Economic Calendar

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Trade Idea: EUR/USD - Stand aside

Candlesticks Trades | Written by ActionForex.com | Sep 23 09 14:10 GMT |

EUR/USD - 1.4766

Most recent candlesticks pattern : N/A
Trend : Up

Tenkan-Sen level : 1.4774
Kijun-Sen level : 1.4727
Ichimoku cloud top : 1.4673
Ichimoku cloud bottom : 1.4542

Original strategy : Sell at 1.4920, Target: 1.4760, Stop: 1.4980

New strategy :

Stand aside

As the single currency retreated after intra-day rise to 1.4843 this morning, suggesting consolidation below there would take place, however, only break of the Kijun-Sen (now at 1.4727) would signal a temporary top is in place and bring correction to the Ichimoku cloud top (now at 1.4673), however, reckon support at 1.4611 would hold from here and bring another upmove later.

On the upside, above said resistance would extend medium term upmove towards 1.4906 (50% projection of 1.4177 to 1.4768 measuring from 1.4611), however, weakening of upward momentum would prevent sharp move beyond there and reckon 1.4976 (61.8% projection) would hold, bring another strong pullback later.

In view of the above analysis and the upcoming FOMC result, we are standing aside in the meantime.





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Trade Idea: USD/JPY - Stand aside

Candlesticks Trades | Written by ActionForex.com | Sep 23 09 14:08 GMT |

USD/JPY – 91.40

Most recent candlesticks pattern : N/A
Trend : Down

Tenkan-Sen level : 91.13
Kijun-Sen level : 91.51
Ichimoku cloud top : 91.71
Ichimoku cloud bottom : 90.84

New Strategy :.

Stand aside

As dollar has rebounded after trading above intra-day support at 90.47, suggesting further consolidation above recent low at 90.12 would take place and another corrective rise to the Ichimoku cloud top (now at 91.71) is likely, only break of resistance at 92.55/60 would revive bullishness for correction of recent decline towards 93.05 (38.2% Fibonacci retracement of 97.79 to 90.12), then towards resistance at 93.31.

On the downside, below said support would signal decline has resumed for retest of 90.12, then test of psychological support at 90.00 and later towards 89.49 (61.8% projection of 95.07 to 90.12 measuring from 92.55) before correction.

In view of upcoming FOMC meeting result, we are standing aside in the meantime.






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Mid-Day Report: Sterling Rises after BoE Minutes, Dollar Consolidates ahead of FOMC

Market Overview

Written by ActionForex.com | Sep 23 09 13:04 GMT |

Sterling strengthens today after the release of BoE meeting minutes. The minutes revealed that the decision to keep rates unchanged, and more importantly keep the 175b pounds asset purchase program unchanged, was made by unanimous vote. Mervyn King and David Miles joined the unanimous vote after seeking 200b pounds in August and the switch argues that consensus is seen among the committee. The minutes said that "in absence of significant news about the medium term, the case for adjusting the program now was outweighed by the benefits of following through with the program." The pound is also lifted by news that Confederation of British Industry raised the forecast for Q3 +0.3% in 3Q09 and +0.4% in 4Q09, and anticipated that BOE will stop buying assets after the current scheme is finished.

Next focus will be on FOMC and decision. Fed is widely expected to keep rates unchanged at 0-0.25% range and will likely reiterate the stance to keep rates at record low for an "extended period" of time. Nevertheless, FOMC might further change to a more upbeat tone on the economy based on recent improvements in data. Also, the Fed will probably taper off its purchase of agency MBS and agency debt by slowing down the pace rather than reducing the size of the program.

So far the greenback is holding above key support levels against major currencies as well as in dollar index on speculations that Fed might give some hints on the timing of stimulus removal. However, dollar could be sharply sold off in case of disappointment from the FOMC statement today. So far, the dollar index is still holding on to mentioned 75.89 key support level. Strong rebound from the current level and a break of 77.09 resistance will affirm our view that fall from March high of 89.62 is completing. However, decisive break of 75.89 will dampen our bullish view and in turn open up the case for sharper fall towards 70.70 low made in 2008.

On the data front Eurozone PMIs were mixed with PMI manufacturing missing expectation and rose to 49. in Sep. Services PMI rose slightly more than expected to 50.6. Eurozone industrial orders rose 2.6% mom in July, above consensus of 2.1%. Overnight, NZD was boosted by stronger than expected GDP report. Q2 GDP unexpectedly rose 0.1% qoq and showed shallower than expected drop of -2.1% yoy. The report raised the possibility that RBNZ might start to hike rates earlier than expected.

GBP/JPY Mid-Day Outlook

Daily Pivots: (S1) 148.50; (P) 148.95; (R1) 149.44; More

GBP/JPY rebounds further today and is now pressing 4 hours 55 EMA. Intraday bias remains neutral for the moment and some more consolidation could be seen above 148.03. Nevertheless, another fall is still in favor as long as 151.16 resistance holds. Below 148.03 will bring fall resumption to 146.75 cluster support next (38.2% retracement of 118.81 to 163.05 at 146.15) first. On the upside, however, break of 151.16 will argue stronger rebound is underway to 153.22 resistance and above. Nevertheless, upside is still expected to be limited below 157.47 resistance and bring fall resumption.

In the bigger picture, rise from 118.81, which is treated as correction the larger down trend from 07 high of 251.90, might have completed at 163.05 already, after failing to sustain above 55 weeks EMA. This view is supported by sustained trading below medium term rising trend line and with 55 weeks MACD staying below signal line. Decisive break of 146.75 support will confirm this bearish case by completing a double top reversal pattern (162.56, 163.05). In such case, deep decline should be seen that eventually send GBP/JPY through 118.81 low. On the upside, while another rise cannot be ruled out, upside is expected to be limited by 50% retracement of 215.87 to 118.81 at 167.34 to conclude such correction and bring reversal finally.

GBP/JPY 4 Hours Chart - Forex Chart, Forex Rates, Forex Directory, Forex Portal

Economic Indicators Update

GMT Ccy Events Actual Consensus Previous Revised
22:45 NZD GDP Q/Q Q2 0.10% -0.20% -1.00% -0.80%
22:45 NZD GDP Y/Y Q2 -2.10% -2.60% -2.70%
7:30 EUR German PMI Manufacturing Sep A 49.6 50.9 49 49.2
7:30 EUR German PMI Services Sep A 52.2 54 54.1 53.8
8:00 EUR Eurozone PMI Manufacturing Sep A 49 49.8 47.9 48.2
8:00 EUR Eurozone PMI Services Sep A 50.6 50.5 49.9
8:30 GBP BoE Meeting Minutes 0--0--9 0--0--9 0--0--9
9:00 EUR Eurozone Industrial New Orders M/M Jul 2.60% 2.10% 3.10% 4.00%
9:00 EUR Eurozone Industrial New Orders Y/Y Jul -24.30% -25.90% -25.10% -25.70%
14:30 USD Crude Oil Inventories
-1.4M -4.7M
18:15 USD FOMC Interest Rate Decision
0.25% 0.25%




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BOE May Cap Bond Plan as U.K. Exits Slump, CBI Says

By Brian Swint

Sept. 23 (Bloomberg) -- The Bank of England may stop buying bonds when it completes its current 175 billion-pound ($286 billion) plan as the U.K. shakes off the recession, the Confederation of British Industry said.

Gross domestic product will rise 0.3 percent in the third quarter, the biggest U.K. business lobby said in a report today, reversing a June prediction for a drop of the same size. The CBI forecast 0.4 percent growth in the last three months of the year and said the central bank will start raising the benchmark interest rate in the first half of 2010.

“Armageddon has receded somewhat over the horizon,” Richard Lambert, CBI director general and a former Bank of England policy maker, told reporters at a briefing in London yesterday. “But the recovery will be slow and protracted. Unemployment will continue to rise.”

The central bank plans to complete its current program to buy bonds by November. While Governor Mervyn King joined a minority bid to raise the plan to 200 billion pounds in August, he supported the current amount this month in a unanimous vote by the policy-setting panel for no change.

“At this stage, we don’t see the need for additional quantitative easing,” CBI Chief Economic Adviser Ian McCafferty told reporters. “It’s clear that quantitative easing has not yet had much of an impact on the wider economy.”

2010 Forecast

The economy will expand 0.9 percent in 2010 after a 4.3 percent contraction this year, the CBI said. The total drop in output in the recession will be 5.5 percent, close to the 5.9 percent of the recession in the early 1980s, the report showed.

King and David Miles this month switched sides and voted for no change in the bank’s bond purchase plan, arguing that consensus was better for now even though a higher amount may be warranted, minutes of the Sept. 10 decision released by the central bank today in London showed.

The CBI predicts the central bank will raise the benchmark interest rate to 1 percent in the second quarter from the current record low of 0.5 percent. The rate will stand at 2 percent by the end of next year, according to the CBI’s forecasts.

House prices will fall 9.8 percent this year before rising 0.8 percent in 2010, and unemployment will peak at about 3 million from the current level of 2.5 million, the CBI said in its forecasts.

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





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Strauss-Kahn Urges Sustained Stimulus, Says Crisis Not Over

By Sandrine Rastello

Sept. 23 (Bloomberg) -- International Monetary Fund Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn called on leaders from the Group of 20 nations to maintain efforts to pull the world economy out of a recession, warning that the crisis isn’t over.

“This recovery will be rather sluggish, at an average lower than growth we had before the crisis,” Strauss-Kahn said in an interview in Washington before the G-20 summit begins tomorrow in Pittsburgh. “It’s too early to say the crisis is behind us.”

The IMF chief also urged policy makers to seize the opportunity to address imbalances in trade and investment flows blamed for contributing to the credit collapse. Giving China a bigger role in the fund will help bolster cooperation, he said, as policy makers seek agreement to pare U.S. borrowing and buttress domestic demand in nations with trade surpluses.

“A failure to rebalance the global economy would cause any recovery to be ultimately doomed,” said Gerard Lyons, chief economist at Standard Chartered Plc in London. “Aiming for a balanced world economy is a win-win situation.”

Leaders from the G-20, which groups the largest developed and developing nations, gather tomorrow for their two-day summit in Pittsburgh. Formed out of the Asian financial crisis, G-20 meetings were elevated to the heads-of-government level in November.

“Suddenly, we’re in a better position to have this kind of cooperation and economic coordination than we were before,” Strauss-Kahn said in the Sept. 21 interview. The G-20 talks are a chance to “fix the way we work together governing globalization, and it may work.”

Geithner’s Goals

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said at a press conference yesterday that G-20 leaders will “take stock of where we are in putting the world on a path to stronger, more sustainable, more balanced growth.” The goals include a stronger financial system that’s better able to absorb shocks, he said.

“We’re now seeing the first signs of growth” and “the financial markets have improved considerably,” Geithner said. “We want to make sure we build on the progress that we’ve achieved.”

U.K. Prime Minister Gordon Brown echoed Geithner’s sentiment, telling reporters in London on Sept. 21 that “what we want to do is safeguard a recovery from a recession” and that “the stimulus that we have still got to give the world economy is greater than the stimulus we have already had.”

U.S. Task

Strauss-Kahn said the U.S. can do its part by boosting the country’s savings rate and reducing its budget deficit, and China can contribute by fostering domestic demand, which would have the effect of revaluing its currency, the yuan.

China may be more willing to cooperate when it gets a bigger role at the IMF, which leaders are expected to announce by calling for a shift in voting rights that would favor emerging markets, he said.

“The Chinese know they’re becoming a big player, they want to be considered a big player, and if they’re considered a big player they will behave as a big player,” Strauss-Kahn said.

The Washington-based IMF, which has rescued economies from Pakistan to Hungary in the past year, is advising officials around the world not to withdraw economic stimulus programs too soon as they chart a path to lasting growth.

While the global economy is susceptible to a “double-dip” recession, Strauss-Kahn said that isn’t the “most probable” scenario.

‘Lot to Do’

Banks still have “a lot to do” to clean balance sheets, said Strauss-Kahn, 60, who became head of the IMF in November 2007 after a career in French politics, including a stint as finance minister from 1997 to 1999.

Banks may need to cut their size or increase their capital reserves in response to regulatory changes being considered by G-20, French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde said.

“The absolute minimum demand is that we don’t go back to the old rules, that we change the organization of banks,” she said yesterday on France Inter radio. “Maybe after that, banks will reduce their size, increase their capital or inevitably change their compensation structures. On these questions we will be intransigent.”

The IMF has a role to play in the global effort to narrow imbalances, Strauss-Kahn said, acknowledging that attempts in 2006 and 2007 at agreements between major economies yielded few results.

Follow-Up

Strauss-Kahn said it makes sense for leaders to have “a kind of machinery which provides policy notes and forecasts, and which follows up on decisions that have been taken at the big meetings.”

Strauss-Kahn said leaders would also give a “political guideline” on how much more power to give “underrepresented countries” at the lender, most of which are emerging economies. The main beneficiary of a shift in the IMF’s governance would be China, he said.

Talks before the summit in Pittsburgh are focusing on a 5 percent shift of so-called IMF quotas from countries with disproportionate influence, two officials from G-20 nations said last week. Quotas determine members’ voting rights, financial commitments and access to IMF loans.

China has overtaken Germany to become the world’s third- largest economy with annual gross domestic product of about $3.9 trillion, according to Bloomberg data. China currently has a 3.7 percent voting share on IMF executive board decisions, compared with 3.2 percent for Saudi Arabia, whose economy is about one- eighth the size of China’s.

Quota Shift

Brazil, Russia, India and China, the so-called BRIC countries, this month proposed a 7 percent shift in IMF quotas to emerging markets and developing countries, “to correspond roughly to their share in world” gross domestic product. That came after they agreed to contribute to a tripling of IMF coffers that G-20 leaders announced in April, a move richer nations linked to emerging countries’ demand for more clout.

China earlier this month signed an agreement to buy as much as $50 billion in IMF notes, and the other three BRIC countries have pledged to contribute about $10 billion each, a move Strauss-Kahn said is “done” even if it hasn’t yet been formally approved.

“Imbalances and governance are very much interlinked,” he said. To resolve the issue, “you also need the countries accepting that they don’t need such a big amount of reserves, which means they can find the reserves somewhere else, which in turn means they are confident in the global institutions like the IMF.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Sandrine Rastello in Washington at srastello@bloomberg.net; To contact the reporters on this story: Timothy R. Homan in Washington at thoman1@bloomberg.net.




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French Manufacturing Confidence Climbs in September

By Mark Deen

Sept. 23 (Bloomberg) -- French manufacturing confidence jumped to the highest in almost a year as recovery from the worst recession in half a century buoyed exports and depleted inventories.

The index of sentiment among factory executives rose to 85 in September from 82 in August, Paris-based statistics office Insee said today. Economists had expected that the index would climb to 81 this month, according to the median of 16 forecasts in a Bloomberg News survey.

The improvement reflects demand from retailers who slashed inventories as the recession hit its trough early this year. Even so, with unemployment rising, consumer demand will act as a brake on growth in the months ahead. Household spending fell 1 percent in August and 1.2 percent in July, Insee said today.

“We had a violent recession and this is the correction,” said Dominique Barbet, an economist at BNP Paribas in Paris. “The short-term outlook is good, though the medium-term is more worrying because consumers are cutting back. Growth potential in 2010 will be limited.”

Exports increased 9 percent in July from the previous month, according to the Finance Ministry. The same month, the number of unemployed actively looking for a job increased to 2.54 million, matching the 28-month high set in May.

Order Pickup

A measure of inventories held by manufacturers fell to zero this month from 5 in July and 12 in June, Insee said today. The reading for orders from abroad is minus 56, compared with minus 66 two months ago.

“More and more industrial executives are saying there is a pickup in activity,” Insee said. “Order books, from at home and abroad, are filling up, though they’re far from full.”

The improved French outlook fits with gains across Europe. A composite index of sentiment in the manufacturing and service industries across the euro region rose to 50.8 this month from 50.4 in August, Markit Economics said today.

Barbet said he expects French consumer spending to recover this month, though it will remain volatile. “Summer vacation is the easiest time to cut back so we’ll see a rebound,” he said. “Beyond that the perspective isn’t very encouraging.”

To boost spending, the main motor for economic growth, the government has pledged almost 4 billion euros ($5.9 billion) in measures including vocational training, tax breaks for low- income families and benefits for jobseekers and the disabled. The minimum wage was raised by 1.3 percent on July 1.

Finance Minister Christine Lagarde said yesterday that the government will maintain measures to bolster the economy until unemployment begins to recede. Lagarde travels to Pittsburgh today where she will join French President Nicolas Sarkozy and other world leaders for a Group of 20 summit on the economy and financial regulation.

“I would use the image of someone who is on crutches and is getting his mobility back,” she said, referring to the state of the economy. “You have to make sure the patient is able to walk again before taking the crutches away.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Mark Deen in Paris at markdeen@bloomberg.net;





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Obama Must Win Over Europeans on Bank Pay Limits at G-20 Summit

By Catherine Dodge and Hans Nichols

Sept. 23 (Bloomberg) -- President Barack Obama will seek to prove his leadership abilities as host of his first world summit by persuading European leaders who want caps on bankers’ bonuses to accept something short of specific limits on what an executive can earn.

At the Group of 20 meeting in Pittsburgh that begins tomorrow, Obama also will seek a consensus on setting higher capital requirements for lenders and forging a common approach to combating global warming.

Meeting these challenges will be a test of whether Obama can leverage his global appeal to influence other world leaders, who will arrive at the summit with their own ideas on how to avert another global financial meltdown and lay the groundwork for a sustained recovery.

“Abroad, Obama remains a rock star, but doubts are beginning to emerge about his ability to turn popularity into policy,” said Charles Kupchan, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations in Washington.

The appeal of the leader of the world’s biggest economy doesn’t mean other governments “necessarily agree with the U.S. on how to fix the international financial architecture,” Kupchan said.

Resurgent Image

A survey by the Pew Research Center’s Global Attitudes Project released in July found that confidence in Obama on world affairs was behind a resurgent U.S. image abroad.

For example, 91 percent of the French expressed confidence in Obama on world affairs, up from 13 percent in 2008 under President George W. Bush. In Germany, 93 percent said they were confident with Obama, compared with 14 percent for Bush. In China, Obama is approved by 62 percent, up from 30 percent under Bush.

European countries are becoming increasingly impatient at the pace of action on climate change and financial regulation in the U.S. Congress and by the Obama administration, said Heather Conley, who specializes in European affairs at the Washington- based Center for Strategic and International Studies.

In the five months since the last G-20 summit in London, “there is a growing disquiet in Europe that the Obama administration is unable to take action on many of these fronts, and certainly, on two issues that the Europeans are most significantly seized with: climate change and really seriously restructuring the global financial regulatory system,” she said in a briefing with reporters ahead of the summit.

Reining in Risk-Taking

In addition to discussing bank bonus limits and capital requirements, Obama and other leaders will seek accord on reining in what they call excessive risk-taking by financial firms and narrowing global imbalances in trade and savings to ensure against a repeat of the worst crisis since the Great Depression. Another priority is making sure the economic recovery is followed by growth in jobs.

Michael Froman, the White House liaison to the G-20, said in a Sept. 16 briefing with reporters the U.S. expects “progress, including commitments to particular deadlines for dealing with some of the unfinished business of the regulatory agenda.”

One area of potential disagreement among the G-20 nations, which account for 85 percent of the world economy, centers on compensation for bankers, though leaders are moving toward a compromise.

Avoiding Limits?

Pay caps, once pushed by French President Nicolas Sarkozy, were excluded from recommendations made by finance officials this month. European leaders now may be willing to endorse linking bonuses to a bank’s capital level, such as not limiting bonuses if certain capital requirements are met, moving closer to a U.S. position that avoids specific limits.

Froman also said the U.S. would emphasize “the need to remain vigilant to avoid premature withdrawal of stimulus.”

Igor Shuvalov, Russia’s first deputy prime minister, said leaders should be coordinating on how to wind down stimulus spending.

“The worst time is behind,” he said in a Sept. 21 interview. “We are thinking about a time when we can develop a new model of global economy.”

Since the leaders’ last gathering in April in London, markets are recovering and nations’ economies are showing signs of emerging from recession. The Standard and Poor’s 500 Index is up 32 percent from early April.

The International Monetary Fund expects G-20 countries to grow 3.2 percent next year after contracting 1.1 percent in 2009, according to estimates circulating among the G-20 ahead of the IMF’s annual meeting next month.

Climate Change

On climate change, Obama will press his counterparts to eliminate subsidies for fossil fuels and electricity, Froman said.

At the United Nations yesterday, Obama said efforts to reach an international agreement on climate change will face “doubts and difficulties” in a world economy struggling to come out of recession.

“There should be no illusions that the hardest part of our journey is in front of us,” Obama said.

That may be true for Obama as well. He faces increased pressure because he is hosting the summit, said Steven Schrage, an international business expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.

“He’s got an enormous reservoir of goodwill, but he’s got to show ability to manage and lead,” Schrage said. “We’ve seen a growing impatience or perception that for all the pomp and circumstance of these summits, they are issuing the same statements about the urgent need to act.”

In the U.S., issues such as financial regulation and climate change have faded to the background as Congress and Obama work to pass legislation overhauling the health-care system.

Obama’s success on health care, nonetheless, is also something world leaders will be watching, Kupchan said.

“His ability to lead at home is an indicator of his leadership abroad,” he said.

To contact the reporters on this story: Catherine Dodge in Washington at cdodge1@bloomberg.net; Hans Nichols in Washington at Hnichols2@bloomberg.net





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King, Miles Opt for Consensus in Unanimous BOE Vote

By Jennifer Ryan

Sept. 23 (Bloomberg) -- Bank of England Governor Mervyn King agreed this month to support policy makers’ August decision for 175 billion pounds ($286 billion) of asset purchases, suspending his drive to buy even more.

King and David Miles switched sides and joined a unanimous vote for no change in the plan, arguing that consensus was better for now even though a higher amount may be warranted. All nine members of the Monetary Policy Committee also opted to keep the interest rate at 0.5 percent, minutes of the Sept. 10 decision released by the central bank today in London showed.

King and Miles had sought as much as 200 billion pounds at the August decision. The Confederation of British Industry today raised its forecast for economic growth in the third quarter and predicted the central bank may cap its program after buying the current allocation with newly printed money.

“We probably have seen the worst of the recession,” said Colin Ellis, an economist at Daiwa Securities SMBC in London and a former Bank of England official. “A further extension of asset purchases could be on the cards, but it’s a difficult balancing act for the bank.”

The pound rose as much as 0.6 percent against the dollar after the report to $1.6438. Against the euro, the U.K. currency climbed by the same amount to trade at 90.03 pence as of 10:01 a.m. in London.

“For those members who had preferred a larger stimulus at the August meeting, a larger asset-purchase program could still be justified,” the minutes said. “But in the absence of significant news about the medium term, the case for adjusting the program now was outweighed by the benefits of following through with the program” announced in August.

Risks to Growth

Policy makers noted that prices of assets including housing and equities had risen, and the short-term risks to economic growth had lessened.

“There was a possibility that the recovery in asset prices and confidence could mark the start of a virtuous upward spiral for the economy,” the minutes said. “But the lesson from previous financial crises was that they were not resolved quickly, and that there could be false dawns.”

The slump in house prices is abating, and the British Bankers’ Association said today that mortgage approvals held close to the highest in a year in August. Property 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.

‘Less Pessimism’

Timothy Besley, who left the committee at the end of August, voted with the minority in August for an expansion of the purchase plan. Adam Posen replaced him at this month’s decision.

“The tone appears to be one of slightly less pessimism than in previous months,” said Peter Dixon, an economist at Commerzbank AG in London. “When we get to November there may be no need to do any more.”

The central bank has bought almost 150 billion pounds in assets so far and plans to complete the current program by November.

The Bank of England may stop buying bonds then as the U.K. shakes off the recession, the Confederation of British Industry said today. Gross domestic product will rise 0.3 percent in the third quarter, the biggest U.K. business lobby said, reversing a June prediction for a drop of the same size.

“Even if GDP growth had turned positive in Q3, it was unlikely to have reached the point where the level of spare capacity was shrinking,” the minutes said. At the same time, “inflation would probably be higher in the short-term than the committee had thought a month ago, though it was still likely to be extremely volatile,” the minutes said.

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





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European Manufacturing, Services Industries Expand

By Simone Meier

Sept. 23 (Bloomberg) -- Europe’s manufacturing and service industries expanded for a second month in September, suggesting the euro-region economy is gathering strength.

A composite index of both industries in the 16-nation economy rose to 50.8 from 50.4 in August, Markit Economics said today. A reading above 50 indicates expansion and the gauge had remained below that level for 14 months before topping it in August. Economists had projected the index, which is based on a survey of purchasing managers, would rise to 51.3 in September, according to the median of 14 forecasts in a Bloomberg survey.

The euro-area economy is showing signs of emerging from its worst recession in more than six decades after governments stepped up stimulus measures and the European Central Bank injected billions of euros into markets. While European economic confidence rose to a 10-month high in August, ECB council member Guy Quaden said on Sept. 15 that rising unemployment is a reason to remain “prudent” about the economic outlook.

“We’re above 50 and that’s fantastic,” said Karsten Junius, a senior economist at Dekabank in Frankfurt. “The situation is stabilizing and the economy is recovering at a faster and stronger pace than previously expected. We’ll see a strong rebound in the third quarter.”

The world economy is emerging from its deepest slump since the 1930s following more than $2 trillion of infrastructure projects, tax breaks and government spending. The ECB earlier this month kept its benchmark interest rate at a record low of 1 percent and Governing Council members have since signaled they are in no rush to withdraw stimulus measures anytime soon.

Covered Bonds

The Frankfurt-based central bank has provided banks with unlimited cash over 12 months and purchased covered bonds to encourage lending. ECB Executive Board member Juergen Stark said on Sept. 15 that the bank is “well prepared to phase out” measures when appropriate.

The euro-area economy may expand 0.2 percent in the current quarter and 0.1 percent in the three months through December, the European Commission said on Sept. 14. In the second quarter, the economy contracted just 0.1 percent as Germany and France, the region’s two largest economies, returned to growth.

The euro-area services index rose to 50.6 in September from 49.9 in the previous month, today’s report showed. That was the first time in 16 months that the index has shown expansion in services. While a gauge of manufacturing remained below 50, indicating contraction, it increased to 49 from 48.2, the highest since June 2008.

Industrial Orders

Adding to signs of recovery, European industrial orders increased for a second straight month in July, the European Union’s statistics office in Luxembourg said today. Orders rose 2.6 percent from June, when they increased 4 percent.

Munich-based Bayerische Motoren Werke AG, the world’s largest maker of luxury cars, projects fourth-quarter deliveries will rise, sales chief Ian Robertson said on Sept. 16. Fiat SpA Chairman Luca Cordero de Montezemolo said earlier this month that the “worst is over” for the premium-car market.

European stocks advanced for a second day amid speculation the Group of 20 nations will maintain measures to support the economy even as signs grow that the recovery is accelerating. The Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index was 0.5 percent higher at 245.50 at 10:35 a.m. in London.

“I’m reasonably optimistic” about the economic outlook, the ECB’s Quaden said earlier this month. “Three reasons to stay prudent” are “the financial sector hasn’t fully stabilized yet in many countries, a very low capacity- utilization rate weighing down on investment and increasing unemployment weighing down on consumption.”

Retail Sales

Europe’s jobless rate rose to 9.5 percent in July, the highest since 1999, as some of the region’s largest companies including Germany’s Siemens AG were forced to eliminate jobs. European retail sales dropped for a 15th month in August, the Bloomberg purchasing managers index showed last month.

Paris-based Club Mediterranee SA, Europe’s largest resort company, said on Sept. 11 that third-quarter sales declined 13 percent. Unilever NV, the world’s second-biggest consumer-goods company, said earlier this month that it will close a production facility in the Czech Republic, resulting in 634 job losses.

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





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Gilts Drop, Pound Gains as BOE Unanimous on Holding Debt Plan

By Anna Rascouet

Sept. 23 (Bloomberg) -- U.K. government bonds fell and the pound rose after the Bank of England’s minutes of its Sept. 10 meeting showed policy makers were unanimous in their decision to keep the asset-buying plan at 175 billion pounds ($287 billion).

The difference in yield, or spread, between two- and 10- year gilts was near the widest since at least 1992 after no mention was made of cutting the rate paid to financial institutions for deposits held at the central bank. Investors sought the safety of shorter-dated securities on speculation policy makers will keep the benchmark interest rate low.

“There was nothing in the minutes to alter the prevailing mindset,” said Charles Diebel, head of European rate strategy at Nomura International Plc in London. “The spread is on a consistent steepening trend and I expect it to continue until we get some clarification on the reserve-rate story.”

The yield on the 2-year note rose 3 basis points to 0.88 percent as of 1:23 p.m. in London. The 4.25 percent security due March 2011 fell 0.05, or 50 pence per 1,000-pound ($1,644) face amount, to 104.85. The 10-year gilt yield gained 2 basis points to 3.78 percent. The spread between the securities was at 290 basis points, within 2 basis points of the most since at least January 1992, when Bloomberg began compiling the data.

The pound strengthened to less than 90 pence per euro for the first time since Sept. 18, appreciating as much as 0.6 percent to 89.85 pence. It advanced 0.4 percent against the dollar to $1.6423.

Switching Sides

Bank of England Governor Mervyn King and David Miles switched sides and joined the unanimous vote for no change in the debt-buying plan, arguing that consensus was better for now even though a higher amount may be warranted. All nine members of the Monetary Policy Committee opted to keep the interest rate at 0.5 percent, the minutes released today in London showed.

The Bank of England agreed on Aug. 6 to expand by 50 billion pounds its program of asset purchases designed to lower borrowing costs and pull the economy out of its deepest recession since World War II.

The government, which is planning to raise 220 billion pounds this fiscal year, may boost sales to 237 billion pounds in the year ending March 2011, according to Citigroup Inc.

The country hired HSBC Holdings Plc, Deutsche Bank AG, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and UBS AG to manage a sale this week of inflation-protected bonds maturing in 2050, according to the Debt Management Office. The banks will start selling the new 0.5 percent linker tomorrow, the debt agency said yesterday.

The FTSE 100 Index of U.K. shares climbed 0.6 percent as Aviva Plc and Prudential Plc gained after Cazenove recommended shares of life insurers.

Gilts lost investors 1.1 percent this month, compared with a 0.5 percent decline for German bonds, according to Merrill Lynch & Co. indexes. Treasuries were little changed, Merrill indexes show.

To contact the reporter on this story: Anna Rascouet in London at arascouet@bloomberg.net.





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U.S. Debt Crisis May Cause ‘Fall of Rome’ Scenario, Duncan Says

By Patrick Rial

Sept. 23 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. budget deficits will continue to pile up in the next decade, eventually reaching an unsustainable level that may result in an economic collapse, according to Richard Duncan, author of “The Dollar Crisis.”

The U.S. has little chance of resolving its deteriorating financial position because the manufacturing industry continues to shrink, leaving the nation with few goods to export, said Duncan, now at Singapore-based Blackhorse Asset Management.

In “The Dollar Crisis,” first published in 2003, Duncan argued that persistent current account deficits by the U.S. were creating an unsustainable boom in global credit that was destined to break down, resulting in a worldwide recession.

“The bad news is at the end of a 10-year period we’re still not going to have fixed the problem,” Duncan said in an interview in Hong Kong yesterday. “Eventually it will lead to high rates of inflation well down the line and really destabilize things to the point where there may be irreparable damage. A kind of ‘Fall of Rome’ scenario.”

The federal budget deficit will total $1.6 trillion this year, while combined shortfalls are forecast to total $9.05 trillion in the next 10 years, according to projections from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office.

The U.S. has run a current account deficit every year since 1982 except one, with a peak of $788 billion in 2006. Foreign purchases of U.S. debt has propped up the dollar and allowed a credit-fueled spending boom by the nation’s consumers, according to Duncan.

Falling Wages

U.S. workers are now likely to face declining wages and that may create a political backlash against free-trade policies, he said. The nation’s jobless rate jumped to a 26-year high of 9.7 percent in August, while wages logged a 2.6 percent increase from the previous year.

“As unemployment remains above 10 percent well into the foreseeable future, it won’t be long before Americans start voting for protectionism,” Duncan said. “That’s going to be bad because protectionism will mean world trade will diminish and will overall reduce global prosperity.”

Once the U.S. debt burden becomes too large and the government can no longer sell debt to the public the Federal Reserve will likely step in and monetize it, resulting in high levels of inflation, he said.

Economic Crisis

The MSCI World Index plunged by a record 42 percent last year as the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. triggered a credit crunch that forced financial institutions to post more than $1.6 trillion in losses and writedowns.

As an analyst, Duncan began warning of imbalances in Thailand’s economy in 1993 that eventually led to the devaluation of the baht in 1997 and a regional economic crisis. The nation’s SET Index dropped as much as 88 percent from its 1994 peak to a low in 1998.

Prior to joining Blackhorse, Duncan was the head of investment strategy at ABN Amro Asset Management. He has also held positions at James Capel, Indosuez W.I. Carr and Salomon Brothers.

To contact the reporter for this story: Patrick Rial in Hong Kong at prial@bloomberg.net.





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Fed May Signal Economic Recovery Has Begun, Affirm Low Rates

By Steve Matthews and Vivien Lou Chen

Sept. 23 (Bloomberg) -- Federal Reserve officials may signal that the U.S. economy has started to recover while maintaining their pledge to keep the benchmark interest rate near a record low for an “extended period.”

Policy makers meet as analysts project 2.9 percent growth in the quarter ending this month, compared with a 1 percent estimate in July. Officials will probably debate their purchases of $1.45 trillion in housing debt, including whether to extend the emergency program into 2010, analysts said.

Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and his colleagues may seek to contain any investor expectations that they will begin raising interest rates as soon as this year by citing risks to the economic recovery. Today’s Fed statement may retain references from last month to rising unemployment and “tight” credit as constraints on consumer spending.

“The Fed has to strike a delicate balance by saying that while economic prospects have brightened, the Fed will continue to provide a helping hand to ensure a bottom to markets and a durable recovery,” said Wan-Chong Kung, who helps oversee $85 billion in investments at U.S. Bancorp’s FAF Advisors in Minneapolis.

The Federal Open Market Committee is scheduled to issue its statement at around 2:15 p.m. after the end of its two-day meeting.

Signs of a recovery include a stabilization in the housing industry and gains in exports, retail sales and industrial production, said Mark Gertler, a professor of economics at New York University.

‘Very Early Stage’

“The bottom is no longer falling out, but the recovery is still at a very early stage,” said Gertler, who worked with research on the Great Depression with Bernanke before he became Fed chairman. “There is no need to expand the balance sheet now, but it is a bit too early to begin shrinking it.”

The Fed has kept the benchmark lending rate at a range from zero to 0.25 percent since December and has adopted asset purchases as its main policy tool. In its August statement, the FOMC said “exceptionally low” rates are likely warranted for “an extended period.”

Central bank officials may also discuss changing the size and duration of their plan to buy as much as $1.25 trillion of mortgage-backed securities and $200 billion of agency debt by the end of this year, said former Fed governor Laurence Meyer, now vice chairman of St. Louis-based Macroeconomic Advisers LLC.

Three district bank presidents -- Jeffrey Lacker of Richmond, James Bullard of St. Louis and Dennis Lockhart of Atlanta -- raised the possibility that the Fed may not spend all the money authorized for the mortgage-backed debt. New York Fed President William Dudley, by contrast, stressed an exit would be “premature,” citing high unemployment and weak growth.

Repurchase Agreements

Fed officials have started talks with bond dealers to use so-called reverse repurchase agreements to drain some of the cash the central bank has pumped into the economy, according to people with knowledge of the discussions. There’s no sense that policy makers intend to withdraw funds anytime soon, said the people, who decline to be identified.

Bernanke said last week the worst U.S. contraction since the 1930s has probably ended, while warning that unemployment will be “slow to come down.”

“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 Sept. 15 following a speech in Washington.

Case for an Increase

A return to growth may bolster the case for an increase in the Fed’s target rate, Stanford University economist John Taylor said in a Sept. 11 Bloomberg Radio interview.

The Fed may need to raise the rate in the first half of 2010 should inflation increase, said Taylor, who devised a guideline for setting the target interest rate based on growth and inflation.

Most FOMC officials are worried expectations for a higher federal funds rate will push up yields on 10-year Treasury notes, increasing mortgage costs, said Michael Feroli, an economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in New York and a former member of the Fed’s research staff.

“Probably two thirds of the committee is concerned that being too quick to embrace the stronger growth story could lead the market to price in sooner rate hikes and tighter financial conditions than they would like,” he said.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 3.45 percent yesterday from 3.72 percent on Aug. 12, the day of the last FOMC announcement.

‘Additional Comfort’

That “provides the committee with additional comfort that inflation expectations will remain well anchored,” Meyer said.

The decline in bond yields has been partly driven by comments by Bernanke and other policy makers during the past month indicating the economy, while improving, remains weak. San Francisco Fed President Janet Yellen predicted a “tepid” recovery, while Lockhart cited a “lackluster outlook.”

Unemployment is forecast to reach 9.8 to 10.1 in the fourth quarter, according to policy makers’ forecasts in June. The jobless rate rose last month to 9.7 percent, the highest since 1983.

“Clearly, they need to remain more than humble when declaring victory in an economy that still faces headwinds,” said Diane Swonk, chief economist at Mesirow Financial Inc. in Chicago. Chief among the risks is “ongoing credit tightness, most notably in the commercial real-estate sector,” she said.

Property Values

Falling property values have impeded efforts by owners of commercial real estate to refinance $165 billion in mortgages this year. Also, total bank credit to the economy grew just 2 percent in August compared with the same month last year, according to Fed data.

The central bank is likely to repeat its view that inflation will remain “subdued for some time” because of slack in the economy, analysts said. Consumer prices fell 1.5 percent in the year ended in August.

“The Fed must keep an eye glued to whether inflation expectations have become unanchored,” said former Fed Governor Lyle Gramley. “As long as the dramatic moderation in wages persists, you don’t have to worry about inflation,” said Gramley, senior adviser to New York-based Soleil Securities.

To contact the reporters on this story: Steve Matthews in Atlanta at smatthews@bloomberg.net; Vivien Lou Chen in San Francisco at vchen1@bloomberg.net





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Canadian Dollar Little Changed as Central Bank Cites Risks

By Matt Townsend

Sept. 23 (Bloomberg) -- Canada’s dollar was little changed after Bank of Canada Deputy Governor David Longworth said the country’s currency remains a risk to an economic recovery.

The currency fluctuated between gains and losses after the biggest advance against its U.S. counterpart in more than two weeks yesterday, as Longworth echoed concern about the dollar’s strength made last month by Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney and Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty.

The loonie traded at to C$1.0696 per U.S. dollar at 8:27 a.m. in Toronto, from C$1.0691 yesterday, when it rallied as much as 1.2 percent, the biggest intraday gain since Sept. 7. One Canadian dollar purchases 93.48 U.S. cents.

“Persistent strength in the Canadian dollar remains a risk to growth,” Longworth said in text prepared for a speech he’s giving today in Summerside, Prince Edward Island.

The Canadian dollar has strengthened 14 percent this year, making the country’s goods less competitive. Canada recorded its first quarterly deficit in traded goods since 1976 between April and June, a gap of C$1.71 billion compared with a C$16.2 billion surplus in the year-earlier period, according to Statistics Canada.

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





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Dollar Trades at One-Year Low Versus Euro on Economy Before Fed

By Anchalee Worrachate and Ron Harui

Sept. 23 (Bloomberg) -- The dollar traded within a cent of a one-year low against the euro on speculation the global economic recovery is gathering strength, encouraging investors to buy higher-yielding assets.

The U.S. currency also weakened versus the pound and South Korean won as economists forecast the Federal Reserve will signal today it intends to keep holding down borrowing costs. New Zealand’s dollar was the biggest gainer versus the greenback among major currencies as the nation’s economy unexpectedly grew for the first time in six quarters.

“The dollar is likely to remain weak in the near term,” said Lee Hardman, a currency strategist at Bank of Tokyo- Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. in London. “What’s driving the dollar lower is the exceptionally loose liquidity conditions, and this encourages its use as a funding currency.”

The dollar traded at $1.4778 per euro at 7:09 a.m. in New York, from $1.4790 yesterday, after earlier declining to $1.4842, the weakest level since Sept. 22, 2008. The U.S. currency rose 0.3 percent to 91.37 yen, from 91.10. The yen weakened 0.2 percent to 135.01 per euro, from 134.76.

The pound advanced 0.5 percent to $1.6434 and 0.6 percent to 89.91 pence per euro as minutes of the Bank of England’s meeting showed Governor Mervyn King agreed this month to follow through with policy makers’ August decision for 175 billion pounds ($286 billion) of asset purchases, suspending his drive to buy more.

Switching Sides

King and David Miles switched sides and joined a unanimous vote for no change in the plan, arguing that a higher amount would be justified yet consensus was desirable for now. All nine members of the Monetary Policy Committee also opted to keep the main rate at 0.5 percent, minutes of the Sept. 10 decision released by the central bank today in London showed.

“It’s obviously a positive result for sterling,” said Geoffrey Yu, a currency strategist at UBS AG in London. “King has backed down a bit now, and they have a better outlook for the economy, which is better for the pound. It raises a question over whether they will still extend the asset purchase program.”

New Zealand’s dollar, known as the kiwi, appreciated as high as 73.12 U.S. cents, the strongest since August 2008, before trading up 1 percent at 72.48 cents. Statistics New Zealand said gross domestic product grew 0.1 percent in the three months to June 30, following a 0.8 percent drop in the first quarter. A Bloomberg News survey of economists forecast a 0.2 percent contraction.

‘Leading the Charge’

“The market was looking for direction, and the kiwis gave it,” said Tony Bieber, a foreign-exchange trader at Suncorp- Metway Ltd. in Brisbane. “The kiwis are leading the charge against the U.S. dollar.”

Traders are betting the Reserve Bank of New Zealand will raise its 2.5 percent benchmark interest rate by 1.53 percentage points over the next 12 months, compared with a prediction for 1.36 percentage points yesterday, according to a Credit Suisse Group AG index based on overnight swaps.

The Federal Open Market Committee will probably maintain its assessment that “tight” bank credit is impeding growth, said economists including former Fed Governor Lyle Gramley. Lending contracted for five straight weeks through Sept. 9, a drop that in part reflected Fed orders to banks to raise more capital and toughen lending standards, analysts said.

All 93 economists surveyed by Bloomberg said the Fed will keep its target lending rate at zero to 0.25 percent at its two- day meeting ending today. Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and his colleagues may discuss how to wind down purchases of mortgage- backed securities, analysts said.

‘Risks’ With Fed

“You’ve obviously got some risks with the Fed, but unless they come out and surprise with being hawkish, which I don’t think they will, it’s another reason dollar bears will feel comfortable with their position,” said Phil Burke, chief foreign-exchange dealer at JPMorgan Chase Bank in Sydney.

Futures contracts on the Chicago Board of Trade show a 41 percent chance the Fed will keep rates unchanged through March, up from a 27 percent chance a month ago.

The Dollar Index, which the ICE uses to track the dollar against the currencies of six major U.S. trading partners, dropped to as low as 75.892, the weakest level since Sept. 22, 2008, before being little changed at 76.177.

The yen gained for a second day against the dollar on speculation world leaders attending a Group of 20 meeting this week will signal currencies other than the dollar need to strengthen to help rebalance global economic growth.

‘Sustained Growth’

Policy makers need to promote a “sustained growth track and facilitate global adjustment, as well as structural reform, which will need to be undertaken in both deficit and surplus countries,” Dimitri Soudas, a spokesman for Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, told reporters Sept. 21 in Ottawa. The G-20 meeting starts tomorrow in Pittsburgh.

“The dollar remains under selling pressure as the G-20 summit moves toward reforming the international monetary system,” Philip Wee, a senior currency economist in Singapore at DBS Group Holdings Ltd., wrote in a research note sent to clients today.

Asian currencies gained, paced by the won and the Philippine peso, as signs the global recovery is gaining traction spurred investors to buy more emerging-market assets. The won rose 0.8 percent to 1,194.45 per dollar.

To contact the reporters on this story: Anchalee Worrachate in London at aworrachate@bloomberg.net; Ron Harui in Singapore at rharui@bloomberg.net





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Corn Declines as Slide in Crude Oil Reduces Appeal of Biofuels

By Luzi Ann Javier

Sept. 23 (Bloomberg) -- Corn dropped as a decline in crude oil reduced the appeal of the grain, which can be processed into ethanol to stretch gasoline supplies, and on expectations that the U.S. will produce a bumper harvest.

Futures slid 0.8 percent after crude oil for November delivery dropped as much as 0.9 percent in New York. Crude fell after the American Petroleum Institute reported yesterday that U.S. inventories rose 276,000 barrels to 337.2 million barrels last week.

Corn futures were “influenced by crude oil prices,” Peter McGuire, managing director at CWA Global Markets Pty. Ltd. in Sydney, said today. The U.S. “corn crop is an outstanding crop. You will see further sell-off in those markets,” he said.

Corn for December delivery fell to $3.2325 a bushel in after-hours electronic trading on the Chicago Board of Trade at 2:04 p.m. Singapore time, after rallying 3.1 percent yesterday.

Corn yields in the U.S., the largest grower and exporter, are forecast to rise to a record 161.9 bushels an acre in the marketing year that began Sept. 1 as abundant soil moisture and cool temperatures during the past two months helped advance crop development, the Department of Agriculture said Sept. 11. That will push output to 12.954 billion bushels, the second-largest crop on record, the USDA said.

Still, speculation that China may begin importing corn to cool domestic prices may support U.S. futures, McGuire said.

Import costs for U.S. corn are about 9 percent lower than domestic prices in Shanghai and Guangzhou, two of the largest port cities in southern China, Na Liu, an analyst at Scotia Capital Ltd., wrote in a report dated Sept. 21.

‘Big Issue’

“That’s probably the big issue at the moment. I think they’ll have to import” corn, McGuire said, referring to China.

China’s 2009 corn output may fall 9.3 percent from a year ago, Jiang Jianhua, vice chairman of Jilin Grain, said Sept. 17. That compares with a 12 percent decline forecast by Shanghai JC on Sept. 4. The state-backed National Grain and Oils Information Center projected on Sept. 9 an output of 165.5 million tons, unchanged from 2008.

Soybeans for November delivery fell 0.4 percent to $9.1825 a bushel at 2:12 p.m. Singapore time, after rising as much as 0.4 percent earlier.

Soybean production in India, the world’s fifth-largest grower, may increase 12 percent next year, after farmers planted more acres with the oilseed, Atul Chaturvedi, president at Adani Enterprises Ltd., the nation’s biggest trader of farm goods, said in an interview yesterday.

Wheat for December delivery slipped as much as 0.6 percent to $4.5375 a bushel before trading at $4.54.

To contact the reporter on this story: Luzi Ann Javier in Singapore at ljavier@bloomberg.net





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Copper Falls in London on Inventories, European Industry Index

By Anna Stablum

Sept. 23 (Bloomberg) -- Copper fell in London after two days of gains as stockpiles returned to growth and an index of European manufacturing and service industries rose less than estimated by economists.

A composite index of manufacturing and services in Europe climbed to 50.8 from 50.4 in August, Markit Economics said. Economists expected a gain to 51.3, according to a Bloomberg News survey. Copper stockpiles in warehouses monitored by the London Metal Exchange rose 175 metric tons, a daily report showed. They gained for 17 sessions before slipping yesterday.

“The euro-zone manufacturing PMI disappointed the market,” David Thurtell, an analyst at Citigroup Inc. in London, said by phone.

Copper for three-month delivery fell $70, or 1.1 percent, to $6,200 a ton on the LME at 10:31 a.m. local time. Futures for December delivery shed 1.4 percent to $2.8245 a pound on the New York Mercantile Exchange’s Comex division.

Nickel climbed to the highest in almost two weeks, the only gain among the six main industrial metals traded on the LME, as inventories declined.

Stockpiles of copper in LME-monitored warehouses increased to 331,950 tons. They have climbed 11 percent this month after gaining 6.4 percent in August and 5.6 percent in July.

“Rising exchange inventories and slower Chinese imports of refined metal have capped the market in the short term,” Robin Bhar, an analyst at Credit Agricole SA’s Calyon unit in London, said in a report dated yesterday. Record inbound shipments in the first half helped the metal to more than double this year.

‘Dip Buying’

Chinese imports of refined copper dropped to 219,731 tons in August, figures showed yesterday. That was still more than double the year-earlier amount.

Lower prices triggered “good dip buying,” along with a weaker dollar that made metals priced in the currency cheaper for holders of other monies, according to Bhar. The Dollar Index, a six-currency gauge of the greenback’s performance, fell for a second day and has lost 6.5 percent this year.

“The fluctuations of the dollar appear to be a key factor, and expectations of continued weakness are underpinning the copper market,” Bhar said.

Among other LME metals for three-month delivery, nickel advanced $150, or 0.9 percent, to $17,900 a ton. It climbed as much as 2.5 percent to $18,185, the highest since Sept. 10. LME stockpiles fell 54 tons to 117,474 tons, according to the daily figures. They’re down 1.4 percent from this year’s high on Sept. 15.

“Stocks into LME warehouses have completely stopped over the last week,” Citigroup’s Thurtell said.

Nickel Demand

About two-thirds of world production of the metal is used to make stainless steel. Demand for stainless steel “should recover strongly,” according to Thurtell.

Global nickel output fell to 110,300 tons in July from 112,400 tons in June as demand rose to 109,300 tons from 107,700 tons, the International Nickel Study Group said on Sept. 16.

“Producers have done a good job of bringing supply back to demand,” Thurtell said.

Tin slipped $50, or 0.3 percent, to $14,650 a ton. The so- called backwardation, when metal for nearby delivery trades at a premium to the three-month price, rose yesterday to $730 a ton, the highest since June 2004.

“Tin is still among the tightest of the metals, at least as seen by the cash-three month spread and warrant concentration,” Eugen Weinberg, an analyst at Commerzbank AG in Frankfurt, said by phone.

Aluminum lost 0.2 percent to $1,886 a ton, while lead fell 2.2 percent to $2,240 a ton. Zinc shed 1.6 percent to $1,915 a ton.

To contact the reporter on this story: Anna Stablum in London at astablum@bloomberg.net





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