Economic Calendar

Monday, November 9, 2009

Morning Forex Overview

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

Previous session overview

The dollar gained slightly on the yen but retreated against the euro in Asian-hours trading Monday, as soaring gold futures pressured the greenback against its European counterpart.

At the weekend meeting in Scotland of finance ministers and central bankers from the Group of 20 leading economic powers, attendees agreed to keep massive stimulus measures in place until the global recovery strengthens.

In a report to the G20, the International Monetary Fund cited signs that the dollar is being used as a funding currency for carry trades, which involve borrowing funds denominated in lower-interest currencies such as the dollar and yen and investing in higher-yielding assets denominated in other currencies.

On Friday, the dollar had edged lower against the yen and traded nearly flat against the euro, after a surprise jump in the U.S. jobless rate to more than 10% comforted views the Federal Reserve will stick to a loose monetary policy.

The euro stood at JPY134.53 against the yen compared with JPY133.53.

The dollar was also up slightly against the yen, at JPY90.09 compared with JPY89.96. Asian banks and other players scooped up the U.S. unit early in the Tokyo morning session, dealers said.

On Friday EURUSD traded briefly above the USD1.4900 level as traders shrugged off the disappointing US jobs data to focus on the USD and US FED rates. Without heavy selling in the equity markets the Euro remained firm and closed at the USD1.4850 level.

On Friday Pound fell against the dollar as the US jobs report came in less than encouraging. Investors continued the trend of buying safe-haven currencies with the announcement of negative economic news.

A weaker U.S. dollar and bullish home lending numbers sent the Australian dollar sharply higher in Asia on Monday ahead of all-important jobs data later in the week

Market expectation

The U.S. dollar is trading lower against major currencies, including the euro and pound, with traders saying the U.S. jobs data has reinforced the greenback's downside bias.

EURUSD trader's note that heavy offers, possibly option related, seen placed from USD1.4970 through to USD1.5000, adding that stops are seen placed through USD1.5010/20.

Despite the disappointing U.S. unemployment number cutting risk appetite, the euro may climb back above the USD1.50 level before year-end, said analysts.

For the rest of the week, dollar-yen may track moves in U.S. long-term interest rates, with some players expecting large-scale Treasury auctions this week to buoy yields to the greenback's benefit, dealers said. Any such rises could send the dollar up to around JPY92.00 later in the week, said analysts.

European stock markets are expected to open higher Monday, with optimism on the up as merger and acquisition activity aids sentiment and the Group of Twenty concluded that global stimulus efforts would remain in place

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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FX Technical Analysis

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by Mizuho Corporate Bank | Nov 09 09 07:39 GMT |

EURUSD

Comment: The Euro found support from Fibonacci retracement as Antipodean currencies gap higher over the weekend. Bullish pressure has increased slightly, as should implied volatility.

Strategy: Attempt small longs at 1.4935, adding to 1.4825; stop below 1.4700. Short term target 1.4955/1.4995, eventually this year's high at 1.5064

Direction of Trade: →

Chart Levels:

Support Resistance
1.4900 " 1.4945
1.485 1.4955
1.4811* 1.4995*
1.475 1.5025
1.4680* 1.5064**

GBPUSD

Comment: Almost, but not quite, a weekly close above important resistance around 1.6665. As other currencies are doing something similar we shall hope for a weekly close above 1.6835 which will really increase bullish momentum.

Strategy: Attempt small longs at 1.6715, adding to 1.6625; stop well below 1.6500. First target 1.6755, then this year's high at 1.7044.

Direction of Trade: →

Chart Levels:

FX Technical Analysis
Support Resistance
1.6690 " 1.6738
1.6618 1.6745*
1.6555 1.68
1.65 1.6835
1.6455 1.7044**

USDJPY

Comment: Little to add as we consolidate under a small 'spike high' and the descending lower edge of a very large Ichimoku 'cloud'. Friday's close below 90.00 has added to bearish momentum and the USD is certainly not oversold. Time for generalised USD selling again today and maybe all this week.

Strategy: Sell at 90.00/90.35; stop above 90.95. Short term target 89.65, then 89.25

Direction of Trade: →

Chart Levels:

Support Resistance
89.70 " 90.5
89.6 90.86
89.35 91.05
89.18* 91.34*
88.85 91.65**

EURJPY

Comment: Hard to believe this is the eighth consecutive month prices hold in a 'triangle'. With momentum just bearish, the Euro not oversold against the Yen, and a small 'spike high' Wednesday should sent this pair back down to 132.00, and eventually more.

Strategy: Attempt small shorts at 134.50; stop above 135.25. Short term target 132.00, then 131.00, eventually another big slide lower still.

Direction of Trade: →

Chart Levels:

Support Resistance
133.38 " 134.72
133.2 135.15
132.5 135.76*
132 136
131.00* 137

Mizuho Corporate Bank

Disclaimer

The information contained in this paper is based on or derived from information generally available to the public from sources believed to be reliable. No representation or warranty is made or implied that it is accurate or complete. Any opinions expressed in this paper are subject to change without notice. This paper has been prepared solely for information purposes and if so decided, for private circulation and does not constitute any solicitation to buy or sell any instrument, or to engage in any trading strategy.






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Technical Analysis for Crosses

Daily Forex Technicals | Written by ecPulse.com | Nov 09 09 07:30 GMT |

GBP/JPY

The GBP/JPY pair declined sharply, reaching the first objective of the short term bearish scenario at 148.35. Presently, it is re-testing the key resistance level of 150.60, while forming a Gap. We think that the mentioned gap is to be covered over the intraday basis around 149.30 zones. A break will confirm the potential downside continuation of the short term Elliott sequence. The secondary image shows that, a bearish engulfing candlestick pattern is supporting our overview.

Trading range for today is among key support at 145.50 and key resistance at 154.60.

The general trend is to the downside as far as 167.40 remains intact with target at 116.00.

Support: 150.00, 149.35, 148.60, 147.80, 146.85
Resistance: 150.60, 151.25, 151.75, 152.30, 153.40

Recommendation Based on the charts and explanations above our opinion is, selling the pair from 150.60 targeting 148.70 and stop loss above 151.75 might be appropriate.

EUR/JPY

The pair has reached the first technical target for the projected short term bearish scenario at 132.50. Presently, it is preparing for a downside continuation, which is based on the suggested short term Elliott over the short term basis to for wave[C], where we believe that CD leg of a harmonic pattern is underway, seen on the provided four-hour chart. Therefore we keep our proposed negative scenario on the intraday basis; retargeting the areas between 132.50 and 132.10.

Trading range for today is among key support at 131.60 and key resistance now at 137.40.

The general trend is to the downside as far as 141.44 remains intact with targets at 100.00 followed by 88.97 levels.

Support: 134.15, 133.60, 133.00, 132.50, 132.00
Resistance: 134.85, 135.50, 136.00, 136.40, 137.00

Recommendation: Based on the charts and explanations above our opinion is, selling the pair from 134.60 targeting 132.70 and stop loss above 135.95 might be appropriate.

EUR/GBP

The royal pair has formed a bullish candlestick pattern on the four-hour chart, along with a positive overlapping of Stochastic-secondary image-; supporting the potential upside expectation over the intraday basis as the short tern Elliott fifth wave of the [IM] is under way -main adily chart-. Areas of 0.8820 should hold to protect our Elliott count; otherwise a breakout below should be reconsidered.

The trading range is among the key support at 0.8760 and key resistance now at 0.9175.

The general trend is to the upside as far as 0.8020 area remains intact with targets at 1.0000 followed by 1.0400 levels.

Support: 0.8905, 0.8865, 0.8820, 0.8790, 0.8760
Resistance: 0.8980, 0.9000, 0.9030, 0.9070, 0.9115

Recommendation: Based on the charts and explanations above our opinion is, buying the pair from 0.8940 targeting 0.9050 and stop loss below 0.8860 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





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Geithner Saying Be Like Buffett Can’t Make JPMorgan Lend More

By Rich Miller

Nov. 9 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner is echoing billionaire investor Warren Buffett in telling banks “to take a chance again on the American economy.” So far, his appeal is falling flat.

While financial institutions including Citigroup Inc. and Bank of America Corp. have received more than $200 billion in capital from the government, they are limiting loans at a time of mounting unemployment, rising company bankruptcies and increasing regulatory oversight. Commercial and industrial lending has dropped 17 percent since October 2008, according to Federal Reserve data.

Economic growth will be slower and short-term interest rates will stay lower for longer than economists and investors expect because of banks’ reluctance to lend, says Jan Hatzius, chief U.S. economist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. in New York. Bank profits may be restrained and bond prices boosted as institutions put money into safe Treasury securities rather than making riskier, more lucrative loans.

Tight credit is a “serious problem,” Hatzius says. “This could keep growth significantly weaker than the consensus view in 2010 and is likely to keep the Federal Reserve at a near zero-percent funds rate all next year.”

His forecast of 2 percent growth in 2010 is below the 2.4 percent median of 67 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. If he’s right, traders in the federal-funds futures market who are betting there’s a more-than-even chance the central bank will raise rates by June may need to reverse their wagers. Federal funds are money that U.S. banks have on deposit at Fed banks.

‘All-In Wager’

Financial institutions including JPMorgan Chase & Co. have reduced loans even as investors such as Buffett have turned more bullish. The 79-year-old chairman of Berkshire Hathaway Inc. called his Omaha, Nebraska, company’s $26 billion purchase last week of the largest U.S. railroad, Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp., “an all-in wager” on America’s economic future.

Loans at New York-based JPMorgan Chase fell to $653.1 billion at the end of the third quarter from $761.4 billion a year earlier. The decline reflected “some tightening of underwriting standards” on consumer loans, including credit cards, Chief Financial Officer Michael Cavanagh told analysts during an Oct. 14 call following the release of the quarter’s results. Loan demand from companies also fell, he added.

Bank of America’s loans and mortgages shrank to $878.4 billion from $922.3 billion a year earlier. The drop was due to “lower consumer spending and a resurgence in the capital markets” that allowed corporations to issue bonds and equity to pay off debt, Kenneth Lewis, chief executive officer of the Charlotte, North Carolina-based bank, said on an Oct. 16 conference call with analysts after the third-quarter report.

‘Good’ Loans

“We’re actively looking for every good loan we can make,” he said. “If the economy starts to get better and there’s demand, then we will be there to supply credit.”

The bank, the largest U.S. lender by deposits, plans to curtail new credit cards and tighten standards for card and small-business customers, Brian Moynihan, the head of its consumer division said at a Nov. 5 presentation for analysts in Boston. The company expects to issue 2.5 million cards this year, down from a peak of 10 million several years ago.

“We gave out a lot of cards, but we were giving them to too many people,” he said. “Now we are being more selective.”

Former Fed governor Susan Phillips likens the situation to that of the late 1980s and early 1990s when the U.S. was confronted by a credit crunch triggered by the savings-and-loan crisis. Lending was curtailed as the number of federally insured thrift institutions dropped about 50 percent to 1,645 between 1986 and 1995, according to a study by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation in Washington, which insures deposits at U.S. banks and unwinds failed lenders. The cost of the crisis was $153 billion, the study estimated.

‘Reasonable Expectation’

The economy and jobs growth were both slow to pick up after the 1990-91 recession, and it’s a “reasonable expectation” that will happen again, says Phillips, who was with the central bank at the time and is now dean of George Washington University’s School of Business in Washington.

The economy grew at an annualized 2 percent in the three quarters after the recession ended in March 1991 as payrolls dropped by an average 30,000 a month. Commercial and industrial loans by U.S. banks fell to $615 billion at the end of that year from $637 billion in March, according to Fed data.

As banks have reduced their lending in the current recession, which began December 2007, they have increased their investments in Treasuries. Holdings of these securities have climbed 26 percent to $125 billion in the 12 months through June, according to Fed data.

10-Year Yields

“Banks will continue to purchase Treasuries for the next several quarters, at least until the end of 2010,” says Ira Jersey, an interest-rate strategist in New York at RBC Capital Markets, a unit of Toronto-based Royal Bank of Canada, Canada’s largest lender. The demand will help keep the 10-year yield below 4 percent through 2010, he adds; it was 3.497 on Nov. 6.

Such caution might limit banks’ profits as they hoard cash instead of lending it.

“It will take down the rates of returns these companies can generate,” says Eric Hovde, chief executive officer of Washington-based Hovde Capital Advisors LLC, a hedge fund with $1 billion of financial-industry and real-estate investments.

A pickup in lending often lags behind an economic recovery as companies initially rely on funds generated by higher profits to finance their expansion, according to Tony Crescenzi, market strategist at Newport Beach, California-based Pacific Investment Management Co., which manages the world’s largest bond.

‘Restrained’ Recovery

This time, “the recovery in lending could take longer and be more restrained than usual,” he said in a Nov. 2 e-mail to clients, as banks prepare for tougher capital standards from regulators and rethink business models that led to $1.7 trillion in writedowns and credit losses worldwide.

“There is still some tightening of credit taking place in certain parts of the country where economic conditions are deteriorating,” says James Chessen, chief economist at the American Bankers Association in Washington.

The global financial industry and economy remain “fragile,” Deutsche Bank AG Chief Executive Officer Josef Ackermann said at an Oct. 12 conference in Frankfurt. “The wave of corporate insolvencies, the impact of higher unemployment on the credit books, this all lies ahead and not behind the banks,” he added. Frankfurt-based Deutsche is Germany’s biggest bank.

Rising Unemployment

The U.S. unemployment rate, which rose to a 26-year high of 10.2 percent in October, may increase to close to 11 percent by the middle of next year, according to Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Economy.com in West Chester, Pennsylvania. Bankruptcy filings by small businesses rose 44 percent in the third quarter from a year earlier, Atlanta-based Equifax Inc., a provider of consumer-credit information, reported Nov. 2.

Bankers’ reluctance to increase lending has fanned frustration among lawmakers who question the financial institutions’ strategy after they received billions in capital from the government’s Troubled Asset Relief Program.

“The original notion of the TARP was, we were going to help Main Street by bailing out Wall Street,” Senator Mark Warner, a Virginia Democrat, said in an interview. “We’ve seen Wall Street recover, but we have not seen Main Street reap the direct benefits.”

The Obama administration has only itself to blame for the failure of banks to make more loans after it chose not to nationalize them, according to Joseph Stiglitz, a Nobel Prize- winning economist and professor at Columbia University in New York.

Influence Over Banks

“If we had done the right thing, we would be able to have more influence over the banks,” Stiglitz told reporters at an economic conference in Shanghai Oct 31. “They would be lending and the economy would be stronger.”

The administration decided against taking over the banks because of the “irreversibility of such actions” and “the very substantial risk” that nationalization could have frightened rather than calmed investors and the public, Lawrence Summers, Obama’s chief economic adviser, said in a July 17 speech.

Much of the policy makers’ focus is on credit for small businesses, which have generated 64 percent of net new jobs during the past 15 years, according to the government, and can’t tap the capital markets for finance, unlike their bigger brethren.

‘Financial Headwinds’

These companies face “the kind of financial headwinds, the classic credit-crunch risk that could slow recovery,” Geithner, 48, said Nov. 1 on NBC’s “Meet the Press” television program. The U.S. economy requires “continued policy support” to recover from a financial crisis that has pushed unemployment to its highest level since 1983, he added in a statement after a meeting Nov. 7 of finance ministers and central bankers from the Group of 20 nations.

President Barack Obama announced on Oct. 21 new measures to spur lending, including capital injections for community banks.

“There is still too little credit flowing to our small businesses,” Obama said in remarks at Metropolitan Archives, a family operated records-storage company in the Washington suburb of Landover, Maryland.

Banks have defended their practices, arguing they need to be prudent. Some small businesses that want to borrow don’t meet lending standards, JPMorgan Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon said in an Oct. 15 interview.

“Small-business loans are down, partially because demand is down, partially because people tightened up credit,” he said. “If we can come up with ways to rationally lend money to small business that is good lending, then we should do it. We do it all the time. We make small-business loans all of the time.”

‘Mixed Messages’

Banks are receiving “mixed messages” from regulators and policy makers, says the banker association’s Chessen. “On the one hand we’re being told to be more cautious and increase capital, while on the other we’re told to lend more aggressively,” he says.

Supervisors have increased oversight, questioning loans already on the books when they come up for renewal. “It’s the worst of back-seat driving,” Chessen says.

“There is still a credit crunch out there,” says Niall Ferguson, author of “The Ascent of Money: A Financial History of the World” and a professor at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts. “We’re still in a situation that’s closer, in my view, to recession than to recovery.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Rich Miller in Washington rmiller28@bloomberg.net





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German Exports Undercut Trichet’s Weaker Euro Push

By Matthew Brown and Oliver Biggadike

Nov. 9 (Bloomberg) -- A decade after the euro replaced the deutsche mark, Germany’s export-driven recovery is undermining European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet’s efforts to slow the currency’s record rise.

Speculators are the most bullish in almost two years on the euro, betting the eight-month, 20 percent rally won’t stop until it hurts the continent’s biggest economy. Even as Spain, France and Portugal advocate weakening the euro to lower the price of their products overseas, 32 of 47 strategists surveyed by Bloomberg forecast an increase from last week’s $1.4847 close by Dec. 31 or March 31. It rose 0.5 percent to trade at $1.4921 as of 12:56 p.m. in Tokyo.

Intended to unify, the euro is proving divisive as Europe battles recession. Germany, the world’s largest goods exporter in 2008, is leading the rebound, deflating pressure to depreciate the currency. Trichet has argued for a strong dollar repeatedly, calling it “extremely important” Oct. 15. A day later, Germany’s then-Economy Minister Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg said “there is no reason for concern” because his country’s competitiveness “does not depend on the dollar rate” versus the euro.

“Global growth has helped Germany’s exports and made it less sensitive to the exchange rate,” said Bilal Hafeez, chief currency strategist at Frankfurt-based Deutsche Bank AG, the largest currency trader and Germany’s biggest bank. “They won’t get worried about the euro’s strength until at least $1.55.”

Bullish Speculators

Euro options-trading indicates about a 60 percent chance it will reach $1.55, a 4 percent gain, by March 31, implied volatility data tracked by Bloomberg show. Hedge fund managers and other large speculators had more than twice as many futures and options bets in September and October that the currency would rise as wagers on a decline, the most bullish ratio since November 2007, Commodity Futures Trading Commission data show.

Germany is recovering faster than other euro countries from the worst global downturn since the 1940s. Its economy expanded 0.3 percent in the second quarter, after contracting the previous four. The euro zone shrank 0.2 percent in April, May and June. Deutsche Bank predicts Germany’s exports will rise almost 6 percent in 2010, compared with the region’s 4.4 percent.

An index measuring German executives’ optimism hit a 17- month high of 96.8 in October, the Munich-based Ifo institute’s business climate survey showed. Manufacturing orders increased an unprecedented 19 percent in the seven months to Sept. 30, according to the German central bank.

Spain’s Pain

Mercedes-Benz maker Daimler AG in Stuttgart reported its first quarterly profit in a year on Oct. 27, and the shares are up 84 percent since March 1. Ludwigshafen-based BASF SE, the world’s largest chemical company, earned profits for three straight quarters, including 237 million euros ($352 million) in the third, when 46 percent of its revenue came from outside Europe. Competitors struggled, with Arkema SA in Colombes, France, posting losses for the past three quarters.

Exports accounted for 40 percent of Germany’s economy in the second quarter, compared with 35 percent for the euro region. France and Spain sell a combined 15 percent of Europe’s cross- border shipments of what the Paris-based CEPII Institute considers “high quality” goods.

Germany’s share is almost a third. They include Porsche SE’s 911 Carrera sports cars, which are manufactured in Zuffenhausen and sell for at least $77,800 in the U.S.; Wuerzburg-based Koenig & Bauer AG’s printing presses, which produce 90 percent of the world’s cash; and optical lenses from Carl Zeiss AG, which began making microscopes in Jena in 1847 and is now based in Oberkochen.

Mercedes Sales

Daimler, the world’s second-largest maker of luxury vehicles behind Munich-based Bayerische Motoren Werke AG, said U.S. Mercedes-Benz sales jumped 21 percent in October.

“Germany has shown the capacity to compete probably more effectively at these kind of exchange rates than many other European countries,” said Alan Ruskin, head of international North American currency strategy at RBS Securities Inc. in Stamford, Connecticut.

Spain contracted 1.1 percent in the second quarter, and Deutsche Bank sees its exports trailing Germany’s with a 2.4 percent increase in 2010. Spain’s economy was once an engine of growth, expanding 3.9 percent a year on average in the decade to June 2007, compared with the region’s 2.3 percent.

While France’s gross domestic product grew as much as Germany’s in the three months through June, its exports will lag behind, with 3.8 percent growth next year, Deutsche Bank estimates. After Portugal’s economy rose 0.3 percent in the second quarter, exports slumped in August by 32 percent.

Unprecedented Fall

The euro’s rally followed a record 23 percent, seven-month drop to $1.2330 on Oct. 28, 2008, from $1.6038, the all-time record, in April 2008. It rose to $1.50 on Oct. 21, as investors dumped U.S. assets on signs of a global recovery and central banks diversified away from the greenback.

Euros account for 28 percent of the world’s $4.3 trillion in currency reserves, versus the dollar’s 63 percent, the slimmest margin ever, International Monetary Fund data show.

Meudon, France-based Gemalto NV, the world’s largest maker of smartcards for data storage and financial transactions, reported third-quarter sales on Oct. 22 that fell short of analysts’ estimates, leading to the stock’s worst day in almost two years.

“Weighing on our margin is this adverse currency effect simply because the euro has strengthened quite a bit,” Gemalto Chief Executive Officer Olivier Piou said as the company posted second-quarter earnings on Aug. 25, when the euro was at $1.43. “Year-on-year gross margin was down 3 percentage points,” in part due to the euro’s advance, he said.

Sarkozy’s ‘Disaster’

Service Point Solutions SA in Barcelona, Spain’s only publicly-traded document manager, may post its biggest loss since 2002 in the third quarter, partly because of the stronger currency, analysts’ estimates show.

“About 30 percent of our sales are in the U.K., so our sales are lower,” Chief Financial Officer Matteo Buzzi said in a Nov. 6 interview. The euro was up as much as 12 percent against the pound last month from June’s six-month low.

Henri Guaino, an aide to French President Nicolas Sarkozy, called the euro at $1.50 a “disaster” on Oct. 20, the day before it hit that level for the first time in 14 months. Portuguese Finance Minister Fernando Teixeira dos Santos said in an Oct. 1 interview that he looks with “concern” at its impact on his country’s exports, which fell to a four-year low in August.

Trichet Rhetoric

Trichet said on Nov. 5 that ECB officials “appreciate” U.S. statements supporting a “strong dollar,” a phrase he uttered at least seven other times in the previous five weeks. “I echo this statement as something which is important in the present circumstances,” he said at a Frankfurt press conference. Ivan Sramko, an ECB governing council member, was more direct on Oct. 23, saying the euro rally may cause economic “problems.”

European Monetary Affairs Commissioner Joaquin Almunia, French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde and Spanish Finance and Economy Minister Elena Salgado also have complained about the euro’s strength in the past two months.

Some members of German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s ruling coalition cheer the rise of the euro, which was pegged to a basket of currencies dominated by the deutsche mark when it was created Jan. 1, 1999.

“Sure, the euro’s comparative strength is an irritation for our exporters, but that’s a short-term nuisance,” said Frank Schaeffler, a Free Democratic Party member on parliament’s Finance Committee, in a Nov. 5 interview. “We want a strong euro. The longer-term well-being of the economy depends on it.”

Euro Pride

Investors say intervention to weaken the euro is unlikely at current levels, given the dominance of Germany, which accounted for 27 percent of the zone’s third quarter GDP.

“The German government always believed in a strong- currency policy,” said Werner Eppacher, who oversees $15 billion a year in trades as head of foreign-exchange at DWS Investment GmbH in Frankfurt and predicts the euro will hit $1.52 by May. “They believed it’s something to be proud of, that a strong currency means reliable fiscal policy, strong economic structure. They viewed it as a sign that they are doing their job correctly.”

Last month, Merkel dismissed critics of Germany’s reliance on sales abroad. “All those who now say we’ve depended too much on exports are undermining our biggest source of prosperity and must be rebuffed,” she said on Oct. 14.

Reduced Chance

The last time policy makers intervened to influence the euro was after the currency had fallen 27 percent since its inception. Central banks bought about 6 billion euros on Sept. 22, 2000, pushing it to 90 U.S. cents from 85 cents in a few hours. It bottomed a month later at 83 cents and hasn’t traded below $1.10 since 1993.

An index of the euro’s value, momentum and trading trends last week signaled a 29 percent chance of another intervention, down from 55 percent in January, said Stephen Hull, Morgan Stanley’s global head of currency strategy in London.

“It’s always a combination of levels and speed,” said Thomas Stolper, an economist in London at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., the most profitable securities firm. “A gradual drift higher from here to the old highs would not necessarily trigger an intervention, but if we went to $1.60 in a few weeks, the probability would be substantially higher.”

Rising debt loads for the region’s countries may cause the euro to depreciate once growth takes hold, said Otmar Issing, the ECB’s former chief economist. The zone’s budget deficit will swell to a record 6.9 percent of GDP next year, from 6.4 percent in 2009, with all 16 countries breaching European Monetary Union limits as they pump cash into their economies, the European Commission forecast Nov. 3. Spain, Greece and Ireland will have shortfalls of 10 percent or more this year and next, it said.

‘Big Problem’

“The reasons for running deficits at the moment, to fight the crisis, are accepted, but when it ends it will be a big, big problem for the stability of the currency,” Issing said in an Oct. 26 debate at the London School of Economics.

For now, that isn’t a problem. Interest rates of 1 percent in Europe versus near zero in the U.S. have attracted investors to the euro. The American government has flooded the world with dollars by spending, committing, lending or guaranteeing $11.6 trillion to fight the recession while the ECB has been more restrained on measures that would debase its currency.

“The Fed and the government filled the market with dollars, making it the main currency for carry trades,” where low- interest economies’ money is invested in higher-yielding ones, said Marc Chandler, global head of currency strategy in New York at Brown Brothers Harriman & Co. “This will only end when the Fed starts tightening monetary policy or the market believes a hike is imminent.” He sees the euro rising to $1.53.

‘Upward Pressure’

The International Monetary Fund on Nov. 7 said “there are indications” that traders are using the dollar to fund carry trades across the world and that it may still be overvalued even after its slide this year.

“These trades may be contributing to upward pressure on the euro,” the IMF said in a report.

Investors outside developed Europe bought $6.5 billion of its government and corporate bonds from April 1 to Nov. 4, the fastest pace since March, according to Cameron Brandt, an analyst at fund-flow data provider EPFR Global in Boston. European stock purchases by foreigners totaled $5.8 billion from mid-July to November, the most since at least 1999, Brandt said. The Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index of Europe’s shares is up 53 percent since March 9 after a record six-month rally. Germany’s DAX index is up 49 percent.

The euro’s “pain threshold is associated with new record highs, so we would need to go above $1.60,” Goldman Sachs’ Stolper said. “Demand for German goods depends a lot more on global growth and investment patterns than on the strength of the euro.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Matthew Brown in London at mbrown42@bloomberg.net; Oliver Biggadike in New York at obiggadike@bloomberg.net





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India’s Singh May Lead G-20 in Fiscal Stimulus Exit

By Cherian Thomas and Kartik Goyal

Nov. 9 (Bloomberg) -- India may be among the first Group of 20 nations to begin winding back fiscal stimulus after Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said faster economic growth would allow the measures to be withdrawn.

“There are clear signs of an upturn in the economy,” Singh told the India Economic Summit organized by the World Economic Forum in New Delhi yesterday. “Like other countries we resorted to a significant stimulus and we will take appropriate action next year to wind this down.”

Singh’s comments are at odds with policy makers from the U.S., Japan, Australia and other G-20 nations who said at the weekend it’s too early to withdraw fiscal steps designed to support global recovery. India’s central bank last month began to tighten monetary policy amid concerns that an inflation flare-up may hit the pockets of close to 800 million Indians who live on less than $2 a day.

“Demand in India has picked up and a continuation of stimulus may not be necessary next year,” said Arun Duggal, chairman of Shriram Transport Finance Co. Ltd., the nation’s biggest financier of trucks and buses. “Stimulus should remain in developed countries as their economies are in a more fragile state and could tip backward.”

Singh said India’s economy may grow 6.5 percent in the year ending March 31, constrained by weak monsoon rains that hurt crop production. With better rainfall in the four-month season starting June 2010, the economy may expand over 7 percent in the year commencing April 1, he said.

Wal-Mart

India’s economic strides prompted Wal-Mart Stores Inc., the world’s largest retailer that has a wholesaling venture with the local Bharti Group, to open as many as 40 more “cash & carry” stores in the country. Wal-Mart opened its first Indian wholesale store on May 30, with initial plans to start 10 or 15 more outlets during the next three years.

Tata Steel Ltd., India’s biggest producer of the alloy, reported October sales rose 38 percent, while sales at Bajaj Auto Ltd., the nation’s second-largest motorcycle maker, gained 46 percent during the month.

India began to tighten monetary policy as the central bank forecasts inflation to accelerate to 6.5 percent by March 31 from 1.51 percent. Asset prices have been climbing as well, evidenced by the 68 percent rise in the key Sensitive index on the Bombay Stock Exchange.

‘Calibrated Way’

The Reserve Bank of India on Oct. 27 ordered lenders to keep more cash in government bonds, raising the statutory liquidity ratio to 25 percent from 24 percent. Governor Duvvuri Subbarao said it was appropriate for the central bank to exit monetary stimulus in a “calibrated way.”

The rupee advanced 0.6 percent to 46.55 per dollar as of 9:40 a.m. in Mumbai, rising for a fourth day, on speculation an improving economy will attract more foreign investment. The Sensex gained 0.7 percent, to 16,268.23 at 9:56 a.m.

Raghuram Rajan, former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund and now a professor at the University of Chicago, said it was “quite appropriate” for the Indian government to think about winding down fiscal stimulus.

“I am not saying do it today, but do it over the next year and going forward,” Rajan said in New Delhi yesterday.

India’s central bank needs to consider an exit from monetary stimulus as interest-rate policy needs to be conducted with “foresight,” Rajan said. “By the time inflation starts picking up, by the time capacity constraints start showing, its too late to do it with monetary policy.”

Asset Bubbles

China also risks faster inflation and asset bubbles as Asia’s second-biggest economy pursues “excessive growth,” Yao Jingyuan, the statistics bureau’s chief economist, said at a forum in Beijing last week.

The Chinese economy is assured of expanding 8 percent in 2009, meeting the government’s target, according to Yao.

India may consider rolling back fiscal stimulus early in the year starting April 1, Montek Singh Ahluwalia, deputy chairman of the Planning Commission, said in New Delhi yesterday. This would help reduce a budget deficit estimated to reach a 16- year high of 6.8 percent of gross domestic product this year.

The Indian government has reduced taxes on consumer products and imports and increased spending, aiming to shield the $1.2 billion economy from the world global recession since the 1930s.

Global Recovery

“The worst is behind us though the path of global recovery will be long and uncertain,” Prime Minister Singh said yesterday. “India has been able to face the global economic downturn better than most other countries in the world.”

The world economy may shrink 1.1 percent in 2009, according to IMF estimates. IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn warned Oct. 23 of the risk of a double-dip recession if countries implement exit strategies too soon.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner told reporters after a meeting of G20 finance ministers in Scotland on Nov. 7 that “it’s too early” to “lean against the recovery.”

Japanese Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda said it’s too soon to start unwinding measures, saying the recovery in his country “still lacks sustainability.” Australian Treasurer Wayne Swan said yesterday government stimulus shouldn’t yet be retracted as winding up the program would threaten jobs and economic recovery.

“The developed countries seem to be very cohesive in thinking that stimulus should continue,” Rana Kapoor, chief executive officer at Mumbai-based Yes Bank Ltd. said in an interview with Bloomberg News yesterday. “Every nation needs to watch out for country-specific conditions and take actions best suited for them, and that’s what India is doing.”

Countries should withdraw stimulus too late rather than too early as the global recovery is likely to be “sluggish,” the IMF said in a report prepared for this weekend’s meeting of G20 officials in St. Andrews, Scotland.

India’s next budget is due to be released in late February 2010 by Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee, who attended the weekend meeting of G20 officials.

“World demand will pick up only slowly,” Singh said yesterday. “Our strategy therefore must aim at sustaining a high rate of growth on the strength of strong domestic demand.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Kartik Goyal in New Delhi at kgoyal@bloomberg.netCherian Thomas in New Delhi at cthomas1@bloomberg.net





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French Business Sentiment Climbs on Stimulus, Export Demand

By Mark Deen

Nov. 9 (Bloomberg) -- French business confidence rose for an eighth month in October as government stimulus programs and demand for exports spurred the economy that emerged from recession earlier this year.

The Bank of France’s Business Sentiment Indicator for manufacturing climbed to 95 from 93 in September, the central bank said in an e-mailed statement today. Economists expected a reading of 93, according to the median of six forecasts gathered by Bloomberg News. The sentiment indicator for services was 84, the same as in the previous month.

French businesses benefited from a return to growth in the second quarter after being buffeted by a recession the previous year. With exports rising and government incentives stoking car sales, Europe’s second-largest economy will probably continue expanding through the end of the year, economists said.

“Orders are inching up and the global production outlook is improving,” said Pierre-Olivier Beffy, chief economist at Exane BNP Paribas in Paris. “The economy is benefiting in full from the effects of monetary and fiscal stimulus.”

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





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Oil at $100 Doesn’t Compute as OPEC Output Pace Grows

By Mark Shenk

Nov. 9 (Bloomberg) -- OPEC is increasing output at the fastest pace in two years, adding to near-record inventories and threatening speculators betting on $100 crude with losses.

The number of options contracts to buy oil at $100 by March almost quadrupled in October and increased another 5.9 percent so far this month. As traders piled in, OPEC boosted production 4 percent, or 1.1 million barrels a day, since March amid the worst global recession since World War II.

Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah has targeted $75 oil as a fair price for consumers and producers and has the capacity to increase pumping by about 50 percent, or 4 million barrels a day, enough for all of Brazil. The prospect of more supply comes with inventories in industrial countries already the highest since 1998, when oil collapsed to $10.

“It’s not in OPEC’s interest to see $100 oil,” said Stephen Schork, president of consultant Schork Group Inc. in Villanova, Pennsylvania. “They know that it’s the speculators that are the main driver in sending prices higher. At some point this market will implode, because this isn’t sustainable.”

Futures contracts show investors expect oil at $79 in March and none of the Wall Street analysts tracked by Bloomberg predict $100 before the end of next year. Crude closed at $77.43 last week on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Oil, which has jumped 74 percent this year, is headed for the biggest annual gain since 1999. The appreciation coincided with a 5.4 percent increase in U.S. stockpiles to 335.9 million barrels.

Ida Boosts Crude

Crude oil rose from a one-week low today as the approach of Hurricane Ida shut some output in the Gulf of Mexico. Oil for December gained as much as 95 cents, or 1.2 percent, to $78.38 a barrel in after-hours electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange and was at $78.28 at 11:38 a.m. in Singapore.

The number of outstanding options contracts to buy oil at $100 by March rose to 27,482 in October from 7,181 in September, and climbed another 1,609 to 29,091 by Nov. 5. The contracts cover more than 29 million barrels of crude.

Inventories are mounting as the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries produced 28.76 million barrels a day in October, up 80,000 from September and the highest in 10 months, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Saudi Arabia has raised shipments in four of the past six months, the data show.

“Listen to the Saudis,” said Lawrence Eagles, the global head of commodities research at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in New York. “They have said they want prices at this level, and they have the ability to keep them here.”

Saudi Output

Saudi crude-oil production has risen to 8.15 million barrels a day after dropping to 7.86 million in February, the lowest level since 2002. Even with the recent increases, October production was down 13 percent from a year earlier.

The desert kingdom has idled about 4 million barrels a day, or one-third of its capacity, according to data from the country’s oil ministry. Officials from the department didn’t return calls seeking comment.

“The Saudis can close or open the valve and control the flow of oil at any time,” said Robert Ebel, chairman of the energy and national security program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington. “They realize it’s not in their interest to see prices climb to an unacceptable level.”

When prices were headed to a record $147.27 last year, Saudi officials increased production by 500,000 barrels a day in June and July to halt the rally. By December 2008, prices collapsed as low as $32.40.

‘Upper End’ Prices

“Prices are probably at the upper end of what they are comfortable with right now because they are concerned about the health of the global economy,” said David Kirsch, an Overland Park, Missouri-based analyst with PFC Energy, an energy strategist to companies and governments.

Finance ministers and central bank governors of the Group of 20 nations said Nov. 7 that while economic and financial conditions have improved, “the recovery is uneven and remains dependent on policy support, and high unemployment is a major concern.” The U.S. unemployment rate jumped to 10.2 percent in October, the highest level since 1983, the Labor Department said last week.

Crude and fuel stockpiles held in non-government tanks in the 30 developed countries in the Organization of Economic Cooperation and Development rose to 2.76 billion barrels in the third quarter, close to the record 2.77 billion reached in 1998, U.S. Energy Department figures show.

Storage Bulging

The 1998 glut caused oil to collapse to $10 a barrel. Now with storage tanks bulging from Singapore to Oklahoma, traders are being forced to store oil and fuel on ships that are bigger than the Chrysler Building.

The amount of heating oil and jet fuel stored at sea increased 17 percent to 112 tankers with a combined capacity of 13.1 million deadweight tons, London-based Simpson, Spence & Young Ltd., the world’s second-largest shipbroker, said in a Nov. 6 report.

OPEC President Jose Maria Botelho de Vasconcelos said Oct. 25 that the group may raise exports in December if prices remain above $75. Ministers are scheduled to meet on Dec. 22 in Luanda, Angola, to review production quotas that the group left unchanged at three gatherings in 2009. OPEC last agreed to increase supply targets in September 2007.

“We’re getting noise from OPEC and it’s probably Saudi inspired,” said Bill O’Grady, chief market strategist at Confluence Investment Management in St. Louis. “They would probably like oil between $65 and $75 because that would be high enough for them and their friends to be fairly compensated.”

OPEC Concern

OPEC will hold a special meeting if oil prices reach $100 a barrel, Kuwait’s Oil Minister Sheikh Ahmad al-Abdullah al-Sabah said in Kuwait City on Nov. 3.

Rising equity prices and the weakening dollar have been reasons for the oil’s rally this year and will probably limit OPEC’s ability to dictate prices, according to Adam Sieminski, chief energy economist at Deutsche Bank AG in Washington.

“Things are still being driven by the dollar, which raises challenges for OPEC,” Sieminski said. “If oil makes a run toward the triple-digits, they would traditionally put more oil on the market, but right now refiners have plenty on hand.”

The dollar has dropped 6.8 percent in the past year against a basket of six major currencies as the Fed, led by Chairman Ben S. Bernanke, cut rates to near zero in an effort to lift the U.S. economy out of its worst recession since the 1930s.

“Prices are being held up by non-oil factors,” Kirsch said. “The easiest way for OPEC to lower prices would be for them to buy up dollars and Treasuries.”

Iran, Venezuela

The falling dollar has hurt the buying power of oil exporters, according to Iran and Venezuela.

“It went to $81 to $82 for a few days but you can’t believe that’s what you’re really getting,” Iran’s OPEC governor, Mohammad Ali Khatibi, said in a phone interview from Tehran on Nov. 3. “You have to consider not only the current price, but the year-to-date average.”

The benchmark crude price used by OPEC, derived from the cost of oil produced by each of its 12 members, averaged $41.50 barrel in January and was at $77.45 on Nov. 5.

“A floor of $80 and stability” are Venezuela’s goal for next year, the country’s oil and energy minister, Rafael Ramirez, told reporters in Caracas on Nov. 4.

Iran pumped an average 444,000 barrels a day above its OPEC target in October, making it the biggest quota-buster, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Venezuela produced 234,000 barrels more than its target.

“They are always looking for higher prices,” said Michael Lynch, president of Strategic Energy & Economic Research in Winchester, Massachusetts. “They let the Saudis do the work, while they pump as much as they can.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Mark Shenk in New York at mshenk1@bloomberg.net.





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G-20 Splits on Tobin Tax, Signals Banks Should Cover Bailouts

By Simon Kennedy and Emma Ross-Thomas

Nov. 9 (Bloomberg) -- Group of 20 governments signaled banks will be forced to cover a greater cost of future bailouts even as they split over whether that should be achieved by taxing financial trading. After spending more than $500 billion in taxpayer’s money to save banks from Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc to Citigroup Inc., officials meeting in St. Andrews, Scotland this weekend debated how the financial industry can be forced to pay for future rescues. The specifics sparked division, with U.K. Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s call to consider a so-called Tobin tax immediately opposed by U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner. “It cannot be acceptable that the benefits of success in this sector are reaped by the few but the costs of its failure are borne by all of us,” Brown told finance ministers and central bankers at their Nov. 7 talks. Geithner said “we want to make sure that we don’t put the taxpayer in a position of having to absorb the costs of a crisis in future.”

G-20 officials are narrowing their focus on reining in excessive risk-taking after uniting earlier this year to fight the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. While the U.S. pushback means a transaction tax is unlikely to occur, the mere discussion of it may be enough to unsettle markets.

Banks’ earnings will inevitably come under pressure as governments agree on other proposals to force banks to fend for themselves in a crisis, says Charles Dumas, chairman of Lombard Street Research in London.

Lower Profits

“The banking industry is only just starting to realise they won’t be able to go back to business as usual,” said Dumas. “The natural thing to do is go for some kind of insurance premium and higher capital requirements. It probably will reduce profitability, and it should reduce profitability.”

The G-20, which met at the end of a week in which Royal Bank of Scotland became the most expensive bailout ever, plans to discuss how banks can “contribute to paying for burdens” arising from state rescues at its next summit.

The push comes amid voters’ anger that banks rescued by taxpayers are returning to profit even as unemployment rises around the world. The U.S. jobless rate rose to a 26-year high in October just as the Centre for Economics & Business Research Ltd. forecasts bankers’ bonuses will rise 50 percent this year.

“We cannot afford having some individuals taking risks without having the pressure on them,” IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said in an interview on Nov. 7.

Tax Split

Other proposals listed by Brown included getting banks to pay an insurance fee that reflects their risk, forcing them to create a pool to finance bailouts or ordering them to pay an upfront amount in return for being able to raise money if they run into trouble.

The Tobin-tax split this weekend, along with tensions over Chinese currency policy, nevertheless suggests the G-20’s ability to find consensus is being tested two months after leaders made it the main body for coordinating global policy.

“Each day the crisis recedes, the old battle-lines reemerge and it gets tougher to find common conclusions,” said Tim Adams, the U.S. Treasury’s top international official during George W. Bush’s administration and now a managing director at the Lindsey Group, an investment consultancy run in Fairfax, Virginia.

Chinese central bank Governor Zhou Xiaochuan arrived at St. Andrews dismissing suggestions that China is under pressure to allow the yuan to appreciate. Later that day, Japan said a more flexible currency would be desirable and the IMF told the G-20 that the yuan is “significantly undervalued” after being kept unchanged against the dollar since July 2008.

No Agreement

The G-20 also failed to reach an agreement on climate change finance ahead of next month’s summit in Copenhagen.

Brown’s Tobin-tax push broke with his past resistance to a levy, lending momentum to a debate started earlier this year by French President Nicolas Sarkozy and backed by Germany.

Geithner responded that a “day-by-day” tax on speculation is “not something we’re prepared to support.” British Bankers’ Association Chief Executive Officer Angela Knight said it “wouldn’t work in practice.” Geithner says the U.S. would prefer to cover the cost of bailouts by forcing banks to repay rescue funds once the crisis is over. European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said Brown’s other proposals may be more acceptable. For Brown, trailing in polls less than seven months before the next election is due, the comments are designed to open a divide with the Conservative opposition. While they say the biggest risk to the economy is the record budget deficit, Brown has stepped up his attacks on banks.

Debate

Economists argued over the merits of a tax on speculation. Julian Jessop, chief international economist at Capital Economics Ltd., said it “could make a useful contribution to reducing the risk of future financial crises and sharing the costs more fairly.”

Bill Witherell, chief global economist at Cumberland Advisors Inc. in Vineland, New Jersey, countered that banks would circumnavigate it and that it would do more harm than good.

“The idea of trying to tax transactions is a populist measure that may appeal to those upset with banks, but would be short-sighted,” said Witherell.

The G-20 still agreed to keep interest rates low and maintain record budget deficits until recoveries take hold. Banks are also still vulnerable, the Financial Stability Board told the G-20, saying that some are too optimistic about the state of their finances. To ensure the next expansion is less reliant on excesses such as U.S. spending and Chinese saving, the G-20 signed up to a plan in which they will outline plans to fix weaknesses in their economies and subject themselves to an IMF-led examination by counterparts.

Members will submit reports on their own economies by the end of January before refining their goals in concert for a summit of leaders in South Korea next November. “The hard work does not end here,” Brown said. “In fact it begins now.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Simon Kennedy in St. Andrews at skennedy4@bloomberg.net. Emma Ross-Thomas in St. Andrews at at erossthomas@bloomberg.net;





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