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Thailand Economy Expands In The First Quarter To The Fastest Pace In a Year

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Thailand Economy Expands In The First Quarter To The Fastest Pace In a Year

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Marketwire – Management Changes:

Gallagher Brings 20 Years of Experience to One of the Fastest-Growing Segments of Online Media

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Online Advertising Veteran Joe Gallagher Joins Jun Group as Chief Revenue Officer

Maxine Harrington Joins Phoenix Healthcare, a Division of Phoenix Marketing International

April 20, 2011

RHINEBECK, NY and LONDON–(Marketwire – Apr 20, 2011) – Phoenix Marketing International (PMI), one of the fastest growing marketing research firms, announced today the appointment of Maxine Harrington as a Research Executive based in its offices in Richmond, Surrey.

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Fast-Growing Manufacturing Sector Cools Off

April 1, 2011

WASHINGTON — Manufacturing activity cooled off a bit last month after expanding in February at the fastest pace in nearly seven years. The Institute for Supply Management said Friday that the sector grew for the 20th straight month. The trade group’s index of manufacturing activity dipped to 61.2 from 61.4 in February, the highest reading in nearly seven years. Any reading above 50 indicates growth. The index bottomed out during the recession at 33.3 in December 2008, the lowest point since June 1980. Measures of new orders and new export orders dropped, though they remained well above levels that signal growth. Ian Shepherdson, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics, said the declines could reflect the impact of Japan’s earthquake and tsunami, which have disrupted global manufacturing supply chains. Japanese firms are leading suppliers of parts to automakers and electronics companies around the world. “Overall, this is still a very robust report,” Shepherdson said. One concern is higher material costs. Manufacturers are paying higher prices for cotton, steel and other commodities, and many are expressing concern that the inflation could cut into their profit margins, the survey found. The prices index rose slightly in March to the highest level in almost three years. That could also contribute to broader inflation if manufacturers pass on some of the higher costs. “Many manufacturers indicate the prices they have to pay for inputs are rising, and there is concern about the impact of higher prices on their margins,” said Norbert Ore, chairman of the committee that oversees the survey. Factory production increased at a faster pace last month, the report showed. The production index rose to its highest level in more than seven years. Other aspects of the report were mixed. Order backlogs are still growing, but at a much slower rate. The survey’s employment index dipped, although February’s pace was the fastest in 38 years. Manufacturing has been a key driver of economic growth and employment since the recession ended in June 2009. Consumers are spending more on autos, appliances and electronic goods. General Motors said Friday that car and truck sales rose 11 percent in March, a smaller increase than the previous two months. But the company said it offered fewer rebates and incentives. Manufacturers added 17,000 jobs in March, the Labor Department said Friday. Factories have added nearly 200,000 jobs in the past year. Overall, the economy added 216,000 jobs in March, the second straight month of strong job growth. The unemployment rate fell to 8.8 percent from 8.9 percent. The rate has fallen a full percentage point since November.

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CoStar Q&A: Colliers’ Warren Dahlstrom Weighs In On CRE Consolidation, Market Trends

March 30, 2011

Warren Dahlstrom, a self-described “25-year veteran of the Washington, D.C. property wars,” has recently taken on a new role that puts him squarely back in the property wars, but at a much broader scope. At the end of February, Dahlstrom was selected by Colliers International, one of the fastest growing commercial real estate brokerage and services firms in the U.S., to preside over the expansion of its investment services group, recruiting top broker…

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Economy Grew Faster Than Previously Thought In Fourth Quarter

March 25, 2011

WASHINGTON: The economy grew more quickly than previously estimated in the fourth quarter as businesses maintained fairly solid spending and restocked shelves to meet rising demand, while corporate profits increased 3.3 percent, a government report showed on Friday. Gross domestic product growth was revised up to an annualized rate of 3.1 percent, the Commerce Department said in its final estimate, close to its initial estimate of 3.2 percent published two months ago and up from its tally of 2.8 percent made in February. Economists had expected GDP growth, which measures total goods and services output within U.S. borders, to be revised up to a 3.0 percent pace. The economy expanded at a 2.6 percent rate in the third quarter. For the whole of 2010, the economy grew 2.9 percent, while corporate profits grew 20.4 percent, the most since 2004. Data so far suggest the economy maintained this growth pace in the first quarter, but there are concerns that rising oil prices could crimp consumer spending and slow the economic recovery. The pick-up in growth has been acknowledged by the Federal Reserve, which injected massive amounts of money into the economy to stimulate demand. The U.S. central bank is expected to conclude its $600 billion government bond buying program at the end of June. The government raised fourth-quarter growth estimates to reflect stronger business spending and inventory accumulation than previously forecast. Business investment rose at a 7.7 percent rate instead of 5.3 percent, lifted by spending on equipment and software, as well as on structures. Spending grew at a 10.0 percent pace in the third quarter. Spending on software and equipment increased at a 7.7 percent rate instead of 5.5 percent. Investment in structures rose at a solid 7.6 percent, the first increase since the second quarter of 2008. Business inventories increased $16.2 billion instead of the $7.1 billion estimated last month, subtracting a smaller 3.42 percentage points from GDP growth rather than the previously reported 3.70 percentage points drag. Excluding inventories, the economy expanded at an unrevised 6.7 percent pace, the fastest increase in domestic and foreign demand since 1998. Domestic purchases grew at a 3.2 percent rate instead of 3.1 percent. Consumer spending — which accounts for more than two-thirds of U.S. economic activity — grew at a 4.0 percent rate in the final three months of 2010 instead of 4.1 percent. It was still the fastest since the last three months of 2006 and was an acceleration from the third quarter’s 2.4 percent rate. The growth in exports was not as strong as previously estimated, while imports were revised a touch down. Trade added 3.27 percentage points to GDP growth instead of 3.35 percentage points. Government spending contracted at a 1.7 percent rate rather than 1.5 percent, due to weak state and local government outlays. The GDP report confirmed a pick-up in inflation pressures on surging food and gasoline prices. The personal consumption expenditures (PCE) index rose at a revised 1.7 percent rate in the fourth quarter instead of 1.8 percent. That compared to the third quarter’s 0.8 percent increase. But a “core” price index closely watched by the Fed advanced at a revised 0.4 percent rate instead of 0.5 percent. The increase was the smallest rise on record. (Reporting by Lucia Mutikani, Editing by Andrea Ricci) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Euro area inflation climbs to the fastest pace in more than two years

March 16, 2011

Euro area inflation climbs to

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South Korean Industrial Production accelerates at the fastest pace in five months

March 4, 2011

South Korean Industrial Production accelerates at the fastest pace in five months

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Video: Beijing Property Boom Forces Migrant Workers Underground

February 18, 2011

Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) — Rising rents in Beijing are forcing many of the city’s migrant workers into small dwellings underground. China’s inflation accelerated in January as prices excluding food rose the most in at least six years, bolstering the case for more interest-rate increases to tame overheating risks in the fastest-growing major economy. Bloomberg’s Margaret Conley reports. (Source: Bloomberg)

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German Producer Prices Rise At Fastest Pace in More Than Two-Years

February 18, 2011

German Producer Prices Rise At Fastest Pace in More Than Two-Years

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Services Activities Expand at the Fastest Pace since August 2005

February 3, 2011

Services Activities Expand at the Fastest Pace since August 2005

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Manufacturing Activities Expand at the Fastest Pace Since 2004

February 1, 2011

Manufacturing Activities Expand at the Fastest Pace Since 2004

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Video: U.S, Stocks Rally on Consumer Data, Exxon Mobil Profit

January 31, 2011

Jan. 31 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Deborah Kostroun reports on the performance of the U.S. equity market today. U.S. stocks rose, extending the second straight monthly gain for the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, as businesses expanded at the fastest pace since 1988 and consumer spending and Exxon Mobil Corp.’s profit beat estimates. (Source: Bloomberg)

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10 Industries In Which The U.S. Is No Longer No.1

January 31, 2011

Americans are used to being No.1 in nearly all the world’s businesses, and athletic endeavors. The foundation of that certainly began to erode in the 1970′s, when much of America’s manufacturing industry started to move overseas.  Many U.S. companies wanted to cut costs, including high-priced manufacturing jobs. That contributed to the rise of the Japanese and, more recently, the Chinese economies. As U.S. manufacturing eroded,  so did other critical parts of society. American children are no longer the best educated in the world. America’s health care system no longer produces the healthiest population. US GDP no longer grows as quickly as it once did, particularly in the recoveries that follow recessions. China now has the fastest growing large economy in the world. It has passed Japan into the No.2 spot and economists are forecasting how long it will take to pass the US.

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Video: Stocks Fall as S&P 500 Hits Highest Valuation Since June

December 30, 2010

Dec. 30 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Ellen Braitman reports on the performance of the U.S. equity market today. U.S. stocks declined as the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index’s highest valuation since June overshadowed reports showing a drop in jobless claims, the fastest business expansion in two decades and a gain in pending home sales. Bloomberg’s Pimm Fox also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: U.S. Stocks Rise, Erasing Decline Since Lehman Failure

December 21, 2010

Dec. 21 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Courtney Donohoe reports on the performance of the U.S. equity market today. Stocks rose, completing the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index’s recovery from the plunge that followed Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.’s collapse in 2008, after Adobe Systems Inc.’s forecast added to speculation that the fastest profit growth in 22 years makes equities a bargain. Bloomberg’s Pimm Fox also speaks. (Source: Bloomberg)

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China’s inflation accelerates to the fastest pace in more than two year as consumer price surges

December 13, 2010

China’s inflation accelerates to the fastest pace in more than two year as consumer price surges

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Is Groupon The Fastest-Growing Company Ever?

December 1, 2010

Groupon, an Internet coupon start-up that is reportedly a Google takeout target, may be the fastest growing company in history. Just two years after its launch, revenue for the Chicago-based deal network is expected to exceed $500 million in 2010, according to analysts. That tops the growth of Zynga, a social gaming company that previously held the title, which took three years to hit that mark, points out Wedbush equity analyst Lou Kerner.

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Video: Schmieding Says `No Serious Risk’ of Irish Debt Default

November 12, 2010

Nov. 12 (Bloomberg) — Holger Schmieding, chief economist at Joh Berenberg Gossler & Co., discusses the outlook for the European economy and Ireland’s debt crisis. Europe’s economic growth weakened in the third quarter from the fastest pace in four years, with peripheral nations lagging behind Germany as budget cuts aimed at reducing record deficits undermined the recovery.

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Where Unemployment Has Been Growing The Fastest (PHOTOS)

November 5, 2010

Despite this morning’s rather optimistic numbers, which showed the U.S. economy created 151,000 jobs in October , the most in five months, some areas of the country are still being hammered by the jobs crisis. According to Bureau of Labor Statistics’s recently released data, employment declined in 296 out of 326 of the largest counties in America between March 2009 and March 2010. The national county job loss averaged 2.1 percent, while the weekly wage increased in the same year by 0.8 percent to $889 in the first quarter of 2010. Of the 326 large counties surveyed, there was a net job decline of 2,075,200 in that same period. Below, we’ve compiled the U.S. counties in which employment fell the fastest over this period — the most recent data available by county. Which areas will rebound from their precipitous declines?

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China Shifts Policy As Growth Cools Inflation Climbs

October 23, 2010

The Chinese economy grew at a slower pace in the third quarter than in the first half of 2010 while inflation shot up at the fastest pace in nearly two years prompting the government to reconsider its economic focus according to Bloomberg

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Video: Orlins Calls U.S. Pressure on China `Counterproductive’: Video

October 21, 2010

Oct. 21 (Bloomberg) — Stephen Orlins, president of the National Committee on U.S.-China Relations, discusses the implications of U.S. pressure on China to allow the yuan to extend gains. China’s economy grew 9.6 percent in the third quarter and inflation accelerated to the fastest pace in almost two years, which may add fuel to arguments that the second-largest economy can withstand a stronger yuan as Group of 20 officials gather to talk about currencies tomorrow in South Korea. Orlins speaks with Betty Liu on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Xie Sees `Big Battle’ for China to Contain Inflation: Video

October 21, 2010

Oct. 21 (Bloomberg) — Andy Xie, an independent economist, talks about China’s economy. China’s economy grew 9.6 percent in the third quarter and inflation accelerated to the fastest pace in almost two years, according to the statistics bureau in Beijing. Xie speaks from Shanghai with Deirdre Bolton on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Barshefsky Says G20 Must Address Yuan Issue `Head-On’: Video

October 19, 2010

Oct. 19 (Bloomberg) — Former U.S. Trade Representative Charlene Barshefsky discusses the outlook for China’s currency policy and a U.S. investigation of Chinese subsidies of green-energy projects. China unexpectedly raised its benchmark lending and deposit rates for the first time since 2007 ahead of data that may show inflation accelerated to the fastest pace in almost two years. Barshefsky speaks with Margaret Brennan on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Barshefsky Says G20 Must Address Yuan Issue `Head-On’: Video

October 19, 2010

Oct. 19 (Bloomberg) — Former U.S. Trade Representative Charlene Barshefsky discusses the outlook for China’s currency policy and a U.S. investigation of Chinese subsidies of green-energy projects. China unexpectedly raised its benchmark lending and deposit rates for the first time since 2007 ahead of data that may show inflation accelerated to the fastest pace in almost two years. Barshefsky speaks with Margaret Brennan on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Robin Ducot Joins Eventbrite as Vice President of Engineering

September 28, 2010

SAN FRANCISCO, CA–(Marketwire – September 28, 2010) –   Eventbrite, the fastest growing event ticketing and social commerce company, today announced that Robin Ducot has joined the company as Vice President of Engineering. In this position, Robin will play an integral role in spearheading the company’s technical development as Eventbrite continues to fundamentally change the way people host, discover and attend their favorite events.

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Video: Brusuelas Discusses Business Inventories, Retail Sales: Video

September 14, 2010

Sept. 14 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg economist Joseph Brusuelas discusses U.S. business inventories, which rose in July at the fastest pace in two years as companies stocked up ahead of a back-to-school sales season that proved to be better than projected. Brusuelas, speaking with Margaret Brennan on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness,” also discusses sales at U.S. retailers, which rose 0.4 in August, a second consecutive gain, easing concern the economy will stumble in the second half of the year. Bloomberg’s Michael McKee also speaks. (Joseph Brusuelas is a Bloomberg economist. The opinions expressed are his own. Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Lombard’s Bhandari Says Indian Inflation `Major Threat’

August 31, 2010

Aug. 31 (Bloomberg) — Maya Bhandari, a senior economist at Lombard Street Research, talks about the expansion of the Indian economy and the threat of inflation. India’s economy grew at the fastest pace in 2 1/2 years, increasing pressure on the central bank to extend the most aggressive round of monetary-policy tightening in Asia. Bhandari speaks with Maryam Nemazee on Bloomberg Television’s “The Pulse.”

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Video: Kraemer Sees U.S., China Slowing German Economic Growth

August 13, 2010

Aug. 13 (Bloomberg) — Joerg Kraemer, chief economist at Commerzbank AG, talks about Germany’s higher-than-expected economic growth for the second quarter. German gross domestic product data showed a 2.2 percent increase, the fastest in two deacades.¶ Kraemer speaks with Andrea Catherwood on Bloomberg Television’s “The Pulse.”

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Video: Annunziata Says German Growth Pace May Not Be Sustained: Video

August 13, 2010

Aug. 13 (Bloomberg) — Marco Annunziata, chief economist at UniCredit Group, talks about Germany’s second-quarter economic growth and the outlook for the European economy. German gross domestic product surged 2.2 percent from the first quarter, the fastest pace since the country’s reunification two decades ago. Annunziata talks with Deirdre Bolton on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Jefferies’s Owen Says German GDP Growth Is `Encouraging’

August 12, 2010

Aug. 13 (Bloomberg) — David Owen, chief European financial economist at Jefferies International Ltd., discusses German second-quarter gross domestic product which grew at the fastest pace since the country’s reunification two decades ago. He talks with Mark Barton on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown.”

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US Private Payrolls Surge Past Expectations

August 11, 2010

Employment in the US nearly tripled the gains that had been expected for October as the private sector hired workers at the fastest pace in six months and government layoffs slowed according to Reuters

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Video: UBS’s Kara Says U.K. GDP Increase `As Good As It Gets’

July 23, 2010

July 23 (Bloomberg) — Amit Kara, an economist at UBS AG, talks about about the rise in the U.K.’s gross domestic product during the second quarter. The U.K. economy grew almost twice as much as economists forecast in the second quarter in the fastest expansion for four years as rebounding services, manufacturing and construction ignited the recovery. Kara speaks with Andrea Catherwood on Bloomberg Television’s “The Pulse.”

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European Producer-Price Inflation Accelerates to Fastest in Almost a Year

June 2, 2010

By Simone Meier June 2 (Bloomberg) — European producer-price inflation accelerated to the fastest pace in more than a year in April as a weaker euro made imports more expensive and energy costs rose. Factory-gate prices in the euro region rose 2.8 percent from a year earlier after increasing 0.9 percent in March, the European Union’s statistics office in Luxembourg said today. That’s the fastest pace since November 2008. Economists forecast prices would gain 2.6 percent, the median of 17 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey showed. Prices rose 0.9 percent from March, when they increased 0.6 percent. The euro has lost 14.6 percent against the dollar this year just as rising energy prices sap companies’ purchasing power. While Michelin & Cie. , the world’s second-largest tiremaker, said last month that it plans to raise prices, companies may struggle to pass on higher costs after European unemployment climbed to the highest in almost 12 years in April and consumer confidence worsened last month. Energy prices at the producer level rose 7.7 percent from a year earlier in April, while intermediate goods were 2.7 percent more expensive, today’s report showed. Excluding construction and energy, prices increased 1 percent from a year earlier. To contact the reporter on this story: Simone Meier in Zurich at smeier@bloomberg.net

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U.K. Mortgage Approvals Rises to a Four Year High, Euro-Zone PPI Advances at Fastest Pace in More than a Year

June 2, 2010

U.K. Mortgage Approvals Rises to a Four Year High, Euro-Zone PPI Advances at Fastest Pace in More than a Year

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Philippine Growth May Have Quickened, Reducing Need for Low Interest Rates

May 25, 2010

By Karl Lester M. Yap and Michael Munoz May 26 (Bloomberg) — The Philippine economy probably expanded at the fastest pace in more than a year last quarter as remittances boosted consumer spending and exports surged, reducing the need for record-low interest rates. Gross domestic product increased 4.4 percent in the three months through March from a year earlier, according to the median forecast of 15 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. The economy expanded 1.8 percent in the fourth quarter. The government will release the report at 10 a.m. tomorrow in Manila. The Southeast Asian nation has lagged behind Malaysia, Australia and India in raising interest rates this year even as the global recovery lifts demand for goods including Philippine- made Texas Instruments Inc. semiconductors. Senator Benigno Aquino , who led vote tallies for the May presidential election, has pledged to create jobs and lure investments to boost incomes. “The central bank will likely keep rates unchanged at its next meeting but it will need to raise rates soon if the growth momentum continues,” said Jonathan Ravelas , chief market strategist at Banco de Oro Unibank Inc. in Manila. Aquino will need to boost infrastructure and social services “to sustain the economic recovery,” Ravelas said. Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’s next meeting on June 3 will be a “balancing act” as policy makers try to curb inflation without stifling economic growth, Deputy Governor Diwa Guinigundo said May 12. The Philippines has pared a lending program for banks this year while keeping the benchmark rate at 4 percent. Philippine inflation held at 4.4 percent in April, the fastest pace since December, as oil and food prices rose amid the global economic recovery. Still, stocks fell around the world yesterday on concern Spain’s ailing banks signal a widening European debt crisis that may hurt the rebound from last year’s slump. Malaysia’s Move “It will be a very tight balancing act to decide on whether we should already adjust the policy rate or recalibrate the reserve requirement,” Guinigundo said. “We may even choose not to touch both if we think the global and domestic economic recovery remains fragile and if the inflation outlook continues to be favorable.” Malaysia’s central bank raised interest rates in May for the second time this year after the economy expanded 10.1 percent in the first quarter, the most in a decade. Indonesia’s GDP grew at the fastest pace in more than a year last quarter, rising 5.7 percent from a year earlier. The Philippine peso last month climbed to its strongest level since August 2008, reaching 44.158 per dollar, as Asia’s recovery attracts funds to the region’s assets. The benchmark stock index is up 33 percent in the past year. Jollibee Foods Corp ., which outsells McDonald’s Corp. in the Philippines, reported an increase in profit in the first quarter as remittances sent home by Filipinos overseas supported local spending, boosting sales of chicken meals and French fries. Its shares have climbed 7.3 percent this year. Remittances from the more than 8 million Filipinos living in countries including the U.S. and Singapore rose 7 percent in the first quarter from a year earlier to $4.3 billion. Money sent home from abroad accounts for about a 10th of the economy and helps fund purchases of mobile phones and cars in a nation where one in every four people live on less than $1.25 a day. Exports , which account for about a third of the Southeast Asian nation’s $167 billion economy, climbed at the fastest pace in at least 29 years in March, rising 43.7 percent from a year earlier. To contact the reporter on this story: Karl Lester M. Yap in Manila at kyap5@bloomberg.net

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Taiwan Outpaces China as Growth Reaches Fastest Pace in More Than 30 Years

May 20, 2010

By Chinmei Sung and Weiyi Lim May 21 (Bloomberg) — Taiwan’s economy grew at the fastest pace in more than 30 years last quarter on surging sales of computer chips and display panels to China, as it heals ideological wounds with its neighbor in favor of trade ties. Gross domestic product rose 13.27 percent in the three months to March 31 from a year earlier, the most since 1978 and more than the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey for an 11 percent gain, the statistics bureau said yesterday in Taipei. Taiwan, Singapore and Japan all reported yesterday that growth accelerated in the first quarter, boosted by a rebound in global trade. In Taiwan, which outpaced China’s 11.9 percent expansion, policy makers are weighing the risk of raising interest rates from a record low against fallout from the debt crisis sparked by Greece, after April export orders from Europe fell 11 percent from the previous month. “Taiwan benefited a lot from a rebound in the Chinese economy,” said Tony Phoo , an economist at Standard Chartered Plc in Taipei. “The economy is still prone to external uncertainty, with the Greek crisis already feeding into the export data.” The statistics bureau yesterday raised its 2010 GDP growth projection to 6.14 percent from 4.72 percent, and its annual inflation forecast to 1.4 percent from 1.27 percent. The Central Bank of the Republic of China (Taiwan) has kept its benchmark interest rate at 1.25 percent since March last year to help extract the island from its deepest recession on record. Trade Agreement President Ma Ying-jeou , who abandoned his predecessor’s pro-independence stance after taking office two years ago, has pushed for a trade agreement with China to prevent Taiwan from being “marginalized” after a Chinese accord with the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations took effect this year. The proposal sparked opposition demonstrations amid concern China may boost its influence over Taiwan. The two have been ruled separately since Nationalist troops fled to the island after losing a civil war to Mao Zedong ’s Communists in 1949. Ma reiterated this week that the accord won’t harm the island’s “sovereignty.” He said a reduction in cross-strait tensions will encourage the mainland “in the long run” to remove the more than 1,000 missiles it has aimed at Taiwan. Exports to China, Taiwan’s biggest trading partner and No. 1 overseas investment destination, soared 62 percent in April from a year earlier, after an 82 percent gain in March. Record Revenue That helped Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. , the island’s biggest company by market value, forecast revenue would rise this quarter to a record NT$100 billion ($3 billion) to NT$102 billion and allow it to expand its workforce. “We will recruit more than 3,000 engineers this year,” JH Tzeng , spokesman for Taiwan Semiconductor, said yesterday. The world’s largest custom chipmaker also plans to convert 2,400 contract positions to permanent during the year, he said. A separate report yesteerday showed export orders , an indication of shipments in the next one to three months, rose 35.15 percent in April, a seventh monthly increase. “The return of inflation will start to concern the central bank, and the CBC will need to take preemptive measures by starting to withdraw monetary stimulus before the economy gets overheated,” Liu Li-Gang , a Hong Kong-based economist at Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd., said before the GDP release. “However, the uncertainty in Europe may delay a rate hike.” Central banks around the world are trying to gauge whether a 750-billion-euro ($925-billion) package of measures organized by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund to rescue the region’s debt-laden governments will stabilize financial markets. Asia’s Expansion In Singapore, GDP grew an annualized 38.6 percent from the previous three months in the first quarter, and Japan’s economy expanded at the fastest pace in three quarters in the period ended March 31, reports yesterday showed. “Our cargo business nearly tripled in the first quarter from a year earlier, as we benefited from robust export growth,” Bruce Chen , spokesman for China Airlines, Taiwan’s biggest airline company, said by phone yesterday. “Our passenger business also rose after we added new destinations.” Chinese visitors to Taiwan in the first quarter outnumbered Japanese for the first time on record as relaxed rules spurred travel to an island off limits to mainlanders for 60 years. The statistics bureau said yesterday that Chinese visitors tripled in the first quarter from a year earlier. The planned trade accord with China has attracted overseas investors, spurring Taiwan’s dollar in April to its biggest monthly advance since September. The currency reached NT$31.269 per U.S. dollar on April 27, the strongest since August 2008. The Taiwan dollar fell 0.2 percent to close at NT$32.175 against the U.S. currency yesterday, according to Taipei Forex Inc. To contact the reporters on this story: Chinmei Sung in Taipei at csung4@bloomberg.net . Weiyi Lim in Taipei at Wlim26@bloomberg.net

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Inflation in U.K. Accelerates Faster Than Forecast to Reach 17-Month High

May 18, 2010

By Scott Hamilton May 18 (Bloomberg) — U.K. inflation accelerated more than economists forecast in April to the fastest pace since 2008, enough to prompt a public letter of explanation from Bank of England Governor Mervyn King . Consumer prices rose 3.7 percent from a year earlier, compared with a 3.4 percent increase in March, the Office for National Statistics said today in London. Economists forecast a 3.5 percent rate, according to the median of 27 predictions in a Bloomberg News survey . With inflation above the government’s 3 percent upper limit three months after the previous breach, King must now write to Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne to say what he will do to bring prices under control. The Bank of England signaled last week that inflation may be peaking and will undershoot the 2 percent target next year because of slack in the economy . “By August we think inflation will have fallen back to around about 3 percent, but there’s obviously a chance it doesn’t,” George Buckley , chief U.K. economist at Deutsche Bank AG in London, said in a telephone interview before the announcement. “The bank seems to think there’s a huge amount of spare capacity and if that’s not true and there’s less spare capacity than they think, you get higher inflation.” Bonds Fall The pound remained higher against the dollar after the report and was up 0.2 percent to $1.4500 as of 9:35 a.m. in London. Bonds fell, with the yield on the 10-year gilt rising 4 basis points to 3.78 percent. Inflation was the fastest since November 2008. The rate rose because of higher costs of food and women’s clothing, and tax increases on alcohol and tobacco, the statistics office said. On the month, consumer prices climbed 0.6 percent. Economists predicted a 0.4 percent increase, according to the median of 21 forecasts in a separate Bloomberg News survey . The report contrasts with comments from retailers, which have said that food inflation is slowing. William Morrison Supermarkets Plc on May 6 reported a slowdown in sales growth as food prices slackened. J Sainsbury Plc Chief Executive Officer Justin King on May 13 said that the climate of “low-to-no inflation could well persist.” Seventh Letter Today’s letter will be the seventh since the central bank was granted independence in setting interest rates in 1997. U.K. law requires the governor to write to the chancellor when inflation misses the 2 percent target by more than a percentage point. This will be the first exchange of letters between King and Osborne, who became finance minister last week. The pound has lost about a quarter of its value on a trade – weighted basis since the start of 2007, stoking consumer prices. The cost of crude oil rose 3.4 percent in April and has climbed by about a fifth in the past year. “Further adjustment to the lower level of sterling, or increases in commodity prices as a result of strong global demand, might cause inflation to remain above target for longer” than just the rest of this year, the central bank said in its May 12 inflation report. “To the downside, spare capacity may exert a greater influence.” Osborne’s June 22 budget may yet stoke prices if he raises sales tax from the current 17.5 percent rate to narrow the record budget deficit . Prime Minister David Cameron , in a May 16 interview with the BBC, refused to rule out an increase. “The upside risk in the near term is that there’s a possibility of them raising value-added tax,” said Deutsche Bank’s Buckley. “Our forecast is for inflation to fall to about 2 percent by the end of the year and assuming no increase in value-added tax, which I think is a very big assumption.” Retail price inflation, a measure used to gauge the cost of living in wage negotiations, accelerated to 5.3 percent in April, the fastest pace since 1991. Excluding mortgage-interest payments, it quickened to 5.4 percent. To contact the reporter on this story: Scott Hamilton in London at shamilton8@bloomberg.net

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Trade Deficit in the U.S. Widens to a One-Year High on Imports Led by Oil

May 12, 2010

By Shobhana Chandra May 12 (Bloomberg) — The trade deficit in the U.S. widened in March to the highest level in more than a year as the cost of imported oil climbed and companies restocked shelves with goods bought abroad. The gap grew 2.5 percent to $40.4 billion, in line with the median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News and the most since December 2008, Commerce Department figures showed today in Washington. The value of imported crude climbed to the highest level since October 2008. A rebounding American consumer, combined with business spending on new equipment and inventories, means imports may keep growing. Gains in exports, which benefited from expanding economies in Asia that gave companies such as Cummins Inc. and Dow Chemical Co. a lift, will probably be more limited as the European debt crisis pushes the dollar up against the euro. “There is a revival in global trade going on,” said Joseph Brusuelas, president of Brusuelas Analytics in Stamford, Connecticut. “There is some concern about Europe. We should see a small impact.” Stock-index futures and the dollar held earlier gains after the report. The contract on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index rose 0.5 percent to 1,158.4 at 8:50 a.m. in New York. The dollar climbed 0.5 percent against the yen to 93.13. Survey Median The trade gap was projected to widen to $40.5 billion, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey of 80 economists. Estimates ranged from deficits of $36.2 billion to $42 billion. The Commerce Department revised the February deficit down to $39.4 billion from a previously estimated $39.7 billion. Goods and services purchased abroad and those sold overseas both increased to the highest levels since October 2008. Imports climbed 3.1 percent in March to $188.3 billion, led by a $2.76 billion surge in crude oil and increasing demand for foreign-made automobiles. The rise in oil reflected higher prices and volumes, and helped push U.S. imports from Mexico to a record. The average price of a barrel of crude for the month was $74.32, the highest since October 2008. Trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange indicates prices climbed even higher in April before retreating so far this month on concern the need to reduce government debt in countries like Greece and Portugal will slow global growth. Excluding Oil Excluding petroleum, the trade gap shrank to $15.6 billion from $16.4 billion in February. A strengthening U.S. economy will keep drawing in more products from abroad. Consumer spending, which accounts for about 70 percent of the world’s largest economy, rose in the first three months of the year by the most since 2007. Business investment in new equipment and software over the past two quarters has put in the biggest back-to-back gain since 2000. Surging growth in emerging Asian and Latin American countries is propelling demand for U.S. goods. Exports increased 3.2 percent to $147.9 billion, reflecting sales of generators, semiconductors and industrial supplies such as petroleum products. China, the world’s third-biggest economy, expanded 11.9 percent in the first quarter from the same time in 2009, the fastest pace in almost three years. India’s growth rate, which is due May 31, was probably 8.6 percent last quarter, the most since December 2007, government officials have said. Brazil, Latin America’s biggest economy, will expand 6.26 percent in 2010, the fastest pace in 24 years, a central bank survey said this month. Rising Surplus The trade surplus with the so-called newly industrialized countries, which include Singapore and Korea, climbed to a record in March. The deficit with China widened. Increasing demand in Asia and Latin America is behind the more optimistic outlook for companies such as Cummins, a Columbus, Indiana-based maker of diesel truck engines and generators, which raised its sales forecast for 2010. “Our strength in large developing markets such as China, India and Brazil has given us a significant boost as those economies have continued to recover from the recession more quickly than other regions,” Chief Executive Officer Tim Solso said in a statement on April 27. A rebound in the U.S. and overseas markets boosted first- quarter sales by 48 percent at Midland, Michigan-based Dow, the largest U.S. chemical maker. Euro’s Slide The euro had slumped 11 percent against the dollar so far this year as investors grew more concerned that fiscal turmoil in the region will hamper Europe’s economic recovery. A sustained decline may restrain further progress in U.S. sales overseas. In addition to making American goods more expensive to European buyers, the dollar’s appreciation against the euro will also weigh on sales to economies where American exporters compete with European goods. After eliminating the influence of prices, which are the numbers used to calculate gross domestic product, the trade deficit grew to $43.8 billion in March from $42.3 billion. The March figure was in line with what the government estimated last month, indicating trade will not factor into revisions for first- quarter growth due later this month. To contact the reporters on this story: Shobhana Chandra in Washington at schandra1@bloomberg.net

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China’s Bubble Risk Adds Tightening Pressure Even Amid European Debt Woes

May 11, 2010

By Bloomberg News May 12 (Bloomberg) — China’s accelerating inflation and surging house prices are adding pressure on policy makers to raise interest rates and allow yuan gains even as their concerns over Europe’s debt woes persist. Property prices rose at a record pace in April, consumer prices climbed at the fastest rate in 18 months and new lending exceeded the forecasts of all 24 economists surveyed, figures showed yesterday. China’s stocks dropped yesterday, sending the benchmark index into a bear market, on concern the government will raise borrowing costs and unveil more measures to cool the housing market. The central bank highlighted risks to price stability in a report on May 10 even as it pointed to added uncertainty over a global recovery triggered by the euro zone debt crisis. “Higher inflation, rising property prices and wages all point to the risk of overheating,” said Kevin Lai , an economist with Daiwa Capital Markets in Hong Kong. “Policy makers are hesitant because of Europe’s debt crisis, but higher interest rates is the only way to contain rising bubble risks.” The benchmark one-year lending rate will be raised by Sept. 30, according to 19 of 20 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News yesterday, with 10 of the analysts predicting an increase as early as this quarter. Twelve out of 18 expect the yuan to rise by June 30, the survey showed. The 12.8 percent jump in property prices in 70 cities was the biggest since data began in 2005, defying a government crackdown on speculation that intensified last month. Producer Prices Producer prices jumped 6.8 percent, the fastest pace in 19 months, while consumer prices climbed 2.8 percent, up from 2.4 percent in March. New lending of 774 billion yuan ($113 billion) was more than any of 24 economists estimated. Retail sales growth accelerated to 18.5 percent in April from a year earlier. So far policy makers have avoided using what central bank Deputy Governor Zhu Min calls the “heavy-duty weapon” of interest rates. Instead they have favored targeted measures to quell property speculation and drained cash from the financial system via three increases this year in the proportion of deposits banks must hold as reserves. Developers Guangzhou R&F Properties Co. and China Overseas Land & Investment Ltd. are reporting slowing sales since the government unveiled real-estate controls such as restrictions on second- and third-home purchases. Investor Concern China’s government aims to contain full-year inflation at 3 percent and avert property bubbles after record credit growth drove an economic rebound. Investors are concerned stimulus withdrawal and a slowdown in construction could choke off growth after an 11.9 percent expansion in the first quarter. The Shanghai Composite Index fell 1.9 percent yesterday to close at the lowest in almost a year. The measure has slid 21 percent since November, a sign analysts say is a bear market. Yuan forwards strengthened for a second day and bonds fell. Statistics bureau spokesman Sheng Laiyun said that while April’s inflation was “mild” and not broad-based, the nation faces significant pressure for bigger price gains. Causes include liquidity, commodity costs and a low comparative base last year, he added. China should focus on preventing excessive increases in asset prices and liquidity after Europe’s almost $1 trillion loan package reduced the risk of another global slump, central bank adviser Li Daokui said May 10. New Language The central bank indicated with new language in a report May 10 that it will likely allow the yuan to appreciate against the dollar, said Xia Bin , one of its academic advisers, according to yesterday’s China Business News newspaper. The bank’s mention of managing the yuan “with reference to a currency basket” shows a change to the peg is coming, Xia told the newspaper. Wang Qing , Morgan Stanley’s chief economist for greater China, said the language change was “big, huge” signaling the central bank’s intention to let the yuan appreciate. Some economists say policy makers may postpone policy action until there is greater certainty that Europe’s debt crisis has stabilized. Adjustments to interest rates and currency policy may be delayed because “there is a growing risk that the Greek debt crisis will worsen and spread,” China International Capital Corp. economists led by Ha Jiming said yesterday. CICC on May 10 cut its estimate for China’s economic growth this year to 9.5 percent from 10.5 percent, citing property tightening measures and overseas “uncertainties.” Not all of April’s indicators pointed up. Industrial production growth slowed, along with M2, the broadest measure of money supply. Urban fixed-asset investment climbed 26.1 percent in the first four months from the same period in 2009, easing from 26.4 percent in the first quarter. — Kevin Hamlin , Li Yanping , Jay Wang . Editors: Russell Ward , Brendan Murray To contact the Bloomberg News staff on this story: Kevin Hamlin in Beijing on khamlin@bloomberg.net

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China Inflation Accelerates as Loans Surge, Property Prices Rise by Record

May 10, 2010

By Bloomberg News May 11 (Bloomberg) — China’s inflation accelerated, new lending topped economists’ estimates and property prices rose by a record, highlighting the threat of overheating in the fastest- growing major economy. Consumer prices rose 2.8 percent in April from a year earlier, the fastest pace in 18 months, and property prices jumped 12.8 percent, the statistics bureau said in statements today. New lending of 774 billion yuan ($113 billion), announced by the central bank, was more than any of 24 economists forecast. Chinese policy makers should focus on preventing excessive gains in asset prices and liquidity as Europe’s rescue package makes another global slump less likely, central bank adviser Li Daokui said in an interview yesterday. The increase in property prices across 70 cities was the most since data began in 2005, defying a government crackdown on speculation that intensified last month. “Price pressures have been building throughout the economy, strengthening the case for higher interest rates and a stronger yuan,” said Brian Jackson , a Hong Kong-based strategist at Royal Bank of Canada. “China is at risk of overheating, with spot fires breaking out in various parts of the economy.” The gain in consumer prices compared with a 2.4 percent increase in March and the 2.7 percent median estimate of 30 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. Producer prices jumped 6.8 percent, also topping estimates, today’s release from the statistics bureau showed. Record Credit Growth China’s government aims to contain full-year inflation at 3 percent and avert property bubbles after record credit growth drove an economic rebound. Investors are concerned stimulus withdrawal and a slowdown in construction could choke off growth after an 11.9 percent expansion in the first quarter. The Shanghai Composite Index dipped briefly into a bear market yesterday, sliding 20 percent from a November high, even as global stocks surged on measures to end Europe’s debt crisis. The benchmark rose 0.7 percent as of 10:15 a.m. today. Industrial production rose 17.8 percent in April from a year earlier, after an 18.1 percent gain in March, today’s data showed. That compared with economists’ median forecast for an 18.5 percent gain. Investment, Retail Sales Baoshan Iron & Steel Co. , China’s largest publicly traded steelmaker, has been running plants at full capacity as carmakers including General Motors Co. said they can’t build enough vehicles to meet demand. Urban fixed-asset investment climbed 26.1 percent in the first four months from the same period in 2009, the statistics bureau said today. Retail sales rose 18.5 percent in April from a year earlier, the agency said. The gain in producer prices was the biggest in 19 months and more than economists’ 6.5 percent median estimate. In March, the costs of goods as they leave the factory rose by 5.9 percent. While developers Guangzhou R&F Properties Co. and China Overseas Land & Investment Ltd. are reporting slowing sales as the government intensifies the crackdown on property speculation, April prices rose 12.8 percent, the most since data began in 2005. Tightening Lending Besides tightening rules for second and third-home purchases, China has increased banks’ reserve requirements three times this year, withdrawing cash from the financial system. Still, policy makers have left benchmark interest rates and the yuan’s peg to the dollar unchanged. “The double-dip risk in the world economy is likely to be reduced to a minimum,” Li said in an interview in Beijing, expressing his personal view of the European aid plan. “China’s growth rate is not a problem this year, and the main policy focus should be on preventing excessive gains in asset prices and liquidity.” The central bank said yesterday that the nation faces increasing risks to “price stability,” citing loose global monetary conditions, rising commodity prices and the world’s recovery. Rising labor, resource and environmental costs in China may push up prices, it added. China International Capital Corp. yesterday cut its estimate for China’s economic growth this year to 9.5 percent from 10.5 percent, citing property tightening measures and overseas “uncertainties.” Adjustments to interest rates and changes to currency policy may be delayed, the investment bank said. European policy makers yesterday unveiled a loan package worth 750 billion euros ($962 billion), including International Monetary Fund backing, to stem a sovereign debt crisis that threatened to shatter confidence in the euro. — Kevin Hamlin , Li Yanping , Sophie Leung , Jay Wang , Chia-Peck Wong . Editors: Paul Panckhurst , Michael Heath . To contact the Bloomberg News staff on this story: Kevin Hamlin in Beijing on khamlin@bloomberg.net

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Chinese Manufacturing Expanded at Slower Pace Last Month, HSBC PMI Shows

May 3, 2010

By Bloomberg News May 4 (Bloomberg) — Chinese manufacturing grew at a slower pace in April, easing overheating risks in the world’s fastest-growing major economy, a survey of more than 400 companies showed. A purchasing managers’ index released today by HSBC Holdings Plc and Markit Economics fell to a six-month low of a seasonally adjusted 55.4 from 57 in March. A number above 50 indicates an expansion. Chinese officials are seeking to restrain inflation and limit property bubbles without derailing the nation’s economic comeback. This year’s third increase in reserve requirements for banks, announced May 2, may be followed by gains in the yuan by June 30 and higher interest rates from next quarter, according to China International Capital Corp. Today’s data “points to a moderate slowdown in the expansion of manufacturing activity,” Qu Hongbin, chief China economist at HSBC in Hong Kong, said. “Beijing’s policy tightening is starting to cool the overheated economy, which will help to contain inflationary risk in the coming quarters.” A government index , released May 1, showed manufacturing picking up pace and the fastest gain in 22 months in input prices. HSBC’s survey uses a different sample of businesses. Faster Growth The economy expanded 11.9 percent in the first quarter, the fastest pace in almost three years, and property prices rose by a record in March after an unprecedented boom in lending that countered the effect on China of the global financial crisis. Exports are recovering, climbing 29 percent in the first quarter from a year earlier, and profits are rising. Industrial companies reported a doubling of net income in the first quarter from a year earlier, statistics bureau figures for 24 provinces showed. BYD Co ., the Chinese carmaker backed by Warren Buffett , said first-quarter profit more than tripled on higher demand in the world’s biggest auto market. Baoshan Iron & Steel Co. estimates that its first-half profit may increase as much as 10-fold. Vice Finance Minister Li Yong said yesterday that inflation is causing concern and economic growth may have been “a little bit” too fast. He spoke at an Asian Development Bank event in Tashkent, Uzbekistan. ‘Major Bubble’ Investor Marc Faber is more pessimistic. The Chinese economy has “symptoms of a major bubble” and may crash in the next nine to 12 months, Faber said in an interview on Bloomberg Television. While officials are paring back stimulus by targeting a 22 percent reduction in new loans this year and raising reserve requirements, the central bank is yet to raise interest rates from crisis levels. It has also left the yuan pegged at about 6.83 per dollar since July 2008 to aid exporters. Inflows of speculative capital from investors betting on yuan gains may have driven the latest increase in reserve requirements, according to Lu Zhengwei , a Shanghai- based economist at Industrial Bank Co. — Sophie Leung , Paul Panckhurst. Editors: Paul Panckhurst , Michael Heath. To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Sophie Leung in Hong Kong at +852-2977-6126 or sleung59@bloomberg.net

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Payrolls in U.S. Probably Increased in April for Third Time in Four Months

May 1, 2010

By Timothy R. Homan May 2 (Bloomberg) — Employers in the U.S. probably added jobs in April for the third time in four months, pointing to a recovery that is both broadening and gaining momentum, economists said before a government report this week. Payrolls rose by 200,000, the most in three years, after increasing by 162,000 in March, according to the median forecast of 60 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News before the Labor Department’s May 7 report. Other figures may show consumer spending, home sales and manufacturing grew. Companies from Caterpillar Inc. to General Electric Co. are hiring as Americans spend more and businesses update equipment. Sustained job growth is required to propel consumer spending, which accounts for about 70 percent of the economy. “It’s really all about jobs,” said Omair Sharif, an economist at RBS Securities in Stamford, Connecticut. “Consumption has come back more robustly than most people had anticipated, including employers.” The April payroll figures may receive a boost from the hiring of temporary government workers to conduct the 2010 census, economists such as Sharif said. Even so, gains are projected in others areas like manufacturing. The Labor Department report will probably show the unemployment rate was 9.7 percent for a fourth straight month, according to the survey median. The jobless rate has not increased since October, when it reached a 26-year high of 10.1 percent. The economy lost 8.4 million jobs since the recession began in December 2007, the most of any downturn in the postwar era. Fed’s View Federal Reserve officials last week restated their intention to keep the benchmark interest rate near zero for an “extended period” and said the job market is strengthening. “The labor market is beginning to improve,” policy makers said in an April 28 statement. “Growth in household spending has picked up recently but remains constrained by high unemployment, modest income growth, lower housing wealth, and tight credit .” The Labor Department’s employment report may also show a 15,000 gain in factory payrolls , according to the median estimate. Hiring is picking up as companies ramp up orders. Manufacturing probably expanded in April at the fastest pace in more than five years, economists said before a May 3 report from the Institute for Supply Management. The Tempe, Arizona-based group’s factory index increased to 60, the highest level since June 2004, from 59.6, the survey showed. Index readings greater than 50 signal expansion. Broadening Expansion Service industries probably expanded in April at the fastest pace in four years, economists said before a separate report from the Institute for Supply Management on May 5. The index of non-manufacturing businesses, which account for almost 90 percent of the economy, rose to 56 from 55.4 the prior month, the survey showed. The U.S. economy grew in the first quarter at a 3.2 percent annual rate, led by consumer spending and business investment, figures from the Commerce Department last week showed. Household spending climbed at a 3.6 percent pace, the most in three years, compared with a 1.6 percent increase the previous three months. Optimism that the economy will keep growing has helped lift stocks. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index has climbed 6.4 percent this year. Americans probably increased spending in March for a sixth straight month, a report tomorrow from the Commerce Department may show tomorrow. Purchases climbed 0.6 percent after a 0.3 percent gain the previous month, and incomes likely rose 0.3 percent after no change in February, the survey showed. Caterpillar Hiring Caterpillar, the world’s largest maker of construction equipment, had its first earnings increase in seven quarters as demand rose, and said it will bring back at least 9,000 jobs this year of the 19,000 it cut globally in 2009. The Peoria, Illinois-based company has added about 1,500 workers since year- end because of higher production, including 600 in the U.S. The housing market, a weak spot for the economy in recent years, is showing signs of life, helped in part by government incentives. The number of Americans in March signing contracts to purchase previously owned homes probably rose 4 percent, economists said ahead of a May 4 report from the National Association of Realtors. Buyers may be aiming to take advantage of a tax credit that requires a contract be signed by the end of April, when the program expired. The index of purchase agreements, or pending home sales, rose 8.2 percent in February, the second-biggest gain on record and the largest since October 2001, according to the Washington-based Realtors group. To contact the reporter on this story: Timothy R. Homan in Washington at thoman1@bloomberg.net

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Consumer Sentiment Index for U.S. Drops to 72.2 After 73.6 March Reading

April 30, 2010

By Bob Willis April 30 (Bloomberg) — Confidence among U.S. consumers declined in April from the previous month, according to a Reuters/University of Michigan report. The final index of consumer sentiment dropped to 72.2, higher than forecast, from a reading of 73.6 in March. The gauge was projected to fall to 71 from a month earlier, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey of 66 economists. The figure stands in contrast to a Conference Board survey that showed Americans’ sentiment in April increased to the highest level since September 2008 as respondents anticipated greater job availability. Americans’ spending , which accounts for about 70 percent of the economy, rose in the first quarter at the fastest pace in three years, the Commerce Department said today. “Consumer confidence is recovering very, very gradually,” Julia Coronado , a senior U.S. economist at BNP Paribas in New York, said before the report. “There is a lot of bouncing around, but we are on an upward trend. Consumers are starting to feel a little more optimistic and we’re seeing that the spending backdrop is a little better.” Business activity in the U.S. expanded in April at the fastest pace in five years, indicating the manufacturing rebound accelerated entering the second quarter. The Institute for Supply Management-Chicago said today that its business barometer rose to 63.8, the highest level since April 2005, from 58.8 in March. Readings greater than 50 signal expansion. Stocks fell on concern over the federal investigation of Goldman Sachs Group Inc. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index dropped 0.7 percent to 1,198.13 at 10:17 a.m. in New York. Estimates for the Reuters/University of Michigan measure in April ranged from 68 to 75 after a preliminary reading of 69.5, according to the Bloomberg survey. Current Conditions The gauge of current conditions , which reflects Americans’ perceptions of their financial situation and whether it is a good time to buy big-ticket items like cars, fell to 81 from 82.4 the prior month. The index of consumer expectations for six months from now, which more closely projects the direction of consumer spending, dropped to 66.5 from 67.9. Consumers in the survey said they expect an inflation rate of 2.9 percent over the next 12 months, compared with 2.7 percent in the March report. Inflation Expectations Over the next five years, the figures tracked by Federal Reserve policy makers, Americans expected a 2.7 percent rate of inflation, the same as the prior month. Household purchases increased at a better-than-forecast 3.6 percent annual rate in the first quarter, the Commerce Department said earlier today in its initial estimate of gross domestic product. The economy expanded at a 3.2 percent pace from January through March after growing 5.6 percent in the final three months of 2009. Sales at U.S. retailers climbed 1.6 percent in March, the most in four months, the Commerce Department reported April 14, as companies from Target Corp . to Saks Inc benefited from a pickup in hiring, an early Easter and better weather. “What we see here is when things improve, that discretionary spending is coming back,” American Express Co.’s Chief Financial Officer Daniel Henry said this week in a conference call, referring to the credit-card company’s high-end client base. U.S. billings at American Express climbed 11 percent in the first quarter from a year earlier. The hotel and travel industries are also recovering. Wyndham Worldwide Corp., the franchiser of Days Inn hotels and Super 8 motels, this week said first-quarter profit rose 11 percent as revenue from its vacation rental business increased. Federal Reserve policy makers this week said in their statement after leaving the benchmark interest rate near zero that “economic activity has continued to strengthen.” While the labor market was improving and consumer purchases picking up, spending is constrained in part by high unemployment, the central bankers said. To contact the reporter on this story: Bob Willis in Washington at bwillis@bloomberg.net

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South Korea’s Growth Accelerates to Faster-Than-Estimated 1.8% on Exports

April 26, 2010

By Eunkyung Seo April 27 (Bloomberg) — South Korea’s economic growth accelerated more than estimated in the three months through March as the global recovery spurred demand for the nation’s electronics products and consumer spending advanced. Gross domestic product increased 1.8 percent in the first quarter from the previous three months, when it rose 0.2 percent, the central bank said in Seoul today. That was more than 1.5 percent median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey of 12 economists. From a year earlier, GDP gained 7.8 percent. Exports surged this year, driving stocks and the won higher as Hyundai Motor Co. increased sales in the U.S. and China and Samsung Electronics Co. posted a seven-fold increase in profit. The central bank forecasts the economy will expand at the fastest pace since 2006 and Moody’s Investors Service raised the nation’s credit ratings one step to A1 on April 14. “The economy has regained its fast recovery pace and the second quarter will also be good,” said June Park , an economist at Woori Investment & Securities Co. in Seoul. “Upbeat growth may add pressure for an early rate increase, but the central bank will likely stay pat until the second half as domestic demand is not robust enough.” The central bank has held the benchmark interest rate at record-low 2 percent for 14 straight months after slashing it by 3.25 percentage points between October 2008 and February 2009 to cushion the economy from the global economic slump. Monetary Policy Even after the revised economic outlook and ratings upgrade, Bank of Korea Governor Kim Choong Soo has been reluctant to push for a tightening of monetary policy in the face of a government that has publicly opposed increasing borrowing costs. The government says it’s “too early” to implement an exit strategy to policy steps taken during the global financial crisis. It sent a vice finance minister to attend the Bank of Korea’s monthly meeting since January, breaking a practice of more than 10 years of excluding political representatives. President Lee Myung Bak’s administration boosted this year’s budget by 3 percent to 292.8 trillion won ($256 billion) and has said it will accelerate distribution of funds as it seeks to maintain the recovery. Investors betting on the economy strengthening have driven the benchmark Kospi stock index up 4.1 percent this year and the won 4.8 percent higher against the dollar over the same period. Increased Shipments Goods exports rose 3.4 percent in the first quarter compared with the previous three months, when they declined 1.5 percent, today’s report showed. Private consumption increased 0.6 percent from the fourth quarter and government spending jumped 5.7 percent. “The economy is doing better than expected,” Song Jae Hyuk, an economist at SK Securities in Seoul, said before the release. “Exports are strong on the global economic recovery and private consumption is improving on low borrowing costs and better job market conditions.” The government forecasts overseas shipments will rise 13 percent this year to $410 billion. Growth in China, South Korea’s biggest export market, accelerated to the fastest pace in almost three years in the first quarter, with GDP expanding 11.9 percent from a year earlier. Samsung Electronics Co. , Asia’s largest maker of semiconductors, flat screens and mobile phones, reported its first-quarter profit increased sevenfold from a year ago on demand for personal computers and televisions. To contact the reporters on this story: Eunkyung Seo in Seoul at eseo3@bloomberg.net

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Video: Housing Starts, Permits Rise as U.S. Builders Rebound: Video

April 16, 2010

April 16 (Bloomberg) — Builders broke ground on more U.S. homes in March than anticipated and took out permits at the fastest pace in more than a year, a sign of growing confidence that sales will stabilize. Housing starts climbed to an annual rate of 626,000 last month, up 1.6 percent from February’s revised 616,000 pace that was higher than initially estimated, Commerce Department figures showed today. Bloomberg’s Michael McKee reports.(Source: Bloomberg)

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CPI Inches Down But Remain the Fastest Since December 2008 While Trade Balance Improves

April 16, 2010

CPI Inches Down But Remain the Fastest Since December 2008 While Trade Balance Improves

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CPI Inches Down But Remain the Fastest Since December 2008 While Trade Balance Improves

April 16, 2010

CPI Inches Down But Remain the Fastest Since December 2008 While Trade Balance Improves

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Bernanke Says U.S. Recovery to Stay Moderate Amid `Significant Restraints’

April 14, 2010

By Craig Torres April 14 (Bloomberg) — Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said the U.S. expansion will remain moderate as the economy contends with weak construction spending and high unemployment. “On balance, the incoming data suggest that growth in private final demand will be sufficient to promote a moderate economic recovery in coming quarters,” Bernanke said in testimony to Congress today. “Significant restraints on the pace of the recovery remain, including weakness in both residential and nonresidential construction and the poor fiscal condition of many state and local governments.” U.S. central bankers are debating how and when to pull back on record monetary stimulus as the economy recovers from the worst slump since the Great Depression. The Fed chairman’s remarks didn’t include a discussion of the path of interest rates , and his outlook doesn’t suggest officials are ready to alter their guidance that rates will remain low “for an extended period,” a phrase repeated in their March statement. The 56-year-old Fed chairman said “further economic expansion will depend on continued growth in private final demand,” now that inventories are better aligned with sales and as fiscal stimulus is set to taper off. “Consumer spending should be aided by a gradual pickup in jobs and earnings, the recovery in household wealth from recent lows, and some improvement in credit availability,” the 56- year-old Fed chairman said today in remarks prepared for testimony to the Joint Economic Committee of Congress. Even so, “a significant amount of time will be required to restore the 8-1/2 million jobs that were lost during the past two years.” Main Rate Policy makers have held the main lending rate at zero to 0.25 percent since December 2008. Fed officials next meet April 27-28. The economy is in its fourth consecutive quarter of expansion, according to economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. Fed officials in January forecast growth of 2.8 percent to 3.5 percent in 2010, about in line with the 3 percent consensus among economists surveyed by Blue Chip Economic Indicators. Sales at U.S. retailers climbed in March more than anticipated, signaling consumers will play a bigger role in a broadening economic recovery. Purchases increased 1.6 percent last month, the most in four months, a Commerce Department report showed today. Stocks rose on the retail sales figures and better-than- forecast corporate earnings. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index climbed 0.3 percent to 1,201.14 at 10:27 a.m. in New York. Manufacturing grew at the fastest pace in more than five years in March, and service industries expanded at the fastest pace since May 2006, according to indexes tracked by the Institute of Supply Management. Payrolls Grow Employers increased payrolls by 162,000 workers last month, the third gain in the last five months and the biggest since March 2007, signaling companies are becoming more confident the economy is healing, Labor Department figures showed April 2. The jobless rate was 9.7 percent in March for a third month. JPMorgan Chase & Co., the second-biggest U.S. bank by assets, beat analysts’ estimates as first-quarter earnings rose 55 percent on record fixed-income trading revenue and a reduction in provisions for credit losses. Net income climbed to $3.33 billion from $2.14 billion in the same period a year earlier, the New York-based bank said today in a statement. The Fed chairman noted that bank credit to households and businesses is still falling. “The decline in large part reflects sluggish loan demand and the fact that many potential borrowers no longer qualify for credit, both results of a weak economy,” Bernanke said. Consumer Prices The consumer price index slowed to a 1.1 percent annual rate in March versus 1.3 percent in February, Labor Department figures showed today. Other price indexes are also decelerating. The personal consumption expenditures price index, minus food and energy, slowed to a 1.3 percent annual rate in February from a 1.5 percent rate the prior month. Wal-Mart Stores Inc., the world’s largest retailer, has reduced prices on more than 10,000 items after sales at U.S. stores dropped last quarter. The company plans to cut more prices in the coming weeks and months, Linda Blakley , a company spokeswoman, said April 9. The Fed chairman noted the “subdued” rate of increase in consumer prices and said “moderation in inflation has been broadly based.” Bernanke reiterated his call for lawmakers to set a path of reducing the record federal budget deficit. “A credible plan for fiscal sustainability could yield substantial near-term benefits in terms of lower long-term interest rates and increased consumer and business confidence,” he said. “Addressing the country’s fiscal problems will require difficult choices, but postponing them will only make them more difficult.” Record Deficits The Obama administration estimates budget deficits will total $5.1 trillion over five years and hit a record $1.6 trillion in the year ending Sept. 30. The $1.4 trillion deficit in 2009 was equal to 9.9 percent of gross domestic product, the largest share since the end of the World War II. Households are borrowing less and paying down debt even as the government borrows more. Consumer credit in February fell $11.5 billion, the 12th drop in 13 months. To contact the reporter on this story: Craig Torres in Washington at ctorres3@bloomberg.net .

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Singapore Unexpectedly Revalues Currency on Growth

April 14, 2010

By Patricia Lui April 14 (Bloomberg) — Singapore unexpectedly revalued its currency, triggering the biggest gain in a year, after the government raised forecasts for economic growth and inflation. The Monetary Authority of Singapore said it will seek a “modest and gradual appreciation” in the local dollar and shift to a stronger range for currency fluctuations, the first such combined move in its 39-year history. The trade ministry said the $182 billion economy will expand as much as 9 percent in 2010, compared with a previous outlook of 6.5 percent, after the fastest growth since at least 1975 in the first quarter. Currencies across Asia rallied as investors bet governments will switch to fighting inflation from stimulating growth, after oil, copper and aluminum prices jumped more than 60 percent in the past year. The decision adds to signs that China, which will probably report its quickest expansion in three years tomorrow, is preparing to end the yuan’s 21-month-old peg to the dollar. “Singapore’s move might reflect policy makers’ belief that China is possibly close to moving on the yuan,” said Brian Jackson , an emerging-markets strategist at Royal Bank of Canada in Hong Kong. “It’s part of the broader trend across Asia that policy makers are moving toward a tighter stance as inflation is driven by stronger commodities prices.” Withdraw Stimulus Singapore’s dollar rose as much as 1.2 percent to S$1.3754 against the greenback, the strongest level since August 2008, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. It last traded at S$1.3763 as of 2:20 p.m. local time from S$1.3923 late in New York yesterday. The central bank for the nation of 4.8 million people guides the local dollar within an undisclosed band against a basket of currencies. It has climbed 2 percent this year, compared with a gain of 7 percent in the ringgit, 4.6 percent in India’s rupee and 4.2 percent for Indonesia’s rupiah. MAS, which uses the exchange rate rather than interest rates to conduct monetary policy, joins regional central banks in withdrawing monetary stimulus this year. China has twice ordered banks to raise the share of their assets held in reserve. India increased interest rates last month for the first time in almost two years. Australia’s central bank has boosted borrowing costs in five out of the past six meetings. “This opens up the rest of Asia to allow further appreciation of their currencies, with the Korean won, Malaysian ringgit, Indian rupee and Taiwan dollar to lead the charge,” said Bernard Yeung , Hong Kong-based head of currency trading for Asia at National Australia Bank Ltd. MAS Statement The MAS will “re-center the exchange-rate policy band at the prevailing level of the Singapore nominal effective exchange rate” and “shift the policy band from that of zero appreciation to one of modest and gradual appreciation,” according to a statement issued today following a semi-annual currency review. There will be no change to the width of the band. “Some of the double-barrel tightening may have been to pre-empt a renminbi appreciation,” Tim Condon , chief Asia economist in Singapore at ING Groep NV, the biggest Dutch financial-services company, wrote in a research report, referring to a denomination of the yuan. ING recently revised its target for the Singapore dollar to appreciate to S$1.35 in three months on the basis a yuan revaluation would trigger a one-off appreciation of near 3 percent in the Southeast Asian nation’s dollar. Royal Bank of Canada stuck with a prediction for the currency to advance to S$1.36 by year-end. ‘Hawkish Stance’ Penn Nee Chow , an economist at United Overseas Bank Ltd., Singapore’s second-largest lender by market value, was the only one of 13 economists who predicted today’s central bank move in a Bloomberg News survey. Five forecast the MAS would tighten by seeking a gradual appreciation in the currency over six months, while the rest expected no change. “It was a quite hawkish stance from the MAS,” said Chow. “According to our model, it looks to be a 0.6 percent appreciation of the Singapore dollar’s trade-weighted index.” Singapore’s economy expanded an annualized 32.1 percent in the first quarter from the previous three months, after shrinking 2.8 percent in the October-to-December period, the trade ministry said today in its preliminary estimate. That was faster than the 18.4 percent median estimate of economists in a separate Bloomberg survey. “We’ve just seen the realization that Singapore is a great place to do business,” said Donald Gimbel , senior managing director at New York-based Carret Asset Management LLC, in an interview with Bloomberg Television. “We will gradually be adding to our position” in Singapore stocks, favoring companies that are doing a lot of business in China, he said. ‘Behind the Curve’ Economists surveyed by Bloomberg estimated gross domestic product in China, the world’s fastest-growing major economy, increased 11.7 percent in the first quarter from a year earlier, compared with growth of 10.7 percent in the prior three months. That would be the fastest pace since the period ended June 2007. The benchmark Straits Times Index advanced to a 22-month high, up as much as 1.1 percent to 3,004.45. DBS Group Holdings Ltd ., Southeast Asia’s biggest lender, climbed as much as 4.2 percent. Neptune Orient Lines Ltd ., owner of Southeast Asia’s largest container line, surged as much as 7.7 percent. The government revised its inflation target for this year to between 2.5 percent and 3.5 percent, compared with an earlier projection of 2 percent to 3 percent. Consumer prices rose 1 percent in February from a year earlier, the fastest pace since March 2009, official data show. “Singapore’s GDP release represents the start of a series of strong Asian first-quarter numbers which will emphasize that central banks across the region have fallen significantly behind the curve,” said Robert Prior-Wandesforde , an economist at HSBC Holdings Plc in Singapore. With assistance by Lilian Karunungan , Haslinda Amin and Anna Kitanaka in Singapore, and Frances Yoon in Hong Kong. Editor: Simon Harvey , Sandy Hendry To contact the reporter on this story: Patricia Lui in Singapore at plui4@bloomberg.net

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