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May 18, 2011

New research firm aims to grow St. Louis drug cluster

Filed under: mortgage, term — Tags: , , , — ManInBlack @ 8:31 am

If St. Louis hopes to build up its biotech industry, it will need both cash and brainpower. Now the people who are trying to grow it here are using a little of the first to tap a lot of the second.

The BioGenerator, an arm of the Coalition for Plant and Life Sciences, said Tuesday that it is investing $50,000 from its Spark Fund into a new firm designed to help drug startups grow. SARmont will be a contract research organization (CRO) housed at BioGenerator’s Central West End facility. It will work with researchers and investors who are trying to bring new drugs to the market.

“Our sweet spot is in all of the work that needs to get done before a company starts clinical and manufacturing work,” said Chief Executive Randy Weiss. “Our core expertise is drug design.”

That expertise largely comes in the mind of Dr. John Talley, SARmont’s chief scientific officer and the lead inventor of several big commercial drugs, including $3 billion arthritis medicine Celebrex. SARmont will essentially be offering the skills and experience of Talley and his team to consult with others who are trying to do what he has done.

“That’s part of our special sauce. We’ve actually seen molecules go from the lab all the way to the pharmacy,” Talley said. “There aren’t that many folks who can say they’ve done that.”

SARmont is starting small

April 28, 2011

Bernanke Avoids Gaffes at Debut News Conference, Regrets Rogoff Chess Game - Bloomberg

Filed under: economics, term — Tags: , , , — ManInBlack @ 8:54 pm

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke avoided saying anything yesterday at his first press conference that shocked or confused investors. In other words, economists said, his appearance was a success.

During 46 minutes answering questions, Bernanke commented on a broad spectrum of economic issues, saying he expected inflation in fuel costs to slow and the end of the central bank’s $600 billion bond purchase program in June to have little impact on markets. He veered away once from the business at hand to mention his “big mistake” to play chess against economist Kenneth Rogoff, a former professional player.

Bernanke’s success in avoiding a gaffe may help validate the Fed’s decision to open up more to the public after decades in which Fed chairmen limited their appearances largely to speeches and congressional testimony. The Fed has now joined central banks in Europe, Japan and the U.K. in holding regular press briefings.

“From the Fed’s point of view it was beautiful, brilliant,” said William Ford, a former Atlanta Fed president who teaches at Middle Tennessee State University. “He didn’t make any goofs and came away as knowledgeable and smart. It was wonderful PR for him,” Ford said.

Bernanke, 57, said the central bank decided to hold press conferences four times a year after judging that the benefits from providing more information and transparency outweighed the risks of potentially creating “unnecessary volatility in financial markets.”

Economic Projections

The press conference gave the chairman the chance to elaborate on a Federal Open Market Committee statement that was little changed from last month. He also discussed economic projections that were released concurrent with the meeting for the first time, instead of three weeks later.

Traders took Bernanke’s comments, and the FOMC statement released two hours earlier, as a signal the Fed is likely to maintain record monetary stimulus. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index rose to an almost three-year high, while long-term Treasury yields rose and the dollar tumbled.

The press conference contrasted with Bernanke’s rocky start with the media after he took office in 2006. In April of that year, he told CNBC reporter Maria Bartiromo at a Washington party that markets had misinterpreted his remarks to Congress that had suggested the Fed was finished raising rates. Bonds tumbled when CNBC reported the conversation. Bernanke later said the incident was a “lapse in judgment.”

Bernanke Lampooned

Bernanke was lampooned in December by U.S. comedian Jon Stewart for likening Fed loans in 2009 to “printing money” and then telling CBS Corp.’s “60 Minutes” program in December that the Fed wasn’t printing money by buying $600 billion in Treasury securities.

The Fed chief showed more control of the message yesterday, commenting on how the Fed may maintain stimulus and respond to any increase in inflation expectations. He tried to show compassion for the average American, saying the Fed has pursued record stimulus to help people facing long-term unemployment and that higher gasoline prices are “absolutely creating a great deal of financial hardship for a lot of people no fax payday loan.”

Bernanke’s body language betrayed his emotions and conveyed “hopelessness” over long-term unemployment, said Greg Hartley, a former U.S. Army interrogator and author of “The Body Language Handbook.” Bernanke also showed emotion when discussing Japan’s response to its March earthquake and nuclear disaster, Hartley said.

‘Natural Human Reaction’

“That’s a natural human reaction,” Hartley said on Bloomberg Television’s “Taking Stock” with Pimm Fox. “He got more comfortable as time went, and I think the next time we’ll see a more polished person, but he could use some coaching.”

Bernanke appeared at precisely 2:15 p.m., striding into a conference room at the central bank’s Martin Building, across the street and reachable via tunnel from the Eccles Building headquarters where he chaired the FOMC meeting.

The former Princeton University professor took a seat, to the clatter of camera shutters, at a mahogany desk on a platform in front of about 60 reporters seated classroom-style in five rows of tables. For 11 minutes, or almost one-fourth of the allotted time, Bernanke read a statement discussing the FOMC’s actions and its forecasts.

Michelle Smith, Bernanke’s chief spokeswoman, stood off camera selecting reporters for questions. Bernanke didn’t hesitate after a reporter suggested that the Fed has been “unsuccessful” in supporting the dollar. He said investors flocked to the dollar as a safe haven during the financial crisis, and its drop over the last couple of years reflects reduced “uncertainty.”

Reinhart, Rogoff Book

The final question, about a book on the history of financial crises by Carmen Reinhart and Rogoff stoked Bernanke’s memory about Rogoff, a graduate school classmate of Bernanke’s at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the late 1970s who is now at Harvard University.

“I’ve known him for a long time,” Bernanke said. “I even played chess against him, which was a big mistake.”

Charles Lieberman, former head of monetary analysis at the New York Fed, said Bernanke parried well questions that put him in a “no-win situation.”

“He refused to answer hypothetical questions or get distracted by weak arguments,” said Lieberman, chief investment officer with Advisors Capital Management LLC in Hasbrouck Heights, New Jersey.

The central bank chairman succeeded in “being informative and clarifying and not making a lot of news,” said Diane Swonk, chief economist at Mesirow Financial Inc. in Chicago, who has tracked the Fed since 1987.

Rogoff in an interview today declined to comment on his chess game against Bernanke, other than to say Bernanke played as black using an opening strategy known as Petrov’s Defense.

As for the press conference, “I thought he gave, speaking of chess, a masterful performance,” Rogoff said.

Source

April 22, 2011

China Yuan Forwards Predict Fastest Appreciation in Five Months - Bloomberg

Filed under: online, term — Tags: , , , — ManInBlack @ 8:58 am

Yuan forwards traded at the biggest premium to the spot rate in more than five months, reflecting speculation the central bank will allow faster currency gains to help tame inflation.

More rapid appreciation may be a tool for curbing prices, Wang Yong, a professor at the People’s Bank of China’s training center in the city of Zhengzhou, wrote in a commentary published in today’s Securities Times newspaper. The central bank set the yuan’s reference rate 0.11 percent stronger at 6.5156 per dollar, the highest level since July 2005.

“The frequent record highs in the reference rate are pushing up appreciation bets in the offshore market,” said Liu Dongliang, a Shenzhen-based senior analyst at China Merchants Bank Co., the country’s sixth-largest lender by market value. “There won’t be any one-off move in the foreseeable future, especially when the trade surplus is narrowing.”

Twelve-month non-deliverable forwards rose 0.3 percent to 6.3285 per dollar as of 10:43 a.m. in Hong Kong, 2.9 percent stronger than the onshore exchange rate of 6.5133, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That’s the largest gain projected since Nov. 10. The currency appreciated 0.1 percent today in Shanghai and earlier touched a 17-year high of 6.5131, according to the China Foreign Exchange Trade System.

Relatively large pressure for yuan gains has affected companies’ export orders, the Ministry of Commerce said on its website today. The country’s import growth may be faster than export growth this year, the ministry said. The world’s second- biggest economy had a $1.02 billion trade deficit in the first three months of this year, the first quarterly shortfall in seven years.

Consumer prices rose 5.4 percent in March from a year earlier, exceeding the government’s 2011 target of 4 percent, according to data released last week.

–Judy Chen. Editors: Sandy Hendry, James Regan

Source

April 14, 2011

Obama: Cut spending, raise taxes on the wealthy

Filed under: small business, term — Tags: , , , — ManInBlack @ 6:53 am

President Barack Obama coupled a call for $4 trillion in long-term deficit reductions with a blistering attack on Republican plans on taxes, Medicare and Medicaid on Wednesday, laying down markers for a roiling debate in Congress and the 2012 presidential campaign to come.

Obama said spending cuts and higher taxes alike must be part of any deficit-reduction plan, including an end to Bush-era tax cuts for the wealthy. He proposed an unspecified “debt failsafe” that would go into effect if Congress failed to make sure the national debt would be falling by 2014 relative to the overall economy.

“We have to live within our means, reduce our deficit and get back on a path that will allow us to pay down our debt,” the president said in a speech at George Washington University a few blocks from the White House. “And we have to do it in a way that protects the recovery, and protects the investments we need to grow, create jobs and win the future.”

Obama’s decision to make higher taxes part of his preferred deficit solution drew strong criticism from Republicans.

Speaker John Boehner said the president had failed to match House Republicans, whom he said have presented a “jobs budget that puts us on a path to paying down the debt and preserves Medicare and Medicaid.” With the administration asking Congress to raise the debt limit, he added, “the American people will not stand for that unless it is accompanied by serious action to reduce our deficit. More promises, hollow targets and Washington commissions simply won’t get the job done.”

The president spoke less than a week after he reached a compromise with Boehner on an unprecedented package of $38 billion in spending cuts for this year just in time to avoid a partial government shutdown. Both houses of Congress are expected to pass the measure in the next 24 hours or so, closing the books on the current budget year and clearing the way for a far more defining debate about the size and shape of the government.

Obama stepped to the podium at a juncture when tea party-backed Republicans are relishing early victories in the House, the 2012 Republican presidential field is just beginning to take shape and moderate Democratic lawmakers are charting their re-election campaigns in swing seats. His emphasis on deficit reduction marked an appeal to independents as well as other voters who are eager to stem record annual deficits as well as a national debt that is over $13 trillion.

At the same time, he sought to keep faith with liberals and other supporters.

To opponents of revisions in Medicare, Medicaid or Social Security, he said, “I guarantee that if we don’t make any changes at all, we won’t be able to keep our commitments to a retiring generation that will live longer and face higher health care costs than those who came before.”

Of $4 trillion in cuts, Obama said $2 trillion should come from spending, $1 trillion from taxes, including ending Bush-era tax breaks for the wealthy, and the rest recouped from lower interest payments on the national debt.

Administration officials said military spending would be reduced by $400 billion through 2023, domestic programs would absorb $770 billion in cuts and mandatory programs such as agricultural subsidies another $360 billion.

An additional $480 billion would be saved from Medicare, which provides health care principally to 33 million seniors, and from Medicaid, a state-federal program that covers lower-income families and is ticketed for a huge expansion under the health care program Obama signed into law last year.

In line with the wishes of Senate Democratic leaders, the president made no recommendations for savings from Social Security, which he said is neither in a crisis nor ” a driver of our near-term deficit problems.” He said he supports unspecified steps to strengthen it for the long term, but ruled out any attempt to privatize it.

The president also urged Congress to pass tax changes, and he suggested he was open to curtailing a homeowners’ tax deduction that can currently be claimed by filers at all income levels.

Neither Obama nor his aides distributed any detailed accounting of the effect of his recommendations on the deficit, which is expected to top $1.5 trillion this year, or the debt, now over $13 trillion.

Obama saved some of his sharpest rhetoric for Republican proposals to end traditional Medicare for anyone currently under 55, and to give the states near-total control over Medicaid.

For Medicare, he said, “It says instead of guaranteed health care, you will get a voucher. And if that voucher isn’t worth enough to buy insurance, tough luck _ you’re on your own.”

He said the Republican budget could cost 50 million Americans health care coverage in all, including grandparents needing nursing home care, children with autism and kids “with disabilities so severe that they require 24-hour care. These are the Americans we’d be telling to fend for themselves.”

The debt has grown for much of the past few decades, with the exception of a brief period after President Bill Clinton and Republicans in Congress reached a compromise that permitted payments to reduce it.

Even a recounting of the debt’s history had a political subtext.

Beginning in 2000, he said, “we increased spending dramatically for two wars and an expensive prescription drug programs, but we didn’t pay for any of this new spending. Instead, we made the problem worse with trillions of dollars in unpaid-for tax cuts.” That was a reference to policies pursued by President George W. Bush and the Republicans who controlled Congress for six of his eight years in office.

Obama made a glancing reference to the 2012 presidential race, saying that some of his potential Republican rivals had signed onto the budget House republicans are advancing.

Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, one likely GOP candidate, issued a statement that said Obama had “dug deep into his liberal playbook for solutions highlighted by higher taxes.”

Another, former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, said that with his speech, the president showed a “lack of seriousness on deficit reduction.”

Source

April 9, 2011

Millions for weatherizing in Missouri is defended

Filed under: online, term — Tags: , , , — ManInBlack @ 9:41 am

What had been a little-known home weatherization program has become the latest target for Republican state senators trying to make a point about runaway federal spending.

The senators have proposed slashing $250 million of already approved federal stimulus projects as a trade-off for their agreement to drop their controversial bid to turn down federal money for unemployment assistance.

The leader of the conservative group, Sen. Jim Lembke, R-Lemay, called the stimulus spending “a plethora of different pork barrel projects and pet projects cash till payday advance.” Chief among them: the weatherization program that pays to upgrade homes for low-income Missourians. That millions of dollars in federal funds has been ’sitting there” for two years proved his point that it was unneeded, Lembke said.

But one of the biggest recipients of weatherization money awarded to any local agency in the state

April 6, 2011

Bernanke Says Fed Must Monitor Inflation ‘Extremely Closely’ - Bloomberg

Filed under: news, term — Tags: , , , — ManInBlack @ 4:12 am

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said policy makers must watch inflation “extremely closely” for evidence that rising commodity costs are having more than a temporary impact on consumer prices.

“So long as inflation expectations remain stable and well anchored” and the rise in commodity prices slows, as he’s forecasting, then “the increase in inflation will be transitory,” Bernanke said yesterday in response to audience questions after a speech in Stone Mountain, Georgia.

“We have to monitor inflation and inflation expectations extremely closely because if my assumptions prove not to be correct, then we would certainly have to respond to that and ensure that we maintain price stability,” he said.

The dollar rose against the euro and yen after the comments, which are similar to both Bernanke’s congressional testimony and the statement from the policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee last month. He told lawmakers March 1 that Fed officials “continue to monitor these developments closely and are prepared to respond as necessary,” while the FOMC said on March 15 that it “will pay close attention to the evolution of inflation and inflation expectations.”

The dollar rose to 84.36 yen at 10:11 a.m. in Tokyo from 84.06 yesterday after earlier touching 84.49. Against the euro, the dollar strengthened to $1.4199 from $1.4221.

Responding to another question yesterday about housing, Bernanke said that the Fed expects a “very high rate” of foreclosures this year, which harms home prices and construction and creates a drag on the recovery, which he said is “not as strong as we would like it to be.”

Price Gauge

The Commerce Department reported last week that the Fed’s preferred price gauge, the personal consumption expenditures index, excluding food and energy, increased 0.9 percent in February from a year earlier. Including all items, prices rose 1.6 percent, compared with a 1.2 percent 12-month increase through January.

Fed officials aim for annual inflation in the long run of 1.6 percent to 2 percent.

Bernanke, in his response yesterday, acknowledged gains in prices of commodities including metals, grains and energy. The national average price of gasoline rose to $3.55 on March 15 from $3.07 on January 1. Gasoline rose further after the Fed’s meeting to $3.66 on Apr. 3.

The FOMC, led by Bernanke, said after its last meeting that the economy is on a “firmer footing” and affirmed plans to buy $600 billion of Treasuries through June. Bernanke hasn’t said what he favors as the next move for monetary policy after that no fax payday advances.

Close to Zero

The Fed has kept its benchmark interest rate close to zero since December 2008 and last month reiterated it would remain there for an “extended period.”

Even so, some policy makers who have broken with Bernanke before are discussing the need to tighten credit. Philadelphia Fed President Charles Plosser, who dissented twice from decisions to lower borrowing costs in 2008, said April 1 in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, that an increase in growth or inflation expectations may “suggest that it is time to begin taking our foot off the accelerator and start heading for the exit ramp.”

While Bernanke’s “remarks echoed the vigilance on inflation expectations that was present in the last meeting statement, it was certainly less hawkish” than recent comments from some regional Fed presidents, Michael Feroli, chief U.S. economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) in New York, said in a research note.

Didn’t Discuss Policy

Bernanke wasn’t asked about and didn’t discuss interest rates. New York Fed President William Dudley, the FOMC’s vice chairman, said April 1 that faster-than-expected payroll growth in March shouldn’t alter the central bank’s bond-buying program to prop up the recovery. “I don’t see any reason to pull back from that yet,” Dudley said to reporters after a speech in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

Dudley also said that “provided commodity prices level off around current levels, the effect on inflation should be transitory. But we will need to ensure that commodity-price pressures do not cause inflation expectations to become unmoored.”

Bernanke’s prepared remarks focused on regulation of clearinghouses for financial trading. Bernanke said the U.S. should subject such institutions to “strong” risk-management oversight to minimize the chance they’ll require emergency government aid.

Fed officials are “nervous” about inflation, including food and energy prices, said Jason Schenker, an economist who attended Bernanke’s speech.

“Everything is dependent, truly, on what happens with commodity prices,” Schenker, president of Prestige Economics LLC in Austin, Texas, said after Bernanke spoke. “If they remain very high, this is tough.”

Source

March 22, 2011

Europe agrees financing for future bailout fund

Filed under: Uncategorized, term — Tags: , , , — ManInBlack @ 12:47 am

Germany’s finance minister says 17 states that use the euro have agreed on the financing of the eurozone’s future bailout fund and slightly lowered the contributions for poorer states.

Wolfgang Schaeuble said Monday the eurozone members will give the European Stability Mechanism a capital base of euro80 billion and provide euro620 billion in callable capital, which has to be made available if a bailed out country looks unable to repay its loans.

That will give the ESM _ which will come into force in mid-2013 _ an effective lending capacity of euro500 billion.

Schaeuble also said that the formula to calculate each state’s contributions will be changed to give economic output more weight than population _ slightly lowering the burden on poorer countries.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below.

BRUSSELS (AP) _ Germany’s finance minister says 17 states that use the euro have agreed on the financing of the eurozone’s future bailout fund and slightly lowered the contributions for poorer states free credit score.

Wolfgang Schaeuble said Monday the eurozone members will give the European Stability Mechanism a capital base of euro80 billion and provide euro620 billion in callable capital, which has to be made available if a bailed out country looks unable to repay its loans.

That will give the ESM _ which will come into force in mid-2023 _ an effective lending capacity of euro500 billion.

Schaeuble also said that the formula to calculate each state’s contributions will be changed to give economic output more weight than population _ slightly lowering the burden on poorer countries.

Source

February 24, 2011

Lowe’s 4Q profit rises 39 percent; outlook weak

Filed under: Canada, term — Tags: , , , — ManInBlack @ 2:05 am

Lowe’s Cos.’ fourth-quarter profit rose 39 percent as home owners took on more renovation projects as the economy slowly recovers.

The results announced Wednesday beat Wall Street estimates, but Lowe’s first-quarter earnings forecast suggested its results could come in below current forecasts.

The weak outlook stood in contrast to competitor Home Depot’s increased earnings outlook issued a day earlier. Lowe’s shares slipped 38 cents to $25.61 in premarket trading.

Still, home-improvement retailers are seeing signs of life from shoppers as they take on projects around the house that were delayed during the consumer spending slowdown and recession.

“While uncertainty in the market remains, the economic recovery is continuing,” said CEO Robert Niblock.

The No. 2 home-improvement retailer said its net income rose to $285 million, or 21 cents per share, for the three months ended Jan. 28 from $205 million, or 14 cents per share, a year ago. Analysts surveyed by FactSet expected 18 cents per share.

The Mooresville, N.C., company said revenue rose 3 percent to $10.48 billion from $10.17 billion. Analysts expected $10.44 billion.

“While the housing market remains uncertain, we believe Lowe’s will continue to gain market share and benefit from a more stabilized environment,” said Bank of America Merrill Lynch analyst Alan Rifkin, who kept his “Buy” rating on the stock. “Further, we favor Lowe’s increased focus on shareholder returns and believe buybacks and dividends will continue to drive returns.”

For the year, Lowe’s net income rose 13 percent to $2.01 billion, or $1.42 per share, from $1.78 billion, or $1.21 per share a year ago.

Annual revenue rose 3 percent to $48.82 billion from $47.22 billion.

Lowe’s expects first-quarter net income of 34 cents to 38 cents per share while analysts expect net income of 38 cents per share. The company predicts revenue will rise 2 percent and revenue in stores open at least a year will be flat.

For the year, the company expects net income of $1.60 to $1.72 per share on a 5 percent revenue increase. Revenue in stores open at least a year is expected to rise 5 percent. Analysts expected earnings of $1.66 per share.

Source

January 14, 2011

Geithner Says China Must Move to Prop Up `Substantially Undervalued’ Yuan - Bloomberg

Filed under: legal, term — Tags: , , , — ManInBlack @ 12:47 pm

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner said China needs to strengthen the “substantially undervalued” yuan because it puts other countries at a competitive disadvantage.

“China’s exchange rate needs to strengthen in response to market forces,” Geithner said in a speech in Washington today. The country’s policies “have the effect of keeping the Chinese currency substantially undervalued.”

President Barack Obama is due to meet with Chinese President Hu Jintao in Washington on Jan. 19 as currency policy remains a point of contention between the two governments. Geithner has been urging China to continue to let the yuan appreciate, and lawmakers in Washington say an undervalued yuan is hurting U.S. manufacturers by making their exports less competitive.

In October, Geithner delayed a twice-yearly report on foreign-exchange policy in which the U.S. can say whether it is of the opinion that China is manipulating its currency. The yuan has climbed about 3 percent against the dollar since officials in June scrapped a peg which had been in place since the global financial crisis.

“This is a pace of about 6 percent a year in nominal terms, but significantly faster in real terms because inflation in China is much higher than in the United States,” Geithner said. Taking inflation into account, the yuan is rising at a rate of about 10 percent a year, “so if that appreciation was sustained over time, it would make a very substantial difference,” he said in response to a question after the speech.

‘Real Change’

“If China does not allow the currency to appreciate more rapidly, it will run the risk of seeing domestic inflation accelerate and face greater risk of a damaging rise in asset prices, both of which will threaten future growth,” Geithner said.

Inflation in China accelerated to 5.1 percent in November from a year earlier, the biggest jump in 28 months, driven by higher food costs. In the U.S., consumer prices rose 1.1 percent in November from a year earlier.

“China presents enormous economic opportunities for the United States and for the world, but its size, the speed of its ascent, and its policies are a growing source of concern in the United States and in many other countries,” he said.

European Crisis

Geithner also said he has “no doubt” that Europe “has the ability” to stop its sovereign-debt crisis from spreading, calling it one of the “most obvious remaining challenges” to the global economic recovery in response to a question after his speech. “They will do whatever is necessary to prevent this crisis from escalating beyond the countries that were initially the focus of so much pressure.”

China’s policies “impose substantial costs on other emerging markets that run more flexible exchange rates, and as a result have experienced a substantial loss of competitiveness against China,” Geithner said.

The Treasury Secretary said China “has been gradually moving to address some of our concerns” on issues including trade barriers and intellectual property. Geithner, 49, was speaking at Johns Hopkins University’s School of Advanced International Studies in Washington.

China will increase currency flexibility this year to cut the trade surplus and reduce inflationary pressure, central bank Deputy Governor Yi Gang wrote in a commentary published in the official China Forex magazine Jan. 10.

Kerry on China

U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman John Kerry said in December that lawmakers are losing patience with the artificially low value of China’s yuan and may take action in 2011.

“The United States Congress is getting increasingly impatient and in the next session may take matters into its own hands,” Kerry said. If the Group of 20 nations “can’t deal with this problem, then we ought to look at other multilateral tools, ones with teeth that can fix this.”

The U.S. said last month that China failed to implement “important commitments” under its obligations to the World Trade Organization.

China is using “excessive, trade-distorting government intervention” to the disadvantage of American companies, the U.S. Trade Representative’s office said Dec. 23 in its annual report on China’s compliance with WTO rules.

In September, the U.S. filed a WTO complaint against China concering curbs on payment-processing companies such as MasterCard Inc. and Visa Inc. that are at a disadvantage because China favors a monopoly provider, China UnionPay Data Co., according to the U.S. trade office.

Fighting Inflation

The yuan advanced to a one-week high today on speculation the central bank will allow the currency to appreciate faster to combat inflation.

The currency strengthened for a second day after the central bank set the yuan’s reference rate at the strongest level since July 2005. Speculation that China will let its currency gain faster ahead of Hu’s visit to Washington next week also supported the yuan, said Dennis Tan, a currency analyst at Deutsche Bank AG. accused China of holding down the yuan to benefit its exporters.

“Looking at fundamentals, China’s biggest problem is inflation,” said Singapore-based Tan. “Typically to help control inflation there will be liquidity tightening, rate hikes, and then currency appreciation at a faster rate. China will let the currency gain faster before Hu’s U.S. meeting.”

Source

January 12, 2011

Euro May Fail if Spanish Economy Collapses, Nobel Winner Pissarides Says - Bloomberg

Filed under: online, term — Tags: , , , — ManInBlack @ 9:59 am

The European Union doesn’t have the resources to rescue Spain if it “collapses,” an event that could lead to the end of the euro, Nobel Prize-winning economist Christopher Pissarides said.

A collapse would be “a very serious problem,” Pissarides, who teaches at the London School of Economics, said at a forum in Beijing today. Such an event “might even see the end of the euro as a common currency,” he said.

Spain plans to auction debt tomorrow in the next test of investors’ confidence that the nation can weather Europe’s sovereign-debt woes. Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero is aiming to prove he can finance his government’s commitments amid high unemployment and after bailing out savings banks.

“If Spain collapses the way Greece has collapsed I don’t think the European Union has the resources to rescue it,” Pissarides said.

Pissarides shared the 2010 Nobel Prize in economics with Dale Mortensen and Peter Diamond for research into the difficulties of matching supply and demand, particularly in the labor market.

The euro rose to $1.2990 as of 1:45 p.m. in Tokyo from $1.2974 yesterday on speculation that bond purchases by China and Japan may help to stem Europe’s crisis. Japan pledged yesterday to buy debt issued by Europe’s financial-aid funds.

Ireland in November became the second euro country after Greece to seek a bailout and the first to request aid from the European Financial Stability Facility.

Portugese Prime Minister Jose Socrates said yesterday that Portugal doesn’t need a bailout from the EU and its 2010 budget deficit will be lower than forecast. Socrates said rumors that the country needs aid are only helping “speculators” while hurting Portugal and the euro.

Source

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