indonesia

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(MENAFN) Indonesia’s statistic bureau BPS said that during 2011, Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita jumped 17.7 percent to USD3,542, compared with USD3,010 in 2010, reported Xinhua News. The …

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Indonesia’s 2011 GDP per capita up 17.7%

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(MENAFN) Indonesia’s central bank governor, Darmin Nasution, said that the country’s inflation might slow to 3.5 percent in the current month, from 3.79 percent in December, reported Xinhua …

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Indonesia’s Jan inflation likely to slow to 3.5%

Find our Weekly Commercial Real Estate, Private Equity and Fund Newsletters at www.WeeklyBrief.net

BP to increase investments in Indonesia by USD10b

May 30, 2011

BP to increase investments in Indonesia by USD10b

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Asian Activities Report for May 20, 2011: Indo Mines Limited (ASX:IDO) To Target 35,000 Tonnes Monthly Production At Mangkok Coal Project In Indonesia

May 20, 2011

Asian Activities Report for May 20, 2011: Indo Mines Limited (ASX:IDO) To Target 35,000 Tonnes Monthly Production At Mangkok Coal Project In Indonesia

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Indonesia-ICD, Indonesia Eximbank sign partnership deal

May 12, 2011

Indonesia-ICD, Indonesia Eximbank sign partnership deal

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Asian Activities Report for May 11, 2011: Adavale Resources (ASX:ADD) Sign Joint Venture For Coal Exploration And Mining In Indonesia

May 11, 2011

Asian Activities Report for May 11, 2011: Adavale Resources (ASX:ADD) Sign Joint Venture For Coal Exploration And Mining In Indonesia

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Courtyard By Marriott Chooses Bali, Indonesia to Open 900th Hotel in the World

April 23, 2011

Courtyard By Marriott Chooses Bali, Indonesia to Open 900th Hotel in the World

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GE to invest USD1.2b in Indonesia

April 13, 2011

GE to invest USD1.2b in Indonesia

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Australian Market Report of April 8, 2011: Kangaroo Resources (ASX:KRL) Announce 3.15 Billion Tonne Coal Resources In Indonesia

April 8, 2011

Australian Market Report of April 8, 2011: Kangaroo Resources (ASX:KRL) Announce 3.15 Billion Tonne Coal Resources In Indonesia

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Australian Market Report of March 4, 2011: Winchester Resources (ASX:WCR) Further Expand Belu Manganese Project In Indonesia

March 4, 2011

Australian Market Report of March 4, 2011: Winchester Resources (ASX:WCR) Further Expand Belu Manganese Project In Indonesia

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Sihayo Gold Limited (ASX:SIH) Drilling Recommences At Tambang Tinggi Gold Prospect, North Sumatra, Indonesia

February 15, 2011

Sihayo Gold Limited (ASX:SIH) Drilling Recommences At Tambang Tinggi Gold Prospect, North Sumatra, Indonesia

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Jeffrey Rubin: Food: What’s Really Behind the Unrest in Egypt

February 9, 2011

It’s more than coincidence the Arab world is convulsing with social unrest just as the United Nations Food and Agricultural Organization’s widely watched price index recently soared past the previous food price peak set in the summer of 2008. After all, didn’t those same prices ignite food riots throughout the world only three summers ago? When 40% of your population lives on less than $2 per day, soaring food prices isn’t about cutting back on luxury spending. This is particularly telling when record prices include basic grains such as wheat, of which Egypt is the world’s largest importer. Suddenly, it becomes a lot more difficult for the roughly 30 million Egyptians living on that $2 per day to stomach their three decade dictator, Hosni Mubarak. Similar popular indigestion, triggered initially around food prices, sent equally beloved Tunisian strongman, Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, packing all the way to exile in Saudi Arabia. And when food riots recently broke out in neighboring Algeria, not only did three-term president Abdelaziz Bouteflika suddenly see fit to lift a 19-year stage of emergency but, more important, he told his government to order a record 800,000 tonnes of wheat. Algeria is not the only country in the region to start bulking up on its food inventories as a hedge against future food protests that could easily morph into popular revolutions. Everyone in the region is doing it, including supposedly stable Saudi Arabia, which recently announced plans to double its wheat inventories. And it is not just Arab nations feeling the pinch. Food riots are sweeping across the developing world, encouraging similar hoarding elsewhere. Bangladesh and Indonesia placed record rice orders; the former doubling its order, while Jakarta quadrupled its rice purchases. And China may soon be joining the fray. Severe drought in the north is having a disastrous impact on the country’s winter wheat harvest. This has left the ground extremely dry for spring planting. If China, normally self-sufficient in wheat, becomes a significant importer this year, world grain prices could go a lot higher. If soaring food prices are the real culprit behind growing civil unrest sweeping through the developing world, governments reaction to the crisis is only bound to make the problem worse. You don’t need a PhD in economics to figure out what happens to prices when every government under the sun starts stockpiling food. What’s most disconcerting about today’s food prices (as it is with oil prices) is not so much their record level but how little time it has taken for basic resource prices to rebound from the post-war’s deepest global recession. At the very beginning of a new cycle, we are already seeing the same record food and energy prices that ended the last cycle. I wonder what that says about the sustainability of growth?

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Bank Indonesia increases interest rate

February 5, 2011

Bank Indonesia increases interest rate

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Video: Binder Discusses Impact of Egypt Unrest on South Asia

January 31, 2011

Jan. 31 (Bloomberg) — Jonathan Binder, chief investment officer at Consilium Investment Management, talks about the economic impact of the unrest in Egypt on Indonesia, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka. Binder speaks with Matt Miller and Carol Massar on Bloomberg Television’s “Street Smart.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Davos Consensus: We’re Out Of The Woods, But…

January 26, 2011

DAVOS, Switzerland — It has been the question of the day at every high-powered international gathering for two years: Are we out of the woods? The answer at this year’s World Economic Forum appears to be an optimistic “Yes, but…” The world may have stepped back from the particular brink of 2008, but it faces huge risks ranging from spiraling food and commodity prices to the danger of trade and currency wars, against a background of growing inequalities that threaten stability. So at the start of the annual conference at Davos on Wednesday, celebrity economist Nouriel Roubini raised a glass that was half-full – or was it half empty? – and declared it a metaphor for the global economy. Judging by the opening panel that Roubini shared with an international array of business leaders and economic thinkers, it is also a world that is struggling to come to terms with the historic transfer of wealth and influence away from the long-dominant West: Will countries collaborate? Can it work to everyone’s benefit or will living standards in the developed world collapse? Will the world run out of resources? The panel struggled with these themes. “There is a global economic recovery,” said Roubini, who gained renown for predicting the crisis of 2008 and a few months ago was still warning against the possibility of a “double dip recession.” He noted that “balance sheets are strong, confidence is rising,” credit spreads have fallen and liquidity – the availability of credit – has increased. But he warned that in the U.S. and Europe, growth remained low and unemployment high, and the U.S. faced a continued real estate crisis and inspired little faith in its ability to tackle its deficit and debt. In Europe, markets have forced an austerity that endangers growth. And in an allusion to China, Roubini said there was “not enough exchange rate adjustment” and warned this could lead to “currency wars and eventually trade wars and protectionism.” Advertising magnate Martin Sorrell said he was “surprised, very surprised” by how well business did in 2010, admitting he would not have predicted that the revenues of his firm – global communications empire WPP – would return to pre-crisis levels by the second quarter of last year. But he warned that corporations were so spooked by the crisis, and perhaps also by the current risks, that “there is an unwillingness in the West to invest in capacity and in increasing fixed costs” – such as new employees. So even though revenues in many cases are back to where they were, people have not been rehired – which explains unemployment but also the high profit margins that are buoying stock prices and balance sheets. One bright spot for the businessmen: whereas James Turley, chairman and CEO of Ernst & Young, said business felt “demonized over the last couple of years,” he said he was now identifying a change of tone from Washington that he attributed to a realization that “business needs to succeed in order for them to create jobs for people.” But the panelists all agreed that the global recovery was uneven: tepid in Western Europe, slow in the U.S. and fast in many of the emerging economies. Reflecting the global transition, panelists noted that the transfer of wealth was not just from west to east – but also to the south, with impressive gains in Latin America and Africa. Expanding on the previous shorthand acronym “BRIC” – how Goldman Sachs described the emerging global relevance of Brazil, Russia, India and China – the catch-phrase on Wednesday seemed to be the “Next 11″ – a clutch of other emerging nations ranging from Indonesia to Vietnam. It is in these emerging economies that one sees most of the interesting initial public offerings on stock markets, Turley said. And he noted that trade between emerging markets themselves – bypassing once-dominant trading partners in the West – was increasingly common. But the recovery is fueling demand that is causing fast gains in commodity prices – oil and metals, for example – and runaway food prices that are blamed for increasing social instability in some places and account in part for the recent revolution in Tunisia. For many countries, panelists noted, this raises the question is whether to raise interest rates to dampen consumption and bring down prices: that also drives up the currency – suppressing exports – and it can harm growth. Turley also noted that the world would soon face great demographic imbalances, creating some unexpected alliances: In 2020, he said, the average age in the U.S. and China will be 37-38; in Western Europe and Japan it will be 47-48; and in India and the Middle East it will be 27-28. “This will cause enormous impact and an array of policy issues,” he said. The panel identified inequality – in both developed and emerging economies – as a major problem that could feed social unrest, creating uncertainties that might stifle the recovery. Sorrell noted that wealthy people are more likely to invest their spare cash in financial assets “that causes asset bubbles” whereas when the wealth is more evenly spread the chances of growth-stimulating – and therefore wealth-spreading – consumption increases. “You attack it with increasing marginal income rates” which is rarely a popular policy, Sorrell said. Azim Premji, chairman of Wipro, a global information technology firm, said inequalities were increasingly visible in his country of India and elsewhere in the developing world, where rapid advances were not spread equally. Zhu Min, a former deputy governor of the People’s Bank of China, said the billions of people in the developing world wanted to have the same things the developed world has: “An American life, a big car, pension… But it won’t work because we don’t have the resources.” Would these aspiring billions really agree to make do with less? In a way, but not exactly, Zhu Min told The Associated Press: “We don’t want to adopt the Western model. It won’t work. It will be necessary to come up with a new model.” ___ Online: http://www.weforum.org

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India, Indonesia to double bilateral trade

January 25, 2011

India, Indonesia to double bilateral trade

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Australian Market Report of January 12, 2011: Arc Exploration (ASX:ARX) Reports High Grade Gold Veins in Indonesia

January 12, 2011

Australian Market Report of January 12, 2011: Arc Exploration (ASX:ARX) Reports High Grade Gold Veins in Indonesia

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Garuda Indonesia eyes IPO in debt restructuring plan

December 19, 2010

Garuda Indonesia eyes IPO in debt restructuring plan

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WB lowers Indonesia’s 2010 growth forecast

December 16, 2010

WB lowers Indonesia’s 2010 growth forecast

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Nestle to build $100m plant in Indonesia

December 10, 2010

Nestle to build $100m plant in Indonesia

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Video: Cohen Says Obama Trip Displays Concern About U.S. Jobs

November 9, 2010

Nov. 9 (Bloomberg) — William Cohen, chief executive officer of the Cohen Group and a former U.S. defense secretary, talks about Obama’s trip to India, Indonesia and South Korea. He speaks with Margaret Brennan on Bloomberg Television’s “InBusiness.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Indonesia’s housing market remains weak

October 27, 2010

High mortgage rates and foreign ownership restriction have hampered the growth of Indonesia’s housing market.

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Rio Tinto to build ferronickel factory in Indonesia

October 20, 2010

Rio Tinto to build ferronickel factory in Indonesia

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Dan Dorfman: The Return of ‘Graveyard George’

October 13, 2010

When I was 10 or 11, I went to my first sleep-away camp in upstate New York. One of the more intriguing characters there was a counselor, “Graveyard George,” who was so nicknamed because of all the scary stories he would rattle off to campers prior to bedtime. Graveyards were frequently included in his tales of horror. I thought of George the other day after wrapping up about a 40-minute chat with Jason Huntley, the chief investment officer of Advisor Shares’ Mars Hill Global Relative Value in Colorado Springs, Col., the first actively managed exchange-traded long and short fund (symbol: GRV) listed on the New York Stock Exchange. Huntley, bright, brainy, amiable and a wine lover to boot, is just the kind of guy I enjoy gabbing with, but he’s also a scary fella. Pointing to a fair number of ticking time bombs, he basically argues that too many investors are at risk of being swallowed up by economic and financial quicksand. Employing a hedge-fund strategy — that is, betting certain investments will go up, while others will go down — Mars Hill Global looks to be fully hedged on a dollar basis. At maximum, it can be 50% short or 50% long. Currently, the ETF’s portfolio is exhibiting a decidedly bearish stance with a 25% net short position that Huntley says he would like to enlarge to maybe 50%. Huntley, 38, who has been in the money management game since 1994 and opened Mars Hill Global (assets: $45 million) in July, is not one of those end-of-the-world guys screaming fire to grab headlines with dire predictions of a depression or a massive drop in the Dow to 1,000. While most professionals believe the market is headed higher, Huntley strongly disagrees. Rather, he’s convinced the pieces are in place for continued deterioration of both the economy and the stock market, and he offers some persuasive reasons to document his case. Among the factors that lead him to take a negative posture are excessive leverage, structural unemployment, mounting housing problems and the refusal of banks to lend because they see accelerated writedowns of poor housing loans. Likewise, slower growth out of Europe and the risk that U.S. and European financial and economic problems could blunt a global recovery. The clear and present danger here, as Huntley sees it, is that financial risks are growing. Yet, he notes, investors are pressing the pedal on risk, having bid up stock prices about 10% to 12% since Sept. 1. Ridiculing this rise, Huntley describes it as “a heightened level of complacency that’s downright dangerous.” Why so? Because, he says, Wall Street is too exuberant in its expectations of economic growth, which, means that earnings expectations are also excessive. Over the past 18 months, he points out, companies have squeezed out a lot of profit margins, primarily at the expense of reduced jobs. But you can’t keep squeezing and squeezing forever, he says. Add to this, he observes, are no underlying demand or underlying growth, signs of inflation from rising food, energy and health care prices, the unwillingness of the consumer to spend on a discretionary basis, deteriorating macroeconomic fundamentals and the fact the housing and job markets stink. To Huntley, it means “at some point in 2011, we’ll see a double-dip recession and GDP will turn negative.” Or, in simple language, things will get worse before they get better. What about the Christmas shopping season? Huntley, who also owns a stake in a winery in Walla, Walla, Wa., isn’t saying Santa will be a no-show, but he does expect him to be pretty frugal, noting “this is not a jovial environment for busy holiday spending.” Translating all of this into the performance of the stock market, our grizzly figures global equities are vulnerable to about a 10% to 15% decline between now and year end, with the U.S. and Europe especially vulnerable. Or, he says, if the Bush tax cuts are not extended, we could see a very fast 10% to 15% correction. Looking ahead to 2011, Huntley sees “a very difficult year” for the market, characterized by increased volatility, a further decoupling of emerging markets from the developed markets and very little in the way of expected returns. Apparently, he’s not alone in his fears, what with jittery investors having pulled out an estimated $20 billion worth of domestic stocks in September. On the political front, Huntley expects Obama to be a one-term president because, he says, he’s made too many mistakes and has failed to bring about the positive changes he promised. He also expects Republicans to capture the House in the impending midterm elections, which means, he says, very little will be done in the remaining days of Obama’s presidency in the way of fiscal stimulus and government spending. Mars Hill Global, by the way, doesn’t buy or short individual stocks, preferring instead to use ETFs to take investment actions. Its short positions are heavily focused on financials, notably through ETFs sporting the symbols IAI, KRF, XLF and EUFN, a European financial ETF. Huntley is especially bearish on Citigroup, describing the banking biggie as “a house of cards that will eventually collapse.” Adds our Citigroup bear: “The stock is being artificially propped by the government and questionable accounting rules and I wouldn’t touch it.” The ETF’s long positions center primarily on Russia and China and such small Asian countries as Malaysia, Indonesia and Thailand. So there you have it — the “graveyard George” of the investment arena. What makes it so scary is that if Huntley’s right, we could all soon get an unhappy insight of what financial graveyards are all about. What do you think? E-mail at Dandordan@aol.com

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Jonathan Lewis: How to Make Everything From Nothing

October 11, 2010

Five years ago, MicroCredit Enterprises was born. Simple in conception, difficult to birth, and now wonderfully successful at reducing poverty for some of the poorest people in the world. Without a dime of donations, lifting a finger or leaving home, high net worth individuals, small family foundations and companies in the United States are at this very minute financing 112,000 small businesses, providing 560,000 people with basic food security. In countries like Indonesia, Peru, Mozambique, Tajikistan, Cambodia, and Ecuador — 15 poor nations in all, located on 4 different continents — local entrepreneurs are bootstrapping themselves to a better life. “Some say nothing can be done about poverty… [MicroCredit Enterprises is] reducing poverty for thousands of the most impoverished women around the globe, ensuring food security for their children and sustainable futures for their families — with a guarantee, not a check.” Here is how it works: A group of Americans voluntarily pool their good financial credit ratings to back small business loans for impoverished people, mostly women, in the developing world who then are able to feed their kids. Since the poor lack good credit and thus can’t get loans to start businesses, these Americans have stepped up. The incredible part, and it is truly amazing, is the poor women have a terrific repayment rate. They pay back 97% of the loans which beats commercial bank loans, housing mortgages, student college loans, just about every loan category that you can think of. As result, the local programs which MicroCredit Enterprises finances are very solid. Indeed, a default to MicroCredit Enterprises almost never happens. When it does, the guarantors cover the loss on an equal “fair share” basis with a tax-deducible contribution. In the words of MicroCredit Enterprises CEO Gary Ford, “Nothing down, no donation, no investment, simply signing a guarantee can make a world of difference.” MicroCredit Enterprises itself operates on a very modest expenditure budget — just 3% of total loan portfolio — and has been financially self-sustaining since its second year of operations. The trick? The organization employs a hybrid staffing model intermixing paid and unpaid professional executives, all of whom work in a virtual enterprise without the cost of rent or other unnecessary overhead. MicroCredit Enterprises borrows the majority of funds which it lends overseas from First Republic Bank which provides financing at commercial rates. Because the entire social finance model is available without copyright protection, any poverty organization can download the legal documents, the structure and all the other supporting materials needed to understand the model and put it to work in the service of a economic opportunity. Thanks to 46 Americans, who have taken “nothing” and made it into something, fewer less children and their moms are looking desperation in the face. As the MicroCredit Enterprises founder and board chair, please excuse my pride.

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Gordon Brown: Climate Change Action Is Economic Common Sense

October 10, 2010

Today, thousands of environmental campaigners will hold workshops on climate change, sponsored by the website Avaaz.org . There will be more than 6,000 events in 170 countries — a powerful human signal that, even after a year of disappointment, the climate change movement will not die — or fade away. It is powered by the most elemental of human instincts — our sense of responsibility to our children, and the threats we see to their future. And the fight has never been more urgent. The future is coming to meet us now: there are new climate change refugees and evacuees every day. This week I spoke to the past Nobel Prize winner Wangari Maathai about the terrible loss of livelihoods occurring through deforestation — and about our need to move forward reforestation initiatives in the Congo Basin, Amazon and Borneo. And last week I also spoke to Jens Stoltenberg, the Prime Minister of Norway, whose UN group is planning how we raise 100 billion dollars a year for post-2020 funding of adaptation and mitigation in the poorest countries. And now, in the autumn of 2010, in a world climbing back from the global financial crisis, climate change should be at the top of the agenda of every government for another reason: investment in low carbon technologies offers us a way out of a lost decade of slow growth and high unemployment. The case for climate change action is not just a moral crusade — it is an economic necessity. It can be a major component in the engine of growth — and massively reduce the world’s levels of unemployment. As I will argue in a forthcoming book, low carbon technologies, renewables and balanced energy polices — and their export potential — represent a new way of living that can help free Europe and America from today’s high unemployment and the specter of economic stagnation. Despite the disappointments of Copenhagen, China’s five year plan will this year give greater priority to low carbon development — not least the export of wind turbines. 2010 will also see the expansion of India’s solar mission; more evidence of Brazil’s climate change ambitions; and the results of Norway’s joint effort with Brazil, Indonesia and Guyana to finance forestation on a new pay-by-results basis. But the biggest driver of climate change action — and the biggest job creator of all — could be a European Union commitment to a low carbon energy super-grid as a mega pan-European initiative. The evidence is compelling. Carbon emissions came down 7 per cent in 2008. The EU is now on course to meet its minimum target for 2020 of a 2O per cent reduction in emissions (-17 per cent already). Today — with a huge surplus of carbon permits in the system, and a carbon price at just 15 Euros per ton — companies have more incentive to invest in a new generation of gas, coal and oil-fired generation power stations than in low carbon technologies. However, the European Climate Foundation’s “Roadmap 2050″ shows that with a bold set of policy decisions now, renewables, nuclear and carbon capture and storage could supply 40% more carbon free electricity by 2050. A low carbon European super-grid — an enhanced transmission network, connecting power sources to demand across and beyond the continent — is the most productive, ethical and practical way forward. The super grid is an asset that makes economic and environmental sense. And by investing an additional 1OO billion dollars a year to 2050, thousands of jobs and exports will follow. A carbon price of 20-30 Euros per ton of CO2 — on a par with the expected 2050 oil price — would make such a decarbonized power system no more expensive than a carbonized system — but much cleaner and more employment friendly. Green technologies can give Europe — and if they choose, America — economic advantage at home and export potential abroad. Those of us at the vanguard of climate change action have always understood that the environment is beyond price. Without a clean and sustainable world we will simply cease to be. But now we can add economic common sense to the argument for change — because growth and new jobs for today’s 2OO million unemployed global workers can come from environmental strategies based on low carbon technologies. The challenge of climate change is not just a moral issue for our time, but an opportunity to make the world’s economic future stronger and more secure.

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Robert E. Scott: Tide Turning on China Currency: Opponents Recycling Tired Arguments

September 23, 2010

Hearings held last week by the House Ways and Means and Senate Banking Committees marked a turning point in Congressional debate on China’s currency manipulation policies. There was widespread support for getting tough with China from members of both houses, and only token opposition from a few business witnesses. Fred Bergsten, head of the Peterson Institute for International Economics , came out in favor of a limited form of the Ryan-Murphy currency bill (HR 2378), which would allow the Commerce Department to treat currency manipulation as a subsidy in some countervailing duty investigations. He also called on the Treasury to name China a currency manipulator, and for the United States to mobilize allies in the G-20 to file a complaint against China at the WTO, requesting authority to impose restrictions on Chinese imports unless its currency rises significantly. Yesterday, Ways and Means Committee Chair Sandy Levin announced that the committee will meet on Friday, September 23 to mark up a version of the Ryan-Murphy currency legislation. Levin noted that he had received a letter signed by 101 House members, including 30 Republicans, urging the Committee to consider and pass the Ryan-Murphy bill. Meanwhile, opponents of getting tough with China have been reduced to recycling widely discredited claims. In a recent posting on his blog, former Labor Secretary Robert Reich (who also helped found EPI and is currently a board member), claimed China might retaliate by selling off some of their $843 billion in Treasury bill holdings. We should be so lucky: the dollar would fall, making U.S. exports more competitive. And it would have no impact on U.S. interest rates (contrary to Reich’s assertions). As Paul Krugman has pointed out , “this fear is completely misplaced: in a world awash in excess savings, we don’t need China’s money – especially because the Federal Reserve could and should buy up any bonds the Chinese sell.” Some U.S. businesses could suffer in the unlikely event that the U.S. and China do enter into a trade war. Companies like Boeing that sell lots of aircraft to China and foreign investors in that country could be penalized. However, China’s imports from the United States exceed U.S. exports to China by more than four-to-one. Exports make up approximately one third of China’s GDP, while U.S. exports to China are less than 0.7% of U.S. GDP. Countries like China with large trade surpluses always have more to lose in a trade conflict. This also illustrates why it’s important to persuade other major governments such as the European Union (E.U.), Brazil and India to join us in threatening China with sanctions for its illegal currency manipulation. If the U.S. and E.U. both impose tariffs on Chinese imports, China would be unable to play Boeing off against Airbus. Reich also claims (as do many others) that revaluation would not create jobs in the U.S. because other lower wage countries would just take their place, and because other countries would rush in to compete in China and other markets. But this claim ignores many studies showing that if the dollar falls, relative to the yuan and other currencies, the U.S. trade balance will ultimately improve. The most recent study, by Bill Cline of the Peterson Institute, showed that for every 1 percentage point rise in China’s real effective exchange rate, its global current account surplus (the broadest measure of its trade balance) will fall by $17 to $25 billion. The corresponding improvement in the U.S. current account would be $2.2 to $6.3 billion. Thus, a 25% appreciation in the yuan would reduce China’s current account surplus by $425 to $580 billion, and reduce the U.S. trade deficit by $55 to $157.5 billion. Cline’s conservative estimates imply that only one-eighth to one-quarter of any reduction in China’s current account would be reflected as an improvement in the U.S. trade balance. Nonetheless his study shows the U.S. trade balance would improve significantly if Chinese currency manipulation were reduced or eliminated. Reich’s claim about substitutes from other low wage countries primarily relates to the effect of currency manipulation on U.S. imports. But currency manipulation also acts like a tax on U.S. exports. This reduces U.S. export to China and every country around the world where we compete with Chinese exports. According to data from the Federal Reserve China is our most important competitor in world export markets, more important even than the EU or Japan. Eliminating currency manipulation will stimulate U.S. exports to China and the rest of the world, creating new jobs in the United States, especially in manufacturing, which produces most traded goods. It is also important to remember that China is not the only country that manipulates its currency–other countries also need to revalue. Cline and Williamson (2010) have also identified Singapore, Taiwan, Malaysia and Indonesia as currency manipulators, and other countries such as Japan, Sweden and Switzerland need to revalue as well. A global currency realignment along these lines would result in further improvements in the U.S. trade balance. Reich also argues that China’s export policy doubles as a social policy that is needed to absorb the millions of workers flooding into the cities from the countryside, and that China risks riots and other upheaval if they don’t continue to manipulate their currency. This claim ignores the fact that revaluation would be good for China’s workers in several ways. It would raise real wages, allowing them to purchase more imports and enjoy the fruits of their labors. It would put downward pressure on Chinese inflation. It would also force China to invest more in infrastructure and the social safety net. This would create the domestically-oriented growth needed to sustain China’s development while providing its citizens with the public and social services (e.g., housing, transportation, safe water and waste disposal) that they need and deserve. It will also reduce pollution and China’s growing demand for energy and other materials needed to fuel its export engines. Finally, Reich argues that the U.S. needs twenty million jobs and ending currency manipulation by China and other countries alone will not solve that problem. Most analysts agree that eliminating Chinese currency manipulation alone will generate between 300,000 and 1 million U.S. jobs. However, there’s no reason to leave those jobs on the table while we search for bigger answers to the unemployment problem. In fact, eliminating the overall U.S. trade deficit could provide the foundation for rebuilding manufacturing and the U.S. economy and to generating massive employment growth. Eliminating the overall U.S. trade deficit, including most or all of our oil imports, could support three to six million new jobs , or more. But it won’t be cheap, and it will not happen overnight. We need massive new investments in clean energy technologies, infrastructure and R&D, to develop new clean energy industries and to rebuild U.S. infrastructure and manufacturing industries. We also need new tools for fighting unfair trade policies such as China’s illegal subsidies to its steel, glass, paper and clean energy industries. Taken as a whole, these strategies could eliminate U.S. trade deficits and generate most of the jobs needed to get unemployment down to five percent. But it won’t be cheap, or easy. Attacks from the right Proposals to punish China for currency manipulation have also been attacked from the right, most recently by Mark J. Perry of the American Enterprise Institute . Perry recently summarized a blog posting by Scott Grannis, former chief economist for a private investment management firm in California, and an acolyte of Arthur Laffer and other supply siders. Grannis begins by claiming that the yuan is not too weak because it has appreciated 23 percent since 1994, and because inflation has been low in China for some time. Neither of these statements says anything about the appropriate level of the yuan or renminbi (RMB–the official name of China’s currency). China maintains closed capital markets and does not allow its citizens to invest abroad. It maintains complete control of the domestic money supply, which is the primary determinate of domestic inflation. Regardless of what has happened to the value of the nominal value of the RMB since 1994, the fact is that China is egregiously violating every accepted standard of currency manipulation ( Scott and Bivens, 2006 ). It has maintained a large, bilateral trade surplus with the United States for more than a decade, both in dollar terms and as a share of its GDP. China has maintained large global current account surpluses (the broadest measure of all trade in goods, service and income flows). And it has massively intervened in currency markets. China has purchased $1 billion or more per day in foreign exchange reserves for many years. This is prima facie evidence of currency manipulation. They have acquired $2.5 trillion dollars in reserves , equal to 22 months of import purchases, and far in excess of ratios held by other countries named by the United States as currency manipulators in the past (Taiwan, South Korea, and China itself on two occasions in the early 1990s). Next, Grannis asks “if the yuan were chronically ‘too weak,’ what’s the problem anyway? …some manufacturers might go out of business but all consumers would benefit.” Perry goes on to claim that if China is forced to appreciate the yuan only a small group of American producers will benefit, but it will harm “all consumers and many businesses.” This is sadly confused logic. Unfair trade with China (and other countries) affects the United States in at least three ways–all must be considered to determine whether currency policy will help or hurt most or all Americans. First, it is critical to remember that consumers are workers, too, for the most part. If imports are cheaper but workers have less to spend because imports and offshoring have depressed their wages, then the ultimate impact of imports on consumers can be negative. And trade with low wage countries like China does affect wages. This is a well known result in trade theory, but one that rarely makes its way into introductory economics textbooks. Josh Bivens has shown that the rise of import competition from low-wage countries has depressed the wages of manufacturing production workers, and all other workers with similar skills by approximately $1,400 per year for the typical median wage earner. Most manufacturing production workers do not have college degrees, and the group of comparable workers in the economy is composed of all non-college educated production and non-supervisory workers. There are about 100 million such workers and they make up about 70% of the labor force. As shown in the Figure below, the real wages of production workers fell significantly between 1973 and 2009. The trend line in the figure shows the tendency of real wages to decline in this period. (Note: The uptick in production worker wages in 2009 was an anomaly due to the sharp fall in energy prices during the recession. Real Wages are falling in 2010 on a monthly basis, and will likely fall more in the future as long as unemployment remains well in excess of five percent. ) If import prices were falling fast enough to provide a net benefit to production workers, then their real wages would have increased in the past three decades. In fact, they have fallen, as shown in the figure. The bottom line is that globalization and especially unfair trade with China have eliminated millions of U.S. jobs, especially in the past decade, and have contributed to the prolonged decline in the real wages of working Americans. Ending currency manipulation will reduce the downward pressure of globalization on U.S. wages. The real beneficiaries of cheap goods from China are workers with college degrees, and especially professionals, managers, executives and stockholders. Those in the top 1 percent of all wage earners, who derive most of their incomes from profits, have benefited most of all from globalization. Between 1979 and 2007, before the start of the recession, this group captured 38.7 % of all the income growth in this period ( Mishel 2010 ). Nearly two-thirds (63.7%) of all income gains went to the top 10%, and an additional 11.5% went to the next 10% of all households. Thus, the bottom 80% of the labor force captured only 26.3% of all the gains in income over this three-decade period. The most important effect of globalization, and especially unfair competition with China, has been to redistribute income from working families to those at the very top of the income distribution. It was a battle between Main Street and Wall Street, and multinational corporations captured the lion’s share of the spoils in this fight. The most direct effect of unfair trade is that it causes trade deficits to rise. A new EPI report shows that rising trade deficits with China will cost one-half million U.S. jobs in 2010 alone. Since China entered the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2001, the United States has lost 5.5 million manufacturing jobs and more than 26,000 (net) manufacturing plants. China is responsible for at least 2.4 million of those lost jobs. These are concentrated loses, but the costs of unfair trade do not end there. The Ryan-Murphy currency legislation being considered by Congress is a first step in the fight against currency manipulation. If passed, it would send an important message to China and the administration that Congress will no longer tolerate illegal currency manipulation. However, the legislation would apply to only a small share of total U.S.-China trade–only products subject to countervailing duties might be penalized ( fewer than 60 products from China are now subject to antidumping or countervailing duties ). It would not necessarily impose duties in particular specific cases–it would merely authorize the Commerce Department to treat currency manipulation as an illegal export subsidy in countervailing duty Investigations. There is growing support for much more aggressive action against Chinese currency manipulation, such as a 25% across the board tariff. If the Ryan-Murphy bill is passed and China does not get the message, then it will soon be time to consider much broader restrictions on Chinese imports. EPI is a non-profit think tank that receives the majority of its funding from foundation grants but also receives support from U.S. labor unions and industrial associations.

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Robert Reich: Why Getting Tough With China Won’t Solve Our Jobs Problem

September 16, 2010

With unemployment in the stratosphere and the midterm elections weeks away, politicians naturally want to show voters they’re committed to getting jobs back. So now they’re getting tough on China. But it’s a dangerous ploy based on wishful thinking. Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner told the Senate Banking Committee Thursday the Administration is “examining the important question of what mix of tools, those available to the United States and multilateral approaches, might help encourage the Chinese authorities to move more quickly.” Translated: We’re on the verge of threatening them with trade sanctions. Even this didn’t satisfy the Senators. Charles Schumer (D-New York) charged that trade with China “diminishes America, our standard of living here in America, and America as a world power.” Richard Shelby (R-Ala) demanded to know why “the administration protecting China by refusing to designate it as a currency manipulator” — a designation that could lead to trade sanctions. On Wednesday the U.S. filed a pair of complaints against China with the World Trade Organization, alleging China was unfairly denying American companies access to its market. Meanwhile, several Democrats facing elections in November are introducing measures that would allow companies to pursue sanctions against China for manipulating its currency. It’s true China has kept the value of its currency artificially low relative to the dollar. If China allowed its currency to rise, Chinese exports would become more expensive to us and our exports would be relatively cheaper to them. This would help shrink the trade imbalance. It’s also true China has dragged its feet. In June, the U.S. stopped short of branding China a currency manipulator after China promised to reform its ways. But since then China’s currency has risen just 1 percent relative to the dollar. America’s trade imbalance with China is growing. In the first half of this year, China exported $119 billion more goods and services to us than we did to them — putting the two nations on course to exceed last year’s $227 billion trade gap. But it’s naive to assume all we have to do to get Chinese to do what we want is to threaten them with tariffs. First, they might retaliate. Remember, China is the biggest foreign investor in U.S. Treasury securities, with holdings of more than $843 billion. If China were to start selling off large amounts, America’s borrowing costs would soar — and we’d end up worse off. Second, it’s already costly to China to keep its currency artificially low — requiring that China buy loads of dollars. So why would anyone suppose that making it more expensive for them would bring China around? China has been willing to bear this huge cost because its export policy doubles as a social policy, designed to maintain order. Each year, tens of millions of poor Chinese stream into China’s large cities from the countryside in pursuit of better-paying work. If they don’t find it, China risks riots and other upheaval. Massive disorder is one of the greatest risks facing China’s governing elite. That elite would much rather create jobs than allow its currency to rise substantially and thereby risk job shortages at home. Third, even if China did allow its currency to rise against the dollar, there’s no reason to think this would automatically generate lots more American jobs. American exports would become cheaper to Chinese consumers. But Japan, Germany, and other major exporters would also demand a piece of the action. Unemployment is high in all developed nations, and every government is under pressure to create more jobs. Meanwhile, Chinese manufacturers — whose goods would suddenly become more expensive to American consumers — could simply shift their production to other nations with lower currencies. Indeed, as Chinese wages have begun to rise, Chinese manufacturers have already started to shift production to Vietnam, Indonesia, and other low-wage outposts of Southeast Asia. What worries me most about all this tough talk about China is it diverts attention from the real problem. American isn’t suffering high unemployment because we’re buying too much from China and not selling them enough. Trade with China is a small portion of the U.S. economy. Twenty million Americans lack jobs because American consumers — especially America’s vast middle class — can no longer spend what’s necessary to keep nearly everyone employed. After three decades of stagnant middle-class wages, during which almost all the economic gains have gone to the top, we’ve finally reached a day of reckoning. The middle class can no longer borrow vast sums by using their homes as ATMs. They can’t squeeze more working hours out of two wage earners. And they have to start saving for retirement. The central challenge we face isn’t to re-balance trade with China. It’s to re-balance the American economy so its benefits are more widely shared. This post originally appeared at RobertReich.org .

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Video: Barclays’s Sofat Says Indonesia to Raise Rates by 2011: Video

September 2, 2010

Sept. 3 (Bloomberg) — Prakriti Sofat, an economist at Barclays Capital in Singapore, talks about the outlook for Indonesia’s economy and central bank monetary policy.¶ Bank Indonesia may keep its benchmark interest rate at 6.5 percent when policy makers meet today, according to all but one of 17 economists surveyed by Bloomberg. Sofat, who also discusses Indonesia’s bond market, talks with Rishaad Salamat on Bloomberg Television. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Jonathan Tasini: A Worldwide Revolt Against Poverty Wages

August 19, 2010

Yesterday, I wrote about how the decline of U.S. wages has made workers here cheaper to hire than workers in India, at least in the call center industry. Today, the news hails from Asia where workers are rising up against poverty-level wages. From the Financial Times (and, as a side observation, the FT gives far better insight on a regular basis on these trends than anything you can read in the U.S. traditional press): Bangladeshi garment workers, who make clothes for western brands such as H&M, Gap and Marks & Spencer, greeted a recent 80 per cent pay rise by rampaging angrily through the capital Dhaka burning cars and looting shops. For the world’s lowest- paid garment workers, the increase in the minimum wage, effective from November, takes their pay from $23 to $43 (€33, £27.50) a month. It was their first pay rise for four years, a period of soaring food and fuel prices. However, the workers were enraged that Dhaka had not agreed to the $75 a month they had demanded. “This is not enough for the survival of workers and their families,” said Amirul Haque Amin, president of Bangladesh’s National Garment Workers’ Federation, which has about 23,000 members. “Living costs – including food, clothes, shelter and medical care – are going higher and higher.” ….Demands for better pay across Asia reflect improving job opportunities in economies that are growing faster than their western markets. …. In Cambodia, Phnom Penh recently raised the minimum wage by 21 per cent – from $50 a month to $61. That was below what the more activist of Cambodia’s 273 unions demanded, although a three-day, industry-wide strike did not materialise. Vietnam recorded 200 strikes last year by workers hit by inflation of 9 per cent. In April, for example, nearly 10,000 workers walked out of a Taiwan-owned shoe factory, demanding better pay. In Indonesia – where powerful trade unions with millions of members play a crucial role in negotiating with employers – minimum wages, set by regional authorities, have been increasing. In 2008, Jakarta raised the local minimum wage by 10 per cent to nearly $100 a month, although wages in the country’s remoter regions are half that. …. “There are no industrial relations,” says Mr Alam. “The whole attitude is arrogant and feudal. Owners and government think they are helping the workers. The workers are not treated like workers – they are treated like beggars. “[emphasis added] What is going on here? There is a thread that connects the anger coursing throughout the globe about the entire failed economic model foisted upon the world’s workers for decades. Here, people have had it with working hard for decades and seeing all that hard work–productivity has been rising for 30 years–turn into a steady stream of money into the pockets of CEOs and the richest one percent. Republicans and Democrats have supported a bankrupt economic system based on the “free market” and “free trade”, leveraged buyouts that obliterate middle-class jobs and a campaign finance system that greases a knee-jerk granting of tax cuts for business before making sure that regular people can form unions to act as a counter-weight to the rapacious nature of the market. And what of those jobs flowing abroad? Well, the FT article shows the reality: slave labor. No surprise. Those stories have been surfacing for years–yet, despite the growing poverty around the world, we still have a bi-partisan support (including from our president) for the very so-called “free trade” policies that have bred substandard wages. Where this leads is not easy to tell. It is easy to talk about worldwide solidarity–and a whole lot harder to make it happen, because of cultural and language differences, the massive physical distances between one slave-wage haven and another, the inability of the poorest to have enough resources to organize on a daily basis…a whole host of reasons. But, it is clear–the people have had it. They cannot, and should not, put up with the siphoning of the world’s wealth and resources into the hands of a few.

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Howard Steven Friedman: How Long Will China’s Economy Be the Second Largest?

August 16, 2010

Many probably saw the headline today stating that China’s economy is now the second largest in the world and may soon eclipse the United States’ economy. The growth in China’s economy has been tremendous, an engine that began taking off with the loosening of restrictions during the Deng Xiaoping era and has accelerated ever since. Some interpret the growth in China’s economy as a validation of its embracing capitalism but there is also a major factor of government planning involved. Yes, government planning and economic growth can go together in spite of many people’s mantra to the contrary (see Singapore for another example). While China’s manufacturing dominates much of the world’s consumer products, this will not likely last forever. Importers are looking to diversify their production since companies know they should never rely on a single supplier. Investments in Vietnam, Indonesia and other countries which have low wage costs will continue in the future. China will feel pressure externally from other countries producing competing products and will need to migrate up the value chain to drive higher margins while mitigating wage pressures. China is making huge investments in higher education to help them design and manufacture higher end products in the future but internal pressures will be significant. As more and more Chinese enjoy Western style lifestyles in Shanghai, Beijing, Hong Kong and other major cities, factory workers will be less likely to continue accepting low wages and long hours in monotonous toil. The days of motivating Chinese workers by encouraging support for the good of the party are long over. China has an astoundingly high level of inequality and this inequality will be one of the most critical issues that the Chinese government will need to address over the coming years in order to maintain strong growth. While many reading about China’s overall economy immediately think that China is a developed country, they need to remember that China has an enormous population with many living in poverty. There are hundreds of millions of rural Chinese living slightly above subsistence and factory workers struggling month to month while a small percent of the population enjoy what we, in the West, would term comfortable lives. As China’s economy continues to grow, it remains to be seen if the percent of people living these comfortable lives continues to grow or if the wealthy in China end up owning more and more of the country while the factory workers and rural poor continue to struggle. So what do I think of projections of when China will eclipse the United State’s economy? As I have stated in previous articles, economic projections 20 or 30 years out tend to be little more than guesswork. There is no question that if China and the United States both continue their current pace of economic growth, then China’s economy will be larger than that of the United States in the next few decades. Of course, there was a huge “if” in that sentence. Japan’s economy grew at a tremendous pace for much of the post World War II period, based on an export economy supported by an undervalued currency. Over time, other countries began competing with Japan for its export products and internal wage pressures developed. Not coincidentally, Japan’s economy has been relatively stagnant for about 2 decades. Calculating growth curves is easy on paper, growing an economy is much tougher. It is much easier for an economy to grow at 10% per year when an economy is smaller. Just as the life cycle of a company often has a rapid expansion phase until they become a large company and then the growth slows down, China will find that maintaining such a rapid growth rate will be a huge challenge, one that can’t be solved by simply dropping a different growth assumption into someone’s economic forecast.

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ADB, First Media team up to launch Indonesia’s 1st HD pay-TV service

August 10, 2010

ADB, First Media team up to launch Indonesia’s 1st HD pay-TV service

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Honda To Launch Electric Car, Plug-In Hybrid In 2012

July 20, 2010

“Honda has no future unless we achieve significant reduction in CO2 emissions,” he told reporters. “The next 10 years will be a true test for Honda’s survival.” Coming up with good cars quickly and at affordable prices is now crucial to score success in changing times, he said. He also said the world’s needs were shifting to small and green vehicles. Ito declined to give details of the vehicles, including the batteries – the key component – they would use, but said green technology was becoming increasingly important in the auto industry. Tokyo-based Honda, Japan’s No. 2 automaker, now makes the Insight and CR-Z hybrids but has not given concrete plans for a plug-in or EV previously. Under its new strategy, Honda will resume preparations for its Yorii plant in Saitama Prefecture near Tokyo to begin production in 2013 and focus on green models. Honda dropped a previous plan to build a new plant in Yokkaichi, Mie Prefecture, central Japan, it said. Ito denied Honda was ever disinterested in electric vehicles as was the impression among some analysts and media reports. Japanese rival Nissan Motor Co. has already begun taking orders for its Leaf electric car, which is set to arrive in Japan and the U.S. later this year. Toyota Motor Corp. is also planning an electric vehicle model for 2012. Mitsubishi Motors Corp. began selling its mass-produced electric vehicle, the iMiEV, earlier this year. The Japanese aren’t the only ones planning EVs, with American, Chinese and other global makers also developing electric vehicles. Toyota announced earlier this month it is working with U.S. electric vehicle upstart Tesla Motors Inc. to develop an electric version of Toyota’s RAV4 small crossover vehicle, with plans to begin selling it in the U.S. in 2012. Ito also said Honda, which also makes the Asimo walking childlike robot, will beef up its lineup of gasoline-electric hybrid models, while declining to give details. Within the next year, Honda will introduce several hybrid models, mainly small models, including the Fit hybrid set to go on sale later this year in Japan, he said. Honda has decided to focus on emerging markets such as India, China, Indonesia and Africa to boost growth while not being as aggressive as in the past on expanding Japan production, which will focus on advanced technology, said Ito. Emerging markets still hold potential for tremendous growth while the Japanese market has been stagnant for years and cannot hope to recover unless North American demand recuperates, Honda officials said.

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Fred Hochberg: Why Robert Reich Is Wrong

July 14, 2010

In a July 9 post, former Labor Secretary Robert Reich warns of a coming trade war and casts a pessimistic light on President Obama’s ability to meet the ambitious goals of the National Export Initiative. Secretary Reich argues that the rising global middle class will not rise quickly enough to compensate for a slowdown in U.S. consumption wrought by the recession. This, he warns, could cause a protectionist backlash by nations unwilling to import more of our goods if we are buying less of theirs. Reich’s argument contradicts the message I’ve heard from leaders of the world’s emerging economies who know that American innovation will help sustain their rapid infrastructure growth. According to data released yesterday by the Department of Commerce, U.S. exports of goods and services increased by 17.7 percent during the first five months of 2010, compared to the same period last year. If this trend continues, the President will meet his goal of doubling exports in five years. The key: targeting export markets strategically. At the Export-Import Bank, we’re focused on countries that have weathered the global recession and want to grow in areas where U.S. companies have a comparative advantage. Vietnam is building hundreds of miles of toll roads, and American companies make the world’s best intelligent transportation systems. Indonesia and Brazil want to upgrade their rail systems, and we make the best welding equipment and locomotives. Economies in the Mideast, North Africa and Latin America need medical equipment, and we make the best medical devices and health care IT products Commerce’s May data illustrate the potential of an export strategy tailored to countries and sectors that suit our strengths. Over the last year, American exports have increased by 43 percent in Indonesia, 38 percent in Colombia, 37 percent in Brazil, 32 percent in Mexico and 23 percent in India. In the current fiscal year, Ex-Im has authorized $17.4 billion in transactions to support American exporters. Our financing has supported an estimated 150,000 additional U.S. jobs over that span. This is already the second-largest year in our 76-year history–and it is only July. While flat U.S. consumer demand creates a unique set of challenges, America’s historic reliance on domestic markets puts us in a better position to boost our exports than most. Slightly more than 10 percent of our GDP is generated from exported goods and services. By contrast, exports represent nearly half of Germany’s GDP, 30 percent of Great Britain’s and 28 percent of China’s. Secretary Reich cites rising global unemployment as an impediment to U.S. export growth. Notably, though, employment has held steady in China, and the IMF predicts marginal gains by the end of 2011. Our trading relationship with Beijing is complicated, but growth opportunities for American exports exist and can be achieved through ongoing diplomacy and outreach. With a focused strategy, America should be bullish about our export future.

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Jim Keady: Nike Workers: "We Want to Fight, but We Don’t Know How."

June 28, 2010

I recently spent 11 days in Indonesia as part of my work with Team Sweat , an international campaign focused on securing living wages and union contracts for Nike’s overseas factory workers. One of the goals of my trip was to find the workers that made the World Cup replica jerseys that I bought at Niketown in NYC before I left for Indonesia. My team had been searching for a couple of weeks prior to my arrival for the plants where these jerseys were produced, but to no avail. Luckily, following our meeting with the Nike shoe factory workers the other night, one of the union leaders said that he had a contact for us at a plant that may have produced this stuff. On Thursday night, he arranged for me to meet with half a dozen workers from this Nike apparel factory. As I pulled the soccer jerseys from my bag –replicas from the U.S., Brazilian, Australian and English National Teams– and passed them around the room, I was struck by the care and attention that each worker gave to the shirts. When most people grab one of these jerseys, they hold it up to themselves, throw it on, and are off on their merry way. But these workers carefully inspected each piece, running their fingers along each seam and holding it the way that a sculptor might hold and admire a finished piece of art. These were not just soccer jerseys to them; this was their lifework, and the pride they took in what they do and create was evident. As things turned out, these particular jerseys were not produced at their factory, although they did produce replicas for Nike for the 2002 and 2006 World Cups and they are now producing similar Nike products. They shared that there may be a factory within their group that produced these and they would try and find out for me. As our conversation continued, the workers shared that (to no surprise), the number one issue for them was their wages. Their basic salaries ranged from Rp1.130.000 (125 USD) to Rp1.191.000 (132 USD). The differences in pay were because of the range of jobs that were held (sewing operator, machine tech, sample creators). They also shared a couple of other interesting things. One of the women told me that whenever Nike monitors are scheduled to visit the plant, workers are told by the managers to lie to the monitors and not to discuss anything that might be deemed negative about the plant. They also shared that their work days are very long, sometimes working from 7am-8:30pm. And when they do have to work long shifts like this, the factory is supposed to provide them with dinner – a meal of at least 1400 calories. The reality is that they get small portions of rice, vegetables, tempeh, and salty fish – not nearly close to the agreed upon standard. They told me that in the past, they used to get a meal allowance of Rp2.250 if they had to work overtime. I know from my research that Rp2.250 would buy you about a third of a portion of a modest meal at the local food stall. So, it seems that whether they are getting the cash or the food, they are being cheated. We came back to the discussion on wage levels and one of the men shared how tough it is to try and survive on the wages, especially given the fact that he has a daughter. I’m a relatively new parent myself (my daughter will be two in July) and so the issues that workers who are parents face have taken on new personal emotional meaning for me. I asked him about his daughter and I learned that she is three-and-a-half years old. When she was just three months old, she had to be sent to live with his mother-in-law in a village in central Java between Solo and Yogakarta. Because he makes such a low salary producing for Nike, he is only able to see his daughter two or three times a year. He fought back his pain as he shared this with me and my heart went out to him. I have only been away from my daughter for a few days and I miss her dearly. I cannot imagine only seeing her two or three times a year. I shared with him and his fellow workers that this situation is unfair. I showed them flyers I had prepared that documented how much Nike made last year from their sweat and hard work. Nike’s 2009 Revenues: Rp19.200.000.000.000 (2 billion USD) I also showed them a flyer with the names, photos and salaries of the top five executives at Nike and what they made in 2009. Phil Knight, Chairman of the Board Basic salary = Rp28.254.340.000 Total salary = Rp34.564.540.000 (3.8 million USD) Mark Parker, President and CEO Basic salary = Rp13.769.230.000 Total salary = Rp88.005.870.000 (9.7 million USD) Donald Blair, Chief Financial Officer, VP Basic salary = Rp7.400.000.000 Total salary = Rp33.470.000.000 (3.7 million USD) Gary DeStefano, President of Global Operations Basic salary = Rp9.588.460.000 Total salary = Rp39.984.080.000 (4.4 million USD) Charlie Denson, President of the Nike Brand Basic salary = Rp11.923.100.000 Total salary = Rp73.333.700.000 (8.1 million USD) After showing them these flyers, I shared with them that I am quite sure that none of these men or anyone that is working for Nike in the USA had to “export” their babies back to home villages. I shared with them that these Nike executives are getting rich, the Nike investors are getting rich, the athletes that endorse Nike are getting rich, but the workers who produced the real wealth for Nike continue to live in abject poverty. I asked them if they wanted to fight to change this. One of the women responded, “Yes, we want to fight, but we don’t know how.” Here our work begins. JUST(ice) DO IT.

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Marc Gunther: Modern-day slavery: Alive and Well

June 27, 2010

Modern-day slavery is not just about sex workers or poor people in faraway places. Some farmworkers in the U.S., for all practical purposes, work as slaves. Laborers with few or no rights, working under inhumane conditions, typically far home, have produced such products as blueberries, organic milk, personal computers or cell phones and garments imported from India, a new report says. Consider: An estimated 12 to 27 million people are victims of slavery, and other forms of forced labor around the world. In the United States alone, 10,000 or more people are being forced to work at any given time. The report, called Help Wanted: Hiring, Human Trafficking and Modern-Day Slavery in the Global Economy (PDF for download, here ), was published by Verite, a non-profit based in Amherst, Mass., that monitors and reports on labor rights abuses around the world. (It was funded by Humanity United , a nonprofit focused on peace and human rights started and chaired by Pam Omidyar.) Over the years, Verite has helped identify and clean up the supply chains of such global brands as Timberland, Gap, Levi Strauss, Apple, Disney and HP. I met with Verite’s executive director, Dan Viederman, last week in Washington to talk about the report, and what can be done to deal with slavery. Dan, who is 46, explained to me that Verite has begun a initiative called Well Made to help companies, governments, investors and advocates deal with modern-day slavery. Companies, for examples, are given sets of questions to put to their suppliers. Shareholders are advised to bring pressure on companies they own. Here it must be said that today’s slaves are not the equivalent of those in 19th century America; in theory, at least, they have legal rights, at least in theory. In fact, many of the stories in the report come from workers who managed to escape dire conditions, on their own or with help. But these modern-day slaves, who can be found in such places as Taiwan, the Persian Gulf, India, Malaysia and, yes, here in the U.S. of A., do have some experiences in in common with the American slaves who picked cotton in the antebellum South: They typically work far from where they grew up, they were trafficked from their homes to their workplaces by labor brokers (slave ships in the old days), and they don’t have the freedom or organize or look for work elsewhere. This makes it relatively easy to uncover forced labor. “The presence of foreign migrant workers is a significant indicator of exploitative labor conditions,” Dan told me. Many employers like to bring in workers from abroad. “You get a cheaper and more compliant workforce if you bring in people who don’t understand their legal rights and can’t turn to social support systems,” he said. Because the migrant workers frequently pay recruitment and transportation fees to get jobs in faroff places, they can find themselves in what’s called “debt bondage.” They are bound to their new employer, sometimes because they need the money to pay debt, other times because they have traveled on a work visa that ties the migrant to a single employer. Some labor brokers endeavor to act responsibly–the global company Manpower Inc . is an industry leader–but many are unscrupulous. “It’s by an large and unregulated industry,” Dan said. The Verite report, which is extensive, looks at four sectors and locales: the migration of adults from India to the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) States of the Middle East for work in construction, infrastructure and the service sector; the migration of children and juveniles from the Indian interior to domestic apparel production hubs; the migration of adults from Guatemala, Mexico and Thailand to work in U.S. agriculture; and the migration of adults from the Philippines, Indonesia and Nepal to the Information Technology sector in Malaysia and Taiwan. Verite’s Well Made website puts a human face on the problem. Here’s an example of a worker who was trafficked from Guatemala to Georgia to Connecticut: Fortunately, some governments and companies are paying attention. The U.S. State Department this month published its own report finding that more than 12 million people worldwide are victims of “trafficking in persons” — trapped in forced labor, bonded labor or prostitution. If you read deep into Apple’s corporate responsibility report, you find this dense but revealing passage: Some of our suppliers work with third-party labor agencies to source workers from other countries. These agencies, in turn, may work through multiple subagencies: in the hiring country, the workers’ home country, and, in some cases, all the way back in the worker’s home village. By the time the worker has paid all fees across these agencies, the total cost may equal many months’ wages and exceed legal limits–and many workers need to incur significant debt to pay these fees. Apple’s Code has always strictly prohibited all forms of involuntary labor . As such, we classify recruitment fee overcharges as a core violation of voluntary labor rights, and we require each supplier to reimburse overpaid fees. As a result of our audits and corrective actions, foreign workers have been reimbursed more than $2.2 million in recruitment fee overcharges over the past two years. To Apple’s credit, it has not only required its suppliers to reimburse workers but issued a “standard for Prevention of Involuntary Labor, which limits recruitment fees to the equivalent of one month’s net wages.” But Dan tells me: “Only a handful of companies are now paying attention to the problems of migrant workers.” Sad to say, modern-day slavery can be very profitable. Labor brokers make a good living. The employers get a docile workforce and essentially outsource the job of recruiting and hiring people. Workers also can benefit, to a degree. Today’s New York Times has an excellent story about the impact of global migration which says, among other things, that Migrants sent home $317 billion last year — three times the world’s total foreign aid. In at least seven countries, remittances account for more than a quarter of the gross domestic product. Of course, if the workers had the freedom to move from one employer to another, or to organize themselves, they could obtain or negotiate higher wages and send even more money home. The bottom line is that lots of the things we consume and enjoy at low prices exact a high cost on others who are out of sight and out of mind. Disclosure : My wife Karen Schneider recently joined the board of Verite, but since I’ve written about the organization’s work before (see this from 2006 and this from 2008), I see no reason to stop now. Photo credit: Sandy Huffaker/Getty Images

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Stocks Worldwide Extend Eight-Day Gain Euro, Gold, Spanish Bonds Advance

June 17, 2010

By Michael P. Regan and Kelly Bit June 17 (Bloomberg) — Stocks rose, with the MSCI World Index extending its longest advance in 11 months, as a late-day rally in technology shares helped the U.S. market reverse an early drop. The euro gained as a Spanish bond sale eased concern the region’s debt crisis will worsen. Gold rallied. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index climbed 0.1 percent to 1,116.04 at 4 p.m. in New York, reclaiming its advance for the year along with the Dow Jones Industrial Average. The MSCI World, a gauge of equities in 24 developed markets, increased 0.2 percent for an eighth straight gain. The euro strengthened 0.6 percent to almost $1.24, while gold futures rose 1.5 percent to $1,248.70 an ounce, approaching a record. Treasuries surged. Apple Inc. climbed to a record and paced the advance in technology shares that helped the S&P 500 recover from a 0.8 percent drop spurred by a lower-than-estimated reading in the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia’s factory index and an unexpected jump in jobless claims. Spanish bonds rallied as the nation sold $4.3 billion in debt, the maximum set for the auction, bolstering optimism Europe’s crisis is contained. “Although the initial reaction to the claims numbers and the Philadelphia Fed number was a kneejerk negative, a little bit more thoughtful reflection on the numbers led to a more positive conclusion,” said Hugh Johnson, who oversees $1.85 billion as chairman of Albany, New York-based Johnson Illington. “When investors had a chance to digest and assess the news, they should have reached the conclusion that the economy continues to expand, albeit at a slow pace.” Apple Hits Record Apple rallied 1.7 percent to a record price of $271.87. The customer base for the iPhone may top 100 million users next year, with demand for the soon-to-be-released iPhone 4 helping to persuade more buyers to embrace the smartphone, Morgan Stanley said. First Solar Inc. jumped 3.9 percent to lead industrial shares higher after Credit Suisse Group AG advised buying the stock. The S&P 500 tumbled 14 percent from a 19-month high in April through June 7 amid concern Europe’s debt crisis and the worst oil spill in U.S. history will stifle the economic recovery. The index has risen 6.2 percent since and may extend its rebound to 12 percent, said Ralph Acampora, whose career as a technical analyst began in 1966. “The damage in price and the damage in psychology has set us up on a very short-term basis for a good recovery,” Acampora said. Technical analysts view pessimism as a sign that stocks may rise, because it indicates investors have capacity to buy shares after avoiding the market. 200-Day Moving Average The S&P 500 today remained above its 200-day average for a third day after sinking below it for about a month. Tomorrow’s expiration of stock options, coupled with the S&P’s quarterly index rebalancing on the same day, resulted “in massive technical noise today,” said Peter Boockvar, equity strategist at Miller Tabak & Co. in New York. The late-day rally in stocks came after U.S. bond markets largely closed. Treasuries rose, pushing two-year yields to as low as 0.69 percent, after the increase in jobless claims and a drop in consumer prices spurred bets the Federal Reserve will keep interest rates low. The yield on the 10-year note fell 7 basis points, or 0.07 percentage point, to 3.19 percent. The Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia’s general economic index slid to a 10-month low of 8, less than half the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists. Initial U.S. jobless claims rose to 472,000 last week, indicating firings remain elevated even as the economy recovers. The index of leading indicators, a gauge of the outlook for growth, climbed 0.4 percent in May, according to the Conference Board. Consumer prices decreased 0.2 percent in May, the government said. ‘Somewhat Concerning’ “The economic numbers are still somewhat concerning,” said Brett Hryb , part of a group that manages $2.6 billion at MFC Global Investment Management in Toronto. “We have a very long-tailed recovery as opposed to a V-shaped bounce back. The gain in Treasuries and gold fall into the flight to safety. Gold is the net beneficiary every time the market is unsure.” General Electric Co., through its finance arm, sold $850 million of bonds backed by credit-card payments, GE’s biggest such sale in nine months, according to a person familiar with the offering. The top-rated securities, maturing in about three years, yield 75 basis points more than the benchmark swap rate, said the person, who declined to be identified because the terms aren’t public. European Stocks The Stoxx Europe 600 Index rose 0.2 percent, paring a 0.7 percent rally. Spain sold 3.5 billion euros ($4.3 billion) of 10-year and 30-year bonds at yields lower than the prevailing market rates, attracting bids worth as much as 2.45 times the securities on offer, assuaging concern that it would face difficulty meeting bond repayments. Spain’s gauge of 35 stocks increased 0.7 percent. Spanish bonds rose, with the yield on the 10-year note falling from the highest level in almost two years. The yield dropped 11 basis points to 4.77 percent. The difference in yield, or spread, between German and Spanish 10-year government bonds narrowed 10 basis points to 211 basis points. Spain is trying to convince investors it can cut the euro- region’s third-largest deficit, while propping up the country’s savings banks and lifting the economy out of a two-year slump. Spain, which faces 24.7 billion euros of maturing debt in July, had seen the risk premium on its 10-year bonds rise to a decade high on concern it may need to tap a European rescue fund. Hayward Testifies BP Plc, battling to contain the worst oil spill in U.S. history, rallied 6.7 percent in London then lost 0.4 percent in New York. The shares have tumbled more than 45 percent on both exchanges since the April 20 explosion that triggered the spill. The company’s Chief Executive Officer Tony Hayward was denounced by U.S. lawmakers today for stonewalling as he failed to answer questions about the causes of the spill. BP scrapped dividends and pledged asset sales to meet President Barack Obama ’s demand for a $20 billion fund to help victims. The U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board will look for the causes of the explosion, Chairman John Bresland said. The euro rose 0.6 percent to $1.2389 and earlier topped $1.24 for the first time in almost three weeks as Spain’s bond sale bolstered confidence in the currency. The dollar weakened against 13 of 16 major currencies, led by a 1.7 percent drop versus the Swiss franc. The Swiss franc approached an all-time high against the euro after the central bank softened its stance on fighting franc gains as deflation risks ease. The Swiss National Bank, which has been buying foreign currencies since March 2009 to counter the threat of deflation, said today that those risks have “largely disappeared.” Emerging Markets, Commodities The MSCI Emerging Markets Index rose 0.4 percent, climbing for an eighth day in the longest stretch of gains in two months. Benchmark indexes in Turkey, Indonesia, Egypt and Romania climbed at least 0.9 percent. Crude oil fell for the first time this week, slipping 1.1 percent to $76.79 a barrel. Copper futures for September delivery slid 8.95 cents, or 3 percent, to $2.924 a pound on the Comex in New York. The Reuters/Jefferies CRB Index of commodities retreated for the first time in nine days, losing 0.3 percent and snapping its longest streak of gains in three years. To contact the reporters on this story: Michael P. Regan in New York at mregan12@bloomberg.net ; Kelly Bit in New York at kbit@bloomberg.net

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U.S. Stocks Halt Global Rally, Treasuries, Gold Gain on Economy

June 17, 2010

By Michael P. Regan and Nikolaj Gammeltoft June 17 (Bloomberg) — U.S. stocks halted a global advance , while Treasuries and gold rallied, as an unexpected increase in jobless claims and lower-than-estimated growth in Philadelphia manufacturing cast doubt on the strength of the economy. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index slipped 0.4 percent to 1,109.8 at 1:15 p.m. in New York and the MSCI World Index erased an earlier gain that would have extended its rally to eight days, the longest in 11 months. Copper and zinc tumbled more than 3.1 percent in London to lead losses in industrial metals. Ten-year Treasury yields fell 7 basis points to 3.19 percent and spot gold jumped 1.5 percent to $1,247.23 an ounce. Stocks turned lower as the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia’s general economic index dropped to a 10-month low of 8, less than half the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists. Initial U.S. jobless claims rose to 472,000 last week, indicating firings remain elevated even as the economy recovers. European shares reversed early gains triggered when a Spanish bond sale eased concern about the region’s debt crisis. “The economic numbers are still somewhat concerning,” said Brett Hryb , part of a group that manages $2.6 billion at MFC Global Investment Management in Toronto. “We have a very long-tailed recovery as opposed to a V-shaped bounce back. The gain in Treasuries and gold fall into the flight to safety. Gold is the net beneficiary every time the market is unsure.” The S&P 500 added to losses from yesterday’s 0.1 percent drop. The Philadelphia Fed figures stand in contrast to a report this week showing New York factories expanded at a faster rate. U.S. Stocks Consumer-discretionary, telephone and commodity companies led declines in eight of 10 industry groups in the S&P 500. Home Depot Inc., Alcoa Inc. and American Express Co. fell more than 1.3 percent to lead the Dow Jones Industrial Average down 0.4 percent to 10,372.05. “Clearly the market doesn’t like the Philly Fed number,” said Mike Shea , a managing partner and trader at Direct Access Partners LLC in New York. “If the numbers tell us anything it’s that this recovery is going to take longer than we thought.” U.S. stock futures pared an early rally in pre-market trading after initial jobless claims increased by 12,000 to 472,000 in the week ended June 12, Labor Department figures showed. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg News projected 450,000 claims, according to the median forecast. The number of people receiving unemployment insurance rose, while those getting extended benefits dropped. Europe Stocks The Stoxx Europe 600 Index rose 0.2 percent, paring a 0.7 percent rally. Spain sold 3.5 billion euros ($4.3 billion) of 10-year and 30-year bonds at yields lower than the prevailing market rates, attracting bids worth as much as 2.45 times the securities on offer, assuaging concern that it would face difficulty meeting bond repayments. Spain’s gauge of 35 stocks increased 0.7 percent, paring a rally of as much as 1.6 percent. Spanish bonds rose, with the yield on the 10-year note falling from the highest level in almost two years. The yield dropped 11 basis points to 4.77 percent. The difference in yield, or spread, between German and Spanish 10-year government bonds narrowed 10 basis points to 211 basis points. Spain is trying to convince investors it can cut the euro- region’s third-largest deficit, while propping up the country’s savings banks and lifting the economy out of a two-year slump. Spain, which faces 24.7 billion euros of maturing debt in July, had seen the risk premium on its 10-year bonds rise to a decade high on concern it may need to tap a European rescue fund. BP Rebounds BP Plc, battling to contain the worst oil spill in U.S. history, rallied 6.7 percent in London as the company scrapped dividends and pledged asset sales to meet President Barack Obama ’s demand for a $20 billion fund to help victims. The shares are down 45 percent since the rig explosion that triggered the spill in April. The euro rose 0.4 percent to $1.2355 and earlier topped $1.24 for the first time in almost three weeks as Spain’s bond sale bolstered confidence in the currency. The dollar weakened against 13 of 16 major currencies, led by a 1.6 percent drop versus the Swiss franc. The Swiss franc approached an all-time high against the euro after the central bank softened its stance on fighting franc gains as deflation risks ease. The Swiss National Bank, which has been buying foreign currencies since March 2009 to counter the threat of deflation, said today that those risks have “largely disappeared.” Emerging Markets The MSCI Emerging Markets Index rose 0.4 percent, climbing for an eighth day in the longest stretch of gains in two months. Benchmark indexes in Turkey, Indonesia, Egypt and Romania climbed at least 0.9 percent. Crude oil fell for the first time this week, slipping 1.6 percent to $76.44 a barrel. Copper futures for September delivery slid 8.9 cents, or 3 percent, to $2.9245 a pound on the Comex in New York. The Reuters/Jefferies CRB Index of commodities retreated for the first time in nine days, snapping its longest streak of gains in three years. To contact the reporters on this story: Michael P. Regan in New York at mregan12@bloomberg.net ; Nikolaj Gammeltoft in New York at ngammeltoft@bloomberg.net .

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European Stocks, U.S. Futures Rise on Spain Copper, Oil Fall

June 17, 2010

By Stephen Kirkland June 17 (Bloomberg) — European stocks and U.S. index futures gained and the euro strengthened as a Spanish bond sale eased concern the government will struggle to finance its burgeoning deficit. Copper and oil retreated and gold rose. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index advanced 0.4 percent at 8:45 a.m. in New York. Futures on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index rose 0.1 percent, trimming an earlier rally of as much as 0.7 percent after U.S. jobless claims unexpectedly increased. The euro rebounded, climbing 0.4 percent versus the dollar. The Swiss franc appreciated against all 16 of its most-traded counterparts as the central bank softened its stance on restraining the currency. Copper fell 2.5 percent, oil declined for the first day this week and gold advanced 0.7 percent. The MSCI World Index has gained for eight days, rallying 7 percent from its 10-month low on June 7 on evidence the global economy is weathering Europe’s debt crisis. Spain sold 3.5 billion euros ($4.3 billion) of 10-year and 30-year bonds at yields lower than the prevailing market rates, attracting bids worth as much as 2.45 times the securities on offer, assuaging concern that it would face difficulty meeting bond repayments. “The strong demand for Spanish bonds should help restore confidence,” Ciaran O’Hagan , a fixed-income strategist at Societe Generale SA in Paris, wrote in a research note today. The MSCI World’s eight-day advance is the longest stretch of gains since July 2009. European banks led the Stoxx 600 higher for a seventh day, extending the longest rally in nine months. Spain’s gauge of 35 stocks increased the most among 18 benchmark indexes in western Europe, rising 1.2 percent to a one-month high. Bonds Rally Spanish bonds rose, with the yield on the 10-year note falling from the highest level in almost two years. The yield dropped five basis points to 4.88 percent after earlier touching 5.04 percent. The difference in yield, or spread, between German and Spanish 10-year government bonds narrowed five basis points to 216 basis points. Spain is trying to convince investors it can cut the euro- region’s third-largest deficit, while propping up the country’s savings banks and lifting the economy out of a two-year slump. Spain, which faces 24.7 billion euros of maturing debt in July, had seen the risk premium on its 10-year bonds rise to a decade high on concern it may need to tap a European Union financial lifeline. BP Plc, battling to contain the worst oil spill in U.S. history, rallied 7.9 percent as the company scrapped dividends and pledged asset sales to meet President Barack Obama ’s demand for a $20 billion fund to help victims. The stock headed for the biggest daily gain since November 2008. Spreads Narrow BP’s European bonds rose, with the spread on its 1 billion euros ($1.2 billion) of 4.5 percent notes due November 2012 narrowing to 555 basis points, from 696 basis points yesterday, according to HSBC Holdings Plc prices on Bloomberg. Credit- default swaps to insure the company’s debt for one year tumbled 521 basis points to 476, CMA DataVision prices show. The gain in U.S. futures signaled stocks may rebound, after the S&P 500 yesterday slipped 0.1 percent. Futures pared gains after initial jobless claims increased by 12,000 to 472,000 in the week ended June 12, Labor Department figures showed. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg News projected 450,000 claims, according to the median forecast. The number of people receiving unemployment insurance rose, while those getting extended benefits dropped. The cost of living in the U.S. dropped, adding to evidence the economic recovery is not stoking inflation. The 0.2 percent decline in the consumer price index was the biggest since December 2008 and followed April’s 0.1 percent decrease, figures from the Labor Department showed today in Washington. Excluding food and fuel, the so-called core rate increased 0.1 percent. The figures matched the median forecasts in a Bloomberg News survey. The Conference Board’s leading economic indicators, a measure of the outlook for the next three to six months, may have increased 0.4 percent in May, the 13th gain in the past 14 months, the survey showed. The report is set for 10 a.m. Another report today may show manufacturing in the Philadelphia region expanded this month. Euro, Franc The euro rose, mirroring the gain in the S&P 500 futures index. The currency advanced 0.4 percent to $1.2363, and 0.4 percent to 112.99 per yen. The yen was little changed at 91.30 versus the dollar. The Swiss franc approached an all-time high against the euro after the central bank softened its stance on fighting franc gains as deflation risks ease. The franc appreciated 1 percent against the euro to 1.3786 and 1.5 percent to 1.1141 per dollar. The Swiss National Bank, which has been buying foreign currencies since March 2009 to counter the threat of deflation, said today that those risks have “largely disappeared.” It also held the three-month Libor target rate at 0.25 percent at its quarterly meeting in Geneva. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index rose 0.8 percent, climbing for an eighth day in the longest stretch of gains in two months. Benchmark indexes in Turkey, Indonesia, Egypt and Romania climbed more than 1 percent. Copper for delivery in three months declined $164.50 to $6,485.50 a metric ton on the London Metal Exchange. Crude oil futures for July delivery fell 0.9 percent to $76.99 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Gold for August delivery climbed 1.3 percent to $1,246.30 an ounce. To contact the reporter on this story: Stephen Kirkland in London at skirkland@bloomberg.net ;

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Australian Market Report of June 17, 2010: Leighton (ASX:LEI) Wins A$1.1B Contract in Indonesia

June 16, 2010

Australian Market Report of June 17, 2010: Leighton (ASX:LEI) Wins A$1.1B Contract in Indonesia

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Exxon, Oil Companies Slammed by Lawmakers for `Carbon-Copy’ Disaster Plans

June 15, 2010

By Jim Efstathiou Jr. and Joe Carroll June 15 (Bloomberg) — Exxon Mobil Corp. , ConocoPhillips, Chevron Corp. and Royal Dutch Shell Plc are as ill-prepared as BP Plc to halt and clean up an offshore oil spill because they all use “carbon copy” disaster plans, lawmakers said. Eight weeks after a drilling rig leased by BP exploded in the Gulf of Mexico, killing 11 workers and triggering the worst spill in U.S. history, executives from the companies at a House Energy Committee hearing sought to distance themselves from BP’s practices that lawmakers said put profits before safety. Lawmakers faulted the four executives for disaster-response plans that would halt oil leaks at the sea floor using the same techniques that failed for BP in the past 56 days. The same firm wrote the plans and included references to making sure crude doesn’t injure walruses, which don’t live in the Gulf of Mexico. “The oil company response plans are great for public relations but these plans are virtually worthless in the event of a spill,” said Representative Bart T. Stupak , a Michigan Democrat. “It could be said that BP is the one bad apple in the bunch, but unfortunately, they appear to have plenty of company.” Energy companies, rig operators and lawmakers in oil- producing states have urged the Obama administration to lift or shorten a six-month moratorium on deepwater exploration that has idled more than two dozen drilling vessels and threatens thousands of jobs. Lawmakers said today they’re not convinced the industry takes safety seriously. ‘Magic Button’ “You can’t have a contingency plan that says cross your fingers and hope the blowout preventer works,” said Representative Joe Barton , the ranking a Texas Republican. “They pushed the magic button on the BP rig and it didn’t work.” Exxon CEO Rex Tillerson said investigators must determine if BP took risks “beyond industry norms” that led to the April 20 catastrophe, which he said “represents a dramatic departure” from the track record of deep-water oil explorers. The CEOs testified a day after the committee released internal BP documents that lawmakers said showed the company put cost concerns ahead of safety in the days leading up to April 20. BP Chief Executive Officer Tony Hayward is to appear before a subcommittee June 17, his first congressional testimony since the well exploded. “Our internal review confirmed what our regular audits have told us,” Chevron Chief Executive Officer John Watson told the committee. “Chevron’s drilling and control practices for deepwater wells are safe and environmentally sound.” He added, “We must act to quickly implement new standards and safeguards so that we can reinstate drilling in the deepwater Gulf of Mexico.” Obama Speech President Barack Obama plans to speak to the nation tonight on the spill, and the administration is demanding that BP set up an escrow account for damage claims. BP Chairman Carl-Henric Svanberg has been called to the White House tomorrow. Industry groups oppose the six-month ban, which Obama put in place to give a presidential commission time to probe the spill. Pressed by Louisiana Democratic Senator Mary Landrieu , who said her state could lose 330,000 jobs from the moratorium, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar last week said the ban may be shortened. “We acknowledge the reasons for the president’s decision to pause deepwater drilling,” Shell President Marvin Odum said in his prepared remarks. “But it is not without consequence: thousands of lost jobs, and billions in lost wages and spending. And not only on the Gulf Coast, but also in places like Alaska.” Ban Concerns Seventeen House members from Gulf coast states including Barton and Representative Ted Poe , a Texas Republican, today called on Obama to end the drilling ban. The group will meet Salazar tomorrow to discuss the impact of the moratorium. “Many offshore drilling companies and suppliers will not be able to survive this six-month period and will either go out of business or move their employees and assets abroad,” the group said in a statement. An extended suspension may cost more than 20,000 jobs in Gulf region, according to a statement. Shell adheres to well-drilling safety standards that lawmakers have said were sidestepped by BP, Odum wrote in a May 14 letter to Elizabeth Birnbaum , former director of the Minerals Management Service, which oversees offshore drilling. Shell’s plans to explore for oil and natural gas off Alaska’s coast face increased scrutiny following the Gulf spill. BP, the biggest Gulf of Mexico oil producer, made five “questionable decisions” aimed at cutting costs and speeding completion of an overdue project before the disaster, Democratic Representatives Henry Waxman of California and Stupak wrote in a letter to Hayward released yesterday. Industry Norms Exxon, based in Irving, Texas, has drilled 262 deep-water wells in the past decade, 35 of which were in the Gulf, Tillerson said. Proper well design, workforce training, redundant safety systems and regular maintenance help mitigate risks involved in drilling wells miles below the surface, he said. When the moratorium is lifted and federal regulators allow deepwater drilling to resume, there may be few rigs available for the work, said Gianna Bern , president of Brookshire Advisory & Research Inc. in Flossmoor, Illinois, which advises oil companies on strategy and risk management. South China, Indonesia Drilling vessels are steaming out of the Gulf for assignments in the South China Sea and off the Indonesia coast, said Bern, a former BP crude trader. Those vessels won’t be able to return to U.S. waters for a year or longer, she said. “The moratorium will likely draw drilling rigs away from the Gulf of Mexico to overseas basins, further delaying development and negatively affecting crucial U.S. jobs that support these operations,” Watson said. “Any extension of the moratorium will only exacerbate the economic consequences.” BP America Inc. Chairman Lamar McKay said in prepared testimony that a “failure of processes, systems and/or equipment must be and can be addressed to restore America’s confidence in the industry’s ability to continue providing the resources consumers need.” To contact the reporters on this story: Jim Efstathiou Jr . in Washington at jefstathiou@bloomberg.net ; Joe Carroll in Washington at jcarroll8@bloomberg.net .

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Taiwan, China Say They Reach a Basic Agreement on Reducing Trade Tariffs

June 13, 2010

By Bloomberg News June 14 (Bloomberg) — China and Taiwan said they reached a basic agreement on tariff reductions in a third round of talks to boost economic and trade relations. “We are still working on details, but the basic agreement has been reached,” Tang Wei, head of Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macau affairs at China’s Ministry of Commerce, said late yesterday after talks in Beijing with Huang Chih-peng , director- general of Taiwan’s Bureau of Foreign Trade. An agreement would lower tariffs on more than 200 items exported from China to Taiwan including car parts, petrochemicals and machinery, the officials said. The exact items have yet to be decided, and Tang said he hoped that Taiwan would export textiles and car parts to China. An accord would allow service providers to compete in the two markets, he said. Taiwan President Ma Ying-jeou has been pushing for an accord to bolster export-dependent Taiwan’s economy after a Chinese trade agreement with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations began this year. Ma is also seeking better relations with the island’s biggest trading partner and No. 1 investment destination. Any accord “will boost market sentiment and confidence,” Tony Phoo , an economist at Standard Chartered Plc, said by phone in Taipei yesterday. Still, “the preferred-tariff treatment won’t happen at least for the next one to two years.” Cross-strait ties improved after President Ma took office in May 2008 and abandoned his predecessor’s pro-independence stance. Ma’s administration has said the Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement, or ECFA, may be signed this month. ‘Milestone’ “Signing the ECFA is a route that Taiwan must take and it is a milestone,” Liu Bih-rong , a professor of political science at Soochow University in Taipei, said by phone. “It signifies how the relationship between the two sides has recovered and more importantly, it will pave the way for more free-trade agreements and benefits.” Taiwan and China agreed in December to boost cooperation in fishing, agriculture and industrial goods at the fourth cross- strait talks as relations reached their warmest in 60 years. In November, they signed three memoranda of understanding to ease access to each other’s banking, securities and insurance industries. “Taiwan has abundant capital, advanced production technology, rich enterprise-management experience and international sales channels,” China’s Tang said in the opening remarks. “On the other hand, the mainland has very rich resources and a lot of labor and huge potential markets.” Trade Jumps Trade between the mainland and Taiwan increased 68 percent in the first four months of 2010 compared with same period last year, and Taiwan investment rose 45 percent, China’s Tang said today. An agreement would be in “both parties’ interests, so we have better resource allocation and cooperation,” Tang said. An agreement with China is “vital to Taiwan’s economy,” Chiang Pin-kung , chairman of the Taipei-based Straits Exchange Foundation, said in February. An agreement would help to ensure Taiwan can compete with regional rivals and may prompt other nations to agree to similar accords with the island, Chiang said. North Korea and Taiwan are the only two economies in the region that haven’t signed trade agreements with China and Asean, which groups Singapore, Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia, Vietnam, Myanmar, Laos, Cambodia, the Philippines and Brunei. Taiwan has been unable to join the wave of bilateral and multilateral free-trade agreements in recent years because China regards the island as a rebellious province. Taiwan’s Democratic Progressive Party opposes the trade accord and on Dec. 20 rallied 100,000 people in Taichung city to protest Ma’s China policies. “Even if the opposition gains power in future, with such a framework it would be difficult for them to reverse the entire decision,” said Soochow University’s Liu. — Henry Sanderson in Beijing and Weiyi Lim in Taipei. Editors: Carey Sargent , Dick Schumacher . To contact Bloomberg News staff on this story: Henry Sanderson in Beijing at 86-10-6649-7548 or hsanderson@bloomberg.net

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China’s May Foreign Investment Rises for 10th Month, Exceeding Forecasts

June 11, 2010

By Bloomberg News June 12 (Bloomberg) — Foreign direct investment in China rose for a 10th month in May, adding to evidence that the nation is weathering the European debt crisis. Investment rose 27.5 percent to $8.13 billion, the Ministry of Commerce said in a statement today. That was more than the 23.2 percent median forecast of four economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. Foreign investment in the first five months of the year rose 14.3 percent to $38.9 billion, the ministry said. China’s economy will expand by 9.5 percent this year, three times the pace of the U.S, the World Bank forecast this week. Companies including Volkswagen AG and PepsiCo Inc. are boosting investment in the world’s third-largest economy to tap rising consumer spending fuelled by the government’s stimulus package and higher wages. “China will remain an attractive investment destination as the government spurs consumer spending,” said Xing Ziqiang , a Beijing-based economist at China International Capital Corp. “The expansion of infrastructure, including transport links, in central and western regions is also opening up a vast inland market for consumption and investment.” The acceleration in foreign investment growth in May, along with the biggest expansion in exports in more than six years, indicate the European debt crisis hasn’t damped China’s rebound from the global financial crisis. Debt Crisis Retail sales rose by more than 18 percent for the third straight month in May, government data showed this week. Passenger-car sales last month rose 26 percent from a year earlier to 1.04 million units, the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers said on June 8. Still, export growth may moderate from July due to higher year-ago comparisons and the possible impact on sales to Europe due to the sovereign-debt crisis, Ministry of Commerce spokesman Yao Jian told a regular press briefing in Beijing today. Stocks around the world surged on June 9 after leaked data exceeded economists’ forecasts. China’s benchmark Shanghai Composite Index rose the most in two weeks that day and posted a weekly gain of 0.6 percent. China, poised to overtake Japan as the world’s second- largest economy this year, replaced the U.S. as the biggest auto market in 2009. VW , Europe’s largest carmaker, said June 9 it will spend 520 million euros ($622 million) to add a 10th plant in China as part of plans to double annual production capacity in the nation to 3 million vehicles within four years. Minimum Wages PepsiCo, the world’s largest snack maker, said last month it will spend $2.5 billion in China in the next three years to build new factories and boost research and development. More than 20 Chinese provinces and cities raised minimum wages this year, the Shenzhen city government said June 9. Taiwanese electronics manufacturer Foxconn Technology Group said it will raise salaries at Shenzhen factories to 2,000 yuan a month in October from 900 yuan in May, after a spate of worker suicides. Honda Motor Co. raised pay by 24 percent at a parts- making factory in Foshan, Guangdong province, last month after a strike crippled its production in China. More facilities were hit by strikes this week. Commerce ministry’s Yao said today that higher labor costs won’t deter foreign investment. “Cheap labor is not the number one attraction for foreign investors in China today,” Yao said. China’s vast market, political and legal environment, and supply chain are the nation’s biggest advantages, he said. Infrastructure Boom A doubling of China’s manufacturing wages over the next five years won’t damp foreign investment because Asian rivals such as India and Indonesia lack comparable infrastructure, former Morgan Stanley economist Andy Xie said on Bloomberg Television in Hong Kong on June 10. Foreign direct investment started to climb in August last year after falling for 10 straight months because of the global financial crisis. Asia’s “bright growth prospects,” coupled with low interest rates in major economies, may attract capital to the region and increase overheating risks, the International Monetary Fund said June 9. Investment may top $100 billion this year, Wang Zhile, director of the commerce ministry’s research center on transnational corporations, told the China Daily today. That would exceed the previous record of $92.4 billion achieved in 2008. -Sophie Leung, Li Yanping. With assistance from Jay Wang. Editors: Paul Panckhurst, Nerys Avery To contact the reporter on this story: Sophie Leung in Hong Kong at sleung59@bloomberg.net Li Yanping in Beijing at yli16@bloomberg.net

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Bank of Korea’s Tilt Toward Rate Increase May Be Thwarted by Government

June 8, 2010

By William Sim and Michael Munoz June 9 (Bloomberg) — The Bank of Korea may keep the benchmark interest rate at a record low for a 16th month after its signal that higher borrowing costs may be coming was snubbed by government warnings about the impact of Europe’s crisis. Governor Kim Choong Soo will leave the seven-day repurchase rate at a record-low 2 percent tomorrow, according to all 12 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. While the meeting will be the first without a government representative attending the vote, Finance Minister Yoon Jeung Hyun made clear his expectation for the outcome last week, saying the bank should wait for second- quarter economic data before any move. “This suggests that political pressures are still a constraint in Bank of Korea decision-making,” said Kevin Grice , an economist at Capital Economics Ltd. in London. Governor Kim “has been signaling to markets that inflation is set to rise and that gross domestic product growth should stay at trend pace, which suggest that rates need to move to more ‘normal’ levels.” Asia’s central banks are weighing the need to avert overheating by raising rates from world-recession levels against the potential impact of Europe’s debt crisis on the global recovery. South Korea has so far sided with China and Indonesia in standing pat, while Malaysia and India are projected to keep boosting borrowing costs after already moving in recent months. New Zealand’s central bank will probably raise its benchmark rate tomorrow to 2.75 percent from a record-low 2.5 percent, the first increase in almost three years, according to 13 of 15 economists in a Bloomberg survey. Two expect no change. August Move Grice said the Bank of Korea is likely to hold the rate tomorrow to gauge the impact on the global recovery of spending cuts by European nations struggling to reduce budget deficits. He expects borrowing costs to be boosted in August and the rate increased to 3 percent by the end of the year. South Korea’s expansion is being driven by exports, which surged 41.9 percent last month. Samsung Electronics Co. , Asia’s biggest maker of semiconductors, flat screens and mobile phones, posted a seven-fold jump in profit in the first quarter as rising demand drove up prices. Hyundai Motor Co. , South Korea’s largest automaker, reported a record profit in the same period by boosting sales in the U.S. and China. South Korea’s $929 billion economy grew 2.1 percent in the first quarter from the previous three months, compared with an April estimate of 1.8 percent, the central bank said last week. North Korea Tension The won, which plunged to a 10-month low on May 25 on escalating tensions with North Korea, tumbled 8.4 percent in May, its worst performance since February 2009, as Europe’s fiscal woes prompted investors to sell riskier assets and buy dollars. The benchmark Kospi stock index dropped 5.8 percent. A North Korean diplomat said last week that war on the Korean peninsula could begin “at any moment” over South Korean accusations that the government in Pyongyang ordered the March sinking of a warship that killed 46 sailors. Also last week, President Lee Myung Bak ’s party suffered a defeat in provincial elections, with the opposition Democratic Party winning seven of 16 races. Lee’s party, which held 11 of the 16 mayoral and gubernatorial posts, secured six. The government is likely to focus more on supporting the middle class after the loss, Kwon Goohoon , an economist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. in Seoul, said after the result. “Inflation and jobs growth are likely to get renewed focus while the currency’s competitiveness could get relatively less priority on concerns about its inflationary implications.” Inflation Accelerates Consumer prices rose 2.7 percent in May, quickening from a 2.6 percent gain a month earlier, as the cost of food and oil increased. That’s within the central bank’s target range of between 2 percent and 4 percent. Central banks in Australia, Indonesia, the Philippines and Thailand last week kept borrowing costs unchanged amid concern Europe’s sovereign-risk woes could damage the global recovery. The Bank of Korea’s monetary board signaled May 12 that rates may move, saying it will “maintain the accommodative policy,” while dropping a reference to keeping that stance “for the time being.” A month earlier, one board member called for a pre-emptive increase in borrowing costs and two wanted to signal the policy may change, according to minutes of the April meeting. The central bank “should wait and check the second-quarter economic data before deciding on the next rate move,” Finance Minister Yoon said in an interview with the Maeil Business newspaper published last week. The data could be disappointing because of Europe’s debt crisis, cold weather and a poor jobs market, he said. To contact the reporters on this story: William Sim in Seoul at wsim2@bloomberg.net ; Michael J. Munoz in Hong Kong at mjmunoz@bloomberg.net

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Ex-Goldman Banker Walujo Emerges as Indonesia’s Busiest Dealmaker With TPG

June 7, 2010

By Netty Ismail June 8 (Bloomberg) — Patrick Walujo , a former investment banker at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., has emerged as Indonesia’s busiest dealmaker since teaming up with U.S. buyout firm TPG almost four years ago. TPG passed over other candidates when it began scouting for a partner in the nation in 2005. The 34-year-old’s Northstar Pacific Partners shared TPG’s plan to invest in plain vanilla equity of resources firms and companies set to benefit from growing consumption in Southeast Asia’s largest economy, said Ashish Shastry , TPG’s head for the region in Singapore. Other private-equity firms seemed to focus on more complex mezzanine debt or structured deals, he said. “Indonesia seemed to us to be an interesting emerging market for investment, and Patrick and his colleagues seemed to be the best there,” said David Bonderman , founding partner of the Fort Worth, Texas-based private-equity firm with $45 billion of capital. Buyout firms including Washington-based Carlyle Group and the U.K.’s CVC Capital Partners Ltd. are venturing into the world’s most populous Muslim nation, where private-equity investments could increase fivefold to as much as $3 billion this year, from $570 million in 2009, according to estimates by the Centre for Asia Private Equity Research Ltd. ‘Building Mode’ Walujo, with TPG’s backing since September 2006, has helped expand Northstar’s assets under management to more than $1 billion from $200,000. Two-thirds of that is from co-investors including Government of Singapore Investment Corp. , manager of Singapore’s foreign reserves. The fund has also attracted money from pension funds, endowments and other institutional investors. Northstar’s biggest holdings include PT Bank Tabungan Pensiunan Nasional, in which it agreed to invest ahead of the bank’s initial share sale in 2008. Northstar seeks to make three to five times the money it invests in a company within five years, Walujo said. “We have been in building mode,” Walujo, the son-in-law of Indonesia’s 15th richest man, said in an interview at his office in Jakarta, where a framed photograph with Bonderman adorns a side cabinet. “This year is going to be a year of a few exits; next year is going to be a busy year for exits.” Northstar and TPG invested about $1.3 billion in five transactions between 2006 and 2009, the most deals on record by a private-equity investor in Indonesia in the period, according to the Hong Kong-based Centre for Asia Private Equity Research. Bonderman Walujo, who holds a Bachelor of Science in operations research and industrial engineering from Cornell University, got to know 67-year-old Bonderman, who attended Harvard University’s law school and studied Islamic law at the American University in Cairo, after inviting TPG to participate in a leveraged buyout of coal producer PT Adaro Indonesia in 2005. The value of the equity investment in Adaro has risen more than 100 times to exceed $5 billion, said Walujo, who wanted to return home after working as an investment banker at Goldman Sachs in London and New York, and in the Tokyo finance, merger and acquisition team at PCCW Ltd. , Hong Kong’s biggest phone company. Two months after Northstar started the fund with TPG, Bonderman, Walujo and Timothy Dattels , Walujo’s former boss at Goldman Sachs, had the first of their annual meetings with President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono at his Merdeka Palace office in central Jakarta. Dattels oversees TPG’s investments in Asia. “We saw the opportunity in the private equity space in Indonesia because at that time, there were not many people,” said Walujo, wearing a traditional batik shirt. Palm Oil Indonesia is the world’s biggest palm oil producer and holds some of the largest deposits of natural gas and minerals such as coal and copper. Consumer confidence has been buoyed by political stability under Yudhoyono not seen since the ouster of former dictator Suharto in 1998. “Private equity is fast becoming a very astute way of investing and profiting from the upswing in the Indonesian economy,” said Karim Raslan , a Kuala Lumpur- and Jakarta-based consultant whose clients include private-equity firms seeking to invest in Southeast Asia, and who has known Walujo since 2004. “Because of the enormous surge in interest in Indonesia, guys like Patrick, who have had substantial experience outside Indonesia at leading investment banks, become a logical port of call.” CVC agreed to buy the retail unit of PT Matahari Putra Prima in January, the London-based buyout firm’s first foray into Indonesia. Carlyle, the world’s second-biggest private- equity company, is “actively exploring opportunities” for its first investment in the nation, Anand Balasubrahmanyan , a Singapore-based managing director said in December. Perception The Jakarta Composite Index is the best performer in Asia after Sri Lanka this year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The economy will probably expand 6 percent to 6.5 percent in 2011, central bank Senior Deputy Governor Darmin Nasution said on June 1. Still, Walujo said it remains challenging to convince people to look at Indonesia “because of the perception problem that we are still suffering from.” While the country’s rank in Transparency International’s corruption perception index rose to 111 last year from 126 in 2008, Indonesia remains in the category of nations perceived as corrupt. Coal Mines Walujo and Glenn Sugita , a former corporate finance banker at PT Bahana Securities, which was Goldman Sachs’s partner in Indonesia, started Northstar in 2003 with capital of less than $200,000. “One thing that we really like about them is that they want to operate Northstar at the same standard as any world class investment firm,” TPG’s Shastry said. In 2008, along with TPG, Northstar bought a 71.6 percent stake in Bank Tabungan , originally a lender to retired civil servants, which opened about 500 micro banking branches last year. The value of the investment has risen almost threefold as the bank’s loan growth outpaced the Indonesian industry’s following its expansion into micro-lending, Walujo said. The fund’s biggest exposure to Indonesia’s resources boom is through PT Delta Dunia Makmur , which acquired coal mining contractor PT Bukit Makmur Mandiri Utama, or Buma. Northstar bought a 40 percent stake in Delta Dunia in November when the property firm raised equity to fund its purchase of Buma, Indonesia’s second-largest coal mining contractor. Father-in-Law Northstar flew prospective U.S. investors on a chartered Beechcraft 1900D to South Kalimantan province on Borneo island in February and gave them a tour of the Tutupan mine where Buma carries out coal excavation and hauling for Adaro, the nation’s second-biggest coal producer. “We have contracts in all of the top coal mines, which are projecting double their production within three to five years,” Walujo said. Both keen tennis players, Walujo and Sugita organize six tennis tournaments a year in Indonesia to encourage local players to improve their competitiveness. Walujo’s “commitment, his persistence to pursue, is incredible,” said Bank Tabungan Chief Executive Officer Jerry Ng , who has known Walujo since 2003. “It blends into his level of energy as well.” Walujo counts his father-in-law, Theodore Rachmat , the former president-director of PT Astra International and the 15th richest man on Forbes’s Indonesia list , as one of his mentors. Walujo is married to Ayu Rachmat and has a 20-month-old daughter. Astra, the nation’s biggest auto retailer, is the sole distributor of Indonesian-assembled Toyota Motor Corp. cars in the country and has a motorcycle venture with Honda Motor Co. Rachmat co-invests with Northstar in some deals, Walujo said. “I try to draw a parallel between what we are trying to do and what Astra International did: they learned all the best practices from their foreign partners,” Walujo said. “We have our partnership with TPG, the best of class, we learn from them. Eventually we want to create an Indonesian entity that we are proud of, just like Astra.” To contact the reporter on this story: Netty Ismail in Singapore nismail3@bloomberg.net .

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Prudential Denies Sunday Times Report That It Plans to Revive Bid for AIA

June 6, 2010

By Bei Hu June 6 (Bloomberg) — Prudential Plc , which aborted the largest acquisition in its 162-year history, doesn’t plan to revive its bid to buy the main Asian unit of American International Group Inc. , it said in an e-mail today. Prudential remains committed to the region through its existing “very successful business,” it said in the e-mail. It was responding to London’s Sunday Times newspaper, which reported today that Chief Executive Officer Tidjane Thiam was considering another attempt at buying AIA Group Ltd. Prudential terminated the agreement to buy AIA for $35.5 billion on June 3 after AIG directors rejected its last-minute attempt to lower the price to $30.4 billion to appease investors. Thiam and Chairman Harvey McGrath are facing pressure from some shareholders to step down after the failed deal cost it about 450 million pounds ($650 million) in fees. “Had he stuck to his guns and got the deal done, he would have been given time to make it work,” Ben Collett , head of equities at broker Louis Capital Markets (Hong Kong) Ltd., said of Thiam. “Trying to renegotiate was admitting the price was too high to the shareholders.” Thiam believes he could put forward a new offer for AIA before year-end and could gather enough shareholder support to derail an attempt to take AIA public, the Sunday Times said today, citing unidentified people close to the company. No active discussions have been held, it added. No Resurrection “We will not be resurrecting the AIA deal and any speculation is misguided and inaccurate,” Prudential said in the statement today. AIG was selling AIA to help repay $182.3 billion received in a U.S. government bailout. AIG may return to an earlier plan to take AIA public through a stock offering, the Treasury Department said on May 26. AIA had filed an application for a Hong Kong initial public offering before Prudential announced it was in talks to buy it in February. AIG directors rejected Prudential’s revised offer after investment banks including Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Citigroup Inc. and Morgan Stanley valued the AIA business at $32 billion to $36 billion, people with knowledge of the matter told Bloomberg earlier this month. The aborted acquisition by Prudential would have created the largest life insurer in Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, the Philippines and Vietnam. Yet some investors balked at the price tag and a $21 billion rights issue, the largest in the U.K. corporate history, to finance the purchase. To contact the reporter on this story: Bei Hu in Hong Kong at bhu5@bloomberg.net

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Trichet Pushes Fiscal Tightening at G-20 as Geithner Wants Demand Growth

June 5, 2010

By Mark Deen and Timothy R. Homan June 5 (Bloomberg) — European Central Bank President Jean- Claude Trichet said tightening fiscal policy is the best way for Europe to help the global economy as U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner urged it to buttress weak demand. The impact of narrower budget gaps “on growth could not be considered negative because it would improve confidence,” Trichet told reporters today after meeting with Group of 20 finance chiefs in Busan, South Korea. The need for such action is clear in “old industrialized economies,” he said. The remarks underline determination within the 16-nation euro area to shrink budget deficits in the wake of a sovereign debt crisis that has led to a 750 billion-euro ($913 billion) rescue fund for the region’s weakest members. The emphasis contrasts with the message delivered to the G-20 by the U.S., which wants countries with trade surpluses, including China and Germany, to stoke demand to help sustain the global recovery. “Stronger domestic demand growth in Japan and in the European surplus countries” is needed, Geithner said at a separate press briefing in Busan. Spending in both areas is “relatively weak,” he said. Fiscal Horizon While Geithner echoed the view that fiscal consolidation is needed, he said it should be done over the “medium term.” European officials said today that budget tightening needs to come next year, and German Chancellor Angela Merkel said that growth can’t come at the price of high state budget deficits. International Monetary Fund estimates backed up Geithner’s concern. Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn said at a press briefing today that efforts to cut budget deficits in rich countries could hurt growth over the next two years. Stimulus measures implemented in the last two years that haven’t expired yet should remain in place in advanced economies, he said. A study by the fund showed that fiscal consolidation, without market deregulations that would bolster domestic demand, could shave as much as 2.5 percentage points off global growth and cost 30 million jobs worldwide. “The world may end up in a period of sub-potential growth for two or three years,” Venkatraman Anantha-Nageswaran , who helps manage about $140 billion in assets as global chief investment officer at Bank Julius Baer & Co. in Singapore, said in an interview today. “Asia is too small to support export-led growth for both euro zone and the U.S.” G-20 Pledge G-20 finance ministers and central bank governors said in their joint statement today that “within their capacity, countries will expand domestic sources of growth.” Recent volatility in financial markets shows “significant challenges” remain for the global economy, and policy makers stand ready to “safeguard” the recovery and job growth, the statement said. Concerns about the ability of Greece, Spain and Portugal to repay public debts have pushed down the value of the euro, helping the region’s exporters. The single currency yesterday touched $1.1956, its lowest level since 2006, and has depreciated 16 percent since the year began. “Europe’s No. 1 priority” must be to implement its 750 billion-euro plan to contain the debt crisis, Geithner said today. He added that “people want to see” the program implemented as parliaments finish ratifying it in coming days. France’s Welcome Some European leaders say they see benefits to the euro plunge. “I see good news from the current euro-dollar rate,” French Prime Minister Francois Fillon told reporters yesterday in Paris. President Nicolas Sarkozy “and I have been saying for years that the euro-dollar rate didn’t reflect reality and was penalizing our exports,” he said. In the U.S., the Obama administration is aiming to double exports during the next five years. Geithner warned that other countries can’t rely on the U.S. consumer to propel the global economy. Meantime, China’s government has kept in place a currency peg to the dollar adopted in July 2008 to help its exporters after allowing the yuan to appreciate 21 percent over the previous three years. “Something has to be done on the currency,” Strauss-Kahn told reporters in Busan. “The IMF still believes that the renminbi is substantially undervalued,” he said, using another term for China’s currency. Japan’s Recovery Japan’s economic recovery depended on trade for more than half of growth in the first quarter, when consumer spending slowed. At the same time, Bank of Japan Governor Masaaki Shirakawa today said at a press briefing that his country’s economic recovery is stronger than previously expected and there are bright signs for a pickup in domestic demand. U.S. indicators show little scope to propel global growth. The savings rate climbed to 3.6 percent in April, the highest level since January, from 3.1 percent in March as incomes increased and purchases cooled. Job growth was less than forecast in May, with a jobless rate of 9.7 percent. Bill Gross , co-chief investment officer and manager of the world’s biggest bond fund at Pacific Investment Management Co., said yesterday the unemployment rate may rise to 10 percent within the next several months with job growth “anemic.” “The market was assuming that the private sector was coming back, but obviously we’ve seen none of that,” Gross said in a radio interview on Bloomberg Surveillance with Tom Keene. Europe’s Banks Geithner also singled out Europe as a region needing to push forward with financial regulation reform. “Further progress on financial repair is critical to global economic recovery,” he wrote in a June 3 letter to G-20 counterparts. “This requires, particularly in parts of Europe, further efforts to restructure and recapitalize the banking system.” Bank of Italy Governor Mario Draghi , a member of the ECB’s governing council, countered Geithner’s assessment. Speaking at a press briefing today in Busan he said European banks are properly capitalized. The Busan meeting ended with no agreement on a universal bank levy and with finance chiefs pledging to work toward a November deal on increasing capital requirements for lenders. G-20 members, which account for about 85 percent of global output, include Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, South Korea, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Turkey, the U.S., U.K. and EU. There’s been “a lot of heat,” in the G-20 talks, Shin Je- Yoon , deputy minister for international affairs at South Korea’s finance ministry, told reporters today, citing discussions of European fiscal consolidation and “structural policies” to bolster growth. To contact the reporters on this story: Mark Deen in Busan at markdeen@bloomberg.net ; Timothy R. Homan in Busan at thoman1@bloomberg.net

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G-20 Signals Delay in Plan That Would Force Banks to Boost Capital Levels

June 4, 2010

By Theophilos Argitis and Mark Deen June 5 (Bloomberg) — Group of 20 finance chiefs signaled they will delay introducing new rules aimed at forcing banks to raise the quality and quantity of capital they hold to buffer against financial crisis. Finance ministers and central bankers conclude talks in Busan, South Korea, today in agreement that banks need to keep more assets on hand, yet split over the scale and timing of capital increases. With euro-area officials expressing concern that haste would hurt economic growth, U.K. Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne echoed U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner in pushing for the new rules to be agreed this year, with the provision that enactment be delayed. “Implementation is a variable,” Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty , who is co-chair of this weekend’s meeting, told reporters in Busan. “I think that can be worked out over time. There could be a compromise over that.” At stake for banks is the potential need to raise as much as $375 billion in fresh capital under the proposals being discussed, according to estimates by UBS AG. Companies from Deutsche Bank AG to Bank of America Corp. warn that forcing them to build up reserves quickly could lead them to cut lending, threatening their profits and imperiling the global recovery. G-20 officials are debating how to define capital, Flaherty said. The issue is nevertheless too “complex” to be settled as soon as when President Barack Obama and his fellow G-20 leaders convene in Toronto this month, he said. ‘Right Direction’ “If we get some more work accomplished here this weekend, then I would expect the leaders in Toronto would be able to express with assurance that we’re going in the right direction, that we’re on time,” Flaherty said. Leaders are scheduled to meet again in South Korea in November, the new target for a deal agreed to by Geithner yesterday. Geithner told South Korean Finance Minister Yoon Jeung-hyun that he backs crafting a final framework by then, according to a South Korean official speaking to reporters on condition of anonymity. Osborne told reporters in Busan yesterday it was important to “end the uncertainty” facing financial markets by agreeing on a blueprint for reform this year even if its introduction may be postponed. “There’ll be a delay in the implementation,” French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde said. “We also need to do a lot of technical work on the quality of the rules. These subjects are too complicated to be rushed.” Global Recovery Both the U.S. and Europe are advocating regulatory models that build on their own existing rulebooks and so would give their banks a competitive edge if implemented globally. Nations such as the U.S. whose economies are largely financed by markets want banks to hold more assets on their balance sheets. Policy makers in continental Europe, where banks provide more financing, are concerned too-high reserves would choke growth. In a dinner session late yesterday in Busan, G-20 members agreed that global growth is coming back, with variation by region, Lagarde told reporters. She also said that the majority of the group now views deficit reduction as the top priority, with a minority arguing that measures to support growth should take precedence. ‘Grave Situation’ The officials gathered just as a slide in Hungary’s currency served as the latest reminder of investor angst over indebted governments. The forint fell to a 12-month low against the euro as the government warned of a “very grave situation.” China’s central bank Governor Zhou Xiaochuan told reporters yesterday that his nation is “confident” the European Union and the European Central Bank will be able to contain the risks from the region’s debt crisis. As they return to profit after governments spent $11 trillion aiding them through the credit crisis, banks are already warning regulators that forcing them to enhance capital levels could backfire if it hurts their ability to lend to customers and consumers. They want more time to be spent gauging the economic fallout from the new regulations. “It is unrealistic to expect such significant capital raising to occur without a significant impact on lending, businesses and ultimately growth and employment,” Andrew Procter , Deutsche Bank’s global head of government and regulatory affairs, wrote in an April 16 letter to the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, which is overseeing the rule- writing. JPMorgan Chase & Co. predicted in February that annual earnings at 13 of the largest banks would drop by $20 billion. Bank Levy Banks should increase the quality of the capital they hold by the end of 2012, the Basel Committee said in a report on bank capital and liquidity published in December. The panel said banks must increase the amount of equity and retained earnings they hold to cope with losses better. G-20 officials also indicated divisions over a proposal backed by the U.S. and some European nations to impose a levy on banks to cover the cost of potential future bailouts. India’s Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee said in an interview in Busan yesterday that using regulatory measures “instead of taxing the banking system is better.” Flaherty said he saw no “evidence” of a consensus for a bank tax. Still, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said he’s confident the U.K. and “many others” will join Germany in introducing a European levy in the absence of a G-20 pact. “We will throw our weight behind European regulation and we won’t be alone in that,” Schaeuble said in an interview. The G-20 accounts for about 85 percent of global GDP. Its members are Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, South Korea, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Turkey, the U.S., U.K. and EU. To contact the reporter on this story: Mark Deen in Busan at markdeen@bloomberg.net

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Most Asian Stocks Drop Mining Shares Decline on Demand Concern

June 4, 2010

By Shani Raja June 4 (Bloomberg) — Asian stocks fell, led by mining companies, after the world’s two largest copper producers said China’s plans to curb growth will lower demand for the metal. Technology companies advanced. BHP Billiton Ltd. , the world’s largest mining company, sank 2.3 percent in Sydney after the comments from Codelco and Freeport-McMoran Copper & Gold Inc.’s chief executive officers dragged metal prices lower. Baoshan Iron & Steel Co. fell 1.1 percent after Shanghai Securities News said the company will cut its prices. Hynix Semiconductor Inc. surged 6 percent in Seoul on a credit-rating upgrade and higher memory-chip prices. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index lost 0.3 percent to 113.28 as of 7:17 p.m. Tokyo time. About five stocks fell for every four that rose. The gauge has lost 12 percent from its high this year on April 15 on concern Europe’s debt crisis and Chinese measures to cool its property market will hurt the global economy. “Chinese economic growth remains a significant risk in the eyes of investors, particularly given the uncertainty surrounding other regions, particularly the euro-zone,” said Tim Schroeders , who helps manage about $1.1 billion at Pengana Capital Ltd. in Melbourne. “The political situation in Japan adds to uncertainty for investors in the near term.” The Nikkei 225 Stock Average lost 0.1 percent in Japan, where the lower house of parliament voted in favor of making Naoto Kan the nation’s next prime minister. Yukio Hatoyama resigned as premier two days ago. South Korean Growth Mining companies dragged Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index down by 0.9 percent. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index and China’s Shanghai Composite Index erased earlier declines to finish little changed after the World Bank predicted 9 percent to 10 percent growth in 2010 for the Chinese economy. The Kospi index added 0.1 percent in Seoul, where the central bank said the country’s economy expanded at a faster pace than initially estimated last quarter. Futures on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index were little changed. The index rose 0.4 percent yesterday on speculation a jobs report due later today will bolster optimism in the economy and overshadow concern about slowing growth in China. The copper market will be “volatile” for as much as another year after China took measures to cool its property market, Codelco Chief Executive Officer Diego Hernandez said yesterday in an interview. The Asian nation is a “risk to the world’s market place in the near term,” Freeport-McMoran CEO Richard Adkerson said in an interview. BHP sank 2.3 percent to A$37.87 in Sydney, while Rio Tinto Group , the world’s third-largest mining company, lost 2.1 percent to A$67.59 after Hernandez and Adkerson’s comments dragged copper futures in New York down by 3.1 percent. ‘Policy Mistakes’ The metal’s futures slumped 7.4 percent in May, the most since January, amid economic growth concerns. Reports June 1 showed the rate of manufacturing gains slowed in China and the U.S., the world’s biggest copper users. “The tendency amongst global investors is to use ‘policy mistakes’ in China as the default premise,” said Prasad Patkar , who helps manage about $1.5 billion in Sydney at Platypus Asset Management Ltd. “A lot of the bad news is in the price, but resources stocks are notorious for overshoots both on upside and downside. It’s hard to stand in front of a charging herd.” In Hong Kong, Jiangxi Copper Co., China’s No. 1 copper producer, lost 0.7 percent to HK$15.04. Aluminum Corp. of China Ltd. lost 1.7 percent to HK$6.30, the Hang Seng Index’s second- biggest loser. Baoshan Iron & Steel , the listed unit of China’s No. 2 steelmaker, slid 1.1 percent to 6.21 yuan. The company will lower its prices in July, the Shanghai Securities News reported today, citing a company pricing statement it obtained. Lower Valuations Chinese policy makers are trimming stimulus measures this year after a $1.4 trillion lending binge revived growth in 2009. Officials are targeting a 22 percent reduction in new loans and have sold bills and raised banks’ reserve requirements to suck money out of the financial system. The China manufacturing report and concerns over political instability in Japan contributed to the MSCI Asia Pacific Index ’s 0.2 percent decline this week. The gauge rallied 2.7 percent yesterday on reports of higher U.S. auto and home sales. Companies in the MSCI gauge are valued at 14.6 times estimated profit, near the lowest level since January 2009. “Valuation levels for many companies appear attractive, on the proviso that the global economy does not go into a double- dip recession,” said Pengana’s Schroeders. Chipmakers Gain PT Bumi Resources , Indonesia’s largest coal producer, fell 2.6 percent to 1,860 rupiah, the third-biggest drag on the Jakarta Composite Index today. Bumi declined as PT Kim Eng Securities’ analyst Ricardo Silaen cut the stock’s rating to “sell” from “hold,” citing higher production costs. In Seoul, Hynix jumped 6 percent to 26,400 won after the company had its long- term foreign currency issuer default rating raised to ‘BB-’ from ‘B+’ by Fitch. Chipmakers also rose after the Dramexchange Index , which tracks prices of the most widely used computer memory chips, rose 1.2 percent today, according to Dramexchange Technology Inc., operator of Asia’s biggest spot market for semiconductors. Samsung Electronics Co. gained 2.1 percent to 793,000 won. Among other stocks that advanced today, Fuji Heavy Industries Ltd. , which makes Subaru cars, surged 7 percent to 566 yen in Tokyo after the Nikkei newspaper said the company will earn a record profit in North America. Samsung SDI Co. , a maker of lithium-ion rechargeable batteries, climbed 4.1 percent to 177,000 won after Hyundai Securities Co. raised its share-price forecast to 210,000 won from 180,000 won. To contact the reporters for this story: Shani Raja in Sydney at sraja4@bloomberg.net .

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G-20 Central Banks Delay Exit on Euro Debt Woes

June 4, 2010

By Simon Kennedy and Shamim Adam June 4 (Bloomberg) — Group of 20 central banks are delaying their withdrawal of emergency stimulus as Europe’s debt crisis shakes financial markets and threatens to hinder the global recovery. G-20 finance chiefs begin talks today in South Korea after central banks from Australia to Canada identified investor reaction to Europe’s indebtedness as a hurdle to higher interest rates. European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet has reversed his exit strategy to combat the euro’s biggest test, while the Federal Reserve’s Charles Evans and Dennis Lockhart signaled market stress will delay a rise in U.S. rates. “Given the increase in uncertainty in the economy, it would be perfectly natural for people to be less eager to tighten,” William White , a former Bank for International Settlements chief economist who pointed to risks in financial markets before the 2008 credit crisis, said in an interview in Seoul. The need for central bankers to keep rates lower for longer may spark tension in Busan, South Korea, as monetary policy makers intensify their public demands for fiscal authorities to restrain debt in return. The pressure is an echo of the 1990s, when then-Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan and counterparts lobbied leaders to narrow deficits that threatened a bondholder revolt. Europe’s Rescue Trichet, Chinese Finance Minister Xie Xuren and their G-20 counterparts convene today for the first time since a Greek-led sell-off in the bonds of the euro-area’s most indebted nations spurred the European Union to craft a 750 billion-euro ($918 billion) rescue plan and the ECB to buy the bonds of “dysfunctional” markets. The package hasn’t been enough to pacify investors concerned sovereign debt is the biggest threat yet to the recovery from last year’s global slump. The MSCI World Index of stocks has fallen 12 percent since mid-April and the rate banks say they pay for three-month loans in dollars last week reached the highest level since July. The market for corporate bonds closed on June 1 as concern European banks will take more writedowns and losses led investors to shun all but the safest government debt. “Investors are going to stay cautious,” said Andrew Milligan , the Edinburgh-based head of global strategy at Standard Life Investments, which manages the equivalent of $214 billion. He predicts they will seek “ballast” for their portfolios amid volatility by buying investment-grade corporate debt. Bonds from governments with lower borrowing levels will also outperform, he forecast. Credit Crunch Central banks are concerned the biggest threat to the recovery is banks ceasing to lend and financial markets freezing as happened in 2008, rather than weaker European demand, said Julian Callow , chief European economist at Barclays Capital in London. He estimates Greece, Ireland, Portugal and Spain accounted for just 4 percent of world gross domestic product last year. “They are traumatized by what happened in 2008,” said Callow, who previously worked at the Bank of England. “Investors are nervous again so central banks are picking up on that.” Trichet’s ECB is leading the pullback, announcing May 10 it would intervene in markets to buy government bonds, renew its auctions of unlimited cash to banks for up to six months and revive a currency swap line with the Fed. Shifting Forecast Goldman Sachs Group Inc. Chief European Economist Erik Nielsen now expects the ECB to wait until the second quarter of next year to raise its benchmark rate rather than during the first three months of the year as he previously anticipated. Other G-20 central banks are also taking note of Europe’s woes. Australia kept its key rate at 4.5 percent on June 1 and signaled it may leave it there for the “near term,” noting in a statement that “investors have generally displayed a good deal more caution.” Turkey’s central bank said on May 18 that indebtedness elsewhere in Europe means “uncertainty over external demand is likely to remain important for a long time.” Russia’s Bank Rossii cut its main interest rate for the 14th time in as many months on May 31 to support its recovery, while Indonesia yesterday kept its benchmark unchanged at a record low. ‘Extended’ Period Fed Bank of Chicago President Evans said May 31 he “wouldn’t be surprised” if the Fed’s policy of keeping rates near zero “gets extended just a little bit.” Atlanta Fed President Lockhart said yesterday that “the pressures in Europe may slow the movement toward any removal of accommodation.” Bank of England policy maker Adam Posen said in a May 20 interview Europe’s crisis is going to inflict “some negative drag on the U.K.” “If you have volatility in markets and implications for the financial system then central bankers are going to be concerned about the risks to growth so may be relatively more conservative in scaling back support,” said Paul Donovan , a UBS AG economist in London. Even central banks that have raised rates may now be slower to do so. In India, where the Reserve Bank increased borrowing costs in March and April, Deputy Governor Subir Gokarn last month said officials will be more cautious with future moves. Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney mentioned Europe and its crisis four times in a one-page statement on June 1, a signal his bank may not soon repeat its quarter-point rate rise. Brazil Exception Brazil, where inflation has exceeded the government’s target each month this year, may be an exception. Brazil central bank President Henrique Meirelles said the nation’s policy makers are in a “tightening mood.” “We are committed to keeping inflation on target,” Meirelles said today in a Bloomberg Television interview from Busan. The market jitters may also have given China reason to refrain so far from letting its currency rise against the dollar. G-20 members have repeatedly called for an end to the peg China adopted in July 2008 to aid its exporters. The euro’s 15 percent slide against the yuan this year already threatens to undermine Chinese shipments. Twelve-month non-deliverable yuan forwards reflect bets the yuan will strengthen 0.7 percent from the spot rate of 6.83 per dollar compared with projections of a 3.2 percent appreciation at the start of May. China’s Yuan “China’s economic strength certainly justifies a stronger yuan and higher interest rates, but policy makers don’t want to give an impression that they are tightening at a time when exporters are suffering,” said Tomo Kinoshita , an economist at Nomura Holdings Inc. in Hong Kong. In return for doing more to aid expansion, central banks may demand governments work harder to outline and enact plans to narrow budget gaps, with southern Europe an example of what may happen if they fail. Citigroup Inc. economists estimate G-20 governments must tighten fiscal policy an average of 8 percent of GDP over the next decade to reduce debt burdens to 60 percent of GDP. Trichet said May 31 that he will no longer tolerate a lack of budget discipline in the euro area after all but Luxembourg and Finland last year violated a rule to hold budget deficits to less than 3 percent of GDP. Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said April 27 that a failure to reduce the U.S. deficit may imperil the recovery by pushing up borrowing costs. Finance ministers headed to Busan seeking to juggle the goals of protecting growth and consolidating budgets. U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner said he wanted fiscal reform that was “growth-friendly,” while France’s Christine Lagarde said the G-20 was aiming to restore confidence in public borrowing, yet not “suffocate growth.” To contact the reporters on this story: Simon Kennedy in London at skennedy4@bloomberg.net ; Shamim Adam in Busan, South Korea, at sadam2@bloomberg.net

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