Sweet Europe, sour America?

(Reuters) – Investors are finding themselves with a new kind of balancing act — one in which they have to juggle with three major regions posing three significantly different circumstances.

Europe’s bank stress testing, the focus of much of the past week’s market debate, may have some impact on Monday but may well pale into insignificance given the most recent numbers on the broader economy.

First there is the United States, which is believed to be facing another slowdown, if not a double-dip recession.

Then there is Europe, suffering a debt crisis and austerity-bound, yet suddenly surprising everyone with an unexpected burst of economic vigor.

Thirdly, comes Asia, growing away so merrily that investors are beginning to be concerned that too much zeal will be exercised in trying to slow things down.

On top of that there is the decoupling of economics and earnings — keeping bond yields down and lifting stocks. The latest investment flow data from EPFR Global showed “yield hungry but skittish” investors flooding into bonds, but world stocks .MIWD00000PUS .TRXFLDGLPU are up more than 7 percent for the month.

“We are really in a much more difficult stage of the recovery right now,” Michala Marcussen, head of global economics at Societe Generale, said at a briefing with Reuters journalists.

She described markets as struggling with a “rotating crisis” in which one problem in one region becomes the focus of concern, only to be quickly replaced by another in another region.

“That ping pong is likely to go on for some time,” she said.

EUROPEAN TIGER?

Entering the new week, investors will first have to deal with any fallout from the stress tests of 91 European banks, which showed just seven failed, confirming fears the criteria used had been too soft.

Markets had been fairly calm about the tests, which, with Greece and other peripheral euro zone economies in mind, were designed to see how banks would fare in serious future crises.

The health check on 91 banks in 20 countries was widely criticized as being too soft. It was also overshadowed somewhat by a slew of data on European economies that suggested the banks may face less pressure and loan defaults than earlier thought.

That leaves investors to make up their own minds about particular banks, armed with the extra data the tests provided, including on sovereign bond holdings, to judge where further weak spots may be.

“With so few banks failing, investors will question whether the economic scenarios are sufficiently severe,” said Jon Peace, analyst at Nomura in London.

“It will be natural for investors to consider the margin by which banks passed,” he added, citing a good pass margin for Scandinavian and British banks, but Greek, Spanish and Italian banks faring less well.

European purchasing managers’ indexes in the past week showed private sector business activity accelerating in July, surprising economists who had expected a slowdown.

They indicated third-quarter euro zone growth of around 0.6-0.7 percent, double the 0.3 percent forecast in the most recent Reuters poll.

This was followed up by German business sentiment posting a record jump in July to its highest level in three years.

Non-euro zone member Britain also surprised with its economy growing twice as fast as expected in the second quarter of this year propelled by a sharp pick-up in services and the biggest rise in construction in almost 50 years.

Investors being investors, of course, these robust numbers triggered some new concerns about monetary tightening — hence the spike in the euro and pound against the dollar.

WEAKLING AMERICA?

The biggest piece of data likely to focus investors’ attention in the coming week is U.S. second-quarter GDP, out on Friday.

The U.S. economy is clearly coming off the boil, if, indeed, it was boiling. After three quarters of solid growth it is showing signs of slowing with firms still reluctant to hire and the housing sector seemingly unable to exit a prolonged rut.

It was enough, during the past week to prompt promises from Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke for more action if there are further signs of faltering.

This would particularly be the case if jobs don’t pick up.

“We are ready and will act if the economy does not continue to improve, if we don’t see the kind of improvements in the labor market that we are hoping for and expecting,” he told the House of Representatives Financial Services Committee.

This admission that all is not well has broad implications for investors even if other global drivers — major emerging market economies, such as China, and now Europe — are still on the upswing.

The question could turn out to be whether markets and other economies can thrive without the U.S. engine. History suggests not.

(Additional reporting by Blaise Robinson; Editing by Patrick Graham)

EURO GOVT-Bunds higher after Bernanke

July 22 (Reuters) – German Bunds rose on Thursday, tracking overnight moves in U.S. Treasuries after the Federal Reserve Chairman said that the world’s largest economy faced “unusually uncertain” prospects, prompting a sell-off in riskier assets.

Ben Bernanke said the Fed stands ready to ease monetary policy further if the budding U.S. economic recovery withers [ID:nN21165172].

Two year US Treasury yields US2YT=RR hit a record low in the wake of the testimony and ten-year yields US10YT=RR held near 15 month lows.

“Those looking for imminent quantitative easing were probably disappointed, but the ‘uncertain outlook’ and talk of taking action is pretty dovish,” a trader.

At 0603 GMT, September Bund futures FGBLc1 were 40 ticks higher at 129.30 having risen above the 21 day moving average at 129.10 at the market open.

Traders were looking to July’s high of 129.54 as the next key resistance level, to break out of the recent trading range.

Two-year bond yields DE2YT=TWEB were 1.8 basis points lower at 0.706 percent, with 10-year yields DE10YT=TWEB almost 4 basis points lower at 2.599 percent .

Euro zone flash manufacturing and services PMIs are released from 0658 GMT, with the regional manufacturing index expected to slip to 55.2 from 55.6 in June and the services index seen falling to 55.0 from 55.5.

Obama budget review may trim 2010 deficit forecast

WASHINGTON, July 22 (Reuters) – The Obama administration may report somewhat better fiscal news when it delivers its mid-session budget review later this week, but the United States still faces a massive deficit and rising debt.

Higher corporate taxes and Wall Street’s quick repayment of a taxpayer bailout could see the projected 2010 U.S. budget deficit fall a bit when the review is released on Friday.

However, the fiscal funding gap would still be the widest on record, highlighting the tough task faced by President Barack Obama’s Democrats as they try to placate voter anger over government spending in an election year.

Obama’s economic team will update forecasts for the deficit and debt over the next decade, while revising estimates for the pace of growth and level of unemployment.

If the economic outlook is dimmed, as some analysts expect, that would further darken a long-term U.S. fiscal picture that already projects debt climbing above 70 percent of GDP.

Investors tend to focus on the long-term outlook, although U.S. government bond yields remain low despite the country’s fiscal challenges, signaling markets so far believe Obama’s pledge to tackle the deficit and debt going forward.

On the other hand, the White House will have the benefit of some more positive short-term news to deliver on Friday.

Analysts expect the deficit for the fiscal year to Sept. 30 to decline from the record $1.56 trillion funding gap projected in Obama’s February budget.

“My guess is … that the deficit number will in fact be a little lower than it had previously been projected, maybe by $100 billion or so,” said Stan Collender, a partner at Qorvis Communications and longtime budget watcher who served on a commission during the 1990s to study budget issues.

If the 2010 deficit came in at $1.45 trillion, it would still be the widest on record, followed by the $1.41 trillion deficit in 2009.

Some observers see the scale of the short-term deficit as academic, considering the severe recession from which the country is still recovering. But they want more convincing White House efforts to phase in budget controls in the future.

DEBT COMMISSION

“We know it is going to be a huge number, over a trillion dollars. And that would be perfectly appropriate given the economic downturn … if, and only if, we had a plan to get out of this mess. And we still don’t,” said Maya MacGuineas, president for the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.

Obama has established a fiscal commission to weigh how to tackle the deficit and debt. The 18-strong bipartisan panel is expected to recommend a mixture of tax increases and spending cuts when its report is delivered by the end of December.

Critics are skeptical it will be able to forge a genuine consensus on how to proceed that will survive the Nov. 2 midterm congressional elections. They also doubt U.S. lawmakers will be prepared to enact the politically painful measures the commission recommends when they are presented to Congress.

Obama spoke to these doubts on Tuesday when he praised the open-minded spirit maintained so far by his commissioners.

“I think it is going to be a good report. But it is still going to require some tough choices, and we’re committed to pursuing those tough choices after we get that report,” he told a joint press conference with British Prime Minister David Cameron. Cameron has split ways with Obama and announced severe austerity measures to curb Britain’s own towering debts.

In the meantime, the White House may be able to argue the U.S. budget is already moving in the right direction.

Monthly updates from the Treasury show the budget deficit over the first three quarters of fiscal 2010 has accumulated to $1.004 trillion, or only two thirds of the initial projection with three quarters of the time elapsed.

Part of the boost to 2010 revenues could be higher corporate tax revenues, due to stronger profits.

But the big difference is seen coming from the lower-than-expected costs of the Troubled Asset Relief Program, created by Obama’s predecessor, George W. Bush, to save big U.S. banks during the financial crisis.

TARP’s initial $700 billion price tag has been slashed and now stands at $105.4 billion — $11.4 billion less than at the time of Obama’s February budget — while $198.4 had been paid back to the U.S. Treasury by the end of June.

Analysts say this is positive for the short-term budget picture but is by definition providing only temporary relief.

“People are paying it back and it is a positive. … That just needs to be understood in the right context. The banks can only repay the TARP funds once,” said Alex Brill, a research fellow at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington. (Editing by David Alexander; editing by Todd Eastham)

UPDATE 1-Hungary rules out austerity to IMF/EU, markets fall

BUDAPEST, July 19 (Reuters) – Hungary’s government insisted on a new financial sector tax this year and ruled out further austerity measures at talks with international lenders that were suspended at the weekend, the economy minister said on Monday.

The forint plunged about 2.7 percent in early trading on Monday to 289.70 versus the euro EURHUF=D2 after a review of Hungary’s funding agreement signed in Oct. 2008 fell through on Saturday when lenders said the new centre-right government needed to take tougher measures to rein in the budget deficit. [ID:nLDE66G0AP]

Government bond yields jumped 20-25 basis points after the open in illiquid trade.

Talks with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the EU ended prematurely on Saturday without concluding the country’s programme review.

This means Hungary will not have access to remaining funds of about 5.5 billion euros ($7.1 billion) in its 20 billion euro financing deal until the review is completed.

Even though the country is not under immediate financing pressure, it has been using the IMF/EU loan as a safety net this year so the lack of agreement risks damaging investor confidence. [ID:nLDE66I08V]

Economy Minister Gyorgy Matolcsy told public television m1 on Monday that the IMF and EU have voiced concerns over a 200 billion forint tax planned by the government to contain the budget deficit and a bill which would cut the central bank governor’s salary.

“Hungary has experienced a programme of austerity over the past five years, we inherited this from the previous governments and we would like to do away with the unfortunate consequences of these steps,” Matolcsy said.

“We have told our partners that further austerity packages were out of the question.” The IMF said in a statement on Saturday that Hungary will need to take additional measures to meet its deficit targets this year and in 2011, set out in its current financing deal and in line with the country’s obligations with the European Union.

In a separate statement, the European Commission said the reducing Hungary’s deficit by next year “will require tough decisions, notably on spending.”

Hungary’s new government has pledged to meet this year’s budget deficit target of 3.8 percent of GDP, which Matolcsy reaffirmed on television on Monday, but he said this should be done primarily with the help of the planned tax on banks.

“We will impose the bank tax, we know this is a significant extra burden but we also know that with this we can achieve the 3.8 percent deficit,” he said.

“It is either bank tax or austerity, these are the two ways of thought.”

For highlights of Matolcsy’s comments click [ID:nLDE66I07T]

(Reporting by Gergely Szakacs and Krisztina Than; Editing by Ruth Pitchford)

Hungary bond yields jump as IMF/EU talks shelved

July 19 (Reuters) – Hungarian government bond yields jumped by 20-25 basis points across the curve in illiquid trade at the open on Monday after government talks with international lenders ended inconclusively at the weekend.

Dealers said yields could rise further still and prevailing uncertainty in the absence of an agreement with the International Monetary Fund and the European Union would continue to weigh on the market. [ID:nLDE66G0AP]

(Reporting by Krisztina Than and Gergely Szakacs; editing by John Stonestreet)

Q+A: What next after IMF/EU suspend Hungary’s review?

(Reuters) – The International Monetary Fund and the European Union have suspended a review of Hungary’s 20 billion euro ($26 billion) financing agreement, but left the door open for more talks with the new center-right Fidesz government.

The decision means Hungary, which uses the package as a safety net, will not have immediate access to undrawn funds of 5.5 billion euros from the financing deal slated to expire in October.

Here are some questions and answers on what lies ahead:

WILL THERE BE A MARKET BACKLASH?

The forint, central Europe’s second-worst performing currency behind the Serbian dinar this year, is bound to weaken, probably in excess of 1 percent, and government bond yields will rise when local markets reopen on Monday.

That will increase Hungary’s borrowing costs and heightened market volatility may also force the central bank, which will discuss interest rates at a regular rate meeting on Monday, into adopting a more hawkish line.

The bank kept interest rates at a record low of 5.25 percent at the past two meetings after 10 months of easing worth 425 basis points. All 25 analysts in a Reuters poll on Thursday expected the bank to hold fire again.

But some analysts said that after Saturday’s unexpected suspension of talks with lenders, the bank may consider a rate hike if markets plunge on Monday.

Falls in the forint will also put pressure on Hungarian households holding trillions of forints worth of foreign currency mortgages, primarily in the volatile Swiss franc, which hit record highs versus the forint in July.

With scarce details on the government’s plans for reforms and no clarity on its 2011 budget plans, a sustained period of uncertainty would have a negative impact on Hungarian markets.

WILL THERE BE AN AGREEMENT WITH LENDERS?

Analysts said despite the talks falling through this week, the government should eventually come to an agreement with the IMF and the European Union, but a deal may not materialize until local government elections due on October 3.

That will give more time for Fidesz to formulate plans on the 2011 budget and on how it wants to transform loss-making state transportation companies into viable businesses able to remain afloat without constant state support.

Analysts said the lack of agreement may also have been a tactical move by the government to postpone the announcement of painful budget cuts needed to cut the deficit below the EU’s 3 percent ceiling next year until after the October poll.

Hungary’s government must also seal a review of the current deal if, as announced earlier, it wants to secure a two-year precautionary agreement worth 10-20 billion euros to serve as a safety net in 2011-12.

DOES HUNGARY NEED IMF MONEY RIGHT NOW?

Hungary has been able to finance itself from the markets since last year and has all of its foreign issuance plans for this year already covered.

Earlier this week debt agency AKK sold all bonds on offer at an auction and raised its 10-year offer by 5 billion forints, with yields dropping about 25-30 basis points across the curve from the previous tenders two weeks earlier.

So far the state has drawn about 12.8 billion euros of the 20 billion available in the IMF/EU package and analysts have said it could safely finance this year’s budget deficit with the help of its available unspent IMF and EU funds worth about 3.5 billion euros. On top of this the central bank has called down 1.4 billion euros from the package and put it in its reserves.

CAN HUNGARY AFFORD TO ESCHEW AN IMF DEAL BEYOND 2010?

The government itself has said it would use a new agreement with the IMF and the EU as a safety net, and not rely on it to cover its funding needs for the next two years.

Analysts said not having a new agreement with international lenders after the current one expires in October would be risky as the deal would be an important credibility anchor but Hungary could still be able to finance itself from the markets.

In a worst case scenario, however, the lack of an agreement with lenders now may trigger a negative market reaction which would leave the government with no choice but to seek the IMF’s good graces again.

(Editing by David Holmes)

Indian bond yields drop; rupee weakens after data

July 12 (Reuters) – Indian bond yields fell and the rupee weakened after industrial production in May rose just 11.5 percent, much below a consensus view of a 16 percent rise. [ID:nDEL003118]

At 11:07 a.m. (0537 GMT), the yield on the benchmark 10-year bond IN078020G=CC was down 2 basis point at 7.61 percent from before the data. It had closed at 7.65 percent on Friday.

The partially convertible rupee INR=IN was at 46.70/71 per dollar, weaker than 46.66/67 beforehand. (Reporting by Swati Bhat and Neha D’silva)

TEXT-Australia central bank July statement on rates

July 6 (Reuters) – Following is the text of the Reserve Bank of Australia’s statement on Tuesday after its monthly monetary policy meeting.

“At its meeting today, the Board decided to leave the cash rate unchanged at 4.5 per cent.

“The global economy has continued to expand over recent months, consistent with a trend pace of growth. The expansion remains uneven, with the major advanced countries recording only modest growth overall, but growth in Asia and Latin America, to date, very strong. There are indications that growth in China is now starting to moderate to a more sustainable rate. In Europe, while output in some key countries has been improving recently, prospects for next year are more uncertain given the budgetary constraints governments face and the pressure on euro area banks. US growth has looked stronger in the first half of 2010 but the pace of labour market improvement is slow.

“Caution in financial markets has been evident in the past couple of months, driven principally by concerns about European sovereigns and banks but also by some uncertainty about the pace of future global growth. Financial prices have been more volatile and equity prices and government bond yields in major countries have declined. Some tightness in funding markets is evident, though not on the scale seen in late 2008. Commodity prices are off their peaks but those most important for Australia remain at very high levels, and the terms of trade are approaching their peak of two years ago.

“With the high level of the terms of trade expected to add to incomes and demand, output growth in Australia over the year ahead is likely to be about trend, even though the effects of earlier expansionary policy measures will be diminishing. Consumption spending is recording a modest increase at present, with households displaying a degree of caution, but most indicators suggest business investment will increase over the coming year. Business credit appears to have stabilised, though credit conditions for some sectors remain difficult. Credit outstanding for housing has continued to expand at a solid pace, but dwelling prices are rising more slowly than earlier in the year.

“The labour market has continued to firm gradually, and after the significant decline last year, growth in wages has picked up a little, as had been expected. Underlying inflation appears likely to be in the upper half of the target zone over the next year. The rate of CPI increase is likely to be a little above 3 per cent in the near term, due to the effects of increases in tobacco taxes announced earlier in the year and significant increases in prices for utilities.

“The current setting of monetary policy is resulting in interest rates to borrowers around their average levels of the past decade. Pending further information about international and local conditions for demand and prices, the Board views this setting of monetary policy as appropriate. (Reporting by Balazs Koranyi)

RPT-GLOBAL MARKETS WEEKAHEAD-Pricing for double-dip

July 2 (Reuters) – With the global economy slowing, interest rates about as low as they can go, governments getting austere and banks being investigated for stress, it is getting harder for investors to keep putting on their bullish faces.

Heading into the first full week of the second half, investors are still committed to riskier assets such as equities and high-yield bonds in their portfolios, but are being battered with questions about whether this is the right stance.

Reuters asset alloction polls for June showed investors cutting stocks a bit, but retaining a long-held overweight bias towards them.

They also moved into the riskier end of bonds, seeking yield. [ID:nLDE65T19X]

But markets themselves are telling another story.

After a brief rally early last month, world stocks have fallen almost steadily. What was shaping up to be a gain on Friday .MIWD00000PUS was only the second up day in nine sessions that have seen stocks lose around 8 percent.

At the same time, bond yields are painting a picture of deep concern about the future. Citi’s composite world bond yield is only 1.8 percent, while short-term U.S. and euro zone yields US2YT=RR EU2YT=RR are only 0.6 percent.

“There is growing concern over the possibility of a double-dip recession in developed markets,” said Rob Carnell, chief international economist at ING Commerical Banking.

“In consequence, people want to keep their money as liquid as possible in case things start to turn down.”

As this interactive graphic shows — r.reuters.com/kuv45m — just about everything has been turning down from bond yields, to stocks, economic indicators and the Baltic Freight Index .BADI,a proxy for world trade.

Friday’s U.S. jobs data will have done nothing to ease concerns, given that private employment gains were less than expected and that jobs are a lagging indicator.

ARMAGEDDON?

There are two implications from this. Either investors banking on a stock revival are wrongly positioned or bond yields are wrong pricing in something approaching an investment and economic Armageddon.

Fred Goodwin, the “Mr Macro” analyst at a Nomura, leans to the latter. He says that once a recovery has begun to take hold, as now, double-dip recessions are very rare. The one in 1980-82, he reckons, only came about after the Federal Reserve had raised interest rates closer to 10 percent.

“Positioning (now) for the double-dip, a Japan scenario, or a Depression does not offer compelling risk-reward at these levels of bond yields,” Goodwin said in a note.

Others are similarly unimpressed by the idea that another recession is on the way, particularly when it comes to corporate earnings performance, the main driver behind stock movements.

“A number of factors have been in place preceding previous global earnings recessions including an inverted global yield curve, excess inventories and unsustainably high profitability. None of these factors are apparent now,” Citi equity strategists said in a note.

That said, it is hard to see where investors would find grounds to be bullish if the current recovery slowdown — epitomised by the lastest manufacturing surveys [ID:nN01124857] — starts gain momentum.

Reliance on Chinese and other emerging market growth could hardly be guaranteed if their main commercial markets started to retrench.

And deflation fears are growing enough to prompt investors such as those at HSBC’s absolute returns team to buy 25- and 30-year bonds. They want to grab a near 4 percent yield they expect will soon fall as demand drives the price higher.

STRESS

The week ahead is not likely to offer much that will help investors make up their minds about the future.

The Bank of England and European Central Bank hold separate meetings, but both are likely to keep interest rates on hold.

Germany will also auction some 10-year Bunds on Wednesday. Some auctions have been disappointing because record low yields have put people off.

But this auction is expected to attract plenty of buyers because of a massive amount of cash that will be returned to Bund investor the same week from other maturing German issues.

Austria might provide a better stress test, when it auctions 1.3 billion euros of benchmark bonds on Tuesday. The country is highly exposed to debt-stricken Hungary and is seen by markets as riskier than Germany and other core euro zone sovereigns.

Investors, meanwhile, will also be looking for any early results from the European Commission’s stress tests on European banks, designed to see how they would cope with crises.

Results for some of the biggest banks will be given to EU finance ministers on July 13 but leaks or announcements could come before then, especially about German regional and Spanish savings banks.

(Editing by Toby Chopra)

EURO GOVT-Bunds lower on post-Fed, data profit-taking

June 24 (Reuters) – German Bunds opened lower on Thursday as investors booked profits after a rally the previous session on the back of dismal US housing data and a cautious tone on the economy from the US Federal reserve.

The Fed renewed its promise to hold benchmark interest rates exceptionally low for an extended period, as expected, but also said financial conditions had become less supportive of growth, helping underpin bonds’ recent strength [ID:nN22150078].

European equities .FTEU3 were set to open higher, also adding to pressure on Bunds.

At 0604 GMT, September Bund futures FGBLU0 were 20 ticks lower at 128.42. Two-year bond yields DE2YT=TWEB were half a basis point higher at 0.6 percent, with 10-year yields up 1.5 basis points at 2.660 percent DE10YT=TWEB.

But traders said German Bunds should remain supported.

“The periphery remains under immense pressure, especially Greece with the month-end index related selling,” said a trader. “That, and the tone from the FOMC should keep core markets underpinned.” The 10-year Greek/German government bond yield spread has widened sharply this week because of expected forced selling at the end of the month by passive indexed funds after Moody’s became the second rating agency to downgrade Greece to junk earlier this month.

In supply, Italy will issue up to 1.5 billion euros of index linked BTPs.

FOREX-Euro slips after chart failure, caution over Spain

TOKYO, June 17 (Reuters) – The euro slipped from its two-week highs versus the dollar on Thursday as its short-covering rally ran out of steam and as worries about Spain’s public finances and banking system stopped it overcoming key resistance.

After failing to break above $1.2350-55 twice in the past 48 hours, the euro EUR= is at risk of retreat to around $1.2175, a 38.2 percent retracement of its rebound from a four-year low below $1.19 set last week.

“Players think the euro’s rise led by short-covering has come to a near-term end,” said an FX trader at a major Japanese brokerage.

“We hear overseas investors with real money, such as pension funds, are picking up the euro,” the trader said. “But besides them, there are few aggressive buyers of the euro, leaving the single currency vulnerable.”

Traders said the euro was likely to see selling into rallies as tolerance for risk subsided on a revival in concerns about euro zone fiscal problems.

“Some people want to reduce risk positions on worries about Spain,” said Daisuke Karakama, market economist at Mizuho Corporate Bank.

But the euro’s fall has not been as sharp as in May when worries about the impact of Europe’s fiscal problems drove it down rapidly, and this indicated that although some shorts have been covered, the market is still short euro longer term, Karakama said.

“The euro would have been sold much more hysterically if it were a month ago,” he said.

It slipped 0.3 percent from late U.S. levels to $1.2268. It is more than half a percent below the two-week high of $1.2354 hit on Wednesday but still up about 3 percent from the four-year low of $1.1876.

The market will be watching a Spanish bond auction later in the day after the spread of Spanish government bond yields over benchmark Bunds soared to a euro lifetime high on Wednesday. [ID:nLDE65F23Y]

“In the past few sessions, rises in the credit spreads of euro zone countries have not led to euro selling as much as before. But unless conditions in Europe improve, correlation (between the euro and European bond spreads) will return,” said Junya Tanase, senior strategist at JPMorgan Chase Bank.

The European Union holds a summit on Thursday to discuss ways to strengthen budget discipline and economic policy coordination.

The EU and IMF on Wednesday denied a report they and the U.S. Treasury were drawing up a safety net for Spain. But worries about Spanish banks put pressure on yields and the market will be looking for the result of bank stress tests which the Spanish central bank said would be published soon. [ID:nLDE65F1X2] [ID:nLDE65F1AL]

The euro also fell against sterling, the yen and the Swiss franc. It shed 0.7 percent to 112.01 yen EURJPY=R as Japanese banks sold. That helped push the dollar down 0.5 percent to 91.30 yen JPY=.

The dollar index .DXY =USD was up 0.3 percent at 86.37, well above support near 85.85 which is the index’s May 28 low.

The Australian dollar AUD=D4 eased from one-month highs of $0.8674. It was trading at $0.8593, down 0.4 percent, with some players looking to sell into rallies after it failed to hold gains above $0.8650.

The dollar was little changed on the day against the Swiss franc CHF= at 1.1307 francs ahead of a Swiss National Bank meeting.

The SNB is expected to keep interest rates low but may announce measures to drain excess money from the economy after flooding the market with francs since 2009 to keep the currency from appreciating too rapidly. [ID:nLDE65E2DB] (Additional reporting by Reuters FX analyst Krishna Kumar in Sydney and Rika Otsuka in Tokyo; Editing by Joseph Radford)

FOREX-Euro slips after chart failure, caution over Spain

TOKYO, June 17 (Reuters) – The euro slipped from its two-week highs versus the dollar on Thursday as its short-covering rally ran out of steam and as worries about Spain’s public finances and banking system stopped it overcoming key resistance.

After failing to break above $1.2350-55 twice in the past 48 hours, the euro EUR= is at risk of retreat to around $1.2175, a 38.2 percent retracement of its rebound from a four-year low below $1.19 set last week.

Traders said the rally now looked tired and the euro was likely to see selling into rallies as tolerance for risk subsided on a revival in concerns about euro zone fiscal problems.

“Some people want to reduce risk positions on worries about Spain,” said Daisuke Karakama, market economist at Mizuho Corporate Bank.

But the euro’s fall has not been as sharp as in May when worries about the impact of Europe’s fiscal problems drove it down rapidly, and this indicated that although some shorts have been covered, the market is still short euro longer term, Karakama said.

“The euro would have been sold much more hysterically if it were a month ago,” he said.

It slipped 0.3 percent from late U.S. levels to $1.2270. It is more than half a percent below the two-week high of $1.2354 hit on Wednesday but still up about 3 percent from the four-year low of $1.1876.

The market will be watching a Spanish bond auction later in the day after the spread of Spanish government bond yields over benchmark Bunds soared to a euro lifetime high on Wednesday. [ID:nLDE65F23Y]

“In the past few sessions, rises in the credit spreads of euro zone countries have not led to euro selling as much as before. But unless conditions in Europe improve, correlation (between the euro and European bond spreads) will return,” said Junya Tanase, senior strategist at JPMorgan Chase Bank.

The European Union holds a summit on Thursday to discuss ways to strengthen budget discipline and economic policy coordination.

The EU and IMF on Wednesday denied a report they and the U.S. Treasury were drawing up a safety net for Spain. But worries about Spanish banks put pressure on yields and the market will be looking for the result of bank stress tests which the Spanish central bank said would be published soon. [ID:nLDE65F1X2] [ID:nLDE65F1AL]

The euro also fell against sterling, the yen and the Swiss franc. It shed 0.7 percent to 112.00 yen EURJPY=R as Japanese banks sold. That helped push the dollar down 0.5 percent to 91.30 yen JPY=.

The dollar index .DXY =USD was up 0.3 percent at 86.32, well above support near 85.85 which is the index’s May 28 low.

The Australian dollar AUD=D4 eased from one-month highs of $0.8674. It was trading at $0.8596, down 0.3 percent, with some players looking to sell into rallies after it failed to hold gains above $0.8650.

The dollar was marginally higher against the Swiss franc CHF= at 1.1303 francs ahead of a Swiss National Bank meeting.

The SNB is expected to keep interest rates low but may announce measures to drain excess money from the economy after flooding the market with francs since 2009 to keep the currency from appreciating too rapidly. [ID:nLDE65E2DB] (Additional reporting by Reuters FX analyst Krishna Kumar in Sydney; Editing by Joseph Radford)

EURO GOVT-Bunds open higher after Greek downgrade

June 15 (Reuters) – German government bonds opened higher on Tuesday after Moody’s investors service cut Greece’s credit rating to junk late the previous day, refocusing market attention on Europe’s debt problems. Moody’s downgraded Greece four notches to Ba1, citing risks in the euro zone/IMF rescue package for the debt-stricken country. It was the second agency to strip Athens of its investment grade rating after Standard and Poor’s made a similar move in April.

The downgrade was expected to prompt equity investors to book profits after a brisk four-session winning run, sending regional shares lower.

“This puts the focus back on the periphery. There are going to be people who are forced sellers now with two junk ratings,” said a trader.

“The ECB are the only bidder so we would expect them to be quite active today, but the worry now is the contagion into other peripherals and the question being asked is who will be next to be downgraded.”

At 0604 GMT, September Bund futures FGBLU0 were at 128.95, 42 ticks higher from Monday’s settlement, although little changed from levels seen in after-hours trading. Two-year bond yields DE2YT=TWEB were 1.2 basis points lower at 0.488 percent, with 10-year yields DE10YT=TWEB almost 3 basis points lower at 2.60 percent.

With peripheral bonds likely to be under pressure, Ireland will auction up to 1.5 billion euros of 2016 and 2018 government bonds.

Ahead of that, the German ZEW sentiment indicator for June, released at 0900 GMT, is seen slipping to 42.0 versus 45.8 previously.

Hungary keeps investors on edge, stocks fall

(Reuters) – The Hungarian forint steadied just off a one-year low on Monday after Budapest tried to calm fears of a Greek-style crisis, but reports of a new bank tax kept up pressure on shares in the country’s leading bank.

Hungarian bond yields were mixed with the yield on the three-year bond at a five-month high and long-end yields just off nine-month peaks. The forint edged up 0.3 percent from Friday’s local close to 287.01 per euro.

“The scare has dissipated, the panic is over. If the forint pares its losses some more and CDS prices normalize, investors will reconsider around the world how little basis this scare really had, the market will return to normalcy once again,” one fixed income trader said.

“(But) it will take much longer than the weakening took.”

Stocks were down 2.5 percent by 0937 GMT, paring earlier 5 percent losses but near a four-month low. The bourse suspended trade in shares of OTP Bank OTPB.BU for a second session in a row after its shares dropped more than 10 percent.

Hungary’s new, center-right Fidesz government rattled investors last week with comments suggesting the country was close to a Greek-style economic meltdown before trying to back off those comments over the weekend.

Most economists believe Hungary is far from becoming another Greece, noting its debt ratios are much lower.

Moody’s, however, said on Monday that comments by Hungarian officials last week were negative for Hungarian credit as they brought renewed attention to the country’s high debt. [ID:nLDE6560S6]. And Analysts said a fast market recovery was unlikely.

Economy Minister Gyorgy Matolcsy said on Monday that 1.0-1.5 percent of GDP in spending cuts were still needed but reiterated a government plan to cut taxes.

Hungary’s government said on Saturday it aimed to meet a deficit target of 3.8 percent of GDP agreed with international lenders, including the International Monetary Fund and EU.

State secretary Mihaly Varga said Hungary’s previous socialist governments had hidden the true fiscal shortfall and additional measures would be needed to reach the goal.

“The damage has already been done, but in case Fidesz sticks to the 3.8 percent figure and comes up with a sensible fiscal correction plan it will be able to ease some of the pressure on markets,” 4Cast analyst Gabor Ambrus said in a note.

WATCHING THE BANKS

Online news portal Index reported that one fundraising option being considered is the introduction of a special tax on banks, hitting Budapest shares.

Other shares in the region followed suit with Erste Group Bank (ERST.VI), one of the largest lenders in central Europe, dropping 1.5 percent. Prague stocks .PX lost 1.7 percent and Bucharest .BETI was down 2.3 percent.

Concerns about Hungary’s fiscal situation kept up pressure on central Europe’s reference currency the euro which hit its lowest level in more than four years.

The Polish zloty, however, edged up 0.4 percent and the Romanian leu was flat while the Czech crown added 0.5 percent after Fitch raised its outlook on its Czech rating on Friday.

Analysts were split on whether the forint could bounce back any time soon.

Hungary was forced to seek a $25 billion international aid package at the start of the financial crisis in October 2008. Commerzbank said it would be difficult to get financing without this aid after CDS prices jumped to above 400 bps.

“The risk of a renewed debt crisis has risen and as a result a recovery of the forint is unlikely,” its analysts said.

(Reporting by Reuters bureaus, writing by Jason Hovet; Editing by Toby Chopra)

Mexico’s peso firms after deep slump in May

MEXICO CITY, May 31 (Reuters) – Mexico’s peso firmed on Monday, edging back from steep losses in the previous session when Fitch downgraded Spain’s credit rating, but the currency was still closing out its worst month since February 2009.

The peso MXN=MEX01 firmed 0.16 percent to 12.93 per U.S. dollar in thin trade as U.S. markets were closed for a holiday. The IPC stock index .MXX closed up 1.56 percent to 32,038.53.

Spain’s downgrade by ratings agency Fitch on Friday followed a move by S&P last month and was widely expected. Fitch, however, put Spain’s credit outlook at stable, unlike S&P, which had suggested further downgrades could be in the pipeline.

“Spain could have a crisis, but at the end of the day, it is not Greece. (Spain) is a much more solid economy,” said Juan Carlos Lopez, head of currency trading at brokerage Intercam.

Investors dumped riskier assets in May on concerns that Europe’s debt crisis could weigh down a global economic recovery. The peso slumped more than 4 percent this month while the IPC index shed 2 percent.

The yield on the government’s benchmark 10-year peso bond MX10YT=RR bid down 0.015 percent to 7.295 percent. The bond’s yield fell around 15 basis points during May.

Many analysts think Mexican bond yields are close to a floor, given mid-term inflation expectations. But should further global volatility hit Mexican bonds, Sergio Luna, an economist at Banamex, said prices for local debt could snap back more quickly than other emerging markets.

“On the margin you have this premium due to the expectation of entering the WGBI,” Luna said, referring to Citigroup’s World Government Bond Index (WGBI).

Banamex, a Citigroup unit, in a report published on Friday, said it doubled its expectation of flows into the Mexican bond market associated with the inclusion of Mexico’s peso-denominated debt in WGBI.

Banamex said funds that use the WGBI as a benchmark would likely funnel around $23.6 billion into Mexico as they approximate Mexico’s expected weighting of around 0.64 percent in the index.

“We are seeing interest from funds in Asia and the Middle East that have not been very active investors in Mexico before,” said Luna.

Banamex research suggests some portion of those funds have already flowed into Mexico in recent months. Mexico is currently in an evaluation process and could formally become part of the WGBI in October.

In stock trading, shares in America Movil (AMXL.MX), Latin America’s biggest cell phone operator, rose 3.13 percent to 31.65 pesos while Mexico’s dominant fixed-line provider, Telmex (TELMEXL.MX), gained 5.90 percent to 9.70 pesos. Both firms are controlled by Carlos Slim, who is in the process of merging his telecommunications holdings under the flagship of America Movil. [ID:nN27159191] (Reporting by Michael O’Boyle and Jean Luis Arce; Editing by Leslie Adler)

Colombia’s Santos favored for runoff

(Reuters) – Former Colombian Defense Minister Juan Manuel Santos is favored to win a June run-off after a solid victory in a first round presidential vote that consolidated his position as heir to the popular incumbent.

World

Santos won a strong lead on Sunday against former Bogota mayor Antanas Mockus, but fell just shy of the votes needed for an outright victory to succeed President Alvaro Uribe, a U.S. ally praised for his war on leftist rebels.

Jobs, the economic recovery and Colombia’s tense relations with neighboring Venezuela will be key issues now during the run-off when Santos will seek to distance himself from scandals in Uribe’s government that helped fuel support for Mockus.

Santos, the scion of a wealthy Bogota family, won 47 percent of the votes against Mockus with 22 percent on Sunday, leaving him with a clear advantage when the two men compete in the June 20 second round run-off.

“The Colombian people didn’t want to take a leap into the dark and they showed it with this election,” Santos told local Caracol radio, calling for other parties to join him in an alliance for the second round.

Colombia’s peso and local TES bonds strengthened after Santos’ victory, as investors applauded the win by a candidate seen as a clear guardian of Uribe’s tough security line and pro-market policies.

The peso rose 0.80 percent in next-day trading to 1,957 pesos against the dollar compared with Friday’s close. Benchmark July 2020 TES bond yields closed at 7.933 percent against 8.107 percent on Friday.

MORE REGIONAL TENSIONS

Santos benefited from a fall in rebel violence, increased investment and strong rural support to finish far ahead of Mockus, despite polls before the vote showing them tied.

But Mockus managed to tap into frustration over issues such as joblessness, healthcare, and voter weariness over human rights and graft scandals that tarnished Uribe’s second term. Uribe is banned by the constitution from seeking a third term.

“There is also a strong sense in Colombia that Uribe left many issues unaddressed,” said Myles Frechette, a former U.S. ambassador to Colombia. “The weight of those unaddressed challenges should prod Santos to go beyond providing a continuity of Uribe.”

Mockus had surged in polls before the election to tie with Santos with a message of clean government. But Santos revamped his campaign to focus on jobs and the economy and also benefited from gaffes by Mockus during presidential debates.

Polls may have underestimated support for Santos in rural areas, which have benefited the most from Uribe’s security drive against Marxist FARC guerrillas, right-wing paramilitaries and cocaine lords.

Investors applauded Santos’ wide margin as the U.S.- and British-educated former finance minister is seen as sticking closer to Uribe’s stances on regulation, taxes and fiscal restraint than Mockus.

But a Santos victory in June will test ties with Venezuela where socialist President Hugo Chavez has called the candidate a “threat” in exchanges during a diplomatic dispute that has battered trade between the Andean neighbors.

Santos is seen by Wall Street as better placed to manage Congress, where his U Party has a strong representation. Mockus’ Green party has few seats and he would struggle to push through any ambitious reforms.

Uribe’s U Party, headed by Santos, is the strongest bloc in the Congress and is a former ally with Cambio Radical, whose candidate German Vargas Lleras came third in Sunday’s vote with just over 10 percent of the votes.

While Mockus has flirted with an alliance with the leftist Democratic Pole Party or PDA, he risks alienating moderate Uribe supporters who distrust Colombia’s political left because of its association with past guerrilla movements.

“This would be a major gamble,” said Christian Voelkel, a IHS Global Insight analyst. “An alliance with the PDA, parts of which belong to the unreconstructed political left, would almost certainly alienate crucially needed centrist voters.”

(Additional reporting by Frank Jack Daniel, Nelson Bocanegra and Luis Jaime Acosta in Bogota, Editing by Sandra Maler)

Bangkok cautiously re-opens for business

Thailand on Monday maintained economic growth projections for the year despite the most violent riots in modern history, as a stellar performance in the first quarter cancelled out the slowdown from the violence.

The stock market dropped sharply despite the state planning agency’s forecast as Bangkok cautiously reopened for business after the mayhem. Analysts blamed increased political risk and the delayed effect of the euro zone crisis.

“Investors may be temporarily relieved that a semblance of normalcy has returned but the political risk remains high and investors will likely be cautious,” said Warut Siwasariyanon, head of research at Finansia Syrus Securities in Bangkok.

“The big underlying conflict is still there and the wound is deeper than ever even as the roads have been wiped clean.”

At least 54 people were killed in Bangkok and over 400 injured in the latest bout of violence which began on May 14. Almost 40 buildings were set on fire last week as the army dispersed thousands of anti-government protesters who had taken over the commercial heart of the city for months.

The planning agency said the 2010 growth forecast was being maintained at 3.5-4.5 percent, but had been dragged down 1.5 percentage points by the political crisis.

The economy grew a strong 3.8 percent on the quarter in the January-March period, against market expectations of 1.8 percent.

The stock market fell as much as 1.6 percent as trading resumed after five days.

However, Thai bond yields jumped as the market priced in a likely hike in interest rates in mid-year following the strong growth figures. In early deals, benchmark five-year bond yields surged 8 basis points to 3.20 percent.

“With the violence behind us, the central bank may start looking at raising rates now and that is being priced into the market,” said one Bangkok-based trader.

Both metropolitan train services, the Skytrain and the underground, operated as normal after starting skeletal service over the weekend following disruptions during the protests.

Trains were crowded, but there was enough space to stand comfortably, even in morning rush hour.

“You look around and it feels like nothing has happened,” said Dao Pipirom, a 35-year-old market researcher whose apartment is in the business district. “Life goes on as normal now.”

“But I still get very agitated when I hear loud noise. I keep thinking it’s another grenade blast or gunshot.”

Government offices and some schools are also scheduled to reopen on Monday, but a night curfew in the city and 23 provinces was still being imposed.

CLEAN-UP

On Sunday, thousands of municipal workers and volunteers, including high school students, cleaned up the Rachaprasong district the anti-government red shirt protesters had occupied for months.

Armed with straw brooms, plastic gloves, garbage bags and face masks, some used kitchen scourers and razor knives to remove anti-government posters and graffiti. Others carted away rubbish left by the protesters.

The red shirts, mainly rural and urban poor, demand new elections, saying Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva lacks a popular mandate and is propped up by the military and a Bangkok elite that has disenfranchised them.

Abhisit said in a regular Sunday broadcast that he did not wish to stay for his full term, which lasts until 2012, but did not confirm whether an earlier offer to the red shirts of a November election was still on the table.

The protesters had rejected that offer.

“It is now up to me to decide whether that election is appropriate… I don’t know what is going to happen next as some people have vowed to continue their struggle, calling for the resumption of the protest in June,” Abhisit said.

Red shirt leaders have said they will resume protests outside Bangkok next month, but the main anti-government Puea Thai party said it would bring a no-confidence motion against the government at a special session of parliament on Monday.

The government is likely to easily defeat the motion.

(Writing by Raju Gopalakrishnan; Editing by Sugita Katyal)

Euro interest rate swap spreads hold near 1-yr low

LONDON, April 14 (Reuters) – Euro zone interest rate swap
spreads held near their lowest levels in nearly a year on
Wednesday, squeezed by heavy bond issuance and concerns over the
funding of a rescue package for debt-laden Greece.

The swap rate represents the cost of exchanging a fixed-rate
stream of interest payments for a floating-rate one, and the
rate usually includes a credit risk premium over the risk-free
rate represented by German Bund yields.

The difference between the two rates has been squeezed
tighter this week, with the 10-year swap spread
EURAB6E10Y=EU10YT=RR falling to its lowest since last June
at 10 basis points from around 15 basis points at the end of
last week, according to Reuters data.

The spread flirted with the zero level in May 2009 before
widening again.

Similar moves have been seen in the 5-year spread which
narrowed to as little as 20 basis points this week, led by
5-year swap rates EURAB6E5Y= falling due to financial issuance
at that maturity in the corporate bond market.

“The announcement of the (Greek) funding plan has sounded
the starting gun for borrowers to race back into the debt
markets, raising funds and adding receiving pressure to the
swaps as they do so,” said ICAP strategist Chris Clark.

One of the biggest weeks of the year for euro zone
government bond supply — with around 30 billion euros scheduled
– and fears that European governments may have to increase
borrowing requirements to fund loans to Greece have kept
pressure on government bond yields, allowing the swap spread to
tighten.

“The market has replaced concerns over a potentially
imminent sovereign default scenario by concerns over the shared
fiscal implications of any bailout and the worrying precedent
that this might create,” said Citigroup strategist Steven
Mansall.
Analysts said they saw room for further tightening to come.

“I don’t think we’ll have Germany trading above swaps in
10-year but expect it to go tighter still,” said David Keeble,
rate strategist at Credit Agricole CIB, adding that he saw the
spread hitting “low single digits”.

The U.S. 10-year swap spread USD10YTS=ICAP turned negative
in late March on similar trends of heavy corporate bond issuance
and U.S. fiscal concerns. The spread was last at -5.5 basis
points.

In July, banks must repay 442 billion euros of 1-year money
to the European Central Bank, which is seen leading to a sharp
fall in liquidity in the euro zone banking system, pushing up
Eonia overnight rates relative to Euribor rates.

“The 10-year German swap spread will also be influenced by
this move. Thus, it is too early to start trying to fight the
recent narrowing between German yields and swap rates,” Credit
Agricole’s Keeble said.
But Citigroup said that while they saw scope for the spread
to test the zero level later in the year, it believed further
compression in the near-term looked increasingly unlikely.

“Our models point to a more progressive grind tighter in
spreads … with potentially countervailing factors on the
horizon, such as a resurgence of risk aversion as underlying
fiscal concerns and supply burdens begin to weigh more heavily
in other peripheral markets with tighter liquidity conditions,”
Citigroup’s Mansell said.

UPDATE 1-Thai protesters gather after clashes hit markets

BANGKOK, April 12 (Reuters) – Thai anti-government protesters gathered on Monday in Bangkok carrying coffins in memory of their comrades killed in clashes at the weekend in the country’s most violent political protests in almost 20 years.

The weekend protests that killed 21 people in clashes between security forces and demonstrators drove the country’s stock market .SETI nearly 4 percent lower on Monday and the market shed over half the gains made at its peak this year.

Bond yields THT5YT=RR fell as investors bet an interest rate rise expected in the next few months could be delayed if political events derailed the economic recovery.

Saturday’s fighting, the worst political violence in the country since 1992 and some of it in well-known Bangkok tourist areas, ended after security forces pulled back late in the night, and the capital has been calm since then.

The “red shirt” protesters want Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva to dissolve parliament and leave the country.

<^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

For full coverage, click on [ID:nTHAILAND] ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>

Prapas Tonpibulsak, chief investment officer of Ayudhya Fund Management, expected stocks to fall up to 10 percent in the near term — not necessarily on Monday — in reaction to the events.

“It’s going to hurt stock market sentiment for sure because the scale of the clashes is beyond expectations. Tourism and related businesses will be the first to be hit,” he said.

Among tourist-related stocks, airport operator Airports of Thailand AOT.BK fell 4.1 percent and national carrier Thai Airways slumped 9 percent.

The baht currency THB= was barely changed from Friday.

Credit rating agency Fitch said on Monday it is “particularly concerned” about the local currency rating of Thailand clashes between security forces and protesters that saw 21 people killed at the weekend.

“We expect a deterioration in public finances of Thailand, given the escalated political uncertainty,” Vincent Ho, associate director of Fitch’s Asia Sovereign ratings, told Reuters by telephone from Hong Kong. [ID:nSGE63B042]

EARLY ELECTIONS

A leading newspaper, citing unnamed sources, said Abhisit could propose early elections to defuse the month-old crisis, although the “red shirts” have said the time for talks was over.

The Bangkok Post daily said Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva could dissolve parliament in six months — three months sooner than his most recent proposal. Some government figures saw this as the best way to break the impasse, it said.

He has to call an election by the end of 2011.

“They believe an announcement by the prime minister on a timeline for him to dissolve parliament — regardless of how the red shirt United Front for Democracy against Dictatorship reacts — might be the best way for him to hang on to his job,” it said.

He would not announce this until after the Songkran holiday this week, the newspaper said without elaboration. Songkran, the Thai New Year, runs from Tuesday to Thursday, but the government also made Friday a holiday long before the protests began.

Four soldiers were among the dead on Saturday. More than 800 people were injured.

A government spokesman said on Sunday a line of communication with the red shirts was open but conditions were not right for formal talks. The government announced a state of emergency on April 7 forbidding public gatherings of more than five people.

“As long as they are still breaking the law, that makes it difficult,” spokesman Panitan Wattanayagorn said.

But thousands of protesters are in a defiant mood after the army failed to move them from one of two Bangkok bases where they have camped out for a month. One is in an upmarket shopping and hotel area, where big malls have had to close their doors.

“We don’t negotiate with murderers,” red shirt leader Weng Tojirakarn said on Sunday. “We have to keep fighting.”

NEW YEAR’S TRUCE

Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thuagsuban said the government would have to continue the operation to take back public areas, but that a truce called on Saturday could last a few days.

“It will take some time before we can restart the operation. What happened caused serious hurt to our troops and they need time,” he said. Four soldiers were among the dead.

There has been no word from revered King Bhumibol Adulyadej, who has intervened in past political crises. The 82-year-old head of state has been in hospital since last September.

The red shirts are mostly rural and working-class supporters of ex-premier Thaksin Shinawatra, ousted in a coup in 2006.

Until Saturday their rally had been mostly peaceful.

Violence erupted after red shirts attempted to get into a Bangkok army base and were repulsed. Troops then advanced on a red shirt camp and fighting spread around the area, including well-known tourist haunts such as Khao San Road. (Editing by David Chance and Bill Tarrant)

Thai protesters gather after clashes hit markets

BANGKOK, April 12 (Reuters) – Thai anti-government protesters gathered on Monday in Bangkok carrying coffins in memory of their comrades killed in clashes at the weekend in the country’s most violent political protests in almost 20 years.

The weekend protests that killed 21 people in clashes between security forces and demonstrators drove the country’s stock market .SETI nearly 4 percent lower on Monday and the market shed over half the gains made at its peak this year.

Bond yields THT5YT=RR fell as investors bet an interest rate rise expected in the next few months could be delayed if political events derailed the economic recovery.

Saturday’s fighting, the worst political violence in the country since 1992 and some of it in well-known Bangkok tourist areas, ended after security forces pulled back late in the night, and the capital has been calm since then.

The “red shirt” protesters want Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva to dissolve parliament and leave the country.

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

For full coverage, click on [ID:nTHAILAND] ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Prapas Tonpibulsak, chief investment officer of Ayudhya Fund Management, expected stocks to fall up to 10 percent in the near term — not necessarily on Monday — in reaction to the events.

“It’s going to hurt stock market sentiment for sure because the scale of the clashes is beyond expectations. Tourism and related businesses will be the first to be hit,” he said.

Among tourist-related stocks, airport operator Airports of Thailand AOT.BK fell 4.1 percent and national carrier Thai Airways slumped 9 percent.

The baht currency THB= was barely changed from Friday.

Credit rating agency Fitch said on Monday it is “particularly concerned” about the local currency rating of Thailand clashes between security forces and protesters that saw 21 people killed at the weekend.

“We expect a deterioration in public finances of Thailand, given the escalated political uncertainty,” Vincent Ho, associate director of Fitch’s Asia Sovereign ratings, told Reuters by telephone from Hong Kong. [ID:nSGE63B042]

EARLY ELECTIONS

A leading newspaper, citing unnamed sources, said Abhisit could propose early elections to defuse the month-old crisis, although the “red shirts” have said the time for talks was over.

The Bangkok Post daily said Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva could dissolve parliament in six months — three months sooner than his most recent proposal. Some government figures saw this as the best way to break the impasse, it said.

He has to call an election by the end of 2011.

“They believe an announcement by the prime minister on a timeline for him to dissolve parliament — regardless of how the red shirt United Front for Democracy against Dictatorship reacts — might be the best way for him to hang on to his job,” it said.

He would not announce this until after the Songkran holiday this week, the newspaper said without elaboration. Songkran, the Thai New Year, runs from Tuesday to Thursday, but the government also made Friday a holiday long before the protests began.

Four soldiers were among the dead on Saturday. More than 800 people were injured.

A government spokesman said on Sunday a line of communication with the red shirts was open but conditions were not right for formal talks. The government announced a state of emergency on April 7 forbidding public gatherings of more than five people.

“As long as they are still breaking the law, that makes it difficult,” spokesman Panitan Wattanayagorn said.

But thousands of protesters are in a defiant mood after the army failed to move them from one of two Bangkok bases where they have camped out for a month. One is in an upmarket shopping and hotel area, where big malls have had to close their doors.

“We don’t negotiate with murderers,” red shirt leader Weng Tojirakarn said on Sunday. “We have to keep fighting.”

NEW YEAR’S TRUCE

Deputy Prime Minister Suthep Thuagsuban said the government would have to continue the operation to take back public areas, but that a truce called on Saturday could last a few days.

“It will take some time before we can restart the operation. What happened caused serious hurt to our troops and they need time,” he said. Four soldiers were among the dead.

There has been no word from revered King Bhumibol Adulyadej, who has intervened in past political crises. The 82-year-old head of state has been in hospital since last September.

The red shirts are mostly rural and working-class supporters of ex-premier Thaksin Shinawatra, ousted in a coup in 2006.

Until Saturday their rally had been mostly peaceful.

Violence erupted after red shirts attempted to get into a Bangkok army base and were repulsed. Troops then advanced on a red shirt camp and fighting spread around the area, including well-known tourist haunts such as Khao San Road. (Editing by David Chance and Bill Tarrant)