Economic Calendar

Monday, September 14, 2009

Protectionism Sinks Asian Markets

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by AC-Markets | Sep 14 09 08:56 GMT |

Market Brief

The Greenback fell to 2009 fresh lows against most major currencies last week, with Dollar Index used to track the greenback against 6 major currencies dropped 2% to 76.608 from 78.136 a week earlier. Demand for the safe-haven currency dropped sharply last week as Standard & Poor's 500 Index posted its biggest weekly gain for the year, and gold continued its uptrend to top at 1011.95 on Friday. Other important factors put pressure on the safe-haven currency. The three months LIBOR for dollars dropped to a record low on Wednesday, making the greenback the cheapest currency to fund purchases of higher yielding assets, and UN called for dollar reserve role to be eliminated. Should the USD fall further this week? I believe we need to watch closely the stock indices as it's relation with the USD are still inversely proportional, while key events such as retail sales, consumer prices and TICS could be the market movers for this week.

The EUR appreciated 2% against the USD last week, but was almost unchanged on Friday, closing at 1.4570 after posting a new 2009 high at 1.4635 earlier in the day. The GBP rallied after the BoE left rates at 0.5%, and quantitative easing stance unchanged at £175 B. The JPY possibly benefited from funds flowing back to safer assets towards the end week, as we've seen correction in U.S. stock markets and drop in commodities except the precious metals. Commodity currencies such as AUD and CAD also fell on Friday as commodity prices dropped.

Gold for the first time since February closes above $1,000 benchmark. The yellow metal rallied to as high as 1013.7 on Friday before closing at 1006.4. I do favorite some more upside in gold for a test of 1033.9 levels. Crude Oil dropped to a low of $68.8 after topping at $72.9. OPEC announced to keep production quotas unchanged on Wednesday. Obviously members are satisfied with the current price level and suggest 68-73 levels to continue for some time.

This week there would be couple of important data releases, especially from the US and UK, along with 2 central banks meetings 'BoJ & SNB'. US data could show more signs of economic recovery with focus on retails sales, CPI, TIC capital flow, and housing market. While UK will be releasing its CPI, which is expected to remain far below BoE's target at 2%, UK jobs report and retails sales would be even released. From the Eurozone focus will be on German ZEW, CPI, and trade balance

ACM FOREX

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





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China And The United States On The Brink Of Commercial Crisis, First Under The New Administration

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by ecPulse.com | Sep 14 09 07:50 GMT |

China protested severely on the United States decision to increase tariffs on automobile tires coming from China, in their attempt to preserve their local industry, indicating that this action taken by the U.S. administration violates international trade treaties.

This decision was taken two days ago and will be applicable from September 26, where tariffs on tires imports from China will increase by 35% for the first year, then will fall by 30% for the second year and by 25% for the third year.

Total imports of tires from China reached to 14.6 billion dollars by 2004, representing approximately 1/6 of the US needs. It is worth mentioning that four U.S. tire factories closed in the past two years causing a loss of more than 5 thousand jobs.

In an action interpreted as retaliation, China conducted a series of investigations regarding the dumping and subsidy of auto and chicken imports from the United States. This refers to an illegal entrance of some goods in the market, and selling them below productivity costs in order to deluge markets with certain products in detriment of local the industry that will get hurt.

These tensions precede the next G20 meeting set for later this month, where President Barack Obama will be meeting with his Chinese counterpart Hu Jintao. China explained through its official statement released on the official website of the Ministry of Trade that the U.S. decision violates trade treaties and promises made during the previous G20 meeting.

Now a series of reactions may be taken by China that could slow the economic recovery that both pledged to support. With this strong rejection by the Chinese government for this protective action made by the U.S. administration, the first trade dispute may appear between the two

Ecpulse

disclaimer: The content of ecPulse.com and any page in the website contain information for investors/traders and is not a recommendation to buy or sell currencies, stocks, gold, silver & energies, nor an offer to buy or sell currencies, stocks, gold, silver & energies. The information provided reflects the writers' opinions that deemed reliable but is not guaranteed as to accuracy or completeness. ecPulse is not liable for any losses or damages, monetary or otherwise that result. I recommend that anyone trades currencies, stocks, gold, silver & energies should do so with caution and consult with a broker before doing so. Prior performance may not be indicative of future performance. Currencies, stocks gold, silver &energies presented should be considered speculative with a high degree of volatility and risk





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Forex Technical Analysis

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by DeltaStock Inc. | Sep 14 09 09:33 GMT |

EUR/USD

Current level-1.4564

EUR/USD is in a broad consolidation, after bottoming at 1.2331 (Oct.28,2008). Technical indicators are neutral, and trading is situated above the 50- and 200-Day SMA, currently projected at 1.4134 and 1.3523.

As expected, the pair broke below 1.4570 critical level, signalizing that a top is in place and a larger corrective phase is on the run, towards 1.4470-44 support area. Intraday bias is negative, while the pair holds below 1.4569 resistance. Crucial on the upside is 1.4606.

Resistance Support
intraday intraweek intraday intraweek
1.4569 1.4720 1.4512 1.4006
1.4606 1.50+ 1.4470 1.3746

USD/JPY

Current level - 90.70

A short-term bottom has been set at 87.12 and a large consolidation is unfolding since. Trading is situated below the 50- and 200-day SMA, currently projected at 94.86 and 94.84.

Our target at 90.35 was fulfilled and the pair is in a corrective rebound for 92.03. Intraday crucial level is 90.19.

Resistance Support
intraday intraweek intraday intraweek
91.23 95.50 90.19 90.35
92.03 101.45 89.62 87.12

GBP/USD

Current level- 1.6572

The pair is in a downtrend after peaking at 1.7042. Trading is situated between the 50- and 200-day SMA, currently projected at 1.6454 and 1.5258.

Recent high at 1.6741 was confirmed to be the end of the rise from 1.6111, so currently a larger consolidation with a negative bias is underway, targeting 1.6430. Intraday resistance comes at 1.6602, followed by the crucial 1.6625.

Resistance Support
intraday intraweek intraday intraweek
1.6603 1.7042 1.6515 1.6111
1.6860 1.7440 1.6430 1.5350

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

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





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Romanian Recovery Optimism ‘Premature,’ Capital Economics Says

By Adam Brown

Sept. 14 (Bloomberg) -- Romania’s economy, which the central bank says is exiting recession, will contract for a second year as unemployment and bad debt rise and the government cuts spending, Neil Shearing of Capital Economics said.

“It’s premature and a bit worrying to start talking about recovery,” said Shearing, an emerging-Europe economist, in a telephone interview on Sept. 11. “Clearly the outlook has improved but there are still too many downside risks. We see economic contraction of half a percentage point next year.”

Romania’s government has said the economy has started to recover after industrial output and retail sales reports improved and the quarterly contraction in gross domestic product slowed. The government predicts an emergence from recession in the fourth quarter and growth of as much as 1 percent next year.

France and Germany, which Romania relies on for export demand and investment, emerged from their recessions in the second quarter, prompting analysts to predict a recovery across most of eastern European as early as the end of this year.

Romania’s industrial output slump slowed to an annual 6.9 percent in July from 8.9 percent in June and the retail sales drop slowed to an annual 13.8 percent from 17.3 percent, the National Statistics Institute said last week. The contraction slowed to a quarterly 1.1 percent in the second quarter from 2.9 percent in the first quarter.

Recovery Process

“We have started the recovery process, seeing that industrial output has already started to improve,” central bank Governor Mugur Isarescu said on Sept. 9. “There will be more economic growth adjustments in the future.”

While sales and output data improved, unemployment rose to 6.6 percent in August from 6.3 percent in July, exports dropped by 14.5 percent on the year, foreign direct investment plunged almost by half and bad loans more than tripled. On an annual basis, the economic contraction deepened in the second quarter to 8.7 percent from 6.2 percent in the first.

“Bad debt will continue to rise and the labor market will continue to deteriorate, which will further expose the banking sector,” Shearing said. “All in all there are too many uncertainties. And, not least, we will see fiscal policy tightening throughout next year.”

The government has agreed to cut spending and raise some taxes this year and next as part of a 20 billion-euro ($29 billion) international financing package led by the International Monetary Fund and the European Union. Romania joined the EU in 2007 along with Bulgaria.

As state revenue declines, the government must cut 1 billion euros in planned spending this year to target a budget deficit of 7.3 percent of gross domestic product. It must cut expenditure further to meet the 2010 deficit target of less than 6 percent.

The government has frozen state wages and created a tax on services this year. It said last month it will send all state workers on 10 days of unpaid leave this year, fire many next year, raise and announce a series of further measures to contain the deficit.

“It’s too early to speak of recovery with so many uncertainties,” Shearing said. “The outlook is much better than it was at the start of the year,” though “our prediction is fresh and based on the latest data.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Adam Brown in Bucharest at abrown23@bloomberg.net





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Israeli Inflation May Hint at Next Fischer Move: Week Ahead

By Alisa Odenheimer

Sept. 14 (Bloomberg) -- Israel’s August inflation figures may provide a sneak preview for investors eager to learn whether Bank of Israel Governor Stanley Fischer will raise rates again at the end of the month.

Fischer, who became the first central bank governor to lift rates since signs of easing in the global recession began, may decide on a further increase if the inflation rate is higher than expected, said Ayelet Nir, chief economist at Tel Aviv- based Israel Brokerage & Investments Ltd. The components of the August consumer price index, and whether they show demand-pull inflation or one-time, government-initiated increases, will also play a role, she said.

“The difficulty in the decision is that the Bank of Israel is trying on the one hand to avoid high inflation and on the other hand not to harm growth,” Nir said. Growth “is still very fragile so the decision is very, very hard.”

Fischer has been trying to find a balance between unwinding an expansionary monetary policy while containing a shekel rally in a country where exports make up almost half of gross domestic product. The bank said its Aug. 25 decision to raise the key rate by a quarter point to 0.75 percent was aimed at returning inflation to within the target range of 1 percent to 3 percent.

If Fischer raises rates too early he can harm growth, both because it may cause the shekel to appreciate, which hurts exporters, and also because it dampens spending, Nir said. On the other hand, inflation also has repercussions for growth, she said.

Unanimous

The August consumer price index is expected to dip to 3.2 percent from 3.5 percent the previous month, according to the median estimate of a Bloomberg survey of nine economists. The Jerusalem-based Central Bureau of Statistics will report the inflation data at 6:30 p.m. on Sept. 15.

All four central bank officials who participated in the rate-setting meeting last month favored raising the rate, with one of the four supporting a half-point increase, according to the minutes.

“If inflation is as expected or higher, there is a good chance of another rate hike,” said Jonathan Katz, a Jerusalem- based economist at HSBC Holdings Plc., who predicted the last increase. The minutes of the last rate meeting show that the “monetary bias is still toward higher rates.”

Israel’s growth rate is expected to be flat this year, and will rise to 2.5 percent in 2010, the Bank of Israel said Sept. 1. The bank’s previous forecast in April was for a 1.5 percent contraction this year and growth of 1 percent next year.

Water Tax

Much of the rise in the August consumer price index is likely to be due to the government’s new drought tax on water, which isn’t relevant in the interest rate decision, Nir said.

There will also be “demand-based inflation,” she said, citing increases in the consumer confidence index, retail sales and credit card spending. “Part of the price increases are because of this.”

The following is a list of important events in Israel next week:


Event
Q2 current account Sept. 14
August CPI Sept. 15
Q2 revised GDP Sept. 16

To contact the reporter on this story: Alisa Odenheimer in Jerusalem at aodenheimer@bloomberg.net;





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Obama Marks Lehman Collapse With Renewed Focus on Market Rules

By Nicholas Johnston

Sept. 14 (Bloomberg) -- President Barack Obama, speaking a year after Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.’s collapse, heads to Wall Street today to outline his plan for unwinding government involvement in the financial sector and to argue that new regime of rules to prevent a market crisis is needed more than ever.

Obama will use the backdrop of Federal Hall in New York City to try and revive efforts at revamping market regulations. The president will urge the financial community to support that goal and he will emphasize the need for global coordination on financial oversight, according to an administration official speaking on the condition of anonymity.

The administration’s focus on health-care legislation has overshadowed work being done to craft a new set of financial regulations that the president called for earlier this year. Obama’s top advisers say the time to act is now.

“This is the year, after what has happened, to overhaul the system of financial regulation,” White House economic adviser Lawrence Summers told reporters last week.

Lehman’s filing for bankruptcy on Monday, Sept. 15, 2008, helped trigger a global financial crisis that led to more than $1.6 trillion in losses and write downs by financial institutions and unprecedented government interventions in banking, insurance and auto industries. The government bailouts, in turn, have stirred public anger, rippling beyond the financial system.

White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said yesterday that some of the public resistance to Obama’s health-care initiative as well as other administration proposals is linked to the unpopularity of the bailouts.

Catastrophe

“People are upset because on Monday we celebrate the anniversary of the Lehman Brothers collapse that caused a financial catastrophe unlike anything we’ve ever seen,” Gibbs said on CNN’s “State of the Union” program. The rescue of financial institutions and automakers General Motors Co. and Chrysler Group LLC “cost a lot of money, but it’s something that we had to do.”

In response to the financial crisis, the Obama administration proposed on June 17 changes to U.S. financial regulations, including oversight of the systemic risk large financial institutions pose to the economy, new ways for the government to dismantle failed companies and a regulator to oversee financial products for consumers.

During his 30 minute-long speech tomorrow, Obama will recount steps taken by the administration in response to the financial crisis and discuss steps the government is taking to reduce its involvement in the financial sector, the administration official said.

Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner will be in attendance along with Christina Romer, the chairwoman of the administration’s Council of Economic Advisors, the official said, along with members of the financial community and consumer advocates.

Keeping Up Pressure

With the unemployment rate poised to hit at least 10 percent this year, Obama has vowed the administration would keep up pressure on Wall Street to free up more credit for businesses and consumers and on Congress to write new financial rules.

The issue will be at the forefront when Obama plays host to a meeting of leaders from the Group of 20 nations Sept. 24-25 in Pittsburgh.

G-20 finance ministers and central bankers agreed on a blueprint for changes to financial services regulations, including global standards on pay, Sept. 5 in London. Those include a global pay code that include forcing banks to “claw back” cash awards if earnings falter and more closely tying compensation to long-term performance.

Detailed proposals scheduled to be presented in Pittsburgh, will suggest how banks can be forced to “prevent excessive short-term risk taking.”

This Year

Summers, the director of the National Economic Council, said that even with the focus on health care, new financial regulations can be enacted this year. Congressional committees have begun hearings on financial regulations and preparing draft legislation and a bill may reach the House floor by next month.

In making the case for broad changes to financial regulations, Summers said the crisis precipitated by Lehman’s collapse was just one in a long line of calamities including the 1987 stock market crash, financial downturns in Mexico and Asia during the 1990’s and the Internet company stock-market bubble.

Past Crises

“It is important to recognize that while the events of the last year stand apart in their magnitude and their severity, they do not represent the first time that events emanating from the financial sector led to the disruption of the lives of very large numbers of people,” Summers said. “Financial crises have been too large a feature on our economic landscape.”

Geithner said in an interview with the Financial Times today that the government didn’t have enough legal authority to support the banking system at the height of the crisis. He called that a “tragic failure” that must be remedied through new rules.

“Things are not yet in place,” Geithner said, according to the Financial Times. “We do not have a new international capital accord and stronger resolution authority in place yet.”

Obama’s speech “will focus on the need to take the next series of steps on financial regulatory reform,” Gibbs said last week. The president wants to put in place “sufficient safeguards to ensure that doesn’t happen again and cause the type of havoc that we’ve seen on our economy.”

Obama isn’t expected to offer new proposals, he said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Nicholas Johnston in Washington at njohnston3@bloomberg.net





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Fed, BOE Stimulus Exits May Differ on Bond Analysis, BIS Says

By Jennifer Ryan

Sept. 14 (Bloomberg) -- The Federal Reserve and other central banks may adopt different strategies for ending monetary stimulus because they have diverging views on the role of bond purchases in stoking economic growth, the Bank for International Settlements said.

The Fed’s statements suggest it considers buying assets as a stimulus, while the Bank of England view may be that holding onto the bonds also aids the economy, BIS official Robert McCauley wrote in a report released yesterday in Basel, Switzerland.

The analysis suggests the Fed regards interest-rate increases as being enough to unwind stimulus without bond sales, while the Bank of England may want to raise rates and sell assets concurrently. Both banks have amassed billions of dollars in debt holdings after they cut interest rates close to zero to battle the global recession.

In the U.K. central bank’s view, “to raise the short-term interest rate while never selling the bond holdings would be to tap the brake while the other foot remained firmly on the accelerator,” McCauley said. For the Fed, “without a foot on the accelerator, one could consistently tap the brake.”

The BIS, the bank for central banks, published the report as part of its quarterly review of the world economy.

The Fed last month discussed ending its program of buying $1.25 trillion agency mortgage-backed securities and $200 billion of housing agency debt, though it said rates would stay “exceptionally low” for an “extended period,” minutes of its Aug 11-12 meeting showed. The interest rate is now in a range of zero to 0.25 percent.

Fed Strategy

The U.S. central bank has signaled it may not raise rates first, and instead may adopt actions such as providing short- term repurchase agreements against long-term securities, McCauley wrote.

The Bank of England on Sept. 10 reiterated its program to buy 175 billion pounds ($292 billion) of bonds with newly created money as it kept the benchmark rate at 0.5 percent.

Deputy Governor Charles Bean signaled last month that the U.K. central bank will probably use a combination of interest- rate increases and asset sales in withdrawing stimulus.

“The fact that we can raise bank rate means that we can stagger sales back to the private sector in a way that recognizes market conditions at the time,” he told journalists in London. Prospects for inflation will be the “guiding light” that determines the timing of any withdrawal, he said.

The Swiss National Bank, which has been pursuing a policy of holding down the Swiss franc by buying foreign assets, has offered little guidance on how it will exit this strategy, McCauley said.

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





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Obama’s China Tariffs May Be Prelude to Opening Trade

By Mark Drajem

Sept. 14 (Bloomberg) -- President Barack Obama’s decision to place tariffs on tires from China may be the opening move in a campaign for fewer trade barriers, based on the strategy used by his four predecessors.

Obama announced duties Sept. 11 of 35 percent on $1.8 billion of automobile tires from China, acting on a complaint by the United Steelworkers union that surging imports were pushing U.S. factory workers out of their jobs.

Former Presidents Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush each took action to protect domestic industries early in their terms before making free trade a focus. Obama, like Clinton, has the added challenge of trying to satisfy trade-wary Democratic lawmakers and the unions that helped them win election.

“It does buy him some credibility with Congress,” said William Reinsch, president of the National Foreign Trade Council, which represents exporters such as Boeing Co. and Microsoft Corp. The decision to impose tariffs may improve the prospects for congressional acceptance of new trade accords sought by the administration, he said.

Agreements with Colombia, Panama and South Korea have been stalled in Congress in part because of Democratic opposition.

China “strongly opposes” Obama’s decision to impose tariffs and may refer the case to the World Trade Organization, that country’s Ministry of Commerce said Sept. 12. China also announced yesterday probes into subsidies for imported U.S. chicken and auto products.

‘Save Jobs’

The case brought by the steelworkers union was the largest so-called safeguard petition filed to protect U.S. producers from increasing imports from China. Union leaders and Democratic lawmakers said the decision demonstrates Obama’s commitment to protecting U.S. workers and jobs.

“The president courageously stood up and enforced fair trade rules that will save jobs and help our communities,” Ohio Senator Sherrod Brown said in a statement after the decision.

In 1983, Reagan imposed duties and quotas on steel imports, and George H.W. Bush extended them in 1989. Clinton cracked down on autos and auto part imports from Japan. George W. Bush imposed a global safeguard on steel as he sought political support in West Virginia and Pennsylvania.

The presidents later worked to cut trade barriers and pushed for new trade agreements such as the North American Free Trade Agreement, which was negotiated in the first Bush administration and passed Congress under Clinton.

Reagan, Clinton

The trade negotiations that led to the WTO were conceived under Reagan and implemented under Clinton. China’s entry into the WTO got congressional approval under Clinton and was completed in the second Bush administration.

Obama’s willingness to act on tire imports may produce a flood of trade complaints seeking action against China, according to Derek Scissors, a research fellow for Asia Economic Policy at the Heritage Foundation, a Washington public policy group.

Lewis Leibowitz, a lawyer at Hogan & Hartson in Washington who represents U.S. consumers of imports, said such complaints may be limited because imports of most products from China are down this year due to the recession.

The global integration of U.S. companies makes it less likely they will join unions in seeking to block imports. In the tire case, Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., the largest U.S. tiremaker, stayed neutral. Cooper Tire & Rubber Co., the second- largest U.S. tiremaker, opposed the relief. The company has a plant in China.

‘Unfair Trade’

The initial reaction from China, the U.S.’s second-largest trading partner after Canada, indicates an exchange of trade penalties may follow. China’s exports to the U.S. were $252 billion last year, compared with $81.4 billion of imports, according to Chinese government figures.

Chinese industries complain that they’re being hurt by “unfair” U.S. trade practices, the nation’s Ministry of Commerce said on its Web site yesterday. The Beijing-based ministry is probing complaints about U.S. subsidies for auto and chicken products, a spokesman said today. The agency is also probing the alleged dumping of the chicken products, he said.

The U.S. decision on tires violated rules of the WTO and is a breach of the commitments made by the U.S. at the Group of 20 summits, the ministry said Sept. 12. The move will harm both countries’ interests and produce a chain reaction of trade protectionism, slowing world economic recovery, it added.

Opposing Reactions

Obama may hear opposing reactions to his decision on tire tariffs at two events in Pittsburgh in coming days. Tomorrow, he is set to address the AFL-CIO, the largest U.S. labor federation, which praised the action.

Next week, Obama will see China’s President Hu Jintao. The leaders are scheduled to attend a G-20 summit, also in Pittsburgh.

Obama’s decision is unlikely to result in the return to the U.S. of jobs producing low-cost tires, said Scissors of the Heritage Foundation and Mickey Kantor, a former U.S. Trade Representative in the Clinton administration. Instead, tariffs could shift production from China to other developing nations.

“U.S. companies have gotten out of this business in the United States,” Kantor said in an interview. “And I don’t think they are going to invest back here because of a three-year safeguard.”

The independent U.S. International Trade Commission recommended that Obama impose duties for three years, starting at 55 percent, to counter a tripling of tire imports from China from 2004 to 2008. The union, which represents 15,000 employees at 13 tire plants in the U.S., said cheap imports were forcing factories to close, eliminating jobs.

To contact the reporter on this story: Mark Drajem in Washington at mdrajem@bloomberg.net





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U.K. Housing Slump to Resume in 2010, Item Club Says

By Jennifer Ryan

Sept. 14 (Bloomberg) -- The U.K. housing market slump will resume next year as the squeeze on mortgage lending persists, Ernst & Young LLC’s Item Club said.

After “dipping” in the first half of 2010, prices will then stagnate for two years, the research group, which uses the same economic model as the U.K. Treasury, said in a report today in London. Mortgage finance may “remain scarce and expensive” as banks rebuild balance sheets while the economy emerges from the recession, the Item Club said.

U.K. house prices rose the most since 2006 in August amid a shortage of supply, Nationwide Building Society said last month. The slump, which erased 15 percent from home values since the decade-long housing boom peaked in 2007, has left many mortgage holders owing more than their properties are worth.

“The current stabilization in the housing market is a false dawn,” Hetal Mehta, senior economic adviser to the Item Club, said in a statement. “Price rises largely reflect the acute shortage of available properties, with many homeowners either trapped in negative equity or reluctant to sell for fear of locking in the losses of the past two years.”

The number of U.K. loans for house purchase rose 24 percent in July from the previous month to 56,000, the Council of Mortgage Lenders said today. Still, the Bank of England’s data on mortgages show the number of approvals is less than half the total in the same month two years ago.

The central bank said on Sept. 10 it will continue a plan to buy 175 billion pounds ($292 billion) of bond purchases while keeping the key interest rate at a record low of 0.5 percent. Policy makers are trying to cement the economy’s recovery from the worst contraction in a generation.

Peak Prices

The Item Club said house prices won’t recover to the peak reached in 2007 for another five years. The pickup will be driven by the economy’s recovery and a continued supply shortage of new properties.

While the government aims to build 240,000 homes a year through 2016, today’s report says the program is already behind schedule after the construction industry slumped. The group estimates the number of new properties completed this year will be below 175,000.

Southern England will lag the recovery in the short-term because first-time buyers will have the hardest struggle to afford new homes, the Item Club said.

“In order for the housing market to function properly it is essential that first-time buyers are bought back into the market,” Andrew Goodwin, senior economic adviser to the club, said. Otherwise, “the current status quo of a low number of transactions, dominated by speculative cash buyers, is likely to be maintained.”

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





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EU Says Economy May Have Resumed Growth This Quarter

By Simone Meier

Sept. 14 (Bloomberg) -- Europe’s economy probably returned to growth in the current quarter after governments spent billions of euros to pull the region out of the worst recession in more than six decades, the European Union said.

The euro-area economy may expand 0.2 percent in the third quarter and 0.1 percent in the fourth after shrinking 0.1 percent in the three months through June, the European Commission, the EU executive in Brussels, said today in updated economic forecasts. In 2009, the economy may shrink 4 percent, the commission said, leaving its May projection unchanged.

European companies from Germany’s ThyssenKrupp AG to France’s L’Oreal SA have reported results that beat analysts’ estimates, suggesting government efforts to encourage spending are feeding into the broader economy. European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet on Sept. 3 cited “increasing signs” of stabilization. Investors grew more optimistic this month and economic confidence is at a 10-month high.

“The situation has considerably improved over the past months,” said Juergen Michels, chief euro-region economist at Citigroup in London. “The second half will be more positive, but we can’t expect a boom. The recovery will continue through 2010.”

The economies of Germany and France unexpectedly returned to growth in the second quarter. In Germany, Europe’s largest economy, gross domestic product will probably rise 0.7 percent in the third quarter and 0.1 percent in the fourth, the commission said today. The French economy probably expanded 0.4 percent in the current quarter.

‘Unprecedented Amounts’

Italy probably emerged from the recession during the third quarter, while Spain’s economy will continue to shrink through 2009, according to the forecasts. The U.K., which isn’t in the euro region, may resume growth this quarter and expand 0.5 percent in the fourth quarter, the EU estimates.

“The situation improved mainly due to the unprecedented amounts of money pumped into the economy by central banks and public authorities,” EU Monetary Affairs Commissioner Joaquin Almunia said in a statement accompanying the forecasts. “We need to continue implementing the recovery measures” this year and in 2010.

The ECB earlier this month raised its forecasts for the euro region to predict expansion of about 0.2 percent in 2010 instead of a previously projected 0.3 percent contraction. In 2009, the economy will shrink about 4.1 percent, less than the 4.6 percent contraction predicted three months ago. The EU forecasts a 0.1 percent contraction next year.

Bottomed Out

Paris-based L’Oreal, the world’s largest cosmetics maker, on Aug. 28 posted a smaller-than-forecast drop in earnings and said sales will gradually improve through the second half. Dusseldorf-based ThyssenKrupp, Germany’s biggest steelmaker, last month reported a third-quarter loss that was less than analysts projected and said there are signs that prices and sales volumes for some products have bottomed out.

Rising unemployment and the expiration of government stimulus packages may damp economic growth next year. International Monetary Fund Managing Director Dominique Strauss- Kahn said on Sept. 4 that there is a “real danger” policy makers will withdraw support measures for their economies too soon, jeopardizing the global recovery from recession.

In the U.S., the world’s largest economy, the recovery may be the slowest since World War II to regain all the ground lost during the recession, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. chief economist Bruce Kasman. The Federal Reserve may hold its target for the key U.S. rate between zero and 0.25 percent through 2010, he said.

‘Economic Malaise’

“We’re going into an extended period of weak economy, of economic malaise,” Joseph Stiglitz, the Nobel Prize-winning economist, said in an interview yesterday. “If workers do not have income, it’s very hard to see how the U.S. will generate the demand that the world economy needs.”

The ECB on Sept. 3 kept its key rate at a record low of 1 percent to encourage spending. The Frankfurt-based central bank providing banks with unlimited cash for 12 months and is buying covered bonds to fight the crisis.

“It seems that the period of strong economic contraction is behind us,” ECB council member Yves Mersch wrote in the quarterly bulletin of the Bank of Luxembourg published on Sept. 10. Still, the recovery will “be very gradual and volatile, partly because of the temporary nature of some of its underpinnings, such as government stimulus,” he said.

1,500 Jobs

Air France-KLM Group said on Sept. 4 that it will eliminate 1,500 jobs and slash capacity by 5 percent in order to bring down costs. Siemens AG, Europe’s largest engineer, has said that it plans 1,600 job cuts beyond the 17,000 announced last year and has placed 15,000 workers on reduced hours.

European stocks were lower. The Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index was down 1.5 percent at 238.14 at 10:02 a.m. in London.

Companies are cutting costs just as retreating oil prices are pushing down inflation. Euro-area consumer prices have posted annual declines for three straight months. The ECB said on Sept. 10 that, while “inflation rates are projected turn positive again within the coming months,” price developments will remain “subdued” amid “ongoing sluggish demand.”

Euro-area consumer prices probably dropped 0.3 percent this quarter before rising 0.7 percent in the three months through December, the commission forecast today. In the year, inflation may average 0.4 percent, it said. The ECB aims to keep inflation just below 2 percent.

Policy makers have suggested the ECB may start unwinding some of its non-standard measures, such as the emergency lending to banks, as soon as a recovery starts to feed into inflation.

“As soon as upside risks to price stability emerge in a context of an improving macroeconomic environment, it will be time to withdraw the policy stimulus,” ECB Executive Board member Juergen Stark said on Sept. 4. The ECB sees “signs that the massive response from governments and central banks has been effective and that the global recession is bottoming out.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Simone Meier in Dublin at smeier@bloombert.net





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Swiss Franc Falls Versus Dollar, Is Little Changed Against Euro

By Justin Carrigan

Sept. 14 (Bloomberg) -- The Swiss franc fell against the dollar to trade at 1.041 versus the U.S. currency as of 7:45 a.m. in Zurich. It was little changed at 1.512 per euro.

To contact the reporter on this story: Justin Carrigan in London at jcarrigan@bloomberg.net





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Bulgaria, Poland, Ukraine: East Europe Bond, Currency Preview

By Zijing Wu

Sept. 14 (Bloomberg) -- The following events and economic reports may influence trading in eastern European bonds and currencies today. Bond yields and exchange rates are from the previous day’s session.

Bulgaria: Inflation slowed to 1.2 percent in August from 1.6 percent in July, according to a survey of five economists by Bloomberg. The government releases the data at 11 a.m. in Sofia.

The lev, which is pegged to the European common policy, was little changed at 1.9563 per euro.

The yield on Bulgaria’s 4.95 percent bond due January 2019 rose less than one basis point to 7.62 percent.

Czech Republic: Retail sales dropped for a seventh month in July, declining an annual 7 percent, according to the median estimate of 9 economists surveyed by Bloomberg. The statistics office publishes the figures at 9 a.m. in Prague.

The koruna rose 0.2 percent to 25.442 per euro.

The yield on the 4.6 percent government bond due August 2018 fell five basis points to 4.72 percent.

Latvia: The central bank releases M0 money supply for August, the narrow measure of money in circulation. The figure was 1.6 billion lats ($3.3 billion) in July.

The lats, which is pegged to the euro, climbed 0.1 percent to 0.7020 per euro.

Poland: M3 money supply increased a monthly 0.4 percent in August, according to the median estimate of four economists polled by Bloomberg. The central bank publishes the data at 2 p.m. in Warsaw.

The government sells up to 1 billion zloty ($352 million) of 52-week treasury bills.

The Polish zloty dropped 0.2 percent to 4.1516 per euro.

The yield on the 5.75 percent government bond due April 2014 rose one basis point to 5.81 percent, according to PKO Bank Polski SA in Warsaw.

Ukraine: Industrial production declined 20.9 percent in August, according to the median estimate of 11 economists surveyed by Bloomberg. The government is due to announce the figures within three days.

The hryvnia lost 1.7 percent to 8.5236 per dollar.

The yield on the 6.75 percent government bond due November 2017 slumped 47 basis points to 11.13 percent.

To contact the reporter on this story: Zijing Wu in London zwu17@bloomberg.net.





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UBS Sees Franc Rising to 1.45-1.50 per Euro Over Next 12 Months

By Daniel Tilles

Sept. 14 (Bloomberg) -- The Swiss franc may strengthen against the euro over the next year amid policy tightening by the Swiss National Bank, according to UBS AG, the world’s second- biggest currency trader.

“The cross may have a knee-jerk reaction higher after the SNB meeting if the central bank again speaks about its desire to curb exchange-rate strength,” Mansoor Mohi-uddin, chief currency strategist in Zurich at UBS, wrote in a report dated Sept. 12. “If that causes the cross to get back to 1.53-1.54, that will present attractive long-term opportunities to short euro-franc. Ultimately the cross is likely to trade back into 1.45-1.50 range in the next 12 months once the SNB exits its super loose policies.”

The franc was little changed at 1.5128 per euro as of 8:07 a.m. in Zurich, from 1.5131 last week.

The SNB decides on interest rates on Sept. 17.

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





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Pound Drops After Item Club Says House-Price Declines to Resume

By Gavin Finch

Sept. 14 (Bloomberg) -- The pound fell against the dollar and the euro after Ernst & Young LLC’s Item Club said the U.K. housing-market slump will resume next year as the squeeze on mortgage lending persists.

The pound dropped from near the highest level in more than five weeks against the U.S. currency as the FTSE 100 Index declined 0.6 percent, falling below 5,000. Martin Sorrell, chief executive officer of WPP Plc, the world’s largest advertising company, said he doesn’t see any signs of an economic recovery, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing an interview.

“The medium-term outlook is still bearish in our view,” analysts led by Hans-Guenter Redeker, London-based global head of currency strategy at BNP Paribas SA, wrote in a research note today. “The U.K. data mix continues to provide negative signals.”

The pound dropped 0.5 percent to $1.6579 as of 8:49 a.m. in London. Sterling weakened 0.4 percent to 87.86 pence per euro.

The yield on the two-year government note was little changed at 0.88 percent, with the 10-year gilt yield up 1 basis point at 3.62 percent.

The U.K. will sell as much as 1 billion pounds of 6 percent bonds due in 2028 today.

Gilts lost investors 0.2 percent this month, compared with a 0.2 percent return for German bonds, according to Merrill Lynch & Co. indexes.

To contact the reporter on this story: Gavin Finch in London at gfinch@bloomberg.net





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Ruble Devaluation Won’t Fix Russia’s Woes, EBRD Says

By Agnes Lovasz

Sept. 14 (Bloomberg) -- A ruble devaluation won’t solve Russia’s economic problems as the world’s largest energy exporter faces “a very difficult next couple of years,” said European Bank for Reconstruction and Development Chief Economist Erik Berglof.

“This is the wrong way to think about the recovery in Russia,” Berglof said in a Sept. 10 interview in London.

Russia’s failure to wean itself off its reliance on commodities has condemned the country to sluggish economic growth as it recovers from a record contraction, economists say. The central bank will struggle to fulfill its goal of easing the ruble into a free float by 2011 as long as the economy’s fate hinges on raw material prices, Berglof said.

“If you want to have a flexible exchange rate, you need to get out of this dependence on commodities,” Berglof said. “It’s a major concern that in the last 10 years Russia has become actually more dependent on commodities. Unfortunately, not much progress has been made.”

The Russian Association of Regional Banks, whose 450 members include the Russian units of Barclays Plc and Citigroup Inc., has called for a devaluation of as much as 30 percent. Billionaire Vladimir Potanin, owner of 25 percent of OAO GMK Norilsk Nickel, said the “interests of the economy” will lead the currency to depreciate in the “mid term,” allowing exporters to cut costs and modernize production, according to an interview published in Vedomosti on Sept. 7.

Prevent Strengthening

While the central bank said that a stabilizing ruble exchange rate has allowed it to move closer toward its target of having a freely traded currency, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said on Sept. 11 that Russia’s “goal is not to allow” the national currency to strengthen.

The government is working to improve Russia’s macroeconomic indicators, including curbing inflation and containing gains in the ruble, Putin told a group of experts on Sept. 11.

Before the crisis, the central bank failed to “sterilize” extra liquidity created by record oil prices and after the government was unable to rein in spending, Putin said. The economy’s chief problem is the lack of “long-term money” as the country’s fast inflation and volatile exchange rate lure “speculative capital,” he said.

The ruble has traded close to the lower limit of its band against a basket of euros and dollars since the beginning of this year, with the rate averaging almost 38.

Ruble Decline

The currency today weakened for the first time in eight days following its biggest weekly advance in more than three months. The ruble lost 0.6 percent to 30.8537 per dollar by 11:05 a.m. in Moscow and depreciated 0.5 percent against the basket to 37.1513.

“Putin was talking about preventing real rather than nominal ruble appreciation,” VTB Capital economists Aleksandra Evtifyeva and Dmitri Fedotkin in Moscow wrote in a Sept. 11 report. “At the same time, this might suggest that the recent ruble strengthening is not welcome.”

The central bank managed a 35 percent depreciation in the second half of last year as a collapse of raw material prices pushed the economy into a recession. The bank, which wants to pursue an inflation target once it moves to a free floating currency, widened the ruble’s trading range to 26 to 41 against a dollar-euro basket in January.

‘Absolutely Right’

A freely fluctuating currency “is absolutely the right objective,” Berglof said. “Russia should strive for a flexible exchange rate. The thing they need to do to have a flexible exchange is to build local currency markets, broadly speaking to develop local financial markets and get more diversified industries. Discussing what the right exchange rate could be is not a solution for Russia’s problems right now.”

The EBRD, one of Russia’s largest foreign investors, is working with the country’s government to strengthen non- oil industries and wants to invest in such companies, Berglof said. The bank sees the best potential in food- production, the chemicals industry and in consumer goods, he said. Most recently it loaned 21 million euros to a Turkish-owned bottling plant near St. Petersburg, and $40 million to cosmetics group OAO Concern Kalina.

The EBRD invested almost 12 billion euros in Russia between 1992 and the end of March, equivalent to 28 percent of the bank’s total funding to the 30 countries it supports over the same period.

Output Collapse

A collapse of economic output this year prompted the calls for a weaker local currency. Last quarter, gross domestic product declined a record 10.9 percent and the country’s exporters hope to tackle a decline in global trade through a weaker currency. They say this will help buoy an economic recovery. Berglof disagrees.

“Manufacturing exports are a small segment of the economy,” he said. “Achieving competitiveness through depreciation in Russia is not really the right strategy. It isn’t the answer to the issues of diversification and increasing international competitiveness.”

Output contracted 9.8 percent in the first quarter, ending 10 years of expansion that averaged close to 7 percent fuelled by an oil-price boom. The cost of crude plunged by more about $100 a barrel from a record between July 2008 and December as the global financial crisis undermined demand for commodities.

Raised Forecast

The Economy Ministry on Sept. 9 raised its forecast for next year’s economic expansion to 1.6 percent from 1 percent. It expects the economy to shrink 8.5 percent this year. Economy Minister Elvira Nabiullina said on Sept. 9 output may grow 3.9 percent to 4.5 percent in the second half of this year compared with the first six months.

“We may see some stronger quarters now but the major declines are now rippling through the financial system and are affecting demand, unemployment,” Berglof said. “Russia will have a very difficult next couple of years. We don’t see rapid growth coming back any time soon.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Agnes Lovasz in London at alovasz@bloomberg.net





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BIS Says Longer-Term Bond Yields May Rise on Budget Concern

By Klaus Wille

Sept. 14 (Bloomberg) -- Longer-term bond yields are likely to rise amid investors’ concern about budget deficits built up by governments to fight the global recession, the Bank for International Settlements said.

“Fiscal sustainability concerns are likely to affect forward yields that span distant horizons, which are less influenced by near-term expectations about inflation, economic growth and monetary policy,” the Basel, Switzerland-based BIS said in a quarterly report yesterday. The BIS expects budget concern to put “upward pressure on “real forward rates.”

Governments from the Group of 20 nations have pumped more than $2 trillion into their economies, swelling their budget deficits. The U.S. fiscal shortfall is already around 11 percent of gross domestic product, the most since World War II, and the U.K. deficit will be around 12.4 percent this year.

The euro region’s five-year, five-year forward rate has risen to 2.67 percent from 2.51 percent at the end of March. Five-year, five-year forwards are a measure of investors’ expectations for inflation over a five-year period starting five years from now.

At the same time, the BIS said economists and investors expect the global economic slump to keep a lid on inflation.

“Long-term” price pressures “appear contained for now, despite surging fiscal deficits and record-low monetary policy rates,” the BIS said in its report for the period from the end of May to September. “This may reflect the belief that the current high level of economic slack will persist for some time.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Klaus Wille in Zurich at kwille@bloomberg.net





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U.S. Economy May See Its Slowest Recovery Since 1945

By Rich Miller

Sept. 14 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. recovery may be the slowest since World War II to regain all the ground lost during the recession, even if economists’ more optimistic forecasts for expansion turn out to be right.

The slump this time was so deep, said JPMorgan Chase & Co. chief economist Bruce Kasman, that the 3.5 percent average quarterly growth rate he sees in the next year won’t be enough to bring gross domestic product back to its $13.42 trillion pre- crisis peak. That’s in contrast with the last 10 recoveries, when GDP returned to its previous levels within 12 months.

The result: A year after the Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. bankruptcy helped drive GDP down to an annualized $12.89 trillion in the second quarter, there’s still “plenty of malaise,” Kasman said. Unemployment may remain close to the current 26-year high of 9.7 percent through 2010, upsetting voters ahead of mid-term Congressional elections and forcing officials to keep interest rates near zero and the budget deficit around this year’s record $1.6 trillion.

“This will be the most disappointing recovery,” said Kasman, whose forecast compares with the median estimate of 2.5 percent growth in a Bloomberg News survey of economists.

The U.S. might not recover the 6.9 million jobs and the $13.9 trillion in wealth lost during the recession until about the middle of the decade, said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Economy.com in West Chester, Pennsylvania. The unemployment rate may never get back down to the 4.4 percent low of 2007, he said.

Cyclical Revival

Stock prices may take three or four years to reach their previous highs as the cyclical revival of the economy gradually boosts corporate profits, said Allen Sinai, chief economist at consulting group Decision Economics in New York.

“It will be a bull market, but not a roaring bull market,” Sinai said. He sees the Standard & Poor’s 500 stock index rising to 1,100 by the end of 2009 from its close of 1,042.73 on Sept. 11. The index hit a record 1,565.15 on Oct, 9, 2007, and then fell to a 12-year low of 676.53 on March 9, 2009.

Companies, particularly retailers such as Macy’s Inc., may have to adjust as consumers buy less. Household spending as a share of GDP might fall to its long-run historical average of 65 percent from 70 percent in the past decade as people opt to save more, according to economists Peter Berezin and Alex Kelston, of Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

Biggest Drop

The restrained performance that is forecast for the economy reflects both the depth and the origins of the recession, which began in December 2007. The 3.9 percent decline in gross domestic product was the most since World War II.

While Nippon Yusen K.K., Japan’s largest shipping line, has been able to raise rates on container services to the U.S., it continues to lose money on the business. Mikitoshi Kai, head of investor relations for the Tokyo-based company, said in an interview that “we need to increase rates by a lot more to make a profit.”

The decline has been a “balance-sheet recession,” says Richard Koo, chief economist at Tokyo-based Nomura Research Institute. Those take time to recover from, as once highly leveraged banks and consumers gradually reduce their debt, he said.

Fed Outlook

Policy makers may have to keep interest rates low and the federal budget deficit high to push the economy forward as financial institutions and households adjust. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and his fellow central-bank colleagues might hold their target for the federal funds rate between zero and 0.25 percent through 2010, said Kasman at JPMorgan in New York, the second-largest U.S. bank. That’s the rate at which commercial banks lend each other money overnight.

“The Fed may need to maintain fairly low interest rates over a period of many years,” Berezin and Kelston, of New York- based Goldman, the fifth-biggest U.S. bank, wrote in a Sept. 9 report.

On the fiscal front, the deficit will total $1.29 trillion in the year starting Oct. 1, boosted by a $787 billion stimulus package and aid to banks, according to Maury Harris, chief economist in New York at UBS Securities, a unit of Zurich-based investment bank UBS AG.

“I suspect the deficit will continue to balloon for years,” said Kenneth Rogoff, a former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund who is now a professor at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

‘Wild Card’

The “wild card” is the political impact the economy’s chronic difficulties will have on mid-term Congressional elections in November 2010 and beyond, Kasman said.

Democratic lawmakers in the House of Representatives are particularly vulnerable if voters blame President Barack Obama for a sour economy, said Nathan Gonzales, political editor for the Rothenberg Political Report in Washington.

Since 1945, the party that controls the White House has lost an average of 16 House seats in a president’s first midterm election, according to the Cook Political Report. Obama’s Democratic Party currently has 256 seats in the chamber, compared with 178 for the Republicans.

In the past, deep recessions have often been followed by rapid recoveries. That’s what happened in 1982-83 as the economy surpassed its previous peak in about six months, thanks to a 7.2 percent surge in growth. Behind the turnaround: aggressive monetary easing by the Fed, which brought short-term interest rates down to 8.5 percent from 15 percent in 1982.

No ‘Gas’

“We thought that if we really stepped on the gas, the economy would take off, and it did,” said Lyle Gramley, a senior economic adviser for New York-based Soleil Securities who was a member of the Fed’s board at the time. That option isn’t available to the central bank now as the overnight interbank rate is at zero.

The Fed has also been hampered by a credit crunch that has restricted the flow of money from lenders to borrowers, Gramley said. Banks, faced with mounting credit losses, have tightened terms and standards on loans to businesses and households since the middle of 2007, according to the Fed’s tri-monthly survey of lending officers.

That’s akin to the situation in 1991-92, when tight credit in the wake of the savings-and-loan crisis restrained the recovery, according to Gramley. It took about nine months for the economy to return to pre-recession production levels as growth clocked in at an average 2 percent.

Borrowing Falls

Household borrowing fell by a record $21.6 billion in July to $2.5 trillion, the Fed reported on Sept. 9. The drop was the sixth straight monthly decline, the longest since the 1991 credit crunch.

Behind the fall: Banks are becoming stingier in handing out credit while consumers are growing more wary of taking on more debt. The savings rate rose to a 14-year high of 6 percent in May before falling to 4.2 percent in July, government data show. It was 1.3 percent at the start of 2008.

Retailers are taking notice of the increased consumer thriftiness, including Cincinnati-based Macy’s. Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Terry Lundgren told Bloomberg Television on Sept. 8 that the second-largest U.S. department-store company has reduced inventories “fairly significantly.”

Home builders may have to adjust, too. Sales of new houses jumped 9.6 percent in July, the most since February 2005, to a 433,000 annual pace. That was still less than half the 923,000 average since the start of 2000.

The increase in sales has helped boost the price of copper. Copper for delivery in three months closed Sept. 11 at $6,250 a metric ton on the London Metal Exchange. That compares with $3,231 on Jan. 2 and a high of $8,730 in April of last year.

“There were huge excesses built up during the expansion,” Sinai said. “It may take the economy a few years to get back to its previous peak.”

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





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China Probes ‘Unfair Trade’ in U.S. Chicken and Auto Products

By Bloomberg News

Sept. 14 (Bloomberg) -- China announced dumping and subsidy probes of chicken and auto products from the U.S., two days after President Barack Obama imposed tariffs on tires from the Asian nation.

Chinese industries complain that they’re being hurt by “unfair trade practices,” the nation’s Ministry of Commerce said on its Web site yesterday. The dumping investigation relates to poultry alone, a spokesman said in Beijing today. The ministry didn’t specify the value of imports of the products.

Rising protectionism may hamper world trade and undermine the global economy’s recovery from recession, the European Central Bank said last week. The U.S. placed tariffs starting at 35 percent on $1.8 billion of tire imports from China, backing a United Steelworkers union complaint against the second-largest U.S. trading partner.

“While there’s friction, I suspect that the two nations will keep any disputes under control,” said David Cohen, an economist at Action Economics in Singapore. “They understand that they’re increasingly dependent as trading partners.”

Dumping is selling goods for less than the cost of producing them.

The state-run China Daily newspaper said in a front-page article today that the probe was “not revenge” for the decision on tires. The commerce ministry spokesman, who wouldn’t be identified by name, said the government was assessing whether the subsidy and dumping complaints had merit.

‘Strategic Relationship’

Rubber futures in Shanghai tumbled by the daily trading limit today because of the tire tariffs. The January-delivery contract dropped 5 percent from the previous settlement to 17,710 yuan a metric ton.

Wang Qing, chief Asia economist for Morgan Stanley in Hong Kong, said today that he doubted that the tire tariffs would trigger a trade war.

The “macroeconomic impact is not enough to warrant an escalation of such a trade dispute to such levels that would threaten the strategic relationship between the two countries,” Wang said.

The Chinese commerce ministry said Sept. 12 that it strongly opposes the U.S. decision on tires and may refer the case to the World Trade Organization.

A “sluggish” global recovery and rising unemployment may tempt governments to restrict trade, triggering a retaliatory spiral of measures, the Frankfurt-based ECB said in its monthly bulletin. Trade protectionism could “significantly impair the global recovery,” it said.

Opposing Protectionism

Yesterday’s three-paragraph statement from the Chinese commerce ministry didn’t refer to the tire dispute.

“China has always steadfastly opposed trade protectionism,” the ministry said, adding that the nation was “willing to continue acting in concert with other nations to promote a global economic recovery as soon as possible.”

The dumping and subsidy probes involve “some” auto and chicken imports from the U.S., it said, without specifying which ones. In June, China said it had asked the World Trade Organization to set up an experts panel to investigate U.S. restrictions on imports of Chinese poultry products.

“Chinese poultry companies have been struggling over the past couple of years amid bird flu and a flood of imports, and the financial crisis is making that worse,” Ma Chuang, vice- secretary general of the China Animal Agriculture Association, said in Beijing today. “This case is long overdue.”

Ma said about 80 percent of imported chicken came from the U.S.

Fear of Retaliation

In the U.S., pork, soybean and other farm-goods exporters urged Obama on Sept. 3 to refrain from imposing tariffs or quotas on tires from China because of the fear of retaliation against U.S. food and agriculture products.

The U.S. consulted with Chinese officials before imposing tariffs to try to work out a solution, a U.S. trade official said, speaking on condition of anonymity. The U.S. hasn’t been notified of the new dumping cases, the official said.

If China is considering the cases in retaliation for the U.S. tires decision, the U.S. could challenge that action at the WTO, the official said. The U.S. prefers holding talks to address the underlying causes of the problem in China, such as subsidies, the official said.

To contact the Bloomberg News staff for this story: Zhang Dingmin in Beijing at Dzhang14@bloomberg.net





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