EU bank stress tests face their own test in markets

(Reuters) – EU tests of banks’ ability to withstand financial shocks, criticized as too easy after only 7 out of 91 failed, face their own stress test in the markets on Monday with early signs pointing to a more positive response.

European Union policymakers and regulators voiced relief at Friday’s results but some market analysts and many media commentators derided an exercise in which all listed banks passed as lacking in credibility.

“I see nothing stressful about this test. It’s like sending the banks away for a weekend of R&R,” said Stephen Pope, chief global equity strategist at brokers Cantor Fitzgerald.

There was skepticism about EU regulators’ conclusion that banks need only a total of 3.5 billion euros ($4.5 billion) in extra capital. Market expectations had ranged from 30 to 100 billion euros, although many European banks have already raised capital during the financial crisis.

Only five small Spanish banks, Germany’s state-rescued Hypo Real Estate and Greece’s Atebank failed outright. More than a dozen others scraped through with just over the required 6 percent of Tier 1 capital in the most stressful scenario and are likely to come under market scrutiny.

However, the wealth of data disclosed by banks representing 65 percent of assets, and the commitment of banks, regulators and governments to follow-up action may well outweigh doubts about the stringency of the tests.

In a first market reaction in New York late on Friday, the cost of insuring the debt of large European banks fell further and the euro rose against the dollar despite worries about the tests’ credibility.

Better-than-expected economic data and business confidence surveys suggesting the euro zone will avoid a double-dip recession despite fiscal austerity measures are also helping revive investor confidence in Europe.

HAGGLING

Given the haggling among EU governments and regulators about the stress tests right up to the last moment, the degree of transparency was greater than had been expected a few weeks ago.

Sources familiar with the discussions said Germany fought hard behind closed doors to limit the extent of disclosure.

In the end, most banks — except Deutsche — issued a detailed breakdown of their exposure to the sovereign debt of EU countries, enabling investors to run their own risk simulations to gauge a counterparty’s solidity.

“We have all the sovereign exposure data, and we can go ahead and do our own tests,” said Nial O’Connor, a banking analyst at Credit Suisse.

That should help reopen the interbank lending market, which partially froze at the height of the euro zone debt crisis in May and has remained tight due to fears that banks have been hiding big exposures.

It also responds to one of the major criticisms of the exercise — that the scenario assumed a “haircut” on sovereign debt of countries such as Greece held in banks’ trading books, but not on a longer-term basis in their banking books.

The EU authorities were chastised for refusing to test the impact of a default by Greece.

But European Central Bank governing council member Christian Noyer said euro zone states “have put several hundreds of billions of euros on the table with the support of the IMF to make this hypothesis completely excluded.”

TRANSPARENCY

Spain, which spearheaded the drive for transparency, tested a larger part of its banking system and disclosed more data than any other country, hoping to clear away lingering market suspicion of its smaller banks’ solvency.

However economist Nicolas Veron of the Bruegel think-tank said Madrid had underplayed the recapitalization needs of the cajas, regional savings banks, although its bank resolution fund (FROBE) is well on the way to meeting those needs.

“The Spanish wanted to be seen as the most transparent and deserve praise for the catalyst role they played, but in the end they clearly understated what the cajas need,” he said in a telephone interview.

Veron said follow-up actions by governments and regulators should include pressing weaker banks to recapitalize, if necessary with state help and facilitating cross-border takeovers of weaker banks.

Even before the results were published, National Bank of Greece, Slovenia’s NLB and Civica in Spain announced plans to raise capital.

Italy said it would reopen an offer of government-backed bonds to support its banks, although none failed. Monte dei Paschi di Siena squeaked through with 6.2 percent of Tier 1 capital under the most stressful scenario, and UBI Banca with 6.8 percent.

Veron said the success of the exercise would depend partly on whether European regulators adopt a more cooperative approach after the stress tests than they did before them.

“If this is the start of a beautiful friendship among EU supervisors, then that’s not the same as if the united front crumbles next week and they start criticizing each other again,” he said.

(Editing by Andrew Roche)

European Online Recruitment Activity Reaches 16-Month High, Reports Monster Employment Index

LONDON–(Business Wire)–
June 2010 Index Highlights:

* The Monster Employment Index Europe reported two point (two percent) increase
in online worker demand in June, whilst opportunities were up 12 percent
year-on-year
* Online job availability increased the most in production, manufacturing,
maintenance and repair, from both a monthly and annual perspective
* Germany registered the sharpest monthly increase among major countries, whilst
Sweden continued to exhibit the most positive long-term trend

Summary Overview

June marked the fifth consecutive month of expansion in online job
opportunities, suggesting the overall industry is on a path of gradual recovery.
This is also reflected in the accelerated rate of annual growth compared to the
previous month. Opportunities are now up 12 percent compared to June 2009 and
their highest level since February 2009.

Among industry sectors, production, manufacturing maintenance and repair
exhibited the sharpest monthly increase, whilst transport, post and logistics
also registered a notable gain. The increases in these sectors suggest an
overall upswing in European industrial activity and transport.

Monster Employment Index Europe results for the past 13 months are as follows:

Jun 10 May 10 Apr 10 Mar 10 Feb 10 Jan 10 Dec 09 Nov 09 Oct 09 Sep 09 Aug 09 Jul 09 Jun 09
114 112 108 104 101 93 100 100 99 97 100 101 102

“The slight improvement in June is yet another encouraging sign for current job
seekers. In addition, the annual growth rate increased in June, suggesting that
we are on the path to gradual recovery,” commented Andrea Bertone, head of
Monster Europe. “Whilst both consumer and business confidence remained static
between May and June, we have seen positive trends emerge in sectors such as
manufacturing and transport and are optimistic about the level of opportunities
that are emerging throughout the year.”

The Monster Employment Index Europe is a monthly analysis of millions of online
job opportunities culled from a large, representative selection of corporate
career sites and job boards across Europe, including Monster.

Weber Shandwick
Robin Clark / Christina Cooper
+44 (0)207 067 0500
MonsterEurope@webershandwick.com

Copyright Business Wire 2010

Finnish outlook ‘unusually uncertain’ -IMF

June 7 (Reuters) – Finland faces an “unusually uncertain” economic outlook given the steep impact of the recession last year and the country’s rapidly-ageing population, International Monetary Fund (IMF) said on Monday.

“The deep recession is likely to reduce the trend level of output, and may also have a negative impact on the growth of potential output,” the IMF said in a statement on the Nordic country’s economy. “Activity has rebounded in recent quarters, and consumer and business confidence have picked up. Nonetheless, growth is projected at only 1.25 percent this year and at about 2 percent in 2011,” it said.

(Reporting by Terhi Kinnunen)

Businesses to be quizzed on vision

An online survey has been launched to gauge business confidence in the Gympie local government area.

The survey, which is a Gympie Regional Council initiative, consists of six questions and is open until May 21.

Mayor Ron Dyne says the results will inform business and council decisions.

“We support tourism and we support various other organisations and we need to start spending more time looking after our businesses,” he said.

“This is a way of finding out what the business community sees as the way ahead in the Gympie Regional Council area.”

Employers hiring as confidence soars

Employer confidence in the ACT has reached its highest levels since March 2008.

The latest employment expectations report by consultancy firm Hudson shows a third of ACT employers plan to raise their permanent staff levels over the next quarter.

About 400 local employers were surveyed.

John Henderson from Hudson says staff are now needed to fill the infrastructure projects funded last year under the Federal Government’s stimulus package.

“The infrastructure projects that got underway in the second half of 2009 under the Nation Building program, we’re actually now starting to see that investment come through to the bottom line in terms of actual staff being required,” he said.

Mr Henderson says he expects business confidence will continue to grow.

“The actual results for the April to June quarter show that it’s now grown just over another two percentage points and that shows our fifth consecutive quarter of rising confidence.

“So it’s really important ACT teams are now really building their teams for future growth.”

Nikkei climbs 1.4 percent; Dai-ichi Life gains in debut

(Reuters) – Japan’s Nikkei average rose 1.4 percent to close at an 18-month high for a third straight day, buoyed after the yen hit a three-month low against the dollar and resource shares rose on gains in commodity prices.

A survey showing improvement in Japanese business confidence as well as a strong debut by Dai-ichi Life Insurance (8750.T), which opened 14 percent above the price in its $11 billion IPO, also boosted market sentiment.

“The weaker yen is a big help,” said Koichi Ogawa, chief portfolio manager at Daiwa SB Investments.

“But the market is definitely overbought, and it really needs a bit of consolidation. This is going to leave it vulnerable to profit-taking.”

The benchmark Nikkei .N225 gained 154.46 points to 11,244.40, although it earlier rose as far as 11,272.73.

The Nikkei’s relative strength index (RSI) shows the benchmark has crossed over the key 70 line, above which it is considered overbought. But longer-term direction indicators such as MACD and the daily Ichimoku chart suggest the Nikkei’s uptrend still has a while to run.

The Nikkei’s next major upside target lies near 11,310. That would be roughly a 38.2 percent retracement of the drop from a peak in 2007 to a trough in 2008.

The broader Topix rose 0.7 percent to 985.26.

Dai-ichi, whose debut was the world’s largest in two years, opened at 160,000 yen. Trade was halted immediately after the first price was settled, a special measure taken by the Tokyo bourse to make sure the listing went smoothly. The shares will trade normally on Friday.

“The shares opened up 14 percent at 160,000 yen so everyone made a profit. I think this is positive for investor sentiment,” said Hideyuki Ishiguro, a strategist at Okasan Securities.

The dollar was up 0.1 percent against the yen at 93.52 after hitting a three-month peak at 93.65 yen.

The euro was flat against the yen at 126.21 yen, after earlier climbing to a high of 126.62 yen, with some analysts saying the euro’s rebound as worries about Greece subside was also a major factor contributing to recent gains in the Tokyo stock market.

GOOD MORALE

The Bank of Japan’s tankan survey showed that Japanese business morale improved in March for the fourth consecutive quarter, a result broadly in line with market expectations.

The headline index for big manufacturers’ sentiment improved to minus 14 in March from minus 25 in December, compared with the median market estimate for minus 13 in March.

The tankan also showed that large manufacturers were forecasting recurring profits to climb 49.3 percent year-on-year in the financial year that started on Thursday, another result that was in line with expectations.

Market players said that hopes for the new quarter and business year were supporting buying, though wariness remained.

“We saw the Nikkei make strong gains in March, when it rose 10 percent, but trading volume was thin, so it’s not as bullish a situation as it could have been,” said Daiwa SB’s Ogawa.

Pump maker Ebara Corp (6361.T) jumped 5.0 percent to 501 yen in active trade after Deutsche Securities upgraded the shares to “buy” from “hold” and raised their target price to 600 yen from 300 yen, saying the visibility for future earnings has improved.

Yahoo Japan (4689.T) gained 2.9 percent to 35,050 yen after the company said it is in talks with China’s Taobao to link their Internet shopping sites, seeking access to the rapidly growing Chinese online retail market.

But banking group Resona Holdings (8308.T) fell 1.8 percent to 1,161 yen after Credit Suisse downgraded it to “neutral” from “outperform,” saying lower income expectations would limit the upside.

Volume picked up, with 2.4 billion shares changing hands on the Tokyo exchange’s first section, the strongest in three weeks.

Advancing shares beat declining ones, 947 to 576.

(Additional reporting by Masayuki Kitano; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)

Rebound in business confidence

The WA Chamber of Commerce and Industry says business confidence has gone from record lows to a record high over the last year.

The Chamber has just released its latest survey of business expectations for the coming year.

The report found that 64 per cent of firms surveyed said they expect the WA economy to strengthen over the next 12 months.

Last year confidence was at its lowest in the survey’s history with only 6 per cent of respondents expecting the economy to pick up over the course of last year.

CCI economist Dana Mason says a resilient local economy laid the foundation for the sharp rise in confidence.

“The turnaround in business confidence does partially reflect that conditions here have held up a lot better than other areas.”

She says the respondents told the Chamber that labour shortages are the number one concern for their business in the year ahead.

“They’re concerned that they won’t be able to find the workers that they simply need to operate their businesses and to grow their operations.”

Ms Mason says local firms are also concerned about the cost of attracting and retaining expertise.

“They’re also worried about the pressure this will put on their wages bill.”

But, she says the latest result is great news for the future of the WA economy.

“Just a year earlier business confidence was at a record low level, so to turn around from a record low to a record high has been a very swift turnaround and this has really been driven by an improvement in overall operating conditions.”

Business confidence bouncing back

The Townsville Chamber of Commerce says business confidence should return to the region during the second half of this year.

Chamber president John Carey says while several industries felt the effects of last year’s weaker economy, the situation is slowly turning around.

He says a return to confidence will lead to more jobs across the north.

“I think there’s a level of cautious optimism, for example, especially in the construction industry,” he said.

“But for the building [of] the education revolution there’d be some people looking for work.”

Several industries were affected by the global financial crisis last year, with a number of projects put on hold or scrapped.

But Mr Carey says a level of cautious optimism is returning to the north.

“I think that people understand that things are picking up slowly and we won’t see a return to the good times … until the second half of this year,” he said.

Two third of Brits hoping to get out of credit crunch within a year

London, Aug 31 (ANI): It seems that the days of economic slump are getting over for Britons, for at least two thirds of them believe that their financial situation will stay the same or improve over the next year.

According to a poll conducted by the Daily Telegraph/YouGov, with a growing number of people now feeling the worst of the recession has passed, the country appears to be regaining its “feel-good factor”.

The findings have indicated that the measure of people’s confidence in the future remains negative, at minus 14.

But it is much better than what it was 12 months ago – a miserable minus 67 – thus making the people in UK all smiles.

The researchers worked out the measure of confidence by asking respondents whether they believed their prospects were looking good, and would remain the same or grow worse in the coming 12 months.

They then calculated the feel-good factor by subtracting the percentage of those who thought their situation would worsen from the percentage who thought it would get better.

While this feel-good factor was minus 20, in June, it has risen by six more points since then.

Meanwhile, the most recent Business Confidence Monitor by the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales showed confidence among business professionals had moved into positive territory for the first time in two years.

This was interpreted as further evidence of an improving UK economy. (ANI)

Reserve Bank of India leaves key rates steady

New Delhi, July 28 (ANI): The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Tuesday kept the key rates unchanged and said that there are progressive signs of recovery with positive industrial production and optimistic business confidence.

The RBI left its lending rate steady at 4.75 per cent, its lowest in nine years, and its reverse repo rate, at which it absorbs surplus cash from the banking system, unchanged at 3.25 per cent.

In its quarterly review of the monetary policy, however, it warned that the overall scenario continued to be uncertain with fiscal consolidation posing a challenge.

There are some negative signs like delayed and deficient monsoon, food price inflation, rebound in global commodity prices, continuing weak external demand and high fiscal deficit, it added.

As far as inflation is concerned, RBI expects inflation to scale up to around five per cent by March 2010. (ANI)

German business confidence edges up in May

German business confidence edges up in May Munich – German business confidence rose less than forecast in May, a key survey released on Monday showed as Europe’s biggest economy struggled to fight its way out of recession.

The Munich-based Ifo research institute said its forward-looking business-confidence index rose to 84.2 points from 83.7 points in April. Analysts had expected a bigger increase.

It was the second increase in a row for the closely watched survey, a key indicator of Germany’s economic outlook.

Ifo president Hans-Werner Sinn said the May figures indicated the economy had stabilised, albeit at a low level. (dpa)

Cleaning up banks only hope for European recovery, IMF says

Washington – Europe must do better in cleaning up its banking sector should the continent have any hopes for recovery from a devastating recession, the International Monetary Fund warned Friday amid signals that some of the continent’s economies may be pulling back from the brink.

Marek Belka, head of the IMF’s Europe department, said the European Central Bank still had “some room” to lower interest rates – currently at 1.5 per cent – and called on governments to coordinate in taking toxic mortgage assets out of the region’s struggling banks.

For monetary or fiscal moves to make a real difference, “Europe needs to move rapidly to clean up its financial sector problems,” Belka told reporters in Washington, ahead of a semi-annual gathering this weekend of the IMF’s members. “It all depends on how efficiently we clean out banks.”

While a recession gripping nearly all the world’s economies may have started in the United States, Europe has been especially hard hit by the fallout from both the financial crisis and a collapse in global trade.

The IMF earlier this week slashed its growth forecast for the 16- member eurozone by another 1 per cent to a 4.2 per cent drop in 2009 with the bloc managing to pull back to a 0.4-per-cent decline in 2010.

Growth in emerging economies, including Central and Eastern Europe as well as Turkey, will tumble 3.7 per cent this year before rebounding slightly by 0.8 per cent in 2010.

Belka said unemployment, which has so far fallen less rapidly in Europe than in the United States, should be a key worry for governments. Germany, the region’s largest economy but also one of the worst hit by the crisis, has to make sure demand within its borders stays strong to make up for a collapse in exports.

“It’s very important that the measures taken by Germany (and others) are geared towards maintaining a high level of employment,” Belka said. “This keeps the consumer’s confidence up.”

Germany’s business confidence hit a five-month high in April, the Munich-based Ifo economic research institute said Friday, fuelling hopes of a recovery. But Belka said it was too early to speak of a “turning point” on the continent. (dpa)

TABLE-Reuters April Tankan business confidence survey

(Click on [JP/TAN1] for main story)

TOKYO, April 16 (Reuters) – Confidence at Japanese companies is hovering
near a record low, a Reuters poll showed on Thursday, underlining the plight of
the economy, which is stuck in its worst recession since World War Two due to
crumbling demand at home and abroad.

But both manufacturers and service-sector firms expect the situation to
improve over the next three months, the Reuters Tankan showed, signalling that
Japanese corporate sentiment may have bottomed out as inventory adjustments make
headway.

Following is a table of indexes for key sectors, and a comparison with the
BOJ’s tankan survey:

JULY(f’cast) APR MAR FEB JAN DEC NOV
========================================================================
MANUFACTURERS (-52) -76 -78 -74 -76 -64 -42
————————————————————————
(Materials) (-52) -84 -87 -81 -83 -64 -39
– Textile/paper (-60) -80 -67 -89 -67 -50 -40
– Chemicals (-33) -81 -86 -75 -85 -52 -28
– Oil refinery/ceramics (-78) -89 -100 -78 -89 -88 -55
– Steel/nonferrous metals (-75) -100 -100 -100 -100 -100 -50
(Manufactured products) (-52) -70 -73 -69 -72 -64 -45
– Food ( 0) 0 0 0 -20 0 0
– Metal products/machinery (-67) -81 -81 -85 -86 -71 -52
– Electric machinery (-52) -83 -83 -76 -78 -73 -46
– Autos/transport equipment (-86) -100 -100 -88 -89 -89 -75
– Precision machinery/others (-33) -44 -78 -67 -63 -56 -33
========================================================================
NON-MANUFACTURERS (-28) -38 -37 -39 -31 -26 -16
————————————————————————
Real estate/construction (-35) -40 -47 -47 -30 -45 -27
– Retail/wholesale (-26) -36 -28 -29 -35 -23 -5
– Wholesalers (-38) -54 -36 -47 -29 -22 +7
– Retailers (-19) -26 -22 -16 -39 -25 -14
– Information/communications ( 0) -20 -22 -40 -22 -22 -18
– Transport/utility (-50) -47 -38 -50 -50 -17 -23
– Other services (-20) -44 -44 -40 -23 -21 -17
========================================================================
*** COMPARISON WITH BANK OF JAPAN TANKAN ***
========================================================================

MANUFACTURERS NON-MANUFACTURERS

RTRS BOJ RTRS BOJ
————————————————————————
JULY(f’cast) -52 – -28 -
JUNE(f’cast) – -51 – -30
– - – - – - – - – - – - – - – - – - – - – - – - – - – - – - – - – - – -
APR (2009) -76 – -38 -
MAR -78 -58 -37 -31
FEB -74 – -39 -
JAN -76 – -31 -
DEC (2008) -64 -24 -26 -9
NOV -42 – -16 -
OCT -25 – -9 -
SEPT -14 -3 -10 +1
AUG -16 – -6 -
JULY -10 – -3 -
JUNE -2 +5 -2 +10
MAY -2 – 0 -
APR +1 – +3 -
MAR +8 +11 +2 +12
FEB +9 – +2 -
JAN +17 – +1 -
DEC (2007) +21 +19 +13 +16
NOV +23 – +9 -
OCT +21 – +19 -
SEP +24 +23 +14 +20
AUG +30 – +14 -
JUL +28 – +19 -
JUN +31 +23 +16 +22
MAY +29 – +21 -
APR +28 – +26 -
MAR +28 +23 +23 +22
FEB +30 – +20 -
JAN +35 – +23 -
DEC (2006) +34 +25 +21 +22
NOV +34 – +22 -
OCT +34 – +20 -
SEP +30 +24 +20 +20
AUG +30 – +22 -
JUL +35 – +24 -
JUN +39 +21 +20 +20
MAY +35 – +23 -
APR +34 – +24 -
MAR +25 +20 +16 +18
FEB +34 – +17 -
JAN +33 – +22 -
DEC (2005) +32 +21 +20 +17
NOV +27 – +21 -
OCT +15 – +25 -
SEP +20 +19 +19 +15
AUG +16 – +17 -
JUL +16 – +18 -
JUN +20 +18 +17 +15
MAY +23 – +16 -
APR +18 – +16 -
MAR +18 +14 +16 +11
FEB + 9 – +19 -
JAN +17 – +15 -
================================================================
***ADDITIONAL QUESTIONS***
Q2. Where do you expect the Nikkei to be at the end of May?

AVERAGE HIGHEST LOWEST
OVERALL 8,447 10,000 6,500
MANUFACTURERS 8,541 10,000 6,500
NON-MANUFACTURERS 8,348 9,750 6,500
—————————————————————-
Q3. Where do you expect the dollar/yen exchange rate to be at the end of May?

AVERAGE HIGHEST LOWEST
OVERALL 97.43 105.00 90.00
MANUFACTURERS 97.47 103.50 90.00
NON-MANUFACTURERS 97.38 105.00 90.00
—————————————————————-
Q4. Where do you expect the 10-year Japanese government bond yield to be at the
end of September? (percentage of respondents)

below 1.2- 1.4- 1.6- 1.8- 2.0- 2.2- 2.4 or

1.2 % 1.39% 1.59% 1.79% 1.99% 2.19% 2.39% above
—————————————————————————
OVERALL 4 52 32 10 1 0 0 0
MANUF’S 5 50 36 8 2 0 0 0
NON-MANUF’S 3 55 29 12 1 0 0 0

The Reuters Tankan covers 200 large manufacturers and 200 non-manufacturers
excluding the financial sector. A total of 219 responded to the first question
in the poll taken from March 26 to April 13.

The index readings are derived by subtracting the percentage of respondents
who say conditions are poor from those who say they are good. A negative reading
means most of those surveyed are pessimistic about conditions.
(For more stories on the Japanese economy, click [ID:nECONJP])
(Reporting by Izumi Nakagawa)

ANALYSIS – G20 bets trillion dollars on crisis turnaround

The $1 trillion G20 package to save the world economy should help boost fragile consumer and business confidence and avoid contagion, but is no silver bullet to end the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression.

Expectations had been low for the London G20 summit after a series of leaked draft communiques offered little more than the usual rhetoric on doing whatever it takes to fight the recession, amid public bickering over what that could entail.

True, there was no pledge of extra cash directly to boost economies but the $1 trillion figure on new financing, mainly through the IMF, impressed markets and helped send stocks sharply higher.

It raises the Fund’s kitty to help countries by $500 billion and adds another $250 billion to the IMF’s Special Drawing Rights — in essence printing money to help countries in need.

The leaders also agreed a $250 billion package to boost world trade, which is set to shrink this year for the first time since 1982.

* The extra money for the IMF is probably the most significant as it should lower the risk factor associated with emerging markets and thus reduce the chances of trouble there spreading back to the rich world — the so-called negative feedback loop.

Officials privately say the IMF probably doesn’t need such a huge boost to its crisis-busting firepower but the idea is that such a huge number creates “shock and awe” for financial markets.

They will then have confidence that no country is about to go bust because even the IMF cannot bail it out. This is a problem that comes about once in 100 years, and it needs a solution that comes in 100 years, officials say.

* The trade guarantees should also help getting international commerce moving again by instilling confidence, at little cost to public purses. This was much higher than the $100 billion Brown initially said he was hoping for.

While all this should at least stop the crisis getting any worse and turning into a depression, it may not be enough to stop most major economies shrinking rapidly this year, together with the attendant losses of millions of jobs.

* The key problem of getting banks lending again remains and won’t go away until financial institutions can find ways of clearing their balance sheets of risky investments made in the good times that are now next to worthless.

The communique says it all: “Our actions to restore growth cannot be effective until we restore domestic lending and international capital flows.”

For now, the jury’s out on how long this will take despite the huge bailouts and the schemes for governments to buy up the toxic assets. But the G20 meeting was never going to be able to solve everything.

In fact, the first leaders’ summit in November, just as the world had just faced what seemed like a complete financial meltdown, was initiated to repair the whole system.

Back then at least, it was meant to come up with a whole new architecture for the modern financial world in terms of regulation and future crises. That was before the economy sank even further, giving Brown and the United States grounds to thrust the focus onto the more immediate problem of getting economies growing again.

Japan business confidence sinks on eve of G20 meet

Japan’s business confidence hit a record low, a key survey showed on Wednesday, showing the depth of the recession in the world’s second-largest economy as world leaders gather in London to tackle the global financial crisis.

Slumping global demand has halved exports and slashed production of cars and electronics in Japan, pushing it into its worst recession since World War Two and leading to an atmosphere of almost uniform gloom among export-reliant manufacturers.

The Bank of Japan index gauging sentiment among major manufacturers slid to minus 58 in March, more than double the previous survey and the worst in a generation.

Underlining the corporate caution, capital expenditure figures were also the second lowest on record.

Rising unemployment and falling spending data a day earlier already showed the worrying trend that the slump in external demand was feeding into Japan’s domestic economy.

“The economy may reach a bottom in the summer but is not likely to return to previous levels of growth any time soon,” said Shinko Research Institute senior economist Norio Miyagawa.

Analysts expect Japan’s economy to keep shrinking in the first half of this year, meaning a record five straight quarters of contraction. Unpopular Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso, facing an election by October, is preparing a third stimulus package to reinvigorate the economy.

U.S. President Barack Obama landed in London for the G20 meeting to address the worst global economic slowdown since the 1930s, which has already cost millions of jobs and trillions of dollars in government assistance.

He arrived on his first major overseas trip as president to a slew of bad economic news and with a fight looming with Europe over whether more stimulus or tighter regulation of financial markets was the way forward.

FAILURE NOT AN OPTION

Washington wants governments to pump more money into their economies but French President Nicolas Sarkozy is leading the regulatory charge.

“Failure is not an option, the world would not understand it and history would not forgive us for it,” Sarkozy said.

The plight of U.S. automakers was not far behind Obama after Washington forced General Motors’ chief executive to step aside this week and told GM and struggling Chrysler to come up with better restructuring plans or face bankruptcy.

GM warned on Tuesday there was a rising chance it could file for bankruptcy by June as it tries to cut its debt load, with the likelihood of more plant closings and job losses, sending its shares tumbling 28 percent.

U.S. stock futures fell during Asia trade on Wednesday and the yen rose after a Bloomberg report that Obama had decided that a prepackaged bankruptcy for GM was the best way for it to restructure. A senior administration official later called that report “inaccurate.”

Deepening the gloom, data on Wednesday is expected to show U.S. auto sales fell 40 percent in March from a year ago.

GM has been given another 60 days to come up with a way to become competitive again, while smaller rival Chrysler has been given a 30-day deadline to reach a deal with Italian carmaker Fiat SpA.

PESSIMISM

The pessimistic Japanese news was mirrored only hours earlier by the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, which said the world economy would shrink 4.3 percent this year, far worse than the 0.4 percent it had previously forecast.

That would cost 25 million jobs, about half of the worldwide job losses the International Labour Organisation is forecasting in the next year or so.

“The world economy is in the midst of its deepest and most synchronized recession in our lifetime,” the OECD said.

“We anticipate that the ongoing contraction in economic activity will worsen this year before a policy-induced recovery gradually builds momentum through 2010.”

Underscoring the human cost of the crisis that G20 leaders must address in London, Japan and Germany both announced big jumps in unemployment on Tuesday, while U.S. economic reports showed low consumer confidence and plunging home prices.

In Australia, retail sales slumped 2.0 percent in February — the most in nine years — raising fears of higher unemployment and pushing the case for yet another cut in already record-low interest rates, possibly next week, to keep Australia off the recession bandwagon.

There was some good news in Seoul, where the pace of decline in South Korean exports slowed and exports per day figures fuelled talk of the economy bottoming out and raised the case for the Bank of Korea to keep rates steady again next week.

(Additional reporting by Wayne Cole in SYDNEY, Yoo Choonsik in SEOUL, Kevin Krolicki and Soyoung Kim in WASHINGTON and DETROIT, and Brian Love in LONDON)

GLOBAL MARKETS – Asian shares extend rally, but caution setting in

Asian stocks started the new quarter with more gains after an impressive performance in March on expectations the frail global economy is about to bottom out and hopes the financial system was on the mend.

However, the safe-haven yen also rose on concerns about the fate of General Motors Corp and Chrysler, in a possible sign that more bad news could spur investors to ditch riskier assets just as quickly as they piled in on March.

Oil prices dropped more than 2 percent, dragged down by an industry report showing a larger-than-expected rise in U.S. crude stocks, while gold prices held firm.

Leaders from the G20 group of the world’s biggest economies meet on Thursday with little hope they will find concrete solutions to the worst global economic crisis in decades.

Evidence of economic weakness abound. Data on Wednesday showed Japanese business confidence tumbled to a record low, while reports on Tuesday showed plunging U.S. home prices and consumer confidence holding at just above record lows.

Still, deep interest rate cuts by major central banks — with the European Central Bank expected to cut its benchmark again on Thursday — and stimulus measures are at least comforting stock markets in Asia, which enjoyed in March their best month in a decade.

“The market environment has turned fairly positive. Easier monetary policy worldwide have allowed more liquidity to flow into markets,” said Kwak Joong-bo, a market analyst at Hana Daetoo Securities in Seoul.

The MSCI index of Asia-Pacific stocks outside Japan rose 0.7 percent as of 0330 GMT, building on gains of 14.6 percent in March.

Financial shares such as National Australia Bank and KB Financial Group were among the leading gainers.

Although banks in the region did not hold as many of the junk investments that hurt some of their global rivals, their shares have suffered nonetheless on concerns about the broader financial system.

“People are feeling a lot more confident about banks,” said Chris Halls, a fund manager with Argo Investments Ltd in Australia.

South Korean auto makers such as Hyundai Motor also surged on hopes they will gain market share at the expense of struggling U.S. rivals.

GM warned on Tuesday there was a rising chance it could file for bankruptcy by June, as Fiat SpA and Chrysler executives met in a race to complete a tie-up the U.S. government says Chrysler needs to survive.

U.S. stock futures had been hit during Asia trade on Wednesday after Bloomberg reported U.S. President Barack Obama had decided on a pre-packaged bankruptcy for GM. A senior administration official later called that report “inaccurate.”

CAUTION REMAINS

The concerns over U.S. auto makers did not prevent Asian shares from extending their winning streak with markets in Japan, South Korea and Taiwan leading with gains of nearly 2 percent.

Currency investors were more cautious, sending the safe-haven yen higher.

The dollar index, a gauge of its performance against six major currencies, rose 0.3 percent to 85.773, but off an earlier high of 85.940. But the dollar fell 0.4 percent from late New York trade to 98.60 yen after tumbling as low as 98.21 yen on trading platform EBS.

The New Zealand dollar fell more than 2 percent and its debt rallied strongly after the country’s central bank warned the outlook for the recession-hit economy remained weak and the bank would be keeping rates low for some time.

“Investors fear that RBNZ may adopt unconventional methods of easing monetary policy, if financial conditions continue to tighten,” said Bank of NZ currency strategist Danica Hampton.

The NZ dollar fell to a low of $0.5558, from $0.5700 before the statement. It was trading at $0.5576/80 at 0100 GMT.

U.S., British and Japanese central banks have turned to unconventional steps to pump funds into their economies, including outright buying of government and corporate debt.

It is not clear whether the European Central Bank will follow suit, though analysts do widely expect it to cut its main interest rate by 50 basis points to a record low of 1 percent at its policy meeting on Thursday.

The euro was down 0.5 percent to $1.3185.

In commodity markets, U.S. crude for May delivery slid $1.20 to $48.50 on a report from the American Petroleum Institute showing U.S. crude stocks rose by a greater-than-expected 3.3 million barrels in the week to March 27.

Gold held firm at $920.35 an ounce from its New York’s notional close of $917.15 on Tuesday.

Oil falls 2 pct to below $49 on bearish stocks data

Oil fell over 2 percent towards $48 a barrel on Wednesday, paring much of the previous session’s gains, dragged down by a bearish industry report showing a larger-than-expected rise in U.S. crude stocks and a slew of weak economic data.

U.S crude for May delivery fell $1.20 to $48.46 by 0223 GMT, erasing much of Tuesday’s 2.6 percent gain that lifted the contract to $49.66 a barrel.

London Brent crude fell $1.03 to $48.20.

“The bearish API data is probably the main reason for the sell-off. Investors are probably also seeing last night’s rally as overdone, which is true since the rally came despite all the gloomy economic data,” said Gerard Rigby, an analyst at Fuel First Consulting in Sydney.

Crude futures on Tuesday rose in tandem with Wall Street, which was headed for its best month in six years, despite gloomy data showing U.S. house prices had plunged at a record pace of 19 percent in January, while consumer confidence held just above record lows in March.

But analysts said bearish numbers from the American Petroleum Institute showing crude stocks rose by a greater-than-expected 3.3 million barrels to 357.8 million barrels in the week to March 27, were encouraging investors to take profit.

The API data is seen as foreshadowing a similarly dismal report by the more widely tracked U.S. Energy Information Administration, due to be released later in the day, which is expected to show a 2.5 million barrel increase in oil stockpiles that have already swelled to their highest level since 1993.

Poor business confidence from Japan, the world’s No. 3 energy consumer, also pointed to a bleak near-term demand outlook for oil.

Japanese business confidence tumbled at its fastest pace ever in the first quarter to the worst on record, the Bank of Japan’s tankan corporate survey showed, highlighting the pain companies are facing as the global economic crisis scythes through Japan’s exports.

Compounding the gloom was a forecast by Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development that world trade was in free fall and should decline by 13.2 percent in 2009 as the economic crisis cuts demand across the globe.

Oil prices have tumbled nearly $100 from the record high struck last July as the global economic crisis slashed global oil demand for the first time in 25 years.

But recent rally in global stock markets and production cuts by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries has helped lift oil prices by 9.5 percent in the first quarter, snapping two consecutive quarters of double-digit declines.

“Investors are generally seeing an uptrend in the markets so funds that are looking for somewhere to invest their money are now much quicker to put their money in commodities,” Fuel First’s Rigby said.

“And oil will be a key market for investors since it is relatively easy to move the market and make some money at a much quicker pace.”

Indian economy to grow between 6.5 to 7 pc: Montek Singh Ahluwalia

New Delhi, Mar 27 (ANI): Deputy Chairman Planning Commission Montek Singh Ahluwalia today said that the economy will pick up in the second part of the fiscal and will grow between 6.5 to seven per cent.

Participating in the annual CII Conference here, Ahluwalia said that more fiscal and monetary measures might be necessary in future to achieve the growth target.

” The industries would also have to prepare themselves for the global competition in the wake of the economic crises,” he added.

Asserting the impact of the fiscal and monetary packages announced earlier, he said it would start showing results in the current fiscal as the volatility in the economy is almost over.

Reserve Bank Governor Dr. Duvvuri Subbarao said once the global economic crisis is over, India’s economic growth will be faster than the rest of the world.

He said the decline in inflation to 0.27 per cent in the second week of March as a positive feature.

He further added that the impact of global economic crises on Indian economy in being constantly monitored and asserted that the bank took all possible action in the last six months to reduce its impact.

Since October, the RBI has slashed its main lending rate by 400 basis points to shield the economy from the global financial crisis and also to shore up activity.

In this context, Dr. Subbarao said that 2009-10 would be a challenging period unless business confidence and investment are revived. Further, he said that cuts in policy rates needed to flow through to the broader economy. (ANI)

Indian economy will recover quickly, says RBI Governor

New Delhi, Mar 27 (ANI): Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Governor Dr. Duvvuri Subbarao said that although it is uncertain as to when Indian economy will recover, when it does it will be sharper and quicker than other economies of the world.

“It is not clear when recovery will start, but when recovery starts around the world and in India, India’s recovery will be sharper and swifter than elsewhere in the world,” Dr. Subbarao said in the course of his address at a seminar hosted by the Confederation of Indian Industries (CII) here last evening.

He also dispelled fears of getting into a deep deflationary cycle.

“Our own view is that this is statistical. There is no fear of sustained deflation in India. I think our inflation dimension is quite healthy. There is no concern about our getting into a deep deflationary cycle,” added Dr. Subbarao.ince October, the RBI has slashed its main lending rate by 400 basis points to shield the economy from the global financial crisis and also to shore up activity.

In this context, Dr. Subbarao said that 2009-10 would be a challenging period unless business confidence and investment are revived. Further, he said that cuts in policy rates needed to flow through to the broader economy.

India’s wholesale price index rose by 0.27 per cent on March 14, below the previous week’s annual rise of 0.44 per cent, government data showed on Thursday.

The Government has decided to tap markets for 2.4 trillion rupees of borrowings in the first half of 2009-10, two-thirds of its projected record borrowings for the full fiscal year that will commence on April 1.

Nonetheless, the government contends that India as Asia’s third-biggest economy has grown by about seven per cent in the fiscal year that ends on March 31, its slowest pace in six years, after growing at rates of nine per cent or more in the last three years.

Gross borrowings for 2008-09 have more than doubled to 3.06 trillion rupees this year. (ANI)

German business confidence to slip, analysts forecast

Berlin – Business confidence in Germany slipped in March, economists expect a key survey to be released Wednesday to say, as boardrooms in Europe’s biggest economy face up to the global recession.

In a major test of the economic mood in Europe, the closely- watched Ifo business confidence index is forecast to have edged down to 82.2 points this month after falling to an 18-year low of 82.6 in February.

Based on a survey of 7,000 German executives and drawn up by the Munich-based Ifo economic research institute, the March index is likely to add to expectations that the European Central Bank will cut rates again next week in a bid to spur economic growth.

A factor dragging the index down in March is expected to be another sharp fall in the business leaders’ assessment of the current economic climate in Germany.

At the same time, however, the indicator’s component gauging expectations six months down the track is forecast to have gained ground on hopes of an economic upturn later in the year.

This comes in the wake of the slew of major fiscal stimulus plans unveiled by governments around the world and a round of hefty global interest rate cuts.

While the March Ifo indicator gauging current business conditions is tipped to slump from 84.3 points in February to 82.9 points this month, the index’s expectations component is forecast to jump to 81.8 in March from 80.9 last month.

But many economists believe that the German economy might now have started to bottom out, after the implosion of America’s Lehman Brothers in September helped to send the world economy into a sharp decline in the last months of 2008.

Indeed, the release of the Ifo survey is also likely to follow a batch of more positive readings from other recent economic sentiment surveys.

Considered a bellwether of the mood in the 16-member eurozone economy, Belgium’s business confidence survey unexpectedly rose to minus 28.6 points in March from minus 31.6 in February. Analysts had forecast a fall to 32 points.

At the same time, the preliminary composite purchasing managers’ index (PMI) for the eurozone, which draws together the manufacturing and services output indices, rose from 36.2 in February to 37.6 in March.

German investor confidence recorded a surprise increase in March to record its fifth consecutive monthly rise, a key indicator released last week showed, amid hopes of further rate cuts and a turnaround in Germany’s economy later in the year.

After posting a big jump in February, the Mannheim-based Centre for European Economic Research (ZEW) said its index measuring the sentiment among analysts and institutional investors edged up to minus 3.5 points this month from minus 5.8 last month.

But while those responding to the ZEW survey believe that the government stimulus packages and central bank rate cuts will help to lay the foundations for a pickup in the German economy six months down the track, they remained downbeat about current business conditions.

The component of the ZEW indicator measuring existing economic situation in Germany slipped in March by 3.2 points to minus 89.4 points.

That said, however, grim economic data and downward revisions to economic have continued to roll in as key export market dry up, order books contract and production plummets.

Commerzbank AG this week forecast that the economy could shrink by a dramatic 6 or 7 per cent this year amid a fresh batch of cuts in projections for the economic growth outlook. (dpa)