Wednesday, January 16, 2008

ECB's Mersch Urges Caution as Growth Risks Increase

(Bloomberg) -- European Central Bank council member Yves Mersch said the bank should exercise caution as risks to economic growth increase.

``We have certainly downside risks to economic activity,'' Mersch, 58, said in an interview at his office in Luxembourg yesterday. While inflation risks have also risen, ``we're not unaware of mitigation to price developments,'' he said, citing a stronger euro, near-record oil prices, the slowing U.S. economy and higher credit costs.

The ECB has threatened to raise interest rates as unions demand wage increases to compensate for the fastest inflation in six years. At the same time, the U.S. Federal Reserve is cutting borrowing costs to stave off recession in the world's largest economy after its housing market slumped.

``I don't like assumptions that what's happening in one part of the world is also true for another part,'' Mersch said. The ECB should nevertheless ``be cautious, look at the figures and take the appropriate decisions. There's still widespread uncertainty, and that's affecting confidence.''

The euro fell more than a cent on the comments, to $1.4652 at 5.06 p.m. in Frankfurt, and bonds rallied.

Mersch is the fifth policy maker this week to note either downside risks to the economic outlook or the temporary nature of the jump in inflation.

`Look Through'

The ECB can afford to ignore an oil-driven surge in inflation if it doesn't inflate wage settlements, Mersch said. ``If there's no pass-through of these temporary factors to the general price level, we're able to look through if need be.''

Inflation, which held at 3.1 percent in December, may return to the ECB's 2 percent limit next year if oil prices ease and wages don't rise excessively, ECB council members Michael Bonello, Lorenzo Bini Smaghi and Axel Weber all said this week.

Mersch said while rising oil and food costs have increased the likelihood of so-called second-round effects materializing, they ``haven't materialized so far.'' Financial-market uncertainty and ``other international developments'' may ``weigh on the inflation development,'' he said.

The ECB shelved a planned rate increase in September and has since kept its benchmark at 4 percent to assess the economic impact of the U.S. subprime mortgage collapse, which made banks reluctant to lend and drove up the cost of credit globally. Oil prices near $100 a barrel and the euro's appreciation may also damp European growth.
 

Boeing delays 787 by three more months

(Reuters) - Boeing Co (BA.N: Quote, Profile, Research) said on Wednesday it would push back first test flight and deliveries of its 787 Dreamliner by about three months, as it struggles with production of the new, carbon-fiber airplane.

The delay is the second major setback for the program in three months, after announcing a six-month delay in October.

Only a month ago Boeing's commercial airplane chief assured Wall Street that the plane was on track to meet its revised schedule.

Boeing said on Wednesday the first test flight of the plane would now take place around the end of the second quarter, compared with its previous target of near the end of March.

First deliveries of the plane are now scheduled for early 2009, rather than its previous estimate of late November or December this year.

Chicago-based Boeing said the new delay would not have a significant effect on 2008 results, but it would update its financial forecasts for this year when it reports quarterly earnings on January 30.

It plans to provide financial forecasts for 2009 when it reports first-quarter earnings at the end of April. The new delay is likely to have a greater impact on 2009, as that is when deliveries of the 787 are now scheduled to start.
 

Consumer prices data open door to rate cut

(Reuters) - Consumer prices rose modestly in December while industrial production was flat, leaving the door open for the Federal Reserve to slash interest rates later this month to shore up an economy that some fear is on the verge of a recession.

The reports released on Wednesday also showed consumer prices shot up last year at the fastest rate in 17 years, driven by soaring energy costs, while manufacturing growth was the weakest since 2003.

The data "underlines our view that we're on the razor's edge here, that we could be headed into recession," said Mike Schenk, senior economist with Credit Union National Association in Madison, Wisconsin.

Stock markets were mixed, with technology shares hurting after a disappointing earnings report from sector bellwether Intel Corp. Bond prices weakened while the dollar's value declined against other major currencies.

The Consumer Price Index, the most broadly used gauge of inflation, rose 0.3 percent in December, slightly ahead of economists' forecasts for a 0.2 percent rise, the Labor Department report showed.

Still, core prices that strip out volatile food and energy items rose 0.2 percent last month - in line with forecasts - following a 0.3 percent November increase.

For the full year, CPI jumped 4.1 percent, well ahead of the 2.5 percent increase posted in 2006 and the largest 12-month rise since a 6.1 percent increase in 1990. Core prices were up 2.4 percent for the full year, following a 2.6 percent pickup in 2006. That was the smallest 12-month rise in core prices since a 2.2 percent increase in 2005.
 

JPMorgan takes $1.3 billion writedown

(Reuters) - JPMorgan Chase & Co said on Wednesday quarterly profit fell a worse-than-expected 24 percent as the No. 3 U.S. bank lost $1.3 billion on risky mortgages and set aside more money for rising losses on home-equity loans.

The bank quadrupled to $1.1 billion the provision it needs to cover continued problems on home equity and subprime mortgage loans. It also said credit card spending slowed in December, a sign the U.S. economy could suffer as cash-strapped consumers face rising food and heating costs while the value of their homes slide.

"We remain extremely cautious as we enter 2008," JPMorgan Chief Executive Jamie Dimon said in a statement. He said a worsening U.S. economy would boost consumer credit losses beyond current levels.
 

Tiger: 'Blatant profiteering'

(Fin24) - The Competition Commission - on Wednesday slammed the bread price increases, saying the "blatant profiteering is an insult to the nation".


Bread maker Tiger Brands (TBS) on Monday implemented price increases on its Albany bread brand - soon after the Competition Commission hit it with a R99m fine for admitting a role in bread price-fixing cartel.


"This blatant profiteering is an insult to the nation, particularly the poor. It demonstrates that either the collusion is continuing or the cartel members are acting to maintain the artificially high margins they achieved by acting unlawfully," said Shan Ramburuth, Competition Commissioner.


The Commission has requested an explanation.


Tiger Brands is the only company that has implemented price hikes. Its peers Pioneer Foods, Premier Foods and Foodcorp, which are also implicated in the bread cartel scandal, are expected to follow suit.


"Should evidence show that the collusive behaviour is continuing we are able to withdraw the immunity we've granted to other players. We are also prosecuting the remaining cartel members, Pioneer and Foodcorp. Perhaps most shockingly, we have received new allegations of other anti-competitive behaviour by these parties, which we are vigorously pursuing," said Ramburuth.


Tiger Brands has denied that prices increases were implemented to plug the gap on the R99m, but has cited higher wheat prices.


Wheat prices - which make about 20% of bread input - nearly doubled in the past year to trade around 3 000 rand per ton as the world's wheat inventories shrunk due to threats of crop failure in the world's top wheat exporters.