Elbit Systems 2010 sales to be flat -CEO

Israel, July 25 (Reuters) – Israeli defence contractor Elbit Systems’ (ESLT.O)(ESLT.TA) 2010 revenues should be flat from last year but its order backlog should continue to grow in 2011, Chief Executive Joseph Ackerman said on Sunday.

Elbit, Israel’s largest publically traded defence firm, posted 2009 revenue of $2.83 billion, up 7.4 percent from 2008, while its backlog of orders topped $5 billion.

“We have experienced a slowdown in the decision process in our customers and I don’t know what will happen this quarter. We may see the same phenomena happening again,” Ackerman told Reuters on the sidelines of a media event.

“On a year basis I think that the neighbourhood of our sales will be as last year, give or take, but nevertheless since we see growing demand for our programmes — defence electronics, electronic warfare and electro-optics — starting in 2011 we see our backlog continuing to grow,” he said.

Ackerman said Elbit had a strong balance sheet, particularly after raising $284 million in a bond offering last month, which would allow Elbit to seek out acquisitions.

“We would not like to limit ourselves to the size of this kind of acquisition. We have this money for any acquisition that we may do either in Israel or in other countries,” he said.

Ackerman noted that Elbit has had minimal impact from its business with Turkey in the wake of increasing tensions between Israel and Turkey after Israel intercepted an aid ship bound for Gaza.

“At the beginning, we experienced a few days of uncertainty but since then all our programmes are in process as usual and as of today we don’t see any impact on ongoing programs with (the) Turkish Ministry of Defence,” Ackerman said. (Reporting by Rami Amichai; writing by Steven Scheer; editing by Karen Foster)

UPDATE 1-Great Portland’s assets up as rebound slows

LONDON, July 22 (Reuters) – British landlord Great Portland (GPOR.L) said on Thursday its asset values had risen in its first quarter to end June, at the same time noting a slowdown in the volatile London property market’s rebound. In an interim management statement, Great Portland Estates Plc said its portfolio valuation had risen 4.6 percent since March 31 on a like-for-like basis.

Its estimated net asset value per share was 295 pence at June 30, up 4.2 percent in the quarter.

The company said it had completed 165 million pounds ($250.1 million) of new property deals over the past three months.

Chief Executive Toby Courtauld said London’s property investment markets had continued to recover during the quarter, noting this was at a lesser pace than the “unsustainably” high rates of the previous two quarters.

“We expect this less urgent mood to persist for the balance of the year, with investors looking to rental growth to support further price increases,” Courtauld said in the statement. “Whilst we expect sentiment to remain relatively volatile in the near term, looking two or three years ahead, we maintain our confidence in London as a global financial centre,” he said.

Courtauld sees rents rising over this period, citing a prospective supply-demand balance that favoured landlords. (Reporting by Andrew Macdonald; Editing by David Holmes) ($1=.6598 Pound)

UPDATE 1-Japan steel output falls in June from May

TOKYO, July 20 (Reuters) – Japan’s crude steel output fell 3.8 percent in June from the previous month, data showed on Tuesday, and the industry association head warned that a build-up of inventories in China had clouded the outlook for exports.

Crude steel output came to 9.35 million tonnes in June, down 3.8 percent from May but marking a 35.9 percent rise from June last year, the Japan Iron and Steel Federation said. The figures are not seasonally adjusted.

Eiji Hayashida, chairman of the federation and president of JFE Steel Corp, told a news conference that inventories of cars and other steel-using products have been rising in China since late June, somewhat clouding the outlook for exports.

Japan’s government had forecast last month that Japan steel output would total 26.82 million tonnes in the July-September quarter, up 10 percent from the same period a year earlier but down 4.3 percent from the previous quarter. [ID:nTOE65H020]

Signs of a slowdown in China’s property sector have led to heavy inventory correction in the region and stronger downward pressure on prices since mid-April, raising concerns that Japanese steelmakers will be forced to cut back on their exports.

Japanese steelmakers, including Nippon Steel Corp (5401.T), the world’s fourth biggest, and No.5 JFE Holdings Inc (5411.T) now generate nearly 50 percent of their steel revenues from exports as domestic demand remains sluggish. (Reporting by Yuko Inoue)

WRAPUP 3-China economy slows, still in Beijing’s comfort zone

BEIJING, July 15 (Reuters) – China’s economy cooled in the second quarter, a slowdown that is likely to extend over the rest of the year as Beijing steers monetary and fiscal policy back to normal after a record credit surge to counter the global crisis.

Annual gross domestic product growth moderated to 10.3 percent from 11.9 percent in the first quarter, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said on Thursday. The reading was slightly below market forecasts of 10.5 percent growth.

Other data suggested that curbs on lending to home buyers and local authorities, along with an ebbing of government stimulus spending and an end to inventory rebuilding, were biting with greater force as the quarter drew to a close.

Particularly striking was a sharper-than-expected drop in factory growth to 13.7 percent in the year to June, below forecasts for 15.3 percent and May’s 16.5 percent reading. <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

For stories on the Chinese economy, click [ID:nECONCN]

For a breakdown of Thursday's data, click [ID:nBJL002048]

For reaction to Thursday's data, click. [ID:nTOE66D08E]

For a poll on the 2010/2011 outlook, click [nSGE66D0AN]

Reuters Insider TV on China slowdown:

link.reuters.com/mab67m

link.reuters.com/jef67m

For graphics, click on:

here

here ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>

But the government showed no sign of being perturbed, partly because the slowdown reflected a high base of comparison in 2009.

Sheng Laiyun, an NBS spokesman, said the GDP growth rate remained high, in line with the average of the past decade and well within Beijing’s comfort zone.

“The slowing will help our economy avoid overheating and assist in the transformation of our economic model,” he said.

Economists polled by Reuters ahead of the data saw full-year growth of 10 percent this year, slowing to 9.0 percent in 2011.

POLICY TO MARK TIME

Most economists expect no dramatic policy response to Thursday’s figures, which included a drop in consumer inflation to 2.9 percent in the year to June from 3.1 percent in May. Markets had forecast a 3.3 percent rise.

With growth slowing and inflation cresting, HSBC and Barclays Capital said they no longer expected interest rates to rise this year. Ting Lu said the chances of an increase in required reserves was fading, too.

Beijing was likely to keep up its campaign against property speculation while ramping up spending on public housing to stabilise growth.

“Despite the slowing growth, we think the chance for double-dip in China is quite small as China’s pragmatic policymakers are quite flexible on policy stance. And they still have a deep pocket to buffer any big slowdown,” Lu said.

One risk emphasised by Sheng, the NBS spokesman, stems from the euro zone’s debt woes and its belt-tightening plans. Chinese exporters have not suffered so far because they are filling a backlog of orders, but pressure on them in coming months could be quite significant, he said.

Market reaction was muted, perhaps because most of the figures were leaked earlier in the week.

Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS were down 0.4 percent, back to their opening levels after a brief spike, while the Shanghai stock market .SSEC shed 0.3 percent. Offshore yuan forwards were little changed.

GOOD NEWS, BAD NEWS

Consumption was resilient, although annual retail sales growth eased to 18.3 percent in June from 18.7 percent in May.

But year-to-date investment in urban areas in fixed assets such as flats and factories slowed a notch, growing 25.5 percent from a year earlier after a 25.9 percent rise in May.

And Dong Tao, chief non-Japan Asia economist for Credit Suisse in Hong Kong, calculated that factory output, seasonally adjusted, actually fell month-on-month in June for the first time since November 2008.

“The good news is the economy is holding up. The bad news is investment is coming down, hence demand for commodities will fall,” Tao said.

The moderation in growth, though engineered by the government, makes it increasingly likely that the pace of monetary tightening will slow. The official China Securities Journal said on Thursday that the government should refrain from further policy tightening as the economy may slow more sharply than expected over the rest of 2010.

“In the second half of the year, external demand will gradually weaken and the dividend from the trade surplus will fall. This requires an increase in overall social investment and a halt to tightening of both fiscal policy and monetary policy,” an editorial said.

Unlike many of its Asian peers, most recently Thailand on Wednesday, China has not raised interest rates this year.

But year-on-year expansion in the stock of outstanding yuan loans slowed to 18.2 percent at the end of June from 33.8 percent as recently as November. Growth in the M2 measure of money supply moderated to 18.5 percent from 29.7 percent over the same period.

THE BEST IS IN THE PAST

Markets worry that the government is applying the brakes too hard to an economy that has been a major engine of the global recovery from the deepest recession in 80 years.

China last year became the top trade partner of Brazil, India and South Africa. German exports to China are booming.

Thursday’s figures reinforced the view that the first quarter marked the cyclical peak for China, which is set to overtake Japan this year as the world’s second-largest economy after the United States.

Goldman Sachs calculated that, at an annual rate adjusted for seasonal variations, GDP growth fell to 8 percent in the second quarter from 10 percent in the first. Morgan Stanley estimated a more modest decline, to 8.4 percent from 9.2 percent.

“We expect growth will ease further in the second half of the year, with external factors likely to determine the severity of the slowdown,” said Brian Jackson, a strategist with Royal Bank of Canada in Hong Kong. (Writing by Alan Wheatley; Editing by Ken Wills and Tomasz Janowski)

Nikkei slips from 3-wk highs on investor economy worry

TOKYO, July 15 (Reuters) – Japan’s Nikkei average fell 1 percent on Thursday after hitting three-week highs the day before, hovering near support after a Federal Reserve statement expressing concerns about the U.S. recovery fed investor jitters.

Asian stock markets slightly pared falls after data showing China’s annual economic growth eased to 10.3 percent in the second quarter, but inflation at the producer and consumer level also eased in June from May, reducing the need for further policy tightening. [ID:nTOE66D06L] [ID:nTOE66D060]

The figures were announced just after the bechmark Nikkei ended morning trade, and sent S&P futures SPc1 to turn positive.

“The Nikkei is now stuck in a place where it’s hard to go either significantly higher or lower. Investors are trying to understand if signs of a slowdown in U.S. economic data show the recovery is at a lull, or if it’ll continue at a slow pace,” said Junichi Misawa, a senior fund manager at STB Asset Management.

He also said the China data initially helped the stock market trim earlier losses, but investors seem to lack a consensus on how to interpret them at this point.

“Stock markets trimmed losses after the China data but they are under pressure again. That shows how fluid the markets’ views still are on China. If the data was too strong it would spark concerns and if it was too weak it could lead to worries about a slowdown,” Misawa said.

The benchmark Nikkei .N225 shed 96.00 points to 9,699.24, after falling as low as 9,667.00 at one stage. On Wednesday, the index rose nearly 3 percent to hit its highest close since late June.

The broader Topix lost 1.5 percent to 857.84.

Market players said the Nikkei was slightly overstretched going into the day and it was no surprise it was taking a bit of a breather.

Minutes of the Fed’s June meeting showed policy makers felt they should be ready to consider additional steps to boost the U.S. economy if an already softening outlook worsens, adding to worries stoked by a report showing June retail sales fell more than expected. [ID:nN14148574] [ID:nN14122226]

“A lot of investors are quite sensitive to anything the Federal Reserve says, and that kind of statement has chilled the recent rapid growth of market optimism,” said Nagayuki Yamagishi, a strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities.

News from Japan’s central bank has little impact on the market. The Bank of Japan revised up its economic forecast for the current fiscal year but reiterated that it will keep monetary policy easy, with deflation likely to persist at least until early 2011. [ID:nTKU106138]

The Nikkei was hovering just above support provided by its 25-day moving average, currently at 9,680, and additional support on its daily Ichimoku charts at around 9,670, which was its kijun-sen.

The kijun-sen is an indicator of medium-term trends that can be either support or resistance but is currently pointing sideways, while Ichimoku charts are a popular charting method among Japanese traders.

But other momentum indicators are mixed, with the Nikkei’s slow stochastic — a measure of how oversold the market is and whether it is in a short-term up or down trend — falling to just below overbought territory. Yet its MACD continues to rise after a bullish cross.

“Longer-term, the Nikkei may still be in a bit of a downtrend. But it’s on the upper end of this and sharp slides are unlikely,” added Yamagishi.

CARS, EXPORTERS, TECH

Automakers lost ground after helping boost the broader market on Wednesday, when shares of Japan’s top three automakers all jumped about 4 percent.

Shares of Nissan Motor Co (7201.T), Japan’s No.3 automaker, slid 3 percent to 650 yen after it said it would idle two U.S. assembly plants for three days starting on Thursday because of a shortage of electronic control units from Hitachi Ltd (6501.T). [ID:nN14156554]

Nissan said earlier this week it would halt part of its vehicle production in Japan for three days starting on Wednesday after Hitachi said delivery of engine control units was running behind schedule. [ID:nTOE66C052]

Top automaker Toyota Motor Corp (7203.T) slid 2.6 percent to 3,165 yen and Honda Motor Co (7267.T), the No.2, retreated 2.1 percent to 2,684 yen.

Techs and exporters, some of the main impetus behind the Nikkei’s climb on Wednesday, fell broadly as well, with gains by the yen adding weight.

Oki Electric Industry (6703.T) lost 3.9 percent to 74 yen after Goldman Sachs downgraded it to “sell”, citing a possible undershooting of guidance for the business year ending next March.

Takeda Pharmaceutical (4502.T) fell 1.9 percent to 3,945 yen as a rival to Takeda’s flagship diabetes drug won support from a U.S. panel for sustained marketing approval. [ID:nN14274445] (Editing by Michael Watson)

TREASURIES-Edge higher, extend gains made on Fed minutes

July 15 (Reuters) – U.S. 10-year Treasury notes edged higher in Asian trading on Thursday, extending gains made the previous day due to weak retail sales data and a pared-back economic outlook from the Federal Reserve.

* Ten-year notes rose about 4/32 in price to yield 3.034 percent US10YT=RR, down 1 basis point from late U.S. trading on Wednesday. Ten-year note futures rose 3/32 to 122-10.5/32 TYv1.

* Two-year notes were unchanged in price to yield 0.6089 percent US2YT=RR, down about 1 basis point from late New York trading and hovering near a record low of 0.590 percent hit in late June. On Wednesday, the two-year yield had slid nearly 7 basis points for its biggest one-day drop in about six weeks.

* While the 10-year yield may head lower in the near term, a sustained drop from current levels seems unlikely, said Junji Kojima, senior deputy manager of Sompo Japan Insurance’s global securities investment department.

* “If the economy weakens too much, that may spur speculation about the possibility of further monetary easing steps and could give a lift to equities,” Kojima said.

* On the other hand, if the U.S. economy holds up relatively well that could also bode ill for Treasuries, which look a bit over-bought, Kojima said.

* Minutes from the Fed’s June policy meeting showed officials felt they should be ready to consider additional steps to boost the U.S. economy if an already softening outlook took a noticeable turn for the worse. [ID:nN14148574]

* Data on Thursday showing that China’s economy slowed in the second quarter contained no surprises, and gave little reason to think that China’s economy was headed for a sharp slowdown that could prompt market players to revise down their outlook for the global economy, said Kojima at Sompo Japan. [ID:nTOE66D06L] (Reporting by Masayuki Kitano; Editing by Michael Watson)

Rio Q2 iron ore output dips 2 pct, warns on China

July 14 (Reuters) – Global diversified miner Rio Tinto (RIO.AX) (RIO.L) on Wednesday reported a 2 percent fall in second-quarter iron ore production from a year earlier and raised concern about a possible double-dip recession in OECD countries and a slight slowdown in Chinese growth.

Rio Tinto, the world no.2 producer of the steel making raw material, also said it was running its iron ore mines close to capacity and forecast total 2010 production of 234 million tonnes.

For a table on second-quarter production: [ID:nSGE66C0JC] (Reporting by James Regan; Editing by Ed Davies)

China shrugs off global fears with export strength

(Reuters) – China’s trade surplus in June topped expectations on surprising strength in exports that suggests the global economic recovery has remained on track despite worries about a fresh slowdown.

Many analysts believe the export momentum will soon wane, but for now the latest numbers give ammunition to critics who say that Beijing is holding down the value of its yuan currency to gain an unfair trade advantage.

Chinese exports in June rose 43.9 percent from a year earlier, beating forecasts of a 38 percent rise, the customs administration said on Saturday. Imports rose 34.1 percent year on year, in line with projections.

That left China with a trade surplus of $20.0 billion, its largest in nine months. The market had expected a surplus of $13.8 billion.

“Exports were better than expected because the negative impact from the European debt crisis was not as serious as the market had feared,” said Liu Nenghua, an economist with Bank of Communications in Shanghai.

“Growth in China’s exports will slow down in coming months, that’s for sure,” Liu added. “But there will be no sharp drop.”

The strong trade numbers could help ease fears — for a time, at least — about the potential for a skid in the Chinese economy after the government’s campaign to clamp down on the red-hot property market.

YUAN IN FOCUS

They could also lead to fresh calls for Beijing to let the yuan rise more quickly. China de-pegged its currency from the U.S. dollar on June 19, after keeping it locked in place for 23 months to help exporters ride out the global economic turmoil.

The yuan has gained just 0.78 percent against the dollar since then, and pressure is again building on U.S. President Barack Obama to take a stronger line against Beijing. Critics say an undervalued exchange rate is an artificial boost for Chinese exporters, robbing other countries of jobs and growth.

As if anticipating this criticism, Zheng Yuesheng, statistics chief for the customs bureau, noted that China’s trade surplus in the first half of 2010 was about 40 percent less than in the same period last year.

“Our foreign trade has continued to move toward a roughly balanced direction,” he said on state television.

Trade disputes with the United States and Europe would be an additional source of uncertainty for markets at a time of great concern about the fragility of the global recovery.

China’s wider trade surplus contained another seed of unwelcome news. It pointed to the beginning of slacker domestic demand in the world’s fastest-growing major economy.

Over the past year, with the U.S. and European economies struggling to regain their footing, global firms and investors looked to China to make up for the shortfall.

China’s imports grew just 0.9 percent from May after calendar adjustments, the customs authority said. Imports of crude oil and soybeans still managed to hit monthly records, but imports of copper and iron ore slowed.

TRANSITORY STRENGTH

Analysts said that China’s export strength might be transitory. Shipments could slow in coming months as U.S. fiscal stimulus fades and European governments cut back on spending.

Though sales to emerging markets surged in June, they cannot compensate for a downturn in demand from major economies, Tom Orlik, an economist with Stone & McCarthy Research Associates in Beijing, said.

“A resurgent trade surplus will clearly strengthen the argument for rapid appreciation of the yuan,” he said. “But with the global recovery on slippery sands, the outlook for China’s exports is not as stable as the last two months of data suggest.”

That point was echoed by Wang Han, an economist with research firm CEBM in Shanghai.

Data due to be released on July 15 will probably show faster consumer price inflation, but the government will not want to tighten monetary policy, because domestic investment is flagging and exports, too, will start to slow, he said.

“It will be difficult for the central bank, but I think there is a strong possibility that China will not raise interest rates this year,” Wang said.

The market consensus is for China to desist from raising rates until the second quarter of 2011, according to a Reuters poll published on Friday.

(Additional reporting by Zhou Xin and Langi Chiang; Editing by Alan Wheatley)

China shrugs off global fears with export strength

(Reuters) – China’s trade surplus in June topped expectations on surprising strength in exports that suggests the global economic recovery has remained on track despite worries about a fresh slowdown.

Many analysts believe the export momentum will soon wane, but for now the latest numbers give ammunition to critics who say that Beijing is holding down the value of its yuan currency to gain an unfair trade advantage.

Chinese exports in June rose 43.9 percent from a year earlier, beating forecasts of a 38 percent rise, the customs administration said on Saturday. Imports rose 34.1 percent year on year, in line with projections.

That left China with a trade surplus of $20.0 billion, its largest in nine months. The market had expected a surplus of $13.8 billion.

“Exports were better than expected because the negative impact from the European debt crisis was not as serious as the market had feared,” said Liu Nenghua, an economist with Bank of Communications in Shanghai.

“Growth in China’s exports will slow down in coming months, that’s for sure,” Liu added. “But there will be no sharp drop.”

The strong trade numbers could help ease fears — for a time, at least — about the potential for a skid in the Chinese economy after the government’s campaign to clamp down on the red-hot property market.

YUAN IN FOCUS

They could also lead to fresh calls for Beijing to let the yuan rise more quickly. China de-pegged its currency from the U.S. dollar on June 19, after keeping it locked in place for 23 months to help exporters ride out the global economic turmoil.

The yuan has gained just 0.78 percent against the dollar since then, and pressure is again building on U.S. President Barack Obama to take a stronger line against Beijing. Critics say an undervalued exchange rate is an artificial boost for Chinese exporters, robbing other countries of jobs and growth.

As if anticipating this criticism, Zheng Yuesheng, statistics chief for the customs bureau, noted that China’s trade surplus in the first half of 2010 was about 40 percent less than in the same period last year.

“Our foreign trade has continued to move toward a roughly balanced direction,” he said on state television.

Trade disputes with the United States and Europe would be an additional source of uncertainty for markets at a time of great concern about the fragility of the global recovery.

China’s wider trade surplus contained another seed of unwelcome news. It pointed to the beginning of slacker domestic demand in the world’s fastest-growing major economy.

Over the past year, with the U.S. and European economies struggling to regain their footing, global firms and investors looked to China to make up for the shortfall.

China’s imports grew just 0.9 percent from May after calendar adjustments, the customs authority said. Imports of crude oil and soybeans still managed to hit monthly records, but imports of copper and iron ore slowed.

TRANSITORY STRENGTH

Analysts said that China’s export strength might be transitory. Shipments could slow in coming months as U.S. fiscal stimulus fades and European governments cut back on spending.

Though sales to emerging markets surged in June, they cannot compensate for a downturn in demand from major economies, Tom Orlik, an economist with Stone & McCarthy Research Associates in Beijing, said.

“A resurgent trade surplus will clearly strengthen the argument for rapid appreciation of the yuan,” he said. “But with the global recovery on slippery sands, the outlook for China’s exports is not as stable as the last two months of data suggest.”

That point was echoed by Wang Han, an economist with research firm CEBM in Shanghai.

Data due to be released on July 15 will probably show faster consumer price inflation, but the government will not want to tighten monetary policy, because domestic investment is flagging and exports, too, will start to slow, he said.

“It will be difficult for the central bank, but I think there is a strong possibility that China will not raise interest rates this year,” Wang said.

The market consensus is for China to desist from raising rates until the second quarter of 2011, according to a Reuters poll published on Friday.

(Additional reporting by Zhou Xin and Langi Chiang; Editing by Alan Wheatley)

UPDATE 2-China shrugs off global fears with export strength

BEIJING, July 10 (Reuters) – China’s trade surplus in June topped expectations on surprising strength in exports that suggests the global economic recovery has remained on track despite worries about a fresh slowdown.

Many analysts believe the export momentum will soon wane, but for now the latest numbers give ammunition to critics who say that Beijing is holding down the value of its yuan currency CNY=CFXS to gain an unfair trade advantage.

Chinese exports in June rose 43.9 percent from a year earlier, beating forecasts of a 38 percent rise, the customs administration said on Saturday. Imports rose 34.1 percent year on year, in line with projections.

That left China with a trade surplus of $20.0 billion, its largest in nine months. The market had expected a surplus of $13.8 billion.

“Exports were better than expected because the negative impact from the European debt crisis was not as serious as the market had feared,” said Liu Nenghua, an economist with Bank of Communications in Shanghai.

“Growth in China’s exports will slow down in coming months, that’s for sure,” Liu added. “But there will be no sharp drop.”

The strong trade numbers could help ease fears — for a time, at least — about the potential for a skid in the Chinese economy after the government’s campaign to clamp down on the red-hot property market.

YUAN IN FOCUS

They could also lead to fresh calls for Beijing to let the yuan rise more quickly. China de-pegged its currency from the U.S. dollar on June 19, after keeping it locked in place for 23 months to help exporters ride out the global economic turmoil.

The yuan has gained just 0.78 percent against the dollar since then, and pressure is again building on U.S. President Barack Obama to take a stronger line against Beijing. Critics say an undervalued exchange rate is an artificial boost for Chinese exporters, robbing other countries of jobs and growth.

As if anticipating this criticism, Zheng Yuesheng, statistics chief for the customs bureau, noted that China’s trade surplus in the first half of 2010 was about 40 percent less than in the same period last year.

“Our foreign trade has continued to move toward a roughly balanced direction,” he said on state television.

Trade disputes with the United States and Europe would be an additional source of uncertainty for markets at a time of great concern about the fragility of the global recovery.

China’s wider trade surplus contained another seed of unwelcome news. It pointed to the beginning of slacker domestic demand in the world’s fastest-growing major economy.

Over the past year, with the U.S. and European economies struggling to regain their footing, global firms and investors looked to China to make up for the shortfall.

China’s imports grew just 0.9 percent from May after calendar adjustments, the customs authority said. Imports of crude oil and soybeans still managed to hit monthly records, but imports of copper and iron ore slowed. [ID:nTOE66900C]

TRANSITORY STRENGTH

Analysts said that China’s export strength might be transitory. Shipments could slow in coming months as U.S. fiscal stimulus fades and European governments cut back on spending.

Though sales to emerging markets surged in June, they cannot compensate for a downturn in demand from major economies, Tom Orlik, an economist with Stone & McCarthy Research Associates in Beijing, said.

“A resurgent trade surplus will clearly strengthen the argument for rapid appreciation of the yuan,” he said. “But with the global recovery on slippery sands, the outlook for China’s exports is not as stable as the last two months of data suggest.”

That point was echoed by Wang Han, an economist with research firm CEBM in Shanghai.

Data due to be released on July 15 will probably show faster consumer price inflation, but the government will not want to tighten monetary policy, because domestic investment is flagging and exports, too, will start to slow, he said.

“It will be difficult for the central bank, but I think there is a strong possibility that China will not raise interest rates this year,” Wang said.

The market consensus is for China to desist from raising rates until the second quarter of 2011, according to a Reuters poll published on Friday. [ID:nTOE66803W]

(Additional reporting by Zhou Xin and Langi Chiang; Editing by Alan Wheatley)

FOREX-Dollar soft on recovery question, euro pauses

TOKYO, July 5 (Reuters) – The dollar held steady near a two-month low on Monday and the euro paused after last week’s boost from unwinding of short and leveraged positions, with traders and analysts seeing scope for it to squeeze a bit higher.

With attention turning to a slowdown in the United States and away from the euro zone’s banking and government debt woes, analysts said the next upside target for the euro was a May reaction high at $1.2673 EUR=.

Leveraged trades funded in the euro, be it long dollar, commodity currencies or emerging markets, were being cut, while at the same time the euro selling seen in April and May looked to be exhausted for now.

“I’m not seeing money flooding back into euro on a broad basis. You really have to describe it as exhaustion,” said Greg Gibbs, FX strategist at Royal Bank of Scotland in Sydney.

The question for markets at this point, with concern that the U.S. recovery was losing steam, was what should they buy.

“The fear of maybe not necessarily double-dip but certainly a very long period of low employment growth and very low rates is definitely playing into the markets’ view,” Gibbs said.

The euro EUR= eased 0.2 percent to $1.2540, with support seen around its 55-day moving average, currently near $1.2530. Last week, the euro gained 1.5 percent against the dollar, reversing a loss from the previous week and gaining greater distance from June’s four-year low at $1.1876 on trading platform EBS.

The euro faces resistance near $1.2595, the bottom of the cloud on daily Ichimoku charts, and then near $1.2620, a 38.2 percent retracement of its drop from its March high near $1.3820 down to its four-year low.

The euro’s rise late last week had stalled at $1.2613, just short of that retracement level.

Jonathan Cavenagh, currency strategist at Westpac in Sydney, said leveraged trades funded in euro were being cut and the low level of yield on the U.S. 10-year Treasuries suggested the euro should be trading higher.

U.S. yields have fallen sharply after a slew of soft U.S. economic numbers suggested recovery would be tepid. The 10-year note yield US10YT=RR has fallen below the psychological 3 percent mark, trading at 2.98 percent.

Friday’s monthly jobs report showed the economy shed 125,000 jobs in June, while private payrolls rose less than expected. Overall employment fell for the first time this year as thousands of temporary census jobs ended.

The data followed a raft of weak reports that suggested consumer spending, housing and factory activity were moderating. [ID:nN01165161]

The dollar lost ground last week before the data and on Friday the dollar index .DXY hit its lowest level in nearly two months at 84.132.

By Monday, it had steadied at 84.495, up 0.1 percent from late U.S. trading on Friday, with short-term support seen around 83.20, roughly a 38.2 percent retracement of the index’s move from a low of 74.17 in November to a high near 88.71 in June. Trade was quiet, with U.S. markets closed for a holiday.

The dollar edged up 0.2 percent against the yen to 87.92 yen, pulling further away from a seven-month low of 86.96 yen set last week, with some talk of dollar buying by Japanese importers.

But it lost 1.8 percent against the yen last week as U.S. yields fell, and traders said there was talk of options triggers below 85 yen. The dollar hasn’t fallen below 85 yen since November last year when it hit a 14-year low at 84.82 yen.

Data from the Currency Futures Trading Commission showed net long yen positions jumped in the week to June 29. The value of the dollar’s net long position slipped to about $9.5 billion in the week ended June 29 from $12.2 billion in the prior week. (Additional reporting by Anirban Nag and Reuters FX analyst Krishna Kumar in Sydney, Rika Otsuka and Masayuki Kitano in Tokyo; Editing by Chris Gallagher)
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FOREX-Dollar soft on recovery question, euro pauses

TOKYO, July 5 (Reuters) – The dollar held at its lowest in nearly two months on Monday and the euro paused after last week’s boost from unwinding of short and leveraged positions, with traders and analysts seeing scope for it to squeeze a bit higher.

With attention turning to a slowdown in the United States and away from the euro zone’s banking and government debt woes, analysts said the next upside target for the euro was a May reaction high at $1.2673 EUR=.

Leveraged trades funded in the euro, be it long dollar, commodity currencies or emerging markets, were being cut, while at the same time the euro selling seen in April and May looked to be exhausted for now.

“I’m not seeing money flooding back into euro on a broad basis. You really have to describe it as exhaustion,” said Greg Gibbs, FX strategist at Royal Bank of Scotland in Sydney.

The question for markets at this point, with concern that the U.S. recovery was losing steam, was what should they buy.

“The fear of maybe not necessarily double-dip but certainly a very long period of low employment growth and very low rates is definitely playing into the markets’ view,” Gibbs said.

The euro EUR= eased 0.2 percent to $1.2542, with near term support seen around its 55-day moving, currently at $1.2531. Last week, the euro gained 1.5 percent against the dollar, reversing a loss from the previous week and gaining greater distance from June’s four-year low at $1.1876.

Traders also said talk of repatriation by European banks helped lift the euro.

Jonathan Cavenagh, currency strategist at Westpac in Sydney, said leveraged trades funded in euro were being cut and the low level of yield on the U.S. 10-year Treasuries suggested the euro should be trading higher.

U.S. yields have fallen sharply after a slew of soft U.S. economic numbers suggested recovery would be tepid. The 10-year note yield US10YT=RR has fallen below the psychological 3 percent mark, trading at 2.98 percent.

Friday’s monthly jobs report showed the economy shed 125,000 jobs in June, while private payrolls rose less than expected. Overall employment fell for the first time this year as thousands of temporary census jobs ended.

The data followed a raft of weak reports which suggested consumer spending, housing and factory activity were moderating. For more details, click [nN01165161].

The dollar lost ground last week before the data and on Friday the dollar index .DXY hit its lowest level in nearly two months at 84.132.

By Monday, it had steadied at 84.499, with short-term support seen at around 83.20, roughly a 38.2 percent retracement of the index’s move from a low of 74.17 in November to a high of 88.71 in June. Trade was quiet, with U.S. markets closed for a holiday.

The dollar edged up against the yen, pulling further away from a 7-month low of 86.96 yen set last week, with some talk of dollar buying by Japanese importers.

But it lost 1.8 percent against the yen last week as U.S. yields fell, and traders said there was talk of options triggers below 85 yen. The dollar hasn’t fallen below 85 yen since November last year when it hit a 14-year low at 84.82 yen.

Data from the Currency Futures Trading Commission showed net long yen positions jumped in the week to June 29. The value of the dollar’s net long position slipped to about $9.5 billion in the week ended June 29, from $12.2 billion in the prior week.

The Australian dollar AUD=D4 and the New Zealand dollar NZD=D4 edged up slightly against the greenback.

But they still looked vulnerable after losing almost 4 percent last week, with sentiment hurt by weekend news that China’s non-manufacturing PMI had eased below 60 in June, following manufacturing surveys also showing expansion slowing. (Additional reporting by Anirban Nag in Sydney and Rika Otsuka in Tokyo; Editing by Joseph Radford)

Mexican stocks jump on Chicago PMI, America Movil

June 30 (Reuters) – Mexico’s IPC stock index rose on Wednesday after data showed business activity in the U.S. Midwest grew slightly more than expected, tempering concerns of a slowdown in the United States, Mexico’s top trading partner.

Financials

The IPC stock index .MXX jumped 1.01 percent to 31,790, bouncing back from its steepest one-day loss in a year in the previous session.

Tuesday’s gains also were supported by a 1.5 percent gain in share of America Movil (AMXL.MX) as Latin America’s top wireless provider recovered some ground after its steepest fall in more than five months on Tuesday. (Reporting by Michael O’Boyle; Editing by Theodore d’Afflisio)

ImagesBazaar Gets High Rating by ICRA for Performance Capability and Financial Strength

NEW DELHI–(Business Wire)–
The world’s largest Indian image bank, ImagesBazaar
(http://www.imagesbazaar.com), owned by Mash Audio Visuals Pvt. Ltd., became the
first stock photography entity to get the credit rating agency ICRA’s high
category ‘SE 2A’ rating for its strong performance capability and financial
strength.

ICRA factored in MASH’s satisfactory relationship with key stakeholders,
including employees, customers and creditors, and its ‘superior’ financial
performance.

In its report, ICRA highlights the following key strengths of MASH:

- Considerable experience of promoters for almost a decade in photography
industry

- Company maintained revenue growth even in slowdown; profitability has improved
over the period

- Reputed and very wide client base which spans from media agencies and ad
agencies to corporate clients

The high rating by ICRA, a leading credit rating agency in India, reflected
exceptional performance of the websites owned by MASH, ImagesBazaar
(http://www.imagesbazaar.com) and ShotIndia (http://www.shotindia.com).

With over 800,000 images on http://www.imagesbazaar.com and more than 120,000
images on http://www.shotindia.com, MASH has the world’s largest stock of Indian
images where one can search, purchase and download as per his needs. At present,
over 6000 clients in more than 42 countries use images shot by over 7200
photographers on http://www.imagesbazaar.com & http://www.shotindia.com for
their advertising, marketing and publishing needs.

ImagesBazaar
Name: Deepak Verma
Websites: http://www.imagesbazaar.com & http://www.shotindia.com
Email: deepak@imagesbazaar.com
Phone: +91-11-42686869

Copyright Business Wire 2010

JGB 10-yr yield falls to 7-yr low on bank bids, Kan

TOKYO, June 24 (Reuters) – The yield on 10-year Japanese government bonds fell to a seven-year low on Thursday, as domestic banks bought the notes to put excess cash to work and amid hopes for the government to make good on its vow to rein in debt.

The Japanese government’s fiscal austerity stance has added to the decline in yields, which had already been falling this month in the wake of Europe’s sovereign debt crisis and on the prospect of the global economic recovery losing steam.

The benchmark 10-year JGB yield JP10YTN=JBTC fell 2.5 basis points to 1.140 percent, its lowest since 2003.

It has fallen about 8 basis points since new Prime Minister Naoto Kan said a week ago that doubling the sales tax rate would be an option to curb the nation’s massive debt. [ID:TOE65M03K]

“How much fiscal reform he can achieve is another question. But for now, his stance is clearly helping the market,” said a fund manager at a U.S. asset management firm.

Kan said last week that his ruling Democratic Party of Japan will call for the sales tax to be hiked in a few years, in a sharp turnaround from his predecessor.

The 10-year yield’s fall to a seven-year low was also helped by purchases from banks seeking higher yields of longer-dated debt. Banks have surplus cash to invest due to a slowdown in lending.

Superlongs, meanwhile, saw buying by life insurers looking to extend the duration of their portfolios to match their assets with their liabilities.

The 30-year yield JP30YTN=JBTC declined 4.5 basis points to 1.950 percent, its lowest since March 2009.

The 20-year yield JP20YTN=JBTC also fell to a March 2009 trough, dropping 4 basis points to 1.890 percent.

The five-year yield JP5YTN=JBTC was flat at 0.385 percent and the two-year yield JP2YTN=JBTC was also unchanged, at 0.145 percent.

An auction of 2.6 trillion yen ($28.9 billion) of two-year JGBs drew firm investor interest on Tuesday, with the demand-indicative bid-to-cover ratio rising to 4.31 from 3.68 at the previous auction in May.

“It is the familiar situation of financial institutions buying short-end JGBs, as they would with financing bills, as they cannot let their cash sit idle,” said Keiko Onogi, a senior JGB strategist at Daiwa Securities Capital Markets.

“The Bank of Japan’s easy monetary policy is helping but a more pressing driver behind the demand is the surplus cash they have on their hands.”

The two-year/10-year yield spread tightened 2.5 basis points to 99.5 basis points, the tightest in 15 months.

Focus was on whether the benchmark 10-year yield would decline further.

“The 10-year yield may blip below 1.1 percent but I don’t think banks will keep buying beyond that level. You can’t expect much in the way of capital gains from there,” said a trader at a European brokerage.

September 10-year JGB futures 2JGBv1 rose 0.14 point to 141.06 but failed to break above their two-year peak of 141.19 hit earlier in June due to profit-taking by short-term speculators including momentum-following funds. (Additional reporting by Shinichi Saoshiro; Editing by Chris Gallagher)

Australia’s Valemus to expand, IPO looms

(Reuters) – The Australian unit of German construction group Bilfinger Berger (GBFG.DE) said on Wednesday it expected to double the size of its services business in three years through bolt-on acquisitions and organic growth.

The company, recently renamed Valemus ahead of a $1 billion-plus stock market listing next month, said it had no immediate plans to expand offshore and growth at its larger construction unit would be more steady in coming years.

“In the next three to four years we don’t see the need to go overseas. We see the growth opportunities in Australia as significant enough,” Valemus chief executive Peter Brecht said at the Reuters Global Real Estate and Infrastructure Summit.

Brecht was speaking ahead of a roadshow in Asia, Europe and the United States to market plans for an up to $1.1 billion float next month. He said investor interest in the float was high but there were some concerns about a predicted slowdown in Australian mining infrastructure spending.

Valemus, which translates from Latin to mean “we are strong”, earlier this month announced plans to push ahead with the country’s largest IPO in 8 months despite volatile markets which drove down valuations for the float to the lower levels of earlier expectations.

Brecht flies to Hong Kong on Wednesday to meet with investors to pitch the construction, engineering and services group which is being priced at 10.5 to 12 times 2010 earnings, lower than larger rival Leighton Holdings

Speaking in Sydney at the Reuters Summit, he said there was some concern from investors about a recent BIS Shrapnel report which predicted a 3 percent fall in mining and heavy industry construction in 2011.

However, he said this was not the indication Valemus was seeing from its own pipeline of work. The company has a forward order book of A$5.7 billion of work in hand at March 31, 2010.

“We have more work in hand for the 2011 year now than we had this time last year for the 2010 number so that is an indicator to us we will still have some growth in the business for 2011,” he said.

Valemus, named after an internal competition which drew over 1,200 submissions, has a 4 percent share of an estimated A$120 billion in Australian construction and engineering work up for grabs each year.

Brecht, a more than 22-year veteran with Valemus, would not say how much the company wanted to lift its market share to but said an infrastructure backlog, population demand and pressure on resources infrastructure would drive demand.

Valemus’ services business Conneq was expected to double in size of the next two or three years, he said, both through organic growth and strategic bolt-on acquisitions in mining, power and oil and gas.

The Valemus chief, who swims laps near the company office each day and loves rugby, boating and golf, said growth at its larger construction unit would be “steadier” but the company was underweight in the resource-rich state of Western Australia.

Valemus is hoping for a high level of interest from investors in Asia, Europe and the United States over the next week. He said there was no plan to attract large cornerstone investors.

Brecht said the company’s strategy would not change after the IPO but it would have the ability to respond faster to acquisition opportunities without needing clearance from parent Bilfinger which will no longer own a stake in the company after the float.

BoE to freeze interest rates to numb fiscal pain

(Reuters) – The Bank of England looks set to keep interest rates at a record low on Thursday — and probably for the rest of this year — as it seeks to bolster Britain’s fragile recovery and offset painful government spending cuts.

Although inflation has jumped to almost double the central bank’s 2 percent target, most members of the bank’s monetary policy committee reckon these price pressures will be short-lived.

For now, the risks to the recovery from the biggest fiscal squeeze in a generation and a slowdown in the euro zone, Britain’s biggest trading partner, are likely to hold sway.

Britain’s new coalition government will publish its first budget on June 22. It is likely to contain a mix of spending cuts and tax rises that could have a profound impact on both growth and inflation.

“The BoE will not want to take action before it knows what scale of fiscal tightening will be delivered in the budget,” said Marc Ostwald, an economist at Monument Securities. “The implications of the euro zone debt crisis also argue against doing anything precipitous.”

All 61 analysts polled by Reuters reckon UK interest rates will stay at 0.5 percent when the BoE ends its two-day policy meeting at 1100 GMT and most do not expect any tightening until early 2011.

Minutes to the BoE’s latest policy meeting show some members are worried inflation may not subside as quickly as expected. But while April’s rise in inflation to 3.7 percent surprised most analysts, bond markets show investors are betting on an increasingly benign inflation outlook.

STRONG HEADWINDS

Despite unprecedented monetary stimulus — including the injection of 200 billion pounds ($288.8 billion) into the economy in the form of quantitative easing — Britain’s recovery from its deepest recession since World War Two has been relatively muted.

The economy grew 0.3 percent in the first three months of this year, slower than the 0.4 percent achieved in the last quarter of 2009 and weaker than the BoE had initially forecast.

There are fears that mass lay-offs in the public-sector, which employs a fifth of Britain’s workforce, could prompt a renewed weakening in the second half of the year.

Finance minister George Osborne has pledged to cut the country’s budget deficit, currently at almost 11 percent of GDP, at a “significantly accelerated” pace, starting with 6 billion pounds of cuts this year.

With the euro zone suffering similar spending cuts, hopes of an export-led recovery also look misplaced.

“Relative muted recovery following deep recession, the looming major fiscal squeeze and the risk to UK economic activity coming from the euro zone debt crisis make a strong case for the BoE to keep its finger off the interest rate trigger,” said Howard Archer, an economist at IHS Global Insight.

(Editing by Toby Chopra)

Mexico’s peso weakens sharply after U.S. payrolls

June 4 (Reuters) – The Mexican peso weakened sharply on Friday after U.S. non-farm payrolls in May showed a sharp slowdown in private hiring, casting doubt on the strength of the recovery in the U.S. labor market.

The peso MXN= MEX01 hit a session low, losing 0.88 percent to 12.89 per U.S. dollar. (Reporting by Michael O’Boyle; Editing by Padraic Cassidy)

Infrastructure lemons may squeeze China banks

(Reuters) – Chinese banks could be headed for a crisis similar in some ways to what their Wall Street counterparts faced two years ago, as a chunk of the $1 trillion they made in dubious infrastructure loans to local governments looks set to sour.

And though the banks have lined up tens of billions of dollars in new capital-raising, they could be forced to raise billions more if China’s property market sees a sharp downturn.

Lending on a wide range of projects — from high speed railways to airports and bridges — mushroomed in China last year as Beijing launched a 4 trillion yuan ($586 billion) stimulus package to keep the economy humming during the global downturn.

But as Beijing moves to cool its now racing economy, including a red-hot real estate market, fears are mounting that local governments that depend on land sales for up to 45 percent of their revenues may be unable to pay back their massive loans.

Chinese banks may have as much as 7 trillion yuan in loans to local government infrastructure projects on their books, with 30-50 percent of that likely to go sour, estimated Stephen Green, China economist at Standard Chartered Bank.

“It’s like a time-bomb,” said Fan Kunxiang, analyst at Haitong Securities. “No one knows exactly how big the problem is or when it is going to explode. If one or two infrastructure projects fail, that would cause panic in the market.”

The sheer scale and nature of the problem is unclear due to opaque borrowing practices by local governments.

To better understand it, China’s banking regulator has launched an industry-wide investigation slated for completion by the end of this month.

The regulator has already ordered a drastic slowdown in infrastructure lending, and is the main force driving banks to raise billions of dollars in new capital to bolster their balance sheets against potential future losses.

All of China’s major lenders have announced various capital raising plans, hitting shares of top lenders like ICBC (1398.HK) (601398.SS), Bank of China (2388.HK) (601988.SS) and China Construction Bank (0939.HK) (601939.SS), even as all three reported record quarterly profits.

“The government is auditing local governments’ infrastructure projects, so I think the concern there is that regulators will force the banks to increase their provisions,” said CLSA equity strategist Christopher Wood.

SPECIAL VEHICLES, WHITE ELEPHANTS

China’s cash-strapped local governments have devised a system of financial smoke and mirrors to facilitate their infrastructure spending binge, often using special vehicles backed by land as collateral to finance projects with little chance of success.

Some 8,000 such vehicles now exist in China, half of them created over the past 18 months alone, according to Credit Suisse economist Dong Tao.

But many of the projects being built through such vehicles hardly look commercially viable.

In one exemplary case, Jiamusi, a small city in northeastern Heilongjiang province, plans to build a high-tech maglev train, even as a similar project in Shanghai, China’s commercial hub, continues to struggle years after starting operation.

Another case in Shanghai demonstrates how funds lent to such vehicles can often be abused for spending that has nothing to do with infrastructure. That saw a Shanghai district borrow 2 billion yuan in the name of a high-speed rail project, only to spend 1.3 billion on non-related matters like resettlement compensation, according to a state audit.

“No one really understands how much revenue-generating capability these projects have, how much land sales can help local governments repay, or how much these projects will add to growth,” Standard Chartered’s Green said.

“In other countries, these projects began with a budget, while in China, it’s all done off government balance sheets.”

Credit Suisse’s Tao warned that many such vehicles look alarmingly similar to those used by Wall Street banks that set off the global crisis, in terms of their high leverage, land-based valuations and lack of asset liquidity and transparency.

He said a crisis could blow up as soon as in 2011, triggered by a property market downturn as Beijing takes harsh steps to curb real estate speculation.

Such a crisis would not only affect major lenders, but also thousands of smaller institutions such as city commercial banks and rural credit co-operatives that typically have close ties with local governments, said Green.

Green added that one of the most basic problems lies in the current ban on local governments issuing bonds directly, a common practice in other countries.

“Fundamentally you need local government fiscal reform … and that implies local governments are held accountable for their debts and that’s very, very hard to do in this system,” he said.

($1=6.83 Yuan)

(Editing by Doug Young and Muralikumar Anantharaman)

UPDATE 1-Euro zone factory PMI sinks, output growth slows

LONDON, June 1 (Reuters) – Manufacturing in the euro zone expanded in May, but at a far slower rate than April’s 46-month high as cost pressures and tighter margins drove firms to take their feet off the production accelerator, a survey showed on Tuesday.

The 16-nation bloc and its common currency have been hit by waves of investor insecurity churned up by the region’s debt crisis and fears that troubles in Greece may be spreading to other peripheral euro zone economies.

“There has been a slowdown in growth globally and in the euro zone there is subdued domestic demand due to the austerity measure implemented in some countries,” said Luigi Speranza at BNP Paribas.

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

For a graphic see: r.reuters.com/quj57k

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

The Markit Eurozone Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index for May sank to 55.8 from 57.6 in April, nudged down from an earlier flash estimate of 55.9.

This is its eighth month above the 50.0 mark that divides growth from contraction, but markets were unmoved by the data.

Cost pressures were on the rise, with the price of factories’ raw materials forced up by the weaker euro.

The output index recorded its second fastest slide in the survey’s history — only surpassed in the aftermath of Lehman Brothers’ collapse — to stand well shy of April’s near 10-year high of 61.2 at 56.8. It inched up from a flash reading of 56.7.

“Importantly, however, the pace of growth remained robust, and the slowdown in May no doubt reflects a payback from April’s ultra-strong growth to some extent,” said Chris Williamson at data provider Markit.

In Germany, the bloc’s biggest economy, manufacturing activity slowed from the previous month’s survey’s record high. Neighbouring France, the second biggest, saw growth in its sector slow from April’s near 4-year high.

Spain and Italy also saw a dip in their main indexes. A separate survey on the UK showed manufacturing activity holding on to its strongest pace in 15 years.

Euro zone manufacturers were hit by rising input prices, with that index reaching its highest level since July 2008 at 73.7 last month, compared to 73.4 in April.

The euro has been battered in recent weeks, driving up costs of materials from outside the bloc, on fears that Greece’s debt problems will spread and in spite of a $1 trillion safety net set up by European policymakers earlier this month.

However, the output price index fell from last month, suggesting producers had more trouble passing on price rises to customers.

Flash data released on Monday showed prices in the bloc rose 1.6 percent in May, faster than the 1.5 percent seen in April.

Detailed PMI data are only available under licence from Markit and customers need to apply to Markit for a licence.

To subscribe to the full data, click on the link below: here

For further information, please phone Markit on +44 20 7260 2454 or email economics@markit.com

(Editing by Toby Chopra, John Stonestreet)