Economic Calendar

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

FX Daily Report

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by swiss pb | Oct 13 09 05:59 GMT |

The dollar was mostly lower on Monday as investors positioned for earnings from some of the biggest U.S. banks later this week on expectations that results will top forecasts and drive risk tolerance higher. Though the relationship has weakened in recent months, some investors are still selling the dollar against other currencies as they buy riskier assets. Results from JPMorgan Chase & Co and Goldman Sachs Group Inc are slated for later this week.

The German government expects gross domestic product (GDP) to rise by about 0.5 percent in the third quarter, government sources told on Monday. The sources said government experts were forecasting a contraction in GDP of 4.5 to 5.0 percent for the full year 2009, and modest growth of about 0.75 percent in 2010. The economy ministry releases its official growth forecasts on October 21 and third quarter GDP data is due to be published in mid-November.

The Swiss franc lost ground against the euro and the dollar on Monday as analysts looked for potential exchange rate volatility on investor sentiment numbers and other macro data due out later in the week. Swiss macroeconomic data in the pipeline include producer prices for September on Tuesday, investor sentiment for October on Thursday and August retail sales on Friday, with German investor sentiment numbers also weighing in on Tuesday.

Sterling fell to a six-month low against a basket of currencies on Monday, as British government plans to raise billions of pounds through asset sales reminded investors of how bleak the outlook is for UK public finances.

Prime Minister Gordon Brown outlined plans to sell 3 billion pounds of assets, part of a broader program to raise 16 billion pounds and help reduce the ballooning budget deficit. A report on Monday from consultancy Centre for Economics and Business Research, meanwhile, said interest rates could stay at the record low of 0.5 percent until 2011 and that the pound could fall to $1.40 and possibly below parity with the euro.

UK opposition leader David Cameron said last week that printing money - a reference to the BoE's quantitative easing program - risked fuelling inflation if it continued much longer.

The Bank of England has cut interest rates to a historic low of 0.5 percent and embarked on an unprecedented 175 billion pound program of quantitative easing, creating money to help stave off the threat of deflation.

EUR/USD: Yesterday pair tested highs and reached 1.4812 level. Prefer buy moving down till 1.4760 for break of resistance at 1.4820 and target 1.4850 – 1.4880. Stop loss below 1.4730

GBP/USD: Important day for GBP. Big movements after CPI figures are possible. Prefer sell moving up till 1.5860 for target 1.5700. Stop loss above 1.5930

USD/JPY: Prefer buy dip till 89.70 level for target 90.50. Stop loss below 89.40.

USD/CHF: Prefer sell at current price (1.0267) and moving up till 1.0280 for target 1.0200. Resistance at 1.0270 – 1.0280 should hold. Stop loss above 1.0300.

swiss pb

Disclaimer

To the extent allowed by applicable law, swiss pb, its employees and partners disclaim without reservation any liability for direct, indirect or consequential damage and/or losses of any kind whatsoever arising from use of fact sheets, reports or access to the swiss pb website or from links to the websites of third parties. Furthermore, swiss pb disclaims without reservation any liability for damage to or influences on the internet user's IT system. In this regard, swiss pb particularly wishes to alert all visitors and users of the swiss pb website to the danger of viruses and the possible presence of hackers in Internet traffic and in telecommunications in general. swiss pb expressly recommends the use of the latest versions of browsers and the installation of regularly updated anti-virus software, and advises against opening e-mails and their attachments from unknown senders.

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.





Read more...

NZ Retail Sales Impress And Europe Awaits Inflation Data

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by AC-Markets | Oct 13 09 07:06 GMT |

Market Brief

Asian equities are strongly higher today as a weak JPY boosted manufacturing names and NZ Retail Sales set a bullish tone to the session; Aug figures were 1.1% MoM vs. 0.5% expected (-0.5% prior), following the example set by Australian and US Retail Sales in convincingly beating forecasts. NZDUSD immediately popped from 0.7340 to 0.7380, and has managed to sustain these levels into the start of the European session. Despite the positive data and robust equity market performance, the USD has stayed firm (DXY 76.19) and correspondingly commodity prices are broadly flat on the day: gold $1055.70, silver $17.80, crude $73.

This morning's data calendar has a raft of inflation figures out of Europe, kicking off with Swiss Producer & Import Prices for Sep (0.1% MoM exp, 0.1% prior) – considering the recent miss in CPI and the SNB's high profile interventions on the CHF currency to fend off deflation, this will be keenly watched for any indications that deflation worries are founded or indeed, have abated. Next up is Swedish CPI (Sep) where inflation is forecast to have ticked up 0.4% MoM after posting a 0.2% gain last month, then UK CPI (Sep) where consensus estimates predict a 0.3% gain MoM vs. 0.4% in August. Other releases to expect include German ZEW economic expectations and later on the US Budget Balance.

In the earnings space, today will bring Johnson & Johnson and Intel Corp; with the latter likely to be the more important driver of market sentiment, however the major market moving events are likely to be tomorrow; with JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley reporting, coupled with the release of US Retail Sales and FOMC Minutes. So far markets have enjoyed a relatively smooth ride throughout the month as risk events have either passed without incident or bettered analyst forecasts. We still believe the USD weakness trend has further to go, but there is undoubtedly room for a correction if the outlook is soured by a downside surprise

ACM FOREX

Disclaimer: This report has been prepared by AC Markets (thereof ACM) and is solely been published for informational purposes and is not to be construed as a solicitation or an offer to buy or sell any currency or any other financial instrument. Views expressed in this report may be subject to change without prior notice and may differ or be contrary to opinions expressed by Salesperson or Traders of ACM at any given time. ACM is under no obligation to update or keep current the information herein, the report should not be regarded by recipients as a substitute for the exercise of their own judgment.





Read more...

Technical Analysis for Major Currencies

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by ecPulse.com | Oct 13 09 06:57 GMT |

EURO

The euro versus dollar failed to stabilize above 1.4780, touching 1.4815 which is considered minor resistance levels that had forced the pair to set bearish candlestick formation; where on the chart above we can see that this minor resistance has become vital after the pair set three peaks upon it. We currently see a negative crossover on Stochastic; whereas the RSI indicator is witnessing a bearish reversal. These levels support the mentioned resistance where we expect it to be able to return the pair to move to the downside to retest 1.4680, which is the 50 MA levels shown in the image above on the four hour chart. It should be noted that closing the four hours below the mentioned resistance is very important for our expectations to remain intact.

The trading range for today is among the key support at 1.4470 and the key resistance at 1.5000.

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

Support: 1.4740, 1.4710, 1.4680, 1.4620, 1.4575
Resistance: 1.4790, 1.4815, 1.4845, 1.4890, 1.4955

Recommendation: Based on the charts and explanations above our opinion is selling the pair at 1.4780 and targeting 1.4680 and stop loss above 1.4845, might be appropriate

GBP

Cable was capable of breach 100% extension, shown above, which indicates more downside movement towards 38.2% correction (the correction for the upside move that began on January 23 and ended on August 5 of this year). We still see a bearish technical pattern on the daily chart provided, where it is still affecting the pair's movement and causing it to ignore the oversold signs on momentum indicators. These technical facts make us expect a bearish direction for today, where the bearish direction my not be free of volatile fluctuations; while stability must remain below 1.5890 to keep the bearish movement over an intraday basis intact.

The trading range for today is among the key support at 1.5465 and the key resistance at 1.6110.

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

Support: 1.5735, 1.5690, 1.5615, 1.5555, 1.5465
Resistance: 1.5805, 1.5890, 1.5925, 1.6000, 1.6035

Recommendation: Based on the charts and explanations above our opinion is selling the pair at 1.5805 targeting 1.5615 and stop above 1.5925, might be appropriate

JPY

Despite of achieving our expectations yesterday, we see a failed attempt at the first breach that occurred yesterday to the main resistance level for the bearish direction, where it met with 23.6% (the correction for the downside wave that began on August 7 and ended with the pair's final bottom) at 90.30. On the other hand, the failed breach yesterday did not complete the positive signs that had appeared on the pair where a bullish intraday direction remains intact, as long as trading remains above the 50 MA at 89.30. Momentum indicators are mixed; ADX points to a very mixed direction, where this situation usually comes along with the breach of the resistance and support levels. From here we see that there's a possibility to the upside today, where it must stabilize above 90.30.

The trading range for today is among the key support at 86.75 and the key resistance at 93.60.

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

Support: 89.65, 89.30, 89.00, 88.60, 88.60
Resistance: 90.00, 90.30, 90.95, 91.35, 91.60

Recommendation: Based on the charts and explanations above our opinion is buying the pair at 89.65 To target 90.95 and stop loss below 89.00, might be appropriate

CHF

A sideways direction is still in control of the pair's move where its resistance is the 38.2% extension at 1.0335, and its main support is at 1.0240 and is presented by 76.4% correction for the last bullish intraday direction. The combination of moving average are still bearish and point that the medium term direction is still bearish; whereas, momentum indicators show a case of positive reversal as the bearish direction strength is falling according to ADX where the D- indicator fell sharply. These technical patterns make us expect that the pair will reattempt another ascend and breach 1.0335 towards the 61.8% extension at 1.0400 and then main resistance for the bearish direction at 1.0435, where this expectation will prevail if 1.0240 remains intact. We should warn that the breach of 1.0220 and remaining below it will cancel any bullish correction.

The trading range for today is among the key support at 1.0000 and the key resistance at 1.0550.

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

Support: 1.0240, 1.0205, 1.0180, 1.0110, 1.0060
Resistance: 1.0300, 1.0335, 1.0360, 1.0400, 1.0435

Recommendation: Based on the charts and explanations above our opinion is buying the pair at 1.0240 and targeting 1.0400 and stop loss below 1.0180, might be appropriate

CAD

Major oversold signs for pair make us take another glance at it to explain the bullish direction's failure which we predicted yesterday, to find that the bullish direction is still expected; where the pair is currently trading above the 200% extension for the Base Impulsive Wave as the pair ended the third wave at this extension at 1.0315. From here we expect that a fourth correctional wave should start, where it makes us expect the pair to move to the upside in an attempt to retest 23.6% correction which somewhat joined with the 161.8% extension at levels around the 20 MA at 1.0450. The ascending correction direction requires 1.0315 to remain intact with four-hour closings and oversold momentum indicators insure our expectations for today.

The trading range for today is among the key support at 1.0210 and the key resistance at 1.0770.

The general trend is to the downside as far as 1.1870 remains intact with targets at 1.0000.

Support: 1.0315, 1.0285, 1.0245, 1.0200, 1.0125
Resistance: 1.0400, 1.0450, 1.0500, 1.0575, 1.0630

Recommendation: Based on the charts and explanations above our opinion is buying the pair at 1.0250 and targeting 1.0360 and stop loss below 1.0175, might be appropriate

Ecpulse

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


Read more...

BOJ May Decide to Let Corporate Buying Program Expire

By Mayumi Otsuma

Oct. 13 (Bloomberg) -- The Bank of Japan may decide tomorrow to start withdrawing its emergency credit-easing programs because businesses have regained access to private funding.

Governor Masaaki Shirakawa and his colleagues may say it will allow their corporate debt purchase programs to expire on Dec. 31 as scheduled. The central bank will also hold the benchmark interest rate at 0.1 percent, according to all of the 20 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News.

Shirakawa said on Oct. 3 the need for the bank’s purchases of commercial paper and corporate bonds has diminished, indicating the bank is preparing to terminate the operations. Companies surveyed in the central bank’s Tankan survey released Oct. 1 said it is becoming easier to borrow from banks as the global credit crisis eases.

“The Bank of Japan has explicitly indicated it wants to end the programs,” said Izuru Kato, chief market economist at Totan Research Co. in Tokyo. “Discontinuing them would have little impact on the economy.”

Government bonds fell, sending 10-year yields one basis point higher to 1.29 percent at 12:20 p.m. in Tokyo. The yen traded at 89.82, unchanged from late yesterday and weaker than the eight-month high of 88.01 reached on Oct. 7.

Emergency Programs

Since lowering rates to 0.1 percent in December, the bank started buying commercial paper and corporate bonds from lenders and offering them unlimited loans backed by collateral to channel funds to companies. The policy board extended the three plans to Dec. 31 when it met in July.

People with direct knowledge of the bank’s discussions said in September the bank may make a decision as soon as this month because officials are concerned that continuing the programs for too long would distort capital markets. Economists expect the bank to keep the limitless lending program.

Major companies said their access to funding improved compared with three months ago, the bank’s Tankan survey showed. Large firms said their access to credit has recovered to last year’s levels while small companies said their funding conditions were still tighter than December, the survey said.

Central banks around the world are moving to pare back unprecedented measures to unfreeze credit as the financial industry stabilizes. The Federal Reserve last month said it would shrink programs that auction loans to banks and Treasuries to bond dealers. The European Central Bank said Sept. 24 it will stop its longer-dated dollar liquidity operations because of limited demand.

Bank of England

Meanwhile the British Chambers of Commerce urged the Bank of England to expand its bond-purchase program to as much as 200 billion pounds ($315 billion). “This fragile recovery we’ve started to see really needs to be nurtured,” BCC Director General David Frost said in an interview.

The strengthening yen may dissuade the Bank of Japan from deciding tomorrow to let the programs expire, some economists say. Japan’s currency has risen more than 3 percent against the dollar in the past three months, squeezing profits of exporters and threatening the economy’s recovery from its worst postwar recession. The Nikkei 225 Stock Average has fallen 4.2 percent since Aug. 31. It rose 0.4 percent in morning trading.

“It may be difficult for the bank to make a decision this week, given that the stability in the yen and stocks is crucial for ending the corporate programs,” said Naka Matsuzawa, chief investment strategist at Nomura Securities Co. in Tokyo.

Thrown Punches

Government officials have acknowledged the lack of demand for some of the BOJ’s programs, while also calling on policy makers to mind that smaller companies still have difficulty raising funds. Deputy Prime Minister Naoto Kan said last week he hopes the bank will take into account the “severe” state of funding for smaller firms when it debates ending the programs.

“The government has already thrown preemptive punches to the Bank of Japan, but the bank should end buying commercial paper and corporate bonds as planned because the facilities aren’t really being used,” said Teizo Taya, a former BOJ board member and now adviser of the Daiwa Institute Research.

The bank will probably maintain the limitless lending program because there is demand for it, analysts say. It has lent 7.3 trillion yen ($82 billion) under the facility as of Aug. 31. In contrast, it had 100 billion yen of commercial paper on its balance sheet, about 3 percent of the amount it’s allowed itself to hold. The bank held 200 billion yen of corporate bonds, only one-fifth of the limit set by officials.

‘Big Presence’

“The lending facility has a big presence in Japan’s money market, and its end would create a rift between the central bank and the government,” said Seiji Shiraishi, chief economist at HSBC Securities in Tokyo. “The bank will probably extend the program through March 31.”

Scaling back its stimulus doesn’t mean the bank is preparing to raise interest rates, analysts surveyed said. The bank will probably keep the key rate around 0.1 percent at least through the end of 2010, 16 of 17 economists who gave forecasts through the period said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Mayumi Otsuma in Tokyo at motsuma@bloomberg.net





Read more...

Forex Technical Analytics

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by FOREX Ltd | Oct 13 09 06:45 GMT |

CHF

Short positions opened and preserved before had positive result of overlap of minimal estimated target. OsMA trend indicator having marked the priority of bearish activity development gives grounds to suppose sales priority of planning of trading operations for today. On the assumption of it, as well as of bullish position of indicator chart we can assume probability of rate return to Ichimoku cloud border at 1,0280/1,0300 levels, where it is recommended to evaluate the development of the activity of both parties in accordance with the charts of shorter time interval. As for short-term sales on condition of formation of topping signals, the targets will be 1,0220/40, 1,0160/80 and (or) further break-out variant up to 1,0100/20, 1,0040/60, 0,9980/1,000. The alternative for buyers will be above 1,0360 with the targets of 1,0400/20, 1,0460/1,0500.

GBP

The pre-planned break-out variant for sales was implemented but with the loss of several points in the achievement of minimal estimated targets. OsMA trend indicator having marked in general outlook the preservation of bearish party activity gives grounds to suppose further sales priorities for planning of trading operations for today. On the assumption of it as well as of the sign of logical incompleteness of current bullish cycle we can assume probability of the achievement of 1,5840/60 resistance levels where it is recommended to evaluate the development of the activity of both parties in accordance with the charts of shorter time interval. As for short-term sales on conditions of formation of topping signals the targets will be 1,5780/1,5800, 1,5700/40 and (or) further break-out variant up to 1,5620/40, 1,5540/60, 1,5460/80. The alternative for buyers will be above 1,5920 with the targets of 1,5960/80, 1,6020/40, 1,6100/20.

JPY

The estimated rate return to close supports was confirmed but relative sales activity rise marked by OsMA trend indicator was not the positive moment for the implementation of pre-planned long positions. At the moment, evaluating the current outlook as favouring to bearish party and according to the chosen strategy we have grounds to choose sales priorities for planning of trading operations for today. Therefore, considering ascending direction of indicator chart we can assume probability of rate return to channel line '1' at 90,20/40 levels where it is recommended to evaluate the development of the activity of both parties in accordance with the charts of shorter time interval. As for sales on condition of the formation of topping signals the targets will be 89,60/80, 89,00/20 and (or) further break-out variant up to 88,40/60, 87,80/88,00. The alternative for buyers will be above 91,00 with the targets of 91,40/60, 92,00/40.

EUR

The pre-planned long positions from key supports were implemented with the achievement of main estimated targets. OsMA trend indicator, having marked bullish activity preservation gives grounds to preserve bullish direction priority for planning of trading operations for today. On the assumption of it as well as of bearish sign of indicator chart we can assume another rate return to Ichimoku cloud border at 1,4740/60 levels, where it is recommended to evaluate the development of the activity of both parties in accordance with the charts of shorter time interval. As for short-term buying positions on condition of the formation of topping signals the targets will be 1,4800/20 and (or) further break-out variant up to 1,4860/80, 1,4920/40, 1,4980/1,5000. The alternative for sales will be below 1,4640 with the targets of 1,4580/1,4600, 1,4520/40.

FOREX Ltd
www.forexltd.co.uk



Read more...

New Zealand Retail Sales Rise 1.1% as Recession Ends

By Tracy Withers

Oct. 13 (Bloomberg) -- New Zealand’s retail sales rose in August at more than twice the pace expected by economists, adding to signs the economy’s recovery from recession is gathering pace in the second half of this year.

Sales increased 1.1 percent from July, seasonally adjusted, Statistics New Zealand said in Wellington today. Core retail sales, which exclude car yards, fuel outlets and workshops, rose 1.2 percent.

Rising consumer confidence, increased immigration and a stronger housing market are buoying spending as the economy emerges from its worst recession in three decades. New Zealand’s dollar rose as traders bet a strong recovery may prompt central bank Governor Alan Bollard to raise interest rates sooner.

“It appears household consumption will make another positive contribution to growth in the third quarter,” said Helen Kevans, an economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in Sydney. “The economic data emerging from New Zealand of late certainly raises the chances of earlier policy tightening.”

New Zealand’s dollar rose to 73.79 U.S. cents at 11.30 a.m. a.m. in Wellington from 73.43 cents immediately before the report was released.

Sales were expected to gain 0.5 percent, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey of 11 economists. Spending fell 0.5 percent in July and was unchanged in June.

‘Patchy Recovery’

Gross domestic product increased 0.1 percent in the three months through June, the first growth in six quarters.

Bollard said on Sept. 10 a “patchy recovery” is under way and growth will remain modest until next year. The official cash rate needs to stay at a record-low 2.5 percent until late 2010 to provide stimulus to the economy, he said.

Seven of 11 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News last week say Bollard will raise the cash rate by at least a quarter point before June 30. Kevans expects the first increase will be in July.

Traders tip the rate will be 4 percent by October next year, according to an index calculated by Credit Suisse based on swaps trading.

Buoying spending, net immigration rose to a four-year high in August. House prices gained for a fifth month in September, Quotable Value New Zealand, the government valuation agency, said yesterday.

Consumer Confidence

Consumer confidence jumped to a four-year high in the third quarter, Westpac Banking Corp. and McDermott Miller Ltd. said in a report last month.

Retail sales increased in 16 of the 24 store categories measured in today’s report, led by clothing and hardware.

The monthly sales series isn’t adjusted to exclude price movements and sales. Fuel costs rose 4.3 percent in August, according to government figures. Food prices fell 0.9 percent.

Clothing and fabric store sales jumped 6.5 percent in August as warm weather bolstered purchases, the statistics agency said. Hardware store sales gained 7.2 percent. Spending at bars and furniture stores also increased.

Supermarket and grocery store sales, which make up a fifth of the total, fell 0.2 percent. Department store sales rose 2.4 percent, the first gain in four months.

Purchases from fuel outlets rose 1.9 percent as prices increased. Vehicle dealer sales fell for the first time in three months, declining 1.4 percent.

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





Read more...

Singapore Extends Wage Subsidies to Curb Job Losses

By Shamim Adam

Oct. 13 (Bloomberg) -- Singapore will extend a wage subsidy program for employers set to expire this year to avoid an increase in job losses that may derail the city-state’s economic recovery, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said.

The government will spend S$675 million ($483 million) to extend its so-called Jobs Credit program by six months, Lee said in a speech to trade unions today. It had earlier budgeted S$4.5 billion for the one-year plan that made quarterly subsidy payments to employers for every Singaporean worker on their payrolls.

Singapore’s unemployment rate is at the highest in four years and nearly 19,000 workers were fired in the first half of the year as the global recession curbed demand for goods and services. The Jobs Credit program has been credited by economists for saving more people from getting fired as it helped companies reduce wage costs during the economy’s worst recession since independence in 1965.

“The economy is now recovering, and some companies are hiring again,” Lee said. “But if we withdraw the Jobs Credit completely and suddenly, companies may have difficulties adjusting.”

Singapore’s economy is forecast to shrink between 2 percent and 2.5 percent this year, the government said yesterday. That is better than a previous estimate for a contraction of as much as 6 percent.

‘Uneven’ Recovery

The central bank yesterday said the strength of the economic recovery may ease after an “initial uplift,” and GDP growth in 2010 is expected to be slower than in previous post- recession periods.

“There is a need to extend the Jobs Credit for another six months as the current recovery has been uneven and restricted to certain segments of the economy,” said Irvin Seah, an economist at DBS Bank Ltd. in Singapore.

The government tapped its reserves for the first time this year in part to fund the Jobs Credit program. The extension of the plan will be funded through the normal government budget, Lee said today.

Under the initial plan, the government subsidized 12 percent of an employee’s monthly wages capped at S$2,500, giving companies cash grants of as much as S$900 every quarter per worker.

For the first of the two new payments, the government will subsidize 6 percent of wage costs at the same cap, Lee said. That will drop to 3 percent for the second payment, he said.

“Unemployment numbers tend to lag an economic recovery,” Lee said. “Not all companies are out of the woods and unemployment will take some time to come down.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Shamim Adam in Singapore at sadam2@bloomberg.net





Read more...

U.K. Housing Market Strengthens on Home Shortage, RICS Says

By Svenja O’Donnell

Oct. 13 (Bloomberg) -- The U.K. housing market strengthened in September as the proportion of surveyors and real-estate agents reporting higher prices rose to the highest since May 2007, the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors said.

The number of respondents saying prices rose exceeded those reporting declines by 22 percentage points, compared with 10 percent in August, RICS said in its monthly survey today in London. A separate report showed retail sales at stores open at least a year rose on an annual basis by the most in five months.

“A lack of supply is still underpinning the rise in house prices with new instructions to estate agents only edging up very gradually,” RICS spokesman Ian Perry said in the statement. “This imbalance between demand and supply suggests that house prices will move higher in the near term.”

The Bank of England says that rising asset prices may buoy the economy and encourage Britain’s recovery from recession. The Council of Mortgage Lenders said yesterday that banks approved almost a third more loans in August than a year ago, while other reports also signal the housing market is picking up as consumer confidence strengthens.

The RICS report shows sentiment in the housing market is now at its highest since before the onset of the financial crisis in August 2007. House prices peaked in October 2007, according to Nationwide Building Society.

The number of surveyors reporting price gains was highest in London, with a balance of 79 percentage points, followed by 52 percentage points in the South East, the report showed. The overall balance of surveyors expecting gains in prices over the next three months rose to 25 percentage points, from 18 percentage points in August.

Buyers Competing

September “has seen price rises but only because there is a continued shortage of quality property,” said Benson Beard, a surveyor at Bective Leslie Marsh in London. “Buyers are having to compete, resulting in some prices being achieved at a level similar to that of 2007. This situation is unlikely to last long as more properties will come to the market, satisfying demand.”

The U.K. economy shrank 0.6 percent in the second quarter, less than previously estimated, and the National Institute of Economics and Social Research said last week gross domestic product stopped falling in the three months through September.

Retail sales are also increasing as consumer confidence returns. Sales at U.K. stores open at least a year rose 2.8 percent in September, compared with a 1.5 percent drop a year earlier, the British Retail Consortium said today.

Other reports this month have shown house prices gained. Halifax said last week that house prices increased for a third month in September, while Nationwide on Oct. 2 reported gains in house prices for the fifth consecutive month in September.

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





Read more...

No Easy Answer to ‘Too Big to Fail,’ Nobelist Williamson Says

By Vivien Lou Chen

Oct. 13 (Bloomberg) -- There’s no easy way to deal with the question of institutions whose failure might pose a threat to the financial system, said Oliver Williamson, co-winner of this year’s Nobel Economics Prize.

“There is no silver bullet,” Williamson, 77, said at a news conference yesterday at the University of California at Berkeley, where he is professor emeritus. “There is no instant answer that I or any of my students or any of my colleagues would be prepared to advance on that.”

Williamson is a founder of organizational economics -- the study of how institutions are created and developed and how they affect growth. In research that may have applications to the financial crisis, he suggested that it is better to regulate large companies than to try to break them up or limit their size.

The administration of President Barack Obama has proposed giving the Federal Reserve responsibility for overseeing financial institutions deemed “too big to fail.”

Williamson shared this year’s Nobel prize with Elinor Ostrom, a political scientist at Indiana University in Bloomington and the first woman to receive the economics award.

“There’s a possibility we could foresee some of the hazards,” such as those in the current crisis, and “take advance action,” Williamson said. The Fed and Treasury Department face “important organizational issues” similar to those raised by his work. Still, he said, he doesn’t think the crisis influenced the Nobel committee’s decision to award him the prize.

Williamson called himself “a lucky guy.”

In his academic work, Williamson found that large corporations exist primarily because they are efficient and benefit owners, workers, suppliers and customers, the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said today in Stockholm.

To contact the reporter on this story: Vivien Lou Chen in San Francisco at o vchen1@bloomberg.net





Read more...

German Investor Confidence Probably Rose to a Three-Year High

By Jana Randow

Oct. 13 (Bloomberg) -- German investor confidence probably rose to the highest in more than three years in October as Europe’s largest economy continued to recover from its worst recession since World War II, a survey of economists showed.

The ZEW Center for European Economic Research’s index of investor and analyst expectations increased to 58.8 from 57.7 in September, according to the median of 36 forecasts in a Bloomberg News survey. That would be the highest reading since April 2006. ZEW releases the report, which aims to predict developments six months ahead, at 11 a.m. in Mannheim today.

Factory orders rose for a sixth month in August and a manufacturing slump eased in September, suggesting growth is accelerating after the German economy exited the recession in the second quarter. While the strengthening economy helped pushed the benchmark DAX index up 58 percent from its March trough, the pace of the recovery may be tempered by rising unemployment and the euro’s increase against the dollar.

“The core message is the economy will recover and the very worst is behind us,” said Klaus Schruefer, an economist at SEB Banken AG in Frankfurt. “We’ve seen a very good development in the stock market and companies’ earnings will probably surpass forecasts in the third quarter. Yet, uncertainty remains.”

ZEW’s gauge of the current economic situation probably rose to minus 69 from minus 74 in September, according to the survey of economists.

Improving Trade

Improving global trade is boosting demand for German exports, while the government’s 85 billion-euro ($125 billion) stimulus package has spurred spending at home. The International Monetary Fund on Oct. 1 raised its forecast for global growth next year to 3.1 percent from 2.5 percent projected in July.

Bayerische Motoren Werke AG, the world’s largest maker of luxury cars, posted its first monthly sales increase this year in September. It has ended months of production cuts as demand picks up and it prepares for the introduction of a new model.

Homag AG, a German machinery maker for the furniture and timber-frame housing industries, may return to profit next year after cutting jobs to cope with this year’s 40 percent sales drop, Chief Executive Officer Rolf Knoll said on Sept. 28.

The gains by the DAX have been matched across Europe, where the Dow Jones Euro Stoxx 50 has gained 55 percent since early March. In the U.S., the S&P 500 has surged 59 percent.

Euro Appreciation

While the “general economic trend” is “pointing upward,” unemployment may rise, curbing consumer spending, Bundesbank President Axel Weber said on Oct. 3. The Bundesbank expects unemployment to rise to 10.5 percent in 2010 from 8.2 percent in September.

The euro-area economy is also facing rising unemployment and a “bumpy” recovery, European Central Bank President Jean- Claude Trichet said on Oct. 9.

In addition to joblessness, the euro’s appreciation against the dollar may hinder the recovery by eroding export competitiveness. Aurelio Maccario, chief euro-area economist at UniCredit Group in Milan, estimates that the euro’s 2 percent appreciation in trade-weighted terms since the start of the third quarter is enough to shave 0.2 percentage points off euro- area growth through 2010.

Ten of the 36 economists surveyed by Bloomberg forecast the ZEW index will decline.

“There’s no need to be overly pessimistic, but the potential for further improvement is shrinking,” said Klaus Baader, co-chief euro-area economist at Societe Generale in London, who predicts the index will retreat to 50.

To contact the reporter on this story: Jana Randow in Frankfurt at jrandow@bloomberg.net





Read more...

Dollar to Advance Against Euro, Aussie, Kiwi Dollars, UBS Says

By Candice Zachariahs

Oct. 13 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. dollar will strengthen against the euro and commodity-backed currencies by less than previously estimated over the next three months, UBS AG said, revising earlier forecasts.

The greenback, which has dropped against all 16 of its most-active counterparts this year, will rise to $1.40 against the euro in three months from $1.4790 as of 8:59 a.m. in Tokyo, the bank said. The Australian dollar will trade at 80 U.S. cents, Canada’s loonie at C$1.12 and New Zealand’s kiwi at 65 cents, UBS said. The Swiss franc will fetch 1.09 per dollar, it said.

“We remain skeptical about U.S. dollar weakness given how much equities have rallied already this year,” wrote a team of UBS analysts led by Zurich-based Mansoor Mohi-uddin, chief currency strategist at UBS. The forecast changes over three months “reflect the likelihood that the U.S. dollar will keep trading in a $1.40 to $1.50 range as we head into year end.”

The Canadian currency climbed to its highest since September 2008 yesterday and bought C$1.0318. Australia’s currency rose to 90.84 U.S. cents, after touching the strongest in 14 months and New Zealand’s dollar gained to 73.82 cents.

UBS earlier forecast the euro would buy $1.35 in three months, with the Australian and New Zealand currencies trading at 75 cents and 60 cents.

One dollar would buy C$1.18 and 1.13 Swiss francs respectively, it had said.

Commodity Currencies

The commodity-backed currencies of Australia, New Zealand and Canada, along with the Brazilian real, South African rand and Norwegian krone, have been the biggest gainers against the greenback this year as traders bet on assets that would benefit from a global recovery. Prices of commodities have climbed 16 percent this year, as investors sought hedges against inflation amid concerns about a widening U.S. budget deficit and record- low interest rates.

“The commodity bloc has strengthened sharply over the last few weeks as the global recovery continues,” wrote the analysts. “But we remain wary of chasing these currencies given all the good news that is priced into them.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Candice Zachariahs in Sydney at czachariahs2@bloomberg.net





Read more...

Chinese Coal Stocks, Shenhua Rise on Higher Crude, Inflation

By Bloomberg News

Oct. 13 (Bloomberg) -- China Shenhua Energy Co. led gains among Chinese coal producers in Shanghai trading after crude oil prices rebounded and on speculation inflation will make resource-related assets more appealing.

Shenhua, the country’s biggest coal producer, climbed 2.5 percent to 33 yuan as of 1:26 p.m., set for the highest close in three weeks. China Coal Energy Co., the No. 2, advanced 1.8 percent to 12.32 yuan. Datong Coal Industry Co., the third- largest, gained 5.8 percent to 39.45 yuan.

A measure tracking energy stocks climbed 2.2 percent today, the most among the 10 industry groups of the CSI 300 Index. China’s benchmark Shanghai Composite Index added 0.6 percent.

“In China, coal stocks are regarded as a proxy for oil producers,” said Wang Ye, chief coal analyst at Citic Securities Co. in Beijing. “So you can expect a good performance of coal stocks when oil prices rise. In addition, the inflation expectation has also made resource stocks like coal more attractive.”

Crude traded at $73 a barrel in New York in after-hours trading, after settling yesterday at a seven-week high of $73.27. Coal prices at Qinhuangdao port, a benchmark in China, the world’s biggest producer of the fuel, rose for a fourth week.

The price of coal with an energy value of 5,500 kilocalories a kilogram gained 0.8 percent to between 600 yuan ($88) and 615 yuan in the week ended Oct. 12, compared with the last assessment, according to data published by the China Coal Transport and Distribution Association.

Inflation in China may accelerate to at least 4 percent by the middle of next year because of an increasing supply of money and rising costs for food and property, Deutsche Bank AG said last month. Consumer prices fell 1.2 percent from a year earlier in August.

--Zhang Shidong and Winnie Zhu. Editors: Mark McCord, Linus Chua.

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Zhang Shidong in Shanghai at +86-21-6104-7014 or szhang5@bloomberg.net; Winnie Zhu in Shanghai at +86-21-5695-9460 or wzhu4@bloomberg.net





Read more...

Saudi Arabia to Maintain Oil Shipments Cuts to Asia

By Yee Kai Pin and Yuji Okada

Oct. 13 (Bloomberg) -- Saudi Arabian Oil Co., the world’s largest oil producer, will maintain cuts in its supplies of crude to refiners in Asia for November, said three officials who received notices.

The company, also known as Saudi Aramco, will keep reductions in supply at about 10 percent to 15 percent below contracted volumes, according to refinery officials in Japan, South Korea and Singapore, who asked not to be identified because of confidentiality agreements. That’s a third month of reductions at those levels. At least one Japanese refiner has yet to receive notice.

Saudi Aramco has reduced shipments to customers as part of announced cuts by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries. Saudi Arabia has a production quota of 8.051 million barrels a day. In September, the kingdom pumped 8.015 million barrels a day, according to a Bloomberg News survey.

Saudi Aramco on Oct. 6 cut its official selling prices for all grades of crude oil sold to Asia in November. The biggest decrease was for Arabian Super Light, which fell 70 cents a barrel from October to 40 cents over the average of Persian Gulf benchmarks Oman and Dubai.

The price and supply cuts coincide with reduced demand in Asia. Refiners in Japan and South Korea usually raise output before the winter to produce more kerosene for heating. Nippon Oil Corp., Japan’s largest refiner, said Sept. 30 it plans to produce 10 percent less fuel in October. Cosmo Oil Co. also said it will cut throughput because of weak domestic demand.

To contact the reporters on this story: Yee Kai Pin in Singapore at kyee13@bloomberg.net; Yuji Okada in Tokyo at yokada6@bloomberg.net





Read more...

Oil Pares Losses as Asian Equities Rises; Traders Bet on Demand

By Yee Kai Pin

Oct. 13 (Bloomberg) -- Crude oil pared losses as Asian equities rose, prompting traders to buy back contracts on bets global energy demand will recover.

Oil traded above $73 a barrel after the MSCI Asia Pacific Index climbed to a 13-month high, reversing losses that came on concern demand from refiners may fall as they shut plants for maintenance works prior to the northern hemisphere winter.

“Equities may be supporting the market,” said Ryoma Furumi at brokers Newedge in Tokyo. “We haven’t seen or heard of anything that’s directly impacting oil buying.”

Crude oil for November delivery was at $73.44 a barrel, up 17 cents, in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange at 2:45 p.m. in Singapore. The contract earlier fell as much as 0.7 percent to $70.84 a barrel. Futures have gained 57 percent this year.

To contact the reporters on this story: Yee Kai Pin in Singapore at kyee13@bloomberg.net





Read more...

BOE Should Buy as Much as 200 Billion Pounds in Bonds, BCC Says

By Brian Swint

Oct. 13 (Bloomberg) -- The Bank of England should expand its bond-purchase program to as much as 200 billion pounds ($316 billion) next month to secure Britain’s recovery from recession, the British Chambers of Commerce said.

“With quantitative easing, there’s still scope for some more,” David Frost, director general of the BCC, said in a Bloomberg Television interview. “This fragile recovery we’ve started to see really needs to be nurtured, so we’re saying perhaps another 25 billion pounds could be put into that.”

Bank of England policy makers signaled they will reassess the 175 billion-pound program in November after Governor Mervyn King was outvoted in August in his push for a bigger stimulus. The BCC’s quarterly survey, released today, showed that the U.K. struggled to emerge from the worst economic slump in a generation during the third quarter.

While business confidence among manufacturers rose to the highest since the first quarter of 2008 in the three months through September, the survey of output and orders suggests that gross domestic product either stagnated or fell, said David Kern, chief economist the BCC.

The index for manufacturing domestic sales rose to minus 10 from minus 37, and the index for export sales climbed to zero from minus 16. For services companies, the domestic sales index rose 15 points to minus 1, and the exports index increased to 6 from minus 10, the BCC said. The survey covered more than 5,500 companies.

Export Demand

The pound’s 20 percent drop against the dollar since the middle of last year is supporting sales abroad, Frost said.

“Clearly it’s helping,” Frost said. “But the growth of export demand depends very much on the global recovery.”

The results of the survey “support our assessment that the U.K. economy is on the brink of leaving recession,” Kern said. “However, the improvement is not sufficiently strong to allow us to conclude without a doubt that GDP has already returned to positive growth.”

The Confederation of British Industry, the U.K.’s biggest employers’ lobby, said Sept. 23 that the economy probably grew 0.3 percent in the third quarter and that the Bank of England is likely to cap its bond purchases at the current 175 billion pounds. The statistics office publishes its first estimate of gross domestic product on Oct. 23. The Bank of England’s next decision is on Nov. 5.

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





Read more...

Obama Dollar Retreats Most Against Commodities in Wealth Shift

By Brendan Murray

Oct. 13 (Bloomberg) -- President Barack Obama’s effort to lead the world economic recovery by spending the U.S. out of its recession is undermining the dollar, triggering record commodities rallies as investors scour the globe for hard assets.

As threats of a financial meltdown fade, the currency is falling victim to an unprecedented budget deficit, near-zero interest rates and slow growth. The dollar is down 10 percent against six trading partners’ legal tender in Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner’s first eight-and-a-half months, the sharpest drop for a new occupant of that office since the Reagan administration’s James Baker persuaded world leaders to boost the deutsche mark and yen by debasing the dollar in 1985. This year’s drop followed its best two quarters in 16 years.

“The dollar had been strong because the U.S. was a haven in the storm, and now that the storm is abating, who needs the dollar?” said Edmund Phelps, who won the 2006 Nobel Prize in economics and teaches at Columbia University in New York. “People got exasperated with the tiny returns on safe assets.”

Investors are sating their renewed risk appetites with developing nations’ stocks, currencies and the commodities some of them produce. Gold is up 19 percent this year, touching an all-time high $1,062.70 an ounce on Oct. 8. Copper has rallied 103 percent with the biggest three-quarter rise in at least 21 years. Crude oil, up 64 percent, just finished its steepest eight-month climb since 1999. Aluminum has gained 24 percent, propelled by its best two quarters in a dozen years or more.

Worst Since 1991

The MSCI Emerging Markets Index yesterday reached 950.34, the highest since August 2008, after the 22-year-old gauge’s biggest seven-month rally. The Dollar Index, which measures the currency against the euro, yen, pound, Canadian dollar, Swedish krona and Swiss franc, dropped to its lowest level since August 2008 on Oct. 8 after its worst two quarters since 1991.

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimates that the budget deficit for the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, which included some of Obama’s $787 billion stimulus package and the lowest tax revenue in more than 50 years, was $1.4 trillion, more than India’s gross domestic product. The administration will announce the final figure by mid-October.

Faced with administration projections of shortfalls totaling $9.1 trillion over the next decade, Obama and Congress have pledged to restore discipline. Fed officials have discussed how -- but not when -- they plan to reduce the central bank’s balance sheet, which has doubled to $2.1 trillion under emergency lending programs to unfreeze the credit markets.

‘Lofty Assurances’

“The most important thing coming from investors in Asia, where I am, is despite all these lofty assurances by U.S. officials that there’s a credible exit strategy from both fiscal and monetary stimulus, they understandably don’t believe it,” said Stephen Roach, chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia in Hong Kong.

Geithner, 48, has adopted the past two administrations’ policy of publicly favoring a “strong dollar.” It fell 24 percent in George W. Bush’s first four-year term, which ended Jan. 20, 2005, and rose 1.3 percent in his second.

“We are going to do everything necessary to make sure we sustain confidence” in the U.S. economy, Geithner said Oct. 3 in Istanbul.

Lawrence Summers, director of the White House’s National Economic Council, echoed Geithner’s statement in an Oct. 8 interview. “He made it very clear that our commitment is to a strong dollar based on strong fundamentals,” Summers said.

U.S. Interventions

Those words may ring hollow without direct government action to support the dollar or more evidence that the fiscal and monetary stimulus will be short lived. The U.S. hasn’t moved to shore up its currency by purchasing dollars since 1995. It intervened to weaken the dollar against the yen in 1998 and to support the euro in 2000.

“Currencies that have the lack of support of petroleum, metals, and have a liberal central bank posture toward printing money are currencies that will continue to be punished,” said Peter Kenny, managing director in institutional sales at Knight Equity Markets in Jersey City, New Jersey. “The U.S. dollar is a classic example of that.”

Commodities “insist on validation and validity,” while currencies “are subject to politics and perception,” he said.

HSBC Holdings Plc economists Stephen King and Stuart Green said in a report this month that the end of U.S. economic supremacy is at hand.

Their report predicted the “demise of the West” amid “ongoing struggles in the developed world” and said that “emerging market nations are set to dominate world economic activity in the years ahead.” Titled “The Tipping Point,” the report said currencies will be weak in countries “still pondering exit strategies and faced with multiple years of debt repayment.”

Growth Prospects

“The most obvious candidates are the U.S. dollar and sterling,” they wrote. Emerging-market economies will expand 6 percent next year, more than three times the 1.8 percent growth in developed economies, they said.

China’s 9.5 percent economic growth and India’s 7.2 percent increase will lead all nations next year, the HSBC economists predicted. In contrast, GDP will expand 2.8 percent in the U.S., 1.2 percent in Japan and 0.7 percent in the 16-nation euro zone, they said.

“Asia is taking its place again on the world stage” and the wealth shift is occurring “more rapidly than anyone would have thought,” said Stephen Green, HSBC group chairman, in an Oct. 6 interview in Istanbul.

As the dollar slips, silver and gold have outperformed all major currencies since the Sept. 15, 2008, announcement of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.’s collapse as investors favored the metals over legal tender.

‘Sniff of Inflation’

“Gold serves as a hedge against inflation, and even though we are in the midst of a recession worldwide, the sniff of inflation is already in the air,” said Richard O’Brien, chief executive officer of Newmont Mining Corp., the largest U.S. gold producer, on Oct. 2.

The dollar is suffering even as American stocks rebound from a 13-year low reached in March. One reason: the 19 percent increase in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index this year is trailing gains in stocks in most other nations.

Of 82 countries’ benchmark stock indexes tracked by Bloomberg, 60 performed better this year than the S&P 500 as of yesterday. Peruvian stocks lead the world with a 120 percent gain. The U.S. edged out gains by Bangladesh, New Zealand and Finland. Ghana, down 41 percent, is in last place.

Even measured against the March 9 start of the S&P 500’s biggest rally since the 1930s, the U.S. index’s 59 percent gain puts it in 39th place worldwide.

Highest Unemployment

With excess production capacity in the U.S. near an all- time high and unemployment at 9.8 percent, the highest in the Group of Seven, restoring the world’s largest economy to the 3 percent growth rate of the past two expansions may take years.

“The U.S. recovery is not yet clearly under way and other parts of the world, particularly emerging markets and commodity- based countries, are ahead of us,” said Michael Mussa, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute in Washington and the International Monetary Fund’s former chief economist.

Niall Ferguson, a Harvard University professor, said that “it would be extraordinary” if the dollar didn’t weaken in the next year.

Obama administration officials are likely to tolerate a decline unless it “gets to an extent where it’s causing trouble,” Jim O’Neill, chief economist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., said in an interview in Istanbul.

Excessive Drop

In an e-mail response to questions from Bloomberg News on Oct. 9, O’Neill said he considers the dollar’s recent drop excessive and predicted the currency will be stronger in a year, especially against the yen.

The dollar slumped to a postwar low of 80.63 yen in April 1995, only to rally 26 percent in the following two years. The Dollar Index reached a 10-year low in December 2004 on concern the U.S. current-account deficit was unsustainable, then rebounded 13 percent in 2006.

“We’re in the midst of a classic overshoot of the dollar,” said Michael Rosenberg, former head of foreign- exchange research at Deutsche Bank AG and a Bloomberg consultant. He said the U.S. outlook next year is more favorable than Japan and the euro area, the country’s current-account deficit is narrowing and the bond market isn’t reflecting inflation fears.

Rosenberg cited the 16 percent rise this year in the Reuters/Jefferies CRB Index of 19 commodities as evidence that the flight to raw materials isn’t widespread. Natural gas is down 49 percent and wheat has lost 31 percent.

Shorting the Dollar

The dollar is succumbing to momentum in a market that’s “lost its anchor,” Rosenberg said. “From 2001 to 2009, the best strategy was to close your eyes and short the dollar.”

The rebalancing of global wealth away from the U.S. as reflected in the dollar is likely to take years if not decades, said Carmen Reinhart, a University of Maryland economist who co- wrote a 2009 book with former IMF chief economist Kenneth Rogoff on the history of financial crises.

After World War II, the U.K. currency’s downfall was predicted “long before the sterling crisis of 1967 put the final nail in the coffin of the British pound as a reserve currency,” Reinhart said.

The dollar’s share of reserves in countries that report currency allocations fell in the second quarter to the lowest level since the euro was introduced in 1999. Reinhart predicted the dollar will remain the world’s most widely used currency for years and that any slide will be gradual until a viable alternative comes along.

“The euro hasn’t been fulfilling that role. The yen? Forget it. And the yuan is not convertible,” Reinhart said of the European, Japanese and Chinese currencies. “This is not something that’s around the corner here.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Brendan Murray in Washington at brmurray@bloomberg.net;





Read more...

Yen Nears Two-Week Low as Recovery Optimism Curbs Safety Demand

By Yoshiaki Nohara and Ron Harui

Oct. 13 (Bloomberg) -- The yen fell toward a two-week low against the euro as signs the global economic recovery is gathering momentum curbed demand for safe-haven currencies.

The yen slid against 14 of 16 major counterparts as Asian stocks extended a global rally on speculation corporate earnings are improving. The euro rose against the dollar and yen before reports forecast to show gains in German investor confidence and European factory output. New Zealand’s dollar climbed after the nation’s retail sales gained in August by the most since 2007.

“Risk appetite will stay underpinned in the near term,” said Danica Hampton, a currency strategist at Bank of New Zealand Ltd. in Wellington. “People are anticipating strong corporate earnings this week. That will support the market and help the yen weaken.”

The yen dropped to 133.16 per euro as of 7:38 a.m. in London from 132.72 in New York yesterday, when it touched 133.32, the weakest level since Sept. 25. Japan’s currency fell to 90.09 to the dollar from 89.82. The dollar was at $1.4779 per euro from $1.4773 in New York yesterday.

Japan’s Nikkei 225 Stock Average rose for a fifth day, and the MSCI Asia Pacific Index of regional shares advanced 0.5 percent. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index increased to a one-year high in New York yesterday after Black & Decker Corp. raised its third-quarter profit forecast and Ford Motor Co. said European sales climbed 12 percent last month.

“Any repeat of the broadly positive earnings surprises seen in Q2 is likely to lead to further gains for commodity currencies at the expense of the U.S. dollar,” Gareth Berry, a currency strategist in Singapore at UBS AG, wrote in a report.

Euro-Zone Economy

The ZEW Center for European Economic Research’s index of investor and analyst expectations increased to a more-than- three-year high of 58.8 in October from 57.7 in September, according to the median estimate of economists in a Bloomberg News survey. The data is due today.

Industrial production in the 16 nations that use the euro gained 1.2 percent in August after dropping 0.3 percent in July, according to a separate survey. The European Union’s statistics office in Luxembourg is due to release the figures tomorrow.

“There’s a sense that the euro-zone’s economy is doing better than the U.S.’s,” said Yuji Saito, head of the foreign- exchange group in Tokyo at Societe Generale SA, France’s third- largest bank. “The euro will likely strengthen further.”

The New Zealand dollar advanced against all 16 major counterparts as the nation’s retail sales gained 1.1 percent in August after dropping 0.5 percent in July. Economists projected a 0.5 percent gain. Reserve Bank of New Zealand Governor Alan Bollard on Sept. 10 said he doesn’t plan to raise benchmark interest rates until the “latter part” of 2010.

New Zealand Rates

“The market will continue to push for a January or March start to the tightening cycle,” said Khoon Goh, senior economist at ANZ National Bank Ltd. in Wellington. “The currency market will be driven by what’s going on overseas, particularly ongoing weakness in the U.S. dollar.”

The New Zealand dollar advanced 0.8 percent to 73.90 U.S. cents from 73.33 cents. Australia’s currency was little-changed at 90.71 U.S. cents. It earlier touched 90.95 cents, the strongest since August 2008.

Australia last week became the first among the world’s major economies to raise borrowing costs since the beginning of the financial crisis. Futures markets show a more than 90 percent chance the Reserve Bank of Australia will raise rates to 3.75 percent by year-end.

Benchmark interest rates of 3.25 percent in Australia and 2.5 percent in New Zealand compare with as low as zero in the U.S., making the South Pacific nations’ assets attractive to investors seeking higher returns. The risk in such trades is that currency market moves will erase profits.

UBS Forecasts

The U.S. dollar will strengthen against the euro and commodity-backed currencies by less than previously estimated over the next three months, UBS AG said.

The greenback, which has dropped against all 16 of its most-active counterparts this year, will rise to $1.40 against the euro. The Australian dollar will trade at 80 U.S. cents, Canada’s loonie at C$1.12 and New Zealand’s kiwi at 65 cents, UBS said.

UBS earlier forecast the euro would buy $1.35 in three months, with the Australian and New Zealand currencies trading at 75 cents and 60 cents. One dollar would buy C$1.18, it said previously.

“The commodity bloc has strengthened sharply over the last few weeks as the global recovery continues,” wrote a team of UBS analysts led chief currency strategist Mansoor Mohi- uddin.“But we remain wary of chasing these currencies given all the good news that is priced into them.”

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





Read more...