Category: Debt

Singapore Stocks-May fall on euro zone debt woes

SINGAPORE, April 16 (Reuters) – Singapore shares may open
lower on Monday following losses on Wall Street, dragged by
renewed concerns over Europes debt woes after rising bond
yields in Spain spooked investors.

———————-MARKET SNAPSHOT @ 0012 GMT ————
INSTRUMENT LAST PCT CHG NET CHG
SP 500 1370.26 -1.25% -17.310
USD/JPY 80.98 0.11% 0.090
10-YR US TSY YLD 1.9928 — 0.003
SPOT GOLD 1652.79 -0.35% -5.790
US CRUDE 102.36 -0.46% -0.470
DOW JONES 12849.59 -1.05% -136.99
ASIA ADRS 125.81 -1.26% -1.61
————————————————————-

gt; Wall St ends worst two weeks since November
gt; Global growth concerns push yields below 2 pct
gt; Euro pressured as debt worries fester
gt; Gold falls almost 1.5 pct in end-of-week liquidation
gt; Oil slips as China growth lags forecast

Stocks and factors to watch:
— SINGAPORE PRESS HOLDINGS LTD
– Publishing and property firm Singapore Press Holdings
posted on Friday an 11.6 percent rise in second-quarter net
profit to S$84.1 million ($67.42 million), helped by higher
rental income.

— CAPITALAND LTD
– Southeast Asias largest property firm CapitaLand said it
has sold 125 out of 180 units of its new residential development
in Singapore, Sky Habitat, as of Sunday evening.
The average price of units sold ranged from S$1,747 per
square foot for a one-bedroom unit to S$1,642 per square foot
for a four-bedroom unit, CapitaLand said.

— LIONGOLD CORP LTD
– Goldmining firm LionGold said it has made a takeover bid
for Australia gold producer Castlemaine Goldfields Ltd
in a deal worth A$50.3 million.

– Singapores benchmark Straits Times Index rose
0.33 percent on Friday to 2,987.82 points.
– The Dow Jones industrial average lost 1.05 percent
to 12,849.59. The Standard Poors 500 Index retreated
1.25 percent to 1,370.26. The Nasdaq Composite Index
dropped 1.45 percent to 3,011.33.

ASIA-PACIFIC STOCK MARKETS:
Japan S.Korea China
Hong Kong Taiwan SE Asia
Australia/NZ India

OTHER MARKETS:
Wall Street Gold Currency
Eurostocks Oil JP bonds
ADR Report LME metals US bonds

STOCKS NEWS US, Europe, Asia:

DIARIES DATA:
IPO diary data
US earnings diary
Singapore diary
Eurostocks Week Ahead
Asia earnings diary
European diary
Wall Street Week Ahead
TOP NEWS:
Asian companies US company
News
European companies Forex news
Global Economy Technology
Telecoms Media news
Banking news
General/political
Asia Macro
A multimedia version of Reuters Top News is available at:
topnews.session.rservices.com
LIVE PRICES DATA:
World Stocks Currency rates
Dow Jones/NASDAQ Nikkei
FTSE 100 Debt
(Local currency) LME price overview
($1 = 1.2475 Singapore dollars)

(Reporting by Charmian Kok; Editing by Muralikumar
Anantharaman)

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Korean Won Falls as Europe Debt Crisis Dims Economic Outlook

South Korea’s won fell for the
first time in three days as concern Europe’s debt crisis will
worsen sapped demand for riskier assets and the central bank cut
its 2012 economic growth forecast. Government bonds rose.

The Kospi (KOSPI) Index of shares dropped 0.8 percent, following a
decline in the Standard amp; Poor’s 500 Index, as the cost of
insuring Spain’s bonds against default surged to a record last
week. The Bank of Korea lowered its growth forecast today to 3.5
percent, from a December estimate of 3.7 percent. China, the
biggest buyer of Korean exports, widened the yuan’s trading band
in a step toward making its currency fully convertible.

“With Spain’s debt issue brought up again and Korea’s
growth forecast lowered, there was increased dollar demand,
especially among offshore investors,” said Kim Do Hee, a Seoul-
based currency trader at Australia amp; New Zealand Banking Group.

The won fell 0.3 percent to close at 1,138.63 per dollar in
Seoul, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. It touched
1,131.25 on April 13, a one-week high. One-month implied
volatility for the won, a measure of exchange-rate swings used
to price options, rose eight basis points, or 0.08 percentage
point, to 8.65 percent.

The central bank lowered its 2012 inflation forecast to 3.2
percent from 3.3 percent. Next year, economic growth will likely
accelerate to 4.2 percent while inflation will moderate to 3.1
percent, according to today’s statement. The current-account
surplus is expected to narrow to $12.5 billion from $14.5
billion this year.

More Flexible Yuan

The People’s Bank of China now allows 1 percent moves from
a daily fixing, after keeping the limit at 0.5 percent since May
2007. A more flexible yuan may help Governor Zhou Xiaochuan
control inflation and support an economy that expanded in the
first quarter at the slowest pace since mid-2009. The yuan has
weakened 0.4 percent so far this year after strengthening 4.7
percent in 2011.

“We should consider possibilities for yuan weakening, not
only strengthening, after the trading band expansion,” said
Jung Kyung Parl, head of market analysis team at KEB Futures Co.
in Seoul. “The decline in China’s reserves and yuan
appreciation last year boosts the case for China to weaken the
currency to support exports, which will limit won gains.”

The yield on South Korea’s 3.25 percent bonds due December
2014 dropped four basis points to 3.46 percent in Seoul, Korea
Exchange Inc. prices show. That’s the lowest rate since
February. Three-year debt futures rose 0.06 to 104.11 and the
one-year interest-rate swap slid two basis points to 3.50
percent.

To contact the reporter on this story:
Jiyeun Lee in Seoul at
jlee1029@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story:
Sandy Hendry at
shendry@bloomberg.net

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Student loan debt threatens economic recovery

April 16

Student loan debt threatens economic recovery

Morning Sentinel Staff

A recent Consumer Financial Protection Bureau report indicates the total amount of US student loan debt has surpassed $1 trillion.

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Spain in Debt Crisis War, Fighting to Stop Turning into a Black Economy

But first, a personal note. My friend and fellow writer/economic blogger Mike Mish Shedlocks wife has ALS, better known as Lou Gehrigs disease. I have talked at length with him the past year as the disease progressed. It is a truly evil affliction. Mish has stayed the course, working with his wife, and now the options will soon be down to her communicating with a device that follows her eye movements to choose words on a computer screen. I cannot even imagine the pain of living with a loved one in the condition.

Mish is not asking for anything for his family, but he is sponsoring a raffle for ALS research. Please consider buying one or more tickets, or making a small donation to the Les Turner ALS Foundation. The money will go to research to find a cure, so that someday no one has to go through such pain. Thanks.

The War for Spain

In my book Endgame, co-author Jonathan Tepper and I wrote a chapter detailing the problems that Spain was facing. It was obvious to us as we wrote in late 2010 that there really was no easy exit for Spain. The end would come in a torrent of misery and tears. Tepper actually grew up in a drug rehab center in Madrid as a kid, his best friends were recovering junkies. (For the record, he has written a fascinating story of his early life and is looking for a publisher.) His Spanish is thus impeccable, and he used to get asked to be on Spanish programs all the time. Until the day came when the government created a list of five people, including our Jonathan, who were basically named Enemies of Spain, and pointedly suggested they not be quoted or invited onto any more programs.

As it turns out, the real enemy was the past government. We knew (and wrote) that the situation was worse than the public data revealed, but until the new government came to power and started to disclose the true condition of the country, we had no real idea. The prior government had cooked the books. So far, it seems it even managed to do so without the help of Goldman Sachs (!)

In about ten days I will be sending you a detailed analysis of all this, courtesy of some friends, but lets tease out some of the highlights. True Spanish debt-to-GDP is not 60% but closer to 90%, and perhaps more when you count the various and sundry local-government debts guaranteed by the federal government, most of which will simply not be paid. Spanish banks are miserably underwater, and that is with write-offs and mark to market on debts that totals not even half of what it should be. If Spanish housing drops as much relative to its own bubble as US housing has so far (and it will, if not more), then valuations will drop 50%. The level of overbuilding was stupendous, with one home built for every new every person as the population grew. We know that unemployment is 23%, with youth unemployment over 50%. Etc, etc. We could spend 50 pages (which is what I will get you access to) detailing the dire distress that is Spain.

Which brings us to this week. It was only a few weeks ago that most everyone, including your humble analyst, thought that the ECB had bought a little time with its shock and awe euro;1-trillion LTRO. Lots of analysis said there would now be at least a year to put programs in place to deal with the coming crisis.

Yet we may now be fast approaching the Bang! moment when the markets simply refuse to believe in the firepower that whatever governmental entities can muster. It happened with Greece, as it has in all past debt crises. Things go along more or less swimmingly until, as Ken Rogoff and Carmen Reinhart so articulately detail in This Time is Different, we wake up one morning to find that Mr. Market has seemingly lost all interest in funding a country at a level of interest rates that is credibly sustainable. When interest rates ran to 15% for Greece, even arithmetically challenged European politicians could understand that Greece had no hope of ever paying off its debt.

When rates rose last year to almost 7% for Italy and 6% for Spain, before the ECB let loose the hounds of monetization, they were approaching the limits of sustainability. Rates came back down as the ECB either bought directly or engineered the purchase of the bonds of the two countries. But now the LTRO effect appears to have worn off, and yesterday interest rates for Spanish ten-year bonds climbed again to 5.99%. There is a large auction for ten-year Spanish bonds next week, which the market is clearly anticipating with a bit of concern. Meanwhile, Italian interest rates are not rising in lock step, which shows that the anxiety is now clearly directed at Spain. Ho-hum, move along folks, nothing to see here in Rome.

(What follows now is a mix of the facts as I read them and speculation on my part. I admit I may be reading more into the information, as I squint at it at 3 AM, than is justified. But then again, there is a substantial amount of history that suggests I am not totally off base…)

Spain Goes All In

I came across this tidbit from typicallyspanish.com, and my antennae started to twitch (hat tip Joan McCullough). The key is the second paragraph. (Hacienda is the common name of the Spanish tax ministry, otherwise known as the Agencia Estatal de Administracioacute;n Tributaria.)

Spain led the loss in the number of self-employed workers in Europe in 2011. One in two of the self-employed to lose their jobs in the EU over the year was Spanish. Seven out of ten self-employed in Spain do not employ anyone else. Over 2011 Europe lost a total of 203,200 self-employed workers, 0.6% fewer than in 2010.

Following the news that cash business transactions over 2500 euro; are to be banned, Hacienda has said they will not fine anyone who admits that they have been making payments of more than 2,500 euro; over the previous three months. The cash limit is part of the Governments anti-fraud plans which have been approved today, Friday. Those Spaniards who have a bank account outside the country now face the legal obligation of having to inform Hacienda about the account. The Government hopes its anti-fraud measures will bring in 8.171 billion euro;.

My fellow US citizens will be saying to themselves, So what? We have to report our foreign bank accounts, and any large cash transactions are flagged. But gentle reader, this is much different. This is new law for Spain, basically currency control writ large, and bells have to be going off all over Europe.

First of all, note that Greece never tried to require its citizens to report cash transactions or to list foreign deposits. This is the new Spanish government revealing serious desperation. The governments back is to the wall. They have to know they will not collect the taxes they need to generate, but are going to try anyway to demonstrate to the rest of Europe (read Germany) that they are doing everything they can.

In a side note, on Wednesday, Spains interior minister introduced new measures to thwart plots using urban guerrilla warfare methods to incite protests. And the local papers are printing op-eds by economists talking about how the effort to comply with German austerity demands will just make the economy worse, and that the government is not taking into account the resolve of labor unions to oppose them. Germany is the problem. It pains me to say this (truly it does), but this is what we were writing about Greece, not all that long ago. We are seeing footage of demonstrations, verging on riots. It is a familiar pattern.

Second, lets review what I wrote a month ago. I noted that the LTRO money was being used by Spanish banks to buy Spanish government debt (and Italian banks were buying Italian government debt, etc.). The intention was to help the two countries specifically and Europe in general to finance their debts and allow banks to shore up their capital as part of that effort. But what that does is yield the unintended consequence of making a breakup of the eurozone easier, as it helps get Spanish and Italian debt off the books of German and French banks.

The only reason Germany and France, et al., cared about Greece is that their banks had so much Greek debt on their balance sheets, in many cases more than enough to render them insolvent. Bailing out the banks directly would have been costly, so better (thought the European leaders) to do it with bailouts from funds created with guarantees from the various governments (which is a backdoor way to get it from taxpayers) and the European Central Bank. A crisis was avoided and there was a more or less orderly Greek default which anybody who bothered to look at the math saw coming well in advance.

A further side note: Spanish-bank borrowing from the European Central Bank doubled last month, revealing a dangerous dependence on emergency funding that on Friday triggered renewed turmoil in financial markets. (The Telegraph) And the Spanish stock market is down some 30% over the past year.)

So, in the effort to make sure that everyone pays their taxes and to stop tax fraud, the Spanish government is going to find out which of its citizens have moved their money out of Spain. And lets be clear, money has been flying out of the banks of Spain and Portugal (and to some extent Italy) as it did, and still is, in Greece.

And it will be easier to track that offshore money than you think. Some people, I am sure, moved their money into cash and then out of the country. But others simply wired the money, thus leaving a trail. Spanish banking regulators can easily require they be given that information, and what bank will say no to the regulators? Spain does not collect taxes from its citizens if they are residents of a foreign country (as the US does), but it can tax everyone who lives in Spain. And if you live in Spain and decide to diversify your risk among a few other countries? I am not sure of Spanish tax law, but I reasonably assume you are supposed to report all your income from whatever source. (Otherwise there would be no one investing with Spanish banks, brokerages, and investment advisors if it were legal not to report foreign investments, then everyone would invest outside of the country.)

Let me hazard a modest prediction: We will see a rather sudden and substantial need for physical cash in certain other peripheral countries, as now their citizens may not want to leave trails as they go about opening foreign bank accounts. What is to keep Italy from doing as Spain has done? Or Portugal? Or France? Or Germany?

Let me be clear about something. I am not suggesting that people should not pay their taxes. If you choose to live in a country, you should pay the taxes that are required. What Spain is trying to do is simply make sure that all their citizens pay the proper amount of taxes. If there was already 100% compliance, there would be no need for new regulations like Spains. And the same goes for the US. Our penalties are rather stiff for not paying taxes, more so, Im guessing, than in most of Europe. I have on more than one occasion noted that the national sport of Italy is tax avoidance.

My friends in Spain tell me a lot of business is done in cash. But that is the case in the US and almost everywhere I go. There are a lot of (ahem) independent taxi drivers, services, etc. that do not take anything but cash. Maybe they report everything, but I do not bother to ask. (When I was a waiter in college, did I report all of my tips? I was required to report a minimum amount of income for each hour worked, but did I report everything? Since it has been 40 years and the statute of limitations has run out by now, I might admit to missing a few dollars here and there.)

I imagine there are quite a few Spanish citizens who are not sleeping well this weekend. And more than a few people tossing and turning in other countries as well. If the next month comes and goes without any sign of unusual cash movement in Europe, then I will owe the peoples of peripheral Europe a big apology for doubting their willingness to pay their taxes. Or maybe it will turn out that they were better at avoidance than your average American, and planned their movements far in advance…

Lets get back to the central point. Spain is too big to fail and too big to save. The bond markets are clearly getting nervous, much sooner than was planned. Spain is clearly attempting to demonstrate that it will do everything in its power to comply with the new European austerity rules. Yet Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy has warned that the situation has created a vicious circle that strangles Spain.

Rajoy delivered a strongly worded speech to parliament, insisting that it was as clear as day that Spain would not need a Greek-style bailout. But in recognition that the country is losing market confidence, he appealed to other European leaders to be careful with their comments and remember that what is good for Spain is good for the eurozone. (The London Telegraph)

One can look at the amount of money Spain will need to refinance in the coming year and look at their financial ability, then look at how much can possibly be raised by the European community, even under the proposed new structures, and readily come to the conclusion that there is simply not enough money to save Spain if the market goes Bang!

The only possible solution I see is for the European Central Bank to step in with some new program. ECB President Mario Draghi has demonstrated a marked ability to come up with new, creative ways to kick the can down the road. Finding the money to bail out Spain is hopefully in his book of tricks. As fellow central banker Ben Bernanke has noted, Mario has a printing press. And the LTRO showed he knows where it is and how to use it.

We Are Not Greece

The German Bundesbank is saying as loudly as it can, QE? Nein!! But I count only two German votes among the 23 that compose the board of the ECB. Spain is demonstrating to its European brothers and sisters that it is doing all it can. We are not Greece is the clear statement. And We need and deserve your help. Yesterday, Rajoy pointedly noted again that What is good for Spain is good for the eurozone.

One should not underestimate the willingness of politicians who are viscerally committed to a certain action (in this case European unity) to spend someone elses money in the pursuit of that action. Especially if that money is a hidden tax in the form of debt monetization.

The markets are moving up the time table on the next large monetization of Spanish (and eventually Italian?) debt. Germans will shout that this is inflationary, and for them it probably will be. But much of the rest of Europe is in the grip of deflation. Spain is clearly in a classic Keynesian liquidity trap. This is what can happen when you have very different economies operating under one monetary roof. This is not simply a banking or sovereign-debt crisis, it is about a massive trade imbalance and huge differences in the productivity of labor. The trade imbalance between the south Portugal, Spain, Italy, and Greece and the north (mostly Germany) must be solved before there can be any resolution of the economic crisis. This is Economics 101, which European politicians seem to have slept through.

There will be the attempt to create some sort of fund to buy Spanish debt, but it will prove to not be enough. And given recent market movements, it may not be able to happen fast enough. It will not surprise me if the ECB uses the promise of such a fund as a pretext for acting sooner.

And yes, this will lower the value of the euro. We will have to see how far Europe is willing to push the process. Greece will soon default again (they are in a depression and have a national election in early May), Portugal is still moving toward being bailed out, and the Irish are growing tired of having to repay the British, French, and Germans for bailing out their failed banks. Think bailout fatigue isnt growing among European voters? Stay tuned…

The New Labor Force

I will end this letter with the beginning of what I intended to write originally and hope to finish next week. Work and employment is changing before our eyes in the US and much of the developed world. As the Baby Boomer generation reaches retirement age and finds out that either it cannot afford to retire or does not want to retire, the trickle-down effect to younger workers is starting to become apparent in the data.

Lets look at three charts (hat tip to John Hussman, who called this to our attention and got me looking at the details). The first shows the employment level in the US for the last five years. The gray area is the official period of recession. Employment growth since the end of the recession has been only a few hundred thousand jobs a month; but since employment is a lagging indicator, you can claim that we have recovered 4 million jobs since the employment bottom in late 2009 or about 2 million jobs since the 3rd quarter of 2009. It all depends on where you want to start your count. But we are still down roughly 4.5 million jobs since the beginning of the recession. This has been the slowest recovery since the end of WWII.

Now lets look at the next chart. This is the employment level for those over the age of 55. Notice that it kept rising all through the recession and especially after. People over 55 have seen their total employment level rise by about 4 million jobs since the beginning of the recession, and over 3 million jobs since the 3rd quarter of 2009. Almost any way you look at it, those over 55 have seen their jobs level improve over those who are younger. If you take the end of the 3rd quarter as your marker, the Boomer generation has seen its jobs level rise by 3 million, while overall jobs rose by just 2 million! Those who are younger are actually falling behind!

And once last chart before we go. Last week we looked at how the civilian participation rate (the percentage of the population who have a job or want a job) for the US has been falling for a decade and especially since the end of the recession. You can attribute a high percentage of the apparent decrease in unemployment to the fall in the participation rate.

Except for one group or cohort. This next chart is the participation rate of those over 65. Their participation rate is rising. The graph is noisy, but the trend is clear. Whether willingly or out of necessity, older workers are staying longer in the work force. And given the rather lackluster employment growth, they are taking jobs that would normally go to younger workers, which is why we are seeing higher rates of unemployment among the latter. We will go into the why of that next week, but a great deal of it has to do with work skills.

A Little Blue Suede Shoe Trouble

My travel schedule is rather hectic, and I will be on the road some 22 out of the next 26 days. Only in the US, which is easier on my body, but air travel has long lost its romance. Airport security can take the fun right out of travel, not to mention the time. Today I was lost in thought, thinking about this letter as I stood in line. I went through the drill, as I have done hundreds of times, taking out the laptop, taking off the coat and shoes, emptying the pockets, etc. Except this time I forgot the shoes. I went right on through the line with the new body scanners (which for some reason I dont like), then began to collect my gear and noticed my shoes were not in the tray. (And yes, these are the very same blue suede shoes that Swedbank bought me a few weeks ago in Stockholm, when my bags were lost. I have found them to be quite comfortable and stylish travel shoes.)

So I looked down. I was still wearing them. I laughed and remarked about it to the security guy at the tail end of the line and began to leave, when suddenly they stopped everything. Seems I had found a particularly zealous security person. Not only did I have to take off my shoes, but I had to go back through security and get scanned all over again. Next time I will try being funny with a more amenable crowd.

It is time to hit the send button. It is once again late, but I get to sleep a little later here in Frisco, so I can adjust. Have a great week.

Your proud member of the working Boomer generation analyst,

By John F. Mauldin
Outside the Box is a free weekly economic e-letter by best-selling author and renowned financial expert, John Mauldin. You can learn more and get your free subscription by visiting www.JohnMauldin.com.

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Copyright 2012 John Mauldin. All Rights Reserved
Note: John Mauldin is the President of Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC (MWA), which is an investment advisory firm registered with multiple states. John Mauldin is a registered representative of Millennium Wave Securities, LLC, (MWS), an FINRA registered broker-dealer. MWS is also a Commodity Pool Operator (CPO) and a Commodity Trading Advisor (CTA) registered with the CFTC, as well as an Introducing Broker (IB). Millennium Wave Investments is a dba of MWA LLC and MWS LLC. Millennium Wave Investments cooperates in the consulting on and marketing of private investment offerings with other independent firms such as Altegris Investments; Absolute Return Partners, LLP; Plexus Asset Management; Fynn Capital; and Nicola Wealth Management. Funds recommended by Mauldin may pay a portion of their fees to these independent firms, who will share 1/3 of those fees with MWS and thus with Mauldin. Any views expressed herein are provided for information purposes only and should not be construed in any way as an offer, an endorsement, or inducement to invest with any CTA, fund, or program mentioned here or elsewhere. Before seeking any advisors services or making an investment in a fund, investors must read and examine thoroughly the respective disclosure document or offering memorandum. Since these firms and Mauldin receive fees from the funds they recommend/market, they only recommend/market products with which they have been able to negotiate fee arrangements.

Opinions expressed in these reports may change without prior notice. John Mauldin and/or the staffs at Millennium Wave Advisors, LLC and InvestorsInsight Publishing, Inc. (InvestorsInsight) may or may not have investments in any funds cited above.

Disclaimer PAST RESULTS ARE NOT INDICATIVE OF FUTURE RESULTS. THERE IS RISK OF LOSS AS WELL AS THE OPPORTUNITY FOR GAIN WHEN INVESTING IN MANAGED FUNDS. WHEN CONSIDERING ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENTS, INCLUDING HEDGE FUNDS, YOU SHOULD CONSIDER VARIOUS RISKS INCLUDING THE FACT THAT SOME PRODUCTS: OFTEN ENGAGE IN LEVERAGING AND OTHER SPECULATIVE INVESTMENT PRACTICES THAT MAY INCREASE THE RISK OF INVESTMENT LOSS, CAN BE ILLIQUID, ARE NOT REQUIRED TO PROVIDE PERIODIC PRICING OR VALUATION INFORMATION TO INVESTORS, MAY INVOLVE COMPLEX TAX STRUCTURES AND DELAYS IN DISTRIBUTING IMPORTANT TAX INFORMATION, ARE NOT SUBJECT TO THE SAME REGULATORY REQUIREMENTS AS MUTUAL FUNDS, OFTEN CHARGE HIGH FEES, AND IN MANY CASES THE UNDERLYING INVESTMENTS ARE NOT TRANSPARENT AND ARE KNOWN ONLY TO THE INVESTMENT MANAGER.

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Of Debt, Gold and Okun’s Law

Is golds run over? Lets look at some facts.

The amount of money the federal government owes to its creditors, combined with IOUs to government retirement and other programs, now tops $15.23 trillion. Thats roughly equal to the value of all goods and services the US economy produces in one year: $15.17 trillion as of September, 2011.

Among advanced economies, only Greece, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Japan and Portugal have debts larger than their economies.

The US government spent over $454 billion just on interest on the national debt during fiscal 2011.

The debt ceiling stands at nearly $16.4 trillion.Some predict the US will run out of money by September 2012. The next increase to the debt ceiling could be as high as $2 trillion.

zerohedge.com

Since Barack Obama was elected, the US government has added $5 trillion more to the national debt.

The United States government is responsible for more than a third of all the government debt in the entire world.

Mandatory federal spending surpassed total federal revenue for the first time ever in fiscal 2011.

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Nikkei falls 1.5 pct, Spanish debt problems fester

* Megabanks, brokers fall on euro zone concerns
* Sharp up 3 pct on high performance panel production
* US earnings likely to be catalyst for market rebound

By Mari Saito
TOKYO, April 16 (Reuters) – Japans Nikkei share average
fell 1.5 percent on Monday on renewed concerns about Europes
debt crisis, hitting major exporters with exposure to the region
as well as big banks and brokers.
The benchmark Nikkei lost 142.24 points to 9,495.75
after gains in the two previous sessions, while the broader
Topix fell 1.2 percent to 805.98.
Rising bond yields in Spain and a record-high cost of
insuring the countrys debt against default sparked fears of a
flare-up in Europes debt crisis on Friday.
Big exporters to Europe came under pressure. TDK Corp
fell 2.8 percent, Konica Minolta Holdings Inc
was down 2.3 percent and Nikon Corp slipped 1.5 percent
after the euro fell to an eight-week low against the yen, last
trading at 105.35 yen on euro zone concerns in the
early Asian trade.
Bucking the trend, Sharp Corp climbed 3.1 percent
after it said it had begun producing the worlds first high
performance liquid crystal display panels, which traders said
could give it an edge over its South Korean and Taiwanese
competitors in the mobile devices market.
Eiji Kinouchi, senior strategist at Daiwa Securities said
the Wall Street earnings season could provide a catalyst for a
rebound in Japans equities this week.
Rather than high-performing technology shares, we should
look at major US defensives that have underperformed the
market. If these companies, mostly retail and pharmaceuticals,
post better-than-expected earnings this week I think you could
see a larger market rebound in the US and Japan, said
Kinouchi.
US technology bellwether Intel Corp is due to
post its results on Tuesday, followed by other marquee names
such as American Express Co, General Electric Co,
and McDonalds Corp.
Japans megabanks and brokers were heavily sold off,
tracking the performance of their US counterparts, with
Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Sumitomo Mitsui
Financial Group and Mizuho Financial Group
down between 2 and 2.4 percent.
Nomura Holdings was down 2 percent and Daiwa
Securities Group dropped 1.9 percent.
Among the top performers on the Topix core 30 list
was Kansai Electric Power Co, up 0.8 percent, after
Japans government declared its two idled nuclear reactors safe
to restart.
All but one of Japans 54 nuclear reactors are now off line,
most of them for regular maintenance checks, as public concerns
over nuclear safety in the wake of Fukushimas atomic disaster
have kept them from restarting.
US stocks closed out their worst week this year on Friday,
with financials, materials and energy shares down after
disappointing Chinese growth data and concerns that Europes
debt crisis was flaring up again.
The cost of insuring Spanish debt against default for five
years closed above 500 basis points for the first time,
according to provider Markit on Friday, amid fears about the
high exposure of the countrys banking sector to sovereign debt.
Data on Friday also showed Spanish banks had borrowed a
record 316.3 billion euros from the European Central Bank in
March, and markets fear much of the funds have been placed in
domestic sovereign debt.

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Treasuries Set for Biggest Weekly Loss in Month Before Home Data

Treasuries Set for Biggest Weekly Loss in Month Before Home Data
January 20, 2012, 5:46 PM EST

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  • Treasuries Decline, Snap Two-Day Gain Before U.S. Report on GDP
  • Treasuries Extend Biggest Gain in 2 Weeks as Gross Sees More QE
  • Treasury 10-Year Notes Fluctuate Before Sale, Fed Projection
  • U.S. Debt in Worst Start Since 2003 on Strengthening Economy

By Keith Jenkins and Wes Goodman

Jan. 20 (Bloomberg) — Treasuries headed for their biggest weekly decline in a month before a U.S. report forecast to show home sales increased in December, adding to signs the world’s largest economy is gaining momentum.

U.S. government securities are having their worst start to a year since 2003 after data yesterday showed employment and manufacturing improved, while declining yields at European debt sales stoked speculation the region’s crisis is easing. The Citi Macro Risk Index dropped to a five-month low of 0.601 yesterday, showing increased demand for higher-yielding assets.

“Domestic data has been reasonably good and that’s been a catalyst to the selloff in Treasuries,” said Eric Wand, a fixed-income strategist at Lloyds Bank Corporate Markets in London. “Risk sentiment has been generally positive this week, which reduces the safe-haven bid, pushing yields higher.”

The benchmark 10-year yield was little changed at 1.98 percent at 6:41 a.m. in New York, according to Bloomberg Bond Trader prices. The 2 percent note due in November 2021 traded at 100 5/32. The yield increased 12 basis points, or 0.12 percentage point, this week, the most since the five-day period ended Dec. 23.

The difference between two- and 10-year yields widened one basis point to 1.75 percentage points after reaching 1.76 percentage points, the most since Jan. 6. The spread was as narrow as 1.47 percentage points on Oct. 4.

Worst Since 2003

Treasuries have handed investors a 0.3 percent loss in 2012 as of yesterday, according to indexes compiled by Bank of America Merrill Lynch. U.S. corporate bonds returned 0.7 percent this year and German bunds fell 0.1 percent, the indexes show. The MSCI All Country World Index of stocks rose 5 percent.

U.S. home purchases increased 5.2 percent last month to a 4.65 million annual rate, the most since May 2010, according to economists surveyed by Bloomberg before the National Association of Realtors reports the figures today.

Initial jobless claims plunged to 352,000 in the week ended Jan. 14, the lowest level since April 2008, the Labor Department said yesterday. A Federal Reserve report on Jan. 18 showed factory output increased.

Treasuries rose earlier today as European stocks fell from a five-month high, spurring demand for safer assets. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index dropped 0.4 percent.

The World Bank said this week that the U.S. economy will expand 2.2 percent in 2012, while the euro area will contract 0.3 percent.

‘Challenged’

“The global economic outlook will remain challenged,” William O’Donnell, head U.S. government-bond strategist in Stamford, Connecticut, at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc’s RBS Securities primary dealer unit, wrote in a note to clients. “We advocate that longer-term investors use back-ups to reload on longs,” or bets bonds will gain.

Most economists are advising the opposite. The 10-year yield will advance to 2.59 percent by year-end, according to a Bloomberg survey of banks and securities companies with the most recent forecasts given the heaviest weightings.

Ten-year rates will rise to 2.5 percent by Dec. 31, according to a report yesterday by RBC Capital Markets LLC, one of the 21 primary dealers that trade with the Fed.

“Weak but positive growth should allow rates to grind higher barring an increase in European stress,” according to the report by analysts including Michael Cloherty, the head of U.S. rates strategy in New York.

France, Spain

France and Spain sold 14.6 billion euros ($18.9 billion) of bonds yesterday, with funding costs in both nations falling in the first sale of medium- and long-term debt since Standard & Poor’s downgraded their credit ratings on Jan. 13.

Greece’s government and private creditors convene today for a third session of talks on how to reduce the nation’s debt and avert a collapse of the economy.

Yields indicate investors are becoming more willing to lend. The three-month London interbank offered rate for loans in dollars was at 0.561 percent yesterday, headed for a second weekly decline.

The difference between five-year swap rates and the yield on same maturity Treasuries shrank for a third week to 31.5 basis points. Investors use swaps to exchange fixed and floating interest-rate obligations. The difference, the gap between the fixed component and the Treasury rate, is a gauge of demand for higher-yielding assets versus sovereign debt.

The Fed is seeking to keep longer-term borrowing costs capped by selling $400 billion of its short-term Treasuries and reinvesting the proceeds into longer-term government debt in a program traders dubbed Operation Twist.

The central bank is scheduled to buy as much as $2.75 billion of Treasuries due from 2036 to 2041 today as part of the program, according to the New York Fed’s website.

–With assistance from Kristine Aquino and Masaki Kondo in Singapore and Cordell Eddings in New York. Editors: Nicholas Reynolds, Matthew Brown

To contact the reporters on this story: Wes Goodman in Singapore at wgoodman@bloomberg.net; Keith Jenkins in London at kjenkins3@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Daniel Tilles at dtilles@bloomberg.net

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Corporate Debt Sales to Surge in Sweden as Bank Credit Dries Up

Sweden’s corporate bond market is
poised for a surge this year as companies abandon an “extreme”
reliance on bank loans amid stricter capital rules, said Mats Carlsson, who heads the investment bank Pareto Ohman AB.

“The banks will be more conservative with their lending,
while at the same time there will still be the same demand from
companies,” Carlsson, who became chief executive officer at
Pareto Ohman in July, said in an interview in Stockholm.
“Supply will diminish and demand will grow.”

Sweden’s government wants the country’s lenders to target
more rigorous capital standards than those set by the Basel
Committee on Banking Supervision and has set a deadline that’s
six years earlier than Basel’s 2019 goal. As the cost of bank
credit rises, firms are seeking alternatives. With Swedish
companies now relying on banks for 80 percent of their debt
financing, versus about 30 percent in the US, the scope for a
surge in corporate issuance is considerable, Carlsson said.

“There is a lot of room for bonds in Sweden,” he said.
“We’re coming from an environment of very cheap lending for the
companies and the issuers, the companies, have to adjust to a
situation where they will have to pay higher interest.”

Martin Gorne, managing director at CorpNordic Sweden AB, a
trustee company, sees “a lot of transactions in the high yield
market” this year and expects to be a trustee in as many as 20
high-yield deals in 2012, he said in an interview.

Debt Issuance

So far this year, Swedish corporates and municipalities
have issued 34.8 billion kronor ($4.9 billion), bringing sales
to 11 percent of the amount sold in 2011, according to data
compiled by Bloomberg. Among the main issuers were Securitas AB,
a security and alarm company, which this month sold 400 million
kronor in three year notes at 3.45 percent interest. TeliaSonera
AB sold 1.1 billion kronor in debt on Jan. 13. The figures only
reflect krona-denominated sales.

“We expect more and more companies to come to the market
for financing and to try to find other financing sources,”
Magnus Nilsson, a Stockholm-based fund manager at Catella
Fondforvaltning AB, which manages $1 billion in fixed income
assets, said in an interview.

According to Daniel Sachs, the chief executive officer at
corporate bond investor Proventus, this year will see a greater
demand from Swedish corporates to sell their bonds than there
will be a supply of credit. At the same time, Sweden’s corporate
debt market may face some hurdles to growth as it struggles to
develop the infrastructure needed to attract more investors.

Banks Deleveraging

“There’s no doubt that the banks need to deleverage and
the need for non-bank funding for mid-sized companies is
increasing,” Sachs said in an interview. Still, Sweden’s
corporate bond market “is underdeveloped and needs to develop
in a number of dimensions,” he said.

Sachs said he welcomes moves such as SEB AB’s decision to
create an index to track corporate bonds. Yet the gauge is “not
a full index and the market is not transparent yet,” he said.

Sweden is also behind when it comes to the standardization
of contracts on debt sales, according to Sachs. He says
regulatory steps may be necessary to bring about the changes
that are needed to enable real growth in the market.

Sweden’s corporate bond market is under pressure to develop
fast as banks start trimming their balance sheets to meet more
rigorous standards.

Capital Rules

The country’s financial regulator and central bank in
November told Sweden’s four biggest lenders to target common
equity Tier 1 capital of at least 10 percent from January 2013
and 12 percent two years later. Basel sets a 7 percent target,
to be met by 2019. The rules affect Nordea Bank AB (NDA), Svenska
Handelsbanken AB (SHBA), SEB, and Swedbank AB. (SWEDA)

“Rising capital requirements do make bank financing more
expensive and our ambition is to shield our customers from the
cost of the new regulation,” Rodney Alfven, head of investor
relations at Nordea, said in an interview. “We’ve seen our
clients increasingly interested in corporate bonds and we expect
this trend to continue.”

Swedish firms may be able to take advantage of the Nordic
country’s haven status as Europe’s debt crisis deepens. Sweden’s
government, which boasts a budget surplus, pays 16 basis points
less than Germany to borrow for 10 years. Investors are also
attracted to debt issued in krona as a hedge against the euro.

Sweden’s currency, the world’s ninth-most traded, has
gained 6 percent against the euro since a Nov. 28 low.

The largest Nordic economy will grow 1.3 percent this year,
the central bank estimates. That compares with just 0.3 percent
expansion in the euro area, according to the Frankfurt-based
European Central Bank.

Default Swaps

The cost of insuring debt sold by the world’s biggest maker
of air compressors, Stockholm-based Atlas Copco AB, is 75
basis points, while a credit default swap on ball-bearing maker
SKF AB is 78.3 basis points. The average among European rivals
is 136.88 basis points, according to Bloomberg data.

“After the turmoil in Greece it became very hard to issue
any bonds because investors were very cautious,” Gorne said of
2011 bond issuance. “I believe it will be more stable this
year.”

Sweden’s haven status and better economic growth prospects
than in the rest of Europe mean “investors, as well as issuers,
will start to see the Swedish corporate bond market as an
attractive opportunity,” Jonas Ranneby, a Stockholm-based
credit analyst at SEB, said in an interview. “Given the new
Basel III legislation, banks are also likely to be more
selective in their use of their balance sheet.”

According to Per Brilioth, managing director at Stockholm-
based investment firm Vostok Nafta Investment Ltd., “issuing
bonds is often the best way for our companies to raise the money
they need. Even though the bonds are high-yield, they are still
cheaper than the alternatives. I’m sure we’ll see many others
coming to the market this year.”

To contact the reporters on this story:
Adam Ewing in Stockholm at
aewing5@bloomberg.net;
Meera Bhatia in Oslo at
mbhatia2@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story:
Frank Connelly at
fconnelly@bloomberg.net;
Christian Wienberg at
cwienberg@bloomberg.net

EURO DEBT SUPPLY-Greek talks key for ultra-long German debt sale

* Greek deal decisive for risk appetite
* Demand for 30-year may be poor at ultra-low yields
* Short-dated paper benefiting from ECB cash

By Marius Zaharia
LONDON, Jan 20 (Reuters) – The outcome of Greeces
negotiations with private creditors over a vital debt swap could
boost or significantly dampen investor interest in next weeks
German and Dutch long-term government bond sales.
With 30-year yields close to record lows, the risk is that
the German auction could get fewer bids than the amount on offer
as seen in a previous tap of the bond in October if fears of a
chaotic Greek default fade and risk appetite picks up.
The talks appeared to be advancing towards a deal on Friday,
but thin volumes in German bond markets suggested that many
investors preferred to stay on the sidelines before an official
conclusion was announced.
A strong bout of risk appetite next week, say that there is
a really good development on the Greek PSI (private sector
involvement), could prove problematic, said Credit Agricole
rate strategist Peter Chatwell.
The 30-year sector would underperform the entire curve.
The Dutch auction is likely to fare much better than the
German auction in a risk on scenario as demand should be
ensured by a strong domestic base of pension funds and insurers,
the usual buyers of ultra-long paper.
German 30-year yields were last 2.5 percent, a
tad higher than their record lows and compared to levels around
2.80 percent before the previous auction in October.Strong results seen at an Austrian syndicated debt sale of
10- and 40-year bonds on Thursday were an encouraging sign for
the auctions, however.
We have the impression that accounts are rather cash-rich,
the Austrian syndications went well … and it indicates that we
see some feeding through of the positive effects liquidity has
on the short-end, DZ Bank rate strategist Michael Leister said.
Sales of shorter-term debt out of the Netherlands, Slovakia,
Germany, France and Italy next week are likely to draw strong
demand as the European Central Banks recent three-year cash
injection of nearly half a trillion euros is supporting the
front end of the yield curves across the euro zone.
An auction of Italian index-linked bonds is widely expected
to be poorly bid as the sector has underperformed other Italian
debt massively given that the ECBs government bond buying
programme omits the so-called linker space.
The 10-year Italian inflation breakeven
has halved to about 70 bps since the start of the
year, highlighting the underperformance of inflation-linked BTPs
relative to their nominal counterparts.
Commerzbank expects the sale to be cancelled.

GLASS HALF FULL
The zero-coupon Italian CTZ auction is expected to fare
well. Demand for debt issued by the euro zones lower-rated
sovereigns has picked up this year, helped by the massive excess
liquidity in the banking system.
Spain has sold significantly more than planned at its recent
debt auctions, covering 20 percent of its 2012 financing plan.
This is encouraging. For now the market is eager to see the
glass half full but if we get worse headlines and worse dataflow
and the focus will shift to the cost of funding, Leister said.
For Italy, the 10-year cost is above 6.25 percent and it
obviously raises some questions. For how long can they do this?

AUCTIONS AT A GLANCE
————————————————————–

DAY ISSUER MATURITY COUPON RIC MAX AMOUNT

Tue Netherlands Jul-2022 TBC 5.00
Wed Germany Jul-2042 3.25% 3.00
Thu Italy TBC 0.00% 3.50*
Thu Italy TBC BTPei 1.50*
* Barclays estimates
————————————————————–

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Mexico Peso Drops as Greece Debt-Swap Talks Spur Risk Aversion

Bonds Gain as Traders Pare Rate-Increase Bets: Mexico City Mover
January 21, 2012, 7:02 AM EST

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By Ben Bain and Jonathan J. Levin

Jan. 20 (Bloomberg) — Mexico’s benchmark peso bond yields fell to a four-month low after policy makers said they expect an inflation pickup to be “temporary,” damping speculation that they’d raise interest rates.

The yield on Mexico’s benchmark peso-denominated bonds due in 2024 fell five basis points, or 0.05 percentage point, to 6.28 percent at 12:20 p.m. in Mexico City, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The price of the securities rose 0.45 centavo to 132.75 centavos per peso. The yield is the lowest since Sept. 8.

The central bank’s board left the benchmark rate at a record low of 4.5 percent today, in line with forecasts from all economists surveyed by Bloomberg, and said the recent jump in consumer prices was not a reflection of core inflation. The bank said there’s been “practically no” change in inflation expectations following the peso’s 12 percent, six-month plunge. Investors pared bets on rate increases in overseas trading of interest-rate swaps.

Today’s statement shows “it would be difficult for them to raise” rates, Javier Belaunzaran, who helps manage 40 billion pesos at Interacciones Casa de Bolsa SA, said in a telephone interview in Mexico City. “The perception is for no change.”

Santander Call

The two-year interest rate swap, the fixed cost investors are willing to pay in exchange for receiving the benchmark interbank rate known as TIIE, fell six basis points to 4.93 percent, suggesting traders are pushing back expectations for an increase, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The swap rate reflects investors’ projections of the average central bank benchmark interest rate during the period.

Some traders have been betting that central bank Governor Agustin Carstens’s next move will be a rate cut as he seeks to shore up Latin America’s second-biggest economy from a global slowdown. Credit Suisse Group AG maintained today its call for three reductions this year that would bring the benchmark rate to 3.75 percent while Banco Santander SA said it predicts a 25- basis point cut at the next meeting in March.

Mexico’s annual inflation rate climbed to a 12-month high of 3.8 percent last month from 3.5 percent in November.

Policy makers are “trying to manage expectations of the impact of the peso depreciation on inflation,” Pedro Tuesta, an economist at 4Cast Inc., said by phone from Washington.

The peso gained 0.3 percent to 13.1788 per U.S. dollar, from 13.2210 yesterday. It has appreciated 3.2 percent this week, paring its sell-off since July.

–With assistance from Ye Xie in New York and Jose Enrique Arrioja and Ralph Cope in Mexico City. Editors: David Papadopoulos, Brendan Walsh

To contact the reporter on this story: Ben Bain in Mexico City at bbain2@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: David Papadopoulos at papadopoulos@bloomberg.net

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