Grains Week Ahead-Yuan move welcome, but all eyes on weather

CHICAGO, June 20 (Reuters) – China’s surprising move over the weekend signaling a new willingness to let its currency gain strength may give grain prices an initial boost this week, but recent adverse weather for world crops will be more important.

“I, and a few other commercials, see the news as mildly supportive. More important may be how the external commodity markets react to the news,” said Dan Basse, president of grain and livestock industry consultant AgResource in Chicago.

“Chinese and U.S. weather is much more important to grain price direction in the week ahead,” he said.

In what was seen as a largely political move to deflect criticism of its fixed exchange rate ahead of the G20 meeting this week, China’s central bank on Saturday indicated it was ready to break a hard peg with the dollar that has come under intense criticism from the United States and other countries.

“This sounds more serious than previous rhetoric coming out of Beijing, but it would be wise to initially take the news with a grain of salt,” said Bill Lapp, an economist with Advanced Economic Solutions in Omaha, Nebraska.

“The exchange rate flexibility is presumably an effort to tame inflation, which we have already observed in their recent purchases of US corn. In other words, a stronger yuan benefits U.S. ag exports. But we have already seen some benefit.

“Not sure what this does for prices Sunday night, but would think weather is still the first factor to watch,” Lapp said.

Chicago Board of Trade wheat and corn futures rallied to three-week highs on Friday and soybeans traded around a one-month peak because of the turn to adverse crop weather.

So analysts say there could be follow-through strength in the markets this week if harsh weather patterns persist.

First system forms before Atlantic hurricane season

The U.S. National Hurricane Centre started tracking the first low pressure system of the 2010 Atlantic hurricane season late Sunday, reminding energy and commodities traders of the coming storm season, which officially starts June 1 and ends Nov. 30.

The non-tropical low, located about 475 miles (764 km) southwest of Bermuda, was producing a large area of disorganized showers and thunderstorms over the southwestern Atlantic Ocean on Monday morning.

The NHC said the system has a medium chance, about 30 percent, of becoming a subtropical cyclone during the next 48 hours as it moves slowly toward the north-northwest and away from Florida and the oil rich Gulf of Mexico.

The U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) will release its 2010 hurricane season forecast on Thursday.

The forecast is widely watched by energy and commodity markets for signs of potential weather disruptions to oil and gas installations in the Gulf of Mexico during the hurricane season.

The NHC is part of NOAA’s National Weather Service.

Some meteorologists have already predicted conditions are ripe for an unusually destructive hurricane season, which could also disrupt efforts to clean up BP’s oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

Commodities traders also watch for storms that could damage agriculture crops such as citrus and cotton in Florida and other states along the coast to Texas.

In addition, the path of a storm can affect pricing of insurance-linked securities, which transfer insurance risks associated with natural disasters to capital markets investors.

(Reporting by Scott DiSavino; Editing by Marguerita Choy)

Mining sector gains in falling market

The mining sector’s made a late come-back on the Australian share market, but overall stocks have closed down 1.3 per cent.

The local losses reflected the mood on international markets overnight, as investors continued to worry about the potential for big debt problems in Europe to spread further across the region.

Financials, industrials and energy stocks have been the worst performers on the domestic market today.

Westpac delivered a half-year profit just shy of $3 billion, which beat market expectations.

But its dividend fell below forecasts, and investors were also disappointed by a slide in Westpac’s interest margins.

Westpac’s share price closed down $1.14, or more than 4 per cent to $26.19.

The rest of the big four banks have also lost value – the Commonwealth Bank closed down $1.41 at $56.90, NAB lost 93 cents to $26.78 and ANZ shed 55 cents to finish at $24.11.

Rio Tinto and BHP Billiton opened sharply lower and were trading down for most of the session.

But bargain hunting investors contributed to a come-back, as did a reassurance from the ratings agency Fitch that the Federal Government’s proposed 40 per cent tax on mining profits will not affect the ratings of the big miners.

By the close, Rio Tinto had gained 1.8 per cent to $68.28, and BHP Billiton closed up 15 cents to $38.74.

Shares in News Corporation closed 4.2 per cent lower, after the company’s outlook for the current financial year disappointed investors.

More broadly, the All Ordinaries Index closed down 61 points to 4,692 and the ASX 200 lost 63 points to finish at 4,674.

On commodity markets, West Texas crude oil’s fallen to $US82.74 a barrel, while Tapis is higher at $US88.95.

Spot gold’s eased to $US1,171 an ounce.

The Australian dollar’s fallen to 91.15 US cents.

On the cross-rates, it was worth 86.52 Japanese yen, 70.14 euro cents, 60.1 UK pence and about $NZ1.26.

Likely yuan rise to stoke commodities prices, demand

(Reuters) – The likelihood of a rise in the value of China’s yuan currency is growing daily, sharpening expectations for commodity markets to see price gains as Chinese consumers exploit their increased buying power.

China

Beijing faces international pressure to scrap the yuan’s peg, especially from Washington, which says the currency is seriously undervalued, sparking reports China may be about to revalue the yuan.

Raising the value of the yuan versus other currencies would cut the cost of China’s imports of dollar-denominated commodities such as oil, copper and iron ore, while making Chinese exports more expensive, but analysts said the net impact would be positive for commodity demand and prices.

The greatest impact will probably be seen in bulk commodities such as iron ore, metals such as copper and in soy, where China is a big importer and consumes most of the products made from those imports at home.

“The currency rise will hurt exports but will make imports cheaper. But that won’t matter to China and the net impact will be positive for commodities,” Jonathan Barrat, managing director of Commodity Broking Services in Sydney said.

“Long-term infrastructure development plans become cheaper and this will help focus on domestic markets and domestic growth. I think the yuan will continue to appreciate in the long term and will only serve to boost primary imports and that means a bull trend for these commodities.”

Even a rise of 3 percent in the value of the yuan, the range of increase discussed by a number of analysts, to around 6.60 to the dollar from last year’s average, would have a profound effect on China’s $244 billion commodity bill.

Last year the country spent around 607 billion yuan ($88.97 billion) on importing oil, 343 billion yuan ($50.28 billion) on iron ore and 206 billion yuan ($30.20 billion) on copper.

An increase of 3 percent in the yuan would have saved the nation some 56 billion yuan ($8.21 billion) on its commodity purchases, or enough to buy more than 1 million tonnes of copper.

China uses its centrally-planned economic power to control prices of certain products such as fuel but when international prices climb substantially the government has no option but to raise domestic prices, as it did this week for diesel and gasoline.

But analysts said it might be hard to reflect further rises in crude oil, unless the yuan strengthened.

“With the government suppressing domestic fuel prices, Chinese consumers will have little motivation to conserve, thus demand growth could accelerate,” said Gordon Kwan, Head of Regional Energy Research of Mirae Asset in Hong Kong.

“I don’t think this is yet priced in as global crude prices are still down 40 percent from their peak, and China’s prior mergers and acquisition deals are beginning to look like genius moves amidst rebounding crude prices. This could also translate into lesser oil product exports on a percentage basis.”

GONE FOR GOOD?

While viewed as a positive for most commodities, analysts said the effect on demand would vary depending on the product.

“When you are looking at consumption of food items, it is not such a huge impact as compared to something like manufacturing goods,” said Toby Hassall, an analyst at CWA Global Markets in Sydney.

But the longer-term implications of a stronger yuan may eventually be negative for commodities demand, said Nick Moore, global head of metals strategy at RBS.

The last time China raised exchange rates back in 2005, commodities saw a steady rally for more than a year after the revaluation.

In that time copper prices doubled to a then record high of $8,800 a tonne in 2006, chipping around half a million tonnes off copper consumption annually, analysts estimated.

“A revaluation could be a sell signal rather than a buy. Higher prices in the West won’t help people trying to boost their businesses and there should be no excuse for producers not to turn on the taps or face the wrath of consumers,” Moore said.

A second weight could land on commodity markets in the form of price-induced demand destruction, he added.

China has the luxury of lifting rates to curb imported inflation, which other nations cannot do, so higher prices could mean demand destruction.

“Already before any further recovery we face the specter of demand destruction. Consumers already view current prices with some concern, and as we saw in nickel and copper in the last run up … once it’s gone it’s gone forever.”

($1=6.822 Yuan)

(Additional reporting by Naveen Thukral and Judy Hua; Editing by Michael Urquhart and Clarence Fernandez)

SCENARIOS-China may be closer to changing yuan policy

BEIJING/SHANGHAI, April 9 (Reuters) – The Chinese yuan eased in offshore markets on Friday after a knee-jerk reaction to a New York Times report late on Thursday that fanned talk of an imminent policy shift in Beijing to let the currency rise.

The newspaper reported that Beijing was very close to announcing a small revaluation and would then let the currency fluctuate more widely.

The report, coincided with a lightning visit by U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner to Beijing to meet Chinese Vice Premier Wang Qishan.

Geithner’s decision last weekend to delay a ruling on whether China manipulates its currency may have defused political tensions enough for Beijing to let the yuan resume its climb after it has effectively repegged it in mid-2008 to help exporters weather the global financial crisis.

Here is a look what Beijing might do in months ahead.

RESUMPTION OF GRADUAL APPRECIATION

* Probability: Likely.

Many analysts expect Beijing to let the yuan start strengthening as early as in the second quarter and allow it to climb 3-4 percent over the 12 months.

Central bank chief Zhou Xiaochuan said in March that the decision to keep the yuan stable was a “special policy” to cope with the global downturn and Beijing would have to let the yuan resume its rise at some point. [ID:nTOE62501N]

Offshore yuan forwards are currently pricing in 2.8 percent appreciation against the dollar over the 12 months CNY1YNDFOR=, roughly in line with a Reuters poll last month. [ID:nTOE62O075]

However, how such a measured climb would be engineered is subject to much debate.

A gradual rise, possibly combined with a widening of the yuan’s daily trading band appears most likely.

But a small one-off revaluation, as in July 2005, still cannot be ruled out.

* Market impact: Even though such scenario is largely priced in, offshore non-deliverable forwards may up the appreciation bets. The impact on commodity markets and commodity-linked currencies is harder to predict, as such a move would make imports cheaper but could also be seen as a tightening measure that would temper Chinese growth in the medium term.

DE FACTO PEG MAINTAINED THROUGHOUT THE YEAR

* Probability: less likely.

China’s reluctance to let yuan rise is in large part a function of deep-seated concerns about the strength of its economic recovery.

The Commerce Ministry has repeatedly said that a stable yuan has benefited both China and the world during the global crisis and the yuan should not be blamed for global imbalances.

China is expected to report its first monthly trade deficit in six years this week, giving Beijing an excuse to ignore calls for a stronger yuan.

But keeping the yuan stable runs the risk of fuelling inflation as the economy recovers, while a lack of action might lead to increased tensions between Beijing and Washington in the run-up to the mid-term U.S. elections in November.

* Market impact: Yuan rises implied by offshore NDFs, particully short-dated forwards, are likely to fall.

NEW EXCHANGE RATE REGIME

* Probability: Less likely but garnering attention

Economists have suggested that China would benefit from a new model for determining the yuan’s exchange rate.

Although the exchange rate is theoretically set against a basket of currencies, it has in practice been overwhelmingly centred on the dollar. Beijing let the yuan gain 21 percent against the dollar between July 2005 and July 2008.

Ting Lu, an economist with Bank of America Merrill Lynch, has said that Beijing should follow Singapore’s example and target a basket of currencies, keeping its composition secret to leave markets guessing when the central bank might intervene.

Jun Ma, an economist with Deutsche Bank, advocates a “flexible crawling peg against a basket” that would generate uncertainty as in Singapore, but with daily and monthly volatility limits.

Researchers from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, a top government think-tank, have suggested a policy of making it clear the yuan will appreciate by 3-5 percent each year, but in an unpredictable pattern to keep speculators at bay.

* Possible market impact: Markets may price in faster yuan rises if China allows greater yuan flexibility, but there will be greater uncertainty about its moves.

BIG ONE-TIME REVALUATION

* Probability: Unlikely

A substantial one-time revaluation would fly in the face of Beijing’s promised policy continuity and might appear to domestic critics as if the government was caving in to foreign pressure.

Goldman Sachs chief economist Jim O’Neill said Beijing could let the yuan rise as much as 5 percent, while Societe Generale expects a revaluation of 5 to 10 percent in April or May. [ID:nTOE61M05Z]

A big enough revaluation would, in theory, deter hot money inflows by dampening expectations of further major gains. But if it was deemed insufficient, investors might still pile into Chinese assets on expectations the yuan would rise further.

Conversely, if the adjustment was big enough to deter speculators, it might batter the very exporters that Beijing has tried so hard to support.

* Possible market impact: A major revaluation could initially boost currencies such as the yen and Australian dollar AUD=, which tend to have high correlations with Chinese growth, while hurting commodity and equity markets due to concerns about its impact on exporters and growth.

Shares of companies geared towards Chinese consumer spending, from luxury goods retailers to automakers, might rally on the hope that cheaper imports would boost demand. (Editing by Tomasz Janowski)

Futures point to firmer start for European shares

LONDON, March 29 (Reuters) – European stock index futures rose on Monday, indicating a stronger start for equities as firmer raw material prices are likely to aid heavyweight commodity shares.

Stocks | Global Markets

By 0602 GMT, futures for STOXX Europe 50 STXEc1, Germany’s DAX FDXc1 and France’s CAC 40 FCEc1 were up 0.4 to 0.6 percent.

The FTSEurofirst 300 .FTEU3 index of leading European shares closed 0.5 percent lower on Friday, retreating from a near 18-month closing high hit in the previous session. (Reporting by Dominic Lau)

NEWS FEATURE: Global economic engine depends on energy security

Berlin – The global economic crisis was precipitated in part by “massive speculative fluctuations in international energy and commodity markets,” former German environment minister Klaus Toepfer said Wednesday.

Speaking at an energy forum in Berlin, Toepfer said: “We need to radically rethink the global mechanisms for our energy supply system to avoid suffocating the incipient, desperately needed economic upturn.

“There is,” he emphasised, “no alternative to a fundamental realignment of our energy systems from an economic and ecological point of view.”

“One can’t simply preserve jobs for the sake of preserving jobs,” he said. Creating employment opportunities into the future would require global environment leadership.

“Climate friendly production is the solution to the current crisis, not its cause,” he emphasized.

Toepfer, who in the late 90s served as the executive director of the UN’s environment programme UNEP in Nairobi, said that while economic stimulus packages were being implemented to stem the tide of unemployment and social dislocation, the global economic downturn was occurring “in the midst of a comprehensive crisis of ecological stability.”

Global energy and technology experts, he said, were stepping up their activities to secure a role in future growth markets.

The focus of investment in renewable energy technology might, he felt, shift from “Europe to the United States and China in the not too distant future, with the emerging economic powerhouses of Brazil and India not far behind.”

The negative economic impact of an unresolved reliance on fossil fuels was becoming increasingly clear, he said.

“The stronger the global demand for oil becomes as a result of an economic downturn in 2010 – above all in the United States, China and India – the sooner we may hit a bottleneck and experience a subsequent stifling of world economic growth.”

The Paris-based International Energy Agency (IEA) has estimated the world needs to spend 26 trillion dollars in the modernisation of its energy of its infrastructure by 2030.

Hamburg-based Max Schoen, of the African Solar Energy Initiative DESERTEC, said by far the largest, technically accessible source of energy on the planet was to be found “in the deserts around the equatorial regions of the earth.”

Proposals had been made which would involve Europe, the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) co-operating in the production of electricity and desalinated water using solar thermal power and wind turbines in the MENA deserts, he said.

Feasibility studies had been carried out by the German Aerospace Centre (DLR). “All that is needed now is the political will and the right framework of incentives,” he added. (dpa)