Economic Calendar

Monday, September 21, 2009

China's Economy Nears Growth Targets

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by ecPulse.com | Sep 21 09 05:15 GMT |

Expectations show that the Chinese economy is on its way to reach the growth target set by the government at 8% this year after the rebound across the globe which helped several economies crawl out of the worst financial crisis.

The Chinese economy reported growth of 7.9% during the second quarter of the year following a 6.1% growth rate in the first quarter. This was due to the large stimulus plan set by the government back in last November worth 4 trillion yuan which was aimed to help support growth that has been negatively effected by the global recession.

The government was able to implement this plan after saving the financial sector as it pumped liquidity into banks and other credit and financial institutions to encourage lending and investments in the different sectors. In addition to that, the economy benefited from the support it received from the stimulus plan which focused mainly on the nation's infrastructure as it helped provide several job opportunities and improve domestic demand.

Expectations now show the fact that the economy is nearing the 8% growth target this year as the economy was able to heal internal factors that offset the negative effects from falling exports. Now and after the improvement seen in global economies and the return of confidence in the markets, it is safe to say that the Chinese economy has a more solid base to lean on.

However, lets not become too optimistic since the last global crisis just proved that nothing's impossible after the collapse of large financial institutions one after the other as the worst crisis since the Great Depression continued to claim victims.

The Chinese economy continues to face difficulties that have aroused from lending as it worries policy makers. Commercial banks and financial institutions seized the opportunity of the government stimulus plan and low interest rates to boost lending which may be a two edged blade to the future of the Chinese economy.

With this boost in lending, we see that the different business sectors will have more chances of investments and expand its operations which will increase capital. On the other hand, we can't ignore that with more lending and liquidity in the financial markets, this could result in inflation risks, especially as global demand starts to pick up which helped support the recent rally in energy and primary commodity prices.

In addition, these massive amounts of liquidity may also result in a new stock market and real estate bubble and eventually lead to another crisis in China. And in order to side step this problem, we have witnessed several statements from policy makers that China should stop expanding its monetary policy and that during the second half, it will use other tools and measures to help promote economic growth and offset the effect of exports that have slid from previous levels.

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





Read more...

Asia Session Recap

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by Forex.com | Sep 21 09 05:41 GMT |

The bank holiday in Japan set the tone for the session, a quiet beginning to what could end up being a very busy week that will be highlighted by some top tier data. Although the three day Japanese holiday should keep the action in Asia toned down, the US FOMC meeting, Unemployment, and Home Sales should keep the week very interesting, with the G-20 Meetings that begin on Thursday being the grand finale. Today's day began with the British Pound opening about 50 pips lower than Friday's settle near 1.6270. With the Bank of England under the microscope as of late it has been easier to find fault with current policies and shortfalls of those policies. The scrutiny has been harsh on the Pound to say the least. Traders took the GBP/USD to under 1.6210 and later to a high of 1.6262, but ultimately the pair was flat for the day after the ride. EUR/GBP opened to a five month high near .9065 on the cable weakness, but the pair later settled down near 0.9045, only slightly higher than Friday's close.

Otherwise in Asia, the US Dollar made some negligible gains against the Euro, crawling to about a 25 pip gain for the day near 1.4680. Against the Yen the Dollar also continued its path higher, breaking through 91.75 in late session trading. A horde of Yen sellers helped push the crosses higher as London prepared for its Monday morning. Further south in the Pacific, the high flying and yielding Aussie and Kiwi Dollar also were persecuted by the mild wave of Dollar strength. The low in AUD/USD was near 0.8645 as of this report.

With the Dollar's dramatic slide over the past few months, many traders are setting their sights on this Thursday's FOMC meeting to find possible clues that may offer the Dollar a reprieve. While no rate movement is expected, Chairman Bernanke could drop hints to the Federal Reserves current course of action.

Upcoming Economic Data Releases (London Session):

9/21/2009 3:00 NZ Credit Card Spending (YoY) AUG -2.00% - -
9/21/2009 10:05 UK Bank of England's Sentance to Make Speech 21-Sep

9/21/2009 12:30 CA Int'l Securities Transactions JUL 10.511B - -

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.


Read more...

Market Morning Briefing

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by Kshitij Consultancy Services | Sep 21 09 03:27 GMT |

EQUITIES

The Dow (9820.20) and the Nasdaq (2132.86) rose last week by more than 2% each led by positive signs of economic recovery suggested by a host of data releases last week. The Dow has Resistance near current levels at 9870 for this week. Significant events/ releases out of US this week are: FOMC Meeting (23 Sep), US Durable Goods (25 Sep), Home Sales.

In Asia, the Nikkei (10370.54) and the Sensex (16741.30) are closed today. The rest of the Asian indices are trading lower. The Shanghai (2876.53) is down 2.91%. The Resistance near 3050 in Shanghai has pushed the index down after it spiked above the Resistance to record a high of 3068 last week. The Sensex has Resistance near 17000 for the week. A rise past would be very bullish.

COMMODITIES

Crude (72.31) is continuing to trade above 72. With no major economic news today and tomorrow, we might expect Crude to be ranged and hold above 70 until the Federal Reserve's interest rate decision which is due on Wednesday (23-Sep). On the upside significant Resistance is seen in the region 74.00-50.

Gold (1004.40) is trading lower. If it continues to trade lower, a break below 1000 might pull it down towards 990 where some Support is seen. On the upside Resistance is seen at 1030.

CURRENCIES

Some profit-taking seems to be coming in on the Euro (1.4690) and the Aussie (0.8655) both of which are trading lower than the highs of 1.4770 and 0.8778 respectively, seen last Thursday. This is despite the rise/ stabilisation in Dollar-Yen, which is trading near 91.50, comfortably above the crucial level of 90.00. The Pound (1.6235) continues to be battered however, trading just below a crucial level at 1.6265. Dollar-Swiss (1.0310) is a mirror image of EUR-USD and has rallied slightly from Thursday's low near 1.0275.

Although there is profit-taking today, which can extend further during the week, the overall big picture trend remains Dollar negative. While there can be "sell" opportunities in the non-Dollar currencies this week, they may be bought on dips for the medium to long term.

Japan is on holiday today (and tomorrow), so that is also keeping the market quiet. The Rupee market is also closed today on account of Id.

INTEREST RATES

3M USD LIBOR has remained unchanged at 0.29%. The Treasury yields have risen. The 10Y yields have gone up 9 bps and is approaching 3.50% mark once again. While the Support at 4.10% on the 30Y bonds look likely to be honoured, the chances of double top on 10Y yields are not allayed. To see the chart of US Yields, click on: http://www.kshitij.com/graphgallery/usdsin00.shtml#sin00

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

Legal disclaimer and risk disclosure

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





Read more...

Technical Analysis for Major Currencies

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by ecPulse.com | Sep 21 09 05:55 GMT |

EURO

The Euro versus dollar pair confirmed the exit from the ascending channel as seen in the above image, changing the intraday trend to the downside confirmed by momentum indicators that have given bearish signs. The medium and short term trend are still to the upside yet on the intraday basis, the pair needs to correct to the downside targeting the 23.6% correction for the ascending channel at 1.4630 and perhaps extend to the 38.2% correction at 1.4540. Trading below 1.4740 is vital for the decline to remain intact.

The trading range for today is among the key support at 1.4330 and the key resistance at 1.4985

The general trend is to the upside as far as 1.4135 remains intact with targets at 1.6000

Support: 1.4650, 1.4630, 1.4565, 1.4540, 1.4465
Resistance: 1.4715, 1.4740, 1.4810, 1.4880, 1.4910

Recommendation: Based on the charts and explanations above, our opinion is selling the pair from 1.4695 to 1.4565 and stop loss above 1.4740 might be appropriate.

GBP

The downtrend continued to take the pair towards the 100% expansion as seen in the above image yet at the same time we see the pair trading below the key support for the downside channel affected by the bearishness yet the 1.6205 level was able to limit further declines on the intraday basis. Momentum indicators show the pair being oversold which may open the way for an upside correction before reversing back to the downside on the short term to breach the above mentioned level.

The trading range for today is among the key support at 1.5925 and the key resistance at 1.6625

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

Support: 1.6205, 1.6180, 1.6140, 1.6020, 1.5980
Resistance: 1.6290, 1.6340, 1.6360, 1.6430, 1.6475

Recommendation: Based on the charts and explanations above, our opinion is selling the pair with the breach of 1.6205 to 1.6050 and stop loss above 1.6340 might be appropriate

JPY

After reaching the 127% expansion at 90.15 as seen in the above image, alongside the oversold signs on momentum indicators, this may result in an upside correction for today targeting 92.40. The uptrend is supported by the 91.30 level on the intraday basis and 90.15 on the short term yet there is a chance for volatile trading during today’s expected incline.

The trading range for today is among the key support at 88.40 and the key resistance at 94.70

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

Support: 91.30, 90.90, 90.65, 90.15, 89.80
Resistance: 91.90, 92.40, 92.60, 93.25, 94.05

Recommendation: Based on the charts and explanations above, our opinion is buying the pair from 91.30 to 92.40 and stop loss below 90.60 might be appropriate.

CHF

From these levels, we expect the pair to rebound to the upside in correctional movements confirming the bullish technical pattern seen on the stochastic indicator which may result in the pair to continue trading in an overbought area alongside the RSI which is currently above 50. This was accompanied by the ADX indicator which has adjusted to the upside to confirm the breach of the key resistance for the downside channel at 1.0355. The moving averages are attempting to adjust to the upside as well.

The trading range for today is among the key support at 1.0160 and the key resistance at 1.0610

The general trend is to the downside as far as 1.1225 remains intact with targets at 0.9600

Support: 1.0310, 1.0280, 1.0265, 1.0210, 1.0160
Resistance: 1.0355, 1.0385, 1.0480, 1.0550, 1.0610

Recommendation: Based on the charts and explanations above, our opinion is buying the pair from 1.0310 to 1.0480 and stop loss below 1.0265 might be appropriate

CAD

Maintaining trading above the 20 MA on the four hour charts alongside a positive adjustment on the RSI and stochastic indicators confirm the uptrend seen on the ADX indicator. The medium and short term trends to the downside continue yet the pair is in need for an upside correction which may target 1.0800 and perhaps extend towards 1.0870 as far as 1.0625 remains intact.

The trading range for today is among the key support at 1.0425 and the key resistance at 1.0900

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

Support: 1.0700, 1.0680, 1.0625, 1.0565, 1.0500
Resistance: 1.0755, 1.0800, 1.0870, 1.0915, 1.0960

Recommendation: Based on the charts and explanations above, our opinion is buying the pair from 1.0700 to 1.0870 and stop loss below 1.0625 might be appropriate.

Ecpulse

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


Read more...

Foreign Exchange Market Commentary

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by HY Markets | Sep 21 09 04:57 GMT |

EUR/USD closed lower due to profit taking on Friday as it consolidates some of this month's rally. The high-range close sets the stage for a steady to higher opening on Monday. Stochastics and the RSI are overbought but remain neutral to bullish signalling that sideways to higher prices are possible near-term. If it extends the rally off August's low, the 87% retracement level of the 2008-decline crossing is the next upside target. Closes below the 20-day moving average crossing are needed to confirm that an important top has been posted.

USD/JPY closed lower on Friday as it consolidates below the 75% retracement level of the 2008-2009-decline crossing. The mid-range close sets the stage for a steady to lower opening on Monday. Stochastics and the RSI are turning bearish hinting that a short-term top might be in or is near. Closes below the 20-day moving average crossing are needed to confirm that a short-term top has been posted. If it extends the rally off August's low, the 87% retracement level of the 2008-2009-decline crossing is the next upside target.

GBP/USD closed below the 20-day moving average crossing on Friday confirming that a short-term top has been posted. The low-range close sets the stage for a steady to lower opening on Monday. Stochastics and the RSI are bearish signalling that sideways to lower prices are possible near-term. If it extends this week's decline, the reaction low crossing is the next downside target. Closes above Thursday's high crossing would temper the near-term bearish outlook in the market.

USD/CHF closed slightly lower due to light profit taking on Friday but remains above the 87% retracement level of the 2008-2009-decline crossing. The high-range close sets the stage for a steady to higher opening on Monday. Stochastics and the RSI are overbought but remain neutral to bullish signalling that sideways to higher prices are possible near-term. If it extends this summer's rally, the 2008 high crossing is the next upside target. Closes below the 20-day moving average crossing would confirm that a short-term top has been posted.

HY Markets
http://www.hymarkets.com



Read more...

Hong Kong’s Recovery to Be ‘Very Subdued’ on Weak Export Demand

By Sophie Leung

Sept. 21 (Bloomberg) -- Hong Kong’s economic recovery will be at a slower pace for the rest of the year because of weak demand for exports after companies restocked, said Renee Chen, an economist at Nomura Holdings Inc. in Hong Kong.

Gross domestic product may rise a seasonally adjusted 0.4 percent this quarter from the previous three months, the economist said in an interview in Hong Kong on Sept. 18. That would compare with the 3.3 percent gain in the second quarter that ended a yearlong recession.

Financial Secretary John Tsang said Sept. 16 that “the worst for the economy has passed, but its outlook remains uncertain.” The city government has allocated HK$87.6 billion ($11.3 billion), or 5.2 percent of gross domestic product, for stimulus and relief spending since 2008.

“The recovery will be very, very subdued,” Chen said. “The pace of the recovery will be slower in the second half because the strong rebound in the second quarter was due to demand from restocking.”

Asset price gains also boosted second-quarter growth by encouraging spending, the economist said. Chen forecasts a 0.8 percent expansion in the fourth quarter from the previous three months.

Hong Kong’s economy is still contracting year-on-year, shrinking 3.8 percent in the second quarter.

“A double-dip recession is unlikely in Hong Kong, as the city is benefiting from China’s robust economy,” Chen said.

Record new lending in the first half of the year and a 4 trillion yuan ($586 billion) stimulus package drove the Chinese economy’s recovery to a 7.9 percent expansion in the second quarter from a year earlier.

Nomura raised its forecast for China’s growth this year to 8.5 percent from 8.1 percent on Sept. 18.

To contact the reporter on this story: Sophie Leung in Hong Kong at sleung59@bloomberg.net





Read more...

N.Z. Immigration Is Highest in More Than Four Years

By Tracy Withers

Sept. 21 (Bloomberg) -- New Zealand’s annual immigration growth accelerated to the highest level in more than four years in August, adding to signs that consumer spending and demand for housing may speed the economy’s recovery from a recession.

The number of permanent migrant arrivals exceeded departures by 15,642 in the year ended Aug. 31, Statistics New Zealand said in a report released today in Wellington. That’s up from 14,488 in the 12 months through July and is the most since the period ended November 2004.

Reserve Bank Governor Alan Bollard this month said a recovery in immigration is bolstering spending and will ensure the economy grows in the second half of this year, ending six quarters of recession. The increase in net immigration has been boosted by fewer New Zealanders heading overseas.

Permanent departures fell 12 percent in the year ended Aug. 31, the statistics agency said. Arrivals rose 0.9 percent.

Analysts monitor a monthly, seasonally adjusted series to determine the pace of immigration. In August, a net 1,620 migrants arrived compared with 2,420 in July, the agency said. That’s the slowest pace since January.

Tourist arrivals declined for the third time in four months in August, which may curb spending in an industry that makes up about 10 percent of the New Zealand economy.

Short-term visitor arrivals fell 0.8 percent from July, the agency said.

The global recession has cut international air travel, reducing tourist arrivals from Asia and Europe. The outbreak of swine flu has also made people reluctant to travel.

Arrivals in the year ended Aug. 31 fell 2.8 percent from a year earlier, led by a 30 percent plunge in arrivals from Japan and large declines in arrivals from South Korea, China, the U.K. and the U.S.

Annual arrivals from Australia rose 6.7 percent after the government targeted that nation with extra marketing. Excluding Australia, arrivals slumped 8.8 percent.

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





Read more...

G-20 Push on Banks Threatens Profits From Goldman to Barclays

By Simon Kennedy and Christine Harper

Sept. 21 (Bloomberg) -- Global leaders meet this week seeking to deliver the broadest financial regulation overhaul since the 1930s, potentially threatening profits and stock prices of banks from Goldman Sachs Group Inc. to Barclays Plc.

President Barack Obama and his Group of 20 counterparts convene in Pittsburgh on Sept. 24-25 to cement a plan to force banks to curb leverage, hold more equity capital and keep a greater pool of assets that can be easily traded. Bankers’ pay will also top the agenda as officials try to hammer out an accord that will prevent a repeat of the worst crisis since the Great Depression.

By limiting the scope of banks to invest and trade, governments may check this year’s 22 percent gain in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Financial Index. That may be a price they’re willing to pay to prevent a repeat of the risk-taking that sparked the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. a year ago, a worldwide recession and taxpayer-funded bank rescues.

“Regulation will make banks less profitable by increasing the cost of doing business,” said Andrew Clare, a professor at Cass Business School in London and a former Bank of England official. “If banks are going to benefit from taxpayer largesse then they need to act in a way that doesn’t hurt taxpayers or the economy.”

The summit, which will also be attended by U.K. Prime Minister Gordon Brown, French President Nicolas Sarkozy and Chinese President Hu Jintao, will also discuss how to sustain the economic recovery, avoid protectionism, improve accountancy and revamp governance of the International Monetary Fund.

Voter Disquiet

Leaders travel to the Steel City amid voter disquiet after governments used public money to bail out banks only to see many of them quickly return to profit and resume setting aside billions for bonuses. Seventy-three percent of U.K. voters polled this month by YouGov wanted a tax imposed on all bonuses over 10,000 pounds. A Gallup poll in June showed that 59 percent of Americans wanted action to curb executive pay.

Under consideration: forcing banks to augment their capital buffers to better account for risk, retain more earnings and satisfy a leverage ratio, which measures equity as a proportion of total holdings. They may also consider a proposal to tie pay to capital levels from Financial Stability Board Chairman Mario Draghi.

“There has been a culture that rewards short-term thinking, that used leverage to take exorbitant risks that were unsustainable for the system as a whole,” Obama said in a Sept. 14 interview with Bloomberg Television. “That’s the culture I think that we’ve got to reverse.”

Crackdown

The crackdown could lower profitability by a third at Goldman, Barclays and Deutsche Bank AG’s investment bank, JPMorgan Chase & Co. analysts led by Kian Abouhossein said in a Sept. 9 report.

Deutsche Bank’s return on equity will probably tumble the most among the world’s largest investment banks, falling to 6.7 percent in 2011 from 10 percent today, the analysts said. Goldman’s return on equity will decline by 4.4 percentage points and Barclays’ by 4.3 points.

“The amendments to capital requirements will clearly affect the activities of banks in their trading books and securitizations,” said Alessandra Mongiardino, a London-based analyst at Moody’s Investors Service.

Spokespeople for Goldman, Deutsche bank and Barclays declined to comment.

Stock Drop?

Investors may suffer if financial companies have to issue more equity, said Charles Goodhart, a former Bank of England official and now a professor at the London School of Economics.

“Banks will have to raise more capital by issuing more equity so existing stocks will generally go down,” Goodhart said. The IMF estimated in April that U.S. and European banks would need $875 billion in extra capital.

To be sure, Goldman has demonstrated that higher capital and lower leverage don’t always mean reduced profits.

The company, which set aside a record $11.4 billion for compensation and benefits in the first half, cut its ratio of assets-to-common equity to 16 times in the second quarter from 26 times a year earlier. Goldman still set a new Wall Street profit record this year, making $3.4 billion on $13.8 billion of revenue in the three months that ended in June.

The new rules will probably also take years to go into effect, with U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithnerproposing that new capital requirements be in place by the end of 2012.

Lehman Demise

Since the demise of Lehman, some banks have already cut leverage, boosted capital by selling stock, and set aside a larger pool of easy-to-sell, or “liquid,” assets.

Morgan Stanley, the sixth-biggest U.S. bank by assets, raised $6.92 billion through stock sales in May and June and cut its ratio of total assets-to-common equity to 18.3 times at the end of June from 30.9 times a year earlier. Barclays’ so-called surplus liquidity jumped to 88 billion pounds ($145 billion) at the end of June from 36 billion pounds six months earlier.

“Banks have already changed so substantially that it’s unlikely the G-20 can impose a further pinch in terms of beefing up liquidity or reducing leverage,” said Simon Gleeson, a regulatory lawyer at Clifford Chance LLP, the second-biggest law firm, in London.

Any agreement on capital buffers could see European banks as the biggest losers, which could provoke the ire of Sarkozy and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who faces elections on Sept. 27. The region’s banks may have to sell more stock than U.S. rivals to satisfy new capital rules having relied on so- called hybrid securities to meet the current requirements.

European Penalty?

“It would be paradoxical if European banks were to be penalized in terms of competition against U.S. banks, given that the crisis originated in the U.S.,” says Baudouin Prot, chief executive officer of BNP Paribas SA, France’s largest bank, at the French Senate Finance Committee in Paris on Sept. 16. He said a leverage ratio would be “extremely difficult” to introduce.

Merkel and Sarkozy have campaigned for the G-20 to focus instead on bonuses, arguing excessive executive pay played a role in triggering the crisis. The summit may fall short of “high expectations,” Merkel said Sept. 19.

The risk for politicians trying to persuade voters they haven’t let bankers off the hook is that the financial industry eventually finds a way around the regulatory revamp.

“We aren’t doing anything significant so far, and the banks are pushing back,” said Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz, a professor at Columbia University. “The leaders of the G-20 will make some small steps forward, given the power of the banks” and “any step forward is a move in the right direction.”

The G-20 accounts for about 85 percent of the world economy and the Pittsburgh talks will the third summit of its leaders in the past year. Its members are Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, South Korea, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Turkey, the U.S., the U.K. and the European Union.

To contact the reporters on this story: Simon Kennedy in Paris at skennedy4@bloomberg.net; Christine Harper in New York at charper@bloomberg.net.





Read more...

China Guangdong Plans Overseas Nuclear Plant, Morning Post Says

By Kyunghee Park

Sept. 21 (Bloomberg) -- China Guangdong Nuclear Power Holding plans to build and partly finance the country’s first overseas nuclear reactor, the South China Morning Post said today, citing an official at one of the company’s units.

The company will focus on developing countries, the English-language newspaper quoted Xiang Weidong, director of overseas business at CGNPC Uranium Resources as saying, without identifying the nations. CGNPC said on its Web site that it had signed a letter of intent a year ago with Belarus to cooperate in the nuclear power industry, the Morning Post reported.





Read more...

Swedish Cabinet Forecasts Healthier Finances in Election Year

By Johan Carlstrom and Niklas Magnusson

Sept. 21 (Bloomberg) -- Sweden’s government unveiled a budget for election year that forecast a narrower deficit than it predicted previously as higher spending and lower taxes help generate economic growth.

The deficit of the Nordic region’s largest economy will widen to 3.4 percent of gross domestic product in 2010 from 2.2 percent this year, Swedish Finance Minister Anders Borg said in Stockholm yesterday. The deficit will shrink to 2.1 percent in 2011 and 1.1 percent in 2012, Borg said.

Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt’s government will cut taxes and raise spending on schools, hospitals and measures to support the unemployed before the elections next September. A package of new and previously announced stimulus measures will contribute 1.7 percentage points to economic growth next year, the budget forecasts, after Sweden’s worst economic decline in at least 15 years in the first half of 2009.

“We’re surprised by the positive development of government finances,” said Robert Bergqvist, chief economist at SEB AB in Stockholm. “The stimulus measures that we will now get and stable government finances mean that the economic outlook for Sweden looks pretty good.”

Sweden has suffered a deeper economic decline than neighbors Norway and Denmark after a slump in global trade undermined demand for its exports, which make up about half of national output.

Better Than Expected

“The public finances have developed somewhat better than forecast in the 2009 economic spring budget both because of higher income and lower expenses,” Borg said. “Expectations of stronger export orders, a more positive purchase managers index, further improvements on the financial markets” and a global upturn “may make the recovery faster than expected.”

The government last month forecast the deficit would amount to 2.4 percent of GDP this year and 3.7 percent in 2010.

Borg yesterday reiterated forecasts from last month that the economy will return to growth of 0.6 percent in 2010 and 3.1 percent in 2011 after shrinking 5.2 percent this year.

Prices will rise 0.4 percent in 2010 after falling 0.4 percent this year and unemployment will peak at 11.6 percent in 2011 from 8.8 percent this year. Total government income next year will be 723 billion kronor ($105 billion), according to the budget.

The government had already announced plans to cut income taxes for a fourth time since it came to power in 2006. Yesterday, it announced higher spending on new stimulus measures of 32 billion kronor next year and 24 billion kronor for 2011.

Election Year

“It’s definitely an election year budget,” said Stefan Hoernell, senior economist at Svenska Handelsbanken AB.

The government trails the three-party opposition bloc of Social Democrats, the Left Party and the Greens by 3.4 percentage points, according to an opinion poll by Sifo Research International published last week.

The Social Democrats want to raise income taxes and re- introduce the country’s wealth tax in a different shape to create more jobs and invest in hospitals and schools.

“We say no to borrowing money to fund tax cuts,” said the party’s economic spokesman, Thomas Oestros, after the budget was presented. “It’s a very ineffective way to increase employment.”

The “most serious risk” to the economic forecasts and budget stems from the Baltic countries of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, where Sweden’s Swedbank AB and SEB AB are the biggest lenders, Borg said. A deepening of the crisis in the Baltics will “affect the entire Nordic region,” he said.

Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania, the European Union’s fastest-growing economies from 2004 through 2006, have since toppled into the bloc’s deepest recessions. Property-investment and spending booms, financed mainly by bank lending, turned to bust as inflation soared, cheap credit evaporated and demand for exports ebbed.

To contact the reporters on this story: Johan Carlstrom in Stockholm at jcarlstrom@bloomberg.netNiklas Magnusson at nmagnusson1@bloomberg.net





Read more...

Crude Oil Falls a Third Day as Investors Seek Recovery Evidence

By Gavin Evans and Ben Sharples

Sept. 21 (Bloomberg) -- Crude oil fell for a third day in New York on speculation further evidence of a global recovery is needed to extend the commodity’s 61 percent gain this year.

An index of leading economic indicators due today in the U.S., the world’s largest crude user, probably rose for a fifth month in August, according to economists surveyed by Bloomberg. Oil, which reached a 10-month high of $75 a barrel on Aug. 25, fell earlier as the dollar strengthened against the euro, reducing the investment appeal of commodities.

“We’ve been range-bound for a while now,” said Toby Hassall, research analyst with Commodity Warrants Australia Pty in Sydney. Investors are “now looking at the market-specific fundamentals for oil and are asking whether there is enough of a justification to break higher out of this range.”

Crude oil for October delivery fell as much as 46 cents, or 0.6 percent, to $71.58 a barrel in after-hours electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange. It was at $71.61 at 3:40 p.m. in Sydney. Japan, India and Singapore, Asia’s major oil trading hub, are closed today for holidays.

The contract, which expires tomorrow, dropped 0.6 percent to $72.04 on Sept. 18 as a stronger dollar reduced the appeal of commodity investments priced in the U.S. currency. The more- widely held November contract fell as much as 0.8 percent to $71.94 a barrel today, and last traded at $71.97.

$65 a barrel

“The fundamentals say squarely we should be going lower,” Jonathan Barratt, managing director at Commodity Broking Services Pty, said in an interview with Bloomberg Television today. “I think it can get as low as $65 a barrel.”

New York oil futures climbed 38 percent the past six months as equity market gains increased investor confidence in the global economic prospects and the weaker dollar funneled funds into commodities. The rally stalled the past month as U.S. gasoline inventories posted two weeks of gains and distillate supplies reached their highest since January 1983.

“When you look at gasoline supplies we are at an 18-year high,” Barratt said. “Supplies of distillate and heating oil are also running very high.”

Russian oil export-growth will slow as domestic demand improves and tax breaks are lifted, OAO Rosneft, the nation’s biggest producer, said yesterday.

Brent crude oil for November settlement fell as much as 47 cents, or 0.7 percent, to $70.85 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange at 3:41 p.m. in Sydney. It declined 0.3 percent to $71.32 on Sept. 18.

Oil Options

Oil traders are paying more than ever in the options market to protect against a plunge in crude prices. The gap between prices of options betting on a decline and those that would profit from a rise in oil widened to a record 10 percentage points, according to five years of data compiled by Banc of America Securities-Merrill Lynch.

U.S. refineries usually shut units for maintenance in September and October as summer gasoline demand wanes and before winter weather increases heating oil consumption. Refining runs fell in September in nine of the past 10 years and extended declines through October in four of them, according to Energy Department data.

U.S. refining rates are already 6 percentage points lower than last year, with little prospect of the hurricanes and storms in the Gulf of Mexico that sometimes disrupt production and deliveries, Commodity Warrants Australia’s Hassall said.

“There doesn’t seem to be much downside there for oil but at the same time we’re going to need a fairly big piece of news or data to really get us out of this range,” he said.

The dollar strengthened to $1.4673 per euro as of 6:26 a.m. in London from $1.4712 in New York on Sept. 18. It fell to $1.4767 on Sept. 17, the weakest level since Sept. 25, 2008.

To contact the reporters on this story: Gavin Evans in Wellington at gavinevans@bloomberg.net; Ben Sharples in Melbourne at bsharples@bloomberg.net





Read more...

Former Deutsche Derivatives Executive Starts Correlation Fund

By Tom Cahill and Jeff Kearns

Sept. 21 (Bloomberg) -- Chris Craig-Wood, formerly Deutsche Bank AG’s head of equity-index trading, plans a fund he said will be the first dedicated to equity-index correlation, or the degree stocks and indexes move in tandem.

Craig-Wood, who left Deutsche Bank in May for Luxembourg Financial Group, a structured-products firm that manages about $2.5 billion, targets annual returns of 15 percent after fees and costs with the LFG Equity Correlation Fund. LFG plans to start the Luxembourg-listed fund with about 100 million euros ($147 million) and aims to raise as much as $250 million.

Investors who bet that correlation will increase benefit when stocks move in tandem, while those who wager on a decrease profit when stock moves have little in common. Correlation between major equity indexes surged earlier this year as markets plummeted, reaching a record on March 20, according to the Chicago Board Options Exchange S&P 500 Implied Correlation Index.

“Ten years ago people started to look at the VIX -- correlation is the next generation of indicators that can be used to understand the market,” Craig-Wood said in an interview at Luxembourg Financial Group’s offices behind London’s Royal Exchange. “Correlation has become an asset class of its own, with multiple ways to trade it.”

Correlation describes the degree to which prices move in the same direction. Global events affecting markets, such as the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks or the failure of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., can lead to an increase in correlation.

Market Tool

Craig-Wood said equity-index correlation, now traded mostly by securities firm derivative desks, is becoming an increasingly common market tool. CBOE, the biggest U.S. options market, introduced the index in July to track correlation for the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index. The gauge is similar to the exchange’s VIX index, the benchmark index for U.S. stock options and a measure of expected price swings.

The most common method used to trade correlation is a so- called dispersion trade, according to Carl Mason, head of U.S. equity-derivatives strategy at BNP Paribas SA in New York. The strategy involves selling options on a stock index while buying options on the companies in the index, either using individual options or over-the-counter derivative contracts as variance swaps, which are valued based on the volatility of an underlying index or security, he said.

Investors also use OTC derivatives to trade correlation itself, using correlation swaps, which settle based on the amount of actual correlation during a given period.

Options are derivatives that give the right, though not the obligation, to buy or sell a security at a set price and date. Investors use options to guard against fluctuations in the price of securities they own, speculate on share-price moves or bet that volatility, or stock swings, will increase or decrease.

‘Favorable Returns’

“Equity correlation has delivered favorable returns for investors who can manage the complexity of the strategy,” said Dean Curnutt, president of Macro Risk Advisors LLC, a New York- based firm that advises institutional investors on derivatives strategy. “The main source of excess return in the strategy likely results from the premium that investors pay to hedge overall market risk through index put options.”

Craig-Wood, 37, has 15 years of equity-derivatives experience, the last 10 trading at Deutsche Bank. At Luxembourg Financial, he joined a number of fellow Deutsche Bank veterans, including Johan Groothaert, who ran equity-structured products for Deutsche Bank’s equity-markets division. Deutsche ranked No. 2 in derivatives for 2008, according to Risk magazine.

“It’s opening up a new niche that isn’t over-populated,” said Gerald Pittner, 38, a partner at Luxembourg Financial.

To contact the reporter on this story: Tom Cahill in London at tcahill@bloomberg.netJeff Kearns in New York at jkearns3@bloomberg.net





Read more...

U.K. Bond Yields May Rise as Investors Shun Deficits, BOE Says

By Brian Swint and Gavin Finch

Sept. 21 (Bloomberg) -- Bond yields in countries such as the U.K. and the U.S. may rise as investors shun the debt of nations with large trade deficits, the Bank of England said.

“To the extent that savers in surplus countries may become more reluctant over time to invest funds in deficit-country government bonds, this would tend to raise the cost of borrowing in deficit countries,” the central bank said. “This shift in the relative cost of borrowing could be an important part of the process by which a rebalancing of demand from deficit to surplus countries is achieved over the medium term.”

The financial crisis has started to reduce the trade gap with surplus countries such as China by lowering domestic demand and prompting the depreciation in sterling and the dollar, the central bank said in a paper co-authored by former Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. Chief European Economist Michael Hume. The structure of global demand will probably have to change more, the bank said.

Global imbalances may have exacerbated the financial crisis that sparked the biggest global economic slump since World War II. While the U.K. central bank has kept a lid on gilt yields by pledging to buy 175 billion pounds ($285 billion) of bonds to spur growth, it will likely sell those assets when the economy recovers, exacerbating any increase in borrowing costs.

The Bank of England published the paper in its quarterly bulletin, which also featured research saying that the dollar’s depreciation may have stoked demand for corporate bonds, stocks and “other risky asset prices.”

The U.K. current account deficit has narrowed from a record in September 2007, helped by the 30 percent drop in the pound in the period.

Sterling’s depreciation may be part of a more prolonged process of rebalancing of the U.K. economy, generating a fall in the long-run sustainable real exchange rate,” the bank said in another article on the movements in the pound’s value.

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




Read more...

U.K. Home Sellers Raise Prices as Market Confidence Improves

By Brian Swint

Sept. 21 (Bloomberg) -- U.K. home sellers raised asking prices in September as confidence in the property market improved and the supply of homes dwindled, Rightmove Plc said.

The average cost of a home increased 0.6 percent to 223,996 pounds ($364,000) after falling 2.2 percent in August, the owner of the U.K.’s biggest residential property Web site said today in a statement. Price gains in London, the southeast and East Anglia outweighed declines in the rest of England and Wales.

Confidence is up, stock is down and the number of people searching is high,” Miles Shipside, commercial director at Rightmove, said in the statement. “The recession appears to have hit prices harder in the north.”

The U.K. property market is showing signs of recovery as the country emerges from the worst recession in at least a generation. The Bank of England this month kept the benchmark interest rate at 0.5 percent and maintained a program to buy bonds with newly created money to stimulate the economy.

Prices increased on the month by 0.9 percent in London, 1.5 percent in the southeast of England and 8.4 percent in East Anglia. The biggest decline was in Yorkshire and Humberside, where the average price of a home fell 3.6 percent.

There are some signs that banks are becoming more willing to lend money and that demand for home loans is increasing. U.K. mortgage approvals by the nation’s six biggest banks increased to the highest this year in August, the Bank of England reported last week.

Good Time

Surveyors reported more gains in home values than declines for the first time in two years, a report by the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors showed on Sept. 15. A majority of Britons say now is a good time to buy a home, a survey by the Building Societies Association showed last week.

The recession may also be easing for companies. An index showed 0.09 percent of U.K. companies failed in August, the lowest level this year, Experian Plc, the world’s biggest credit-checking company, said today in a separate report.

Unemployment is at the highest level since 1995 and central bank Governor Mervyn King said last week that joblessness will keep rising even after the economy starts growing again.

Andrew Sentance, a Bank of England policy maker who said last week that the economy may be turning around more quickly than he had expected, will deliver a speech today in London. The next interest-rate decision is Oct. 8.

To contact the reporter on this story: Brian Swint in London at bswint@bloomberg.net.





Read more...

Dodd Plan for Bank Regulator May Spark Fight With Frank, Obama

By Alison Vekshin

Sept. 21 (Bloomberg) -- Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd’s plan for a single bank regulator may set up a fight with House colleague Barney Frank and the Obama administration and might slow the overhaul of financial rules.

Dodd, leading efforts to rewrite regulations, will suggest combining the Federal Reserve, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., the Office of Thrift Supervision and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency into one agency, the senator’s office said yesterday.

“Establishing a single regulator is a very bad idea,” Camden Fine, president of the Independent Community Bankers of America, a Washington-based trade group with 5,000 members, said yesterday in an e-mail. “When you have a cyclopic regulatory system, it only takes one stick in the eye to blind it.”

Dodd’s proposal goes further than recommendations by President Barack Obama that are backed by Frank, chairman of House Financial Services Committee that resumes hearings on the issue this week. Dodd’s plan embraces ideas of Democratic Senators Charles Schumer of New York and Mark Warner of Virginia and has elements from measures introduced by House Republicans. Any differences must be resolved before the rules become law.

Obama in June recommended combining OCC, regulator of national banks including New York-based Citigroup Inc., and OTS, which regulates savings and loans including Paramus, New Jersey- based Hudson City Bancorp Inc.. His proposal leaves intact oversight powers of the Fed and FDIC.

The multiple-agency system has produced “some real costs ranging from inefficiencies and redundancies to the lack of accountability and regulatory laxity,” Dodd said at an Aug. 4 Senate Banking Committee hearing to consider the issue. “We are now paying a very high price for those shortcomings.”

No Panacea

FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair and Comptroller of the Currency John Dugan support Obama’s proposal.

Bair said merging the four agencies is “no panacea” for effective oversight, according to Banking committee testimony Aug. 4. “One of the advantages of multiple regulators is that it permits a diversity of viewpoints to be heard,” she said.

Fed officials including Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and Governor Daniel Tarullo, who is leading efforts to overhaul the Fed’s bank supervision, have testified that the central bank should retain its authority over U.S. banks.

The administration recognizes “many ideas” will be offered and will “work with the leadership” in the House and Senate committees “to get a bill done” this year, White House spokeswoman Jennifer Psaki said yesterday in a statement.

‘Big Mistake’

Frank, the Massachusetts Democrat leading his chamber’s efforts, supports Obama’s merger. Stripping the Fed and FDIC of their oversight powers would be “a big mistake,” Frank said.

Representative Spencer Bachus of Alabama, top Republican on the Financial Services panel, has proposed consolidation as a step to reduce duplication and avoid the separate Consumer Financial Protection Agency proposed by Obama.

“If structured like the House Republican plan, streamlining and consolidating the functions of the four bank regulatory agencies will address consumer protection without the need for a new and costly government bureaucracy,” Bachus said in a statement. “It will create smarter regulation, and will benefit both taxpayers and consumers.”

Schumer and Warner, along with Republicans on Frank’s committee, support a single regulator.

“It does not make sense for up to four different federal regulatory bodies to retain oversight over the safety and soundness of banks,” Schumer wrote in June to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner. This system “preserves the regulatory arbitrage that allows institutions to pick the oversight scheme that benefits them the most.”

Warner told Bloomberg News July 1 that the Fed and FDIC should cede their bank oversight role to an “end-to-end” supervisor.

Jonathan Graffeo, a spokesman for Senator Richard Shelby, top Republican on Dodd’s committee, in an e-mail yesterday said “we continue to review” Dodd’s proposal.

To contact the reporter on this story: Alison Vekshin in Washington at avekshin@bloomberg.net





Read more...

China Can’t Buy Enough Bonds as Dollar No Deterrent

By Cordell Eddings and Lukanyo Mnyanda

Sept. 21 (Bloomberg) -- International investors are increasing purchases of Treasuries on a bet U.S. inflation will remain subdued, even as the dollar falls to the lowest levels of the year and the budget deficit tops $1 trillion.

Investors outside the U.S. bought 43.1 percent of the $1.41 trillion of notes and bonds sold by the Treasury Department this year, compared with 27.1 percent of the $527 billion issued at this point in 2008, government figures show. The Merrill Lynch & Co. Treasury Master Index of U.S. securities returned 1.18 percent in the third quarter after the worst first half on record as demand from the investor group that includes central banks climbed to record levels at Treasury auctions.

The trade-weighted U.S. Dollar Index’s 15 percent decline from its high this year on March 4 has proved no obstacle in Treasury auctions, aiding President Barack Obama’s efforts to sell an unprecedented amount of debt. Fund managers say their money is safe in the U.S. with expectations for inflation as measured by indexed bonds below the five-year average.

Treasuries are “starting to look like even a better value with a weaker dollar,” said Dave Chappell, who manages $90 billion in London at Threadneedle Asset Management Ltd., and has been buying longer maturity U.S. government debt.

The 10-year note yield rose 12 basis points last week, or 0.12 percentage point, to 3.46 percent, according to BGCantor Market Data. That’s the most since gaining 37 basis points in the five days ended Aug. 7. The 3.625 percent security due August 2019 fell 1, or $10 per $1,000 face amount, to 101 11/32.

Treasuries were unchanged today as of 10:01 a.m. in Hong Kong, with trading closed in Japan and Singapore for holidays.

Record Issuance

This week the U.S. will sell $112 billion of 2-, 5- and 7- year notes. The amount will be a record for that combination of maturities, exceeding the $109 billion sold the week of Aug. 24. Treasuries rallied that week, with the yield on the 10-year note falling 12 basis points to 3.45 percent.

Federal Reserve holdings of Treasuries on behalf of foreign accounts rose 16 percent to $2.07 trillion since the March high in the Dollar Index.

China, the biggest foreign owner of Treasuries, added $24.1 billion in July after net sales of $25.1 billion in June, raising its stake in U.S. government debt 3.1 percent to $800.5 billion, Treasury data showed on Sept. 16. The country’s holdings have risen 10 percent this year, after a 52 percent gain in 2008 amid the surge in demand for the safety of U.S. government debt as global credit markets froze.

Little Choice

Foreign governments have little choice than to buy Treasuries because they hold so many dollars. The U.S. dollar accounts for 65 percent for world currency reserves, up from 62.8 percent in mid-2008, according to the International Monetary Fund in Washington.

The Obama administration needs the foreign help to fund the debt sales needed for his $787 billion stimulus spending package. Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said in March that the Asian nation was “worried” about the safety of its investment as a weakening dollar erodes the value of its record $2.1 trillion of foreign-exchange reserves.

“The interest rate on long-term Treasury bonds is at a very low level by historical standards,” said David Dollar, the U.S. Treasury Department’s economic and financial emissary to China on Sept. 11 at the World Economic Forum meeting in Dalian, China. “That says that the market has confidence the U.S. will get the fiscal problem under control.”

Inflation Protected Debt

Yields on U.S. inflation-protected debt show there’s little concern about consumer prices eroding the value of bonds’ fixed payments. The difference in rates on 10-year notes and Treasury Inflation Protected Securities, or TIPS, which reflects the outlook among traders for consumer prices, is 1.82 percentage points. While up from 0.04 points in November, the level is below the average of 2.19 points over the past five years.

The U.S. has the lowest so-called breakeven rates of any major sovereign debt market except Japan. The difference between three-year maturities is 0.71 point, below the average of 2.21 points this decade.

Prices of goods imported into the U.S. tumbled 15 percent in August from a year earlier, after a record 19.2 percent drop in July, the Labor Department said Sept. 11.

“There is no inflation on the horizon,” said Michael Cheah, who manages $2 billion in bonds at SunAmerica Asset Management in Jersey City, New Jersey. “The market is comfortable that the Fed will keep rates low and there isn’t much of an alternative.”

Current-Account Deficit

The Fed’s announcement June 24 that it anticipates the target rate for overnight loans between banks will stay at zero to 0.25 percent for an extended period is keeping two-year notes anchored near current levels. Policy makers meet Sept. 22-23 in Washington. Traders are pricing in less than a 50 percent chance of a rate increase before March, federal funds futures show.

A weaker dollar has increased concern among some investors as the budget and current-account deficits come back into focus in the currency market. The U.S. government and the Fed have spent, lent or committed more than $12 trillion in a bid to revive the economy and credit markets.

Economists forecast the current-account deficit will rise to 3.2 percent of gross domestic product in 2010 and 3.5 percent in 2011 from 2.9 percent this year as consumer and business spending boost imports and oil prices increase, according to the median estimates in Bloomberg News surveys.

‘Hard to Find’

“Even though U.S. asset markets are doing well, they’re not doing well enough,” Steven Englander, the chief currency strategist for the Americas at Barclays Capital Inc., said in an interview with Bloomberg Radio on Sept. 17. “The question is, what is there in the U.S. to attract capital? And that answer is hard to find.”

Investors buying a 10-year note today will lose 0.2 percent if yields rise to 3.57 percent by year-end as projected in a Bloomberg survey of forecasts. On an unhedged basis, European investors would have lost 13 percent on 10-year notes since the start of the year, according to Merrill Lynch index data.

Even with last week’s drop in bond prices, Treasuries have returned 2.8 percent in the past three months, including reinvested interest, beating the 2.3 percent return for mortgage-backed bonds, according to indexes compiled by Merrill. The rally reflects skepticism about the sustainability of the economic recovery once government stimulus ends.

Rising Unemployment

The Obama administration forecasts that unemployment in the world’s largest economy will rise above 10 percent in the first quarter. The jobless rate increased to 9.7 percent in August, a quarter-century high. Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said in Washington Sept. 15 that the worst U.S. recession since the 1930s probably ended, while adding that growth may not be strong enough to quickly reduce unemployment.

“If you subscribe to the double dip school of thought this may not be a bad entry point for Treasuries,” said Steve Rodosky, the head of Treasury and derivatives trading at Newport Beach, California-based Pacific Investment Management Co., manager of the word’s biggest bond fund. “The longer-term risk is that the weaker dollar is the cause or affect of people diversifying their holdings or using other currencies as a global currency, but we are a long way from that.”

Yields on 10-year notes may fall toward 3 percent, the least in five months and down from 3.47 percent last week, as the inflation rate drops, Francesco Garzarelli, chief interest- rate strategist in London at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., wrote in a Sept. 15 research report.

“The international community has not lost favor with Treasuries, and the weakening currency allows an opportunity to increase their exposure,” Rodosky said.

Pimco’s Changes

Bill Gross, who runs Pimco’s Total Return Fund, increased holdings of government-related debt last month to the most in five years, according to the company’s Web site. Gross boosted the $177.5 billion fund’s investment in Treasuries, so-called agency debt and other bonds linked to the government to 44 percent of assets, the most since August 2004, from 25 percent in July.

The U.S. will sell $43 billion in two-year notes tomorrow, $40 billion of five-year debt on Sept. 23 and $29 billion in seven-year securities on Sept. 24.

Indirect bidders, the class of investors that includes foreign central banks, bought 49.4 percent of the notes at the two-year auction, up from 33 percent in July’s sale. They purchased 56.4 percent of the five-year notes, compared with 36.7 percent in July, and 61.2 percent of the seven-year securities, above the average of 43.7 percent at the prior six sales of that maturity.

“China and a few other central banks have grumbled about the dollar but they don’t have many other alternatives so they keep buying,” said Michael Atkin, head of sovereign research at Putnam Investments in Boston, who helps oversee $12 billion in fixed-income assets.

To contact the reporter on this story: Cordell Eddings in New York at Lukanyo Mnyanda in London at lmnyanda@bloomberg.net.





Read more...