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Strategies & Market Trends : Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (1295)3/5/2004 12:57:29 PM
From: mishedlo  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 116555
 
China 'to slow' commodities demand
(CNN) -- China's economy grew at a breathtaking 9.0 percent-plus last year, but a government-ordered cooling of its booming construction sector will have a big impact on global commodities demand, an analyst warns.

HSBC economist Qu Hongbin said Premier Wen Jiabao last month ordered state banks to curb lending to counteract over-investment in industrial parks, big urban construction projects and shopping malls.

Wen reinforced that theme in his address to the National People's Congress Friday, saying the government would crack down on "haphazard" and "redundant" investment.


Wen told the NPC he expected China's economy would still grow at more than 7 percent this year, but the focus would shift to raising incomes in rural areas.

In a commentary released just before the Congress, Hong Kong-based Qu said Wen's lending order in February meant that commodity demand would continue in China for the next couple of years, but at a slower pace than 2003.

"This slowdown, together with new capacity, is likely to have a material impact on global demand for commodities over the next two years," Qu said.

Global resources giants such as BHP Billiton, Rio Tinto, and Brazil's CRVD have seen a surge in sales and profits recently on the strength of their supply agreements with China.

Earlier this week, for example, BHP said it reached agreement with four of China's leading steel mills to supply iron ore worth $9 billion over 25 years.

But Qu noted that the Chinese Association of Steel Industries predicts demand in 2004-05 will grow at only 7 percent, compared to 21 percent last year, and that if investment growth continues at its current pace, domestic steel-making capacity will exceed demand by 80 million tonnes or 30 percent by 2005.

Qu said Wen warned last month that some of China's urban developments programs were ill-considered, and that some sectors -- such as steel, cement and aluminium -- were showing signs of over-investment.

As a result, credit is being tightened, leading to slower growth in fixed investment.

"We expect growth in fixed investment to slow from 27 percent last year to 15 percent in 2004 and around 10 percent in 2005," Qu noted.

Qu said while the slowdown was gradual, it was likely to have a "substantial impact" on demand for raw materials.

In his opening address to the NPC, Wen also highlighted a crackdown on corruption related to China's property and construction sector, saying some bureaucrats were 'wasteful, extravagant ... and sometimes even corrupt."

He said the fight to tackle corruption would be an "arduous task."

edition.cnn.com
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Just as nearly everyone believed the crack-up boom on commodities would go on forever. Let's see when the slowdown occurs, but there is no doubt in my mind that it will, and it won't take a rate hike to do it either.

Mish



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (1295)3/5/2004 1:03:47 PM
From: mishedlo  Respond to of 116555
 
Anger as ECB digs heels in on rates
By Gary Duncan, Economics Correspondent

JEAN-CLAUDE TRICHET, President of the European Central Bank, faced an angry backlash from Europe’s leading politicians last night after he rebuffed demands for lower interest rates to shore up the eurozone’s flagging recovery.

M Trichet and his 17 colleagues on the Governing Council of the Frankfurt-based ECB spurned pleas from Gerhard Schröder, Germany’s Chancellor, and Jean-Pierre Raffarin, the French Prime Minister, and again held eurozone rates at 2 per cent.

Herr Schröder left little doubt about his disappointment and refused to back down from his stance that eurozone rates should fall. “I have to respect the European Central Bank’s decision but I have not changed my opinion,” he said in Berlin after a meeting with Romano Prodi, the European Commission President.

Signor Prodi said he backed Herr Schröder.

The spat is the latest sign of mounting discontent among politicians in the eurozone’s economies over the ECB’s slow-moving policy stance. Last week Herr Schröder urged the ECB to “think over interest rate reactions” to the euro’s strength. Noting that this was hurting German exports, he added pointedly: “The (ECB) should deal with that most intensively.” He was backed by M Raffarin.

But M Trichet made plain yesterday that he will not be swayed by political interventions. The ECB’s President also dismissed suggestions that the bank might deliberately hold rates in a rebuke to politicians pressing it for action.

He said: “Full independence means we should not do something because we are told to do something, and that we should not do something because we are told to do the contrary. Namely, we should not be influenced in either direction.”

M Trichet’s remarks denoted a reassertion of the ECB’s independence. A growing number of political leaders have abandoned pledges to leave the ECB to do its job to tell it what it should do.

Some analysts believe that the eurozone’s politicians feel safe in trying to deflect blame for underperforming economies on to the ECB, knowing that it will turn a deaf ear.

Economists said that M Trichet offered little hope that the ECB is yet willing to cut rates. “While growth has been relatively modest so far, both external and domestic factors give reason to expect strengthening of the recovery through 2004 and beyond,” he said.

M Trichet made no comment about the euro’s prolonged surge against the dollar — or about the US currency’s fightback over recent days, which has pushed the euro back to levels around $1.22, against its January record of $1.29. Last night the dollar remained broadly higher, at $1.2184, despite M Trichet’s tough tone on rates.

business.timesonline.co.uk



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (1295)3/5/2004 1:12:41 PM
From: mishedlo  Respond to of 116555
 
UK - Budget Balancing Problems
No easy tax targets as Brown seeks to balance the Budget
Chancellor could raise VAT or hit homeowners, but at the risk of a political backlash
By Philip Thornton, Economics Correspondent
05 March 2004

With 14 days to go until the Budget but 14 months until a likely general election, Gordon Brown faces one the toughest challenges of his political career.

He is raising less in tax revenue than he hoped for and is spending more than he budgeted for. For Charles Dickens' Mr Micawber the result is misery but for the economists, the outcome is a more dramatic "black hole" that will eventually require tax rises or spending cuts.

The Chancellor is unlikely to countenance any unpopular - or manifesto-breaking - tax rises so close to polling day. Instead Tony Blair will look to his Chancellor to deliver a tax-cutting gesture in Budget 2005 to boost voter support in advance of the election.


According to PricewaterhouseCoopers, the accountants, Mr Brown will have to find between £10bn and £15bn a year in extra taxes or lower spending to balance the books - equivalent to 3p to 5p on income tax.

This is based on the fiscal rules that the Chancellor set for himself. The most important is that over the economic cycle, the Government must ensure that it does not borrow to fund current - non-investment - spending.

Most analysts believe Mr Brown will squeak inside the rule narrowly in the current cycle, which will probably end next year, but will start the next one deeply in the red.

"There is no immediate crisis in the public finances that requires remedial action in the 2004 Budget," said John Hawksworth, PwC's head of macroeconomics. "But eventually the Chancellor is likely to either increase taxes or tighten spending more sharply than indicated in [December's] pre-Budget report."

Spending has already jumped high up the political agenda with both the Tories and Lib Dems identifying billions of pounds of Whitehall waste to cut.

The Government has found its own "waste windfall" in the form of £15bn of savings within public services expected to be identified by Sir Peter Gershon, the head of the Government's efficiency review, on Budget day.

But if the Chancellor wants to take early action to balance the books, he must impose tax rises. This is where it gets interesting.

The frantic speculation over recent weeks has made some of the City's austere accountants resemble their turf colleagues in setting odds on possible gambits. John Whiting, Mr Hawksworth's tax colleague at PwC, would offer odds of only 8-1 that the Chancellor would try to raise the full £15bn on 17 March.

Some of the "runners and riders" are ruled out by the manifesto. The Government has pledged not to raise the basic or higher rates of income tax.

"We have kept all our manifesto promises on tax and we will continue to keep all our manifesto promises on tax," Mr Brown told MPs yesterday.

The other tempting cash cow, which Mr Brown has already raided, is national insurance. Freezing the income tax and NI thresholds would raise £8.8bn, according to the Institute for Fiscal Studies. It added that raising the contribution rate on earnings above the upper earnings limit from 1 to 6 per cent would raise £4bn.

However, as one economist put it: "The Government raised national insurance in exchange for improving the NHS. To do it again because he had simply run out of cash would be seen as highly cynical."

The other area for fevered speculation is the housing market. House prices have started to accelerate again in the new year, raising renewed fears of a property crash and allowing the Chancellor to portray himself as acting in the public interest by acting to slow it down.

"The Government may launch a fresh set of attacks on the householder and people looking to buy and develop second homes," said Steve Durman, at accountants Moore Stephens. "Justified by spiralling house prices in the South-east, the Government may allow main residence tax-breaks only on properties owned for more than two years."

Significantly, the Treasury will publish the results on the independent inquiry it commissioned into the housebuilding industry on or near Budget day.

Analysts point out that just before Mr Brown unveiled his NI increase, he published a report carried out by Sir Derek Wanless, concluding that the NHS should be funded from direct taxation. Kate Barker highlighted distortions around the stamp duty thresholds and lent her support to government plans for tax-transparent property investment vehicles.

Anne Redston, a tax partner at Ernst & Young, said he could raise the stamp duty rates by another percentage point. "The simple fact is that it is an easy way for him to raise money," she said. "The collection mechanism is there and people who would have voted Labour are not going to vote Tory because of higher tax on a one-off transaction."

But the really tempting option is to raise VAT, the tax paid automatically by shoppers every time they make a purchase. Currently set at 17.5 per cent, it was last hiked in 1993 to pay for the abolition of the poll tax, and now raises £69bn a year. Lifting it to 18.5 per cent would net £4bn, according to the IFS.

One drawback is that VAT is seen as a regressive tax - costing the poor proportionately more than the rich - and would appear to counter Labour's tradition of redistributing wealth.

Ms Redston said that, like stamp duty, it would be easy to implement and collect. She said preserving zero-rating on basic items such as food and clothes could help Mr Brown "concoct a defence".

"To some extent it is a tax on choice," she said. "If people choose to buy other goods or services or be entertained, that's not quite the same as putting up tax on food and necessities." An even stealthier money-raiser would be to freeze the threshold on higher-rate tax. More than one in 10 people pay income tax at 40 per cent compared with one in 40 in 1978. Freezing it would see more people pay more tax.

Beneath these "big-hitting" taxes there is a myriad of different levers the Chancellor can pull. He is likely to freeze duty on spirits for the seventh year in a row but punish smokers and drinkers of wine and beer.

He will detail plans to close a tax loophole that allows thousands of wealthy non-domiciled UK residents, which could raise up to £1bn a year.

Mr Brown has made clear he will close a loophole he created by zero-rating small businesses for corporation tax, encouraging thousands of sole traders to set up companies. He has lost £1bn and is likely to impose a tax on dividends that will make up the loss and raise an extra £1bn, Ernst & Young believe.

The Chancellor has already announced plans to close a loophole exploited by investors in film productions and a crackdown on VAT avoidance to raise £450m.

Could there be tax cuts? Mr Brown has already pre-announced measures for small business. This week he pledged to increase spending on science.

But he will keep his tax-cut powder dry for Budget 2005, leaving the real focus on his need to raise money? Ms Redston said it was an "evens bet" whether the Chancellor would use Budget 2004 to impose a significant tax rise.

"I think it will really come down to his level of confidence in his forecasts," she said. "If income and expenditure diverge and there's a really big gap, he would have to something unpopular in 2005 like raise VAT.

"Otherwise he has to hold his breath now, dive into the water and hope he keeps holding it until the other side of the election, when I am sure the first thing he will do will be to raise national insurance again."
============================================================
Lot's of choices.
All of them bad?

Mish



To: Wyätt Gwyön who wrote (1295)3/5/2004 2:18:48 PM
From: NOW  Respond to of 116555
 
thank god for small miracles....