Economic Calendar

Monday, February 27, 2012

Motorola Solutions Buys $1.2 Billion of Stock From Icahn as Intrieri Quits

By Cecile Daurat - Feb 27, 2012 9:06 PM GMT+0700

Motorola Solutions Inc. (MSI), which split in two a year ago following pressure from investors led by Carl Icahn, said it bought $1.17 billion of its stock from the billionaire investor and some of his affiliates.

As part of the transaction, Vincent J. Intrieri, a director of Icahn Enterprises G.P. Inc., has agreed to resign from the board, Schaumburg, Illinois-based Motorola Solutions said today in a statement.

Icahn pushed Motorola to spin off its mobile-phone unit on Jan. 4, 2011 after four years of agitating for change. Motorola Solutions had gained 24 percent since the separation before today, outperforming the 7.5 percent gain in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index. The spun-off business, Motorola Mobility Holdings Inc., is being bought by Google Inc. for $12.5 billion.

Motorola Solutions purchased 23.7 million of its common stock at $49.15 apiece, as part of a $3 billion buyback program, according to the statement.

Shares of the maker of radio equipment for emergency workers and scanning devices for retailers fell 0.2 percent to $49.43 on Feb. 24.

Icahn built his reputation as a corporate raider in the 1980s targeting companies such as Phillips Petroleum Co., Texaco Inc. and Trans World Airlines Inc. He recently sparred with management at Time Warner Inc. and Clorox Co. He often spends years holding stocks as he waits for investments to pay off.

As of Jan. 1, Icahn Associates Corp. owned 38.3 million shares of Motorola Solutions, the largest stockholder in the company, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

To contact the reporter on this story: Cecile Daurat in Wilmington at cdaurat@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Cecile Daurat at cdaurat@bloomberg.net





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U.S. Stock Futures Drop as G-20 Snubs Europe

By Rita Nazareth - Feb 27, 2012 8:43 PM GMT+0700

U.S. stock futures declined, after the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index advanced to the highest level since 2008, as the Group of 20 nations rebuffed calls from the euro area to boost international lending resources.

Fifth Third Bancorp and Regions Financial Corp. (RF) slid at least 1 percent, following losses in European lenders. Alcoa (AA) Inc. and Chesapeake Energy Corp. (CHK) each dropped 0.5 percent to pace declines in commodity producers. Lowe’s Cos. (LOW), the second- largest U.S. home-improvement retailer, rose 2.5 percent as profit exceeded estimates. Walt Disney Co. (DIS), the largest U.S. entertainment company by market value, added 0.8 percent after Goldman Sachs Group Inc. recommended buying the shares.


S&P 500 futures expiring in March lost 0.5 percent to 1,356.50 at 8:41 a.m. New York time. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures slid 48 points, or 0.4 percent, to 12,913.

European leaders shift their focus this week to bolstering the euro region’s debt-crisis firewall after the Group of 20 nations rebuffed their call for help. The European Central Bank will offer unlimited three-year funds, with banks set to take 470 billion euros ($629 billion), according to the median of 28 estimates in a Bloomberg survey, compared with 489 billion euros at the tender Dec. 21.

Stocks rose last week, sending the S&P 500 to the highest level since June 2008, after Greece got a bailout and better- than-expected data boosted confidence in the world’s largest economy. The index is on pace for a third month of gains, the longest streak in a year. It rose 4.1 percent this month through Feb. 24.

Banks Fall

Financial companies fell, following a 2 percent slump in a gauge of European lenders. Fifth Third (FITB) decreased 1.3 percent to $13.42. Regions Financial erased 1 percent to $5.74.

Energy and raw material producers retreated as the S&P GSCI gauge of 24 commodities dropped 0.6 percent. Alcoa slid 0.5 percent to $10.38. Chesapeake Energy fell 0.5 percent to $25.33.

Lowe’s rose 2.5 percent to $27.83. Sales at stores open at least a year advanced 3.4 percent, helped by the fourth-warmest January on record. Unemployment sank to a three-year low last month and builders began work on more houses. Analysts had expected same-store sales to increase 1.1 percent, the average of seven estimates.

Disney added 0.8 percent to $41.65. The shares were raised to “conviction buy” from “neutral” at Goldman Sachs, which expects accelerating ad growth at ESPN.

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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Nokia Offers Cheaper Windows Smartphone

By Jonathan Browning and Cornelius Rahn - Feb 27, 2012 5:18 PM GMT+0700

Nokia Oyj (NOK1V), the world’s third-largest smartphone maker by shipments, will sell a Windows Phone priced at 189 euros ($254) in the second quarter to capture first-time users against similar devices powered by Google Inc.’s Android.

The Lumia 610 will be 30 percent less expensive than Nokia’s current cheapest smartphone running Microsoft’s Corp.’s Windows platform. The device will be targeted at young people to hook them to the company’s new platform. Nokia also announced a high-resolution camera phone as it returned to the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Europe’s biggest wireless show, with its first product introduction in three years.

Nokia Chief Executive Officer Stephen Elop won good reviews for the first two Lumia phones using the Microsoft platform, which sold “well over 1 million” units, he said Jan. 26. Nokia’s shares have fallen about 10 percent since it unveiled those handsets Oct. 26 as consumers continued to bypass Windows Phones in favor of Android handsets costing as little as $100 and Apple Inc. (AAPL)’s iPhone, which broadened its range with discounted older devices.

“Nokia has come back with a vengeance,” Elop said in an interview with Bloomberg Television today. “We’re absolutely mobbed today because of the range of product and services” the company is showing at the Mobile World Congress.

Bigger Ecosystem

Microsoft has adapted Windows Phone software so that it requires half as much memory and runs the cheaper 7X27A chip from Qualcomm Inc. That should help manufacturers cut their costs.

“The new Nokia Lumia 610 is the perfect introduction of Windows to a younger audience,” said Jo Harlow, Nokia’s smartphones chief. “We are now able to cover a range of needs and a range of price points.”


The price of the Lumia 610 “makes it very competitive with the low-end Android devices,” said Carolina Milanesi, a research vice president at Gartner Inc. The handset will be attractive to operators as it will require very little subsidy, she said. “You build momentum, you build volume and then you build interest in the ecosystem.”

The Lumia will run on the updated version of Microsoft’s software, Windows Phone 7.5, known as Mango, which will be based on cheaper hardware, according to the announcement.

“Nokia is starting to deliver on Elop’s promise to bring down the price points and enlarge the Windows Phone ecosystem,” said Martin Garner, a London-based analyst at CCS Insight. “It’s still too early to proclaim success, the volumes are not there, but he is executing and doing it at the right sort of speed.”

Emerging Markets

The manufacturer also said that its high-end Lumia 900 device, which will first go on sale in the U.S. with operator AT&T Inc., won’t be made available on any other fourth- generation network except in Canada. The handset, which will be sold in the second quarter and costs 480 euros, will run on a form of third-generation technology called HSPA+.

Nokia, based in Espoo, Finland, also introduced three phones for its Asha line, sold primarily in emerging markets. The company got about 46 percent of its sales last year from these handsets and other low-end phones, which lag behind smartphones in processing speed and applications such as video calling and corporate e-mail. The company’s new camera-phone, the 808 Pure View, will have a 41 megapixel sensor, alongside optics jointly developed with Carl Zeiss AG.

Smartphone Growth

“We are demonstrating the actions necessary to improve the fortunes of Nokia, very deliberately recognizing challenges, changing strategy and then executing very aggressively against that,” Elop said. “That’s the path you’ll see us continue to execute day in and day out.”

Smartphone sales may grow 39 percent this year from 472 million units, according to researcher Gartner. Android and the iPhone together accounted for almost three quarters of smartphone sales last quarter, while Nokia’s share was 12 percent, Gartner said. A billion people may use smartphones by 2016, Forrester Research said in a report this month.

Microsoft Corp. (MSFT) said it plans to bring its Windows Phone software to 23 new countries and put the operating system on less expensive smartphones. Microsoft will kick off the expansion by opening mobile-application stores in China, Thailand, Venezuela and the 20 other nations by the end of the month, with phones arriving around the same time. That will bring the total number of markets Microsoft serves to 63, letting it target 60 percent more buyers.

Value Drop

Nokia has lost more than 60 billion euros in market value since Apple introduced the iPhone in 2007, including a 14 percent drop on Feb. 14, 2011, the day Elop announced that Nokia would embrace Windows Phone and taper off its 10-year-old Symbian product line.

“Investor confidence will be built as we execute our strategy,” Elop said.

Nokia will need the U.S. market for brand credibility and emerging markets for volume. It’s preparing to sell the Lumia 900 handset with AT&T while the Lumia 710 is in shops including Wal-Mart Stores Inc. Nokia will offer Lumias in China and Latin America by July, Elop said Jan. 26. Last year its handset revenues fell in all regions except the Middle East and Africa and Latin America. The Lumia 710 costs 270 euros.

The company introduced the Communicator, one of the first handsets to surf the Internet, in 1996. Its N8 Symbian smartphone, introduced in 2010, had a 12-megapixel camera.

To contact the reporters on this story: Jonathan Browning in Barcelona via jbrowning9@bloomberg.net; Cornelius Rahn in Barcelona via crahn2@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Kenneth Wong at kwong11@bloomberg.net



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Stocks Decline From Seven-Month High as U.S. Futures Fall; Yen Strengthens

By Stephen Kirkland and Lynn Thomasson - Feb 27, 2012 8:53 PM GMT+0700

Feb. 27 (Bloomberg) -- Nader Naeimi, a Sydney-based senior strategist at AMP Capital Investors Ltd., talks about the impact of Australia's ruling party leadership vote on the nation's markets, the outlook for Asian stocks and his investment strategy. Naeimi also discusses the European debt crisis. He speaks with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television's "First Up." (Source: Bloomberg)

Feb. 27 (Bloomberg) -- Lorraine Tan, director of Asia equity research at Standard & Poor’s, talks about regional stock markets. She speaks from Singapore with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television's "First Up." (Source: Bloomberg)

Feb. 27 (Bloomberg) -- Francis Lun, managing director at Lyncean Holdings Ltd., talks about his forecast for Hong Kong property company earnings and the outlook for Hong Kong stocks. Lun also discusses HSBC Holdings PLC and Standard Chartered PLC's financial results. He speaks with Rishaad Salamat on Bloomberg Television's "On the Move Asia." (Source: Bloomberg)


Stocks (MXWD) fell from the highest level in almost seven months as the Group of 20 nations rebuffed calls from the euro area to boost international lending resources. Brent crude snapped a five-day rally and the yen strengthened.

The MSCI All-Country World Index slid 0.5 percent at 8:50 a.m. in New York, after closing last week at the highest since Aug. 1. Standard & Poor’s 500 Index futures fell 0.5 percent. Brent oil retreated from a nine-month high. The yen gained against all 16 of its most-traded peers and the yield on the 10- year U.S. Treasury note decreased four basis points to 1.93 percent. The cost of insuring against default on European corporate debt rose for the first time in three days.

The G-20 told Europe to come up with more financial firepower before they will consider lending outside support. The world economy is “not out of the danger zone” amid fragile financial systems, high public and private debt and rising oil prices, International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde said. The European Central Bank will offer unlimited three-year funds, with banks set to take 470 billion euros ($629 billion), according to the median of 28 estimates in a Bloomberg survey, compared with 489 billion euros at the tender Dec. 21.

“Europe still has work to do in terms of the great bailout and there seems to be some things various parties can’t agree upon, so that’s winding down on the market at the moment,” said Matt Riordan, who helps manage $6.8 billion in Sydney at Paradice Investment Management Pty.

Nokia Slides

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index (SXXP) retreated 0.9 percent. Nokia Oyj sank 6.4 percent as the world’s third-largest smartphone maker by shipments revealed its latest devices at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. A.P. Moeller-Maersk A/S retreated 3.6 percent after saying its container line, the world’s largest, will post a loss again this year, depressed by lower freight rates and slower market growth. Air France-KLM Group and Deutsche Lufthansa AG slipped more than 3 percent.

The Markit iTraxx Crossover Index of contracts on 50 mostly junk-rated companies climbed 14 basis points to 587.5, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co.

The retreat in S&P 500 futures indicated that the benchmark measure will snap a two-day advance. A report from the National Association of Realtors due today at 10:00 a.m. in Washington may show the number of Americans signing contracts to buy previously owned homes rose 1 percent in January. Reports later this week may show manufacturing accelerated for a fourth straight month in February, consumer confidence improved and Americans picked up the pace of spending a month earlier, according to Bloomberg surveys of economists.

Yen Rallies

The yen appreciated 0.8 percent against the dollar and climbed 1.2 percent versus the euro. The 17-nation currency slipped 0.4 percent to $1.3390. The Dollar Index (DXY) rose 0.3 percent.

Brent crude decreased 1 percent to $124.21 a barrel on the ICE Futures Europe exchange, after gaining 4.9 percent last week. Copper for delivery in three months fell 0.9 percent on the London Metal Exchange. The S&P GSCI (SPGSCI) gauge of 24 commodities fell for the first time in eight sessions, declining 0.6 percent, after touching a nine-month high on Feb. 24.

Natural gas was little changed today, leaving this year’s decline at 15 percent. Warren Buffett, who bought about $2 billion in bonds of power company Energy Future Holdings Corp., said the investment is at risk of losing all its value after natural gas prices fell. Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc. wrote down the debt by $390 million last year, following a $1 billion impairment in 2010, the billionaire said in his annual letter to shareholders posted Feb. 25 on the company’s website.

The MSCI Emerging Markets Index (MXEF) fell 1 percent, after reaching a six-month high on Feb. 24. The Hang Seng China Enterprises Index of Chinese shares listed in Hong Kong fell 1.3 percent and India’s Sensex index lost 2.7 percent. South Korea’s Kospi Index dropped 1.4 percent.

To contact the reporters on this story: Stephen Kirkland in London at skirkland@bloomberg.net; Lynn Thomasson in Hong Kong at lthomasson@bloomberg.net

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





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European Stocks Slide as G-20 Rebuffs Boosting IMF Resources; Maersk Drops

By Sarah Jones - Feb 27, 2012 7:45 PM GMT+0700

European stocks declined, extending last week’s retreat, as the Group of 20 nations rejected calls from the euro area to increase the International Monetary Fund’s resources. U.S. index futures and Asian shares also retreated.

HSBC Holdings Plc (HSBA) lost 2.6 percent after pretax profit at Europe’s largest bank missed analysts’ estimates. A.P. Moeller- Maersk (MAERSKB) A/S slipped 4 percent after saying that its container division will make a loss this year. Airlines fell as crude oil traded near a nine-month high.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index (SXXP) slid 0.8 percent to 262.61 at 12:42 p.m. in London, extending last week’s 0.4 percent retreat. Futures on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index (SPH2) expiring next month dropped 0.4 percent, while the MSCI Asia Pacific Index slipped 0.7 percent.

“I don’t think the market really anticipated the G-20 would come up with anything different,” said Jeremy Batstone- Carr, head of research at Charles Stanley & Co. in London. “The fact of that matter is -- as it stands -- the firewall is still insufficient. The higher oil price is another uncertainty in investors’ minds and it is contributing to this slightly risk- off day today.”

G-20 officials told the euro area’s political leaders to provide more financial firepower before they consider lending outside support, putting the onus on Germany, already the biggest national contributor to the bailouts.

Germany went to the Mexico meetings of finance ministers and central bankers urging G-20 nations to find further money that the IMF could channel to the euro area.

IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde, who attended the talks, said she wants to increase the fund’s lending capacity by $500 billion so that it can fend off “further shocks” to the global economy.

Germany’s Bailout Vote

Germany’s parliament holds a vote on a second Greek aid package in Berlin today. Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government must decide whether to back plans at a March 1-2 European Union summit to combine rescue funds for the euro area and produce a potential firewall of 750 billion euros ($1 trillion).

The Stoxx 600 (SXXP)rose for the first time in four days on Feb. 24, as companies from Telecom Italia SpA to Eiffage SA said they will cut their debt in 2012 and new house sales in the U.S. beat economists’ estimates. The gauge has climbed 7.4 percent this year buoyed by U.S. economic reports and as investors speculated that Europe will contain its debt crisis.

Earnings Season

Seventy-seven companies on the Stoxx 600 (SXXP) are scheduled to report financial results this week, including eight companies today. Of the 214 that have reported quarterly earnings so far, 108 have missed analysts’ estimates, while 94 have beaten them, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

HSBC fell 2.6 percent to 559.8 pence after reporting a 15 percent increase in pretax profit to $21.9 billion last year. That missed the $22.3 billion median analyst estimate. Chief Executive Officer Stuart Gulliver told reporters the lender remained “confident” of hitting its 12 percent return-on- equity target by 2013.

Maersk (MAERSKB) slid 4 percent to 43,720 kroner after the shipping company posted a 43 percent drop in 2011 profit to 15.2 billion kroner ($2.7 billion). That compared with the average analyst estimate of 14.8 billion kroner. Falling freight rates pushed its container line to a loss in 2011. The company said that the division will also lose money this year.

Air France, Lufthansa

Air France-KLM (AF) Group dropped 3.1 percent to 4.33 euros as crude oil traded near a nine-month high of $109.77 a barrel in New York. Deutsche Lufthansa AG (LHA) lost 3.3 percent to 10.08 euros and Carnival Plc slid 1.2 percent to 1,849 pence.

Prices gained the most in two months last week as sanctions tightened against Iran, OPEC’s second-biggest producer. The contract for April delivery fell as much as 1.4 percent to $108.24 a barrel today as investors speculated that prices may have climbed too far.

Essar Energy Plc (ESSR) tumbled 8 percent to 115.9 pence after the Indian power producer and oil refiner said it made a loss after taxes of $568 million in 2011 after the Supreme Court of India overturned a decision to defer payment of sales taxes.

Associated British Foods Plc (ABF) fell 1.7 percent to 1,198 pence after the world’s second-biggest sugar producer forecast that first-half profit will exceed the previous year.

Nokia, Volkswagen Fall

Nokia Oyj (NOK1V) sank 6.6 percent to 4.04 euros after the world’s third-largest smartphone maker by shipments revealed its latest devices at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, including the Lumia 610. The shares rallied 5.6 percent on Feb. 24 after the company said it would announce “significant industry news” at the MWC.

Volkswagen AG (VOW) lost 1.4 percent to 137.35 euros. Europe’s largest carmaker is close to a deal to purchase the 50.1 percent stake in Porsche SE’s automotive business that it doesn’t already own, said people familiar with the matter who declined to be identified. The company may announce a plan within the next two weeks, the people said.

Shares of Porsche rose 1.4 percent to 49.22 euros after earlier falling as much as 3.2 percent.

BP Plc (BP/) added 1.6 percent to 503.9 pence. Europe’s second- largest crude producer and plaintiffs suing over the 2010 Gulf of Mexico oil spill have discussed a $14 billion accord that the company would fund with money originally set aside for out-of- court settlements, said three people familiar with the talks.

To contact the reporter on this story: Sarah Jones in London at sjones35@bloomberg.net

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





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G-20 Rebuffs Europe Call for Help

By Patrick Donahue and Alan Crawford - Feb 27, 2012 7:28 PM GMT+0700
Enlarge image Angela Merkel

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, center, and former East German rights activist Joachim Gauck, left, and party leader Horst Seehofer at a press conference at the Chancellery in Berlin on Feb. 19, 2012. Photographer: Robert Schlesinger/dpa/Corbis

Feb. 27 (Bloomberg) -- John Llewellyn, founder of Llewellyn Investment Bank, and Gerard Lyons, chief economist at Standard Chartered Plc, talk about the European debt crisis and the outlook for the Greek economy. They speak with Maryam Nemazee on Bloomberg Television's "The Pulse." (Source: Bloomberg)


European leaders shift their focus this week to bolstering the euro region’s debt-crisis firewall after the Group of 20 nations rebuffed their call for help.

The decision by G-20 finance ministers to fend off pleas for assistance pending an increase in the euro-area backstop puts the onus on Germany, the biggest national contributor to bailouts, to overcome its resistance to doing more.

With a parliamentary vote on a second Greek aid package looming in Berlin today, German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government must decide next month whether to back plans to combine rescue funds and produce a potential firewall of 750 billion euros ($1 trillion). European Union leaders convene for a summit meeting in Brussels on March 1-2.

Europe “doesn’t really need any outside money,” Jim O’Neill, chairman of Goldman Sachs Asset Management, said in an e-mail. “It needs their own policy makers, especially Germany, to show leadership.”

Finland votes on the same package on Feb. 29 while the European Central Bank is preparing to issue a second round of unlimited three-year loans to help shore up the region’s banks.

Germany went to the Mexico meetings of finance ministers and central bankers urging G-20 nations to find fresh money for the International Monetary Fund that could be channeled to defuse the euro-region crisis now in its third year. IMF chief Christine Lagarde, who attended the talks, said she wants to raise the Washington-based fund’s lending capacity by $500 billion to fend off “further shocks” to the global economy.

Merkel Urges IMF

This week’s EU summit likely won’t reach a decision on expanding the firewall, putting off a final verdict on the issue until later in March, European Commission President Jose Barroso said today at the Lisbon Council in Brussels.

“March of course has 31 days,” Barroso said. “During March this matter is going to be addressed.”

Merkel’s coalition today urged that the IMF “as far as possible, continues to play a financial role in the program” for Greece, according to a resolution for the Greek aid vote obtained by Bloomberg News.

German Interior Minister Hans-Peter Friedrich said Greece would have better chances of overhauling its economy if it left the euro area, Der Spiegel said today, citing an interview, adding that this is the first time a German Cabinet member has suggested a Greek exit. Germany’s Bild, the country’s biggest selling newspaper, ran a front-page headline today saying “Stop!” and urged lawmakers to vote against further Greek aid. With the opposition Social Democrats and Greens backing aid for Greece the measure is likely to win approval.

Stocks, Euro Fall

Stocks and the euro fell. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index (SXXP) retreated 0.8 percent at 12:02 p.m. in London. The euro was down 0.3 percent at $1.3402 at 1:03 p.m. Frankfurt time.

The G-20 concluded that a European review of its financial firewall in March is “essential” before any consideration can be made to boost resources for the IMF, the G-20 said in its closing statement issued in Mexico City yesterday. Progress will be assessed in April, when officials gather in Washington for the IMF’s spring meetings.

“Until we see the color of their money, I don’t think you are going to see any money from the rest of the world,” U.K. Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne said in an interview in Mexico City.

Pressure on Europe

The U.S. led calls for Europe to step up, with Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner saying in a Feb. 25 speech in Mexico that the region needed to make their crisis-fighting commitments “credible.” The same day, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said a deal struck last week for Greece’s 130 billion-euro bailout showed “Europe has done its homework.”

The exchange underscored G-20 divisions as Japan, Brazil, Russia and the U.K. joined with the U.S. and Canada in prodding the euro-area to boost its crisis defenses. The deliberations left no time for discussion of a successor to World Bank chief Robert Zoellick, who steps down on Jun 30.

While the German government has yet to show its hand on a plan to combine the 250 billion euros remaining in the region’s temporary fund and the 500 billion-euro permanent rescue fund that is due to come into force in July, Merkel has signaled she may be open to review the matter at the EU summit in Brussels.

Germany Opposes Funds

Merkel spokesman Steffen Seibert said Feb. 25 there was no change in the German position that there’s no need to raise the funding limit, rebutting a report in Germany’s Focus magazine. Focus had said Merkel’s government was prepared to concede and allow 250 billion euros in additional funding from the remaining volume of the EFSF.

As with Germany’s stance on the crisis since it first came to light in Greece in late 2009, Merkel must take into account domestic considerations. A total of 62 percent of German voters said they want lawmakers to reject aid for Greece in today’s vote, an Emnid poll of 500 people for Bild am Sonntag newspaper showed yesterday. Thirty-two percent backed the bailout.

EU Economic and Monetary Commissioner Olli Rehn, asked in Mexico if he expected a deal on the firewall at this week’s summit, said he anticipated a result “in the course of March.” Italy’s central banker, Ignazio Visco, echoed those sentiments.

“The Germans have their own sequencing” and “want Greece out of the way” before debating the firewall, Jacques Cailloux of Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc., said by phone. “Any hope there could have been for an agreement on a higher firewall as early as this week’s summit is fading.”

ECB Liquidity

Even so, the G-20’s stance on additional funds is not as big a focus for investors as Greece and the ECB’s decision to offer banks unlimited liquidity for three years, the second such offering in three months, Cailloux said.

Pressure for a deal in Mexico eased after European bond markets reacted positively to last week’s agreement to help Greece avert the euro-area’s first sovereign default.

Italy’s 10-year bonds rose for a seventh week, the longest run of gains in the euro-era, while Spanish 10-year bonds had their biggest weekly advance in a month.

Europe’s Stoxx 600 (SXXP) index slipped 0.4 percent last week on concern that Greece won’t be able to implement the austerity measures needed for the rescue. The European Commission said the euro area’s economy will shrink this year.

‘More Firepower Needed’

“In order to reassure market investors that contagion is under control, more firepower is needed,” Andrew Milligan, who helps oversee about $262 billion as the Edinburgh-based head of global strategy at Standard Life Investments Ltd., said in an e- mail. “Pressure is certainly growing on Germany and others to increase the firewall. I think eventually they will agree, although it may take another crisis or a difficult period of negotiation before that happens.”

Euro-area governments have pledged about $200 billion in new money to the IMF’s lending resources. Geithner said in Mexico that he won’t go to Congress to seek a U.S. contribution because “we don’t think that’s necessary or desirable.”

Brazil’s Finance Minister Guido Mantega said after meeting with his counterparts from Russia, India, China and South Africa that the BRICS group of major emerging markets will only add more funding for Europe if the region’s leaders follow “precisely to the letter” a 2010 agreement to give them a bigger say in how the IMF is run.

Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty pointed the finger at Germany for being absent at the helm, saying that it was time for Europe’s dominant country to “take that leadership role very seriously and come up with an overall euro-zone plan.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Alan Crawford in Mexico City at acrawford6@bloomberg.net; Patrick Donahue in Berlin at pdonahue1@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Joshua Goodman at jgoodman19@bloomberg.net




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G-20 Rebuffs Europe Call for Help

By Patrick Donahue and Alan Crawford - Feb 27, 2012 7:28 PM GMT+0700
Enlarge image Angela Merkel

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, center, and former East German rights activist Joachim Gauck, left, and party leader Horst Seehofer at a press conference at the Chancellery in Berlin on Feb. 19, 2012. Photographer: Robert Schlesinger/dpa/Corbis

Feb. 27 (Bloomberg) -- John Llewellyn, founder of Llewellyn Investment Bank, and Gerard Lyons, chief economist at Standard Chartered Plc, talk about the European debt crisis and the outlook for the Greek economy. They speak with Maryam Nemazee on Bloomberg Television's "The Pulse." (Source: Bloomberg)


European leaders shift their focus this week to bolstering the euro region’s debt-crisis firewall after the Group of 20 nations rebuffed their call for help.

The decision by G-20 finance ministers to fend off pleas for assistance pending an increase in the euro-area backstop puts the onus on Germany, the biggest national contributor to bailouts, to overcome its resistance to doing more.

With a parliamentary vote on a second Greek aid package looming in Berlin today, German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government must decide next month whether to back plans to combine rescue funds and produce a potential firewall of 750 billion euros ($1 trillion). European Union leaders convene for a summit meeting in Brussels on March 1-2.

Europe “doesn’t really need any outside money,” Jim O’Neill, chairman of Goldman Sachs Asset Management, said in an e-mail. “It needs their own policy makers, especially Germany, to show leadership.”

Finland votes on the same package on Feb. 29 while the European Central Bank is preparing to issue a second round of unlimited three-year loans to help shore up the region’s banks.

Germany went to the Mexico meetings of finance ministers and central bankers urging G-20 nations to find fresh money for the International Monetary Fund that could be channeled to defuse the euro-region crisis now in its third year. IMF chief Christine Lagarde, who attended the talks, said she wants to raise the Washington-based fund’s lending capacity by $500 billion to fend off “further shocks” to the global economy.

Merkel Urges IMF

This week’s EU summit likely won’t reach a decision on expanding the firewall, putting off a final verdict on the issue until later in March, European Commission President Jose Barroso said today at the Lisbon Council in Brussels.

“March of course has 31 days,” Barroso said. “During March this matter is going to be addressed.”

Merkel’s coalition today urged that the IMF “as far as possible, continues to play a financial role in the program” for Greece, according to a resolution for the Greek aid vote obtained by Bloomberg News.

German Interior Minister Hans-Peter Friedrich said Greece would have better chances of overhauling its economy if it left the euro area, Der Spiegel said today, citing an interview, adding that this is the first time a German Cabinet member has suggested a Greek exit. Germany’s Bild, the country’s biggest selling newspaper, ran a front-page headline today saying “Stop!” and urged lawmakers to vote against further Greek aid. With the opposition Social Democrats and Greens backing aid for Greece the measure is likely to win approval.

Stocks, Euro Fall

Stocks and the euro fell. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index (SXXP) retreated 0.8 percent at 12:02 p.m. in London. The euro was down 0.3 percent at $1.3402 at 1:03 p.m. Frankfurt time.

The G-20 concluded that a European review of its financial firewall in March is “essential” before any consideration can be made to boost resources for the IMF, the G-20 said in its closing statement issued in Mexico City yesterday. Progress will be assessed in April, when officials gather in Washington for the IMF’s spring meetings.

“Until we see the color of their money, I don’t think you are going to see any money from the rest of the world,” U.K. Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne said in an interview in Mexico City.

Pressure on Europe

The U.S. led calls for Europe to step up, with Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner saying in a Feb. 25 speech in Mexico that the region needed to make their crisis-fighting commitments “credible.” The same day, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said a deal struck last week for Greece’s 130 billion-euro bailout showed “Europe has done its homework.”

The exchange underscored G-20 divisions as Japan, Brazil, Russia and the U.K. joined with the U.S. and Canada in prodding the euro-area to boost its crisis defenses. The deliberations left no time for discussion of a successor to World Bank chief Robert Zoellick, who steps down on Jun 30.

While the German government has yet to show its hand on a plan to combine the 250 billion euros remaining in the region’s temporary fund and the 500 billion-euro permanent rescue fund that is due to come into force in July, Merkel has signaled she may be open to review the matter at the EU summit in Brussels.

Germany Opposes Funds

Merkel spokesman Steffen Seibert said Feb. 25 there was no change in the German position that there’s no need to raise the funding limit, rebutting a report in Germany’s Focus magazine. Focus had said Merkel’s government was prepared to concede and allow 250 billion euros in additional funding from the remaining volume of the EFSF.

As with Germany’s stance on the crisis since it first came to light in Greece in late 2009, Merkel must take into account domestic considerations. A total of 62 percent of German voters said they want lawmakers to reject aid for Greece in today’s vote, an Emnid poll of 500 people for Bild am Sonntag newspaper showed yesterday. Thirty-two percent backed the bailout.

EU Economic and Monetary Commissioner Olli Rehn, asked in Mexico if he expected a deal on the firewall at this week’s summit, said he anticipated a result “in the course of March.” Italy’s central banker, Ignazio Visco, echoed those sentiments.

“The Germans have their own sequencing” and “want Greece out of the way” before debating the firewall, Jacques Cailloux of Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc., said by phone. “Any hope there could have been for an agreement on a higher firewall as early as this week’s summit is fading.”

ECB Liquidity

Even so, the G-20’s stance on additional funds is not as big a focus for investors as Greece and the ECB’s decision to offer banks unlimited liquidity for three years, the second such offering in three months, Cailloux said.

Pressure for a deal in Mexico eased after European bond markets reacted positively to last week’s agreement to help Greece avert the euro-area’s first sovereign default.

Italy’s 10-year bonds rose for a seventh week, the longest run of gains in the euro-era, while Spanish 10-year bonds had their biggest weekly advance in a month.

Europe’s Stoxx 600 (SXXP) index slipped 0.4 percent last week on concern that Greece won’t be able to implement the austerity measures needed for the rescue. The European Commission said the euro area’s economy will shrink this year.

‘More Firepower Needed’

“In order to reassure market investors that contagion is under control, more firepower is needed,” Andrew Milligan, who helps oversee about $262 billion as the Edinburgh-based head of global strategy at Standard Life Investments Ltd., said in an e- mail. “Pressure is certainly growing on Germany and others to increase the firewall. I think eventually they will agree, although it may take another crisis or a difficult period of negotiation before that happens.”

Euro-area governments have pledged about $200 billion in new money to the IMF’s lending resources. Geithner said in Mexico that he won’t go to Congress to seek a U.S. contribution because “we don’t think that’s necessary or desirable.”

Brazil’s Finance Minister Guido Mantega said after meeting with his counterparts from Russia, India, China and South Africa that the BRICS group of major emerging markets will only add more funding for Europe if the region’s leaders follow “precisely to the letter” a 2010 agreement to give them a bigger say in how the IMF is run.

Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty pointed the finger at Germany for being absent at the helm, saying that it was time for Europe’s dominant country to “take that leadership role very seriously and come up with an overall euro-zone plan.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Alan Crawford in Mexico City at acrawford6@bloomberg.net; Patrick Donahue in Berlin at pdonahue1@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Joshua Goodman at jgoodman19@bloomberg.net




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Europe Futures, Asia Stocks Drop

By Lynn Thomasson and Kana Nishizawa - Feb 27, 2012 2:16 PM GMT+0700

European equity futures and Asian stocks fell amid concern that rising energy costs will hurt corporate profits. Oil snapped a seven-day winning streak after the International Monetary Fund warned of an economic slowdown.

Euro Stoxx 50 Index futures slid 0.7 percent as of 7:10 a.m. in London. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index (MXAP) lost 0.8 percent and Standard & Poor’s 500 Index futures retreated 0.3 percent. The yen advanced against all of its 16 major peers. Treasury 10-year yields fell two basis points to 1.96 percent. Oil slumped 0.5 percent to $109.19 a barrel.

The world economy is “not out of the danger zone” amid fragile financial systems, high public and private debt and rising oil prices, said International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine in a statement after the Group of 20 meeting this weekend. Higher oil prices may push inflation in South Korea, the world’s fifth-largest oil importer, above the government’s target and have a “far-reaching” effect on the economy, said Finance Minister Bahk Jae Wan.

“The higher the oil price goes, the bigger the brake on consumers, which is concerning,” said Matt Riordan, who helps manage $6.8 billion in Sydney at Paradice Investment Management Pty. “Europe still has work to do in terms of the great bailout and there seems to be some things various parties can’t agree upon, so that’s winding down on the market at the moment.”

Debt Crisis

Officials at the G-20 meeting told Europe to come up with more financial firepower before they consider lending outside support. German lawmakers are voting today on a second bailout package for Greece and data may show U.S. pending home sales increased and Italian business confidence improved, according to Bloomberg surveys of economists.

Hyundai Motor Co., the nation’s largest automaker, dropped 3 percent. Korean Air Lines Co., the country’s biggest carrier, slid 5.3 percent. South Korea’s won dropped 0.3 percent to 1,129.24 per dollar.

Treasury 10-year yields fell for a fourth day. The Federal Reserve is scheduled to purchase as much as $5 billion of notes due from February 2018 to February 2020 today as part of its efforts to keep borrowing costs down.

Copper for delivery in three months fell as much as 0.9 percent to $8,457.25 per metric ton on the London Metal Exchange. The Standard & Poor’s GSCI Spot Index of 24 commodities capped its biggest weekly increase of the year last week, touching a nine-month high on Feb. 24.

To contact the reporters on this story: Lynn Thomasson in Hong Kong at lthomasson@bloomberg.net; Kana Nishizawa in Hong Kong at knishizawa5@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Shelley Smith at ssmith118@bloomberg.net





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Gillard Defeats Rudd in Australia Labor Vote

By Jason Scott and Michael Heath - Feb 27, 2012 1:37 PM GMT+0700

Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard defeated predecessor Kevin Rudd in a leadership ballot, leaving her to unite the ruling Labor party and revive its lagging poll ratings before elections due in 2013.

Gillard won 71 votes to Rudd’s 31 in today’s ballot of party lawmakers, Labor official Chris Hayes said. Rudd, who resigned as foreign minister last week as he sought to reclaim the nation’s top job, said he accepted the result and would fully support the prime minister.

After weeks of political infighting, Gillard, 50, needs to heal the party as her government aims to implement unprecedented taxes on mining profits and carbon emissions that the Liberal- National opposition says it would scrap. The nation’s first female prime minister must also hold together a minority government that relies on the backing of independent and Green party lawmakers, while trying to narrow the opposition’s 10 point lead in the latest opinion poll.

“Rudd’s leadership ambitions are now all over,” said Andrew Hughes, who conducts research in political marketing at the Australian National University in Canberra. “The doubts are over within the party -- now she has to work on winning over the voters, who still seem to have plenty of doubts.”

The Australian dollar traded at $1.0685 at 4:54 p.m. in Sydney from $1.0681 immediately before the announcement. Ten- year government bonds yields were at 4.03 percent, six basis points below last week’s close. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 index closed down 0.9 percent.

‘Political Drama’

“This political drama is over,” Gillard told reporters in Canberra after the vote, and said the party would unite to fight the next election. “I will take Labor to that election and I am confident we can win.”

Rudd, 54, congratulated Gillard on her “strong” performance in the ballot and said it was time the party’s “wounds were healed.”

“I accept fully the verdict of the caucus,” said Rudd, adding he intends to remain a Labor lawmaker through to the next election and beyond. “I dedicate myself to working fully for her re-election as prime minister of Australia and I will do so with my absolute ability dedicated to that task.”

Gillard assembled a minority government after the closest election in seven decades in August 2010. Any collapse in that arrangement risks triggering another national vote before 2013 that opinion surveys indicate the conservatives would win.

The Labor party’s primary vote of 35 percent trails opposition leader Tony Abbott’s coalition by 10 percentage points, according to a Newspoll published in the Australian today. The survey of 1,152 people conducted Feb. 23-26 had a margin of error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.

No-Confidence Vote

Abbott, 54, a volunteer lifeguard who once studied for the priesthood, said today the ballot win was a “stay of execution” for Gillard. He hasn’t ruled out calling a no- confidence vote among lawmakers in the lower house of parliament that could trigger an early election if successful.

One of Gillard’s first tasks will be to consider whether her ministerial lineup needs its second overhaul in three months. She said Trade Minister Craig Emerson would act as foreign minister for the time being and said any other Cabinet changes would be announced in coming days.

Gillard declined to say whether she would sideline colleagues who declared they would vote against her in the ballot, such as Resources Minister Martin Ferguson and Kim Carr, minister for manufacturing.

Arbib Resigns

Assistant Treasurer Mark Arbib, a factional power broker in Labor who helped Gillard topple Rudd in 2010, unexpectedly resigned today from his ministerial post and as a senator, saying the move may help the healing process in the party.

Arbib, who is also minister for small business and sport, said he’d promised his wife he would review his political career at the age of 40 and that the demands of the job had impacted on his family. He denied he’d been pressured to step down. Labor is expected to nominate a replacement for Arbib in the Senate and a by-election won’t be required.

Tensions have simmered within the party since Gillard toppled Rudd in a June 2010 party-room coup amid complaints about the autocratic style of his 2007-2010 prime ministership and concern over his slumping poll ratings.

Rudd has promised not to mount a second challenge to Gillard, whose efforts to boost Labor’s poll ratings may be hampered by an economy that recorded its worst annual job growth in 19 years in 2011.

Mining Boom

While the biggest mining boom in a century is helping the economy sustain a two-decade long expansion, a currency that has gained 23 percent since she took office in June 2010 is hurting manufacturing.

BlueScope Steel Ltd. (BSL), the country’s largest steel producer, in August closed its export division. Toyota Motor Corp. (7203) and General Motors Co. have cut jobs in Australia this year, citing the currency’s strength, while Alcoa Inc. (AA) is reviewing the future of an aluminum smelter.

“A big chunk of the Labor voting base is in the slow lane of Australia’s two-speed economy,” said Shane Oliver, Sydney- based head of investment strategy at AMP Capital Investors Ltd., which has $100 billion under management. “Australia has to make the adjustment related to the strength in the mining sector, and trying to resist that is futile, but it’s a difficult balancing act for the government.”

Interest Rates

The job market has shown signs of revival this year as employers added the most workers in 14 months in January and the unemployment rate unexpectedly declined to 5.1 percent, compared with the 7.9 percent average for advanced economies last year.

The Reserve Bank of Australia kept its benchmark interest rate at 4.25 percent on Feb. 7, the highest among major developed nations, after lowering borrowing costs by a quarter percentage point twice late last year.

The central bank is likely to cut rates once more as risks to global growth remain, said Paul Bloxham, chief economist for HSBC Holdings Plc in Sydney and a former RBA official who predicts the economy will then accelerate next year. “The challenge for the government is that the next election is likely to occur in 2013 and it’s quite possible we’ll be in an environment where interest rates are rising.”

As parliament resumes in Canberra today, Gillard will be looking to add to her record of legislative success and implement taxes on carbon emissions and resources profits as the government strives to return the budget to surplus by 2012-13.

Investor Uncertainty

Under a law coming into effect on July 1, the government will charge about 500 polluters A$23 a ton for discharges until the set price gives way to a cap-and-trade system in 2015. A 30 percent tax on iron ore and coal profits is forecast to raise A$7.7 billion in the first two years. The mining tax bill is expected to be approved in the upper house where her government has the support of Greens, who hold the balance of power.

David Lennox, a Sydney-based resources analyst at Fat Prophets, said the Labor leadership battle had created little uncertainty for investors.

“The question will start to be raised, what happens if there’s no longer a Labor government in charge?” Lennox said by telephone. “If Abbott gets into power, what will he do? As we get closer to another federal election, that will create some uncertainty.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Jason Scott in Canberra at jscott14@bloomberg.net; Michael Heath in Sydney at mheath1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Peter Hirschberg at phirschberg@bloomberg.net






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China Congress of Billionaires Makes Capitol Hill Peers Look Like Paupers

By Bloomberg News - Feb 27, 2012 2:21 PM GMT+0700

The richest 70 members of China’s legislature added more to their wealth last year than the combined net worth of all 535 members of the U.S. Congress, the president and his Cabinet, and the nine Supreme Court justices.

The net worth of the 70 richest delegates in China’s National People’s Congress, which opens its annual session on March 5, rose to 565.8 billion yuan ($89.8 billion) in 2011, a gain of $11.5 billion from 2010, according to figures from the Hurun Report, which tracks the country’s wealthy. That compares to the $7.5 billion net worth of all 660 top officials in the three branches of the U.S. government.

The income gain by NPC members reflects the imbalances in economic growth in China, where per capita annual income in 2010 was $2,425, less than in Belarus and a fraction of the $37,527 in the U.S. The disparity points to the challenges that China’s new generation of leaders, to be named this year, faces in countering a rise in social unrest fueled by illegal land grabs and corruption.

“It is extraordinary to see this degree of a marriage of wealth and politics,” said Kenneth Lieberthal, director of the John L. Thornton China Center at Washington’s Brookings Institution. “It certainly lends vivid texture to the widespread complaints in China about an extreme inequality of wealth in the country now.”

Most Powerful

The National People’s Congress, whose annual meeting will run for a week and a half, is legally the highest governmental body in China. While the legislature, with about 3,000 members, is often derided as a rubberstamp parliament, its members are some of China’s most powerful politicians and executives, wielding power in their home provinces and weighing in on proposals such as whether to impose a nationwide property tax.

“The NPC is not exactly what you would call a center of power, but being on it certainly gets you deeply engaged in the political system,” Lieberthal said.

Hurun, a Shanghai-based publisher of magazines targeted at the Chinese luxury consumer, uses publicly available information such as corporate filings to compile its annual list of the richest people in China. It then cross-checks that data with the government’s list of NPC members.

Zong Qinghou, chairman of beverage-maker Hangzhou Wahaha Group (HWGZ) and China’s second-richest person, with a family fortune of 68 billion yuan, is a member. So is Wu Yajun, chairwoman of Beijing-based Longfor Properties (LHREZ) Co. She has family wealth of 42 billion yuan, according to the Hurun Report.

Jiang’s Pushing

Former President Jiang Zemin pushed for the inclusion of wealthy private entrepreneurs into the Communist Party a decade ago. Now they have regular access to top party leaders who are also NPC members.

The third-richest person in the NPC, auto-parts magnate Lu Guanqiu, traveled with Vice President Xi Jinping to the U.S. during his official visit this month, attending a meeting with Vice President Joseph Biden and Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner in Washington on Feb. 14.

“The rich in China have strong incentive to become ‘within system’ due to the relative weakness in the rule of law and of property rights,” Victor Shih, a professor at Evanston, Illinois-based Northwestern University who studies Chinese politics and finance, wrote in an e-mail. Being a member of the NPC “means that one’s commercial or political rival cannot easily throw one in jail or confiscate one’s property.”

Richest Woman

Wu, who is China’s richest woman, doesn’t give media interviews, her spokeswoman said. Lu wasn’t available for an interview, his spokesman said. Zong wouldn’t comment on the makeup of the NPC because that’s a matter determined by the central government, Wahaha spokesman Shan Qining said in a phone interview.

Many of the NPC’s richest members, including Longfor’s Wu, are executives in real estate, a sector that has spurred protests and contributed to the rising wealth gap between city dwellers and farmers.

A land grab by a property developer in Wukan, a fishing town in southern China’s Guangdong province, sparked protests in December that resulted in the expulsion of its Communist Party leaders. Premier Wen Jiabao has pledged to crack down on such land grabs and work to ease wealth disparities.

China’s top political leaders, including President Hu Jintao and Wen, don’t disclose their personal finances or those of their families.

Chinese private executives such as Zong and Lu have built their fortunes on the back of economic growth that has averaged 10.1 percent in the last 30 years. The U.S. economy expanded by an average annual rate of 2.7 percent in the same period.

Out Of Poverty

Regular Chinese have also benefited from the growth of China’s economy, which surpassed Japan as the world’s second biggest in 2010. Since introducing free-market policies, China has lifted 300 million of its 1.3 billion citizens out of poverty, according to the United Nations.

Annual growth of per capita GDP in China was 9.8 percent at the end of 2010. Per capita GDP has more than doubled since 2000, according to the World Bank.

The wealth gap between legislatures holds with statistically comparable samples. The richest 2 percent of the NPC -- 60 people -- had an average wealth of $1.44 billion per person. The richest 2 percent of Congress -- 11 members -- had an average wealth of $323 million.

The U.S. figures come from a downloadable database on the website of the Washington-based Center for Responsive Politics. The U.S. figures are inflated because the database includes members of Congress who were retired or defeated in the 2010 elections as well as their replacements.

Issa’s Wealth

The wealth of members of Congress did increase at a higher rate than that of their Chinese peers in the most recent disclosures as U.S. equity markets outperformed China’s. The average wealth of the richest 2 percent of Congress rose 22 percent in 2010 from 2009. The Standard and Poor’s 500 Index rose 12.8 percent in 2010.

The wealth of the top 2 percent of NPC delegates rose 13 percent in the 2011 Hurun list following a 14.3 percent fall in the Shanghai Stock Exchange Composite Index in 2010 and a further 21.7 percent drop last year. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng dropped 20 percent in 2011 and the Shenzhen Composite fell 33 percent in the same period.

The wealthiest member of the U.S. Congress is Representative Darrell Issa, the California Republican who had a maximum wealth of $700.9 million in 2010, according to the center. If he were in China’s NPC, he would be ranked 40th. Per capita income in China is about one-sixth the U.S. level when adjusted for differences in purchasing power.

‘Cozy Relationship’

Financial disclosure forms ask lawmakers and other top U.S. officials to list the value of their individual assets in ranges, such as $1,001 to $15,000 or $1,000,001 to $5,000,000. Bloomberg News used the maximum range of wealth on the U.S. disclosures to compare with the Chinese NPC.

Rupert Hoogewerf, chairman and chief researcher for the Hurun Report, estimates that for every Chinese billionaire the company discovers for its list, there is another one it misses, meaning the gap between the wealth of China’s NPC and the U.S. Congress may be greater still.

“The prevalence of billionaires in the NPC shows the cozy relationship between the wealthy and the Communist Party,” said Bruce Jacobs, a professor of Asian languages and studies at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia. “In all levels of the system there seem to be local officials in cahoots with entrepreneurs, enriching themselves, and this has led to a lot of the demonstrations.”

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Michael Forsythe in Beijing at mforsythe@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Peter Hirschberg at phirschberg@bloomberg.net





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Australian, N.Z. Dollars Advance Before ECB Refinancing, Asian Stocks Open

By Kristine Aquino - Feb 27, 2012 6:09 AM GMT+0700

The Australian and New Zealand dollars climbed to their strongest levels in at least six months against the yen on prospects Asian stocks will advance, spurring demand for higher-yielding assets.

The so-called Aussie also advanced before the European Central Bank’s planned longer-term refinancing operation this week. Euro-area banks are forecast to ask the ECB for 470 billion euros ($633 billion) in three-year funds, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey. The appeal of New Zealand’s currency, nicknamed the kiwi, was tempered after the nation unexpectedly posted a trade deficit last month.

“The most important driver of the kiwi and the Aussie is still trends in global risk appetite,” said Mike Jones, a foreign-exchange strategist at Bank of New Zealand in Wellington. “All eyes are on the ECB’s LTRO later in the week. If we do see a sizeable take-up, it’s going to be viewed as positive for global growth.”

Australia’s dollar gained 0.6 percent to 87.36 yen at 9:57 a.m. in Sydney after earlier touching 87.48 yen, the highest level since July 8. The Aussie added 0.2 percent to $1.0715. New Zealand’s currency climbed 0.6 percent to 68.26 yen. It earlier reached 68.35 yen, the strongest level since Aug. 1. The kiwi bought 83.69 U.S. cents, 0.1 percent higher than its close at 83.60 cents on Feb. 24 in New York.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index (SPX) rose 0.2 percent on Feb. 24. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index gained 0.3 percent.

New Zealand’s imports exceeded exports by NZ$199 million ($167 million), from a revised NZ$306 million surplus in December, a report showed today. The median estimate in a Bloomberg survey was for a NZ$167 million surplus.

Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard is expected to win a leadership ballot today against predecessor Kevin Rudd, as the Labor party’s ratings lag behind the opposition in opinion polls before elections due in 2013. A tally of voting intentions compiled by the Australian and Age newspapers shows Gillard with a 2-1 margin.

To contact the reporter on this story: 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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G-20 Snubs Germany on IMF Help

By Alan Crawford - Feb 27, 2012 7:17 AM GMT+0700

Group of 20 nations rebuffed German- led calls to come to Europe’s rescue as it battles the region’s debt crisis, saying any decision on outside help hinges on the euro area delivering more financial firepower within two months.

A European review of its financial firewall against the crisis next month is “essential” before any consideration to “mobilize resources” for the International Monetary Fund, the G-20 said yesterday in a statement in Mexico City. Progress will be assessed in April, when officials gather in Washington for the IMF’s spring meetings.

G-20 officials meeting in Mexico over the past two days sided with the U.S. and deferred Europe’s bid to raise fresh money for IMF that could be used to defuse the crisis. That is the second time in almost four months that the world’s biggest economies have declined to rally to Europe’s side, even as the IMF warns the crisis risks triggering another global recession.

The spotlight now shifts to Germany, Europe’s biggest economy, which is weighing whether to agree to beef up the region’s financial backstop to a potential 750 billion euros ($1 trillion) at a March 1-2 European summit.

“Europe has no balance of payments deficit so it doesn’t really need any outside money,” Jim O’Neill, chairman of Goldman Sachs Asset Management, said in an e-mail response to questions. “It needs their own policymakers, especially Germany, to show leadership.”

EU Pleas

Germany went in to the Mexico meetings urging G-20 nations to find fresh money for the IMF. In a Feb. 15 document, the European Union called on G-20 countries “and other financially strong IMF members to support the efforts to safeguard financial stability by contributing to the increase in IMF resources.”

Instead, in Mexico, the U.S. led calls on Europe to step up, with Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner saying in a speech that the region needed to make their crisis-fighting commitments “credible.” German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said a deal struck Feb. 21 for a second Greek bailout of 130 billion euros showed “Europe has done its homework.”

The exchange underscored G-20 divisions as Japan, Brazil, Russia and the U.K. joined with the U.S. and Canada in prodding the euro-area to boost its crisis defenses.

“Until we see the color of their money, I don’t think you are going to see any money from the rest of the world,” U.K. Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne said in an interview in Mexico City.

Merkel’s Greek Vote

While the German government has yet to show its hand on a plan to combine the region’s temporary and permanent rescue funds, Chancellor Angela Merkel has signaled she is open to review the matter at next week’s EU summit in Brussels. Her government must first win a parliamentary vote in Berlin tomorrow sanctioning last week’s bailout for Greece.

EU Economic and Monetary Commissioner Olli Rehn, asked in Mexico if he expected a deal to combine the funds at the Brussels summit, said he anticipated a result “in the course of March.”

“The Germans have their own sequencing” and “want Greece out of the way” before debating the firewall, Jacques Cailloux of Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc., said by phone. “Any hope there could have been for an agreement on a higher firewall as early as this week’s summit is fading.”

Even so, the G-20’s stance on additional funds is not as big a focus for investors as Greece and the European Central Bank’s decision to offer banks unlimited liquidity for three years, the second such offering in three months, Cailloux said.

Bonds Rise

Pressure for a deal in Mexico eased after European bond markets reacted positively to last week’s agreement to help Greece avert the euro-area’s first sovereign default.

Italy’s 10-year bonds rose for a seventh week, the longest run of gains in the euro-era, while Spanish 10-year bonds had their biggest weekly advance in a month.

Europe’s Stoxx 600 (SXXP) index still slipped 0.4 percent last week on concern that Greece won’t be able to implement the austerity measures needed for the rescue, and as the European Commission said the euro area’s economy will shrink this year.

The G-20 statement said that growth expectations for 2012 are moderate and downside risks continue to be high along with market volatility. With oil prices undergoing the longest rally in two years amid tension with Iran and Syria, G-20 countries said they were “alert to the risks of higher oil prices, and welcome the commitment by producing countries to continue to ensure adequate supply,” the statement showed.

‘Not the Moment’

For all that the meeting recognized the “significant progress” made this year in Europe and the U.S. in stemming risks, “this is not the moment for complacency,” Mexico’s Central Bank Governor Agustin Carstens told reporters.

IMF chief Christine Lagarde is seeking to raise the fund’s lending capacity by $500 billion to fend off “further shocks” to the global economy. Euro-area governments have pledged about $200 billion of the total. Geithner told reporters that he won’t go to Congress to seek a U.S. contribution because “we don’t think that’s necessary or desirable.”

Brazil’s representative to the Washington-based lender, Paulo Nogueira Batista, said in an interview that the U.S. refusal to contemplate new cash for the fund was hampering the drive to raise money from other nations.

Brazil’s Finance Minister Guido Mantega, after meeting with his counterparts from Russia, India, China and South Africa, said that the BRICS group of major emerging markets will only contribute more funding for Europe if the region’s leaders follow “precisely to the letter” a 2010 agreement to give them a bigger say in how the IMF is run.

‘Leadership Role’

Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty pointed the finger at Germany, saying that it was time for Europe’s dominant country to “take that leadership role very seriously and come up with an overall euro-zone plan.”

While the government in Berlin faced criticism, the Frankfurt-based ECB was singled out for praise by both Geithner and Lagarde, with the IMF chief saying the central bank’s actions helped avert “derailment” of the global recovery.

“Given some of the official narrative in the runup to the meeting, few expected it to yield much in terms of concrete agreements,” Mohamed El-Erian, chief executive officer of Pacific Investment Management Co., said in an e-mailed response to questions. Even so, “it would be unwise for markets and policymakers to think that ECB liquidity injections, while powerful, would durably substitute for proper actions to improve growth, competitiveness and debt solvency.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Alan Crawford in Mexico City at acrawaford6@bloomberg.net;

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Joshua Goodman at jgoodman19@bloomberg.net.





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Geithner, Schaeuble Spar Over Debt Crisis

By Alan Crawford and Flavia Krause-Jackson - Feb 27, 2012 5:01 AM GMT+0700

Group of 20 nations rebuffed German- led calls to come to Europe’s rescue as it battles the sovereign debt crisis, saying any decision on outside help hinges on the euro area delivering more financial firepower within two months.

G-20 officials meeting in Mexico City heeded U.S. calls to defer a German bid to raise fresh money for the International Monetary Fund that could be used to defuse the crisis.

A euro-area review of its financial firewall against the crisis is “essential” before any consideration to “mobilize resources” for the IMF, according to a G-20 statement issued at the end of the summit today. Progress will be assessed in April, when officials gather in Washington for the IMF’s Spring meetings, according to the statement.

This is the second time in almost four months that the world’s biggest economies have declined to rally to Europe’s side, even as the IMF warns the crisis risks triggering another global recession. The spotlight now shifts to Germany, Europe’s biggest economy, which is weighing whether to agree to beef up the region’s financial backstop to a potential 750 billion euros ($1 trillion) at a March 1-2 European summit.

‘Color of Money’

“Until we see the color of their money, I don’t think you are going to see any money from the rest of the world,” U.K. Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne said in an interview in Mexico City today.

Germany went in to the Mexico meetings aiming to rally G-20 nations to find fresh money for the IMF that could be channeled to fighting the crisis. In a Feb. 15 document, the European Union called on G-20 countries “and other financially strong IMF members to support the efforts to safeguard financial stability by contributing to the increase in IMF resources.”

Instead, in Mexico, the U.S. led calls on Europe to step up, with Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner saying in a speech that the region needed to make their crisis-fighting commitments “credible.” German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said that a deal struck Feb. 21 for a second, 130 billion-euro Greek bailout and debt write-down showed that “Europe has done its homework.”

The exchange underscored G-20 divisions as Japan, Brazil, Russia and the U.K. joined with the U.S. and Canada in prodding the euro-area to boost its crisis defenses.

Merkel’s Greek Vote

While the German government has yet to show its hand on a plan to combine the region’s temporary and permanent rescue funds, Chancellor Angela Merkel has signaled she is open to review the matter at next week’s EU summit in Brussels. Her government must first win a parliamentary vote in Berlin tomorrow sanctioning last week’s bailout for Greece.

EU Economic and Monetary Commissioner Olli Rehn, asked in Mexico if he expected a deal to combine the funds at the Brussels summit, said he anticipated a result “in the course of March.”

“The Germans have their own sequencing” and “want Greece out of the way” before debating the firewall, Jacques Cailloux of Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc., said by phone today. “Any hope there could have been for an agreement on a higher firewall as early as this week’s summit is fading.”

Even so, the G-20’s stance on additional funds is not as big a focus for investors as Greece and the European Central Bank’s decision to offer banks unlimited liquidity for three years, the second such offering in three months, Cailloux said.

Bonds Rise

Pressure for a deal in Mexico eased after European bond markets reacted positively to last week’s agreement to help Greece avert the euro-area’s first sovereign default.

Italy’s 10-year bonds rose for a seventh week, the longest run of gains in the euro-era, while Spanish 10-year bonds had their biggest weekly advance in a month.

Europe’s Stoxx 600 (SXXP) index still slipped 0.4 percent last week on concern that Greece won’t be able to implement the austerity measures needed for the rescue, and as the European Commission said the euro area’s economy will shrink this year.

The G-20 statement, while recognizing Europe’s recent “important progress,” and said that growth expectations for 2012 are moderate and downside risks continue to be high along with market volatility.

With oil prices undergoing the longest rally in two years amid tension with Iran and Syria, G-20 countries said they were “alert to the risks of higher oil prices, and welcome the commitment by producing countries to continue to ensure adequate supply,” the statement showed.

Lagarde Request

IMF chief Christine Lagarde is seeking $600 billion to allow an increase in lending resources of $500 billion. Euro- area governments have pledged about $200 billion of that sum.

Brazil’s representative to the Washington-based lender, Paulo Nogueira Batista, said in an interview that the U.S. refusal to contemplate new cash for the fund was hampering the drive to raise money from other nations.

Brazil’s Finance Minister Guido Mantega, after meeting with his counterparts from Russia, India, China and South Africa, said that the BRICS group of major emerging markets will only contribute more funding for Europe if the region’s leaders follow “precisely to the letter” a 2010 agreement to give them a bigger say in how the IMF is run.

Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty pointed the finger at Germany, saying that it was time for Europe’s dominant country to “take that leadership role very seriously and come up with an overall euro-zone plan.”

Mexican President Felipe Calderon, whose country holds the rotating G-20 presidency, urged leaders not to become complacent.

“We’re all in the same boat, and it doesn’t matter whether the hole is in first, second or third class,” Calderon told officials in a dinner at the historic Chapultepec castle last night. “It’s the same boat and we have to fix it.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Alan Crawford in Mexico City at acrawaford6@bloomberg.net;

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Joshua Goodman at jgoodman19@bloomberg.net.





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