September 2009

Belarus, Iran to set up joint trade council

September 27, 2009

Belarus, Iran to set up joint trade council

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China becomes world’s largest energy producer

September 27, 2009

China becomes world’s largest energy producer

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South Korea to spend 2.8 tln won on green technology

September 27, 2009

South Korea to spend 2.8 tln won on green technology

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China’s industrial profits fall 10.6% in first 8 months

September 27, 2009

China’s industrial profits fall 10.6% in first 8 months

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Spain sees 2010 budget deficit at 8.1% of GDP

September 27, 2009

Spain sees 2010 budget deficit at 8.1% of GDP

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Obama hails tough regulations to prevent another finanical crisis

September 27, 2009

Obama hails tough regulations to prevent another finanical crisis

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Yankees Poised to Claim AL East; Cardinals, Dodgers Clinch Playoff Berths

September 27, 2009

By Nancy Kercheval Sept. 27 (Bloomberg) — The New York Yankees can claim their division, the American League’s best record and home-field advantage through the Major League Baseball playoffs today with a win over the Boston Red Sox. In the National League, the St. Louis Cardinals won the Central division title with a 6-3 win over the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field in Denver. The Los Angeles Dodgers clinched a playoff berth by beating the Pittsburgh Pirates, sending manager Joe Torre to his record-tying 14th straight postseason series. The Yankees beat the Red Sox 3-0 to raise their season record to 99-56 yesterday as CC Sabathia became the first pitcher to claim 19 victories. No other AL team can win 100 games this season, and the league has home-field advantage in the World Series. “We need one win basically in the next seven games,” manager Joe Girardi said. “You’d like to clinch as soon as possible so you could maybe give the guys a couple days and make sure that you keep them well-rested and strong.” Sabathia (19-7) went seven innings, allowing one hit and striking out eight for the Yankees. Mariano Rivera got his 43rd save after pitching one inning. Sabathia could reach 20 wins with a victory against Tampa Bay on Oct. 2. “He’s been everything that we have asked for and more,” Girardi said. “He is an ace.” Robinson Cano hit his 24th home run of the season in the sixth inning to give the Yankees their first run of the game at Yankee Stadium. Johnny Damon singled in the eighth to drive in two runs. ‘Doesn’t Matter’ Daisuke Matsuzaka (3-6) gave up six hits and one run in seven innings for the Red Sox, who dropped to 91-63. “I don’t think it matters,” Red Sox first baseman Kevin Youkilis said. “Both of us are probably going to the playoffs unless we don’t do something right.” Boston leads the Texas Rangers by 6 1/2 games in the race to claim the wild card playoff spot. The Red Sox have a “magic number” of three — Boston wins plus Texas losses — to eliminate the Rangers and get into the playoffs. Jim Thome hit a two-run single that followed two runs scored on walks in the eighth inning as the Dodgers (93-62) sealed the 8-4 win at PNC Park in Pittsburgh. George Sherrill (1-0) allowed one run in 1/3 inning to get the win. Denny Bautista (1-1) gave up one hit and two runs in 1/3 inning for the loss. The Pirates fell to 57-96. Los Angeles has a magic number of three to clinch the National League West for their first back-to-back division titles since 1977-78. To contact the reporter on this story: Nancy Kercheval in Washington at nkercheval@bloomberg.net .

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Perry Leads Woods By Two Strokes After Third Round of Tour Championship

September 27, 2009

By Nancy Kercheval Sept. 27 (Bloomberg) — Tiger Woods trails Kenny Perry by two strokes going into the final round of the Tour Championship, which will decide the winner of the U.S. PGA Tour’s season-long $10 million FedEx Cup. Perry birdied his first four holes yesterday, then added three more birdies and one bogey to finish three rounds of the tournament at East Lake Golf Club in Atlanta 8-under-par at 202. He’ll play today’s final round paired with Woods. “I look forward to it. I’m going to jab him a little bit tomorrow,” Perry said after yesterday’s round. “Everybody will kind of be figuring numbers and percentages, who falls where. It might be exciting tomorrow.” Woods, who started the third round with a one-stroke lead, shot 69 and is 6-under. He’s seeking his seventh win this season and a second career FedEx Cup trophy to go with his 2007 title. “I’d much rather just win the tournament, and the FedEx Cup will take care of itself,” Woods said. “As of right now, I’m two back and have an opportunity to win the tournament, and that’s what I’m going to focus on tomorrow.” Perry and Woods tee off today at 1:45 p.m. local time. Perry has to win the Tour Championship, with Woods no better than a three-way tie for third, to capture the FedEX Cup , according to the Sports Network. He also needs Steve Stricker , Jim Furyk and Zach Johnson to finish worse than second. Woods tops the FedEx Cup playoff points list followed by Stricker, Furyk, Johnson and Heath Slocum . Perry is ninth. ‘Help Some People’ “My life will stay the same. But it will definitely give me some opportunities to help some people,” said Perry whose mother has cancer and father is ill. “It might be magical, we’ll see.” Phil Mickelson and first-round leader Sean O’Hair are tied for third at 4-under. Mickelson shot 66 and O’Hair had 70. A victory would move Woods within one win of Jack Nicklaus’s 73 career PGA Tour titles. He also would collect a $1.35 million winner’s check and the FedEx Cup’s $10 million winner’s bonus. The points chase was created in 2007 in part to maintain the interest of golf fans throughout the season. To contact the reporter on this story: Nancy Kercheval in Washington at nkercheval@bloomberg.net .

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Germany Votes as Merkel-Steinmeier Race Tightens With Promises of Growth

September 27, 2009

By Tony Czuczka and Brian Parkin Sept. 27 (Bloomberg) — Germany votes today to decide who steers the European Union’s biggest country, with polls showing Angela Merkel set to remain chancellor and her bid to forge a coalition with the pro-business Free Democrats in doubt. Merkel’s challenger, Social Democratic Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier , has narrowed the gap in the past two weeks and about a quarter of the electorate was undecided in the last days of the campaign. The candidates used their final appeals yesterday urging supporters to turn out. “It’s going to be a thriller,” said Peter Loesche , a political scientist at Goettingen University in central Germany. While he expects Merkel to win, he said the race for her coalition partner is “50-50.” After four years of compromise in a grand coalition of their two parties, Merkel, 55, and Steinmeier, 53, used the campaign to set out competing visions on how to spur growth as the economy emerges from the worst post-World War II slump. Merkel backs tax cuts that Steinmeier says are unaffordable as debt soars. He wants a national minimum wage and an increase in the top income-tax rate to 47 percent from 45 percent. The vote, which decides the balance of power in the 598- seat lower house of parliament, “is a crossroads,” Merkel told a rally in Berlin yesterday after returning from the Group of 20 summit in Pittsburgh. Only a coalition of her Christian Democrats with the Free Democrats can “secure economic growth and jobs.” Voting is from 8 a.m. until 6 p.m., when television stations ARD and ZDF release the first exit polls. ‘Cold Place’ Steinmeier, addressing supporters in Dresden , said a Merkel-FDP alliance would benefit only the rich and turn Germany into a “cold place.” Merkel’s Christian Democrats and their Bavarian sister party, the Christian Social Union, slipped 2 points to 33 percent in a Forsa poll released on Sept. 25, their lowest score since March. The Social Democrats lost a point to 25 percent, while the Left rose two points to 12 percent and the Greens declined 1 point to 10 percent. The Free Democratic Party, led by Guido Westerwelle , gained a point to 14 percent, giving a CDU-FDP alliance combined support of 47 percent, the lowest since October last year. A score as low as 46 percent may still be enough to form a government, analysts say. Forsa polled 2,001 voters on Sept. 21- 24 with a margin of error of as many as 2.5 percentage points. Al Qaeda Threat The vote comes amid heightened security after video threats by al-Qaeda and the Taliban. The Interior Ministry banned flights over the Munich Oktoberfest and raised security at train stations and airports after videos surfaced warning Germany to withdraw its 4,200 troops from Afghanistan. While Afghanistan featured only briefly in the election campaign, the parties have clashed on energy policy. Merkel wants to extend the lifespan of nuclear-power plants by as many as 15 years, while Steinmeier backs a law he helped negotiate as Schroeder’s chief of staff that will shut them by about 2021. Nuclear power is “yesterday’s energy,” he said. At stake are stations run by Dusseldorf-based E.ON AG, RWE AG of Essen, Sweden’s Vattenfall AB and Karlsruhe-based EnBW Energie Baden-Wuerttemberg AG that generated 23 percent of Germany’s electricity last year. ‘Old Greed’ Steinmeier, who pledges to promote green technology to create as many as 4 million new jobs, says a CDU-FDP coalition would make it easier to fire workers and promote “the old greed.” He wants to lower the bottom tax rate to 10 percent from 14 percent and use the top rate increase to improve the education system. “The voters want a government that offers social justice for everyone in this country,” Steinmeier said in Dresden. “They won’t get that with Merkel’s CDU and certainly not with Westerwelle’s party.” Merkel wants to push deregulation, overhaul labor-market rules to make it easier to hire and fire and cut taxes by 15 billion euros ($22 billion) over four years. She aims to lower the bottom tax rate to 12 percent and raise the threshold for the 45 percent rate to 60,000 euros from 52,000 euros. Merkel wants to avoid a repeat of the 2005 election, when then-Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder hauled the Social Democrats back into contention after trailing by as many as 20 percentage points. Merkel’s victory by a single point forced her into coalition with her traditional rivals. Coalition Stimulus Policies enacted by the coalition helped Germany, the world’s biggest exporter, emerge from recession in the second quarter, sooner than economists forecast. The government pushed through stimulus spending of 85 billion euros and a 102 billion- euro government-backed rescue of Munich-based lender Hypo Real Estate Holding AG, helping keep unemployment below the U.S. level and the euro-area average. “The election is too close to call,” Gary Smith , director of the American Academy in Berlin, a trans-Atlantic research institute, said in an interview. “We might end up with another not-so-grand coalition.” To contact the reporters on this story: Tony Czuczka in Berlin at aczuczka@bloomberg.net ; Brian Parkin in Berlin at bparkin@bloomberg.net

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Germany Votes as Merkel-Steinmeier Race Tightens in Final Days

September 27, 2009

By Tony Czuczka and Brian Parkin Sept. 27 (Bloomberg) — Germany votes today to decide who steers the European Union’s biggest country, with polls showing Angela Merkel set to remain chancellor and her bid to forge a coalition with the pro-business Free Democrats in doubt. Merkel’s challenger, Social Democratic Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier , has narrowed the gap in the past two weeks and about a quarter of the electorate was undecided in the last days of the campaign. The candidates used their final appeals yesterday urging supporters to turn out. “It’s going to be a thriller,” said Peter Loesche , a political scientist at Goettingen University in central Germany. While he expects Merkel to win, he said the race for her coalition partner is “50-50.” After four years of compromise in a grand coalition of their two parties, Merkel, 55, and Steinmeier, 53, used the campaign to set out competing visions on how to spur growth as the economy emerges from the worst post-World War II slump. Merkel backs tax cuts that Steinmeier says are unaffordable as debt soars. He wants a national minimum wage and an increase in the top income-tax rate to 47 percent from 45 percent. The vote, which decides the balance of power in the 598- seat lower house of parliament, “is a crossroads,” Merkel told a rally in Berlin yesterday after returning from the Group of 20 summit in Pittsburgh. Only a coalition of her Christian Democrats with the Free Democrats can “secure economic growth and jobs.” Voting is from 8 a.m. until 6 p.m., when television stations ARD and ZDF release the first exit polls. ‘Cold Place’ Steinmeier, addressing supporters in Dresden , said a Merkel-FDP alliance would benefit only the rich and turn Germany into a “cold place.” Merkel’s Christian Democrats and their Bavarian sister party, the Christian Social Union, slipped 2 points to 33 percent in a Forsa poll released on Sept. 25, their lowest score since March. The Social Democrats lost a point to 25 percent, while the Left rose two points to 12 percent and the Greens declined 1 point to 10 percent. The Free Democratic Party, led by Guido Westerwelle , gained a point to 14 percent, giving a CDU-FDP alliance combined support of 47 percent, the lowest since October last year. A score as low as 46 percent may still be enough to form a government, analysts say. Forsa polled 2,001 voters on Sept. 21- 24 with a margin of error of as many as 2.5 percentage points. Al Qaeda Threat The vote comes amid heightened security after video threats by al-Qaeda and the Taliban. The Interior Ministry banned flights over the Munich Oktoberfest and raised security at train stations and airports after videos surfaced warning Germany to withdraw its 4,200 troops from Afghanistan. While Afghanistan featured only briefly in the election campaign, the parties have clashed on energy policy. Merkel wants to extend the lifespan of nuclear-power plants by as many as 15 years, while Steinmeier backs a law he helped negotiate as Schroeder’s chief of staff that will shut them by about 2021. Nuclear power is “yesterday’s energy,” he said. At stake are stations run by Dusseldorf-based E.ON AG, RWE AG of Essen, Sweden’s Vattenfall AB and Karlsruhe-based EnBW Energie Baden-Wuerttemberg AG that generated 23 percent of Germany’s electricity last year. ‘Old Greed’ Steinmeier, who pledges to promote green technology to create as many as 4 million new jobs, says a CDU-FDP coalition would make it easier to fire workers and promote “the old greed.” He wants to lower the bottom tax rate to 10 percent from 14 percent and use the top rate increase to improve the education system. “The voters want a government that offers social justice for everyone in this country,” Steinmeier said in Dresden. “They won’t get that with Merkel’s CDU and certainly not with Westerwelle’s party.” Merkel wants to push deregulation, overhaul labor-market rules to make it easier to hire and fire and cut taxes by 15 billion euros ($22 billion) over four years. She aims to lower the bottom tax rate to 12 percent and raise the threshold for the 45 percent rate to 60,000 euros from 52,000 euros. Merkel wants to avoid a repeat of the 2005 election, when then-Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder hauled the Social Democrats back into contention after trailing by as many as 20 percentage points. Merkel’s victory by a single point forced her into coalition with her traditional rivals. Coalition Stimulus Policies enacted by the coalition helped Germany, the world’s biggest exporter, emerge from recession in the second quarter, sooner than economists forecast. The government pushed through stimulus spending of 85 billion euros and a 102 billion- euro government-backed rescue of Munich-based lender Hypo Real Estate Holding AG, helping keep unemployment below the U.S. level and the euro-area average. “The election is too close to call,” Gary Smith , director of the American Academy in Berlin, a trans-Atlantic research institute, said in an interview. “We might end up with another not-so-grand coalition.” To contact the reporters on this story: Tony Czuczka in Berlin at aczuczka@bloomberg.net ; Brian Parkin in Berlin at bparkin@bloomberg.net

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Iran Fires Short-Range Missiles in `Deterrent’ Tests Before Nuclear Talks

September 27, 2009

By Ladane Nasseri Sept. 27 (Bloomberg) — Iran fired short-range missiles as part of a military maneuver that may increase tension over the Persian Gulf country’s nuclear program. Iran “successfully tested a multimissile launching system,” state-run Press TV reported. “A number of missiles including the homemade Fateh and Tondar” models were launched both simultaneously and consecutively, the report said. The country’s Revolutionary Guards Corps. said yesterday it would conduct the war games to maintain the “deterrent capacity” of the armed forces. The military plans to test-fire its long-range Shahab 3 missile tomorrow, Agence France-Presse said, citing an unidentified commander of the guards. Today’s exercise, called Prophet IV, will assess “recent technical developments and tactical progress” in surface-to- surface missiles, General Hossein Salimi, head of the air force, said in a report on the guards’ Web site. The maneuver is also aimed at “practicing management of long-term preventive and defensive operations,” he said. Iran’s military initiative comes two days after the country confirmed the development of a second uranium enrichment facility, a move condemned by the U.S., U.K. and France. Iranian officials are set to meet Oct. 1 in Geneva with representatives of the five permanent UN Security Council members and Germany. The group seeks to determine whether Iran is willing to limit its nuclear activities, which several western nations claim is aimed at developing weapons. U.S. President Barack Obama said yesterday he remains open to “a serious, meaningful dialogue” with Iran. The country first must “cooperate fully” with international arms inspectors and “take actions to demonstrate its peaceful intentions,” the president said in his weekly radio and Internet address. To contact the reporter on this story: Ladane Nasseri in Beirut at lnasseri@bloomberg.net .

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Infigen Energy Plans to Sell Its U.S. Wind Power Business for $2.2 Billion

September 27, 2009

By Rebecca Keenan Sept. 27 (Bloomberg) — Infigen Energy , the Australian wind power producer formerly known as Babcock & Brown Wind Partners, said it wants to sell its U.S. business for about $2.2 billion to focus on Australian assets. “We’re selling out of America for the primary reason that we think there is a fantastic opportunity here in Australia,” Managing Director Miles George said in an interview with Australian Broadcasting Corp.’s Inside Business program. Based on the replacement value of the U.S. unit, the “ballpark” sale figure could be $2.2 billion, he said. Australia, the world’s biggest exporter of coal, must derive 20 percent of its power from renewable energy, such as wind turbines, by 2020, under a law passed by the senate on Aug. 20. The legislation will help spur A$28 billion ($24 billion) of investment and the creation of 23,000 jobs in industries such as wind and solar power, according to the Clean Energy Council. “Over the longer term, the regulatory environment and the willingness of governments to encourage alternative energies is clearly a tailwind for anyone in the sector,” said Tim Schroeders , who helps manage about $1 billion at Pengana Capital Ltd. in Melbourne. Selling the U.S. units would “go a long way to making Infigen’s debt not as much of a burden and I think equity holders will get a better deal, albeit on a smaller asset base.” Wind Energy Infigen shares have risen 55 percent this year compared with a 27 percent gain in the benchmark index. The Bloomberg Wind Energy index, comprised of 64 leading wind power stocks in the world, has gained 32 percent since the start of the year. Infigen has six buy ratings, two hold ratings and two sell ratings according to Bloomberg data. The company has a market value of A$1.1 billion. Pengana’s Schroeders reviewed the company as a possible investment and decided not to buy shares because the rate of return was lower than traditional energy companies. “We would like to redeploy capital from that U.S. business into the growth of our Australia business,” Infigen’s George said. The legislation means “the opportunity for our business, we believe, is extremely strong.” Infigen reported an increase in profit in the last financial year with net income of A$189.5 million, compared with A$17.9 million a year ago after it sold assets in Spain and Portugal. It had net debt of A$1.24 billion at June 30. Infigen has five wind farms in Australia’s Western Australia, South Australia and New South Wales states. It is the nation’s biggest wind energy generator and the company’s second biggest earner in the past financial year according to company regulatory filings. It also has 12 wind farms in Germany and six wind farms in France that it is also selling. The U.S. unit is the largest independent wind energy business in the country, George said. It has interest in 18 individual wind farms and the unit was its biggest contributor to sales in the last financial year. It has appointed Marathon Capital and UBS AG to manage the sale of the U.S. assets, it said on Aug. 17. To contact the reporter on this story: Rebecca Keenan in Melbourne at rkeenan5@bloomberg.net

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Yen Rises to Seven-Month High as Japan Reiterates Anti-Intervention Stance

September 27, 2009

By Ye Xie and Matthew Townsend Sept. 26 (Bloomberg) — The yen rose to a seven-month high versus the dollar as Japan’s new government reiterated its opposition to intervening to stem a currency’s gain and the Federal Reserve pledged to keep interest rates low. Sterling dropped to a three-month low below $1.60 this week after Bank of England Governor Mervyn King was quoted by a newspaper as saying the pound’s weakness is aiding in rebalancing the U.K.’s economy. The dollar reached a one-year low versus euro on increased demand for riskier assets before a report next week forecast to show U.S. job losses slowed. “The yen is getting a benefit from the fact that there is no political intervention, and that it’s not the whipping boy,” said Boris Schlossberg , director of currency research in New York at the online currency trader GFT Forex. Japan’s yen advanced 1.8 percent this week to 89.64 per dollar, from 91.29 on Sept. 18. It touched 89.51 yesterday, the strongest level since Feb. 5. The currency gained 2 percent to 131.70 per euro, from 134.33 The dollar rose 0.2 percent to $1.4689 per euro, from $1.4712, after touching $1.4844 on Sept. 23, the weakest level since Sept. 22, 2008. A break in the yen below 89.50 per dollar would “rechallenge” 87.15, wrote Thomas Anthonj , a technical analyst at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in London in a note yesterday. The yen reached 87.13 on Jan. 21, the strongest level since 1995. Canada’s currency dropped 2 percent to C$1.0910 per U.S. dollar in its biggest weekly loss since June as crude oil, the nation’s biggest export, declined 8.3 percent to $66.07 a barrel. The currency appreciated 12 percent this year. Bank of Canada Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney said he’s concerned when the Canadian dollar moves away from “fundamental” levels, according to the transcript of an interview with the Canadian Broadcasting Corp. released yesterday. Sterling slid 2.1 percent versus the dollar this week after the Newcastle Journal reported on Sept. 23 that King called the currency’s drop “very helpful.” The pound fell yesterday to $1.5918, the lowest level since June 8, and depreciated to 91.19 per euro, the weakest level since April 1. Barclays Capital lowered its three-month forecast for the dollar to $1.52 per euro yesterday, from $1.40. “Excess liquidity” stems from a Fed monetary policy that’s “buoying risky assets indiscriminately while punishing” the greenback, wrote David Woo , global head of foreign-exchange strategy in London in a note. Fed Asset Purchases The Fed said on Sept. 23 that it would end its $1.45 trillion in purchases of mortgage-backed securities and housing agency debt in March rather than in December and left the fed funds target at zero to 0.25 percent. Policy makers recommitted to keeping the rates “exceptionally low” for an “extended period,” even as the economy shows signs of recovery. U.S. companies probably cut 180,000 jobs in September, after shedding 216,000 in the prior month, according to the median forecast of 58 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. The Labor Department is due to release the report on Oct. 2. The yen advanced against all its major counterparts except the South Korean won as Japan’s Finance Minister Hirohisa Fujii said at the Group of 20 meeting in Pittsburgh on Sept. 24 that he has been questioning the idea of “easy intervention.” Fujii, whose Democratic Party of Japan took office for the first time this month, referred in comments to reporters to a previous pledge of the nations to refrain from pursuing a currency-devaluation strategy. Fujii on Yen “I don’t intend to take a strong yen policy but, at the same time, a deliberate weaker-currency policy was denounced” at the G-20 summit in London earlier this year, Fujii said. Fujii said last week he didn’t support a “weak yen,” fueling speculation Japan won’t resort to intervention to curb yen’s appreciation. Central banks intervene in foreign-exchange markets by selling and buying currencies. Japan’s currency rose 3.6 percent to 142.90 versus the pound this week and appreciated 3.8 percent to 6.62 against the Mexican peso. The yen gained 7.3 percent against the dollar this quarter and advanced 2.7 percent versus the euro. The rally contributed to a 36 percent decline in Japan’s exports in August from a year earlier and weighed on Japanese stocks. The Nikkei 225 Index rose 4.8 percent in the past three months, compared with a 14.2 percent increase in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index . The yen’s current level of about 90 per dollar is “painful,” Toyota Motor Corp. Executive Vice President Yukitoshi Funo told reporters yesterday. Goldman Sachs View “While policy statements on the yen remain confusing, the tightening in Japanese financial conditions is having a damaging impact,” wrote Dominic Wilson , a senior global economist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. in New York, in a note to clients yesterday. “The market appears to be voting that the economy ‘needs’ a weaker yen, even if it is not yet getting it.” The yen also gained on prospects the nation’s exporters will take advantage of an April 1 rule change that waives taxes on repatriated profits. Under previous laws, companies had to pay a combined 40 percent tax on overseas earnings. The first half of Japan’s fiscal year ends Sept. 30. South Korea’s won rose for a fifth week versus the dollar in its longest winning streak since April as confidence the economy is recovering from a recession helped draw funds from abroad. The won gained 1.8 percent and touched 1,185.30 per dollar yesterday, the strongest level since October 2008. The won increased 0.1 percent to 13.2148 versus the yen. To contact the reporters on this story: Ye Xie in New York at yxie6@bloomberg.net ; Matt Townsend in New York at mtownsend9@bloomberg.net

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Treasury’s No. 2 Wolin Says Financial Rules Overhaul Is Likely This Year

September 27, 2009

By Alan Bjerga Sept. 26 (Bloomberg) — Deputy Treasury Secretary Neal Wolin , the department’s No. 2 official, said he expects Congress to revamp financial regulations for Wall Street this year. Congress is considering legislation that would impose tighter regulations on banks, lenders, and other financial institutions following the worst recession since the Great Depression. One proposal, the creation of a Consumer Financial Protection Agency, remains a top priority for President Barack Obama , Wolin said in an interview today at a conference hosted by the Congressional Black Caucus in Washington. The plan would create the consumer agency and move most of the $592 trillion over-the-counter derivatives market onto regulated exchanges and increase capital requirements. It would also boost oversight of the systemic risks large financial institutions pose to the economy and give the government power to dismantle failed companies. “There is a definite need for an agency that focuses on consumer protection as part of our overall structure for a financial services regulatory framework,” he said. Wolin’s office translated the administration’s 88-page financial-regulations proposal into more than 600 pages of legislation for lawmakers to use as a foundation for crafting their proposals. To contact the reporter on this story: Alan Bjerga in Washington at abjerga@bloomberg.net .

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China Industrial Companies’ Profit Declines at Slower Pace Amid Recovery

September 27, 2009

By Bloomberg News Sept. 27 (Bloomberg) — Chinese industrial companies’ profits fell at a slower pace as a recovery gathered pace in the world’s third-biggest economy on stimulus spending and record lending in the first half of the year. Net income declined 10.6 percent from a year earlier in the eight months through August to 1.67 trillion yuan ($245 billion), the statistics bureau said today. Profits dropped 22.9 percent in the first five months of the year. The Asian Development Bank this week increased its 2009 economic growth forecast for China as rising industrial output and property transactions plus record car sales boost confidence. The government cautioned on Sept. 22 that industry remains in a critical phase and weak demand for exports won’t improve quickly. “China’s economy is recovering at a strong pace,” said Sherman Chan , an economist at Moody’s Economy.com in Sydney. “That the mainland remains on a solid footing bodes well for the global recovery.” Sales in the first eight months of the year rose 1.6 percent to 32.4 trillion yuan. The data is for companies with annual sales of more than 5 million yuan in 39 industries, including steel, chemicals, electricity, telecommunications and mining. The government is aiming for 8 percent economic growth to create jobs and so limit the risk of social instability in the world’s most-populous nation. Premier Wen Jiabao said on Sept. 10 that China “cannot and will not” pull back yet from monetary and fiscal stimulus measures. Stimulus, Lending A 4 trillion yuan stimulus package and record lending have countered the slump in exports caused by the global recession, pushing economic growth to 7.9 percent in the second quarter. Gross domestic product rose 6.1 percent in the first three months of the year, the slowest pace in almost a decade. The investment and lending boom prompted the ADB to raise its forecast for China’s economic growth this year to 8.2 percent from a previous estimate of 7 percent. It increased its 2010 forecast to 8.9 percent from 8 percent. Growth may quicken to 10 percent or more in the fourth quarter because of stimulus spending, domestic consumption and a recovery in exports, Chen Dongqi , a senior researcher at the country’s top planning agency, said on Sept. 17. Urban fixed-asset investment climbed 33 percent in the first eight months from a year earlier. Industrial-output growth recovered to climb 12.3 percent in August. Auto Sales Car sales leapt 90 percent last month from a year earlier as tax cuts and subsidies pushed China past the U.S. as the biggest market for new vehicles. Geely Automobile Holdings Ltd., China’s biggest privately owned carmaker, more than doubled first-half profit to 595.9 million yuan. China’s State Council pledged this week more measures to help small- and medium-sized businesses burdened by overcapacity, weak demand, falling profits and difficulties getting loans. China’s cabinet said measures would include tax breaks and assistance via government procurement. “The outlook for small- and medium-sized enterprises is improving,” said Chan. “SMEs have thus far been left out of the credit boom.” To contact the Bloomberg News staff on this story: Kevin Hamlin in Beijing at khamlin@bloomberg.net ;

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Employers in U.S. Probably Eliminated Fewer Jobs, Manufacturing Gauge Rose

September 27, 2009

By Bob Willis Sept. 27 (Bloomberg) — Employers probably cut fewer jobs in September and manufacturing expanded for a second month as the U.S. embarked on a tenuous recovery, economists said before reports this week. Payrolls fell by 180,000 workers, the smallest drop in a year, according to the median of 58 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey ahead of an Oct. 2 Labor Department report. Figures from a private group of purchasing managers may show factories advanced at the fastest pace in more than three years. The mixed figures explain why Federal Reserve policy makers last week said they will keep interest rates low for the foreseeable future. Another report may show household purchases jumped last month by the most in six years as the now-expired government’s “cash-for- clunkers” plan helped prop up consumers shaken by rising joblessness and stagnant wages. “The initial stages of the recovery will be gradual and uneven,” said Ryan Sweet , a senior economist at Moody’s Economy.com in West Chester, Pennsylvania. “The labor market holds the key. We need to see further moderation in payroll declines or risk unwinding the improvement in consumer spending.” The jobless rate this month probably climbed to 9.8 percent, the highest level since 1983, from 9.7 percent in August, according to economists surveyed by Bloomberg. Unemployment will reach 10 percent by the last quarter of 2009, a Bloomberg poll this month showed. Job Losses Payroll losses peaked at 741,000 in January, the most for a single month since 1949. The U.S. has lost 6.9 million jobs since the recession began in December 2007. While acknowledging that “economic activity has picked up,” the Fed last week said household spending “remains constrained by ongoing job losses, sluggish income growth, lower housing wealth, and tight credit.” The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index fell 2.2 percent last week, the biggest weekly drop since early July, as figures on home sales and business spending came in weaker than analysts anticipated. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg this month forecast the economy will grow at a 2.5 percent pace in the second half of the year after shrinking 3.9 percent in the 12 months to June, the biggest slump since quarterly records began in 1947. Revised figures from the Commerce Department on Sept. 30 may show the economy contracted at a 1.2 percent annual rate in the second quarter, more than the 1 percent pace previously estimated. Automaker Payrolls Companies such as auto-parts maker Tenneco Inc. continue to eliminate jobs to cut costs and boost profits amid weak sales. Carmakers, which are trying to rebuild depleted dealer inventories, are calling staff back to work. General Motors Co., which came out of bankruptcy in July, will add a third shift at plants in Kansas, Indiana and Michigan after “cash-for-clunkers” boosted sales. The plants are taking on additional production from factories slated to close or be idled. The changes will restore 2,400 jobs, the Detroit-based company said last week. Nonetheless, Tim Lee , the company’s vice president of global manufacturing, said on a conference call Sept. 22, “even with these actions, we will have some employees left on layoff.” The Obama administration’s $3 billion auto incentive to trade in gas-guzzlers for more fuel-efficient vehicles ran out of funds in late August. Auto Incentives Consumer spending probably climbed 1.1 percent in August from the prior month, the most since August 2003, partly reflecting the surge in car sales , economists forecast a Commerce Department report Oct. 1 will show. Incomes, on the other hand, likely grew just 0.1 percent, reflecting the job losses, according to the survey median. The Tempe, Arizona-based Institute for Supply Management may report Oct. 1 that its manufacturing index climbed to 54 in September, the highest level since April 2006, the survey showed. Readings greater than 50 signal expansion. Orders placed at factories likely rose 0.5 percent in August after a 1.3 percent gain the prior month, economists projected an Oct. 2 Commerce Department report will show. The jobs report may also show factory employment dropped by 53,000 workers this month compared with a 63,000 decrease in August. In other reports this week, the number of contracts to buy previously owned homes rose in August for a seventh consecutive time, according to the survey median. The National Association of Realtors’ report on pending home sales is due Oct. 1. The S&P/Case-Shiller index of home prices, due Sept. 29, may show declines in property values slowed in July. Consumer confidence probably rose in September to the highest level in a year, figures from the Conference Board may show the same day, according to economists surveyed. To contact the reporter on this story: Bob Willis in Washington at bwillis@bloomberg.net

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City targets abandoned buildings (Sentinel & Enterprise)

September 27, 2009

LEOMINSTER — Abandoned and condemned buildings are open invitations for vandals and squatters, and they are serious risks for personal injury as structures become unsound and overgrown, Mayor Dean J.

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IPO investors not sold on REITs that buy distressed mortgages

September 27, 2009

… signs that investors aren’t sold on new real estate investment trusts that plan to purchase distressed-mortgage … whether they will be able to access distressed debt at yield levels that are attractive …

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real estate (Bankrate.com)

September 27, 2009

There are very few active buyers in the real estate market these days — but every one of them seems to be looking to buy a foreclosure or a short sale.

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Eurozone office mkts brace for rental falls-report

September 27, 2009

will drive down office rents in nearly all of the Eurozone’s biggest economies in coming months, as distressed businesses relinquish space onto an already bloated lettings market, a report showed on Wednesday. ‘Whilst the higher cost of debt has

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New Colliers exec sees full-service job (The Cincinnati Enquirer)

September 27, 2009

Read our “Look Who’s Talking” interview with James A. Donlin.

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New Colliers exec sees full-service job

September 27, 2009

… of Colliers Turley Martin Tucker, a commercial real-estate services company. He holds both bachelor’s and … great school,” he said. Although not a real estate broker, Donlin, 54, knows something about … offering services in property management, leasing and distressed properties. We can offer a client a …

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$1 million going further in many housing market

September 27, 2009

… best time in years to buy luxury real estate as sale prices on million-dollar homes have … million was laughable. Now, foreclosures and financially distressed homeowners account for about 15 percent of …

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The TightLine Group Pushes to Revitalize Denver Neighborhoods

September 27, 2009

an ethical and positive manner has prompted us to add this class.’ Best known for buying and rebuilding distressed properties in the lower income neighborhoods of the greater Denver metro area, The TightLine Group also facilitates a local Real Estate

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Short sales spread across real estate market

September 27, 2009

… and people, whether they are homeowners or real estate agents, just roll their eyes. The practice, … care of it. However, with so many distressed properties for sale, and other homes selling …

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US Distressed Debt Ratio Falls Below 25%

September 27, 2009

Extract not available.

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Banking troubles alter rankings of area financial institutions

September 27, 2009

… itself saddled with $1.7 billion in bad real estate loans and under criminal investigation by federal … find ourselves selling (foreclosed) property in a distressed real estate market, so we are not …

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Post Bank to be established in Pakistan

September 27, 2009

Post Bank to be established in Pakistan

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Radical solutions needed to resolve global conflicts

September 27, 2009

Radical solutions needed to resolve global conflicts

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Tehran will allow IAEA inspection

September 27, 2009

Tehran will allow IAEA inspection

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EU imposes duties on aluminum foil imports

September 27, 2009

EU imposes duties on aluminum foil imports

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Turkey seeks to set up FTZs with Iran

September 27, 2009

Turkey seeks to set up FTZs with Iran

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Unilever to buy Sara Lee unit for $1.88 billion

September 27, 2009

Unilever to buy Sara Lee unit for $1.88 billion

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Australia’s Infigen to sell US business for $2.2b

September 27, 2009

Australia’s Infigen to sell US business for $2.2b

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Member Services Specialist

September 27, 2009

Institutional Partners is the silent partner to commercial real estate companies, private equity firms, distressed debt companies, loan sale advisors, hedge funds and family offices. Institutional Partners provide companies with access …

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Member Services Specialist

September 27, 2009

Institutional Partners is the silent partner to commercial real estate companies, private equity firms, distressed debt companies, loan sale advisors, hedge funds and family offices. Institutional Partners provide companies with access …

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Multifamily sales creeping back as bargains abound

September 26, 2009

… While much of the commercial real estate market, both locally and nationally, has been … for the buyer. Banks willing to sell distressed properties at much lower prices will drive …

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Behringer Harvard Expands Real Estate Investment Relations to the …

September 26, 2009

Behringer Harvard is a commercial real estate company investing in assets domestically and internationally. The company creates and manages strategic real estate fund opportunities across a wide spectrum of investment styles for retail investors, … July 4th, 2009 DUBAI, UAE – Unlike its predecessors Beeyoot.com (www.beeyoot.com/index.jsp) allows property owners to sell directly to buyers. This creates room for a new momentum for the distressed UAE real – estate industry. …

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Home sales drop 2.7 percent (09/25/2009)

September 26, 2009

… 30. Congress is facing intense pressure from real estate agents and home builders to extend it, … a week earlier. Foreclosures and other financially distressed sellers accounted for about 30 percent of …

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2:”Make Money in Commercial” Real Estate Seminar Series

September 26, 2009

MakeMoneyInCommercial.com Listen in as Jason Gilbert, President of the rapidly growing Commercial Training Institute, based in San Diego, CA, talks about his 2 recently released strategies for investing in Commercial real estate . …

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2:”Make Money in Commercial” Real Estate Seminar Series

September 26, 2009

MakeMoneyInCommercial.com Listen in as Jason Gilbert, President of the rapidly growing Commercial Training Institute, based in San Diego, CA, talks about his 2 recently released strategies for investing in Commercial real estate . …

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International Forecaster September 2009 (#8) – Gold, Silver, Economy + More (GoldSeek.com)

September 26, 2009

The following are some snippets from the most recent issue of the International Forecaster. For the full 23 page issue, please see subscription information below.

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Fed Held Back As Evidence Mounted On Subprime Loan Abuses

September 26, 2009

Under a policy quietly formalized in 1998, the Fed refused to police lenders’ compliance with federal laws protecting borrowers, despite repeated urging by consumer advocates across the country and even by other government agencies. The hands-off policy, which the Fed reversed earlier this month, created a double standard. Banks and their subprime affiliates made loans under the same laws, but only the banks faced regular federal scrutiny. Under the policy, the Fed did not even investigate consumer complaints against the affiliates.

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DIRECT SALES – New

September 26, 2009

Institutional Partners is the silent partner to commercial real estate companies, private equity firms, distressed debt companies, loan sale advisors, hedge funds and family offices. Institutional Partners provide companies with access …

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Former Wrightwood exec joins Huzenis brothers

September 26, 2009

(Crainâ??s) â?? Real estate finance veteran Cheri Grossman now is leading acquisitions for an investment firm headed by Harry and Charles Huzenis, joining the stampeding herd of those seeking to buy distressed property

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Traders in 250m plan for toxic property debt

September 26, 2009

almost double in recent weeks. A number of property investors have started to build war chests to buy distressed properties in recent months, including Nick Leslau?s £250m Max Property fund. In April, Tice and Wardle bought bonds in Brixton at less

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Open Letter to President Obama on Foreclosure Crisis

September 26, 2009

connected with foreclosures. A mere look at Wells Fargo's false 1099-A's will expose various White Collar real estate & foreclosure fraud (carried out for years)–likely, another S&L mess! Further, the most recent controversy about former Wells

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Havens for homeless and crime a challenge for those who tend them.

September 26, 2009

… been busy lately as the number of distressed properties has grown. When homes A neglected … one door have been broken into. Local real estate agents say the properties were purchased by …

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