Monday, December 10, 2012

NEWS,10.12.2012



Slight gains on Wall Street


Wall Street moved higher amid promising data on China's economy, fuelling hopes that the world's second-largest economy is gathering steam again. China offered better-than-expected data on both industrial output and retail sales, welcomed by a market that is on tenterhooks about US budget talks aimed at avoiding the US$600 billion in tax increases and spending cuts scheduled to kick in on January 1. "China hit that trough and is starting to see an acceleration of growth," Tom Wirth, who helps manage US$1.6 billion as senior investment officer for Chemung Canal Trust, in Elmira, New York, told Bloomberg News.Meanwhile, no details were offered on yesterday's meeting between US President Barack Obama and Republican House Speaker John Boehner about an agreement to avoid the so-called fiscal cliff  and a potential recession for the world's largest economy.A study by the US National Intelligence Council, however, predicted that China's economy will take over the top spot from the US before 2030.In afternoon trading in New York, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 0.25%, the Standard & Poor's 500 Index gained 0.16%, while the Nasdaq Composite Index advanced 0.31%.Better-than-expected November sales data for McDonald's lifted its shares 1.3%, following a dismal October during which sales declined for the first time in nine years. Global sales at restaurants open at least 13 months increased 2.4% last month. "One month does not a trend make ... but it's a nice sign to see them rebound after a horrible October," ITG Investment Research analyst Steve West .Investors are eyeing a two-day meeting by Federal Reserve policy makers starting tomorrow. In Europe, the Stoxx 600 Index eked out a 0.1% gain from the previous close. It is at the highest level in 18 months, according to Bloomberg. National benchmark stock indexes also rose in London, Paris and Frankfurt. Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti's unexpected announcement over the weekend that he plans to resign soon after lawmakers approve his budget plan later this month sent the nation's stocks and bonds lower. Italy's FTSE MIB stock index dropped 2.2%, while the yield on the country's 10-year bond was last up 29 basis points at 4.82%. Elections may be held as early as February one to two months earlier than expected. European political and financial leaders today pressed for the next Italian government to hold fast on the reforms initiated by Monti. Still, the uncertainty may increase wariness among investors. "The underlying cracks within the euro zone are actually widening," Georg Grodzki, head of credit research at Legal & General Investment Management in London, told Bloomberg. "Investors will be reading Italian politicians' lips very, very closely."

Berlusconi lashes out at foreign leaders


Former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi has reacted angrily to negative comments from foreign politicians and media about his decision to run as a candidate to lead Italy for the fifth time, calling it an offensive interference in domestic affairs.He said in a statement that he had always been a "convinced supporter of Europe" and that the comments criticising him were "out of place" and "offensive not so much to me personally but to the free choice of the Italians".He suggested that the "interference" in Italian affairs may be an attempt to weaken the share price of Italian companies and make them easier takeover targets.The current Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti has been attempting to reassure rattled financial markets that Italy will not be left adrift following his surprise decision to resign from - and Berlusconi's return to frontline politics.Monti's weekend announcement that he will quit after Berlusconi's People of Freedom (PDL) party withdrew its support for his technocrat government pushed up Italy's borrowing costs and prompted a stock market sell-off on Monday."I understand market reactions. They need not be dramatised," Monti told reporters in Oslo where he attended the award of the Nobel Peace Prize to the European Union and where other EU leaders queued up to praise him.The former European Commissioner said he was confident the elections would produce a responsible government "which should be in line with the huge efforts already pursued by Italy... markets should not fear a decision-making vacuum".He added: "Let me remind markets that the current government has not left - it's fully in charge and will be so until a new government comes in after the elections."The campaign for a vote expected in mid-February is likely to be fought over Monti's reform agenda, which Berlusconi, his predecessor as prime minister, said had condemned Italy to recession and forced him to reluctantly run for a fifth term.European leaders were anxious to stress that any new government must stick to Monti's economic reform agenda."Monti was a great prime minister of Italy and I hope that the policies he put in place will continue after the elections," said European Council President Herman Van Rompuy in Oslo.There were similar comments from policymakers ranging from French President Francois Hollande to the head of the European bailout fund Klaus Regling and European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso.Spanish Economy Minister Luis de Guindos warned that instability in Italy could spill over and put Spain's fragile public finances at risk of further turmoil.Attention is now focused on whether Monti will enter politics himself, either as a candidate or by endorsing one of the centrist forces that have backed his reforms and made more or less explicit pleas for him to run."I'm not considering this particular issue at this stage. All my efforts are being devoted to the completion of the remaining time of the current government," he said in Oslo.Monti has repeatedly warned of the danger posed by the rise of populist, anti-European forces in the region and said he hoped such forces would not dominate the Italian election campaign.Monti's decision to resign once the 2013 budget is approved, probably before Christmas, has brought forward to February an election that had already been expected in March or April at the latest. Opinion polls suggest Berlusconi has little chance of re-election, and he has struggled to reassert a previously undisputed domination of rival factions and courtiers in his deeply divided centre-right party. In contrast, his enemies in the centre-left Democratic Party (PD) under Pier Luigi Bersani hold a strong lead and are likely to form the next government on a broadly pro-European platform, largely in line with Monti's agenda.Bersani who hopes that the former European Commissioner will stay on in some capacity, possibly as Italy's president said on Monday that "precisely because Monti should still be able to be of service to this country, it would be better for him to stay out of the (election) contest" .Berlusconi's strategy appears designed to ensure he retains influence in the next parliament with a substantial voting bloc that, among other things, can protect his business and personal interests .After several weeks of calm, markets bridled at the prospect of Berlusconi's return to lead the centre right, just over a year after a financial crisis drove the scandal-plagued billionaire from office to be replaced by Monti's technocrats. Berlusconi's reappearance and the prospect of a messy anti-Monti election campaign has galvanised attention in Italy and abroad, reawakening memories of the financial and sexual scandals that peppered the media magnate's last government.Not that such memories have had much chance to slumber. This week the prosecutor in Berlusconi's trial for allegedly having sex with a juvenile prostitute accused the 76-year-old of delaying tactics after the young woman failed to appear as a witness.The Roman Catholic Church made outspoken and thinly veiled criticism of the former premier that could influence the PDL's conservative voting base."What leaves one astonished is the irresponsibility of those who think of arranging things for themselves while the house is still burning," the head of the Italian bishops' conference, Angelo Bagnasco, told the Corriere della Sera.French Finance Minister Pierre Moscovici also weighed in."The direction that Italy has been going in for the last year and a half is a solid direction, there is no reason to worry," he said."Berlusconi is returning to politics, but I'm convinced that he will not return to power," he said.With a new government likely to be formed in a few months, Italy's European partners have now started to look more closely at Bersani, the overwhelming victor in a centre-left primary election last month.A no-frills former communist who is close to Italy's unions, Bersani has promised to stick to Monti's promises on fiscal discipline.While Italy's election laws are likely to give Bersani a strong majority in the lower house, the complicated rules may make it more difficult for him to take control of the Senate, posing a possible risk to the formation of a stable government.Whoever wins will have to confront a severe recession, record unemployment and a ballooning public debt expected to surpass 126% of gross domestic product this year.


Concerns over Japan's economy


On Monday confirmed that the world's third-largest economy shrank in the three months to September, stoking fears the country is slipping into a recession.Financial turmoil in Europe, a strong yen that has dented exports and a painful diplomatic row with major trade partner China have dented Japan's economy, dousing hopes it had cemented a recovery after the 2011 quake-tsunami disaster.Some economists have warned the current quarter is likely to see another contraction, meaning two successive quarters of negative growth that would reflect a technical recession.On Monday, official data confirmed earlier figures that showed Japan's economy shrank 0.9% in the July-September quarter, or down 3.5% on an annualised basis.Revised figures from the Cabinet Office also showed the nation's growth in the previous quarter was essentially flat, further underscoring recession fears.Separate data released Monday showed Japan's current account surplus was down about 30% on-year to ¥376.9bn ($4.56 billion) in October, although the latest figure beat market expectations for a ¥218bn surplus, according to Dow Jones Newswires.The current account is the broadest measure of Japan's trade with the rest of the world, including exports, tourism and overseas income.Japan's current account surpluses have been hit by a slowing global economy and a spike in fuel imports due to the shutdown of most of the country's nuclear reactors following last year's disaster which triggered a major atomic crisis.Last month, Tokyo approved $10.7bn in fresh spending to help boost the limp economy, more than double a package announced in October.The new package was announced as the nation prepares for December 16 elections which are expected to see Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda and his Democratic Party of Japan defeated by the main opposition Liberal Democratic Party led by Shinzo Abe.Abe has vowed to spend heavily on public works and pressure the Bank of Japan into launching aggressive monetary easing measures to boost growth if his party wins the election.The BoJ has unveiled two policy easing measures in recent months as its counterparts in the US and Europe launched major moves to counter slowing growth.The yen has been weakening as speculation grows that the BoJ will usher in further easing measures after its policy meeting this month, with the central bank's closely-watched Tankan corporate sentiment survey due this week. "The BoJ will have no choice but to consider additional monetary easing in case its own Tankan survey shows worsening in near-term corporate sentiment," said RBS Securities chief Japan economist Junko Nishioka. 


China one of the most unequal nations

 

China's wealth gap has widened to a level where it is among the world's most unequal nations, a Chinese academic institute said in a survey, as huge numbers of poor are left behind by the economic boom.China's Gini coefficient a commonly used measure of inequality - was 0.61 in 2010, the Survey and Research Center for China Household Finance said, well above what some academics view as the warning line of 0.40.A figure of 0 would represent perfect equality, and 1 total inequality."Currently, China's household income gap is huge," said the institute, founded by the Southwestern University of Finance and Economics and the Institute of Financial Research, which operates under China's central bank."The Gini coefficient is as high as 0.61, rare in the world."China's growing wealth gap is a major concern for Communist authorities, who are keen to avoid public discontent that could lead to social unrest in the country of 1.3 billion people.In a sign of the sensitivity surrounding the issue the government has not released an official Gini coefficient for the country as a whole for more than a decade, since it put the statistic at 0.412 in 2000.A figure of 0.61 would put China at the top of a list of 16 countries by 2010 Gini coefficient on the World Bank website. The largest set of figures available on the site is for 2008, covering 47 countries and headed by Honduras on 0.613.The Global Times newspaper, which reported the latest survey results on Monday, said China's wealth gap had reached an "alarming" level.But the research centre played down its own findings, saying such a phenomenon was common in rapidly developing economies.It called on the government to use its vast financial resources to support low-income earners in the short term, while improving education to help address the imbalance in the long term."The Gini coefficient certainly points to the serious issue of income inequality," the director of the Chengdu city-based centre Gan Li said."But more importantly about the interpretation of the figure is that it does not necessarily indicate imbalance in China's economy," he said, adding it was normal for greater resources to flow to developed areas."There's no need to make a big fuss about it."The government-backed Chinese Academy of Social Sciences estimated China's Gini coefficient at nearly 0.47 in 2005.Another research institute, the Centre for Chinese Rural Studies, in August put the Gini coefficient at around 0.39 for rural residents last year, but gave no figure for the overall national level.

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