Analysis: Obama may not see big boost from Wall Street reform

(Reuters) – President Barack Obama may struggle to reap political rewards from his big win on Wall Street reform — at least in the near term.

Passage of the most sweeping overhaul of the financial regulatory system since the Great Depression of the 1930s comes as Obama is trying to bolster his sinking poll numbers and avert an election catastrophe for his Democrats.

The financial bill could prove more helpful to Obama when he seeks re-election in 2012 than for Democratic lawmakers trying to keep their seats this November.

Wall Street reform marks the latest in a series of major legislative achievements for the president, who campaigned on a promise of change.

Americans are focused on high unemployment and ballooning budget deficits, and some worry Obama is overreaching with his agenda. That has prevented Obama from gaining a lot of traction from two other signature initiatives: health care reform and the $862 billion stimulus package.

Financial reform could fit the same pattern.

“It will have relatively little positive effect on 2010,” said Ross Baker, a political scientist at Rutgers University. “It’s something Obama can take to the voters in 2012.”

The complexity of the 2,300-page financial reform bill is one reason Baker says it might not help Democrats much in the November congressional elections.

“It has yet to play out and affect the lives of Americans,” Baker said. “It will be a long time before people get a sense that somehow their debit cards are better protected than they were before financial regulation reform was passed.”

BILL UNFAMILIAR

Many U.S. voters are unfamiliar with the financial overhaul, according to an Ipsos Public Affairs online poll.

The poll found 38 percent of Americans had never heard of the overhaul and 33 percent had heard of it but knew almost nothing about the legislation. Another 18 percent said they knew “a little bit” about it.

The healthcare measure is also complex, though Baker said voters might come to better appreciate both pieces of legislation by the time Obama seeks re-election in two years.

For now, the jobless rate, which stands at 9.5 percent, trumps healthcare and financial reform.

“If he can get job creation going and we start seeing a decline in unemployment, that’s really the only thing that’s going to rescue Obama and the Democrats,” said Chris Arterton, a political scientist at George Washington University.

That may be why Obama focused his weekly radio and Internet address on Saturday on his push for extensions in jobless benefits and a program to spur lending to small businesses.

The Senate scheduled a vote on the unemployment benefits on Tuesday — the day before the signing of financial reform.

The White House has openly expressed fear that Democrats could lose their dominance in the House of Representatives.

Democrats are seen as having a better chance of holding onto the Senate though they are expected to lose seats. That would make it harder for Obama to tackle other items on his agenda like energy and immigration legislation.

The White House depicts the financial reform debate as a choice: Setting responsible rules of the road for Wall Street versus allowing greed and recklessness to run rampant.

Obama has argued Wall Street must be reined in to protect consumers and prevent a repeat of the financial implosion that plunged the country into its longest recession in decades.

CREDIT CARD FINE PRINT

Senior Obama aide David Axelrod disagreed with those who see the financial bill as too complex to resonate with voters.

“I don’t think it’s complicated to tell credit card holders that they have new rights relative to their credit card companies or mortgage holders that their prepayment penalties are now limited,” Axelrod said.

“I understand that not everybody is steeped in the knowledge of derivatives and all of this kind of exotic instruments that were part of the saga of the financial crisis,” he added. “But everybody in America deals with the headache of credit card fine print and variable mortgages.”

The Wall Street measure passed almost entirely along party lines, with only three Republicans breaking ranks to back it.

One obstacle for Democrats is a dampening of liberal enthusiasm because of concerns that industry lobbyists won too many concessions and loopholes in the final bill.

Former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, an outside adviser to Obama, was disappointed in a rule named after him to prohibit banks with federal deposit insurance from betting with their own money. Volcker felt the rule was too watered-down.

But Republicans are prepared to attack the financial bill from a different vantage point. They hope that the bill and Obama’s populist, anti-Wall Street rhetoric will reinforce an “anti-business” image they are trying to pin on him.

House of Representatives Republican leader John Boehner has called the financial legislation ill-conceived and said he wants to repeal it.

“It’s going to make credit harder for the American people to get, clearly harder for businesses to get,” Boehner said. “It’s going to punish every banker in America for the sins of a few on Wall Street.”

(Additional reporting by Thomas Ferraro; Editing by Xavier Briand)

WRAPUP 1-Wall Street bill nears the finish line in Congress

WASHINGTON, July 15 (Reuters) – The broadest overhaul of U.S. financial rules since the Great Depression is likely to clear a crucial hurdle in Congress on Thursday morning, paving the way for President Barack Obama to sign the measure into law.

Democrats are expected to muster the 60 votes they need — if just barely — to advance the legislation in a vote likely to take place around 11 a.m. (1430 GMT).

Final approval in Congress could come soon after, though Republicans who oppose the measure could delay a final vote until Friday evening.

The House of Representatives has already approved the bill, which tightens regulation across the financial industry in an effort to avoid a repeat of the 2007-2009 financial crisis.

With Republicans poised for big gains in the November congressional elections, Democrats are eager to show voters that they are cracking down on an industry that touched off the worst recession in 70 years.

The bill “substantially reduces the risk the financial markets will cause the economy to implode again, and it empowers consumers and small businesses to make better financial choices,” Democratic Senator Dick Durbin said on the Senate floor on Wednesday.

It is not clear whether voters will give them credit.

Nearly half of those surveyed in a Bloomberg poll released on Tuesday believe the bill will do more to protect the financial industry than consumers, while only 38 percent believe it will protect consumers more.

A Washington Post/ABC News poll also released on Tuesday found 50 percent disapproving of the way Obama has handled financial reform, with 44 percent approving.

The bill has also won Democrats few friends on Wall Street as wealthy donors have started to steer more campaign contributions to Republicans.

FEW CORNERS OF INDUSTRY UNTOUCHED

The Dodd-Frank bill — named for chief authors Senator Christopher Dodd and Representative Barney Frank — leaves few corners of the financial industry untouched.

Mortgage brokers, student lenders and other financial firms would have to answer to a new consumer-protection authority, though auto dealers will escape scrutiny.

Regulators will have new power to seize and dismantle troubled firms and impose leverage limits on firms that threaten financial stability.

Large banks would face new limits on risky trading activities, and many would have to set aside more capital to help them ride out times of crisis.

Large private-equity and hedge funds will face more scrutiny from federal regulators, and credit-rating agencies could potentially see their entire business model upended.

Much of the $615 trillion over-the-counter derivatives market will be routed through more accountable and transparent channels, and banks would have to spin off the riskiest of their swaps clearing desk operations.

WRAPUP 1-Wall Street bill nears the finish line in Congress

WASHINGTON, July 15 (Reuters) – The broadest overhaul of U.S. financial rules since the Great Depression is likely to clear a crucial hurdle in Congress on Thursday morning, paving the way for President Barack Obama to sign the measure into law.

Democrats are expected to muster the 60 votes they need — if just barely — to advance the legislation in a vote likely to take place around 11 a.m. (1430 GMT).

Final approval in Congress could come soon after, though Republicans who oppose the measure could delay a final vote until Friday evening.

The House of Representatives has already approved the bill, which tightens regulation across the financial industry in an effort to avoid a repeat of the 2007-2009 financial crisis.

With Republicans poised for big gains in the November congressional elections, Democrats are eager to show voters that they are cracking down on an industry that touched off the worst recession in 70 years.

The bill “substantially reduces the risk the financial markets will cause the economy to implode again, and it empowers consumers and small businesses to make better financial choices,” Democratic Senator Dick Durbin said on the Senate floor on Wednesday.

It is not clear whether voters will give them credit.

Nearly half of those surveyed in a Bloomberg poll released on Tuesday believe the bill will do more to protect the financial industry than consumers, while only 38 percent believe it will protect consumers more.

A Washington Post/ABC News poll also released on Tuesday found 50 percent disapproving of the way Obama has handled financial reform, with 44 percent approving.

The bill has also won Democrats few friends on Wall Street as wealthy donors have started to steer more campaign contributions to Republicans.

FEW CORNERS OF INDUSTRY UNTOUCHED

The Dodd-Frank bill — named for chief authors Senator Christopher Dodd and Representative Barney Frank — leaves few corners of the financial industry untouched.

Mortgage brokers, student lenders and other financial firms would have to answer to a new consumer-protection authority, though auto dealers will escape scrutiny.

Regulators will have new power to seize and dismantle troubled firms and impose leverage limits on firms that threaten financial stability.

Large banks would face new limits on risky trading activities, and many would have to set aside more capital to help them ride out times of crisis.

Large private-equity and hedge funds will face more scrutiny from federal regulators, and credit-rating agencies could potentially see their entire business model upended.

Much of the $615 trillion over-the-counter derivatives market will be routed through more accountable and transparent channels, and banks would have to spin off the riskiest of their swaps clearing desk operations.

Stage set for final votes on Wall Street reform bill

(Reuters) – Senate Democrats on Tuesday appeared to nail down the votes needed to approve a historic overhaul of U.S. financial regulations and set up a final vote by the end of the week.

Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid scheduled a key vote for Thursday morning after Senator Ben Nelson, one of the chamber’s most conservative Democrats, said he would support the bill, which would be the broadest rewrite of the Wall Street rulebook since the Great Depression.

Nelson’s support probably gives Democrats the 60 votes they need to clear an expected Republican procedural hurdle in the 100-seat chamber.

If they succeed on Thursday, backers could hold a final vote by Saturday and send the bill to Obama to sign into law.

“I believe we have 60 votes, otherwise we wouldn’t be going forward,” said Democratic Senator Christopher Dodd, one of the chief architects of the bill.

The House of Representatives already has approved the measure and Democrats are eager to get it to Obama’s desk.

If signed into law, it would give Democrats an important legislative victory alongside healthcare reform as they try to minimize Republican gains in the November congressional elections.

The Dodd-Frank bill — named for chief authors Dodd and Representative Barney Frank — would impose tough new restrictions on the financial industry in an effort to avoid a repeat of the 2007-2009 financial crisis, which touched off a deep recession.

The bill establishes new consumer protections and gives regulators the authority to seize and dismantle large, troubled financial firms. It limits banks’ ability to engage in risky trading practices and imposes new regulations on much of the $615 trillion over-the-counter derivatives market.

“This reform is good for families, it’s good for businesses, it’s good for the entire economy and I urge the Senate to act quickly so that I can sign it into law next week,” Obama said.

Passage would allow Democrats to capitalize on public disgust with Wall Street, which sucked up hundreds of billions in bailout funds as the financial meltdown pushed the wider economy into a deep recession.

“By cleaning up Wall Street, we’re going to make sure big bankers can never again gamble away our future,” Reid said.

MODERATE REPUBLICANS HELPED SHAPE IT

Three moderate Republicans senators have said they will vote for the bill and have had a hand in shaping it.

Senator Scott Brown won concessions for mutual funds and other financial players in his home state of Massachusetts, while Senator Susan Collins added a provision that will require many banks to set aside more capital to help them ride out future crises.

Republican Senator Olympia Snowe, who won protections for small businesses, said she was disappointed that more Republicans did not support it. “On an issue of this kind you would hope to have broader support,” she told reporters.

Other Republicans might sign on as well, Dodd said.

Republican Senator Charles Grassley had backed an earlier version, but he is concerned with how the final bill is funded and has not yet decided how to vote, according to an aide.

If Reid cannot find 60 votes this week, he could wait until next week when a Democratic successor is likely to be in place to fill the seat of the late Robert Byrd. West Virginia Governor Joe Manchin is expected to appoint a successor by Friday afternoon, aides said.

Most Republicans have firmly opposed the bill, painting it as an intrusive overreach that fails to address problems in the housing market that spurred the crisis.

“There were a number of flaws in it that I think most of my members felt were disappointing and will lead most of my members to oppose,” said Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell.

(Additional reporting by Thomas Ferraro, Patricia Zengerle and Donna Smith; Editing by Andrea Ricci.)

State governors face fiscal strain

(Reuters) – State governors meeting in Boston this weekend had plenty on their minds, from the Gulf oil spill to Arizona’s border security controversy. But the economy — and another year of fiscal pain — topped the bill.

After two years of deep cuts, states still face large deficits going into their 2011 fiscal years. With the need to keep budgets balanced from year to year, that has meant cutting services and jobs, raising taxes, borrowing and dipping into rainy-day stabilization funds.

“We have used our rainy-day fund because we considered it to be pouring down rain,” Washington Governor Christine Gregoire said at the National Governors Association meeting.

Gregoire, a Democrat, has needed to cover a combined $12 billion shortfall in Washington over three years, on an annual budget of roughly $32 billion.

A biannual report, The Fiscal Survey of States, released by the NGA in June, showed fiscal year 2010 was the toughest for state budgets since the Great Depression. Combined state budgets tumbled by more than 10 percent from fiscal 2008 to fiscal 2010, a drop of some $74 billion.

State revenue typically lags behind any national recovery, meaning for 2011, “states will have to make additional spending cuts or increase taxes to close their budget gaps, actions that will slow the economic recovery,” the report said.

Yolanda Kodrzycki, an economist at the Boston Federal Reserve, warned that many towns and cities will be crying out for more help from the states in 2011, when falling property tax revenues threaten to choke off municipal budgets.

“You have a tough fiscal environment. Next year will be at least as tough,” said Kodrzycki, director of the Boston Fed’s New England Public Policy Center.

UNIONS UNDER FIRE

New Jersey Governor Chris Christie opened the three-day meeting with a blistering attack on public service unions and resumed that theme on Saturday. The Republican said it was galling “that one sector of our population” had been protected from the recession.

Many governors kept up pressure on Congress to continue for another six months the additional Medicaid benefits that have been part of the federal stimulus bill.

Congress has stalled action on bills worth about $40 billion to help states pay for Medicaid programs and to retain teachers. State aid from 2009′s $787 billion stimulus package is due to run out at the end of this fiscal year.

Some states, including Illinois and Pennsylvania, included millions of dollars in prospective payments in their recently enacted fiscal 2011 budgets and would face the need to cut jobs if the funds are not available.

Supporting the Medicaid budget would be a short-term but badly needed fix for the states, said Arkansas Governor Mike Beebe, a Democrat.

Even so, “we can’t be hypocrites and ask the federal government to bail us out of everything and then decry deficit spending,” Beebe said.

Over time, though, more fundamental issues face states in terms of defining the government’s role, said Wyoming Governor Dave Freudenthal, a Democrat,

“Discussions on redesigning government always come down to ‘how you deal with supply side issues’ but what about the ‘demand side issues,’ regarding what services the public expects the government is going to pay for?” he said.

For programs like Medicare, “you’re going to have to trim back what (that) provides, to more basic services.”

The NGA meeting is often a showcase for governors to step up onto the national stage.

One high-profile governor skipping the meeting was Minnesota’s Tim Pawlenty, discussed as a potential Republican presidential contender in 2012. Pawlenty instead visited neighboring New Hampshire, a state pivotal to national politics, for the third time in seven months.

The NGA meeting drew a small crowd protesting Arizona Governor Jan Brewer and her state’s new law ordering police to crack down on illegal aliens. Others carried signs expressing support for Brewer.

The Arizona immigration law is set to take effect July 29 but is being challenged by the federal government.

“From comments that I’ve heard, many, many are supporting the state of Arizona because they too understand the problems and the issues that we face, because our border is not secure,” Brewer said.

(Reporting by Ros Krasny; Editing by Bill Trott)

Nikkei falls below support to two-week closing low

TOKYO, June 25 (Reuters) – Japan’s Nikkei average extended falls on Friday for its biggest weekly loss in a month, closing below a key support level in what market players said could signal still more drops to come.

Fresh signs of weakness in U.S. consumer spending that have raised concerns about the outlook for corporate earnings sparked much of the selling.

The Nikkei shed 1.9 percent on Friday and 2.6 percent for the week to close below its 25-day moving average, a proxy for a one-month moving average that is keenly watched in Japan.

Support lies near a six-month low hit this month around 9,400. But on weekly charts, the Nikkei’s 13-week moving average has crossed below the 26-week moving average — a formation known as a “death cross.”

“The feeling in the market really isn’t very good right now, and if we don’t get something encouraging out of the G20 summit we could see more falls next week,” said Noritsugu Hirakawa, a strategist at Okasan Securities.

“With the G20 summit going on it’s very hard to buy, and the yen’s gains are adding some downward pressure.”

Leaders of the Group of Eight and Group of 20 rich and developing nations meet in Canada June 25 to 27 to discuss how to plot the world’s emergence from the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. [ID:nN18322198]

Shares of Mizuho Financial Group (8411.T) hit a seven-month low after sources told Reuters the bank will decide on Friday to sell up to 6 billion new shares in a planned global offering, increasing the total number of shares outstanding by up to 38 percent. [ID:nTOE65O032]

The benchmark Nikkei .N225 shed 190.86 points to 9,737.48, its lowest close in two weeks. The broader Topix slipped 1.4 percent to 867.30.

“Investors had been aware that the speed of a recovery in the economy is rather slow but believed earnings are on a solid footing, but concerns are now emerging about the outlook for corporate earnings,” said Kenichi Hirano, operating officer at Tachibana Securities.

The technical picture has darkened for the Nikkei, with its MACD turning downwards after a sustained rise. Its slow stochastic, which gives near-term signals on market trends, shows the drop may yet have further to go as well.

The S&P 500 fell on Thursday for a fourth straight day, losing nearly 4 percent over the four sessions, with retailers among the biggest decliners a day after discouraging outlooks from Bed Bath & Beyond (BBBY.O) and athletic apparel maker Nike Inc (NKE.N) [ID:nN23235380]

FOREIGN SELLING

On Friday, orders for Japanese stocks placed through 10 foreign securities houses before the start of trade showed net selling for a fourth straight day, although market players said foreign investor activity appeared to have ebbed later.

“I think a lot of foreign investors have closed their positions as the quarter-end nears,” said Okasan’s Hirakawa.

Shares of blue-chip exporters fell to drag down the broader market, with several major names hit by brokerage downgrades.

Shares of Canon (7751.T) lost 4.5 percent to 3,530 yen after Credit Suisse cut its rating on the stock to “underperform” from “neutral.”

The brokerage also cut its rating on Tokyo Electron (8035.T) to “neutral” from “outperform” and lowered the target price, saying the order recovery cycle for 2010-11 semiconductor capex is likely approaching a peak. Tokyo Electron lost 5.6 percent.

Large Japanese banks gained in early trade after a Financial Times report that the Basel Committee is set to relax its proposals on how much capital banks must set aside to protect against future financial crises, but by afternoon had reversed course. [ID:nLDE65N2C1]

Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (8306.T) lost 0.5 percent to 419 yen and Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group (8316.T) shed 0.7 percent to 2,658 yen. Mizuho lost 1.3 percent to 153 yen.

Mizuho had registered with regulators last month to raise up to 800 billion yen in a global offering of new shares to prepare for stricter capital requirements, but had not made an official decision to go ahead with the offering. [ID:nTOE64D069]

Trade picked up on the Tokyo exchange’s first section, with 1.9 billion shares changing hands, the highest volume in two weeks. Declining shares outnumbered advancing ones by nearly 4 to 1.

Obama gets second major legislative victory with passage of financial regulation bill

Washington, May 21 (ANI): US President Barack Obama on Thursday secured his second major legislative victory with the Senate approving far-reaching new financial rules on Thursday aimed at preventing the risky behavior and regulatory failures that brought the economy to the brink of collapse two years ago and cost millions of Americans their jobs and savings.

The final vote, just after 8:30 p.m., was 59 to 39. Four Republicans voted in favor of the bill, and two Democrats opposed it.

“Our goal is not to punish the banks,” Obama said in the White House Rose Garden hours before the final vote, “but to protect the larger economy and the American people from the kind of upheavals that we”ve seen in the past few years.”

According to the Washington Post, the 1,500-page measure, shepherded through the Senate by Christopher J. Dodd (D-Conn.), chairman of the banking committee, seeks to reshape both Washington and Wall Street.

In providing for the most profound remaking of financial regulations since the Great Depression, the legislation would create a new consumer-protection watchdog housed at the Federal Reserve to prevent abuse in mortgage, auto and credit card lending.

It also would give the government power to wind down large failing financial firms and set up a council of federal overseers to police the financial landscape for risks to the global economy.

Moreover, the legislation would establish oversight of the vast market in financial instruments known as derivatives, impose new restrictions on credit rating agencies and give shareholders a say in corporate affairs.

Passage of the measure marks a milestone in President Obama”s efforts to tackle the financial abuse and excess.

The vote gives Obama his second major legislative victory of the year, following the March passage of his landmark health-care bill.

The bill now appears headed to a House-Senate conference committee, where a handful of lawmakers will work to resolve differences between the two chambers.

House Financial Services Chairman Barney Frank (D-Mass.) said he aims to wrap up that task in short order. (ANI)

An economic puzzle Bernanke can’t solve

(Reuters) – It’s a mystery that has puzzled even Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke: if the U.S. economy is growing rapidly, why isn’t it creating jobs?

Friday’s hotly anticipated employment report for March may muddle matters even more. Economists polled by Reuters had widely divergent views, with one looking for an increase of 400,000 jobs — which would be the strongest in a decade — while others thought it may show another small net decline.

The consensus expects a gain of 190,000 jobs, which would mark only the second month of job growth since the recession started in December 2007, and the largest increase since March of that year.

Government jobs are expected to account for the bulk of the growth, thanks to the once-a-decade Census, which requires taking on hundreds of thousands of temporary workers. While the jobs pay well ($22.00 an hour in San Francisco; $11.75 in Ames, Iowa,) they last only a few months.

Bernanke and his central bank colleagues are well aware that Census hiring will skew readings, and have cautioned that unemployment will likely remain near 10 percent all year.

The Fed and private economists are trying to answer the bigger question of why the labor market shed 8.4 million jobs during this recession. Although the downturn was the deepest since the Great Depression, the job losses were even more severe than most forecasters had predicted based on models that compare economic growth and employment.

Bernanke offered two possible explanations.

“One is that maybe the recession was deeper than we thought,” he said in response to a question from a member of Congress last week. “The other is that the productivity gains were greater than we thought they would be when firms were able to cut their work forces and still maintain output.”

CAUSE FOR OPTIMISM

The first theory gained support when one of Bernanke’s staff economists wrote a research paper suggesting that the most commonly used measure of U.S. economic growth, gross domestic product, had understated the depth of the recession and overstated the recent recovery.

The economist, Jeremy Nalewaik, argued that a lesser known measure called gross domestic income may give a more accurate assessment of the business cycle. GDP looks at spending to measure the size of the economy, while GDI focuses on income.

Based on GDI, the economy began contracting in 2007, not 2008 as GDP data indicates. It also shows growth did not resume until the final quarter of 2009, while GDP showed the economy had expanded in the third quarter as well.

If GDI is indeed a more accurate gauge, there is reason to think employment will soon rise. Data released last Friday showed GDI jumped at a 6.2 percent annual rate in the fourth quarter, even faster than GDP’s 5.6 percent pace.

That would also help explain why payrolls were still contracting eight months after GDP indicated economic growth resumed. Employment gains normally lags economic growth by a few months, so if the cycle turn came in October rather than June, it would make more sense to see job growth now.

If the U.S. economy does indeed show large job gains for March, it would pull ahead of the euro zone, which is expected to report on Wednesday that the jobless rate ticked up to 10 percent in February from 9.9 percent the prior month.

The U.S. unemployment rate is at 9.7 percent, and the consensus view is that it will hold there in March. What happens after that is open for debate.

Some economists think it will inch up again later this year, for a somewhat counter-intuitive reason. As the labor market improves, discouraged workers may decide to start looking for work again. Those who give up the search are not officially counted in the unemployment rate, but when they jump back into the labor pool they are.

David Rosenberg, chief economist at money manager Gluskin Sheff in Toronto, is more concerned that the economy will weaken just as the Census jobs are disappearing. Government stimulus spending will be fading later this year, and the Fed may be cutting back on its extraordinary economic support.

“I would be looking for a second-half growth relapse that sees the unemployment rate climb back to a new cycle high once the Census hiring effect subsides,” Rosenberg said.

(Editing by Leslie Adler)

Fed’s Fisher: Must break up banks that are too big

NEW YORK, March 3 (Reuters) – Banks that are seen as too large to fail should be broken up in order to make the financial system more stable, Dallas Federal Reserve President Richard Fisher said on Wednesday.

In his most explicit call yet for reshaping the financial industry, Fisher said markets could only function properly if institutions that take big risks are allowed to go under.

His comments come as Washington debates financial regulatory reform, which some analysts worry has become too watered down to prevent another financial crisis. Fisher called for an international agreement to break up oversized firms.

“The disagreeable but sound thing to do regarding institutions that are too big to fail is to dismantle them over time into institutions that can be prudently managed and regulated across borders,” Fisher said in prepared remarks to the Council on Foreign Relations.

One prominent proposal for reform, known as the Volcker rule after Paul Volcker, the former Fed chairman and White House economics adviser who devised it, would limit taxpayer backing for banks whose primary activities are speculative in nature.

“I align myself closer to Paul Volcker in this argument and would say that if we have to (break up banks) unilaterally, we should,” Fisher said.

He said the arguments for maintaining the current system, which include sustaining the global competitiveness of U.S. financial firms, is weak at best, citing Japan’s experience.

Fisher used the forum to add his voice to the chorus of Fed officials vying to maintain the central bank’s regulatory authority, which has come under threat from key proposals in Congress.

Some lawmakers have criticized the Fed for being too hands-off in its approach to supervision, thereby allowing troubles to fester that eventually led to the worst crisis since the Great Depression.

But central bank officials, while admitting to some past mistakes, say they have learned their lessons and are becoming more proactive about measuring not only risks to specific institutions but also those to the broader financial system.

Fisher, like colleagues at the Fed, argued that supervisory authority is key to the adequate conduct of monetary policy, since it gives policy makers a bird’s eye view of financial markets.

“We depend on our regulatory arm to provide in-depth, hands-on assessments to guide us as we perform our duty as the lender of last resort,” Fisher said.

Fisher, who did not comment directly on the economic outlook or on monetary policy, also reiterated his calls for insulating the central bank from political pressures.

UCLA economist blames Hoover’s pro-labour policies for Great Depression

Washington, Aug 30 (ANI): A University of California, Los Angeles economist has blamed former US President Herbert Hoover’s pro-labour policies for Great Depression in 1929.

“These findings suggest that the recession was three times worse – at a minimum – than it would otherwise have been, because of Hoover,” said Lee E. Ohanian, a UCLA professor of economics.

The policies, which included both propping up wages and encouraging job-sharing, also accounted for more than two-thirds of the precipitous decline in hours worked in the manufacturing sector, which was much harder hit initially than the agricultural sector.

“By keeping industrial wages too high, Hoover sharply depressed employment beyond where it otherwise would have been, and that act drove down the overall gross national product,” said Ohanian.

“His policy was the single most important event in precipitating the Great Depression,” he added.

According to Ohanian, Hoover was concerned about two potential crises. He was afraid the stock market collapse of October 1929 would result in a recession with deflation, leading to dramatic wage cuts, as a period of deflation had done just a decade earlier.

And because of a series of recent legislative and court decisions that had expanded the power of organized labour, he also worried about the possibility of crippling strikes if such wage cuts were to come to pass.

“Hoover had the idea that if wages were kept high for workers and they shared jobs instead of being laid off, they would be able to buy more goods and services, which would help the economy improve,” Ohanian added.

After the crash, Hoover met with major leaders of industry and cut a deal with them to either maintain or raise wages and institute job-sharing to keep workers employed, at least to some degree. In response, General Motors, Ford, U.S. Steel, Dupont, International Harvester and many other large firms fell in line, even publicly underscoring their compliance with Hoover’s program.

Designed to placate labour and safeguard workers’ buying power, the step had an unintended effect. As deflation eventually did set in, the inflation-adjusted value of these wages rose over time, effectively giving workers a raise precisely at the time when companies were least in a position to afford such increases and precisely when productivity was beginning to fall.

“The wage freeze effectively raised the cost of labour and, by extension, production,” Ohanian said.

“If you artificially raise the price of production, your costs go way up and you pass them on to the customers, and they buy that much less,” he added.

Reluctant to lower wages due to Hoover’s entreaties, employers in the manufacturing sector responded by reducing the workweek and laying off workers. By September 1931, the manufacturing sector was already hurting: Hours clocked by workers had fallen by 20 percent and employment by 35 percent.

Overall, the economy suffered, with the GDP falling by 27 percent.

“The Depression was the first time in the history of the U.S. that wages did not fall during a period of significant deflation,” Ohanian said.

“In late 1931, industry finally did cut wages, but it was too late. By this point, the economy was in an unprecedented, full-blown depression,” he added.

The findings are slated to appear in the December issue of the peer-reviewed Journal of Economic Theory. (ANI)

Blackberry maker tops Fastest Growing Firms list

London, August 19 (ANI): Research in Motion (RIM), the developer of the hit Blackberry smartphone, has been named the world’s fastest-growing company, suggests business magazine Fortune.

The Canadian wireless device company topped the magazine’s latest annual guide to the 100 fastest-growing businesses, beating US chipmaker Sigma Designs to the second place.

Chinese internet business Sohu.com came in third, followed by Ebix, European forum for energy Business Information exchange, and then DG Fast Channel, reports the BBC.

Fortune said: “Since the Great Depression, some companies just keep growing. And not only in the United States.”

10 Fastest Growing Firms

1. RIM

2. Sigma Designs

3. Sohu.com

4. Ebix

5. DG Fast Channel

6. CF Industries

7. Shanda Industries

8. Arena Resources

9. Bruker

10. Potash Corporation (ANI)

Americans prefer taller presidential candidates when times are more difficult: Study

London, August 19 (ANI): An American study conducted by social psychologists at Coastal Carolina University in Conway, South Carolina, suggests that the country’s presidents get taller when the going gets tough.

Lead researcher Terry Pettijohn looked at the heights, ages and facial attributes of the 11 elected US presidents over the past 75 years, and compared them with economic and social indicators such as unemployment and birth rates.

“What we’re seeing is that taller candidates are preferred when times are more difficult,” New Scientist magazine quoted Pettijohn as saying.

The researcher enumerates among lofty leaders Franklin Roosevelt, who steered the US through the Great Depression (188 centimetres), and Bill Clinton, who campaigned with the phrase “It’s the economy, stupid” during the recession of the early 1990s (189 cm).

Pettijohn further highlights the fact that the relatively petite Harry Truman won two elections during the prosperous 1940s (175 cm).

According to him, hard times also make for presidents with larger chins and smaller eyes.

These findings make him believe that voters associate such features with strength and maturity, qualities that may be perceived to provide security in troubled times.

A presentation on the study was made last week at a meeting of the American Psychological Association in Toronto, Canada. (ANI)

New Zealand government ditches tax cuts in recession budget

New Zealand government ditches tax cuts in recession budgetWellington – New Zealand’s new conservative government Thursday ditched a campaign pledge to cut income taxes in the next two years in its first budget statement as it faced up to the realities of an economic recession.

Finance Minister Bill English told parliament that after 15 years of budget surpluses the country was facing a decade of deficits and the tax cuts promised to follow a first tranche which took effect in April were unaffordable and would be shelved indefinitely.

English said New Zealand was in the sixth consecutive quarter of recession and the effects would strip 50 billion New Zealand dollars (31 billion US dollars) off the economy over the next three years.

Giving what analysts described as a very bleak assessment of the economy, English said unemployment was tipped to reach 8 per cent next year and the deficit to peak at 9.3 billion New Zealand dollars in 2010/2011.

He said the minority National Party government, which came to power in November after nine years of Labour Party rule, would borrow 35 billion New Zealand dollars over the next three years to maintain economic activity and prevent more job losses.

This will see the country’s gross debt – until now anchored at 20 per cent of gross domestic product – more than double by 2016.

Preview speeches in recent weeks stressing that the country was experiencing the worst economic conditions since the Great Depression of the 1930s had primed New Zealanders to expect few handouts from the budget.

The main proposal to revive part of the economy and preserve jobs was a scheme to give 180,000 homeowners grants of up to 1,800 New Zealand dollars to insulate their homes and install clean heating devices like heat pumps.

Substantial increases in spending on the big-ticket state sectors of health and education were announced but analysts said the bleak medium-term outlook and clamps on spending growth meant they would suffer in years to come.

Pensioners were relieved with confirmation that state superannuation would be maintained at 66 per cent of the average wage for all over-65s, though English suspended automatic contributions to a fund established by the former government which was intended to guarantee pensions for future generations.

Prime Minister John Key said the budget would help put New Zealand on the road to recovery, putting in place policies to ensure that the economy emerged strongly from the current recession.

“While the measures in the budget may be the first steps along that journey, it paints a picture of a bleak landscape along the way,” said Jan Dawson, chief executive of the international accountancy firm KPMG.

Noting rising unemployment, with more than 1,250 New Zealanders joining dole queues last week, Phil Goff, leader of the opposition Labour Party, said, “It should have been a budget for jobs – it’s not.

“It will not stem the dramatic increase in job losses happening right now in New Zealand’s cities and towns.”(dpa)

US subsidies could prolong recession, New Zealand leader says

Wellington – The United States risks prolonging the current economic recession by its move to pay subsidies to American farmers to export dairy products, New Zealand Prime Minister John Key said Monday.

Key told his weekly news conference that the Great Depression of the 1930s was prolonged because a number of countries took measures to protect their own industries.

He said the US move to subsidize 92,000 tons of dairy exports would not help the world come out of recession.

Key said that it risked retaliation by the European Union, which reintroduced export subsidies for its own dairy farmers in January and as a much bigger exporter was capable of providing much bigger subsidies.

It also encouraged other countries to take protectionist measures in defiance of communiqués opposing protectionism by international bodies like the G20 group of developed nations and the Asia Pacific Economic Co-operation (APEC) organization, he said.

New Zealand Trade Minister Tim Groser said earlier that the tit-for-tat subsidies risked a trade war between the US and EU.

He said an agreement to eliminate subsidies reached in the early stages of the World Trade Organization’s deadlocked Doha Round of liberalization talks had been effectively destroyed. (dpa)

British economy at weakest for 30 years

LONDON: Britain’s recession-hit economy is contracting at its sharpest pace in almost three decades amid a the worst global downturn since the 1930s, official data showed on Friday.

British gross domestic product (GDP) shrank 1.9 per cent during the first quarter of 2009 compared with the final three months of last year, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).

The data was unchanged from an initial estimate it gave last month.

GDP shrank 4.1 per cent in the first quarter compared with the first three months of 2008, also unchanged from preliminary data, the ONS added.

Both figures matched analysts’ consensus forecasts.

“The good news is that it is looking highly likely that the first quarter will have marked the deepest rate of contraction in this recession,” said Howard Archer, chief Britain economist at IHS Global Insight.

“There are mounting signs in the latest data and surveys that the rate of economic contraction has moderated appreciably so far during the second quarter as the combination of monetary and fiscal stimulus, support to the banking sector and a very weak pound increasingly kick in to support economic activity. “Nevertheless, serious obstacles to economic recovery remain … recovery will develop only gradually in 2010, with relapses a serious threat,” Archer warned.

The British economy shrank 1.6 per cent in the last quarter of 2008, while the 2009 first-quarter contraction was the sharpest since the third quarter of 1979 — the year that Margaret Thatcher was elected prime minister.

Britain must hold its next general election by mid-2010, with polls indicating that the main opposition Conservatives are set to oust Labour, led by Prime Minister Gordon Brown.

Economists have in recent weeks spoken about the emergence of ‘Green Shoots’ of recovery as the world economy struggles with the worst global slump since the 1930s Great Depression.

The ONS meanwhile added on Friday that British industrial output fell 5.3 per cent in the first quarter compared with a drop of 4.5 per cent during the first three months of 2008.

In separate data, car production in Britain dived 55.3 per cent in April from a year earlier, the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders said Friday.

“Despite the current difficulties, the UK must prepare for the return of global growth and government support for the industry is an essential part of the process,” SMMT chief executive Paul Everitt said.

Standard and Poor’s warned Thursday that the British economy’s top-level ‘AAA’ credit rating was under threat and revised down its outlook due to soaring public debt, sending financial markets reeling.

The international ratings agency said it downgraded the outlook to “negative” from “stable” because of the country’s “deteriorating public finances” as a result of the global recession.

S&P warned that the change could lead to a downgrade of Britain’s cherished ‘AAA’ sovereign credit rating — a mark of its financial standing in the world and a major concern in any move to raise funds.

Official data Thursday showed Britain’s public deficit ballooned to a record 8.5 billion pounds (9.6 billion euros, 13.22 billion dollars) in April as the government bailed out banks and the recession slashed tax revenues.

At the same time, public debt as a proportion of GDP jumped to 53.2 per cent in April compared with 42.9 per cent at the end of the same month in 2008.

Official Washington prefer more-breezy, fly-in, fly-out casual partying events

Washington, Apr.30 (ANI): Socialising and partying in official Washington has undergone a change in the last decade and a half.

Washington doesn’t demand or even want a sit-down dinner with an evening port.

According to Politico, partygoers tend to prefer more-breezy, fly-in, fly-out casual events, like birthday parties for A-list reporters and staffers.

Faced with the most terrifying economic crisis since the Great Depression, two wars, the looming collapse of the auto industry, a swine flu epidemic and even a few pirate attacks, the city’s new establishment hasn’t had the time – or perhaps the inclination – to elect a new power hostess.

“The first 100 days, the economy wasn’t solved and the new hostess hasn’t been identified,” says journalist Margaret Carlson, who has a knack for bringing people together.

Its essentially par for the course that every incoming administration reshuffles the Washington deck – effectively determining who’s powerful and who’s not. But as any decent lobbyist will tell you, access is the key to power, and few control the access to the city’s political hierarchy more directly than the reigning social chair.

The doyennes of yesteryear — Democratic powerhouse Esther Coopersmith, the well-known Sally Quinn, and Beth Dozoretz, a friend of the Clintons, remain social fixtures. These women still host fabulous parties.

Several years ago, two new party players – Juleanna Glover and Nancy Jacobson Penn – popped up on the horizon, offering food, drink and expansive homes for White House officials, members of Congress, senators, Capitol Hill staff, lobbyists, reporters and even then-Vice President Dick Cheney.

Glover, a Republican, was more than willing to throw a party for anyone from the newly minted head of CNN’s Washington bureau to visiting A-listers such as businessman John Tisch.

Jacobson Penn, conveniently a Democrat, used her impressive Rolodex to transform her palatial Georgetown home into a sort of social foxhole for Democrats in a town that was run by Republicans.

Between them, Glover and Jacobson Penn had the social cartography of political Washington covered.

Still, the grandeur of a Katharine Graham soiree is missing – the utter sophistication and French chefs replaced by appetizers from Costco.

So who’s in line for the new throne?

Communications guru, avid party-thrower and overall Washington political scene expert Jim Courtovich says that “the list is still emerging.” (ANI)

Fed mulls press briefings to foster public insight

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Officials at the Federal Reserve have discussed holding regular press briefings to help improve public understanding of unusual actions by the Fed in times of crisis, a Fed official said on Tuesday.

Press conferences have been weighed among other ideas, the official said. The Fed has sought during recent upheaval to explain its actions to a broader public, the official said, citing Chairman Ben Bernanke’s recent television interview and willingness to take questions from reporters after a speech.

The Fed also took the unusual step on Tuesday of publishing excerpts of Bernanke’s speech Tuesday at Morehouse College in Atlanta in a newspaper, USA Today.

The Fed’s consideration of press conferences was first reported in the online edition of the Wall Street Journal.

Fed Vice Chairman Donald Kohn has headed up efforts to improve the U.S. central bank’s communications to the public. A new Website provides greater detail about the Fed’s books than was available before.

The Fed has also been under pressure from lawmakers to provide more information about some of its lending.

The U.S. central bank currently issues quarterly forecasts for economic growth, inflation, and employment over a three-year period. Following two of those forecasts, the Fed chairman testifies before Congress.

The other two forecasts might be appropriate occasions to hold briefings for media, the official said, stressing that the idea was merely under consideration and had not risen to the level of likelihood.

The Fed’s expanded efforts at communications come as the central bank has lowered benchmark interest rates to near zero as part of unprecedented efforts to stabilize markets during the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression and to pull the economy out of a recession that officially began in December 2007.

With the Fed’s traditional interest rate setting tool exhausted, officials believe there is greater reason to show that Fed actions are consistent with its traditional role of ensuring sustainable growth and maintaining price stability.

(Reporting by Mark Felsenthal; Additional reporting by Emily Chasan in New York; Editing by Gary Hill and Bernard Orr)

NEWSWEEK: International Editions: Highlights and Exclusives, April 20 Issue

COVER: Cheap Oil Forever (All overseas editions). Contributor Ruchir
Shamirexamines the historic and current trends of the rise and fall of the
prices of commodities, like oil, copper, grains and gold. There are many
people who believe that last year’s swoon in commodities prices represented
only a short pause in the long-term bull market. “It’s a view rooted in
powerful and real trends, like the growth of China and India, the decline in
global reserves …, fears over resource nationalization … and long-term
underinvestment in energy and agriculture, which hampers supply. Yet the fact
is that the world has faced all these issues before, and for the past 200
years, commodity prices have been trending downwards, thanks to new
technologies, greater efficiency in extraction and the substitution of one
commodity for another (which explains the high correlation between commodities
prices).” As countries get richer, their per capita consumption of
commodities in fact declines, thus it’s a myth that the boom in China and
India will inexorably drive up oil and other commodity prices, he writes. Yet
markets are still betting that the price of oil is poised to spike again.
“This bullishness is misplaced. The world is now in the biggest growth slump
since the Great Depression, and the era of exceptionally high global growth
that led to a surge in demand for commodities from 2003 to 2007 is unlikely to
return any time soon.”

http://www.newsweek.com/id/193499

Marry a Farmer. Legendary American investor Jim Rogers, co-founder of the
Quantum Fund, talks to Newsweek about why oil is still black gold, even
though, inflation adjusted, oil is the same price that it was in 1976, and in
1870. “It doesn’t matter. It’s also true that just about any stock you can
think about is at or below where it was in the 1970s right now. So what? There
are still 15- to 20-year periods when commodities, stocks and any other asset
class goes up a great deal. In 1987 stocks collapsed by 40 to 80 percent. But
people who were smart enough to stay in them made 1,000 percent returns in the
next decade. The point is to take advantage of those periods and make some
money.”

http://www.newsweek.com/id/193500

A-Team in Blue Suits. Senior Writer Adam B. Kushner reports on the birth of
one of Washington’s wonkiest and most important new agencies since 9/11: the
Office for the Coordinator for Reconstruction and Stabilization. After the
embarrassment of bumbling in postwar Iraq, U.S. officials realized they had to
come up with a better system for training and deploying seasoned civilians in
future conflicts. The goal is to become the civilian equivalent of the U.S.
military’s Special Forces. The office has collected experts from throughout
the federal government in a Civilian Response Corps (CRC). It’s a kind of temp
agency for specialists, deploying them whenever they’re needed to help
unstable governments.

http://www.newsweek.com/id/193505

‘There Will Be Bankruptcies.’ Moscow Bureau ChiefOwen Matthewsand Special
Correspondent Anna Nemtsova profile Oleg Deripaska, who a year ago was
Russia’s richest oligarch with a $44 billion global empire and 290,000
employees. A few weeks ago Deripaska was facing the loss of his empire unless
the Russian president got its creditors to hold off foreclosing $7.4 billion
in urgent overdue loans — less than half of his total indebtedness. The
story of Deripaska’s rise and fall is a window on money and power in
post-Soviet Russia, showing the flaws that hid behind the nation’s economic
revival under Vladimir Putin — and the dilemma the country now faces in the
aftermath of the crash.

http://www.newsweek.com/id/192461

Partying Like It’s 2008. European Economics Editor Stefan Theil reports that
while Germany’s economy is forecast to contract by 5.3 percent this year,
Germans are remarkably angst-free about their prospects. Consumer spending has
held up; March auto sales were up 40 percent over last year, thanks to the
¤2,500 government trade-in incentive that came with Germany’s fiscal-stimulus
plan. The main reason that most Germans have yet to feel affected by the
crisis is, to put it simply, that they haven’t been affected. And they have an
attitude that whatever happens, they’ve probably been there before.

http://www.newsweek.com/id/193506

Fading to Black. Moscow Bureau Chief Owen Matthews reports on the outcome of
Moldova’s latest unrest, which he calls a key test of both Russia’s soft and
hard power in the region. Moldovan President Vladimir Voronin called the
unrest, where students gathered in Chisinau to protest the ruling Communist
Party’s suspiciously large electoral victory, “an attempted coup d’etat” and
accused Romania of fomenting the protests. Police quickly restored order after
arresting more than 200. The aborted revolution revealed Russia’s ability to
project power and protect friends like Voronin. For at least four years,
Moscow has mounted a campaign to woo Voronin away from the EU and NATO with
offers of subsidized gas and closer economic ties.

http://www.newsweek.com/id/193438

With a Friend Like This. Newsweek International Assistant Managing Editor
Jonathan Teppermanreports that it may be time for the U.S. to reconsider its
alliance with Ethiopia. The Bush administration claimed the country was the
linchpin of its regional counterterrorism strategy and a vital beacon of
stability. But Prime Minister Meles Zenawi’s ruling party has rigged
elections, effectively banned independent human-rights groups, passed a
draconian press law and shrugged off calls for an investigation into alleged
atrocities in the Ogaden region. In the same period, the country has become
one of the largest recipients of U.S. aid in sub-Saharan Africa, getting $1
billion in 2008.

http://www.newsweek.com/id/193503

WORLD VIEW: Is Robert Gates a Genius? Newsweek International Editor Fareed
Zakaria is optimistic about Secretary of Defense Robert Gates’ budget
proposal because it focuses sensibly on the wars we are actually fighting, and
makes sure the military is equipped to wage them successfully. “American
military budgets should be based on two competing imperatives. The first is
that we are likely to be engaged in small, complex conflicts… in which
manpower and intelligence are key. The second requirement is deterrence.”
These imperatives can be satisfied with a “military that is leaner, more
cost-effective, more efficient and does keep somewhere in mind the capacity of
potential adversaries.” Now is the time for Gates to take the opportunity and
“move the United States towards a military strategy that is shaped by the
world we actually inhabit.”

http://www.newsweek.com/id/193487

THE LAST WORD: Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili. President Mikheil
Saakashvili sits down with Special Correspondent Anna Nemtsova and talks about
the protestors demanding his resignation, his difficult relationship with
Russia and how the West has largely abandoned him in recent months. He says
he is not hurt by the criticism in Georgia, but “did not expect the West to
put all relationships with us on hold, while waiting for this revolution.”
Saakashvili points out that “the problem is not about [Georgia], the problem
is about [the United States'] own internal politics” and how Georgia has
integrated into them. The policy with Russia remains the same. “We will
handle the demonstrations as if the Russian issue did not exist, and Russia as
if the demonstrations did not exist.”

http://www.newsweek.com/id/193509

/PRNewswire — April 12/

SOURCE Newsweek

Katherine Barna, +1-212-445-4859, Katherine.Barna@Newsweek.com, or Grace Huh,
+1-212-445-5831, Grace.Huh@Newsweek.com

China economy improves but deflation haunts Japan

* China economy better than expected, March output up – Wen

* Japan wholesale prices fall, deflation looms again

* Asian stocks stall near 3-mth high, Shanghai copper jumps

* Stock rally hinges on U.S. bank results this week (For full crisis coverage, double click on [nCRISIS])

By Jason Subler and Yuzo Saeki

BEIJING/TOKYO, April 13 (Reuters) – China’s economy is in better shape than expected, the country’s premier said, but a big fall in wholesale prices in Japan showed the world’s second-largest economy was sliding back towards deflation.

A jump in China’s industrial output last month, along with a record rise in new lending, gave further credence to the idea that the bottom of the worst global crisis since the Great Depression may not be far away.

“China’s economy has shown some positive signs, but we can all see that our economy still faces some very big difficulties,” Premier Wen Jiabao told reporters on Saturday in Thailand, where East Asian leaders gathered for a summit.

China was planning a new economic stimulus package targeted at boosting consumption, the China Securities Journal reported on Monday, citing a senior official of the State Information Center, which is affiliated with the country’s top planning agency. [ID:nSHA22356]

In the latest sign that Beijing’s efforts to revive the economy were beginning to bear fruit, new loans and money supply growth surged to record highs in March. [ID:nPEK337716]

Wen also said industrial output growth picked up to 8.3 percent in March from a record low of 3.8 percent in the first two months of the year, topping analysts’ expectations.

While things were looking modestly brighter in China, the economic situation in Japan remained bleak.

Wholesale prices are falling at their fastest rate since 2002, March figures showed on Monday, as weakening domestic demand on top of falling commodity prices drives Japan towards its second bout of deflation this decade. [ID:nT344226]

With interest rates already almost at zero, analysts say the Bank of Japan has limited weapons to fight deflation in the country’s worst recession since World War Two.

“The BOJ has reached its limit in terms of conventional monetary policy moves,” said Norihiro Fujito, general manager at Mitsubishi UFJ Securities.

“If prices continue to slide, the BOJ may need to expand its government bond buying, and move toward quantitative easing.”

STOCKS STALLED, COPPER JUMPS

Asian share markets were stalled near three-months highs in holiday-thinned trade, with Japan’s Nikkei average .N225 down 0.3 percent and MSCI’s measure of stocks elsewhere in the Asia-Pacific .MIAPJ0000PUS up by a similar amount. [MKTS/GLOB]

Markets in Hong Kong and Australia remained closed for the Easter break, with London markets also closed on Monday.

Prices for copper in Shanghai SCFc3 jumped by the daily limit of 7 percent, boosted by the Chinese economic data and figures showing a decline in inventories of the industrial metal.

Key to global share markets this week are earnings from top U.S. banks including Goldman Sachs (GS.N), JPMorgan (JPM.N) and Citigroup (C.N).

Hopes that the economic slump may be abating and some stability may be returning to the banking sector have helped underpin a month-long recovery in stocks from 12-year closing lows hit in early March.

“The market is looking like it wants to continue the rally,” said Andre Weisbrod, president and chief executive officer of STAAR Financial Advisors Inc in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

MSCI’s World index has climbed by more than a quarter since sinking to a six-year low early last month, having fallen 60 percent from its November 2007 peak.

U.S. President Barack Obama said on Friday that despite the recession’s heavy toll, the U.S. economy is showing “glimmers of hope.” [ID:nN10327428]

Further evidence as to whether such glimmers are likely to prove more lasting will come this week with U.S. retail, housing and industrial production data, and some see little hope of a meaningful rebound. [ECI/US]

“I’m still very pessimistic about the prospects of any enduring recovery,” said T.J. Marta, chief market strategist at Marta on the Markets, in Scotch Plains, New Jersey. “In spite of the stabilisation, there is no sustainable upward trend in growth.” (Writing by Lincoln Feast;Editing by Tomasz Janowski)

WRAPUP 1-China’s Wen cites March output bounce as lending soars

Wen says economy better than expected, sees positive signs

* March industrial output up 8.3 pct yr/yr, Wen says

* Domestic demand in March shows “stable growth”

* New yuan loans hit record 1.89 trln in March

* Foreign reserves see smallest quarterly rise since Q2 2001

By John Ruwitch and Jason Subler

PATTAYA, Thailand/BEIJING, April 11 (Reuters) – China’s economy is in a better shape than expected with March industrial output growth exceeding forecasts, but it still faces big challenges, Premier Wen Jiabao said on Saturday.

Wen, speaking on the day when the central bank reported a record rise in new lending last month, said industrial output growth picked up to 8.3 percent in March from a record low of 3.8 percent in the first two months of the year.

Analysts polled by Reuters had expected a 6 percent rise in industrial production, due for official release on April 16 along with first quarter economic growth figures and other data. [ID:nPEK325406]

“China’s economy has shown some positive signs, but we can all see that our economy still faces some very big difficulties,” Wen told reporters in the Thai seaside resort of Pattaya, where East Asian leaders were holding a summit.

He said China’s policymakers have taken appropriate action to help the world’s third largest economy to weather what has turned into the worst global crisis since the 1930s Great Depression.

“Chinese government policy has been timely, correct and decisive,” Wen said.

In the latest sign that the government’s efforts to revive the economy were beginning to bear fruit, new loans and money supply growth surged to record highs in March. [ID:nPEK337716]

LENDING BOOM

Banks extended 1.89 trillion yuan ($276.6 billion) in local currency-denominated loans in March, bringing the total for the first quarter to 4.58 trillion yuan — nearing the government’s full-year target of at least 5 trillion yuan.

Analysts saw the lending figures as a sign that Beijing’s moves to boost domestic demand were working, but they also cautioned against jumping to the conclusion that a rebound was just round the corner.

“The March lending is strong, but whether the strong growth in bank credit can revive the real economy sector is still unclear,” said Zhang Xiaojing, an economist with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences in Beijing.

One of the main concerns about the surge in lending has been that it could be financing stock market speculation as much as actual investment and spending.

But Wen said March domestic demand, including fixed asset investment and consumption, had shown “stable growth” compared to the year before and January and February.

China’s economic situation was “better than expected”, he said, according to a recording of the remarks.

The Chinese premier was scheduled to meet with Southeast Asian leaders earlier on Saturday for a summit to sign a joint investment agreement, but Thai anti-government protesters blockading his hotel forced a delay in that meeting.

China, the only economy among the world’s top five that is still growing, was hit hard by a plunge in exports and Beijing has been trying to soften the blow by boosting investment and spending at home with a 4 trillion yuan ($585 billion) stimulus.

Wen noted the collapse of demand for Chinese exports among the biggest difficulties the economy faced.

Dwindling trade volumes and a decline in foreign investment were reflected in the smallest quarterly rise in China’s foreign exchange reserves. The world’s largest stockpile rose just $7.7 billion to $1.9537 trillion in the past quarter, according to central bank data released on Saturday.

Data on Friday showed China’s exports and imports fell for the fifth month in a row in March, but the 17 percent annual decline in exports was much less severe than feared, raising hopes that trade may start bottoming out. [ID:nPEK8623] China’s urban fixed-asset investment grew 26.5 percent in January and February from a year earlier, supported by the surge in government spending. (Writing by Tomasz Janowski; Editing by Sugita Katyal)