles in commodities, stocks and real estate.”

“Policy stimulus is driving the recovery and China is poised to get more support from exports in coming months,” said Brian Jackson, Hong Kong-based senior strategist for emerging markets at Royal Bank of Canada. “That will give growth an extra push and allow policy makers to ease back on stimulus early next year.”

The Shanghai Composite Index closed 2.2 percent higher, helping pare losses last month that were stoked by concern about a slowdown in new lending from a record $1.1 trillion in the first half. The index is up 64 percent this year.

Stimulus Spending

Premier Wen Jiabao pledged yesterday to sustain stimulus measures to secure the recovery, saying the rebound “is unstable, unbalanced and not yet solid.” Speaking at a conference in Dalian, northern China, he said “we cannot and will not change the direction of our policies when the conditions aren’t appropriate.”

Economists had forecast an 11.8 percent gain in industrial production, according to the median of 15 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey. New loans were projected to total 320 billion yuan, a separate survey showed.

Retail sales climbed 15.4 percent in August from a year before, the most for the year after accounting for seasonal distortions caused by the lunar new year holiday, statistics bureau data showed today. The median estimate was for a 15.3 percent advance.

Regional Impact

China is poised to help stoke growth throughout the Asian region, said Gail Fosler, president of the Conference Board, a New York-based research group. “China is much more of a factor in Asian growth than is the U.S.,” Fosler said at a conference today in Singapore.

Figures from Japan today showed the region’s largest economy grew less than estimated in the second quarter. Gross domestic product rose at a 2.3 percent annualized pace, less than the 3.7 percent previously calculated.

In China, the quickening expansion follows a 4 trillion yuan stimulus package, record lending and a rebound in property investment and sales that have countered a slump in the nation’s exports. Trade data today showed shipments abroad fell a more- than-estimated 23.4 percent in August from a year earlier, the biggest drop in three months. Exports rose a seasonally adjusted 3.4 percent from July.

Economists anticipate China’s GDP growth will accelerate to a 9.5 percent pace next year after an 8.3 percent rate in 2009, according to a Bloomberg survey of economists conducted the week ended Aug. 28.

“The biggest challenge now is how to guide monetary and credit policy to a prudent level without impacting the property and stock markets and the economic recovery,” said Isaac Meng, a senior economist at BNP Paribas SA in Beijing.

Inflation Alert

In his remarks yesterday, Wen added that officials also need to guard against inflation.

People’s Bank of China figures showed today that M2, the broadest measure of money supply, rose by a record 28.53 percent, as the central bank maintained a “moderately loose” policy stance.

Other figures today showed consumer prices fell 1.2 percent last month from a year earlier, declining for a seventh month and giving the central bank more room to keep interest rates at a four-year low to stoke growth. Producer prices dropped 7.9 percent compared with a record 8.2 percent fall in July.

China will increase interest rates “around next spring” when inflation will climb to as high as 5 percent, economist Meng said. Inflation will quicken to 1 percent toward the end of this year and for the whole of next year will average 3.9 percent, he predicted.

General Motors

Surging auto sales are aiding the nation’s recovery. Hyundai Motor Co., South Korea’s largest carmaker, said yesterday that it will raise annual production capacity at its Chinese venture next year to 600,000 vehicles from 500,000. General Motors Co., the biggest overseas automaker in China, says the nation’s vehicle sales may reach 12 million this year, surpassing the U.S. as the world’s No. 1 market.

A rebound in the property market and business investment has added to signs that the recovery is maintaining momentum.

Urban fixed-asset investment for the eight months to Aug. 31 climbed 33 percent, the statistics bureau said. That was more than a 32.9 percent gain through July and the 32.7 percent median estimate in the survey of economists. For August alone, the gain was 33.6 percent.

Property Investment

Investment in real-estate development grew 14.7 percent in the first eight months after an 11.6 percent gain in the first seven months, the statistics bureau said yesterday. House prices in 70 cities rose 2 percent in August, the fastest gain in 11 months.

New loans of more than one year increased in August from the previous month and discounted bills fell, indicating more money flowing to projects that are driving growth, said Sun Mingchun, chief China economist at Nomura Holdings Inc. in Hong Kong.

Drags on the nation’s expansion include the export slump, overcapacity in manufacturing and elevated unemployment.

Exports to the U.S. fell 21.8 percent from a year earlier, the biggest slide since China’s shipments began to contract in November, according to Bloomberg News calculations. Shipments to the European Union fell 26.6 percent.

To contact the Bloomberg News staff on this story: Kevin Hamlin in Beijing at khamlin@bloomberg.net;





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U.K. Producer Prices Rise for Sixth Month as Oil Costs Climb

By Jennifer Ryan

Sept. 11 (Bloomberg) -- U.K. producer prices rose for a sixth month in August as the cost of raw materials jumped the most in more than a year, a sign inflation pressures are persisting in the economy.

The price of goods at factory gates climbed 0.2 percent from July, when it rose at the same pace, the Office for National Statistics said today in London. Economists predicted a 0.3 percent increase, according to the median of 18 forecasts in a Bloomberg News survey. Raw material costs including oil jumped 2.2 percent on the month, the most since June 2008.

Bank of England policy makers yesterday confirmed they will buy as much as 175 billion pounds ($290 billion) of bonds to cement the recovery and stave off the threat of deflation. Evidence that manufacturers can keep pushing through price increases suggests they are succeeding in defending profit margins as they struggle to shake off the recession.

``Oil and other commodity prices have risen sharply and firms are passing those along,'' David Page, an economist at Investec Securities in London, said before the report. ``Though activity is picking up again and that's helping higher prices get pushed through, inflation will remain subdued for a number of years.''

The increase in producer prices was led by petroleum products and other items such as scrap metal, the statistics office said. On the year, prices dropped 0.4 percent, the least in three months.

Profit Margins

IMI Plc, the world's biggest maker of pneumatic controls, said Aug. 27 that profit margins improved as it raised average selling prices as much as 2 percent in the first half from a year earlier. Fenner Plc, the world's largest conveyor-belt maker, said on Sept. 7 that the last two months have shown ``some signs'' of improvement.

Core producer prices, which exclude oil, food, tobacco and alcohol products, climbed 0.2 percent on the month after gaining 0.4 percent in July.

Manufacturers have raised prices to absorb higher costs of raw materials. The increase in input prices was more than double the 1 percent median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey of 14 economists. The gain was led by crude oil prices, which jumped 9.4 percent on the month, the statistics office said.

Oil costs have risen more than 60 percent this year as signs the world economy is emerging from the worst economic contraction since World War II stoke demand.

The Bank of England's quarterly forecasts, published last month, show the economy contracting about 4.4 percent this year, with growth resuming on an annual basis in the first quarter of 2010. The slump has pushed the inflation rate down to 1.8 percent, below the bank's 2 percent target.

To contact the reporter on this story: Jennifer Ryan in London at Jryan13@bloomberg.net





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Japan’s Economy Grows at 2.3% Pace, Less Than First Estimated

By Jason Clenfield and Tatsuo Ito

Sept. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Japan’s economy unexpectedly grew less than initially estimated in the second quarter as companies cut spending and stockpiles fell.

Gross domestic product expanded at an annual 2.3 percent pace in the three months ended June 30, slower than the 3.7 percent reported last month, the Cabinet Office said today in Tokyo. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg News forecast the figure to be unchanged from the preliminary estimate.

Today’s report shows Japan’s recovery from its deepest postwar recession is even weaker than previously thought, and intensifies pressure on the incoming government, led by Yukio Hatoyama, to resuscitate household demand. With unemployment at a record high and one-third of factory capacity idle, Japanese growth may depend on overseas demand.

“It’s hard to say when the economy will return to where it was before the unprecedented contractions in previous quarters,” said Yoshiki Shinke, a senior economist at Dai-Ichi Life Research Institute in Tokyo. “The DPJ will be forced to come up with more specific growth strategies to help the economy.”

The Nikkei 225 Stock Average fell 0.4 percent at the lunch break in Tokyo. The yen traded at 91.41 per dollar from 91.65 before the report was published.

From the previous quarter, the world’s second-largest economy grew 0.6 percent, less than the 0.9 percent the Cabinet Office estimated last month. That compares with a 0.1 percent contraction in Europe and a 0.3 percent drop in the U.S.

In a sign that overseas demand is holding up, reports from China today showed industrial production rose the most since August 2008 and new lending unexpectedly accelerated.

Stockpiles Decline

Net exports -- the difference between exports and imports -- contributed 1.6 percentage points to Japan’s expansion, unchanged from the first reading. That was offset by the deeper- than-expected decline in stockpiles, which subtracted 0.8 percentage point from quarterly output, more than the 0.5 percentage point first reported.

The inventory figures suggest manufacturers have more room to increase output to replace stockpiles they ran down when global trade seized up in the wake of the global financial crisis, said Shinke at Dai-Ichi Life. Companies increased production at the fastest pace in half a century last quarter.

“The negative contribution from inventories isn’t necessarily bad news,” Shinke said. “It’s likely to be a plus for growth this quarter.”

Reports since the second quarter suggest the economy is slowing. Gains in industrial production decelerated for a fourth month in July, the jobless rate jumped to an unprecedented 5.7 percent, and machinery orders, an indicator of capital spending, tumbled 9.3 percent.

‘Weak Recovery’

“This is a weak recovery,” said Tetsuro Sugiura, chief economist at Mizuho Research Institute in Tokyo. “Consumers and business are anxious about the outlook.”

Toyota Motor Corp., which estimates it will make about a third fewer cars this year than it has the capacity to build, said last month it will close an assembly line at its Takaoka plant in central Japan. The carmaker plans to cut capital spending by 36 percent in the year ending March 31.

Japan Airlines Corp. posted a 99 billion-yen ($1.1 billion) loss in the first quarter, the most in at least six years, as business and leisure travel plummeted. The airline plans to cut 1,400 administrative jobs domestically, starting next month.

Economic and Fiscal Policy Minister Yoshimasa Hayashi said spending cuts by companies “indicate the outlook for the economy is still murky.”

Cash Handouts

Capital spending declined 4.8 percent last quarter, more than the 4.3 percent initially reported, today’s report showed. Consumption rose 0.7 percent, spurred by cash handouts and incentives introduced by the outgoing Liberal Democratic Party- led government to buy cars and electronics.

Finance Minister Kaoru Yosano said the GDP report shows “Japan’s economy isn’t experiencing a full-fledged recovery” and he urged the new government to “make its utmost efforts to put Japan’s economy on a sustainable growth path.”

The Democratic Party of Japan will take power for the first time on Sept. 16 after last month’s landslide election victory.

Declining corporate profits and falling tax revenues may make it difficult for the party to fund its promises to encourage more consumer spending through childcare handouts and abolishing highway tolls. The DPJ pledged not to increase new bond sales to avoid expanding a debt burden that’s the largest in the industrialized world.

“They’re saying they’ll finance their projects by reshuffling the budget,” said Hiroshi Shiraishi, an economist at BNP Paribas in Tokyo. “Under the best of circumstances that wouldn’t be easy.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Jason Clenfield in Tokyo at jclenfield@bloomberg.net





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Euro May Rise to 9-Month High Versus Dollar: Technical Analysis

By Yoshiaki Nohara and Shigeki Nozawa

Sept. 11 (Bloomberg) -- The euro may rise to a nine-month high against the dollar by the end of this month, Bank of Tokyo- Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. said, citing trading patterns.

The euro is likely to climb toward $1.4719, a level that represents a 100 percent Fibonacci retracement from the six- month low of $1.2457 reached on March 4, said Masashi Hashimoto, a Tokyo-based senior analyst at the bank. Daily momentum indicators such as the moving average convergence/divergence chart show buy signals for the euro against the dollar, he said.

“The euro is in an uptrend,” Hashimoto said yesterday. “The euro used to drop quickly following moderate gains in June and August, but its recent rally bucks that trend.”

The 16-nation currency may rise toward a resistance level of $1.4866 should the currency climb above $1.4719, Hashimoto said. Resistance is where sell orders may be clustered.

The euro was at $1.4580 as of 8:26 a.m. in Tokyo from $1.4582 in New York yesterday.

Fibonacci analysis is based on the theory that prices rise or fall by certain percentages after reaching a high or low. A break above resistance or below support indicates a currency may move to the next level. MACD charts can indicate whether a price shift is a change in trend or a short-term deviation by comparing moving averages based on nine-, 12- and 26-day periods.

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

To contact the reporter on this story: Yoshiaki Nohara in Tokyo at ynohara1@bloomberg.net; Shigeki Nozawa in Tokyo at Snozawa1@bloomberg.net.





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Lehman Monday Morning Lesson Lost With Obama Regulator-in-Chief

By Alison Fitzgerald and Christine Harper

Sept. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Less than 24 hours after his swearing-in ceremony, U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner surprised Camden R. Fine with an invitation to a one- on-one meeting about the financial crisis.

“I about fell out of my chair,” said Fine, president of the Independent Community Bankers of America, a Washington-based trade group with about 5,000 members. He was in a corner office overlooking the White House at the Treasury Department the next morning, telling Geithner that behemoths such as Citigroup Inc. and Bank of America Corp. were a menace, he said.

“They should be broken up and sold off,” Fine, 58, said he declared, as Geithner scribbled notes before thanking him for his time and ushering him out into the January chill.

The Treasury secretary didn’t follow through on Fine’s suggestion, just as he didn’t act on the advice of former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul A. Volcker, or Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. head Sheila C. Bair, or the dozens of economists and politicians who pressed the White House for measures that would limit the size or activities of U.S. banks.

One year after the demise of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. paralyzed the financial system, “mega-banks,” as Fine’s group calls them, are as interconnected and inscrutable as ever. The Obama administration’s plan for a regulatory overhaul wouldn’t force them to shrink or simplify their structure.

Policy of Containment

“We could have another Lehman Monday,” Niall Ferguson, author of the 2008 book “The Ascent of Money” and a professor of history at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, said in an interview. “The system is essentially unchanged, except that post-Lehman, the survivors have ‘too big to fail’ tattooed on their chests.”

After the deepest recession since the 1930s, which has seen the world’s largest economy shrink 3.9 percent since the second quarter of last year, and more than $1.6 trillion in worldwide losses and writedowns by banks and insurers, President Barack Obama decided on a policy of containment rather than a structural transformation.

His proposal for revamping the way the U.S. monitors and controls banks doesn’t include taking apart institutions, supported by taxpayer loans, that have grown in scope and size since Lehman imploded. The biggest, Charlotte, North Carolina- based Bank of America, had $2.25 trillion in assets as of June, 31 percent more than a year earlier, and about 12 percent of all U.S. deposits.

Creating Bedlam

Instead, the Obama plan would label Bank of America, New York-based Citigroup and others as “systemically important.” It would subject them to capital and liquidity requirements and stricter oversight, relying on the same regulators who didn’t understand the consequences of a Lehman failure. And while companies could be dismantled if they got into trouble, they, their creditors and shareholders could also be bailed out with taxpayer money, according to the plan.

The chief architects, Geithner, 48, and National Economic Council Director Lawrence H. Summers, 54, say they don’t think it would be practical to outlaw banks of a certain size or limit trading activities by deposit-taking banks, according to people familiar with their thinking. They said the two men, who declined to be interviewed, and others on Obama’s team believe the lines are too fuzzy between banking and investing products and that forcing the divestiture of units and assets would create bedlam.

“It’s a very difficult thing to say as a national policy goal that we’re going to limit the success of an American firm,” said Tony Fratto, 43, a spokesman for President George W. Bush and former Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson who now heads a Washington consulting firm.

System Failure

The lesson of Sept. 15, 2008, is that limits may be necessary, according to Fine and other critics of the government’s regulatory proposals.

Lehman, the leading underwriter of mortgage-backed securities in 2008, was done in by too much borrowing and too many real estate investments that couldn’t be sold easily. When the property market turned sour -- home prices fell by 20 percent in the two years preceding the bankruptcy, according to the S&P/Case-Schiller home-price index of 20 U.S. cities -- and creditors wanted more collateral for loans or their money back, the investment bank had to fold.

It had $613 billion in debt and so many deals with so many companies that its bankruptcy set off a chain reaction the government and other Wall Street firms didn’t anticipate. Simon H. Johnson, a former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund, likened it to the fictitious substance ice-nine in the 1963 Kurt Vonnegut Jr. novel “Cat’s Cradle,” one drop of which could crystallize all the water on Earth. The Chapter 11 filing froze the global financial infrastructure.

Obama’s Fix

“This was a failure of the entire system,” Obama said on June 17 when he introduced his blueprint. “A regulatory regime basically crafted in the wake of a 20th-century economic crisis - - the Great Depression -- was overwhelmed by the speed, scope, and sophistication of a 21st-century global economy.”

The president’s fix is to empower the Fed to put the brakes on banks, hedge funds, insurers or other financial firms whose crash could have a crippling domino effect. About 25 companies may qualify based on their assets and on factors such as funding relationships, Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke told the House Financial Services Committee on July 24.

Potential Threats

“Most reform proposals acknowledge, perhaps with some consternation, that systemically important institutions are likely to be with us into the indefinite future,” said Daniel K. Tarullo, a member of the Fed’s board of governors, in an interview. “The proposed reforms are oriented toward forcing those institutions to internalize more of the risks they create and thus making it less likely they will create problems for the system as a whole.”

A Financial Services Oversight Council -- made up of the heads of the FDIC, the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and other agencies -- would advise the Fed on potential threats.

The Treasury would be able to take over and wind down financial institutions with an authority modeled on powers held by the FDIC, which guarantees deposits and can close and sell failing banks under its jurisdiction. A Consumer Financial Protection Agency could restrict what it viewed as unsuitable products for Americans.

‘Crap Loans’

The existence of such a regulatory framework might have averted Lehman’s chaotic end -- and the economic crisis that followed -- because cheap money wouldn’t have been allowed to inflate a real estate bubble with questionable mortgages and mortgage derivatives, according to Austan Goolsbee, a member of the president’s Council of Economic Advisers.

“One of the fundamental principles of the plan is that if you’re menacing to the system, someone is going to regulate you very closely,” said Goolsbee, 40. “They’re going to be in there watching everything you do.”

If a consumer agency had existed, lenders wouldn’t have been able to sell so many complex and costly mortgages, said Ralph L. Schlosstein, chief executive officer of New York investment bank Evercore Partners Inc. and a supporter of Obama’s.

“There has never been decent regulation of the appropriateness of lending products as opposed to investment products, and the fact that that didn’t exist really allowed trillions of dollars of crap loans that were neither affordable nor understood to be made,” said Schlosstein, a co-founder and former president of asset management company BlackRock Inc.

Fatally Flawed

As much as it might mitigate some risks, the Obama strategy is fatally flawed because it fails to force the largest banks to change their behavior, said Johnson, the former IMF economist who is now a professor for finance at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge.

“The biggest problem is it doesn’t deal with too-big-to- fail,” Johnson said. “It doesn’t say anything.”

If constraints aren’t legislated, “complexity will multiply and take on new forms,” and regulators once again won’t be able to keep up, he said. “You have to make things a lot smaller.”

That too-big-to-fail predicament -- the theory that certain businesses can’t be allowed to go bankrupt because of the economic damage that would cause, and that the implicit government guarantee encourages risky behavior -- was discussed in conference rooms and watering holes during the Kansas City Fed’s annual symposium in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, in August.

‘Financial Oligarchy’

The chairman of the regional Fed and the event’s host, Thomas M. Hoenig, 63, had set the tone with speeches over the past year that warned against allowing power to be concentrated in a “financial oligarchy.” Hoenig played on the theme at the opening steak-and-salmon dinner on Aug. 20 at Jackson Lake Lodge, a National Historic Landmark in Grand Teton National Park. Access had to be limited, he said, for fear the group would grow “too big to feed.”

That thread of humor spread as speakers tried to work references to size and failure into their remarks, with varying degrees of success, according to Mark Gertler, 58, a New York University economist and former research partner of Bernanke’s who attended the conference.

Bank of Israel Governor Stanley Fischer, Bernanke’s thesis adviser at MIT, addressed the topic more seriously at lunch on Aug. 21.

“At this stage, we seem to be taking it for granted that we should go back to the structure of the financial system as it was on the eve of the crisis,” Fischer, 65, a former Citigroup vice chairman, told his audience in the lodge’s Grizzly Room. “Even for the largest economies, there is a case for discouraging financial institutions from growing excessively.”

‘Fragile’ System

Fischer’s comments echoed those of Volcker. The 82-year-old head of the president’s Economic Recovery Advisory Board began his campaign for restructuring the basics of U.S. banking 17 months ago in a speech to the New York Economic Club. It was April 8, 2008, three weeks after the Fed helped New York-based JPMorgan Chase & Co. buy Bear Stearns Cos. by extending a $30 billion backstop.

The “demonstrably fragile financial system that has produced unimaginable wealth for some, while repeatedly risking a cascading breakdown of the system as a whole, needs repair and reform,” the 6-foot-7-inch (2.01-meter) Volcker said, grasping a podium that reached only to his waist. Before the speech at the Grand Hyatt New York, he belatedly celebrated his 80th birthday by blowing out a candle on a cake shaped like a stack of gift boxes.

Volcker’s Plan

Volcker’s ideas for overhauling the system -- including strict regulation of over-the-counter derivatives trading -- were outlined in an 82-page report prepared by the Group of 30, an organization of current and former central bankers, finance ministers, economists and financiers that Volcker heads.

When he made the document public on Jan. 15, Volcker told reporters that he “sent a copy to some of the people in the new administration that would have an interest in it.” Since then, Volcker, an adviser to Obama during the presidential race, has lobbied Geithner and Summers, according to people familiar with the discussions. The former Fed chairman is taking his case on the road this month, starting with a speech on Sept. 16 to the Association for Corporate Growth in Beverly Hills, California.

Volcker would subject money market funds to the same regulatory burdens as banks, demanding they hold capital to protect against losses like those suffered by the Reserve Primary Fund when Lehman’s bankruptcy touched off a run and more than 60 percent of its assets were withdrawn in two days.

‘Molotov Cocktail’

Another critical change, according to Volcker, would be to prohibit big, interconnected companies that handle essential services such as deposit-taking and business payments from making high-risk bets with their own money in so-called proprietary trading. Volcker also wouldn’t allow non-financial firms to own government-insured deposit-taking companies. The proposals, intended to prevent another ice-nine episode, are similar in some respects to restrictions in place in the U.S. for more than 60 years until the Glass-Steagall Act was overturned by Congress in 1999.

“Does anyone think it’s a coincidence that less than 10 years after they repealed Glass-Steagall, the financial markets collapsed?” said Fine of the community bankers group. He called current rules for banking a recipe for a “Molotov cocktail.”

Bair, the FDIC chairman, has taken a different tack: She wants to check growth by charging fees based on the risks banks take. If Lehman had to pay for its gambles, it might not have held $84 billion in mortgage investments and loaded up on mortgage-backed securities in early 2008, after the subprime crisis began.

Bair, Geithner

“A financial system characterized by a handful of giant institutions with global reach and a single regulator is making a huge bet that those few banks and their regulator over a long period of time will always make the right decisions,” Bair told the Senate Banking Committee in May. She and Geithner have clashed because of her public opposition to his plan to make the Fed the chief overseer of systemically important financial institutions.

For the executives and government officials who met at the New York Fed the weekend before Lehman went bust last September, the right decisions weren’t obvious.

Their focus was on mitigating damage from about 1 million over-the-counter derivatives trades that Lehman had participated in, according to people who attended the meetings. The men and women in the room weren’t prepared when panic struck the $3.6 trillion money market industry, which provides short-term loans called commercial paper used by corporations such as General Electric Co. to pay everyday bills.

Espresso Shot

“They didn’t know who Lehman was intertwined with because they hadn’t done their homework,” said Joseph Stiglitz, a Columbia University economics professor who won the Nobel Prize in economics in 2001 for his analysis of markets with asymmetric information.

That came home to Fratto the Saturday morning before Lehman fell apart. He sat in his West Wing office at the White House, adorned with pictures of his children and an inscribed photograph of Bono, monitoring the negotiations when he got a call from a friend at a New York bank.

Sipping from a cup of Starbucks coffee with an extra shot of espresso, Fratto asked what she was doing at work.

“She told me that every bank in New York City had their back offices filled with people trying to figure out their counterparty risk to Lehman,” Fratto recalled. “I was stunned. Everyone knew that Lehman had been listing for six months.”

‘Web of Counterparties’

Richard Bookstaber, a former trader and risk manager who warned a crisis was likely in his 2007 book “A Demon of Our Own Design: Markets, Hedge Funds, and the Perils of Financial Innovation,” testified in Congress in October 2007 and June 2008 that regulators didn’t have adequate information to understand the dependencies between companies. The White House proposal to move over-the-counter derivatives onto clearinghouses and exchanges would help by giving regulators and companies involved in transactions better information, he said.

“You have to know the web of counterparties,” he said in an interview. “Nobody knew that, so they’re really shooting in the dark in terms of what the impact would be of Lehman not being saved and what would be necessary to save Lehman.”

Global Sprawl

By the middle of September 2008, it was too late to save the company, and when profits were rolling in it would have been too early, said Ron Feldman, senior vice president in charge of bank supervision at the Minneapolis Fed and co-author of “Too Big to Fail: The Hazards of Bank Bailouts,” published in 2004.

“When the firms are making a lot of money, it’s very difficult to tell them to stop doing certain things,” Feldman said in an interview. “That’s when all the risks are taken.”

Once losses are overwhelming, regulators may have trouble closing down businesses with depositors and creditors in far- flung places. Lehman was an international company based in New York, and people in cities as distant as Hong Kong lost their savings without any inkling their securities were linked to the investment bank.

Citigroup, the bank that has received the most support from the U.S. government, had $494 billion in deposits at foreign branches on June 30 compared with $317 billion in U.S. deposits, according to the company’s latest regulatory filing. That kind of global sprawl at Citigroup and other big financial institutions would make it difficult for U.S. authorities to wind them down.

Goldman Sachs

“Unless we get an internationally agreed-upon insolvency regime, which I cannot believe is ever going to happen in our lifetime, then you just can’t deal with it,” said Bradley K. Sabel, a partner at Shearman & Sterling LLP in New York who spent 18 years at the New York Fed.

Four U.S. companies -- Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup and San Francisco-based Wells Fargo & Co., which bought Wachovia Corp. eight months ago -- have grown to command 46 percent of the assets of all FDIC-insured banks, up from 37.7 percent a year ago. Bank of America, which agreed to acquire Merrill Lynch & Co. the day before Lehman filed for bankruptcy, has 13.3 percent of the total.

New York-based Goldman Sachs Group Inc., the world’s biggest securities firm before converting to a bank seven days after Lehman went under, ratcheted up its trading risks to a record in the first six months of this year, leading to a 67 percent jump in revenue from trading and principal investments over the same period last year. Goldman Sachs also has international reach, with more than 900 subsidiaries in places including the Cayman Islands, Mauritius, Panama and Liberia, according to an SEC filing for the year 2008.

Restoring Discipline

“Nothing has changed except that we have larger players who are more powerful, who are more dependent on government capital and who are harder to regulate than they were to begin with,” said Nomi Prins, who was a managing director at Goldman Sachs before leaving in 2002 and becoming a writer. “We’re in a far less stable environment.”

The ability to wind down big banks would help restore discipline, according to Deputy Treasury Secretary Neal S. Wolin.

“Special resolution authority would give the government the tools it needs to let firms fail in times of severe economic distress without destabilizing the entire financial system,” Wolin said.

The Treasury would also retain the power to save a company and turn to taxpayers to recapitalize it or pay creditors or shareholders, according to the Obama plan.

‘Permanent TARP’

That bothers Philip L. Swagel, an assistant Treasury secretary under Paulson and now an economics professor at McDonough School of Business at Georgetown University in Washington. He said the White House isn’t doing much to convince investors -- or executives -- that the next bank to wobble won’t be propped up too.

“Their answer is basically a permanent TARP,” Swagel said referring to the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program.

One evening in Jackson Hole, central bankers and economists, sipping cocktails on a patio with a view of the Teton Range, talked about what was really worrying them, according to Gertler, the New York University professor. It was that politicians wouldn’t have the mettle to enact significant changes, he said.

“The broader concern was not so much shaping the details of the policy, but whether the legislation would die in Congress,” he said.

Bank Lobbying

The House Financial Services and Senate Banking committees began holding hearings on regulatory proposals before the August recess. Representative Barney Frank of Massachusetts, the Democrat who heads the House panel, has said it will consider the consumer agency first before moving on to other provisions. In the Senate, the entire package will be taken up as one bill, which is unlikely to reach the floor before next year.

Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan and Citigroup were three of the five biggest donors to federal candidates and political parties in last year’s election cycle, according to data compiled by the Center for Responsive Politics, a Washington research group.

Banking industry trade groups are pushing to kill the consumer agency, which they contend will make it impossible to offer the variety of loans and accounts that customers demand and deserve. Banks are also fighting the Treasury’s proposal to move the $592 trillion over-the-counter derivatives market onto clearinghouses and exchanges.

Capital Ratios

While pieces of the administration’s plan may help stave off future crises, the lesson of the Lehman collapse is that big, global financial institutions can create risks that even experienced regulators and bankers won’t always anticipate or understand, according to critics such as Christopher Whalen, managing director of Torrance, California-based Institutional Risk Analytics, which evaluates banks for investors.

At talks in London that concluded on Sept. 5, finance officials from the Group of 20 agreed that banks should be forced to hold more capital, raise the quality of assets they keep in reserve and curtail leverage. The Financial Stability Board, a committee of regulators based in Basel, Switzerland, will flesh out the details before leaders of G-20 countries, which include the U.S., Japan, China and members of the European Union, meet in Pittsburgh on Sept. 24.

“Our objective is to reach agreement by the end of next year on a new standard that will raise capital and liquidity requirements and dampen rather than amplify future credit and asset-price bubbles,” Geithner said in London.

Changing Behavior

The G-20 proposal doesn’t address the right issues, according to Institutional Risk Analytics’ Whalen.

Every big firm that got into trouble last year had a ratio of capital to risk-weighted assets exceeding government minimums, regulatory filings show.

Fifteen days before its bankruptcy, Lehman estimated its Tier 1 capital ratio was 11 percent, up from 10.7 percent at the end of May, the investment bank said in a Sept. 10, 2008, press release. SEC rules obliged Lehman to notify the agency if its total ratio, of which Tier 1 was just a piece, slipped under 10 percent or was expected to do so.

“It was the activities of the banks -- not their lack of capital -- that caused the problem,” Whalen said. “We have to change the behavior of these institutions, and higher capital requirements are not going to change their behavior.”

Some financial executives have applauded the Geithner proposals. Walid Chammah, co-president of Morgan Stanley, said at a banking conference this week in Frankfurt that he doesn’t believe breaking up banks is the right approach. Instead, they should be required to hold more capital and liquid assets.

‘Break the Power’

The White House proposals are meek compared with what the U.S. did under President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, according to Charles R. Geisst, a finance professor at Manhattan College in Riverdale, New York, and author of “Wall Street: A History.”

The Glass-Steagall Act of 1933 forced then-mighty J.P. Morgan & Co. to split in two, creating Morgan Stanley as a standalone investment bank.

Roosevelt’s effort was “antitrust legislation to break the power of the New York City money-center banks,” Geisst said. While today’s titans such as JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs “have the same sort of influence, for some reason most people here do not want to alienate them.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Alison Fitzgerald in Washington at afitzgerald2@bloomberg.net; Christine Harper in New York at charper@bloomberg.net.





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Dollar Index Falls for Longest Run Since March on China Growth

By Yoshiaki Nohara and Ron Harui

Sept. 11 (Bloomberg) -- The Dollar Index fell for a sixth day, its longest losing streak since March, after reports showed China’s factory output and lending gained by more than economists estimated, spurring demand for emerging-market assets.

The euro rose to a nine-month high against the dollar on signs Europe’s recession is abating. The pound climbed to the strongest in a month versus the dollar before a U.K. report forecast to show producer prices gained a second month. The yen strengthened for a second day against the euro amid speculation Japanese exporters are repatriating earnings.

“Solid data in China show economic fundamentals are improving, weighing down on the dollar,” said Koji Fukaya, a senior currency strategist in Tokyo at Deutsche Bank AG. “Risk appetite is coming back.”

The Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against the currencies of six major U.S. trading partners including the euro, yen and pound, retreated to 76.675 as of 9:14 a.m. in London, from 76.817 yesterday in New York. The gauge earlier touched 76.511, the weakest level since Sept. 25, 2008.

The euro rose to $1.4589, from $1.4582. It earlier gained to $1.4627, the highest level since Dec. 18. The yen appreciated to 132.79 per euro, from 133.76. Japan’s currency was at 91.02 per dollar, from 91.73. It touched 90.68, the strongest since Feb. 13.

The pound appreciated to $1.6668, from $1.6651. It earlier touched $1.6742, the highest level since Aug. 7.

China Production, Lending

China’s industrial production expanded 12.3 percent in August from a year earlier, the statistics bureau reported today in Beijing. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg News forecast an 11.8 increase. New lending unexpectedly climbed in August and money supply rose by a record. Banks extended 410.4 billion yuan ($60.1 billion) of local-currency loans, up from 355.9 billion yuan in July, the People’s Bank of China said today.

German exports, adjusted for working days and seasonal changes, rose 2.3 percent in July from June, the Federal Statistics Office said in Wiesbaden on Sept. 8.

“The euro-zone economy is gradually recovering,” said Masanobu Ishikawa, general manager of foreign exchange at Tokyo Forex & Ueda Harlow Ltd., Japan’s largest currency broker. “The euro will probably trade in a firm manner.”

‘Uptrend’

The euro is likely to climb toward $1.4719, a level that represents a 100 percent Fibonacci retracement from the six- month low of $1.2457 reached on March 4, said Masashi Hashimoto, a Tokyo-based senior analyst at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. Daily momentum indicators such as the moving average convergence/divergence chart show buy signals for the euro against the dollar, he said.

“The euro is in an uptrend,” Hashimoto said yesterday. “The euro used to drop quickly following moderate gains in June and August, but its recent rally bucks that trend.”

The 16-nation currency may rise toward a resistance level of $1.4866 should the currency climb above $1.4719, Hashimoto said. Resistance is where sell orders may be clustered.

The pound was poised for a second weekly advance versus the dollar as the price of goods at U.K. factory gates climbed 0.3 percent in August, the same pace as in July, according to a Bloomberg News survey of economists. The Office for National Statistics will release the data today in London.

Rising Pound

“Sentiment is emerging that the recession in economies around the world, including the U.K.’s, is ending,” said Tsutomu Soma, a bond and currency dealer at Okasan Securities Co. in Tokyo. “Risk-taking appetite is benefiting the pound.”

The Bank of England yesterday held interest rates at 0.5 percent and kept its bond-buying program unchanged in a sign policy makers believe the economy is recovering. The decision by the BOE’s nine-member Monetary Policy Committee, led by Governor Mervyn King, was forecast by all 35 economists in another survey.

The yen advanced against all 16 major counterparts amid speculation Japanese companies are bringing back money earned abroad to take advantage of a tax break that went into effect this fiscal year.

“Japan’s exporters are bringing home their earnings, a typical move in September toward the end of the third quarter,” said Takashi Kudo, director of foreign-exchange sales at NTT SmartTrade Inc., a unit of Nippon Telegraph & Telephone Corp. “As a result, the yen is rising across the board.”

The Japanese government announced earlier this year that it would waive taxes on repatriated profits from April 1 to help support the economy. Under previous laws, companies had to pay a combined 40 percent tax on overseas earnings.

The dollar headed for a fifth weekly loss against the yen. If the dollar falls below the key psychological level of 90 yen, the greenback will be caught in a “downward spiral,” said Yoh Nihei, trading group manager at Tokai Tokyo Securities Co. in Tokyo. Declines in the dollar will cause a sell-off in shares of export-dependent companies in Japan, he said.

“As stocks decline, investors will buy Treasuries as a refuge,” Nihei said. “The resultant drop in yields will put more downward pressure on the dollar.”

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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Codelco to Stem Output Drop With $11 Billion Program

By Matthew Craze and James Attwood

Sept. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Codelco, the world’s largest copper producer, will boost output for the first time in five years as an $11 billion investment program revamps aging mines.

Production will increase by “at least” 120,000 metric tons, or about 8 percent more than last year’s 1.55 million tons, as the company produces for a full year at the Gabriela Mistral mine, Santiago Gonzalez, Chilean Mining Minister and chairman of state-owned Codelco, said in an interview.

Santiago-based Codelco is developing new deposits as metal runs out at mines including century-old Chuquicamata. Four years of falling output at Codelco, which produces about a 10th of the world’s copper, helped prices surge sixfold between 2003 and May 2008, when futures for the metal used in plumbing and wiring rose to a record $4.2605 per pound.

New Codelco supplies “will increase the likelihood of a medium-term pullback” in prices, Matthew Zeman, a trader at LaSalle Futures Group in Chicago, said in an interview yesterday. “That will add a little fuel to the fire.”

Zeman predicts prices may decline to $2.50 a pound. Copper futures fell 4.75 cents, or 1.6 percent, to $2.8765 a pound in New York yesterday as inventories rose in London Metal Exchange- monitored warehouses.

Stockpiles tracked by exchanges in London, New York and Shanghai have risen 17 percent this year to 452,541 tons as of yesterday, data compiled by Bloomberg showed. That was the highest since May 11.

Purchases by China, the world’s largest consumer, tumbled for a second month as stores of the metal rose. Imports plunged to 325,098 tons in August, the customs office said today. That’s 20 percent down from a month ago, according to Bloomberg data.

Gabriela Mine

Codelco’s production rose 15 percent in the first half of 2009 as the Gabriela Mistral mine boosted the company’s total.

Last year, Codelco’s contract workers went on strike at three of the company’s mines and mudslides curbed output at the El Teniente mine.

“If these events don’t reoccur then production should increase,” Gonzalez said yesterday in Santiago.

Chile’s total copper output may increase by between 3 and 5 percent this year because of gains at Codelco, Gonzalez said.

Gonzalez also said the government may increase its estimate for this year’s average copper price to about $2.16 a pound, from $1.95 currently, on Chinese purchases of the metal used in power cables and electrical wire.

Copper prices have more than doubled in 2009 as imports by China climbed to a record in the first half.

To contact the reporters on this story: Matthew Craze in Santiago at mcraze@bloomberg.net; James Attwood at jattwood3@bloomberg.net





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Billionaire Palmer Seeks Hong Kong Listing This Year

By Rebecca Keenan and Jesse Riseborough

Sept. 11 (Bloomberg) -- Clive Palmer, Australia’s fifth- richest man, expects to complete an initial public offering of his Resourcehouse mining group in Hong Kong by the end of the year to benefit from demand for resources in China.

“There is a big need in China for growth for resources,” Palmer said today in a phone interview from Perth. He said he’s still deciding what mining assets the IPO will include, and wouldn’t give a value.

Palmer, planning a A$7.5 billion ($6.5 billion) coal project and an iron ore mine, is seeking to take advantage of surging interest in IPOs in Hong Kong, on target for its busiest month for such shares sales since 2007. He may sell between $2 billion and $3 billion in shares, the South China Morning Post reported today, citing people it didn’t identify.

“It’s still a very, very big lick, it would need a lot of interest from China and Hong Kong to get behind it,” said Peter Arden, a Melbourne-based analyst at Ord Minnett Ltd., an affiliate of JPMorgan Chase & Co. “The window for IPOs is opening.”

Australasian Resources Ltd., 66 percent owned by Palmer, advanced 4.4 percent to 47 cents at the 4:10 p.m. Sydney time close on the Australian stock exchange. The stock has risen 27 percent this year.

Soccer Club

Palmer, chairman of the closely held coal and iron ore company Mineralogy Pty., was the only person in the top-10 of Business Review Weekly Magazine’s annual rich 200 list whose wealth increased last year. Palmer’s fortune more than doubled to A$3.4 billion, according to the list that was published in May. He also owns the Gold Coast United soccer club.

China’s industrial production grew at a faster pace than forecast in August and new lending unexpectedly accelerated, indicating a strengthening recovery in the world’s third-biggest economy. Urban fixed-asset investment for the eight months to Aug. 31 climbed 33 percent, the statistics bureau said today.

“One thing that is clear is the Chinese are planning to move another 350 million people to the cities from rural areas and that is going to increase demand for commodities,” Palmer said.

Resourcehouse may include Queensland coal assets held by Palmer and joint venture partner state-owned China Metallurgical Group Corp., Palmer said. It’s unlikely to include the iron ore operations Palmer controls in Western Australia or the Yabulu nickel refinery he bought from BHP Billiton Ltd. in July.

Talks between Australasian and Chinese partner Shougang Corp. for financing of Palmer’s proposed A$2.7 billion iron ore project in Western Australia had not been successful, Perth- based Australasian said in July.

UBS, Macquarie

Funds from the proposed IPO, being managed by UBS AG and Macquarie Group Ltd., will be used to develop resources, he said.

Waratah Coal Inc., the joint venture that owns the coal projects in Queensland and is chaired by Palmer, signed an agreement in May with China Metallurgical to get funding for up to 70 percent of the project. Waratah will fund the remaining 30 percent, Palmer said then. Mineralogy bought Waratah last year for C$85.8 million ($80 million).

Palmer planned a A$5 billion IPO of his company Resource Development International Ltd., owner of iron ore, steel, nickel and energy assets, in July last year, aiming to be dual listed in Hong Kong and Australia. The proposal was shelved after an unsuccessful exploration campaign, he said today.

“The worry I see is that it’s possibly a bit early and my sense of what he’s trying to do, and it’s not a criticism of him, A$5 billion was a very big ask last time,” said Minnett’s Arden. “That’s where he ran into trouble.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Rebecca Keenan in Melbourne at rkeenan5@bloomberg.net; Jesse Riseborough in Melbourne at jriseborough@bloomberg.net.





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