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Friday, January 29, 2010

Bankers in favour of paying global fee

Published: January 30 2010 00:02 | Last updated: January 30 2010 00:02

Some of the world’s most prominent bankers have come out in favour of a global bank wind-down fund, a concession from the industry after weeks of fighting proposals for new taxes in the US and Europe.

Government rescue packages for banksJosef Ackermann, chief executive of Deutsche Bank, told the Financial Times on Friday : “To help solve the too-big-to-fail problem I’m advocating a European rescue and resolution fund for banks. Of course, the capital for this fund would have to come from banks to a large degree.”

Bob Diamond, president of Barclays , also supported the idea of a global levy, which could see banks contribute tens or even hundreds of billions of dollars over a period of years.



“I think every G20 country would like to have an insurance scheme that would help cover the cost of any future bank failure,” he told the FT at the World Economic Forum in Davos. “A co-ordinated global system is preferable to an unlevel playing field.”

Support has been growing among regulators and politicians for an insurance levy as the best way to ensure that the burden of big bank collapses would not fall on taxpayers. But until now bankers have resisted the idea. They say the impetus for considering a global levy came from President Barack Obama’s $90bn balance sheet levy, which will tax banks in the US to recover the cost of an earlier bail-out programme.
In practice, any new levy would be more like the proposed US “resolution fund”, which is currently before the Senate.

The House of Representatives approved a bill in December that creates a resolution fund for winding down big companies without the taxpayer expense of the AIG rescue or the damage to markets of the uncontrolled Lehman bankruptcy.

The Senate is considering whether to approve the House’s version, which levies an up-front fee on big banks, or to follow the Treasury in advocating that banks reimburse the taxpayer after any wind-down.

Regulators will be encouraged by the support of Mr Ackermann and Mr Diamond for a global levy. Jaime Caruana, head of the Bank for International Settlements, the umbrella body for global regulation, told the FT the most realistic way to institute a global levy would be to begin with Europe.

Subbarao Seeks to Assure Investors on Prices, Aid India Rebound

Jan. 30 (Bloomberg) -- India’s central bank Governor Duvvuri Subbarao sought to assure investors that he will restrain inflation, while refraining from raising interest rates to support a rebound in Asia’s third-largest economy.

The Reserve Bank of India yesterday left benchmark rates unchanged and instead boosted the ratio of deposits lenders must hold in reserve by more than forecast, to 5.75 percent. The step is part of a gradual tightening of monetary policy that will lead to higher borrowing costs in coming months, said Rajeev Malik, a regional economist at Macquarie Group Ltd.

The goal is to secure a recovery in economic growth toward 8 percent this year while containing a surge in inflation that would impoverish households and drive up longer-term bond yields. Subbarao, 60, is emulating a course taken across the region, with nations from China to the Philippines taking steps toward higher borrowing costs without rushing to raise rates.

“The Reserve Bank of India has embarked on a handle-with- care monetary exit,” said Singapore-based Malik. “While inflation has become more important, it has not taken its eyes off growth dynamics.”

Malik expects the central bank to raise interest rates by between 1 and 1.5 percentage points over the next year, starting in either March or April.

India’s generic 10-year government bond yields reached 7.71 percent on Jan. 13, the highest level since November 2008, and closed at 7.58 percent yesterday in Mumbai.

‘Keeping a Vigil’

“Bond yields haven’t reacted much and are likely to remain stable,” said Jayesh Mehta, country treasurer and head of fixed income at Bank of America Corp. in India. “The RBI has been keeping a vigil on inflation and had announced its intentions several months back.”

India’s benchmark stock index gained 0.3 percent yesterday, reversing earlier losses, after the central bank predicted faster growth. The rupee gained 0.4 percent to 46.18 against the dollar from 46.36.

Subbarao expects India’s economy to grow 7.5 percent in the year to March 31 from the 6 percent forecast earlier as demand for manufactured goods and services rise. He also raised the bank’s inflation forecast to 8.5 percent by March 31 from 6.5 percent.

As a result, the cash reserve ratio was raised from 5 percent while the benchmark reverse repurchase rate was kept unchanged at 3.25 percent and the repurchase rate at 4.75 percent yesterday.

Currency Gains

Analysts anticipate currency gains as strengthening economies force central banks to act. The rupee may gain almost 8 percent by year-end to 43 per dollar, according to the median forecast in Bloomberg survey. China’s yuan and Malaysia’s ringgit are estimated to advance 3.7 percent.

China, Malaysia and the Philippines moved closer to raising interest rates in January.

In China, the central bank ordered some banks to pare lending, raised the ratio for deposits banks must set aside as reserves and guided bill yields higher this month after loan growth surged.

Malaysia kept borrowing costs unchanged on Jan. 26, while warning that rates cannot be kept “too low” for too long because of the need to prevent a build-up of “financial imbalances.” The Philippines increased its so-called rediscounting rate, one of the interest rates it charges lenders for borrowing money from the central bank.

Robust Growth

“The growth in emerging-market economies such as China and India is expected to be robust,” Subbarao said yesterday. He said India could sustain 7.5 percent growth in the next financial year starting April 1.

The International Monetary Fund on Jan. 26 boosted its 2010 gross domestic product growth projection for India to 7.7 percent from the 6.4 percent forecast in October.

India’s growth prospects are luring investments. Bridgestone Corp. said Jan. 29 that a subsidiary in India will begin production of radial tires for buses and trucks in the first half of 2011 to tap growing demand in the country. The Tokyo-based company will invest 3.3 billion yen ($36 million), for daily production of 400 units, it said.

Cisco Systems Inc. Chief Executive Officer John Chambers told CNBC in Davos Jan. 29 that he would be “not surprised” if China and India grew between 7 percent and 10 percent in 2010.

Subbarao said his objective is to “anchor” inflation expectations without hurting growth.

“The central bank has to balance growth versus inflation because in a country like India, inflation is sometimes more important than growth,” said Anil Singhvi, vice chairman of Reliance Natural Resources Ltd., a unit of India’s third-largest utility.

Inflation is politically sensitive in India as it hurts the poor the most. The Food & Agriculture Organization says 231 million people in the country are undernourished, more than in Sub-Saharan Africa. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s government is under pressure to tame inflation after opposition parties stepped up their criticism of his administration for failing to curb price gains.

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Japan Factory Production Rose, Unemployment Fell in December

Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) -- Japan’s industrial production rose and unemployment rate fell in December, signaling a continued recovery, while central bankers considered the threat to the economy from exchange rates, reports showed today.

Factory output increased 2.2 percent from the previous month, less than economists had projected, Trade Ministry figures showed today in Tokyo. The unemployment rate dropped to 5.1 percent from 5.2 percent, according to a separate release.

While the gains in production and jobs may reduce the danger of a return to recession, declines in consumer prices and an appreciating yen are forcing policy makers to remain open to further stimulus. Bank of Japan officials highlighted concern that the yen’s rise to a 14-year high would undermine business sentiment, minutes of their meetings last month showed today.

“This confirms that the worst is over,” said Masamichi Adachi, senior economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in Tokyo. “But these are very, very small improvements, and the jobs recovery ahead is going to be extremely slow, too.”

Bond futures rose, and headed for a three-week advance, as the evidence of continued deflation underpinned demand for the relative safety of government debt. Yields on benchmark 10-year bonds fell to 1.305 percent, matching the lowest level since Jan. 4, at Japan Bond Trading Co. The yen rose 0.3 percent to 89.66 per dollar.

A separate government report today showed household spending rose 2.1 percent in December from a year before, more than forecast and capping a fifth straight advance. The figures contrasted with data earlier this week showing retail sales tumbled 0.3 percent from a year ago.

More Work

The economy added 130,000 jobs in December, the biggest increase in four months. People found more work in medical, welfare and education sectors, while there were fewer jobs and manufacturing and retail industries, according to unadjusted figures in the report.

“Unemployment has improved a little bit but I don’t think we can be optimistic at all because the number is still more than 5 percent,” Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama told reporters today in Tokyo. “The situation remains where many people want to work but cannot find a job.”

Japan’s Diet yesterday approved a 7.2 trillion yen ($80 billion) economic package aimed at bolstering the recovery from the nation’s worst postwar recession.

“At least the worst is over,” said Yoshiki Shinke, senior economist at Dai-Ichi Life Research Institute in Tokyo. “But I’m concerned unemployment is going to stay stuck at this high level for some time.”

Cutting Staff

Some companies are still slashing jobs to rein in costs. Promise Co., Japan’s second-largest consumer lender, said yesterday it will cut 1,600 staff, or a third of its workforce, by the end of March 2011. The Tokyo-based company’s net income slumped 23 percent in the six months ended Sept. 30. Japan Airlines Corp., which filed for bankruptcy this month, will slash about 15,700 jobs by the end of March 2013.

The job-to-applicant ratio rose for a fourth month to 0.46, meaning there are 46 positions for every 100 candidates, the Labor Ministry said today. The same report showed there were 87 newly advertised jobs in December for every 100 people who started looking for work that month, the most since January. Economists regard the gauge as a leading indicator of employment.

Exports rose for the first time in 15 months in December, fueling production gains and may also be encouraging companies to increase overtime or hiring. Toyota Motor Corp. and Sumitomo Pipe & Tube Co. are among companies increasing production to meet growing demand in China.

Toyota, Nissan Motor Co. and Honda Motor Co. increased global production in December as automobile demand surged in China and U.S. sales recovered. Output at Toyota rose 33 percent from a year earlier, while Honda increased production 3.4 percent and Nissan’s surged 54 percent.

The manufacturers plan to increase production 1.3 percent this month and 0.3 percent in February, the government said today.

India May Debate Rate Increase, Tell Banks to Boost Reserves

Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) -- India’s central bank may debate whether to start raising interest rates today and will probably ask banks to set aside more cash to temper inflation as the second-fastest growing major economy accelerates.

The Reserve Bank of India may raise the cash reserve ratio to 5.5 percent from 5 percent, the first increase since 2008, according to the median forecast of 25 economists in a Bloomberg News survey. Seven respondents said the benchmark reverse repurchase rate may rise to 3.5 percent from 3.25 percent, while the rest see no change.

Governor Duvvuri Subbarao’s task is to head off a surge in inflation that would undermine purchasing power in the nation of 1.2 billion people. India is forecast to follow China this month in tightening monetary policy; part of a global withdrawal of stimulus measures that’s led to a decline in stock prices.

“Subbarao has to walk a tightrope,” said Sanjay Mathur, a Singapore-based economist at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc. “He has to be careful not to jeopardize India’s nascent growth while attempting to tame inflation.”

The bank is scheduled to release its monetary policy decision at 11:15 a.m. in Mumbai today.

Investors have already begun to anticipate the central bank taking its biggest step yet to rein in monetary stimulus. India’s generic 10-year government bond yields reached 7.71 percent this month, the highest level since November 2008, and closed at 7.56 percent yesterday in Mumbai. The benchmark stock index yesterday reached its lowest level since November, while the rupee has dropped about 2 percent since Jan. 11.

Inflation Concern

Inflation has emerged as a “major concern,” the central bank said in a report yesterday. The bank said economic recovery has coincided with “significant” build-up of price pressures. Subbarao said last week that he wants to support the recovery without “compromising” price stability.

India’s benchmark wholesale-price inflation accelerated to 7.3 percent in December, the fastest pace since November 2008. The RBI in October forecast price gains would reach 6.5 percent by March 31. Manufacturing inflation surged to 5.2 percent in December from 1.6 percent in October.

Industrial production rose 11.7 percent in November, the fastest pace in two years, as sales at companies including Hindustan Unilever Ltd. and Hero Honda Motors Ltd. surged.

Corporate Profits

Hindustan Unilever, India’s biggest maker of household products, said this week profit grew in the three months through December for the first time in three quarters. Hero Honda, the nation’s biggest motorcycle maker, reported a better-than- estimated 79 percent increase in third-quarter net income.

“What we’ve seen in India is a fairly strong recovery in domestic demand,” Jorg Decressin, deputy director of the International Monetary Fund’s monetary and capital markets office, told reporters in Washington this week. “It’s one of the countries where we’re pretty bullish.”

The IMF three days ago boosted its gross domestic product growth projection for India to 7.7 percent from 6.4 percent in October.

China, whose economy expanded the most since 2007 in the fourth quarter, is also acting to rein in price pressures. The People’s Bank of China has ordered some banks to pare lending, raised the ratio for deposits banks must set aside as reserves and guided bill yields higher this month after lending surged in January.

Commercial Loans

India’s credit growth has been more subdued. Commercial loans, which rose 13.7 percent in the two weeks ended Jan. 1 from a year earlier, are growing near the slowest pace in six years.

Most of the nation’s inflation is due to food costs, which shot up after deficient rains last year. They accounted for 80 percent of December’s inflation reading, government data showed.

“Policy makers should avoid any tightening of monetary policy to contain food-price inflation,” said Harsh Pati Singhania, president of the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry in New Delhi. “It will derail the growth momentum.”

India’s central bank prepares monetary policy in consultation with the finance ministry, which has faced criticism from opposition political parties in the past two months for failing to check surging prices.

Subbarao cut the cash reserve ratio in late 2008 to inject cash into the banking system and protect the Indian economy from the global recession. He has kept the reverse repurchase rate and the repurchase rate at a record low of 3.25 percent and 4.75 percent, respectively, since April.

Asset Sales

The Indian central bank may also delay raising interest rates to avoid “spooking” the markets before the government’s asset sales program, said Rohini Malkani, a Mumbai-based economist at Citigroup Inc.

The government plans to sell as much as 250 billion rupees ($5.4 billion) of stakes in companies including NMDC Ltd., the nation’s largest iron-ore producer, by the end of March as it tries to trim its budget deficit projected at a 16-year high.

“Monetary tightening will be incremental,” said Sashi Krishnan, chief investment officer at Bajaj Allianz Life Insurance Co., India’s second-largest private insurer. “The economy is just returning to growth and the central bank may not want to cap that.” Krishnan expects interest rates to rise as much as 1.25 percentage points in 2010.

Asian Junk Bonds to Beat High-Grade as U.S. Recovers, UBS Says

Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) -- Investors should buy Asian junk bonds as Treasury yields pushed higher by signs the U.S. economy is recovering erode the relative return from investment-grade debt, according to UBS AG.

“I’d pick high-yield over high-grade,” Edwin Chan, UBS’s head of Asian credit research, said in a phone interview from Hong Kong. Junk bonds pay a much bigger margin, so will continue to provide stronger returns regardless of fluctuations in debt sold by the world’s biggest economy, he said.

Two-year Treasury yields rose to their highest in two weeks yesterday and 10-year yields their highest in a week. President Barack Obama, delivering his first State of the Union address, called on Congress to pass tax cuts and spending that would further stimulate the economy and add jobs. Ten-year note yields, currently about 3.67 percent, may rise to 3.9 percent by the end of June, according to Mitsubishi UFJ Asset Management Co.

Signs the global economy is recovering after the worst recession since World War II is spurring demand for riskier assets. The extra return investors demand to own high-yield dollar debt in Asia has dropped 15.04 percentage points to 8.05 percentage points since Jan. 1 last year, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. data. For Asian high-grade dollar debt it has decreased 4.51 percentage points to 2.5 percentage points.

Credit spreads will tighten further in 2010, especially for high-yield debt, as the economic outlook improves, Chan said. High-yield, or junk, bonds are rated less than Baa3 by Moody’s Investors Service and below BBB- by Standard & Poor’s.

Junk Sales

Corporate high-yield bond sales in either dollars, euros or yen in Asia outside of Japan total $1.1 billion this month, compared with $6.2 billion for all 2009, Bloomberg data show.

Evergrande Real Estate Group Ltd. sold $750 million of 13 percent notes on Jan. 22, the biggest Chinese real estate high- yield offering ever, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch, which helped manage the sale. Evergrande’s bonds were yielding 12.8875 percent yesterday, prices from Calyon show.

It’s been the busiest start to a year in the U.S. in dollar terms for junk bonds in a decade, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Virgin Media Inc., the U.K.’s second-largest pay- television company, this month helped push offerings of high- yield debt in Europe to a record.

“More supply of high-yield and high-grade bonds is not necessarily a bad thing for credit spreads,” Chan said. “The demand for bonds is still high.”

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Australian Rate Gains Signal Challenge for Retailers

Jan. 28 (Bloomberg) -- Further Australian interest rate gains, which investors expect as early as next week, will prompt consumers to cut spending, the head of Australia’s biggest retailer Woolworths Ltd. said.

“Interest rate rises are not good for consumers full stop,” Chief Executive Officer Michael Luscombe, 56, said in a interview in Sydney yesterday after a report showed consumer prices rose more than some economists forecast. “I think 2010 is going to be a challenging year.”

Luscombe’s comments underscore the downside for retailers of an economic recovery that prompted Reserve Bank Governor Glenn Stevens to raise borrowing costs in December for an unprecedented third month. Concern about inflation, which the central bank aims to keep between 2 percent and 3 percent on average, is increasing pressure on Stevens to keep raising rates.

Woolworths, which benefited early last year as Prime Minister Kevin Rudd’s government distributed more than A$20 billion ($18 billion) in cash to households, yesterday posted the slowest sales growth in a Christmas quarter since 1993. Consumer spending accounts for more than half of Australia’s economy.

“Like all retailers we harbored a secret hope that a miracle might happen and people might find they didn’t spend all their stimulus -- but they clearly had,” Luscombe said.

Woolworths shares fell 2.7 percent to A$26.09 at 1:06 p.m. in Sydney. The S&P/ASX 200 consumer staple index, which tracks retailers in the Australian benchmark, fell 1.6 percent.

Revenue Falls

Revenue at Woolworths’ general merchandise division fell last quarter for the first time in at least seven years as demand slowed at its Big W discount stores and Dick Smith Electronics outlets, the company said yesterday.

Traders are betting there is a 72 percent chance of a quarter-point increase in Australia’s overnight cash rate target to 4 percent at the central bank’s next meeting on Feb. 2, according to Bloomberg calculations based on interbank futures on the Sydney Futures Exchange at 11:13 a.m. Prior to yesterday’s report, the chances of a move were 56 percent.

“Inflation is probably not low enough for the Reserve Bank to pause in February,” said Paul Brennan, an economist at Citigroup Inc. in Sydney. “The medium-term inflation outlook will increasingly be shaped by high commodity prices, signs of inflation pick-up in Asia and the recovery in the domestic economy.”

Core Inflation

The central bank’s so-called weighted-median gauge of inflation advanced 0.7 percent in the fourth quarter for an annual increase of 3.6 percent. Economists forecast gains of 0.6 percent and 3.5 percent respectively. The consumer price index rose an annual 2.1 percent.

“Discretionary spending levels will continue to be influenced by macro-economic factors,” Luscombe said.

Policy makers meet next week for the first time since Dec. 1 as signs mount of a recovery in Australia’s economy.

While inflation may “moderate in the near term,” it probably won’t slow “as far as thought likely six months ago,” Governor Stevens said last month, after boosting the benchmark rate to 3.75 percent. The consumer price index “will probably rise somewhat” this year, he said.

Employers added 135,700 jobs in the four months through December, the biggest four-month gain since 2006, pushing down the jobless rate to an eight-month low of 5.5 percent, a report showed Jan. 14. Consumer confidence jumped in January by the most in six months, a survey by Westpac Banking Corp. showed last week.

‘Weather Eye’

The creation of jobs is “one half of the equation, the other half is keeping a very careful weather eye on inflation and making sure our economic policy is balanced,” Rudd told 5AA Radio in Adelaide yesterday. His government is due to face an election this year.

The International Monetary Fund said this week that Australia’s gross domestic product will rise 2.5 percent this year and 3 percent in 2011. In October, it forecast 2 percent growth in 2010.

Stevens’s concern that inflation may strengthen more than forecast last year contrasts with remarks from policy makers in other countries. The European Central Bank, which this month kept its benchmark rate at a record low of 1 percent, said Jan. 21 that inflation is “expected to remain moderate,” and Federal Reserve officials said last month that inflation will “remain subdued for some time.”

New Zealand central bank Governor Alan Bollard said today the bank will keep its benchmark lending rate at a record-low 2.5 percent until the middle of this year because inflation is likely to remain within its target range until at least 2012.

Australia “is going into an upswing in 2010 from a higher starting point for inflation than you would probably like, and with less spare capacity than previously thought,” said Su-Lin Ong, senior economist at RBC Capital Markets Ltd. in Sydney. “It all points to a quarter-percentage point move next week.”

Satyam’s Raju Earns Pauper Status in U.S. Investor Litigation

Jan. 28 (Bloomberg) -- Ramalinga Raju, who resigned as chairman of Satyam Computer Services Ltd. after saying he overstated the company’s assets by $1 billion, was granted pauper status in U.S. litigation brought by investors.

U.S. District Judge Barbara Jones in New York approved the status for Raju; his brother Rama Raju, Satyam’s former chief executive officer; and Srinivas Vadlamani, the company’s ex- finance chief. Proceeding “in forma pauperis” means the three men won’t have to pay filing fees and other court costs tied to the litigation because of their financial condition.

“The court finds that defendants have adequately demonstrated that they are unable to pay,” Jones wrote in a Jan. 26 order.

The three men have also been charged criminally and have been in custody in India since last January. Shares and American depositary receipts of the software-services provider based in Hyderabad, India, have plunged since Jan. 7, 2009, when Raju wrote a letter to the board explaining the financial irregularities. His letter touched off India’s biggest corporate-fraud inquiry.

In November, India’s Central Bureau of Investigation said it found $607 million of additional fraud at the company. Investors in the U.S. suits, who say Raju’s confession wiped out $4 billion in market capitalization, filed at least a dozen class-action lawsuits that have been consolidated before Jones.

Ramalinga Raju, 55, Rama Raju, 50, and Vadlamani, 49, also asked Jones to appoint lawyers for them that they wouldn’t have to pay.

Lawyer Request Denied

She denied that request “at the present time,” finding that, because of their incarceration in India, “it would be unusually difficult for appointed counsel to meet with and otherwise competently represent defendants under the circumstances.”

The judge said they could renew the request later.

Keith Fleischman, a lawyer for the investors at Grant & Eisenhofer PA in New York, declined to comment on Jones’s rulings.

After Raju’s disclosures, India’s government fired the Satyam board and appointed new directors. Tech Mahindra Ltd., the Pune, India-based software company, gained control of Satyam in May.

American depositary receipts are issued by U.S. banks to allow investment in non-U.S. companies. Satyam raised $161.9 million from the May 2001 sale of its ADRs.

Satyam ADRs, each representing two ordinary shares, fell 17 cents, or 3.4 percent, to $4.85 yesterday in New York Stock Exchange composite trading. The ADRs have risen 5.2 percent this year.

The case is In re Satyam Computer Services Ltd. Securities Litigation, 09-md-02027, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York (Manhattan).

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

BHP, Rio Set to ‘Bounce Back’ to Record Profits on Recovery

Jan. 27 (Bloomberg) -- BHP Billiton Ltd. and Rio Tinto Group, the world’s biggest and third-largest mining companies, are set to return to record profits faster than estimated because of a quicker rebound in the global economy.

Brokers have increased London-based Rio’s 2010 earnings estimates and Melbourne-based BHP’s fiscal 2011 predictions by more than $1 billion in the past four weeks, according to Bloomberg data. Rio’s shares may gain 14 percent in the next 12 months and BHP’s almost 10 percent, according to the data.

The World Bank has raised its forecast for global growth in 2010 as the economy in China, the world’s biggest consumer of metals, expands at the fastest rate in three years. UBS AG and Citigroup Inc. are among brokers who’ve boosted profit estimates for BHP and Rio after they reported record iron ore output.

This year “is just about in the bag in terms of earnings,” said Ken West, who helps manage in Melbourne the equivalent of $1.9 billion at Perennial Investment Partners Ltd., including Rio and BHP shares. There’s no reason why profit at BHP and Rio shouldn’t be “bouncing back to those pre-global financial crisis earnings levels,” he said.

BHP declined 1 percent and Rio fell 1.1 percent in London trading yesterday. BHP spokeswoman Kelly Quirke and Rio spokesman Tony Shaffer declined to comment.

Rio may have net income of $9.3 billion in 2010, according to the median of 12 analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg. That would beat its record in 2006 of $7.4 billion. BHP may report profit of $16 billion in fiscal 2011, according to 13 analyst estimates, beating 2008’s record $15.4 billion. BHP reports earnings on Feb. 10 and Rio on Feb. 11.

‘Picking Up’

Mining company profits plunged after the global financial crisis struck in 2008. Now, Rio, BHP and South Korea’s Posco, Asia’s most profitable steelmaker, are raising production as demand from carmakers and builders rebounds.

Alcoa Inc. the largest U.S. aluminum maker, expects earnings to improve this year and Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc., the world’s largest publicly traded copper producer, posted fourth-quarter profit that topped analysts’ estimates.

“We are hearing from not just Rio but other companies, demand is picking up,” Glyn Lawcock, managing director of resources research at UBS AG in Sydney, said in an interview on Bloomberg TV after Rio’s production report Jan. 14. He’s forecasting a 10 to 15 percent gain in Rio’s stock this year.

BHP may report profit of $18 billion in fiscal 2011, according to UBS. BHP reported second-quarter output Jan. 20.

‘Volatile Year’

To be sure, the World Bank said the global recovery may lose momentum in the second half of the year as stimulus programs wind down and unemployment persists. Stocks fell in Asia and Europe last week after Chinese regulators told some of the nation’s banks to limit lending. Asian stocks had the biggest weekly drop since March on concern the pace of economic growth will prompt central banks from China to India to curb price increases. Australian mining stocks fell amid concern the nation may raise taxes on mining projects.

“We expect another volatile year in 2010 as the removal of fiscal and monetary stimulus in the U.S., Europe and Asia is likely to be accompanied by a period of relatively weak growth,” Deutsche Bank AG analysts led by Paul Young said in a report this month.

Steel output in China, the largest maker, rose to a record last year as government stimulus spending boosted demand from builders and automakers. Copper production also rose to a record. A stimulus-driven rebound is helping boost confidence in the global economy as equity markets rally from last year’s low and industrial production rises worldwide.

‘Faster Turnaround’

“Throughout 2009, China has surprised on the upside every reporting period,” said Grant Craighead, managing director of Sydney-based Stock Resource. “Whatever the consensus view was amongst economists China always came in a bit stronger.”

There may be a faster turnaround in China as infrastructure spending improves the demand for BHP’s products and drives spot prices higher, Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc. analysts led by Warren Edney said in a report. Edney is forecasting BHP will report profit of $16.1 billion in the 12 months ending June 30, 2011.

The global steel market will grow by 9.2 percent in 2010 on rising demand from the U.S., Japan and Europe, the World Steel Association has said. Domestic demand will continue to grow driven by housing, automakers, shipbuilding and machinery, the China Iron & Steel Association said Jan. 22.

Australian Economic Recovery to Strengthen in 2010, Access Says

Jan. 27 (Bloomberg) -- Australia’s economic recovery will accelerate this year and next, helped by China’s demand for raw materials including iron ore and a rebound in consumer confidence, Access Economics says.

Gross domestic product will rise 2.5 percent this year and 3.5 percent in 2011, after gaining 0.9 percent last year, the research company said in a report released in Canberra today.

The nation’s economy was one of the few to skirt the global recession in 2009, as Prime Minister Kevin Rudd’s government distributed A$20 billion ($18 billion) in cash to households and Asian demand for exports rebounded. Signs that the economy will strengthen further this year prompted central bank policy makers to raise borrowing costs last month by a quarter-percentage point to 3.75 percent, the third move in as many months.

“Recovery should continue through 2010 and 2011,” Access said in the report. While government spending will slow and consumers may be hurt by higher borrowing costs, housing construction will “lift notably” amid a surge in population growth.

By 2011, engineering construction will also add to growth, it said.

Sunday, January 24, 2010

New Zealand May Lag Behind Australia in Raising Interest Rates

Jan. 25 (Bloomberg) -- New Zealand may lag behind Australia in raising interest rates this quarter as its economic recovery trails its larger neighbor and inflation remains within central bank Governor Alan Bollard’s target range.

The Reserve Bank of New Zealand will leave the official cash rate at a record-low 2.5 percent in its decision at 9 a.m. in Wellington on Jan. 28, according to all 14 economists surveyed by Bloomberg. Australia’s currency has outperformed New Zealand’s as traders bet Governor Glenn Stevens will boost his rate by a quarter percentage point to 4 percent next week.

Bollard is seeking to strengthen an economy emerging from its worst recession in three decades, while Australia skirted the global slump and is forecast to record faster growth this year as demand for exports such as iron ore increases.

“Inflation is moderate for now and the Reserve Bank still has some time on its side,” said Nick Tuffley, chief economist at ASB Bank Ltd. in Auckland. “There is nothing to prod the bank to move as early as January or March.”

Bollard, who has kept the cash rate at 2.5 percent since April last year, said Dec. 10 that conditions may support higher borrowing costs from the middle of 2010.

He said he wants to be sure that domestic demand will remain “solid” as Prime Minister John Key’s government withdraws fiscal stimulus measures, including extra spending on infrastructure, implemented to boost the economy.

Just two economists expect a rate increase in March, with 12 forecasting a move in April or June.

‘Imprudent’ Level

“It will be imprudent to leave monetary policy settings at exceptionally low levels for too much longer,” said Tuffley, who expects a half-point increase on April 29.

Economists forecast the cash rate will be 4 percent by the end of the year, according to the survey. Traders are betting rates will rise to 4.25 percent over the next 12 months, according to a Credit Suisse index based on swaps trading.

New Zealand’s dollar rose to an eight-week high of 74.42 U.S. cents on Jan. 15 amid speculation Bollard may raise rates as early as March. It fell to 71.3 cents late in Wellington on Jan. 22 as expectations waned. The currency has declined 2.1 percent this year against the U.S. dollar compared with a 0.3 percent gain in the Australian currency.

Central bankers around the world are assessing when to remove stimulus measures as the global economy recovers. Australia and Norway are among countries that have started raising rates and the U.S. Federal Reserve has committed to scale down buying of mortgage-backed debt.

Australian Rates

Reserve Bank of Australia Governor Stevens is forecast to boost his benchmark lending rate by a quarter percentage point to 4 percent next week, adding to similar moves in October, November and December, according to 16 of 18 economists surveyed by Bloomberg.

New Zealand consumer prices fell 0.2 percent in the fourth quarter, according to a government report on Jan. 20. Annual inflation was 2 percent, in the middle of the 1 percent-to-3 percent band that Bollard targets. Last month, the governor forecast inflation will be 2 percent or less until early 2011.

The housing market slowed in December, easing pressure on prices, according to a Real Estate Institute report last week. House prices fell for the first time in six months as the number of properties sold declined for a third month.

“The stabilization in prices should ease concerns about a possible renewed bubble in house prices and consequent impacts on domestic demand,” said Darren Gibbs, chief New Zealand economist at Deutsche Bank AG in Auckland.

Inflationary Expectations

Bollard expects the pace of inflation will accelerate to 2.6 percent by the end of 2011 as the economy expands. Gross domestic product will increase 3 percent this year and 4.1 percent in 2011, he forecast Dec. 10.

Manufacturing grew in December for a fourth month, buoyed by new orders, according to an index published Jan. 21 by Business New Zealand and Bank of New Zealand Ltd.

Retail sales also rose for a fourth month in November, according to a government report last week. Consumer confidence surged to a three-year high in December, according to an ANZ National Bank-Roy Morgan Research index released Jan. 21.

Companies are more likely to hire workers and to invest in the coming months, the New Zealand Institute of Economic Research said Jan. 12. Its survey, conducted in early December, also showed that companies have less spare capacity, meaning they will have to raise prices as they increase production.

Bollard “was looking for spare capacity built up during the recession to damp inflationary pressures,” said Michael Gordon, an economist at Westpac Banking Corp. in Wellington. “Inflation pressure could be building again.”

The central bank can wait until a review on April 29 before raising rates, allowing Bollard to assess data on how the economy ended 2009 and how inflation tracked in the first three months of this year, said Gordon.

Japan Price-to-Assets Makes for Cheapest International Stocks

Jan. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Not even the slowest economic growth in the industrialized world or deflation can keep Byron Wien, David Herro and John Alkire away from Japanese equities.

Wien, the Blackstone Group LP adviser who predicted last year’s rallies in stocks and oil, says Japan shares are his favorites. Harris Associates LP’s Herro, Morningstar Inc.’s international manager of the decade, says stocks at the cheapest ever relative to assets will gain even if the economy stagnates. Alkire of Morgan Stanley Asset & Investment Management is betting low debt levels will spur an advance that beats the U.S.

Japan, the world’s second-biggest equity market, is up 3.7 percent this year as measured by the Topix index, the most among the world’s 10 largest economies. Overseas investors pumped almost $13 billion into Japan during the two weeks ended Jan. 15, the most since 2004. Companies trade for an average 1.2 times book value, almost half the valuation for the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

“My best investment idea is Japan,” said Wien, 76, a former market strategist at Morgan Stanley and at hedge fund Pequot Capital Management Inc. who predicted the end of the technology bubble in 2000. “The Japanese market looks relatively attractive assuming the earnings come through, which I think they will.”

More investors are looking at net assets instead of earnings after the economy posted its lowest production since 1991 in the third quarter and stagnant profit growth left companies in the Topix trading at an average 37 times estimates for this year’s income. The price-to-earnings ratio is the highest among the world’s 10 biggest markets.

1989 High

The index fell 2.6 percent last week to end at 940.94. While the Topix remains 67 percent below the high reached on Dec. 18, 1989, investors profited in nine of the past 20 years, including a 58 percent gain in 1999 when the S&P 500 rose 20 percent.

Since the end of 2005, the Topix has fallen 43 percent, compared with the MSCI World Index’s 8.6 percent drop, as successive prime ministers including the current Yukio Hatoyama battled deflation and faltering growth. Bank of Japan Governor Masaaki Shirakawa said on Jan. 18 that he will keep borrowing costs near zero to help end the worst postwar recession. Hatoyama unveiled a 7.2 trillion yen ($80 billion) stimulus package last month.

Wien, Herro and Alkire’s predictions are based on valuations instead of economic prospects. Wien favors export- related companies, technology makers, and drug and cosmetics suppliers. Gauges of automakers and electronics companies in the Topix have climbed 11 percent and 6.2 percent, respectively, in the past three months, more than the broader index’s 4.3 percent advance.

Priced In

“Japan doesn’t have to be a strong economy to attract investor interest,” Wien said. “Things aren’t getting good there, but they’re not getting bad either. The bad news is diminishing.”

Companies in the Topix are projected to turn profitable in 2010 after a combined loss of 40 yen per share in the past 12 months, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The Topix’s book value is 33 percent below its average dating back to 1993 of 1.8 times, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

“Japan is extremely cheap on fundamentals,” said Herro, the chief investment officer for international equities at Harris, with $55 billion in assets. “When you combine the two concepts of low price and high quality to get a value proposition, especially if we see a movement towards more sustainable operating profitability by corporate Japan, this could be one of the best-performing markets over the next couple of years.”

Toyota, Canon

Herro bought shares of Toyota Motor Corp., the world’s largest automaker, and Canon Inc., the biggest camera manufacturer. Analysts surveyed by Bloomberg project Toyota will return to an operating profit this year, while Tokyo-based Canon’s may climb 64 percent from 2009.

Japanese equities underperformed industrialized nations since the MSCI World Index of 23 developed countries reached a record on Oct. 31, 2007. The fallout from the global recession has left the MSCI World 32 percent below that peak, compared with 30 percent for the S&P 500 and 42 percent for the Topix.

Alkire, the chief investment officer for Morgan Stanley Asset in Tokyo, says Japanese stocks may beat the U.S. and Europe in 2010 as falling expenses and low debt bolster profits. Forty-three percent of Japanese companies have no borrowings, compared with 18 percent in the U.S. and 17 percent in Europe, Alkire said in a presentation to pension funds in Tokyo.

‘Never Say Never’

“For most of the past year, foreign investors said, ‘Never buy Japan,’” said Alkire, whose firm oversees about $39 billion. “But this year, I say, ‘Never say never.’ Global markets will likely focus on Japan.”

Standard Life Investment Ltd.’s Frances Hudson isn’t as bullish because price drops may erode profits and hamper the recovery. Consumer costs fell 1.7 percent in November from a year earlier, the ninth month of declines. Japan has deflation for the first time in three years, according to the government.

“I wouldn’t write off the whole of Japan, but I would struggle to find anyone feeling positive on the domestic situation,” said Hudson, who helps oversee $197 billion at Standard Life in Edinburgh and advises staying “very light” on Tokyo-listed shares in global funds. “The government doesn’t seem to be able to make any headway in reforms. Neither in stimulating consumer spending or ending deflation.”

Speculation drove the Nikkei 225 Stock Average to a record 38,915.87 on Dec. 29, 1989. What followed was the popping of an asset bubble and a plunge in stock and real-estate values in what became known as Japan’s Lost Decade.

Worst Drop

The Nikkei has lost 73 percent from that peak, the worst performance of the world’s major markets. Japan’s nominal gross domestic product rose 23 percent between 1989 and 2008, while the U.S. increased 163 percent, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Japanese gross domestic product shrank to an annualized 471 trillion yen in the third quarter, the lowest level since 1991, according to Cabinet Office figures. It’s forecast to expand 1.4 percent in 2010 after a projected 5.3 percent contraction last year, according to the median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg. That’s less than the 2.7 percent growth the World Bank in Washington is predicting globally.

U.S.-based funds that invest in Japanese equities attracted new money equal to 2.7 percent of total assets in the week ended Jan. 13, the most inflows since October 2005, according to data from EPFR Global in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and Frankfurt- based Deutsche Bank AG.

Weakening Yen

Money is returning as investors speculate Finance Minister Naoto Kan will bolster exports by weakening the yen, which touched a 14-year high against the dollar on Nov. 27.

Kan said Jan. 7 on his first day in office that he would welcome a weaker currency, compared with his predecessor, Hirohisa Fujii, who opposed “easy intervention.” The yen has dropped 5.9 against the dollar since Nov. 27, while the Nikkei average has rallied 17 percent.

A weaker currency will spur a rebound in stocks, according to Seiichiro Iwasawa, chief strategist at Tokyo-based Nomura Holdings Inc., the country’s largest brokerage, who predicted last month the Topix will climb to 1,200 by the end of 2010.

Operating Profit

A five-yen appreciation against the dollar that holds for a year would trim 0.2 percentage point from gross domestic product, according to Tatsushi Shikano, senior economist at Mitsubishi UFJ Securities Co. in Tokyo. Every 1 yen drop by the Japanese currency against the dollar raises Toyota’s operating profit by about 30 billion yen and Honda Motor Co.’s by about 12 billion yen, according to figures supplied by the automakers in November.

Toyota soared 13 percent in December after plunging 14 percent the previous three months. The Toyota City, Japan-based company gets 32 percent of revenue from North America. Tokyo- based Honda, Japan’s second-largest carmaker, jumped 15 percent in December after a three-month, 8 percent drop. The company makes 81 percent of its sales from abroad.

The “change in attitude by the government is significant,” said Phillip Schwartz, a New York-based director at ING Investment Managers who helps oversee $1.3 billion and has been buying Japanese exporters. “Having been underweight for so long, fund managers fear being left out.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Alexis Xydias in London at axydias@bloomberg.net; Shani Raja in Sydney at sraja4@bloomberg.net.
Last Updated: January 24, 2010 10:01