Economic Calendar

Thursday, December 1, 2011

France-Spain Bond Sales Win Investor Backing

By Emma Ross-Thomas and Lukanyo Mnyanda - Dec 1, 2011 6:46 PM GMT+0700

Spain and France sold 8.1 billion euros ($10.9 billion) of bonds, sending yields lower across Europe, a day after six central banks jointly moved to reduce financing costs to banks.

Spain sold 3.75 billion euros of notes and had to pay the most since at least 2005 to borrow for five years, with investors ordering more than twice the amount sold. Top-rated France auctioned 4.3 billion euros of debt, including 10-year bonds at 3.18 percent, less than at the Nov. 3 sale.

The debt sales were a test of investor confidence after the Federal Reserve, the European Central Bank and four other central banks in a globally coordinated effort yesterday cut the cost of emergency dollar funding for European banks. The central banks acted after financing costs rose following euro-area leaders’ failure to bolster the region’s rescue fund as planned.

“They were both pretty good auctions,” said Huw Worthington, fixed-income strategist at Barclays Capital in London “The levels are higher than they would like, but the actual auctions were strong. The central bank action yesterday has certainly helped.”

French 10-year yields fell 27 basis points, the most in 20 years, to 3.12 percent after the auction, while Spanish 10-year bond yields declined 21 basis points to 6.015 percent. That compares with a euro-era high of 6.781 percent on Nov. 17, when Spain last auctioned bonds.

Summit

European leaders are due to meet on Dec. 9 and German Chancellor Angela Merkel said Nov. 29 that her priority is to put the “whole euro zone on a stronger treaty basis.” ECB President Mario Draghi told the European Parliament in Brussels today that the bank’s bond-buying program, which has included Spain and Italy since August, was “limited” and that euro- region governments unifying their fiscal policies would be a more effective way to end the crisis.

“We know that on Dec. 9 there are supposed to be some political developments from the euro zone but there’s a risk those developments could materialize earlier, so that may have created a bit of caution for those who are bearish on the periphery,” Peter Chatwell, a fixed-income strategist at Credit Agricole said. “It looks like shorts are being closed here.”

Spanish Cancelation

Italy, with the second-largest public debt burden in the euro region after Greece, paid almost 8 percent to sell three- year debt on Nov. 29, the highest since 1996. The same day, Belgium paid the most in three years to sell six-month notes.

France sold bonds due in October 2017, October 2021, April 2026, and April 2041. Spain auctioned notes maturing in April 2015, January 2016 and January 2017.

Spain changed the securities it planned to sell at the auction, opting for longer-dated notes that already trade instead of a new benchmark three-year bond, citing market conditions. Spain’s short-term borrowing costs started approaching the levels of longer-term yields last week as the gap between two-year and 10-year rates narrowed to the least in three years. Greek and Portuguese short-term rates rose above long-term yields just before they sought bailouts.

The difference between yields for three-year and five-year notes, which narrowed to 10 basis points on Nov. 23, widened to 42 basis points as of 11:00 a.m. London time today after the auction.

Big Banks

Spain’s Treasury has already issued more than 16 billion euros each of the 2015 and 2016 bonds and more than 14 billion euros of the 2017 securities, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, making them more liquid than a new bond.

Spanish banks increased their holdings of the nation’s bonds to 142.4 billion euros in September, the highest on record, from 140.6 billion euros in August, according to Tressury data. Lenders are also increasing their dependence on the ECB, borrowing 76 billion euros in October, the most in more than a year, Bank of Spain data show.

France decided to press ahead with the sale of bonds today, braving the market turbulence, even though it has completed its funding requirements for 2011. The extra yield demanded to lend to France for 10 years rather than Germany rose to 204 basis points on Nov. 17, the widest since 1990. It narrowed to 88 basis points today.

To contact the reporters on this story: Emma Ross-Thomas in Madrid at erossthomas@bloomberg.net; Lukanyo Mnyanda in Edinburgh at lmnyanda@bloomberg.net;

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Craig Stirling at cstirling1@bloomberg.net Daniel Tilles at dtilles@bloomberg.net




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U.S. Jobless Claims Unexpectedly Rise in Holiday-Shortened Week

By Shobhana Chandra - Dec 1, 2011 8:36 PM GMT+0700

Dec. 1 (Bloomberg) -- More Americans than forecast filed applications for unemployment benefits during the holiday-shortened week, signaling limited recovery in the labor market. Jobless claims climbed by 6,000 to 402,000 in the week ended Nov. 26 that included the Thanksgiving holiday, Labor Department figures showed today. Betty Liu, Dominic Chu and Michael McKee report on Bloomberg Television's "In the Loop." (Source: Bloomberg)


More Americans than forecast filed applications for unemployment benefits during the holiday- shortened week, signaling limited recovery in the labor market.

Jobless claims climbed by 6,000 to 402,000 in the week ended Nov. 26 that included the Thanksgiving holiday, Labor Department figures showed today in Washington. The median forecast of 43 economists in a Bloomberg News survey called for a drop to 390,000. The number of people on unemployment benefit rolls and those getting extended payments increased.

Some companies are still trimming staff and others are reluctant to add workers until demand picks up and there’s more clarity on tax breaks due to expire at year-end. Faster hiring is needed to spur consumer spending, which accounts for about 70 percent of the economy, and reduce a jobless rate stuck near 9 percent that’s a concern for Federal Reserve officials.

“Companies are still in a mode of hiring based on absolute need,” said Russell Price, senior economist at Ameriprise Financial Inc. in Detroit. “They’re not adding a whole lot of workers for future growth. Employers are waiting to see what happens with the payroll tax cut.”

Jobless benefits applications were projected to decrease from 393,000 initially reported for the prior week, according to the survey median. Estimates ranged from 380,000 to 415,000. The Labor Department revised the prior week’s figure up to 396,000.

Stock-index futures were little changed after the report. The contract on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index expiring this month declined 0.1 percent to 1,244.5 at 8:33 a.m. in New York.

Effect of Holidays

A Labor Department spokesman said there was nothing unusual in the state level data last week. Because of the holiday, the seasonal-adjustment factors projected claims would drop by about 75,000, instead they fell by about 70,000, pushing up the adjusted reading, the spokesman said. It’s often difficult to account for the effect of holidays on weekly claims.

Today’s data showed the four-week moving average, a less volatile measure than the weekly figures, rose to 395,750 last week from 395,250, which was a seven-month low.

The number of people continuing to receive jobless benefits climbed by 35,000 in the week ended Nov. 19 to 3.74 million.

The continuing claims figure does not include the number of Americans receiving extended benefits under federal programs.

Extended Payments

Those who’ve used up their traditional benefits and are now collecting emergency and extended payments increased by about 69,500 to 3.52 million in the week ended Nov. 12.

Some employers see the need for more workers. Williams- Sonoma Inc. (WSM), a retailer of high-end home goods, raised its annual profit forecast and will “continue to look for a few key jobs” in online sales, Chief Executive Officer Laura Alber said in a Nov. 17 conference call with analysts.

Vail Resorts Inc. (MTN) is among those trimming their workforce. The Broomfield, Colorado-based owner of ski resorts said yesterday it plans to make “selected staff reductions” as it reorganizes.

The unemployment rate among people eligible for benefits increased to 3 percent from 2.9 percent in the prior week, today’s report showed.

Forty-six states and territories reported an increase in claims, while 6 reported a drop. These data are reported with a one-week lag.

Initial jobless claims reflect weekly firings and tend to fall as job growth -- measured by the monthly non-farm payrolls report -- accelerates.

November Employment

Payrolls may have climbed by 125,000 workers in November, after rising 80,000 the prior month, economists surveyed by Bloomberg projected ahead of a Labor Department report due tomorrow. The unemployment rate likely held at 9 percent, it may show.

The Fed’s view is that the economy, while strong enough to skirt a recession, remains too weak to bring down the unemployment rate that’s been near 9 percent or higher for more than two years.

“Hiring was generally subdued,” the central bank said in its Beige Book survey released yesterday. “Overall economic activity increased at a slow to moderate pace” in most of its 12 districts, it said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Shobhana Chandra in Washington at schandra1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Christopher Wellisz at cwellisz@bloomberg.net



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Dollar Proves Best Bet for Investors

By Wes Goodman and Kristine Aquino - Dec 1, 2011 3:15 PM GMT+0700

The dollar (DXY) was the best place for investors to be in November, beating returns on worldwide bonds, commodities and stocks as Europe’s debt crisis threatened to derail global growth.

The Dollar Index tracking the U.S. currency against six foreign-exchange peers rose 2.9 percent last month, leaving it down less than 1 percent for the year. Even as Treasuries gained 0.7 percent, fixed-income securities around the world lost 0.5 percent, Bank of America Merrill Lynch index data show. The Standard & Poor’s GSCI Total Return Index of commodities rose 1.4 percent, and the MSCI All Country World Index (MXWD) of shares fell 2.9 percent with dividends.

“There’s been a flight to quality, which means investors are keeping their money in U.S. dollars and Treasuries,” said Sean Callow, a Sydney-based senior currency strategist at Westpac Banking Corp., the second-most-accurate foreign-exchange forecaster measured by Bloomberg News. “The U.S. hasn’t been a bad bet, whether you’re on the safe-haven side or you see signs of life in the economy,” he said in a phone interview Nov. 29.

Contagion in Europe’s debt markets spread to Italy last month, boosting yields to euro-era record highs, and curbed demand for German bunds. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development this week cited doubts about the survival of Europe’s monetary union as the main risk to the world economy.

OECD Forecasts

The 34 OECD nations will grow 1.9 percent this year and 1.6 percent next, the Paris-based organization said in its twice- annual global economic outlook released Nov. 28, down from 2.3 percent and 2.8 percent predicted in May.

To alleviate stresses in the financial system, six central banks led by the Federal Reserve made it cheaper for banks to borrow dollars in emergencies. The premium banks pay to borrow dollars overnight from central banks will fall by half a percentage point to 50 basis points, the Fed said yesterday in a statement in Washington.

The Fed coordinated the move with the European Central Bank and the central banks of Canada, Switzerland, Japan and the U.K., sparking gains in stocks and commodities, and losses in Treasuries and the dollar.

IntercontinentalExchange Inc.’s Dollar Index rebounded from a 3 percent loss in October to 78.388 as of yesterday, and it’s up from the low this year of 72.696 in May. It will climb to 80 by year-end, Callow said.

Dollar Forecasts

The U.S. currency will trade at $1.35 on Dec. 31 against its 17-nation European counterpart, from $1.3446 yesterday, and 77 versus Japan’s currency from 77.62, according to the median estimate of strategist and economists in Bloomberg surveys.

The euro fell 2.97 percent against the dollar in November, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The yen advanced 0.71 versus the dollar, even after Japan sold its currency for the third time this year on Oct. 31 and Finance Minister Jun Azumi indicated he may do so again. The Brazilian real was the biggest loser among the 16 most-widely traded currencies, depreciating 5.14 percent.

The haven appeal of U.S. assets has been burnished amid signs of strength in the world’s largest economy. The New York- based Conference Board said last month that its index of consumer confidence rose in November by the most since April 2003.

‘Favorite Strategy’

“The favorite strategy will be to locate the cleanest dirty shirts -- the United States, Canada, United Kingdom and Australia at the moment,” Bill Gross, who runs the world’s biggest bond fund as co-chief investment officer at Pacific Investment Management Co. in Newport Beach, California, wrote in his monthly commentary this week.

Bond markets in November showed that a debt crisis that began in Europe’s so-called peripheral markets of Greece and Portugal is starting to impact core economies. Germany failed to get bids for 35 percent of the 6 billion euros ($8 billion) of bonds it planned to sell on Nov. 23. Italy issued bonds this week with coupons that exceeded 7 percent, the threshold that preceded bailouts for Greece, Portugal and Ireland.

Euro-area finance ministers approved enhancements this week to their rescue fund, though they refrained from setting a target for its size.

Europe’s woes helped send Bank of America’s Global Broad Market Index, which consists of more than 19,000 sovereign, corporate, asset-backed and other debt securities with a value of $41.4 trillion, down for the second straight month. The losses trimmed this year’s gains through Nov. 29 to 4.3 percent, after reinvested interest.

Government Bonds

America’s government bonds are up 8.8 percent in 2011, set for the best year since returning 14 percent in 2008. The debt extended gains in November even after the U.S. lost its last stable outlook from the three biggest credit-ranking companies. Fitch Ratings on Nov. 28 lowered its outlook on the U.S.’s AAA grade to “negative” following a congressional committee’s failure to agree on deficit cuts.

Treasuries due in 10 years and more have returned 25 percent in 2011, the second most after Sweden among 144 bond indexes compiled by Bloomberg and the European Federation of Financial Analysts Societies.

“Confusion in Europe will help the Treasury market,” said Tsutomu Komiya, a bond investor at Daiwa Asset Management Co. in Tokyo, which oversees the equivalent of $118.7 billion and is a unit of Japan’s second-biggest brokerage. Demand for safety will help keep U.S. yields low, he said.

Yield Forecasts

The nation’s 10-year yield will finish 2011 at 2.20 percent from 2.07 percent yesterday, according to a Bloomberg survey of banks and securities companies, with the most recent forecasts given the heaviest weightings. The record low of 1.67 percent was set on Sept. 23.

Investment-grade corporate bonds lost 1.8 percent last month, while junk-rated debt plunged 2.7 percent, based on the Bank of America indexes. High-yield, high-risk securities are rated below Baa3 by Moody’s Investors Service and less than BBB- at S&P.

The S&P GSCI Total Return Index of 24 commodities advanced in November after surging 9.8 percent in October for its best monthly performance since May 2009.

West Texas Intermediate crude oil futures traded in New York had some of the biggest gains among raw materials, rallying 7.7 percent to $100.36 a barrel. The futures rose after Enbridge Inc. and Enterprise Products Partners LP announced plans to start shipping oil from Cushing, Oklahoma, the contract’s delivery point, in 2012.

Crude Outlet

The change would add an outlet for North American crude at Gulf Coast refineries, easing a glut at the hub that helped cut the price of the U.S. benchmark against London-traded Brent crude. Brent cost $10.16 per barrel more than West Texas Intermediate oil as of yesterday. The gap has narrowed from a record $27.88 a barrel Oct. 14.

West Texas Intermediate will average $90 a barrel and Brent will average $108.50 a barrel in the fourth quarter, based on the median forecast in a Bloomberg survey of banks.

Concern that Europe’s crisis will curb global growth weighed on demand for other raw materials, with cocoa and nickel posting the biggest losses for the month.

Cocoa futures traded in the U.S. slumped 14.5 percent as exports from Ivory Coast, the world’s biggest producer, resumed after a civil war. Nickel on the London Metal Exchange tumbled about 11 percent as global stockpiles swelled.

No ‘Great Market’

“You can’t get really optimistic or really bullish about the commodity markets,” Jeremy Friesen, commodity strategist at Societe Generale SA, said by phone from Hong Kong on Nov. 29. As long as Europe’s crisis lingers, he said, “it’s not going to be a great market for anything that’s levered to global growth.”

The MSCI All Country World Index retreated after October’s 11 percent rally. The equity benchmark tracking 45 global markets has declined 6.2 percent this year.

The MSCI index is valued at 12.4 times reported profit, 18 percent below the median from the past five years, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The price-earnings ratio reached 10.4 in September, the lowest in more than two years.

Denmark’s OMX Copenhagen 20 Index rose 6.2 percent and Ireland’s ISEQ Overall Index climbed 0.9 percent, for the only monthly advances among 24 developed markets, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Venezuela’s IBC Index (IBVC) was the biggest gainer among benchmark emerging market indexes, climbing 7.3 percent.

S&P 500 Retreats

The S&P 500 retreated 0.2 percent in November, after the U.S. equity benchmark posted the worst Thanksgiving-week loss since 1932 as American policy makers failed to reach agreement on reducing the federal budget.

A gauge of financial stocks in the S&P 500 tumbled 4.8 percent as Fitch said Europe’s debt crisis poses a threat to American banks and S&P cut credit ratings of large lenders including Bank of America Corp. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

Analysts have reduced 2012 profit estimates (SPX) for companies in the S&P 500 by 4.2 percent since Aug. 4 to $108.93 a share. The projections now imply earnings will increase 10 percent next year, the slowest pace of growth since 2009.

The S&P 500 will rise to 1,265 by Dec. 31 from 1,246.96 yesterday, the median forecast of banks surveyed by Bloomberg shows.

“We’re concerned that we have lower levels to plumb before we’re through with this, given what’s happening with the economies in Europe,” Bruce McCain, who helps oversee more than $20 billion as chief investment strategist at the private- banking unit of KeyCorp in Cleveland, told Adam Johnson Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart” Nov. 29. “We have a harder time seeing positive catalysts than negative ones.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Wes Goodman in Singapore at wgoodman@bloomberg.net; Kristine Aquino in Singapore at kaquino1@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Rocky Swift at rswift5@bloomberg.net




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European Stocks Fluctuate on Concern Over Euro Debt, Slowing China Growth

By Peter Levring - Dec 1, 2011 8:30 PM GMT+0700

European stocks swung between gains and losses as concern that the debt crisis is spreading and China’s economy is slowing offset auction results that showed investor demand continues for Spanish and French debt. U.S. index futures were little changed, while Asian shares rose.

Novartis AG (NOVN) and Roche Holding AG (ROG) led health-care companies higher, gaining at least 1.5 percent. Hochtief AG (HOT) and Vinci SA declined after an airport deal between them fell through. Norsk Hydro ASA (NHY) dropped 1.1 percent after predicting aluminum demand growth will weaken.

The Stoxx 600 gained 0.1 percent to 240.41 at 1:28 p.m. in London after earlier falling as much as 0.8 percent. The gauge has advanced 8.5 percent this week as euro-area leaders agreed to insure sovereign-bond issues and central banks eased dollar funding for banks. The December contract on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index (SPX) retreated less than 0.1 percent. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index jumped 3.2 percent.

“Today, the setback is all about recouping from yesterday’s massive climb,” said Morten Kongshaug, a chief equity strategist at Danske Bank A/S in Copenhagen. “The stock market is fundamentally strong and all the risk awareness comes down to the European debt crisis.”

European stocks (SXXP) yesterday rose 3.6 percent to post their biggest four-day rally since November 2008 as the Federal Reserve and five other central banks lowered the cost of dollar funding and China cut its reserve ratio for banks.

Watching Policy Makers

“Something big has to happen given the distortion we have in Europe,” said Matthias Fankhauser, fund manager at Clariden Leu in Zurich. “Everybody is waiting for big decisions from European politicians. Policy makers have to come up with convincing solutions. Otherwise the euro area would be severely damaged.”

China’s manufacturing recorded the weakest performance since the global recession eased in 2009, underscoring the case for monetary stimulus.

A purchasing managers’ index compiled by the China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing slid to 49 in November, lower than all but two of 18 forecasts in a Bloomberg News survey. Readings below 50 signal a contraction.

Premier Wen Jiabao is shifting policy gears as Europe’s woes combine with a domestic real-estate slowdown to impair the outlook for growth. Asian nations from China to India to South Korea will cut key interest rates next year as the global economy deteriorates, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. predicted today.

Debt Auctions

Spanish bonds gained and the euro strengthened after the government sold the maximum amount of debt planned at an auction. France sold 4.3 billion euros of securities, compared with a maximum 4.5 billion euros of debt available on offer as 10-year bonds sold were priced to yield 3.18 percent, less than at a previous auction on Nov. 3.

In the U.S., a report at 10 a.m. in New York may show manufacturing grew in November at the fastest pace in five months, showing factories will keep supporting the economic expansion through the end of the year, economists said.

The Institute for Supply Management’s factory index rose to 51.8 last month from 50.8 in October, economists surveyed by Bloomberg News forecast. Fifty is the dividing line between growth and contraction.

BP’s Canadian Deal

Novartis climbed 1.9 percent to 50.15 Swiss francs and Roche advanced 2 percent to 147.90 francs as a gauge of health- care companies was among the best performers of the Stoxx 600 index.

Hochtief fell 2.6 percent to 41.28 euros and Vinci SA (DG), Europe’s biggest builder, slipped 1.2 percent to 32.72 euros. Vinci pulled out of bidding for the purchase of Hochtief’s airport-operating business, Societe Generale said in a research note today, citing Vinci’s chief financial officer.

Norsk Hydro, Europe’s third-largest aluminum maker, fell 1.1 percent to 27.37 kroner after forecasting lower global growth in demand for the metal. Goldman Sachs recommended selling the shares on low returns and near-term weakness.

Zurich Financial rose 1.7 percent to 203.50 francs after the company confirmed its targets for return on equity. It also said that achieving a return of 2 percentage points below the target “is more realistic” if current economic conditions persist.

Salzgitter advanced 2.3 percent to 39.24 euros after saying a tax gain will boost 2011 profit after taxes. The benefit resulted from a combination of its domestic holdings into a single unit. The company’s forecast of about 200 million euros in fiscal 2011 pretax profit is unchanged.

To contact the reporter on this story: Peter Levring in Copenhagen at plevring1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Will Hadfield at whadfield@bloomberg.net; Andrew Rummer at arummer@bloomberg.net



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Spanish, French Bonds Rise After Auctions

By Stephen Kirkland - Dec 1, 2011 9:31 PM GMT+0700

Dec. 1 (Bloomberg) -- David Riley, head of global sovereign ratings at Fitch Ratings Ltd., discusses the outlook for French bonds, the U.S. economy and efforts to resolve the euro-zone crisis. He talks with Maryam Nemazee on Bloomberg Television's "The Pulse." (Source: Bloomberg)

Dec. 1 (Bloomberg) -- Mauro Guillen, a professor at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, talks about the European debt crisis. Six central banks led by the Federal Reserve made it cheaper for banks to borrow dollars in emergencies in a global effort to ease Europe’s sovereign-debt crisis. Guillen speaks with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television's "First Up." (Source: Bloomberg)


Spanish and French bonds rallied and the euro climbed for a second day as successful debt auctions eased concern about Europe’s sovereign crisis. U.S. stocks fell following yesterday’s rally as jobless claims unexpectedly rose.

The yield on France’s 10-year note dropped as much as 27 basis points, the most since 1991, and traded 13 basis points lower at 3.26 percent at 9:30 a.m. in New York. Spain’s five- year yield tumbled 34 basis points to 5.52 percent. The euro appreciated 0.3 percent against the dollar. The Standard & Poor’s 500 slipped 0.2 percent following the stock gauge’s 4.3 percent jump yesterday.

French borrowing costs declined in its auction of 10-year bonds and Spain sold 3.75 billion euros ($5.1 billion) of debt, the maximum amount planned. European Central Bank President Mario Draghi said the bank’s program of buying government bonds “can only be limited,” a day after six central banks made additional funds available to ease strains from the crisis and the People’s Bank of China cut banks’ reserve requirements for the first time since 2008.

“The French and Spanish bond auctions were well received and priced,” Matthias Fankhauser, who helps oversee the equivalent of $100 billion in assets at Clariden Leu in Zurich, said in an interview. “Until now, we just had disasters on that front. Some investors feel it would be a good chance to jump into these high yields.”

Lower Costs

The gain in French 10-year bonds narrowed the yield gap with benchmark German bunds to as little as 84 basis points, the least since Oct. 13. The Spanish-German spread approached a one- month low while the Italian spread was the least in two weeks. France sold 1.57 billion euros of 10-year debt at an average yield of 3.18 percent, down from 3.22 percent at the last auction on Nov. 3. The yield on Spain’s five-year bonds was 5.544 percent, compared with 4.848 percent when notes with a similar maturity were auctioned on Nov. 3.

“Sovereign debt will continue to be the focus for the entire market,” Gary Jenkins, head of fixed income at Evolution Securities Ltd. in London, said in a report. “The coordinated move was welcomed by the market, but the fact that central banks saw the need for such measures confirms how serious the bank funding situation is.”

The cost of insuring against default on sovereign debt fell for a third day with the Markit iTraxx SovX Western Europe Index of credit-default swaps linked to 15 governments dropping three basis points to 336.

Jobless Claims

The S&P 500 yesterday capped its steepest three-day rally since March 2009. The index retreated today after jobless claims climbed to 402,000 in the week ended Nov. 26 that included the Thanksgiving holiday, Labor Department figures showed. The median forecast of 43 economists in a Bloomberg News survey called for a drop to 390,000. Labor Department data tomorrow is forecast to show a 125,000 increase in jobs last month and an unemployment rate stuck at 9 percent, according to the median economist forecasts.

A report at 10 a.m. New York time today will show that manufacturing in the world’s largest economy expanded in November at a faster pace than in October, according to a Bloomberg News survey of economists. Other figures today may show construction spending increased in October for a third month. The yield on 10-year Treasuries rose four basis points to 2.11 percent after jumping eight basis points yesterday.

The euro gained 0.4 percent versus the yen. The Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the greenback against the currencies of six trading partners, fell 0.2 percent for a fourth consecutive decline. The Australian currency dropped versus all 16 major peers after building approvals dropped in October and consumer spending slowed.

Industrial metals led commodities lower after Chinese manufacturing contracted. Zinc, nickel and copper retreated at least 1 percent. Oil declined 0.3 percent to $100.06 a barrel.

The MSCI Emerging Markets Index (MXEF) rose 3.2 percent, extending this week’s gain to 9.2 percent, the biggest four-day rally since 2009. The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index jumped 8.1 percent, the most since 2008, after the Chinese government cut the reserve-ratio requirement for lenders. Benchmark indexes in India, South Korea and Taiwan advanced more than 2 percent.

To contact the reporter on this story: Stephen Kirkland in London at skirkland@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Stuart Wallace at swallace6@bloomberg.net




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Fed Dollar-Funding Cut Shows Limits of Action

By Scott Lanman - Dec 1, 2011 6:33 PM GMT+0700

Dec. 1 (Bloomberg) -- Krishna Memani, director of fixed income at OppenheimerFunds Inc., discusses the European sovereign-debt crisis and investment strategy. Memani speaks with Stephanie Ruhle on Bloomberg Television's "InsideTrack." (Source: Bloomberg)


The Federal Reserve-led global effort to ease borrowing costs for financial firms shows both the central bank’s power to jolt markets -- and the limits of its ability to alleviate the European debt crisis.

Stocks rallied worldwide, commodities rose and yields on most European debt fell after the Fed and five other central banks yesterday cut the cost of emergency dollar loans to banks outside the U.S. At the same time, the action falls short of more-drastic moves that central banks are reluctant to take, including purchases or guarantees of countries’ bonds.

Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and his counterparts are revisiting their playbook from the U.S. housing-induced financial crisis that started in 2007 to cushion markets and economies from Europe’s fiscal turmoil today. Yesterday’s move deals with the consequences of the crisis without addressing the causes, said John Ryding, chief economist at RDQ Economics LLC.

“You have to do something to stabilize the sovereign-debt situation,” Ryding, a former Fed and Bank of England economist who is based in New York, said in a Bloomberg Television interview. That requires European Central Bank bond purchases that are “far beyond what they’ve been willing to do so far,” he said.

Stocks Rally

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 4.2 percent to 12,045.68 in the biggest gain since March 2009, boosted in part by reports on U.S. private employment, business activity and home-purchase contract signings that all exceeded forecasts. The Standard & Poor’s GSCI index of 24 raw materials gained 0.7 percent.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index, which surged 3.6 percent yesterday, was little changed today. Yields on 10-year French debt fell to 3.13 percent from 3.5 percent on Nov. 29, while Italy’s dropped 42 basis points to 6.76 percent.

The S&P 500 Index (SPX) of stocks is still 9 percent below its 2011 high in May. Italy’s bond yields need to fall below 6 percent, where they haven’t been for more than a month, to calm the debt turmoil, Ryding said.

The premium banks pay to borrow dollars overnight from central banks will fall by half a percentage point to 50 basis points, the Fed said yesterday in a statement in Washington. The so-called dollar swap lines will be extended by six months to Feb. 1, 2013. The Fed coordinated the move with the ECB and the central banks of Canada, Switzerland, Japan and the U.K.

‘Not a Solution’

“Central banks appear to be willing to respond to the situation with the tools that they have,” said Roberto Perli, a former economist in the Fed’s Division of Monetary Affairs. Investors probably understand that cheaper dollar funding is “not something that can fix the problem” in Europe, said Perli, now a managing director at International Strategy & Investment Group in Washington.

Bank of England Governor Mervyn King also said today that lowering the cost of dollar funding won’t solve imbalances in the global financial system.

“This is not a solution,” King said at a press conference in London to present the Financial Stability Report. “All this can be is to help with temporary relief for liquidity problems, but those problems are a result of solvency issues.”

The Fed has additional tools available, including cutting the U.S. discount lending rate or restarting crisis programs such as the Term Auction Facility, said Michelle Girard, senior U.S. economist at RBS Securities Inc. in Stamford, Connecticut.

‘Zero Probability’

Still, the central bank will want to avoid the appearance of bailing out foreign banks or shifting U.S. monetary policy, said Robert Eisenbeis, former research director at the Atlanta Fed and now chief monetary economist in Atlanta for Sarasota, Florida-based Cumberland Advisors Inc. He put “zero probability” on buying foreign debt.

In yesterday’s move, the Fed and the other five central banks also agreed to create temporary bilateral swap programs so funding can be provided in any of their currencies, “should market conditions so warrant.” Those swap lines were also authorized through Feb. 1, 2013.

Fed policy makers voted 9-1 for the action in a Nov. 28 videoconference, with Richmond Fed President Jeffrey Lacker dissenting. Lacker said in a statement that the swaps amount to “fiscal policy, which I believe is the responsibility of the U.S. Treasury.”

Markets also got a boost from China’s decision, two hours before the Fed’s announcement at 8 a.m. New York time, to cut the amount of cash the nation’s banks must set aside as reserves. The level for the biggest lenders will fall to 21 percent from a record 21.5 percent in the first reduction since 2008.

Easing Moves

The moves from the Fed-led group and China both take effect Dec. 5. Brazil cut its benchmark interest rate late yesterday by 50 basis points to 11 percent.

The decisions by Brazil and China are the latest in a round of easing moves by central banks seeking to shield their economies from the consequences of the European crisis.

The U.S., the U.K. and nine other nations, along with the European Central Bank, have bolstered monetary stimulus in the past three months. Australia, Brazil, Denmark, Romania, Serbia, Israel, Indonesia, Georgia and Pakistan have all reduced interest rates.

“The Europeans in particular, but also all central bankers, appreciate the urgency of the moment,” said Christine Lagarde, managing director of the International Monetary Fund and a former French finance minister. Leaders inside and outside Europe “will also understand that timing is of the essence” and the need for an “urgent resolution of the current crisis,” Lagarde said at a press conference in Mexico City.

Swap Revival

Under the liquidity-swap program, the Fed lends dollars to the ECB and other central banks in exchange for collateral in other currencies, including euros. The central banks lend the dollars to commercial banks in their jurisdictions through an auction process.

The swap arrangements were revived in May 2010 when the debt crisis in Europe worsened. The Fed three months earlier had closed all swap lines opened during the financial crisis triggered by the subprime-mortgage meltdown in 2007.

Fed lending in the second round of swaps has been a fraction of the first round. The swap lines had $2.4 billion outstanding as of Nov. 23, the most since the program was revived in 2010, compared with a peak of about $583 billion in December 2008.

Credit Shortage

“There has been a real constriction of credit within the European community and the banking system,” Stephen Schwarzman, chairman of Blackstone Group LP, the world’s largest private- equity firm, said in a Bloomberg Television interview. “That has to be addressed because if you grind lending to a halt, a variety of predictable, very bad things happen throughout not just the eurozone but also around the world.”

Yesterday’s decision will help European banks that need dollar funding, letting them borrow money instead of having to sell U.S.-denominated assets, including mortgages and corporate loans, said Neal Soss, chief economist at Credit Suisse in New York. Still, the involvement of central banks outside the Fed and ECB made the joint announcement appear more potent than it actually was, said Soss, who was an aide to former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker.

“It doesn’t mean it’s not important, but the atmospherics of this were in that sense quite brilliant,” Soss said.

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

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Christopher Wellisz at cwellisz@bloomberg.net


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U.S. Stock Futures Pare Drop; Walt Disney Climbs

By Rita Nazareth - Dec 1, 2011 9:20 PM GMT+0700

Dec. 1 (Bloomberg) -- Troy Gayeski, senior portfolio manager at SkyBridge Capital LLC, talks about the outlook for global markets and investment strategy. He speaks with Scarlet Fu on Bloomberg Television's "InsideTrack." (Source: Bloomberg)


U.S. stock futures fell, following the biggest three-day gain in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index since March 2009, as an increase in jobless claims and weaker manufacturing in China raised concern about global growth.

Target Corp. (TGT) lost 1.8 percent after November sales at the discount retailer missed estimates. Hewlett-Packard Co. slid 1.1 percent after S&P cut its credit ratings for the computer maker. Yahoo (YHOO)! Inc. added 3.8 percent as a group including Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. is said to prepare a bid for all of the company. Walt Disney Co., owner of the namesake theme parks, rose 0.7 percent after boosting its dividend 50 percent.

S&P 500 futures expiring in December dropped 0.2 percent to 1,243.20 at 9:15 a.m. New York time. The gauge rallied 7.6 percent over the previous three days. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures lost 30 points, or 0.3 percent, to 12,004. The index yesterday posted the biggest gain since 2009.

“Today’s data raise a yellow flag for the economy,” Timothy Ghriskey, who oversees $2 billion as chief investment officer of Solaris Group LLC in Bedford Hills, New York, said in a telephone interview. “China is slowing and jobless claims numbers were not good. In addition, Europe is still a concern for the world.”

The S&P 500 rose 4.3 percent yesterday as six central banks took action on Europe’s debt crisis by making it cheaper for lenders to borrow in dollars and after China lowered banks’ reserve requirements. It was the ninth time since the beginning of 2010 that the index rallied more than 3 percent in one day, according to data compiled by Birinyi Associates Inc. Following similar gains, the measure has fallen six out of eight previous instances when the market opened, the data showed.

Economic Data

Stock-futures fell today after a report showed that more Americans than forecast filed applications for unemployment benefits during the holiday-shortened week, signaling limited recovery in the labor market. A purchasing managers’ index compiled by the China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing slid to 49 in November, lower than all but two of 18 forecasts in a Bloomberg News survey.

Spain and France sold 8.1 billion euros ($10.9 billion) of bonds today, sending yields lower across Europe. The European Union may exempt bank debt issued before 2013 from proposals forcing investors to take losses at failing lenders, said a person familiar with the plan. Excluding the debt is designed to prevent lenders’ funding costs from rising, said the person.

“The market may be too occupied with action in Europe, but China concerns are not too far back in everyone’s mind,” said Manish Singh, the London-based head of investment at Crossbridge Capital, which has more than $2 billion under management.

Target Slumps

Target lost 1.8 percent to $51.77. The second-largest U.S. discount retailer said November same-store sales rose 1.8 percent, missing an estimated 2.9 percent increase.

Hewlett-Packard (HPQ) dropped 1.1 percent to $27.64. The largest computer maker had its corporate credit and senior unsecured ratings cut to BBB+ from A by S&P, which cited reduced financial flexibility caused in part by the use of debt to fund the acquisition of Autonomy. The company’s “inconsistent” strategies and management turnover may also have increased operational risk, S&P said. The outlook on the ratings is stable.

Yahoo rallied 3.8 percent to $16.31. Alibaba Group and Softbank Corp. (9984) are in advanced talks with Blackstone Group LP (BX) and Bain Capital LLC about making a bid for all of Yahoo, said three people with knowledge of the matter. A bid may value Yahoo at more than $20 a share because of tax savings tied to the Internet company’s stakes in Alibaba and Yahoo Japan, said two of the people, who declined to be identified.

Disney gained 0.7 percent to $36.11. The new 60-cent annual dividend (DIS), up from 40 cents, will be paid on Jan. 18 to shareholders of record as of Dec. 16, the Burbank, California- based company said yesterday in a statement.

Limited Brands Inc. (LTD) jumped 2.5 percent to $43.40. The owner of the Victoria’s Secret lingerie chain said November comparable-store sales increased 7 percent, beating a 4.9 percent estimated gain. The retailer said it will pay a $2 special dividend to shareholders as of Dec. 12.

To contact the reporter on this story: Rita Nazareth in Sao Paulo at rnazareth@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Nick Baker at nbaker7@bloomberg.net



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Alibaba-Led Group Said to Be Preparing Bid for All of Yahoo

By Cristina Alesci, Jeffrey McCracken and Serena Saitto - Dec 1, 2011 5:24 PM GMT+0700

Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. and Softbank Corp. (9984) are in advanced talks with Blackstone Group LP (BX) and Bain Capital LLC about making a bid for all of Yahoo! Inc., said three people with knowledge of the matter.

Yahoo shares rose 8.27 percent from yesterday’s close to $17.01 in premarket trading. A bid may value Yahoo at more than $20 a share because of tax savings tied to the Internet company’s stakes in Alibaba and Yahoo Japan, said two of the people, who declined to be identified because the discussions are private.

Yahoo’s board is meeting to discuss offers it received for a minority stake in the Sunnyvale, California-based company from bidders including TPG Capital and a group led by Silver Lake, people familiar with the matter said this week. Silver Lake’s bid valued Yahoo at about $16.60 a share, these people said. TPG Capital’s offer was higher, they said.

Some Yahoo investors say they would prefer the company be sold in its entirety, at a higher price. “It definitely has to be much higher than $16.60,” said Di Zhou, a Santa Fe, New Mexico-based analyst at Thornburg Investment Management, which oversees about $80 billion in assets, including Yahoo shares.

While the Alibaba group has prepared financing for a possible offer, it hasn’t decided on a final price or whether to proceed, the people said. The group would prefer to be invited to bid rather than going hostile, one person said. Alibaba hasn’t informed Yahoo of its possible bid, this person said.

No Decision Yet?

“Alibaba Group has not made a decision to be part of a whole-company bid for Yahoo,” John Spelich, a spokesman for Hangzhou, China-based Alibaba, said in an e-mailed statement.

At $20 a share, Yahoo would be valued at 24.1 times earnings in the past 12 months, data compiled by Bloomberg show. That would compare with 20.4 times for Google Inc. (GOOG) and a ratio of 9.5 for Microsoft Corp.

The $20 price tag would undervalue the company because its Asian assets have so much growth potential, said Thornburg’s Zhou, who puts the value at about $25 a share. Yahoo, the largest U.S. Internet portal, owns about 40 percent of Alibaba, the top e-commerce site in China, and 35 percent of Yahoo Japan.

Zhou wants to see Yahoo hold on to the Alibaba stake until the Chinese company can do an initial public offering, providing a windfall to investors.

“Chinese Internet penetration and e-commerce is going well,” she said. “It should be more valuable by the day.”

Chinese Growth

Total Internet users in China may grow 27 percent this year, with the number of online shoppers climbing 28 percent, according to Thornburg.

Alibaba is seeking to buy back the stake in its company that Yahoo owns. Softbank, meanwhile, wants to acquire the stake in Yahoo Japan, one of the people familiar with the matter said. In the proposed deal, Blackstone and Bain would take control of the U.S. operations, the person said.

Spokeswomen for Blackstone, Softbank and Yahoo declined to comment.

Alibaba Chief Executive Officer Jack Ma said in October that his company is interested in purchasing Yahoo. Earlier attempts by the Chinese e-commerce leader to buy out Yahoo’s stake faltered amid disagreements with former CEO Carol Bartz. Yahoo acquired the Alibaba stake for about $1 billion in 2005.

While Alibaba is in advanced talks with Blackstone and Bain, the company is also in discussions with other private- equity firms, including Providence Equity Partners Inc., about an offer, one person said.

Ken Sena, an analyst at Evercore Partners Inc. in New York, puts Yahoo’s total value at about $18 a share, with $5 coming from the U.S. Internet business. The so-called off-balance-sheet assets -- including the Asian investments -- are worth $11 a share, plus $2 in cash, he said. By buying the whole company, Alibaba would avoid having to negotiate over how much Yahoo’s main business is worth, Sena said.

“Almost two-thirds of the enterprise value is really these off-balance-sheet assets,” he said.

To contact the reporters on this story: Cristina Alesci in New York at calesci2@bloomberg.net; Jeffrey McCracken in New York at jmccracken3@bloomberg.net; Serena Saitto in New York at ssaitto@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Jennifer Sondag at jsondag@bloomberg.net




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Majority of Economists Still See Deflation Gloom

By David J. Lynch - Dec 1, 2011 12:00 PM GMT+0700
Bloomberg Markets Magazine
Enlarge image Obama supercommittee meeting

U.S. President Barack Obama speaks to the media following a supercommittee meeting in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Monday, Nov. 21, 2011. Obama blamed Republican lawmakers who "refused to listen to the voices of reason and compromise" for the failure of a congressional panel to come up with a deal on cutting the deficit. Photographer: Roger L. Wollenberg/Pool via Bloomberg *** Local Caption *** Barack Obama


After concern last summer of an imminent double-dip recession in the U.S., the data got a bit brighter in the fall. The economy grew faster than expected in the third quarter and has created almost 2.8 million private- sector jobs since the labor market bottomed in early 2010.

“It looks like recovery to me,” says Chris Rupkey, a New York-based economist for Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. Even as he’s encouraged by an uptick in consumer spending and slow but steady gains in employment, Rupkey says he knows his optimism is a minority view.

Two and a half years after the official end of the recession, in June 2009, this recovery looks like none before it, Bloomberg Markets magazine reports in its January issue.

Daniel Tarullo, a member of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, describes the economy as “slogging through the mud.” Arun Raha, chief economist for the state of Washington, chooses a different metaphor. “A return to normalcy seems like a mirage in the desert,” he wrote in a report in October. “The closer we get to it, the further it moves away.”

The trek through the sand (or mud) may be longer than many had anticipated -- at the Federal Reserve, in the White House or on Wall Street. Growth has picked up several times, only to stall.

In 2009, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke spotted “green shoots” suggesting a turnaround. He was premature. President Barack Obama in June 2010 started touting a Recovery Summer, only to suffer political embarrassment as stimulus spending failed to cure the jobs crisis. Another false dawn came and went in early 2011, as the labor market added about 200,000 jobs per month before slowing again.

Weakest Recovery

Measured from the December 2007 start of the recession, the rebound in production in the U.S. has been weaker than any recovery since World War II. After previous contractions, the economy has always topped its previous high within two years. This time it took almost four. Annual gross domestic product at the end of the third quarter was less than 0.1 percent higher, after adjusting for inflation, than its pre-crisis peak in 2007.

Job growth too has been more feeble than in past comebacks. Fewer Americans have work today than in April 2000, before the technology stock bubble deflated, even though the population has grown by 31 million. The gains in private-sector employment that reassure Rupkey have been partly offset by lost state and local government jobs, the result of plunging tax revenue and debts coming due.

Joblessness

October’s 9 percent unemployment rate was just 1 percentage point below its 2009 peak -- and more than 4 points higher than it was prior to the recession. The rate likely stayed at 9 percent in November, according to the median forecast of 79 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News ahead of the government’s report tomorrow.

Even with such discouraging news, the U.S. economy today is nowhere near as bad as in the Great Depression, when unemployment topped 20 percent and output shrank for three and a half years -- from 1929 into 1933 -- before recovery even began.

Still, some investors and analysts are batting around terms meant to distinguish today’s economic pain from the less distressing recessions and recoveries of past decades. “It’s the modern equivalent of a depression,” says Lacy Hunt, chief economist at Hoisington Investment Management in Austin, Texas.

Fisher Debt Deflation

What’s holding the economy back? Hunt, who has also worked on the staff of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas and as chief economist at HSBC Holdings Plc in New York, says the U.S. is stuck in a debt deflation. The term was coined in 1933 by economist Irving Fisher, a prominent Yale University professor, as he tried to explain the Great Depression. Fisher’s reputation never really recovered from his claim on the eve of the 1929 market crash that stocks had reached a “permanently high plateau.” And yet, his debt-deflation theory has gained currency in the aftermath of the collapse of credit markets in 2008.

Fisher describes a vicious spiral in which liquidation of debt slows the economy, cuts the value of assets, curtails lending, reduces employment and leaves businesses with excess capacity. The subsequent loss of confidence just makes things worse.

Americans are clearly in a sour mood, as Fisher’s theory would predict. Consumers are only slightly less pessimistic than they were at the February 2009 nadir of the financial crisis, according to the University of Michigan Confidence Survey’s expectations index.

Globalization’s Impact

The downward spiral describes well what the economy is going through, says Daniel Alpert, a founder and managing partner of Westwood Capital LLC, the New York investment bank. “It’s a classic Irving Fisher debt deflation.”

The effects of deleveraging are being made worse by excess production capacity due to globalization, according to “The Way Forward,” a report co-authored by Alpert, Cornell University law professor Robert Hockett and economist Nouriel Roubini of New York University. Over the past generation, almost 2 billion new workers from developing Asia and eastern Europe have joined a more integrated global economy, the report explains. That has lifted millions of people out of poverty. It has also disrupted the worldwide balance between supply and demand. Swapping well- paid American workers for lower-paid Chinese or Indians means a loss of demand overall, Alpert says. Workers who are paid less buy less.

While some economists express optimism about a growing consumer class in emerging markets, Alpert and his co-authors emphasize the flip side: the growth in labor supply and productive capacity as developing countries become bigger players in international trade.

Excess Capacity

In the U.S., almost 14 million men and women are unemployed, and factories are operating at 78 percent of capacity, which is below the low point reached in the recession of 1990 to 1991, according to Fed data.

Alpert says unemployment is likely to climb again and may top 10 percent in 2012. He, Hockett and Roubini argue that, to boost demand, the government should oversee the spending of $1.2 trillion on the nation’s crumbling airports, roads, bridges and energy grid, tapping both public and private funds.

That won’t happen, of course. Money from the $787 billion economic stimulus bill that Democrat Obama signed in February 2009 is mostly spent. Republicans won control of the House of Representatives in 2010 with promises to curb spending and tackle the federal debt. They favor fewer government regulations and lower taxes as the recipe to strengthen the economy.

Political Disagreements

Obama’s stimulus package didn’t create the jobs he promised, former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney said at an Oct. 11 debate among candidates for the Republican presidential nomination: “The right course for America is not to keep spending money on stimulus bills, but instead to make permanent changes to the tax code.”

Romney has also said Obama’s auto industry rescue was wrong. Yet Michigan has been creating jobs since General Motors Co. and Chrysler Group LLC emerged from bankruptcy with government backing in mid-2009. Bloomberg’s Economic Evaluation of States indexes, which incorporate data on employment, income and tax revenue, show that conditions improved more quickly in Michigan than anywhere else in the country except North Dakota in the two years ended in June 2011.

The struggling economy and the deep political divide in Washington are feeding off each other. Growth might pick up if politicians were working together, and cooperation between the parties might improve if the economy were healing more quickly.

Bernanke Surprised

Closing the government’s $1.2 trillion budget deficit would be easier if economic growth were stronger. If not for the recession, the U.S. likely would be collecting $600 billion more in annual tax revenue. For now, Republicans and Democrats offer mutually exclusive diagnoses of the economy’s ailments and preferred cures, and their squabbles -- such as the brinkmanship over the debt ceiling -- are hurting consumer and business confidence.

The Fed has been surprised that the economy has failed to gain momentum, Bernanke said during a Nov. 2 press conference: “The drags on the recovery were stronger than we thought.” In response, the Fed cut its 2011 and 2012 economic growth forecasts. The central bank sees the economy growing at an annual rate of 1.6 to 1.7 percent in 2011 -- more than a full percentage point below its June prediction -- and 2.5 to 2.9 percent in 2012.

The troubled housing market and consumer deleveraging have contributed to the weakness, Bernanke said, along with Europe’s sovereign debt crisis.

European Hazard

Demand in Europe is eroding as leaders struggle to keep the euro zone intact. Mario Draghi, who took the helm of the European Central Bank at the beginning of November, cut interest rates by a quarter point at his first policy meeting, while warning that Europe is on the verge of a mild recession.

Rupkey at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi is among those who take solace in the positive U.S. economic data in recent months. Americans may be complaining to pollsters, yet they are still shopping, Rupkey says. Consumer spending in October was 2 percent higher than a year earlier, after adjusting for inflation, and shopping over the Thanksgiving weekend gave a preliminary signal that holiday sales will be strong. Rupkey expects pent-up demand for big-ticket items such as homes and cars to begin making itself felt.

Maury Harris, chief economist at UBS Securities LLC, a unit of UBS AG, also says the data show that economic fundamentals are improving in the U.S. His team ranked as the top forecaster of the U.S. economy in the January issue of Bloomberg Markets.

While Bernanke remains concerned about household debts, they have become less burdensome by some measures. Consumers were spending about 11 percent of disposable income on mortgage and credit card payments as of June 2011 compared with nearly 14 percent as the financial crisis gathered force in September 2007.

Debt Burdens

Ethan Harris, co-head of global economic research at Bank of America Corp., doesn’t see that data as grounds for optimism. When the economy returns to normal and the Fed begins raising interest rates, he says, “these debt burdens are going to zoom back up again.” He expects the jobless rate in 2013 to be higher than today.

Household debt peaked at $13.9 trillion in mid-2008. After three years of repayments and write-offs, consumer obligations have been trimmed to $13.3 trillion, down just 4.6 percent from the high, according to the Fed. In the second quarter, the most recent data available, consumers made less progress whittling down their debt than in any quarter since the deleveraging began.

Chronic Ailments

Even if the danger of a new recession has eased, the economy has chronic ailments that defy easy solutions -- and have spawned the Occupy Wall Street protests in New York and elsewhere. The income of the average American household is less than 1 percent greater than it was in 1989.

Measured another way, the current era has been almost 10 times as damaging to household balance sheets as the mid- to late 1970s, generally regarded as a pretty miserable period for the economy. During the past six years, household net worth relative to disposable income has fallen by more than 20 percent, according to Fed data. During a similar span from 1973 to 1979 -- years that encompass both of the Middle East oil shocks, peak inflation above 12 percent and the address by President Jimmy Carter that became known as his “malaise speech” -- the ratio fell just 2.4 percent.

“We’ve had a recovery for 21 months, technically, but the standard of living has continued to decline,” says Hoisington’s Hunt, whose firm oversees $5.7 billion. “So the recovery is very incomplete,” he says.

Wounded Economy

The risk now is that a wounded U.S. economy gets hit with another shock -- this time coming when politicians in Washington can’t agree on a response and central bank officials already have deployed their most-effective tools. (The Fed’s benchmark interest rate has been near zero for three years.) Ripples from Europe’s sovereign debt crisis or some other disruption to the financial system could do the job.

“The worst-case scenario is that we allow the economy to sit in this non-recovery for so long that something comes along and causes that second recession,” says Ethan Harris, a former New York Fed staff economist. “Accidents happen. And if you’re growing at 1 to 2 percent, you’re just waiting for bad luck to hit.”

To contact the reporter on this story: David Lynch at dlynch27@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Christopher Wellisz at cwellisz@bloomberg.net; Laura Colby at lcolby@bloomberg.net



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Europe Stocks Pare Losses as Spain Sells Debt; Retail, Mining Shares Gain

By Peter Levring - Dec 1, 2011 5:10 PM GMT+0700

European stocks erased their losses after debt sales by France and Spain, as shares of commodity companies, carmakers and retailers advanced. U.S. index futures retreated, while Asian shares climbed.

The Stoxx 600 gained 0.2 percent to 240.45 at 10:06 a.m. in London. The December contract on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index (SPX) slid 0.2 percent. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index jumped 3.1 percent.

European stocks yesterday rose 3.6 percent to post their biggest four-day rally since November 2008 as the Federal Reserve and five other central banks lowered the cost of dollar funding and China cut its reserve rates for banks.

Spanish bonds gained and the euro strengthened after the government sold the maximum amount of debt planned at an auction. France sold 4.346 billion euros of securities, compared with a maximum 4.5 billion euros of debt available on offer.

In the U.S., a report today may show manufacturing grew in November at the fastest pace in five months, showing factories will keep supporting the economic expansion through the end of the year, economists said.

The Institute for Supply Management’s factory index rose to 51.8 last month from 50.8 in October, economists surveyed by Bloomberg News forecast. Fifty is the dividing line between growth and contraction. Jobless claims fell last week and construction spending increased in October, other data may show.

To contact the reporter on this story: Peter Levring in Copenhagen at Plevring1@bloomberg.net or

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Andrew Rummer in London at arummer@bloomberg.net;




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Spanish, French Bonds Gain After Sales; Euro, Stocks Rebound

By Stephen Kirkland and Shiyin Chen - Dec 1, 2011 5:34 PM GMT+0700

Dec. 1 (Bloomberg) -- David Joy, the Boston-based chief market strategist at Ameriprise Financial Inc., talks about his investment strategy and Europe's sovereign debt crisis. U.S. stocks advanced, driving the Dow Jones Industrial Average up the most since March 2009, after six central banks took action on Europe’s crisis by making it cheaper for lenders to borrow in dollars. Joy speaks with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television's "First Up." (Source: Bloomberg)

Dec. 1 (Bloomberg) -- Stephen Green, Hong Kong-based head of Greater China research at Standard Chartered Plc, talks about China's economy and central bank monetary policy. The People’s Bank of China announced yesterday it will cut the reserve requirement for the nation’s lenders by 0.5 percentage points from Dec. 5. Separately, China’s manufacturing contracted for the first time since February 2009 as the property market cooled and Europe’s crisis cut export demand, a survey showed. Green speaks with John Dawson on Bloomberg Television's "On the Move Asia." (Source: Bloomberg)


Spanish and French bonds rallied and the euro strengthened for a second day after the governments sold debt. European stocks and U.S. index futures pared losses.

The yield on Spain’s five-year bonds fell 28 basis points to 5.58 percent at 10:30 a.m. in London, with France’s 10-year yield dropping 21 basis points to 3.18 percent. The euro appreciated 0.4 percent against the dollar. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index slipped 0.1 percent, after dropping as much as 0.8 percent. Standard & Poor’s 500 futures slid 0.3 percent, following the stock gauge’s 4.3 percent surge yesterday.

Spain sold 3.75 billion euros ($5.1 billion) of bonds, the maximum amount planned, and French borrowing costs declined in its auction of 10-year notes. European Central Bank President Mario Draghi said the bank’s program of buying government bonds “can only be limited,” a day after six central banks made additional funds available to ease strains from the crisis and the People’s Bank of China cut banks’ reserve requirements for the first time since 2008.

“Sovereign debt will continue to be the focus for the entire market,” Gary Jenkins, head of fixed income at Evolution Securities Ltd. in London, said in a report. “The coordinated move was welcomed by the market, but the fact that central banks saw the need for such measures confirms how serious the bank funding situation is.”

The cost of insuring against default on sovereign debt dropped for a third day with the Markit iTraxx SovX Western Europe Index of credit-default swaps linked to 15 governments dropping eight basis points to 359 basis points.

The French government sold 1.57 billion euros of 10-year bonds at an average yield of 3.18 percent, the Bank of France said. At its last auction on Nov. 3, the average yield was 3.22 percent. The average yield on Spain’s five-year bonds due January 2017 was 5.544 percent, compared with 4.848 percent when notes with a similar maturity were auctioned on Nov. 3.

Fed Move

U.S. futures signal the S&P 500 will halt its steepest three-day rally since March 2009. The gauge jumped yesterday after the Federal Reserve said in a statement the premium banks pay to borrow dollars overnight from central banks will fall by half a percentage point to 50 basis points. The so-called dollar swap lines will be extended by six months to Feb. 1, 2013.

The yield on 10-year Treasuries rose three basis points, after jumping eight basis points to 2.07 percent yesterday.

----With assistance from Matthew Brown and Michael Shanahan in London. Editors: Stephen Kirkland, Stuart Wallace

To contact the reporters on this story: Stephen Kirkland in London at skirkland@bloomberg.net; Shiyin Chen in Singapore at schen37@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Stuart Wallace at swallace6@bloomberg.net



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Spain, France Bond Sales Take On EU Crisis

By Emma Ross-Thomas and Lukanyo Mnyanda - Dec 1, 2011 3:08 PM GMT+0700

Spain and France auction 8.25 billion euros ($11 billion) of bonds today as European efforts to strengthen the region’s firewalls against contagion failed to rein in surging borrowing costs.

Spain is selling as much as 3.75 billion euros of notes as the extra yield on its 10-year bonds compared with benchmark German bunds was at 396 basis points today. France, rated AAA, is auctioning as much as 4.5 billion euros of debt as its 10- year securities yielded 112 basis points more than comparable German debt.

“Judging by where yields are, it’s not going to be pleasant,” said Elisabeth Afseth, a fixed-income analyst with Evolution Securities Ltd. in London, referring to the Spanish auction. “If there are problems getting the full amount away or if yields are pressed to substantially higher levels, it will be bad news and will further intensify the crisis.”

The auctions will test investor confidence after the Federal Reserve, the European Central Bank and four other central banks in a globally coordinated effort yesterday cut the cost of emergency dollar funding for European banks. The central banks acted after financing costs rose following euro-area leaders’ failure to bolster the region’s rescue fund as planned.

As the crisis that began in Greece two years ago moves to the euro-area’s core, leaders are struggling to convince investors they can contain the risk and assure the euro’s survival.

Spanish Cancelation

Italy, with the second-largest public debt burden in the euro region after Greece, was forced to pay almost 8 percent to sell three-year debt on Nov. 29, the highest since 1996. The same day, Belgium paid the most in three years to sell six-month notes.

France is selling bonds due in October 2017, October 2021, April 2026, and April 2041. Spain aims to sell notes maturing in April 2015, January 2016 and January 2017.

Spain changed the securities it planned to sell at the auction, opting for longer-dated notes that already trade instead of a new benchmark three-year bond, citing market conditions. Spain’s short-term borrowing costs are approaching the levels of longer-term yields as the gap between two-year and 10-year rates narrowed last week to the least in three years.

The difference between yields for three-year and five-year notes narrowed to 10 basis points, or 0.10 percentage point, on Nov. 23, and was 35 basis points as of 7:47 a.m. London time. That’s half of where it was on Oct. 7. Greek and Portuguese short-term rates rose above long-term yields just before they sought bailouts.

Big Banks

Spain’s Treasury has already issued more than 16 billion euros each of the 2015 and 2016 bonds and more than 14 billion euros of the 2017 securities, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, making them more liquid than a new bond.

Spanish banks may also prop up the auction as Treasury data show they increased their holdings of the nation’s bonds to 142.4 billion euros in September, the highest on record, from 140.6 billion euros in August. Lenders are also increasing their dependence on the ECB, borrowing 76 billion euros in October, the most in more than a year, Bank of Spain data show.

“France and Spain both have big banks so that should help out at these auctions: typically what we hear is that they are refraining in the secondary market but they are still active in the primary market,” Kommer van Trigt, a fund manager at Robeco Groep NV in Rotterdam, said in a telephone interview.

French Auction

France decided to press ahead with the sale of bonds today, braving the market turbulence, even though it has completed its funding requirements for 2011. The extra yield demanded to lend to France for 10 years rose to as much as 204 basis points more than the German rate on Nov. 17, the widest spread since 1990. The gap was 28 basis points in April.

Euro-area finance ministers said on Nov. 29 they would seek a greater role for the International Monetary Fund and ECB to top up efforts to bolster the region’s European Financial Stability Facility rescue fund.

They agreed on a plan to guarantee up to 30 percent of bond issues from troubled governments and to develop investment vehicles that would boost the facility’s ability to intervene in primary and secondary bond markets.

Spanish Finance Minister Elena Salgado, who’s set to be replaced on Dec. 22 when Prime Minister-elect Mariano Rajoy takes charge, said the measures will create a preventive firewall as there’s no “case on the table for it to be used.”

‘Dysfunctional’ Market

“A commitment by the ECB to buy is the only solution to the crisis,” said Christoph Kind, head of asset allocation at Frankfurt Trust, which manages about $20 billion from Frankfurt.

The ECB, which started buying Italian and Spanish debt in August, is resisting pressure to step up its response to the crisis. ECB President Mario Draghi asked governments on Nov. 18 “where is the implementation” of pledges to stem contagion, and said the ECB would risk its credibility if it strayed from its main task of protecting price stability.

French 10-year bond yields rose two basis points today to 3.41 percent, compared with a high this year on Nov. 17 of 3.82 percent. Investors demanded 6.24 percent to lend to Spain for 10 years, compared with a euro-era high of 6.78 percent also on Nov. 17, the date of Spain’s last bond auction.

“The auctions are very likely to be covered,” said Gianluca Salford, a fixed income strategist at JPMorgan Chase & Co. Still, the market remains “fairly dysfunctional.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Emma Ross-Thomas in Madrid at erossthomas@bloomberg.net; Lukanyo Mnyanda in Edinburgh at lmnyanda@bloomberg.net;

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Craig Stirling at cstirling1@bloomberg.net Daniel Tilles at dtilles@bloomberg.net




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European Stock-Index Futures Advance Before Bond Auctions by Spain, France

By Peter Levring - Dec 1, 2011 2:08 PM GMT+0700

European stock-index futures rose, indicating the benchmark Stoxx Europe 600 Index may extend its biggest four-day rally since November 2008, before Spain and France sell debt amid surging borrowing costs.

Norsk Hydro ASA, the Norwegian aluminum maker, may be active after Goldman Sachs Group Inc. advised selling the shares. Zurich Financial Services AG, Switzerland’s biggest insurer, may move after confirming its target for return on equity.

Futures on the Euro Stoxx 50 Index expiring in December gained 0.7 percent to 2,342 at 7:02 a.m. in London. FTSE 100 Index futures advanced 0.8 percent. The December contract on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index slipped 0.2 percent. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index jumped 3.1 percent.

Spain and France auction 8.25 billion euros ($11 billion) of bonds today as European efforts to strengthen the region’s firewalls against contagion failed to rein in surging borrowing costs.

Spain is selling as much as 3.75 billion euros of notes as the extra yield on its 10-year bonds compared with benchmark German bunds was 395 basis points yesterday. France, rated AAA, is auctioning as much as 4.5 billion euros of debt as its 10- year securities yielded 111 basis points more than comparable German debt.

European stocks yesterday rose 3.6 percent to post their biggest 4-day rally since November 2008 as the Federal Reserve and five other central banks lowered the cost of dollar funding and China cut its reserve rates for banks.

To contact the reporter on this story: Srinivasan Sivabalan in London at ssivabalan@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Andrew Rummer at arummer@bloomberg.net




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Zynga Said to Plan IPO With $10B Valuation

By Douglas MacMillan and Lee Spears - Dec 1, 2011 11:41 AM GMT+0700

Zynga Inc., the biggest maker of games on Facebook Inc., is seeking a valuation of as high as $10 billion in an initial public offering, according to two people briefed on the matter.

Zynga plans to raise about $900 million by selling shares at about $8 to $10 apiece, said one of the people, who asked not to be identified because the plans haven’t been made public. Zynga would sell 10 percent or fewer of its outstanding shares, which are scheduled to be priced on Dec. 15, the person said.

At $10 billion, Zynga would be valued at below the $14.05 billion that the company said in regulatory filings represents its fair value. Zynga would also be the second-largest U.S. game company after Activision Blizzard Inc. (ATVI), which has a capitalization of $14.2 billion. Electronic Arts Inc. (ERTS), which bought Zynga rival PopCap Games in August, has a market value of $7.69 billion based on yesterday’s close.

Zynga would be valued at as much as 9.8 times trailing 12- month sales, compared with about 3 times for Activision and 2 times for Electronic Arts, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Dani Dudeck, a spokeswoman for San Francisco-based Zynga, declined to comment.

Paying Customers Climb

Under Chief Executive Officer Mark Pincus, Zynga aims to capitalize on the popularity of social networks and virtual goods. The company lets users play games for free and then makes money by selling items -- say, a townhouse in “CityVille” or a shipyard in “Empires & Allies.” Zynga is pressing ahead with IPO plans even as other Internet companies that recently sold shares, including Groupon Inc. and Angie’s List Inc., get hammered. Both were trading yesterday below their offer prices.

Founded in 2007, Zynga has hired Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS) to manage the IPO. Zynga’s shares will trade on the Nasdaq Stock Market under the symbol ZNGA.

Zynga updated its filings on Nov. 4 to show that 6.7 million of its users were paying customers in the first nine months of the year, up from 5.1 million in the year-earlier period. Revenue more than doubled to $828.9 million.

The worldwide virtual-goods market will more than double to $22.5 billion in 2015 from $9.27 billion last year, according to Lazard Capital Markets.

To help it add more customers hungry for virtual goods, Zynga is stepping up spending on research and marketing -- which in turn is crimping profit. The company posted $30.7 million in net income in the nine months that ended in September, down from $47.6 million a year earlier.

Dependent on Facebook

In October, Zynga announced a new service, called Project Z, geared toward reducing its dependence on Facebook users. The company also introduced new games, including “Zynga Bingo,” “CastleVille” and “Hidden Chronicles.”

Ninety-three percent of Zynga’s third-quarter revenue was generated on Facebook, the world’s most popular social network. That number has ranged between 91 percent and 94 percent since the beginning of last year, according to Zynga filings.

Adding more mobile games is part of Zynga’s plan to diversify. The company said in November that the number of daily active users on mobile devices increased more than 10-fold from November 2010 to September 2011, reaching 9.9 million. By October, the number was 11.1 million.

Facebook, the world’s largest social networking service, is also making preparations for an IPO. The company is considering raising about $10 billion in a deal that would value it at more than $100 billion, a person with knowledge of the matter said this week.

Jive Software Inc., the maker of social-networking software for businesses, seeks to raise as much as $117 million in an IPO that would value it as high as $573 million, the Palo Alto, California-based company said in a filing yesterday.

Reuters reported Zynga’s valuation yesterday on its website.

To contact the reporters on this story: Douglas Macmillan in New York at dmacmillan3@bloomberg.net; Lee Spears in New York at lspears3@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Tom Giles at tgiles5@bloomberg.net; Jennifer Sondag at jsondag@bloomberg.net




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