Economic Calendar

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

India’s September Iron-Ore Exports Probably Fell 25%

By Debarati Roy

Sept. 16 (Bloomberg) -- India’s iron-ore exports probably fell 25 percent in the first two weeks of this month because of increasing royalty and transportation charges and lower demand from China, a mineral industry group said.

Overseas sales may have declined 15 percent in August from a year earlier, Siddharth Rungta, president of the Federation of Indian Mineral Industries, said today in an interview in Bangalore. India, the largest seller of iron ore to China in the cash market until last year, is losing share to BHP Billiton Ltd. and Rio Tinto Group, he said, without giving details.

BHP, the world’s largest mining company, sold more iron ore in the cash market after buyers deferred some contract deliveries. India’s overseas sales of the key steelmaking ingredient had risen in July because of the price impasse between Chinese buyers and Australian suppliers, Rungta said.

Indian enquiries from customers of iron ore dried up in the last 15 days of August, R.K. Sharma, secretary general of the Federation of Indian Mineral Industries, said on Aug. 31.

Shares of Sesa Goa Ltd., India’s biggest iron-ore exporter, pared gains after rising as much as 2.6 percent to 268.90 rupees in Mumbai today. The shares traded at 262.45 rupees, up 0.1 percent, as of 1:59 p.m. local time. The stock has more than tripled this year, compared with a 72 percent gain in the Bombay Stock Exchange’s key Sensitive Index.

Falling Prices

Iron ore prices fell after China lowered purchases last month. So-called free-on-board prices have fallen to $60 a metric ton from a peak $90 a ton in early August, Rungta said.

“Our costs, including royalty to be paid to government, have gone up,” he said.

India’s government increased the royalty it charges from companies mining iron ore to 10 percent of revenue starting Aug. 13. The government earlier charged as much as 27 rupees a ton for iron ore lumps and 19 rupees a ton for fines. Out of every 100 tons of iron ore produced in India, 60 tons are fines and the rest are lumps.

Demand for iron ore is “robust” in the long term, BHP said today in a presentation on its Web site. China and emerging nations will underpin that growth, the company said.

Iron-ore swaps for settlement this month traded at $98.26 a ton on Aug. 28, according to SGX AsiaClear over-the-counter prices from Singapore Exchange Ltd. They indicate prices may drop to $81.81 in October.

To contact the reporter on this story: Debarati Roy in Mumbai at droy5@bloomberg.net.





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London Session Recap

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by Forex.com | Sep 16 09 10:06 GMT |

Yesterday's remarks from Fed Chairman Bernanke that the 'recession is likely over' has spurred the risk trade higher. Stock markets have gained across the board, EUR/USD is testing the water above the 1.4700 level and the AUD and the NZD have been seen even greater gains vs the greenback. Once again the gains in the JPY are counter to the general mood of the market but reflect an apparent nonchalance in the tone of the new Japanese government towards yen strength.

The new Japanese government officially took office today. As expected Fujii has been appointed Finance Minister and his remarks on fx markets that 'I don't think they are fluctuating rapidly now' offers not even a whiff of discomfort with JPY strength. Earlier this month Fujii indicated that he was not in support of a weak yen. The tone of the new government with respect to the yen has limited the fear in the market with respect to the potential for intervention against yen strength (last seen in 2004). One consequence of the gains in the JPY has been the step up the preference of the USD as a funding currency. Low interest rates, the US's huge budget deficit, weak current account position combined with the likelihood of no rate hike from the Fed potentially until the middle of next year are a collection of weak fundamentals. That said, the warnings from the Fed's Bernanke and the BoE's King yesterday referring to a weak economic outlook for some months reinforces the fact that the global economy is not out of the woods yet. The USD still stands to benefit from any pullbacks in risk appetite.

UK economic data offered few surprises this morning. The Aug claimant count rose by 24.4K, when considered with the revision to the July data, this number was very close to market expectations. The ILO unemployment rate was a little lower than expected at 7.9% though this was the highest rate since 1996. While the pace of job losses in the UK has slowed, the high levels of unemployment should be viewed in light of the comments from the BoE's King yesterday that spare capacity in the economy is bearing down on inflationary pressures. Sterling has recovered most of its overnight losses vs the EUR. However, the accommodative tone of King yesterday suggests that the pound will likely be vulnerable ahead of next month's MPC meeting. Cable is little changed from last night's close at present having also recovered its overnight losses.

The gains in the AUD overnight were encouraged by the 1.1% rise in the Westpac leading index. The surge in NZD/USD pushed it back to levels not seen since August 2008. Eurozone CPI was as expected at -0.2% y/y in August.

This afternoon, US CPI, industrial production, current account and TIC flow data are due. Canadian manufacturing sales figures will also be released.

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

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



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Currency Technical Report

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by FX Greece | Sep 16 09 12:40 GMT |

EUR/USD

Resistance: 1,4680/ 1,4700/ 1,4725-30/ 1,4780/ 1,4810/ 1,4835/ 1,4860/ 1,4900
Support : 1,4635-40/ 1,4600/ 1,4560/ 1,4530/ 1,4500/ 1,4480/ 1,4450/ 1,4420/ 1,4380-00

Comment : Euro formed new tops at 1,4680, as the slow but steady rise continues and retracements remain shallow. The upper part of the upward channel is tested but the sentiment remains bullish.

Next important resistance, in case of an upward break of the channel, emerges at 1,4720-30, but it is very likely to be breached. Next targets are set at 1,4850 and we will focus at that area looking for reversal signs.. Next important targets will be at 1,4950-00 and 1,5300 are, in case of an extensive rise.

We will follow the trend and adjust our strategies according to that. The area of 1,4630-45 is now turned into a support levels and it should be breached in order to get some signs of weakness. Next support emerges at 1,4550 and 1,4500,which are also the reversal ranges.

For now, we will focus on 1,4680-00 and we wait for the market's reaction at these levels...

*STRATEGY: Sell positions at 1,4650 could not reach our lower targets. We will keep half positions open with stop above 1,4730. Retracements towards 1,4550-80 will be used for buy orders.

FX Greece

DISCLAIMER

  1. The details and information included in the above analysis, are part of research based exclusively on currency charts and are of purely instructional and educational nature. None of the information featuring in the analysis can be considered as an invitation for opening positions in FOREX market or in the market of forward contracts or any securities listed on an organized or unorganized market.
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U.S. Treasury to Scale Back Fed Program to Avoid Debt Ceiling

By Rebecca Christie

Sept. 16 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. Treasury Department plans to cut back its borrowing on behalf of the Federal Reserve as it seeks to keep government debt under a legal limit.

The Treasury will reduce the outstanding borrowing in its Supplementary Financing program to $15 billion “in the coming weeks,” the department said in a statement in Washington. The Treasury has been keeping the account, set up last year to give the central bank more flexibility as it undertook unprecedented lending, at about $200 billion.

Today’s announcement comes as the Obama administration presses lawmakers to lift the $12.1 trillion debt limit, which Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner warned last month may be reached as soon as mid-October. Geithner’s predecessors sometimes had to shuffle federal accounts in order to keep the debt under the limit while Congress debated increases.

“This action is being taken to preserve flexibility in the conduct of debt management policy,” the Treasury said in its statement today. The Supplementary Financing Account will drop as outstanding bills mature and aren’t rolled over, it said.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce and other business groups have urged the Senate to move forward so as not to hurt U.S. credibility or threaten the economic recovery.

“Raising the statutory debt limit is critical to ensuring global investors’ confidence in the creditworthiness of the United States,” wrote the chamber, in a Sept. 9 letter also signed by the Business Roundtable, Financial Services Forum, the Financial Services Roundtable, National Association of Homebuilders and National Association of Manufacturers.

Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke has said the central bank wouldn’t depend on the Treasury to continue with the Supplementary Financing Program.

“Although the Treasury’s operations are helpful, to protect the independence of monetary policy, we must take care to ensure that we can achieve our policy objectives without reliance on the Treasury,” Bernanke said in July.

To contact the reporter on this story: Rebecca Christie in Washington at rchristie4@bloomberg.net.





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U.K. Unemployment Rises to Highest Since 1995

By Svenja O’Donnell

Sept. 16 (Bloomberg) -- U.K. unemployment jumped to the highest level since 1995 as the recession destroyed work in industries from banking to construction.

The number of people seeking jobs in the three months through July rose by 210,000 to 2.47 million, the Office for National Statistics said in London today. A separate measure showing claims for unemployment benefit climbed by 24,400 in August to 1.61 million. The median forecast of 28 economists in a Bloomberg News survey was for an increase of 25,000.

Bank of England Governor Mervyn King said yesterday that households will feel pain from the recession even after the economy has stopped shrinking “because unemployment is either going to keep rising or remain high.” Policy makers are printing as much as 175 billion pounds ($288 billion) in money to aid economic growth and avoid the threat of deflation.

“If anything the U.K. economy is only just emerging from recession, and this is a lagging indicator,” said Philip Shaw, an economist at Investec Securities in London. “We’re looking at unemployment peaking towards the middle of next year. Things are likely to improve at a slow rate, but it’s likely to remain uncomfortable for a long time.”

Election Due

Prime Minister Gordon Brown, who faces an election next year, said yesterday that the recovery “is still fragile” and that stimulus programs to boost the economy should be maintained.

“Unemployment still remains a real problem for families up and down the country,” Employment minister Jim Knight said on BBC News. “We’ve got to keep the support going and not be tempted to celebrate the recovery.”

The unemployment rate in the three months through July rose to 7.9 percent, the most since 1996, the statistics office said. That compares with the latest figures of 9.5 percent in the euro region, 9.7 percent in the U.S. and 5.7 percent in Japan.

The jobless rate based on benefit claimants rose to 5 percent, the most since 1997, the statistics office said.

“There are no signs of recovery here,” Trades Union Congress General Secretary Brendan Barber said. “It might look rosier in city dealing rooms but out in the real world unemployment is the number one issue.”

Companies Firing

WS Atkins Plc, the U.K.’s biggest engineering-design company, said last week it eliminated about 900 more positions in the past five months to weather the construction slump. Lloyds Banking Group Plc, the nation’s largest mortgage lender, said last month it will cut about 200 British jobs in its general insurance unit, bringing the total reduction to more than 8,000 this year.

The economy has shown signs of shaking off the slump. Services expanded at the fastest pace in almost two years in August. The British Chambers of Commerce cut its estimate for unemployment this month, estimating it will peak at 3 million people in 2010 rather than 3.2 million people.

“Although the increase in unemployment was marginally smaller than feared, the figures are consistent with our assessment,” said David Kern, chief economist for the BCC. “Employment continues to fall, and without an increase in the number of people deemed ‘economically inactive,’ the increase in unemployment would have been much larger.”

KPMG and the Recruitment and Employment Federation said last week that the labor market is showing signs of improvement. Their measure of hiring for permanent jobs rose to 50.6 last month from 46.1 in July. That’s the first result above 50, signaling expansion, since March 2008.

Companies may also have limited the pace of job losses by curbing pay increases instead, Bank of England Deputy Governor Charles Bean told lawmakers yesterday.

Average earnings excluding bonuses grew an annual 2.2 percent in the quarter through July, the least since records began in 2001. the statistics office said. Including bonuses, they increased by 1.7 percent.

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





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U.S. Current-Account Gap Shrank Last Quarter as Trade Declined

By Bob Willis

Sept. 16 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. current-account deficit narrowed in the second quarter to $98.8 billion, the least since 2001, reflecting a smaller shortfall in trade of goods as imports and exports both decreased.

The gap, the broadest measure of trade because it includes transfer payments and investment income, was more than forecast and followed a revised $104.5 billion deficit in the previous three months, the Commerce Department said today in Washington.

The current-account deficit may widen in coming months as U.S. demand for imports rebounds as the economy pulls out of a recession that caused companies to slash inventories at a record pace and sapped consumer purchases. The deficit narrowed even as the government boosted sales of debt to overseas investors to fund recovery programs and a soaring budget gap.

``There is a sense that the best of the gains in these external accounts have already been achieved,'' Alan Ruskin, head of currency strategy for RBS Securities Inc. in Stamford, Connecticut, said before the report. ``It's relatively easy to make reductions in the deficit while domestic demand is slumping.''

Economists forecast a deficit of $92 billion, according to the median of 39 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey, after an initially reported $101.5 billion shortfall the prior quarter. Forecasts ranged from deficits of $66.8 billion to $100 billion.

Foreign earnings on U.S. assets decreased to $116.6 billion from $117.1 billion in the prior three months.

U.S. income on overseas assets, including wages and compensation, decreased to $133 billion from $135.4 billion.

Trade Deficit

That left a $16.4 billion surplus on income payments, compared with an $18.3 billion surplus in the previous quarter.

U.S. government payments to foreigners and other private transfers abroad increased to $32.2 billion from $30.3 billion.

The U.S. trade deficit, which accounted for most of the current-account imbalance, narrowed to $83 billion in the second quarter from $92.4 billion in the previous three months. The figures aren't adjusted for inflation.

Weaker consumer spending this year has boosted household savings in the U.S. and depressed imports, helping to offset increased government borrowing as federal spending soars.

Consumer spending, which makes up about 70 percent of the economy, is forecast to grow at a 1.7 percent annual rate in the third quarter, slowing to 1 percent in the last three months of the year, according to economists surveyed by Bloomberg this month. Purchases shrank 1 percent in the April- to-June period.

Budget Gap

The federal budget deficit will total $1.6 trillion this year as revenue falls and the U.S. government spends at the fastest pace in 57 years, according to projections released by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office on Aug. 25.

President Barack Obama urged a joint session of Congress last week to pass a $900 billion health-care plan to contain medical costs, which are causing Medicare and Medicaid spending to surge. Obama signed a $787 billion stimulus program in February and committed funds to rescue automakers and banks.

The current-account gap amounted to 2.8 percent of gross domestic product, the lowest since 1991, compared with 2.9 percent in the prior quarter. The deficit was 6.6 percent of GDP during the last quarter of 2005, the highest level since records began in 1960.

Adjusted for prices, which are the numbers used to calculate GDP, the trade deficit narrowed last quarter, according to the Commerce Department.

GDP Contribution

Trade contributed 1.6 percentage points to economic growth in the second quarter, helping to limit the contraction for the three-month period to 1 percent, following a 2.6 percentage point contribution in the first three months of 2009.

International demand for long-term U.S. financial assets rebounded in June from the prior month as investors sought safe haven in Treasuries amid concerns about the timing of a recovery in financial markets and economies worldwide. Demand slowed in previous months as China, Japan and Russia scaled back purchases, underscoring the danger of U.S. reliance on foreigners to finance the fiscal deficit.

Total net purchases of long-term equities, notes and bonds were a net $90.7 billion in June, compared with net sales of $19.4 billion in May, the Treasury Department said Aug. 17. Net buying of U.S. government notes and bonds totaled $100.5 billion, the most since records began in 1977, after net selling of $22.6 billion in May.

To contact the reporter on this story: Bob Willis in Washington at bwillis@bloomberg.net





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Pound May Climb to $1.70 on Dollar Weakness: Technical Analysis

By Anchalee Worrachate

Sept. 16 (Bloomberg) -- The pound may strengthen to $1.7050 in the “medium term” amid weakness in the U.S. currency, according to Commerzbank AG, which cited trading patterns.

“Pound-dollar has sold off to its 50 percent retracement of the recent leg higher,” Karen Jones, a technical analyst in London, wrote today in a report, citing Fibonacci analysis. “The move lower is regarded as corrective as we look for dips to be contained by the $1.6320-$1.6250 band for an upside bias to be maintained,” she said. “Add to longs on further weakness to $1.6350,” Jones said. A long position is a bet an asset will appreciate in value.

So-called support for sterling is “the recent low and support line” at $1.6145-$1.6115, she said. Support levels are where buy orders may be clustered.

“Given the recent weakness of the U.S. dollar, the risk has increased for the upmove to then reassert” toward $1.7040- $1.7050 over one-to-three months, she wrote.

The pound advanced 0.1 percent to $1.6508 as of 10:38 a.m. in London after the Office for National Statistics said the number of people seeking jobs in the three months through July rose by 210,000 to 2.47 million. Against the euro, the British currency was at 88.98 pence, from 88.91 pence 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.

To contact the reporter on this story: Anchalee Worrachate in London at aworrachate@bloomberg.net





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Bernanke May Accept Slow Recovery to Fight Inflation

By Craig Torres

Sept. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke, who yesterday said the U.S. recession probably has ended, may have to accept a slow recovery and high unemployment as the price for defending his inflation-fighting credentials.

“Even though from a technical perspective the recession is very likely over at this point, it’s still going to feel like a very weak economy for some time,” Bernanke said in response to questions after a speech at the Brookings Institution in Washington. “That’s a challenge for us and all policy makers going forward.”

Policy makers predicted in June that the unemployment rate will remain above 9 percent through the end of next year, while inflation will stay below their preferred range. That hasn’t stopped them from starting to unwind their extraordinary monetary stimulus as investors express concern that the expansion of the Fed’s balance sheet to $2.1 trillion will ignite inflation when the economy recovers.

“The Fed is in an odd situation here,” said Michael Feroli, an economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in New York. “Both aspects of their dual mandate for growth and inflation will have suboptimal outcomes, but they can’t do anything to speed things up because of concerns about inflation credibility.”

The Federal Open Market Committee may extend the end-date of its $1.45 trillion program to buy housing-agency and mortgage-backed securities at its next meeting Sept. 22-23. There is little chance that it will expand the program after deciding in August to end purchases of $300 billion in Treasury debt next month.

Greenspan ‘Worried’

Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said he’s worried that lawmakers will hamper U.S. central bank efforts to rein in its monetary stimulus, and that inflation might “swamp” the bond market.

“It’s the politics in the United States that worries me, whether the Congress will basically feel comfortable” with the Fed withdrawing its stimulus, Greenspan said from Washington in a broadcast to Tokyo clients of Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. today. He later said that “if inflation rears its head, it will swamp long-term markets,” referring to bonds.

Central bankers have pledged to keep the benchmark lending rate in a range of zero to 0.25 percent “for an extended period.” If unemployment lingers at high levels, officials could face questions on whether they have done enough to push the economy to a faster rate of growth, economists say.

“At the end of 2010, the story may not be whether they exited correctly, but how did they allow this outcome to occur,” said Laurence Meyer, a former Fed governor and vice chairman of Macroeconomic Advisers LLC. in Washington. “The definitive marker of the end of easing was the decision at the August FOMC meeting to allow Treasury purchases to expire.”

‘Moderate Growth’

The FOMC’s June forecasts show unemployment above 8 percent in the final three months of 2011. A majority of FOMC members also forecast inflation will be below their long-run preferred range of 1.7 to 2 percent next year, Fed minutes show.

“If we do in fact see moderate growth, but not growth much more than the underlying potential growth rate, then unfortunately unemployment will be slow to come down,” Bernanke said yesterday, noting that the economy faces “headwinds” such as tight credit. “It will come down, but it will take some time.”

At the same time, the Fed could startle markets if it decided to buy up more government debt, expanding the balance sheet even further. Gold futures reached an 18-month high of $1,013.70 an ounce on Sept. 11 as the U.S. Dollar Index, which values the greenback against six other currencies, dropped to its lowest level in almost a year.

Inflation Concern

“Those buying gold believe the Fed is going to be accepting inflation if not even promoting it,” said Axel Merk, whose $370 million Hard Currency Fund is up 11.3 percent year to date on investments in precious metals and foreign currencies.

Yields on the 10-year Treasury note rose for a second day yesterday after a report from the Commerce Department showed that retail sales surged in August by the most in three years, adding to evidence the economy is recovering. The yield on the 10-year note rose to 3.46 percent at 5:32 p.m. in New York from 3.42 percent the day before.

The difference between rates on 10-year notes and Treasury Inflation Protected Securities, or TIPS, which reflects the outlook among traders for consumer prices, widened to 1.84 percentage points from 1.66 percentage points two weeks ago. It has averaged 2.19 percentage points over the past five years.

Underscoring the Fed’s view that inflation will be contained, a Labor Department report today showed that consumer prices fell 1.5 percent in August from the previous year. Prices rose 0.4 percent in August from a month before, following no change in July.

Bank Reserves

Regional Fed bank presidents Jeffrey Lacker, of Richmond, and James Bullard, of St. Louis, have said the central bank may not even need to complete its purchases of $1.45 trillion in mortgage-backed and housing-agency securities.

“With the economy leveling out and beginning to grow again later this year, and with bank reserve demand ebbing as financial conditions improve, I will be evaluating carefully whether we need or want the additional stimulus,” Lacker said Aug. 28 in a speech in Danville, Virginia.

His concern is that the Fed will so over-supply demand for bank reserves that it will suppress money-market rates even when the central bank is trying to raise them.

That increase could come as soon as “the first part of next year” if inflation picks up, Stanford University economist John Taylor told Bloomberg Television last week.

Credit Risk

The risk is that credit conditions remain tight, consumers keep a lid on spending, and the expansion never gets to a rate that will cause employers to hire, say economists including Richard Berner, co-head of global economics at Morgan Stanley in New York.

“While markets have improved and the cost of credit has declined dramatically, the capacity and willingness to lend are still somewhat impaired,” said Berner, a former researcher at the Fed. “That restraint is the key reason why we expect a moderate, rather than a V-shaped recovery.”

David Simon, chairman and chief executive of Simon Property Group Inc., the largest U.S. shopping mall owner, said “It’s too early for us to declare the recession over.”

“Ultimately, what’s important to retail and real estate is the health of the consumer, the job outlook and so on,” Simon said in an interview, when asked to respond to Bernanke’s comments on the recession. “I still think the consumer’s under pressure.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Craig Torres in Washington at ctorres3@bloomberg.net; Scott Lanman in Washington at slanman@bloomberg.net.





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Consumer Prices in U.S. Increased 0.4% in August; Core Up 0.1%

By Timothy R. Homan

Sept. 16 (Bloomberg) -- The cost of living in the U.S. climbed 0.4 percent in August, underscoring the Federal Reserve’s view that inflation will be contained.

The gain in the consumer price index was larger than forecast and followed no change in July, the Labor Department said today in Washington. Excluding food and energy costs, the so-called core index increased 0.1 percent, matching expectations.

Companies such as Kroger Co. are having to keep a lid on prices to revive demand as the economy starts to emerge from the worst recession since the 1930s. A lack of inflation will probably give Fed policy makers leeway to hold interest rates near zero in the foreseeable future to secure a recovery.

“Underlying inflation remains dormant,” Nigel Gault, chief U.S. economist at IHS Global Insight in Lexington, Massachusetts, said before the report. “This gives the Fed plenty of room to keep rates low for an extended period.”

Economists forecast consumer prices would rise 0.3 percent, according to the median of 75 projections in a Bloomberg News survey. Estimates ranged from a decline of 0.1 percent to a gain of 0.6 percent.

Compared with a year earlier, prices were down 1.5 percent.

For the core index, prices were up 1.4 percent from a year earlier, the smallest gain since February 2004.

The increase in the cost of living reflected a 4.6 percent increase in energy prices in August. Gasoline climbed 9.1 percent.

Gasoline

Gasoline prices this month are in line with August figures, according to AAA. Regular pump prices averaged $2.58 a gallon in the first 15 days of September, compared with an average of $2.62 in August.

Food prices, which account for about a seventh of the CPI, increased 0.1 percent in August, the smallest gain since January.

Lower food prices are dragging down revenue at some businesses. Kroger, the largest U.S. supermarket chain, yesterday reported second-quarter profit that fell more than analysts’ estimates as prices for some products, particularly produce and dairy, decreased more than expected.

“Most of us have never seen a selling environment like now,” Chief Executive Officer David Dillon said on a conference call, adding that prices will continue to decline over the next several quarters. “It will be like this a while longer.”

The increase in the core index reflected gains in used cars, air fares and hotel rates.

Rents Stable

Rents, which make up almost 40 percent of the core CPI, were little changed. Owners-equivalent rent, one of the categories used to track rental prices, climbed 0.1 percent following no change in July.

New vehicle prices plunged 1.3 percent, the biggest drop since 1972. The Labor Department said it considered the administration’s “cash-for-clunkers” initiative as a discount off purchase prices, contributing to the drop. The program gave buyers as much as $4,500 for trading in older models for new, more fuel-efficient autos.

Sales at automobile dealerships and parts stores climbed 11 percent in August, the most since October 2001, according to a Commerce Department report yesterday.

Excluding autos, the core rate would have climbed 0.2 percent, according to a Labor Department spokesman.

The CPI is the broadest of the three monthly price gauges from Labor because it includes goods and services. Labor said last week that prices of goods imported into the U.S. rose 2 percent in August on higher petroleum costs.

Fed View

Fed policy makers on Aug. 12 committed to keeping the key interest rate between zero and 0.25 percentage point “for an extended period” to promote economic recovery. They said they expected “inflation will remain subdued for some time.” The central bankers meet again next week.

Former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan, speaking yesterday to an investor conference sponsored by Deutsche Bank Securities Inc., said inflation will continue to cool until next year.

“We’ve got worldwide disinflation in train and it will continue for a short while,” he said. “Our model says that by the early months of next year the rate of inflation will fall below 1 percent on an annual rate” before starting to climb.

A report from the Labor Department yesterday showed prices paid to factories, farmers and other producers rose 1.7 percent in August, more than twice as much as forecast, led by gasoline costs.

Almost 60 percent of the CPI covers prices consumers pay for services ranging from medical visits to airline fares and movie tickets.

To contact the reporter on this story: Timothy R. Homan in Washington at thoman1@bloomberg.net





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Pound Drops to Four-Month Low Versus Euro as Unemployment Rises

By Morwenna Coniam and Gavin Finch

Sept. 16 (Bloomberg) -- The pound fell to a four-month low against the euro for a second day as U.K unemployment rose to the highest level since 1995, denting optimism that an economic recovery is taking root.

The British currency also held near the lowest level in a week against the dollar after the Office for National Statistics said the number of people seeking jobs in the three months through July rose by 210,000 to 2.47 million. The pound tumbled yesterday after Bank of England Governor Mervyn King signaled it may cut the rate paid to hold reserves at the central bank.

“The market had a shock yesterday and the data this morning was not strong enough to reverse the trend,” said Vincent Chaigneau, head of currency and interest-rate strategy at Societe Generale SA in London. “The data confirmed what King said yesterday, which is that we can pretty much rule out a strong recovery. It was a wake-up call for the market.”

The pound was little changed at 88.87 pence per euro as of 12:52 p.m. in London, after weakening as much as 0.5 percent to 89.31 pence, the lowest level since May 15. It climbed 0.1 percent to $1.6508.

The unemployment rate in the three months through July rose to 7.9 percent, the most since 1996, the statistics office said. That compares with the latest figures of 9.5 percent in the euro region, 9.7 percent in the U.S. and 5.7 percent in Japan.

Deposit Rate

King told lawmakers in London yesterday that the central bank is “looking at” cutting the deposit rate to stimulate lending by financial institutions and revive consumer demand. The bank’s next Monetary Policy Committee decision is on Oct. 8.

Banks are currently paid 0.5 percent on the deposits. While the central bank is boosting its reserves through asset purchases under its so-called quantitative-easing program, King said he doesn’t want them to grow too much.

The yield on the two-year gilt dropped 3 basis points to 0.72 percent, and fell to 0.71 percent earlier, the lowest level since at least January 1992. The yield on the 10-year bond dropped 3 basis points to 3.61 percent. The difference in yield, or spread, between the two securities widened to 288 basis points, near the most since at least January 1992.

To contact the reporters on this story: Morwenna Coniam in London at mconiam@bloomberg.net; Gavin Finch in London at gfinch@bloomberg.net





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Dollar Pessimism Highest in 18 Months as Growth Outlook Rises

By Matt Townsend

Sept. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Investors turned the most bearish on the dollar in 18 months as signs of a recovery in the global economy reduced demand for the currency as a refuge, a survey of Bloomberg users showed.

The world’s main reserve currency will fall and Treasury yields will rise over the next six months, according to 1,851 respondents in the Bloomberg Professional Global Confidence Index. Their outlook on the economy improved for a second month, after saying it worsened every month since the index began in November 2007.

The U.S. Dollar Index fell yesterday to the lowest level in a year as a decline in foreign-exchange price swings encouraged investors to borrow the currency at record low interest rates to finance the purchase of assets in countries offering yields as much as 8.1 percentage points higher than deposit rates in America.

“You’ve had a lot of people being in the dollar that are going to exit when it isn’t a necessity as a safe haven,” said Fabian Eliasson, a survey participant and head of U.S. currency sales at Mizuho Corporate Bank Ltd. in New York. Eliasson said he expects the dollar to weaken.

Sentiment toward the greenback fell to 30.8 in September, from 38.8 in August, according to the survey. The reading is the lowest since it dropped to 30.3 in March 2008, and has tumbled from a high of 68.86 a year ago. The measure is a diffusion index, meaning a reading below 50 indicates Bloomberg users expect the dollar to weaken.

Dollar Losing Ground

Prospects for an improving global economy rose to 58.5 from 58.1 in August and a low of 3.99 in October 2008.

Using the dollar to finance purchases of assets outside the U.S. will continue until the Federal Reserve raises borrowing costs to curb inflation, Eliasson said. Borrowing costs in dollars as measured by London interbank offered rates fell below those of yen for the first time since 1993 in the past month.

“Next year you are going to have to start to think about raising interest rates,” Eliasson said. “Until then, you are going to have people borrowing in dollars.”

Fed policy makers won’t raise their target rate for overnight loans between banks, currently a range of zero to 0.25 percent, until the third quarter of 2010, according to the median estimate of 57 economists surveyed by Bloomberg.

The Dollar Index, which IntercontinentalExchange Inc. uses to track the currency against the euro, yen, U.K. pound, Canadian dollar, Swiss franc and Swedish krona, gained 17 percent from Sept. 15, 2008, to March 5, 2009, as investors sought the safety of U.S. assets following the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.

It has since fallen about 14 percent, touching 76.187 today, the lowest since Sept. 23, 2008.

Yen Sentiment Rises

Spain and Mexico were the only countries of the nine surveyed outside the U.S. where users expected their currencies to decline against the dollar in the next six months. Sentiment toward the euro in Spain decreased to 48.4 from 52.4. The index for the Mexican peso increased to 45.4 from 40.8 in August.

Users in Japan raised their outlook on the yen for the first time in three months, as sentiment improved to 62.11 from 50.31. Japan’s currency rallied against 15 of its 16 most-traded counterparts in August on speculation the Democratic Party of Japan will be more tolerant of a stronger yen than its predecessor, the Liberal Democratic Party, as it tries to increase consumer demand to spur economic growth.

Hirohisa Fujii, who was appointed finance minister today, said he doesn’t support “a weak yen.” Current yen movements “aren’t excessive” and the currency is “just moving gradually,” Fujii told reporters in Tokyo.

Real, Pound

Survey participants in Brazil were the most upbeat, with optimism toward the real rising to 70.83, from 69.44 last month. The real has gained 28 percent this year to $1.8037 per dollar, the second-best performer among the 16 most-traded currencies tracked by Bloomberg after the South African rand’s 29 percent gain.

In the U.K., users turned less bullish on the pound after it gained 13 percent this year versus the dollar and 7.7 percent against the euro. The sentiment index for sterling fell to 54.3 from 62.04.

While investors in Treasuries have lost 3.21 percent this year on average, they have earned 1.3 percent since June, according to Merrill Lynch & Co. indexes. Sentiment toward the U.S. economy stayed at 47.3 after gaining four out of the past five months, from 5.2 in March.

Bond Yields

The prospect for an increase in 10-year Treasury note yields rose to 66.2 in September, from 64.8 a month earlier. In June, the index reached to 73.7, the highest since Bloomberg began compiling the data in November 2007. The yield on the benchmark 10-year note ended yesterday at 3.45 percent, down from the high this year of 4 percent in June.

“For bond yields to go back to four percent, we have to be in the same kind of euphoric state we were in June,” said Suvrat Prakash, a survey participant and a interest-rate strategist in New York at BNP Paribas Securities Corp. “The likelihood of a V-shaped recovery in June looked much better than now. We’ve seen a bit of a plateau and there is a lot of doubt about the consumer.”

For 10-year German bunds, expectations for higher yields rose to 75 from 68.7 after Europe’s largest economy grew in the second quarter following a year of contraction.

Survey participants said the global economy is improving as France, Europe’s second-largest economy, started to recover in the second quarter and China’s economy, the world’s third largest, strengthened as industrial production, lending and retail sales exceeded forecasts.

To contact the reporter on this story: Matt Townsend in New York at mtownsend9@bloomberg.net





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Canada’s Dollar Climbs to Highest in Six Weeks as Stocks Rise

By Chris Fournier

Sept. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Canada’s dollar appreciated to the strongest level in more than a month against its U.S. counterpart as stocks and gold climbed and oil held above $70 a barrel, burnishing the appeal of higher-yielding currencies.

“The market is focused on risk parameters,” said Jack Spitz, managing director of foreign exchange in Toronto at National Bank of Canada. “Oil is still trading at $70, which is bullish. Equities are stronger. The U.S. dollar is weaker across the board. It’s all contributing to an appetite for risk which is contributing to a stronger loonie.”

The Canadian currency advanced as much as 0.6 percent to C$1.0661 per U.S. dollar, the strongest since Aug. 4, before trading at C$1.0698 at 8:10 a.m. in Toronto, from C$1.0724 yesterday. One Canadian dollar buys 93.48 U.S. cents.

The dollars of New Zealand and Australia, which like Canada’s rise and fall with stocks and commodity prices, outperformed all of the 16 most-traded currencies tracked by Bloomberg, rising 1.1 percent and 0.8 percent respectively. The U.S. dollar lagged behind all 16 except for the Swiss franc.

“The backdrop does suggest that the Canadian dollar is poised for further strength,” said Spitz, adding “key data” today including a report at 8:30 a.m. on the U.S. consumer price index could be a catalyst for further gains.

To contact the reporter on this story: Chris Fournier in Montreal at cfournier3@bloomberg.net





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Greenspan Sees Threat U.S. Congress Will Hamper Fed

By Timothy R. Homan

Sept. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said he’s worried that lawmakers will hamper U.S. central bank efforts to rein in its monetary stimulus, and that inflation might “swamp” the bond market.

“It’s the politics in the United States that worries me, whether the Congress will basically feel comfortable” with the Fed withdrawing its stimulus, Greenspan said in a broadcast to Tokyo clients of Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. today. He later said that “if inflation rears its head, it will swamp long-term markets,” referring to bonds.

With U.S. unemployment running at a quarter-century high, the Fed may face resistance from lawmakers as it tries to promote price stability by raising its benchmark interest rate from near zero. The jobless rate reached 9.7 percent last month and employers have cut almost 7 million jobs, the biggest drop in any recession since World War II.

The former Fed chief, who counts Deutsche Bank among his clients, also warned that the U.S. must rein in its “very dangerous” level of debt, citing the threat of increased issuance of Treasuries undermining the dollar.

Greenspan last month estimated the recovery began with a 2.5 percent growth rate in the third quarter. His focus today on a political threat to the rebound comes more than a decade after he pressed former President Bill Clinton to trim fiscal plans to bring down borrowing costs. He “urged Clinton in no uncertain terms to make deficit reduction the priority,” Clinton Labor Secretary Robert Reichlater wrote.

Taleb’s Worry

Greenspan’s debt comment echoed concerns expressed by Nassim Taleb, the New York University professor who wrote “The Black Swan: The Impact of the Highly Improbable,” published about three months before the start of the financial crisis.

“This is what I’m worried about,” Taleb told a group of business people in Toronto this week, citing the U.S. having three times the debt, relative to gross domestic product, as in the 1980s. “No one has the guts to say let’s bite the bullet.”

Greenspan, speaking via videoconference from Washington, indicated that successor Ben S. Bernanke and his fellow Fed policy makers have until next year before inflation will present a danger.

“We’ve got worldwide disinflation in train and it will continue for a short while,” he said. “Our model says that by the early months of next year the rate of inflation will fall below 1 percent on an annual rate” before increasing.

Consumer Prices

American consumer prices fell 1.7 percent in August from a year earlier, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey of economists before the Labor Department reports the figure today. Prices fell 2.1 percent in July, the most since Harry S. Truman was president in 1950. Investors use the figures to gauge inflation, which erodes bonds’ fixed returns.

Treasuries and the dollar were little changed in Asian trading. Benchmark 10-year Treasury notes yielded 3.44 percent at 2 p.m. in Tokyo, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. They averaged 3.15 percent so far in 2009, compared with 4.16 percent the past five years. The dollar was at $1.4673 per euro, compared with its record low of $1.6038 reached in July 2008.

Greenspan said that if there were a significant issuance of Treasury securities that increased the national debt, “there would be of necessity downward pressure on the dollar.” At the same time, he said, “you can’t say that without saying what the counterparty currency would be.”

‘Very Dangerous’

Greenspan said one threat to Treasuries is the “very dangerous” level of U.S. national debt. “We’ve got to confront that issue immediately,” he said.

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office said last month that deficits between 2010 and 2019 will total $7.1 trillion. Those shortfalls, which are financed with borrowed money that’s tacked onto the national debt, would drive the debt up to 68 percent of the nation’s economy by 2019, from the current 54 percent, CBO said.

“The next six months seem reasonably easy to anticipate: no inflation, good economic growth,” Greenspan said. “Things are turning and it looks good for the near term.”

Greenspan said last month the U.S. economy could resume growth with a 2.5 percent expansion in the current quarter, while adding there was still a risk of a “second wave down.”

Growth Outlook

Economists surveyed by Bloomberg News this month put the odds of a double-dip recession in the next 12 months at 25 percent, up from 20 percent in August. The economy will expand at a 2.9 percent annual rate in July through September, according to the median of 61 estimates in the survey taken Sept. 3 to Sept. 10.

“This recession will not be over until home prices stabilize at a minimum,” Greenspan said. “The evidence suggests that we’re getting there, finally.”

Home prices in 20 U.S. cities fell in June at a slower pace than forecast, a sign that the real-estate crisis is dissipating. The S&P/Case-Shiller home-price index advanced 2.9 percent in the second quarter from the previous three months, the first increase since 2006 and the biggest in almost four years, according to an Aug. 25 report.

Bernanke yesterday said the worst U.S. recession since the 1930s has probably ended. At the same time, he warned that growth may not be strong enough to immediately reduce the unemployment rate.

Bernanke’s Call

“Even though from a technical perspective the recession is very likely over at this point, it’s still going to feel like a very weak economy for some time,” Bernanke said at the Brookings Institution in Washington, responding to questions after a speech.

The remarks were the Fed chief’s most explicit yet that the contraction that began in December 2007 is over. They echoed comments this week by San Francisco Fed President Janet Yellen and followed a report yesterday showing retail sales rose last month by the most in three years, adding to evidence of a recovery.

Greenspan also weighed in on the debate over a regulator of risks across the financial system as Congress prepares the biggest overhaul of U.S. financial regulations since the 1930s, when the Fed was reorganized. The U.S. Treasury has proposed giving the Fed greater authority over the capital, liquidity, and risk-management standards of the largest financial firms.

Congressional leaders haven’t supported that proposal and are considering giving broader authority to a council of regulators.

“I’m not in favor of a systemic-risk regulator because I don’t think it’s feasible,” Greenspan said. “I think we have to recognize that there are limits to what we can do.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Timothy R. Homan in Washington at thoman1@bloomberg.net





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U.S. May Welcome Carry Trades, Credit Suisse Says

By Shigeki Nozawa

Sept. 16 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. may “welcome” carry trades in dollars as returns overseas flow back to American investors, Credit Suisse Group AG said.

High returns generated in other countries will help the dollar maintain its status as the world’s reserve currency, even as the greenback weakens, said Hiromichi Shirakawa, chief economist at Credit Suisse in Tokyo.

“A weak dollar should be welcomed, since it signals a recovery in the global economy and financial markets,” Shirakawa said by telephone today. “The U.S. will likely welcome dollar carry trades.”

In a carry trade, investors borrow in nations where interest rates are low and buy assets where returns are higher, profiting from the difference. Benchmark interest rates are as low as zero in the U.S. compared with 3 percent in Australia and 2.5 percent in New Zealand.

The U.S. has been seeing a surplus in the income balance, a portion of the current-account balance that shows investment returns, even after it became a debtor nation in 1986, according to Shirakawa.

“U.S. investors are generating returns from overseas assets that more than offset payments of external debt,” the economist said. “Their performance is just amazing.”

The Dollar Index fell to the lowest in almost a year after a Commerce Department report showed U.S. retail sales increased 2.7 percent last month following a revised 0.2 percent drop in July, adding to signs the recession is ending.

The Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback against the euro, yen, pound, Canadian dollar, Swiss franc and Swedish krona, declined to as low as 76.244, the weakest since Sept. 22, 2008, from 76.520 yesterday.

Japan’s government may increase purchases of Treasuries if policy coordination with the U.S. is needed to stem the dollar’s decline, Shirakawa said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Shigeki Nozawa in Tokyo at snozawa1@bloomberg.net.



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India’s September Iron-Ore Exports Probably Fell 25%

By Debarati Roy

Sept. 16 (Bloomberg) -- India’s iron-ore exports probably fell 25 percent in the first two weeks of this month because of increasing royalty and transportation charges and lower demand from China, a mineral industry group said.

Overseas sales may have declined 15 percent in August from a year earlier, Siddharth Rungta, president of the Federation of Indian Mineral Industries, said today in an interview in Bangalore. India, the largest seller of iron ore to China in the cash market until last year, is losing share to BHP Billiton Ltd. and Rio Tinto Group, he said, without giving details.

BHP, the world’s largest mining company, sold more iron ore in the cash market after buyers deferred some contract deliveries. India’s overseas sales of the key steelmaking ingredient had risen in July because of the price impasse between Chinese buyers and Australian suppliers, Rungta said.

Indian enquiries from customers of iron ore dried up in the last 15 days of August, R.K. Sharma, secretary general of the Federation of Indian Mineral Industries, said on Aug. 31.

Shares of Sesa Goa Ltd., India’s biggest iron-ore exporter, pared gains after rising as much as 2.6 percent to 268.90 rupees in Mumbai today. The shares traded at 262.45 rupees, up 0.1 percent, as of 1:59 p.m. local time. The stock has more than tripled this year, compared with a 72 percent gain in the Bombay Stock Exchange’s key Sensitive Index.

Falling Prices

Iron ore prices fell after China lowered purchases last month. So-called free-on-board prices have fallen to $60 a metric ton from a peak $90 a ton in early August, Rungta said.

“Our costs, including royalty to be paid to government, have gone up,” he said.

India’s government increased the royalty it charges from companies mining iron ore to 10 percent of revenue starting Aug. 13. The government earlier charged as much as 27 rupees a ton for iron ore lumps and 19 rupees a ton for fines. Out of every 100 tons of iron ore produced in India, 60 tons are fines and the rest are lumps.

Demand for iron ore is “robust” in the long term, BHP said today in a presentation on its Web site. China and emerging nations will underpin that growth, the company said.

Iron-ore swaps for settlement this month traded at $98.26 a ton on Aug. 28, according to SGX AsiaClear over-the-counter prices from Singapore Exchange Ltd. They indicate prices may drop to $81.81 in October.

To contact the reporter on this story: Debarati Roy in Mumbai at droy5@bloomberg.net.





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India’s September Iron-Ore Exports Probably Fell 25%

By Debarati Roy

Sept. 16 (Bloomberg) -- India’s iron-ore exports probably fell 25 percent in the first two weeks of this month because of increasing royalty and transportation charges and lower demand from China, a mineral industry group said.

Overseas sales may have declined 15 percent in August from a year earlier, Siddharth Rungta, president of the Federation of Indian Mineral Industries, said today in an interview in Bangalore. India, the largest seller of iron ore to China in the cash market until last year, is losing share to BHP Billiton Ltd. and Rio Tinto Group, he said, without giving details.

BHP, the world’s largest mining company, sold more iron ore in the cash market after buyers deferred some contract deliveries. India’s overseas sales of the key steelmaking ingredient had risen in July because of the price impasse between Chinese buyers and Australian suppliers, Rungta said.

Indian enquiries from customers of iron ore dried up in the last 15 days of August, R.K. Sharma, secretary general of the Federation of Indian Mineral Industries, said on Aug. 31.

Shares of Sesa Goa Ltd., India’s biggest iron-ore exporter, pared gains after rising as much as 2.6 percent to 268.90 rupees in Mumbai today. The shares traded at 262.45 rupees, up 0.1 percent, as of 1:59 p.m. local time. The stock has more than tripled this year, compared with a 72 percent gain in the Bombay Stock Exchange’s key Sensitive Index.

Falling Prices

Iron ore prices fell after China lowered purchases last month. So-called free-on-board prices have fallen to $60 a metric ton from a peak $90 a ton in early August, Rungta said.

“Our costs, including royalty to be paid to government, have gone up,” he said.

India’s government increased the royalty it charges from companies mining iron ore to 10 percent of revenue starting Aug. 13. The government earlier charged as much as 27 rupees a ton for iron ore lumps and 19 rupees a ton for fines. Out of every 100 tons of iron ore produced in India, 60 tons are fines and the rest are lumps.

Demand for iron ore is “robust” in the long term, BHP said today in a presentation on its Web site. China and emerging nations will underpin that growth, the company said.

Iron-ore swaps for settlement this month traded at $98.26 a ton on Aug. 28, according to SGX AsiaClear over-the-counter prices from Singapore Exchange Ltd. They indicate prices may drop to $81.81 in October.

To contact the reporter on this story: Debarati Roy in Mumbai at droy5@bloomberg.net.





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Indonesia to Boost Raw-Sugar Imports by 445,000 Tons by Yearend

By Yoga Rusmana

Sept. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Refiners in Indonesia, Southeast Asia’s top sugar buyer, will import 445,000 metric tons of the raw commodity by December to cool domestic prices, including 225,000 tons advanced from next year’s state-set allocation.

“The allocation is part of government’s effort to ease the price of white sugar,” Yamin Rachman, executive director at the Indonesian Refined Sugar Association, said by phone today. As of Sept. 1, refiners had shipped in 1.44 million tons of raw sugar from the 1.8 million tons licensed to date by the Ministry of Trade, he said. This year’s full allocation is 2 million tons.

Raw-sugar futures in New York have surged to the highest price in 28 years after drought hurt cane output in India, the largest user, and heavy rains cut yields in Brazil, the biggest producer. Indonesia’s additional raw-sugar imports may help to push U.S. prices higher by raising global demand.

Indonesia, home to the world’s largest Muslim population, is marking the fasting month of Ramadan at present, which culminates in the Eid al-Fitr festival. Both events boost sugar consumption as people eat celebratory meals and sweets.

The average price of white sugar in Indonesia has risen more than 49 percent this year to 9,934 rupiah ($1) a kilogram as of Sept. 15, according to data from the Trade Ministry.

The nation’s refiners may process 2 million tons of imported raw sugar this year to make about 1.8 million tons of refined sugar, Rachman said. Next year, refiners may import 1.865 million tons of raw sugar, while food makers may buy 400,000 tons of raw sugar equivalent, or about 360,000 tons of the white variety of the sweetener, Rachman said.

Regulation

Raw-sugar for March delivery fell 1.6 percent to 23.32 cents a pound on ICE Futures U.S. in New York yesterday. On Sept. 1, the price reached 24.85 cents, the highest for a most-active contract since February 1981.

Indonesia’s sugar industry is regulated by the government, which sets import quotas. Households buy sugar made from cane grown by local farmers, while industrial users import refined sugar directly, or buy the commodity from domestic processors which imported raw sugar.

To contact the reporter on this story: Yoga Rusmana in Jakarta at yrusmana@bloomberg.net





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Asian Stocks Rise Most in Three Weeks on Growth Speculation

By Shani Raja and Ian C. Sayson

Sept. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Asian stocks rose, driving the MSCI Asia Pacific Index to its largest gain in three weeks, as a better-than-estimated U.S. retail sales report boosted prospects for exporters’ sales.

Samsung Electronics Co., the world’s largest maker of liquid-crystal display televisions, surged 3.4 percent. Canon Inc., which gets 28 percent of its revenue in the Americas, climbed 4.2 percent in Tokyo as Nomura Holdings Inc. recommended buying the shares. National Australia Bank Ltd., the nation’s largest by assets, rose 3.3 percent, after an index of the country’s leading economic indicators climbed.

“Asia and other emerging markets have strong domestic economies that will benefit further from a global recovery,” said Paul Joseph Garcia, who helps manage about $1.45 billion as chief investment officer at the Philippine unit of ING Investment Management Ltd. “Trade will pick up and that’s good for Asia’s export-oriented industries.”

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index gained 1.9 percent to 118.03 as of 7:42 p.m. in Tokyo, the biggest advance since Aug. 24. The gauge has climbed 67 percent from a more than five-year low on March 9 as stimulus measures around the world pulled economies out of recession. Stocks on the gauge are priced at an average 23.9 times estimated earnings, up from 15 times at the March low.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 Stock Average rose 0.5 percent, paring an earlier climb of 1.7 percent, amid concern new Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama’s policies will delay the nation’s economic recovery. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index rose 2.6 percent. China’s Shanghai Composite Index lost 1.1 percent as government data showed investors opened fewer trading accounts.

BHP Billiton, Halex

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index climbed 2.4 percent with Telstra Corp. surging 4.2 percent on optimism it will get access to a new national Internet network. BHP Billiton Ltd., the world’s largest mining company, gained 2 percent after commodity prices advanced. Halex Holdings Bhd., an agricultural chemicals manufacturer, surged 21 percent on its debut in Kuala Lumpur.

Futures on the U.S. Standard & Poor’s 500 Index added 0.5 percent. The gauge increased 0.3 percent yesterday after a government report showed retail sales excluding automobiles gained 1.1 percent last month, while the Federal Reserve Bank of New York said its general economic index rose to 18.9 in September. Both reports surpassed economist estimates.

Billionaire investor Warren Buffett said yesterday his company is buying equities, while Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said the U.S. recession is “very likely” over.

Samsung surged 3.4 percent to 795,000 won in Seoul. Canon, which makes digital cameras and office equipment, climbed 4.2 percent to 3,700 yen after Nomura raised its rating on the stock to “buy” from “neutral.” Li & Fung Ltd., the biggest supplier of clothes and toys to Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and Target Corp., climbed 3.1 percent to HK$28.30.

‘It Looks Good’

“The next six months seem reasonably easy to anticipate: no inflation, good economic growth,” Former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan said in a broadcast to Tokyo clients of Deutsche Bank Securities Inc. today. “It looks good for the near term.”

A gauge of Australian leading indicators, which focuses on future economic growth, gained 1.1 percent to 248.5 points in July from June as shares and dwelling approvals climbed, Westpac Banking Corp. and the Melbourne Institute said in Sydney today. The index shrank at an annualized rate of 1.8 percent in July after contracting 4.6 percent the previous month.

National Australia Bank added 3.2 percent to A$29.05. Rival Commonwealth Bank of Australia advanced 4.1 percent to A$48.40.

Telstra, the nation’s biggest telephone company, gained 4.2 percent to A$3.24. Stephen Conroy, the country’s communications minister, told national radio the government may give Telstra a stake in its Internet network.

Improving Data

Shares of Telstra fell 3.2 percent yesterday after Conroy said the company must separate its fixed-line assets from its consumer business or face curbs on mobile-services expansion.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index’s six-month rally has been driven by better-than-estimated economic reports and corporate earnings. Of 645 companies on the gauge that reported net income for the latest quarter, 225 beat analyst predictions, compared with 138 that missed.

China’s statistics bureau last week reported a greater- than-estimated surge in August industrial production, while a Westpac and Melbourne Institute survey last week showed Australian consumer confidence jumped this month to the highest level in more than two years.

“We expect markets to rise,” said Prasad Patkar, who helps manage about $1.2 billion at Platypus Asset Management in Sydney. “Markets typically climb walls of worry.”

Oil, Metals Prices

BHP gained 2 percent to A$39. A measure of six metals in London advanced 1.1 percent, rising for the first time in five sessions. Rio Tinto Group, the world’s third-largest mining company, gained 2 percent to A$60.18.

Gold producers rallied after the precious metal closed above $1,000 an ounce for the third-straight day. Newcrest Mining Ltd., Australia’s largest gold producer, advanced 4.5 percent to A$34.95. Zijin Mining Group Co., China’s largest bullion producer, surged 7.8 percent to HK$8.15 in Hong Kong.

Oil producers advanced as futures of the raw material climbed 3 percent to $70.93 a barrel in New York yesterday, the biggest increase since Sept. 8. Inpex Corp., Japan’s largest oil explorer, climbed 2.4 percent to 797,000 yen, while PetroChina Co., China’s largest oil producer, gained 2.9 percent to HK$9.24.

Nippon Steel Corp. rose 1.2 percent to 339 yen, while JFE Holdings Inc. rose 0.9 percent to 3,230 yen after JPMorgan Chase & Co. rated both companies “overweight” in new coverage.

Halex Holdings jumped 21 percent to 94 sen on its first day of trading on the Kuala Lumpur stock exchange. The company sold shares at 78 sen in its initial share sale.

To contact the reporters on this story: Shani Raja in Sydney at sraja4@bloomberg.net; Ian C. Sayson in Manila at isayson@bloomberg.net.





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