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Friday, May 1, 2009

Asian Currencies Gain, Led by Won, Rupiah, as Recession Eases

May 2 (Bloomberg) -- Asian currencies rose against the dollar for a third week as signs a global recession is easing prompt investors to favor riskier assets, helping emerging markets draw funds.

South Korea’s won and Indonesia’s rupiah led the advance on optimism the region’s exports will rebound after Japan reported industrial output grew for the first time in six months and a Chinese gauge of manufacturing climbed for a second month. Taiwan’s dollar jumped the most in six months on April 30 after Chinese companies were allowed to invest in the island for the first time since a civil war ended in 1949.

“All the Asian currencies are on a stronger footing,” said Rajeev Malik, a regional economist at Macquarie Group Ltd. in Singapore. “There’s obviously a better economic outcome anticipated. We’ve passed the eye of the storm and while it’s still bumpy and uncertain, the worst is probably behind us.”

The won surged 4.7 percent this week to close at 1,282.95 per dollar in Seoul, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The rupiah climbed 2.1 percent to 10,610 and Taiwan’s dollar rose 1.3 percent to NT$33.233.

All regional markets except Indonesia were closed yesterday for the Labor Day holiday. There was no trading in Mumbai on April 30 as well for elections.

The Bloomberg-JPMorgan Asia Dollar Index, which tracks the region’s 10 most-active currencies excluding the yen, gained for a third week and reached the highest in four months yesterday.

The MSCI Asia-Pacific Index of shares increased 0.1 percent yesterday, extending its gains in the last two months, as the Federal Reserve this week said a U.S. recession is abating.

China, Japan

The Fed’s Open Market Committee said on April 29 that the U.S. economy is contracting at a slower pace than before, while China’s Federation of Logistics and Purchasing in a statement yesterday said the Purchasing Manager’s Index rose to a seasonally adjusted 53.5 in April from 52.4 in March. A reading above 50 indicates an expansion.

Industrial production in Japan rose 1.6 percent in March from the previous month, a Trade Ministry report showed on April 30, double the increase forecast by economists in a Bloomberg survey. The U.S., Japan and China are the world’s top three economies.

The yen traded at 99.17 a dollar after dropping to a two- week low of 99.58 yesterday. It declined to 132.07 per euro yesterday, the lowest since April 14.

Shares Surge

The rupiah climbed to a six-month high against the dollar yesterday after the Jakarta Composite Index of local shares surged 20 percent in April, the best month in a decade. Equity purchases by foreigners exceeded sales by $238 million last month, according to exchange data.

“We’ve seen some good strengthening in the rupiah on the back of easing risk aversion that’s reflected in the stock markets,” said Apratim Chakravarty, head of global markets at HSBC Holdings Plc in Jakarta. “Foreign fund flows have been strong. We think this trend should continue next week.”

Taiwan’s dollar strengthened 1.4 percent this week as China ended a ban on investments in the island following an agreement to open cross-border operations for financial-services companies and more than double the number of direct flights.

The benchmark Taiex index of the island’s shares surged on April 30 by the most since 1991 on speculation money will pour in from the mainland as investment curbs are relaxed.

The currency appreciated 2.1 percent last month, following an advance of 3.1 percent in March.

China Mobile Ltd., the world’s biggest phone company by subscribers, this week said it will buy a 12 percent stake in Far EasTone Telecommunications Co., Taiwan’s third-largest phone company, for NT$17.8 billion ($541 million).

Overweight

Standard Chartered Plc raised the Korean won to “overweight” from “neutral,” suggesting investors should hold more of the currency than benchmarks suggest. The won will gain 12 percent to 1,150 per dollar by the end of the year, David Mann, a Hong Kong-based senior foreign-exchange strategist at the bank, forecast in a research note on April 30.

The won climbed 7.8 percent last month, Asia’s best performance after the rupiah. The nation’s industrial production increased 4.8 percent in March from the previous month, a third straight gain, according to a government report released on April 30. A separate report yesterday showed exports declined 19 percent in April from a year earlier, less than the 23 percent drop forecast by economists in a Bloomberg survey.

A central bank survey this week showed manufacturers were the least pessimistic in seven months.

Risk-Taking Returns

Malaysia’s ringgit completed a second weekly gain after the central bank on April 29 left interest rates unchanged and said economic stimulus will help revive growth in the second half of the year.

“There are reasons to be positive as the fiscal stimulus should start to produce results,” said Yeo Chin Tiong, head of treasury at OSK Investment Bank Bhd. in Kuala Lumpur. “The risk-taking culture should return and that’s positive for the ringgit as well as the regional currencies.”

The ringgit strengthened 0.8 percent this week to 3.5585 per dollar.

Elsewhere, the Philippine peso gained 0.1 percent this week to 48.360 versus the greenback and the Thai baht rose 0.3 percent to 35.30. China’s yuan was little changed at 6.8230 versus 6.8273 on April 24.

Asian Stocks Gain a Seventh Week in Eight on Economic Optimism

May 2 (Bloomberg) -- Asian stocks advanced for the seventh time in eight weeks, sending a regional index to the highest level in four months, as production and earnings figures lifted confidence the region’s economies have started to recover.

Canon Inc., the world’s largest seller of digital cameras, gained 8.1 percent after cost cuts helped the company boost its profit forecast and Japan’s production levels increased for the first time in six months. Li & Fung Ltd., the biggest supplier of toys and clothes to Wal-Mart Stores Inc., added 10 percent ahead of a report that Chinese manufacturing increased for a fifth month. Lion Nathan Ltd. soared 41 percent after receiving a takeover offer.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index added 1.6 percent this week to 90.91, a level not seen since Jan. 7. Asian markets have rallied 29 percent since the MSCI benchmark dropped to an almost six- year low on March 9.

“All the things are in place for the bear market to have ended,” Anthony Bolton, London-based president of investments at Fidelity International, which oversees $157.3 billion, told Bloomberg Television in Hong Kong. “We’re going to see a slow economic upturn, but that’s enough for the stock market. If you wait for things to get better, you’ll miss the rally.”

Japan’s Nikkei 225 Stock Average surged 3.1 percent to 8,977.37. Indonesia’s Jakarta Composite Index posted the region’s largest gain with an 8.3 percent advance after companies including PT Bank Rakyat Indonesia, the country’s No. 2 financial services provider, reported rising profits.

Swine Flu, Chrysler

Markets shrugged off the outbreak of swine flu, a disease that has reached 11 countries since last week and pushed the World Health Organization to raise its six-tier alert system to 5, one notch below a pandemic. The bankruptcy of Chrysler LLC on April 30 also failed to derail market gains.

MSCI’s Asian index plunged by a record 43 percent last year as the credit crunch tipped the world’s largest economies into recession, forcing companies to idle factories and lay off workers.

The gauge has rallied amid signs government measures to ease the financial crisis are working. Earnings estimates for companies included in the MSCI benchmark started to rise in April after a year of falling predictions, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

Canon gained 8.1 percent to 3,130 yen after boosting its earnings estimate for the year ending in December by 12 percent on April 30. Fujitsu Ltd., Japan’s largest business computer maker, extended gains by 21 percent to 496 after forecasting a return to profitability this year. Honda Motor Co., Japan’s second-largest automaker, rose 6.5 percent after predicting it will make a profit this year as demand recovers in the U.S.

BOJ: 2010 Recovery

A Japanese government report on April 30 showed that industrial output rose for the first time in six months and at twice the pace predicted by economists. The Bank of Japan said on April 30 it expects the economy to return to growth in 2010 after a 3.1 percent contraction this year.

Li & Fung gained 10 percent to HK$22. Shimao Property Holdings Ltd., the Chinese developer controlled by billionaire Xu Rongmao, jumped 19 percent to HK$8.73. Morgan Stanley analyst Derek Kwong boosted the stock to “overweight” from “equal- weight” on April 28, citing a strong sales outlook.

China’s manufacturing purchasing manager’s index rose for a fifth month, according to a May 1 report from the National Bureau of Statistics and Federation of Logistics and Purchasing.

Taiwan-China Thaw

“While a fifth monthly improvement in the PMI reinforces our confidence that the Chinese economy is starting to turn around, it appears sensible to guard against excessive optimism,” Jing Ulrich, Hong Kong-based chairwoman of China equities at JPMorgan Chase & Co., said in an e-mail.

Lion Nathan, Australia’s second-largest brewer, jumped 42 percent to A$11.74 after Kirin Holdings Co., Japan’s largest beverage maker, agreed to pay A$3.5 billion ($2.5 billion) for the 54 percent of Lion Nathan it doesn’t already own.

Taiwan’s Taiex index posted its steepest gain since 1991 on April 30 as the island allowed Chinese investments for the first time since a civil war ended six decades ago. Far EasTone Telecommunications Co., Taiwan’s third-largest phone company, surged by 7.6 percent to NT$37.65 after China Mobile Ltd. agreed to buy a 12 percent stake for NT$17.8 billion ($529 million).

Japanese Bonds Rise, Yields Fall to 4-Week Low, on Deflation

May 2 (Bloomberg) -- Japan’s 10-year bonds advanced, pushing yields to a four-week low yesterday, after a government report signaled Japan may return to deflation, easing concern higher prices will erode the value of debt.

Ten-year securities yesterday completed a third weekly gain, outperforming U.S. Treasuries and U.K. gilts, after a separate report showed the nation’s unemployment rate surged to the highest level since August 2004. Demand for debt also increased on concern swine flu will spread, hurting economies globally. Japan’s financial markets will be closed between May 4 and May 6 for the so-called Golden Week holidays.

“Concerns of deflation are positive for the bond market, especially as we can expect a prolonged period of monetary easing,” said Takashi Nishimura, a Tokyo-based analyst at Mitsubishi UFJ Securities Co., a unit of Japan’s largest bank by assets. “It’s going to take time for economic recovery. Swine flu is still a concern because we haven’t got a clue about its economic implications.”

The yield on the 1.3 percent bond due March 2019 fell 2.5 basis points this week to 1.395 percent, the lowest since April 3, in Tokyo at Japan Bond Trading Co., the nation’s largest interdealer debt broker. The price added 0.217 yen to 99.176 yen. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point.

Ten-year bond futures for June delivery gained 0.32 this week to 137.47 at the Tokyo Stock Exchange.

Japan’s bonds handed investors a return of 0.4 percent in the past three weeks through April 30, compared with a loss of 1.2 percent for holders of Treasuries, according to indexes compiled by Merrill Lynch & Co. U.K. gilts lost 0.4 percent, the indexes show.

Jobless Rate

A government report yesterday showed Japan’s jobless rate climbed to 4.8 percent in February, higher than the 4.6 percent expected by economists.

“It’s not the time to sell bonds,” said Eiji Dohke, chief strategist in Tokyo at UBS Securities Japan Ltd., one of the 24 primary dealers required to bid at government debt sales.

Consumer prices excluding fresh food fell 0.1 percent in March from a year earlier, the first decline since September 2007, the statistics bureau said yesterday in Tokyo. Economists expected a 0.2 percent decline.

“The consumer price index turned negative,” which may support investors’ sentiment, said Akihiko Inoue, chief market analyst in Tokyo at Mizuho Investors Securities Co., a unit of Japan’s second-largest bank. “Purchasing bond futures may be preferred before the long holiday.”

Breakeven Rate

Ten-year inflation-linked bonds yesterday yielded 1.86 percent more than similar-dated conventional debt, signaling investors expect the world’s second-largest economy to reenter deflation. The securities typically yield less than regular bonds because their principal payment increases at the same rate as inflation.

Japan will experience a general drop in prices through the first quarter of next year, according to a Bloomberg survey of economists.

Demand for bonds was limited after the Nikkei 225 Stock Average advanced 1.7 percent, extending gains into a third month. Chrysler LLC, the automaker that survived a near-death experience in 1979, on April 30 began a bankruptcy process designed to revive its business using small-car technology from Fiat SpA, its new partner.

“Chrysler and Fiat have formed a partnership that has a strong chance of success,” U.S. President Barack Obama said on April 30. “It’s a partnership that will save more than 30,000 jobs at Chrysler and tens of thousands of jobs at suppliers, dealers, and other businesses that rely on this company.”

‘More Optimistic’

“The market is more optimistic about Chrysler’s bankruptcy and looking toward the re-engineering of the company,” said Satoru Ogasawara, a foreign-exchange analyst and economist in Tokyo at Credit Suisse Group AG, the second-largest Swiss bank. The feeling is that “the bad news is over now.”

Demand for bonds increased as swine flu reached 11 countries, heightening concerns of a global pandemic. More than 250 people have swine flu confirmed by genetic tests, according to the World Health Organization’s Web site.

Hundreds more cases are suspected in New York, Mexico and Australia. The health agency said thousands of samples from sick patients are backlogged for testing, and disease trackers are looking at whether an outbreak in Spain should trigger a declaration of a pandemic.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

New Zealand Annual Trade Gap Narrows as Exports Rise

April 29 (Bloomberg) -- New Zealand’s annual trade deficit narrowed in March as rising commodity prices and the sale of an aircraft bolstered exports to a record.

The gap narrowed to NZ$4.8 billion ($2.7 billion) in the 12 months ended March 31 from NZ$5.16 billion in the year through February, Statistics New Zealand said in Wellington today. The median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey of 10 analysts was for a NZ$4.89 billion shortfall.

World prices of butter, meat and other commodities rose for the first time in eight months in March, buoying exports that make up 30 percent of the New Zealand economy. The annual deficit may narrow further as a domestic recession curbs demand for imports. Finance Minister Bill English said last week the economy is probably in its sixth quarter of contraction.

“There were some positive signs for agricultural exports,” said Philip Borkin, an economist at ANZ National Bank Ltd. in Wellington. “The economy is definitely rebalancing as imports come under pressure. We think we have seen the peak in the current-account deficit.”

New Zealand’s dollar bought 56.10 U.S. cents at 11:40 a.m. in Wellington from 55.82 cents immediately before the report was released.

The current-account deficit, the broadest measure of trade because it includes investment and tourism, was a record NZ$16.07 billion, or 8.9 percent of gross domestic product in the year ended Dec. 31. ANZ expects the gap will narrow to 5.8 percent of GDP by the end of 2009.

Monthly Gap

Economists monitor the rolling, 12-month trade balance because of volatility in the month-on-month figures, which aren’t seasonally adjusted. In March, there was a trade surplus of NZ$324 million compared with a NZ$43 million deficit a year earlier.

Exports rose 18 percent from a year earlier to NZ$4.04 billion, led by the NZ$128 million sale of an aircraft and gains in beef, lamb and apple prices, the statistics agency said. The kiwifruit export season also began earlier than usual.

Commodity prices rose 1 percent in March from February, according to an index compiled by ANZ National Bank Ltd.

Sales of milk powder, butter and cheese, which make up almost one-fifth of overseas shipments, gained 4.5 percent. Crude oil and aluminum exports declined.

Imports jumped 6.9 percent to NZ$3.72 billion led by electrical machinery, particularly for wind farms, the agency said. Vehicle and fuel imports fell.

Crude oil imports dropped 49 percent from a year earlier. The import and export figures aren’t adjusted for inflation and reflect changing commodity prices as well as actual shipments. Crude oil imports fell by a third to 284,000 tons from a year earlier. Prices declined 20 percent.

Imports recovered from a three-year low in February. Still, first-quarter imports slumped 13 percent from the fourth quarter, the statistics agency said.

ANZ Bank’s Profit Slumps as Bad-Debt Provisions Almost Double

April 29 (Bloomberg) -- Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd., the nation’s fourth-largest lender, said profit fell 28 percent in the first half as bad debts almost doubled.

The stock slumped 4.7 percent, the most in more than two months, after the Melbourne-based bank reported that net income dropped to A$1.42 billion ($1 billion) in the six months ended March 31, from A$1.96 billion a year earlier. The bank’s credit impairment charge almost doubled to A$1.44 billion.

Chief Executive Officer Mike Smith, who joined ANZ after running HSBC Holdings Plc’s Asian operations, faces an Australian economy headed for its first recession in 18 years. Cameron Clyne, CEO of larger rival National Australia Bank Ltd., reported lower earnings yesterday and said bad debts would spread from businesses to consumers.

“Arrears across a lot of their markets are picking up, so you’re seeing the impact of Australia sliding into recession,” said Sean Fenton, who manages about $324 million at Tribeca Investment Partners in Sydney. “We’re seeing the other side of the coin with bad debts accelerating, so I think that’s enough to put a halt to the bank rally.”

ANZ shares, which have rallied 33 percent since a February low, declined 78 cents to A$15.85 at 11:09 a.m. in Sydney. National Australia Bank fell 3.6 percent to A$20.51.

ANZ cut its dividend for the first time since the 1991 recession as its credit impairment charge almost doubled to A$1.44 billion. It will pay 46 cents per share for the half year.

Rising Provisions

Credit provisions rose to A$247 million and are expected to double in the full year. Provisions for credit impairments increased 72 percent to A$626 million. Individual provisions occurred primarily in Australia, including one for its securities firm and others for property, financial, and service industry businesses.

“An uptick in provision levels in March, driven largely by stress being experienced by middle-market customers,” means the bank expects full-year provision levels will be “somewhat higher” than anticipated at a trading update in February, ANZ said in today’s statement.

Gross impaired loans total A$3.69 billion, or 1.03 percent of net advances, the bank said.

“Provisioning is probably higher than first thought, but offsetting that income is also higher,” said Paul Xiradis, who manages the equivalent of $8 billion as chief executive officer of Ausbil Dexia Ltd. in Sydney including ANZ shares.

National Australia Bank said yesterday that first-half profit fell 0.9 percent to A$2.66 billion as bad debts rose. Cash earnings, which exclude gains from currency and interest rate movements on the bank’s debt, fell 9.4 percent.

Government-Backed Debt

Problems in ANZ’s markets at home have diverted Smith’s attention from Asia, where he plans to increase the bank’s business. The bank confirmed interest in Royal Bank of Scotland Plc’s Asian assets this month and plans to open 20 branches in China by 2012.

Smith has sold government-backed debt to protect the bank’s balance sheet and maintain profitability as the economy slows.

Australia may have followed the U.S., U.K., Japan and Europe into its first recession since 1991 after gross domestic product fell 0.5 percent in the fourth quarter.

“The expected slowdown in Australia and New Zealand is now playing out with the outlook for provisions in the second half likely to be somewhat more difficult than the first half and we expect that situation to continue through to early 2010,” said Smith in today’s statement.

ANZ has completed raising 87 percent of funds it plans to source in bond markets for the year through Sept. 30, it said.

Capital Ratios

Australia’s biggest lenders have sold more than $85 billion of state-backed notes since Nov. 28, when the AAA-rated government first guaranteed their funding in a bid to thaw credit markets frozen after Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.’s bankruptcy, according to the central bank.

“The Australian banking system is considerably better placed to weather the current challenges than many other systems around the world,” the Reserve Bank of Australia said in its half-yearly Financial Stability Review published March 26.

ANZ Bank’s Tier 1 ratio, a key measure of financial health, was 8.2 percent. The cost-to-income ratio at its Australian business, a measure of profitability, dropped 162 basis points to 36.1 percent. Net interest margin, the difference between what the bank earns from loans and pays to depositors, increased 22 basis points to 2.22 percent.

Australian Stocks Drop on ANZ Profit; South Korean Shares Rise

April 29 (Bloomberg) -- Australian stocks fell for a second day after the nation’s fourth-biggest lender reported a slump in profits and commodity prices slipped. South Korean equities rose as the nation’s current-account surplus widened.

Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. sank 4.8 percent in Sydney after rising bad debts dragged first-half profit down by 28 percent. Rio Tinto Group, the world’s third-biggest mining company, declined 1.4 percent after metals traded in London fell for a second day. Hynix Semiconductor Inc., the world’s second- biggest computer-memory chipmaker, rose 1.5 percent in Seoul after the Maeil Business Newspaper said the company plans to sell equipment.

Australia’s benchmark S&P/ASX 200 Index dropped 0.2 percent to 3,702.60 at 11:16 a.m. Sydney time. South Korea’s Kospi index gained 1 percent to 1,313.50. The MSCI Asia Pacific excluding Japan Index rose 0.4 percent to 263.90, after a two-day, 4 percent decline. The Japanese market is shut for a holiday.

“People in the market are looking for a reason to buy cheap equities,” said Angus Gluskie, who manages about $256 million at White Funds Management Pty. in Sydney. “They are being too optimistic relative to the fundamentals that are out there.”

Futures on the U.S. Standard & Poor’s 500 Index gained 0.5 percent. The gauge lost 0.3 percent yesterday as concerns that banks need more capital and the swine-flu outbreak will thwart an economic recovery offset a bigger-than-expected jump in consumer confidence.

Overseas Shipments

ANZ Banking slumped 4.8 percent to A$15.84. Rio Tinto lost 1.5 percent to A$60.68 as a measure of metals traded in London fell 3 percent.

In Seoul, companies that rely on overseas sales advanced after the central bank said South Korea’s current-account surplus widened to a record $6.65 billion in March as imports fell and the pace of a decline in exports eased. Overseas shipments, which make up 60 percent of South Korea’s gross domestic product, rose 10.5 percent from February.

Samsung Electronics Co., the world’s second-largest maker of mobile phones, added 0.9 percent to 580,000. UBS AG increased its share-price target by 9.1 percent.

Hynix gained 1.4 percent to 14,200 won. The company plans to sell about 500 billion won ($368 million) of equipment, the Maeil reported, citing unidentified industry officials.

Monday, April 27, 2009

Deutsche Bank Chief’s Contract Extended After Navigating Crisis

April 28 (Bloomberg) -- Josef Ackermann, who helped Deutsche Bank AG navigate the financial crisis, will have his contract as chief executive officer extended by three years.

Ackermann, 61, acceding to a supervisory board request, will remain CEO until the annual general meeting in 2013, Frankfurt-based Deutsche Bank said in a statement late yesterday. He was scheduled to step down in May of next year.

The Swiss-born CEO, who has been at the helm since 2002, helped Deutsche Bank skirt the worst of the U.S. subprime mortgage market crash and resist taking government aid. The German bank returned to profit in the first quarter, analyst estimates show, bouncing back from the first annual loss in more than 50 years in 2008.

“This is about continuity,” said Manfred Jakob, a Frankfurt-based analyst at SEB AG. “Ackermann has best exemplified the company’s strategy of both pursuing investment banking and expanding retail banking. Overall, it’s not a bad move.”

Deutsche Bank, which reports first-quarter earnings today, may post net income of 773 million euros ($1.02 billion), compared with a loss of 131 million euros a year earlier, according to the median estimate of 13 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg.

Ackermann “steered the bank safely through the crisis,” said supervisory board Chairman Clemens Boersig in the statement. “Our performance in the first quarter 2009 is impressive evidence of this.”

‘Secures’ Leadership

Deutsche Bank rose 55 percent so far this year in Frankfurt trading. The stock is the third-biggest gainer in the Bloomberg index of 65 European banks, following a 69 percent slump last year. The company has a market value of 26.9 billion euros.

Ackermann said on Feb. 5 at the annual earnings press conference in Frankfurt that he was sticking to his plan to step down in May 2010, when asked by Bloomberg News whether he’d consider extending his contract.

Deutsche Bank appointed four executives to its management board in March, stoking speculation one of them would be selected to succeed Ackermann. Investment banking co-heads Anshu Jain and Michael Cohrs were named to the board, as was Rainer Neske, the head of private and business clients, and regional management chief Juergen Fitschen.

The decision to extend the contract “secures leadership continuity for the bank,” Boersig said in the statement.

Higher Profit

Since taking over, Ackermann boosted Deutsche Bank’s profit 16-fold by 2007 by cutting more than a quarter of the workforce, selling industrial stakes in companies such as Daimler AG and expanding the investment bank. Ackermann, who joined from Credit Suisse in 1996 and headed the investment bank before becoming CEO, expanded the securities unit and the bank’s international operations.

Nearly two-thirds of the 80,000 employees work outside Germany. The bank extended its geographical reach to markets including Qatar and Peru, and generated almost three-quarters of its revenue abroad by 2007 compared with about half in 2001.

Ackermann also helped turn Deutsche Bank into a sales-and- trading powerhouse. The German bank ranked No. 2 among underwriters of international debt issues last year, and was among the top 10 underwriters for equity and equity-linked securities, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. It ranked seventh in providing merger advice.

Ackermann has been investing in consumer banking to reduce reliance on investment banking, which generated about half of earnings in 2007. Deutsche Bank earlier this year acquired a stake in retail lender Deutsche Postbank AG and has an option to gain control in the future.

National Australia Profit Falls on Rising Bad Debts

April 28 (Bloomberg) -- National Australia Bank Ltd., the country’s biggest by assets, said first-half profit fell 0.9 percent as bad debts rose in an economy headed for its first recession in 18 years.

Net income dropped to A$2.66 billion ($1.9 billion) in the six months ended March 31, from A$2.69 billion a year earlier, as the bad and doubtful debt charge for the half rose to A$1.8 billion, the Melbourne-based bank said in a statement today. Cash earnings, which excludes gains from currency and interest rate movements on the bank’s debt, declined 9.4 percent.

“The bad and doubtful debt charge is a little higher than some would have expected and may head higher,” said Peter Vann, who manages more than $600 million at Constellation Capital Management Ltd. in Sydney. “The outlook from here is really going to depend on the outlook for the economy.”

Cameron Clyne, who took over as CEO from John Stewart on Jan. 1, is also facing pressure in the U.K., where the company’s Clydesdale and Yorkshire banking units are confronting the prospect of the worst recession since the 1930s. National Australia is firing workers and cut its dividend payout by a quarter to 73 cents in the half to weather the downturn.

The bank’s shares, which have rallied 27 percent since March 9, dropped 4 percent to A$21.17 at 10:23 a.m. in Sydney.

Collective provisions increased by A$1.2 billion to A$3.6 billion, while specific provision increased by A$800 million to A$1.3 billion since March 2008. Total provisions as at March 31 stood at A$4.9 billion, reflecting “a downgrade in customer credit ratings across all businesses,” the bank said.

‘Tough’ Conditions

“The fall in cash earnings reflects the tough economic conditions that continued to deteriorate as the half year progressed,” Clyne said in the statement. “We continued to grow revenue while carefully managing costs, but this was offset by increased bad and doubtful debts and higher funding costs.”

In Australia, bank cash earnings rose 7.5 percent, while earnings at its MLC wealth management unit dropped 28 percent. In the U.K., where National Australia owns Clydesdale Bank Plc and Yorkshire Bank Plc, cash earnings tumbled 64 percent.

National Australia remains committed to Clydesdale Bank Plc and Yorkshire Bank Plc, it said in a briefing on March 12. With more than 190 retail branches for Yorkshire Bank and 150 for Clydesdale, the company derives the highest proportion of earnings abroad among Australia’s four biggest lenders.

The bank has already raised more than 86 percent of the funds it plans to source in bond markets for the year through Sept. 30, as it takes advantage of the government’s plan to guarantee wholesale debt sold by lenders in Australia. Its Teir- 1 ration, a key measure of financial health was at 8.31 percent as at March 31.

Improved Margins

Deposits increased 13 percent to A$340.7 billion, mainly due to growth in term deposits, the bank said.

National Australia’s banking cost-to-income ratio, a measure of profitability, improved by 360 basis points to 43.4 percent. Net interest margin, the difference between what the bank earns from loans and pays to depositors, rose 17 basis points to 2.53 percent in Australia, and dropped 52 basis points to 2.14 percent in the U.K.

The bank has shed 205 jobs in the past six months, giving it a work force of 39,783 full-time equivalent workers, it said.

Australia’s economy may already have followed the U.S., U.K., Japan and Europe into its first recession since 1991 after gross domestic product fell 0.5 percent in the fourth quarter.

Japan Retail Sales Drop for Seventh Month on Job Woes

April 28 (Bloomberg) -- Japan’s retail sales fell for a seventh month in March as worsening job prospects and declining wages prompted households to cut spending.

Sales slid 3.9 percent from a year earlier after decreasing 5.7 percent in February, the steepest pace since February 2002, the Trade Ministry said today in Tokyo. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg predicted a 4.7 percent drop.

The world’s second-largest economy will shrink 3.3 percent this fiscal year, the sharpest contraction in the postwar period, the government forecast yesterday. Finance Minister Kaoru Yosano said the economy remains in a “crisis” as a slump in exports and factory output take a toll on employment.

“The labor market is deteriorating, profits have plunged; everything points to consumer retrenchment,” said Masamichi Adachi, a senior economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in Tokyo.

The Nikkei 225 Stock Average opened lower, before gaining 0.6 percent at 9:57 a.m. in Tokyo. The yen traded at 96.55 per dollar from 96.38 before the report.

The Trade Ministry cut its assessment of retail sales, saying for the first time that they are “decreasing” compared with “on a decreasing trend” a month earlier.

Sales of clothing, general goods and automobiles led the declines, the ministry said. Fuel sales also slumped after gasoline prices dropped from a year ago.

Large Retailers

Receipts at large retailers including department stores and supermarkets tumbled 8.1 percent, matching the steepest decline in 11 years set in February.

Aeon Co., Japan’s largest supermarket chain, posted its first annual loss in seven years. Takashimaya Co., the country’s third-largest department store operator, said this month that it expects net income to decline 36 percent in the current fiscal year.

“Conditions will remain very severe for the next year at least,” Koji Suzuki, president of Takashimaya, said April 15.

Adachi at JPMorgan said retailers may get a boost this month as households start spending 2 trillion yen in handouts as part of a stimulus plan unveiled by Prime Minister Taro Aso last October.

“From April we expect an improvement because of the cash benefits, but we still don’t know how much it will help,” Adachi said. He said only about a quarter of the 12,000 yen most people are eligible for will be spent on items they wouldn’t otherwise buy.

Aso has pledged to spend 25 trillion yen in three stimulus packages since he took office in September to reduce the effect on households and businesses of a collapse in exports.

Jobless Rate

The jobless rate rose to a three-year high of 4.4 percent in February. Household spending fell for a 12th month and wages dropped 2.7 percent, matching the fastest pace in five years.

Toyota Motor Corp., the world’s largest automaker, last week said it will cut summer bonuses of managers in Japan by 60 percent in anticipation of its first loss in almost six decades.

From a month earlier, retail sales dropped 1.1 percent in March, the sixth straight decline, the Trade Ministry said.

“Households will remain cautious about spending as the job market worsens and incomes decline,” said Yoshiki Shinke, a senior economist at Dai-Ichi Life Research Institute in Tokyo. “The outlook for consumer spending is grim.”

LBO, Hedge Fund ‘Anchor’ Weighs Down AIG, Hartford

April 27 (Bloomberg) -- Insurers’ holdings in private equity and hedge funds shrank 10 percent last year as companies pared riskier investments amid a global decline in stocks and slowdown in leveraged buyouts.

The companies had $44.7 billion in the so-called alternative assets in 2008, down from $49.8 billion in 2007, according to the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, which collects data on firms’ U.S. holdings.

The decline is a reversal after the holdings almost doubled in the two years ended Dec. 31, 2007, as insurers reached for higher yields than possible on most bonds. The slide increased pressure on insurers including American International Group Inc. at the same time the industry posted record writedowns tied to housing. AIG lost $2.38 billion on alternatives in 2008, compared with a $3.72 billion gain in 2007.

“In the good years, it’s an amplifier of returns, it will help you exceed earning expectations,” said Josh Goldfarb, a financial advisory director specializing in insurers at PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP. “In the bad years, it’s an anchor around your legs, it can really drag a company down from a returns standpoint.”

Hedge funds, mostly private pools of capital whose mangers participate substantially in the profits from their speculation on whether the price of assets will rise or fall, lost 18.3 percent in 2008 as they misjudged the severity of the biggest financial crisis since the Great Depression. The loss was the worst since Chicago-based Hedge Fund Research Inc. began tracking data in 1990.

‘Harshest’ Losses

Investors in private-equity funds face writedowns of 10 percent to 20 percent, with the “harshest” losses coming from the biggest buyout firms, said Steve Kandarian, chief investment officer of MetLife Inc., the biggest U.S. life insurer, in a conference call in February.

Buyout funds that purchased businesses with the intention of reselling them or holding public offerings face a “lack of exit opportunities,” as the recession limits potential investors’ access to credit, Kandarian said. The combined value of mergers and acquisitions worldwide plunged 39 percent in 2008 from a year earlier.

Life insurers, which held $33.1 billion of the alternatives, three times more than property-casualty companies, accounted for most of the decline, according to NAIC data. AIG, based in New York, said its holdings shrank by 16 percent to $24.4 billion last year. That accounts for about 3.8 percent of the company’s total investments. The insurer was rescued by the U.S. last year after losses tied to subprime loans.

AIG, MetLife

AIG Chief Executive Officer Edward Liddy, appointed by the government last year, named a new investment head in January, and announced plans in October to sell AIG’s remaining stake in Blackstone Group LP, the world’s largest private-equity firm. AIG spent $150 million in 1998 for a 7 percent stake in Blackstone, which went public in 2007.

MetLife reported worsening results from the assets every quarter in 2008, culminating in a $540 million fourth-quarter miss of its expectations. In 2007, MetLife beat its target for alternative income every quarter, peaking in the final three months of the year with $270 million more than planned. The New York-based insurer had $6.04 billion of limited partnership interests as of Dec. 31, or about 2 percent of total investments.

The insurer’s stock is down about 16 percent this year through April 24 and plunged 43 percent in 2008 after gaining the prior five years.

‘Caught by Surprise’

Hartford Financial Services Group Inc. said that its holdings lost $445 million in 2008, compared with a $255 million gain the year earlier, as the size of the assets declined 11 percent to $2.3 billion. Hartford stock dropped 42 percent this year after plunging 81 percent in 2008. Hartford replaced its chief investment officer last year.

“Some insurers were caught by surprise as to how volatile” alternative investments where, said Paul Newsome, an analyst at Sandler O’Neill & Partners. “Now, they want to be as conservative as they possibly can.”

Mark Herr, an AIG spokesman, Shannon Lapierre of Hartford and Christopher Breslin of MetLife declined to comment.

Allstate Corp., the largest publicly traded U.S. home and auto insurer, said that its alternatives lost $36 million last year, compared with a $293 million gain the year earlier. The company had $2.79 billion in the assets as of Dec. 31.

Travelers, Chubb

Travelers Cos., the second-largest U.S. commercial insurer, will invest largely in bonds rather than spend like a “sailor on leave” to seek higher gains from private equity and hedge funds, Chief Executive Officer Jay Fishman said in September.

Travelers lost $137 million last year on a portfolio including private equity, hedge funds and real estate partnerships, compared with a $431 million gain in 2007.

“Our investment operations are in place to support our insurance operation, not the other way around,” Fishman said.

Chubb Corp., the insurer of corporate boards and high-end homes, said first-quarter results included a $248 million loss on alternative investments. The Warren, New Jersey-based company said last week that the second-quarter net realized loss from the holdings would probably be $50 million or less.

Hartford, MetLife, AIG, Travelers and Allstate are expected to announce first-quarter results this month or in May.

Sell Indian Stocks Ahead of Poll Results, Credit Suisse Says

April 27 (Bloomberg) -- Investors should lower their holdings of Indian stocks on concern the nation’s ongoing elections may prove a “sharp disappointment,” Credit Suisse Group said.

Shares appear to have priced in a victory for a “market- friendly, stable government” without factoring the possibility of other outcomes, the brokerage said. Regional investors should instead buy other so-called high beta markets and local shareholders should reduce their holdings of more volatile stocks such as Bharat Heavy Electricals Ltd., they added.

The Bombay Stock Exchange Sensitive Index has gained 39 percent since sliding to 2009 low on March 9, making India one of the 10 best-performing stock markets among the 84 tracked by Bloomberg in that period. The MSCI Asia-Pacific Index rallied 26 percent since that date while the MSCI Emerging Markets Index climbed 32 percent.

“Election uncertainties are now badly mispriced,” Credit Suisse analysts Nilesh Jasani and Arya Sen wrote in a report today. “Chances of a market-friendly government have not improved in the last few weeks. As a result, the near surety of such an outcome in the stock market has opened the doors for a sharp disappointment.”

Indians began electing on April 16 a new government that will have to revive an economy growing at its slowest pace in six years. Votes will be counted on May 16, with opinion polls showing neither the Congress party-led United Progressive Alliance nor the main opposition, led by the Hindu-nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party, winning a clear majority.

Economy’s Prospects

Gains in Indian stocks over the past two months also suggest that investors are overly “positive” on the prospects for India’s economy, the Credit Suisse analysts said. The Reserve Bank of India said on April 21 the economy may expand 6 percent in the fiscal year that started April 1, the slowest pace since 2003.

Even if the election results disappoint investors, signs of improved funding may boost growth at Indian companies, helping extend gains in share prices, Credit Suisse said. Unitech Ltd., the nation’s No. 2 developer, was among companies that sold shares this year to raise funds.

“If the capital market-based funding continues to be strong and somehow $5 billion to $10 billion worth of funding gets done in the next three months, corporate India could be back on a strong growth path,” the analysts wrote.

Credit Suisse didn’t specify which “high beta” markets investors should buy at the expense of Indian equities.

Bharat Heavy, the nation’s biggest power equipment maker, has gained 21 percent this year, while Hindalco Industries Ltd., India’s largest aluminum producer, has climbed 11 percent. Credit Suisse lowered its rating on Bharat Heavy to “neutral” from “outperform” and downgraded Hindalco to “underperform” from “neutral” this month.

India’s Sensitive Index Advances for a Third Day; ICICI Gains

April 27 (Bloomberg) -- India’s Sensitive index rose for a third day. ICICI Bank Ltd., the nation’s second-largest by assets, advanced after its rating was raised at Goldman, Sachs & Co. on improving earnings.

ICICI jumped to the highest in almost four months. Ranbaxy Laboratories Ltd., the nation’s largest drugmaker, dropped after it posted a loss for the third straight quarter as sales fell in the U.S. and it forecast a loss for the year.

The Bombay Stock Exchange’s Sensitive Index rose 0.4 percent to 11,371.85. The S&P CNX Nifty Index on the National Stock Exchange fell 0.3 percent to 3,470. The BSE 200 Index dropped less than 0.1 percent to 1,343.73. Nifty futures for April delivery declined 0.5 percent to 3,465.

ICICI surged 8.2 percent to 467.95 rupees, the highest since Jan. 7. Net income fell 35 percent to 7.44 billion rupees ($149 million) in the three months ended March 31, higher than the 7.3 billion rupee median estimate of analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News. The stock was raised to “buy” from “neutral” at Goldman Sachs, which said ICICI’s fundamentals were improving.

“The core earnings have improved even though treasury income was lower,” said Jayesh Shroff, who helps manage $5.5 billion in assets at SBI Asset Management Co. in Mumbai. “That’s encouraging.”

Swine Flu Drug

Cipla Ltd., India’s second-largest drugmaker by value, added 1.5 percent to 244 rupees. The stock rose after fourth- quarter profit climbed 41 percent to 2.53 billion rupees. The company also said it can supply 1.5 million doses of generic Tamiflu drugs to help fight an outbreak of swine flu within four to six weeks.

Jaiprakash Associates Ltd. gained 3.5 percent to 130.30 rupees. India’s biggest dam builder said profit in the quarter ended March 31 rose 83 percent to 3.85 billion rupees. That beat the 1.95 billion rupee median profit estimate in a Bloomberg News survey.

Ranbaxy fell 4.7 percent to 167.65 rupees. The net loss for the first quarter was 7.61 billion rupees compared with a profit of 1.37 billion rupees a year earlier. That’s wider than the 181 million rupee median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey after the company booked 9.19 billion rupees in losses on foreign- currency options.

The company expects to post a loss of about 8 billion rupees in 2009 on full-year sales of 70 billion rupees, according to an e-mailed statement. Ranbaxy shares were downgraded by Citigroup Inc. and Credit Suisse Group.

Overseas funds bought a net 3.12 billion rupees of Indian stocks on April 23, according to the nation’s market regulator.

The following shares were among the most active on the exchange:

Aban Offshore Ltd. (ABAN IN) dropped 8.9 percent to 442.60 rupees after it reported a loss of 930.4 million rupees in the fourth quarter, compared with a profit of 339.2 million a year earlier.

Ballarpur Industries Ltd. (BILT IN) fell 5.1 percent to 16.75 rupees. India’s biggest paper maker said profit in the three months ended March 31 dropped 76 percent to 178.9 million rupees. The company will buy back bonds worth $60 million.

Indiabulls Real Estate Ltd. (IBREL IN) declined 11 percent to 130.75 rupees. The company plans to raise as much as $600 million or its Indian rupee equivalent selling shares to institutions.

Raymond Ltd. (RW IN) fell 3.9 percent to 90.15 rupees. India’s biggest maker of woolen fabrics reported a loss of 2.39 billion rupees in the fourth quarter, compared with a profit of 269.7 million rupees a year ago.

Wockhardt Ltd. (WPL IN) slid 5.4 percent to 97.10 rupees. The drugmaker reported a loss of 202.4 million rupees in the fourth quarter ended March 31, compared with a profit of 509 million rupees a year ago.