Thursday, December 15, 2011

Industrial output sees first drop since April




WASHINGTON |
Thu Dec 15, 2011 9:19am EST

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Industrial output declined in November for the first time in seven months as manufacturing activity slumped, countering recent signs of improvement in the economy.

Production in the industrial sector eased 0.2 percent last month, the first drop since April, following a 0.7 percent gain in October. Analysts in a Reuters poll had been looking for a 0.2 percent rise.

A measure of how fully firms are using available resources, capacity utilization, eased to 77.8 from 78.0.

The pullback in factory activity was led by a 3.4 percent decrease in motor vehicles and parts. But even excluding that drag, manufacturing output was still down 0.2 percent.

Mining production rose 0.1 percent, and there was a 0.2 percent rise for utilities.

(Reporting by Pedro da Costa; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)



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Bad batch of moonshine kills more than 100 in India




MOGRAHAT, India |
Thu Dec 15, 2011 6:53am EST

MOGRAHAT, India (Reuters) - An adulterated batch of bootleg liquor has killed at least 100 drinkers in eastern India, with dozens more arriving at a cramped rural hospital with poisoning symptoms.

The deaths come just days after a hospital fire killed 93 people in the same state of West Bengal. Both disasters highlight lax health and safety standards as the nation of 1.2 billion people rapidly modernize.

Residents of Mograhat, a town about 50 km (31 miles) south of West Bengal's capital Kolkata, fell severely ill after drinking liquor from several illegal shops. Ambulances brought more patients from villages to the town every few minutes.

"He drank the alcohol late in the afternoon yesterday...we didn't realize his health was deteriorating," Zamir Sardar said about his 32-year-old uncle Jahangir Sardar, a leather cutter, who passed away Thursday.

"In the morning, his condition seemed very unusual, he cried out in pain. Then we brought him to the hospital as soon as we could, but he passed away within a couple of hours," he told Reuters Thursday.

Half-conscious patients were carried into hospitals on stretchers, and treated on the floor due to lack of beds.

A hospital document seen by a Reuters witness listed 81 dead, while doctors at the hospital said the toll was climbing rapidly. The Press Trust of India news agency reported at least 107 had died.

Mass deaths from drinking moonshine are common in India, where the poor often drink "country liquor" which is cheaper than alcohol from licensed shops.

(Additional reporting in NEW DELHI by Annie Banerji; Writing by Frank Jack Daniel; Editing by Yoko Nishikawa)



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Wednesday, December 14, 2011

HK IPO debuts weak on volatile global markets




HONG KONG |
Wed Dec 14, 2011 8:46pm EST

HONG KONG (Reuters) - Two of Hong Kong's biggest initial public offerings fell in their trading debuts on Thursday, underscoring weak investor demand that has pressured new listings in the once booming global IPO powerhouse.

Chow Tai Fook Jewellery Group Ltd (1929.HK), the world's biggest jewellery retailer, slumped more than 8 percent in early trading, while New China Life Insurance (1336.HK) was down about 9 percent after the two companies raised a combined $3.9 billion. New China Life, which listed both in Hong Kong and Shanghai, will debut in mainland China on Friday.

Both deals had been priced at or near the bottom of their indicative ranges, signaling the lack of appetite from retail and institutional investors wary of the outcome from Europe's debt troubles, despite a year-end scramble to get some deals done.

Haitong Securities Co Ltd (600837.SS), China's No.2 brokerage by assets, pulled its up to $1.7 billion Hong Kong stock offering on Monday due to poor market conditions, although some smaller IPOs were more successful in Shanghai.

Both Chow Tai Fook and New China Life said in separate securities filings that their international offerings were only "moderately over-subscribed."

Demand from Hong Kong retail investors, who focus on the first-day performance of IPOs, was well short of the total offered for New China Life. Chow Tai Fook said it received orders worth almost seven times the total offered, compared with more than 2,000 times over subscription for the IPO of handbag retailer Milan Station (1150.HK) in May.

Chow Tai Fook shares fell as low as HK$13.66 shortly after opening from its IPO price of HK$15 a share. New China Life, which is 15 percent owned by Swiss insurer Zurich Financial Services AG (ZURN.VX), dropped to HK$25.9 from the HK$28.5 offering price. The broader market .HSI fell for a sixth day running and was down 1.4 percent.

Deutsche Bank (DBKGn.DE), Goldman Sachs (GS.N), HSBC (0005.HK)(HSBA.L) and JPMorgan (JPM.N) were joint global coordinators of the Chow Tai Fook IPO, with Citigroup (C.N), Credit Suisse (CSGN.VX) and UBS (UBSN.VX) acting as joint bookrunners.

China International Capital Corp (CICC) and UBS Securities were lead underwriters of New China Life's Shanghai offering.

CICC, Goldman Sachs and UBS were hired as joint global coordinators of the Hong Kong tranche of the deal, with Bank of America Merrill Lynch (BAC.N), BNP Paribas SA (BNPP.PA), Deutsche Bank, HSBC and China Merchants Securities also acting as joint bookrunners.

(Editing by Richard Pullin)



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Bombs kill three, injure 35 in north Iraq: police




MOSUL, Iraq |
Wed Dec 14, 2011 10:41am EST

MOSUL, Iraq (Reuters) - Two car bombs exploded near shops and restaurants in the Iraqi town of Tal Afar on Wednesday, killing at least three people and wounding 35 others, a police source said.

The blasts occurred in the mainly Shi'ite town of Tal Afar, which lies about 420 km (260 miles) north of Baghdad and just west of the volatile northern city of Mosul - the last urban stronghold of al Qaeda Sunni insurgency.

Militants blew up a small oil tanker then few minutes later they detonated a car bomb as more people gathered to help the wounded, the source in Tal Afar police said. Seven of those wounded were seriously injured, the source said.

Violence has subsided sharply in Iraq since the sectarian strife in 2006-07, but Sunni Islamist insurgents and Shi'ite militia still stage daily bombings and assassinations.

Nearly nine years after the invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein, Washington will end its military presence and pull out its remaining 5,500 troops before December 31.

(Reporting by Reporting by Jamal al-Badrani; writing by Rania El Gamal)



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Monday, December 12, 2011

Fed likely to stay on sidelines at policy meeting




WASHINGTON |
Tue Dec 13, 2011 12:17am EST

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Federal Reserve is likely to hold off offering the U.S. economy fresh stimulus at a meeting on Tuesday as it weighs encouraging signs on the recovery against risks coming from Europe.

Central bank officials are expected to continue discussions on how they might sharpen their communications to get more traction out of the monetary easing they have already put in place, but observers rate chances of an announcement as low.

Even less likely is the prospect of a new round of bond buying, although many analysts think that will happen eventually too.

"I don't think this meeting lends itself to any major overhaul of policy," said Jacob Oubina, senior U.S. economist for RBC Capital Markets in New York.

The Fed has held overnight interest rates near zero since December 2008 and has bought $2.3 trillion in bonds in a further attempt to stimulate a robust recovery.

Recent reports about the U.S. economy point to some improvement. The jobless rate tumbled 0.4 percentage point to 8.6 percent in November and consumers entered the holiday shopping season with wallets open.

The world's largest economy expanded at a 2.5 percent annual rate in the third quarter, the fastest pace in a year. Forecasters hope growth will top 3 percent in the current quarter.

However, analysts say the recovery's relative strength is partly a snapback from the weakness that followed Japan's natural disasters and high oil prices early in the year.

They caution that a return to more-sluggish growth is likely, particularly as Europe begins to weigh more heavily.

"Growth will slow down in the first half of the year," said Harm Bandholz, chief U.S. economist for UniCredit in New York. "With that comes weaker payroll gains and a higher unemployment rate."

BIDING THEIR TIME

The large decline in the jobless rate suggests it may have been an anomaly. With U.S. housing markets still deeply depressed and consumers laboring under high levels of debt, two traditional avenues of recovery -- home buying and borrowing -- are unlikely to provide help this time.

Meanwhile, Europe looms large.

U.S. policymakers say the greatest risk to the U.S. recovery would be financial contagion that could freeze markets in a repeat of the 2008 crisis. Even if that risk is avoided, a likely euro zone recession will take a toll.

Given the uncertainty, the U.S. central bank appears ready to hold both communications and easing tools at the ready for possible use in early 2012.

"We ... continue to face significant downside risks, mostly related to the stress in the euro zone," New York Federal Reserve Bank President William Dudley said last month.

Many observers expect the Fed to begin publishing the interest rate forecasts of its senior officials, perhaps as soon as January, when it issues its next quarterly economic projections.

Doing so would clarify when officials expect benchmark short-term rates to start rising and could cement market expectations that any tightening of policy is a long way off.

The Fed has also been discussing the possible adoption of an explicit inflation target to reassure markets it will not let price pressures gain an upper hand even as it pushes hard to jump-start a stronger recovery.

Many analysts expect the Fed will wait until a two-day meeting on January 24-25 before launching any new initiatives.

Officials are already scheduled to release projections for GDP growth, unemployment and inflation at that meeting, and Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke will hold a quarterly news conference, which he could use to explain any changes.

Markets do expect the Fed to eventually fire more bullets. In a Reuters poll earlier this month, economists at 13 of the 20 financial firms that deal directly with the Fed said they expect the central bank to buy more mortgage-backed securities. The median estimate of the bond-buying initiative was $550 billion.

Of the economists polled, 17 of 20 expect the Fed to overhaul its communications framework.



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Sunday, December 11, 2011

Insight: The day Europe lost patience with Britain




BRUSSELS |
Sun Dec 11, 2011 6:30am EST

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - It was billed as a summit to save the euro. It may be remembered as the day Europe lost patience with Britain, as most of the continent threw its lot in with EU founding members France and Germany and committed to binding their economies ever more tightly.

There was plenty of talk of history in the making in the week before the Dec 8/9 gathering of European Union leaders - the eighth this year. But it was all about the currency and whether it would survive the strains of a debt crisis that over the past two years has engulfed Greece, spread to Ireland, Portugal, Spain and Italy and now threatens France and even mighty Germany.

As the summit began, there was no hint of the drama that was to come in the early hours of Friday, the moment when Europe split, 26 against one, after about 10 hours of talks. Britain has always had an uneasy relationship with its EU partners, choosing not to join the single currency or sign the open borders Schengen treaty and often kicking against what it sees as Brussels "interference."

But this was a low point. The first time in 39 years that a British prime minister had used a veto to block an EU agreement. David Cameron cast it is a bold and necessary decision to protect British interests. Most of the rest of Europe appeared to regard it as reckless and went a different way. Hours later, when the leaders briefly reconvened to finish their discussions, Cameron cut a lonely figure. French President Nicolas Sarkozy appeared to avoid an extended hand as Cameron walked to his seat.

The build up to this last summit of the year had been much like the previous seven. The language had been recognizable too, even if market pressures had added an unprecedented degree of urgency to glacial EU decision making. Overnight borrowing from the European Central Bank hit its highest level since March at the start of December, showing the degree of tension amongst banks.

PROFOUND CONCERN

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner had spent several days in Europe before the summit. The United States, like all of Europe's trade partners, had been watching the accelerating debt crisis with profound concern, worried for their own economies and banks.

In meetings with the head of the ECB, Mario Draghi, and euro zone finance ministers the conversation was all about the two-year-old debt crisis and how to resolve it. The issues: the role of the ECB, how far should or would it stand behind countries to buy them breathing space, the scale of the euro zone's rescue fund, the part to be played by the IMF, and should the EU let private bondholders off the hook.

Geithner spent time in Frankfurt, Berlin, Paris, Marseille and Milan. London didn't figure on his itinerary. During the same week, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Sarkozy spoke frequently and met in person. There were contacts with Spain's incoming Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy. Draghi was closely involved in discussions at all stages, insiders say. Once more, Cameron was peripheral.

Immediately before the summit, the U.S. assessment of Europe's progress was, in broad terms, they know what they need to do but they need to work out how they're going to do it. As one U.S. official put it, fixing the flaws of the 13-year-old single currency - a monetary union without coordinated budget policy - could not happen overnight. But the Europeans were moving closer to addressing the problem at its root.

That assessment captured well the mood in the hours heading into the latest in a long line of "crunch" summits.

Germany - Europe's biggest economy - was intent on changing the European Union's treaty to enshrine stricter budget discipline and penalties for countries that failed to adhere to them, to ensure there could be no repeat of the current crisis. From the German perspective, only by reforming economies, cutting social benefits and working longer would the indebted members of the euro zone and the single currency project itself emerge from the turmoil. Printing money would buy only a temporary respite and would remove the incentive to reform.

France was ready to back Germany in a push for full-blown treaty change, but really favored the idea of an intergovernmental treaty - akin to a sideline agreement - among the 17 euro zone members, anchoring the single currency and its members at the heart of a new Europe.

NATIVITY PLAY

Britain's prime minister, under pressure from a sizeable anti-EU element in his own party, set off for the Brussels meeting straight from his son's school nativity play, having promised during a particularly raucous session of parliament the previous day that he would defend Britain's interests at the summit.

With hindsight, the choreography on the evening of Thursday, Dec 8 probably should have been clear to Cameron and everyone else.

Speaking a few hours before the summit began, European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso issued this challenge to Europe's leaders: "What I expect from all heads of governments is that they don't come saying what they cannot do but what they will do for Europe."

Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker, who chairs euro zone finance ministers' meetings, was the first to arrive at the Brussels venue. Juncker said he preferred to see unanimity on treaty change among the 27, but if that wasn't possible, the 17 members of the euro zone would have to go it alone. "Their relationship is more intimate than between the 27."

When Cameron arrived in Brussels Thursday it was after 6 p.m.. His first meeting was with Italy's new Prime Minister Mario Monti, an unelected "technocrat" charged with getting Italy's finances in order. Europe's fourth biggest economy has a debt to GDP ratio of 120 percent after years of stagnation under Silvio Berlusconi. The meeting was brief and was followed by 45 minutes of talks with Merkel and Sarkozy. Cameron was accompanied at that meeting by Foreign Secretary William Hague and Jon Cunliffe, the prime minister's most senior EU adviser, the architect of the rules that helped keep Britain out of the euro and Britain's next ambassador to the EU. One official who saw the three leaders emerge said they were "visibly tense."

BRITAIN'S ISOLATION

Then came dinner and the start of the meeting that was to end in Britain's isolation. Sources involved described how events unfolded. The intention was to get the 27 leaders to agree on what they wanted for a stronger euro zone first, and then work out how to achieve it, officials said. It was disagreement over the means, not the objective, that led to the break down.

An official present at the negotiations said Cameron had begun by saying that he understood there was a desire for treaty change, and that he wanted it too, but if Britain were to give its backing, it needed something in return. "His reasoning appeared to be: 'you want treaty change, I want treaty change', 'I need something because you are asking for something'," the official said, describing it as logic that wasn't going to fly.

At that point, the British prime minister set out two concessions he wanted in exchange for Britain's support on treaty change. "One was a safeguard on the internal market ... but that was not the problem," the official said. "Then he launched the idea on financial services."

Financial services account for about 10 percent of Britain's economy and the government has been at pains to shield the sector from regulation emanating in Brussels. Britain had shared the outlines of its thinking with some of its partners, officials said, but it hadn't circulated anything approaching a document sufficiently detailed to form the basis of discussion. For that reason, the demands were news to many of the people around the table. But it wasn't just the way Cameron went about it, it was the substance of the demands. He was effectively asking for a softening of regulation on Britain's financial sector at a time when many voters and politicians believe banks are largely to blame for the crisis Europe is suffering and want tighter regulation on the sector.

DEAD FROM THE START

"Politically speaking, when the banks are considered the enemy and the root of all the problems we have today, Cameron's arguments were the wrong arguments at the wrong time for the wrong people," the official said. "Politically, he was dead from the start."

At that point old enmities came into play, rooted in a widely-held French view that Britain never really belonged in the European Union in the first place. "The French were using all this as a really perfect alibi to get rid of the British. Sarkozy used the proposals of the British to justify an intergovernmental treaty," the official said, explaining that intentionally or otherwise, Cameron had played straight into Sarkozy's hands.

It may have appeared things couldn't get worse for the British prime minister, a relative novice on the EU stage.

"It took 10 or 20 minutes to see that most of the participants were not pleased at all with the idea of Britain getting an opt out or exceptional treatment for their financial services and it didn't fly at all. There was no understanding for it. David Cameron obtained nothing. Just nothing."

"We understand his domestic political situation. He is a prisoner of domestic constraints."

Another official present at the talks recalled the moment, in the early hours of Friday, when European Union President Herman Van Rompuy, who chaired the meeting, proposed moving forward with an intergovernmental agreement of the 17 euro zone nations, with an open invitation for other countries to join.

"France said yes, immediately followed by Germany and then one by one, in a matter of seconds the member states of the euro zone backed the Franco-German call. Within a few minutes, the non-euro zone member states decided they wanted to be in and left Cameron completely isolated. The swing was very, very quick. Everybody was on board in a matter of minutes. I think it was obvious inside the room that Cameron was shocked by the swiftness with which his allies left him alone."

"Cameron made a serious miscalculation. He genuinely thought he could get something back in return and underestimated the willingness of the euro zone to move on. That's our view. This deal has probably saved the euro, but all this will now have serious repercussions on the relationship between Britain and the EU." (additional reporting by Matt Falloon and Mark John in Brussels, Paul Carrel in Frankfurt, David Lawder in Washington; writing by Janet McBride; editing by David Stamp)



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Saturday, December 10, 2011

Death of bond salesmen as banks rethink EU auctions




LONDON |
Fri Dec 9, 2011 7:10am EST

LONDON (Reuters) - European governments -- many of whom are already struggling to woo buyers for sovereign debt -- could find it even harder to raise money as the investment banks they relied on to sell the debt baulk at the cost.

Banks are reconsidering the cozy relationships that in the past saw them subsidize bond sales in the hope it would curry favor with governments and lead to other lucrative business, such as state privatizations.

Any bank designated by a country as a primary dealer must commit to buying a certain percentage of government-issued bonds in return for a guaranteed chance to participate in the auction.

This was once a coveted position given the regularity of debt auctions, but scarce capital means banks are now not willing to take on the increasing risk of being left with unsold bonds.

"Being a primary dealer is an expensive business," said one market participant at a large investment bank.

"Banks will start to focus (now that) they have fewer resources. Does it really make sense for somebody to be in Spain or in Portugal?", this person said, speaking like others on condition of anonymity due to commercial sensitivity.

Banks used to buy bonds from government debt management agencies at a loss, in the hope of earning fees when governments sold bonds directly to investors via separate syndicated deals. These are auctions where a government sells bonds to investors through a designated syndicate of banks.

If banks do walk away from bond auctions, the loss of guaranteed buyers is likely to boost interest costs for cash-strapped countries in Europe, making life more difficult just as they need to plan to issue some 800 billion euros ($1,100 billion) of debt next year alone.

PRIMARY DEALERS EVERYWHERE

Many banks have ended up with primary dealer mandates from European governments -- the result of years of huge state borrowing and a widely held perception that there was no real risk in holding government bonds.

A small country like Austria, for instance, has primary dealer relationships with 24 banks.

But since Europe's debt crisis has brought the single currency to the brink of collapse, and three countries -- Greece, Ireland and Portugal -- were bailed out, the business is looking a lot less attractive.

Italy last month paid a record 6.5 percent to borrow six-month money, and its longer-term funding costs soared far above levels seen as sustainable.

And Germany saw a "disastrous" bond auction on November 23, with the central bank forced to pick up 39 percent of the intended volume, to prevent the sale from failing.

WARY OF GOVERNMENTS

Many primary dealers are taking measures to mitigate the risk from holding sovereign bonds on their books.

This can often lead to more market havoc.

The short-selling of government bonds ahead of an auction -- borrowing them and then selling them on in the hope of buying them back at a lower price -- is now a common practice, and tends to depress bond prices in the run-up to a sale.

In investment banking, talent tends to get sucked into the highest performing and most lucrative part of the business, which means that as sovereign auctions become less attractive and less lucrative, so their top traders are moved elsewhere.

That again can lead to more volatility, dampening investor appetite.

And banks are increasingly baulking at signing derivative deals with governments, which use so-called collateralized swap agreements (CSA) as protection against market risk.

Governments traditionally used not to have to put up collateral for such deals, while banks did. But collateral is becoming scarce, and costlier, and banks are now reconsidering these so-called one-way collateral agreements.

"It's extremely expensive to fund it. It dwarves any fees you might make on the swap," the first person said.

Portugal and Ireland have already been forced to put up collateral in swap agreements.

COSTLY BUSINESS

Most major U.S. investment banks and large European banks participate in the market, while dozens of smaller players may also have one or two mandates. BNP Paribas, Deutsche Bank and HSBC are the biggest players.

However, some argue that in the long run, banks will always want to sell debt for governments, because of the vast amounts they issue, and the reliability of their issuance calendars.

"Do you know a lot of issuers that are committed to issue one year in advance at a certain date, a minimum amount whatever the market conditions are?" said a second market participant, who works at a large European bank.

Still, acting as a primary dealer, and the market making duties that come with it typically costs a bank tens of millions of dollars a year -- anywhere between $20 million and $90 million, two people interviewed on the topic said.

"Those who do not have a vested interested in continuing to develop their capital market franchise in Europe may effectively decide to back off," the second person said.

"Because the market is extremely dangerous and therefore you need to have a strong commitment to this market to remain in this type of trouble," this person said.

(Additional reporting by Yeganeh Torbatil; Editing by Alexander Smith and Jodie Ginsberg)



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