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


To: mishedlo who wrote (109740)3/19/2010 3:43:24 PM
From: DebtBomb  Respond to of 116555
 
India’s Unexpected Interest Rate Rise ‘Sign of Things to Come’
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By Cherian Thomas and Anil Varma

March 20 (Bloomberg) -- India’s central bank will probably raise interest rates again next month as the first increase in two years is only the initial step in the battle against inflation, BNP Paribas SA and Standard Chartered Plc said.

The Reserve Bank of India yesterday increased the benchmark reverse repurchase rate to 3.5 percent from a record-low 3.25 percent and the repurchase rate to 5 percent from 4.75 percent, saying containing inflation has become “imperative.”

Governor Duvvuri Subbarao’s move comes after Australia and Malaysia increased rates this month, while Norway and Israel did so at the end of last year as the global economy’s recovery from the worst recession since World War II gathers pace. The World Bank indicated this week that China should also act to help contain the risk of a property bubble.

“This is just a sign of things to come,” said Manoj Rane, treasurer at BNP Paribas in Mumbai. “A 25 basis-point increase doesn’t get you there but it sets the course” to contain inflation.

Lagging behind India are central banks in the Group of Seven economies with the Federal Reserve and European Central Bank among those waiting for evidence of a more concrete recovery before they unwind record low borrowing costs. Canada may be the first G-7 central bank to shift after data showed its core inflation rate unexpectedly accelerated last month.

Stocks Declined

Stocks in the U.S. declined after the decision, a month before the bank’s scheduled monetary policy meeting. Subbarao moved after India’s industrial production gained 16.7 percent in January following a 17.6 percent increase in December from a year earlier, the fastest pace since at least 1994, according to Bloomberg data. The wholesale-price inflation rate touched 9.89 percent in February, according to the commerce ministry.

“We see this as the first of several policy rate increases as the Reserve Bank of India realigns policy rates to high inflation,” said Sanjeev Prasad, executive director at Kotak Securities Ltd. Prasad, India’s top-ranked analyst in the past four years according to Asia Money polls, expects the central bank to raise interest rates by 2 percentage points in the fiscal year starting April 1.

As inflation accelerated, the difference between the overnight money-market rate and the one-year swap rate, a measure of expectations for changes in borrowing costs, surged almost six-fold this fiscal year. The spread averaged 1.59 percentage points this month, compared with 27 basis points in April 2009, when the fiscal year began. A basis point is 0.01 of a percentage point.

Doubled Holdings

Foreigners more than doubled holdings of Indian debt this fiscal year, raising total ownership to an all-time high $11.2 billion on March 18, to benefit from the rising yields on the nation’s assets. Outstanding overseas investment in stocks also climbed to a record $76 billion on the same day.

“It’s a positive step for all financial markets because it shows policy makers’ resolve to tackle the inflation problem in a timely manner,” said Arvind Sampath, the Mumbai-based head of interest-rate trading at Standard Chartered. “The measures will help subdue inflationary expectations, which is good for the economy as a whole.”

Benchmark 10-year bond yields have added 24 basis points this year, after rising by a record 2.3 percentage points in 2009 as investors braced for faster inflation and higher policy rates. India’s benchmark share index has rallied 95 percent and the rupee has gained 10 percent in the past year.

Currency option prices signal investors are the most optimistic in 21 months that rising asset yields and quickening economic growth will bolster the rupee. One-month implied volatility, a measure of expectations for rupee price movements, touched 7.4 percent, the lowest level since June 2008, on March 18, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The gauge of expected currency swings is quoted by traders as part of options prices.

Inflationary Pressures

The central bank yesterday said inflationary pressures have “accentuated” and have been “spilling over to the wider inflationary process” and pointed to the latest industrial production data to show “revival of private demand.”

India’s passenger car sales gained in February to a record amid rising incomes in the world’s second-most populous nation. The demand is encouraging Ford Motor Co. and Volkswagen AG to build plants and unveil new models in the South Asian nation.

India’s $1.2 trillion economy, Asia’s biggest after Japan and China, may expand 8.2 percent in the next fiscal year, compared with 7.2 percent in the year to March 31, the Finance Ministry said in February.

Inflation has returned to Asia as growth accelerates amid the global economic recovery. Consumer prices in China rose to a 16-month high of 2.7 percent in February from a year earlier as industrial production grew 20.7 percent in the first two months of 2010, the most in more than five years. Factory output in Malaysia rose 12.7 percent in January.

Inflation is politically sensitive in a country such as India, where the World Bank estimates three-quarters of the nation’s 1.2 billion people live on less than $2 a day. Opposition parties led by the Bharatiya Janata Party repeatedly stalled proceedings in parliament this month, accusing Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s government of being anti-poor and failing to curb prices.

To contact the reporters on this story: Cherian Thomas in Bangalore at Cthomas1@bloomberg.netAnil Varma in Mumbai at avarma3@bloomberg.net.

Last Updated: March 19, 2010 14:30 EDT

bloomberg.com



To: mishedlo who wrote (109740)3/19/2010 5:15:51 PM
From: DebtBomb  Respond to of 116555
 
U.S., U.K. Move Closer to Losing AAA Debt Rating, Moody’s Says
March 14, 2010, 9:16 PM EDT

March 15 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. and the U.K. have moved “substantially” closer to losing their AAA credit ratings as the cost of servicing their debt rose, according to Moody’s Investors Service.

The governments of the two economies must balance bringing down their debt burdens without damaging growth by removing fiscal stimulus too quickly, Pierre Cailleteau, managing director of sovereign risk at Moody’s in London, said in a telephone interview.

Under the ratings company’s baseline scenario the U.S. will spend more on debt service as a percentage of revenue this year than any other top-rated country except the U.K., and will be the biggest spender from 2011 to 2013, Moody’s said today in a report.

“We expect the situation to further deteriorate in terms of the key ratings metrics before they start stabilizing,” Cailleteau said. “This story is not going to stop at the end of the year. There is inertia in the deterioration of credit metrics.”

The U.S. government will spend about 7 percent of its revenue servicing debt in 2010 and almost 11 percent in 2013, according to the baseline scenario of moderate economic recovery, fiscal adjustments in line with government plans and a gradual increase in interest rates, Moody’s said.

Under its adverse scenario, which assumes 0.5 percent lower growth each year, less fiscal adjustment and a stronger interest-rate shock, the U.S. will be paying about 15 percent of revenue in interest payments, more than the 14 percent limit that would lead to a downgrade to AA, Moody’s said.

U.K. Debt Service

The U.K. is likely to spend 7 percent of revenue servicing debt this year and 9 percent in 2013, rising to almost 12 percent under the adverse scenario, Moody’s said.

Financing costs above 10 percent put countries outside of the AAA category into a so-called debt reversibility band, the size of which depends on the ability and willingness of nations to reduce their debt burden by raising taxes or reducing spending. The U.S. has a 4 percentage-point band, while the U.K. has a 3 percentage-point band.

“Those economies have been caught in a crisis while they are highly leveraged,” Cailleteau said, referring to the level of private and public debt as a percentage of gross domestic product. “They have to make the required adjustment to stabilize markets without choking off growth.”

The U.S. would be the “most affected” under the adverse scenario, as the only country that would face a downgrade, Cailleteau said. The company’s baseline scenario assumes that all current AAA sovereigns will keep their ratings over the next three years, he said.

‘Distance-to-Downgrade’

“On balance, we believe that the ratings of all large Aaa governments remain well positioned, although their ‘distance-to- downgrade’ has in all cases substantially diminished,” Moody’s said in the report.

While the U.S. is likely to benefit from economic growth more than other AAA nations, weak public consumption is likely to weigh on GDP this year, the ratings company said.

“The pattern of growth and the high rate of unemployment raise the question of how strong the recovery will be going forward,” Moody’s said. “The ability of the U.S. economy to grow more rapidly and, therefore, for government revenues to contribute to fiscal consolidation, will have to depend on a revival in the growth of consumption.”

U.S. Growth

The U.S. economy will grow 3 percent this year and in 2011 after contracting 2.4 percent in 2009, according to the median estimate of economist forecasts compiled by Bloomberg. Unemployment will average 9.6 percent this year, up from 5.8 percent in 2008, and will fall to 9 percent next year, based on the median estimate.

Sales at U.S. retailers unexpectedly climbed 0.3 percent in February, compared with a median forecast for a 0.2 percent contraction, the Commerce Department said on March 12.

“The emphasis of the market, and our own, will move increasingly away from public finance developments in 2010, towards medium-term consolidation plans and the credibility thereof,” Moody’s said.

Achieving the fiscal consolidation necessary to avert a downgrade will test “social cohesion” and may involve rewriting the “social contract” between governments and their people, Cailleteau said. “People have to decide what level of pain they are willing to accept to have a healthy economy.”

U.K. Prime Minister Gordon Brown has clashed with opposition leader David Cameron over the timing and speed of budget cuts as they prepare for an election that must be held by June 3.

‘Very Fragile’

The opposition Conservatives argue that the government should come to grips now with the budget deficit, while Brown’s Labour Party says it’s too soon to remove fiscal stimulus.

“Although the economy is now growing, recovery is still in its early stages and remains very fragile,” Brown told business leaders in London on March 10. “We’re not going to withdraw the stimulus until the recovery is assured.”

The U.K. economy, which emerged from its longest-ever recession last quarter, is forecast to expand by 1.2 percent this year after a 5 percent contraction in 2009, according to median economist estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Unemployment will average 8 percent this year and 7.9 percent next year, the estimates show.

“The question here is less when fiscal retrenchment ought to start, but rather how credible it is that sufficient retrenchment will take place,” Moody’s said.

businessweek.com



To: mishedlo who wrote (109740)3/20/2010 1:00:08 AM
From: Little Joe  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116555
 
Beginning of the end I think.

lj