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To: Bobby Yellin who wrote (10730)4/26/1998 11:15:00 PM
From: Serge Collins  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116790
 
Aussie gold stocks down more than 2% overnight. Doesn't sound like a positive opening for gold stocks Monday morning.



To: Bobby Yellin who wrote (10730)4/27/1998 8:07:00 PM
From: goldsnow  Respond to of 116790
 
Asia effect on world growth still seen modest-IMF
06:52 a.m. Apr 27, 1998 Eastern
By Andrea Ricci

HONG KONG, April 27 (Reuters) - The International Monetary Fund said on
Monday it remained convinced Asia's crisis would only modestly hurt the
global economy, despite charges by some observers that it was too
optimistic on world growth.

The agency also said it saw more scope for growth in Japan following the
government's unveiling of a fiscal package.

''On the global level, we expect this crisis to cause only a relatively
small recession at the world level,'' Flemming Larsen, deputy director
of the IMF's research department, told a gathering of business
executives in Hong Kong.

He also said the depth of the global economic slowdown would be of
''quite a different magnitude'' than the world slowdowns of the past
quarter century.

In its World Economic Outlook released on April 13, the IMF said it
expected world output to grow 3.1 percent in 1998 and 3.7 percent in
1999 compared with 4.1 percent in 1997.

Growth in the advanced economies was projected to decline to 2.4 percent
in 1998 from 3.0 percent in 1997 and then rise to 2.5 percent in 1999.

The IMF had forecast zero growth for Japan, but had become more
optimistic after the government's recent revealing of a 16.65 trillion
yen (US$126 billion) fiscal stimulus package.

''With the package, we are now more optimistic that Japan will not
contract,'' said Larsen. He said growth might even be ''modestly
positive'' in 1998.

But he said that while the package would help boost demand in the
short-run, Japan needed to do more to reform the structure of its
economy.

Economies of the ASEAN-4 -- Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia and the
Philippines -- were seen contracting 2.7 percent in 1998 from 3.9
percent growth in 1997 before slowly recovering as the century closed.

But while the outlook for Southeast Asia was poor, the world picture
''had not changed much,'' largely because of continued strong growth in
the United States and Canada and increasing strength in continental
Europe, Larsen said.

Larsen said the IMF was not ''completely opposed'' to arguments that
diminished import demand in Asia could have negative effects on the
growth in the developed world.

But he said the substantial reallocation of investment funds from Asia
to the United States and Europe that has boosted those countries' stock
markets and spurred a global fall in interest rates was offsetting the
trade effects of a weakened Asia.

''The financial reallocation effect is providing a very powerful
offset,'' he said.

Larsen acknowledged there was merit to concerns expressed by some
observers that developed nations had become too complacent about
inflation on views the downturn in Asia would mitigate price pressures
in their economies.

But he also said ''we may well be looking at a tightening in the U.S.
and Europe in the next six months.''

But the IMF did not foresee a sharp monetary tightening in the U.S. to
stave off inflation. Rather it expected -- and hoped -- the country
would experience a soft landing.

Turning to exchange rates, Larsen said the strength of the dollar and
weakness in the yen largely reflected cyclical factors that would
reverse in time.

''The U.S. dollar is clearly above its medium-term trading range,''
Larsen said, adding that that would contribute to the U.S. current
account deficit widening to $230 billion to $240 billion in 1998.

The gap was around US$166 billion in 1997.

The fall in the yen ''probably exceeds what is appropriate for the
medium-term, but it reflects cyclical factors in the Japanese economy,''
he said.

The dollar was trading at 132.75 yen in late Asian activity.

-- Hong Kong Newsroom (852) 2843-6371; Fax (852) 2845-0636

Copyright 1998 Reuters Limited.