Economic Calendar

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Australia Lifts Key Rate From 49-Year Low, Signals More to Come

By Jacob Greber

Oct. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Australia’s central bank unexpectedly raised its benchmark interest rate from a 49-year low and signaled further increases in coming months amid signs the economy is strengthening.

Reserve Bank Governor Glenn Stevens increased the overnight cash rate target to 3.25 percent from 3 percent in Sydney today. Only one of 20 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News forecast today’s move. The rest predicted no change.

The local currency jumped as Australia became the first Group of 20 nation to raise borrowing costs since the start of the global financial crisis more than a year ago. Rising job vacancies, retail sales and house prices, plus surging business and consumer confidence support Stevens’ view that the “basis for such a low interest rate setting has now passed.”

“It’s quite a pre-emptive move,” said Su-Lin Ong, senior economist at RBC Capital Markets Ltd. in Sydney. “They’re very comfortable the globe is returning to firmer growth, particularly Australia’s key trading partners in Asia.

‘‘There are a few more hikes ahead.”

The Australian dollar rose to 88.34 U.S. cents at 3:10 p.m. in Sydney from 87.62 cents just before the decision was announced. The two-year government bond yield gained 5 basis points to 4.40 percent. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point.

Governor Stevens, who cut the benchmark lending rate by a record 4.25 percentage points between September 2008 and April to cushion Australia against fallout from the global credit squeeze, said today that the economy is likely to expand “close to trend over the year ahead,” and inflation will remain near the bank’s target range of between 2 percent and 3 percent.

Risk Has Passed

“The risk of serious economic contraction” in Australia has passed, Stevens said in a statement.

“The board’s view is that it is now prudent to begin gradually lessening the stimulus provided by monetary policy,” he added. “This will work to increase the sustainability of growth in economic activity and keep inflation consistent with the target over the years ahead.”

Today’s increase means households with an average-sized mortgage of A$250,000 ($221,000) will pay an extra A$40 a month in repayments.

Jane Counsel, a spokeswoman for Westpac Banking Corp., Steve Batten, a spokesman for Commonwealth Bank of Australia, and Luisa Ford, a spokeswoman for National Australia Bank Ltd., said the banks are currently reviewing their interest-rate settings. A spokesman for Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. was unable to comment immediately.

Global Rates

Speculation that Stevens would move faster than policy makers in the U.S., Europe and Japan to raise borrowing costs has helped stoke this year’s 26 percent gain in the nation’s currency.

Indonesia’s central bank kept interest rates unchanged for a second month yesterday and the European Central Bank will leave its benchmark rate at a record low of 1 percent on Oct. 8, according to analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. The U.S. Federal Reserve left the rate for overnight loans between banks at a record low of between zero and 0.25 percent on Sept. 24.

“The Reserve Bank has flagged there may be more to come,” Treasurer Wayne Swan told reporters in Canberra today. There is “no doubt” Australia’s economy is recovering.

Reports last week showed retail sales, approvals to build private homes, bank mortgage lending and property prices all jumped in August. Advertisements for job vacancies rose in September for a second straight month, gaining 4.4 percent.

‘Consumer Shock’

A report on Oct. 8 will show the unemployment rate rose to 6 percent last month from 5.8 percent, according to the median estimate of 20 economists surveyed by Bloomberg. By contrast, Europe’s jobless rate climbed in August to a 10-year high of 9.6 percent, and reached 9.7 percent in the U.S., the highest level since 1983.

“Overall, growth through 2010 looks likely to be close to trend,” Governor Stevens said. “Unemployment has not risen as far as had been expected.”

The bank’s decision will be “a shock for consumers in particular and those first-home buyers who have been borrowing pretty big,” said Stephen Walters, chief economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in Sydney, who forecast today’s move. “I think the Reserve Bank will move quite slowly” on future moves with quarter-point increases “every couple of months or so.”

Consumer spending, stoked by A$20 billion in government cash handouts to households, helped fuel a 1 percent expansion in Australia’s gross domestic product in the first half of this year.

Stock, House Prices

The government is also boosting domestic demand by spending an extra A$22 billion on roads, railways, ports and schools.

There are increasing signs the stimulus is starting to drive up asset prices. The nation’s benchmark S&P/ASX 200 index of stocks has surged more than 20 percent this year, and a report published on Sept. 30 by property monitoring company RP Data-Rismark showed house prices climbed 7.9 percent in the first eight months of this year.

“Housing credit growth has been solid and dwelling prices have risen appreciably over the past six months,” Stevens said today.

The Reserve Bank scrapped its forecast in August for the economy to contract this year, instead predicting GDP will rise 0.5 percent. The bank expects growth will accelerate to 2.25 percent in 2010 and 3.75 percent in 2011.

“There’s a risk they’ve gone too early,” said Prasad Patkar, who helps manage about $1.2 billion at Platypus Asset Management in Sydney. “The recovery may not be all that well entrenched and yet they’re starting to unwind the stimulus.”

To contact the reporter for this story: Jacob Greber in Sydney at jgreber@bloomberg.net





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FX Daily Report

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by swiss pb | Oct 06 09 05:59 GMT |

The need to rebalance the global economy does not at all mean the dollar should depreciate against the euro, European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said on Monday.

Many economists think the United States' huge trade and budget deficits mean the dollar may have to fall. But Trichet took pains to stress that the euro should not have to bear part of that adjustment.

Trichet and some other European officials, particularly the French, have expressed concern in the last few weeks that excessive strength of the euro could hurt the region's exports.

The euro has risen about 14 percent against the dollar since March and, at around $1.46, is not far from its record high of $1.6038, hit in July 2008.

Asked what action might be taken to stop the dollar falling, Trichet said the G7 statement spoke for itself, adding that he put faith in assurances by U.S. policymakers that they wanted a strong dollar.

Asked if the ECB was prepared to raise interest rates in the euro zone before unemployment peaked, as part of its strategy to unwind monetary policy measures taken during the financial crisis, Trichet replied that current rates were appropriate.

A tepid economic recovery should allow the U.S. Federal Reserve to keep interest rates at rock-bottom lows for a prolonged period, New York Federal Reserve President William Dudley said on Monday.

Because the U.S. economy faces many headwinds, including an anemic labor market and a fragile banking system, Dudley said, inflation will not become a problem in the foreseeable future.

Japan's government urged the central bank on Tuesday not to end support for corporate funding too soon, with the finance minister saying the Bank of Japan needed to carefully consider the economic outlook and monitor funding.

The outspoken banking minister went further, saying it was too early to discuss ending the funding support, amid growing expectations that the central bank will end schemes for buying commercial paper and corporate bonds in December.

Finance Minister Hirohisa Fujii described the economy as unstable and said the BOJ was at a stage where it should appropriately monitor the situation for corporate funding

EUR/USD: If the pair breaks important resistance at 1.4720, next target 1.4800 - 1.4820. Small correction till 1.4660 level is possible. Prefer buy in 1.4700 - 1.4670 area for target 1.4800. Stop loss below 1.4640.

GBP/USD: The same strategy as yesterday. Prefer buy moving down till 1.5950. Stop loss below 1.5920, target 1.6100.

USD/JPY: The pair could not break resistance at 90.00 yesterday and moved down till 88.95 level. Prefer sell rally till 89.40 for target 88.60. Stop loss above 90.00

USD/CHF: Prefer sell rally till 1.0330 for target 1.0220. Stop loss above 1.0350

swiss pb

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Performance

Past results and performance form no reliable basis for decisions regarding future investments and yield expectations. The value of investments can go up as well as down. Exchange rate fluctuations can likewise result in a loss of value. swiss pb can therefore undertake no guarantee that the value of invested capital will be preserved or increase.


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Daily Technical Outlook

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by Innerfx | Oct 06 09 05:53 GMT |

EURUSD

The euro recovered on yesterday and continued to climb higher during today's Asian trading session. Upside remains favored and a daily close above 1.4700 would confirm the end of the corrective cycle from 1.4845 to 1.4480. Intra-day sentiment is also positive and won't change as long as 1.4650/70 will provide support on pullbacks. Since there aren't any solid resistance levels until the ytd high at 1.4845, extended gains should be easily achieved if the support into the 1.4670/00 region will be confirmed. Current quote is 1.4720 @05:30 GMT

Support: 1.4670, 1.4600 and 1.4500/20
Resistance: 1.4720/50, 1.4800 and 1.4820/45

GBPUSD

Both intra-day and short-term charts show signs of indecision as cable fails to follow euro's performance against the dollar nowadays. While the pound trades on a fragile ground and shows clear signs of weakness across the board, upside seem slightly favored and the pound is getting away from the support zone around 1.5800. However, it is far from trading into a safe zone so look for the same indecisive behavior as long as the pair holds below the 1.62-1.63 region. Current quote is 1.5995 @05:30 GMT

Support: 1.5900, 1.5950 and 1.5800
Resistance: 1.6000, 1.6050 and 1.6130

USDJPY

Downside is under heavy pressure as the dollar currently trades only 100 points above last week's low. Both short-term and intra-day studies are negative and the dollar doesn't show any signs of recovery. On potential dollar gains, look for resistance into the 89.50/65 region then above, at 90. A minor support is formed by an upward trend line around 88.75, as seen on the chart attached below. Current quote is 88.95 @05:30 GMT

Support: 88.75, 88.00/25 and 87.20/50
Resistance: 89.50/60, 90 and 90.50

Innerfx

Legal disclaimer and risk disclosure

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Foreign Exchange Market Commentary

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by HY Markets | Oct 06 09 03:47 GMT |

EUR/USD closed higher on Monday and above the 10-day moving average crossing. The high-range close sets the stage for a steady to higher opening on Tuesday. Stochastics and the RSI are turning neutral hinting that a short-term low might be in or is near. Multiple closes above the 10-day moving average crossing are needed to signal that a low has been posted. If it extends last week's decline, September's low crossing is the next downside target.

USD/JPY closed higher on Monday as it consolidates above the 75% retracement level of the 2008-2009- decline crossing. The high-range close sets the stage for a steady to higher opening on Tuesday. Stochastics and the RSI are turning neutral signalling that sideways trading is possible near-term. If it extends the rally off August's low, the 2008 high crossing is the next upside target. Closes below the 20-day moving average crossing are needed to confirm that a short-term top has been posted.

GBP/USD close higher due to short covering on Monday but remains below the lower boundary of this summer's trading range crossing. The low-range close sets the stage for a steady to lower opening on Tuesday. Stochastics and the RSI are oversold but remain neutral signalling that sideways to lower prices are possible near-term. If it extends the decline off September's high, the 50% retracement level of this year's rally crossing is the next downside target. Closes above the 20-day moving average crossing would temper the near-term bearish outlook in the market.

USD/CHF closed higher due to short covering on Monday and above the 10-day moving average crossing. The high-range close sets the stage for a steady to higher opening on Tuesday. Stochastics and the RSI are turning neutral hinting that sideways trading is possible near-term. Multiple closes above the 10-day moving average crossing would temper the near-term bearish outlook. If it extends the decline off September's high, September's low crossing is the next downside target.

HY Markets
http://www.hymarkets.com


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PTTEP’s First Bid to Plug Australian Oil Leak Fails

By Ben Sharples

Oct. 6 (Bloomberg) -- PTT Exploration & Production Pcl, operator of the Montara well that’s spilling oil into the Timor Sea off Western Australia’s Kimberley coast, said its first attempt to plug the leak failed.

A fresh bid would likely be made Oct. 9 or Oct. 10, Lauren Tindale, a Perth-based spokeswoman for PTTEP Australasia, said by telephone today. The company aims to halt the flow by injecting heavy mud into the well.

Oil, gas and condensate started seeping into the Timor Sea from the well on Aug. 21. A light “sheen,” or coverage, has entered Indonesian waters and is about 120 kilometers (75 miles) from the coast, Tracey Jiggins, spokeswoman for the Australian Maritime Safety Authority, said Oct. 3.

The sheen extends to within 144 kilometers of Australia’s coastline, Jiggins said. The government department is coordinating the cleanup effort and PTTEP has said it will cover the cost.

To contact the reporter on this story: Ben Sharples in Melbourne at bsharples@bloomberg.net





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Holiday Retail Sales May Drop for Second Year, NRF Forecasts

By Allison Abell Schwartz

Oct. 6 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. holiday sales may decline for the second year as consumers stick to budgets and retailers cut prices to encourage spending, according to an industry group.

Sales for the last two months of the year will probably fall 1 percent to $437.6 billion from the same period in 2008, the National Retail Federation said today in a statement. That’s not as steep as last year’s decline of 3.4 percent, the first drop since the NRF started tracking holiday sales in 1995.

The highest U.S. unemployment in 26 years, stagnant wage growth and wavering consumer confidence will reduce spending, according to Washington-based NRF. Holiday shoppers will continue to flock to discount retailers and warehouse clubs as they shop on tighter budgets, according to Rosalind Wells, the federation’s chief economist.

“It’s going to be heavily promotional because consumers are very cautious,” Wells said yesterday in a telephone interview. “They’re going to wait until they get the best price that they can get on things.”

TJX Cos., the Framingham, Massachusetts-based owner of the T.J. Maxx and Marshalls clothing chains, and Menomonee, Wisconsin-based Kohl’s Corp., the fourth-largest U.S. department store chain, have reported sales gains over the past two months. Higher-priced retailers including New Albany, Ohio-based Abercrombie & Fitch Co. and New York-based Saks Inc. have reported steep declines.

The NRF forecast excludes sales at car dealers, gas stations and restaurants. The trade group forecast a 3 percent decline in retail sales for all of 2009.

Discounts may not be as deep as they were last holiday season because retailers have trimmed inventory to match the pace of consumer spending, Wells said.

‘Razor-Sharp’

“Retailers’ focus on the holiday season has been razor- sharp with companies cutting back as much as possible on operating costs in order to pass along aggressive savings and promotions to customers,” NRF President and CEO Tracy Mullin said in the statement.

Consumers may shop online more this holiday season to limit trips to the mall that can prompt unplanned purchases, Wells said in the interview. Shopping online helps consumers limit discretionary spending because it’s easier to stick to a planned purchase, she said.

A drop would mark the first back-to-back decline in holiday retail sales in four decades, according to Stamford, Connecticut-based Archstone Consulting, citing U.S. census data. Archstone forecast yesterday that holiday retail sales will fall 1 percent.

The U.S. unemployment rate rose to 9.8 percent in September, the highest since 1983, from 9.7 percent in August, the Labor Department said Oct. 2. Payrolls fell by 263,000, more than forecast in a Bloomberg survey of economists.

Confidence Falls

Confidence among U.S. consumers unexpectedly fell in September. The Conference Board’s confidence index dropped to 53.1, from a revised 54.5 in August. Consumer confidence was projected to increase to 57, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey.

“Last holiday season, I think, most retailers were taken by surprise about how precipitous the drop was in retail sales,” Wells said. “Retailers have had almost a full year of pretty weak sales so they’ve started to adjust to that.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Allison Abell Schwartz in New York at aabell@bloomberg.net





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Fujii Says Weak-Currency Policies Aren’t Desirable

By Keiko Ujikane

Oct. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Japanese Finance Minister Hirohisa Fujii said he told Group of Seven officials that governments worldwide shouldn’t pursue policies that seek to devalue their currencies.

“I made the point that it’s undesirable for individual nations to take a weak-currency policy,” Fujii said at a news conference in Tokyo today. “Currency devaluation policies back in the 1930s had an adverse impact on the global economy and politics.”

Officials expressed “various opinions on the weakening of the dollar” at the G-7 meeting in Istanbul last weekend, he said, while declining to comment on foreign-exchange rates. The slide in the U.S. currency has sparked concern from Canada to France over the potential impact on economic recoveries.

Fujii indicated at the gathering that Japan is open to intervening in the currency market to stem gains in the yen, which rose to an eight-month high against the dollar last week. He said the government “will take action” should currencies “show excessive moves in a biased direction.”

Fujii also said today that he wasn’t aware of a newspaper report that Gulf states may start to move to a basket of currencies, rather than the dollar, for oil trading. When asked about the report, the minister said he “doesn’t know anything about it.”

Started Talks

Arab states have started talks with China, Russia, Japan and France to stop using the U.S. currency for settling oil transactions, the Independent newspaper reported, citing Middle Eastern and Chinese banking officials it didn’t name.

The dollar fell for a second day against the Japanese currency after the report, trading at 89.13 yen at 1:24 p.m. in Tokyo from 89.53 yen in New York yesterday.

Separately, Fujii said he hadn’t heard whether the Bank of Japan will this month consider deciding to let its programs of purchasing corporate debt expire at the end of the year.

The central bank “will judge what is appropriate for corporate funding,” he said, adding that he’s “confident” it won’t pursue actions that risk undermining the recovery.

Bank of Japan Governor Masaaki Shirakawa said on Oct. 3 that the need for the programs of buying commercial paper and corporate bonds has eased as companies regain access to funding in the markets. The central bank may decide as soon as this month to let the measures expire at the end of the year, people with direct knowledge of the discussions have said.

Fujii said that the central bank decides monetary policy in a way that complements the government’s economic goals.

To contact the reporter on this story: Keiko Ujikane in Tokyo at kujikane@bloomberg.net





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HSBC Raises Asia 2010 Growth Forecast to 7.6%

By Jason Clenfield

Oct. 6 (Bloomberg) -- HSBC Holdings Plc raised its 2010 economic growth forecast for Asia excluding Japan to 7.6 percent from 6.9 percent, led by faster expansions in China, South Korea and Singapore.

“Growth has roared back in Asia, with domestic demand firing on all cylinders and exports accelerating too,” the bank wrote in a report published today.

China will expand 9.5 percent, faster than an earlier forecast for 8.5 percent, HSBC said. Hong Kong’s growth estimate was raised to 3.8 percent from 2.4 percent. South Korea will grow 4.6 percent, versus the 3.6 percent estimated previously, and Singapore will expand 6.5 percent compared with 5.3 percent.

“Besides continued strength in consumption and investment, we expect exports to rebound over the coming quarter, driven by restocking in the West and inter-emerging markets trade,” HSBC economists Robert Prior-Wandesforde and Frederic Neumann wrote in the report.

They said the region’s central banks will begin to raise interest rates. Australia will increase its key rate later this year, and Korea and Taiwan will move in the first quarter of 2010. China, India, Indonesia, the Philippines, Vietnam and Thailand will following in the second quarter, the report said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Jason Clenfield in Tokyo at jclenfield@bloomberg.net





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Philippine Inflation Accelerates From Two-Decade Low

By Karl Lester M. Yap and Max Estayo

Oct. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Philippine inflation accelerated from a 22-year low last month, supporting the central bank’s decision to stop cutting interest rates as economic growth recovers.

Consumer prices rose 0.7 percent from a year earlier, after a 0.1 percent gain in August, the National Statistics Office said in Manila today. That compares with the median forecast for a 0.6 percent increase in a Bloomberg survey of 10 economists.

Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas kept its benchmark interest rate unchanged at 4 percent last week for a second straight meeting after slashing it by 2 percentage points from December to July. Inflationary risks have increased since August as the economy picks up, Deputy Governor Diwa Guinigundo said Oct. 1.

“Headline inflation is starting to accelerate” and will rise sharply in the coming months, said Frederic Neumann, an economist at HSBC Holdings Plc in Hong Kong. “We expect the central bank to start preparing the ground for rate hikes early next year.”

The peso rose 0.4 percent to 46.53 per dollar as of 9:48 a.m. in Manila, its highest level since Jan. 7, according to Tullett Prebon Plc.

The Philippine economy expanded 1.5 percent in the second quarter from a year earlier, accelerating from a decade low as record-low borrowing costs and government stimulus helped Asian nations recover from the global recession.

‘Exit Strategy’

Bangko Sentral has “an exit strategy in place” and will “shift gradually to a different monetary stance” when it sees signs of firmer growth, Guinigundo said last week.

Fuel, electricity and water prices fell 3.4 percent from a year earlier last month, easing from a 5.4 percent decline in August. Food, beverage and tobacco costs climbed 2.2 percent.

Damage caused by tropical storms to crops and properties in the past two weeks may also fuel inflation, said Ildemarc Bautista, an economist at Metropolitan Bank & Trust Co.

“There is a potential for price increases as people purchase items to clean up and refurbish their houses,” said Bautista, who is based in Manila. “That’s a lot of people buying from the same hardware stores and groceries. It could cause a blip in inflation.”

Typhoon Parma, which hit the Philippines on Oct. 3, killed at least 16 people and brought more rain to areas still recovering from Tropical Storm Ketsana the week earlier. Ketsana dropped the most rain on Manila and nearby provinces in at least 40 years, leaving 293 dead.

To contact the reporter for this story: Karl Lester M. Yap in Manila at kyap5@bloomberg.net





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Obama Weighs Spending to Stem Job Cuts Without Second Stimulus

By Mike Dorning and Nicholas Johnston

Oct. 6 (Bloomberg) -- President Barack Obama is considering a mix of spending programs and tax cuts to respond to widening job losses that would amount to an additional economic stimulus without carrying that label.

The discussion of the initiatives, including a boost in transportation spending and an extension of an expiring tax credit for first-time homebuyers, comes as the White House is balancing rising concern about unemployment and a budget deficit the Congressional Budget Office estimates will total $1.6 trillion for 2009, and $1.4 trillion in 2010.

Administration officials have told allies in Congress that a broader transportation bill, and extensions of a homebuyer tax credit and unemployment benefits are all on the table, a Senate aide said.

Representative Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, who chairs the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee that is tasked with holding the party’s House majority in next year’s midterm elections, said additional transportation funding would be popular among Democratic lawmakers.

“If there was to be another round of stimulus, additional infrastructure would be at the top of the list,” Van Hollen said in an interview. Money for roads, transit and bridges would be a priority.

Contradictory Missions

In considering the measures, the administration has to reconcile two potentially contradictory missions: combating rising unemployment through government intervention and the need to hold deficits down.

White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs yesterday highlighted those political sensitivities, saying there “were no plans” for a second stimulus like the $787 billion package passed earlier this year. Instead, he said, the administration is looking at “extensions” of existing programs.

“The economic team is certainly looking at and working on any way that we can create more jobs,” Gibbs said.

The items under consideration include an increase in infrastructure spending through expiring transportation legislation that Congress must reauthorize in the coming months, the Senate aide said, speaking on condition of anonymity.

Other steps being weighed include an extension of a tax credit of up to $8,000 for first-time homebuyers that is due to expire later this year, and a renewal of a tax benefit for net operating losses that would benefit small businesses, the aide said.

‘A Stimulus’

“Clearly these things are a stimulus,” said Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, who has called for more stimulus spending. “There’s no two ways about it.”

The Obama administration isn’t near a final decision on additional measures, said Jen Psaki, a White House spokeswoman.

“As they continue to explore the best options, any notion that we are any farther along than preliminary discussions about new proposals is wildly inaccurate,” she said.

The Labor Department reported last week that unemployment reached 9.8 percent in September, the highest level since 1983. Nonfarm payrolls dropped by 263,000, a steeper drop than economic forecasters had expected.

At the same time, the federal deficit has risen sharply because of this year’s stimulus package and bailouts for the banking industry, auto industry and Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. While the Obama administration has pledged that a health-care overhaul it is pushing through Congress won’t widen the deficit, it has stirred concerns among fiscal conservatives.

‘More Difficult’

“More of a stimulus package is much more difficult at this point than it was in February,” said Julian Zelizer, a professor of public affairs at Princeton University in New Jersey. “The deficit can become a political straitjacket to the Democrats.”

Obama and his aides have stressed that they expect employment growth to lag in an economic recovery. They now confront rising joblessness as they move toward midterm elections in November 2010.

Since 1945, the party that controls the White House has lost an average of 16 House seats in a president’s first midterm election, according to the Cook Political Report, a nonpartisan publication in Washington. The Democrats have 256 seats in the chamber, compared with 178 for the Republicans.

30-Day Extension

The federal transportation funding program, which provides routine federal aid for highway construction and other transportation projects, expired Sept. 30 and is operating under a 30-day extension passed by Congress.

While the transportation funding law typically is renewed in multiyear increments, the Obama administration has instead proposed an 18-month extension, a move backed by the Senate public works panel. That time frame limits the scope of the bill to the period in which economic forecasters expect high unemployment.

Representative James Oberstar, a Minnesota Democrat who chairs the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, has proposed a six-year $500 billion highway and transit bill. Most of the measure is financed through federal gasoline taxes, which haven’t been raised since 1993. At the current level, the tax would only generate about $350 billion over six years.

A six-year bill would be “a better stimulus than a temporary, one-time, infusion of cash,” said Jim Berard, a spokesman for Oberstar.

Van Hollen said Congress’ first step would likely be to move forward with an extension of unemployment benefits.

“We don’t want to get ahead ourselves here,” he said.

To contact the reporters on this story: Mike Dorning in Washington at mdorning@bloomberg.net; Nicholas Johnston in Washington at njohnston3@bloomberg.net.





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Hong Kong Luxury Home Deals Triple on Mainland Buyers

By Sophie Leung and Theresa Tang

Oct. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Hong Kong’s luxury home sales almost tripled in September from a month earlier, as mainland Chinese residents flocked to buy flats in the city.

The registered sales of residential units worth more than HK$10 million ($1.3 million) rose to 1,351 from 500 in August, according to Land Registry figures released yesterday. A one- bedroom flat in Kowloon sold for a record HK$24.5 million, Centaline Property Agency Ltd. said last month.

Luxury home prices in Hong Kong climbed as much as 28 percent in the first nine months of the year, as low mortgage costs fueled buying, according to Colliers International Ltd. Prices may rise by between 5 and 10 percent in the next 6 to 12 months, the global real-estate broker said last month.

“The luxury home market is very active,” Buggle Lau, chief analyst at Midland Holdings Ltd., said by phone today. “Capital from the mainland and overseas is contributing.”

There is “enormous liquidity and buying” from Chinese residents, Martin Cubbon, executive director of Swire Pacific Ltd., said Sept. 29.

The aggregate number of homes registered increased to 12,285 from 11,250 in August, the government said on its Web site.

“We probably will see consolidation after home prices, especially luxury apartments, jumped quite a bit, because the market thinks interest rates may have bottomed out,” Credit Suisse analyst Cusson Leung said in a telephone interview.

Mortgage Rates

Mortgage rates in Hong Kong are the lowest in at least 19 years as banks seek to offset slower demand for other types of credit.

Lenders have cut mortgage rates “to such an extent that they might not have given due regard to the reputation risk, interest rate risk and liquidity risk potentially associated with their pricing,” Hong Kong Monetary Authority Deputy Chief Executive Y.K. Choi said Sept. 17.

“Average mortgage rates are going to pick up gradually,” Peter Wong, head of the Hong Kong unit of HSBC Holdings Plc, said in the city last week.

New mortgage loans approved fell 8.2 percent in August from a month earlier to HK$34.2 billion, the HKMA said last month.

Hong Kong home prices may fall in coming months as Chinese investors face a slowdown in lending growth at home, reducing their buying power, said Leung at Credit Suisse. “Mainland investors’ appetite goes along with growth of liquidity in China, which has already showed signs of slowing down,” he said.

Loans in China

China’s banks extended 410.4 billion yuan ($60.1 billion) of local-currency loans in August, up from 355.9 billion yuan in July, according to official figures. New lending in September may fall to a range between 300 billion and 400 billion yuan, China Banking Regulatory Commission Chairman Liu Mingkang said yesterday.

A one-bedroom apartment at the Masterpiece development in Hong Kong’s Kowloon district was bought for HK$30,025 a square foot last month, a record for a property of that type in the city, Centaline said. The home, with space of 816 square feet (75 square meters) was sold for HK$24.5 million.

Hong Kong is the world’s fifth-most expensive residential real estate market, after Monte Carlo, Moscow, London and Tokyo, according to Global Property Guide.

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





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Oil Trades Above $70 After Rising on Equity Gain, Dollar Drop

By Yee Kai Pin and Ben Sharples

Oct. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Crude oil traded above $70 a barrel in New York after rising on optimism fuel demand will increase amid improved prospects for a recovery in the U.S., the world’s biggest energy consumer.

Oil climbed to $71 yesterday as U.S. stocks gained after a report showed service industries returned to growth following 11 months of contraction. Commodities also rose as the dollar fell on a report Gulf states may switch to a basket of currencies to trade oil. The dollar’s decline bolstered the appeal of raw materials as a hedge against inflation.

“People are still on the backfoot wanting to buy and consume,” Jonathan Barratt, managing director at Commodity Broking Services Pty in Sydney, said in a Bloomberg Television interview. “The positive data we had out of the U.S. last night with the ISM non-manufacturing was another step to say that any dip really should be looked at.”

Crude oil for November delivery was at $70.55 a barrel, up 14 cents, in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange at 12:47 p.m. in Singapore. Yesterday, the contract gained 46 cents, or 0.7 percent, to settle at $70.41 a barrel. Prices have climbed 58 percent this year.

The Institute for Supply Management’s index of non- manufacturing businesses, which make up almost 90 percent of the U.S. economy, rose to 50.9, higher than forecast, from 48.4 in August, according to the Tempe, Arizona-based group. Fifty is the dividing line between expansion and contraction.

“The major headline supporting the rally was the September ISM non-manufacturing report showing positive growth,” Mike Sander, an investment adviser at Sander Capital in Seattle, said in a note. “Oil was pushed higher thanks to the 100-point move in the Dow Jones” Industrial Average, he said.

Asian Shares

Asian stocks rose for the first time in four days. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index added 1 percent to 114.89 as of 1:42 p.m. in Tokyo. Yesterday, the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index added 1.5 percent to 1,040.46 in New York, its steepest gain in a week. The Dow Jones Industrial Average advanced 112.08, or 1.2 percent, to 9,599.75.

The dollar fell to $1.4710 per euro at 12:38 p.m. in Tokyo, from $1.4648 yesterday in New York, after the U.K.-based Independent newspaper reported Arab states are seeking to move to a basket of currencies, including the yen, the yuan, the euro and gold to settle oil transactions. Commodities including gold and copper advanced.

“We’re seeing some tentative signs that consumption is picking back up,” said Ben Westmore, an energy and minerals economist at National Australia Bank Ltd. in Melbourne. “It continues to look like the recovery is on track.”

Oil Inventories

U.S. crude oil inventories probably rose last week as refineries performed seasonal maintenance, a Bloomberg News survey showed. Commercially held stockpiles increased 2 million barrels from 338.4 million in the week ended Oct. 2, according to the median of estimates from 11 analysts.

Distillate fuel inventories, which include heating oil and diesel, are expected to have declined 400,000 barrels, the survey showed. Stockpiles previous rose a sixth week to 171.1 million barrels, the highest since 1983.

The Energy Department is scheduled to release its Weekly Petroleum Status Report at 10:30 a.m. tomorrow in Washington. The industry-funded American Petroleum Institute will put out its own data today.

Brent crude oil for November settlement traded at $68.16 a barrel, up 12 cents, on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange at 12:46 p.m. Singapore time. Yesterday, the contract slipped 3 cents to settle at $68.04 a barrel.

To contact the reporters on this story: Yee Kai Pin in Singapore at kyee13@bloomberg.net; Ben Sharples in Melbourne at bsharples@bloomberg.net.





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U.K. to Work Longer And Earn Less in Government Austerity Drive

By Robert Hutton and Gonzalo Vina

Oct. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Gordon Brown announced a freeze in government pay while the Conservative opposition said it wants people to retire later as Britain’s politicians vied to show their determination to cut the country’s record deficit.

The prime minister’s government said wages should remain unchanged next year for judges, family doctors and senior health service administrators. Other civil servants should get raises of less than 1 percent. About 750,000 people will be affected.

Meanwhile George Osborne, the lawmaker in charge of finance for the Conservatives, will say today that he wants to bring forward an increase in the national retirement age to 2016, a decade earlier than planned, to cut 13 billion pounds ($21 billion) a year off the deficit.

“Voters think it’s inevitable there will be spending cuts whoever wins the election,” said Andrew Cooper, pollster at Populus Ltd. “They say they’d rather politicians tell them the truth.”

Today’s announcements mark the start of a period austerity after almost two decades of uninterrupted growth. Even during the depths of the recession, many Britons were cushioned from the crisis by spending on government programs and tax cuts.

Now, both Brown’s Labour Party and David Cameron’s Conservatives say the government must cut spending to curtail a deficit, which at 12 percent of national income next year will be the biggest in the Group of 20 nations. With an election due no later than June 2010, both parties are want to build their credibility with voters on how they’d manage the economy.

Spending Squeeze

The squeeze on government outlays may be the biggest since 1976, when Labour’s James Callaghan sought an emergency loan from the International Monetary Fund, according to the Institute for Fiscal Studies, a non-partisan researcher studying the public finances.

Today, the Treasury will submit recommendations to pay review bodies that mark the tightest wage settlements for government workers in three decades.

As part of the pay proposals, the government is having to renege on a three-year deal agreed with senior civil servants that was due to expire in March 2011 which would have awarded them a 3.04 percent pay rise. Nurses, teachers and police officers aren’t covered by today’s announcement and their three- year pay awards will be honored.

“We have to make tough but realistic decisions on pay,” Liam Byrne, chief secretary to the Treasury, said in a statement in London. “That means leadership from senior groups and realistic increases for other workforces.”

Deficit Pledge

Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling is looking for savings in government spending as he seeks to implement a pledge to halve the deficit while maintaining the same quality of services at schools, hospitals and other areas.

The Conservative retirement proposal will hit people born after 1951, with the age at which they qualify for their state pension increases to 66 from 65. That change had been scheduled for 2026.

The decision on when to make the change will be made after a review of pension funding to be set up should the Conservatives win the next election, due by June 2010. Polls put the party on course to defeat Brown.

Adair Turner, now the chairman of the Financial Services Authority, in November 2005 completed a review of British retirement plans, concluding that people would have to work longer and save more if they wanted to fund their old age.

The government responded by saying the retirement age will rise to 66 by 2026, to 67 by 2036 and to 68 during a two-year period between 2044 and 2046. After that, the age will rise in line with life expectancies.

The age at which women qualify for their pensions, currently 60, is already planned to rise over the coming decade until it is equal with men’s.

“Our aim will be to bring forward the date when the pension age rises,” Osborne will say in his keynote speech to the party’s annual conference in Manchester, according to his office. “This is how we can afford increasing the basic state pension for all.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Robert Hutton in London at rhutton1@bloomberg.net





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China Discusses Reserves at IMF Meeting, EmergingMarkets Says

By David Yong

Oct. 6 (Bloomberg) -- China is holding talks with the International Monetary Fund concerning the management of global currency reserves, EmergingMarkets magazine reported, citing Liu Mingkang, chairman of China Banking Regulatory Commission.

The government and the People’s Bank of China are having some “good conversations with the IMF” at its annnual meeting in Istanbul regarding the reserves issue, the magazine cited Liu as saying in an interview. Liu declined to comment on the possible outcome, the magazine said on its Web site.

The IMF’s steering body, the International Monetary and Financial Committee, has explored the idea of offering pooled currency reserves instead of having countries stockpile them, Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said on Oct. 4. People’s Bank of China Governor Zhou Xiaochuan urged the IMF in March to create a “super-sovereign reserve currency.”

Some countries may prefer to create regional pools of reserves instead of a global one managed by the IMF because of bureaucratic and political hurdles, the magazine said, citing Mexican central bank Governor Guillermo Ortiz and his counterpart in Brazil, Henrique Meirelles.

The plan won’t solve global financial imbalances and the U.S. veto power would be an obstacle to countries entrusting their reserves to the IMF, the report said, citing former World Bank chief economist Joseph Stiglitz.

To contact the reporter on this story: David Yong in Singapore at dyong@bloomberg.net.





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Ivanhoe, Rio Tinto, Mongolia to Sign Oyu Tolgoi Agreement Today

By Rob Delaney and Rebecca Keenan

Oct. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Ivanhoe Mines Ltd. and Rio Tinto Group plan to sign an agreement today with the government of Mongolia to develop the Oyu Tolgoi copper-gold project, which Rio has called the world’s largest such resource.

The accord sets up a “legal, stable, long-term tax and regulatory environment for the construction and operation of the Oyu Tolgoi mining complex,” Vancouver-based Ivanhoe said yesterday in a statement. No terms of the agreement were given and Ivanhoe spokesman Bob Williamson declined to comment. A news conference in Ulaanbaatar is scheduled for 3 p.m. local time today, according to an invite sent by the Mongolian parliament.

The deal may last as long as 30 years and is valued at $30 billion to $50 billion, Mongolian President Tsakhiagiin Elbegdorj said last month. Ivanhoe, the developer of the project, has tried for more than six years to reach an agreement to mine the deposit, which is about 80 kilometers (50 miles) north of Mongolia’s border with China.

The site contains about 78.9 billion pounds (36 million metric tons) of copper and 45.2 million ounces of gold, according to company estimates from March 2008. Ivanhoe spent $156 million on exploration and development at Oyu Tolgoi last year and $245.5 million in 2007, the company said in April.

Ivanhoe rose 2.1 percent to C$13.91 in Toronto Stock Exchange trading yesterday. London-based Rio gained 2.2 percent to A$58.08 as of 2:16 p.m. in Sydney.

Rio Tinto agreed to buy 9.9 percent of Ivanhoe in October 2006. The company has the option to increase its stake to 43.1 percent in stages as development progresses, according to a Sept. 23 statement from Ivanhoe. The stake can rise to 46.65 percent should Rio buy Ivanhoe shares on the market, the statement said.

Disagreements

Ivanhoe Chairman Robert Friedland’s efforts to get the project into production had been stymied by disagreements between Mongolia’s parliament, ministers and the mining companies over how much ownership the government should take in its mineral wealth. Protests over benefits for foreign miners led to the collapse of a coalition government in 2006.

Friedland has staked the prospects for Oyu Tolgoi on demand for copper from manufacturers in China, where imports rose more than threefold to 213,399 tons at the end of last year from three years earlier, according to the country’s customs data.

Oyu Tolgoi will “make Ivanhoe a major producer of copper,” said Ray Goldie, an analyst at Salman Partners Inc. who has a “buy” rating on Ivanhoe since April 2008, according to data collected by Bloomberg.

Ivanhoe would likely profit from production at Oyu Tolgoi if copper prices were trading as low as $1.50 a pound.

Copper for December delivery on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange rose as much as 1 percent to $2.755 a pound. The metal hasn’t traded below $1.50 since Feb. 27.

To contact the reporters on this story: Rob Delaney in Toronto at robdelaney@bloomberg.net; Rebecca Keenan in Melbourne at rkeenan5@bloomberg.net.





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Dollar Falls on Report Gulf States May Stop Using Greenback

By Yoshiaki Nohara and Ron Harui

Oct. 6 (Bloomberg) -- The dollar fell for a second day against the yen as the Independent newspaper said Gulf states may switch to a basket of currencies including the yen and euro for oil trading.

The dollar declined against 14 of its 16 major counterparts as Asian stocks rallied and the Independent cited banking sources in Hong Kong as saying Gulf states along with Japan and China discussed dropping the greenback for oil trades. The yen rose after Japan’s finance minister said he told Group of Seven leaders weak-currency policies were undesirable. Australia’s dollar surged after the nation’s central bank unexpectedly raised benchmark interest rates.

“Eventually there will be a move to non-dollar commodity contracts, and it may be the next big risk for the dollar,” said Ben Simpfendorfer, chief China economist for Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc in Hong Kong. “At the same time, I don’t want to overplay the importance of the story. There’s no credible sources there.”

The dollar fell to 89.03 yen at 6:16 a.m. in London from 89.53 yen in New York yesterday. The euro climbed to $1.4719 from $1.4648. The 16-nation currency fetched 131.05 yen from 131.15 yen.

The dollar weakened after the U.K.-based Independent reported oil-producing Gulf nations are seeking to move to a basket of currencies to settle transactions.

“A move by the Arab states to use a currency basket that consists of the yen, the euro and other instruments will definitely prove positive for those assets,” said Lee Wai Tuck, a currency strategist at Forecast Pte in Singapore. “This is likely to fuel buying of the Japanese and European currencies at the expense of the greenback.”

Rising Stocks

The Dollar Index fell for a third day as the MSCI Asia Pacific Index of regional shares gained 1 percent, weakening demand for safe-haven currencies. The index, which the ICE uses to track the dollar against the currencies of six major U.S. trading partners including the euro, dropped 0.3 percent to 76.433.

“Evidence suggests the global economy is recovering,” said Greg Gibbs, a Sydney-based currency strategist with Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc. “The dollar may weaken, which has been a trend of recent weeks. Certainly, strong equities enforce that trend.”

Fujii Comments

The yen gained against 13 of its 16 major counterparts after Japanese Finance Minister Hirohisa Fujii said he told officials from the Group of Seven nations meeting in Istanbul last weekend that governments shouldn’t pursue policies that seek to devalue their currencies.

“I made the point that it’s undesirable for individual nations to take a weak-currency policy,” Fujii said at a news conference in Tokyo today. “Currency devaluation policies back in the 1930s had an adverse impact on the global economy and politics.”

Fujii said earlier last month he didn’t support a weak currency. In Istanbul he said that Japan would “take action” if currencies show excessive moves. The yen has gained 14 percent against the dollar in the past year, hurting earnings for export-dependent Japanese companies.

“The market is interpreting his latest comments as signs the government will let the yen keep rising,” said Yoh Nihei, trading group manager at Tokai Tokyo Securities Co. in Tokyo. “The yen is benefiting from that.”

The Australian dollar jumped 1 percent to 88.64 U.S. cents after the Reserve Bank of Australia raised its benchmark interest rate from a 49-year low by a quarter percentage point amid signs the nation’s economy is strengthening.

Reserve Bank Governor Glenn Stevens increased the overnight cash rate target to 3.25 percent from 3 percent in Sydney today. Only one of 20 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News forecast today’s decision. The rest predicted no change.

‘Solid Economic Data’

Australia is the first Group of 20 nation to raise borrowing costs since the start of the global financial crisis more than a year ago.

The euro gained before a report forecast to show German factory orders increased for a sixth month. The Economy Ministry in Berlin is forecast to report Germany’s factory orders advanced 1.1 percent in August following a 3.5 increase in July, according to the median estimate of economists in a Bloomberg News survey. The data is due tomorrow.

“Solid economic data in Germany are good for the euro- zone’s economy, boosting demand for the euro,” said Toshiya Yamauchi, a Tokyo-based manager of the foreign-exchange margin trading department at Ueda Harlow Ltd. “Rising stocks are also encouraging risk taking, and the yen and dollar are under pressure.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Yoshiaki Nohara in Tokyo at ynohara1@bloomberg.net; Ron Harui in Singapore at rharui@bloomberg.net.





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Russian Steel Writedowns Loom as Price Slump Wrecks Ambitions

By Ilya Khrennikov

Oct. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Russian steelmakers’ plans for world domination are in tatters. A spending spree on U.S. mills meant to lift their billionaire owners into the industry’s top rank is instead forcing them to renegotiate debt and write down assets.

OAO Severstal, the biggest producer, may sell some of the U.S. plants it bought for almost $4 billion at fire-sale prices or seek bankruptcy for them, Uralsib Financial Corp. analyst Dmitry Smolin said. Outstanding debt at Severstal and next- largest producer Evraz Group SA almost tripled after they ramped up buying in 2006, while the cost of funding debt in Russia has risen by about 50 percent, according to data Bloomberg compiled.

“Russian steelmakers’ acquisitions in the U.S. were all unsuccessful,” said Dan Yakub, a Citigroup Inc. analyst in Moscow who recommends investors sell Evraz and who has a “hold” rating on Severstal. “The management wanted a global business, to get more flags on the map. They overestimated the potential of the U.S. market and underestimated the depth of the price collapse.”

While the Russians began buying U.S. mills in 2004, with Severstal’s purchase of Rouge Steel Co., it was rising steel prices two years later that fueled an acquisition binge, which totaled $18 billion according to Moody’s Investors Service. Even as economies and prices retreated from May 2008, Evraz, Severstal and OAO Novolipetsk Steel kept buying to try to pick up bargains. Instead the prices fell further, wiping as much as 70 percent off asset values, according to VTB Group.

Chinese Growth

Steel demand at automakers and builders tumbled amid the global economic crisis, with North American steel prices plunging as much as two-thirds from their May 2008 peak. Lower- cost mills in China, the world’s largest producer, expanded as plants in the U.S., Japan and Europe cut output. U.S. production in August was down 40 percent from a year earlier while China’s rose 22 percent, according to data from the Brussels-based World Steel Association.

Severstal owner Alexei Mordashov, 44, followed Rouge Steel with a stake in Italian steelmaker Lucchini SpA, before buying gold miner Celtic Resources Holdings Plc. By January 2007, as banks such as Credit Suisse Group AG were warning about risky credit derivatives, Mordashov said he was seeking acquisitions around the globe. As late as 2008, while debt markets imploded, Severstal made another four purchases of steel and coal assets.

“I have no idea how much these assets are worth now as there are probably few buyers interested, if any,” said Jean- Louis Tauvy, who as a fund manager in Moscow at Atria Advisors Ltd. helps oversee $120 million in Russian stocks. “It’s more probably a liability rather than an asset for Severstal. Evraz assets are better quality but are still worth much less than what they were bought for.”

Personal Ambition

Moscow-based Evraz, part owned by Roman Abramovich, agreed to buy Claymont Steel Holdings Inc. in December 2007 and spend $2.4 billion on the Canadian assets of Ipsco Inc. in June 2008.

The billionaire steel magnates, while driven by personal ambition, also bought operations in North America and Europe as a way to avoid anti-dumping duties and import quotas on the steel they were shipping from their plants in Russia.

In addition, access to Russian electricity a third the cost of power in western Europe along with cheaper raw materials and labor meant the steelmakers had double the profit margins of foreign rivals, and an impetus to invest spare cash that was out of step with the global economic cycle.

“It was natural for Russian steel companies to look for targets abroad,” said Aivaras Abromavicius, who helps run $2.5 billion in Russian equities at East Capital in Moscow. “Looking back, of course, it seems it would have been wiser either to return more cash to the shareholders in the form of dividends or to use it to pay back some of the loans.”

Loan Waivers

Both Evraz and Moscow-based Severstal may need to seek waivers or changes to loan agreements with creditors to avoid breaching so-called debt covenants this year, Standard & Poor’s said in a report on Sept. 24. “The moderate upturn” in the market “may not be enough to support current ratings.”

The two companies have already written off at least $2.6 billion from the value of their purchases of foreign assets and goodwill, according to Bloomberg calculations.

Price Recovery

“Russian steelmakers will probably test their foreign assets for impairment at the end of the year and may then do further write-offs,” Alex Herbert, an analyst at S&P in London, said by phone. He declined to provide specific estimates.

Severstal remains “committed” to operating in North America, “one of the world’s most important long-term markets for steel,” the company said in an e-mailed response to questions on Sept. 29. It declined to comment on any sales of assets, write-offs or the viability of its U.S. operations.

“We consider our acquisitions in North America to be a real success,” Pavel Tatyanin, Evraz’s senior vice president for international operations, said by phone from Johannesburg. “We bought assets related to infrastructure. They will be among the first to recover and will benefit from U.S. stimulus.” Evraz doesn’t plan to sell the operations, Tatyanin said.

North American domestic hot-rolled coil has rebounded 57 percent from the more than five-year low of $370 a short ton on June 9, 2009. The benchmark for regional steel prices lost two- thirds of its value in the previous year from a record $1,125.

As the worst of the economic slump passes, prices rebound and demand returns, pressure on producers to write down assets may ease. UBS AG on Sept. 23 raised its fourth-quarter forecast for North American hot-rolled coil 20 percent to $570 a ton.

“It would be a misconception to say expansion to the U.S. failed,” Gregory Mason, Severstal North America’s former CEO, said in a phone interview from Pittsburgh. “Those who say it think tactically rather than strategically. Strategic decisions should be viewed over the entire steel market cycle. It would’ve been unwise to sit on cash in Russia.”

Dreams Shattered?

Others say Russian dreams of expansion have been shattered. When Severstal pinned its U.S. ambitions on demand for cars, vehicle sales slumped to the lowest in almost three decades. After Mason said steel assets could be had in the country for “bargain” prices, the industry lost half its market value.

“Severstal will definitely have to reveal the strategy for the market regarding its U.S. plants, which may include either direct sale or filing for bankruptcy for some of the assets,” Smolin said. “Evraz has better-quality assets and doesn’t plan to sell them but may consider the sale some of overseas assets if it fails to pay creditors,” though this remains unlikely.

Severstal International, the steelmaker’s overseas arm, said on Sept. 7 that two of its five U.S. plants were idle and it would only retain its “most efficient” units.

Takeover Scrapped

Evraz sold the Cape Lambert iron-ore project in Australia in August and allowed an option to increase a stake in China’s Delong Holdings Ltd. to lapse. Lipetsk, Russia-based Novolipetsk in November scrapped a planned $3.5 billion takeover of New Jersey-based John Maneely Co. OAO TMK, Russia’s largest steel- pipe maker, ran U.S. plants it bought last year for $1.75 billion at a third of capacity in the first half of 2009.

The Moscow-based pipemaker will boost capacity utilization to 70 percent by the year-end, RIA Novosti reported on Sept. 22.

Severstal’s operations in the U.S. “may have to file for bankruptcy,” said Sergei Belyaev, who helps oversee $150 million in investments from Russia and former Soviet states at Kazimir Partners in Moscow. “The assets that don’t generate cash are basically worth nothing.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Ilya Khrennikov in Moscow at ikhrennikov@bloomberg.net





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