Archivo diario: agosto 9, 2010

Most Asian Stocks Rise on Profit Speculation; Japan Shares Fall

Aug. 9 (Bloomberg) — Most Asian stocks rose, led by finance companies and Taiwanese electronics makers amid speculation corporate earnings growth can weather slower economic growth in the U.S. and Japan.

Winbond Electronics Corp. surged 7 percent in Taipei after reporting a second-quarter profit compared with a loss the previous year. Melbourne-based Axa Asia Pacific Holdings Ltd. surged 5.4 percent on speculation regulators will approve a buyout by National Australia Bank Ltd. Japanese exporters Toyota Motor Corp., Canon Inc. and Honda Motor Co. fell more than 1.6 percent as Goldman Sachs Group Inc. cut its forecasts for economic growth forecasts in the U.S. and Japan.

About 15 stocks advanced for every 14 that declined in the MSCI Asia Pacific, which fell 0.1 percent to 122.08 as of 2:52 p.m. in Tokyo. The index dropped after rising for the last five consecutive weeks, the longest stretch in a year.

“While we’re recovering and we’d all like to see it go in a straight line upwards, the nature of the recovery is still bumpy,” said Tim Schroeders, who helps manage about $1.1 billion at Pengana Capital Ltd. in Melbourne. “It’s clearly a road full of twists and turns.”

Japan’s Nikkei 225 Stock Average slumped 0.8 percent. Ministry of Finance figures released today showed the country’s current-account surplus unexpectedly shrank for a second month in June as export growth cooled, a sign an economic recovery is losing momentum.

China’s Shanghai Composite Index gained 0.1 percent, with cement makers advancing on optimism overcapacity in the industry will ease. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index rose 0.7 percent and Taiwan’s Taiex index climbed 0.9 percent. South Korea’s Kospi index increased 0.3 percent.

To contact the reporters for this story: Lynn Thomasson in Hong Kong at lthomasson@bloomberg.net ; Anna Kitanaka in Tokyo at akitanaka@bloomberg.net .

===
Sent from Bloomberg for Blackberry. Download it from the Blackberry App World! Enviado desde mi Blackberry® 3G de Iusacell.

Deja un comentario

Archivado bajo Uncategorized

China Risks ‘Sacrificing’ Growth as Energy Curbs Hit

Aug. 9 (Bloomberg) — China’s industrial output growth may have weakened in July as the government shuttered energy- intensive factories, highlighting how environmental goals risk damping growth just as export orders soften.

Industrial production climbed 13.4 percent from a year earlier after a 13.7 percent gain in June, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey of 29 economists. The data are scheduled for release in Beijing on Aug. 11.

China is lagging behind a target for reducing the amount of energy used relative to gross domestic product, with only months to run in Premier Wen Jiabao’s five-year plan. Policy makers’ determination to meet the goal may be tested by the need for “sacrificing” growth in an economy that is already cooling, according to UBS AG economist Wang Tao.

“The government is determined to meet this self-imposed target and this will likely have a direct impact in terms of weak readings of key headline indicators,” said Wang Qing, a Hong Kong-based economist with Morgan Stanley. Wang estimates that measures to meet the energy-efficiency goal could cut full- year industrial output gains by 1.5 percentage points.”

Wang added that the environmental campaign is unlikely to hurt the underlying strength of the world’s fastest-growing major economy.

Food Costs

China’s July trade data, due tomorrow, may show that exports climbed 35 percent from a year earlier, down from 43.9 percent in June, according to the survey of analysts. Import growth may have slowed for a fourth month to 30 percent, leaving a trade surplus of $19.6 billion.

Inflation may have accelerated to 3.3 percent from 2.9 percent in June, boosted by food costs and the comparison with a year earlier, when prices were falling. Economists’ median estimate was for new lending of 600 billion yuan ($88.6 billion), almost matching June’s 603 billion yuan.

The forecast industrial-output growth would be the weakest since August 2009, excluding distortions caused by holidays at the start of each year.

A harsher campaign of closures of inefficient factories would add to weakness in export orders, illustrated by a third monthly decline in a July index released by the logistics federation. A cooling property market, easing infrastructure investment and credit curbs are also restraining the expansion of the fastest-growing major economy. July manufacturing data showed companies are reducing stock.

Growth Risk

The energy measures add to the threat of excessive “tightening” by officials, while weakness in external demand poses the biggest near-term risk to growth, according to Ken Peng, an economist for Citigroup Inc.

China’s energy used per unit of GDP rose 0.1 in the first six months from a year earlier, making it harder to meet the 2006-10 goal of a 20 percent cut. In the first four years, the reduction was 15.6 percent, according to UBS.

The industry ministry yesterday named 2,087 companies in 18 industries including steel, aluminum and cement that have been ordered to shut outdated facilities by the end of next month. Failure to meet the deadline will incur penalties that may include a suspension of power supplies and lending, according to a statement posted on the website of the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology yesterday.

Climate Change

Accelerating the closure of capacity is “a key measure to transform the country’s economic growth model and improve the quality and efficiency of growth and is urgently needed to promote energy efficiency, reduce pollution and actively tackle climate change,” the ministry said.

Hong Kong-listed Sanmenxia Tianyuan Aluminum Co., one of the companies named by the ministry, said on July 20 it was ordered to close 38 percent of its annual capacity for aluminum re-smelt ingots by the end of the third quarter.

The government aims to limit the economy’s reliance on heavy industry and the environmental toll, illustrated by last month’s Dalian oil spill and a leak of acid-laced waste at a Zijin Mining Group Co. site in Fujian.

The Communist Party’s Politburo, chaired by President Hu Jintao, said July 22 that the government will continue to focus on energy-efficiency and reducing pollution.

“If the government has true resolve, then investors, especially overseas investors, may have not fully comprehended the implications of such policies on China’s heavy industry and demand for commodities,” UBS’ Beijing-based economist Wang Tao said in a note last month.

Power Surcharges

She estimates an intensified campaign to achieve the goal could shave 1.8 percentage points from second-half economic growth.

So far, government measures have included increasing power surcharges for some aluminum companies and scrapping export tax rebates for some steel and metals. The nation aims to shut down small thermal power plants totaling 10 million kilowatts in capacity this year, according to a Nanfang Daily report citing unidentified officials.

China’s economic expansion dipped to 10.3 percent the second quarter from 11.9 percent in the first three months of the year. Urban fixed-asset investment in the seven months through July probably rose 25.3 percent after gaining 25.5 percent in the first six months, the survey of economists showed. Retail sales may have gained 18.5 percent in July.

Economic growth of between 8 percent and 9 percent would be more sustainable for China, Tom Albanese, the chief executive of mining company Rio Tinto Group said Aug. 5.

For Related News and Information: Most-read stories on China: MNI CHINA 1W Most-read China economy stories: TNI CHECO MOSTREAD BN For top economic news: TOP ECO For top China news: TOP CHINA Credit crunch page: WWCC Government relief programs: GGRP

===
Sent from Bloomberg for Blackberry. Download it from the Blackberry App World! Enviado desde mi Blackberry® 3G de Iusacell.

Deja un comentario

Archivado bajo Uncategorized

Crash of 2015 Won’t Wait for Regulators to Rein In Wall Street

Aug. 9 (Bloomberg) — The financial system experiences a crisis “every five to seven years,” JPMorgan Chase & Co. Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon told the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission in January. By that measure, the next crash could come by 2015 — years before new banking reforms are in place.

Many of the measures ordered by Congress and global regulators, aimed at cushioning the financial system in future crises, are years away from being implemented. The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision plans to give the world’s banks until 2018 to comply with limits on how much they can borrow. Parts of the Volcker rule, a provision of the new Dodd-Frank Act that would force firms to cut stakes in in-house hedge funds and private-equity units, may not go into effect for a dozen years.

Banks’ appetite for using borrowed money, known as leverage, for investing in complex, illiquid securities contributed to the worst credit crisis since the Great Depression. The pace at which curbs on leverage are likely to be imposed on the industry contrasts with the speed at which banks including UBS AG and Morgan Stanley are hiring to ramp up trading activities.

“Based on our experience of government’s ability to execute these things effectively and in a timely way, we are almost uncovered now from any future financial risk for at least another 8 or 10 years, and that’s a little scary,” said Roy Smith, finance professor at New York University’s Stern School of Business and a former banker at Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

‘Glacial Pace’

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, who served as president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York prior to and during the crisis, said in a speech last week that the administration wants to change the “frustrating, glacial pace” at which rule-writing has occurred in the past. “We will move as quickly as possible to bring clarity to the new rules of finance,” he said.

Even so, he said that banks will have until the beginning of 2013 to meet the new minimum capital requirements and “several years beyond that” to create new capital buffers and meet more stringent definitions of what constitutes capital.

The Dodd-Frank Act requires 67 studies and 243 new rules to be created, according to law firm Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP. The act creates a Financial Stability Oversight Council with 10 voting members, including a to-be-named insurance expert and heads of at least 3 regulatory agencies awaiting new leaders. The law’s Volcker rule, which bans banks from proprietary trading and limits investments in private equity and hedge funds, requires a study by the council before rules are drafted.

Seat Belts

Financial crises have become a regular occurrence. The 2008 credit crisis followed the implosion of the technology stock bubble in 2000 and 2001, which came just a couple of years after the Russian government bond default and the collapse of hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management LP roiled global markets.

Lawrence Summers, director of the National Economic Council, said in an October speech to the Economist magazine’s annual Buttonwood Gathering that fixing the financial system could be compared to reducing fatalities in automobile wrecks. Mandating seat belts, guard rails and speed limits proved more effective in reducing damage caused by crashes than trying to prevent reckless driving, he said.

“In the same way, we need approaches to financial regulation that seek to make the world safer for ignorance and cupidity, which are inevitable, rather than relying on our ability to correct them,” Summers said in the New York speech.

Cues From Basel

Like placing seat belts on careless drivers, requiring financial institutions to hold more capital would help the companies better withstand even serious errors, Summers said.

Instead of mandating higher capital levels for financial institutions, the Dodd-Frank Act signed by President Barack Obama last month leaves the decisions to regulators such as the Federal Reserve. They, in turn, are taking cues from the Basel committee, a forum of 27 countries’ central banks and regulators that creates global rules that aim to prevent banks from seeking out countries with the most lenient regulation.

The Basel committee, which in December proposed a set of new guidelines for leverage, capital and liquidity, came under attack by financial companies and some governments who thought the limits would curb lending and hamper an economic recovery. The Institute of International Finance, an industry group representing more than 400 firms, released a report in June that said the proposed rules would erase 3.1 percent of gross domestic product in the U.S., euro region and Japan by 2015.

‘Don’t Kill the Goose’

“They’re all saying the same thing, which is don’t kill the goose that lays the eggs you depend on,” NYU’s Smith said. “So they’re getting through to the Basel people, and they’re getting through to them in two ways — one is to soften the expected blows,” he said. The second is “to extend them well into the future.”

The Basel committee agreed last month to give banks more leeway in the types of assets they can count as capital. Geithner, in his speech at NYU last week, said delaying capital rules will make it easier for banks to earn the money they use as capital.

“Importantly, that means banks will have the opportunity to meet these new requirements in part through future earnings and that will help protect the recovery currently under way,” he said.

In effect, the policy allows banks several years of padding their capital with future profits instead of imposing immediate remedies, a policy sometimes referred to as “regulatory forbearance” that’s a little like allowing drivers to build up speed before buckling a seatbelt.

Vulnerable to Losses

The Basel committee’s efforts to require banks to hold more liquid, or easy-to-sell, assets — enabling them to better handle a sudden rush for funds — were also weakened by expanding the definition of what counts as liquid. And a planned leverage ratio, which would set an absolute cap on the amount of borrowing a bank could do, won’t be in effect until 2018, the committee said.

While leverage enables financial companies to multiply their potential gains on investments, it also makes them far more vulnerable to losses that can wipe out capital. For a company that borrows $20 for every $1 it holds in shareholder equity, a 5 percent decline in those assets can render the company insolvent.

Delaying reform until “2018 is like doing nothing because you know the world will change many times between now and 2018,” said Simon Johnson, former chief economist for the International Monetary Fund who is now a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Sloan School of Management. “You should worry a lot about the next round of the cycle.”

Regulators ‘Under Pressure’

Not everyone is so concerned. Even though the Financial Stability Oversight Council created by the Dodd-Frank legislation won’t hold its first meeting until October, regulators have stepped up oversight and many U.S. banks already have raised capital and reduced their leverage.

“In a way it feels like we’re in an informal systemic risk regime just in terms of the way that supervisors are acting and reacting to bank holding companies,” said Margaret Tahyar, a partner in the financial institutions practice at Davis Polk in New York.

Geithner’s efforts to speed up rulemaking “can have a pretty big effect” on the pace at which systemic risk regulation is implemented, she said. Other regulators, such as the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodities Futures Trading Commission, are “under enormous pressure to do things and show progress,” Tahyar said.

Derivatives Rules

Key provisions of the Dodd-Frank legislation, such as rules requiring over-the-counter derivatives to be cleared or exchange-traded, are due to be clarified in a year, said Bradley Sabel, a partner at law firm Shearman & Sterling LLP in New York who spent 18 years at the New York Fed. Derivatives are contracts with values derived from assets such as stocks, bonds commodities, currencies, or events such as changes in interest rates, creditworthiness or the weather.

Reforming the $615 trillion market in over-the-counter derivatives is itself a way to manage leverage, as the trades often replicate investments that are a multiple of the cost of the contract.

“It’s not like we’re saying, as Basel did about leverage, wait until 2018,” Sabel said of the Dodd-Frank Act’s provisions. “Within one to two years this stuff will pretty much be coming on line. I think that’s quite soon enough.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Christine Harper in New York at charper@bloomberg.net

===
Sent from Bloomberg for Blackberry. Download it from the Blackberry App World! Enviado desde mi Blackberry® 3G de Iusacell.

Deja un comentario

Archivado bajo Uncategorized

Microsoft, Yahoo Tackle Pesky Online Ads by Giving Users Choice

Aug. 9 (Bloomberg) — Microsoft Corp., Yahoo! Inc. and Hulu LLC plan to make online advertisements less annoying and more profitable — by letting users choose which ones to watch.

Starting next month, websites including MSNBC.com, Yahoo.com and Hulu.com will begin letting consumers decide which ads show up in the video clips they watch online. A research study of the new Hulu-designed format led by Vivaki, the digital arm of French advertising company Publicis Group SA, showed that users were twice as likely to click an ad when given a choice than when one was selected for them.

“When you give people a choice they tend to love you because you’re showing them respect,” said Beth Uyenco Shatto, global research director at Microsoft’s ads unit. “If it wasn’t for advertising they wouldn’t be getting the content for free.”

The new ad-selecting tool, called ASq, may step up development of the $3.1 billion global video ads market, already the fastest-growing part of online advertising, Bloomberg Businessweek.com reported. While it may not end unwelcome commercials for car insurance or weight-loss pills, it may help websites command higher rates while letting marketers attract more eyeballs and better target consumers.

CBS.com, AOL.com and Discovery.com plan to start using ASq in September and Google Inc.’s YouTube is studying it. The new offering would let the viewer of an online video choose from three or more ads instead of a pre-roll clip. Yahoo and Hulu plan to use it as does Microsoft’s MSNBC.com, which features segments from the “Today” show, “NBC Nightly News” and “Meet the Press.”

“We’re getting smarter about what makes more impactful advertising,” said Uyenco Shatto. “The big aha! here is understanding what makes a viewer choose a particular ad.”

Online Ad Surge

Online advertising is expected to rise 12 percent this year to $61.8 billion worldwide from $55.2 billion in 2009, according to New York-based researcher eMarketer. Although text ads on search pages such as Google or Microsoft’s Bing remain the dominant form of online advertising, video ads are growing fast, eMarketer says. According to IDC, global online video ad spending, which was $2.2 billion in 2009, will expand to $11.3 billion in 2014.

YouTube, which has more than 1 billion views a day, says the company is “doubling” its efforts to get more viewers for its video ads.

“We are always looking to develop new formats and features that make them more interactive,” the company said.

While online ads may be seen as disruptive, they foot the bill for much of the Internet’s content. They are expected to get better at targeting individual consumers.

Fun and Engaging

“Online is much more individualist than television so targeting is extremely important and effective,” said Dean Donaldson, director of media experience at MediaMind Technologies Inc., a maker of software for digital ad campaigns.

“People do like advertising if it’s fun and engaging and that’s done by speaking to each user,” he said.

Not everyone is convinced allowing users to choose ads will benefit the industry.

“If you only watch what you like then how will it broaden your appeal?” said Richard Wheaton, managing director at Ogilvy & Mather’s Neo digital media agency, which works with clients including Cisco Systems Inc., Eastman Kodak Co., International Business Machines Corp. and American Express Co. “Everybody isn’t happy to be advertised at, but the more iPads I see the more I want an iPad.”

Wheaton said there’s a “real shortage” of quality of video ads online because they are very expensive to shoot.

Experimental

For now, most online video ads are nothing more than TV commercials posted on the Internet, said David Hallerman, an advertising analyst at eMarketer.

“The whole online video space is still experimental for most advertisers and websites,” he said. “It definitely will be growing, though search still remains No.1 in terms of dollars spent and will remain dominant.”

An estimated 9 percent of ads online are “touched” by a user’s mouse for an average 43 seconds, Donaldson said. The touch-time grows by 2 percent to 3 percent if the ad is a video.

Blinkx Plc, an online video-search operator spun off by Autonomy Corp., is among companies that stand to benefit from the expected surge in video ads, said Chief Executive Officer Suranga Chandratillake.

The site, which gets 99 percent of its revenue from advertising and was rated by ComScore as the fastest-growing video site after Facebook, targets consumers with ads using software that analyzes words and visual signs. Users can even choose their own endings to some video ads.

Samsung 3-D

Samsung Electronics Co. is using interactive ads in one of its campaigns for 3-D television. The company took a projection of the late-19th-century Beurs van Berlage building in Amsterdam and pasted it into a YouTube page. The building then cracks, butterflies emerge from it, and users are instructed to click on as many butterflies as possible to win a free TV.

“Video is emotive,” said Chandratillake. “Search is a terrible place to do branded advertising. When you think of your favorite ads, they are never Google search ads.”

There are 150 million online video watchers in the U.S. and double that in China, said Sean Finnegan, chief digital officer at Starcom MediaVest Group, a media buying and communications agency owned by Publicis.

“The majority of brands we represent plan to increase their allocation to online video this year and next,” he said.

Starcom MediaVest was part of a research group put together by Publicis’s Vivaki, along with Hulu, Microsoft and the others to study the ASq model. The group included marketers such as Allstate Corp., Applebee’s International Inc. and Capital One Financial Corp.

Eventually, video ads will become richer and accompany TV audiences migrating online. They will have social and commercial elements and target the right person at the right time, said Jonathan Nelson, Omnicom Group Inc.’s digital chief.

“Video ads and interactive ads have lineage in TV; extending that online is natural,” he said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Kristen Schweizer in London at kschweizer1@bloomberg.net .

===
Sent from Bloomberg for Blackberry. Download it from the Blackberry App World! Enviado desde mi Blackberry® 3G de Iusacell.

Deja un comentario

Archivado bajo Uncategorized

U.S. Economy to Improve Slowly, Former Treasury Secretaries Say

Aug. 9 (Bloomberg) — The U.S. economy will improve slowly and another round of fiscal stimulus probably wouldn’t be effective, former Treasury secretaries Paul O’Neill and Robert Rubin said.

Rubin, who served under Democratic President Bill Clinton, said the U.S. is “going to have slow and bumpy growth,” an interview on CNN’s “Fareed Zakaria GPS” aired yesterday. A “major second stimulus” might create more uncertainty and undermine confidence, he said.

Companies concerned about demand won’t expand facilities or hire new employees until sales have improved, said O’Neill, who was Treasury secretary under Republican President George W. Bush. “We are moving forward at a pretty gradual pace,” he said. “But I don’t think things are terrible.”

The world’s largest economy may be cooling in the second half of the year as a scarcity of jobs limits consumer spending. At the same time, concern about the surging fiscal deficit has prompted President Barack Obama to urge lawmakers to let the Bush administration tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans expire this year.

While Rubin backed Obama’s stance, O’Neill reiterated that he strongly opposed the Bush tax cuts of 2003 and said the president and U.S. lawmakers need to focus on overhauling the entire tax system rather than on the expiring cuts.

Not ‘Intelligent People’

“The tax code we have is proof we’re not an intelligent people,” said O’Neill, a senior adviser and consultant to New York-based Blackstone Group LP. “The president could earn a lot of credit and he could make a huge difference if he would lead the charge for fundamental tax reform,” which might include a “consumption-based tax.”

Obama wants to let the tax cuts expire for households earning more than $250,000 a year and maintain them for households earning less than that. The tax reductions, enacted in 2001 and 2003, expire on Dec. 31. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner has said the government can’t afford to extend tax reductions for the wealthiest group, as the breaks don’t pay for themselves in economic growth.

Rubin said he’d create an estate tax, increase taxes for the top two brackets of upper-income Americans and leave in place the middle-class tax rates “for a limited period” because economic growth will take time to quicken. He would also try “over the next six months to put in place a very serious beginning of deficit reduction that would take effect at some specified time in the future.”

Delay Elimination

Rubin urged delaying the elimination of tax cuts on the middle class because of the “vulnerability” of the economy and the high unemployment rate.

The economy grew at a slower-than-projected 2.4 percent pace in the second quarter as consumer spending slowed and the trade deficit widened, government data showed on July 30. U.S. companies in July hired fewer workers than forecast, and economists in a Bloomberg News survey project unemployment will be slow to recede after reaching a 26-year high of 10.1 percent in October 2009.

O’Neill advocated steps to help Americans see a brighter future. Something “simple” such as a value-added tax instead of the income tax and corporate income tax “would give reassurance to the markets that we’re coming back” and spur investment and savings, he said.

Jobless Rate

Private payrolls that exclude government agencies rose by 71,000 in July after a June gain of 31,000 that was smaller than previously reported, according to Labor Department figures released in Washington Aug 6. Overall employment fell by 131,000, reflecting the dismissal of temporary census workers, and the jobless rate held at 9.5 percent.

The Clinton presidency, when 22.8 million jobs were created, “was a remarkable period” and the president “was terrific on economic policy,” Rubin said. The country is in a much different position now, he said in response to a question about how the U.S. could create jobs more rapidly.

“Obama has done a lot, given the current circumstances in which he has been operating,” Rubin said. “But he now faces these enormously complex issues,” and “I think we’ve all got to try to find some way to help make the system work better.”

The weak July payrolls report intensified a debate among economists over whether Federal Reserve policy makers will take an incremental step this week toward providing more stimulus. U.S. central bankers said in June that additional monetary stimulus “might become appropriate” if the economic outlook “were to worsen appreciably.”

Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke last month said the central bank is prepared to take further policy actions if the economy “doesn’t continue to improve.” Bernanke said last month the Fed may at some point maintain stimulus by investing the proceeds from maturing bonds into U.S. Treasuries.

To contact the reporters on this story: Courtney Schlisserman in Washington at cschlisserma@bloomberg.net Shobhana Chandra in Washington at schandra1@bloomberg.net

===
Sent from Bloomberg for Blackberry. Download it from the Blackberry App World! Enviado desde mi Blackberry® 3G de Iusacell.

Deja un comentario

Archivado bajo Uncategorized

Mummies Tell Tale of Economy Missing in Action: William Pesek

Aug. 9 (Bloomberg) — It sounds more like a plot for a horror film than a legitimate news story.

It began last week when Tokyo’s oldest man turned out to be 30 years dead, his mummified remains sharing the family home with his daughter. A bank account receiving his pension benefits was found to be alive and well.

Reports that Tokyo’s oldest woman — 113 if alive — is missing prompted a mad centenarian search. Japan is now checking on the whereabouts of 840 pensioners 85 and older. The 100-plus crowd has more than tripled to 40,399 in the past decade; it may take Japan’s entire police force to locate all of them.

This macabre tale got more attention than Toyota Motor Corp.’s sudden return to profit. It had 126 million Japanese asking any number of questions. How could we let people vanish? Do we really live the longest? How many others are decomposing in their homes? And hey, where’s granny?

Yet there are three ways in which Japan’s missing-elderly scandal sheds light on the nation’s economic plight.

First, it’s an analogy for the increasingly mummified state of fast-graying Japan. With firms such as Toyota and Sony Corp. raising profit projections, it’s easy to forget deflation is deepening. That would be less of a concern if interest rates weren’t already near zero and public debt weren’t about 200 percent of gross domestic product.

Mummified Japan

A mummy is a corpse whose skin and organs have been preserved. That’s an apt description of where the economy finds itself. Twenty years after Japan’s bubble economy burst, corporate executives are still obsessing over exchange rates.

Japan needs to increase its global competitiveness, not bellyache about the yen’s 8 percent increase this year. Corporate Japan’s skin and organs have been preserved to the detriment of its global standing. And while Japan’s business model festers, life goes on everywhere else.

Only one Japanese name made Fast Company magazine’s 2010 list of the world’s most innovative companies, and it was a retailer. One reason is the staid nature of Japan’s start-up universe. Another is the “Galapagos syndrome,” whereby Japan makes status-quo-shattering gadgets in isolation.

Japan’s cell-phone industry is emblematic of how little regard is given to tapping new markets overseas. The nation makes cutting-edge phones, yet with features and functions that differ markedly from global standards. As the population shrinks, Japan needs to think bigger and more internationally.

Hello Kitty

Hello Kitty offers another cautionary tale. Last week, one of Japan’s most iconic characters rang the closing bell at the New York Stock Exchange to mark creator Sanrio Co.’s 50th anniversary. Yet the 30-something feline is running out of product lives as domestic sales shrink. It’s a fitting analogy for Japan’s failure to update its global image.

Second, pockets of poverty are growing. Japanese cling to the myth that their nation is an egalitarian one. An October 2009 disclosure by the Labor Ministry dramatized the point: about one in six Japanese was below the poverty line as of 2007.

That was before the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and the global financial crisis. The rate at which Japanese are sliding into poverty surely accelerated in the last three years. It has become a media obsession to chronicle the lives of the working poor in a nation that likes to pretend poverty is only a problem for others.

Missing Centenarians

Part of the shock surrounding missing centenarians is the lengths to which some go to eke out a living. That someone might leave dad’s corpse in a bedroom for 30 years so they can collect his pension smacks many as more an act of desperation than depravity. It ignited fresh debate about the need for improved social safety nets as the outlook darkens.

Third, taxpayer funds are wasted. Of all the skeletons in Japan’s closet, this is the one that most needs addressing. Pension scandals are common here, be it the government losing files or politicians not paying into the national scheme. Yet perhaps more than ever before, Japanese are miffed about some families bilking the system.

The issue of waste doesn’t get enough attention. And as a taxpayer in Japan, I have long been outraged at the number of low-level bureaucrats that ministries send to meetings and conferences around the globe — all traveling business class and staying in swanky hotels.

Money-related investigations of politicians become so numerous and broadly based that one’s eyes glaze over. I can’t count the number of times the road in front of my home in Tokyo gets repaved in a year — quite pointlessly, as far as I can tell. For all the talk of killing bridge-to-nowhere public-works projects, lots of cement is still being dumped around the nation at this very moment.

Investors everywhere are losing tolerance for runaway public debt. That means making bold and honest efforts to get control over spending. Japan can no longer allow these challenges to fester away in the basement with grandpa.

(William Pesek is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.)

To contact the writer of this column: William Pesek in Tokyo at wpesek@bloomberg.net

===
Sent from Bloomberg for Blackberry. Download it from the Blackberry App World! Enviado desde mi Blackberry® 3G de Iusacell.

Deja un comentario

Archivado bajo Uncategorized

Bad Things Happen in August for Russia Investors: Julian Rimmer

Aug. 9 (Bloomberg) — August is often the cruelest month for Russians, and the 2010 vintage looks no different with wildfires blazing across large swathes of the country.

Maybe it’s pure coincidence the most disastrous news flow over the last dozen years has coincided with this month: the debt default in 1998; the sinking of the Kursk submarine in 2000; terrorist attacks near the Moscow subway and on two airplanes in 2004; the war with Georgia in 2008; and the explosion at OAO RusHydro’s power station in 2009. Bad things happen in August. That’s why you should sell now.

An ominous seasonal pattern is discernible, so investors should react accordingly. With the mercury and the equity markets having risen in tandem during the summer, benchmark indexes are vulnerable to the impression that August will be unlucky again. The overriding concern is that the present emergency threatens to derail Russia’s economic recovery.

So how do you protect your portfolio? Sell shares in companies on whom the government will lean to plug budget gaps or contain inflation. OAO Gazprom has long been used to subsidize other parts of the economy, and the Finance Ministry has made it clear that taxation of oil companies such as OAO Lukoil and OAO Rosneft will remain high to balance the revenue- expenditure ledger. Oil stocks can be expected to shore up government finances.

The heat wave has reduced Russia’s grain harvest by at least 20 percent and deprived the country of export revenue. Last week, Russia banned grain exports from Aug. 15 until the end of the year to contain domestic prices.

Rising Prices

One might expect utilities to fare well in this environment. They won’t. OAO Mosenergo, for example, has seen electricity consumption rise 15 percent in the last two weeks, but water shortages are starting to strain power generation. Since utility bills comprise a large percentage of the inflation basket, the government will delay tariff hikes to tame the consumer-price index. It is estimated the drought will add 1.5 percentage points to the CPI next year, and higher budget spending to deal with the costs of the emergency will aggravate that further.

The inflation genie, never completely rebottled even during the financial crisis, may wreak havoc again, forcing the central bank to reverse its recent policy of lowering interest rates and thereby choking loan growth in the banking industry. This is bad news for banks such as VTB Group and OAO Sberbank, which compete for deposits to repair their balance sheets and whose net interest margins are under pressure as a consequence.

Economic Drag

The debilitating effect of high temperatures on the economy has already been cited by VTB Capital’s purchasing managers index, which dropped to a four-month low of 54.2 in July, and by several companies, including carmaker OAO AvtoVAZ, which suspended production this month.

One challenge facing Russian fund managers is the scarcity of stocks to choose in reaction to the crisis. Wheat prices surged more than 50 percent in July and rallied to the highest price in 23 months last week, a squeeze that will force economists to revise their inflation forecasts. But the Russian market offers no means to profit from this. Prime Minister Vladimir Putin clearly wants to prevent fertilizer companies from profiteering. So there is a dearth of opportunities.

Grain producer OAO Razgulay is risky because of its high leverage, and soil aridity is delaying the planting of winter grains. There are no listed stocks that suit the spike in beer consumption, while consumer companies such as X5 Retail Group N.V. and OAO Magnit will suffer from the disruption to shopping habits caused by bushfires and smog in affected areas.

$15 Mojitos

The heat wave began so beguilingly in July. With temperatures exceeding 100 degrees Fahrenheit on the sun-beaten streets, wealthy Muscovites basked in the novelty, happy to pay $25 for a towel on a sun bed and sip $15 mojitos at swanky beach clubs on the Moscow River.

The hot spell turned sinister. Each day brought a litany of drownings. The bikini-clad beauties, who were frolicking in Moscow’s fountains a few weeks earlier, began to suffocate in the poisonous fug squatting on the capital. Wildfires are still blazing uncontrollably in the surrounding areas as the worst drought on record shows no sign of abating.

Normally at this time of the year Putin likes to decamp to Siberia and engage in the manly pursuits of hunting and fishing. Not this year. He has been frantically crisscrossing the country, extinguishing literal and metaphorical fires.

The Russian government has a well-earned reputation for being remarkably clumsy when it comes to handling crises and this latest one is generating concern among the Russian investment community for precisely this reason. Perhaps it’s also because oligarchs are cruising the Mediterranean in their yachts and not running their companies properly, or because Russian leaders and security services allow their vigilance to lapse. But there’s something about a Russian August that conjures unwelcome drama and extreme market volatility.

Equity investors have one hope. Putin, who was appointed prime minister by President Boris Yeltsin in August 1999, was catapulted into the limelight for his reputation as a man well- versed in crisis management. He and President Dmitry Medvedev need to bring these fires under control before the embryonic economic recovery goes up in flames.

(Julian Rimmer is a trader at CF Global Trading in London. The opinions expressed are his own. His firm or clients may own or trade securities discussed in this column.)

To contact the writer of this column: Julian Rimmer at jrimmer1@bloomberg.net

===
Sent from Bloomberg for Blackberry. Download it from the Blackberry App World! Enviado desde mi Blackberry® 3G de Iusacell.

Deja un comentario

Archivado bajo Uncategorized

EBay, China Automotive, McDonald’s, Synutra: U.S. Equity Movers

Aug. 9 (Bloomberg) — Shares of the following companies are having unusual moves in U.S. trading. Stock symbols are in parentheses, and prices are as of 10 a.m. in New York.

China Automotive Systems Inc. (CAAS US) fell 9.4 percent to $18.75, after sinking as much as 13 percent, the most intraday since May 5. The maker of steering components for cars reported second-quarter profit of 28 cents a share, in line with the average analyst estimate in a Bloomberg survey.

China Electric Motor Inc. (CELM US) climbed 5.5 percent to $5.15, after advancing as much as 11 percent, the most intraday since July 9. The maker of micro-motors said second-quarter profit rose to 20 cents a share from 17 cents a year earlier.

DigitalGlobe Inc. (DGI US) rose 11 percent to $30.76 and GeoEye Inc. (GEOY US) gained 12 percent to $36.19. The providers of satellite imagery won contracts for $3.5 billion and $3.8 billion respectively from the U.S. National Geospatial- Intelligence Agency for its EnhancedView commercial imagery program.

Dish Network Corp. (DISH US) fell the most in the Russell 1000 Index, slipping 8.9 percent to $19.01. The second-largest U.S. satellite-television provider unexpectedly lost subscribers last quarter.

EBay Inc. (EBAY US) gained 2.6 percent to $22, after climbing to $22.63 earlier, the highest intraday price June 21. Skype SA, which offers free or low-cost calls over the Internet, said it filed to Securities and Exchange Commission for a proposed initial public offering. EBay, owner of e-commerce sites and the PayPal online payment service, sold most of its stake in Skype for $2 billion in November.

Hewlett-Packard Co. (HPQ US) slumped 6.5 percent to $43.30 for the biggest retreat in the Dow Jones Industrial Average. The world’s largest maker of personal computers said Mark Hurd resigned as chief executive officer following an investigation into a sexual-harassment claim that found violations of the company’s standards of business conduct. Chief Financial Officer Cathie Lesjak will take over as CEO on an interim basis.

McDonald’s Corp. (MCD US) had the biggest advance in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, adding 2 percent to $73.18. The world’s largest restaurant company said July global comparable- store sales rose 7 percent. Analysts surveyed by Bloomberg had estimated an increase of 5.1 percent on average.

Medtronic Inc. (MDT US) fell 3 percent to $36.66 for the third-biggest drop in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index. The world’s largest maker of heart devices was cut to “neutral” from “overweight” at JPMorgan Chase & Co.

Northern Oil and Gas Inc. (NOG US) climbed 3.4 percent to $15.39. The exploration and production company focused on the U.S. Rocky Mountain region posted second-quarter profit excluding some items of 12 cents a share, compared with the average analyst estimate of 7 cents in a Bloomberg survey.

Skilled Healthcare Group Inc. (SKH US) gained 30 percent to $3.24 for the biggest rally in the Russell 2000 Index. The nursing and assisted-living home operator was raised to “buy” from “hold” at Jefferies & Co. Inc.

Superior Well Services Inc. (SWSI US) surged 21 percent to $22.01, after rising to $22.03 earlier, the highest intraday price since October 2008. The oilfield services company posted second-quarter profit of 18 cents a share excluding some items when analysts were expecting an average loss of 10 cents, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Synutra International Inc. (SYUT US) had the biggest decline in Russell 2000 Index, losing 33 percent to $11.61. The Chinese maker of baby formula denied a newspaper report that its products may cause premature development in infants.

Target Corp. (TGT US) advanced 2.1 percent to $53.43, after climbing to $53.47, the highest intraday price June 22. The second-largest U.S. discount retailer may rise as its focus on higher-margin goods and cost-control efforts boosts earnings, Barron’s reported.

Visa Inc. (V US) climbed 1.2 percent to $72.97. The world’s biggest payments network may rise as growth in credit- and debit-card usage offsets tighter regulation on fees, Barron’s reported.

To contact the reporter on this story: Lu Wang in New York at lwang8@bloomberg.net

===
Sent from Bloomberg for Blackberry. Download it from the Blackberry App World! Enviado desde mi Blackberry® 3G de Iusacell.

Deja un comentario

Archivado bajo Uncategorized

U.S. Stocks Fluctuate Amid Speculation of Fed Stimulus Measures

Aug. 9 (Bloomberg) — U.S. stocks swung between gains and losses, following the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index rally last week, as investors bet the Federal Reserve may announce economic stimulus tomorrow and Hewlett-Packard Co. tumbled.

McDonald’s Corp. rose 1.6 percent, leading gains in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, after beating sales estimates. Berkshire Hathaway Inc. climbed 0.3 percent after beating the average analyst profit estimate. HP plunged 7.6 percent after Chief Executive Officer Mark Hurd resigned. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. helped send financial shares lower after saying it lost money on 10 days during the second quarter.

The S&P 500 gained 0.2 percent to 1,123.91 at 10:10 a.m. New York time. The Dow climbed 26.27 points, or 0.3 percent, to 10,679.83.

“There are a couple of stock-specific events such as McDonald’s and HP, but everybody’s waiting for tomorrow’s Fed meeting,” said Mike Morcos, senior money manager at Old Second Wealth Management in Aurora, Illinois, which oversees about $1.1 billion. “If we see more quantitative easing then that could provide some support for stocks and metals.”

The Fed’s rate-setting committee meets tomorrow and investors are betting the central bank will announce it will purchase mortgage-backed securities or Treasuries, Jim Reid, a global strategist at Deutsche Bank AG, wrote in an e-mail today. The U.S. economy will improve slowly and another round of fiscal stimulus likely wouldn’t be effective, former Treasury secretaries Paul O’Neill and Robert Rubin told CNN in an interview broadcast yesterday.

Beating Estimates

The S&P 500 increased 1.8 percent last week, sending the benchmark measure of U.S. stocks to the highest level since May, after companies from Pfizer Inc. to News Corp. beat earnings estimates and reports showed expansion in the service and manufacturing industries.

McDonald’s climbed 1.6 percent to $72.91 after the world’s largest restaurant company said July same-store sales rose 7 percent, compared with the median analyst estimate for 5.1 percent growth in a Bloomberg survey. U.S. comparable-store sales rose 5.7 percent, topping the 5 percent forecast.

Berkshire Hathaway rallied 0.3 percent to $80.71. Warren Buffett’s insurance and investment company reported second- quarter operating earnings of $1,866 a share, beating the average estimate of $1,456, according to a Bloomberg survey of four analysts.

HP Investigation

HP fell 7.6 percent to $42.80. Hurd quit following an investigation that found he had a personal relationship with a contractor who received inappropriate payments from the company.

Chief Financial Officer Cathie Lesjak took over as HP’s interim CEO. While an investigation didn’t find a violation of the company’s sexual harassment policy, Hurd “demonstrated a profound lack of judgment that seriously undermined his credibility and damaged his effectiveness in leading HP,” General Counsel Michael Holston said.

HP’s closing price was initially misreported on Aug. 6 as $41.85 instead of $46.30 because Direct Edge Holdings LLC reported trades without the correct code attached, making it appear the computer maker’s stock tumbled before Hurd quit.

The S&P 500 Financials Index fell 0.3 percent, posting the only decline among 10 industries. Goldman Sachs slipped 0.1 percent to $155.02. JPMorgan Chase & Co. retreated 1.3 percent to $39.92. Goldman Sachs, the bank that makes the most revenue trading stocks and bonds, lost money in that business on 10 days in the second quarter, ending a three-month streak of loss-free days at the start of the year.

Losses on Goldman Sachs’s trading desks exceeded $100 million on three days during the period that ended on June 30, according to a filing today by the company with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The firm also disclosed that trading losses surpassed its value-at-risk estimate, a measure of potential losses, on two days.

Trading results across Wall Street firms declined after Goldman Sachs and its biggest rivals posted perfect results, with no losing days, in the first quarter.

To contact the reporter on this story: Nikolaj Gammeltoft in New York at ngammeltoft@bloomberg.net .

===
Sent from Bloomberg for Blackberry. Download it from the Blackberry App World! Enviado desde mi Blackberry® 3G de Iusacell.

Deja un comentario

Archivado bajo Uncategorized

Swedish Earnings Signal Best Economic Rebound in EU

Aug. 9 (Bloomberg) — Eighty percent of Sweden’s biggest companies reported earnings that exceeded analysts’ estimates last quarter, indicating the largest Nordic economy may be headed for the biggest economic rebound in the European Union.

Of the 25 Sweden-based companies on the OMX Stockholm 30 Index, 20 beat the average second-quarter profit estimate from analysts, data compiled by Bloomberg show. That compares with 65 percent of companies that beat analyst estimates on Germany’s DAX Index.

Swedish exporters led by Volvo AB, Alfa Laval AB, SKF AB and Svenska Cellulosa AB, which generate half the country’s economic output, are propelling the recovery as they tap Asian and Latin American demand to counter sluggish trade in Europe. An index of Swedish purchasing managers approached a record high in July, meaning Sweden’s 3.7 percent second-quarter economic expansion may gain pace in the three months through September.

“Exporters are recovering more rapidly from the latest plunge,” said Nordea Bank AB economist Torbjoern Isaksson, in Stockholm. “As the export sector was the hardest hit during the crisis, gross domestic product and capacity utilization are now rising sharply; the strong recovery in the Swedish economy continues.”

EU Outperformer

The second-quarter GDP gain followed a first-quarter increase of 3 percent, which represented the best growth rate in the EU after Slovakia’s 4.8 percent. Sweden’s turnaround may be the biggest in the 27-nation bloc, with the central bank estimating output growth of 3.8 percent this year and 3.6 percent in 2011, erasing last year’s 5.1 percent contraction.

That compares with the European Central Bank’s forecast for economic growth in the euro area of 1 percent this year and 1.2 percent in 2011. The International Monetary Fund expects the euro-area economy to grow 1 percent this year and 1.3 percent next year, saying in a July 21 report that “turmoil has clouded the prospect of a strong regional and global recovery.”

Sweden’s government may raise its economic growth forecasts for this year and cut its outlook for unemployment, Finance Minister Anders Borg said Aug. 5. The government lifted its 2010 estimate on July 5, bringing its official growth forecast to 3.3 percent for this year and of 3.8 percent in 2011.

Smallest Deficit

The government boasts the EU’s smallest budget deficit as a percentage of GDP, allowing Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt to pledge more spending next year if he wins Sept. 19 elections. Sweden’s fiscal shortfall was 0.5 percent last year, compared with an EU average deficit of 6.8 percent. The Nordic country’s deficit will widen to 2.1 percent this year, still the lowest in the 27-member bloc.

The government plans to take advantage of rising asset prices to boost its coffers. Borg last week reiterated budget assumptions that state divestments of stakes in firms such as TeliaSonera AB, Sweden’s largest telephone company, and Nordea Bank AB, the Nordic region’s biggest bank, may generate 100 billion kronor ($14 billion) in 2011 to 2014.

Reinfeldt’s four-party coalition is poised to win a second four-year term, according to most polls conducted since the beginning of July. The government has a 3.3 percentage point lead over the three-party opposition alliance, according to a survey published by pollster Sifo in newspaper Svenska Dagbladet on Aug. 8.

Krona Best Performer

In Sweden, an EU member with its own currency, OMX company earnings topped analysts’ estimates by 22.2 percent on average, Bloomberg calculations show. That’s helped spur a 10 percent surge in the krona against the dollar since the end of June, making it the best performer of the 16 major currencies tracked by Bloomberg in the period.

SKF, the world’s largest maker of ball bearings, reported its biggest-ever quarterly profit, led by sales to automotive and industrial customers. The Gothenburg-based company’s profit jumped four-fold to 1.41 billion kronor from 314 million kronor a year earlier. Volvo, the world’s second-largest truckmaker, had profit of 3.15 billion kronor, compared with a loss of 5.57 billion kronor a year earlier. Analysts surveyed by Bloomberg were predicting the company would earn 2.32 billion kronor.

“The strong performance of Swedish companies is due to their exposure to strong export markets combined with strong cost controls and high margins,” said Hans Peterson, global head of investment strategy at SEB Bank AB in Stockholm. “Sales are in many cases still at low levels compared with 2007 and therefore, stable growth going forward is a blessing for Swedish exporters, which make up a large part of the market.”

Export Growth

Export growth gives the Riksbank more scope to continue raising interest rates, even as other European nations struggle with budget cuts and slow growth. Sweden’s economic expansion has exceeded the central bank’s forecasts, meaning it may raise the benchmark rate to 1.25 percent by the end of the year from 0.5 percent, Nordea’s Isaksson said.

The OMX Stockholm 30 Index has gained 13 percent this year, beaten only by Nordic neighbors Denmark, Finland and Iceland, compared with a peer group of 24 developed country stock markets, Bloomberg data show. The index today touched its highest level since December 2007 at 1,077.78.

“Many foreigners like Sweden because of its cyclical exposure, but also because the krona is expected to get even stronger as the Riksbank so clearly has shown it will continue to raise the key rate, which is not the case in Euroland or the U.S.,” said Martin Guri, an equity strategist at Nordea in Stockholm. “If you as a foreigner buy Swedish shares, a good relative performance could come both from the stock index and the currency.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Niklas Magnusson in Stockholm at nmagnusson1@bloomberg.net Adam Ewing in Stockholm at aewing5@bloomberg.net .

===
Sent from Bloomberg for Blackberry. Download it from the Blackberry App World! Enviado desde mi Blackberry® 3G de Iusacell.

Deja un comentario

Archivado bajo Uncategorized