Monday, November 29, 2010

Gas and electricity bills hide internet savings

New energy statements are failing to make clear that some customers could save hundreds of pounds on fuel bills.

The statements, which will be delivered to every UK home by the end of the year, will explain discounts available on a customer's current tariff.

But they will fail to detail the savings that can be made by switching to an internet-based plan.

Figures show a difference of £239 between an online tariff and paying by cheque when a bill arrives.
Statements

Suppliers have been told by the regulator Ofgem to start sending out annual statements. They are intended to help consumers understand their energy use and what it is costing them.

They should include information such as the name of a customer's tariff and a reminder that the customer can switch provider, along with advice on how to do so.

They must also point out any discounts that apply to the tariff the customer is on when compared with the same supplier's standard direct debit tariff.

But they will not show cheaper deals available for online tariffs. These are internet-based deals that use e-mails instead of paper bills and require customers to enter meter readings online.

At present an estimated 13% of UK households are on an online energy plan.

The regulator has not demanded these cheaper deals be flagged up, because it says direct debit - not an online plan - is "the cheapest payment accessible to the majority of customers".

The reason, according to an Ofgem spokesman, is that these deals are often time-limited or have other conditions - in other words, that they are a moveable feast.

Debate

This has had some support from watchdog Consumer Focus, which said it could prove difficult to put an accurate price of the cheapest deals on annual statements.

And the energy suppliers say the statements will make consumers better equipped in any case.

"The best way to ensure you are on the best deal from your supplier is to talk to them direct - there is no one-size-fits-all solution. But it is also important to shop around to see if other companies might offer a deal that suits you better," said a spokesman for Energy UK, which represents the major energy companies.

"Annual statements provide useful information on cost and energy usage, making it easier for customers to make comparisons with offers available from both their existing supplier and other companies."

But the argument does not seem to have convinced the Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC). In line with the coalition agreement, it is planning a change in the law next year to force suppliers to include details of the cheapest deal on the statement.

This move, according to Ann Robinson, of price comparison website Uswitch, is leading to a narrowing of the gap between the annual cost to those paying when they receive a paper bill and those on an online tariff.

"The proposal that suppliers will have to show their cheapest tariffs on all household bills could be causing them to re-think their pricing strategy," she said.

"At the moment just over one in 10 of us are on a competitive online energy plan. If suppliers bring it to the attention of all their customers, this number could rocket. Clearly suppliers are concerned about the impact it could have on their bottom line and so may be looking to see how this pans out.

"The important thing is that consumers understand that these plans continue to be highly competitive and along with fixed price plans offer an easy way to protect yourself from the impact of winter price hikes."

Uswitch calculated figures for the BBC showing the difference between the average standard plans (payment on receipt) and the average online price among suppliers in the UK for dual-fuel gas and electricity bills.

This stood at £143 a year in November 2007, and widened to £179 a year later, and to £265 by November 2009.

However, the difference narrowed again to £239 by November this year. The typical online price was £956 compared with £1,195 for the average standard bill.

By Kevin Peachey Personal finance reporter, BBC News

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Irish corporate tax in focus as bailout deal nears

By Julien Toyer and Jodie Ginsberg

LISBON/DUBLIN (Reuters) - French President Nicolas Sarkozy said on Saturday he expected Ireland to raise its corporate tax rate but added that an increase would not be a condition for any bailout.

International Monetary Fund and European Commission officials are in Dublin to discuss financial aid to help Ireland cope with its struggling banks, whose huge liabilities have sent Irish borrowing costs soaring.

The main concern for EU policymakers is that Ireland's problems will spread to other euro zone members with large budget deficits such as Spain and Portugal, threatening a systemic crisis.

Euro zone states want Ireland to raise its 12.5 percent corporate tax rate as part of any deal but Dublin argues the low rate is crucial to attracting foreign investment.

Sarkozy, speaking at a news conference in Lisbon on the sidelines of a NATO summit, said he expected Ireland to raise its corporate tax rate.

"It's obvious that when confronted with a situation like this there are two levers to use: spending and revenues," he said. "I cannot imagine that our Irish friends, in full sovereignty, (would not use) this because they have a greater margin for maneuver than others, their taxes being lower than others."

"In the conditions for activating the (bailout) mechanism, there are no fiscal demands," he added.

The Irish Times newspaper reported that Ireland's four-year plan to reduce its deficit would be published on Tuesday, before any international financial aid package was ready.

Last month, Ireland doubled to 15 billion euros ($21 billion) the sum it calculated was needed to bring its deficit under control by 2014. Finance Minister Brian Lenihan said this was designed to ensure Ireland would not need a bailout but it failed to calm jittery markets.

Ireland's central bank chief acknowledged this week the country needed a loan running into tens of billions of euros to shore up a banking sector that has grown dependent on ECB funds and seen an exodus of deposits over the past six months.

CABINET TO MEET

The Irish Times said the government -- deeply unpopular and hanging on to a tiny parliamentary majority -- had pushed forward the publication date for its four-year plan so it could be identified as a programme drawn up by the government rather than one driven by the European Union or the IMF.

The newspaper said the plan would be published on Tuesday, citing unnamed senior Irish officials. A government spokesman said only the plan would be published early next week.

An international aid package is expected to be announced shortly afterwards.

"The cabinet will meet tomorrow to sign off on the 160-page document which charts how the state will reduce its outgoings," the Irish Times said, adding a separate plan for restructuring the bank sector was also expected to be finalized this weekend.

Sources have told Reuters that Ireland may need assistance of between 45 billion and 90 billion euros, depending on whether it needs help only for its banks or for public debt as well.

SYSTEMIC RISK

Markets calmed in recent days after it became clear Ireland was on track to receive aid, but remained jittery on Friday.

The euro briefly pushed above $1.3720, but fell back to $1.3660 in late European trading. The spreads of Irish 10-year bonds above German benchmarks drifted down toward 5.4 percentage points before pushing back up to 5.6 points, dragging Greek, Portuguese and Spanish debt alongside.

ECB policymaker Lorenzo Bini Smaghi told the weekly Die Welt am Sonntag that the costs of any bailout could increase if Dublin needs financial aid but delays in asking for it.

"This risk in fact grows with time -- we have seen this already with Greece. There is also danger that contagion spreads to other highly indebted euro zone countries," he said.

"If the financial markets see that Europe is having a hard time to resolve a problem quickly, they could seek out a new victim," he added.

Britain repeated its readiness to help because of its strong economic links with Ireland and Sweden said it could help too.

"There could be some bilateral help. We are waiting to hear more from the Irish government," Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt told RTE.

"We feel that we are very close to Ireland and are always ready to listen and help if we can do so," he said.

Funds for Ireland are likely to come from a safety net fund set up after the EU bailed out Greece earlier this year.

Prime Minister Brian Cowen's razor-thin parliamentary majority could be cut even further if, as expected, his Fianna Fail party loses a seat in a special election next week.

Support for Fianna Fail has fallen to 17 percent, according to a Sunday Business Post/Red C poll, a result that would cost the party more than half its MPs if repeated in a general election.

Union leaders said the public was already angry over the government's austerity cuts and any further measures to be announced on Tuesday could prove a tipping point.

"The talk now is of the budget, and effectively destroying the social welfare system. I think there is going to be huge civil unrest as a result of that," TEEU union leader Eamon Devoy told Reuters.

Unions plan a November 27 protest march against austerity measures imposed to rescue the state's finances and one has called for a campaign of civil disobedience if the government fails to call an election.

(Additional reporting by Lorraine Turner in Dublin and Emmanuel Jarry in Lisbon; editing by Jon Boyle)

Source: www.reuters.com

Friday, November 19, 2010

Ben Bernanke hits back at Fed critics

US Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke has criticised countries like China that run large trade surpluses.

"Currency undervaluation by surplus countries is inhibiting needed international adjustment," he said in a speech to the European Central Bank

He said that by buying dollars, these countries were hurting the US recovery and the global economy with it.

He also defended the Fed's policy of "quantitative easing", which has been criticised by China and Germany.

Defending QE

China, Germany and others have attacked the Federal Reserve in recent weeks for its decision to purchase another $600bn of US government debt in a bid to stimulate the US economy.

They say that the policy will unfairly devalue the dollar in currency markets, and that this could lead to inflation and asset bubbles elsewhere in the world.

The Chinese also argued the Fed had failed to take account of its responsibility for protecting the value of the dollar as a global reserve currency.

In his speech, Mr Bernanke defended the policy as the right response to falling inflation and high unemployment in the US.

He also said it was a natural extension of monetary policy, given that interest rates were near zero and could not be cut further.
On the attack

But Mr Bernanke went further than this, hitting back against his critics.

He said that their policy of accumulating dollar reserves in order to weaken their currencies and help maintain a trade surplus would hurt the recovery in industrial economies, and this in turn could harm the entire global economy.

"For large, systemically important countries with persistent current account surpluses, the pursuit of export-led growth cannot ultimately succeed if the implications of that strategy for global growth and stability are not taken into account," he said.

He spoke of a two-speed recovery, in which developing economies like China and India had rapidly bounced back, while industrialised countries like the US, Europe and Japan were growing much more slowly and suffered from high unemployment.

"Because a strong expansion in the emerging market economies will ultimately depend on a recovery in the more advanced economies, this pattern of two-speed growth might very well be resolved in favour of slow growth," he said.
Collateral damage

He also said the currency interventions by countries like China had other iniquitous effects.

He said it was unfair on other countries that allowed their currencies to appreciate, as they would be forced to bear the brunt of the economic adjustment.

Countries such as Brazil and South Africa have already complained that they have been put in exactly this position by the "currency war" between the US and China.

Mr Bernanke also warned that by refusing to let their currencies appreciate, countries like China would be forced to take other measures to stop risky inflows of speculative money, and to cool rising inflation.

On the same day of his speech, China announced a half-point rise in the percentage of cash its banks must hold in reserve - a measure designed to slow down a recent jump in inflation to 4.4%.

China has also taken measures in recent months to tighten up capital controls - designed to stop people speculating on the value of the Chinese currency.

Source: BBC
www.bbc.co.uk

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Greece unveils austerity budget

The Greek government has unveiled an austerity budget that aims to cut its 2011 public deficit to 7.4% of the nation's annual economic output or GDP.

If achieved, this would mean a 5bn-euro ($6.8bn; £4.3bn) reduction on Greece's projected 9.4% deficit for 2010.

Under the budget plans, the government will cut health and defence spending, and increase the sales tax on most retail items from 11% to 14%.

Greece had to accept a 110bn-euro ($150bn; £93bn) rescue deal in May.

This sum - which is being given to the country in three stages - has come from the European Union and International Monetary Fund.

To get the money, Greece had to agree to enforce substantial spending cuts to reduce both its public deficit and overall government debt, which are among the largest in Europe.

The country's finance department also said that the Greek economy would contract by 4.2% this year and by a further 3% in 2011, higher than its previous estimate of a 2.6% slowdown next year.

The budget also reveals that the Greek government is to sell stakes in state-owned companies, and even four Airbus A340 planes that it owns.

The sale of organisations to be partly or fully privatised included rail operator Trainose, mining firm Larko, gas operator DEPA, and defence group Hellenic.

Cource: BBC
www.bbc.co.uk

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Difference of opinion at G-20 summit over what ails the global economy

Seoul: As a further indication of the fact that the pre-Summit negotiations of the G-20 are not going very smoothly, India has said that “there are no universally agreed upon diagnoses of what ails the global economy.”

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh conveyed this to British Prime Minister David Cameron, and President Philip Calderon of Mexico on Thursday during his bilateral meetings with them. This indicates that it disagrees with the United States' perception that only China's current account and capital account surpluses are to blame for the global economic predicament.

Dr. Singh also met the Prime Minister of Ethiopia in a bilateral meeting.

According to informed sources, the final G-20 communiqué could run to about 70 pages, reflecting the divergent views.

It has been evident that far too many differences of opinion on key issues of who has to do what have emerged and delegates have even been heard to “raise their voices,” according to an informed source.

The main issue is an old one, namely, that the U.S. and its allies do whatever they want to and then expect others to adjust their policies accordingly. The American decision to pump in $600 billion over the next few months has left everyone jumpy as to the consequences for their economies.

Brazil has already spoken out sharply against this. A Chinese official said on television that if America catches a cold it can't look for Chinese medicines.

China has already taken pre-emptive action against capital surges by asking Chinese banks to deposit more money with the Central bank. Many G-20 members have already put sand in the machine so that destabilising dollar inflows do not cause problems for them.

As a result of the U.S. decision, there are not many takers for the latest American proposal which seeks, as it were, to walk on four legs. In a letter to the G-20, U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, along with Tharman Shanmugaratnam, Singapore Finance Ministerand Wayne Swan, Finance Minister of Australia, have spelt out the four things that the world needs to do.

First, they say, global economic growth must be strengthened; second, in a manner of reminiscent of national policies, they say, global growth must also be balanced across countries so that some countries do not grow at a breakneck speed, while others languish; third, the first two objectives require the world to create “a new framework for cooperation to allow exchange rates to reflect economic fundamentals and support needed structural reforms;” and fourth, no protectionism, please.

The first and the last items are the only ones on which there is no disagreement. But the second and third suggestions are causing problems.

Informed sources told Business Line that India is sitting pretty during all these negotiations as it does what economic theory prescribes, namely, run a deficit on the current account which is financed by a surplus on the capital account. This is in contrast to “some countries” which run a surplus on both accounts.

India is, therefore, focusing on development by asking the developed world to invest in infrastructure in the developing countries. This is a relatively non-controversial issue.

However, India is being asked to endorse the currency adjustment suggestions and is looking for alternative and more ambiguous wording.


Source: www.indiaeveryday.com

Saturday, November 13, 2010

Why dollars must not sink and tempers must not rise at the G20

The global economic crisis demands that all nations consider the wider international picture rather than narrow national self-interest

Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva may be leaving the world stage, but he still knows how to make an impact. His blunt prediction on the first day of the G20 summit in Seoul – that the world economy was headed for "bankruptcy" unless rich nations raise consumer demand rather than relying on exports to drive recovery – was a warning shot fired at Washington.

The US, which has been accused by key developing nations of attempting to deflate the dollar with a $600bn quantative easing programme, also came under fire from China. "Don't make other people take the medicine for your disease," Yu Jianhua, a director general at China's ministry of commerce, told reporters in South Korea.

At the heart of this is the nature of global imbalances. For America, growth should return by exporting more and getting people to spend at home. For many developing nations who rely on selling goods and services into richer markets, this means sacrificing themselves on the altar of US interests. It's not just big, poorer nations, that are concerned: Germany, the world's third-largest exporter, is singing the same tune as South Korea, China and Brazil.

These countries see the dollar's fall as part of a feared circle of competitive devaluations across the major economies. Yet the US can simply shrug these attacks off – as its central bank can keep printing dollars.

The result is lots of money flowing into emerging economies, which are left to face a series of difficult decisions over the influx of dollars. Deflating a series of asset bubbles is the last thing developing nations need to tackle – especially given the bigger challenges of social inclusion, food security and infrastructure spending.

But if they sit on their hands and do nothing, poorer nations face damaging their export competitiveness by letting their currencies rise. If they intervene to keep their currencies low, the risk is that they end up holding lots of worthless greenbacks. The least palatable option is the tricky policy decision to use capital controls to keep the cash out.

What this boils down to is the inability of developing nations to translate their growing economic heft into meaningful pressure on the US. It is a dramatic illustration of where real power lies in the global system. The world's "emerging" powers are still that – and will be so for many years to come. They may represent the future, but developing nations lack the diplomatic firepower to sway the world's great powers.

What the world is dealing with is a legacy of history. The rules governing global monetary reform evolved in a uni-polar world where the dollar was dominant. Today we face a multi-polar system of currencies. The features of the past created today's problems. To insulate against volatile currency flows and speculative attacks, developing nations accumulated dollars. The dollar's role as the global reserve currency encouraged unsustainable lending in the US.

But what are the rules appropriate for both the richer nations and for large emerging markets such as China, South Africa, Brazil and India? It's hard to see how a public punch-up at Seoul is going to answer that question. The G20 aspires to be a global club, steering the world economy out of a slump – and that does mean countries must consider the international picture, rather than simply their own, narrow national interest. It means not just letting the dollar sink and tempers rise in South Korea.

Perhaps the rest of the world should recognise how important the US is to the global economy – and accepting that the world's richest nation might need a helping hand. At the same time, the G20 could also think about the poorest too – by throwing open their doors to goods and services from the least developed countries. The world's biggest economies need to prove that the G20 is more than just a place to talk to each other.

Source: Guardian
www.guardian.co.uk

Friday, November 12, 2010

Concerning Capital Inflows

By Manoj Pradhan

China's hike in banks' reserve requirements today served notice to the G20 leaders' meeting later this week that capital inflows remain a major problem for EM policymakers. Brazil Finance Minister Mantega's ‘currency war' tag has continued to stay prominent in the lead-up to the G20 summit and certainly in discussions in the media. If currency tensions are indeed frustrating EM policymakers, then perhaps the blunt tools of interest rate cuts could be called upon in the future. This would represent an important turning point in EM dynamics for growth, inflation and currency movements. However, if a currency ‘war' is not a huge concern for EM policymakers, then the use of only FX interventions and possibly mild capital controls could be enough to alleviate EM concerns. And this is indeed the story that seems to coalesce from the views of our EM economics teams. Rather than aggressively fighting a currency war with every tool available, EM central banks seem to be keeping the blunt tool of policy rate cuts away from the skirmish so far. Rather, they seem to prefer the well-directed tool of FX intervention to soak up capital inflows and consequently increase FX reserves.

But which exchange rate to consider? With QE2 emanating from the US, EM and DM currencies have appreciated vis-à-vis the US dollar. However, the effective appreciation of EM currencies against a broader basket of currencies has been much smaller (see EM Macro Strategy Update: Considerations on Currencies, October 15, 2010).

With AXJ economies tied closely to China through their trade links, and the Chinese currency virtually pegged to the dollar (modest appreciation aside), AXJ economies are effectively tied to the USD/CNY peg. Latin America also has close trade links with the US and growing ties to China. However, the situation is different for some countries in the CEEMEA region. For the CEE economies, the US dollar is secondary in importance to the euro. In fact, since the dollar affects imports (specifically commodity imports) more than exports, some appreciation against the dollar is not unwelcome.

QE blocs: Enhanced capital flows to emerging markets courtesy of QE2 have produced varying degrees of discomfort in the EM world. In a past note, we suggested that QE2 would create two ‘blocs' among EM economies (see "QE20", The Global Monetary Analyst, October 13, 2010). The first bloc, with economies at risk of overheating, would allow currencies to appreciate and dampen domestic growth and inflation. The other, with fewer concerns of overheating, would find currency appreciation unwelcome. This second bloc would likely act to stem the appreciation, and end up stimulating domestic growth. Getting a hands-on perspective from our EM economics teams, we find that this split is indeed borne out. The collective wisdom of our teams suggests that the economies that find currency appreciation unwelcome are also economies where overheating risks are small. On the other hand, economies at risk of overheating do not find the currency appreciation as offensive (with the notable exception of China, as discussed below), as policymakers there welcome the dampening effect that the appreciation has on domestic growth and inflation.

In economies at risk of overheating where domestic demand is strong and the central bank allows currency appreciation, US imports will likely become cheaper. In economies where currency appreciation is resisted, domestic demand is likely to get a boost, and this should increase the demand for all imports, including imports from the US. This is what we called a win-win situation for the US in our QE20 piece.

As always, China is different: China finds the enhanced pressure on its currency highly unwelcome and it will likely allow only a slow and steady appreciation. However, China's highly effective capital and credit controls imply two things: i) there really has been no impact of QE2 on the currency, but FX reserves have probably soaked up a large quantity of capital inflows; and ii) the domestic economy has not received an additional stimulus from QE2. With Chinese growth at 10% for 2010 and 9.5% in 2011, one can hardly say that China should grow faster to generate import demand. In short, China does not fit our dichotomy as it resists currency appreciation on the one hand but maintains firm control over domestic financial conditions and the economy on the other.

The policy response: The policy response from EM economies to the signals about QE2 in the US sent since August is quite varied, but a majority of central banks in the EM world have kept policy unchanged since then. A handful have responded by postponing hikes (the central banks of Peru and Poland have pushed rate hikes further out to keep the currency from strengthening further), while the SARB has actually eased policy outright (and further easing appears to be on the cards - our economists are forecasting a 50bp cut, see South Africa: Rate Call Change - We Expect a 50bp Cut, November 1, 2010). Some central banks that face strong domestic growth have even tightened policy despite the risk that such measures will invite even more capital inflows and put additional pressure on currency values.

Digging deeper: Overheating economies: A large majority of EM economies have shown strong growth. Unsurprisingly, AXJ economies feature prominently here along with Brazil, Chile and Peru from Latin America and Turkey, Israel and Poland from the CEEMEA regions. A smaller number of these strongly growing countries, however, have inflation concerns. This latter group includes India, Indonesia, China, Korea, Brazil, Peru and Poland. Clearly, this bloc would prefer some help in dampening domestic growth, and some currency appreciation might not be unwelcome. We illustrate that these overheating economies are also where central banks are not extremely concerned about currency appreciation (with the important exceptions of China discussed earlier and Brazil discussed below). However, as the cases of Poland and Peru show, even inflation concerns have sometimes been subordinated to keep in check excessive appreciation of the currency. In the case of Poland, inflation concerns are likely to win out fairly shortly, according to our Poland economist, Pasquale Diana.

Brazil clearly dislikes its stronger currency, has been intervening aggressively in FX markets and has quickly raised taxes on foreign investments in local fixed income products. The postponement of rate hikes in Brazil, however, can be traced back to its own slowdown earlier in the year rather than to a growing probability of QE2.

Digging deeper: No overheating: In economies where growth has either not led to inflation and even where growth has been weak with inflationary concerns, the EM emphasis on growth clearly shows because of the desire of these economies to keep their currency from appreciating. Most economies in this category have either intervened in FX markets or have stayed put on monetary policy. Thus, either through accumulating FX reserves leaking into the economy or through the postponement of monetary tightening, economic growth is likely to benefit from a tailwind.

The economies where growth is weak and inflation risks are present (Romania and Hungary) are worth noting. As noted before, these economies are more closely tied to the euro and might actually welcome an appreciation against the dollar, given the asymmetric effects on imports and exports. They do not therefore face the same dilemma as most other EM economies.

FX intervention: Central banks appear to be less reluctant to get involved in FX intervention. The bulk of EM central banks are involved in at least some FX intervention. Further, half of that pack have been intervening quite aggressively in currency markets, but even then with limited results. The difference in the way policymakers seem to have used broad monetary policy and FX intervention to deal with QE-related inflows could be explained in three ways: i) monetary policy is seen as a blunt instrument with broad effects, while FX intervention is seen as a targeted tool best equipped to deal with an FX problem; ii) FX interventions are a less public way of dealing with capital inflows, compared with the public attention that usually accompanies monetary policy changes and capital controls; and iii) EM central banks view FX policy and reserves policy as being distinct, and are accumulating reserves in excess of levels that could ostensibly be used for the defence of the currency.

Different strokes: Different emphases on each of these explanations apply to EM economies. For example, the objectives of FX intervention in Turkey appear to be oriented towards increasing the size of the reserves. Brazilian FX interventions, in line with its aggressive rhetoric and milder capital controls, have probably been aimed at keeping the currency from appreciating. And finally, in Israel, FX interventions have been used to stifle the impact of policy rate hikes on the currency. In all three cases, however, FX interventions have not been entirely successful in keeping the currency from appreciating.

Summary: The extent to which the ‘currency war' debate has been ramped up in the media does not gel with the feedback from our EM economics teams. In general, EM central banks appear to be unwilling to take strong, aggressive action in the form of postponing policy tightening or cutting rates outright (with the notable exceptions of the central banks of Peru and Poland for postponed rate hikes, and the SARB for outright easing). Rather than fighting any such ‘currency war', EM central banks appear to be dealing with the very familiar three-way trade off between capital inflows, exchange rate concerns and monetary policy independence - the trilemma (see "No ‘Currency War'...Yet", The Global Monetary Analyst, October 6, 2010). Central banks seem far less reluctant to use FX intervention. In fact, FX intervention is likely being used as a better directed tool to temper FX appreciation and build up FX reserves (in some cases) at the same time.

The feedback from our EM teams suggests that QE is indeed splitting the EM world into two broad blocs. Economies with strong growth and overheating concerns appear to be more willing to accept currency appreciation in order to dampen domestic growth and inflation. Countries where growth is weak, however, seem to be less tolerant of currency appreciation. The desire there to keep the currency from appreciating is likely to lead to higher domestic growth either through newly accumulated FX reserves leaking into the economy or via inaction (or less tightening, or even easing) on the policy front.

Source: MorganStanley
www.morganstanley.com

Tuesday, November 09, 2010

Finally, a talking-shop worth having

The G20 has been a mild success. If it sticks to boring, pragmatic incrementalism, it might just remain one

ONE of the few winners from the global financial crisis was the G20, a group of the world’s biggest economies. These countries’ leaders have met four times in the past two years to chart a common response to the global recession and find ways to prevent a repeat. With big players from the emerging and rich worlds around the table, the G20 has a legitimacy that is lacking in other economic clubs, such as the rich-country-only G7. In the darkest moments of the crisis the G20 yielded impressive results, from a common commitment to fiscal stimulus to more resources for the IMF. Optimists hoped it could become something all too rare in international economic diplomacy: a talking-shop worth having.

Those hopes can be realised even though there are signs that the G20’s utility has faded as the world economy has recovered. The leaders’ last meeting, in Toronto in June, was a washout. It did nothing to reconcile widening divisions, particularly between Europeans and Americans, over the merits of short-term budget austerity. That feebleness has raised the stakes for the next gathering, in Seoul on November 11th-12th.

Global currency tensions are rising as America’s Federal Reserve embarks on a second round of “quantitative easing” (printing money to buy bonds, see article), as China resists allowing the yuan to strengthen much and as other emerging economies face a surge of capital inflows. If the G20’s leaders manage no more than another mealy-mouthed communiqué, many people will begin to suspect that it—like so many other of the Gs—is a waste of time.

That would be a pity. For behind the scenes, under the energetic chairmanship of South Korea, the G20 has notched up a few notable accomplishments in recent weeks. There has at last been some progress in overhauling the IMF. A reform of the “quotas” that determine countries’ heft will increase the clout of emerging economies. Over-represented European countries have been cajoled into giving up two seats on the board. The IMF has also revamped its lending schemes so that well-run countries have access to large amounts of cash if a crisis hits. South Korea argued, rightly, that such a safety net is essential if emerging economies are able to withstand financial crises without piling up ever-larger foreign-exchange reserves. These are small but important improvements. And, thanks to the G20, they were done quite quickly (at least by the glacial standards of international institutions).

If the Seoul summit is to be a success, the G20’s leaders must apply the same approach—call it urgent incrementalism—to today’s main challenge: rebalancing global demand so that it relies less on overindebted America and more on domestic spending in vibrant emerging economies, particularly China. The process will take several years, and is complicated by domestic politics. In America the Republican victory in the mid-term elections reduces the already slim chances of progress either on short-term fiscal stimulus or medium-term deficit reduction. Fiscal gridlock means extra reliance on quantitative easing to boost the economy. That, in turn, will provoke extra capital flows to emerging economies. And since the main emerging economy, China, keeps its capital account closed and its currency pegged, the pressure on others is all the greater.


A Korean lesson for France

The G20 meeting will not magically resolve these tensions. But it can help manage them. It can provide a common analysis of how far countries’ currencies are over- or undervalued and where current-account balances ought to head. America has proposed limiting these imbalances to 4% of GDP. That is too rigid, but there is plenty of scope for the G20 to agree on the ranges countries’ current-account balances should reach.

Incrementalism, however, even of the urgent sort, may not be grand enough for France, which takes over the leadership of the G20 on November 12th. Nicolas Sarkozy, France’s president, has made clear that he wants a debate “without taboos” on the future of the international monetary system. He wants to tackle big subjects, such as the dollar’s role as a reserve asset (see article). Unfortunately, history suggests that big-picture debates on the future of the international monetary system rarely yield results, while diverting attention from smaller, practical goals. France should take note. The G20 will remain worth having only if it sticks to the art of the possible.

Source: The Ecoomist
www.economist.com

Monday, November 08, 2010

Germany attacks US economic policy

By Ralph Atkins, FT.com

Germany has put itself on a collision course with the US over the global economy, after its finance minister launched an extraordinary attack on policies being pursued in Washington.

Wolfgang Schäuble accused the US of undermining its policymaking credibility, increasing global economic uncertainty and of hypocrisy over exchange rates. The US economic growth model was in a "deep crisis," he also warned over the weekend.

His comments set the stage for acrimonious talks at the G20 summit in Seoul starting on Thursday. Germany has been irritated at US proposals that it should make more effort to reduce its current account surplus. But Berlin policymakers were also alarmed by last week's US Federal Reserve decision to pump an extra $600bn into financial markets in an attempt to revive US economic prospects through "quantitative easing".

On Friday, Mr Schäuble described US policy as "clueless". In a Der Spiegel magazine interview, to be published on Monday, he expanded his criticism further, saying decisions taken by the Fed "increase the insecurity in the world economy".

" They make a reasonable balance between industrial and developing countries more difficult and they undermine the credibility of the US in finance policymaking."

Mr Schäuble added: "It is not consistent when the Americans accuse the Chinese of exchange rate manipulation and then steer the dollar exchange rate artificially lower with the help of their [central bank's] printing press."

Germany's export success, he argued, was not based on "exchange rate tricks" but on increased competitiveness. "In contrast, the American growth model is in a deep crisis. The Americans have lived for too long on credit, overblown their financial sector and neglected their industrial base. There are lots of reasons for the US problems -- German export surpluses are not part of them."

There was also "considerable doubt" as to whether pumping endless money into markets made sense, Mr Schäuble argued. "The US economy is not lacking liquidity."

On the future of the eurozone, Mr Schäuble confirmed in the same interview that Berlin will push for a greater private investor involvement in future bail-outs. To ensure German taxpayers faced the smallest possible burden it was important to have the possibility of an orderly debt restructuring with the participation of private creditors, he said.

Germany's proposals for a planned new rescue mechanism have run into resistance from the European Central Bank, which fears they will add to investor uncertainty at a crucial time for Europe's 12-year old monetary union. Mr Schäuble said the new mechanism would apply only to new eurozone debt but argued the European Union "was not founded to enrich financial investors".

Mr Schäuble envisaged a two-stage process in a future crisis. The EU would put in place the same sort of saving and rescue programme as imposed this year on Greece. In a first stage, the term structure of government debt could be extended. If that did not work, then in a second stage, private creditors would have to take a discount on their holdings. In return, the value of the remainder would be guaranteed, Mr Schäuble said.

Source: CNN
www.cnn.com

Zoellick seeks gold standard debate

By Alan Beattie, FT.com

(FT) -- Leading economies should consider readopting a modified global gold standard to guide currency movements, argues the president of the World Bank.

Writing in the Financial Times, Robert Zoellick, the bank's president since 2007, says a successor is needed to what he calls the "Bretton Woods II" system of floating currencies that has held since the Bretton Woods fixed exchange rate regime broke down in 1971.

Mr Zoellick, a former US Treasury official, calls for a system that "is likely to need to involve the dollar, the euro, the yen, the pound and a renminbi that moves towards internationalisation and then an open capital account". He adds: "The system should also consider employing gold as an international reference point of market expectations about inflation, deflation and future currency values."

His views reflect disquiet with the international system, where persistent Chinese intervention to hold down the renminbi is blamed by the US and others for contributing to global current account imbalances and creating capital markets distortions.

This week's meeting of government heads in South Korea is likely to see yet more exchange rate conflict. A US plan for countries to sign up to current account targets has run into widespread opposition.

Wolfgang Schäuble, Germany's finance minister, has raised the temperature by describing the US economic model as being in "deep crisis" and criticising the US Federal Reserve's decision to pump an extra $600bn into financial markets. "It is not consistent when the Americans accuse the Chinese of exchange rate manipulation and then steer the dollar exchange rate artificially lower with the help of their [central bank's] printing press."

Although there are occasional calls for a return to using gold as an anchor for currency values, most policymakers and economists regard the idea as liable to lead to overly tight monetary policy with growth and unemployment taking the brunt of economic shocks.

The original Bretton Woods system, instituted in 1945 and administered by the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank's sister institution, comprised fixed but adjustable exchange rates linked to the value of gold. Controls to restrict destabilising shifts of capital from one economy to another buttressed it.

"The scope of the changes since 1971 certainly matches those between 1945 and 1971 that prompted the shift from Bretton Woods I to II," Mr Zoellick writes. "Although textbooks may view gold as the old money, markets are using gold as an alternative monetary asset today."

Source: FT.com

Friday, November 05, 2010

China, Germany and South Africa criticise US stimulus

Germany, China, Brazil and South Africa have criticised US plans to pump $600bn (£373bn) into the US economy.

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said the US policy was "clueless" and would create "extra problems for the world".

The US Federal Reserve could weaken the US dollar and hurt exports to America.

China's Central Bank head Zhou Xiaochuan urged global currency reforms, while South Africa said developing countries would suffer most.

He did not elaborate how the system should be changed.

'Undermining the G20'

South Africa's finance minister Pravin Gordhan warned that "developing countries, including South Africa, would bear the brunt of the US decision to open its flood gates without due consideration of the consequences for other nations."

The US policy "undermines the spirit of multilateral co-operation that G20 leaders have fought so hard to maintain during the current crisis," he said.

The heads of state and government of the G20 group of the world's leading nations is due to meet in a week in South Korea, with currencies and trade imbalances high on the agenda.

The US central bank announced on Wednesday that it would spend $600bn to buy government bonds, in the hope that the cash injection can kickstart the country's economy.

However, this weakens the dollar, making imports from around the world more expensive for US consumers.

'Clueless'

"If the domestic policy is optimal policy for the United States alone, but at the same time it is not an optimal policy for the world, it may bring a lot of negative impact to the world," said Mr Zhou.

"There is a spill over."

China's Vice Foreign Minister Cui Tiankai said the Federal Reserve had the right to take steps without consulting other countries beforehand, but added: "They owe us some explanation."

Germany's finance minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said on German television that "with all due respect, US policy is clueless."

"It is not that the Americans have not pumped enough liquidity into the market and now to say let's pump more into the market is not going to solve their problems."

He added that the German government was going to hold bilateral talks with US officials and also discuss the topic at the G20 summit in Seoul next week.

On Thursday, Brazil's finance minister Guido Mantega had warned that the Fed's move would hurt Brazil and other exporters.

The latest move by the Fed has been dubbed QE2 as it follows the central bank's decision to pump $1.75tn into the economy during the downturn in its first round of quantitative easing.

Source:BBC
www.bbc.com

Thursday, November 04, 2010

The Evolving Nature of Corporate Mergers and Acquisitions in the Wake of the Global Economic Crisis

WASHINGTON (Marketwire) - In an article in Global Finance Magazine Dr. Alexander Mirtchev, economics expert and president of Washington-based Krull Corp., a consultancy with a focus on new economic trends and emerging policy challenges expounds on the signs of revitalization in the international mergers and acquisitions market. He assesses the implications of the resurgence of investment activity and the potential repercussions of the growing trend of investors' "clubbing together" for major acquisition and investment deals.

After the international M&A activities "cratered" in the midst of a global recession, there are finally indications that corporate tie-ups and "teaming-ups" are once again becoming an attractive form of prioritizing investment activity. According to Alexander Mirtchev, "looking towards recovery, joining forces allows investors to achieve better terms and access 'tailor-made' financing tools. This has led to intensifying interest in mergers and acquisitions of a size that until recently appeared unviable due to the impact of the global economic crisis." Despite the fact that global economic recovery is "moderately-paced and uneven," he added, "M&A activity has picked up noticeably, perhaps even beyond the level that is perceived to correspond to the actual state of the global economy."

The rationale for the recent resurgence can be seen not only in efforts to tackle the effects of the crisis, but represent also the "long view" of recovery in the post-crisis period. From Mirtchev's perspective, mergers and acquisitions are not simply driven by the growing perception that asset prices have dropped to a level that makes them attractive. "Rather, a number of major corporate alliances and acquisitions reflect the drive to develop synergies beyond the immediate," he indicates. "Merger and acquisition activity is being driven not just by the growing perception of attractive asset values in the wake of the crisis. Stronger investment interest is also due to the momentum of private equity firms, investment companies and sovereign wealth funds "teaming up" in order to achieve shortcuts to improved market knowledge, better trading terms and increased opportunities for investment with a realistic medium to long-term significance."

According to Mirtchev, "there is, in addition, a view among major investors that combining forces brings new resources to bear to a particular project, as well as enhancing the level of expertise brought to the table. The primary advantage of forming clubs is to spread the risk while increasing potential profits. Meanwhile, the co-financing is welcome at a time when lack of financing is the biggest impediment to dealmaking." Skeptics would suggest that, given uncertain demand, M&A recovery reflects the desire by CEOs to use cash to eliminate their weakened competitors rather that invest in organic growth and innovation. From Mirtchev's vantage point, this is a sign of maturity by investment companies and funds, which are now interested not only in short-term gains or in "glamour investments", but are more focused on the results in the long-run.
Moreover, a number of investors are showing greater willingness to join forces, in order to pool their exposure to risk, generate additional opportunities and multiply the effect of their resources. "The increased willingness of investors to share the benefits from an acquisition in order to introduce elements of comparatively independent supplementary financing mechanisms in their transactions is another sign of their growing acumen," posits Dr. Mirtchev. "These signs of maturity reinforce the legitimacy of mergers and acquisitions, and provide an added level of liquidity to a system that is still struggling to cope with the effects of the global financial and economic crisis."

About Krull Corporation

Washington, D.C.-based Krull Corp. was founded in 1992 with a mission to address new economic trends, relevant business strategies, and economic and political risk mitigation.
-30-

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT:

Krull Corp.
+1 202 416 1646
+1 202 833 3843
mail@krullcorp.com

Shares hit two-year highs after US Fed move

US and UK shares hit two-year highs as global stock markets reacted positively to the decision by the Federal Reserve to pump $600bn (£373bn) into the US economy to try to boost its recovery.

Both the FTSE and Dow Jones indexes closed up 2%, while leading indexes in France and Germany rose sharply.

The price of oil also jumped, while the dollar fell against major currencies.

Although the Fed's move was widely expected, most analysts had predicted a lower figure of $500bn to be injected.

Weakening dollar

The FTSE 100 closed up 114 points at 5863, while the Dow gained 220 points to close at 11435.

In Paris, the Cac 40 climbed 74 points to 3,917, while Germany's Dax was up 117 points at 6,735.

Earlier, Asian shares closed higher, with Japan's Nikkei index gaining 199 points to finish at 9,359 and Hong Kong's Hang Seng rising 391 points to close at 24,536.

The price of oil also rose to its highest level since early April, with US light crude gaining $2 a barrel to $86.71. London Brent rose by $1.80 to $88.19 a barrel.

With more dollar cash in circulation and with the US government's policy of buying bonds with the $600bn putting downward pressure on interest rates, as expected the dollar weakened against major currencies.

The euro rose 2 cents against the dollar to $1.4239, while the pound also rose 2 cents to $1.6273. The dollar slipped to 80.66 yen, from 81.29 yen.
European reaction

European Central Bank president Jean-Claude Trichet refused to comment on the Fed's action at the ECB's monthly press conference.

However, he did say that he was confident the Fed still supported a strong dollar, despite reports that the second round of quantitative easing was designed to weaken the US currency, in order to make its exports more competitive.

"I have no indication that would change my trust in the fact that [Fed policymakers]... are not playing the strategy of the weak dollar," he said.

"It is in the interest of the US to have a strong dollar vis-a-vis the other floating currencies."
'On the hoof'

The latest move by the Fed has been dubbed QE2 as it follows the central bank's decision to pump $1.75tn into the economy during the downturn in its first round of quantitative easing.

Rob Carnell, chief international economist at the banking group ING, said the action was unusual because the economy is in a completely different shape to how it was before.

"[During the first round of QE], you had massive financial market disruptions - really serious problems, mortgage yields and rates were shooting through the roof, no one could borrow. That's clearly not the case right now," he told BBC World Service.

"The justification for it seems to have utterly changed... It's really policy on the hoof, trying to justify it as they go along."

Source: BBC
www.bbc.co.uk

Wednesday, November 03, 2010

Full speed ahead

THE ocean liner Queen Elizabeth 2 was launched in 1967 to throngs of spectators and adulatory press. Expectations are considerably lower for the Federal Reserve’s launch of monetary QE2: a second round of quantitative easing, the purchase of bonds with newly printed money. Experts from Joseph Stiglitz, the Nobel-winning economist, to Bill Gross, head of the bond-management giant, Pimco, have already predicted it will be either ineffectual or dangerous.

Undeterred, the Fed has moved ahead:

To promote a stronger pace of economic recovery and to help ensure that inflation, over time, is at levels consistent with its mandate, the Committee decided today to expand its holdings of securities. The Committee will maintain its existing policy of reinvesting principal payments from its securities holdings. In addition, the Committee intends to purchase a further $600 billion of longer-term Treasury securities by the end of the second quarter of 2011, a pace of about $75 billion per month. The Committee will regularly review the pace of its securities purchases and the overall size of the asset-purchase program in light of incoming information and will adjust the program as needed to best foster maximum employment and price stability.

The announcement of $600 billion in new purchases is slightly above the $500 billion level many anticipated. In what may be disappointing news to some, the Fed has not changed its language to signal a move toward an official inflation or price-level target. Still, the early evidence suggests that QE2 is already working as advertised. Since Ben Bernanke, the Federal Reserve chairman, hinted in late August that it was on its way, financial markets have responded vigorously.

The 10-year bond yield has fallen to 2.65% from 2.53%. At the same time, expected inflation, as measured by the inflation-indexed bond market, has risen steadily. This means that real yields have fallen even more than nominal yields. Indeed on October 25, the Treasury Department sold five-year inflation-indexed bonds with a negative real yield for the first time.

Lower real yields also raise the value of future profits, and that has helped drive stock prices 13.5% higher. And easier monetary policy has made the dollar and dollar investments less attractive; the dollar has fallen 4.4% against the yen, 9.7% against the euro, and is down 4.1% on a trade-weighted basis. "You can declare QE to be a success already", says one hedge fund economist. "Whether this translates into real activity remains a question mark. But the question of whether the mechanism would work has been answered."

In theory, this should help the economy through three channels. First, lower real yields spur borrowing and investment. This channel, however, is partly blocked: households can’t borrow against the depreciated value of their homes, banks have tightened underwriting standards, and businesses are waiting for sales to pick up. The remaining two channels are not similarly impaired. Higher stock prices have raised household wealth, which should spur spending and offset some of the damage of lower home values. And the lower dollar ought to help trade. Indeed in October, American factory purchasing managers reported a sharp jump in export orders and a drop in imports.

Macroeconomic Advisers, a consulting firm, reckons that if this round of QE eventually adds up to $1.5 trillion that should be enough to raise growth next year to 3.5% from a little over 3%. That’s not exactly overwhelming. Larry Meyer, the firm’s vice-chairman, thinks the Fed would have to buy $5 trillion to achieve the equivalent of a 400 basis point drop in the federal funds rate that today’s economic slack actually demands. The Fed won’t go that far; it worries too much about unintended consequences. It would also invite attack from some of Congress’ newly empowered Republicans. In a Bloomberg poll, 60% of self-identified Tea Party supporters favoured overhauling or abolishing the Fed.

Could QE succeed too well, by driving expected inflation up dramatically? "The odds aren’t zero", says Don Kohn, a former Fed vice-chairman. But he sees that as more likely once credit loosens up and spending accelerates, which would signal that the Fed has succeeded, and can then tighten policy.

Another potential cost is that by driving the dollar down, QE merely shifts the burden of growth to other countries, perhaps fueling asset bubbles in their markets in the process. Some of this is may be unavoidable. Countries with overheating economies need to tighten monetary conditions, either through higher interest rates, a rising currency, or both. The central banks of both India and Australia raised interest rates this week despite sharply higher currencies. China has grudgingly allowed its currency to creep higher recently, and this week central bank officials hinted they will have to tighten monetary policy soon.

By far the most interesting response, however, has been the Bank of Japan’s. It had planned to announce details of its own QE programme at a regular policy meeting on November 15-16. But it abruptly accelerated the date to November 4-5. This seems to reflect a desire to counteract any boost to the yen resulting from the Fed’s announcement. The action risks aggravating tensions over currency levels, but it could have a more benign effect. "This kind of follow the leader response by central banks is part of the solution and not part of the problem". says Barry Eichengreen of the University of California at Berkeley, who has long argued that such competitive reflation is analogous to the expansionary effect of quitting the gold standard in the 1930s. If Mr Bernanke's is the face that launches a thousand ships, the global economy may be the better for it.