5 money moves one gold bug is making now

SAN FRANCISCO  — What’s in your wallet? Less buying power, for starters.
Inflation is taking a bigger bite out of household budgets, and as an investor who broods about worst-case scenarios mutual fund manager Charles de Vaulx is worried.

Charles de Vaulx
“There’s so much debt in the system, you have to be out of your mind to pay no attention to the big picture,” de Vaulx said. “When there’s a credit boom, you never know when the party will end. All you know is that the longer it lasts, the harder the fall.”
So de Vaulx is avoiding what he sees as the market’s potential land mines: momentum stocks, debt-riddled businesses, pumped-up emerging markets and companies and bonds that are likely to wither when both inflation and interest rates climb.
Instead, the co-manager of the IVA Worldwide IVWAX -0.17%  and IVA International IVIOX -0.53%  funds with Chuck de Lardemelle, is making investments that can withstand the challenging investment climate he expects — and even take advantage of it.

At such a time, capital preservation is paramount: “To finish first, you must first finish,” de Vaulx likes to say, quoting American race car driver Rick Mears.
Accordingly, De Vaulx has made five crucial investment moves into areas he believes can go right when things go wrong.

1. Buy inflation-proof stocks

First, the fund manager is buying inflation protection through shares of companies with the ability to pass higher prices to consumers.
Essential services providers, consumer-staples companies and fee-generating businesses are particularly attractive, de Vaulx noted. Three of his favorites: credit-card processor Mastercard Inc. MA +1.43% , retailer Wal-Mart Stores Inc. WMT +1.00%  and Sodexo FR:SW +0.47%   SDXOF +1.69%  , the French catering and services group.
Mastercard receives a percentage of every transaction, and the more inflation, the more money it makes, de Vaulx pointed out. “Owning Mastercard is owning a stream of free cash flow that can creep up through inflation,” he said. Similarly, Wal-Mart and Sodexo are two enterprises that should be able to maintain profit margins against rising food costs.

2. Own gold bullion

Each of de Vaulx’s funds had about 5% to 6% of assets in gold bullion at the end of March. The stake reflects a longstanding allocation for the fund manager.
“We control risk by owning gold,” de Vaulx said. “As long as the policymakers are being irresponsible, it’s good to own some gold, especially if the [U.S.] dollar keeps falling.”

5 Effective Ways To Protect Yourself from Rising Inflation

dollar squeezed
It is no mystery to anyone that the US government has pumped trillions of dollars into the economy, all while holding interest rates at record lows over the past two years. Anyone with a basic concept of supply and demand, with all of these dollars in our economic system, will fear that rising inflation is becoming more and more imminent as each day passes.

Even though our government is doing everything they can to get our economy back on its feet, we as financially educated individuals must find ways to protect ourselves against the possibility that we may be facing future periods of serious inflation…and even worse…hyper-inflation.
Below are some key ways and investing strategies you can implement into your financial plans and portfolios to make sure you don’t fall victim to a diminished purchasing power.
Follow at least one of these investing strategies, and you will counterbalance the effect of inflation. Follow two, and you will thrive when inflation starts to rise. Follow three, well, use your imagination!

1) Buy Physical Gold and Silver

gold bars
By investing your dollars into physical assets such as gold or silver, you fully protect yourself as inflation increases or decreases. As the value of the dollar goes down, the price of these precious metals tend to increase in value.
Additionally, a metal like silver differs with gold because it is in limited supply, and is used by big companies around the world. Where gold is hoarded, silver is still used and will only increase in value as the silver supply continues to decrease over time. Having a mix of both of these precious metals on hand is a great way to protect yourself from rising inflation. Just be sure that you have the metals on hand and purchase them from a certified dealer so you won’t be scammed.

2) Invest In Other Currency

eurotic
If the American currency decreases in value, other currencies will increase in value (at least relatively). Last time I checked, the Euro is 1.5 times the value of the dollar, but don’t quote me on it. Be sure that you know what you are doing if you choose to invest in other currencies as this can be extremely risky if you are clueless as to how this works.
If you play the market right though, you will still end up on top by diversifying your currency holdings in your portfolio of investments. Again, be sure that you have physical currency on hand, as purchasing “derivatives” of paper currency in the market can be manipulated and leave you with more risk than if you physically held it.

3) Invest in Positive Cashflow Producing Real Estate

real estate
When investing your money into real estate outside of your personal residence, be sure that the properties you invest in will turn a positive cash flow on a monthly basis. If you don’t know what that means, be sure that the income from the renter’s monthly rent covers all of the expenses of maintaining the property. Also, budget to have some left over for yourself as this becomes passive income.
The beauty of owning cash flow producing real estate is that not only do you make money on a monthly basis, you are also exposed to the possibility of asset appreciation. Additionally, you get to create phantom income as you write off on the depreciation of the structure of the property over time. Whatever you do, do not invest in something that will turn a negative cash flow from day one…this property will eat you alive…even if it increases in value. Before you decide to invest in a piece of property, I would highly suggest that you get professional advice from your advisers and mentors.

4) Start a Business

start a businessBy starting a business, you also begin to build an asset that increases or decreases in value as inflation rises or falls. The inflation rate doesn’t directly impact the value of your business, but it certainly affects what you can charge for your goods and services that you provide to the market.
By managing your business cash flow each month, you can cushion the effect of inflation and also leverage the extra cash flow to invest in real estate and physical precious metals. On the other hand, working at a job gives you very little, if any, control over the income you make.
Even if you just start a side business, get something going!

5) Find The Highest Interest Bearing Saving’s and Checking Accounts

high interest savings
No matter what, we all will need to have some cash on hand at all times even if inflation gets really bad. To put you in the best position possible, be sure to keep your money in the highest paying savings/checking accounts or in treasury inflation-protection securities (TIPS).
As inflation rises, your money will be safer in these vehicles compared to those that don’t accumulate interest, or more speculative investments. Having cash on hand is important no matter what the inflation rate is. Just be sure that you are being paid the highest interest rate possible no matter where you keep your money.

Hedge-fund managers ponder Armageddon

LAS VEGAS — A collapse of the banking system, the demise of the U.S. dollar as the reserve currency, another oil shock, a new round of junk-bond defaults and a meltdown in Japan’s bond market were among the doomsday scenarios explored by hedge-fund managers at a conference in Las Vegas Thursday.
Since the 2008 financial crisis, many hedge funds have added trades that could protect against losses from big, unexpected events — now known as black swans, a term coined by investor Nassim Taleb.
“These black swans are interbreeding,” said Robert Sinnott, chief executive of hedge fund and private-equity firm Kayne Anderson Capital Advisors, during the SkyBridge Alternatives Conference.

 

Commodities rebound in wild day

Paul Vigna describes volatility on Wall Street brought on by commodities, foreign exchanges and the euro. (REUTERS/Lucas Jackson)
Sinnott expects another oil shock, like the one that plunged the U.S. economy into recession during the 1970s. During that period, energy costs went from 8% of U.S. gross domestic product to about 15%, “and our economy crashed,” he added. “That’s likely to happen again.”
Kayne is a major investor in the energy industry; its private-equity business owns roughly 40 companies in the sector that are mainly focused on drilling.
One way to handle black-swan events, according to Sinnott, is to own companies, or large stakes in companies, and actively improve them — something he called “thrust” investing.
“In our hedge funds, we don’t have an investment where we don’t personally know the CEO,” he said, noting that the firm has about 70 of such positions.

‘Unrepentant bear’

Eric Sprott of Sprott Asset Management called himself an “unrepentant bear” during the conference.
“We’ve been in a secular bear market since 2000,” he said. “Governments and central banks have tried to prevent the natural flow of that, which has led to housing mania, bank bailouts and financial crisis.”
Banks remain too leveraged at roughly 20 to 1 and their assets are still mainly government bonds and mortgages, argued Sprott, while noting that government bonds may be overvalued and the housing market keeps going down.
Sprott has been a bullish on gold for more than a decade. He recently started a silver fund, and said Thursday that precious metals are “the way to survive the coming Armageddon.”
Silver slumped in recent weeks, and Sprott said the price of the metal has been “manipulated down.”
Silver fell by $6 in 13 minutes late on a recent Sunday, when the market was thinnest, he commented. That was followed by four margin increases, Sprott elaborated.

Asian common currency

China may create a common currency in Asia, part of a shift away from the U.S. dollar as the world’s reserve currency, Karthik Sankaran of currency-trading hedge fund firm Covepoint Capital Advisors said at the conference.

Ex-Citi exec discusses debt crisis

William Rhodes, former vice chairman at Citigroup and current head of Rhodes Global Advisors, talks about Europe's debt crisis and his experiences as a banker during some turbulent times.
“The rest of the world is getting increasingly concerned about the willingness of the U.S. to maintain the dollar as a reserve currency and a store of value,” he remarked.

INDIA DAYBOOK: Yields Rise, Industrial Production, Coal India

India’s bond yields surged to a 31- month high as strategists say the government’s decision to raise subsidies will undermine efforts to trim the fiscal deficit.
WHAT TO WATCH: * The rate on benchmark 10-year notes climbed to 8.29 percent yesterday, the highest level since October 2008, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Credit Suisse Group AG and Citigroup Inc. said this week the government won’t be able to limit the shortfall to 4.6 percent of gross domestic product in the year ending March 2012, from 5.1 percent, following an increase in handouts on fertilizers on April 28. * Servalakshmi Paper Ltd. will commence trading after raising 600 million rupees ($13.4 million) in an initial public offer at 29 rupees per share last month. The offer received 1.47 times demand. * Tata Consultancy Services Ltd., Asia’s largest computer- services provider by value, said its annual sales may expand at least 20 percent a year in the “foreseeable future” as companies outsource more contracts. * A deadly confrontation this week over a highway to the Taj Mahal may add pressure on Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to accelerate changes to land laws as growth threatens to alienate the nation’s 234 million farmers. ECONOMY: * 11:00 a.m. Industrial Production Year-on-Year Data * 12:00 p.m. Food articles wholesale price inflation. * 12:00 p.m. Fuel power light wholesale price inflation. * 12:00 p.m. Primary articles wholesale price inflation. EARNINGS: * Coal India Ltd. Est. 37.1 Billion rupees * Siemens India Ltd. Est. 2.29 Billion rupees * Lupin Ltd. Est. 2.25 Billion rupees * Adani Enterprises, Jindal Saw, Mahanagar Telephone Nigam, Syndicate Bank, Great Offshore, Future Capital Holding, Lanco Infratech, Titagarh Wagons, Gammon India, Hinduja Global Solutions, Moser Baer (I), Jubilant Food Works, Talwalkars Better Value Fitness, Peninsula Land, Electrosteel Castings, Monnet Ispat. EQUITY MOVERS: * GMR Infrastructure Ltd. (GMRI IN): India’s cabinet approved an additional $200 million overseas investment in GMR Airports Holding Ltd., the unit of GMR Infrastructure, the government said in a statement in New Delhi yesterday. * Grasim Industries Ltd. (GRASIM IN): The company reported a fourth-quarter profit of 8.65 billion rupees ($193.5 million), compared with 6.54 billion rupees a year earlier, it said in a statement to the Bombay Stock Exchange yesterday. Analysts surveyed by Bloomberg had estimated a profit of 6.19 billion rupees. * Usha Martin Ltd. (USM IN): The Indian steelmaker may raise steel prices by about 3,000 rupees a metric ton in the financial year that started on April 1 because of higher coking coal and fuel costs, Managing Director Rajeev Jhawar said in Kolkata yesterday. Shares of the company fell 0.3 percent to 59.9 rupees. * Ispat Industries Ltd. (NDEN IN): The steelmaker’s stand-alone net profit in the quarter to March 31 rose more than threefold to 701 million rupees, according to a statement to the Bombay Stock Exchange. Sales rose 14 percent to 29 billion rupees. MARKETS: * The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 1 percent. * The MSCI Asia Pacific Index added 0.5 percent to 138.64. * India’s benchmark stock index rose 0.4 percent to 18,584.96. CONFERENCES/EVENTS: * ASSOCHAM seminar on transfer pricing. * Japanese skincare brand Utena will announce its entry in the Indian market. * Rahul Khullar, trade secretary, will speak at the Telecom Award Presentation Ceremony. * Godrej Consumer Products will have an investor meet. * CII Real Estate & Housing Investment Conclave Via - www.bloomberg.com

Ener1, Learning Tree, Walt Disney, Yahoo: U.S. Equity Movers

Shares of the following companies had unusual moves in U.S. trading. Stock symbols are in parentheses and prices are as of 4 p.m. in New York.
Commodity producers declined amid concern that rising global inflation will lead to higher interest rates. Freeport- McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc. (FCX US) slid 5.6 percent to $48.27. Exxon Mobil Corp. (XOM) lost 2.1 percent to $81.12. Helmerich & Payne Inc. (HP) retreated 3.5 percent to $58.72.
Alon USA Energy Inc. (ALJ) fell 14 percent, the most since November 2008, to $11.68. The company’s Krotz Springs refinery will be affected if a spillway is opened amid the Mississippi River flooding, according to Lisa Vidrine, director of the St. Landry Parish office of emergency preparedness.
American International Group Inc. (AIG) gained 3.5 percent to $30.65 for the second-biggest gain in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index. The bailed-out insurer and the U.S. Treasury will offer 300 million shares of common stock in AIG as the company seeks to replace government investment with private capital.
China Yuchai International Ltd. (CYD) plunged 17 percent, the most since November 2008, to $26.12. China’s largest maker of diesel engines reported first-quarter sales of $645.5 million, trailing the estimate of $662 million by one analyst in a Bloomberg survey.
Conceptus Inc. (CPTS) fell 16 percent, the most since July 9, to $12.71. The maker of a female-sterilization method reported a loss of 9 cents a share excluding some items in the first quarter, wider than the 4-cent loss estimate from analysts in a Bloomberg survey.
Ener1 Inc. (HEV) dropped 27 percent, the second-most in the Russell 2000 Index, to $1.78. The maker of electric-car batteries reported first-quarter sales that missed analysts’ estimates. Wunderlich Securities Inc. cut the stock’s rating to “sell” from “hold.”
Globecomm Systems Inc. (GCOM) rose 10 percent to $14.67, the highest price since November 2007. The maker of satellite communications gear has hired JPMorgan Chase & Co. to advise on a possible sale, DealReporter said, citing two industry sources.
Intel Corp. (INTC) rose the most in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, climbing 1.7 percent to $23.41. The world’s largest chipmaker raised its dividend for the second time in six months as increasing corporate spending on technology boosts its earnings.
Intralinks Holdings Inc. (IL) slid 33 percent, the most since it went public in August, to $20.22. The software maker forecast second-quarter profit excluding some items of 11 cents a share at most, trailing the 13-cent average analyst estimate in a Bloomberg survey.
Learning Tree International Inc. (LTRE) rose 9.7 percent, the second-biggest gain in the Russell 2000, to $9.69. The provider of computer classes reported a second-quarter loss of 7 cents a share, beating the average of two analyst estimates that was for a loss of 10 cents a share, according to a Bloomberg survey. The stock was raised to “buy” from “hold” at Stifel Nicolaus & Co.
Macy’s Inc. (M) rose the most in the S&P 500, rallying 7.7 percent to $28.36. The second-biggest U.S. department-store chain boosted its 2011 profit forecast and doubling its dividend, bolstered by surging online sales.
Pegasystems Inc. (PEGA) advanced 8.3 percent, the most since Nov. 10, to $39.83. The developer of customer relationship management software reported first-quarter profit excluding some items of 25 cents a share, beating the average analyst estimate by 51 percent, Bloomberg data show.
Rovi Corp. (ROVI) jumped 18 percent, the most since November 2008, to $58.48. The maker of technology for home- entertainment systems said 2011 earnings excluding some items may be as high as $2.55 a share, more than the average analyst estimate of $2.36.
Stec Inc. (STEC) lost 20 percent, the most since February 2010, to $16.11. The maker of flash-memory drives said profit excluding some items will be no more than 30 cents a share in the second quarter, compared with the average analyst estimate of 32 cents.
Valence Technology Inc. (VLNC) retreated 11 percent, the most since June 29, to $1.17. The maker of rechargeable lithium polymer batteries said Chief Financial Officer Ross Goolsby resigned to pursue other business opportunity.
Walt Disney Co. (DIS) slumped 5.4 percent to $41.52 for the biggest retreat in the Dow Jones Industrial Average. The world’s biggest theme-park operator reported lower second- quarter profit than analysts estimated as a shrinking box- office, park shortfall and the Japanese tsunami overshadowed gains in TV.
Yahoo! Inc. (YHOO US) fell 7.3 percent, the most in the S&P 500, to $17.20. The owner of the largest U.S. Web portal may lose value on its stake in Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. after the payment business of the Chinese Internet company was restructured so that a different company now holds 100 percent of its outstanding shares.
Zagg Inc. (ZAGG) gained 6.8 percent to $10.20, the highest price since Jan. 13. The distributor of electronics accessories increased its 2011 sales forecast to as much as $110 million.
Via - www.bloomberg.com

China Buys Most Japanese Bonds Since 2005

China bought the most Japanese long- term bonds since 2005 and sold stocks as the smaller nation’s record earthquake in March spurred demand for safer assets.

China purchased a net 234.5 billion yen ($2.9 billion) in long-term bonds in March, the biggest amount since January 2005, according to data released today in Tokyo by Japan’s Ministry of Finance. China sold a net 100 million yen in Japanese stocks and a net 415.7 billion yen of short-term debt, the figures showed.

“It’s possible China expects a low-rate policy after Japan’s quake and is buying longer-maturity debt for capital gains,” said Makoto Noji, a senior bond and currency strategist in Tokyo at SMBC Nikko Securities Inc., one of the 24 primary dealers obliged to bid at government debt sales. “This seems to be part of China’s move to diversify foreign reserves.”

Japanese government debt due in 10 years and longer has handed investors a 2 percent gain since the March 11 earthquake, versus a 1 percent advance for the broad market, based on Bank of America Merrill Lynch data. The Nikkei 225 Stock Average has fallen 4.7 percent over the same period.

The earthquake and tsunami that hit northeastern Japan on March 11 left 24,837 people dead or missing as of May 7, according to the country’s National Police Agency.

Poll: China’s Yuan Convertible by 2016

China’s Yuan Convertible by 2016 in Global Poll

China is taking steps to make the yuan more accepted abroad short of convertibility, such as setting up an offshore market for yuan transactions in Hong Kong.

RBS's Oakley Interview on Asian Currencies From May 11

May 11  -- Stuart Oakley, Singapore-based head of emerging markets foreign exchange for Asia at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc, talks about the region's currencies and the dollar. Asian currencies advanced, led by South Korea’s won and Taiwan’s dollar, as gains in stocks and commodities boosted confidence in the global economic recovery, increasing investor appetite for emerging-market assets. Oakley also discusses China's economy. He speaks with John Dawson on Bloomberg Television's "On the Move Asia." (Source: Bloomberg)

StanChart's Green on China Economy, Yuan From May 11

May 11  -- Stephen Green, head of Greater China research at Standard Chartered Plc in Shanghai, talks about China's economy, currency, and central bank monetary policy. China said it faces challenges from rising consumer prices and will maintain a "prudent" monetary policy, according to a statement released yesterday following the annual Strategic and Economic Dialogue with U.S. officials. The nation’s consumer prices may have risen 5.2 percent last month, based on a survey of economists by Bloomberg News. Green speaks with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television's "First Up."

Peterson's Hufbauer on U.S.-China Ties, Yuan From May 11

May 11 -- Gary Hufbauer, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington, talks about U.S.-China relations and China's currency policy. China said it faces challenges from rising consumer prices and will maintain a "prudent" monetary policy, according to a statement released yesterday following the annual Strategic and Economic Dialogue with U.S. officials. Hufbauer speaks to Susan Li on Bloomberg Television's "First Up."

Most global investors predict China’s yuan will be convertible into other currencies by 2016, with 50 percent seeing it joining the dollar, yen and euro as a reserve currency within a decade, a Bloomberg poll indicated.
Fifty-seven percent of 1,263 Bloomberg customers surveyed who are investors, traders or analysts, including 58 percent of Asian respondents, said it’s likely the yuan will be convertible in five years. Nineteen percent of respondents said it will become a reserve currency in that time, with an additional 31 percent predicting that step within a decade.
The decision would mark one of the biggest policy changes since China embraced private enterprise three decades ago, enabling fund managers to more freely invest in the world’s No. 2 economy. Convertibility would help unlock domestic Chinese savings, now at 75.6 trillion yuan ($11.6 trillion), equivalent to more than 80 percent of U.S. gross domestic product.
“If we get to the stage that the yuan is convertible and there’s a liquid government bond market available to invest in, it would mean that the Chinese yuan becomes a possible viable alternative to the dollar,” said Mansoor Mohi-uddin, chief currency strategist at UBS AG in Singapore, the world’s third- biggest foreign-exchange trader. “The euro hasn’t been able to fulfill that.”

China Advantage

While the dollar’s share of global reserves fell after the euro’s 1999 introduction, it has held above 60 percent in recent years, International Monetary Fund data show. One advantage for China over the euro region would be a single national government, avoiding the disputes arising from the sovereign-debt crisis that enveloped Greece, Ireland and Portugal.
China is taking steps to make the yuan more accepted abroad short of convertibility, such as setting up an offshore market for yuan transactions in Hong Kong. It has also entered into currency swaps with nations from Indonesia to Argentina, and denominated some overseas loans, including to Venezuela, in yuan. In Hong Kong, McDonald’s Corp. (MCD), the world’s biggest restaurant chain, sold yuan-denominated bonds last year.
“Certainly we have seen huge steps pointing towards that direction,” said Marcelo Ricaud, a fixed-income sales manager at Standard Chartered Plc in London who participated in the poll, referring to convertibility. “It is interesting to follow the increase in volume” of the offshore yuan in Hong Kong, he said.

Yuan Bonds

Sales of yuan-denominated bonds in Hong Kong have climbed to 40 billion yuan so far this year, from 36 billion yuan last year, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
Yuan deposits in Hong Kong rose to a record 451.4 billion yuan in March and may climb to 870 billion yuan by year-end, Zhang Guangping, deputy director general of the China Banking Regulatory Commission’s Shanghai branch, said last month.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy said in March that work should start on including the yuan in the currency basket used for the IMF’s Special Drawing Rights. At a March 31 conference in Nanjing, European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said the idea is “worth discussing.”
In 2009, People’s Bank of China Governor Zhou Xiaochuan proposed making SDRs, the unit of account for IMF loans that’s also held by central banks, function as a working global reserve currency.

Faster Than Expected

“Zhou Xiaochuan has laid out a coherent plan for having the yuan become a major global currency, including becoming a constituent of an expanded SDR -- convertibility is part of this plan,” said Tim Condon, the Singapore-based head of Asia research at ING Groep NV. “The authorities have started implementing the plan and progress has been faster than most expected. I think that will remain the case.”
The yuan was at 6.4976 per dollar at 11:35 a.m. Shanghai time, according to the China Foreign Exchange Trade System. The currency reached 6.4892 on April 29, the strongest level since 1993. It isn’t allowed to move more than 0.5 percent either side of the central bank’s daily fixing, which was 6.4948 yesterday. The yuan has gained about 5 percent in the past year.
By contrast with investors in the poll, many economists don’t see the yuan becoming fully convertible until 2020 or later because making the move earlier could stoke real estate and equity bubbles. A new generation of leaders, scheduled to come to power starting late next year, will not want to risk disrupting the economy, said Brian Jackson, a Hong Kong-based strategist with the Royal Bank of Canada.

Leadership Transition

“It’s a slow-moving process,” Jackson said. “There are a lot of reforms, especially in the financial sector, that need to be done. I think it could be delayed by a factor that we are going to have a transition to a new leadership over the next couple of years.”
Wang Tao, a Beijing-based economist and colleague of Mohi- uddin’s at UBS, declined to predict a time-frame for yuan convertibility. “China will have to put in place a sound financial, macro-control and exchange-rate regulatory framework” to enable the step, she said.
Meantime, respondents were less optimistic about Chinese government policies helping the investment climate than in past surveys. Fifty-one percent said they were optimistic President Hu Jintao’s policies would help investors. That is lower by about 10 percentage points than in three previous polls dating back to September 2010 where that question was asked.

Asian Leaders

Still, investors had more confidence in Hu’s government than in India under Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, Singapore under Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, and Japan under Prime Minister Naoto Kan, who tied with Sarkozy at 25 percent as the leader whose government policies investors judged to be the least promising.
Among Asian investors, 63 percent were optimistic about Hu and China, with 14 percent saying the same about Kan.
China ranked as the third-best market for investors over the next year behind the U.S. and Brazil, with 24 percent of respondents saying the country was among the world’s top two investment opportunities. Even so, that figure was the lowest among seven investor polls dating back to October 2009, though almost even with January’s findings.
Fifty percent of poll respondents and 62 percent in Asia predicted the MSCI Asia Pacific Index would be higher six months from now. In a January poll, 58 percent of all respondents said the index would be higher a half year later and in a November poll 64 percent predicted a rise. The index is little changed from the start of the year.

Japan’s Stocks

Forty-one percent of respondents, including 47 percent in Asia, predicted that the Nikkei 225 (NKY) Stock Average would be higher in six months, with 23 percent saying the index would be lower.
Fifty-four percent of respondents, including 67 percent in Asia, said that Japan’s economy will shrink in the year following the March 11 earthquake and tsunami. Ten percent of investors say Japan can escape deflation within the next year, and 21 percent say it will take more than five years.
Goldman Sachs Group Inc. economists on May 10 lowered their forecasts for Japan’s gross domestic product for 2011, saying GDP will shrink 0.2 percent this year and expand 2.6 percent in 2012. Goldman Tokyo-based analysts Naohiko Baba and Chiwoong Lee had previously seen a 0.7 percent gain for this year and 2.3 percent growth in 2012.

Highest Since 2009

At the same time, 15 percent of respondents said Japan gave investors the best opportunities among global markets, the highest percentage saying that in seven polls dating to October 2009.
“The Japanese equity market is largely discounting the reconstruction story,” said Manoj Wanzare, senior portfolio manager at Plato Investment Management in Sydney and a participant in the global poll that was conducted May 9-10.
Wanzare said he expects the Japanese economy to have an “uptick in activity” within the next six to 12 months as reconstruction spending rises.
The poll was conducted by Des Moines, Iowa-based Selzer & Co. for Bloomberg and has a margin of error of plus or minus 2.8 percentage points.

Most European Stocks Rise; Maersk, Hermes Gain as Earnings Beat Estimates

Most European stocks rose as results from A.P. Moeller-Maersk A/S to Hermes International (RMS) SCA beat estimates, offsetting concern China may take further steps to cool growth. Asian shares climbed and U.S. index futures were little changed.
Maersk jumped 3 percent as the owner of the world’s largest container line said net income surged 85 percent. Hermes gained 2.3 percent after saying sales increased as wealthy consumers purchased more luxury watches and fragrances. ITV Plc (ITV) slid 3.6 percent as the U.K.’s biggest commercial broadcaster forecast slowing advertising revenue growth.
The benchmark Stoxx Europe 600 Index advanced 0.3 percent to 283.64 at 10:02 a.m. in London as twice as many stocks rose than fell. The gauge has gained 8.2 percent from this year’s low on March 16 as companies including PSA Peugeot Citroen and Ericsson AB reported results that topped analysts’ estimates and the U.S. Federal Reserve maintained its pledge to keep interest rates low for an extended period.
“Outlook statements from companies are more positive than expected, showing companies are really confident,” said Matthias Joerss, a Frankfurt-based strategist at Macquarie Group Ltd. “However, going forward, the earnings season will become less important and the sovereign debt crisis is still a main issue. We will also see slowing macroeconomic leading indicators.”
Standard & Poor’s 500 Index futures gained 0.1 percent today and the MSCI Asia Pacific Index advanced 0.7 percent.

Chinese Inflation

China’s inflation held above 5 percent in April and lending exceeded analysts’ estimates, signaling that further monetary tightening may be needed to cool the fastest-growing major economy. Consumer prices rose 5.3 percent from a year earlier and banks extended 740 billion yuan ($114 billion) of local- currency loans, according to reports from the statistics bureau and central bank.
Another release today showed German inflation accelerated more than initially estimated in April after energy costs surged. The inflation rate, calculated using a harmonized European Union method, jumped to 2.7 percent from 2.3 percent in March, the Federal Statistics Office in Wiesbaden said.
European leaders slowed debt-wracked Greece’s drive for extra aid, saying the Athens government must first make good on pledges to overhaul an economy mired in a three-year recession. German Chancellor Angela Merkel said Greece needs to meet strict terms to deserve credits beyond the 110 billion-euro ($158 billion) lifeline granted a year ago.

‘Rebuild That Foundation’

“We can offer solidarity only if Greece’s stability and eagerness to reform is proven,” Merkel told reporters in Berlin yesterday. “We can get out of this difficult situation only if we properly rebuild that foundation, not just help without Greece doing anything.”
Of the 255 companies in the Stoxx 600 that have reported earnings since April 11, 148 have beaten analyst forecasts for per-share profit, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That compares with 72 percent of U.S. companies in the period.
Maersk jumped 3 percent to 50,800 kroner. The owner of the world’s largest container line posted first-quarter net income before minority interests of 6.35 billion kroner ($1.2 billion), compared with an average estimate of 4.89 billion kroner in a Bloomberg survey of five analysts.
Hermes rallied 2.3 percent to 165.35 euros, the highest price in five months. The French maker of Birkin handbags and silk scarves reported first-quarter sales that increased 26 percent, beating analysts’ estimates.

Storebrand, Bourbon

Storebrand ASA (STB) gained 2.2 percent to 51.95 kroner as Norway’s largest publicly traded insurer said the developments in financial markets thus far in 2011 provide a basis for continued positive growth in its core markets.
Bourbon SA (GBB) rose 5.5 percent to 34.39 euros in Paris trading, the largest gain in seven months. The owner of the second-biggest fleet of supply and crew ships for the oil industry reported a 24 percent increase in first-quarter revenue and said demand is being boosted by the price of crude and investments by oil companies.
Axel Springer AG (SPR) jumped 3 percent to 111.20 euros after Europe’s largest newspaper publisher said first-quarter profit before some items rose 6.5 percent as international and online business revenue made up for a weaker German advertising market.
ITV slid 3.6 percent to 73.2 pence as the broadcaster forecast first-half advertising revenue growth will slow and it may underperform the market as clients cut spending budgets.

South Korean Stocks: Korea Zinc, LG Electronics, SK Innovation

Shares of the following companies may have unusual moves in South Korea trading. Stock symbols are in parentheses and prices are as of the 3:00 p.m. close of trading in Seoul.

The Kospi Index (KOSPI) rose 1.3 percent to 2,166.63, the biggest advance since May 2.

Oil refiners: S-Oil Corp. (010950) (010950 KS) rose 2.5 percent to 143,000 won, while SK Innovation Co. (096770 KS) gained 3 percent to 226,000 won. Gasoline futures in New York rose 3.1 percent yesterday, lifting the premium of the oil product to crude oil to an all-time high.

Korea Zinc Co. (010130 KS), which produces gold and silver, rose 2.8 percent to 389,500 won. Gold futures for June delivery rose 0.9 percent in New York yesterday to settle at $1,516.90 an ounce. Silver futures surged 3.7 percent.

LG Electronics Inc. (066570) (066570 KS), the world’s third-largest maker of mobile phones and second-biggest manufacturer of televisions, surged 7.1 percent to 113,500 won. Today’s increase was the biggest since Dec. 3, 2009.

“There are expectations that second-quarter earnings will get better,” said Chang Yoon Soo, an analyst at Korea Investment & Securities in Seoul. “Some investors seem to think the stock is undervalued.”

Samsung Engineering Co. (028050 KS) jumped 3.4 percent to 231,500 won. South Korea’s largest engineering company is bidding to participating in the construction of a new chemicals plant planned by Saudi Aramco and Dow Chemical Co. in Jubail on the Persian Gulf Coast, Chief Marketing Officer Kong Hong Pyo said in an interview.

Via - www.bloomberg.com

U.S. Stocks Rise on Higher-Than-Estimated Earnings, Microsoft’s Skype Deal

Stocks Rise on Earnings as Greek Bonds Rebound


Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange in New York on May 10, 2011. Photographer: Ramin Talaie/Bloomberg

U.S. stocks rose for a third day as higher-than-estimated profit forecasts and Microsoft Corp. (MSFT)’s purchase of Skype Technologies SA bolstered optimism that earnings and takeovers will keep fueling the rally.

Dean Foods Co. (DF), the largest U.S. milk processor, jumped 11 percent after its earnings forecast beat analysts’ estimates. Microsoft fell 0.6 percent after agreeing to buy Skype for $8.5 billion to expand its Internet presence after past failures. Titanium Metals Corp. (TIE) gained 2 percent, pacing gains in raw- material producers, as metal prices advanced before the release of figures that may show weaker inflation in China.

The S&P 500 gained 0.8 percent to 1,357.16 at 4 p.m. in New York. The benchmark gauge has risen 1.7 percent over the past three days. The Dow Jones Industrial Average advanced 75.68 points, or 0.6 percent, to 12,760.36 today.

“The earnings season has been a pleasant surprise,” said Mark Luschini, chief investment strategist at Philadelphia-based Janney Montgomery Scott LLC, which manages $53 billion. “There wasn’t a great deal of optimism that earnings were going to beat estimates with the vigor that we’ve seen. On top of that, we’re getting big M&A deals. That’s an indication that companies have a lot of cash and will continue to do deals.”

The S&P 500 fell 1.7 percent last week following a rout in raw materials that knocked off $99 billion of market value from commodities. The S&P 500 has advanced 7.9 percent this year amid government stimulus measures and higher-than-projected corporate profits. Earnings-per-share have beaten analyst estimates at 72 percent of the 423 companies in the S&P 500 that reported results since April 11, Bloomberg data show.

Import Prices

Prices of goods imported into the U.S. rose more than forecast in April, driven by gains in fuel and food that may put pressure on some companies to raise prices.

The 2.2 percent increase in the import-price index followed a revised 2.6 percent gain in March, Labor Department figures showed. Economists projected a 1.8 percent increase, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey. Prices excluding fuel advanced 0.6 percent.

Financial, technology and health-care stocks offer “value,” Bill Miller, the chairman and chief investment officer of Legg Mason Capital Management Inc., wrote in the Financial Times today. He said valuations in those industries have been more expensive 90 percent of the time during about the past 60 years.

Higher Commodity Prices

Miller, whose Legg Mason Capital Management Value Trust (LMVTX) fund outperformed the S&P 500 annually for 15 straight years through 2005, said a lower U.S. dollar and higher commodity prices will be “bearish not bullish” for stocks as the Federal Reserve is set to end its asset-purchase program next month. The fund was outperformed by 98 percent of peers in 2010, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

“We believe now is a good time to buy what’s on sale, and a bad time to buy what’s marked up,” Miller said.

S&P 500 financial companies are currently trading at 13.7 times reported operating earnings, while technology stocks are trading at 15.8 times and health-care shares are selling at a multiple of 13.4.

Dean Foods jumped 11 percent to $12.24. The company forecast full-year profit excluding some items of at least 67 cents a share. On average, the analysts surveyed by Bloomberg estimated earnings of 57 cents.

Microsoft’s Deal

Microsoft lost 0.6 percent to $25.67. Microsoft will acquire Luxembourg-based Skype, with 170 million active users, from an investor group led by Silver Lake, the companies said in a statement today. The agreement was approved by the boards of directors of both companies.

The takeover may help Microsoft Chief Executive Officer Steve Ballmer attract Web users and narrow Google Inc.’s lead in Web advertising. Microsoft will connect Skype to its Outlook e- mail, Xbox game console, Windows mobile phones and corporate- phone software. The acquisition is Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft’s largest, surpassing the purchase of AQuantive Inc. for about $6 billion in 2007.

Overall, there have been 8,768 deals announced globally this year, totaling $883.8 billion, a 26 percent increase from the $699.13 billion in the same period in 2010, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

A gauge of raw-material producers in the S&P 500 rose 0.7 percent as metal prices rallied. Titanium Metals, a Dallas-based producer of the metal, added 2 percent to $19.89.

China Prices

Chinese consumer prices climbed 5.2 percent in April, slowing from 5.4 percent in March, according to a Bloomberg News survey of economists. Concern that Chinese demand may slow as authorities move to tighten credit contributed to copper’s 7.1 percent drop in March and April in New York.

The biggest weekly retreat in U.S. equities since March did “little damage” to the S&P 500 and the pullback presents a buying opportunity, according to MKM Partners.

The benchmark for U.S. stocks maintained its “positive momentum” despite falling four of the five days last week, said Katie Stockton, MKM’s chief market technician. The index’s Moving Average Convergence/Divergence line, calculated by subtracting the index’s average level during the past 26 days from the average over the past 12 days, stayed above its uptrend line since March, a sign that the market may resume its rally and extend its gain to as high as 1,420, she said.

“The pullback did surprisingly little damage from a technical standpoint,” Stockton wrote in a note dated May 8. It’s “a testament to the strength of the uptrend.”

Via - www.bloomberg.com

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