Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Gold Rebounds as Dollar Tumbles After Fed's Interest-Rate Cut

(Bloomberg) -- Gold rose after an emergency cut in U.S. borrowing costs reduced the value of the dollar, boosting the appeal of the precious metal as an alternative investment.

The Federal Reserve slashed its benchmark interest rate 0.75 percentage point to 3.5 percent after global equity markets tumbled on concern the slumping U.S. economy will drag down the growth rates of other nations. Gold rallied 31 percent in 2007 after the Fed cut rates by 1 percentage point, sending the dollar down 9.5 percent against the euro.

``This is a pure dollar play if ever there was one,'' said Jon Nadler, an analyst at Kitco Minerals & Metals Inc. in Montreal.

Gold futures for February delivery climbed $8, or 0.9 percent, to $889.70 an ounce at 11:57 a.m. on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. The price earlier fell as low as $849.50.

Gold for immediate delivery rose $24.22, or 2.8 percent, to $889.22. The price fell 2.1 percent yesterday, when the Comex was closed for Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

The rate cut was the biggest single reduction since the Fed began using the benchmark as the principal tool to control monetary policy in 1990. The dollar dropped as much as 1.3 percent against the euro.

``Lower interest rates are very good for gold because the dollar will weaken against other currencies,'' said Marty McNeill, a trader at R.F. Lafferty Inc. in New York.

Policy makers are scheduled to meet on Jan. 30. Interest- rate futures show a 70 percent chance the Fed will cut the benchmark rate 0.25 percentage point to 3.25 percent at that session, compared with no chance a week ago.

`Total Meltdown'

``At this point, the Fed looks like they're asset- senstive,'' said Frank McGhee, head metals trader at Integrated Brokerage Services LLC in Chicago. ``They're going to put liquidity in the market to keep stock prices higher and a total meltdown from happening.''

U.S. stocks tumbled for the fifth session with the Dow Jones Industrial Index plunging as much as 3.8 percent before paring losses. European stocks rose for the first time in six session after the Fed's surprise cut.

``Market participants see weakening economic conditions as the cause of the emergency rate cuts and stronger inflationary pressures as a result,'' said Stuart Flerlage, who helps manage more than $600 million at NuWave Investment Corp. in New York ``This will continue to provide a strong bid for gold.''
 

ABN Leads Stocks Bears as MFS Sees No Repeat of '03

(Bloomberg) -- The last time the Standard & Poor's 500 Index was at least 10 percent below its previous high, in 2003, the world's biggest stock investors were bullish.

Not this time. Institutions handling $1.5 trillion, including Baring Asset Management's Andrew Cole, ABN Amro Asset Management's Joost van Leenders and MFS Investment Management's James Swanson, are holding or selling. They say stocks are riskier today than they were during that last correction in 2003, even though valuations are half as much.

``It's a much more dangerous game today,'' said Cole, 44, a fund manager who helps invest $48 billion at Baring in London. ``2008 is going to be a year of preservation of capital. We've got a lot of cash and we're not frightened to say so.''

Cole, whose firm favored shares over bonds or cash in 2003, said in an interview he's ``underweight'' equities this year because evidence of a U.S. recession is mounting. January's decline in the S&P 500, the benchmark for American equities, marked the worst start in the index's history.

The Federal Reserve's three interest-rate cuts since September haven't encouraged stock investors about the prospects for the economy. Equities are the cheapest relative to bonds since 1974, and still investors are shifting funds to fixed- income.

Steepest Drop

Stocks got even less expensive as the MSCI World Index dropped 3 percent yesterday, its biggest decline since 2002. The global benchmark slipped 1.1 percent today, its sixth straight decline and the longest stretch of losses since the period ended July 18, 2006.

Benchmark indexes from Hong Kong to London and Brazil retreated yesterday as concern grew that a U.S. recession will weaken global growth. Japan's Nikkei 225 Stock Average dropped today by the most since September 2001, and Australia's All Ordinaries Index tumbled the most since October 1989. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng Index was headed for its biggest two-day slump in a decade.

Investors pulled money from U.S. stock funds every month between May and November, the longest streak this decade, according to Investment Company Institute, which compiles data from 4,744 equity funds with $6.6 trillion in assets.

Net inflows to fixed-income funds in 2007 were the biggest since the start of the U.S. bull market in 2002, according to data from ICI, the Washington-based trade group for the mutual- fund industry.

``What we've been telling people to do is, `Face reality and take action.''' said David Darst, the New York-based chief investment strategist for Morgan Stanley's private banking unit, which oversees $700 billion.

Recession Forecasts

Last month, Darst recommended clients raise their cash holdings to 16 percent of assets. He told them to move money from equities to hedge funds that use futures to bet on currencies, interest rates and commodities.

ABN Amro Asset's van Leenders, 38, the firm's investment strategist, said he's daunted as earnings fall and predictions from Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs Group Inc., and Merrill Lynch & Co. increase investors' conviction that the country is sliding into a recession.

Profit for S&P 500 members may have tumbled an average of 17 percent in the fourth quarter, according to Bloomberg data. The 2.5 percent drop in the third was the first quarterly decline since 2002.

End of Expansion

A jump in the jobless rate in December signaled that the longest expansion in consumer spending on record will end in the first quarter, Goldman said. The number of Americans who fell behind on mortgage payments rose to a 20-year high in the third quarter and home prices probably fell last year for the first time since the Great Depression.

Economic growth will slow to 1.1 percent in the first quarter, according to the median estimate of 65 economists surveyed by Bloomberg. In 2003, the U.S. grew at an annual rate of 2.5 percent while profits rose 17.4 percent a quarter, on average.

A correction is any time a stock index declines 10 percent or more from peak to trough. The latest for the S&P 500 was reached Nov. 26, when it fell 10 percent from its record in October.

Prior to that, the 15 percent drop in the index between November 2002 and March 2003 was the sixth correction in three years. Those were spurred by the collapse of the technology bubble, the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, a recession in 2001 and the dissolution of Enron Corp.

`Entering Recession'

The S&P 500 rebounded 39 percent between its 2003 low and the end of the year, marking the beginning of a five-year bull market.

``The macro picture right now is much weaker,'' said van Leenders, whose Amsterdam-based firm has $309 billion in assets. ``Then we were recovering from a recession, now we are entering one.''

ABN Amro Asset lowered its allocation to equities last quarter by raising cash and buying government and investment- grade corporate debt, he said. Swanson, the chief investment strategist at Boston-based MFS, sold a third of the shares he owned at the end of the year to boost his holdings in U.S. government bonds.

The S&P 500 fell 9.8 percent in the first 13 trading days of this year for the worst start since the index's inception in 1957. Stocks will drop further as the economy forces more homeowners into default and banks' losses on investments tied to subprime mortgages double to as much as $200 billion, Swanson said.

Benchmarks Drop

MSCI's world index slid 1.1 percent to 1,380.60 as of 3:03 p.m. in Tokyo, extending its decline from an Oct. 31 record to 18 percent. Japan's Nikkei 225 dropped 5.7 percent, and Australia's S&P/ASX 200 lost 7.1 percent. Hong Kong's Hang Seng plunged as much as 8.2 percent. India's Sensex index tumbled 12 percent when trading resumed after a halt to avoid breaching limits.

Yesterday, London's FTSE 100 Index dropped 5.5 percent for the steepest loss since September 2001. Brazil's Bovespa index plunged 6.6 percent, the biggest retreat in almost a year.

``Everything is being painted with a `dump-it-now' brush,'' Swanson, 58, said in an interview from Omaha, Nebraska. ``Seeing those red numbers on stock after stock after stock, it changes the psychology. It's very easy to give in to the doom of `Man, this is really now a recession and bear market and it's never going to get better.'''

Banks Extend Decline

Banks and brokerages in the S&P 500, last year's worst- performing industry with a 21 percent decline, have dropped another 13 percent in 2008. Telephone companies, energy producers and computer makers have fallen more than 12 percent since the start of this year.

New York-based Merrill, the biggest U.S. brokerage, had a record loss last week after writing down the value of its subprime-infected assets by $16.7 billion.

The stock-market slump hasn't been limited to the U.S. Benchmarks in more than two dozen countries including Japan, Sweden and Peru have plunged at least 20 percent from their peaks in the past six months, marking the start of so-called bear markets. This month alone, global stocks have lost more than $5 trillion in market capitalization, Bloomberg data show.

Stuart Fraser, who helps manage $42 billion at Brewin Dolphin Securities Ltd. in London, said he purchased inflation- linked government debt because ``central banks will be more concerned about rescuing the economy than worrying about inflation.''

Fraser, 61, also bought futures contracts and exchange- traded funds that track wheat and soybean prices. Wheat reached a record $10.095 a bushel in December and has doubled in the past year. Soybeans set an all-time high of $13.415 a bushel this month after surging 78 percent in 2007.

Long Volatility

Ashburton Ltd.'s Peter Lucas bought futures on the so-called VIX, the Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index that tracks the price of S&P 500 options. The gauge of stock market price swings almost doubled in 2007.

``Whatever happens this year, volatility will remain elevated,'' said Lucas, 42, who oversees $1.7 billion as chief investment officer at Ashburton in Jersey, Channel Islands. ``Being long volatility is a smart way of hedging equity risk.''

Relative to earnings, stocks are about half as expensive as they were in 2003. Companies in the S&P 500 are valued at an average 17.5 times reported profit, compared with 33 times at the start of 2003, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
 

ECB, BOE May Follow U.S. Fed Cut, Economists Say

(Bloomberg) -- The European Central Bank and the Bank of England may have to follow the Federal Reserve and cut interest rates as the risk of a U.S. recession threatens to drag down a global expansion, economists said.

``From a European and a U.K. perspective, the Fed cut adds to the risk of more and quicker rate cuts,'' said Amit Kara, an economist at UBS AG in London. Kara, a former economist at the U.K. central bank, predicts four cuts from the Bank of England this year and two by the ECB.

The Fed today lowered its benchmark rate in an emergency move for the first time since 2001 after global stock markets tumbled amid signs the world's largest economy is sliding into recession. The move spurred a rally in European stocks, though failed to stem a decline in U.S. indexes.

The widening interest-rate gap between the U.S. and Europe may spur gains in the euro, worsening the outlook for an economy already showing signs of a slowdown by hobbling exports. German investor confidence dropped to the lowest since 1992 in January and European manufacturing growth slowed in December.

``This market has been calling for help,'' said Alberto Espelosin, who helps to manage about $12 billion at Zaragoza, Spain-based Ibercaja Gestion. ``The ECB should follow suit.''

The Bank of Canada, in a scheduled meeting, lowered its main rate by a quarter point today to 4 percent and signaled it will act again to shield Canada from the U.S. slowdown.

Yields Fall

Investors are increasing bets Europe's two major central banks will cut borrowing costs, interest-rate futures trading shows. The ECB's benchmark rate is currently 4 percent, while the Bank of England's 5.75 percent is the highest among the Group of Seven industrial nations.

The yield on the June ECB contract fell to 3.80 percent today from yesterday's close of 3.94 percent. On the June U.K. contract, the yield fell 3 basis points to 4.89 percent.

The ECB and the U.K. central bank refused to give away their intentions. The Bank of England said it has no plans to bring forward next week's meeting of the Monetary Policy Committee, which is scheduled for Feb. 7. ECB council member Juergen Stark declined to comment on the Fed's decision when questioned by reporters in Brussels.

The Swiss National Bank also declined to comment, as did spokespeople for the central banks of Norway and Sweden.

The euro, which touched a record $1.4967 on Jan. 23, rose 1.1 percent to $1.4619 at 6:08 p.m. Frankfurt time after the Fed's announcement. The pound climbed 0.8 percent to $1.9592.

`Forced to Act'

``If it becomes clear that this is merely a temporary fix, and the situation deteriorates further, then the ECB will be forced to act,'' said Ken Wattret, an economist at BNP Paribas SA in London.

While David Brown, chief European economist at Bear Stearns Cos. in London, predicted the Bank of England will cut its rate next month and the ECB will do so in the second quarter, he ruled out either following the Fed in reducing rates outside their normally scheduled meetings, as they did in September 2001.

``It's not their style,'' said Brown. ``European central banks tend to move by the calendar.''

European inflation at a six-year high of 3.1 percent, breaching the ECB target of just below 2 percent, is limiting policy makers' room for maneuver. President Jean-Claude Trichet said Jan. 10 that the bank is ready to act ``preemptively'' to raise rates to contain consumer prices.
 

SA losing faith in govt

(Fin24) - If the power deadlock within the ANC is perpetuated, a feeding frenzy of opportunistic corruption, near corruption or inertia could follow, according to a researcher from the Institute for Justice and Reconciliation (IJR), Susan Brown, who calls this "the worst case".


Brown was speaking during a breakfast briefing to launch the IJR's transformation audit, which she edited, and which showed there has been an alarming slump in public confidence in SA leaders and its representative institutions, including parliament.


The report was conducted between April 2006 and April 2007 among 3 500 respondents.


The Presidency has already received a copy of the report, and according to the IJR it was "receptive", questioned whether a trend was being seen and engaged more openly in dialogue than they would have perhaps a year ago.


IJR researcher Jan Hofmeyr explains that all 23 government performance areas showed significant declines, with seven showing declines of 20% or more.


"This is quite significant," he noted, adding that there was a decline in the trust being placed in national leaders. Added to this were concerns around softer issues, like the integrity of leadership.


Incoming executive director of the IJR (replacing Charles Villa-Vicencio, who remains on the board) Fanie du Toit said: "There are some serious findings here. It speaks of a more systematic failure to take the public into confidence."


He added that there was a "startling gap" between economic growth and the public perception as displayed in the audit.
SA has been enjoying the highest growth in its business cycle since the Second World War, but yet the public was clearly not happy. Some blame must lie somewhere, and as the audit showed, there appeared to be something of a leadership crisis within government institutions and lack of delivery to a wider base.


Brown highlighted inefficiencies in the education system, which she explained fed into unemployment. She said the linkages with tertiary institutions had hardly expanded since 1994.


Du Toit pointed out that SA compared badly with its peers on the education front, and said that the pool of people from which tertiary students were derived was still the same size as it was in 1995.


"It affects the nature of the macroeconomic system we have, and it affects public confidence and the ability to develop a unified society," said Brown.
 

Lekgotla to solve energy crisis

(Fin24) - Eskom CEO Jacob Maroga will face some tough questions from the South African government which will use its two-day Lekgotla, starting January 23, to help solve the country's energy supply shortfall.


Maroga joins the Lekgotla which brings together all ministers and their deputies, premiers, director-generals and representatives of the South African Local Government Association.


Rolling blackouts throughout South Africa have ground business to a halt and severely disrupted roads and other infrastructure, as well as weakened confidence in the country's ability to attract and support future investment.


After the Lekgotla all eyes will be on February 8, when President Thabo Mbeki's state of the nation address in parliament is expected to detail some of the Lekgotla's findings.


A statement released by the cabinet today apologised for the electricity predicament and the impact it has had on the country's citizens, economy and image.