Economic Calendar

Friday, February 10, 2012

Foreclosures to Climb in U.S. Before Bank Deal Helps Housing Market Heal

By Prashant Gopal and John Gittelsohn - Feb 10, 2012 12:01 PM GMT+0700

The $25 billion settlement with banks over foreclosure abuses may result in a wave of home seizures, inflicting short-term pain on delinquent U.S. borrowers while making a long-term housing recovery more likely.

Lenders slowed the pace of foreclosures as they negotiated with attorneys general in all 50 states for more than a year over allegations of faulty and fraudulent paperwork used to repossess homes. With yesterday’s agreement, banks are likely to resume property seizures.

“The best thing about the settlement, frankly, is that it will be done,” said Stan Humphries, chief economist for Seattle-based Zillow Inc. (Z), a provider of home-sales data. “The shadow of the settlement hung over the market for a year now.”

The backlog of foreclosures has trapped homeowners in properties they can no longer afford, depressed neighborhood prices by increasing the number of abandoned homes and led banks to tighten mortgage credit standards because of uncertainty about the cost of their potential obligations. Foreclosure starts fell 46 percent in December from October 2010, when the investigation into the so-called robo-signing of mortgage documentation began, according to Irvine, California-based RealtyTrac Inc.

The agreement will direct $17 billion to writing down debt to buffer about 1 million homeowners from foreclosure through mortgage forgiveness, forbearance or loan modification programs, according to Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan. About 750,000 borrowers may get direct payments of as much as $2,000 to compensate them for servicing errors.

Small Borrower Universe

Principal reductions and other loan modifications will be accessible to a small universe of borrowers because the deal doesn’t include loans owned or guaranteed by Fannie Mae (FNMA), Freddie Mac or Ginnie Mae, which pools and sells Federal Housing Administration loans. The five banks included in the settlement control or own 7.3 percent of all outstanding single-family mortgages, according to Inside Mortgage Finance.

“The primary beneficiaries of any principal reductions, loan modifications or refinancings are really a universe that excludes 92 percent of mortgage borrowers,” said Guy Cecala, publisher of the newsletter.

After a six-year slide in home prices, demand is showing signs of strengthening, bolstered by a jobless rate that fell to 8.3 percent last month. The number of Americans who signed contracts to buy previously owned homes in December held near a 19-month high, indicating that stabilization in the market that began in late 2011 may continue this year.

Driving Down Prices

A surge of home seizures may drive down values, at least for a while, in a fragile market. The number of new foreclosure filings fell 34 percent last year, according to RealtyTrac, resulting in a backlog that now may flood the market with low- cost properties. About 1 million foreclosures will be completed this year, up 25 percent from 2011, according to the firm.

“All of this will result in more foreclosure pain in the short term as some of the foreclosures that should have happened last year instead happen this year,” Daren Blomquist, a RealtyTrac vice president, said in an e-mail yesterday.

About 5 million homes have been lost to foreclosure in the U.S. since 2006, according to RealtyTrac.

“I think there’ll be more price weakness, because we’ll see the number of distressed sales pick up,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist for Moody’s Analytics Inc. in West Chester, Pennsylvania. “But I think the price declines will be modest. I think the banks themselves are going to be very sensitive to market prices. I don’t think they’re just going to dump property. That wouldn’t be in their best interest.”


Decline Since 2006

Home prices have dropped 33 percent from their July 2006 peak, according to the S&P/Case-Shiller index of values in 20 U.S. metropolitan areas. About 11 million U.S. homeowners have negative equity, or owe more on their mortgages than their homes are worth, according to CoreLogic Inc. (CLGX), a real estate data provider. That has limited their ability to sell or refinance and reduced the incentive to keep paying.

Principal reductions may help cut the number of mortgage delinquencies by improving borrowers’ finances and reducing incentives for so-called strategic default, when homeowners walk away from a property because they have too much negative equity, according to a Federal Reserve report sent to Congress Jan. 4.

U.S. homeowners have $750 billion in negative equity, Humphries said. The deal will help the residential market “at the margins, but little more,” according to an analysis late last month by London-based Capital Economics of the impact of the settlement on housing.

Reductions ‘Seem Small’

The money may have an added benefit: It will test the effectiveness of principal forgiveness in preventing defaults, and may spur a larger-scale program if successful, said Paul Diggle, a property economist at Capital Economics.

“There has been a lot of discussion of principal reductions and whether that’s the one measure the U.S. housing market needs to get it going again,” he said in an interview this week. “That may well be the case. But the amounts of principal reductions under the settlement seem small.”

Principal was reduced on 10,772 loans, or 7.8 percent of the mortgages with payment modifications, in the third quarter of last year, according to the office of the U.S. Comptroller of the Currency. All of those loans were held by private investors or were in bank portfolios.

The agreement announced yesterday includes $5 billion in cash for states to pay for foreclosure-prevention initiatives. Loan servicers will refinance $3 billion in mortgages to reduce homeowners’ interest rates and pay about $1.5 billion to borrowers harmed by botched foreclosures.

Debt Forgiveness

The money set aside for mortgage-debt forgiveness also can be used for short sales, when a lender agrees to a sale for less than owed on the home. Banks have been stepping up the sales by pre-approving deals, streamlining the closing process, forgoing their right to pursue unpaid debt and in some cases providing as much as $35,000 in “relocation” incentives. Short sales accounted for 33 percent of financially distressed transactions in November, up from 24 percent a year earlier, according to Santa Ana, California-based CoreLogic.

For California, which has the highest number of properties in the foreclosure pipeline, banks agreed to pay $12 billion to help 250,000 homeowners with principal reductions or short sales, according to Kamala Harris, the state’s attorney general.

Borrowers in Florida, which had the second-most foreclosures, will receive an estimated $7.6 billion in benefits from loan modifications, including principal reduction, according to state Attorney General Pam Bondi.

Citigroup, Wells Fargo

The total value of the agreement with lenders including Citigroup Inc. (C), Bank of America Corp. and Wells Fargo & Co. may grow to $40 billion if the next nine largest mortgage servicers sign on to the agreement, Donovan said. In a best-case scenario, if all banks participate fully, the deal might be worth $45 billion to homeowners and victims of foreclosure.

The settlement adds to a series of recently expanded government steps to protect consumers and encourage lenders to refinance homes and modify payment terms for homeowners facing foreclosure.

President Barack Obama this month proposed plans to expand loan modifications for delinquent homeowners to include some principal reductions through his administration’s Home Affordable Modification Program, or HAMP. Underwater homeowners would be able to refinance at current low interest rates through the Home Affordable Refinance Program, or HARP. Some of the refinancing plans require Congressional approval.

Under the administration’s Making Home Affordable program, $29.9 billion in aid had been pledged as of Jan. 30.

Buying in Bulk

Separately, Fannie Mae, the mortgage company under U.S. conservatorship, invited investors to apply for a new program to buy foreclosed homes in bulk to be managed as rental properties, under another program announced by the Federal Housing Finance Agency. The goal of that program is to reduce the inventory of foreclosures while providing rental homes to people who can’t qualify to buy or don’t want to own.

“No action, no matter how meaningful, is going to by itself entirely heal the housing market,” Obama said at an appearance with state attorneys general in Washington yesterday. “But this settlement is a start. And we’re going to make sure that the banks live up to their end of the bargain.”

Investors are likely to buy many of the foreclosed homes that come on the market to take advantage of low prices and demand for rentals, Zandi said. About 21 percent of home sales in December were investor purchases, according to the National Association of Realtors.

Manage as Rentals

Private equity funds including Los Angeles-based Oaktree Capital Management LP (OAKTRZ) and New York-based GTIS Partners announced plans in January to buy $2.5 billion of foreclosed single-family homes to manage as rentals, focusing on states with the highest number of foreclosures, such as California, Florida and Nevada.

“There’s pretty strong investor demand, particularly in some markets where prices have overshot,” Zandi said. “They’ve gone well below what you’d expect given incomes and rents.”

There remains a danger that “a wave of foreclosures” may destabilize the housing market, said Susan Wachter, professor of real estate and finance at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School.

“The logjam has to be unleashed and it has been -- this will do that,” she said. “That’s a good thing. But then there needs to be methodical loan-by-loan determination of the best resolution.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Prashant Gopal in New York at pgopal2@bloomberg.net; John Gittelsohn in Los Angeles at johngitt@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Daniel Taub at dtaub@bloomberg.net




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Missed Super Bowl Amid Frantic Talks Led to $25 Billion Mortgage Agreement

By Dawn Kopecki, David McLaughlin and Lorraine Woellert - Feb 10, 2012 12:01 PM GMT+0700

Hashing out the $25 billion settlement reached by Bank of America Corp., JPMorgan Chase & Co. and three other U.S. banks with 49 states required missing some football.

Bank executives, state officials and U.S. Housing Secretary Shaun Donovan worked frantically over Super Bowl weekend as the New York Giants beat the New England Patriots 21-17, according to three people involved in the discussions. The negotiations ran down to the wire the night before the agreement was announced, they said.

Negotiators made phone calls late into the night and ironed out the final details by phone at about 2 a.m. or 3 a.m. yesterday, less than six hours before the Obama administration released the details to the public, said the people, who didn’t want to be identified because the negotiations were private.

The result was what the U.S. called the largest federal- state civil settlement in the nation’s history, ending a probe of abusive foreclosure practices stemming from the collapse of the housing bubble. The banks have committed $20 billion in various forms of mortgage relief plus payments of $5 billion to state and federal governments.

The nation’s five largest mortgage servicers -- Bank of America, JPMorgan, Wells Fargo & Co., Citigroup Inc. (C) and Ally Financial Inc. -- negotiated the settlement with federal agencies, including the Justice Department, and state attorneys general.

Faulty Documents

The deal comes more than a year after attorneys general from all 50 states announced a probe into foreclosure practices following disclosures that banks were using faulty documents to seize homes. Oklahoma reached a separate agreement worth $18.6 million with the banks and didn’t sign the federal settlement, according to its attorney general, Scott Pruitt.

The multistate deal will “begin to turn the page on an era of recklessness” that led to the housing bubble, President Barack Obama said yesterday in Washington, where he was joined by administration officials and state attorneys general. Obama’s announcement was preceded by lengthy, sometimes contentious negotiations.

Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi pulled her support for the agreement late on Feb. 3, three days before the deadline for states to sign on to the deal, according to one person involved in negotiations. She refused to sign on until the banks would guarantee that California didn’t get a better deal than other states, two people said.

Florida, California

A third person said Bondi wanted to make sure that her state got as good of a deal as California.

Negotiations were delayed more than once by Bank of America, which sent Eric Telljohann, a credit loss mitigation strategies executive, to the bargaining table, said two people involved in the talks. Telljohann, who reports to Ron Sturzenegger in Bank of America’s legacy mortgage division, wasn’t authorized to commit to any major decisions without seeking approval from Chief Executive Officer Brian Moynihan and sometimes the board of directors, according to these people.

The Charlotte, North Carolina-based bank was accountable for almost half of the $25 billion settlement so it was natural that the board had to sign off on certain commitments ahead of time, said Dan Frahm, a bank spokesman.

BofA’s Stake

“When material changes to terms were proposed, our negotiators reviewed changes with our management team to confirm support,” Frahm said, adding that the banks’ negotiating team had “significant authority” to make some decisions on their own. “This was appropriate and responsible given the size of the settlement and the fact that Bank of America was committing the greatest share of dollars and programs for customers in need of assistance.”

Bank of America had the most at stake for its customers and shareholders, Frahm said.

“Our approach to the negotiations was rigorous and disciplined with a sense of urgency to provide additional assistance to our customers and get the mortgage crisis behind us,” he said.

Jenn Meale, a spokeswoman for Bondi, didn’t respond to an e-mail or a phone call seeking comment on her role in the talks. Late in the day on Feb. 8, Bondi still hadn’t signed on to the deal and was “actively involved” in settlement discussion, Meale said in an e-mail at the time.

Brian Sullivan, a spokesman for the Department of Housing and Urban Development, didn’t return a call or e-mail seeking comment yesterday on Donovan’s role in the talks.

750,000 Borrowers

The $25 billion agreement includes $1.5 billion in payments to some 750,000 borrowers who lost their homes to foreclosure. About $17 billion will pay for mortgage debt forgiveness, forbearance, short sales and other assistance to homeowners. Servicers will also provide $3 billion in refinancing to lower homeowners’ interest rates. A website has been set up to give information on the settlement.

Bank of America has committed as much as $11.8 billion, including a cash payment of $3.24 billion, according to a government fact sheet. The balance will be applied toward mortgage modifications and other benefits for borrowers. San Francisco-based Wells Fargo (WFC) has committed as much as $5.35 billion; New York-based JPMorgan $5.29 billion; New York-based Citigroup $2.2 billion; and Detroit-based Ally $310 million.

Best-Case Scenario

The total could grow to $40 billion if the next nine largest mortgage servicers sign on to the agreement, said an administration official who briefed reporters on condition of anonymity before the announcement. In a best-case scenario, if all banks participate fully, the deal could be worth $45 billion to homeowners and people who lost their homes to foreclosure, the official said.

This settlement will hold accountable institutions that wronged families and neighborhoods and “contributed to the collapse of not just the American economy but the international economy,” Donovan said in Washington.

California Attorney General Kamala Harris, who initially didn’t sign on the accord when states were required to decide, said in a statement that the settlement provides a commitment to the state of as much as $18 billion.

California’s agreement with the banks includes $12 billion for principal reduction, with incentives for banks to move swiftly and penalties if they don’t, Harris said yesterday.

The settlement doesn’t release banks from any criminal liability or grant any immunity, release any private claims by individuals or any class-action claims, or release claims related to the packaging of mortgage loans into securities, according to the website outlining the agreement.

The resolution also establishes a monitor, Joseph A. Smith Jr., North Carolina’s banking regulator, to track compliance with the terms of the agreement.

To contact the reporters on this story: Dawn Kopecki in New York at dkopecki@bloomberg.net; David McLaughlin in New York at dmclaughlin9@bloomberg.net; Lorraine Woellert in Washington at lwoellert@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: David Scheer at dscheer@bloomberg.net; John Pickering at jpickering@bloomberg.net; Maura Reynolds at mreynolds34@bloomberg.net




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S&P 500 May Snap 5-Week Rise on Greece Concern

By Rita Nazareth - Feb 10, 2012 9:41 PM GMT+0700

U.S. stocks fell, snapping a five- week-rally for the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, amid concern plans to help Greece avoid default were unraveling.

Citigroup Inc. (C), Morgan Stanley and Bank of America Corp. (BAC) dropped more than 1.2 percent to pace losses in financial companies. Commodity producers retreated as Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc. (FCX), Alcoa Inc. (AA) and Halliburton Co. (HAL) slid at least 1.2 percent. LinkedIn Corp., the biggest professional-networking website, jumped 10 percent after it reported sales that more than doubled and forecast higher 2012 revenue.

The S&P 500 declined 0.8 percent to 1,340.92 as of 9:39 a.m. New York time. The benchmark gauge for American equities has fallen 0.3 percent since Feb. 3, snapping the longest weekly rally since January 2011. The Dow Jones Industrial Average decreased 101.57 points, or 0.8 percent, to 12,788.89 today.

“We’ve had a flip-flop that triggered global selling,” Frederic Dickson, who helps oversee $28 billion as chief market strategist at D.A. Davidson & Co. in Lake Oswego, Oregon, said in a telephone interview. “Investors are responding to the sudden change in direction or the lack of resolution of the Greek/European problem that they felt was resolved.”

Equities followed a global slump as emergency talks of euro-area finance chiefs broke up late last night with Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker saying Greece must turn its budget cuts into law, flesh out 325 million euros in spending reductions and have its major party leaders sign up to the program so they don’t retreat after upcoming elections.

No Support

George Karatzaferis, the leader of one of the three parties supporting interim Prime Minister Lucas Papademos, said he wouldn’t support austerity measures worked out for a rescue. Karatzaferis, who heads the Laos party, spoke in Athens hours after German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble told lawmakers in Berlin that Greece was missing debt-cutting targets.

Stocks rose yesterday, putting the S&P 500 less than 1 percent away from its peak nine months ago of 1,363.61, which was the highest level since June 2008. The benchmark gauge climbed 7.5 percent this year through yesterday, as companies reported earnings that beat analysts’ estimates while better- than-expected data on manufacturing and employment bolstered optimism about the world’s largest economy.

American banks slumped as a gauge of European lenders sank 2.2 percent. Citigroup retreated 1.5 percent to $33.16. Morgan Stanley (MS) declined 2.1 percent to $19.91. Bank of America lost 1.2 percent to $8.08.

Commodity Shares

Concern that Europe’s debt crisis may curb global economic growth also drove energy and raw material producers lower. Copper shipments to China fell for the first time in eight months in January, while inventories monitored by the Shanghai Futures Exchange advanced to a record after rising for a ninth straight week.

Freeport-McMoRan, the world’s largest publicly traded copper producer, sank 3.4 percent to $44.83. Alcoa erased 2.9 percent to $10.33. Halliburton fell 1.2 percent to $36.32.

Apollo Global Management LLC dropped 7.2 percent to $14.23. The private equity firm that went public last year said fourth- quarter profit fell 66 percent as market swings hurt its private equity holdings.

LinkedIn rallied 10 percent to $84. The company, which first sold shares to the public in May, said membership jumped to more than 150 million from 131.2 million in the third quarter. LinkedIn is signing up more professionals for its subscription services and luring advertisers who want to reach the growing user base.

Bearish Wagers

As short sellers push bearish wagers against RadioShack Corp. (RSH) to a four-year high, options traders are increasing bets that the cheapest U.S. specialty retailer will become a takeover target. Almost 24 percent of RadioShack’s shares are currently shorted, the most since January 2008 and four times the average of the Standard & Poor’s Midcap 400 Index, according to New York-based research firm Data Explorers.

After posting the second-steepest two-year decline in the S&P Midcap 400, Fort Worth, Texas-based RadioShack trades at 5.8 times profit, the lowest of any specialty retailer in America worth more than $500 million, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

While RadioShack’s earnings are shrinking because of stagnant consumer spending, rising dependence on mobile-phone sales and lower-than-projected revenue from Sprint Nextel Corp., it’s also one of only two companies in the industry valued at a discount to net assets.

Takeover Offer

The cost of calls to buy shares priced 10 percent above RadioShack’s stock reached a five-year high this week versus puts to sell on comparable one-month contracts, signaling some traders may now be speculating the company is cheap enough to attract a takeover offer, said Frederic Ruffy, a senior options strategist at WhatsTrading.com.

“They are in a tough situation,” Todd Lowenstein, who helps oversee about $17 billion for Highmark Capital Management Inc. in Los Angeles, said in a phone interview. “You have people who, in the current scheme, are willing to bet negatively, but ultimately there’s a price for somebody to come in and say it’s attractive. Everything has a price. There will be vultures that will circle and will be willing to step in at a price. This thing is cheap.”

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

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






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Germany Says Greece Missing Debt Targets in Fresh Aid Rebuff

By Brian Parkin and Simon Kennedy - Feb 10, 2012 5:32 PM GMT+0700

Greece is missing its debt-cutting targets, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble told lawmakers today, intensifying pressure on Greek politicians to deliver on austerity promises.

Schaeuble said in Berlin that Greece’s plans would leave its debt as high as 136 percent of gross domestic product by 2020, according to two people who took part in the meeting and who spoke on condition of anonymity because it was private. That compares with the 120 percent foreseen in a 130 billion- euro ($172 billion) bailout being negotiated.

Signs that Greece is falling short underscored euro-area officials’ frustration with the country’s bickering leaders and the prospect that they may again backtrack on fiscal pledges not first passed into law. Greek lawmakers begin voting on austerity measures this weekend after European finance ministers last night held back the rescue package demanding further commitments from Athens.

“The Greek offer is not sufficient and they have to go away to come up with a revised plan,” Bertrand Benoit, a spokesman for the German Finance Ministry in Berlin, said by telephone today.

The emergency talks of finance chiefs broke up late last night with Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker saying Greece must turn its latest budget-cutting plan into law, flesh out 325 million euros in spending reductions and have its major party leaders sign up to the program so they don’t retreat after upcoming elections.

Juncker’s Condition

“In short: no disbursement without implementation,” Juncker said. He set another extraordinary meeting for Feb. 15. “We can’t live with this system while promises are repeated and repeated and repeated and implementation measures are sometimes too weak,” he said.

The impasse left European stocks falling for the fourth time in five days and the euro declining from yesterday’s two- month high against the dollar.

Facing general strikes and mounting opposition to cuts in wages, pensions and government spending, Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos said the parliamentary vote set to begin this weekend amounted to a ballot on euro membership.

“If we see the salvation and future of the country in the euro area, in Europe, we have to do whatever we have to do to get the program approved,” Venizelos said in Brussels.

Resolution of the aid talks, which have dragged on since July, would allow Greece to make a 14.5 billion-euro bond payment on March 20 and contain the threat that speculators will target debt-saddled nations including Italy and Portugal.

Default Risk

Fitch Ratings today reiterated its view that Greece will default even with the rescue package.

Greece “must get this deal agreed really within the next few days to enable them sufficient time and have the new bailout money disbursed before that bond is due,” Tony Stringer, Fitch’s managing director of global sovereigns, said in an interview in Singapore. “If they don’t manage to achieve that, then it could be in the realm of a disorderly default.”

Europe’s hardline stance follows more than two years in which Greece repeatedly failed to carry through promised reforms to tackle its uncompetitive economy and meet the terms for aid. Greece blamed its shortcomings on a deeper than first expected slump which is now set to worsen with reports yesterday showing unemployment jumping to 20.9 percent in November and industrial production declining.

Greek Talks

Negotiations over another bailout began seven months ago and Greece’s participation in the euro first came into question when then-Prime Minister George Papandreou threatened in October to hold a referendum on austerity.

In contrast to the approach to Greece, Germany may be willing to study revising the terms of Portugal’s bailout, Schaeuble told his Portuguese counterpart in Brussels in a conversation picked up by Portuguese television.

Germany will “be ready” for an adjustment of the Portuguese program if needed, Schaeuble told Finance Minister Vitor Gaspar at the meeting yesterday.

The gathering, attended by International Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde and European Central Bank President Mario Draghi, came hours after Greek Prime Minister Lucas Papademos and party chiefs ended a week of meetings with an agreement on a package of fresh budget cuts.

Greece is seeking to reduce its debt to 120 percent of gross domestic product by 2020 from 160 percent last year. The latest measures are aimed at delivering budget reductions totaling 1.5 percent of GDP this year and range from a 20 percent paring of the minimum wage to lower pension payments and immediate job cuts for as many as 15,000 state workers.

ECB Pressure

With European officials signaling investors will soon accept a debt swap that would impose losses of about 70 percent of their Greek bond holdings, the European Central Bank came under pressure to offer additional relief.

“The ECB must look, within the framework of its independence, what sort of contribution it can make,” Juncker said.

Draghi yesterday left open the possibility of passing up some the profits on the Greek bonds the central bank bought during the crisis. He nevertheless rejected selling them to Europe’s temporary bailout fund at a loss because doing so would amount to “monetary financing” of governments, which is banned by European treaties.

Bondholders Meet

Bondholders met in Paris yesterday to discuss accepting an average coupon of as low as 3.6 percent on new 30-year bonds in the proposed debt swap. An agreement would slice 100 billion euros off more than 200 billion euros of privately-held debt and a formal offer must be made by Feb. 13 to allow all procedures to be completed before the March 20 bond comes due.

European Union Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn said the deal is “practically finalized.” The Institute of International Finance, which represents investors, said it welcomed progress made by Greece and look forward to the debt swap being completed next week.

“The Greeks understand that it’s not five minutes to midnight but 30 seconds to midnight,” Luxembourg Finance Minister Luc Frieden said.

To contact the reporters on this story: Brian Parkin in Berlin at bparkin@bloomberg.net; Simon Kennedy in London at skennedy4@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: James Hertling at jhertling@bloomberg.net






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S&P 500 May Snap 5-Week Rise on Greece Concern

By Rita Nazareth - Feb 10, 2012 9:41 PM GMT+0700

U.S. stocks fell, snapping a five- week-rally for the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, amid concern plans to help Greece avoid default were unraveling.

Citigroup Inc. (C), Morgan Stanley and Bank of America Corp. (BAC) dropped more than 1.2 percent to pace losses in financial companies. Commodity producers retreated as Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc. (FCX), Alcoa Inc. (AA) and Halliburton Co. (HAL) slid at least 1.2 percent. LinkedIn Corp., the biggest professional-networking website, jumped 10 percent after it reported sales that more than doubled and forecast higher 2012 revenue.

The S&P 500 declined 0.8 percent to 1,340.92 as of 9:39 a.m. New York time. The benchmark gauge for American equities has fallen 0.3 percent since Feb. 3, snapping the longest weekly rally since January 2011. The Dow Jones Industrial Average decreased 101.57 points, or 0.8 percent, to 12,788.89 today.

“We’ve had a flip-flop that triggered global selling,” Frederic Dickson, who helps oversee $28 billion as chief market strategist at D.A. Davidson & Co. in Lake Oswego, Oregon, said in a telephone interview. “Investors are responding to the sudden change in direction or the lack of resolution of the Greek/European problem that they felt was resolved.”

Equities followed a global slump as emergency talks of euro-area finance chiefs broke up late last night with Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker saying Greece must turn its budget cuts into law, flesh out 325 million euros in spending reductions and have its major party leaders sign up to the program so they don’t retreat after upcoming elections.

No Support

George Karatzaferis, the leader of one of the three parties supporting interim Prime Minister Lucas Papademos, said he wouldn’t support austerity measures worked out for a rescue. Karatzaferis, who heads the Laos party, spoke in Athens hours after German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble told lawmakers in Berlin that Greece was missing debt-cutting targets.

Stocks rose yesterday, putting the S&P 500 less than 1 percent away from its peak nine months ago of 1,363.61, which was the highest level since June 2008. The benchmark gauge climbed 7.5 percent this year through yesterday, as companies reported earnings that beat analysts’ estimates while better- than-expected data on manufacturing and employment bolstered optimism about the world’s largest economy.

American banks slumped as a gauge of European lenders sank 2.2 percent. Citigroup retreated 1.5 percent to $33.16. Morgan Stanley (MS) declined 2.1 percent to $19.91. Bank of America lost 1.2 percent to $8.08.

Commodity Shares

Concern that Europe’s debt crisis may curb global economic growth also drove energy and raw material producers lower. Copper shipments to China fell for the first time in eight months in January, while inventories monitored by the Shanghai Futures Exchange advanced to a record after rising for a ninth straight week.

Freeport-McMoRan, the world’s largest publicly traded copper producer, sank 3.4 percent to $44.83. Alcoa erased 2.9 percent to $10.33. Halliburton fell 1.2 percent to $36.32.

Apollo Global Management LLC dropped 7.2 percent to $14.23. The private equity firm that went public last year said fourth- quarter profit fell 66 percent as market swings hurt its private equity holdings.

LinkedIn rallied 10 percent to $84. The company, which first sold shares to the public in May, said membership jumped to more than 150 million from 131.2 million in the third quarter. LinkedIn is signing up more professionals for its subscription services and luring advertisers who want to reach the growing user base.

Bearish Wagers

As short sellers push bearish wagers against RadioShack Corp. (RSH) to a four-year high, options traders are increasing bets that the cheapest U.S. specialty retailer will become a takeover target. Almost 24 percent of RadioShack’s shares are currently shorted, the most since January 2008 and four times the average of the Standard & Poor’s Midcap 400 Index, according to New York-based research firm Data Explorers.

After posting the second-steepest two-year decline in the S&P Midcap 400, Fort Worth, Texas-based RadioShack trades at 5.8 times profit, the lowest of any specialty retailer in America worth more than $500 million, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

While RadioShack’s earnings are shrinking because of stagnant consumer spending, rising dependence on mobile-phone sales and lower-than-projected revenue from Sprint Nextel Corp., it’s also one of only two companies in the industry valued at a discount to net assets.

Takeover Offer

The cost of calls to buy shares priced 10 percent above RadioShack’s stock reached a five-year high this week versus puts to sell on comparable one-month contracts, signaling some traders may now be speculating the company is cheap enough to attract a takeover offer, said Frederic Ruffy, a senior options strategist at WhatsTrading.com.

“They are in a tough situation,” Todd Lowenstein, who helps oversee about $17 billion for Highmark Capital Management Inc. in Los Angeles, said in a phone interview. “You have people who, in the current scheme, are willing to bet negatively, but ultimately there’s a price for somebody to come in and say it’s attractive. Everything has a price. There will be vultures that will circle and will be willing to step in at a price. This thing is cheap.”

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

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






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China’s Import Slump, New Loans Slowdown Add to Growth Concerns: Economy

By Bloomberg News - Feb 10, 2012 6:23 PM GMT+0700

Feb. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Eswar Prasad, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington and a former International Monetary Fund economist, talks about the potential impact of Europe's sovereign debt crisis on China's economy. The IMF said on Jan. 6 China’s economic expansion would be cut almost in half if Europe’s crisis worsens. Prasad speaks with John Dawson on Bloomberg Television's "On the Move Asia." (Source: Bloomberg)

Feb. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Nicholas Lardy, an economist at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington, talks about U.S.-China relations, and the Asian nation's economy and currency policy. Chinese Commerce Minister Chen Deming said yesterday exports probably fell in January after foreign trade slowed in the second half of last year, as he pledged to maintain "stability" in the yuan’s exchange rate. Lardy speaks with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television's "On the Move Asia." (Source: Bloomberg)


China’s exports and imports fell for the first time in two years in January and lending grew less than estimated, adding to signs growth is weakening in the world’s second-largest economy.

Overseas shipments decreased 0.5 percent and imports declined a more-than-forecast 15.3 percent from a year earlier in a month that had four fewer working days than January 2011 because of the Chinese New Year holiday, the customs bureau said today.

The lowest January new lending in five years and the smallest money-supply growth in more than a decade underscore the case for more easing even as seasonal distortions make the numbers harder to gauge. Commerce Minister Chen Deming said yesterday January exports “cannot make us optimistic” and the International Monetary Fund warned this week a deterioration in Europe could cut China’s expansion rate almost in half this year.

“The weakness in trade and lending is more than can be explained by holiday effects, pointing to growing downside risks in the domestic economy due to cooling in the property market and investment,” said Joy Yang, chief economist for Greater China at Mirae Asset Securities (HK) Ltd. in Hong Kong.

Still, policy makers may wait to move more aggressively with policy easing until next quarter when inflation drops to more of a “comfort zone” and weaker economic data justify the actions, Yang said.

The Shanghai Composite Index gained 0.1 percent today, while the MSCI Asia Pacific Index was down 1.4 percent at 8:21 p.m. in Tokyo.

Surplus Widens

The trade surplus widened to a six-month high of $27.3 billion, customs bureau data showed. M2, the broadest measure of money supply, rose 12.4 percent, less than all 29 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey, People’s Bank of China data released today showed.

Banks extended 738.1 billion yuan ($117 billion) of new yuan-denominated loans last month, compared with the 1 trillion yuan median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey. New lending totaled 640.5 billion yuan in December, and last month’s figure was lower than 25 of 26 analyst estimates.

The trade surplus may increase pressure on China to quicken the pace of yuan appreciation and will also delay a projected reduction in required reserves for banks, said Liu Li-Gang, an economist in Hong Kong at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. The currency rose to an 18-year high against the dollar today ahead of Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping’s visit to the U.S. next week. China lowered the bank-reserve ratio in December for the first time since 2008.

‘Mixed Signals’

January’s data gave “mixed signals” on prospects for the next reserve-ratio reduction as inflation and the trade balance may lower chances of an immediate cut whereas weaker-than- forecast loan data boosts the case for a move, Mirae’s Yang said.

The median estimate of 30 economists was for a 3.6 percent drop in imports for the month. Trade data in the first two months of the year are distorted by the timing of the Chinese New Year festival which fell in January this year. Adjusted for the holiday, exports rose 10.3 percent from a year earlier while imports were up 1.5 percent, the customs bureau said.

The decline in exports compared with the median estimate for a 1.4 percent drop in a Bloomberg News survey. The median analyst estimate was for a $10.4 billion trade surplus last month after a $16.5 billion excess in December and $6.46 billion a year ago.

Imports fell for the first time since October 2009. Last year, purchases from overseas rose 51 percent in January from a year earlier.

Demand ‘Picking Up’

In China factories had less need to build up inventories ahead of the holiday, ANZ’s Liu said. “We do not believe this is a sign of a demand slowdown,” said Liu, who previously worked at the World Bank. “On the contrary, demand has been steadily picking up.”

Tom Albanese, chief executive officer of Rio Tinto Group, said yesterday he remains confident of a so-called soft landing in China. The nation provided 28 percent of Rio Tinto’s revenue in its most recent financial year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Yuan-denominated deposits dropped 800 billion yuan in January, the central bank said today. That would be the largest monthly decline in at least 12 years, according to data compiled by Bloomberg that go back to 2000.

“The weak pace of deposit growth has been a constraint to bank lending,” Jing Ulrich, chairman of global markets for China at JPMorgan Chase & Co., said in a note after the data. “With the stringent loan-to-deposit ratio requirement of 75 percent still in place, individual banks’ loan growth may remain constrained.”

India Output

Elsewhere in the Asia-Pacific region, the Australian central bank lowered its forecasts for growth and inflation this year. The outlook for consumer prices provides “scope for easier monetary policy should demand conditions weaken materially,” the Reserve Bank of Australia said.

India’s industrial production rose less than estimated in December, signaling weakening domestic demand, data from the Central Statistics Office showed today.

In Europe, U.K. factory output prices rose at the fastest pace in nine months as manufacturers increased the price of alcohol, petroleum products and clothing, according to report from the Office for National Statistics in London.

The trade deficit in the U.S. probably widened to $48.5 billion from the $47.8 billion shortfall in November, according to a Bloomberg News survey ahead of Commerce Department data today.

‘Significant’ Fiscal Stimulus

China’s inflation accelerated last month for the first time since July as food prices climbed before the holiday that started Jan. 22, a statistics bureau report showed yesterday. An index of export orders in the agency’s survey of manufacturing purchasing managers released last week showed a contraction for the fourth straight month.

The IMF said in a Feb. 6 report that China’s economic expansion may be cut almost in half from its 8.2 percent estimate this year if Europe’s debt crisis worsens, a scenario that would warrant “significant” fiscal stimulus from the government.

--Zheng Lifei, Li Yanping. With assistance from Ailing Tan in Singapore, Penny Peng and Regina Tan in Beijing. Editors: Scott Lanman, Nerys Avery

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Zheng Lifei in Beijing at lzheng32@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Paul Panckhurst at ppanckhurst@bloomberg.net




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Barclays Cuts Bonuses at Investment Bank

By Howard Mustoe and Gavin Finch - Feb 10, 2012 6:28 PM GMT+0700
Enlarge image Barclays May Miss 2013 Profitability Target as Profit Falls

Pedestrians pass a Barclays Plc bank branch in London. Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg

Feb. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Simon Denham, chief financial officer at London Capital Group Holdings Plc, discusses financial industry compensation and Barclays Plc's drop in full-year net income. He speaks with Maryam Nemazee on Bloomberg Television's "The Pulse." (Source: Bloomberg)


Barclays Plc (BARC), the first of Britain’s biggest banks to report full-year earnings, cut bonuses at its investment banking unit by 32 percent after profit fell.

Net income for 2011 fell 16 percent to 3 billion pounds ($4.74 billion) from a year earlier, missing the 3.27 billion- pound median estimate of 11 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. The bank raised its full-year dividend by 9 percent and said its investment banking unit made an “encouraging start” to the year. The shares climbed as much as 5.1 percent.

The lender today set a 65,000-pound limit on cash bonuses and cut remuneration for its top executives by almost half. The bank may still miss the 13 percent profitability target Chief Executive Officer Robert Diamond set a year ago. Return on equity fell to an “unacceptable” 6.6 percent in 2011, he said today. Barclays was the last British consumer bank to have kept its profitability target as Europe’s debt crisis and tougher regulation eroded investment-banking earnings.

“Diamond will have to once again lay out a road map on how he can improve returns,” said Christopher Wheeler, a London- based analyst at Mediobanca SpA who has an “outperform” rating on the stock. “Very encouragingly” the bank increased the dividend, he said.

Shares Gain

Barclays gained 3.8 percent at 241.95 pence as of 11:01 a.m. in London trading, for a market value of about 29.5 billion pounds. The bank increased its dividend to 6 pence a share. The company has declined 26 percent in the past year in London trading, compared with a 27 percent drop in the 43-member Bloomberg European Banks and Financial Services index at yesterday’s close.

“People were fearful initially on the suggestion they won’t get to the 13 percent return,” said Colin McLean, who helps manage at SVM Asset Management Ltd who oversees about 700 million pounds of assets. “They will get there eventually.”

The London-based lender today also raised its cost-cutting target for next year to 2 billion pounds to bolster profit.

Lloyds Banking Group Plc (LLOY) said in November it may not meet some of its medium-term financial targets until beyond 2014. HSBC Holdings Plc (HSBA) has said it will meet only the “softer end” of its 12 percent to 15 percent ROE target. Diamond said he isn’t cutting or abandoning his own probability target.

“The target remains 13 percent,” Diamond told reporters on a call today. “Because of some of the external headwinds, we can’t be as convinced that 2013 will be the year.”

Equities Tumbled

Pretax profit at Barclays Capital, the investment banking arm led by Rich Ricci and Jerry Del Missier, fell 32 percent to 2.97 billion pounds in 2011, the lender said in a statement. Revenue from fixed-income, currencies and commodities trading, which accounts for more than half the unit’s income, slid 52 percent in the fourth quarter. Revenue from equities tumbled 51 percent and investment banking declined 30 percent.

Total revenue at Barclays Capital in the fourth quarter declined 48 percent to 1.82 billion pounds. UBS AG, Switzerland’s biggest bank, this month said investment banking revenue dropped 36 percent to 1.8 billion francs ($2 billion). Credit Suisse Group AG yesterday said revenue at its securities unit fell 64 percent.

“Bob’s track record is unrivaled, but today is not his finest hour,” Ian Gordon, an analyst at Investec Bank Plc, said in a note to investors. Barclays Capital’s revenue was “very weak,” he wrote.

Barclays Capital set aside 47 percent of its income for remuneration in 2011, up from 43 percent for the previous year. The unit reduced its 2011 bonus pool by 32 percent to 1.54 billion pounds and capped cash bonuses at 65,000 pounds.

Public Mood

The cash cap was “the right thing to do” because banks need to be “responsive to the public mood,” Diamond, 60, told reporters.

Annual pay for executive directors and the eight highest- paid senior executives will decline by 48 percent on the previous year, Barclays said today

Diamond declined to comment on his bonus this year after receiving a 6.5 million-pound award last year.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS) said last month profit fell 58 percent to $1.01 billion in the fourth quarter, while Deutsche Bank AG, Germany’s largest lender, said last week profit fell 76 percent as Europe’s debt crisis curbed trading and the company wrote down holdings.

Pretax profit from Barclays’s U.K. consumer division climbed 3 percent to 1.02 billion pounds. Losses as the corporate banking unit shrank by 89 percent to 70 million pounds. The company provided 43.6 billion pounds of gross new lending to British companies and exceeded its so-called Project Merlin lending targets agreed with the government last year.

The bank’s European consumer and business banking unit’s loss widened to 661 million pounds, from 139 million pounds as it took a 427 million-pound goodwill impairment.

“We need to fix Europe,” Diamond said.

Barclays’s credit and bad-loan charges decreased to 3.8 billion pounds, from 5.67 billion pounds. It also wrote down its stake in BlackRock Inc. by 1.8 billion pounds and took a 1 billion-pound charge to compensate customers who were sold payment protection insurance.

To contact the reporter on this story: Howard Mustoe in London at hmustoe@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Edward Evans at eevans3@bloomberg.net




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BMW Tells Mercedes Eat My Dust With Fuel-Efficient 3-Series Sedan: Cars

By Tim Higgins - Feb 10, 2012 12:01 PM GMT+0700

While Bayerische Motoren Werke AG (BMW) won the race for the U.S. luxury car market last year, the world’s largest premium automaker is keeping a sharp eye on its rear-view mirror.

Facing increased competition from Daimler AG (DAI)’s Mercedes- Benz, General Motors Co. (GM)’s Cadillac and Volkswagen AG (VOW)’s Audi, BMW is determined to hold on to its hard-won top position with the arrival of the new entry-level 3-Series sedan in U.S. showrooms tomorrow.

The stakes are high. The success of the 3-Series, first introduced in 1975, has been a key to BMW’s ability to outsell Mercedes last year and capture the U.S. luxury crown from Toyota Motor Corp. (7203)’s Lexus. That may change as a slew of competing entry-level luxury sedans increases the pressure on the new 3- Series, which features more power yet greater gas mileage than earlier versions.

“Ever since we came out with the 3-Series we were very successful, so we’ve been hunted for a long time,” said Ludwig Willisch, chief executive officer of BMW (BMW) North America. “We are used to that.”

The new 3-Series is making its debut as Mercedes is moving to surpass BMW. Mercedes was the top-selling U.S. luxury brand last month, its sales surging 24 percent to 20,306 while BMW rose 3.1 percent to 16,405. Lexus, which held the luxury title for 11 years until 2011, is targeting U.S. sales to surge more than 25 percent this year to 250,000.

Mercedes started selling an updated C-Class sedan in September that ended the year up 11 percent, edging out the 3- Series sedan by about 500 sales. Audi plans an updated A4 to arrive in U.S. showrooms around midyear. GM’s Cadillac will introduce its first compact luxury car in about 25 years when the ATS arrives in the third quarter.

$290 Billion

Still, BMW executives are confident they can outpace their rivals. Willisch said he expects sales of the new 3-Series to grow more than 10 percent and play a role in keeping BMW’s sales ahead of the luxury pack. The 3-Series was last redesigned in 2005.

The 3-Series has generated $290 billion in revenue and $17 billion in earnings before interest and taxes since 1995, Max Warburton, a London-based analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein, has estimated.

“It is one of the most profitable vehicles ever, thanks to big volumes and good prices,” Warburton said in a Nov. 15 report.

More Horsepower

The new 3-Series gets 36 miles per gallon on the highway and 28 mpg in combined highway-city driving with its eight-speed automatic transmission and stop-start technology that cuts the 4-cylinder engine at stoplights, compared with 28 and 22 for the outgoing 6-cylinder version. The entry-level 328i will have 10 more horsepower than its predecessor, the company said.

“It’s a perfect succession” to the previous version, code named the e90, said Satch Carlson, editor of Roundel, an enthusiast magazine for members of the BMW Car Club of America. “If you liked the styling of e90, this is not going to scare you away,” he said. “If you didn’t like it, this is probably going to be more to your liking” because it’s more refined.

The new 3-Series’s styling may face challenges against the Audi A4, Rebecca Lindland, an industry analyst with IHS Automotive, said in an interview.

“I don’t know if it has the charisma of the Audi A4,” she said.

Audi, which sold 27,517 A4 sedans last year, plans a refreshed version that includes changes to the front grille, including new headlights.

The 2012 3-Series sedan starts at $35,795, $300 more than its predecessor, excluding an $895 destination and handling fee. BMW expects the four-cylinder version will make up more than 50 percent of its 3-Series sales, Willisch said.

More Attention

“A car of that size and that performance would be something 10 years ago that was unthinkable,” he said. “It has 240 horses under the hood, so it is, as far as performance is concerned, better in every aspect in comparison to the former six-cylinder engine and it is much, much more efficient.”

The 3-Series will get some additional attention in September when the automaker brings out an all-wheel-drive version, which made up about half of the model’s sales last year. A hybrid version is also planned for the around the same time as the all-wheel drive version, with a 300-horsepower, six-cylinder engine. The hybrid will probably make up less than 10 percent of sales, Willisch said.

While skeptical that luxury customers are price-sensitive to gasoline costs, Carlson, the Roundel editor, said BMW customers care about image.

“They like to be known by the neighbors as conscientious, caring people who want to save the planet,” he said. “Plus, they’re in the luxury field with competitors who are coming out with hybrids for the same reason.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Tim Higgins in Southfield, Michigan, at thiggins21@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Jamie Butters at jbutters@bloomberg.net






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Stocks Decline With Commodities on Greece Bailout Concern; Treasuries Rise

By Andrew Rummer - Feb 10, 2012 9:31 PM GMT+0700

Feb. 10 (Bloomberg) -- European finance ministers held back a rescue package for Greece in a rebuff that left lawmakers in Athens under government pressure to endorse a newly minted austerity plan or exit the euro. Owen Thomas, Linzie Janis and David Tweed report on Bloomberg Television's "Countdown." (Source: Bloomberg)

Feb. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Catherine Yeung, an investment director at Fidelity Investment Management Ltd. in Hong Kong, talks about Asian stocks and bonds. Yeung also discusses China's economy and central bank monetary policy. She speaks with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television's "First Up." (Source: Bloomberg)

Feb. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Nick Sargen, chief investment officer at Fort Washington Investment Advisors in Cincinnati, talks about the outlook for bond and stock markets and his investment strategy. Sargen also discusses the euro members' efforts to resolve Greece's debt problems. He speaks with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television's "First Up." (Source: Bloomberg)


Global stocks fell for the first time in four days, commodities slid and the euro weakened amid concern that plans to help Greece avoid default were unraveling. U.S. Treasuries and costs to protect European debt rose.

The MSCI All-Country World Index lost 1.1 percent at 9:30 a.m. in New York and the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index slipped 0.6 percent. The S&P GSCI gauge of commodities dropped 1.3 percent. The euro slipped 0.8 percent to $1.3180 after touching a two- month high yesterday. The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note fell six basis points to 1.98 percent, while Spain’s 10- year yield rose 20 basis points to 5.37 percent. The Markit iTraxx SovX Western Europe Index of credit-default swaps on 15 governments climbed 8 basis points to 330.

Greece must pass its latest austerity package into law and identify 325 million euros ($431 million) in spending cuts before euro-area governments endorse a second bailout for the country, Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker said. Laos Party leader George Karatzaferis said the roadmap proposed for Greece is wrong and he can’t vote for the accord as is. China’s exports fell for the first time in more than two years in January, the customs bureau reported.

“For many days and weeks, we’ve been hearing that negotiations soon will be over,” said Yves Maillot, the head of investments at Robeco Gestions in Paris, who helps oversee $6.8 billion. “Things are getting stuck a bit on every front. The big European countries must dig into their budgets to help Greece.”

Euro Exit

Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos pressed domestic political leaders to yield to conditions for a bailout, saying a refusal would open the way for the country’s exit from the euro.

Euro-area finance ministers refused to approve a second aid package at an emergency meeting because the government fell short of austerity demands and because of a lack of assurances by Greek party leaders that they will stick to their commitments after elections due as soon as April. The Greek parliament is due to vote on the measures this weekend. Euro-region ministers are set to meet again on Feb. 15.

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble told lawmakers in Berlin today that Greece is missing its debt-cutting targets, according to two people who took part in the meeting.

Schaeuble, briefing lawmakers on estimates by the so-called troika assessing Greek progress, said that Greece’s pledges would leave debt at as much as 136 percent of gross domestic product by 2020, the people said. The target was to reduce debt to 120 percent of GDP by then.

‘Blind to Risks’

“Markets have been a little blind to the risks still remaining in the system,” Philippe Gijsels, head of research at BNP Paribas Fortis Global Markets, said in a phone interview from Brussels. “The Greece solution has been promised for a while, but they cannot get their bits together.”

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index declined 1 percent today, extending this week’s drop to 1.3 percent. Cable & Wireless Communications Plc slid 15 percent in London as the company cut guidance for its Panama and Caribbean units. SSAB, a Swedish steelmaker, sank 6.8 percent after reporting a loss. Alcatel- Lucent, France’s largest telecommunications-equipment supplier, surged 14 percent after forecasting higher profit margins.

Today’s drop threatened to erase a 0.5 percent advance in the S&P 500 over the previous four days and snap a streak of five straight weekly gains. Citigroup Inc., Morgan Stanley and Bank of America Corp. paced losses in banks. LinkedIn Corp., the biggest professional-networking website, rose after reporting quarterly sales that more than doubled and forecast increased 2012 revenue.

Consumer Confidence

A report today may show confidence among U.S. consumers declined in February. The Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan preliminary index of consumer sentiment slipped to 74.8 from 75 in January, according to a Bloomberg survey of economists. The U.S. trade deficit widened 3.7 percent in December to $48.8 billion, government data showed.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke is due to speak on “housing markets in transition” in Orlando, Florida.

Copper dropped 2.3 percent to $8,554.75 a metric ton in London. China is the biggest buyer of the metal. Gold declined 0.9 percent to $1,713.38 an ounce, the third consecutive drop. Brent crude was down 1.7 percent to $116.60 a barrel, ending the longest winning streak for the March futures contract since October 2009. West Texas crude traded in New York slid 2.1 percent to $97.78.

German 10-year bonds rose for the first time in four days, driving the yield down eight basis points to 1.94 percent. The extra yield investors demand to hold similar-maturity Spanish debt instead of bunds increased 27 basis points to 3.44 percentage points, while Greek securities due in October 2022 dropped, sending the yield 26 basis points higher to 31.311 percent.

Euro, Aussie Weaken

The 17-nation euro depreciated 0.8 percent versus the yen. The Australian dollar dropped 1.1 percent against its U.S. counterpart after the Reserve Bank of Australia cut its forecasts for growth and inflation this year, boosting scope for policy makers to reduce interest rates.

Bank bond risk climbed in Europe, with the Markit iTraxx Financial Index of credit-default swaps linked to the senior debt of 25 lenders and insurers rising 10 basis points to 216.

The MSCI Emerging Markets Index (MXEF) slid 1.8 percent, the most this year. The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index (HSCEI) sank 2.3 percent as the nation’s customs bureau said exports fell and imports slid more than forecast in January, the first declines in two years, after a weeklong holiday disrupted trade and commodity prices dropped. Benchmark gauges in South Korea, Indonesia and Hungary fell more than 1 percent.

To contact the reporter on this story: Andrew Rummer in London at arummer@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Chris Nagi at chrisnagi@bloomberg.net




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Stocks Decline With Commodities on Greece Bailout Concern; Treasuries Rise

By Andrew Rummer - Feb 10, 2012 9:31 PM GMT+0700

Feb. 10 (Bloomberg) -- European finance ministers held back a rescue package for Greece in a rebuff that left lawmakers in Athens under government pressure to endorse a newly minted austerity plan or exit the euro. Owen Thomas, Linzie Janis and David Tweed report on Bloomberg Television's "Countdown." (Source: Bloomberg)

Feb. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Catherine Yeung, an investment director at Fidelity Investment Management Ltd. in Hong Kong, talks about Asian stocks and bonds. Yeung also discusses China's economy and central bank monetary policy. She speaks with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television's "First Up." (Source: Bloomberg)

Feb. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Nick Sargen, chief investment officer at Fort Washington Investment Advisors in Cincinnati, talks about the outlook for bond and stock markets and his investment strategy. Sargen also discusses the euro members' efforts to resolve Greece's debt problems. He speaks with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television's "First Up." (Source: Bloomberg)


Global stocks fell for the first time in four days, commodities slid and the euro weakened amid concern that plans to help Greece avoid default were unraveling. U.S. Treasuries and costs to protect European debt rose.

The MSCI All-Country World Index lost 1.1 percent at 9:30 a.m. in New York and the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index slipped 0.6 percent. The S&P GSCI gauge of commodities dropped 1.3 percent. The euro slipped 0.8 percent to $1.3180 after touching a two- month high yesterday. The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note fell six basis points to 1.98 percent, while Spain’s 10- year yield rose 20 basis points to 5.37 percent. The Markit iTraxx SovX Western Europe Index of credit-default swaps on 15 governments climbed 8 basis points to 330.

Greece must pass its latest austerity package into law and identify 325 million euros ($431 million) in spending cuts before euro-area governments endorse a second bailout for the country, Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker said. Laos Party leader George Karatzaferis said the roadmap proposed for Greece is wrong and he can’t vote for the accord as is. China’s exports fell for the first time in more than two years in January, the customs bureau reported.

“For many days and weeks, we’ve been hearing that negotiations soon will be over,” said Yves Maillot, the head of investments at Robeco Gestions in Paris, who helps oversee $6.8 billion. “Things are getting stuck a bit on every front. The big European countries must dig into their budgets to help Greece.”

Euro Exit

Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos pressed domestic political leaders to yield to conditions for a bailout, saying a refusal would open the way for the country’s exit from the euro.

Euro-area finance ministers refused to approve a second aid package at an emergency meeting because the government fell short of austerity demands and because of a lack of assurances by Greek party leaders that they will stick to their commitments after elections due as soon as April. The Greek parliament is due to vote on the measures this weekend. Euro-region ministers are set to meet again on Feb. 15.

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble told lawmakers in Berlin today that Greece is missing its debt-cutting targets, according to two people who took part in the meeting.

Schaeuble, briefing lawmakers on estimates by the so-called troika assessing Greek progress, said that Greece’s pledges would leave debt at as much as 136 percent of gross domestic product by 2020, the people said. The target was to reduce debt to 120 percent of GDP by then.

‘Blind to Risks’

“Markets have been a little blind to the risks still remaining in the system,” Philippe Gijsels, head of research at BNP Paribas Fortis Global Markets, said in a phone interview from Brussels. “The Greece solution has been promised for a while, but they cannot get their bits together.”

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index declined 1 percent today, extending this week’s drop to 1.3 percent. Cable & Wireless Communications Plc slid 15 percent in London as the company cut guidance for its Panama and Caribbean units. SSAB, a Swedish steelmaker, sank 6.8 percent after reporting a loss. Alcatel- Lucent, France’s largest telecommunications-equipment supplier, surged 14 percent after forecasting higher profit margins.

Today’s drop threatened to erase a 0.5 percent advance in the S&P 500 over the previous four days and snap a streak of five straight weekly gains. Citigroup Inc., Morgan Stanley and Bank of America Corp. paced losses in banks. LinkedIn Corp., the biggest professional-networking website, rose after reporting quarterly sales that more than doubled and forecast increased 2012 revenue.

Consumer Confidence

A report today may show confidence among U.S. consumers declined in February. The Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan preliminary index of consumer sentiment slipped to 74.8 from 75 in January, according to a Bloomberg survey of economists. The U.S. trade deficit widened 3.7 percent in December to $48.8 billion, government data showed.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke is due to speak on “housing markets in transition” in Orlando, Florida.

Copper dropped 2.3 percent to $8,554.75 a metric ton in London. China is the biggest buyer of the metal. Gold declined 0.9 percent to $1,713.38 an ounce, the third consecutive drop. Brent crude was down 1.7 percent to $116.60 a barrel, ending the longest winning streak for the March futures contract since October 2009. West Texas crude traded in New York slid 2.1 percent to $97.78.

German 10-year bonds rose for the first time in four days, driving the yield down eight basis points to 1.94 percent. The extra yield investors demand to hold similar-maturity Spanish debt instead of bunds increased 27 basis points to 3.44 percentage points, while Greek securities due in October 2022 dropped, sending the yield 26 basis points higher to 31.311 percent.

Euro, Aussie Weaken

The 17-nation euro depreciated 0.8 percent versus the yen. The Australian dollar dropped 1.1 percent against its U.S. counterpart after the Reserve Bank of Australia cut its forecasts for growth and inflation this year, boosting scope for policy makers to reduce interest rates.

Bank bond risk climbed in Europe, with the Markit iTraxx Financial Index of credit-default swaps linked to the senior debt of 25 lenders and insurers rising 10 basis points to 216.

The MSCI Emerging Markets Index (MXEF) slid 1.8 percent, the most this year. The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index (HSCEI) sank 2.3 percent as the nation’s customs bureau said exports fell and imports slid more than forecast in January, the first declines in two years, after a weeklong holiday disrupted trade and commodity prices dropped. Benchmark gauges in South Korea, Indonesia and Hungary fell more than 1 percent.

To contact the reporter on this story: Andrew Rummer in London at arummer@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Chris Nagi at chrisnagi@bloomberg.net




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Stocks in Europe Decline on Greek Impasse; Saab Tumbles, Barclays Advances

By Tom Stoukas - Feb 10, 2012 8:09 PM GMT+0700

European (SXXP) stocks fell for the fourth time in five days as a Greek politician backing the nation’s government said he won’t support austerity measures demanded by the region’s finance ministers. U.S. index futures and Asian shares also retreated.

National Bank of Greece SA (ETE) tumbled 10 percent. Saab AB (SAABB) plunged 9.2 percent after fourth-quarter earnings and sales missed analysts’ estimates. Barclays Plc erased early losses and advanced 3.1 percent after raising its cost-cutting target and reducing the bonus pool. Alcatel-Lucent (ALU) jumped 15 percent after saying adjusted operating margins will increase in 2012.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index dropped 0.9 percent to 261.17 at 1:07 p.m. in London, extending its weekly loss to 1.3 percent. The gauge has still advanced 6.8 percent this year amid optimism that the euro area will contain its debt crisis and that the U.S. economic recovery remains intact. Futures on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index slid 0.8 percent, while the MSCI Asia Pacific Index fell 1.5 percent.

“It’s still Greece that’s dominating,” the sentiment, said Will Hedden, a sales trader at IG Markets Ltd. in London. There are “people ready to get in and get some risk on and move this market forward, but it is this little annoying Greece issue, I think, that is still stopping people from jumping in.”

George Karatzaferis, the leader of the Laos party, today said he couldn’t support the accord worked out for a new financing agreement in its present form.

Lack of Assurance

Euro-area finance ministers yesterday refused to approve a second aid package because of a lack of assurances by Greek party leaders that they will stick to their commitments after elections due as soon as April. The ministers asked Greece to turn its budget cuts into law and identify 325 million euros ($429 million) in spending reductions.

Greek Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos said after the Brussels meeting that the parliamentary vote set to begin this weekend amounted to a ballot on euro membership.

“If we see the salvation and future of the country in the euro area, in Europe, we have to do whatever we have to do to get the program approved,” Venizelos said.

China’s exports fell and imports slid more than forecast in January, the first declines in two years, as a week-long holiday disrupted trade and commodity prices dropped.

In the U.S., a report at 9:55 a.m. New York time may show that the Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan preliminary consumer sentiment index for February probably eased to 74.8 from January’s one-year high of 75, according to the median forecast of 71 economists in a Bloomberg News survey.

Bank Shares

National Bank of Greece, the country’s largest lender, fell 10 percent to 2.66 euros. Alpha Bank SA, the second-biggest, plummeted 14 percent to 1.38 euros. EFG Eurobank Ergasias SA dropped 13 percent to 84.3 euro cents.

Saab declined 9.2 percent to 135.50 kronor, its biggest drop since June 8. The Swedish company reported a fourth-quarter net income of 413 million kronor ($62 million) against analysts’ projection for 474 million kronor.

Barclays rose 3.1 percent to 240.35 pence, after falling as much as 3.5 percent. The first of Britain’s biggest banks to report full-year earnings, Barclays raised its cost-cutting target for the next year to 2 billion pounds ($3.2 billion) to bolster profit. It set limits on cash bonuses and cut the amount it set aside for bonuses at Barclays Capital by 32 percent. The London-based lender also said it may fail to hit the 13 percent target for return-on-equity by 2013.

Commerzbank AG (CBK), Germany’s second-biggest lender, lost 6 percent to 2.04 euros.

Alcatel-Lucent Profit Margin

Alcatel-Lucent (ALU), France’s largest telecommunications-gear supplier, jumped 15 percent to 1.72 euros after it said it expects to increase adjusted operating margins in 2012.

National Grid Plc (NG/) slid 1.7 percent to 629 pence after its stock was cut to “neutral” from “overweight” at JPMorgan Chase & Co.

Total SA dropped 1.3 percent to 40.62 euros. The company plans to cut net investments to $20 billion in 2012, compared with $22 billion last year. Adjusted net income in the fourth quarter was 2.73 billion euros, in line with the average analyst estimate of 2.72 billion euros.

Cable & Wireless Communications Plc (CWC) plunged 12 percent to 38.48 pence, its biggest decline since May 25, after saying that full-year earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization at its Panama unit will be less than its own projection. The business has been affected by the high level of competition in mobile-phone services, the company said.

Next Plc (NXT), the U.K’s second-largest clothing retailer, advanced 1.5 percent to 2,760 pence after the shares were raised to “buy” from “hold” at Deutsche Bank AG. (DBK)

To contact the reporter on this story: Tom Stoukas in Athens at astoukas@bloomberg.net

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





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