Economic Calendar

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Daily FX Report

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by Varengold Bank | Sep 24 09 08:56 GMT |

Good morning from Hamburg and welcome to our Daily FX Report. We approach the end of the week and have interesting data from the interest rate decision of the Federal Reserve. However, we wish you a successful trading day

Markets review

The JPY rose against all its 16 major counterparts after a Japanese report showed that the national exports fell for the 11th month, which reduces the demand for higher-yielding assets. The EUR recovered from a one year low against the USD and climbed to 1.4717. The USD climbed about 0.5% to a level 1.0736 versus the CAD. The Chairman of the FED Ben S. Bernanke indicated for the first time since August 2008, that the economy is accelerating, even as they recommitted to keep their benchmark interest rate, exceptionally low for an extended period. At the same time, the Federal Reserve will slow its purchases of mortgage securities for seeking to avoid disrupting the house market.

In Europe, the German business confidence rose to a 12-month high in September and indicate that Europe`s largest economy will gather strength after leaving the second largest recession.

The AUD/USD increased near to a 13-month high as the Australian central bank said that the nation's lenders are weathering the global recession, adding signs the financial industry is recovering.

Technical analysis

EUR/JPY

Since the middle of September, the EUR has been trading in a bullish trend against the JPY. Now, it reached the bottom Bollinger Band. Four times before when it touched the bottom Bollinger Band, the EUR recovered and started an upward movement. Also it seems that the MA Oscillator may indicate a bullish trend, but it remains to be seen if the currency pair could cross the resistance at 135.45

CHF/JPY

During the past two weeks, the CHF has been moving in a bullish trend channel against the JPY. The CHF rebounded always when it touched the upward trend channel line or for the last four days the resistance according to its Pivot point. The MACD shows that the CHF could become a bearish trend. It remains to be seen if the currency pair could cross the bottom trend channel line. The next support would be then around 88.53

Pivot Points - Daily FX Support and Resistance Levels

Daily Calendar & Key FX Events

Varengold Bank

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London Session Recap

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by Forex.com | Sep 24 09 10:14 GMT |

Sterling took another dive this morning on the acknowledgment from BoE Governor King that two British banks got within hours of a liquidity shortfall on October 6 2008. Lloyds bank and RBS stocks are both trading lower this morning though the general tone of stocks has been dragged down as the market comes to terms with more remainders that the global economic recovery could be protracted. In tune with the pullback in stocks the JPY is trading higher across the board supported by talk of repatriation ahead of the end of the fiscal half year. In contrast, the AUD and the NZD have continued to climb vs the USD, finding support on reports from the RBA about the health of its banks and on surprisingly good Australian new home sales data (+11.4% m/m). As stocks pare their losses EUR/USD is presently pushing higher, the USD failing to sustain its better overnight tone.

The news that two British banks came within hours of collapse just one year ago is a stark remainder of the depth of the crisis suffered last year. It puts into context the constant warnings of Governor King about the difficulties still facing the UK economy and puts the risks of a 'W'shaped upturn back into focus. Simultaneously, the fact that last night's FOMC statement contained no signal that the Fed is preparing to enact its exit policies also sends the signal that the US economy is not out of the woods. In Germany, the release this morning of the September IFO showed further improvement to 87.0 in September from a revised 86.2 in August. However, the outcome was lower than expected which again raises the question over whether the market is being over-optimistic with respect to the improvement in demand. Yesterday's drop in oil prices is in tune with the same theme. Oil inventories remain unseasonably high suggesting an imbalance between supply and demand. The softness of the Baltic Dry index is another reminder of the lacklustre nature of global economic activity.

Cable continues to push lower presently trading at the day's low of 1.6178. EUR/GBP is trading at the day's high of 0.9130. Also of interest in the UK today is the unusual gathering of leading economists called by the BoE. Officially this meeting marks the 6 mth point after the start of QE. It could impact the Bank's thinking about the impact of QE on the economy and inflation and also impact the timing of exit policies.

Main focus today will be the G-20 summit in Pittsburgh. Some agreement in executive pay, a general dressing down of protectionist measures and a sense that it is too early to withdraw stimulus measures are likely to emerge from the meeting. It is unlikely that any strong mention of FX markets will be made, though some reference to the preference for stable exchange rates may be seen.

The US data calendar will bring initial claims and existing home sales today.

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

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





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Forex Technical Analysis

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by DeltaStock Inc. | Sep 24 09 08:52 GMT |

EUR/USD

Current level-1.4757

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

Still in the consolidation pattern below 1.4842 and there are no signs of bottoming so far, so allow one more dip to 1.4680 support area before renewing the rise for 1.4911. Crucial remains 1.4611.

Resistance Support
intraday intraweek intraday intraweek
1.4842 1.50+ 1.4708 1.4611
1.4911 1.6040 1.4680 1.3746

USD/JPY

Current level - 90.61

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

As expected, the pair tested 91.62 resistance and the overall downtrend is back on track. Intraday bias is negative with resistance at 90.77 and target 90.12

Resistance Support
intraday intraweek intraday intraweek
90.77 93.40 90.12 88.64
91.62 101.45 --- 87.12

GBP/USD

Current level- 1.6280

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

The pair reversed a bit higher, than expected, at 1.6468. We still think, that current sell-off is the second part of the consolidation pattern above 1.6110 daily support and is likely to peak around 1.6546 before breaking below 1.6110, towards 1.5352 weekly support zone. Intraday bias is extremely negative with resistance around 1.6315 and only a break above 1.6386 will signal, that the third part of the corrective wave is underway.

Resistance Support
intraday intraweek intraday intraweek
1.6315 1.6546 1.6212 1.6111
1.6468 1.7440 1.6130 1.5350

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

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





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Strauss-Kahn Says IMF Will Raise Global Economic Forecasts

By Mark Deen

Sept. 24 (Bloomberg) -- The International Monetary Fund will raise its forecasts for the global economy when they are published in coming days, Managing Director Dominique Strauss- Kahn said.

“For a long time the IMF has been predicting a recovery in the first half of 2010,” Strauss-Kahn said today on France’s Europe1 radio. “When we come out with our latest forecast in the next few days, they will be a bit better,” he said, adding that 2009 will also be stronger than previously expected.

The Washington-based lender’s official forecast is currently for a global contraction of 1.4 percent this year, followed by growth of 2.5 percent in 2010. It is scheduled to release a new set of estimates on Oct. 1.

The pickup in the global economy has been helped by government stimulus packages and record-low interest rates. Straus-Kahn said that Group of 20 leaders gathering in Pittsburgh today need to be careful not to withdraw that economic support too quickly.

“We must continue the support for the economy that is already engaged,” he said, likening the coordinated fiscal and monetary effort to putting out a fire. “This is not yet the time for sponges, we’re not completely sure the fire is out. For now, the biggest risk would be to stop too quickly.”

The G-20 leaders need to look for new motors of growth as U.S. consumers collectively shift from being net borrowers to net savers, he said. While China and India will take up some of that slack, they can’t take all of it, he said.

“What happened in the past year has never existed before - - it was international coordination never seen before,” he said. “Everyone was so afraid they wanted to work together. Will the will to work together persist? That’s the question on which everything is staked.”

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





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Japanese Exports Fell 36% in August, 11th Decline

By Jason Clenfield and Kyoko Shimodoi

Sept. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Japan’s exports fell for an 11th month in August as the economic recovery struggled to gain traction.

Shipments abroad dropped 36 percent from a year earlier compared with a 36.5 percent decline in July, the Finance Ministry said today in Tokyo. From a month earlier, exports fell 0.7 percent, the second straight decrease.

Today’s report suggests the boost in overseas demand that helped the economy expand in the second quarter may be moderating as governments exhaust stimulus spending. New Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama meets his counterparts from the Group of 20 nations in Pittsburgh today to discuss how to sustain a recovery from the worst global recession since the 1930s.

“Even with all those global stimulus measures, the recovery in exports has been extremely slow,” said Seiji Shiraishi, chief economist at HSBC Securities Japan Ltd. in Tokyo. “Final demand worldwide remains weak.”

The yen rose to 91.19 per dollar at 10:22 a.m. in Tokyo from 91.38 before the report. The Japanese currency’s 7 percent gain over the past six months has added another headwind for exporters by eroding the value of their profits earned abroad.

Finance Minister Hirohisa Fujii said last week that he didn’t support a “weak yen,” causing the currency to surge. Investors are seeking to gauge the exchange-rate views of the Democratic Party of Japan-led government after it took power for the first time last week.

Obon Holidays

The year-on-year drop in exports was in line with the 36.5 percent forecast by economists. The 0.7 percent monthly decline may have been overstated by the country’s Obon holidays, a period when Japanese often take vacations to honor ancestors and which isn’t factored into the seasonal calculation, the Finance Ministry said.

Imports fell 41.3 percent in August from a year earlier, leaving a trade surplus of 185.7 billion yen ($2 billion).

Bank of Japan Governor Masaaki Shirakawa said last week he’s concerned the recovery may not outlast the worldwide stimulus packages that boosted demand for the country’s cars and electronics. The central bank cited exports as the main reason for raising its assessment of the economy last week, as record unemployment and slumping wages weaken consumer spending.

“So much of what’s keeping Japan’s economy going is temporary: the inventory, the stimulus measures,” said Junko Nishioka, chief economist at RBS Securities Japan Ltd. in Tokyo. “When the boost from those things fades, shipments -- along with the growth they’ve brought -- will flatten out.”

U.S. Improvements

Exports to the U.S. declined 34.4 percent from a year earlier, the least since November, the ministry said. Shipments to China, Japan’s biggest market, fell 27.6 percent, and sales to Europe slid 45.9 percent.

The world’s second-largest economy grew at an annual 2.3 percent pace in the three months ended June 30, ending Japan’s worst postwar recession. Some $2 trillion in spending by governments worldwide spurred sales for companies from Toyota Motor Corp. to Sharp Corp.

“Exports are definitely headed toward a recovery, thanks to inventory adjustments and global stimulus measures,” said Tatsushi Shikano, a senior economist at Mitsubishi UFJ Securities Co. in Tokyo. “The level of exports is still low but this pickup is certainly something we should be pleased with.”

‘Cash for Clunkers’

Government incentives to encourage car-buying in the U.S., Germany and China are helping sales at automakers such as Toyota and Nissan Motor Corp. Auto sales in China, which this year became the world’s biggest car market, rose a record 90 percent in August. President Barack Obama’s “cash-for- clunkers” program helped U.S. car sales gain for the first time in almost two years last month.

“The car companies have been huge beneficiaries of all of these stimulus packages,” said Kyohei Morita, chief economist at Barclays Capital in Tokyo. “It’s not misplaced money because auto production has such widespread knock-on effects on other manufacturers.”

Parts suppliers such as Toyota Boshuku Corp. are seeing sales recover. The company said in July it plans to build a new domestic factory to supply Toyota with car seats.

China’s 4 trillion yuan ($585 billion) stimulus package is also benefiting Japanese exporters. Sharp says subsidies for household appliances will help boost its China sales about 3 percent this year, even as revenue drops in the U.S. and Europe. Komatsu Ltd.’s sales of construction equipment in China climbed about 60 percent last month.

To contact the reporters on this story: Jason Clenfield in Tokyo at jclenfield@bloomberg.net; Kyoko Shimodoi in Tokyo at kshimodoi@bloomberg.net





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Taiwan Keeps Interest Rate Unchanged Amid Recovery

By Janet Ong and Chinmei Sung

Sept. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Taiwan’s central bank kept its benchmark interest rate unchanged on signs the export-dependent economy will recover as the global recession abates.

Governor Perng Fai-nan and his board held the discount rate on 10-day loans to banks at a record-low 1.25 percent, the central bank said in a statement. That was in line with the estimate of all 12 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News.

Taiwan, like its Asian neighbors, has slashed borrowing costs to help the island recover from its first recession since 2001. The stock index has risen 60 percent this year on optimism improving overseas demand for electronics products will revive an economy that shrank 7.54 percent in the second quarter after contracting 10.1 percent the previous three months.

“The central bank may continue to keep rates steady through the first quarter of next year,” said Ma Tieying, an economist at DBS Group Holdings Ltd. in Singapore. “The magnitude of the economic recovery is still too small.”

Central banks across the region have stopped cutting interest rates as they gauge signs of recovery. Japan’s central bank on Sept. 17 kept the benchmark overnight lending rate at 0.1 percent, while the Bank of Korea held its rate at a record- low 2 percent on Sept. 10 for a seventh month.

Taiwan’s central bank said its current monetary policy is appropriate and the growth in money supply has been “reasonable.” The bank will intervene to keep the island’s currency stable and respond to “hot money inflows,” it said.

Stocks Fall

“Our rate policy depends on the outlook of consumer prices,” Perng said. “Taiwan’s consumer prices will likely stay comfortable through the end of the year.”

Taiwan’s rate decision was released after the close of trading on the island’s stock exchange. The Taiex stock index fell 0.7 percent to close at 7,324.22. The Taiwan dollar weakened 0.1 percent to NT$32.395 against its U.S. counterpart as of 4 p.m. local time, according to Taipei Forex Inc. It touched NT$32.315 yesterday, the highest level since June 2.

“We expect the central bank to keep interest rates steady for the rest of the year as there is no inflationary pressure,” said Cheng Cheng-mount, an economist at Citibank Taiwan Ltd.

Taiwan had cut rates by 2.375 percentage points in seven reductions since late September 2008. That, combined with the government’s planned stimulus of NT$858.5 billion ($27 billion) over four years, have helped boost the island’s recovery.

Slump Eases

Shipments to China, Taiwan’s biggest overseas market, are improving as the mainland implements a 4 trillion yuan ($586 billion) stimulus package. Exports, accounting for 70 percent of gross domestic product, declined 24.6 percent in August, less than economists forecast and easing from a record 41.9 percent drop in January.

Central banks in South Korea, Singapore and Taiwan will likely start to tighten monetary policy early next year as Asian economies show signs of picking up, Barclays Capital economists Wai Ho Leong and Matthew Huang said in a Sept. 22 report.

“Inflation is slowly catching up on a month-on-month basis,” said Christopher Wong, a Hong-Kong based economist at HSBC Holdings Plc. “However, the central bank is still favoring a pro-growth policy because the current employment situation is still very fragile. We would expect the central bank to start tightening next year.”

The statistics bureau said on Sept. 7 “mild” inflation will return at the start of 2010 as the economy recovers.

On Guard

The Asian Development Bank on Sept. 22 increased its economic growth forecast for the region on strengthening expansions in China, India and Indonesia, and said it’s too early for governments to withdraw stimulus policies.

Policy makers globally remain on guard about the world economy. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said on Sept. 16 U.S. growth may not be strong enough to quickly reduce the jobless rate.

Taiwan’s unemployment rate climbed to a record 6.07 percent in August and consumer prices fell even as food costs rose after crops were damaged by Typhoon Morakot, the island’s deadliest storm in half a century.

“The central bank may only consider raising rates and be concerned about inflation after the jobless rate stops rising and consumer demand is steadily increasing,” said Ma from DBS. Instead of raising interest rates, Perng may “use open market operations to control the money supply,” the economist said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Janet Ong in Taipei at jong3@bloomberg.net.





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European Stocks Retreat; Hennes & Mauritz, Air France Decline

By Daniela Silberstein

Sept. 24 (Bloomberg) -- European stocks fell for the first time in three days as German business confidence rose less than forecast, adding to speculation a six-month rally has outpaced prospects for the economy.

Hennes & Mauritz AG led retailers lower as a sales decline worsened. Air France-KLM Group dropped 2.8 percent after UBS AG recommended selling shares of Europe’s largest airline. 3i Group Plc sank 3.3 percent as the pace of new investments dropped. Aiful Corp., Japan’s second-biggest consumer lender by assets, tumbled 24 percent after forecasting a full-year loss.

Europe’s Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index slipped 0.7 percent to 243.16 at 10:54 a.m. in London as 17 out of 19 industry groups retreated. The gauge has soared 54 percent since March 9 as the Group of 20 nations committed about $12 trillion to revive growth and the Federal Reserve kept overnight borrowing costs near zero to unlock credit markets.

“The market is ripe for a few weaker days in a row,” said Rudolf Buxtorf, who manages about $114 million at RBS Coutts Bank in Zurich. “The advances are saturated and any negative news can trigger momentum to the downside. Stocks are no longer cheap.”

The rally has pushed valuations on the Stoxx 600 to more than 50 times the profit of its companies, the most expensive level since 2003, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

German business confidence rose to a 12-month high of 91.3 from 90.5 in August, according to the Ifo institute in Munich. Economists had forecast a reading of 92, the median of 40 projections in a Bloomberg News survey showed.

U.S. Futures

Standard & Poor’s 500 Index futures advanced 0.1 percent. The benchmark index for U.S. equities slid yesterday as the Fed signaled it will use fewer tools to bolster economic growth.

The central bank, following a two-day policy meeting, changed the wording in the final paragraph of its statement to say it will continue to employ a “wide range of tools” to bolster the economy. In its August statement, it said it would use “all available” tools.

The Fed left its target rate for overnight loans between banks in a record-low range between zero and 0.25 percent, and said it will stay “exceptionally low” for an “extended period.” The central bank said the economy has “picked up,” activity in the housing industry has increased, household spending seems to have stabilized and businesses are cutting back on investments and staffing at a slower pace.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index rose 0.3 percent today as trading in Japan resumed after a three-day holiday.

G-20 Meeting

Leaders from the G-20 nations are meeting in Pittsburgh today and tomorrow to work on an accord to prevent a repeat of the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression and ensure a sustained recovery. U.S. President Barack Obama and his counterparts may be saddled with the weakest recovery since World War II if they are to pay off the $9 trillion tab they ran up rescuing the world economy.

H&M slid 2.6 percent to 398 kronor, pulling a gauge of retail stock to the biggest decline among 19 industry groups on the Stoxx 600. Europe’s second-largest clothing retailer said revenue at stores open at least a year fell 11 percent last month, the fourth consecutive drop and worse than July’s 3 percent decrease. Third-quarter net income of 3.46 billion kronor ($504 million) missed the 3.5 billion-krona average estimate of 11 analysts compiled by Bloomberg.

Airlines Fall

Air France slid 2.8 percent to 12.47 euros after UBS gave the airline a “sell” recommendation in new coverage.

British Airways Plc dropped 3.7 percent to 221.4 pence. Europe’s third-largest carrier was downgraded to “hold” from “buy” at Citigroup Inc., which said mid-cycle share-price valuations were reached “far earlier than expected.”

3i sank 3.3 percent to 278.5 pence. Europe’s biggest publicly traded private-equity firm said the pace of new investments dropped 75 percent as a lack of debt financing brought the buyout market nearly to a near-halt.

Aiful plummeted 24 percent to 102 yen in Tokyo on its loss forecast and plans to cut as much as 44 percent of its workforce.

London Stock Exchange Group Plc slid 3.1 percent to 852 pence. Europe’s oldest independent bourse said trading dropped 43 percent in the five months ended Aug. 31 as stocks slumped amid the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression and the company lost market share.

Carlsberg, Solvay

Carlsberg A/S, the Danish brewer that’s also the biggest beer producer in Russia, fell 2.5 percent to 383.25 kroner after the Russian government raised beer taxes. Duty will rise 50 percent a year in 2010 through 2012, Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin said, reaching 10 rubles (33 cents) a liter in three years from 3 rubles now, according to remarks posted on the ministry’s Web site.

Solvay SA rallied 3.8 percent to 76.95 euros, paring four days of declines. Abbott Laboratories made a bid to purchase the pharmaceutical unit of the Belgian company, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing people familiar with the matter.

A report today may show sales of existing U.S. homes climbed in August to the highest level in two years, another sign the real-estate collapse that triggered the global recession is abating, economists said. Separate data from the Labor Department is projected to show the number of Americans seeking jobless benefits rose last week.

A repeat of the grand coalition between German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Christian Democrats and the Social Democrats may be the best election outcome for the country’s stock market, if history is any guide. Since, 1987, the only time Germany’s 30- company DAX Index advanced in the two months surrounding a vote was 2005, the only election resulting in a coalition between the CDU and the SPD.

To contact the reporter on this story: Daniela Silberstein in Zurich at dsilberstei2@bloomberg.net.





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German Business Confidence Rises to 12-Month High

By Frances Robinson

Sept. 24 (Bloomberg) -- German business confidence rose to a 12-month high in September, indicating Europe’s largest economy will gather strength after exiting its worst recession since World War II.

The Ifo institute in Munich said today its business climate index, based on a survey of 7,000 executives, rose to 91.3 from 90.5 in August. That’s the highest reading since September last year. Economists expected a gain to 92, the median of 40 forecasts in a Bloomberg News survey showed. The index reached a 26-year low of 82.2 in March.

The confidence report comes as Chancellor Angela Merkel enters the final leg of her re-election campaign. The government’s “cash-for-clunkers” program and improving global trade helped the economy expand 0.3 percent in the second quarter from the first. While the Bundesbank predicts a “strong pickup” in the third quarter, the recovery could falter when stimulus measures expire and as unemployment rises.

“Overall, the German economy is expected to recover in the next four quarters, but fiscal stimulus will be one the main drivers of this recovery,” said Stefan Bielmeier, chief German economist at Deutsche Bank AG in Frankfurt. “The risk is that the recovery is not sustainable when stimulus packages expire.”

Election Looms

Merkel, who leads opinion polls for the Sept. 27 election, has approved spending of about 85 billion euros ($126 billion) to rekindle growth. The measures include tax breaks, infrastructure investment and a 2,500-euro payment to people who scrap an old car and buy a new one. The car-scrappage fund ran dry earlier this month.

The euro was little changed after Ifo’s report at $1.4760.

Ifo’s gauge of the current situation rose to 87 from 86.2, while an index of executives’ expectations advanced to 95.7 from 95, the institute said.

“Expectations have run so far ahead of current conditions that it makes me pause for thought as to whether this is sustainable,” said David Milleker, chief economist at Union Investment in Frankfurt. “Germany is very dependent on exports to euro-area countries, and there are structural problems in Spain and elsewhere.”

The Spanish and Irish economies will contract 0.9 percent and 1.5 percent respectively in 2010, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

By contrast, Germany’s will grow 1.5 percent next year after contracting about 4.5 percent in 2009, the IW economic institute in Cologne forecast on Sept. 21.

German investor confidence rose to the highest level in more than three years in September, and the benchmark DAX share index has rebounded more than 50 percent from its March trough.

“We do see light at the end of the tunnel, there are more and more signs that the economy is improving,” HeidelbergCement AG Chief Executive Officer Bernd Scheifele said in an interview on Sept. 22. The cement maker, which this week raised 2.25 billion euros selling new shares, will benefit “noticeably” from the government’s stimulus programs, Scheifele added.

To contact the reporter on this story: Frances Robinson in Frankfurt at frobinson6@bloomberg.net





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Russia Risks Prolonged Slump as Asset Quality Worsens

By Alex Nicholson and Paul Abelsky

Sept. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Russian government and central bank assurances that the nation’s financial industry is on the brink of recovery may be premature as asset quality continues to deteriorate, industry executives said.

“There are few quality borrowers, and banks may cease lending to most companies until market conditions improve,” Andrei Sharonov, managing director of Moscow- based Troika Dialog, Russia’s oldest investment bank, said in an interview in the Black Sea coast city of Sochi. “Companies are losing cash flow and becoming unable to service debt.”

Lenders are amassing bad debts at a pace of $2 billion a month, according to Sharonov. Russia’s faltering banking sector threatens to prolong a decline in the world’s biggest energy exporter after oil, gas and metals prices slumped, sending gross domestic product plunging a record 10.9 percent last quarter. The government’s “anti-crisis” program earmarked 495 billion rubles ($16.5 billion) to shore up the financial industry.

The support measures didn’t prevent overdue bank loans from rising to 5.5 percent of total lending in July, compared with 5 percent a month earlier. Bank interest rates on corporate loans rose last month for the first time this year, rising to 15.1 percent on average in August, even after the central bank cut rates, Bank Rossii data show.

Delinquency

The pace of increases in delinquent loans will accelerate until the middle of next year, according to Mikhail Zadornov, a former Finance Minister and chairman of VTB-24, the retail unit of VTB Group, Interfax reported yesterday. Overdue loans at the country’s 30 biggest banks jumped 8.5 percent in August, the news wire cited Zadornov as saying.

Bank St. Petersburg, the biggest private lender in northwestern Russia and one of the country’s two traded private banks, said today that the share of delinquent loans jumped to 7.5 percent of total lending as of July 1, compared with 0.7 percent at the end of last year.

“Given that Bank Saint Petersburg’s loan portfolio has a 30-percent exposure to the high-risk construction and real estate sectors, the rapid increase in non-performing loans is one of the main concerns,” said Yulia Rusanova, a banking analyst at Deutsche Bank AG in Moscow.

Putin Calls

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has repeatedly called on the recipients of state bailout funds to boost lending and cut interest rates. Russia’s three biggest banks, which are majority-owned by the government, have dragged their feet on increasing lending in an effort to protect their asset quality.

The central bank, which has lowered the key refinancing rate six times since April to 10.5 percent, has sought to assure markets that Russia’s banks are over the worst.

Growth in non-performing loans “slowed quite considerably” last month, bank Chairman Sergey Ignatievsaid on Sept. 9. Overdue corporate debt rose 5 percent in August from July, the smallest monthly rise this year, he said.

Banks’ average capital adequacy ratio is now at about 19 percent, compared with the required 10 percent, the central bank said on Sept. 9. Loan books expanded 0.8 percent last month after state-run OAO Sberbank, the country’s largest bank, boosted its portfolio by 1.9 percent, according to Ignatiev.

“I can speak about the gradual breaking of the vicious circle,” Ignatiev said.

Out of Step

The picture painted by policy makers is also out of step with what rating companies say.

Russian banks may face a surge in “troubled assets” that could total $213 billion, Standard & Poor’s said in June. As much as 38 percent of all assets held by banks at the end of last year may become “problematic” by the end of 2011, S&P said.

Stubborn bad debt may derail the central bank’s bid to unlock credit markets, said Ulrich Leuchtmann, head of currency strategy at Commerzbank AG.

“The central bank will start to consider if cutting rates at a high speed is really a useful means for providing the economy with more credit volumes in the situation where the banking sector has its problems with non-performing loans,” Leuchtmann said in a phone interview from Frankfurt. “Therefore, even despite the fact that the central bank is cutting rates, lenders might not be as willing to increase credit volume to the economy.”

‘Year of Losses’

Russian banks face a “year of losses” in 2009 before they can start to generate profits next year, Andrei Kostin, chief executive officer of VTB Group, Russia’s second biggest lender, said in an interview with Bloomberg Television on Sept. 16. The number of lenders that posted losses through July 2009 rose to 180 from 119 a month earlier, according to Bank Rossii.

“The fall of economic growth affected the Russian banking sector very much, so we still feel the consequences of this,” Kostin said.

Since the failure of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. in September, Russia has made available 4 trillion rubles of central bank funding, including uncollateralized loans. So far, the industry has been spared a run on lenders like the one it suffered after the government’s 1998 default on $40 billion of debt that forced a ruble devaluation.

Problems

“Last year we had problems,” First Deputy Prime Minister Igor Shuvalov said in an interview with Bloomberg Television in Washington on Sept. 21. “Russian citizens were queuing in the banks in order to take out their money, liquidity was very short and interbank loans were cut immediately,” he said. Quick steps by the Finance Ministry and the central bank meant “very quickly, the situation changed,” he said.

Since then, the government has also provided 410 billion rubles in subordinated loans, and plans to offer 300 billion rubles in loan guarantees by the end of 2009. The government has also earmarked 150 billion rubles in this year’s budget to swap government bonds for bank shares.

“In spring, when the decline curve was very deep, we thought that the portfolio of bad debts will be enormous,” Shuvalov said. “Possibly we will face another phase of banking crisis.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Paul Abelsky in Moscow at pabelsky@bloomberg.net.





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King Says British Banks Got Within Hours of Collapse

By Brian Swint

Sept. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Bank of England Governor Mervyn King said two British banks got within hours of a liquidity shortfall on Oct. 6, 2008, and the day after as the U.K. financial system came to the brink of collapse.

“Two of our major banks which had had difficulty in obtaining funding could raise money only for one week then only for one day, and then on that Monday and Tuesday it was not possible even for those two banks really to be confident they could get to the end of the day,” the BBC cited King as saying in an interview to be broadcast later today.

King was referring to Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc and HBOS Plc, the BBC said. Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s government pledged to invest about 50 billion ($82 billion) pounds in the banking system on Oct. 8, 2008, to save it from meltdown in the aftermath of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.’s bankruptcy declared that September.

“It was, it is, probably the worst situation, as I say, we faced in peacetime,” Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling said, according to a press release from the BBC.

The BBC corrected its original release to say that RBS was one of the two banks in trouble, and not Lloyds TSB Group Plc. In the wake of Lehman’s collapse, Lloyds TSB took over HBOS Plc, the nation’s biggest mortgage lender, to form Lloyds Banking Group Plc. An RBS spokesman declined to comment on the story.

The television program, The Love of Money, is the third in a series looking back on the financial crisis. It will be broadcast on BBC Two today at 9 p.m. in the U.K.

Great Depression

Edward Lazear, chairman of George W. Bush’s Council of Economic Advisers at the time, told the program: “We literally thought that we were on the verge of the Great Depression, and looking back I think we probably were.”

King said that allowing the banks to fail would have brought the economy to a halt, the BBC said.

“Individuals would not have had access to the money in that bank,” he was cited as saying. “Their deposits would have been frozen. The accounts would have not been there for salaries to be paid in to, so many people would not have been paid their salary.

“In turn, they wouldn’t have been able to pay bills to businesses so the businesses would have found that their flow of payments would have come to an end,” King said, according to the BBC.

Emergency Meeting

U.K. business minister Shriti Vadera called a meeting of senior bankers on Oct. 7, 2008, to advise the government on the bailout plan.

“We really only knew by probably about 7 o’clock at night that we, that everyone, was going to get through the next day,” David Soanes, a managing director at UBS AG in London, was quoted as saying in the program.

On Oct. 2, 2008, the Irish government guaranteed all deposits and borrowings at six of its biggest banks to assure customers they could withdraw their money and avoid a bank run. The decision rattled other European governments because it encouraged depositors to move their holdings to Ireland.

Irish Finance Minister Brian Lenihan told the BBC that there was no other choice because of the risk of panic.

“We were anxious to avoid that at all costs,” Lenihan was quoted as saying. “The policy options available to us were to immediately nationalize an institution. If we immediately nationalized that institution the risk was that it could lead to a systemic collapse of all the other institutions.”

French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde said the decision was “a bit of a shock,” the BBC said. Darling told the program that “the lesson that you draw here is you can’t do these things on your own.”

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





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G-20 Presents Risks for Commodity-Currency Rally, RBC Says

By Daniel Tilles

Sept. 24 (Bloomberg) -- The Group of 20 meeting starting today poses risks for further gains by commodity currencies, according to RBC Capital Markets.

“Beware also of any toughened stance from the authorities on tackling financial-market speculation on commodities and oil in particular,” Sue Trinh, a senior currency strategist in Sydney, wrote today in a report. “Further discussion on placing position limits on speculative positions could stop the current commodity-price rally in its tracks, with bearish consequences for commodity-leveraged currencies such as the Australian dollar and Canadian dollar.”

The euro may weaken as the G-20 starts, RBC also said.

“Following reports that France was worried about the euro’s strength yesterday, the euro may be on the defensive into the G-20,” Trinh wrote.

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





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Fed Signals Growth Return Insufficient to End Monetary Stimulus

By Scott Lanman

Sept. 24 (Bloomberg) -- The Federal Reserve signaled that the U.S. economy’s return to growth is insufficient to withdraw stimulus as officials seek to reduce the highest unemployment rate in a quarter century.

While the economy has “picked up,” the central bank’s planned asset purchases will help ensure a “gradual return to higher levels of resource utilization,” the Fed’s Open Market Committee said yesterday. Policy makers committed to complete their $1.25 trillion in purchases of mortgage securities and extended the end-date of the program to March from December.

“They’re going to be in that accommodative phase for a while,” said Vincent Reinhart, a former Fed monetary-affairs director who’s now a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington. The Fed’s “tactical goal isn’t just to get to the rate of growth of potential,” he said. “It’s to work down the level of slack.”

The FOMC statement, while offering the most favorable economic outlook since Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. failed a year ago, means Chairman Ben S. Bernanke may delay raising interest rates and shrinking the Fed’s $2.1 trillion balance sheet until he secures a recovery.

Policy makers, as part of a unanimous decision, kept the main interest rate in a range of zero to 0.25 percent and reiterated that rates will stay low for an “extended period.”

The central bank pledged to purchase “a total of” $1.25 trillion of mortgage debt, changing prior language saying it will buy “up to” that amount.

Traders yesterday marked down expectations for Fed interest-rate increases next year, based on futures contracts on the Chicago Board of Trade.

Stocks, Treasuries

Treasuries rose yesterday, pushing the yield on the benchmark 10-year note down three basis points to 3.42 percent in New York, according to BGCantor Market Data. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index lost 10.79, or 1 percent, to 1060.87, paring its gain this year to 17 percent.

The FOMC said the economy showed signs of “substantial resource slack.” The unemployment rate rose to 9.7 percent last month, the highest since June 1983, when it reached 10.1 percent. Employers eliminated 216,000 jobs in August, the 20th straight month of losses, and the Fed acknowledged yesterday that businesses are “still cutting back on fixed investment and staffing, though at a slower pace.”

Capacity utilization, the proportion of industrial volume in use, rose in August to 69.6 percent from 68.3 percent in June, its lowest level since record-keeping began in 1967. The figure averaged about 81 percent from 2005 to 2007.

‘Cost Pressures’

“Slack is important to their thinking about inflation and inflation expectations,” said Mark Spindel, chief investment officer at Potomac River Capital LLC in Washington, a hedge fund with about $100 million under management.

“They are sending a clear message that rates will stay low for longer,” said Spindel, a former deputy treasurer at the World Bank’s International Finance Corp.

The weakness in the economy is “likely to continue to dampen cost pressures” and keep inflation “subdued for some time,” policy makers said yesterday. Public expectations for price trends are “stable,” they said.

At the same time, housing market has started to stabilize. Home prices rose 0.3 percent in July from the previous month, the Federal Housing Finance Agency said this week. Housing starts rose in August to the highest level in nine months.

“Activity in the housing sector has increased,” the central bank said.

‘More Optimistic’

“They have gotten progressively more optimistic over the last several statements, and this is the most optimistic since the financial crisis intensified last September,” said Dean Maki, chief U.S. economist at Barclays Capital Inc. in New York.

“The economic data will be improving quite sharply over the next few quarters,” said Maki, a former Fed researcher.

Yesterday’s affirmation that the Fed would buy the full amount of mortgage backed securities eased concerns that any reduction of the program might undermine a recovery in the housing market. The Fed’s purchases of the securities have pushed down mortgage rates, helping spur demand for homes.

“They probably recognize exiting is much more difficult than entering into the program,” said Torsten Slok, senior economist at Deutsche Bank AG in New York. “They’re very worried about what the reaction will be when it fades, so they’re pushing it into 2010,” he said. “For now, that’s pushed the problem ahead of them.”

The average rate on a 30-year mortgage dropped to 5.04 percent in the week ending Sept. 17 from 5.07 percent the week before, according to mortgage buyer Freddie Mac.

The Fed has announced $861.9 billion of mortgage-backed securities purchases and completed $685.1 billion. It’s bought $125.2 billion of agency debt and $289.2 billion of the planned purchases of $300 billion in Treasuries, which will end next month.

The tapering in housing debt purchases will begin today, the New York Fed said in a separate statement after the meeting.

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





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Yen Climbs Amid Speculation Japan Companies Bringing Funds Home

By Anchalee Worrachate and Yasuhiko Seki

Sept. 24 (Bloomberg) -- The yen rose against the dollar and the euro amid speculation Japanese companies returned from a three-day holiday to repatriate funds before the end of the fiscal first half.

The Japanese currency climbed most against the British pound and South Korean won after a government report showed Japan’s exports fell for an 11th month in August, curbing demand for higher-yielding assets. The Australian dollar advanced toward a 13-month high as the central bank said the nation’s lenders are weathering the global recession.

“Japan is very much in repatriation mode now and this is driving the yen higher,” said Neil Jones, head of European hedge-fund sales in London at Mizuho Corporate Bank Ltd. “People have just returned from three days of holiday and there are probably a lot of buy orders ahead of the end of their first half of the financial year.”

The yen appreciated to 90.53 per dollar as of 9:47 a.m. in London, from 91.29 in New York yesterday, and reached 90.42, the strongest since Sept. 16. It was at 133.54 per euro, from 134.52. The euro rose to $1.4759, from $1.4735 yesterday, when it advanced to $1.4844, its highest level since Sept. 22, 2008.

Japan’s currency has risen 6.5 percent against the dollar this quarter. A strengthening yen reduces the value of overseas sales by Japanese companies when converted into their home currency. Large manufacturers expected the yen to trade at an average of 94.85 per dollar in the 12 months to March 2010, according to the Bank of Japan’s quarterly Tankan survey released July 1.

Exports Tumble

The Japanese government announced this year that it would waive taxes on repatriated profits from April 1 to help support the economy. Under previous laws, companies had to pay a combined 40 percent tax on overseas earnings. The country’s fiscal first half ends on Sept. 30. Japanese markets were closed Sept. 21-23 for national holidays.

Japan’s shipments abroad dropped 36 percent from a year earlier, compared with a 36.5 percent decline in July, the Finance Ministry said today in Tokyo. From a month earlier, exports fell 0.7 percent, the second-straight decrease.

Today’s report suggests the boost in overseas demand that helped the economy expand in the second quarter may be moderating as governments exhaust stimulus spending. New Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama meets his counterparts from Group of 20 nations in Pittsburgh today to discuss how to sustain a recovery from the worst global recession since the 1930s.

Aussie Dollar

The Australian dollar strengthened against 15 of the 16 major currencies after the Reserve Bank of Australia said the nation’s four largest banks, including Westpac Banking Corp. and Commonwealth Bank of Australia, posted combined after-tax profits of A$8.6 billion ($7.5 billion) in the latest half year.

“The economy and the financial structure were more resilient than the market had anticipated,” Claudio Piron, Singapore-based head of Asia currency research at JPMorgan Chase & Co., said in a Bloomberg Television interview. “It really underpins the Aussie.”

Australia’s currency traded at 87.41 U.S. cents, from 86.97 cents in New York yesterday, when it rose to 87.89 cents, the highest level since Aug. 22, 2008. The New Zealand dollar was at 72.32 U.S. cents, from 71.97 cents yesterday, when it climbed to 73.12 cents, the strongest since Aug. 4, 2008.

“The Australian financial system has remained resilient,” the RBA said in its half-yearly financial stability review released today in Sydney. “Banks have experienced only a modest decline in profitability” and are better placed than those in other economies to weather any further global turmoil, it added.

Business Confidence

The euro advanced after a report showed German business confidence rose to a 12-month high this month. The Munich-based Ifo institute’s business climate index, based on a survey of 7,000 executives, increased to 91.3 in September, from 90.5 in the previous month. Economists expected a gain to 92, the median of 40 forecasts in a Bloomberg survey showed.

“The underlying bias for the dollar is to weaken as the risk sentiment remains intact,” Yuichiro Harada, senior vice president in Tokyo of the foreign-exchange division at Mizuho Corporate Bank, a unit of Japan’s second-largest banking group.

The euro dropped against the dollar earlier after Reuters cited a French government official as saying the country is concerned about the currency’s strength. France intends to press governments attending this week’s G-20 meeting to set a timeframe for a discussion on exchange rates, the report said.

Market ‘Sensitive’

“The market is becoming sensitive to comments from monetary authorities as the G-20 meeting approaches,” said Kosei Fujita, a foreign-currency dealer in Tokyo at SBI Liquidity Markets Co., a unit of financier SBI Holdings Inc. “As comments from French government officials added to concerns, people are inclined to close long positions on the euro.” A long position is a bet that an asset will rise.

G-20 leaders are meeting in Pittsburgh to discuss the latest developments of the global economy and financial markets.

Demand for the dollar waned after the Federal Reserve said yesterday it will keep interest rates low for an “extended period.” The central bank also said it will slow its purchases of mortgage securities, seeking to avoid disrupting the housing market as an economic recovery takes hold.

“The Committee will gradually slow the pace of these purchases in order to promote a smooth transition in markets and anticipates that they will be executed by the end of the first quarter of 2010,” the Federal Open Market Committee said in a statement yesterday after meeting in Washington. The $1.45 trillion program was scheduled to cease by the end of this year.

Signs of Recovery

Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and fellow policy makers indicated for the first time since August 2008 that the economy is recovering from the recession.

Purchases of existing U.S. homes climbed to a 5.35 million annual rate in August, the most since August 2007, from a 5.24 million rate in July, according to a Bloomberg survey of economists. The National Association of Realtors will release the report at 10 a.m. in Washington.

“Signs of an improvement in the U.S. economy have so far failed to boost inflation expectations or hopes for an early exit from the current policy,” said Jitsuo Tachibana, senior manager for marketing at Sumitomo Trust & Banking Co. “As interest rates in the U.S. remain low, the hyper-liquid dollar will continue to trickle down into higher-yielding currencies.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Yasuhiko Seki in Tokyo at yseki5@bloomberg.net; Anchalee Worrachate in London at aworrachate@bloomberg.net





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China Non-Ferrous Barred From Taking Control of Lynas

By Jason Scott

Sept. 24 (Bloomberg) -- China Non-Ferrous Metal Mining Co. was blocked by Australia from buying a majority stake in rare-earth producer Lynas Corp. as the government seeks to preserve local control of the nation’s resources.

Australia’s Foreign Investment Review Board ordered China Non-Ferrous to limit its stake in Lynas to less than 50 percent, the Sydney-based company said today in a statement. China accounts for more than 90 percent of global output of rare earths, used in iPod music players, liquid crystal displays, hybrid cars and wind turbines.

Investments by Chinese companies have faced scrutiny from Australia as the biggest metals consumer accelerates takeovers. Australia blocked a A$2.6 billion ($2.3 billion) bid by state- owned China Minmetals Corp. for OZ Minerals Ltd. in March on national-security concern and review board director Patrick Colmer said today overseas investors should limit proposed stakes in major mining companies to no more than 15 percent.

“What FIRB doesn’t want to see is something as significant as a rare-earths project, where China controls so much of the world’s production, fall under the control of one country,” said Peter Strachan, a Perth-based analyst for independent company StockAnalysis.

Lynas, which says it owns the world’s richest deposit of rare earths, has risen more than threefold since China Non- Ferrous agreed May 1 to pay A$252 million for a 51.6 percent stake. It advanced 3.5 percent today in Sydney trading to 90 cents.

Board Directors

The Chinese company terminated the entire purchase. It was also ordered to cut the number of directors it planned to appoint to Lynas’s board to less than half, Lynas said.

“These were in addition to already agreed undertakings between Lynas and CNMC aimed at ensuring independent director control of all marketing of rare earths products,” Lynas said.

Lynas planned to use the money from the sale to resume work on the Mount Weld project, near Laverton in Western Australia. The company suspended work in February while it sought development funding.

The company said it’s well advanced in getting interim funding to ensure it has sufficient working capital.

‘Without Difficulty’

The review board has processed about 90 proposed Chinese investments in Australia valued at about A$34 billion in the past 18 months, Colmer said. China is now probably the third- biggest foreign investor in Australia after the U.S. and the U.K., he said, adding it may climb further up the rankings in coming years.

After initially blocking China Minmetal’s offer for OZ Minerals it allowed the sale of most of its other assets to the Chinese company.

The “vast majority” of Chinese investments are in Australian resources and most of them are cleared without difficulty, Colmer said.

“It’s very dangerous and counter-productive to see something like this as anti-Chinese as Australia also needs to protect its interests,” StockAnalysis’s Strachan said.

China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology said Sept. 3 supplies of dysprosium and terbium, minerals needed to make hybrid cars and televisions, may be inadequate for its needs, amid concerns that exports from the largest rare-earths producer may decline.

Export Curbs

China has about half of the world’s rare-earths reserves. The government started to curb output and exports in 2006 as prices dropped.

Chinese exports of rare earths fell 35 percent to 34,600 metric tons in 2008 from 53,300 tons in 2006, according to Inner Mongolia Baotou Steel Rare-Earth Hi-Tech Co., which owns the largest rare-earths mine.

Demand for rare earths may grow more than 40 percent by 2014, Arafura Resources Ltd. Managing Director Alistair Stephens said Sept 10, citing BCC Research. Arafura is planning a A$600 million rare earths mine in Australia.

China may spend more than $500 billion on overseas resources investments over the next eight years, according to Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu.

To contact the reporter on this story: Jason Scott in Perth at Jscott14@bloomberg.net





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Soybeans Slump as Risk of Frost Damage to U.S. Crops Recedes

By William Bi and Luzi Ann Javier

Sept. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Soybeans declined for the fourth time in five days on speculation that freezing weather in the Midwest will cause little damage to the crop in the U.S., the biggest exporter.

The biggest soybean and corn growing states in the U.S., including Iowa, Illinois and Indiana will have near- to above- normal temperatures from Sept. 29 through Oct. 7, according to a National Weather Service forecast yesterday. About 40 percent of the crop was beginning to drop leaves as of Sept. 20, the U.S. Department of Agriculture said yesterday. That’s a sign the plants are mature and ready for harvest.

“The risk of early frost keeps falling,” Tommy Xiao, analyst at Shanghai JC Intelligence Co., said by phone from Shanghai. “The trend toward a bumper crop is inevitable.”

November-delivery soybeans dropped as much as 1.2 percent, $9.0925 a bushel in after-hours trading on the Chicago Board of Trade. The contract was at $9.0925 at 1:18 p.m. Singapore time.

May-delivery soybeans traded on the Dalian Commodity Exchange fell as much as 2.6 percent to 3,605 yuan ($528) a metric ton, before trading at 3,616 yuan.

Soybean production will jump to a record 3.245 billion bushels, up 9.7 percent from last year, the USDA said in a Sept. 11 report. Yields will rise to 42.3 bushels an acre from 39.6 bushels last year, the department said.

Corn for December delivery fell as much as 2 percent, to $3.235 a bushel before trading at $3.235.

There’s a “good chance” corn yields in the U.S. will be higher than USDA’s estimate of 161.9 bushels an acre, Kona Haque, analyst at Macquarie Bank Ltd. wrote in a report. Macquarie raised its yield estimate to 162.4 bushels an acre.

Record Yield

A record average yield of 161.9 bushels an acre will push output in the world’s largest grower and exporter to 12.954 billion bushels in the year that began Sept. 1, the second- largest on record, according to the USDA forecast on Sept. 11.

Wheat for December delivery fell as much as 1.2 percent, to $4.545 a bushel in Chicago, before trading at $4.5575 a bushel.

West Australia’s wheat crop, the nation’s biggest, is starting to dry out “a little more than desired,” the Commonwealth Bank of Australia said in an e-mailed note today. Australia is forecast to be the world’s fourth-largest wheat exporter in the 2009-10 marketing year, with shipments expected at 14.5 million tons.

To contact the reporters on this story: Luzi Ann Javier in Singapore at ljavier@bloomberg.net; William Bi in Beijing at wbi@bloomberg.net





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