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Ratings agencies rattle cages in U.S., Europe

July 18, 2011 in Banking Industry News


NEW YORK |
Sun Jul 17, 2011 11:58am EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) – The credit ratings agencies are again angering governments, but this time they are taking on the big fish of the world economy.

From Washington to Brussels, Moody’s, Standard Poor’s and Fitch have added to the intense pressure on governments trying to deal with crushing sovereign debt.

Their warnings about the precarious finances of the world’s top economies have also roiled investors more accustomed to seeing emerging market countries take the brunt of criticism.

Tension hit new highs on both sides of the Atlantic last week as Moody’s and Standard Poor’s threatened to downgrade the United States’ prized “triple-A” rating.

A few days earlier, Moody’s slashed ratings in Ireland and Portugal to “junk” status, triggering an outcry from European officials.

“These opinions, they continue to give them in such a way that it worsens the crisis,” Ewald Nowotny, a member of the European Central governing council, said on Tuesday, referring to the agencies. He said markets could live without them.

Now that the agencies are focusing their fire on the rich world, U.S. and European officials — long proponents of seeing indebted nations “take their medicine” — are crying foul.

Their complaints carry a strong sense of deja-vu.

In 1998, when Moody’s pushed Brazil deeper into “junk” rating territory, the country’s finance ministry called the decision a “mistake” that showed the agency needed to invest more in sovereign risk analysis.

In a sign of the turnaround of the fortunes of many emerging economies, 11 years later in its New York headquarters Moody’s received a much friendlier Brazilian finance minister, Guido Mantega, to hand him Brazil’s much-awaited “investment-grade” status.

The question now is whether the agencies will be able to withstand much stronger political pressures while the debt crisis rages in developed countries.

In Europe and the United States, policymakers have already promised tougher regulations for the agencies after they failed to spot the housing bubble in the middle of the last decade. and stand accused of contributing to it by giving generous ratings to subprime mortgage bonds.

Rating agencies came under fire from holders of subprime-related securities because raters are paid by the firms issuing the securities. Investors argued that kind of “economic incentive” blurred the analysis.

Sovereign nations, by contrast, do not shell out any money for their ratings.

That has not lessened the political anger. On Wednesday, U.S. Congressman Dennis Kucinich said: “No nation, agency or organization has the authority to dictate terms to the United States government. Moody’s and its compatriot SP were a direct cause of the near collapse of the economy of the United States.”

EUROPEAN RATING AGENCY

In Europe, where the agencies poured cold water on a plan for Greece to extend debt maturities and avoid a default, sentiment is even worse. European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso accused them of having an anti-European bias.

Barroso and other policymakers want the creation of an European rating agency which, they argue, would be better equipped to analyze euro zone issues. That argument overlooks the fact that Fitch is majority-owned by a French company.

The intensity of Europe’s reaction to the latest sovereign downgrades is proportional to the power that ratings agencies retain over financial markets — a clout that even the ratings agencies suggest is exaggerated.

In a recent special report about proposed regulation changes, Moody’s said the agencies should not be seen as “gatekeepers in the financial markets” and their ratings should not be used as substitutes for disclosure by issuers.

WRONG TIMING

Some say policy makers may have a point when they criticize the timing of the downgrades by ratings agencies.

Their failure to anticipate the severe deterioration of sovereign credit was an issue in emerging market debt crises in the past, said Claudio Loser, a former Western hemisphere director for the International Monetary Fund.

“My experience with the rating agencies in Latin America during the debt crisis of the 1980s and 1990s is that they were a destabilizing factor,” said Loser, now president of the Centennial Latin America consulting firm.

“They did not warn the markets when they should have and they did actually create more noise when it was not the appropriate thing to do.”

Loser believes policymakers will force the agencies to “adjust significantly,” and that they will emerge stronger from this crisis.

(Reporting by Walter Brandimarte; Editing by David Gaffen, Jennifer Ablan and Maureen Bavdek)

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Greek PM says time for Europe to wake up: report

July 17, 2011 in Banking Industry News


ATHENS |
Sat Jul 16, 2011 5:54pm EDT

ATHENS (Reuters) – Greece’s Prime Minister George Papandreou ruled out bankruptcy for his debt-choked country and said it was time for Europe to wake up and take brave decisions, according to a newspaper interview to be published on Sunday.

Ahead of a summit of euro zone leaders on July 21 to discuss a second bailout for Greece, Papandreou said his government had taken the necessary decisions, however difficult they were, to deal with the crisis, and it was Europe’s turn to do the same.

“We managed not to let Greece go bankrupt, and neither will it go bankrupt,” Papandreou was quoted as saying by Greek newspaper Kathimerini, referring to whether credit rating agencies could find Greek debt to be in “selective default.”

“For a year and a half now, I’ve been continuously reiterating to our partners that we must collectively take brave decisions, not just for the future of Greece but of Europe as a whole. It is time for Europe to wake up,” he added.

With sovereign debt jitters having reached Italy, the euro zone’s third-largest economy, Europe’s leaders are struggling to agree on how to provide new aid for Greece to prevent contagion from spreading further in financial markets.

Papandreou said that several of the options that he had suggested and were rejected a year and a half ago, such as buying back debt, issuing common euro zone bonds and keeping credit rating agencies in check, were now on Europe’s negotiating table.

“In an ultraconservative Europe, I would even say phobic, the truth is it took time for these thoughts to mature with our partners and for them to be convinced that these proposals are not an alibi in order to avoid our own responsibilities,” Papandreou said in the interview.

Greece’s total outstanding debt is around 370 billion euros ($523 billion). Most economists regard the debt burden, at around 160 percent of gross domestic product, to be unsustainable as it stifles growth, with the economy seen contracting by nearly 4 percent this year after a 4.5 percent slump last year.

“Now everybody understands that Greece needs to be helped to exit recession as soon as possible. The relevant negotiations are making progress, and I hope they are completed as soon as possible,” Papandreou said.

A bond buyback is more likely than the other options that euro zone finance ministers have discussed and would allow Greece to cut its public debt by 20 billion euros if purchases were made at market prices, German magazine der Spiegel said on Saturday.

(Reporting by Greg Roumeliotis, editing by Jane Baird)

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Jobless claims fall, but retail sales timid

July 15, 2011 in Banking Industry News


WASHINGTON |
Thu Jul 14, 2011 2:54pm EDT

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The economy may not see a strong pick-up in growth in the second half of 2011 as the number of Americans filing for first-time jobless benefits remained high last week and retail sales barely rose in June.

But other data on Thursday showed a drop in energy costs, which caused wholesale prices to post their biggest fall last month in 1-1/2 years. That could lend consumer spending much needed support.

Initial claims for state unemployment benefits fell 22,000 to 405,000 last week, the lowest since mid-April, the Labor Department said. Economists expected claims to drop to 415,000. Still, claims held above the 400,000 level usually associated with a stable labor market.

Economists also cautioned against reading to much into the decline in jobless claims last week, which included the July 4 Independence Day holiday. Claims are volatile around this time of year because automakers normally shut plants for annual retooling.

There were fewer plant shut downs this year, however, after vehicle production was disrupted because of a shortage of parts from Japan in the aftermath of the March earthquake.

“The economy is touch and go. You really need to take the improvement in claims with a grain of salt. It feels like the labor market is moving sideways,” said Ryan Sweet, a senior economist at Moody’s Analytics in West Chester, Pennsylvania.

“We have numerous hurdles to overcome, and July data will be very telling.”

Retail sales rose 0.1 percent as a rebound in receipts from auto dealers offset the biggest drop in gasoline receipts in a year, a Commerce Department report showed, after dipping 0.1 percent in May.

Core sales, excluding gasoline and autos, rose 0.2 percent after rising by the same margin in May.

MODEST BOUNCE BACK SEEN

The mixed retail sales report came on the heels of data last week that showed employment growth stalled in June, with nonfarm payrolls growing by only 18,000 jobs and the unemployment rate rising to 9.2 percent.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke on Thursday reiterated the U.S. central bank, which ended a $600 billion government bond-buying program in June, was ready to ease monetary policy further if growth and inflation slowed much more.

Economists said it was now looking less likely that the anticipated second-half pick-up would be as strong as initially thought.

Economists at JPMorgan lowered their third quarter gross domestic product (GDP) growth forecast to an annual rate of 2.5 percent from 3.0 percent. Their counterparts at Deutsche Bank said GDP would be lower than their 3.5 percent forecast.

“We still expect that third-quarter growth will be better than the second-quarter as we still see a rebound in vehicle production and a decline in energy prices freeing up some consumer purchasing power,” said JPMorgan’s Michael Feroli.

“To be sure, both of these positives are looking a little less shiny than they did a few weeks ago.”

Second-quarter GDP growth estimates range between 1.5 percent and 2 percent. A Reuters survey published on Thursday forecast the economy expanding 3.1 percent in the third quarter.

U.S. stocks initially rose on the jobless claims and a higher-than-expected profit from JPMorgan Chase Co but gave up gains in afternoon trade on views that there would be no immediate monetary stimulus for the economy. Prices for government debt rose.

JPMorgan, the second-largest U.S. bank, made more loans during the quarter than in the first quarter and added staff, signs other banks could be lending more and leading to further growth.

WEAK CONSUMER SPENDING

The U.S. economy has been hurt by high commodity prices and supply chain disruptions from Japan.

The retail sales report suggested that growth in consumer spending in the April-June period would be less than the 2.2 percent annual pace in the first quarter.

Another report from the Commerce Department showed business inventories were starting to pile up because of weak demand.

Inventories increased 1 percent in both May and April, suggesting restocking supported growth in the second quarter and will be less of a boost to third-quarter GDP.

But the drop in gasoline prices from their peak just above $4 a gallon in May should help to ease stretched household budgets and support spending in coming months.

The Producer Price Index fell 0.4 percent, the steepest decline since February 2010, the Labor Department said in a second report, after a 0.2 percent rise in May.

Excluding autos, retail sales were flat last month, the weakest reading since last July.

(Additional reporting by Pedro Nicolaci da Costa; Editing by Padraic Cassidy)

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Japan escalates warning as yen continues to rise

July 14, 2011 in Banking Industry News


TOKYO |
Wed Jul 13, 2011 11:48pm EDT

TOKYO (Reuters) – Japanese Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda warned on Thursday that recent yen strength does not reflect economic fundamentals, escalating a verbal campaign to cool the rising yen although traders saw little immediate chance that authorities would intervene directly in the market.

The dollar tumbled to a four-month low against the Japanese currency after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke on Wednesday signaled that the central bank was ready to ease monetary policy further if economic growth and inflation slow much more.

“The movement doesn’t reflect fundamentals and has been one-sided,” Noda told reporters on Thursday regarding the yen’s recent surge.

“It would be troublesome if it persists, and I will continue to closely watch markets.”

The warning was somewhat sharper than the previous day’s, when the finance minister said recent yen rises had been “a little one-sided.” Noda made no comment about possible intervention in the financial markets.

His comments failed to stem the yen’s rise, with the dollar slipping to a fresh four-month low of 78.45 yen.

The yen has been climbing as investors seek a safe haven from the escalating euro zone debt crisis and mounting doubts about the health of the U.S. economy.

The dollar came under additional pressure after Moody’s Investors Service said the United States may lose its top-notch credit rating if lawmakers fail to increase the country’s debt ceiling.

“Noda has stepped up his warning against the yen’s rise as Japanese authorities are getting worried about how much further the currency will strengthen,” said Makoto Noji, senior bond and currency strategist at SMBC Nikko Securities in Tokyo.

“But it is hard for Japan to intervene in the market, since that sort of beggar-thy-neighbor action would not gain understanding from other countries with four months having passed since the quake.”

PRESSURE ON BOJ

Japanese policy-makers are sensitive to a stronger yen as it is seen harming the export-led economy, which was tipped back into recession by the March 11 earthquake and tsunami.

The yen’s rise has triggered a series of verbal warnings by Japanese officials, although the market does not believe the chances of imminent currency intervention have risen significantly.

“Japanese intervention is less likely to succeed, because we have very negative news about the United States and Europe,” said Kimihiko Tomita, head of foreign exchange at State Street Bank Trust in Tokyo.

Noda has so far refrained from using the sort of stronger wording, such as a warning that Tokyo would take “decisive action” when needed, that markets would view as signaling intervention may be imminent.

Group of Seven nations jointly intervened to stem yen strength when the Japanese currency spiked to a record high of 76.25 to the dollar in the aftermath of the March quake, on speculation that Japanese firms would repatriate some of their huge foreign assets to pay for reconstruction.

Japan last conducted solo intervention in September of last year, when it stepped into the market for the first time in six years.

The Bank of Japan eased monetary policy on both occasions.

With Japan’s economy now recovering steadily from damage inflicted by the quake, Tokyo will have difficulty convincing its G7 counterparts of the need for intervention, even solo action, market players say.

That may mean the central bank will come under more pressure to loosen policy if the yen rises sharply enough to threaten its forecast that Japan’s economy will resume a moderate recovery when it shakes off supply constraints in the autumn.

“The BOJ’s policy action has recently been in sync with the yen’s rise, so further policy easing could be possible at its next rate review or later, depending on the yen’s movements,” said Noji of SMBC Nikko Securities.

The BOJ kept monetary policy on hold and raised its assessment of the economy on Tuesday, encouraged by a rebound in factory output and the prospects for a recovery in business and household sentiment.

But central bank officials admit that a renewed yen spike accompanied by sharp falls in stock prices would be the most likely next trigger for further easing, as such market moves would damage a still fragile recovery in business sentiment.

The BOJ has stood pat since easing credit in March but has expressed its readiness to act if Japan’s recovery prospects are threatened. Its next rate review will be held on August 4-5.

BOJ Governor Masaaki Shirakawa warned on Wednesday that yen rises would hurt Japan’s economy in the short term, although he stuck to the view that growth will pick up as companies steadily restore their supply chains.

(Additional reporting by Stanley White; Editing by Michael Watson)

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For JPMorgan, forecasts matter more than results

July 14, 2011 in Banking Industry News


NEW YORK |
Thu Jul 14, 2011 12:34am EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) – When JPMorgan Chase Co reports second-quarter results on Thursday, Wall Street will care more about its forecasts than its earnings, looking for clues on the direction of the U.S. lending business.

Credit quality likely improved during the quarter for products like credit cards, and the overall banking system saw a slight increase in loan volume, which could bode well for the biggest banks’ loan growth. JPMorgan is the first of the major lenders to post results.

Wall Street expects JPMorgan to report second-quarter earnings of $1.21 a share, up from $1.09 a year earlier, based on the average estimate of 28 analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S as of Wednesday afternoon.

All of the gain, if it comes through, would be attributable to the fact that this quarter, JPMorgan did not have to pay a one-time tax in the United Kingdom on investment banker bonuses that last year cost it 14 cents a share in profits.

But with the U.S. economy still sluggish, trading volumes weak at many banks, and regulatory reform reshaping the industry, investors care much more about the next few quarters than the three months ended June 30, analysts said.

“You have to look under the hood to figure out whether these big survivors of the financial crisis can really make decent returns for shareholders,” said Frederick Cannon, research chief at Keefe, Bruyette Woods, a New York-based investment firm that specializes in banking.

With many consumers still cutting back on borrowing, and businesses holding lots of cash, the U.S. gross domestic product is growing faster than bank lending — a reversal of more than five decades of banking speeding ahead of the economy, said Cannon.

“It is that structural shift in the whole business of lending that has made investors really try to get a handle on what banks can earn,” said Cannon.

That shift makes life tough for Chief Executive Jamie Dimon. JPMorgan reported three months ago that its loan book at the end of March was down 4 percent from a year earlier as shrinkage of its consumer loan portfolio overwhelmed improvement in business lending.

As the loans have been running down, so have JPMorgan’s lending profits, even before its expense provisions for bad loans. Pre-provision profits in the March quarter were down 20 percent from a year earlier.

The results are expected to lag first-quarter earnings of $1.28 a share, which benefited from strong trading volumes in JPMorgan’s capital markets operations — part of one of the biggest investment banking businesses on Wall Street.

Analysts say they will be watching trading revenue in Thursday’s report for clues to the severity of the slowdown in investment banking results in reports in coming days from Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and Citigroup.

“Most people have kind of written off the second quarter to slow U.S. economic growth,” said Peter Kovalski, a money manager at Alpine Woods Capital, which owns JPMorgan and other bank stocks in its $6 billion portfolio.

“What is more important is the outlook that is talked about for the third quarter and the second half of the year,” Kovalski said.

CEO Dimon said in an investor conference June 2 that he was encouraged by an increase in demand for loans from mid-sized companies. JPM’s average balance of middle market loans in its commercial banking division was up 13 percent in the first quarter from a year earlier. Those loans amounted to 6 percent of all JPMorgan’s outstanding loans and less than 2 percent of its $2.2 trillion of assets.

JPMorgan shares closed Wednesday at $39.62, up 23 cents. Since the start of the year, the shares were down nearly 7 percent.

(Reporting by David Henry; Editing by Gary Hill)

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China growth tops forecast, inflation fight goes on

July 13, 2011 in Banking Industry News


BEIJING |
Wed Jul 13, 2011 12:37am EDT

BEIJING (Reuters) – China’s economy slowed less sharply than expected in the second quarter and Beijing said corralling inflation remained its top priority even though a “complex and volatile” global economy clouded the outlook.

Second-quarter gross domestic product rose 9.5 percent from a year earlier, China reported on Wednesday, exceeding economists’ forecasts for 9.4 percent growth. But that was still the slowest pace since the third quarter of 2009, when the world economy was pulling out of its worst recession in 80 years.

Some cooling was expected — and even welcome — because China has raised interest rates and clamped down on bank lending terms to try to ease inflation, which hit a three-year high in June. The stronger-than-expected GDP figures suggest Beijing may have more room to tighten without choking off growth.

“These are very good numbers,” said Liu Li-Gang, an economist with ANZ in Hong Kong. “This is perhaps the reason the (central bank) raised interest rates last week. They are showing they are not afraid of a significant slowdown in the economy.”

For investors worried that Beijing’s tightening campaign might exact too heavy a toll on the economy, the figures offered some reassurance. Asian stocks, metals and the Australian dollar all rose.

Sheng Laiyun, a spokesperson for China’s statistics bureau, said stabilizing inflation was the primary goal, and policies would be “targeted, flexible and effective.”

“It’s not easy and China has done a great job to maintain fast economic growth when the global situation is complex and volatile,” Sheng said.

Europe’s sovereign debt troubles and a slowdown in the U.S. economy means two of China’s best export customers are struggling. New export orders slipped in June, a manufacturing survey showed earlier in July, which raised questions about China’s growth prospects.

But Wednesday’s figures suggested domestic demand remains robust. Final consumption contributed 4.6 percentage points to first-half growth, while exports subtracted slightly, China’s statistics bureau said.

REBALANCING

Industrial output growth rose 15.1 percent in June from a year earlier, quickening sharply from May’s 13.3 percent and beating market expectations of 13.1 percent.

The growth figures underlined the resilience of the world’s second-largest economy, thanks to the country’s rapid urbanization, and could soothe investor concerns about a hard landing that would dent demand for global commodities.

Fixed-asset investment grew 25.6 percent in the first six months from a year earlier, while retail sales expanded 16.8 percent, showing that domestic demand still held up relatively well despite policy tightening.

“The economic growth data are quite upbeat and industrial production is noticeably stronger than expected,” said Xu Biao, an economist with China Merchants Bank in Shenzhen. “It’s quite beyond expectations as Chinese imports and (purchasing manager’s survey) in June were quite weak.”

Stronger demand at home not only helps insulate China from the global turmoil, it provides a bit of a buffer for the rest of the world and evidence that Beijing is making good on pledges to move away from export-driven growth. But it can also increase price pressures.

Fighting inflation remains Beijing’s top priority but any policy steps should avoid causing big swings in economic growth, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said in comments published on Tuesday.

Last Wednesday, China raised rates by 25 basis points — the third such increase this year — which took the one-year bank deposit rate to 3.5 percent.

The central bank has raised benchmark interest rates five times since October and lifted banks’ reserve requirement ratio — its preferred policy tool so far — nine times.

(Reporting by Aileen Wang and Kevin Yao and Zhou Xin; Writing by Emily Kaiser; Editing by Neil Fullick)

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BOJ holds fire, more optimistic on economy

July 12, 2011 in Banking Industry News


TOKYO |
Tue Jul 12, 2011 1:02am EDT

TOKYO (Reuters) – The Bank of Japan kept monetary policy on hold and revised up its assessment of the economy on Tuesday, encouraged by a rebound in factory output and increasing signs that the recovery from the devastating March earthquake is broadening.

But the central bank warned that emerging nations faced a tough balancing act between curbing inflation and sustaining economic growth.

It also reiterated that U.S. balance sheet adjustments and Europe’s debt woes were among risks to Japan’s economic outlook, in light of a series of weak U.S. economic data that fueled concerns exports may get less support from global demand just when Japan is overcoming supply constraints.

As widely expected, the BOJ kept its benchmark interest rate steady at a range of zero to 0.1 percent by a unanimous vote and held off on loosening policy further.

“Japan’s economy is picking up as supply constraints from the earthquake ease,” the central bank said in a statement issued after the rate decision.

The BOJ cut its economic forecast for the current fiscal year in a quarterly review of its growth projections, although this was a technical revision reflecting a steep contraction in first-quarter GDP. It kept its projection for the following year unchanged.

Japan’s economy likely contracted for three straight quarters through June but is expected to grow 1.0 percent in the third quarter, a Reuters poll showed, as companies make progress restoring supply chains hit by the March disaster.

Factory output jumped by the most in almost 60 years in May while business and consumer sentiment showed signs of recovery from the quake’s damage, underscoring the BOJ’s view that the economy will resume a moderate recovery in the autumn.

GLOBAL GROWTH WORRIES

The BOJ revised up its assessment of the economy from last month, when it had said that while the economy appeared to be picking up, it remained under downward pressure mainly on output.

That upbeat view reinforces market expectations that no immediate easing is in the horizon, although the BOJ is hardly optimistic about the outlook.

Still, some in the BOJ have become increasingly worried about softening global growth which, if prolonged, will hurt exports just when supply constraints ease in the autumn.

U.S. jobs growth ground to a near halt in June, dashing hopes that the world’s largest economy was emerging from a soft patch, while annual inflation in China accelerated to a three-year high, signaling that more tightening may be needed in the second-largest economy even as growth slows.

The central bank issues its long-term economic and price forecasts in April and October of each year, and reviews them in January and July.

The BOJ has stood pat on policy since easing credit just days after the March disaster by topping up a pool of funds used to buy assets ranging from government bonds to corporate debt.

(Editing by Edmund Klamann)

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Hurdles abound in global recovery

July 11, 2011 in Banking Industry News


NEW YORK |
Sun Jul 10, 2011 3:02pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) – A dismal U.S. jobs report. A European debt crisis for which there is no quick fix. Slowing growth in China.

There are a number of reasons to be cautious about the prospects for the global economic recovery.

It’s against this background that U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke will step before Congress for his semi-annual testimony on Wednesday. He will likely be barraged with questions about Friday’s jobs report — a report so across-the-board disappointing that JPMorgan economist Michael Feroli called it “worse than Spinal Tap’s ‘Shark Sandwich.’”

The U.S. economy created just 18,000 jobs in June, much less than the 90,000 economists had expected.

A U.S. retail sales report may offer a little bit of hope on Thursday if it shows Americans spent money left over from a recent retreat in gasoline prices on other items.

“We’re in a situation where the data is noisy and choppy,” said Michael Hanson, a senior economist at Bank of America.

“For a central banker, you’re now in risk management mode: ‘We want to be ready to calm the markets in case we get more bad data, but we don’t want to jump the gun, either.’”

Bernanke has argued that the biggest factors affecting growth in the first half of the year are temporary in nature: supply disruptions due to the Japanese earthquake, inclement weather and a surge in oil prices earlier this year.

He is expected to stick to that assessment.

“The weak jobs report does not rule out a second half recovery by any means. Employment is something of a lagging indicator,” said Dean Maki, economist at Barclays Capital.

“It depends on consumer spending and we are focusing intently on retail sales as one of the first signals of how consumers are responding to the decline in gasoline prices.”

In addition, U.S. industrial production and manufacturing data on Friday may show the Japanese earthquake-induced supply chain disruptions to auto production and sales have eased somewhat.

Japan’s central bank, which meets on July 11-12, will likely revise up its assessment of the economy next week as companies restore supply chains more quickly than expected. Factory output is seen returning to pre-quake levels in August. The BOJ is expected to hold off easing monetary policy further, though it will likely warn of lingering risks to the global economy.

NO QUICK-FIXES

One of those risks is Europe’s escalating debt crisis.

Euro zone finance ministers are set to meet on Monday to discuss a second bailout package for Greece.

But given the absence of a decision on how private bondholders might participate in any Greek debt rollover, markets are skeptical of how much progress can be made at the Eurogroup meeting.

Markets want European policymakers to come up with longer-term solutions rather than one temporary fix after the other if they are to avoid a domino effect as financial markets pounce on other weak euro area countries.

Contagion is already evident from the growing risk premia on debt issued by Spain and Italy, which some analysts view as a warning signal. Lower-rated euro zone government bonds have faced increased pressure since Moody’s cut Portugal’s credit rating to junk last week.

“There is not expected to be much of a resolution, so all together there is a lot of asymmetric risk out there,” said Mark McCormick, currency strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman.

China raised interest rates for the third time this year on Wednesday as taming inflation remains a top priority even as the pace of growth in its vast economy slows.

Risky assets, particularly those with direct links to China’s growth, sold off after the announcement on concerns the latest monetary tightening could choke an already sluggish global recovery.

On Wednesday, July 13, China will get a read on its second-quarter economic growth data and retail sales for June. Chinese consumer sentiment is expected to have been weighed down by surging inflation and high property prices.

“Unlike in Japan and the U.S., where we believe growth has slowed for temporary reasons, policy tightening in the euro area and China seems likely to yield a more persistent slowing in growth,” Barclays’ Maki wrote in a note to clients.

(Reporting by Kristina Cooke; Editing by Dan Grebler)

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Italy scrambles to soothe market jitters

July 11, 2011 in Banking Industry News


ROME |
Sun Jul 10, 2011 1:10pm EDT

ROME (Reuters) – Italy’s government scrambled to present a united front and defend the embattled economy minister on Sunday, hoping to soothe market fears that triggered a sell-off in Italian stocks and bonds last week.

The sell-off, fueled in part by fears that Economy Minister Giulio Tremonti may be forced out, raised concern that market contagion worries might be shifting to Italy and set off alarm bells in the European Union, the ECB and the Bank of Italy.

The message appeared to have been heard in Rome, where top officials in Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s struggling center-right coalition appealed for unity to stop Italy being drawn into market turmoil that has hit Greece and Portugal.

“From tomorrow, we have the job of showing we are united and blocking the effort of speculators,” said Paolo Bonaiuti, a government undersecretary and senior aide to Berlusconi.

“In the coming months we have to 120-130 billion euros of bond issues to deal with, so we need cohesion and united intent, it’ll take effort to show that the markets are overdoing it.”

Berlusconi, facing trial on corruption and sex charges, has been weakened by electoral losses and government infighting and has appeared increasingly at odds with his finance minister. Adding to his woes, a court on Saturday ordered his Fininvest holding company to pay an $800 million penalty to a rival.

Credited with shielding Italy from the worst of the financial crisis, Tremonti has appeared isolated within the government for his hard line on spending cuts.

He has also faced additional pressure after a corruption probe ensnared a close former adviser.

The premium investors demand to hold Italian debt rather than benchmark German bonds hit a euro lifetime high of 236 basis points on Friday after Berlusconi criticised the abrasive Tremonti in a newspaper interview for not being a “team player.”

As fears spread that the turmoil hitting Greece could spread to Italy if the budget discipline imposed by Tremonti relaxed, yields on 10-year Italian bonds rose to 5.3 percent, close to what some bankers describe as a pain threshold of 5.5 percent.

At the same time, shares in Italy’s biggest bank Unicredit (CRDI.MI) sank 7.9 percent and Italy’s blue-chip FTSE MIB index fell 3.5 percent.

Euro zone governments have made heavy enough weather of agreeing bailouts for small countries like Greece and Ireland and the consequences of the crisis affecting Italy, the euro zone’s third largest economy, are incalculable.

“We can’t go on for many more days like Friday,” a senior official from the European Central Bank said. “We’re very worried by Italy.”

OVERCOMING INTERNAL DIVISIONS

The scare on what Italian newspapers called “Black Friday” appears to have strengthened Tremonti’s position, with Umberto Bossi, the powerful leader of Berlusconi’s Northern League coalition allies, praising him for “listening to the markets.”

This week, parliament will begin debating an austerity package aimed at keeping Italy on track to bring its budget back to balance by 2014 and center-right officials urged an end to weeks of squabbling in the ruling coalition.

“The coalition has to avoid internal divisions that must be overcome at all costs and which can be resolved in better times,” said Fabrizio Cicchitto from Berlusconi’s PDL party.

Berlusconi met Tremonti on Friday for what was officially described afterwards as a “long and cordial” lunch and newspaper commentators expect a truce between the two — for now.

“The apparent harmony that has been found again is a gesture of responsibility,” Massimo Franco, an Italian commentator wrote in the Corriere della Sera newspaper.

“And the unanimous chorus with which the PDL — usually irritated by his arrogant manner — defended Tremonti confirms fears of the international consequences of his leaving.”

Berlusconi himself was silent over the weekend and canceled two appointments to speak, which Bonaiuti pinned on the Fininvest court ruling.

How far Italian leaders have reassured markets will become clear when Italy taps the bond market on Thursday. Details of the auction will be released Monday. Barclays Capital expects it will be for 7.75 billion euros worth of government bonds.

Officially projected at 120 percent of gross domestic product this year, Italy’s gross government debt is the second highest in the European Union, after Greece. But its projected budget deficit of 3.9 percent is below the EU average of 4.7 percent, and its private sector debt is not high.

Italy’s 10-year government bond yield, at 5.28 percent, has risen near the 5.5-5.7 percent area that some analysts fear could start pressuring government finances.

It is now only 41 basis points below the yield for Spain, which was considered the next euro zone nation at risk of needing a bailout, but remains far below yields for crisis-hit countries such as Ireland, where the yield is above 13 percent.

(Additional reporting by Andrew Torchia and Brussels bureau)

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by Admin

Seoul shares slip, exporters sag on weak U.S. data

July 11, 2011 in Banking Industry News


Sun Jul 10, 2011 10:02pm EDT

* Weak U.S. data hits key exporters such as Samsung, Hyundai

* SK Telecom down on Hynix bid plan

* Hynix, KEB up on stake sale prospects

(Updates to midday)

By Miyoung Kim

SEOUL, July 11 (Reuters) – Seoul shares opened lower on
Monday as poor U.S. jobs data raised concern about weak overseas
demand for South Korean products, hitting key exporters such as
Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and Hyundai Motor Co
.

U.S. jobs data on Friday came in short of even the lowest
forecast, dashing optimism that the economy was emerging from a
soft patch and leaving investors to hope that earnings season
will revive buying appetites. [ID:ID:nOAT004829]

“U.S. data was much weaker than many had expected, and that
has increased uncertainty over its economy, which is now more
likely to lag in the second half,” said Korea Investment
Securities analyst Kim Chul-joong. “There’s still hope that the
Chinese economy will provide some support for global demand but
the overall external demand outlook is weak and will keep the
market under pressure.”

By 0135 GMT, the Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI)
was down 0.86 percent at 2,161.47 points. Last week, the
index rose for a third consecutive week, adding more than 8
percent.

Samsung Electronics, Asia’s biggest technology company by
market value, fell 1.9 percent and Hyundai Motor, the country’s
top automaker, dropped 3 percent.

LG Display Co Ltd , which vies to be the world’s
leading LCD flat screen producer with Samsung Electronics,
dropped 2.4 percent after a report that it had lowered capacity
run rates because of weak demand.

The Edaily online news outlet quoted an unnamed LG Display
official as saying that the company had cut production run rates
at one of its eighth-generation lines from a high 80 percent
level. LG Display said it could not comment on specific lines
but it planned to keep operation rates conservative and flexible
depending on market conditions.

SK Telecom Co Ltd , the country’s No.1 wireless
carrier fell nearly 4 percent, dropping for a fifth consecutive
session to an eight-year low, pummeled by its plan to buy a
controlling stake worth $2.3 billion in Hynix Semiconductor Inc
.

SK Telecom entered the fray to buy the 15 percent stake in
the world’s No.2 memory chip maker on Friday, prompting investor
concern about a lack of synergy benefits and SK possibly paying
a hefty premium to win bidding over rival STX Corp .

“There’s not much for SK to gain from the deal and its
shares will continue to be under pressure until it makes a final
decision on whether to bid,” said KB Investment Securities
analyst Lee Ji-yeon.

Hyundai Cement Co Ltd , a cement producer that
owns a resort in Gangwon Province, tumbled 8.4 percent on
mounting selling pressure after climbing 24 percent in the past
two sessions. The stock rallied last week on hopes for a
construction boom after South Korea’s winning bid to host the
2018 Winter Olympics in the eastern province.

Bucking the trend, Hynix Semiconductor Inc added
0.4 percent, rising for a second successive session on
expectations that creditors-turned-shareholders may be
successful in selling their stakes after at least three failed
attempts in as many years.

Korea Exchange Bank gained 0.5 percent after
Hana Financial Group Inc extended its agreed $4.1
billion deal for a controlling stake in KEB on Friday,
indicating its firm interest in the foreign exchange specialist,
despite legal and regulatory uncertainties.

(Reporting by Miyoung Kim; Editing by Chris Lewis)