Economic Calendar

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

RBA Tightens But Sounds Less Hawkish

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by AC-Markets | Nov 03 09 09:36 GMT |

News and Events:

Yesterday saw the US ISM manufacturing index improve to a three and a half year high and combined with the resurgence of residential construction, this suggests the pace of US fourth quarter growth is on track to meet Q3s whopper. However since the release of these impressive figures the USD and risk correlated trades have had a choppy ride. Wall Street closed the session slightly higher with the S&P up 0.64% but Asian regional indexes were broadly lower. EURUSD continued to consolidate trading between 1.4725 - 1.4850 while the remaining G10 pairs were evenly / randomly spit between winners and losers against the USD. The lack of arrangement illustrates the confusion over market drivers. Clearly the markets are searching for direction and most expect tomorrows FOMC meeting to provide a course. Given the very impressive string of economic data, the US markets have been speculating that the Fed will shift to a slightly less dovish statement. A move which will have traders worried over a world without endless liquidity to freely gamble in the markets. We would expected a pull back in asset prices should the Fed choose to humor the hawks. Currently profit taking and USD short covering ahead of the central banks (Fed, BoE, ECB), NFP and end of the year's performance reports seem to be a key motivator of price action. Yesterday the SNB's Jordon reiterated that it was still not time to exit loose monetary policy and the Swiss central bank is committed to its interventionist policy. Interestingly enough, despite the strong language, the reaction in the EURCHF was muted. With verbal intervention failing to scare sellers & growing choirs of EURCHF sell recommendations, the SNB will have to resort to more drastic measures. I believe that any move down to 1.5080 would have buy signal written all over it. The major event in the Asian session was the RBA rate decision. As was widely expected (some notable exceptions were thinking 50bp) the central bank increased its policy rate by 25bp to 3.50%. The accompanying statement was moderately less hawkish as the RBA stressed a measured reduction in policy stimulus: '...the Board's view is that it is prudent to lessen gradually the degree of monetary stimulus...' The noticeably less hawkish statement weighed on the AUDUSD as the pair traded down from to 0.8960 from 0.9095. The calendar is relatively light today and we don't expect traders to build any meaningful positions ahead of tomorrows festivities. In Europe Norway & UK, PMI is expected to improve to 49.0 & 47.2 respectively, following the global trend. And in the US session, Factory Orders will momentarily distract traders from pondering the worlds 3 major central bank actions. We would expect that a better than expected release would have a similar reaction to yesterdays figure in short term USD selling.


Advanced Currency Markets - Forex Issues and Risks

Today Key Issues:

  • 08:00 NOK Manufacturing PMI, index Oct 49.0 exp, 47.4 prior
  • 09:28 GBP Construction PMI, index Oct 47.0 exp, 46.7 prior
  • 13:00 USD FOMC meeting begins
  • 14:00 EUR ECB Council Members Mersch and Weber speak in Germany and Turkey
  • 15:00 USD Factory orders, % m/m (y/y) Sep 1.0 (-17.0) exp, -0.8 (-20.4) prior
  • 00:00 USD USD Vehicle sales, mn saar Oct 9.8 exp, 9.2 prior

The Risk Today:

EurUsd EURUSD continues to consolidate and ahead of tomorrow FOMC we dont expect any breakout pressure. The pullback in risk sentiment in Asia has once again brought EURUSD down to range support. However the pair stand squarely in the middle of the broader 1.4680 - 1.4860 range. The bullish trend remains intact and thus far the 50dma (now coming in at 1.4679) has provided a floor. A bounce off this level will likely meet resistance around 1.4810-15, and thereafter 1.4870.

GbpUsd GBPUSD met continued supply just below 1.6600, and fell through 1.6330 support today. Below here there is minor support coming in at 1.6290 and key support below there at 1.6240. The bullish cup and handle formation still however remains in play and we would caution that a break above 1.6604 highs would target 1.6663 resistance and major downtrend channel before 1.7000 resistance.

UsdJpy USDJPY continues to track daily cloud cover lower. With the sharp sell-off in USDJPY after CIT bankruptcy news, Yesterday USDJPY broke below the head-and-shoulders neckline and key support at 90.10, spiking to a low of 89.20. Cloud covering at 90.80 provides heavy resistance with support coming into play at yesterdays lows.

UsdChf The pair continues to mark its range between 1.0150 support and 1.0270 resistance. Bearish trend remains as long as we continue to close below 1.0270, but decent long interest should come in at 1.0123 with lots of support at 1.0037 below. Lack of drivers should push the pair down to 1.0150 support.

EURUSD
GBPUSD
USDJPY
USDCHF
1.5020
1.6742
92.50
1.0360
1.4967
1.6605
91.60
1.0290
1.4860
1.6480
90.70
1.0250
1.4751
1.6330
90.00
1.0242
1.4684
1.6350
89.60
1.0150
1.4650
1.6290
89.20
1.0123
1.4580
1.6200
88.85
1.0037
S: Strong, M: Minor, T: Trendline, K: Keylevel, P: Pivot

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.



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Currencies: Currency Markets Await Central Bank Meetings

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by KBC Bank | Nov 03 09 08:26 GMT |

Sunrise Market Commentary

  • Investors react only moderately positive to stronger than expected manufacturing surveys
    Yesterday, the rise in the manufacturing surveys raised hopes on a strong global recovery. Equities and commodities rebounded, but recouped only part of Friday's sharp losses, while bonds traded broadly sideways in the euro zone to slightly lower in the US. In a thin calendar, the focus will be on the EU Commission Autumn forecasts today.
  • Currency markets await Central Bank meetings
    Currencies moved mostly sideways in a rather dull session, as investors await the key Fed, ECB and BoE meetings. We expect more such trading today, as also the eco calendar is unexciting

The Sunrise Headlines

  • On Monday, US Equities gained some modest ground supported by better than expected economic data. Dow/S&P ended the session 0.79% / 0.65% higher. This morning, most Asian shares trade mixed.
  • This morning, the Australian central bank raised interest rates for a second consecutive month by 25 basis points to 3.50% as they said the risks for a serious economic contraction in Australia have passed now. The AUD lost some ground.
  • The IMF announced yesterday that it sold 200 tonnes of gold to the Reserve Bank of India for an amount of $6.8 billion, quietly executing half of a long-planned bullion sale that had threatened to slow gold's rally.
  • Royal Bank of Scotland said it would be forced to sell more assets than it had expected and axe 3 700 jobs from its retail business as another radical shake-up loomed for Britain's banks.
  • Ford Motor Co unexpectedly posted a third-quarter profit of nearly $1 billion suggesting that the company's efforts to slash costs and improve its vehicle lineup are beginning to have an impact.
  • Crude oil ($78.12) rose slightly on Monday, supported by better than expected manufacturing data.
  • Today, the calendar contains the US factory orders and European Commission Autumn economic forecasts

EUR/USD

On Monday, EUR/USD had a quite uneventful session that ended with some modest, albeit insignificant gains for the euro which only partly erased Friday's losses. The pair closed at 1.4775, up from Friday's close of 1.4718. There were no decisive moves in other markets too, as most markets are eagerly awaiting the outcome of the central bank meetings that will take place this week. The global eco news was generally encouraging with further signs that the manufacturing sector is recovering quite sharply. The majority of economists remain skeptical about the sustainability of the recovery in 2010, dismissing the current boost in manufacturing output as leading only to a rebuilding of inventories. Once inventories are again sufficiently large, they'll see the absence of final demand, especially consumption as the reason for renewed economic weakness. We are more optimistic and think that the combination of unprecedented fiscal and monetary stimulus, together with the inventory cycle and the stabilization/increase in asset prices will lead to good, albeit not super growth in 2010. Those measures and subsequent growth will start to affect the labour market, giving households enough income to support consumption to some extent.

Intra-day, EUR/USD tested the downside on the news that CIT had asked for chapter 11 protection, but the CIT decision didn't come out of the blue and the orderly unwinding of the firm shows how far the financial healing has progressed since the panic following the Lehman bankruptcy about one year ago. So, the pair soon reversed course and very gradually moved up during the Asian and European morning session. There was a small pullback in early US dealings and ahead of the US ISM release. The latter was much better than expected and sent equities higher and in a Pavlov reaction EUR/USD jumped higher too. However, equities couldn't hold on to its gains and when they dropped, EUR/USD slid lower too, almost to unchanged levels but some equity recovery late in the session left EUR/USD with small gains in the close. Overnight, EUR/USD remained upward oriented, but with Tokyo closed for a National holiday, flows are very thin.

EUR/USD: MT uptrend line still under test, as markets await central bank decisions.

Support comes in at 1.4762 (STMA/uptrendline), at 1.4725 (reaction low hourly), at 1.4681 (week low/daily envelop) and at 1.4641/24 (Bollinger bottom/weekly envelop).

Resistance stands at 1.4846 (week high/daily envelop), at 1.4860/72 (Friday high/ 50% retracement/MTMA), at 1.4928 (Reaction high), at 1.4964/85 (Breakdown hourly + daily) and at 1.5064 (reaction high).

The pair is in oversold conditions.

USD/JPY

Today, the eco calendar is thin and unexciting. The US factory orders might get some attention, but shouldn't really affect the dollar. There are some ECB members speaking, but with the ECB meeting taking place on Thursday, they shouldn't bring us new info either. The Fed meeting starts, but the statement is only scheduled for release tomorrow evening. In this context, more sideways trading looks likely.

Global context: recently, the swings in risk appetite/risk aversion were the drivers on the currency markets. Improving investor sentiment towards risk is still considered a good reason to sell the US dollar. On top of that, in this low yield environment, the dollar has become (or is at least perceived to have become) the preferred currency to fund carry-trade deals. Lingering uncertainty on the huge US financing needs, some international debate on the status of the dollar and the Fed's intention to run an expansionary monetary policy for a prolonged period of time offer additional ammunition for carry traders to use the dollar rather than other currencies. This has put the dollar in a vulnerable position. We stay dollar skeptical as long as we don't get a clear signal that the Fed is coming closer to reversing its very stimulating monetary policy. Last week, the ongoing building up of USD short positions in step with the stock market rally triggered a correction. However, this correction phase might have entered its final phase.

Looking at the (technical) charts, the break of EUR/USD above the range top at 1.4438/48 and above the 1.4719 (Dec high) improved the picture, but the move continued to develop in a rather gradual way. Nevertheless, the corrections, if any, were very limited, too. As we had reached our long-standing technical target of 1.5021 (2nd target double bottom of 1.3739), we turned more cautious on the ST upside potential in the pair and advised partial profit taking on standing EUR/USD long positions. We maintain a buy on dips approach with current levels (uptrendline) and the 1.4480 level obvious entry points.

On Monday, USD/JPY spiked lower at the onset of trading, as the news of CIT filing for chapter 11 protection spread. However, the spike was rapidly unwound and USD/JPY slid in a sideways range near the 90 level (previous close). In the US session, the pair jumped higher (to 90.70) as equities reacted positively on the strong US ISM manufacturing survey. However, as equities turned south again later on, the dollar gains evaporated, leaving USD/JPY at 90.21 in the close, near Friday's closing levels. The Japanese market is closed today for Culture Day holiday keeping trading range-bound.

The Australian central bank raised rates by 25 basis points (3.5%) for the second consecutive meeting. The bank left open whether it would raise rates again at the next meeting, but re-iterated that it will phase out the stimulus in a gradual way. The decision was widely expected and some traders may have been disappointed that the RBA didn't use firmer language. So, a buy the rumour sell the fact reaction pushed the Aussie dollar slightly lower on the decision. However, the move was insignificant from a longer time perspective.

Global context: USD/JPY reached a reaction high in the 97.80 area early August. Despite positive global investor sentiment, the dollar could not hold on to its gains against the yen. The link between USD/JPY and global investor risk aversion/risk appetite became less tight and sometimes it even reversed. The dollar (and not the yen) was said to have become the preferred funding currency for carry trades. So, the price action in USD/JPY more or less joined the global dollar trend (decline). The long-term trend obviously remains USD/JPY negative. We turned more cautious on USD/JPY shorts on technical considerations, looking for re-entry opportunities in the 92/93 area, an area reached last week. We advocated re-installing USD/JPY short positions for return action lower in the trading range. We hold on to our bias

USD/JPY: downtrend intact, but little momentum in past 24 hours

Support is seen at 89.84 (reaction low), at 89.54 (daily envelop), at 89.18 (week low), at 88.83 (14 Oct low), at 88.48/01 (Boll Bottom/07 Oct low).

Resistance comes in at 90.48/56 (Bollinger mid-line/STMA), at 91.71/84 (week high/daily envelop), at 91.14/45 (weekly envelop/weekly MTMA), at 92.33 (ST high) and at 92.55 (21 Sep high).

The pair is in neutral territory

EURGBP

On Monday, EUR/GBP moved again somewhat higher following a violent correction that started on Monday last week, but showed signs of fatigue as the week drew to an end. Following such a unidirectional move there is scope for a countermovement. So EUR/GBP started the European session on stronger footing, helped by equities holding their composure. The pair traded at 0.9028, up from opening levels around 0.8950, when the UK manufacturing PMI showed an unexpectedly strong improvement in October (53.7), suggesting that while the Q3 GDP crimp was a disappointment, Q4 would turn out to be start of the recovery. Consequently, EUR/GBP turned south re-testing the 0.90 area, but the absence of follow through selling soon pushed the pair back up to the 0.9280 level. Given the steep sterling gains of recent and the upcoming BoE meeting where the MPC might decide to extent its QE, it should be no surprise that traders are cautious to push sterling to still higher levels. Of course, while the EUR/GBP gains are encouraging for euro bulls, the sentiment hasn't been restored yet. Later in the session the euro gave even back part of its intra-day gains, closing the session at 0.9005 compared to Friday's close at 0.8944. Overnight, the EUR/GBP traded somewhat stronger again, changing hands currently at 0.9036.

Today, the UK eco calendar only contains the construction PMI, while the EMU calendar is devoid of eco releases and the ECB members expected to speak are bound by the black period that surrounds the ECB meeting. So, the market will be driven by technicals, sentiment and eventual surprise events.

Global context: Since early August, sterling sentiment deteriorated again. The BoE decision in August to raise the asset purchase program to £175B and Governor King's call for an even greater effort indicated that the Bank intended to maintain a loose policy for a prolonged period of time. This triggered a new sterling selling wave. At the September meeting, the BoE took no additional policy steps and this applies also to the October meeting. However, the Minutes of that meeting nevertheless attracted the attention. Some observers correctly noted that in contrast to September meeting, the more dovish MPC members didn't re-state there preference for more QE, making such an expansion of the QE unlikely, especially as some MPC members including governor King in a newspaper had become slightly more optimistic on the economy. We were not sure whether such an interpretation of the Minutes was correct and have to wait for Thursday's MPC meeting to know. Nevertheless, this week's drop below the key 0.8984 support is a technical warning signal, suggesting that the unwinding of sterling overextend short positions is not completely worked out. For now we keep a wait and see approach to see how the test of this key support area will work out. However, it is obvious that our ST sterling negative bias is under pressure. If the pair doesn't return above the 0.9000 mark soon and sustain, the correction might go quite a bit further. The 0.8845 area is the next high profile support

EUR/GBP: euro tries to fight back, but outcome delayed until after central bank meetings

Support comes in at 0.8991/86 (reaction low hourly/broken STMA), at 0.8955/47 (week low/daily envelop), at 0.8912/06 (Reaction low/ 50%retracement from 0.8400 and at 0.8829 (LTMA break-up).

Resistance is at 0.9040 (daily envelop), 0.9052/54 (week high/MTMA), at 0.9070 (weekly envelop), at 0.9083 (reaction high hourly).

The pair is in oversold territory

News

US: manufacturing sector expands for third straight month

In October, the US manufacturing sector expanded for the third consecutive month. The manufacturing ISM headline index surged from 52.6 to 55.7, while an outcome of 53.0 was expected. Looking at the details, the improvement was led by production (63.3 from 55.7) and very encouraging by employment (53.1 from 46.2), but also inventories rose steeply for the second month in a row. New orders (58.5 from 60.8) and imports (51.0 from 52.0) on the contrary dropped, but new orders remain at very lofty levels. New export orders rose marginally. The better than expected outcome is a very positive sign and raises hopes that the US manufacturing sector might recover sharply in the current quarter. The jump in the employment index might be an additional sign that gradually stronger growth is affecting the payrolls.

In September, US pending home sales rose for the eighth consecutive month. On a monthly basis, pending home sales rose by 6.1% M/M, while the consensus was looking for a flat outcome. Regional data showed increases in sales in the West (10.2% M/M), Midwest (8.1% M/M) and South (4.9% M/M), while sales fell in the Northeast (-2.0% M/M). Again, the upward surprise might be due to Americans rushing to meet the deadline for the home-buyer tax credit. In this respect a pullback in the next months wouldn't be a surprise. The administration is pondering an extension of the tax credit.

Construction spending rose by a much stronger than expected 0.8% M/M in September, to compare to a consensus estimate of -0.2% M/M. However, the upward surprise was largely due to a downward revision of the August figure to -0.1% M/m from +0.8% M/M.

EMU: manufacturing sector shows first expansion in 17 months

In October, the manufacturing PMI jumped back into expansionary territory. The final figure confirmed the first estimate which showed an increase from 49.3 to 50.7. This is the first month that the euro zone manufacturing sector is expanding since May 2008 and raises expectations that the manufacturing sector might grow again in the fourth quarter. The missing country details show an improvement in manufacturing sentiment in Italy, but very weak, declining optimism in Spain.

Other: UK manufacturing PMI at highest level in 2 years

In the UK, the manufacturing PMI surprised on the upside of expectations rising to 53.7, while the consensus was looking for an outcome of 50.0. Also the previous figure was upwardly revised from 49.5 to 49.9. Most of the improvement was due to a significant increase in new orders. The outcome provides further evidence that the UK economy is recovering from the severe recession and the scrappage scheme might have had a positive impact on business confidence in October

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Disclaimer: This non-exhaustive information is based on short-term forecasts for expected developments on the financial markets. KBC Bank cannot guarantee that these forecasts will materialize and cannot be held liable in any way for direct or consequential loss arising from any use of this document or its content. The document is not intended as personalized investment advice and does not constitute a recommendation to buy, sell or hold investments described herein. Although information has been obtained from and is based upon sources KBC believes to be reliable, KBC does not guarantee the accuracy of this information, which may be incomplete or condensed. All opinions and estimates constitute a KBC judgment as of the data of the report and are subject to change without notice.


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Morning Forex Overview

Daily Forex Fundamentals | Written by Dukascopy Swiss FX Group | Nov 03 09 08:13 GMT |

Previous session overview

The dollar dipped Tuesday in Asia after the International Monetary Fund made a big gold sale to India, but the U.S. currency rebounded as Australia's central bank signaled it may pause its monetary tightening next month.

The moves were mostly modest in thin trade as Japanese markets were closed for a national holiday.

The euro and gold gained at the dollar's expense as news that the IMF sold 200 metric tons of gold to the Reserve Bank of India stoked expectations that central banks, especially in Asia, will continue to shift away from their reliance on the U.S. currency.

But the buck got a lift against the Australian dollar, as well as the euro, when the Reserve Bank of Australia after raising rates by a quarter percentage point for a second month in a row, as expected said the tightening 'will work to increase the sustainability of growth in economic activity and keep inflation consistent with the target over the years ahead.'

The EURUSD tested below USD1.4700 in Asia but rebounded well as stocks lifted off lows and China's PMI at 55 showed manufacturing expanded at the fastest pace in 18 months. The rally continued on similar data in the US before stocks once again came under pressure and pushed the Euro lower.

The GBPUSD was pressured at the start of the European session as the market focused on proposed UK bank breakup plan and potential for the BOE to expand QE by up to 50bn pounds more on Thursday. October PMI Manufacturing at 53.7 vs. 50.1 forecast.

The Australian dollar was weaker late Tuesday in Asia after the central bank lifted interest rates an expected 25 basis points but signaled it could pause its tightening cycle in December

Market expectation

The dollar is mixed against the euro, yen and pound on Tuesday, as investors grapple with how much more risk to take on before key central banks meet this week.

Analysts said the dollar selling that has greeted recent encouraging data, such as Monday's U.S. ISM index and last week's third-quarter U.S. gross domestic product growth figures, indicates a resilient appetite for risk that should favor the euro and other currencies against the dollar.

For EURUSD bids seen placed to USD1.4750, with traders noting further, minor, buy interest dotted down to USD1.4720. Below here and rate can ease on toward USD1.4700 ahead of stronger support at USD1.4680. Stops said to be building below USD1.4675. Offers remain in place between USD1.4810/20, a break to open a move toward USD1.4845/60. Above here and USD1.4920 moves into view.

EURJPY knocked under JPY133.00 in early European dealing, though as yet slippage is contained ahead of the Cloud base at JPY132.78. A break below required for fresh downside momentum. Key support still seen placed as the 200-day moving average down at JPY131.03.

Dukascopy Swiss FX Group

Legal disclaimer and risk disclosure

This overview can be used only for informational purposes. Dukascopy SA is not responsible for any losses arising from any investment based on any recommendation, forecast or other information herein contained.


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Forex Technical Analysis

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by DeltaStock Inc. | Nov 03 09 09:10 GMT |

EUR/USD

Current level-1.4767

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

The pair is still in the consolidation pattern above 1.4680 and we feel, that this corrective phase is close to its end, so expect a break below 1.4680 to trigger a sell-off towards 1.4593, en route to 1.4450. Intraday crucial level comes at 1.4806, followed by the dynamic resistance at 1.4840.

Resistance Support
intraday intraweek intraday intraweek
1.4806 1.5063 1.4680 1.4444
1.4860 1.6040 1.4593 1.4190

USD/JPY

Current level - 90.17

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

Yesterday's minor support at 89.83 provoked a rise towards our target at 90.80 and the pair peaked at 90.70. Current bias is negative below 90.14 support, towards 89.53. On the larger frames it looks like the focus is still set on 91.30 resistance, but a break above 90.30 is needed to confirm such an outlook

Resistance Support
intraday intraweek intraday intraweek
90.30 92.40 90.14 88.01
90.86 97.79 89.53 83.53

GBP/USD

Current level- 1.6353

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

Still in the consolidation pattern above 1.6340, but the pair is gathering momentum and the bias is negative for 1.6250, en route to 1.6130. Intraday crucial level on the upside is 1.6402.

Resistance Support
intraday intraweek intraday intraweek
1.6402 1.6752 1.6340 1.6130
1.6513 1.7042 1.6250 1.5352

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

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


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Forex Technical Analytics

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by FOREX Ltd | Nov 03 09 08:59 GMT |

CHF

The pre-planned long positions from key supports were implemented with the achievement of minimal estimated target. OsMA trend indicator, having marked further activity fall of both parties remains trading plans made before almost unchanged. Namely, we assume probability of another test of Senoku Span B line of Ichimoku indicator at 1,0160/80 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 1,0220/40, 1,0280/1,0300 and (or) further break-out variant up to 1,0340/60, 1,0400/40. The alternative for sales will be above 1,0120 with the targets of 1,0060/80, 1,0000/20.

GBP

The pre-planned long positions from key supports were implemented with the loss of several points in the achievement of minimal estimated target. OsMA trend indicator, having marked activity fall of both parties and gives grounds to suppose further rate range movement without clarifying the choice of planning priorities for today. On the assumption of it we can assume probability of rate return to Ichimoku cloud border support at 1,6460/80 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 1,6400/20,1,6320/40, 1,6240/60 and (or) further break-out variant up to 1,6180/1,6200, 1,6120/40, 1,6060/80. The alternative for buyers will be above 1,6540 with the targets of 1,6580/1,6600, 1,6660/1,6700.

JPY

The pre-planned short positions from key resistance range levels were implemented and the achievement of estimated targets is supported by descending direction of OsMA trend indicator according to the sign of bearish development cycle incompleteness. Therefore, at the moment, for opened short positions the targets will be 89,80/90,00, 89,00/40 and (or) further break-out variant up to 89,20/40, 88,80/89,00. The alternative for buyers will be above 91,40 with the targets of 91,80/92,00, 92,40/60.

EUR

The pre-planned short positions from key resistance range levels were implemented with the achievement of main estimated targets. OsMA trend indicator, having marked activity fall of both parties as it was before does not clarify the choice of planning priorities for today. Therefore, evaluating the situation from positions of further rate range movement we can assume probability of rate return to Senoku Span B line of Ichimoku indicator at1,4840/60 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 sales on condition of the formation of topping signals the targets will be 1,4780/1,4800, 1,4680/1,4720 and (or) further break-out variant up to 1,4620/40, 1,4540/60, 1,4480/1,4500. The alternative for buyers will be above 1,4900 with the targets of 1,4940/60, 1,5000/40.

FOREX Ltd
www.forexltd.co.uk





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Taiwan, China to Begin Trade Accord Talks at December Meeting

By Janet Ong

Nov. 3 (Bloomberg) -- Taiwan and China will begin talks on a trade agreement in December as the island seeks to revive its economy and the government in Beijing aims for extra leverage over its counterpart in Taipei.

The accord will be discussed at cross-strait negotiations on cooperation in the fishing industry, certification of agricultural and industrial goods and double taxation, said Ma Shao-chang, deputy secretary-general of Taiwan’s Straits Exchange Foundation.

“We will be signing agreements on the four items and will exchange views on the trade agreement at the talks in Taichung, central Taiwan,” Ma said by telephone today. “But there won’t be any signing of a trade accord at this stage.”

Cross-strait dialogue resumed last year, following a nine- year hiatus, when President Ma Ying-jeou was elected and abandoned his predecessor’s pro-independence stance. The island is seeking closer ties with the mainland to support an economy that may contract at a record pace this year on declining exports and investment.

Zheng Lizhong, deputy head of the Beijing-based Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Strait, unexpectedly flew into Taipei today for talks with his Taiwanese counterpart Kao Koong- lian to complete details of the meeting, due to be held in the second-half of December, Ma said. Officials met in Hangzhou in eastern China last month to arrange the talks.

Taiwan and China eased curbs on investment and lifted a six-decade ban on direct transportation links in December under the cross-strait dialogue.

Jobs, Exports

The trade accord, known as the Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement, will create as many as 263,000 jobs in Taiwan and bolster exports, the Ministry of Economic Affairs in Taipei said last month.

The agencies are semi-official bodies set up for cross- strait discussions that allowed the two sides to broker the so- called 1992 consensus in which they agreed to disagree on the definition of what constitutes “one China.”

Talks broke down in 1999 when Taiwan’s then-President Lee Teng-hui referred to the two sides as “state-to-state,” a characterization unacceptable to China, which regards Taiwan as a breakaway province.

Closer ties with China, the world’s third-largest economy and Taiwan’s biggest trading partner, may help President Ma speed the island’s recovery from its first recession since the technology bubble burst in 2001.

Export Concerns

“Taiwan is keen to sign a trade agreement with China on concerns its exports may suffer after the free-trade agreement China has with Asean takes effect next year,” said Cheng Cheng- mount, an economist at Citigroup Inc.’s Taiwan unit. Exports to China and Hong Kong combined account for about 40 percent of Taiwan’s overseas shipments.

Huang Hsien-lin, a spokesman for Taiwan’s Ministry of Economic Affairs, declined today to comment on details of the trade agreement.

Taiwan’s gross domestic product may shrink 4.04 percent in 2009, its biggest contraction since the government began keeping records in 1952, the island’s statistics bureau said on Aug. 21.

China and Taiwan have been ruled separately since Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalists fled to the island after losing the civil war to Mao Zedong’s Communists in 1949. China is aiming to cement economic ties with Taiwan to gain leverage and ensure the island’s leaders don’t seek independence.

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





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Bernanke Housing Gamble May Bring Pressure to Extend Fed Aid

By Craig Torres

Nov. 3 (Bloomberg) -- Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke is gambling that come March, he can stop the purchases of mortgage-backed securities that have propped up the U.S. housing market. Congress may have other ideas.

The central bank says it must eventually withdraw its unprecedented economic stimulus to avoid a surge of inflation as a recovery takes hold. Plans to buy $1.25 trillion of housing debt are the centerpiece of its program to pull the nation out of the worst recession since the 1930s.

Bernanke, who convenes a meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee today, is counting on private investors to fill the void left by the Fed when its purchases end. If he’s wrong, he may come under pressure from politicians to maintain support for housing or even extend credit programs for small businesses and consumers. That would threaten the Fed’s ability to conduct an independent monetary policy.

“The nightmare scenario for the Fed would be to see them try to sell their mortgage portfolio, and Congress steps in and tries to stop it on the grounds that the housing market hasn’t fully recovered,” said Ethan Harris, head of North American Economics at Bank of America-Merrill Lynch in New York. “The attempts to influence the Fed in the exit strategy will be pretty strong.”

The Fed chairman has already come under pressure from lawmakers including Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd of Connecticut and Representative Paul Kanjorski of Pennsylvania, both Democrats, to aid car companies and provide more credit to commercial real estate.

‘Perceived Difficulties’

“Whenever any sector has perceived difficulties, Congress may ask the Fed to invent a new program,” said William Poole, a former president of the St. Louis Fed who is now a senior fellow at the Cato Institute, a Washington-based policy research group.

The FOMC will release a monetary policy statement around 2:15 p.m. tomorrow in Washington. A Labor Department report two days later may show the jobless rate rose to 9.9 percent in October, even as the economy returned to growth.

Fed officials say purchases of housing debt have helped lower borrowing costs, boosting the part of the economy that was at the epicenter of the economic crisis. The average rate on a 30-year mortgage was 5.03 percent last week, down from 6.46 percent a year earlier, according to mortgage company Freddie Mac.

Rates on 30-year mortgages could be a full percentage point higher by March as the economy strengthens and the Fed stops its purchases, says Nicholas Strand, a mortgage-backed securities strategist at Barclays Capital Inc. in New York.

Home Sales Surge

Sales of new homes unexpectedly fell in September as the end of an $8,000 tax credit for first-time homebuyers approached. Concern the housing recovery may falter prompted Senate Democrats to agree to extend the credit and allow benefits for some people who already own homes.

“There is a question whether the housing market can survive when the fiscal props are pulled out,” Brian Bethune, chief financial economist at IHS Global Insight in Lexington, Massachusetts, said in an interview.

The central bank is already the biggest buyer of mortgage- backed securities sold by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, with purchases exceeding new issuance by the two companies in September, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.

Private Capital

“When the Federal Reserve stops buying mortgages, is there private capital to substitute?” Laurence Fink, chairman and chief executive officer of New York-based asset-management firm BlackRock Inc., said in an interview with the Financial Times’ Martin Wolf broadcast on Bloomberg Television Oct. 28. “At the moment, it is not certain.”

Purchases of mortgage securities are part of the unprecedented expansion of the Fed’s powers under Bernanke, a 55-year-old Princeton University economist and self-described “Great Depression buff” who took the helm in 2006.

The Fed chairman told the House Financial Services Committee July 21 that “aggressive actions” by central bankers averted “the collapse of the global financial system.”

Representative Ron Paul, saying the Fed has “operated without sufficient scrutiny or oversight,” is sponsoring a bill that would open monetary policy to audits by Congress. The Texas Republican’s bill has more than 300 co-sponsors.

“If the economy is performing poorly, it will be difficult to get back to independence in monetary policy,” says Vincent Reinhart, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute and former director of the Fed’s Division of Monetary Affairs.

The Fed has already come under pressure to provide industrial finance twice in the past year.

Aid to Automakers

Last December, when legislators were considering bailouts for General Motors Corp. and Chrysler LLC, Dodd asked Bernanke in a letter “whether there is anything in your statute that prevents you from lending to any of these domestic auto- manufacturing companies.”

Dodd was rebuffed by Bernanke, who said “questions of industrial policy are best resolved by Congress.”

In July, Kanjorski and 41 other members of Congress asked Bernanke to help support the commercial mortgage-backed securities market by extending the Fed’s Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility through the end of 2010.

The Fed approved an extension until March of 2010 for existing CMBS deals and until June 2010 for new ones. Fed officials said they were already considering the extension when they received Kanjorski’s letter.

Little Alternative

Paul Krugman, the Nobel-prize winning Princeton University economist, said Bernanke had little alternative to expanding the Fed’s balance sheet.

“I’d love to see the Fed with a perfectly clean balance sheet,” Krugman told reporters at a news conference in Buenos Aires on Oct. 27. “I’m sure Bernanke would like that as well. But the problem is in housing. The Fed probably should continue purchasing as long as we’re in this situation.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Craig Torres in Washington at ctorres3@bloomberg.net





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IMF Sells Gold to India, First Sale in Nine Years

By Sandrine Rastello and Kim Kyoungwha

Nov. 3 (Bloomberg) -- The International Monetary Fund sold 200 metric tons of gold to the Reserve Bank of India for about $6.7 billion, its first such sale in nine years.

The transaction, equivalent to 8 percent of global annual mine production, involved daily sales from Oct. 19-30 at market prices and is in the process of being settled, the IMF said in a statement yesterday. The average price to India, the biggest consumer, was about $1,045 an ounce, an IMF official said on a conference call. Gold for immediate delivery gained 0.2 percent.

“The fall in the U.S. dollar seems to be pushing all the central banks to strengthen their portfolio with gold,” said N.R. Bhanumurthy, professor at the National Institute of Public Finance and Policy in New Delhi. “Gold is a safe store of value compared to the U.S. dollar.”

The IMF sale accounts for almost half the 403.3 tons that the Washington-based lender in September agreed to sell as part of a plan to shore up its finances and lend at reduced rates to low-income countries. Asian nations, which have amassed stockpiles of foreign currency reserves since the 1998 financial crisis, have shown increased interest in diversifying out of U.S. assets as the dollar loses value against other currencies.

Gold for immediate delivery gained to $1,061.60 an ounce at 3:42 p.m. in Singapore and was about $9 below its record $1,070.80 an ounce reached Oct. 14.

Concession Lending

“The most important thing is that people want gold even at these prices,” said Ghee Peh, head of mining research, with UBS AG in Hong Kong. “There’s good support for prices for now” from the IMF’s disposal of bullion, he said.

Proceeds from the sales and other IMF resources as well as individual contributors would help pay for discounted interest rates on loans to low-income countries, the IMF said in July. It plans to grant as much as $17 billion in extra loans to poor nations through 2014. The 403.3 tons the IMF agreed to sell amount to one-eighth of its stockpile.

“This transaction is an important step toward achieving the objectives of the IMF’s limited gold sales program, which are to help put the fund’s finances on a sound long-term footing and enable us to step up much-needed concession lending to the poorest countries,” IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss- Kahn said in an e-mailed statement.

Reserve Management

The gold purchase was done as part of Reserve Bank’s foreign exchange reserves management operations, the central bank said in a statement on its Web site today.

India’s foreign-exchange reserves advanced $684 million to $285.5 billion in the week ended Oct. 23, the central bank said Oct. 30. That included foreign-currency assets of $268.3 billion, gold reserves of $10.3 billion and the special drawing rights with the IMF.

“There seems to be consensus among the central banks that it’s better to cut down on currency holdings and diversify into assets like gold, which has upside potential,” Krishna Reddy, a precious metal analyst at Way2Wealth Commodities Pvt. said in Mumbai. “The Reserve Bank of India gold purchase is a clear reflection of this belief.”

China, the world’s biggest gold producer, has increased reserves of the metal by 76 percent to 1,054 tons since 2003 and has the fifth-biggest holdings by country, Hu Xiaolian, head of the State Administration of Foreign Exchange, said in April.

The nation may purchase some of the 403.3 tons of gold being offered by the IMF, Market News International reported in September, citing two unidentified government officials.

More Sales

The lender has said it is ready to sell directly to central banks and later make transactions on the open market if necessary. The IMF official declined to say yesterday whether other central banks have expressed interest in purchases.

The IMF, which helped shore up economies from Pakistan to Iceland over the past year, has sold gold on several occasions. The last transaction was authorized in December 1999 and took place off-market between then and April 2000.

“Gold production has been declining for the past seven years, while demand, particularly the investment demand has been growing steadily,” Way2Wealth’s Reddy said. “Central banks and even ordinary investors want to own more gold.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Sandrine Rastello in Washington at srastello@bloomberg.net; Kyoungwha Kim in Singapore at Kkim19@bloomberg.net.





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BOE Should Cap Bond Plan This Week, Julius Says

By Brian Swint and David Tweed

Nov. 3 (Bloomberg) -- The Bank of England should cap its bond purchase plan at 200 billion pounds ($328 billion) this week in a signal that it will stop buying assets in the next quarter, former policy maker DeAnne Julius said.

“I would, at this meeting, ask for a small extension, say 25 billion, just to have in our back pocket in case we need to use it,” Julius said in a Bloomberg Television interview in London yesterday. “But I’d be aiming to use it at a diminishing rate and looking at February to pause completely.”

While the program has failed to help the economy return to growth, shutting it down right away would shock investors, Julius said. The U.K. central bank will expand the program to 225 billion pounds from the current 175 billion pounds on Nov. 5, according to the median estimate of 48 economists in a Bloomberg News survey.

“It’s hard to say quantitative easing is being that effective,” Julius said. “It’s very important that the Bank of England not create its own shocks for this economy. The patient is fragile.”

Policy makers, led by Governor Mervyn King, extended the program by 50 billion pounds for a second time in August after starting the program in March with a 75 billion-pound target. The benchmark interest rate has been at a record low 0.5 percent for eight months.

Second Bailout

The pound fell as much as 0.7 percent today against the dollar after the government announced a second bailout for Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc and Lloyds Banking Group Plc. The U.K currency traded at $1.6329 as of 9:17 a.m. in London.

U.K. gross domestic product fell 0.4 percent in the third quarter, the statistics office reported Oct. 23. That’s the sixth consecutive contraction, the longest streak since records began in 1955.

“There is definitely a global recovery under way,” Julius said. “In the U.K., it doesn’t seem to be as prevalent as elsewhere, if we believe the latest evidence on GDP estimates. But we’re certainly seeing it here too.”

While the central bank’s bond-purchases have helped bring down yields on government bonds, they haven’t done much to bolster the economy, Julius said. Lower interest rates and the depreciation of the pound will be enough to put the economy back on track, she said.

“We’ve got to phase it out very gradually,” Julius said. “We have to be careful about just how we do that because there’s so much uncertainty.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Brian Swint in London at bswint@bloomberg.net; David Tweed in London at dtweed@bloomberg.net.





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Australia Increases Benchmark Interest Rate to 3.5%

By Jacob Greber

Nov. 3 (Bloomberg) -- Australia raised its benchmark interest rate by a quarter percentage point for the second straight month, becoming the only nation to increase borrowing costs twice this year as the global economy recovers.

Reserve Bank Governor Glenn Stevens lifted the overnight cash rate target to 3.5 percent in Sydney today, as forecast by 18 of 22 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. The rest expected a half-point move.

Australia’s dollar and bond yields fell as traders reduced bets on an increase in December after Stevens said higher rates would come “gradually.” Rising consumer confidence and Chinese demand for iron ore and coal will stoke economic growth while the currency’s 29 percent gain this year may hurt exporters and curb inflation, he said.

“Today’s move strikes a nice balance -- it edges the cash rate back to more normal levels without threatening the economic recovery,” said Craig James, a senior economist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia. “It is far from certain that rates will rise again in December.”

The Australian dollar fell to 90.34 U.S. cents at 5:08 p.m. in Sydney from 90.88 cents just before the decision was released. The two-year government bond yield dropped 19 basis points to 4.54 percent. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point.

Investors pared bets on whether Stevens will increase the key rate by a quarter point on Dec. 1, according to Bloomberg calculations based on interbank futures on the Sydney Futures Exchange. There is a 52 percent chance of such a move, the futures showed at 4:28 p.m. Prior to today’s announcement expectations were at 96 percent.

Changed Outlook

Treasurer Wayne Swan said yesterday the economy will expand faster than he previously forecast, growing 1.5 percent in the 12 months to June 30, 2010. In May, he forecast a 0.5 percent contraction. GDP will accelerate to 2.75 percent the following fiscal year, he said yesterday. The economy grew 1 percent in the first six months of this year.

“The adjustments at the October and November meetings will work to increase the sustainability of growth in economic activity and keep inflation consistent with the target over the years ahead,” Stevens said today.

“The board noted that the rise in the exchange rate is likely to constrain output in the tradeables sector and dampen price pressures,” he said.

Investors, hungry for China’s economic growth, have been betting the Australian dollar is headed toward parity with the U.S. currency for the first time, buying into the world’s biggest exporter of iron ore used in making steel.

Hedge Funds

Citigroup Inc., Calyon, Barclays Capital and National Australia Bank Ltd. forecast it will trade at 1 U.S. dollar next year, implying an additional 11 percent gain. Hedge funds and other large traders have more bets than at any time since July 15, 2008, that the rally will continue, data from the Washington-based Commodity Futures Trading Commission show.

Stevens has tempered his comments on the pace of rate increases and their effect on the currency, after last month signaling he was prepared to keep raising borrowing costs and tolerate further appreciation in the local dollar, the best- performing in the past 12 months of 171 currencies tracked by Bloomberg, as it “may help contain inflation.”

The central bank’s measure of core inflation, the so-called weighted median index of consumer prices, rose 3.8 percent in the third quarter from a year earlier, holding above the top of Governor Stevens’s target range of between 2 percent and 3 percent for a ninth straight quarter, a report showed on Oct. 28.

Global Rates

Stevens also raised the rate by a quarter point on Oct. 6. The only other countries to increase borrowing costs this year are Israel and Norway. By contrast, the U.S. Federal Reserve has kept its benchmark rate close to zero for almost a year. The European Central Bank and Bank of England benchmark rates are at record lows of 1 percent and 0.5 percent respectively.

“The absence of more assertive rhetoric in today’s statement signals clearly that the Reserve Bank will remove the policy accommodation ‘gradually’, a key word that once again was prominent in today’s statement,” said Stephen Walters, chief economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in Sydney.

Stevens also dropped references in today’s statement, last made in the minutes of the bank’s October meeting, that the “very expansionary setting” of monetary policy was “possibly imprudent.”

‘Subtle Shift’

“A subtle shift in the tone of the commentary hints that officials are inclined to take each meeting on its merits,” Walters said.

Australia’s economy is growing faster and generating more jobs than Treasurer Swan and Prime Minister Kevin Rudd forecast six months ago, helped by A$20 billion ($18 billion) in government cash handouts to consumers and Stevens’s record interest-rate cuts between September 2008 and April, when he slashed the benchmark rate by 4.25 percentage points to a half- century low of 3 percent.

Unemployment is expected to peak at 6.75 percent in the second quarter of next year, well below the 8.5 percent rate Swan forecast in May for the three months through June 30, 2011, the government said yesterday.

Today’s interest-rate increase will do nothing to resolve the nation’s housing shortage, said Housing Industry Association Chief Economist Harley Dale.

“It would be prudent for the Reserve Bank to sit on its hands,” Dale said.

The boost will add A$50 to monthly repayments on an average A$300,000 home loan. Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd., Commonwealth Bank, National Australia Bank Ltd. and Westpac Banking Corp. raised their variable mortgage rates by a quarter point after today’s announcement.

Tough Decisions

“Today’s decision is a tough one for Australian families and businesses, but it’s also another indication that rates could not stay at 50-year emergency lows forever,” Swan told reporters in Brisbane today.

Reports published in recent days show bank lending unexpectedly fell in September for the first time in nine months amid weaker demand for business credit, and manufacturing growth slowed in October.

“It looks like the Reserve Bank is doing the right thing,” billionaire Gerry Harvey, chairman of Australian retailer Harvey Norman Holdings Ltd., said in an interview today.

“Those people who are looking at interest rates at 3.5 percent are saying to themselves it’s still low and my mortgage is still a lot less than I was paying before” Harvey said by telephone. “It shouldn’t have a great effect in the marketplace.”

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





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China Bank Regulator Said to Plan Study of Developers

By Bloomberg News

Nov. 3 (Bloomberg) -- China’s banking regulator plans to review debt levels at some real-estate developers on concern the companies’ borrowings are fueling excessive gains in property prices, a person familiar with the matter said.

The China Banking Regulatory Commission wants to reduce leverage at developers that bought land at inflated prices and at large state-owned companies that have entered the property market, the person said, declining to be identified because the plans haven’t been made public.

Some developers have borrowed too much, threatening to cause an increase in delinquent debts should property prices collapse, the person said. China’s home prices rose at the fastest pace in a year in September as government stimulus spending drove a recovery in the world’s third-largest economy.

“Should lending be tightened, the impact on the property market would be huge,” said Liu Xihui, a Shenzhen-based analyst at Ping An Securities Co. Restrictions on second mortgages imposed after June 30 “had a big impact” on demand both among property investors and people looking for new homes, he said.

At the end of August, liabilities exceeded 90 percent of assets at more than 160 developers that have borrowed at least 50 million yuan ($7.3 million) each from banks, the person said. New loans for real-estate development surged 121 percent from a year earlier in the first half to 403.9 billion yuan, according to the People’s Bank of China’s latest quarterly report.

Chasing Market Share

New credits for home purchases more than doubled to 479.3 billion yuan in the period. A gauge tracking 24 real estate firms traded in Shanghai has climbed 120 percent this year, the best- performing group on the benchmark Shanghai Composite Index. The property measure rose 0.2 percent today.

Some banks loosened mortgage down-payment requirements this year to boost market share, and some paid commissions to developers and real estate agents for referring borrowers, the person said. Almost 10,000 mortgages defaulted in the first eight months of 2009, taking the total to 140,000 at the end of August, the person said.

Regulators in Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan and India are also trying to control property lending, after rising prices across Asia fueled concerns that bad debts could spiral. The Reserve Bank of India last week ordered lenders to set aside more funds to cover property loans.

While the CBRC doesn’t have the power to force developers to cut borrowings, it can direct banks to reduce lending to the industry. The regulator will mainly target state-owned companies whose main businesses are outside of real estate, the person said. The CBRC didn’t respond to a faxed request for comment.

Income Growth Trails

China Vanke Co., the nation’s largest developer by market value, raised average apartment prices 26 percent in September from a year earlier to 10,168 yuan per square meter, the company said last month. Prices rose 4 percent from August.

The price increase outpaced gains in urban disposable incomes, which rose 14.5 percent to an average 15,781 yuan last year, according to the National Bureau of Statistics. Vanke’s third-quarter net income doubled from a year earlier to 433 million yuan.

Tomson Group Ltd., after selling just four flats since 2005 in what was dubbed China’s most expensive property project, sold more than 35 apartments in Shanghai’s Tomson Riviera since June, the 21st Century Business Herald reported Oct. 29, citing local government data.

“Bubbles exist in some regions, mostly first-tier cities and some second-tier cities, and the bubble in high-end property market is more obvious,” said Bai Hongwei, an analyst at China International Capital Corp. “Banks had a huge role. Without this leverage, the market would basically have no vigor.”

‘Reasonable’ Lending

Rapid gains in property prices are “very likely” to disrupt improvements in real estate investment and threaten the economic recovery as the government takes measures to curb the “bubble,” Ba Shusong, a deputy head of financial research at the Development Research Center, which advises the State Council, said Sept. 2.

Rising property prices have pushed up land costs, as developers and other companies rushed to secure inventories in anticipation that housing demand would continue to strengthen.

“The government is more keen to clamp down on these players who are getting out of their core business and buying expensive land and pushing up prices,” said Bei Fu, an analyst at Standard & Poor’s, in a Bloomberg Television Interview.

China has clamped down on the property market before. The government raised down-payments on second mortgages to 40 percent and interest rates to 110 percent of the benchmark on Sept. 29, 2007, causing price declines in some cities in 2008.

The CBRC’s Shanghai branch in July ordered lenders to obey rules on mortgages for second homes and step up scrutiny of approvals. On Oct. 28, the regulator said it plans to tighten rules on personal loans to prevent them from being used for speculation.

Banks must “steadfastly” follow policies on second mortgages and make “reasonable” lending plans for the fourth quarter, CBRC Chairman Liu Mingkang said in an Oct. 21 statement on the regulator’s Web site.

--Philip Lagerkranser. With assistance from Debra Mao in Hong Kong. Editors: Andreea Papuc, Joost Akkermans

To contact the Bloomberg reporter for this story: Philip Lagerkranser at lagerkranser@bloomberg.net





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Bumi Said to Plan Sale of Seven-Year Bonds in U.S. Dollars

By Shelley Smith

Nov. 3 (Bloomberg) -- PT Bumi Resources, Indonesia’s biggest coal producer, plans to sell seven-year bonds denominated in U.S. dollars, according to a person familiar with the transaction.

Jakarta-based Bumi hired Credit Suisse Group AG and Deutsche Bank AG for a benchmark sale of the bonds, said the person, who declined to be identified before a public announcement. Benchmark typically means at least $500 million.

Bumi has the right to buy the bonds back after four years, the person said.





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PTTEP Says It Has Stopped Oil Spill, Blaze on Rig Off Australia

By James Paton and Sarah McDonald

Nov. 3 (Bloomberg) -- PTT Exploration & Production Pcl has plugged a well that has been leaking oil and gas off northwestern Australia for 10 weeks, and extinguished the main blaze engulfing a drilling rig, the company said.

Experts on board a nearby rig pumped about 3,400 barrels of heavy mud down a relief well to stop the leak, PTTEP said in an e-mailed statement. The main fire at the Montara well head platform has been put out, although some material on the rig may still be ablaze, the company said.

“PTTEP drilling experts who are monitoring online well data in Perth reported the situation was stable and well pressure was being maintained,” the statement said.

PTTEP, Thailand’s only publicly traded oil-exploration company, has estimated that up to 400 barrels of oil a day were seeping into the Timor Sea. WWF-Australia has called the oil spill an unfolding environmental disaster and has reported seeing dolphins, birds and sea turtles swimming in the oil slick.

PTTEP slumped to the lowest in three months, dropping 2.6 percent to 133.5 baht in Bangkok, adding to yesterday’s 5.5 percent slide.

A fire erupted on Nov. 1 as the Bangkok-based company injected mud into the well to try to halt the flow of oil and gas. The blaze at the West Atlas drilling rig was “out of control,” Jose Martins, a director of the company’s Australian unit, said yesterday. Losing the rig, which may collapse into the ocean, will delay the start of extracting an estimated 35,600 barrels of oil a day from the field.

Australia’s Resources and Energy Minister Martin Ferguson told reporters an investigation into the spill will take place after the well is plugged and the fire is extinguished. PTTEP has engaged “world-leading” companies to help in the effort, he said yesterday.

Third-Biggest Spill

A daily flow of 300-400 barrels of oil since the leak started Aug. 21 would make the spill the third-biggest in the nation’s history, based on figures from the Australian Maritime Safety Authority’s Web site. The company has failed on prior three attempts to stem the flow.

PTTEP has said it will pay the maritime safety authority’s costs for cleaning up and controlling the spill. The company has set aside A$177 million ($160 million) as provisions against costs for the leak.

The world’s largest population of humpback whales, about 22,000, is found along the northwestern coast, according to a survey by whale researchers Richard Costin and Annabelle Sandes.

Tourism Australia describes the region as “one of the world’s last true wilderness areas.” Ashmore Reef, which supports sea snakes, dugongs and marine turtle nesting sites, was feared to be within reach of leaking oil in the spill’s early days.

To contact the reporter on this story: James Paton in Sydney jpaton4@bloomberg.net.





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