construction

Black & LEED Gold: Pittsburgh Penguins’ Sustainable Arena Delivers

August 12, 2010

The Pittsburgh Penguins have already made NHL history this season – and the first puck has yet to drop. Hunt Construction Group has completed construction of the CONSOL Energy Center in Pittsburgh, the new home of the Penguins. It is the first NHL…

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Video: China State Construction’s Cheong Sees Profits Improving: Video

August 12, 2010

Aug. 13 (Bloomberg) — Jackson Cheong, executive director for China State Construction International Holdings Ltd., talks about the company’s financial results and growth outlook. Cheong also discusses property markets in Hong Kong and China. China State Construction provides civil engineering services in Hong Kong. Cheong speaks with Bloomberg’s Susan Li. (Source: Bloomberg)

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New Jobless Claims Hit Highest Level In Nearly Six Months

August 12, 2010

WASHINGTON — The economy is looking bleaker as new applications for jobless benefits rose last week to the highest level in almost six months. It’s a sign that hiring remains weak and employers may be going back to cutting their staffs. Analysts say the increase suggests companies won’t be adding enough workers in August to lower the 9.5 percent unemployment rate. First-time claims for jobless benefits edged up by 2,000 to a seasonally adjusted 484,000, the Labor Department said Thursday. That’s the highest total since February. Analysts had expected claims to fall. Initial claims have now risen in three of the last four weeks and are close to their high point for the year of 490,000, reached in late January. The four-week average, which smooths volatility, soared by 14,250 to 473,500, also the highest since late February. The report “represents a very adverse turn in the labor market, threatening income growth and consumer spending,” Pierre Ellis, an economist at Decision Economics, wrote in a note to clients. Even the lowest mortgage rates in decades are a gloomy sign for the economy. Average rates on 30-year fixed mortgages fell to 4.44 percent, Freddie Mac said Thursday. While that’s good for people looking to refinance or buy a home, low rates haven’t been enough to energize a struggling housing market. And the drop suggests investors are losing confidence in the recovery. Mortgage rates track the yields on U.S. Treasurys. They are falling because investors are shifting more money away from stocks and into the safety of Treasurys, which forces those yields down. Those yields were pushed even lower this week after the Federal Reserve downgraded its assessment of the economy on Tuesday and announced a program to buy more Treasurys to help lift the recovery. The stock market has been falling since the Fed’s more pessimistic outlook. The Dow Jones industrial average dropped 58 points on Thursday and is down more than 300 points for the week. Economists closely watch weekly claims, which are considered a gauge of the pace of layoffs and an indication of employers’ willingness to hire. The government’s July jobs report, released Friday, showed that the economy lost a net total of 131,000 jobs last month. Excluding the impact of the elimination of 143,000 temporary census jobs, the economy added a meager 12,000 positions, as layoffs by state and local governments almost canceled out weak hiring by businesses. Thursday’s report on jobless claims indicates that trend may not change soon. Claims fell steadily last year from their peak of 651,000, reached in March 2009. But they have mostly leveled out this year at or above 450,000. In a healthy economy with rapid hiring, claims usually drop below 400,000. The rise in claims is a sign that private employers may be ramping up layoffs, which declined as recently as June, according to a separate government report released Wednesday. States with the largest increases in claims two weeks ago cited rising layoffs in the construction and manufacturing industries. The state data lags the national report by one week. Claims could also be rising because of large job cuts by state and local governments, which are struggling with unprecedented budget gaps. State and local governments cut 48,000 jobs in July, the most in a year. Some economists speculate that many census workers whose jobs are finished are requesting unemployment benefits. Another possibility is that small companies, facing tight credit, are still reducing their staffs, even as larger corporations slowly resume hiring. The report comes after the Federal Reserve said Tuesday that “employers remain reluctant to add to payrolls.” The central bank said the pace of economic recovery is likely to be more modest than anticipated. And on Wednesday, the Commerce Department said June imports jumped while exports dropped. That pushed the trade gap to its widest point since October 2008. Many economists say that could reduce economic growth estimates in the April-to-June quarter to 1.2 percent – half the 2.4 percent annual rate the government estimated last month. That’s a sharp slowdown from the 5 percent growth in the final quarter of 2009 and the 3.7 percent pace in the January-to-March quarter. That weakening could be prompting more employers to cut staff, or at least hold off on hiring. The total number of people receiving benefits dropped 118,000 to 4.45 million, the department said. But that doesn’t include another 5.3 million people receiving extended benefits paid for by the federal government, as of the week ending July 24, the latest data available. Some companies are still cutting workers. Medical products manufacturer CareFusion Corp. said Wednesday it plans to eliminate 700 jobs, saving the company up to $120 million a year.

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Video: U.K. Budget Cuts Loom Over Building Projects, Consumers

August 11, 2010

Aug. 11 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Elliott Gotkine reports on the outlook for the U.K. economy and the risks to growth in the construction industry as the government takes steps to cut the deficit. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Rubicon Professional Services Names Jaime Dutro Vice President of Construction Management Services

July 8, 2010

Award-Winning Design-Build Expert Brings 30 Years of Construction Management, LEED and MEP Expertise and General Contracting Experience to Rubicon Team

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Leading Minds Join Propel to Build-Out the Nation’s Largest Network of Renewable Fuel Stations

July 8, 2010

Executives in Finance, Construction, Retail Operations and Technology, Accelerate Expansion

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Australian Construction Sector Shrinks for First in Six Months

July 7, 2010

Australian Construction Sector Shrinks for First in Six Months

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Production Probably Rose, Prices Fell U.S. Economy Preview

June 13, 2010

By Timothy R. Homan June 13 (Bloomberg) — Factories kept churning out more goods last month, while prices and home construction fell, pointing to a manufacturing-led U.S. recovery that is not generating inflation, economists said before reports this week. Production at factories, mines and utilities increased 0.8 percent in May, the 10th gain in the past 11 months, according to the median estimate of 63 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News ahead of Federal Reserve figures due June 16. The cost of living declined for a second month and work began on fewer houses, other data may show. “It’s really a sweet spot in terms of continuing growth without inflation,” said Brian Bethune , chief U.S. financial economist at IHS Global Insight in Lexington, Massachusetts. “Manufacturing is still in pretty good shape.” The need to replenish depleted inventories, growing sales overseas and business investment in new equipment are putting American factories at the forefront of the rebound from the worst recession since the 1930s. A lack of inflation means the Fed has scope to keep the target interest rate near zero in coming months to spur growth. Manufacturers added 29,000 workers to payrolls in May, a fifth consecutive gain, the workweek lengthened and the average amount of overtime climbed to the highest level in two years, pointing to an acceleration on factory floors, data from the Labor Department showed earlier this month. Factory Gains Regional reports may show manufacturing kept driving the recovery this month. Factories in the New York Fed district expanded for an 11th month, a June 15 report will show, while data from the Philadelphia Fed two days later will say those in its area grew for a 10th month, according to economists surveyed. Deere & Co ., the world’s largest farm-equipment maker, said on its website last week that sales of utility tractors rose in the “double digits” in May, compared with a 6 percent increase for the industry overall. Growing global demand for agricultural commodities, housing and infrastructure are driving sales, Samuel Allen , chief executive officer of the Moline, Illinois-based company, said last month in a statement. Deere last month raised earnings and sales forecasts for a second time this year after second-quarter profit top analysts’ estimates. Manufacturing shares are outperforming the broader market. The Standard & Poor’s Supercomposite Machinery Index , which includes Deere and Peoria, Illinois-based Caterpillar Inc., is up 7 percent so far this year, compared with a 2.1 decline in the S&P 500 Index on growing concern that the European debt crisis will slow global growth. Less Inflation Three reports from the Labor Department this week will show the plunge in fuel prices precipitated by the turmoil in financial markets is tamping inflation. The import-price index , due on June 15, dropped 1.3 percent in May, after an increase of 0.9 percent the prior month. The producer-price index, issued the following day, declined 0.5 percent after a 0.1 percent decrease in April, according to the survey median. Consumer prices in May are forecast to drop 0.2 percent, after declining 0.1 percent the previous month, the survey median showed. Excluding food and fuel, the so-called core rate rose 0.1 percent after no change the previous month, economists projected. The lack of inflation validates the Fed’s strategy to maintain the benchmark lending rates on overnight loans between banks near zero to spur growth. Their next decision on interest rates is due June 23. Home Construction One area that may not fare well in coming months is housing. Work began on 648,000 houses at an annual pace last month, down from a 672,000 rate in April, according to the median forecast of economists surveyed before Commerce Department figures June 16. The end of a government tax credit at the end of the month will cool sales and construction in the second half of the year, economists said. The incentive for first-time homebuyers worth as much as $8,000, which was extended in November to include some current owners, required contracts be signed by April 30 and settled by June 30. Finally, a report from the Conference Board, a New York- based research group, will show growth outlook brightened last month. The group’s index of leading economic indicators, due on June 17, increased 0.4 percent in May, according to economists surveyed. The measure had climbed for 12 consecutive months before declining 0.1 percent in April. To contact the reporter on this story: Timothy R. Homan in Washington at thoman1@bloomberg.net

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`Investor Resistance’ Lifts Municipal Bond Yields to Highest in Four Weeks

June 11, 2010

By Allison Bennett and Brendan A. McGrail June 11 (Bloomberg) — Municipal bond yields rose two days in a row for the first time in a month, reaching a four-week high, as investors refrained from buying in hopes of better returns. Yields on top-rated tax-exempts maturing in 2020 jumped 2 basis points to 3.15 percent yesterday, the highest since May 13, after rising 1 basis point the day before. They last rose on consecutive trading days May 7 and May 10, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point. “The issue is absolute yields are so low, so you’re seeing a lot of investor resistance,” said Alan Schankel , a managing director at Philadelphia-based Janney Montgomery Scott LLC. “There are a lot of bonds in dealers’ inventory because it’s hard to move them with such absolute lows.” Municipal borrowers offered $9.2 billion in debt this week, almost twice as much as the previous period, according to Bloomberg data. Top-rated, 10-year municipal bonds yielded more than 98 percent of equivalent-maturity Treasuries on June 9. A day earlier, the ratio climbed above 99 percent, the highest since May 18, 2009, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Municipals have averaged 93 percent of Treasury yields since the beginning of May. “The nominal yields, even though attractive compared to Treasuries percentage-wise, there was a lot of reluctance to participate at this level,” said Tom Boylen , a managing director and municipal-bond trader in Chicago for BMO Capital Markets. “We’re going to have a somewhat illiquid environment in munis in the short run, until we get levels that are palatable.” Money Flow Yields on top-rated, 10-year general obligations sagged to a two-month low on May 25. Money flowed into long-term municipal bond mutual funds, the largest institutional holders of state and local obligations, for five consecutive weeks through June 2, according to data released June 9 by the Investment Company Institute , a Washington-based trade group. Fund investors added a net $869 million in the period ended June 2, compared with $458 million the previous period, the institute’s data show. Connecticut , whose credit rating was downgraded one level to AA by Fitch Ratings last week, reduced a $600 million bond offer by 19 percent on June 9. The state with the highest tax-supported debt per capita lowered a refinancing issue to $258.2 million from $400 million, alongside $200 million in new borrowing. Connecticut’s five-year securities were priced to yield 2.03 percent on June 9, 29 basis points above top-rated general obligation debt, according to a daily survey by Concord, Massachusetts-based Municipal Market Advisors. Bond Yields The last time Connecticut came to market, in April, five- year bonds yielded 1.93 percent, 9 basis points above the MMA index. “The Fitch downgrade didn’t help, but I think it is more a sloppy market,” Schankel said. The state had $13.7 billion of bonds outstanding before the sale, according to New York-based Fitch. Yields on the state’s 10-year general obligations have risen 2 basis points since the report, according to Bloomberg Fair Market Value data. Christine Shaw, a spokeswoman for the state treasurer’s office, and JPMorgan Chase & Co., leading the group marketing the deal, didn’t return calls seeking comment. Following are descriptions of pending sales of municipal debt in the U.S.: UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA, spread over four campuses in the Phoenix area, plans to offer $146.7 million in revenue bonds as soon as next week for construction of a health science building. The notes will be issued through the Arizona Board of Regents, the governing body for the state’s three public universities, with the sale split into $139.2 million in Build America Bonds and $7.5 million in tax-exempts. JPMorgan Chase will lead the group marketing the securities. (Added June 11) MASSACHUSETTS SCHOOL BUILDING AUTHORITY , which finances school construction in the state, plans to sell $151 million in Qualified School Construction Bonds for renovations as soon as next week. The debt is backed by state sales taxes. The securities mature in 2027 and will be marketed by a group led by Barclays Plc. (Added June 11) LOS ANGELES COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT, which operates nine campuses in the second-largest U.S. city, plans to issue $1.2 billion in debt as soon as next week. The offering, to be backed by the full faith and credit of the district, is non-callable and will be split into Build America Bonds and tax-exempts. The proceeds will be used to build and renovate schools. Some proceeds will go to pre-paying $300 million in bond anticipation notes. Citigroup Inc. will lead a group marketing the debt. (Added June 10) SAN ANTONIO, the seventh most-populous U.S. city, plans to issue $250.8 million in debt as soon as next week. The offering is split into $201.9 million of Build America Bonds, $9.5 million of tax-exempts and $39.4 million of combination tax and revenue certificates of obligation. Proceeds of the sale will go toward improvements of streets, bridges and public spaces. The Texas city is rated AAA, the highest, by all three rating companies. The securities will be marketed by a group led by Citigroup. (Added June 9) To contact the reporters on this story: Allison Bennett in New York at abennett23@bloomberg.net ; Brendan A. McGrail in New York at bmcgrail@bloomberg.net .

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Builders Rush to Finish Houses as Deadline for U.S. Buyer Tax Credit Loom

June 11, 2010

By Kathleen M. Howley June 11 (Bloomberg) — Construction crews for LGI Homes begin work at 4 a.m., pouring concrete slabs for houses before the heat of a Texas day. They don’t stop until 6 p.m., and usually work six days a week. U.S. builders such as LGI Homes are on a tight deadline to finish houses by the end of June so purchasers can get a federal tax credit of as much as $8,000. Buyers had to sign a contract by April 30 and must complete the transaction by July 1 to qualify. That’s speeding up a construction process that for some builders can take five to six months. “We have people we need to get closed by the end of the month,” said Eric Lipar , 39, chief executive officer of Conroe, Texas-based LGI Homes. “There is a sense of urgency.” Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid proposed a three-month deadline extension yesterday amid concern that a rush of buyers created too big of a backlog. New-home contracts rose 30 percent in March and 15 percent in April, the biggest two-month gain in records dating to 1963, according to the Commerce Department. About a third of the April signings were for homes under construction, and a quarter were for those that weren’t started. Waiting to see if a new home will be finished by the credit deadline can be nerve-racking for buyers, said Charlie Li, a civil engineer in Kansas City, Missouri, who is purchasing a property in the nearby suburb of Overland Park, Kansas. Li drives by the building site every day after work. The four- bedroom house probably will be finished in two weeks, he said. ‘Under the Gun’ “We’re under the gun, because you never know if the weather will impact the schedule,” Li said. “If I don’t see that progress has been made, it makes me nervous.” To complete a sale, builders in most of the U.S. are required to have a certificate of occupancy from local officials attesting the house is finished or at least conforms to building codes. Mortgage lenders usually require the document before closing on a loan. “I’ve seen some building officials require that a house be completely finished before issuing a certificate of occupancy — even the carpets installed,” said Richard Wildermuth, president of Connecticut Valley Homes in East Lyme, Connecticut. “In other towns, all they require is the house conforms to code — things like installed windows, stair railings, a functional bathroom and a working furnace.” Construction Employment Builders are snapping up workers to make the deadline. The jobless rate in the construction industry dropped to 20 percent in May from a high of 27 percent in February. The national unemployment rate for May was 9.7 percent, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The number of people working in residential construction rose to 579,700 in May, up from a 17-year low of 549,800 in February, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data. That doesn’t include sub-contractors who aren’t on payrolls, such as self-employed plumbers. New-home sales in March and April were concentrated in houses costing less than $300,000, signaling a rise in first- time buyers seeking the tax credit. The maximum benefit of $8,000 is reserved for people who have never owned property, while current homeowners can qualify for as much as $6,500. Entry-level houses tend to be smaller and many can be finished in three months or less, compared with five to six months for larger homes, said David Crowe , chief economist of the National Association of Home Builders in Washington. Still, it’s not easy to build a house that quickly, he said. “Finishing a home in a few months can be done, but the builder would have to work fast,” Crowe said. 45 Days In Texas, the LGI Homes crews have it down to a science, according to Lipar. They can complete a home in about 45 days with a crew of 10 to 12 people on site, including framers, drywallers and electricians, he said. The builder’s entry-level properties cost $110,000 to $170,000 for homes that are 1,100 to 2,500 square feet (102 to 232 square meters), Lipar said. The most popular model is a ranch-style house with three bedrooms, two bathrooms and an attached two-car garage for about $130,000, he said. The National Association of Realtors asked members of Congress to consider extending the tax credit deadline to allow people more time to complete sales, said Lucien Salvant, head of public affairs for the Chicago-based trade group. Reid, a Nevada Democrat whose state has been among the nation’s worst-hit housing markets, proposed moving the date to Sept. 30. “The bulk of the delays are coming from people doing short sales, but we’re also seeing people having problems closing on homes they’re having built,” said Salvant. Short sales are transactions in which a bank accepts less than the balance owed on a property. California Credit In California, the federal tax benefit has been eclipsed by a $10,000 state tax credit for real estate purchased between May 1 and the end of the year. The credit applies to people who buy a new home and first-time homebuyers who purchase either a new or existing property. “We think the California tax credit will be more helpful than the federal,” said Jim Warmington Jr., president and CEO of the Warmington Group, a homebuilder in Costa Mesa, California. The rest of the U.S. may see a sales slump after the end of the federal credit, said John Burns , chairman of John Burns Real Estate Consulting in Irvine, California. Permits, a sign of future construction, fell in April by the most since December 2008, the Commerce Department said in a report last month. “The federal tax credit got people off the fence and pulled a lot of sales forward,” Burns said. “We’re now entering a period where we’ll see the U.S. new-home market trending down.” To contact the reporter on this story: Kathleen M. Howley in Boston at kmhowley@bloomberg.net .

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Iran to Consider Limiting Ties With UN Nuclear Agency After Sanction Vote

June 10, 2010

By Ali Sheikholeslami and Bill Varner June 10 (Bloomberg) — Iran said it will consider downgrading relations with the United Nations nuclear agency after the UN Security Council passed a fourth round of sanctions against the Persian Gulf nation over its atomic development. Parliament on June 13 will discuss revising Iran’s ties with the International Atomic Energy Agency as a result of the sanctions, a senior lawmaker, Esmaeil Kosari, was cited as saying today by the state-run Fars news agency. “We are studying this and will comment when it’s done,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast said by phone from Tehran. The Security Council , with backing from Russia and China, yesterday approved new sanctions including restrictions on financial transactions, a tighter arms embargo and authority to seize cargo suspected of being used for Iranian nuclear or missile programs. With further U.S. and European Union sanctions likely, Iran may take “provocative” steps over the next few months, Cliff Kupchan , a senior analyst at Eurasia Group, a New York political-risk consulting firm, said in an e-mailed commentary. Iran’s representative at the IAEA downplayed the possibility his country would end its cooperation with the agency, which monitors compliance with the international treaty on nuclear weapons. “The parliamentarians are very upset,” Ambassador Aliasghar Soltanieh told reporters today at the IAEA’s offices in Vienna. “As of now, there is no intention to withdraw from the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty or to stop our cooperation in accordance with IAEA safeguards.” ‘Trash Bin’ Iran denounced the sanctions, which President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said should be “thrown into the trash bin like a used tissue.” The 15-nation council voted 12 to 2, with one abstention, to approve a resolution that also freezes the assets of 40 companies, banks and government agencies, and bars the foreign travel of Javad Rahiqi, head of a branch of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran. Turkey and Brazil voted against the measure, and Lebanon abstained. China said today the sanctions don’t close off continued diplomacy. A solution to the nuclear standoff should be resolved through dialogue and diplomatic means, spokesman Qin Gang said in comments posted on the Foreign Ministry’s website after the vote. “We will ensure that these sanctions are vigorously enforced,” President Barack Obama said at the White House. “A nuclear arms race in the Middle East is in nobody’s interest.” Energy Production The new penalties, the fourth set of sanctions imposed on Iran by the council since 2006, aim to block Iran’s ability to develop nuclear weapons and pressure the country to join international talks on the issue. Iran maintains that its nuclear development is needed for energy production. Brazil and Turkey, which have temporary seats on the Security Council, both criticized the sanctions. The two countries brokered a proposed agreement with Iran under which half of its low-enriched uranium would be swapped for a more concentrated supply in a form that can only be used in a medical-research reactor in Tehran that will run out of fuel. They say the exchange would build confidence and keep talks with Iran open. The U.S. and its allies say Iran has rebuffed diplomacy. Iran has refused Security Council demands to suspend the production of enriched uranium, which can fuel a reactor or form the core of a bomb. The IAEA has criticized Iran for failing to cooperate with its inspectors. Inspectors’ Access Cutting IAEA access in Iran would be a blow to inspectors, who last month negotiated enhanced access to a uranium enrichment site in Natanz. The agency said May 31 that it won the right to add more cameras, increase atomic-material accounting and conduct surprise inspections at the site, where Iran has produced 5.7 kilograms (12.6 pounds) of 20 percent enriched uranium. While most nuclear weapons contain 90 percent enriched uranium, concentrations as low as 20 percent can start the atomic fission seen in nuclear weapons. Russia and China, which had resisted further UN sanctions to avoid damaging their commercial ties with Iran, agreed to the measures after amendments to the text. Russia is building Iran’s first nuclear power plant and will supply the fuel for it. Iran expressed disappointment with China’s vote for sanctions. “It will slowly lose its respectable position in the Muslim world and will wake up when it’s too late,” said Ali Akbar Salehi , vice president and head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran, said according to the Iranian Students News Agency. Lebanon Vote Lebanon said it abstained because its Cabinet couldn’t reach a decision on the resolution. The UN measure bars Iran from investing in uranium mining or the construction of new enrichment facilities. It bans sales to Iran of tanks, armored combat vehicles, artillery, fighter jets, attack helicopters, warships or missiles. Russia will freeze a contract to deliver its S-300 air- defense systems to Iran, Interfax reported today, citing an unidentified Russian defense-industry official. Iran’s financial transactions, including those related to insurance and re-insurance, would be barred if they might have a nuclear purpose. Air, Sea Cargo The sanctions text “calls upon” nations to intercept and inspect any cargo by air or sea suspected of containing banned materials that would contribute to Iran’s nuclear or missile programs. Three annexes to the resolution’s main text cite 15 entities “owned, controlled or acting on behalf” of the Revolutionary Guard Corps, an arm of the Iranian military with extensive business interests. Also cited are three companies the resolution says are related to the Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines, and 22 companies it says are involved in nuclear and ballistic missile activities. “If Iran would meet and engage on their nuclear program, there was receptivity,” Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said in Colombia. “We know that Iran did not and would not. At the end of the day, it was clear Iran was not willing to abide by the expectations of the international community.” The UN action is “long overdue but doesn’t go far enough,” Representative John Boehner of Ohio, the Republican leader in the U.S. House, said in a statement. Boehner said Obama’s 16-month “engagement strategy” on this issue has simply given the Iranians 16 more months to work on acquiring nuclear capability. “At the request of the administration, Congress has repeatedly delayed mandatory bilateral sanctions legislation,” he said. “Any justification for delay is now at an end, and the Congress must act immediately.” To contact the reporters on this story: Ali Sheikholeslami in London at alis2@bloomberg.net ; Bill Varner at the United Nations at wvarner@bloomberg.net .

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Iran Sanctions Tightened by UN as China Urges Further Diplomatic Efforts

June 9, 2010

By Bill Varner June 9 (Bloomberg) — The United Nations Security Council voted to impose new sanctions on Iran that restrict financial transactions, tighten an arms embargo and authorize the seizure of cargo linked to its nuclear or missile programs. The 15-nation Security Council voted 12 to 2, with one abstention, to adopt a resolution that freezes the assets of 40 companies, banks and government agencies, and bars the foreign travel of Javad Rahiqi, head of a branch of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran. Turkey and Brazil voted against the measure, and Lebanon abstained from the vote. “We will ensure that these sanctions are vigorously enforced,” President Barack Obama said at the White House. “A nuclear arms race in the Middle East is in nobody’s interest.” The new round of penalties, the fourth set of sanctions imposed on Iran by the Security Council since 2006, is aimed at blocking Iran’s ability to develop nuclear weapons and pressuring the country to join international talks. The Brazilian ambassador to the world body, Maria Viotti , told the Security Council just before the vote that the resolution was a mistake. “Sanctions threats can result in tragic consequences,” Viotti said. The Turkish foreign ministry said the sanctions don’t contribute to regional peace and security, in an e-mailed statement. Uranium Deal Brazil and Turkey, a North Atlantic Treaty Organization ally of the U.S. that borders Iran, have pursued a deal to swap Iranian enriched uranium for fuel to power a medical-isotopes reactor. The two countries, which have temporary seats on the Security Council, say the exchange would build confidence and keep talks with Iran open. The U.S. and its allies say Iran has rebuffed diplomacy. Iran maintains that its nuclear development work is intended for energy production, not to build weapons. Its uranium-enrichment effort has fed suspicions among U.S. leaders that the Iranian nuclear aims are military in nature. Iran probably would need three to five years to complete a bomb, Marine Corps General James Cartwright , vice chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, told a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing on April 14. Cartwright said U.S. officials have no evidence that Iran has decided to build a weapon and noted the timeline was based on historical estimates. The sanctions vote drew an immediate reaction from Iran. “It is neither constructive nor will it have impact,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Ramin Mehmanparast said in a telephone interview in Tehran. ‘Trash Bin’ Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was more blunt. “The sanctions you pass should be thrown into the trash bin like a used tissue,” Ahmadinejad was cited as saying by the state-run Iranian Students News Agency. “They are not capable of harming the Iranian nation.” Lawrence Haas , senior fellow at the American Foreign Policy Council in Washington, called the resolution negotiated with China and Russia a “Pyrrhic victory” for the Obama administration that will do little to achieve its aim of preventing Iran from developing nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles. “There are elements that are good, but also loopholes built in so I don’t know if I can point to any one thing with real bite,” Haas said in an interview. “There is no question they are tightening pressure but, unfortunately, not enough.” Lebanon Abstains Lebanon, which represents Arab nations on the Security Council, said its Cabinet couldn’t reach a decision on the resolution. “There was no majority, no consensus, therefore it was an abstention,” Mohamad Chatah , a political adviser to Prime Minister Saad Hariri , said in a telephone interview. French Ambassador Gerard Araud said Iran is continuing to enrich uranium in the absence of a “credible” nuclear energy program. “These measures will increase the cost to Iran of its proliferative policy,” he said of today’s resolution. “It will slow down the progress of the nuclear program and help us to buy time for diplomacy.” The UN resolution bars Iran from investing in uranium mining or construction of new enrichment facilities. It bans sales to Iran of tanks, armored combat vehicles, artillery, fighter jets, attack helicopters, warships or missiles. Insurance Transactions Financial transactions, including those related to insurance and re-insurance, would be barred if they might have a nuclear purpose. The text “calls upon” nations to intercept and inspect any cargo by air or sea suspected of containing banned materials that would contribute to Iran’s nuclear or missile programs. Three annexes to the main text of the resolution cite 15 entities “owned, controlled or acting on behalf” of the Revolutionary Guard Corps, an arm of the Iranian military with extensive business interests. One is the Khatam al-Anbiya Construction Headquarters, described as being involved in “large-scale civil and military construction projects,” including the nuclear facility at Qom whose existence was made public in September. Also cited are three companies the resolution says are related to the Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines and 22 companies it says are involved in nuclear and ballistic missile activities. The companies include the Armament Industries Group, identified as a small-arms manufacturer, and the Ministry of Defense Logistics Export, which the measure says sells Iranian- made weapons “to customers around the world.” Bank in Malaysia The resolution targets the Malaysia-based First East Export Bank, which is “owned or controlled” by Bank Mellat, named in previous sanctions. Mellat has “facilitated” hundreds of millions of dollars in transactions linked to Iranian nuclear defense and missile entities, according to the resolution. The U.S. Treasury Department has barred U.S. transactions with the Malaysia bank. The Export Development Bank of Iran, which was included on the draft sanctioned companies list as late as June 7, was dropped from the final version of the UN resolution. The measure approved today bars the foreign travel of 40 Revolutionary Guard officials and persons involved with Iran’s nuclear or missile programs, individuals who were listed in the three previous sanctions resolutions. Those texts only sought “vigilance” of their entry into other nations. More Talks The text “encourages” the Vienna-based International Atomic Energy Agency to continue talks with Iran aimed at “measures to build confidence” in its intentions. It takes note of the effort by Brazil and Turkey to reach an agreement with Iran under which half of its enriched uranium would be swapped for fuel in a form that can only be used in Tehran’s medical-research reactor. A fourth annex repeats the political and economic incentives to negotiations presented to Iran in June 2008 by the U.S., Britain, China, France, Germany, Russia and the European Union. The foreign ministers of the six nations released a statement today saying the resolution “keeps the door open for continued engagement.” To contact the reporter on this story: William Varner in New York at wvarner@bloomberg.net

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Agricultural Bank of China to Sell 15% Stake in Potential $30 Billion IPO

June 4, 2010

By Bloomberg News June 5 (Bloomberg) — Agricultural Bank of China Ltd. , the nation’s biggest lender by customers, will sell a 15 percent stake in what may be the world’s largest initial public offering on record. The state-owned bank plans to sell 22.235 billion shares in Shanghai and 25.411 billion shares in Hong Kong, excluding an over-allotment option, according to a prospectus posted on the securities regulator’s website yesterday. The lender may seek to raise as much as $30 billion, Apple Daily reported last month. Agricultural Bank will compete for investors’ money with publicly traded rivals that plan to raise a combined $32 billion in stock and bond sales even with bank valuations near record low levels. The offering also comes as the government cracks down on real-estate speculation and Europe’s debt crisis threatens to slow China’s exports , while spurring companies from Hong Kong to Moscow and New York to postpone IPOs. “Agricultural Bank has to sell what’s so special about itself because the number of shares it’s offering to the market is huge and investors have many banks to choose from,” said Deng Yongming , who helps oversee about $320 million at Changsheng Fund Management Co. in Beijing. “The global and domestic economic picture isn’t rosy either.” Commonly known as ABC, Agricultural Bank will have 26.73 billion shares outstanding in Hong Kong after the IPO, which includes 25.411 billion shares sold to the public and another 1.32 billion shares held by China’s national-pension fund. No Price Range The prospectus did not give a price range for the share sale or an amount that the lender would seek to raise. China’s securities regulator said it will review the IPO plan on June 9. Agricultural Bank had 320 million customers and 23,624 outlets in China at the end of last year, the prospectus said. The bank boosted its profit by 26 percent to 65 billion yuan ($9.5 billion) in 2009, and forecasts net income will rise to at least 82.9 billion yuan this year, the statement showed. The Beijing-based lender’s net income increased to 24.97 billion yuan in the first quarter from 18.03 billion yuan a year ago. Agricultural Bank had a capital adequacy ratio of 10.07 percent at the end of 2009 and its non-performing loan ratio stood at 2.91 percent. The bank is aiming to maintain a minimum capital adequacy ratio of 11.5 percent from 2010 through 2012. It targets a minimum core capital adequacy ratio of 8.5 percent. Agricultural Bank had 4.14 trillion yuan of outstanding loans at the end of 2009, according to the prospectus. Biggest IPO Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd. had a capital adequacy ratio of 12.36 percent and a non-performing loan ratio of 1.54 percent as of Dec. 31. The Beijing-based bank raised $22 billion in 2006 in the world’s largest IPO ever. Chinese banks are under pressure to raise money after an unprecedented 9.59 trillion yuan of new loans last year weakened their capital and raised the risk of a rise in bad debts, and regulators imposed tougher guidelines for financial buffers. ICBC, China Construction Bank Corp. , Bank of China Ltd. , and Bank of Communications Co. have announced plans to raise about 182 billion yuan in total selling shares and bonds this year, after the banking regulator raised the mandatory minimum capital adequacy ratio to 11.5 percent. Agricultural Bank, China’s fourth-largest by assets as of March, is also the least profitable of the four biggest banks to go through a state-led restructuring. It received a $19 billion cash injection from the government and removed 816 billion yuan of non-performing loans from its balance sheet in 2008. ‘Considerable Demands’ “You’ve got a company that has a very dominant position and a huge number of customers,” said Julian Mayo , investment director in London at Charlemagne Capital UK Ltd., which oversees about $3 billion. “The weakness is inefficiency. The price will obviously be very important. It’s been known in the market for some time that banks as a whole have got considerable demands in terms of raising money.” The sale will come after the Shanghai Composite Index slid 22 percent this year for the worst performance among the world’s 10 largest equity markets. Citigroup Inc. of New York and Paris- based BNP Paribas SA project home prices in China will drop 20 percent this year, after policy makers increased bank reserve requirements three times in three months to slow lending. Europe’s widening debt crisis has sent the MSCI Emerging Markets Index down 11 percent since the start of May, while at least 26 companies worldwide postponed or withdrew IPOs. “For Agricultural Bank it’s really bad timing, but they weren’t in a position to predict such bad market conditions,” said Changsheng Fund Management’s Deng. Less Affluent Agricultural Bank, established to serve the country’s farmers and less affluent rural areas, may boost the number of shares sold to 25.57 billion in Shanghai and 29.22 billion in Hong Kong after exercising the over-allotment option, accounting for a combined 16.87 percent of the enlarged capital, according to the prospectus. Excluding the over-allotment, China’s Ministry of Finance will own 40.2 percent of Agricultural Bank after the IPO and Central Huijin Investment Co. , a unit of the nation’s $300 billion sovereign wealth fund, will have 40.93 percent. The National Social Security Fund, which spent 15.5 billion yuan for a 3.7 percent stake before the offering, will own 3.87 percent after the sale, according to the prospectus. China International Capital Corp., Deutsche Bank AG , Goldman Sachs Group Inc., JPMorgan Chase & Co., Macquarie Group Ltd. and Morgan Stanley were hired to arrange the Hong Kong portion of Agricultural Bank’s IPO together with its own investment unit. CICC, Citic Securities Co., China Galaxy Securities Co. and Guotai Junan Securities Co. will manage the bank’s yuan-denominated A-share offering. — Luo Jun , Bei Hu , Zhao Yidi , with assistance from Zijing Wu in London and Inyoung Hwang , Lee Spears and Michael Tsang in New York. Editors: Brett Miller , Philip Lagerkranser . To contact Bloomberg News staff of this story: Luo Jun in Shanghai at +8621-6104-7021 or jluo6@bloomberg.net

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Coast Guard Opens Own Suggestion Box for Oil Cleanup as Well Keeps Gushing

June 4, 2010

By Pat Wechsler June 4 (Bloomberg) — The U.S. Coast Guard is creating a panel to look into proposed technologies and products to clean up the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, concerned that BP Plc ’s multistage suggestion box system isn’t working. The new group will evaluate ideas that deal with detecting oil in the ocean, cleaning it up and restoring the environment, said Commander Howard Wright, a Coast Guard spokesman. The panel will be independent of BP’s online efforts to assess ideas. The spill is leaking an estimated 12,000 to 19,000 gallons of oil into the Gulf each day, a government panel said. The decision follows a report by Bloomberg News that London-based BP has so far tested only four of almost 35,000 ideas submitted and implemented none. The panel will bring proposals that may have the fastest impact on the spill to the immediate attention of the government response team headed by Admiral Thad Allen that is handling the disaster, Wright said. “There has been a lot of concern that there are significant ideas not getting full voice,” Wright said today in a telephone interview. “The government wanted to make sure that all the best technology is being applied and there was good oversight of that process.” The new group will include representatives from the Coast Guard, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Department of Interior, Environmental Protection Agency and Department of Agriculture, Wright said. April 20 Explosion The spill was caused by an April 20 explosion aboard the Deepwater Horizon rig, which London-based BP leases from Switzerland’s Transocean Ltd. The blast killed 11. The Interagency Technology Assessment Program, as the new group is being called, today will put out a request for proposals from companies, scientists and engineers. The ideas must be summarized in six pages. Wright said the government will be looking for “significant rigor and a significant amount of validation with these proposals.” BP’s effort asked for a 200-word description of a proposed solution. BP spokesmen didn’t immediately return phone calls for comment today. The new panel will be aided by scientists and engineers at the Coast Guard’s Research Development, Testing and Evaluation Program . A representative from the Coast Guard’s research development center will be on site when the panel meets to take ideas of “immediate benefit,” particularly involving cleaning up the spill, directly to the incident command, Wright said. Latest Ideas “We wanted to keep the interagency group plugged in to the command to make sure we are using the latest ideas,” he said. While BP is responsible for stopping the flow, its failure to do so after seven weeks has prompted the government to make more demands and seek its own solutions. Allen in recent days ordered BP to pay for the construction of six barrier islands as buffers to keep as much oil as possible away from fragile coastal marshes and wetlands. The EPA also met with 20 scientists and movie director James Cameron on June 1 in search of potential methods to cap off the oil gushing from the damaged well. Cameron was invited because of his work with underwater remote vehicles for the filming of the 1997 movie “Titanic.” “This is something that has to be dealt with immediately, not sometime later,” President Barack Obama said May 28. Ideas to BP The ideas that have been submitted to BP range from soaking up the oil with human hair to oil-eating microbes to blasting the well closed with nuclear weapons, and while many of them are duplicative, unworkable or even dangerous, about 800 have been categorized as feasible and may be tested. BP set up a four-stage evaluation system that involves dozens of engineers from within the company and some hired on a contract basis. Proposals are reviewed to see if they are feasible and then whether they are proven to work. One of the four technologies to move forward is centrifuge equipment, an example of which was developed by actor-director Kevin Costner . The machines built by Ocean Therapy Solutions Inc., a company owned by the “Waterworld” and “Dances with Wolves” star and his scientist brother Dan, use barge-based turbines to spin as much as 200 gallons of water a minute in such a way that oil is separated out. Costner unveiled the centrifuges at an offshore technology conference 10 years ago, where several of the BP executives working on the spill now were in attendance. After some preliminary testing on land, the centrifuges were given the go- ahead to test in open water this week. To contact the reporter on this story: Pat Wechsler in New York at pwechsler@bloomberg.net

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Agricultural Bank May Raise $30 Billion in Makeover of Mao Zedong’s Lender

June 3, 2010

By Bloomberg News June 4 (Bloomberg) — Agricultural Bank of China Ltd. has about 350 million reasons why investors might want to buy into what could be the world’s largest initial public offering, and construction worker Zhao Qiang is one of them. Zhao, who moved to Beijing from the eastern Anhui province three years ago, uses the bank to wire part of his monthly income to his parents back home, about 1,100 kilometers (683 miles) away. “I like Agricultural Bank, it’s very convenient,” said Zhao, 38, as he and his wife withdrew 200 yuan ($29) from their savings account at the lender’s branch in Yongding County outside the Chinese capital in May. Agricultural Bank, which plans an IPO local media have said could raise as much as $30 billion, is less profitable than all its major rivals and more prone to extending loans that default . Chairman Xiang Junbo is betting investors will overlook those weaknesses because of a different type of asset: its 350 million customers, mainly spread around rural areas that are the focus of a government push to lessen the gap in living standards in the world’s fastest-growing major economy . “For investors who want to have exposure to different segments of the growth in China, it represents a unique stock to hold in a diversified portfolio,” said Victoria Mio , a Hong Kong-based senior fund manager at Robeco Group, which oversees $194 billion worldwide. Mio said she plans to subscribe for stock in the IPO if the valuation is “reasonable.” The Hong Kong stock exchange is scheduled to hold a listing hearing for the sale on June 10, two people with knowledge of the matter said. Agricultural Bank Board Secretary Li Zhenjiang wasn’t available to comment. Pulled IPOs Xiang, 53, will still have to persuade investors rattled by Greece’s debt crisis, a stock-market slump and a crackdown in China on real-estate speculation to part with cash. At least 20 companies worldwide postponed or withdrew IPOs in May as the MSCI World Emerging Markets Index slid 9.2 percent, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Agricultural Bank will sell shares in Hong Kong and Shanghai. Hong Kong’s benchmark Hang Seng Index has dropped 9.5 percent this year, while the Shanghai Composite Index plunged 22 percent for the worst performance among the world’s 10 biggest equity markets, according to Bloomberg data. “The domestic market has been hit by the property curbing measures, and the recent plunge in overseas markets will have further negative impact on China,” said Deng Yongming , who helps oversee about 2.2 billion yuan at Changsheng Fund Management Co. in Beijing. “For Agricultural Bank, it’s really bad timing.” China IPOs Rally Chinese IPOs have defied the drop in the wider market this year. Shares of companies that have gone public in Shanghai and Shenzhen gained an average 29 percent in their first month of trading through June 1, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Agricultural Bank’s IPO, which may surpass the $22 billion sale by Beijing-based Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd. in 2006, marks the final chapter of a decade-long overhaul of the country’s banking industry. The government spent an estimated $650 billion to clean out bad loans that were the legacy of years of state-directed lending gone awry. Set up in 1951 by Mao Zedong to finance rural cooperatives, Agricultural Bank was the first Chinese commercial lender established during Communist rule. Xiang now plans to delve further into areas left out of the economic transformation that’s lifted 300 million Chinese out of poverty in the past three decades according to the United Nations . Under a 10-year plan that started in 2008, Agricultural Bank, commonly known as ABC, aims to increase its rural customers to 400 million — more than the combined population of the U.S. and Germany — by the end of 2011. The plan, which was made public in March, also calls for the lender to double loans to farmers and agricultural businesses in the period. 24,000 Branches Agricultural Bank, commonly known as ABC, has more than 24,000 branches that dot the country from tropical Hainan Island in the south to Nenjiang in the northernmost Heilongjiang province. The bank has outlets in Kashgar in China’s west, 4,800 kilometers from Beijing where it is based. ICBC , whose market value of $216 billion makes it the world’s biggest bank by that measure, has 16,232 branches and 216 million individual customers in China. London-based HSBC Holdings Plc , the world’s third-largest lender by market value, operates more than 8,000 offices in 88 countries. “ABC’s rural operation is not a profit maker yet, but I have no doubt that it will eventually become a stable growth engine that can’t be easily matched by competitors,” said Liao Qiang , a Beijing-based analyst at Standard & Poor’s. Lower Profitability The bank’s focus on serving the poorer parts of China came at the cost of lower profitability and a higher bad-loan ratio than at local rivals, and it was the last lender to undergo a state-led restructuring, in 2008. Agricultural Bank was found to have violated rules related to 10.6 billion yuan in loans it made in 2008, as some of the money was funneled into the stock market and unqualified projects, the National Audit Office said in April. The lender posted profit of 65 billion yuan last year, the official China Daily reported in March, citing Chairman Xiang. That compared with 128.6 billion yuan at ICBC and 106.8 billion yuan at Beijing-based China Construction Bank Corp. Delinquent loans accounted for 2.91 percent of the total as of Dec. 31, almost double ICBC’s ratio — even after the government removed about 800 billion yuan of bad debts from Agricultural Bank’s books in 2008. Shares of ICBC have gained 35 percent in Shanghai and 86 percent in Hong Kong since their Oct. 27, 2006, debut. ‘Strike a Balance’ “The real difficulty for ABC is how to strike a balance between its role as a semi-policy lender serving farmers under a government agenda with its new obligation as a publicly traded entity to maximize profit for shareholders,” Liao said. Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao has made boosting living standards among China’s farmers a priority, promoting loans and subsidies and increasing public works spending as part of a push to double rural dwellers’ earnings by 2020. Two-thirds of people who live outside cities have no access to banking services, according to the China Banking Regulatory Commission . The average income of a countryside resident was 5,153 yuan last year, less than a third of that in cities, according to government statistics. The gap between rural and urban dwellers has widened since 2001, the data show. Even so, consumption growth in the countryside outpaced that of urban areas for the first time last year, at 15.7 percent. Rural bank lending jumped 35 percent in the first quarter, compared with 22 percent for China as a whole. Rivals including Beijing-based Bank of China Ltd. and China Construction Bank have begun reversing course after closing a combined 31,000 rural branches over the past decade. Rural Banks Bank of China and Temasek Holdings Pte plan to invest up to 20 billion yuan to set up as many as 400 rural banks, people familiar with the matter said in March. Bank of China President Li Lihui said the same month that the lender may start by opening 60 branches under a pilot program. Construction Bank, China’s second-largest, plans to set up a rural banking venture with Spain’s Banco Santander SA , people with knowledge of the matter said last June. Agricultural Bank has received preferential treatments from the central government for some of its rural branches, including tax breaks, a lower requirement for reserves and a waiver on fees to regulators, the Shanghai Securities News reported May 27. “Agribank’s exposure to underdeveloped rural China is obviously good for its longer-term prospects,” said Edward Chan , who oversees about $1 billion at Royal London Asset Management. “It’s not only targeting the farming community, but also countryside workers who are potentially strong consumers.” — Luo Jun , Zhao Yidi , with assistance from Zijing Wu in London, Cathy Chan and Bei Hu in Hong Kong and Michael Tsang in New York. Editors: Philip Lagerkranser , Daniel Hauck . To contact Bloomberg News staff of this story: Luo Jun in Shanghai at +8621-6104-7021 or jluo6@bloomberg.net ; Yidi Zhao in Beijing at +86-10-6649-7575 or yzhao7@bloomberg.net

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Record $30 Billion IPO Hinges on 350 Million China Agricultural Customers

June 3, 2010

By Bloomberg News June 4 (Bloomberg) — Agricultural Bank of China Ltd. has about 350 million reasons why investors might want to buy into what could be the world’s largest initial public offering, and construction worker Zhao Qiang is one of them. Zhao, who moved to Beijing from the eastern Anhui province three years ago, uses the bank to wire part of his monthly income to his parents back home, about 1,100 kilometers (683 miles) away. “I like Agricultural Bank, it’s very convenient,” said Zhao, 38, as he and his wife withdrew 200 yuan ($29) from their savings account at the lender’s branch in Yongding County outside the Chinese capital in May. Agricultural Bank, which plans an IPO local media have said could raise as much as $30 billion, is less profitable than all its major rivals and more prone to extending loans that default . Chairman Xiang Junbo is betting investors will overlook those weaknesses because of a different type of asset: its 350 million customers, mainly spread around rural areas that are the focus of a government push to lessen the gap in living standards in the world’s fastest-growing major economy . “For investors who want to have exposure to different segments of the growth in China, it represents a unique stock to hold in a diversified portfolio,” said Victoria Mio , a Hong Kong-based senior fund manager at Robeco Group, which oversees $194 billion worldwide. Mio said she plans to subscribe for stock in the IPO if the valuation is “reasonable.” The Hong Kong stock exchange is scheduled to hold a listing hearing for the sale on June 10, two people with knowledge of the matter said. Agricultural Bank Board Secretary Li Zhenjiang wasn’t available to comment. Pulled IPOs Xiang, 53, will still have to persuade investors rattled by Greece’s debt crisis, a stock-market slump and a crackdown in China on real-estate speculation to part with cash. At least 20 companies worldwide postponed or withdrew IPOs in May as the MSCI World Emerging Markets Index slid 9.2 percent, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Agricultural Bank of Beijing will sell shares in Hong Kong and Shanghai. Hong Kong’s benchmark Hang Seng Index has dropped 9.5 percent this year, while the Shanghai Composite Index plunged 22 percent for the worst performance among the world’s 10 biggest equity markets, according to Bloomberg data. “The domestic market has been hit by the property curbing measures, and the recent plunge in overseas markets will have further negative impact on China,” said Deng Yongming , who helps oversee about 2.2 billion yuan at Changsheng Fund Management Co. in Beijing. “For Agricultural Bank, it’s really bad timing.” China IPOs Rally Chinese IPOs have defied the drop in the wider market this year. Shares of companies that have gone public in Shanghai and Shenzhen gained an average 29 percent in their first month of trading through June 1, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Agricultural Bank’s IPO, which may surpass the $22 billion sale by Beijing-based Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd. in 2006, marks the final chapter of a decade-long overhaul of the country’s banking industry. The government spent an estimated $650 billion to clean out bad loans that were the legacy of years of state-directed lending gone awry. Set up in 1951 by Mao Zedong to finance rural cooperatives, Agricultural Bank was the first Chinese commercial lender established during Communist rule. Xiang now plans to delve further into areas left out of the economic transformation that’s lifted 300 million Chinese out of poverty in the past three decades according to the United Nations . 24,000 Branches Agricultural Bank, commonly known as ABC, has more than 24,000 branches that dot the country from tropical Hainan Island in the south to Nenjiang in the northernmost Heilongjiang province. The bank has outlets in Kashgar in China’s west, 4,800 kilometers from Beijing. ICBC , whose market value of $216 billion makes it the world’s biggest bank by that measure, has 16,232 branches and 216 million individual customers in China. London-based HSBC Holdings Plc , the world’s third-largest lender by market value, operates more than 8,000 offices in 88 countries. “ABC’s rural operation is not a profit maker yet, but I have no doubt that it will eventually become a stable growth engine that can’t be easily matched by competitors,” said Liao Qiang , a Beijing-based analyst at Standard & Poor’s. Lower Profitability The bank’s focus on serving the poorer parts of China came at the cost of lower profitability and a higher bad-loan ratio than at local rivals, and it was the last lender to undergo a state-led restructuring, in 2008. Agricultural Bank was found to have violated rules related to 10.6 billion yuan in loans it made in 2008 as some of the money was funneled into the stock market and unqualified projects, the National Audit Office said in April. The lender posted profit of 65 billion yuan last year, the official China Daily reported in March, citing Chairman Xiang. That compared with 128.6 billion yuan at ICBC and 106.8 billion yuan at Beijing-based China Construction Bank Corp. Delinquent loans accounted for 2.91 percent of the total as of Dec. 31, almost double ICBC’s ratio — even after the government removed about 800 billion yuan of bad debts from Agricultural Bank’s books in 2008. Shares of ICBC have gained 35 percent in Shanghai and 86 percent in Hong Kong since their Oct. 27, 2006, debut. ‘Strike a Balance’ “The real difficulty for ABC is how to strike a balance between its role as a semi-policy lender serving farmers under a government agenda with its new obligation as a publicly traded entity to maximize profit for shareholders,” Liao said. Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao has made boosting living standards among China’s farmers a priority, promoting loans and subsidies and increasing public works spending as part of a push to double rural dwellers’ earnings by 2020. Two-thirds of people who live outside cities have no access to banking services, according to the China Banking Regulatory Commission . The average income of a countryside resident was 5,153 yuan in 2009, less than a third of that in cities, according to government statistics. The gap between rural and urban dwellers widened since 2001, the data show. Even so, consumption growth in the countryside outpaced that of urban areas for the first time last year, at 15.7 percent. Rural bank lending jumped 35 percent in the first quarter, compared with 22 percent for China as a whole. Rivals including Beijing-based Bank of China Ltd. and China Construction Bank have begun reversing course after closing a combined 31,000 rural branches over the past decade. Rural Banks Bank of China and Temasek Holdings Pte plan to invest up to 20 billion yuan to set up as many as 400 rural banks, people familiar with the matter said in March. Bank of China President Li Lihui said the same month that the lender may start by opening 60 branches under a pilot program. Construction Bank, China’s second-largest, plans to set up a rural banking venture with Spain’s Banco Santander SA , people with knowledge of the matter said last June. Agricultural Bank has received preferential treatments from the central government for some of its rural branches, including tax breaks, a lower requirement for reserves and a waiver on fees to regulators, the Shanghai Securities News reported May 27. “Agribank’s exposure to underdeveloped rural China is obviously good for its longer-term prospects,” said Edward Chan , who oversees about $1 billion at Royal London Asset Management. “It’s not only targeting the farming community, but also countryside workers who are potentially strong consumers.” — Luo Jun , Zhao Yidi , with assistance from Zijing Wu in London, Cathy Chan and Bei Hu in Hong Kong and Michael Tsang in New York. Editors: Philip Lagerkranser , Daniel Hauck . To contact Bloomberg News staff of this story: Luo Jun in Shanghai at +8621-6104-7021 or jluo6@bloomberg.net Yidi Zhao in Beijing at +86-10-6649-7575 or yzhao7@bloomberg.net

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U.S. Stocks Drop on Report Lebanon Fired on Israeli Warplanes

June 1, 2010

By Elizabeth Stanton and Nikolaj Gammeltoft June 1 (Bloomberg) — U.S. stocks fell, adding to losses from the Dow Jones Industrial Average’s worst May since 1940, as BP Plc ’s failure to plug a leaking oil well dragged down energy producers and AFP reported Lebanon fired on Israeli warplanes. Transocean Ltd ., Anadarko Petroleum Corp . and Halliburton Co . fell more than 11 percent after BP gave up trying to plug the worst oil spill in U.S. history any sooner than August. Benchmark indexes erased earlier gains triggered by growth in construction spending and manufacturing after a senior Israeli security official told AFP that the nation’s aircraft were targeted by Lebanese anti-aircraft guns. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index decreased 1.7 percent to 1,070.71 at 4 p.m. in New York. The S&P 500 lost 8.2 percent in May, its worst month since February 2009, on concern Europe’s debt crisis will hamper the global economic recovery and China will take more steps to cool its economy. The Dow lost 112.61 points, or 1.1 percent, to 10,024.02 today. “The nervousness about the global economic recovery continues,” said Giri Cherukuri , portfolio manager and head trader at Oakbrook Investments in Lisle, Illinois, which manages $2.2 billion. “Also, political tension across the world is making investors more cautious.” The S&P 500 has fallen 12 percent from a 19-month high on April 23 on concern that widening budget deficits in Europe could derail global growth. The five-week slide is consistent with a temporary pullback within a bull market, said Thomas J. Lee , the chief U.S. equity strategist at JPMorgan Chase & Co. ‘Pretty Normal’ “It is a pretty normal correction in a bull market,” Lee said today in a Bloomberg Television interview. “It pays up to be a slow buyer here. If you start to get enough positive headlines to offset the negatives, that would be a way to build confidence. Investors are seeing good opportunities to buy.” Stocks fell to the lowest levels of the day after AFP said Lebanon’s military fired at Israeli planes as they flew over its airspace, according to a senior Israeli security official. The report came a day after nine people were killed in an Israeli commando raid on boats carrying pro-Palestinian activists to the Gaza Strip. Israeli forces killed two Palestinians who tried to infiltrate from the enclave today and another three who tried to fire a rocket, according to an army statement. Energy companies extended losses after Attorney General Eric Holder said the U.S. Justice Department is investigating whether any criminal or civil laws were violated in the BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. ‘A Tragedy’ “We will prosecute to the fullest extent of the law anyone who has violated the law,” Holder said. “This disaster is nothing less than a tragedy.” BP plunged 15 percent in New York, its largest retreat since at least 1980. Transocean , owner of the Deepwater Horizon rig that exploded April 20, declined 9.4 percent to $51.45. Halliburton, which provided oilfield services on the well, dropped 13 percent to $21.72. Anadarko Petroleum Corp. , which owns a 25 percent stake in the well, lost 16 percent to $43.99 for the biggest drop in the S&P 500. Tenet Healthcare Corp. fell 15 percent to $4.89 for the second-biggest drop in the S&P 500. The third-largest publicly held U.S. hospital chain said it is discussing a potential acquisition of Healthscope Ltd., the second-largest private hospital company in Australia. China, Europe Slowdown Concern that economic growth in China and Europe will slow also weighed on equities. China’s Purchasing Managers’ Index slid to 53.9 from 55.7 in April, the Federation of Logistics and Purchasing said today. That was less than the median 54.5 estimate in a Bloomberg News survey of 18 economists. Readings above 50 indicate expansion in manufacturing. China is the world’s biggest consumer of industrial metals including copper and zinc, and the second-biggest consumer of crude oil after the U.S. Emerging markets such as China are driving the global economy, which the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development estimates will expand 4.6 percent this year. Excluding emerging countries, the forecast is 2.7 percent. The euro touched a four-year low against the U.S. dollar after the European Union’s statistics office said the jobless rate in the 16-nation currency zone increased to 10.1 percent in April, the highest since June 1998. The currency has lost 14 percent of its value against the dollar this year as the ability of countries such as Greece, Spain and Portugal to avoid debt restructuring has discouraged investment in the region. ISM, Construction Spending U.S. benchmark indexes temporarily recovered from their lows of the day after the Institute for Supply Management’s factory index came in at 59.7 for May, topping the reading of 59 in a Bloomberg survey of economists. Commerce Department figures showed construction spending rose 2.7 in April after a gain of 0.2 percent the prior month. That exceeded economists’ estimates that it would remain even. Manufacturing has been a leader in the U.S. economic recovery as demand from abroad strengthened and firms picked up production and spending to meet demand after a record drawdown in inventories last year. “The underpinning of the economic recovery in the U.S. and emerging markets appear to be sustainable despite what’s going on in Europe,” said Jason Pride , director of investment strategy at Glenmede in Philadelphia, which manages $18 billion. “This is not a crystal-clear resolution that we’ll have enduring growth, because the debt bogeyman can peak around the corner and surprise anyone at almost any time.” RadioShack rose 2.8 percent to $21.01 for the biggest advance in the S&P 500. The New York Post reported that Blackstone Group LP is a leading bidder for the electronics chain and said KKR & Co., Bain Capital LLC and TPG are also likely to be involved in the bidding. Hershey Co. increased 2.6 percent to $48. The candy maker said it may cut 500 to 600 jobs in a plan to modernize its manufacturing. Ev3 Inc. rallied 17 percent to $22.22 for the second- biggest advance in Russell 2000 Index. Covidien Plc, the medical-device company spun off from Tyco International Ltd., agreed to buy ev3 for $2.6 billion to add treatments for heart disease. To contact the reporters on this story: Elizabeth Stanton in New York at estanton@bloomberg.net ; Nikolaj Gammeltoft in New York at ngammeltoft@bloomberg.net .

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Israel Says Gaza Aid Ships Are `Propaganda,’ Will Block Them From Docking

May 25, 2010

By Jonathan Ferziger May 25 (Bloomberg) — Israel won’t allow an international flotilla to reach the Gaza Strip with construction materials and humanitarian supplies, an official said, calling the shipment a provocative stunt. While the Free Gaza Movement, the group behind the shipments, has “wrapped themselves in a humanitarian cloak, they are engaging in political propaganda and not in pro-Palestinian aid,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor said today in a telephone interview from Jerusalem. The eight vessels, carrying 10,000 tons of cargo and some 550 pro-Palestinian activists through the Mediterranean Sea, will probably reach the coastal waters of Gaza by May 28 or 29, Dror Feiler, one of the organizers, said by satellite phone from aboard the Swedish-Greek ship Sofia. Israel has restricted entry of people and goods into Gaza since it was taken over by the militant Hamas movement in 2007, allowing in only a limited range of supplies including food, clothing and medicine in truck convoys. Israeli Navy ships have stopped three previous efforts by the Free Gaza Movement, an international group formed in 2008 to deliver aid, to reach the territory by sea. The ships set sail from Ireland, Sweden, Turkey and Greece, Feiler said. Some are carrying television crews that plan to broadcast live any confrontation between Israeli forces and the activists. “This is not going to look good on television,” said 58-year-old Feiler, an Israeli-born resident of Sweden. “We’re on a peaceful mission to help end the misery of the people in Gaza and it’s going to be very ugly if Israeli soldiers try to take over our ships.” Gaza War Hamas is considered a terrorist organization by Israel, the U.S. and European Union. Israel fought a three-week war in Gaza starting in December 2008 that it said was meant to stop Hamas and other militant groups from firing rockets into its territory. It has been negotiating a prisoner swap with Hamas to exchange a captive Israeli soldier, Gilad Shalit , for about 1,000 jailed Palestinians. The Palestinian Authority condemned Israel’s decision to stop the ships. “This is part of the Israeli policy of suffocating Gaza’s population of 1.5 million people by tightening the blockade,” spokesman Ghassan Khatib said in a telephone interview from Ramallah in the West Bank. Along with medical and school supplies, the ships this time are carrying cement, iron rods and other construction material that Israel has banned from entering Gaza, and that are needed to rebuild homes and other buildings destroyed in the war, Feiler said. Making Bombs Such materials are used by Hamas “for developing its arsenal, building bunkers and launching sites, and making rockets and mortars,” according to a statement e-mailed by the Israeli army. The ships can unload their cargo at Ashdod port, north of Gaza, and Israel will determine which supplies can be trucked in, Shlomo Dror , a Defense Ministry spokesman said. To contact the reporter on this story: Jonathan Ferziger in Tel Aviv at jferziger@bloomberg.net

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Geithner, `Uncle’ Wang Will Spar Over Revaluing Yuan at Beijing Dialogue

May 23, 2010

By Bloomberg News May 24 (Bloomberg) — The Chinese official who will face Timothy Geithner in Beijing today jokingly calls himself the Treasury secretary’s “uncle” because of a family connection. Geithner may one day call him “Premier.” Vice Premier Wang Qishan leads the delegation meeting with Geithner and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton at the Strategic and Economic Dialogue, which will discuss yuan revaluation, Europe’s debt crisis and North Korea’s nuclear program. Wang, who oversees China’s financial sector, is mentioned for membership in China’s ruling Politburo Standing Committee and as a successor to Premier Wen Jiabao , two China experts say. Geithner says Wang is China’s “definitive preeminent troubleshooter, firefighter, problem solver.” He is also a high-level emissary to business leaders: During a three-month stretch this year, Wang met with Citigroup Inc. Chief Executive Officer Vikram Pandit , JPMorgan Chase & Co. CEO Jamie Dimon and UBS Investment Bank Vice Chairman Leon Brittan . “Wang has done everything and he’s very good at it,” said Robert Hormats , the U.S. undersecretary of state for economics, energy and agriculture and a former Goldman Sachs Group Inc. banker who first met Wang in the 1980s. “He knows the American relationship inside and out. He has had great relations with a number of American officials for decades.” China’s top leaders regularly tap him to extract the country from crises, including the 1998 collapse of a provincial investment company and the 2003 outbreak of a deadly virus in Beijing. As mayor, Wang also headed the Chinese capital’s preparations for the 2008 Olympic Games. Standing Committee? Dimon said in an e-mail that Wang was “extremely smart, engaged and deeply knowledgeable about issues, finance and history.” Li Cheng , director of research at the Brookings Institution’s John L. Thornton China Center in Washington, says Wang’s experience means he’ll likely be named to the standing committee in 2012, giving foreign bankers a familiar face at the top of China’s power structure. Wang, 61, is also being mentioned within the party as a possible candidate to succeed Wen in 2013, when the country will be looking for a seasoned hand to guide China to full yuan convertibility, said Li and Victor Shih , a professor at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, who studies Chinese politics and finance. “He would help push for the convertibility of the yuan in a very positive way,” Shih said. Market Forces Wang is already getting pushed on the currency by Geithner. In a May 14 interview on Bloomberg Television’s “Political Capital with Al Hunt ,” Geithner said: “I think it is in China’s interest that they move to let their exchange rate start to gradually reflect market forces again.” The yuan’s value has been fixed to about 6.83 to one U.S. dollar for almost two years. Wang won’t have the final say. He is one member of the 25- person Politburo, which sets policy for the government and the ruling Communist Party. And up to now, the government has resisted U.S. pressure to end or loosen the peg. “Only the authorities of a sovereign country have the right to decide how to form the exchange rate,” Assistant Finance Minister Zhu Guangyao said in Beijing on May 20. Li Keqiang , the executive vice premier, is a member of the standing committee, now with nine members, and is the front- runner to succeed Wen, Brookings’ Li said. Central Bank Past Yet Wang’s experience, which includes stints as head of China Construction Bank Corp. and China International Capital Corp., the country’s first investment bank, as well as deputy governor of the central bank, outshines Li’s resume, said Brookings’s Li. Hormats said Wang had the “can-do” leadership style of former Premier Zhu Rongji , who led a drive to sell shares of the country’s biggest state-run firms to foreign investors and shepherded China’s 2001 entry into the World Trade Organization. Wang, as vice governor of southern China’s Guangdong province, was tapped by Zhu to oversee the bankruptcy of Guangdong International Trust & Investment Corp. after its 1998 collapse due in part to soured real-estate investments. A native of northern China’s Shanxi province, Wang often speaks without notes when giving speeches, peppering his remarks with anecdotes. He didn’t respond to a request for an interview. Uncle Wang In a Washington speech last July, Wang called himself Geithner’s “uncle,” referring to ties he had with the Treasury secretary’s father, Peter, who headed the Ford Foundation’s office in Beijing in the 1980s. Geithner, 48, who pronounces Wang’s name with the correct Chinese tones, was a Dartmouth College student in Beijing in the early 1980s. On the same trip, Wang met with President Barack Obama at the White House. The vice premier received an autographed basketball. A year earlier, speaking at Washington’s Wardman Park Marriott, Wang’s sense of humor came out as he explained that while China’s economy was large — it is now No. 3 in the world — its per capita gross domestic product was a fraction of that of the U.S. He told Finance Minister Xie Xuren to check out then-Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson . “Look at his wallet,” Wang said. “He has a really fat wallet.” — Michael Forsythe in Beijing. With assistance from Rebecca Christie in Washington and Dawn Kopecki in New York. Editors: Anne Swardson , Bill Austin . To contact Bloomberg News staff on this story: Michael Forsythe in Beijing at +86-10-6649-7580 or mforsythe@bloomberg.net

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Dubai Shares Lead Gulf Slump on European Credit Crisis, Oil

May 16, 2010

By Zahra Hankir May 16 (Bloomberg) — Dubai shares fell, leading Gulf markets lower, on concern Europe’s sovereign debt crisis will hurt the global economic recovery and as companies including Kuwait’s Agility posted lower earnings. Crude oil declined. Agility lost 3.5 percent as the storage and logistics company said profit fell 52 percent. Vodafone Qatar fell to the lowest this month after the phone company reported a loss. Emaar Properties PJSC, developer of the world’s tallest skyscraper, also slid. The DFM General Index retreated 1.5 percent to 1,692.4, the lowest since March 11. The Bloomberg GCC 200 Index of stocks in the Gulf decreased 0.7 percent and in North Africa, Egypt’s EGX 30 Index tumbled 3.2 percent. “Concern about the long-term impact of Greek and European spending cuts on global growth is weighing on oil and equity markets,” said Rabih Sultani , a fund manager at Duet Mena Ltd. in Dubai, a unit of Duet Group, which oversees $2.1 billion. In Europe, the Stoxx Europe 600 Index sank 3.4 percent on May 14. The euro fell to its lowest level since the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. in 2008 on concern the shared currency may be headed for disintegration. Oil tumbled to $71.61 a barrel, a three-month low, on concern that Europe’s crisis may reduce energy consumption. The six nations of the Gulf Cooperation Council supply about a fifth of the world’s oil. Vodafone Qatar Aabar Investments PJSC, the Abu Dhabi fund and largest shareholder in Daimler AG, rose 1.5 percent to 2.10 dirhams after posting a first-quarter profit of 1.58 billion dirhams ($430 million) after derivatives and foreign-exchange gains. Agility retreated to 560 fils, the lowest since April 22. The company’s first-quarter net income fell to 17.6 million dinars ($61 million). Agility said it’s in talks with the U.S. government to reach an agreement over alleged overbilling on military supplies. Emaar fell 2.1 percent to 3.75 dirhams, the lowest since March 24. Egyptian builder Orascom Construction Industries lost the most in a week, dropping 3.6 percent to 242.52 Egyptian pounds. Vodafone Qatar slumped 2.8 percent to 8.80 riyals, the lowest since April 26. The venture between Vodafone Group Plc and state-controlled Qatar Foundation posted a full-year loss of 673.4 million riyals ($185 million). Qatar’s QE Index dropped 1.8 percent to 7,211.24. Abu Dhabi’s gauge and the Kuwait Stock Exchange Index decreased 0.6 percent. Bahrain’s measure lost 0.9 percent to the lowest since March and Oman’s MSM30 Index slid 0.8 percent. Saudi Arabia’s Tadawul All Share Index fell 0.2 percent, extending yesterday’s 2.3 percent slump. To contact the reporter on this story: Zahra Hankir in Dubai at zhankir@bloomberg.net or

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Alwaleed Holds Wallet With Warren Buffett as Princely Riches Incur Setback

April 26, 2010

By Vernon Silver April 27 (Bloomberg) — Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal sits under an almost full moon near a campfire at his rustic retreat in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. He’s surrounded by a zoo with zebras and giraffes, an artificial lake and a lodge that has an indoor pool, saunas and steam rooms. Three hooded falcons are perched on stands in front of him. Five young women, dressed in black miniskirts and jackets and orange knee-high boots that match their nail polish, serve clove-and-cardamom tea to Alwaleed and his entourage, which includes his personal physician. On this evening in late March, the prince perks up in his easy chair as a newscast on a large-screen television behind the campfire reports on a rally in global hotel stocks — a sign of hope for the billionaire investor who’s trying to revive his slumping fortune, Bloomberg Markets magazine reports in its June issue. “Hotels are on the way up; they’re taking off,” says Alwaleed, before he rises to lead about 15 courtiers and retainers down a hill for a feast of Saudi, Lebanese and Italian food. Alwaleed, 55, one of the world’s richest men, saw his net worth climb to $21.1 billion in May 2000, according to his tally of investments and personal wealth. He achieved that mostly by investing in big-name companies such as Apple Inc. and News Corp. Since then, many stocks have turned against him, especially those of Citigroup Inc. and Time Warner Inc. The Saudi royal’s fortune has been trimmed to $16.6 billion, based on the value of his Kingdom Holding Co. stake on March 31 and his personal assets as of Feb. 10. ‘Buffett of Arabia’ Alwaleed often refers to himself as the “Buffett of Arabia,” although the comparison to Warren Buffett , chairman of Berkshire Hathaway Inc., doesn’t hold up. Berkshire Hathaway’s Class A shares more than doubled in the same span of almost ten years, swelling Buffett’s stake to $48.7 billion. Alwaleed, who’s a nephew of Saudi King Abdullah , is plotting a rebound. The prince’s Riyadh-based Kingdom Holding, which invests most of his wealth, has been retreating from U.S. equities and pouring billions into luxury hotels and large-scale housing and commercial developments in Saudi Arabia and around the world. Kingdom Holding, where Alwaleed serves as chairman, has boosted its property-related assets, such as Four Seasons Hotels Inc., to 75 percent of its holdings , according to his company’s 2009 annual report. Publicly traded stock, which made up at least 79 percent of Alwaleed’s assets in 2000, now constitutes only about 23 percent of his wealth. 371-Room Palace Alwaleed’s most ambitious undertaking is the 1-kilometer- tall (0.62-mile-tall) Kingdom Tower in Jeddah. When completed, the skyscraper will be the world’s tallest, surpassing the current record holder — Dubai’s Burj Khalifa — by 21 percent. The prince says his shift in strategy at Kingdom Holding, which he controls with a 95 percent stake, may put him on a path to surpass the riches of the 79-year-old Buffett. “When he was my age, he was not as big as me,” Alwaleed says. “I still have 20 years.” Alwaleed’s preoccupation with his status and wealth, which includes four jets, a 281-foot (86-meter) yacht and a 371-room palace, is also on display at Kingdom Holding’s headquarters. The glass tower that he built has an oval-shaped hole in the top that resembles the eye of a sewing needle. In his 66th- floor office, models of his airplanes decorate his desk. Bookshelves display reprints of magazine articles about his ranking on billionaire lists. Bill Gates The prince keeps meticulous track of the ups and downs of his fortune, Kingdom Holding Chief Financial Officer Shadi Sanbar says. Alwaleed hires appraisers to value his private assets — such as a jewelry collection worth more than $700 million — and makes those figures available to publishers of rich lists, Sanbar says. After a ranking is published, the prince sometimes issues a press release touting his position. “He wants to be the best, the wealthiest; that by itself is what motivates him,” says Saleh Al Fadl , who worked for Alwaleed from 1989 to 1993 at United Saudi Commercial Bank, one of the prince’s earliest investments, and now helps run retail banking at Riyadh-based Saudi Hollandi Bank. In addition to chasing Buffett, Alwaleed has also been preoccupied with Bill Gates , the Microsoft Corp. founder who has often topped the billionaire rankings, Al Fadl says. “He was always referring to Bill Gates,” he says. Buffett Letters Alwaleed is particularly fond of his correspondence with Buffett by mail and fax over a span of at least nine years. Buffett started the exchange, writing Alwaleed after a 12- day stay at New York’s Plaza Hotel. In the May 1999 letter, Buffett called the Plaza his “home” when in New York and praised the prince, who then owned a 42 percent stake in the hotel, for the extraordinary service. “You have restored The Plaza to its former luster — indeed your managers have enabled it to surpass its previous heights — and I congratulate you,” Buffett wrote in the first of a series of letters that Alwaleed gave to Bloomberg News. The prince responded a month later, saying he was elated to have an individual of such discriminating tastes attest to the Plaza’s high standards. Alwaleed then got down to business. “Needless to say, I should be pleased to consider participating in any of your future investments that you may deem pertinent,” the prince wrote. A Laggard Buffett, who grew rich by investing in consumer brands such as American Express Co. and Coca-Cola Co., wrote back three days later. He said he would be delighted to team up with the prince. He also piled on the praise. “In Omaha, I’m known as the ‘Alwaleed of America’ — which is quite a compliment,” Buffett wrote. In December 1999, Alwaleed told Buffett in a letter that he found news coverage of a slump in Berkshire’s stock “highly objectionable” and had written to editors to defend him. “Dear Prince Alwaleed,” Buffett responded the next day. “You’re terrific!” A decade later, it’s the prince’s investments that need a boost. As of March 31, Alwaleed’s net worth had dropped 21 percent from May 2000, the tally shows. Citigroup shares, which fell 90 percent during the period, did the most damage to his fortune. The prince even fell behind the Dow Jones Industrial Average, which returned 27 percent, including reinvested dividends . “He’s become a laggard,” says Laszlo Birinyi , founder of equity research firm Birinyi Associates Inc. in Westport, Connecticut. “As an investor, his record is not worth following.” Unrealized Losses Sitting at his gray-marble desk in his office, Alwaleed defends his stock picking, saying most of his losses came in 2008 as a wave of subprime-mortgage defaults convulsed the financial world. He grabs a copy of Richard J. Connors’s book “Warren Buffett on Business” (Wiley, 2009) and flips it open to a passage he has highlighted with a green marker. It describes Berkshire Hathaway’s assets declining in 2008, reducing the book value of the company’s shares by 9.6 percent. “Just read this,” he says. “Look what it says. In 2008, everyone had a hiccup. He went down also.” Buffett declined to comment for this story. Alwaleed’s decline may be worse than his accounting shows. In its 2008 annual report, Kingdom Holding classified more than $4 billion of its $7.45 billion of stock market losses as temporary — and therefore didn’t subtract them from its earnings. Ernst & Young Note Kingdom Holding’s auditor in Riyadh, Ernst & Young, qualified its approval of the accounts, saying it couldn’t determine whether the company took a big enough deduction for the market losses, according to its notes on the company’s statements . Ernst & Young didn’t say the company had violated accounting standards generally accepted in Saudi Arabia. A year later, as the unrealized loss shrank to $3.53 billion, Ernst & Young didn’t attach any qualification to its audit of Kingdom Holding. Even though the unrealized loss has come down, the auditor’s notes suggest that the value of Kingdom Holding may be less than its market capitalization of $9.49 billion as of April 26, says Steven Bankler , a San Antonio-based forensic accountant who examined the company’s financial statements at the request of Bloomberg News. Kingdom Holding’s Sanbar says the company correctly judged the size of its unrealized loss and that it expects its stock investments to bounce back. Kingdom Oasis Alwaleed also hopes to boost his fortune in the desert of Saudi Arabia. Northeast of Riyadh, the prince’s armored GMC Suburban bumps over rocks as he prepares to inspect his latest project: Kingdom Oasis, a development that includes an equestrian resort, a banquet facility and villas. Oasis is part of the 16.8-square-kilometer (6.5-square-mile) Kingdom City Riyadh planned community. His driver, who has a black pistol holstered under his arm, turns past what will be a safari park and lake and stops in front of a clubhouse next to horse stables. Alwaleed ducks inside the clubhouse and spots a flaw: Two Ping-Pong tables in the recreation room instead of one. He thrusts his wooden walking stick at one of the tables. “This should be removed,” he barks at his project managers. “And put in billiards.” When he’s not inspecting his investments, Alwaleed sometimes meets with foreign officials and heads of state as part of his role as a Saudi royal. Saudi King “I’m a businessman, but that’s only a platform,” he says. When asked if he wants to be king, he said he would serve his nation in any capacity if asked. In a country with thousands of princes and an autocratic regime with no firm order of succession, Alwaleed doesn’t have a clear path to the throne. Unlike his cousins from other lines of the Saud family, he lacks a formal role in government. Alwaleed’s father, Talal Bin Abdulaziz , does sit on the kingdom’s commission for succession, which helps pick the crown prince after the death of a king. Talal became a black sheep of the royal clan after pressing unsuccessfully in the 1950s for more democracy in Saudi Arabia. He later founded the Arab Gulf Program for United Nations Development Organizations in 1980 and currently serves as its president. The group raises money to support reproductive health education in Mauritania and women’s entrepreneurship in the Gaza Strip. Princess Ameerah Altaweel Alwaleed has followed his father’s example by advocating for greater freedom for Saudi women, who must wear neck-to-toe robes to mask their figures in public. The prince has hired a mostly female staff at his offices, creating workplaces rarely seen in Saudi Arabia. The women he employs dress in Western clothing and hold jobs managing his construction projects, piloting his jets and directing catering at his palace. Three times divorced, the prince has a son, 32, and a daughter, 27. Alwaleed is now married to Princess Ameerah Altaweel, 27, who speaks fluent English with an American accent she picked up from watching the television show “Friends.” The princess, who’s vice chairman of the Alwaleed Bin Talal Foundations for Charity and Philanthropy, says she wants to be the first Saudi woman to drive on public roads — if it becomes legal. “She’s the vanguard,” Alwaleed says. Starting with $30,000 The prince says his liberal views were nurtured in the U.S., where in 1979 he received an undergraduate degree in business administration from Menlo College in Atherton, California. After Alwaleed returned to Riyadh, his father jump-started the prince’s investment career by giving him a $30,000 loan and a house, which he mortgaged. As the prince started to build his fortune, he earned a master’s degree in social science from Syracuse University in Syracuse, New York, in 1985. Alwaleed says he made his first billion by 1989 from investments in Saudi real estate and banking as well as commissions he earned as a local agent for foreign construction companies. In the next two years, the prince began investing in Citicorp, which was then drowning in bad real estate loans. After Citicorp Chief Executive Officer John Reed asked Alwaleed for a cash infusion, the prince in 1991 added $590 million to his stake. That brought his total investment to $797 million, making him the bank’s biggest individual shareholder — a position the prince says he still holds today. Technology Splurge Seven years later, the bank merged with Travelers Group Inc. to form Citigroup, and by 2000, Alwaleed’s shares were worth $8.6 billion, even after he’d sold off some of his original holding . “He took a big risk and it paid off,” says David Webb , head of the finance department at the London School of Economics. “Big fund managers didn’t buy the stock, and then some guy from the Middle East puts all his eggs in one basket. We all could have been rich, looking backwards.” The billionaire used his new riches to splurge on U.S. technology shares in the first half of 2000. Just as stock markets were beginning to plunge that year, with the Nasdaq Composite Index falling 78 percent through October 2002, Alwaleed bought $400 million of Compaq Computer Corp. shares and $200 million of WorldCom Inc. He also purchased shares of Amazon.com Inc. and DoubleClick Inc. as well as household names such as AT&T Corp., McDonald’s Corp. and Coca-Cola. The prince told Bloomberg News at the time that he was buying all of these stocks on the cheap. Praise from Murdoch As he spread his money around corporate America, Alwaleed won many friends. News Corp. Chairman Rupert Murdoch was among the 355 guests who gathered at the Plaza Hotel to honor the prince in November 2000 at an awards dinner thrown by the Arab Bankers Association of North America. After the guests took their seats in the Grand Ballroom, Alwaleed entered the room with his retinue and walked to the head table, drawing applause. He sat next to Murdoch, and the two men chatted over a dinner of lobster tails and rack of lamb. Then the media mogul took the podium to praise the Saudi royal for his investment in News Corp., at the time an Australian company that had U.S.-traded shares. From his initial News Corp. investments of a combined $600 million in 1997 and 1999 through that evening in 2000, Alwaleed had almost doubled his money. “Very proud, we are, that Prince Alwaleed is one of News Corp.’s largest shareholders ,” Murdoch said. Selling Apple After six tribute speeches, Alwaleed returned to the hotel’s Suite 537, decorated with gilded furniture, where journalists quizzed him about ill-timed investments he had announced about six months earlier. “We don’t see any further investments in the Internet,” Alwaleed said. “Many companies are going to go bankrupt.” In 2002, the same year in which WorldCom went belly up, the prince deployed another $1 billion in three companies whose stock he already owned: AOL Time Warner Inc., Priceline.com Inc. and Citigroup. Priceline.com was the only winner: The shares he’s held on to have jumped fourfold to about $175 million, based on data in Kingdom Holding documents. The investor would be worth several billion dollars more today had he not chucked the bulk of his stake in Apple in 2005. He had poured $115 million into the computer maker in 1997. Under founder and CEO Steve Jobs , the company introduced the iPod four years later. Returning to Saudi At Alwaleed’s Hotel George V in Paris in November 2005, the prince told Bloomberg News his motive for selling his Apple stake. “The benefit of iTunes and all the good moves that Steve Jobs has done have already been put in the price,” Alwaleed said. He was wrong. The rapidly selling iPod was followed in 2007 by the iPhone, which transformed mobile devices, and the iPad in 2010. The prince missed a sevenfold rally starting from the middle of 2005. His holding would have been worth about $6.75 billion as of today. As Alwaleed was selling his Apple shares, he began moving money from the U.S. into Saudi Arabia, which itself was in transition. In 2005, King Fahd , who had ruled for 23 years, died at age 82, propelling Alwaleed’s uncle — Crown Prince Abdullah — to the throne. “The prince made a commitment to the king,” Sanbar, 62, says. “He said, ‘Instead of having 80 percent of my wealth outside, I’m going to bring it here.’” Kingdom IPO In 2007, Alwaleed put together an initial public offering for Kingdom Holding on the Saudi stock exchange. The 240-page prospectus, which appeared on Kingdom Holding’s Web site only in Arabic, said the company’s listed assets had achieved lifetime annual returns of 19.9 percent through March 30, 2007. The figure included only shares held at the time, omitting money losers such as WorldCom that Alwaleed had already sold. “These historical results do not represent all of the investments that Management has made during the relevant historical periods,” the prospectus said. The prospectus contained one number that concerned potential shareholders, Sanbar says. Some 40 percent of its assets were in Citigroup stock, which was just starting to slip from its record high of $56.41 in December 2006. Kingdom Holding assured investors it would pare back the Citigroup stake. “The answer was, we were going to start selling and shift to regional and Gulf investments,” Sanbar says. Citigroup Crashes Kingdom Holding’s stock jumped 20 percent on its first day of trading on July 29, 2007, giving the company a market value of about $20 billion. But Kingdom never sold its Citigroup shares as planned. From the IPO to the end of 2007, as credit markets tightened, the bank’s stock plunged by more than a third. “Buy-and-forget can be deadly to a portfolio,” says Frederic Dickson , who manages $25 billion, including Citigroup shares, as chief market strategist at D.A. Davidson & Co. in Lake Oswego, Oregon. As the deepening credit crisis sent Citigroup shares tumbling 77 percent in 2008, Alwaleed had one reason to cheer. At Microsoft’s annual CEO summit in May in Redmond, Washington, the prince finally got to meet his pen pal, Buffett. During the event, a beaming Alwaleed posed with Buffett for a photo taken by the prince’s personal photographer. Buffett hammed it up for the camera, handing his black wallet to the prince as the flash went off. Photo With Buffett After the conference, Alwaleed sent Buffett a copy of the photo, and Buffett wrote back to thank the prince. In signing off, he continued their banter about collaborating. “I hope we can come up with something in which we can work together,” Buffett said in the June 2008 letter. Alwaleed could use some help from the Oracle of Omaha. In 2008, Kingdom Holding reported a net loss of $7.98 billion. That year, as the U.S. government injected $45 billion into Citigroup to save it, the prince began to buy more of the bank’s shares. “At $3, you have to buy,” Alwaleed says. His purchases from 2008 and 2009 turned a profit as Citigroup shares rose to $4.61 on April 26. While Kingdom Holding rebounded to a profit of $107 million for 2009, it also reported the unrealized loss of $3.53 billion that carried over from 2008’s rout . Bankler, the forensic accountant, says the profit could vanish, slashing the company’s market value and Alwaleed’s net worth, if even a small portion of those unrealized losses became permanent. Fairmont, Four Seasons “One of the factors of market value is earnings per share, and they didn’t take that hit,” Bankler says. Alwaleed’s fortunes are improving this year. On April 19, Citigroup posted a first-quarter profit after two years of losses, and the next day, Kingdom Holding also reported a gain . But the company’s shares remain in the doldrums. Since its first trading day in 2007, Kingdom Holding’s stock has fallen 54 percent to 9.6 Saudi riyals on April 26. “Alwaleed is a major player, always will be,” says Four Seasons CEO Isadore Sharp , who became fast friends with the prince after they met on Alwaleed’s yacht in 1994. “The markets are turning. Things are getting back on track.” Alwaleed says he plans to take his hotel businesses public in the next few years. He bought his first stakes in Toronto- based Fairmont Raffles Holdings International and Four Seasons in 1994. Fairmont also runs the Plaza Hotel, which is jointly owned by Kingdom Holding and Israeli billionaire Isaac Tshuva ’s Elad Properties. Hotels made up 63 percent of the assets in the prince’s company in 2009, according to its year-end report. ‘He’s a Hotelier’ “He’s a hotelier,” Bankler says. “This is a hotel company.” Alwaleed’s partners in Fairmont, which runs more than 90 hotels worldwide, include Qatar’s sovereign wealth fund and Colony Capital LLC, the Los Angeles-based buyout firm founded by billionaire Thomas J. Barrack. The prince is in business with Gates at Four Seasons, which operates 83 hotels globally. Kingdom Holding and Gates’s investment company, Cascade Investment LLC, each hold 47.5 percent of the hotel management company. Sharp, who founded Four Seasons, retains a 5 percent stake. Fairmont and Four Seasons may be ripe for an IPO as the recession eases and companies stop trimming travel expenses, says Smedes Rose , an analyst who covers hotels at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Inc. in New York. Kingdom Tower “Trends are turning much better for them, and you’d want to go public into the momentum of a recovering market,” he says. “Four Seasons has a lot of legs.” Alwaleed says that within two years he also plans to hold an IPO for his Riyadh-based media company, Rotana Holding, which includes Arabic movie and music channels and a record label. In February, Murdoch’s News Corp. agreed to buy 9.1 percent of Rotana for $70 million. The prince’s Kingdom Tower project in Jeddah, Saudi’s commercial hub on the Red Sea, faces several obstacles. The spike-shaped skyscraper anchors a project that includes shopping malls, a marina, hotels, villas and parks. Alwaleed, who says the tower will be completed in four to five years, plans to raise some of the $20 billion that the complex will cost from equity investors and the sale of Islamic bonds. And he has hired Emaar Properties PJSC — the Dubai-based contractor that erected Burj Khalifa — to manage the project. “The beef is in Saudi Arabia,” Alwaleed says. “In 2010, we’re seeing ourselves coming out of it.” Burj Khalifa opened in January, just after the Arab emirate went from being the world’s best-performing real estate market to the worst. Prices for apartments in the tower have dropped to less than half of their 2008 peak during the credit crackup. $32.1 Billion Difference Alwaleed may have an even tougher time filling his skyscraper in Saudi Arabia, says Saud Masud , head of Middle East research at UBS AG in Dubai. Masud says Saudi laws and customs, including restrictions on travel, women’s attire and the purchase of local securities by foreigners, deter visitors and businesses from entering the nation. “It’s not going to be a straightforward build-it-and-they- will-come,” Masud says. “What the market needs now is affordable housing and not kilometer towers.” As the prince rides in his GMC truck around the site of his Kingdom City residential development, he once again draws comparisons between himself and Buffett: The prince says they both buy undervalued assets. The offices of Kingdom Holding and Berkshire Hathaway have roughly the same square footage, and both companies have small staffs at their headquarters. Pepsi Versus Coke “I drink Pepsi; he drinks Coke,” Alwaleed says, with a laugh. The biggest difference between the two men: The investor from Omaha is worth about $32.1 billion more than the Saudi prince. Alwaleed’s sluggish performance over the past decade hasn’t crimped his style, though. In 2012, he’ll take delivery of a custom-fitted double- decker Airbus A380, becoming the first private buyer of the world’s biggest airliner. While he may not be the world’s richest man, he knows how to act like he is. To contact the reporter on this story: Vernon Silver in Rome at vtsilver@bloomberg.net

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Karzai, Singh to Discuss Efforts to Halt Taliban Attacks on Indian Workers

April 25, 2010

By Eltaf Najafizada and James Rupert April 26 (Bloomberg) — Afghan President Hamid Karzai arrived in New Delhi today for talks likely to focus on security for 3,500 Indian workers in Afghanistan who have become targets for attacks by Taliban guerrillas. Karzai will meet Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in an overnight stop before both leaders travel to Bhutan tomorrow for a South Asian summit. The talks come two months after suicide bombers killed at least 17 people in Kabul, including Indian government officials. “President Karzai will talk with Prime Minister Singh about counter-terrorism matters,” including the Feb. 26 attack, presidential spokesman Waheed Omar told reporters yesterday. Seventeen Indians have been killed in Afghanistan since 2008, Foreign Minister S.M. Krishna told parliament in New Delhi last week. The Indian and Afghan governments have accused Pakistan’s military intelligence of backing at least some of those attacks, which come as Pakistan opposes the breadth of India’s role in aiding its western neighbor. India has “no plan to scale down” its presence in Afghanistan, Krishna said, according to a statement on a Ministry of Overseas Indian Affairs Web site. India has been a main backer of Karzai’s government, providing $1.2 billion in aid since 2002 that has included the construction of highways, power lines and Afghanistan’s new parliament building. India provides 1,000 scholarships each year for Afghan students to study in India, the biggest such education contribution, Omar said. Karzai has maintained close ties with India since his own university studies there in the early 1980s. Neighboring Pakistan supported his foe, the Taliban movement, until the U.S. forced it to break relations after the September 2001 attacks. Pakistani politicians complain that India’s four consulates in Afghanistan are used to covertly destabilize Pakistan, which India denies. Pakistan in turn rejects Indian and Afghan assertions that intercepted communications showed Pakistan’s military intelligence network helped its longtime ally, Taliban commander Jalaluddin Haqqani , launch attacks on Indians in Kabul. Haqqani’s faction claimed responsibility for the October 2009 suicide bombing of India’s embassy in Kabul, which killed the mission’s defense and press attachés. That strike, and a July 2008 bombing killed a total of 75 people. Indians in Afghanistan, many of whom work on road-building or other technical assistance projects, now live under tightened security, advised by their embassy to vary routes and schedules. To contact the reporter on this story: James Rupert in New Delhi at jrupert3@bloomberg.net ; Eltaf Najafizada in Kabul at enajafizada1@bloomberg.net .

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Secure Runway Systems Corp. Announces the Appointment of Vice President of Mining Operations, New Corporate Advisor and Appointment to the Board of Directors

April 23, 2010

TORONTO–(Marketwire – April 23, 2010) –  Secure Runway Systems Corp. ( PINKSHEETS : SRWY ) (Secure or the Company) is pleased to announce that it has appointed Mr. Travis Handford of Arizona as Vice President of Mining Operations of the company. Mr. Edward Minnema, President of Secure, states, “I am very pleased with the impressive credentials that Mr. Handford brings to Secure who will prove to be a much appreciated asset. Mr. Handford’s wealth of knowledge of mineral deposits including those in Arizona, together with his extensive knowledge of mining operations and experience in the construction industry will bring uncompromised wealth to Secure and to Secure’s present and future shareholders. Together with his extensive contact base in the mining and financial areas, Secure is now in a far superior position to reach its objectives and goals.”

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China May Float Yuan, Shun One-Time Jump, Survey Shows

April 13, 2010

By Bob Chen April 13 (Bloomberg) — China may allow the yuan to appreciate by June 30 to curb inflation while avoiding a one- time jump in value that might endanger export jobs, a survey of analysts showed. Twelve of 19 respondents surveyed by Bloomberg said the central bank will allow the currency to float more freely this quarter, five expect it to happen by Sept. 30, and the rest see the move by year-end. Eleven ruled out a one-off revaluation, including state-owned Bank of China Ltd. and China Construction Bank Corp. Fifteen predict a wider daily trading range. China, which relies on manufacturers to help create jobs for 230 million migrant workers, will safeguard “its own economic and social development needs” when deciding exchange- rate policy, President Hu Jintao said in Washington yesterday. Allowing the currency to strengthen would temper inflation after a 17 percent surge in import prices in March from a year earlier helped cause China’s first trade deficit since 2004. “China won’t allow one-off revaluation when it’s faced with foreign pressure,” said Zhao Qingming , a senior analyst in Beijing at Construction Bank, the country’s second-largest lender. Even so, he added, “China may let the yuan exit the dollar’s peg at the end of the second quarter or the start of the third as the rebound in the economy is quite good.” The trading band may be widened to between 0.75 percent and 3 percent either side of the central bank’s daily reference rate, the survey showed. In May 2007, the central bank widened the daily trading band to 0.5 percent, from 0.3 percent. ‘Managed Float’ The median estimate in the survey is for the yuan to strengthen 3.1 percent to 6.62 per dollar by year-end. Estimates ranged from 6.4 yuan to 6.8 yuan in the survey carried out since April 9. Eight respondents forecast a one-time gain of between 0.5 percent and 5 percent. The yuan was revalued by 2.1 percent on July 21, 2005, after China ended the decade-long peg to the dollar and introduced a “managed float” against a basket of currencies. Speculation on when and how the yuan will begin appreciating escalated in the past week as U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner met Vice Premier Wang Qishan in Beijing after delaying a decision on whether to label China a currency manipulator. Forwards Weaken The New York Times reported on April 8 that China’s government is “very close” to announcing a change in currency policy, possibly including a revaluation as occurred in July 2005. A small, one-time move may be better than gradual appreciation in helping deter speculators, Xia Bin, an adviser to the central bank, said that day at a forum in Shanghai. The analysts are more bullish on the currency than traders in the forward market. Nine-month non-deliverable yuan contracts show traders are pricing in a 2.2 percent gain in the currency from the spot rate of 6.8256 as of 5 p.m. in Hong Kong. The contract weakened 0.2 percent today to 6.6815 after Hu told U.S. President Barack Obama that a stronger yuan won’t reduce the U.S. unemployment rate, riding at 9.7 percent in March. Obama, under pressure from U.S. lawmakers to use the threat of trade sanctions to force a policy change, told Hu China needs a “more market-oriented exchange rate.” Traders Reducing Bets Bank of China, the country’s largest foreign-exchange lender, was the least bullish on the yuan, predicting a 0.4 percent gain by year-end. Societe Generale SA was the most bullish, forecasting a 6.7 percent jump. Foreign-exchange reserves rose to $2.45 trillion in March, the world’s largest holdings, as the central bank sold its own currency to maintain an almost two-year-old peg. Those currency sales have helped fuel inflation and asset- price bubbles. Consumer prices rose 2.7 percent in February from a year earlier, the biggest increase in 16 months. Executives at companies focused on the Chinese market, including Beijing-based computer maker Lenovo Group Ltd. and Shanghai-based China Eastern Airlines Corp. , say they would gain from lower import costs and stronger consumer purchasing power. Yuan gains will “unambiguously reduce China’s soaring import bill,” said Glenn Maguire , regional head of research at SocGen in Hong Kong. “China is a “price taker” of commodities.” Loss of Competitiveness China should allow the yuan to trade more freely, while avoiding adjustment “abruptly” that would cause a “sudden loss of competitiveness,” former central bank adviser Fan Gang wrote March 26 in the government-backed China Daily newspaper. Overseas shipments, which slumped for 13 months until November 2009, gained 24 percent in March from a year earlier, the customs bureau reported April 10. Imports jumped 66 percent, leaving a $7.2 billion trade deficit, China’s first since 2004. Chinese textile makers stand to lose the most from appreciation and some would “face bankruptcy” as their profit margins are as low as 3 percent, Zhang Wei, vice chairman of the China Council for the Promotion of International Trade, said last month after carrying out stress tests of 1000 companies. A “slow” appreciation would give manufacturers enough time to adjust their businesses, according to Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. The number of laborers who left China’s farms for urban jobs increased by 4.36 million last year to 230 million people at the end of 2009, government data show. “The timing itself is out of the economists’ hands,” said Emmanuel Ng , a strategist at Oversea-Chinese Banking, the owner of Singapore’s biggest life insurer. “It’s more an issue of what goes on at the highest, head of state level.” For Related News and Information: Top currency news: TOP FRX News on China’s currency: TNI CHINA FRX BN Stories on China economy: TNI CHINA ECO BN

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China May Float Yuan, Shun One-Off Jump, Survey Shows

April 13, 2010

By Bob Chen April 13 (Bloomberg) — China may allow the yuan to appreciate by June 30 to curb inflation while avoiding a one- time jump in value that might endanger export jobs, a survey of analysts showed. Twelve of 19 respondents surveyed by Bloomberg said the central bank will allow the currency to float more freely this quarter, five expect it to happen by Sept. 30, and the rest see the move by year-end. Eleven rule out a one-off revaluation, including state-owned Bank of China Ltd. and China Construction Bank Corp. Fifteen predict a wider daily trading range. China, which relies on manufacturers to help create jobs for 230 million migrant workers, will safeguard “its own economic and social development needs” when deciding exchange- rate policy, President Hu Jintao said in Washington yesterday. Allowing the currency to strengthen would temper inflation after a 17 percent surge in import prices in March from a year earlier helped cause China’s first trade deficit since 2004. “China won’t allow one-off revaluation when it’s faced with foreign pressure,” said Zhao Qingming , a senior analyst in Beijing at Construction Bank, the country’s second-largest lender. Even so, he added, “China may let the yuan exit the dollar’s peg at the end of the second quarter or the start of the third as the rebound in the economy is quite good.” The trading band may be widened to between 0.75 percent and 3 percent either side of the central bank’s daily reference rate, the survey showed. In May 2007, the central bank widened the daily trading band to 0.5 percent, from 0.3 percent. ‘Managed Float’ The median estimate in the survey is for the yuan to strengthen 3.1 percent to 6.62 per dollar by year-end. Estimates ranged from 6.4 yuan to 6.8 yuan in the survey carried out since April 9. Eight respondents forecast an one-time gain of between 0.5 percent and 5 percent. The yuan was revalued by 2.1 percent on on July 21, 2005, after China ended the decade-long peg to the dollar and introduced a “managed float” against a basket of currencies. Speculation on when and how the yuan will begin appreciating escalated in the past week as U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner met Vice Premier Wang Qishan in Beijing after delaying a decision on whether to label China a currency manipulator. Forwards Weaken The New York Times reported on April 8 that China’s government is “very close” to announcing a change in currency policy, possibly including a revaluation as occurred in July 2005. A small, one-time move may be better than gradual appreciation in helping deter speculators, Xia Bin, an adviser to the central bank, said that day at a forum in Shanghai. The analysts are more bullish on the currency than traders in the forward market. Nine-month non-deliverable yuan contracts show traders are pricing in a 2.2 percent gain in the currency from the spot rate of 6.8267 as of 11:04 a.m. in Hong Kong. The contract weakened 0.14 percent today to 6.6802 after Hu told U.S. President Barack Obama that a stronger yuan won’t reduce the U.S. unemployment rate, riding at 9.7 percent in March. Obama, under pressure from U.S. lawmakers to use the threat of trade sanctions to force a policy change, told Hu China needs a “more market-oriented exchange rate.” Traders Reducing Bets Bank of China, the country’s largest foreign-exchange lender, was the least bullish on the yuan, predicting a 0.4 percent gain by year-end . Societe Generale SA was the most bullish, forecasting a 6.7 percent jump. Foreign-exchange reserves rose to $2.45 trillion in March, the world’s largest holdings, as the central bank sold its own currency to maintain an almost two-year-old peg. Those currency sales have helped fuel inflation and asset- price bubbles. Consumer prices rose 2.7 percent in February from a year earlier, the biggest increase in 16 months. Executives at companies focused on the Chinese market, including Beijing-based computer maker Lenovo Group Ltd. and Shanghai-based China Eastern Airlines Corp. , say they would gain from lower import costs and stronger consumer purchasing power. Yuan gains will “unambiguously reduce China’s soaring import bill,” said Glenn Maguire , regional head of research at SocGen in Hong Kong. “China is a ‘‘price taker’’ of commodities.” Loss of Competitiveness China should allow the yuan to trade more freely, while avoiding adjustment “abruptly” that would cause a “sudden loss of competitiveness,” former central bank adviser Fan Gang wrote March 26 in the government-backed China Daily newspaper. Overseas shipments, which slumped for 13 months until November 2009, gained 24 percent in March from a year earlier, the customs bureau reported April 10. Imports jumped 66 percent, leaving a $7.2 billion trade deficit, China’s first since 2004. Chinese textile makers stand to lose the most from appreciation and some would “face bankruptcy” as their profit margins are as low as 3 percent, Zhang Wei, vice chairman of the China Council for the Promotion of International Trade, said last month after carrying out stress tests of 1000 companies. A “slow” appreciation would give manufacturers enough time to adjust their businesses, according to Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. The number of laborers who left China’s farms for urban jobs increased by 4.36 million last year to 230 million people at the end of 2009, government data show. “The timing itself is out of the economists’ hands,” said Emmanuel Ng , a strategist at Oversea-Chinese Banking, the owner of Singapore’s biggest life insurer. “It’s more an issue of what goes on at the highest, head of state level.” For Related News and Information: Top currency news: TOP FRX News on China’s currency: TNI CHINA FRX BN Stories on China economy: TNI CHINA ECO BN

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Asian Stocks Rise for Fifth Day on Fed Rate Optimism; Mining Shares Gain

April 6, 2010

By Kana Nishizawa and Kotaro Tsunetomi April 7 (Bloomberg) — Asian stocks gained, driving the MSCI Asia Pacific Index higher for the fifth straight day, as investors bet the Federal Reserve will leave the benchmark U.S. interest rate at a record low. Rio Tinto Group , the world’s third-largest mining company, rose 0.7 percent in Sydney after oil and metal prices advanced. Sumitomo Corp., which trades commodities, rose 0.8 percent in Tokyo. China Construction Bank Corp. may be active in Hong Kong after people familiar with the matter said the company plans to sell shares to raise capital. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index rose 0.3 percent to 127.75 as of 9:26 a.m. in Tokyo. The gauge has climbed 12 percent from this year’s low on Feb. 8 as improving economic data and a Fed pledge to keep borrowing costs down eased concern that budget deficits in Europe will derail the global economic recovery. “The global economy is on a recovery trend,” said Hiroichi Nishi , an equities manager at Nikko Cordial Securities Inc. “The market is moving toward summer. The winter is over.” The Nikkei 225 Stock Average rose 0.2 percent. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index climbed 0.2 percent. New Zealand’s NZX 50 Index gained 0.1 percent. Futures on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index lost 0.2 percent. The gauge advanced 0.2 percent in New York yesterday, as minutes from the last Fed policy meeting showed some central- bank officials warned of raising rates too soon. “While recent data pointed to a noticeable pickup in the pace of consumer spending during the first quarter, participants agreed that household spending going forward was likely to remain constrained by weak labor market conditions, lower housing wealth, tight credit, and modest income growth,” minutes of the March 16 Federal Open Market Committee showed. Shares in the MSCI Asia Pacific Index are priced at an average 16.7 times estimated earnings, compared with 15.3 times for the U.S. S&P 500. To contact the reporters for this story: Kana Nishizawa in Tokyo at knishizawa5@bloomberg.net ; Kotaro Tsunetomi in Tokyo at ktsunetomi@bloomberg.net .

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Which Industries Lost/Gained Jobs In The Great Recession (CHARTS)

April 5, 2010

The nascent upturn in the economy has economists cheering the end of the Great Recession, but the return of more than eight million lost jobs will take years, stoking fears that this will be a jobless recovery. More than 8.2 million jobs have been lost since the recession officially began in December 2007. Male-dominated industries like construction and manufacturing have been hit particularly hard, leading some to dub this a ‘mancession’ . It’s precisely those jobs that will take so long to recover, economists argue, because those skill-specific jobs are no longer available. “In simple terms, the skills people have don’t match the jobs available,” Dennis P. Lockhart, president and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, said in a recent speech . “Coming out of this recession there may be a more or less permanent change in the composition of jobs.” “There’s been a very, very deep recession, and there have been heavy job losses in the relatively unskilled parts of the labor force, such as construction,” said Nigel Gault, chief U.S. economist for IHS Global Insight. “It’s difficult for people who lose those types of jobs to find other jobs, especially if they require particular skills, which they don’t have.” Nearly two million construction jobs have vanished since December 2007, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. More than 2.1 million jobs have been lost in manufacturing. Those industries are dominated by men. “[T]he fall in men’s employment is about 2.5 times that of women’s,” notes Howard J. Wall, an economist for the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, in a recent St. Louis Fed publication . Those jobs were lost in part because of the collapse of the housing market. With prices nationwide down nearly a third, foreclosures on the rise and a ‘shadow inventory’ of homes secured by defaulted mortgages just waiting to be foreclosed on and unleashed on the market, there’s little need for further construction. “There had been a bubble in construction prior to the downturn, and there’s an awful lot of construction workers out there who can’t find alternative work,” said Sophia Koropeckyj, an economist and managing director for Moody’s Economy.com who covers the labor market. “The same holds for manufacturing. It’s hard [for those workers] to get reabsorbed into the labor market. “In the past, when these highly-cyclical industries were affected, those people could find at least temporary work in things like retail,” Koropeckyj said. “But because of the severity of the downturn in consumer industries, that option is no longer available.” Thus, it’s taking longer and longer for those workers to find jobs. Nearly 44 percent of the unemployed have been jobless for at least six months — an all-time high . “The long-term unemployed are weighted towards men,” Koropeckyj said. “Industries that employ a large proportion of men are being hurt, whereas industries that employ a large proportion of women — like education and health care — are being less affected by the downturn.” In fact, more than 880,000 jobs have been created in education and health services since the start of the Great Recession. Two industries hit hardest by the recession — financial services and construction — also are the two industries that arguably were the biggest beneficiaries of the bubble. The financial industry has lost 628,000 jobs. That shows that the “expansion was not really that strong in terms of employment,” Koropeckyj said. In a February speech , Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco President Janet Yellen warned what the recovery will look like: “The recession has forced businesses to reexamine just about everything they do with an eye toward restraining costs and boosting efficiency,” said Yellen, who’s expected to be President Barack Obama’s pick to become the Fed’s vice chairman. “Strapped by tight credit and plummeting sales, businesses have overhauled the way they manage supply chains, inventory, production practices, and staffing. Stores don’t order merchandise unless they think they can sell it right away. Manufacturers and builders don’t produce unless they have buyers lined up. “My business contacts describe this as a paradigm shift and they believe it’s permanent. This process of implementing new efficiency gains may have only begun and we may be in store for further efficiency improvements and high productivity growth for some time. If so, the rate of job creation will be frustratingly slow.” Source: HuffPost analysis of Bureau of Labor Statistics data Source: HuffPost analysis of Bureau of Labor Statistics data The Current Recession Compared To Past Recessions The Current Recovery Compared To Past Recoveries How Employment In This Recession Compares To Past Recessions How Output In This Recession Compares To Past Recessions

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Which Industries Lost/Gained Jobs In The Great Recession (CHARTS)

April 5, 2010

The nascent upturn in the economy has economists cheering the end of the Great Recession, but the return of more than eight million lost jobs will take years, stoking fears that this will be a jobless recovery. More than 8.2 million jobs have been lost since the recession officially began in December 2007. Male-dominated industries like construction and manufacturing have been hit particularly hard, leading some to dub this a ‘mancession’ . It’s precisely those jobs that will take so long to recover, economists argue, because those skill-specific jobs are no longer available. “In simple terms, the skills people have don’t match the jobs available,” Dennis P. Lockhart, president and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, said in a recent speech . “Coming out of this recession there may be a more or less permanent change in the composition of jobs.” “There’s been a very, very deep recession, and there have been heavy job losses in the relatively unskilled parts of the labor force, such as construction,” said Nigel Gault, chief U.S. economist for IHS Global Insight. “It’s difficult for people who lose those types of jobs to find other jobs, especially if they require particular skills, which they don’t have.” Nearly two million construction jobs have vanished since December 2007, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. More than 2.1 million jobs have been lost in manufacturing. Those industries are dominated by men. “[T]he fall in men’s employment is about 2.5 times that of women’s,” notes Howard J. Wall, an economist for the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, in a recent St. Louis Fed publication . Those jobs were lost in part because of the collapse of the housing market. With prices nationwide down nearly a third, foreclosures on the rise and a ‘shadow inventory’ of homes secured by defaulted mortgages just waiting to be foreclosed on and unleashed on the market, there’s little need for further construction. “There had been a bubble in construction prior to the downturn, and there’s an awful lot of construction workers out there who can’t find alternative work,” said Sophia Koropeckyj, an economist and managing director for Moody’s Economy.com who covers the labor market. “The same holds for manufacturing. It’s hard [for those workers] to get reabsorbed into the labor market. “In the past, when these highly-cyclical industries were affected, those people could find at least temporary work in things like retail,” Koropeckyj said. “But because of the severity of the downturn in consumer industries, that option is no longer available.” Thus, it’s taking longer and longer for those workers to find jobs. Nearly 44 percent of the unemployed have been jobless for at least six months — an all-time high . “The long-term unemployed are weighted towards men,” Koropeckyj said. “Industries that employ a large proportion of men are being hurt, whereas industries that employ a large proportion of women — like education and health care — are being less affected by the downturn.” In fact, more than 880,000 jobs have been created in education and health services since the start of the Great Recession. Two industries hit hardest by the recession — financial services and construction — also are the two industries that arguably were the biggest beneficiaries of the bubble. The financial industry has lost 628,000 jobs. That shows that the “expansion was not really that strong in terms of employment,” Koropeckyj said. In a February speech , Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco President Janet Yellen warned what the recovery will look like: “The recession has forced businesses to reexamine just about everything they do with an eye toward restraining costs and boosting efficiency,” said Yellen, who’s expected to be President Barack Obama’s pick to become the Fed’s vice chairman. “Strapped by tight credit and plummeting sales, businesses have overhauled the way they manage supply chains, inventory, production practices, and staffing. Stores don’t order merchandise unless they think they can sell it right away. Manufacturers and builders don’t produce unless they have buyers lined up. “My business contacts describe this as a paradigm shift and they believe it’s permanent. This process of implementing new efficiency gains may have only begun and we may be in store for further efficiency improvements and high productivity growth for some time. If so, the rate of job creation will be frustratingly slow.” Source: HuffPost analysis of Bureau of Labor Statistics data Source: HuffPost analysis of Bureau of Labor Statistics data The Current Recession Compared To Past Recessions The Current Recovery Compared To Past Recoveries How Employment In This Recession Compares To Past Recessions How Output In This Recession Compares To Past Recessions

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Deutsche Telekom, Pernod, Lafarge Brace for Deeper Slump in Greece, Spain

March 22, 2010

By Ragnhild Kjetland and Ladka Bauerova March 22 (Bloomberg) — Deutsche Telekom AG , Pernod Ricard SA and Lafarge SA are among companies bracing for shrinking demand as Greece, Spain, Portugal and Ireland tighten their belts to slash budget deficits. Austerity programs in these countries may deepen slides in revenue in the region for companies already facing a fragile rebound. For now, executives at 67 percent of 18 large European companies surveyed by Bloomberg say they see revenue this year from these countries unchanged or slightly better than in 2009. Still, declines in incomes and spending, already evident late last year, will worsen, some company officials said. “In the second half, household income in the region did go down, many moved to prepay and they became more price sensitive,” Guido Kerkhoff , a board member at Deutsche Telekom, the biggest shareholder of Greece’s Hellenic Telecommunications Organization SA, said in Bonn on March 18, alluding to south and eastern Europe. “Customers will be more cautious than before.” From phone calls, wine and clothes to cement and cars, demand for goods and services is set to cool in these countries this year, analysts and economists said. Lafarge , the world’s largest cement maker, sees sales volume of the construction material falling as much as 8 percent in Greece and 15 percent in Spain. Pernod Ricard, the world’s second-largest liquor maker with brands such as Chivas Regal whiskey and Absolut vodka, faces a “difficult” market in Spain, which has among the largest household-debt burdens in the euro area. Economic Gloom “The situation is getting tougher,” said Olivier Cavil , a spokesman for Pernod Ricard. Spain is the second-largest export market behind the U.S. for the Paris-based company. Irish demand has “declined dramatically,” hurt by the faltering economy and a severe contraction in consumer confidence, he said. Efforts by countries to reduce their budget gaps to calm markets and satisfy European Union limits they’ve breached, may tip all or parts of the 16-nation euro-sharing economy into a double-dip recession, economists say. “Fiscal measures will definitely have strong repercussions on economic growth,” said Luca Mezzomo , head of economic research at Intesa Sanpaolo SpA in Milan. “The effects of the measures will be particularly harsh on consumer spending as they will cut disposable income and increase prices.” Greece is seeking to raise taxes and slash wages to narrow its budget gap, which at 12.7 percent of gross domestic product was the EU’s biggest in 2009. Ireland, with a budget gap at 11.7 percent, is cutting government workers’ wages and welfare benefits. ‘Fragile Recovery’ Portugal is selling state assets to cut its deficit, currently more than three times the EU limit of 3 percent of GDP. Spain is struggling to recover from the worst recession in six decades. Its economy, reeling from the collapse of a decade- long construction boom, has been contracting since the second quarter of 2008. At 19 percent, Spain has the highest unemployment rate in the euro region. “Some European countries potentially need a bailout, which is a clear threat to the fragile recovery in our European markets,” said Bernd Scheifele , chief executive officer of HeidelbergCement AG, the world’s third-largest cement maker, according to a company presentation in London last week. HeidelbergCement rival Lafarge, based in Paris, expects cement sales volume to fall 3 percent to 8 percent in Greece this year with prices holding stable or rising slightly. In Spain, the company said the volume of sales will slide between 10 percent and 15 percent even as prices fall. Consuming Less For Paris-based Carrefour SA , Europe’s biggest retailer, like-for-like sales in Spain, which represents 15 percent of revenue, slid 7 percent last year and CEO Lars Olofsson said he didn’t expect any change in the consumer environment this year. The decline in Spain largely stemmed from food deflation that “remains strong” and a drop in consumption, Carrefour said. In Greece, which accounts for 2.9 percent of revenue, like-for-like sales fell 4.5 percent. U.K. retailer Marks & Spencer Group Plc said “trading conditions continue to be difficult” in Greece. The company has 30 stores in the country, making Greece its second-biggest international franchise after Turkey. Marks & Spencer gets 90 percent of its revenue from the U.K. Greece remains the immediate concern. Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou on March 18 set a one-week deadline for the EU to craft a financial aid mechanism for Greece, saying he may then turn to the International Monetary Fund. Domestic Demand While his government said on March 10 that the economy may shrink more than 0.8 percent this year, Deutsche Bank forecasts the contraction could be “substantially” greater — 4 percent in 2010, twice last year’s pace. The larger concern is that Greece’s debt woes may spread. As unease over Greece’s ability to pay its debts spills over into other countries, the risk premium on Spanish and Portuguese bonds has surged along with that on Greek securities. The Spanish government, battling the third-largest budget deficit in the region, plans to raise value-added tax. “Given the scale of the austerity measures that Spain, Greece, Ireland and some other countries are undertaking, there is little doubt domestic demand will be significantly dampened,” said Silvio Peruzzo , an economist at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc in London. ‘Great Opportunity’ Some companies may gain from the current woes in Greece, said Christos Pitelis , director of the Centre for International Business and Management at Cambridge. “One could take the cynical view, which is that this could be a great opportunity to buy some Greek companies at good prices,” he said. Deutsche Telekom, which posted a fourth-quarter loss primarily on a writedown in the value of its Greek unit, is offering to raise its stake in the entity. The Bonn-based company, which owns about 30 percent of Hellenic Telecommunications, paid 3.8 billion euros for the stake that is now valued at about 1.31 billion euros based on Hellenic’s stock price. Deutsche Telekom said it would be interested in raising its stake if the government were to sell more of the company. The Greek government owns 20 percent. “The Greek government has the option of selling another stake to us,” Deutsche Telekom Chief Executive Officer Rene Obermann said this month. “It’s up to the Greek government but we’re ready to talk. We’ll certainly look at it with interest.” To contact the reporter on this story: Ragnhild Kjetland in Frankfurt rkjetland@bloomberg.net or; Ladka Bauerova in Paris at lbauerova@bloomberg.net .

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Video: Fertel Expects 45 New Nuclear Plants in U.S. by 2030: Video

March 18, 2010

March 18 (Bloomberg) — Marvin Fertel, president of the Nuclear Energy Institute, talks with Bloomberg’s Mark Crumpton and Julie Hyman about the development of nuclear energy in the U.S. Fertel also discusses the outlook for new nuclear plants and the creation of employment through their construction. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Unemployment Eased in Nine U.S. States in January, Labor Department Says

March 10, 2010

By Timothy R. Homan March 10 (Bloomberg) — Unemployment decreased in nine U.S. states in January, led by an improvement in Michigan that demonstrates factories are driving the economic rebound. Michigan’s jobless rate fell to 14.3 percent, still the highest in the nation, from 14.5 percent in December, according to figures issued today by the Labor Department in Washington. New York and New Jersey were among the eight states where unemployment decreased by a tenth of a point. The “most stable economies are those more exposed to manufacturing,” said Steven Cochrane , director of regional economics at Moody’s Economy.com in West Chester, Pennsylvania. “This is a recovery that’s really kind of concentrated.” Efforts to stabilize inventories and rising exports are prompting companies like General Motors Co. to call back some dismissed workers. The jobless rate climbed in 30 states at the start of 2010, signaling the thawing of the labor market is not broad-based and indicating it will take years to recover the 8.4 million jobs lost the recession began in December 2007. Unemployment in the U.S. unexpectedly fell to 9.7 percent in January from 10 percent the prior month, according to figures from the Labor Department. The government’s report last week showed the rate held at 9.7 percent in February, compared with a projected increase to 9.8 percent, according to the median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. Payrolls fell by 36,000 last month following a 26,000 decline in January. The loss of jobs during the recession has been the biggest of any economic slump in the post-World War II era. State Payrolls Today’s state breakdown showed employment, which is calculated by a survey of businesses, increased in 31 states, led by California, Illinois and New York. Missouri and Ohio showed the biggest payroll decreases at the start of the year. The state and local employment data are derived independently from the national statistics, which are typically released on the first Friday of every month. The state figures are subject to larger sampling errors because they come from smaller surveys, making the national figures more reliable, according to the government’s Bureau of Labor Statistics. State totals showed the economy gained 135,000 jobs in January. Unemployment in the Detroit area, home to General Motors and Ford Motor Co. , dropped to 15.3 percent from 16 percent in December, contributing to the decrease in Michigan’s jobless rate. Jobs at GM GM said it may fill most of the 5,500 jobs created by its $1.4 billion retooling of 18 U.S. factories with laid-off workers, Diana Tremblay, the automaker’s manufacturing and labor chief, said in an interview Feb. 23. The company’s 5,000 to 6,000 workers on indefinite layoff have first rights to any openings from the factory upgrades, including a third shift in Lordstown, Ohio, announced last month. Sixteen states in January had an unemployment rate that exceeded the 9.7 percent national average, today’s report showed. New York City’s unemployment rate declined to 10.4 percent from 10.5 percent the previous month, the state’s Labor Department reported March 4. The state’s jobless level fell to 8.8 percent from 8.9 percent in December, while New Jersey’s decreased to 9.9 percent from 10 percent. Unemployment in California, Florida, Georgia, North and South Carolina and the District of Columbia climbed to the highest levels since records began in 1976. Construction Slump Florida’s jobless rate rose to 11.9 percent from a revised 11.7 percent in December. Job losses in the state, where population declined last year for the first time since World War II, have been led by construction. The industry lost 5,500 jobs in January from a month earlier, bringing the total over the past year to 90,700. “Developers can’t do new projects because they’re losing existing projects in foreclosures,” said Suzanne Breistol, whose Florida Construction Connection Inc. recruits for builders. “They used to hire staff in anticipation of getting a job, but now they can’t afford that so they won’t hire until they get a job.” A national unemployment rate will average 9.8 percent this year, according to the median estimate of economists surveyed last month by Bloomberg, signaling state budgets will be strained by decreases in tax revenue and rising jobless insurance payments. Revenue shortfalls are translating into job cuts. New Jersey Transit, the third-busiest U.S. commuter-rail service, will cut 200 jobs, reduce executive salaries by 5 percent and trim contributions into employees’ 401(k) retirement plans by one-third to help close a $300 million budget deficit. The firings of both unionized and non-union employees will total about 2 percent of the workforce, the biggest one-year reduction in agency history, Executive Director James Weinstein said last week in a statement. To contact the reporter on this story: Timothy R. Homan in Washington at thoman1@bloomberg.net

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Japan’s Machinery Orders Fall 3.7%; Business Spending Revival May Be Slow

March 9, 2010

By Keiko Ujikane March 10 (Bloomberg) — Japanese machinery orders fell in January, a sign that any pickup in capital spending is likely to be slow. Orders, an indicator of business investment in three to six months, declined 3.7 percent from December when they increased 20.1 percent, the most since August 2000, the Cabinet Office said today in Tokyo. The median estimate of 27 economists surveyed by Bloomberg was for a 3.5 percent drop. Business spending remains the weak link of an economic recovery that has begun to spread from exporters to households. The government is likely to revise economic growth figures lower tomorrow after a report last week showed capital investment fell for an 11th straight quarter. The decline in orders “is payback from the large gain in December and they may gradually recover in the coming months,” Junko Nishioka , chief economist at RBS Securities Japan Ltd. in Tokyo, said before today’s report. “But the level of orders remains low, signaling companies remain cautious about capital spending.” A separate report showed producer prices fell 1.5 percent in February from a year earlier, the 14th consecutive drop, matching the median estimate of economists. The yen traded at 90.01 per dollar at 8:59 a.m. in Tokyo, from 90 before the reports were published. Revised GDP Spending on plant and equipment fell 18.5 percent in the fourth quarter from a year earlier, the Finance Ministry said last week. Gross domestic product grew at an annual 4 percent pace in the three months ended Dec. 31, slower than the 4.6 percent reported last month, according to the median forecast of 29 economists surveyed ahead of tomorrow’s revised figures. Companies including Panasonic Corp. are paring costs to protect profits. The world’s largest maker of plasma televisions may make its money-losing TV operations profitable in the year ending March 2011, helped by cost reductions and sales of 3-D sets, President Fumio Ohtsubo said last week. The Osaka-based company cut costs by 259 billion yen ($2.9 billion) in the nine months ended Dec. 31. Other data for January signal Japan’s recovery from its worst postwar recession remains intact. The unemployment rate dropped to a 10-month low of 4.9 percent and wages climbed for the first time in 20 months. Manufacturers increased output at a faster pace and exports climbed the most in almost 30 years, Hitachi Excavators Hitachi Construction Machinery Co. , Asia’s second-largest excavator maker, may double sales in China this quarter as spending on railroads and mining spurs demand, Chief Executive Officer Michijiro Kikawa said this month. “The manufacturing sector will continue to recover on a pickup in exports,” said Shunsuke Saito , an economist at Dai- Ichi Life Research in Tokyo. “So there’s a high chance that companies will have a better appetite for investment.” The Cabinet Office forecast last month that factory orders will increase 2 percent in the first quarter. Orders rose 0.5 percent in the three months ended Dec. 31, the first gain in seven quarters. To contact the reporter on this story: Keiko Ujikane in Tokyo at kujikane@bloomberg.net ;

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Da Phuc port complex construction starts

March 4, 2010

04 Mar 2010 Construction has started on a port complex in Pho Yen District in the north of Vietnam. President Nguyen Minh Triet was on hand to attend a ceremony to mark the start of the constructio…

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Japan’s Fourth-Quarter Capital Spending Slides 18.5%, 11th Quarterly Drop

March 3, 2010

By Keiko Ujikane March 4 (Bloomberg) — Japanese businesses cut spending for an 11th quarter, signaling a revival in exports remains insufficient to prompt investment that would spur the recovery. Capital spending excluding software fell 18.5 percent in the three months ended Dec. 31 from a year earlier, after dropping a record 25.7 percent in the previous quarter, the Finance Ministry said today in Tokyo. Sales fell and profits doubled, the report showed. Sony Corp. and Panasonic Corp. are among companies cutting costs and restraining investment to protect earnings even as demand from abroad picks up. “Corporate spending may have nearly hit a bottom but it will take more time until it recovers,” Naoki Tsuchiyama , market economist at Mizuho Securities Co. in Tokyo, said before the report. “Companies will likely keep shedding costs and investment as they focus on restoring their profitability.” The yen traded at 88.59 per dollar at 9 a.m. in Tokyo from 88.52 before the report. The Nikkei 225 Stock Average fell 0.1 percent. The Cabinet Office will use today’s report to revise fourth-quarter gross domestic product figures on March 11. The economy grew at an annual 4.6 percent pace in the three months ended Dec. 31, preliminary figures showed last month. Companies’ sales slid 3.1 percent last quarter after tumbling 15.7 percent the previous three months, the Finance Ministry said. Profits surged 102.2 percent, compared with a 32.4 percent decline in the third quarter. Weak Link Capital spending remains the weak link of a recovery that’s being driven by exports and showing signs of improvement in the labor market . About a third of factory capacity is sitting idle in the wake of the nation’s worst postwar recession, discouraging companies from buying equipment. “Capital utilization is recovering but the level is still historically low,” Mizuho’s Tsuchiyama said. “That means companies try to use existing facilities and equipment rather than investing in new things.” Sony last month narrowed its forecast for a net loss, saying it is approaching its target of trimming 330 billion yen in costs by eliminating jobs and shutting factories. Capital spending for this fiscal year will probably total 220 billion, 34 percent less than a year earlier and lower than the 250 billion yen estimated in October, Sony said on Feb. 4. Panasonic last month raised its operating profit forecast, as cuts in fixed and material costs lead to a recovery in earnings from consumer electronics and appliances. Capital investment for the nine months ended Dec. 31 stood at 275.6 billion yen, 22 percent less than the same period a year earlier, according to a company statement. Slumping Prices Slumping prices also are squeezing profit margins. Consumer prices excluding food and energy dropped 1.2 percent in January, matching December’s record decline, the government said last week. Finance Minister Naoto Kan renewed calls on the Bank of Japan to help arrest deflation this week, saying he hopes prices will rise this year. The government has been encouraging spending by providing incentives to buy cars and consumer electronics. Those initiatives are becoming less effective, said Tetsufumi Yamakawa , chief Japan economist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. “Not only is capital investment slack but the demand boost from policies to stimulate replacement purchase of energy-saving electrical goods and environment-friendly autos is fading,” Yamakawa said. Still, some companies are benefiting from rebounding demand in Asia, particularly China, the world’s fastest-growing major economy and Japan’s biggest overseas market. Hitachi Construction Hitachi Construction Machinery Co. , Asia’s second-largest excavator maker, may double sales in China this quarter, beating its forecast as the nation’s spending on railroads and mining fuels demand, Chief Executive Officer Michijiro Kikawa said in an interview on March 1. Japanese manufacturers increased output in January at the fastest pace since May and exports climbed the most in almost 30 years, government reports showed last month. The global economy is on a cyclical recovery as the U.S. economy is rebounding, in addition to stronger-than-expected growth in Asia, said Shunsuke Saito , an economist at Dai-Ichi Life Research in Tokyo. The U.S. economy expanded the most in six years last quarter. “The worst for capital spending may be over as corporate profits are recovering,” Saito said. “Even though the pace of growth may slow, Japan should avoid a standstill in the first half of this year as exports maintain high growth.” To contact the reporter on this story: Keiko Ujikane in Tokyo at kujikane@bloomberg.net

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Redrow’s Morgan Aims to Revive His Company With Shift to Higher-End Homes

March 2, 2010

By Tim Barwell March 2 (Bloomberg) — Steve Morgan , who took the job of chairman at Redrow Plc for the second time almost 12 months ago, said the U.K. homebuilder’s biggest mistake during his nine-year absence was shifting to the low end of the market. Morgan, a 57-year-old native of Liverpool, created the company in 1974 and said he was dismayed to see its houses and apartments “dumbed down” to appeal to lower income buyers after he left in 2000. The decision to return was prompted by an 18-month spell during which the shares plunged 85 percent, shrinking the value of his 6.5 percent stake. “It’s in my blood,” Morgan said in an interview in London. “It was still my baby, the business I started from scratch.” The decision by Redrow’s management to build more apartments and fewer more-expensive houses sacrificed profit, Morgan said. Redrow’s average price of 137,400 pounds ($206,000) was the lowest in the industry last year and compares with the average of 179,639 pounds for the seven publicly traded U.K. homebuilders, according to Citigroup Inc. Apartments rose as a proportion of total construction during Britain’s decade-long property boom, as developers tapped demand from buyers who planned to rent out the properties. Detached houses fell to 12 percent of homes built in 2008 from 44 percent in 1997, according to the latest annual data from the National House-Building Council . The pendulum is now swinging back, with companies including Redrow and Taylor Wimpey Plc, the U.K.’s second-biggest homebuilder by volume, reducing the proportion of apartments in their construction plans. Slashing Products Morgan is now Redrow’s largest shareholder with a stake of almost 16 percent in his name, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Since rejoining the company, he has slashed the number of products by more than half to 32 and introduced a range of costlier houses he expects will account for 80 percent of sales in 2012. Last year, about half of Redrow’s revenue came from apartments. “It’s returning Redrow to what they did very well in the 1980s and 1990s,” said Rachael Waring , a Liverpool-based analyst at Panmure Gordon & Co with a “hold” rating on the stock. “However, it will take some time to work.” Redrow, based in St. David’s Park in northern Wales, has climbed about 31 percent since the company announced Morgan’s intention to return a year ago, even though the company hasn’t made a profit since the property market peaked in 2007. That exceeds the 23 percent gain in the Bloomberg EMEA Homebuilders Index . Redrow now has a market value of 415 million pounds. ‘How Many Units?’ “The second I had gone they started to dumb down the product,” Morgan said of the previous management. “They got rid of the attention to detail that the product used to have and they made it cheaper. When I came back in, the psyche of the business was: ‘How many units, how many units?’” Morgan has an estimated net worth of about 350 million pounds according to the 2009 Sunday Times Rich List . He also owns the English Premier League soccer team Wolverhampton Wanderers. At the age of 21, Morgan set up Redrow as a civil engineering business with a 5,000-pound loan from his father. He went into homebuilding five years later and remained at the helm until October 2000. Redrow had net income of 50.4 million pounds on sales of 405.7 million pounds in fiscal 2000, the last year of results before Morgan left. It reported a loss of about 100 million pounds last year, in what Morgan called the “worst set of trading results” in the company’s history. Morgan Comes Back Morgan told Redrow last March that he wanted to rejoin management after increasing his stake to 29.9 percent, just short of a 30 percent holding that would trigger a mandatory offer for the remaining shares. He built up the holding by buying shares from the London-based hedge fund Toscafund Asset Management LLP through his investment vehicles. Only one board member appointed before Morgan’s return remains at the company following the departure of former Finance Director David Arnold this year. Paul Pedley , who was chief executive officer of Redrow for five years after Morgan left before becoming deputy chairman, declined a request for an interview. Most U.K. homebuilders reported losses last year after banks cut back on mortgage lending and many have sold shares to raise money. Prices of detached houses fell 16 percent from the peak of the market in October 2007 through last March, to an average of 211,595 pounds, according to Nationwide Building Society. Apartments dropped 22 percent to 109,708 pounds. Recovery May Stall Home prices overall have rebounded 9.2 percent in the past year, Nationwide data show. Even so, mortgage approvals dropped in January by more than economists forecast to an eight-month low, adding to evidence that the housing-market recovery may be losing momentum, the Bank of England said yesterday. The number of Britons renting their homes will increase for at least the next decade as limited financing options shut out first-time buyers, according to Savills Plc. That means Morgan may be facing a dwindling pool of buyers for his houses. Redrow’s first line of single-family homes introduced since Morgan’s return, called the New Heritage Collection, is influenced by the Arts and Crafts design movement of the early 1900s, he said. Features include kitchens with floor-to-ceiling units and timber or tiled canopies over doors and windows. ‘Win Me Over’ “This idea needs to win me over,” Robin Hardy , an analyst at KBC Peel Hunt in London, said of Redrow’s New Heritage range. Hardy has a “sell” rating on the stock. “It’s dressing a different exterior on a house without changing the interior.” The new houses may not be as profitable as Morgan thinks, according to Hardy. Redrow may struggle to pass on all of the costs of higher-end fittings such as central kitchen islands and extra plumbing needed for bigger houses, and should be concentrating on slashing building costs to fatten its margins, the analyst said. Prices for a typical three-bedroom home in the New Heritage collection range from 160,000 pounds to 190,000 pounds. Panmure’s Waring estimates that Redrow’s average selling price will swell to 173,000 pounds by 2012. Morgan said he is banking on a revival in Britons’ preference for single-family houses to help make Redrow profitable again. His instincts have served him well in the past. Sensing that the market was overheating, he sold all of Redrow’s sites in southeast England in 1988 before prices fell. He then re- entered the region in 1993 at the bottom of the market with the acquisition of Costain Plc’s house building division. “One of the benefits of having a few gray hairs is that I’ve been round the block before,” Morgan said. “Now it feels like I’ve never been away, particularly now we’re getting the product that’s right for the business back in again.” To contact the reporter on this story: Tim Barwell in London on tbarwell@bloomberg.net

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Qatar’s Education City rail construction ‘to begin this month’

March 2, 2010

02 Mar 2010 Construction will begin this month on the rail network for Qatar’s flagship Education City project and is due to be completed in three years. The trains will help to reduce congestion a…

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Malaysia to Encourage State-Linked Companies, Tycoons to Invest at Home

February 28, 2010

By Barry Porter March 1 (Bloomberg) — Malaysia’s government-linked companies and businessmen are being pressed to boost spending at home amid concern that more money is being invested abroad than flowing into the country. Fresh ideas to stimulate investment may be included in the government’s so-called New Economic Model, International Trade and Industry Minister Mustapa Mohamed said in an interview on Feb. 27. Prime Minister Najib Razak will unveil the strategy in about a month’s time, Mustapa said. “In the past couple of years there’s been more outflows than inflows,” Mustapa said. “We are going to be more aggressive in promoting our people to invest in Malaysia. We have spoken to our GLCs, for example. They have got some plans, some of which have been presented to the government.” Malaysia reported a net outflow of 17.8 billion ringgit ($5.3 billion) in direct investment in the six months through September 2009, according to statistics department data. State- linked companies, including oil and gas producer Petroliam Nasional Bhd., mobile-phone operator Axiata Group Bhd . and palm- oil producer Sime Darby Bhd. , have invested abroad in recent years to expand their operations. The cumulative net outflow in investment overseas during the past three years was 40 billion ringgit, the Edge weekly newspaper reported on Feb. 27, citing central bank data. Investments abroad were mainly in oil and gas, financial services, communications and business services, the Edge said. “There was a phase in Malaysia’s history when we encouraged our companies to move abroad and there was a time when we received a lot of foreign direct investment inflows into the country,” Mustapa said. Spend at Home While the government won’t stop companies investing overseas, it will encourage them more “aggressively” to spend at home, Mustapa said. The minister didn’t specify what measures to stimulate domestic investment may be included in the New Economic Model, saying details are being ironed out and discussions are still under way. Property is one industry where government-linked companies can invest more locally, Mustapa said. “Some of the GLCs have huge land banks,” he said. “So this is time for them to think about putting more money into our system. We have been talking to our GLCs. We have been talking to our own people, our rich entrepreneurs who have done very well.” Malaysia eased rules governing foreign investors, initial public offerings and property purchases last year, peeling back decades of benefits to the ethnic-Malay majority as the nation slid into its first recession in a decade. Exports Improve Overseas companies investing in the Southeast Asian nation and locally listed businesses no longer need to set aside 30 percent of their equity for so-called Bumiputera investors, identified as Malays and some indigenous people. Overseas ownership thresholds in the fund management industry and at local stockbrokers were also raised. Malaysia emerged from its recession last quarter with gross domestic product rising 4.5 percent from a year earlier. Investment as measured by gross fixed capital formation jumped 8.2 percent, and the construction industry grew 9.2 percent, Malaysia’s central bank said on Feb. 24. Export data for January, due on March 5, could exceed expectations, Mustapa said, adding that the country has no need for further stimulus. Malaysia unveiled 67 billion ringgit of measures under two packages in 2008 and 2009 to help resuscitate growth. “What has happened in respect to Malaysia is a global phenomenon,” said Mustapa. “There has been a global contraction of foreign direct investments throughout the world.” Approved factory investment dropped by about half to 32.6 billion ringgit last year as companies delayed projects during the global economic slump, Mustapa said last month. The government aims to attract domestic investments to account for 60 percent of total investments by 2020 from about 32 percent in 2009, he said Feb. 23. To contact the reporter on this story: Barry Porter in Kuala Lumpur at bporter10@bloomberg.net

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Obama’s `Man’ Goes Nuclear as Global Fixer: Alexandre Marinis

February 24, 2010

Commentary by Alexandre Marinis Feb. 24 (Bloomberg) — Barack Obama couldn’t have imagined that a casual exchange with Brazil’s president would complicate U.S. efforts to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons. On April 2, when world leaders convened in London for a G- 20 meeting, Obama approached President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and said, “That’s my man right here. I love this guy. The most popular politician on earth.” Lula, who doesn’t speak English, didn’t understand Obama’s friendly banter. The following day Brazil’s press reported that Obama called Lula “the man,” which in Portuguese translates into not “my buddy,” as Obama intended, but rather “the most important leader in the universe.” This mistranslation of an off-hand remark turned out to be no small deal. Many Brazilians viewed it as a case of Obama conferring first-world status on a nation that usually doesn’t get the respect it deserves. Afterward, Lula’s already strong approval rating shot up to 80 percent. Lula endears himself to Brazilians by reminding them that he’s one of them, someone who grew up poor and is tired of being treated as a second-class citizen of the world. He enjoys telling people that the global financial crisis was caused by the U.S. and other rich nations, not by Brazil. This is true, of course, and Brazilians love hearing their leader repeat it in speeches. Inflated Ego No one has ever accused Lula of lacking a healthy ego. So it’s no surprise he embraced this inflated interpretation of Obama’s bonhomie. Since the encounter in London, Lula has come to believe he can solve most, if not all, the world’s major problems, from an internal political crisis in Honduras to the Arab-Israeli conflict, global climate change and now even Iran’s apparent pursuit of atomic bombs. On Feb. 8, following Iran’s announcement that it was producing 20 percent enriched uranium — which paves the way for the higher grade material used in nuclear weapons — European diplomats told Le Monde that the Brazilians were making it more difficult for the United Nations Security Council to impose economic sanctions on the Islamic nation. Sanctions require approval of nine of the 15 council members. The five permanent members — China, France, Russia, the U.K. and the U.S. — have veto power. The Chinese, who buy oil from Iran and have other business interests in the country, such as the construction of a $3 billion refinery, oppose sanctions. They may veto the initiative, unless the other four permanent members can win the support of five additional temporary members. This would help to isolate the Chinese, possibly leading them to abstain from a vote. That’s where Brazil comes in. Lula’s Diplomacy Without the support of a strong emerging nation such as Brazil, persuading the council’s smaller members to approve economic sanctions against Iran will be difficult. Historically, Brazilian diplomacy has been recognized as effective and managed by a foreign service staffed with highly qualified professionals. Under Lula, though, the country’s foreign policy has proved ineffective in several ways. Lula’s approach hasn’t always supported Brazil’s best economic interests. It’s failed to swiftly adapt to changing circumstances. And it has been infused with an outdated anti- U.S. mentality. All these shortcomings are present in the way Brazil is responding to Iran’s nuclear program. Just last week, for example, when Lula was asked why he supported Iran’s government, he turned his response into an attack on the U.S. for waging war on Iraq. ‘Dangerous’ Assumptions Brazilian diplomats, like their counterparts in China, believe pressuring the Islamic nation is counterproductive, and they are probably right. “Unfortunately, the prospect of crippling the Iranian economy is a fallacy, and a dangerous one at that”, former U.S. State Department policy adviser Suzanne Maloney , an expert on Iran, wrote in a report in January. Nonetheless, at least so far, Brazilians have been unable to come up with an option other than economic sanctions. On Nov. 23, while under attack by the international community for hiding a uranium enrichment facility from the UN, president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad visited Brazil and was welcomed by Lula. The Brazilian president defended Iran’s right to pursue peaceful nuclear technology. Ahmadinejad, however, rejected Brazil’s offer to help Iran enrich uranium for civilian use. Earlier this month, the U.S. announced new unilateral sanctions against Iran. Lula, who recently received the first Global Statesmanship Award from the World Economic Forum , may still be able to help mediate a diplomatic solution to this conflict during an official trip to Iran in May. But his prospects don’t seem too bright. Backing Ousted Leader In 2009, Brazilian diplomats tried unsuccessfully to reinstate ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya. Violating international laws, the Brazilians allowed Zelaya to occupy their embassy in Tegucigalpa and to use the place as his political headquarters to spread social unrest throughout Central America’s second-poorest country. As was clear from the day he was ousted in a coup, Zelaya lacked sufficient public support to regain power. Finally, in November Hondurans democratically elected a new president, whom Brazil refuses to recognize. That’s the sort of diplomacy that grows out of an inflated ego. And all thanks to a couple of words lost in translation. (Alexandre Marinis, political economist and founding partner of Mosaico Economia Politica, is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.) Click on “Send Comment” in the sidebar display to send a letter to the editor. To contact the writer of this column: Alexandre Marinis at amarinis1@bloomberg.net

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Singapore Withdraws Red Carpet for Overseas Workers on Political Concern

February 23, 2010

By Shamim Adam Feb. 24 (Bloomberg) — After luring investor Jim Rogers , actor Jet Li , Filipino maids and Bangladeshi construction workers with one of Asia’s most open immigration policies, Singapore is becoming a little less welcoming to foreigners. Singapore almost doubled the rate it grants citizenship and permanent residence in the past five years to counter a falling birth rate, and let firms bring in thousands to work at hotels, shipyards and restaurants. The move saw foreigners make up one in every three people. The government plans to slow the inflow to avoid being “overwhelmed,” and unveiled higher levies for overseas laborers, cooks and janitors in its Feb. 22 budget. The effort is part of a shift in economic policies designed to ease discontent in the aftermath of the deepest recession since independence in 1965 and to shore up public support before elections that must be held by February 2012. The danger is that the changes may make Singapore more expensive for companies to operate in and less attractive to investors. “The economy generates more jobs than can be filled by locals and it wasn’t that long ago the government was arguing vehemently that we need foreign talent to ensure strong and sustainable growth,” said Song Seng-Wun , an economist at CIMB- GK Securities Pte in Singapore. “They’re trying to soothe Singaporeans’ anxiety that the whole island is swamped with foreigners. It’s politics.” Election Timing The government’s shift, which includes higher school and medical fees for non-citizens, has spurred speculation that an election may be called as early as this year. Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong on Feb. 17 directed the Elections Department to update electoral rolls with eligible voters and for the process to be completed by March 31. A day later, a government gazette published the boundaries of new and existing polling districts. Lee’s People’s Action Party was co-founded in 1954 by his father, former Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew , and it has been in power since 1959. Its politicians currently hold 82 of 84 elected seats in parliament. Prime Minister Lee in a speech on Jan. 25 noted a speculation “fever” of early elections, while adding that it’s not imminent. Support for long-serving governments in Asia has diminished in recent years. At the last Singapore election in 2006, Lee’s party won about 67 percent of ballots, 8 percentage points lower than the previous vote. In neighboring Malaysia, voters reduced the ruling coalition’s majority to a record low in 2008. Japan in August saw the ouster of the Liberal Democratic Party, which ruled the nation for almost all the postwar period. Hit to Economy Singapore’s economy contracted 2 percent last year as the global slump reduced demand for goods, hurting the island’s exports. The trade ministry last week said it expects an expansion as much as 6.5 percent in 2010. Policy makers in Singapore say productivity is a cornerstone of their economic blueprint for the next decade, aiming to reduce the island’s dependence on exports. The government has blamed some industries’ use of cheaper, low- skilled foreign labor as a reason for low productivity in the past 10 years. “We’re not against foreign workers,” Lim Swee Say , a government minister and secretary-general of the National Trades Union Congress, said at a Feb. 1 media briefing. “But just like drinking wine, wine is good but too much wine is bad. Foreign workers are good but too many foreign workers growing at too fast a rate is no good for the economy because it dilutes our focus on productivity.” Birth Rate Immigration had been a key component of Singapore’s population and economic strategy, given the failure of other incentives offered since 1987 to arrest a birth-rate decline — such as tax breaks, subsidies and cash bonuses. Singapore, which has one-quarter the land area of Rhode Island, has no natural resources and the government relies on the skills of its populace to drive growth. The government insists it’s still welcoming foreign talent, suggesting it will aim to reduce the inflow of lower-skilled workers rather than bankers, scientists and athletes. The laborers who build office towers and ships and serve at the city’s restaurants and hotels are mostly not allowed to apply to be permanent residents or citizens. The influx of foreigners, both skilled and unskilled, has boosted sales for property developers such as CapitaLand Ltd. , transportation providers including SMRT Corp. and telephone companies such as Singapore Telecommunications Ltd. It’s also helped consumption, given the birth rate has been below the level needed to replace the population since the 1970s. Citizenship, Residence About 20,513 people became Singapore citizens in 2008, and another 79,167 were given permanent residence. The tally is three times more than the 32,423 babies born to citizens that year. Of the 4.99 million population, about 1.8 million are non- citizens. Disgruntled Singaporeans say the immigration policy means more competition with newcomers for jobs, public housing and places in choice in schools for their children. In the past few months, the government has lowered healthcare subsidies for permanent residents, increased public school fees for non- citizens, and tweaked a balloting system to give Singaporean children twice the chance of getting into the educational institution of their choice. To address the flood of workers brought in by companies such as SembCorp Marine Ltd. , the world’s second-biggest oil-rig maker, and casino operator Genting Singapore Plc , the government now plans to increase levies on foreign labor. Levies on Workers Singapore will raise the monthly charge for foreign workers in manufacturing and services industries by an average S$100 ($71) over the next three years, while construction companies will see a larger increase because there is more room for productivity improvements, Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam said Feb. 22. The first increase from July will see a rise of as much as S$30 a month per worker, he said. An employer currently pays the government between S$50 and S$470 monthly per foreign worker. Professionals and executives who earn more than S$2,500 fall under a separate category that doesn’t require a levy. The government’s latest move may cost SembCorp Marine, which estimates it has as many as 20,000 foreign workers and sub-contractors, an additional S$600,000 a month, said Ong Poh Kwee , the company’s deputy president. “It will add on to the cost of operations,” Ong said. “This is the catalyst to driving productivity and adds to the urgency” of becoming more efficient. The levy increase will slow economic growth and raise business costs, said Alvin Liew , an economist at Standard Chartered Bank in Singapore. ‘Hollowing-Out’ “The new policy on foreign workers may place a disproportionate burden on certain sectors, posing risks to their profitability in the next few years,” Liew said. “The most obvious victim is the construction sector, followed by low- end manufacturing and labor-intensive services industries like hotels and restaurants.” Higher costs may also accelerate the “hollowing-out” of some manufacturing industries, which may move to cheaper locations in the region, he said. For consumers, Singapore will likely become a more expensive place for hotel stays and restaurant meals, he said. Singapore cannot slow down the intake of foreigners too much because it will hurt growth even as locals complain of competition in schools or congestion in trains, buses and public areas, Lee Kuan Yew , now known as Minister Mentor, said at a community event Feb. 18. In an interview with National Geographic last year, he called the country’s recent migrants “hungry” and “determined to succeed” compared with locals who are “less hard driving and hard-striving.” “We tell them, look, they have to work harder or they’ll become stupid,” the elder Lee said of Singaporeans. “It’s just they don’t see the point of it. Why race when you can canter and save your energy and do other things? A regular inflow of migrants without too huge a deluge will keep” a society “on its toes,” he said. To contact the reporter on this story: Shamim Adam in Singapore at sadam2@bloomberg.net

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KBR to Remain in Houston, Inks 1.2 Million-SF Deal

February 21, 2010

Last week, controversial defense contractor KBR signed the largest office deal in the United States in nearly two years, leasing a total of 1.2 million square feet in Houston. Brookfield Properties extended the construction company’s 700,000-square…

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Obama Marks Stimulus Bill Anniversary as Republicans Criticize Rising Debt

February 17, 2010

By Nicholas Johnston and Roger Runningen Feb. 17 (Bloomberg) — President Barack Obama said the stimulus legislation he signed a year ago helped avert an economic catastrophe as his administration undertook a concerted effort to highlight the benefits of the $862 billion package. “It is largely thanks to the Recovery Act that a second depression is no longer a possibility,” the president said. The ceremony marked the anniversary of enactment of the measure to revive growth and stem job losses after the biggest slump since the Great Depression of the 1930s. Obama’s remarks were reinforced by advisers and allies. Amid Republican criticism of the stimulus, administration officials are fanning out to more than 35 cities to promote the programs funded by the measure. The defense of the collection of tax cuts and spending programs was coordinated with congressional Democrats, such as an event in San Francisco featuring House Speaker Nancy Pelosi , labor unions and the Democratic National Committee. Democrats and Republicans are getting ready for the midterm congressional elections in November that will determine control of the House and Senate. Republicans released their own report, with House Minority Leader John Boehner saying the stimulus law’s first anniversary “marks one year of broken promises, bloated government and wasteful spending.” Republican Report Since the measure was passed, “more than 3 million Americans have lost their jobs, unemployment is near 10 percent and the deficit is set to hit a record $1.6 trillion,” Boehner said in a statement accompanying the Republican report , entitled “Where Are the Jobs?” Obama said that even though stimulus spending isn’t popular with the nation facing such a budget shortfall, “we had a responsibility to do what was right for the U.S. economy and for the American people.” While no government program can replace the 8.4 million jobs lost since the recession began in December of 2007, he said the legislation provided a “temporary boost” to begin a revival. One-third of the stimulus is “about rebuilding our economy on a new and stronger foundation for growth over the long term,” Obama said. The administration also released its first annual report on the legislation, in which Vice President Joe Biden wrote that the government spending “halted an economic freefall.” Economic Forecasts The administration predicts the economy will grow about 2.7 percent this year, rising to 3.8 percent next year. Still, unemployment, which was 9.7 percent last month, is forecast to hover at about 10 percent for all of 2010. “What we expect is steady healing” of the economy with “moderate growth” this year, Christina Romer , chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, said today on Bloomberg Television. Administration officials have said that without the stimulus spending the unemployment rate would be higher and job losses would be more severe. Monthly job losses were 20,000 in January, compared with more than 700,000 a year earlier, according to government data. The White House invited two operators of small businesses that have benefited from stimulus spending. Blake Jones, co-founder and president of Namaste Solar of Denver and Boulder, Colorado, is a maker of solar electric systems. The company expanded the staff by about 25 percent because of the stimulus program, the White House said in a fact sheet. Construction Work Charles Niederriter, chief operating officer of Golden Triangle Construction Co. in Imperial, Pennsylvania, projects that one-third of its summer road construction business will be funded by stimulus projects, with employment peaking at about 300 workers. The public is skeptical about the benefits from the stimulus. Six percent of Americans say the legislation has created jobs, according to a survey conducted by CBS News and The New York Times. Another 41 percent say they expect it will create jobs, while 48 percent say it won’t. In the poll of 1,084 Americans, 45 percent said they disapprove of Obama’s job performance, the highest since he became president, and 52 percent said they disapprove of how he is handling the economy. The poll, conducted Feb. 5-10, had a margin of sampling error of 3 percentage points. To contact the reporters on this story: Nicholas Johnston in Washington at njohnston3@bloomberg.net ; Roger Runningen in Washington at rrunningen@bloomberg.net

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NDC to issue P3-Billion bonds for new tollway

February 13, 2010

The National Development Co. (NDC) is set to issue P3 billion bonds under the P50-infrastructure fund to jumpstart the construction of the 88.58-kilometer toll road extension from Tarlac to Pangasinan and La Union, which is estimated to cost P14 billion

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Turkmens Seek Bids for Fields as Europe, Asia Vie for Caspian Gas Supply

February 12, 2010

By Anna Shiryaevskaya Feb. 12 (Bloomberg) — Turkmenistan, holder of the world’s fourth-largest gas reserves, is seeking bids from foreign producers to develop untapped Caspian Sea deposits as Europe, Russia and China compete for supplies. The government is discussing investment in offshore blocks directly with several international producers, Acting Energy Minister Bayramgeldy Nedirov said last week in Abu Dhabi, declining to name the companies. KazMunaiGaz National Co. , Kazakhstan’s state oil company, said it may bid. “Russian and Asian companies are most likely to show an interest in new offshore acreage, along with some Western independents,” Julian Lee , senior energy analyst at the London- based Centre For Global Energy Studies, said in an e-mail. “Offshore blocks will be of less interest than onshore opportunities, which remain off-limits to foreign investors.” Turkmenistan, where foreign investment was held back until the 2006 death of isolationist President-for-Life Saparmurat Niyazov , ships gas to Russia and Iran, and opened a pipeline to China last year. The European Union, seeking less reliance on Russia, wants Turkmen gas for the proposed Nabucco pipeline, although plans to build a link across the Caspian Sea have been frustrated by unresolved marine borders. Foreign Contracts International oil companies such as Chevron Corp. , BP Plc and Royal Dutch Shell Plc have sought access to the country’s inland gas resources, while spurning less explored offshore deposits. Only China National Petroleum Corp. has succeeded in signing an onshore production-sharing agreement in 2007 to develop the Bagtyyarlyk area near the Uzbek border. Turkmenistan has five offshore production-sharing agreements with foreign producers in its part of the Caspian, including Malaysia’s state-owned Petroliam Nasional Bhd., Dubai- based Dragon Oil Plc and Itera, once Russia’s biggest gas producer after OAO Gazprom. Turkmenistan now offers only service contracts to its onshore reserves, which include South Yolotan-Osman, one of the world’s largest untapped gas deposits. KazMunaiGaz is studying the offshore blocks and may bid, Chief Executive Officer Kairgeldy Kabyldin said in Abu Dhabi. Kazakhstan’s sector of the Caspian Sea is home to the Kashagan development, its biggest oil deposit by reserves. “Over the next five years Turkmenistan will be offering more offshore fields because they can’t tap them on their own,” said Alexei Kokin , an oil analyst at IFC Metropol in Moscow. “They are a little late on offshore compared to Kazakhstan.” South Yolotan CNPC, South Korea’s LG International Corp. won service contracts for as much as $9.7 billion for South Yolotan in December. They got no stake in the field’s reserves or output. The U.S. and European oil companies such as Exxon Mobil Corp. and BP Plc have yet to agree to a major investment in Turkmenistan. Chevron is interested in onshore projects as a partner, not a service contractor, said Douglas Uchikura, head of the company’s operations in the Central Asian country. Turkmenistan is inviting foreign companies in a bid to boost gas output to 250 billion cubic meters a year by 2030, from about 78 billion cubic meters, Tim Lambert, vice president of Wood Mackenzie, said at a conference in Moscow on Feb. 4. That goal equals nearly half of the European Union’s gas consumption in 2008, according to BP Plc. “It’s unrealistic,” Lambert said at the Russia Forum 2010 in Moscow. “It wouldn’t be possible to get scale of the investment, to get people comfortable with the risks involved to achieve that expansion of production.” Trans-Caspian Link Turkmenistan may still double output to about 150 billion cubic meters by 2020-2022, he said. The problem still remains how to deliver the fuel across the Caspian to Europe, without travelling across Russia through OAO Gazprom ’s pipeline network . “Turkmen gas into Europe via the Caspian Sea is not something we expect to happen,” Lambert said. “We do not see the construction of a trans-Caspian pipeline taking place.” Disputes with Iran on the status of the sea create a political barrier to the construction of that link, he said. China agreed last year to buy as much as 40 billion cubic meters of Turkmen gas annually. Russia resumed purchases of fuel from Turkmenistan in January after a nine-month halt, agreeing to buy 30 billion cubic meters a year. Iran increased gas imports to 14 billion cubic meters year in January, which will reach 20 billion cubic meters “shortly,” Nedirov said. For Related News and Information: To contact the reporter on this story: Anna Shiryaevskaya in Moscow at ashiryaevska@bloomberg.net

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Palmer’s Resourcehouse Wins $60 Billion Export Deal, `Australia’s Largest’

February 5, 2010

By Shani Raja and Jesse Riseborough Feb. 6 (Bloomberg) — Resourcehouse Ltd. , the iron ore and coal company controlled by Australian billionaire Clive Palmer , said it’s secured Australia’s largest export contract, worth $60 billion. The company reached a 20-year sales agreement with one of China’s largest power companies, China Power International Development Ltd., the flagship company of China Power Investment Corporation, Resourcehouse said today in an e- mailed statement that cites comments by Palmer. “This deal with CPI is Australia’s biggest export contract,” Palmer, 55, is quoted as saying in the release. The contract involves Resourcehouse’s proposed China First coal mine and infrastructure project in central Queensland state. Palmer, Australia’s fifth-richest man, aims to raise as much as $3 billion in a Hong Kong initial sale of shares in Resourcehouse, which plans to spend A$10.2 billion ($8.9 billion) to develop two mines in Australia. The company aims to supply coal and iron ore to steel mills and power companies in China, challenging producers such as BHP Billiton Ltd. According to today’s press release, Palmer said he’d awarded Queensland’s largest engineering and construction- management contract, worth more than $8 billion, to Metallurgical Corp. of China Ltd. Job Creation “There will be a huge flow-on of employment from both the construction phase through to operation of the mine, port and rail,” Resourcehouse’s Executive Director Phil McNamara is quoted in the release as saying. “There is a potential to create 50,000 to 70,000 indirect jobs in Queensland.” Metallurgical Corp. signed an accord to buy $200 million of shares in Resourcehouse on Feb. 3. The Chinese company will own no more than 5 percent of the company, and also agreed to take a 10 percent stake in the China First coal project. China, the world’s largest consumer of coal and metals, last year announced $32 billion of resource acquisitions to fuel the world’s fastest-growing major economy. The Export-Import Bank of China confirmed it’s agreed to lead financing for the coal project, today’s release said. Thermal Coal Resourcehouse has the right to mine 1.4 billion tons of soft thermal coal at China First, in the Galilee Basin in Australia’s Queensland state, Macquarie analyst Andrew Dale said in a Nov. 6 report. Palmer completed the acquisition of Waratah Coal Inc. in April for about C$98 million ($93 million) to gain control of the project. China First, scheduled to start operations in the second half of 2013 and produce as much as 40 million tons a year, may become one of the world’s largest exporters of power station coal, Macquarie said. The bank values the project at between $4.2 billion and $4.9 billion. China’s demand for coal, used to generate about 80 percent of the nation’s power, has jumped as the government’s 4 trillion yuan ($586 billion) stimulus spending drove economic growth in the third quarter to the fastest pace in a year. Resourcehouse also has the right to mine 10 billion tons of iron ore in the Pilbara region of Western Australia and has the potential to become the world’s fourth-largest iron ore producer, Macquarie said. The company’s directors include Zhengrong Shi, chief executive officer of the world’s largest maker of silicon solar panels, Suntech Power Holdings Co. , and former Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer. Its other interests include oil and gas in Australia and Papua New Guinea, Macquarie said. To contact the reporters on this story: Shani Raja in Sydney at sraja4@bloomberg.net . Jesse Riseborough in Melbourne at jriseborough@bloomberg.net .

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Asian Stocks Fall as China Manufacturing Reports Spur Tightening Concerns

January 31, 2010

By Sandy Hendry and Jonathan Burgos Feb. 1 (Bloomberg) — Asian stocks and currencies fell as manufacturing surveys added to speculation that Chinese policy makers will rein in record lending growth. Bond risk climbed on concern Greece will need a bailout to repay its debts. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index slumped 1 percent to 115.65 as of 1 p.m. in Tokyo after the two surveys showed rising export orders and inflation pressures in China. The Shanghai Composite Index slid 1.9 percent and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index sank 1.2 percent. South Korea’s won lost 1 percent, leading declines in developing-nation currencies. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index of shares has fallen more than 10 percent since Jan. 11, as China and India both raised reserve requirements for banks to curb lending growth and damp inflation. The dollar traded near a seven-month high against the euro as equity investors pull cash out of Europe at a record pace and central banks slow purchases of the European currency. “Markets may continue to move lower on concerns about further tightening,” said Manpreet Gill , Singapore-based strategist for Asia at Barclays Wealth, which has $223 billion in assets. “Investors should start to nibble, following recent declines, as central banks are tightening because fundamentals are improving.” A purchasing managers’ index released by HSBC Holdings Plc and Markit Economics rose to a record 57.4 from 56.1 in December and the survey showed the biggest gains in prices since July 2008. A similar index from the Federation of Logistics and Purchasing was a seasonally adjusted 55.8, the second fastest pace since 2008. Share Declines Hebei Iron & Steel Co. , the listed unit of China’s second- biggest steelmaker, declined 3.3 percent after central bank Deputy Governor Zhu Min said the government plans to curb industrial overcapacity. Jiangxi Copper Co. and Aluminum Corp. of China Ltd. slid more than 3 percent. China Shenhua Energy Co. led losses among coal producers after spot prices for the fuel dropped at Qinhuangdao port and earnings slumped. Bank of Communications Ltd. , the bank that’s part-owned by HSBC Holdings Plc, dropped 2.6 percent, while China Construction Bank Corp. , the country’s second-biggest lender, lost 2.1 percent. “The market is very worried about the outlook for economic recovery,” said Wu Kan , a Shanghai-based fund manager at Dazhong Insurance Co., which manages about $285 million. “More tightening measures are expected.” Japan, Korea Toshiba Corp., Japan’s biggest memory-chip maker, fell 6.6 percent after the company cut its annual sales forecast on Jan. 29 by 5.9 percent, citing the global recession. Honda Motor Co. sank 3.8 percent after saying it’s recalling 646,000 City, Fit and Jazz cars primarily in North America and U.K. because of faulty power windows. In South Korea, Hynix Semiconductor Inc. fell 4 percent after creditors failed a second time in less than three months to sell their controlling stake in the world’s second-largest maker of computer-memory chips. Copper in London declined 1.6 percent to $6,640 a metric ton, reaching a two-month low, on a strengthening dollar and China’s curbs in bank lending. Nickel slid 1.1 percent to $18,300 a ton. The dollar was at $1.3866 per euro, after earlier touching $1.3853, the strongest level since July 8. Traders have spurned European stocks in favor of shares elsewhere for a record 19 straight weeks, “clearly hurting” the currency by draining a net $13 billion from the market, said Geoffrey Yu , a UBS AG analyst. European Union Monetary Affairs Commissioner Joaquin Almunia said on Jan. 29 fiscal imbalances within euro-zone economies have been discussed “every month.” Debt Concerns “Sovereign debt worries in Greece, Portugal and Spain continue to hang over the euro,” said Mike Jones , a currency strategist at Bank of New Zealand Ltd. in Wellington. “As long as these worries continue, we are likely to see ongoing ‘safe- haven’ support for the dollar and the yen.” The greenback climbed 1 percent to 1,174 won and 0.7 percent to 9,415 Indonesian rupiah. The cost of protecting Asian corporate and sovereign bonds from non-payment climbed, according to traders of credit-default swaps. The Markit iTraxx Asia index of 50 investment-grade borrowers outside Japan rose 3.5 basis points to 111.5 basis points, Citigroup Inc. prices show. The risk benchmark is on track to rise to its highest since Dec. 1. Treasuries Drop Treasuries fell for the first time in three days on speculation reports this week will show the U.S. economic recovery is gaining momentum. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note rose one basis point to 3.60 percent, according to BGCantor Market Data. U.S. S&P 500 stock index futures rose 0.1 percent. The Institute for Supply Management factory index will show a sixth-straight month of U.S. growth, a Bloomberg News survey showed before the data release today. Payrolls probably rose by 13,000 workers last month, according to a separate survey before the Labor Department’s Feb. 5 report. Crude oil for March delivery fell as much as 0.5 percent to $72.53 a barrel amid concern that fuel demand may be slow to recover in the U.S., the biggest energy-consuming nation. Oil may extend its slump as U.S. supplies climb and demand lags behind year-earlier levels, a Bloomberg News analyst survey showed Jan 29. To contact the reporters on this story: Sandy Hendry at shendry@bloomberg.net ; Jonathan Burgos in Singapore at jburgos4@bloomberg.net .

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Japan’s Homebuilding Probably Hit Lowest Level Since 1964 Olympics Heyday

January 28, 2010

By Toru Fujioka and Aki Ito Jan. 29 (Bloomberg) — Japan’s housing starts probably fell to the lowest level since the nation celebrated its postwar recovery by hosting the Olympics in 1964, as builders are hobbled by dwindling household incomes and sustained deflation. Construction companies broke ground on 18.8 percent fewer homes in December from a year earlier, bringing the annual total to 785,856, the lowest since the 751,429 recorded in 1964, according to the median estimate of 26 economists in a Bloomberg News survey. The pace of decline eased in the past three months. The report, scheduled for release today, highlights a decline that’s likely to see Japan lose its place as the world’s second-largest economy to China this year. Government programs to stimulate the property market have been unable to reverse expectations that home prices will fall, keeping households away from investing in real estate. “It’s been a very miserable year,” said Richard Jerram , chief economist at Macquarie Securities Ltd. in Tokyo. “There certainly is an improvement underway, but it’s been slow to materialize, and it’s starting from very low levels.” Falling wages and mounting job losses sapped demand for new homes last year, sending apartment builder Anabuki Construction Inc. into bankruptcy in November. Starts totaled 719,112 in the first 11 months of 2009. The Land Ministry is scheduled to release the report at 2 p.m. in Tokyo. Figures already published today signaled that the economy continues to recover from its worst postwar recession. Deflation Continues Industrial production rose for a 10th month in December, households increased spending and the unemployment rate fell to 5.1 percent. At the same time, consumer prices slid for a 10th month and minutes of Bank of Japan meetings showed officials were concerned that deflation and a rising yen would hamper the recovery. Japan has been blighted by price declines and sluggish economic growth since an asset bubble burst two decades ago. An index of residential land prices has slid more than 40 percent from its 1991 peak, Japan Real Estate Institute data show. Respondents in a Bank of Japan survey released this month said they expect property values to slump for a seventh quarter. The central bank’s index of household expectations for future land prices dropped, reversing two quarters of improvements. Condo Slump The average price of condominiums fell 5 percent last year in the metropolitan area of Tokyo, Kanagawa, Saitama and Chiba, according to the Real Estate Economic Institute. Nationwide residential land prices slid 3.2 percent in 2009 after rising for the previous two years, Land Ministry data show. “More people are asking for discounts, or are looking to share rooms with others,” said Wataru Ichinari, president of Tokyo-based Ichinari Real Estate. “We’re not going to see a full-fledged recovery in the housing market” for at least a couple of years, he said. Policy makers are trying to revive the market. Former Prime Minister Taro Aso ’s administration expanded and extended tax deductions on housing loans. The current government under Yukio Hatoyama included incentives to build and renovate energy- efficient homes in a 7.2 trillion yen ($80 billion) stimulus package passed by parliament yesterday. The housing recession is depleting business at the country’s construction firms. Anabuki Construction filed for bankruptcy with 140 billion yen in debt, becoming the country’s sixth-largest corporate failure last year, according to Tokyo Shoko Research Ltd. Profits in Anabuki’s condominium business plunged following the global financial crisis, the company said in a statement on its Web site. Construction Bankruptcies Bankruptcies in the construction industry last year accounted for more than a quarter of 15,480 failures , the highest among all industries, according to Tokyo Shoko. Even as the employment market starts to improve, the jobless rate has been above 5 percent since last April and wages have slumped for 16 straight months. Employee compensation will slide a record 3.9 percent in the fiscal year ending March 31, and a further 0.7 percent in the following 12 months, the government said last week. The job environment will further dissuade potential home buyers, said Hiroshi Miyazaki , chief economist at Shinkin Asset Management Co. in Tokyo. “With unemployment so high and wages dwindling, households just aren’t going to be in the mood to buy a new home.” To contact the reporters on this story: Aki Ito in Tokyo at aito16@bloomberg.net ; Toru Fujioka in Tokyo at tfujioka1@bloomberg.net

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Airbus Says Chinese Airplane Financing Will Sustain Near-Record Deliveries

January 28, 2010

By Andrea Rothman Jan. 28 (Bloomberg) — Airbus SAS said more carriers are relying on Chinese financial services firms to fund aircraft purchases, helping keep deliveries near a record this year. Deals backed by Chinese institutions in the last year include Bank of China BOC Aviation’s sale-lease-back of three Southwest Airlines Inc. planes, and Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Ltd.’s first international leasing transaction, with British Airways Plc. Nigel Taylor, who leads Airbus’s aircraft finance, said China will gain more clout this year. “The great advantage of China is that the country still has a fairly deep pocket of dollars, which is perhaps the major reason for their beginning to be more active than some of the historical lessors,” Taylor said in an interview from Toulouse, France, where Airbus is based. The ascent of Chinese institutions from local funding suppliers to a global stage reflects the country’s rise in the air-travel industry. Chinese airlines will account for 20 percent of all Airbus planes delivered in 2010, compared with 3.5 percent a decade ago, with the majority of those jets getting funding from their home country, Taylor predicted. The 979 planes delivered globally last year required some $70 billion in financing. Transactions include cash purchases, often refinanced with bank debt or sale-lease-backs; commercial bank debt; bank debt backed by government export credit agencies; rentals lessors such as General Electric Co.’s Gecas, as well as funding from capital markets, including loans that package multiple planes from different airlines to spread risk. Chinese Accord Chinese institutions over the last two years also arranged a syndicated bank facility for Qantas Airways Ltd.’s first two A380 superjumbos. Other non-Chinese airlines that have benefited from Chinese financing include Deutsche Lufthansa AG, Air France KLM Group and Virgin Blue Holdings Ltd. Airbus signed an accord earlier this week with CDB Leasing Co., one of China’s largest leasing companies, for financing of support sale and leaseback transactions of as much as $4 billion over the next five years for Airbus aircraft. The company last year set up a final assembly plant in China to serve the market. Planemakers have an interest to act as intermediary between airlines and the financing side whenever airlines struggle to get commercial banks or capital markets onboard for a purchase. A single-aisle plane, the most widely purchased planes in the industry, has a list price from $50 million to $90 million, while wide-body planes cost more than twice as much. Record Deliveries The record number of planes delivered by Airbus and Boeing last year defied concern that airlines would have trouble financing transactions in the wake of the steepest economic contraction in half a decade. This year, Airbus and Boeing aim to maintain deliveries at a similar level, they said. Commercial deliveries will fall to 460 to 465 aircraft this year, after 481 aircraft shipped to customers in 2009, Boeing predicts. Airbus had 498 shipments last year, retaining the title held since 2003 as the largest commercial-plane builder. Chinese institutions showed their resilience last year, provided financing for all aircraft shipments into the country without backing from either the U.S. Export Import Bank or European credit agencies. Airbus entered 2009 predicting it would need up to 50 percent of all deliveries backed by government guarantees, and the final tally came to just 34 percent. Boeing only needed state backing on 26 percent of jets. ‘Solid Job’ “ Chinese financial institutions have done a solid job of financing airlines in China; now they’re expanding rapidly beyond Chinese borders, and that should continue,” said John Leahy , the chief operating officer at Airbus. Boeing has also pursued greater links with Chinese banks. Chinese financial institutions financed about 10 percent of all 2009 deliveries, including both commercial bank debt financing and Chinese lessors, according to Kostya Zolotusky , the managing director of Boeing’s financial services unit. Boeing last November joined with CDB Leasing and China Construction Bank , bringing to six the number of Chinese organizations working with the planemaker, as the U.S. company seeks to expand its presence in the world’s fastest growing aviation market. “All the fundamentals are there: an economy running a significant surplus with a strong banking sector, so aircraft that are deployable globally and are very liquid assets become attractive to them,” Zolotusky said. “They’re becoming an important contributor to the global aircraft finance market and we anticipate that this will continue.” To contact the reporters on this story: Andrea Rothman in Toulouse, France at aerothman@bloomberg.net

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Bank of China, Construction Bank Restrict Loans as Regulator Cracks Down

January 26, 2010

By Bloomberg News Jan. 26 (Bloomberg) — Chinese banks have begun restricting new loans, responding to a push by regulators to contain credit after a surge in lending in the first half of this month. Bank of China Ltd. has stopped extending new corporate loans in the Shanghai area, except for clients who have repaid earlier borrowings, said a person familiar with the matter who declined to be identified. China Construction Bank Corp. ’s branch in the city has been told to screen applications for personal loans and mortgages more carefully and to stop new lending once a monthly quota is met, another person said. China’s benchmark stock index fell to a three-month low today on concern a government clampdown on lending will slow the world’s third-largest economy. Credit Suisse Group AG said in a note today that a countrywide lending halt that started Jan. 19 may trigger a “meaningful” decline in manufacturing. “This round of quantitative tightening seems to be more serious than we thought after Beijing was shocked by the lending figures in the first two weeks of this year,” Credit Suisse economist Dong Tao wrote in the report. “We would not be surprised if banks imposed a monthly lending quota, as against a quarterly quota in 2008.” The central bank has also moved to curb credit, ordering banks on Jan. 12 to raise the ratio of deposits they hold in reserve, limiting the amount of cash available for lending. The People’s Bank of China has also instructed lenders including China Citic Bank Corp. to boost their reserve ratios by an additional 0.5 percentage point, Reuters reported last week. Lending Cap Shares in Bank of China slipped 3.4 percent to close at HK$3.68 in Hong Kong today, the lowest since Aug. 19. Construction Bank fell 2.9 percent to HK$5.95, the lowest since Sept. 3. Chinese banks advanced 1.45 trillion yuan ($212 billion) of loans in the first 19 days of this month, the 21st Century Business Herald reported today, without citing anyone. That’s equivalent to 19 percent of the CBRC’s full-year target. The China Banking Regulatory Commission last week said lenders that failed to meet any of more than a dozen regulatory requirements have been told to limit lending. The watchdog said not all banks have been asked to rein in credit. “Five major banks we have contacted today all suggested they received instruction from banking regulators last week to slow down new lending, but not stop new lending,” HSBC Holdings Plc economist Hongbin Qu said in a note today. China will cap new credit at 7.5 trillion yuan this year, down from a record 9.59 trillion yuan last year, according to CBRC Chairman Liu Mingkang . Capital Pressure Lenders in the country are under pressure to raise money after last year’s credit surge weakened their capital and the industry regulator imposed tougher guidelines for financial buffers. Bank of China , the nation’s third-largest lender by market value, announced Jan. 22 that it will sell 40 billion yuan of convertible bonds and may raise additional capital by selling new shares. Bank of China’s new lending in the first 20 days of January was “relatively large,” according to an e-mailed statement from the lender on Jan 20. The company said it will try to balance loans between months and quarters and that it needs to pay more attention to the structure of credits. China Construction Bank’s Beijing-based spokesman Yu Baoyue wasn’t immediately available. A Bank of China spokesman declined to comment. — Luo Jun , Zhang Dingmin . Editors: Philip Lagerkranser , Joost Akkermans To contact the reporters on this story: Jun Luo in Shanghai at jluo6@bloomberg.net ; Zhang Dingmin in Beijing at Dzhang14@bloomberg.net

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China Stocks Drop a Third Day as Loan Outlook Weighs on Banks, Developers

January 25, 2010

By Bloomberg News Jan. 26 (Bloomberg) — China’s stocks fell, dragging the benchmark index to its lowest level in three months, as banks and developers retreated on speculation the government will take further steps to rein in credit growth and avert asset bubbles. China Construction Bank Corp. dropped 1.4 percent and Poly Real Estate Group Co. slid 4.4 percent after Reuters reported that several Chinese banks face an additional increase in their reserve ratios starting today and the Shanghai Securities News said the pace of new loans slowed in the third week of January. The Shanghai Composite Index fell 63.53, or 2.1 percent, to 3,030.89 at the 11:30 a.m. local-time break, set for the lowest close since Oct. 30. The MSCI China Index , which tracks 118 mostly Hong Kong-traded Chinese companies, today joined the Shanghai index in falling more than 10 percent from last year’s high, entering a so-called correction. “Investors have begun to revaluate their previous projections for earnings growth as the government’s tightening has come faster than expected,” said Zhang Xiuqi , a Shanghai- based strategist at China International Fund Management Co., which oversees about $10.2 billion. “The correction is likely to carry on.” The CSI 300 Index , measuring exchanges in Shanghai and Shenzhen, declined 2.2 percent to 3,253.83. Construction Bank, the country’s second largest, lost 1.4 percent to 5.83 yuan. Industrial Bank Co. , part-owned by a unit of HSBC Holdings Plc, fell 2.1 percent to 33.90 yuan. The stock had its share-price estimate cut by 12 percent to 44.1 yuan at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. Loan Growth The pace of lending growth in China slowed in the third week of January as compared with the first two weeks of the month, the Shanghai Securities News reported today, citing unidentified people. Bank of China Co. , the nation’s third largest, fell 0.2 percent to 4.13 yuan. It on Jan. 22 said it’s planning a 40 billion yuan ($5.9 billion) convertible bond sale. China’s banking stocks will continue to trail the market’s performance in the “coming quarters” due to concerns over fundraising, according to BoFA Merrill Lynch analyst David Cui . The nation’s banks have suspended new lending since Jan. 19 across the country, according to Credit Suisse Group AG. The lending halt may trigger a “meaningful” decline in a gauge of manufacturing this month, Dong Tao , a Hong Kong-based economist, wrote in a note to clients. Developers Fall Poly Real Estate slid 4.4 percent to 19.05 yuan, set for the lowest close since April 29. China Vanke Co. , the nation’s biggest listed property developer, dropped 2.6 percent to 9.27 yuan. China State Construction Engineering Corp., the nation’s largest housing contractor, slumped 3.6 percent to 4.25 yuan, the most in three months. Bank of China has reduced discounts on mortgage interest rates offered to first-time home buyers in Beijing, Xinhua News Agency reported. The bank has tightened reviews of loans for second-home purchases, according to the report. Baoshan Iron & Steel Co. , China’s biggest steelmaker, lost 3.4 percent to 7.43 yuan. Hebei Iron & Steel Co. , the listed unit of China’s second-biggest steelmaker, slid 5.5 percent to 5.87 yuan. The average spot price for domestic hot-rolled steel sheet yesterday fell 0.7 percent to the lowest since Dec. 17, data from Beijing Antaike Information Development Co. showed. — Zhang Shidong . Editors: Richard Frost , Linus Chua To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Zhang Shidong in Shanghai at +86-21-6104-7014 or szhang5@bloomberg.net

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Charles Gasparino: Volcker Is Finally Getting His Due, at Least Till He Gets Snubbed Again

January 25, 2010

It can’t be easy being Paul Volcker. One of the great economists of the modern era, Volcker is best known as the Fed chairman who slayed slagflation in the late 1970s and early 1980s. He was hired by President Obama to provide economic advice and some adult supervision in an administration that featured as other advisers people like the Marxist-sympathizing Van Jones. But then, when he offered his ideas about regulating the banking industry in a post-bailout era, Volcker was routinely ignored, that is until the president, witnessing the horror (for him and his followers at least) of the election of Scott Brown, a Republican, to fill the Senate seat once held by the late Teddy Kennedy, and the vanishing act of his far left agenda, including socialized medicine. And just like that, presto, the grumpy old man who refused to lower interest rates 30 years ago — acts that Obama would presumably oppose given his support for the reappointment of the current, easy-money loving Fed chairman Ben Bernanke — Volcker is back in vogue. Last week, he was seen alongside the president (with Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner standing warily in the background) as Obama unveiled the broad outlines of a financial plan Volcker has been advocating for months now; something that if Obama lives up to his words would make it difficult if not impossible for government-protected banks to mix their risk taking activities like trading esoteric bonds if they want to be protected by taxpayers as Too Big To Fail. On the surface, it would seem like a victory for Volcker and a commonsense move by the White House. After being shunned for months, his ideas like calling for the separation of commercial banking (which includes government protected deposits) and risk-taking investment banking activities denigrated by Geithner and Larry Summers, Obama’s economic advisers and Wall Street mouthpieces, Volcker had won the day. He finally convinced the president of the mountain of evidence that one of the leading contributing factors to the 2008 financial crisis was the a federal law passed in 1999 that allowed risk taking to be combined with commercial banking activities. But Obama’s last minute conversion to Volckerism is, I suspect, less about commonsense and more about politics. As unemployment remains high and Wall Street is now handing out billions in bonuses just a year after being bailed out, the president can call investment banks “fat cats” all he wants. Obama’s policies of the past year: Promised taxes on small businesses to pay for his expansionist government, and protecting banks have led to a dual economy. Unemployment in the construction industry is at around 20% because businesses are hording cash to pay for higher taxes when the financial types who caused the 2008 meltdown and the current Great Recession feast. And now the president is paying the price. Volcker, at 82, may feel as though this is his last act in a long and storied career to do something great, but for my money, there is something unctuous about the great Paul Volcker being used by the president as a political prop. This is, of course, the man who refused to bend to political pressure in the early 1980s, when the Federal Reserve, under his rule, jacked up interest rates to nose bleed levels in an effort to squeeze out inflation but squeezing the economy. His rationale was simple: The short term pain was worth the long term gain of lower inflation, which usually benefits lower income people the most by making goods and services they need more affordable. He was right, and for that, we’re all thankful. But this is a crusade where Volcker isn’t leading the charge. The final proposal (which could come in days, along with I am told further limits on how much “leverage” or borrowing banks may engage in to trade, and new capital requirements) will be hammered out by Obama’s political team, not Volcker. That’s probably one reason my sources on Capitol Hill tell me there’s still a dearth of information on the final product. In other words, they’ve been given no guidance as to how these “reforms” will actually work. “We’ve been directed to a website with a press release covering the president’s announcement last week,” said one Republican staffer. For that reason, look for a watered down proposal that does little to address the notion that banks shouldn’t be able to take risk on the backs of taxpayers. Already, senior officials at Goldman and JP Morgan are telling analysts and investors that the rules will be easily evaded. They’re designed, the Goldman folks assure anyone who asks, to prevent so-called proprietary trading, where Goldman itself comes up with an idea of how to gamble with its own capital, but not trading that begins when a customer makes and order and then the trader follows through with his own bet. For the life of me, I can’t figure out the difference between the two since the firms in both instances are risking their own capital, but Wall Street is making a case that the difference is huge and the firms are flooding Washington as I write this column to influence the legislation. How much of this jockeying for control of the final product Volcker will stand before just calling it quits, is, of course, a matter of debate. For the past year or so, I’ve been reporting that Volcker has been ignored by Obama, shunned as the crazy old man with the wild-ass idea of reimposing something like the Depression-era law known as Glass-Steagall, which formally separated commercial banking from risk-taking investment banking ideas. Ironically, he received a better reception from some of his contacts on Wall Street for this plan, who gave him their ideas on how best to make such a separation of risk taking and commercial work given the realities of the modern financial industry. Goldman Sachs, of course, isn’t a commercial bank like Citigroup. It doesn’t have branch offices, and it doesn’t hold checking accounts, and yet under the president’s approach to regulation, the firm is protected like Citigroup as too systemically important to fail even as it trades just about every esoteric bond in creation. Through it all, Volcker accepted all the snubs, that is, until last week when the president woke up and realized he was right, and there was Volcker standing next to the president getting his due, until, that is, he gets snubbed again.

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