Fed Signals Support for Further Stimulus If Economy Slows

The Federal Reserve signaled that a further economic slowdown would bring growing support among policy makers for additional steps to spur the three-year expansion.

A few members of the Federal Open Market Committee said the Fed should ease policy to move the economy toward its targets for full employment and stable prices, according to minutes of the June 19-20 meeting released yesterday in Washington. Several others said more action could be warranted if growth slows, risks intensified or inflation seemed likely to fall “persistently” below their goal.

“You have a majority to do a lot more with even a small downward revision in the forecast,” said Joe Gagnon, who worked as an associate director at the Fed Board’s Division of International Finance from 1999-2008. Gagnon, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington, said the Fed’s next move could come as early as the Sept. 12-13 meeting.

As Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and fellow policy makers extended their Operation Twist program through the end of the year, they debated whether additional steps such as a third round of asset purchases, known as quantitative easing, might be needed. Some said there was a risk that buying more Treasuries might eventually disrupt the government debt market.

The FOMC met before the Labor Department reported last week that employers added 80,000 jobs to payrolls in June, fewer than economists forecast, while the jobless rate was unchanged at 8.2 percent, the 41st consecutive month above 8 percent. Other reports showed manufacturing shrank in June for the first time since the recovery began and consumer spending stalled in May.
‘Poor Results’

“It’s more than just the dovish branch of the voting membership that appears to be signing on to the idea of QE3 if the economy loses momentum,” said Dana Saporta, U.S. economist for Credit Suisse in New York. “We do know that since that meeting, we’ve gotten some poor results, most noticeably the June employment report.”

The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index (SPX) fell less than 0.1 percent to 1,341.45 at the close of trading in New York after declining as much as 0.6 percent. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose to 1.52 percent from 1.5 percent the day before.

The minutes showed 15 FOMC participants said the risks to the economy were weighted to the downside in June, up from eight in April. Thirteen said the risks to the unemployment rate were weighted to the upside, up from nine in April.
Voting Seats

The Fed’s 19 presidents and governors take part in each FOMC meeting, while only 12 have votes at any given time. The seven governors and New York Fed president have permanent votes, while the other Fed presidents rotate among four voting seats.

Several Fed policy makers said the central bank should “explore the possibility of developing new tools to promote more accommodative financial conditions and thereby support a stronger economic recovery,” without specifying what those tools might be.

“They’ve intensified their concerns about the downside risk, and they’re talking about additional tools,” said Michael Hanson, senior U.S. economist at Bank of America in New York.

The FOMC decided to extend Operation Twist by swapping $267 billion of shorter-term securities with the same amount of longer-term debt. The program is intended to reduce long-term interest rates. The Fed also repeated that its key interest rate was likely to stay near zero at least through late 2014.

Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke, at a press conference after the meeting, said policy makers were prepared to “take additional steps” to boost the economy.
‘Modest’ Effect

Several central bankers said that extending Operation Twist was likely to have a “modest” effect on already low interest rates. Richmond Fed President Jeffrey Lacker dissented from the decision, arguing that the move would do little to help growth or employment.

While some policy makers expressed concern excessive purchase of Treasuries could “at some point, lead to deterioration” in the government debt market, members agreed the risk was “low at present” and would be outweighed by the benefits of extending Operation Twist.

“They’re not entirely confident that the options they have are good ones,” said Drew Matus, U.S. economist at UBS AG in Stamford, Connecticut. “They’re being more open about their limitations.”
Opens Door

Lou Crandall, chief economist at Wrightson ICAP LLC, said the committee’s discussion of potential costs to the functioning of the more than $10.5 trillion Treasury market opens the door to renewed purchases of mortgage-backed securities.

“If you want to spread the impact, then you add another market,” Crandall said.

The Fed lowered interest rates to zero in December of 2008 and initiated two rounds of large-scale asset purchases totaling $2.3 trillion. In the first round the central bank purchased Treasuries and housing debt, while it limited purchases to Treasuries in the second round.

San Francisco Fed President John Williams and the Chicago Fed’s Charles Evans this week said that the central bank could add additional stimulus through a third round of asset purchases, this time including housing debt guaranteed by mortgage-finance companies Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae.

“If further action is called for, the most effective tool would be additional purchases of longer-maturity securities, including agency mortgage-backed securities,” Williams said in a July 9 speech in Coeur D’Alene, Idaho. Evans said he would have favored the Fed taking stronger action in June.
Less Supportive

Participants at the meeting said financial conditions had become less supportive of the economy as investors’ concerns about the euro region’s sovereign-debt and banking crisis increased. Policy makers said that strains in Europe could spill over into the U.S. and saw the need of “undertaking adequate preparations to address such spillovers if they were to occur.”

Nearly all policy makers judged uncertainty about economic growth and unemployment to be higher than the normal level during the previous 20 years, the minutes show.

Inflation is also falling below the Fed’s 2 percent goal. Prices rose 1.5 percent from a year earlier in May, as measured by the personal consumption expenditures price index. The inflation gauge is the lowest since January 2011 and has dropped from a 2011 peak of 2.9 percent in September.

“There’s a growing coalition of members who are inclined to do more and who really feel that they’re failing to meet their objectives,” said Jeffrey Greenberg, a U.S. economist at Nomura Securities International LLC in New York. “They see the unemployment rate and read that as a clear indication that they’re not achieving the full employment aspect of the dual mandate.”
 

Italy not expected to request bail-out: Fekter

Italy is not expected to request a bail-out from the European Union, Austrian Finance Minister Maria Fekter said on Thursday.

"We have no reason at the moment to believe that Italy will make a request," Fekter told reporters on the sidelines of an International Monetary Fund conference in Vienna.

Fekter said the EU's EFSF rescue fund had sufficient resources to meet Spanish demands and that a decision on Cyprus would be made in the coming days.
 

Factory output drags on euro zone's economy

Euro zone factories unexpectedly stepped up production in May, but output fell in France and the Netherlands in a further sign that the bloc's sovereign debt crisis is also hurting its stronger economies.

Industrial production in the 17 countries sharing the euro rose 0.6 percent in May from April, the EU's statistics office Eurostat said on Thursday, beating expectations of economists polled by Reuters, who had forecast no growth in the month.

But Eurostat revised downward the reading for April to a 1.1 percent drop from a 0.8 percent decrease, the deepest fall so far this year, highlighting the crushing effect that the 2-1/2 year debt crisis has had on consumer and corporate demand.

"May's increase does not alter our view that the sector will continue to act as a drag on overall economic growth," said Ben May, a economist at Capital Economics in London.

"With the weakening business surveys pointing to more rapid rates of decline, we would not be surprised if production fell again in June," he said, forecasting a contraction in second quarter gross domestic product in the euro zone.

A fall in energy production in May for the euro zone as a whole appeared to explain the modest reading as output rose for capital goods, such as machinery to make other products.

Industrial output fell 2.1 percent in France in May, a drop second only to Slovenia's 3.2 percent slide.

Production also fell in the Netherlands, where GDP is expected to shrink 0.9 percent this year, according to the European Commission and making it the worst performing economy in the euro zone's wealthy, northern core.

"Modest annual declines in production in Germany, the Netherlands and Finland suggest that all is not well in the core countries," said Martin van Vliet at ING, adding that with no growth in industrial output in June, the sector's performance will likely knock at least a 0.1 percentage point off GDP.

FRENCH JOB LOSSES

Led by France, EU leaders agreed at a summit last month to inject 120 billion euros ($145 billion) into the European economy to counterbalance public sector layoffs and cuts in spending to bring budget deficits down to sustainable levels.

But with the euro zone crisis also weakening business confidence in China, the United States and other major economies, that plan may not be enough, especially when only 60 billion euros will be available quickly.

In another attempt to revive the economy, the European Central Bank cut interest rates to a record low of 0.75 percent this month, making it cheaper for the euro zone's hard-pressed households and firms to borrow.

The outlook is poor for France in particular, after French carmaker PSA Peugeot Citroen (PEUP.PA) announced on Thursday 8,000 job cuts and the closure of an assembly plant as it struggles with mounting losses.

Germany, Europe's largest economy, has shown the most resilience to the debt crisis and the International Monetary Fund expects it to grow 1 percent this year, better than the stagnation most economists see for the euro zone as a whole.

But while German factories increased production by 1.5 percent in May, it was still not enough to compensate for a 2 percent fall in April. Italy painted a similar picture, rising 0.8 percent in May after also falling 2 percent in April.

"German exports should climb again in the coming months, as we do not expect global demand to slump. That said, the German upswing has lost momentum amid the crisis in the euro zone," Ulrike Rondorf, an economist at Commerzbank, wrote in a note to clients last month on the German export outlook.

Ireland, which the euro zone is eager to hold up as a success story after Dublin took a bailout in 2010, notched up its third consecutive month of solid output gains, with industrial production rising 1.4 percent. ($1 = 0.8164 euros)
 

EU Trials New Crisis Model in Spain Trading Budget Cuts for Time

European leaders are testing the latest version of their debt crisis strategy in Spain, granting Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy more time to reduce the budget deficit in exchange for deeper spending cuts.

Rajoy yesterday announced 65 billion euros ($80 billion) of austerity measures in a renewed effort to meet European Union budget targets after he was granted a one-year extension on the deadline to meet EU limits.


“Europeans are learning from past mistakes,” said Christian Schultz, a senior economist at Berenberg Bank in London and a former European Central Bank official. “The stick is necessary but the carrot is also good.”

Europe’s concession to recession-wracked Spain has raised expectations in Ireland and Portugal that they can win more time to rein in their budget deficits after Germany’s hardball tactics in Greece spurred a rebellion against bailout politics there.

Spanish bonds and equities rose yesterday. The extra yield investors demand to hold Spanish 10-year debt instead of the benchmark German bunds dropped 19 basis points yesterday to 531 points and the main stock index, the Ibex 35, rose 1.2 percent.
IMF Role

“People can see that they are serious,” said Javier Morillas, professor of international economics at San Pablo CEU University in Madrid. “I don’t think these are the last measures we’ll see, and they certainly aren’t the last cartridges Rajoy has left.”

Rajoy’s budget package came as Spain finalizes the conditions of a 100 billion-euro bank rescue bank that will allow International Monetary Fund officials to intervene in the process of restructuring the banking system and tightens scrutiny over spending plans.

European leaders also held out the prospect of buying Spanish debt to trim yields as long as Rajoy complies with their conditions, which include transfering powers from the Economy Ministry to the Bank of Spain and bolstering the central bank’s independence.

Rajoy is also seeking additional cuts from the 17 regional governments, which control health and education. Even as Spain’s own access to capital markets is narrowing, the central government is planning to help states fund themselves on markets. Budget Minister Cristobal Montoro meets regional finance chiefs today at 4 p.m. in Madrid to discuss the plan.
Greek Recession

With the extra year, Spain has until 2014 to bring its deficit within the EU’s 3 percent limit. European finance ministers agreed to loosen the 2012 deficit goal to 6.3 percent of GDP from 5.3 percent. Still, ministers urged Spain to step up budget cuts.

Even after the concessions on the timing, Europe’s demands may end up pushing Spain deeper into recession like Greece, which has been in recession since 2008. The Spanish program brings the fiscal tightening for this year to about 65 billion euros, Schultz estimates, after three previous packages.

“Just when you think reason and pragmatism are returning, European policymakers resort to type,” said Dario Perkins, an economist at Lombard Street Research Ltd. in London, in research note. “Significant fiscal tightening was the last thing the economy needed.”
Voter Backlash

Rajoy is already facing a backlash from Spanish voters with unemployment at 25 percent and the economy sliding deeper into its second recession since 2009. Miners who’ve been striking for the past seven weeks clashed with police outside the industry ministry in Madrid yesterday as they demanded the government reinstate subsidies they say are needed to keep their industry alive.

The premier also scrapped a mortgage rebate, reversing a policy he implemented in December at his second Cabinet meeting to enact an election promise. At the same time, he had raised pensions to meet another pledge. Yesterday, he said he’d present parliament’s pension committee with a bill to make retirement benefits more sustainable.

Even with the new targets, Spain needs to cut the deficit by 2.6 percent of GDP as the economy shrinks. The deficit overshot last year as the economic downturn bit into tax revenue and regions unearthed undeclared bills. The government forecasts a contraction of 1.7 percent this year and Rajoy said today the slump would continue next year.

“We have very little room to choose,” Rajoy told the national parliament in Madrid. “I pledged to cut taxes and now I’m raising them. But the circumstances have changed and I have to adapt to them.”
 

Trade Gap in U.S. Narrowed in May as Imports Decreased

The trade deficit in the U.S. narrowed in May as falling crude oil prices and weakening demand for consumer goods trimmed the import bill.

The gap shrank 3.8 percent to $48.7 billion, in line with the median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News, from $50.6 billion in April, Commerce Department figures showed today in Washington. Purchases from abroad fell to the lowest level in three months, while exports climbed to the second- highest on record.


Slowing global growth, which led central banks from Europe to China to cut interest rates and announce more stimulus a week ago, may signal American companies will have a harder time boosting overseas sales. At the same time, an increase in imports of business equipment indicates sustained investment in the U.S., and more inbound shipments of cars point to continued strength in the auto industry.

“The trade deficit will drift slightly lower because of the decline in the price of oil,” said Jay Bryson, senior global economist at Wells Fargo Securities LLC in Charlotte, North Carolina, who was the only analyst to correctly project the trade outcome. “Exports are holding up, but as we go forward we are going to see pretty weak numbers given the slowdown abroad. Our economy has slowed as well.”

The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index erased losses in the final hour of trading as investors weighed the Federal Reserve’s latest policy minutes for evidence that the central bank may be closer to additional stimulus actions. The 500 Index was at 1,341.45 at the 4 p.m. close in New York, down less than 0.1 percent.
Fed Minutes

A few Fed policy makers said the central bank will probably need to take more action to boost the labor market and meet its inflation target, according to minutes of their June meeting issued today.

The median forecast in the Bloomberg survey of 70 economists called for the deficit to shrink to $48.6 billion. Estimates ranged from $42.5 billion to $51 billion. The Commerce Department revised the trade deficit for April from an initially reported $50.1 billion.

Imports dropped 0.7 percent to $231.8 billion, the fewest since February, from $233.3 billion the prior month. Demand for crude oil plunged by $2.82 billion in May. Purchases of foreign- made consumer goods like mobile phones and clothing decreased by $375 million, pointing to a slowdown in household spending.
Wholesale Inventories

The drop in imports was also reflected in a slower pace of inventory accumulation at the nation’s wholesalers in May. The 0.3 percent gain in stockpiles followed April’s 0.5 percent increase that was smaller than previously estimated, the Commerce Department also reported.

The trade shortfall excluding petroleum widened to $23.8 billion from $22.5 billion in April.

There were some exceptions to the glum reading on imports. A $1.42 billion increase in imports of capital equipment like computers and telecommunications gear indicates business investment is holding up. Automobile and parts imports, which is a separate category from consumer goods, also climbed to a record.

Exports increased 0.2 percent to $183.1 billion, boosted by sales of food and capital equipment.

After eliminating the influence of prices, which are the numbers used to calculate gross domestic product, the trade gap narrowed to $48 billion from $48.7 billion. The average for the quarter so far was slightly higher than that for the first three months of the year, indicating trade will probably subtract a little bit from growth.
European Union

The trade gap with the European Union was the biggest since July 2008 as U.S. imports from the region jumped more than exports, perhaps starting to reflect the recent drop in the value of the euro. The deficit with South Korea was the biggest since November 2004.

The deficit with China widened to $26 billion from $24.6 billion in April. Data this week indicated it may keep growing.

China’s total imports rose less than anticipated in June, pushing the trade surplus to a three-year high and adding pressure on the government to support demand as the global economy slows, a report yesterday showed. Inbound shipments increased 6.3 percent from a year earlier, compared with the 11 percent median estimate in a Bloomberg survey.

The trade deficit with China may remain a thorny issue as the U.S. presses it to allow its currency, the yuan, to rise against the dollar and improve access to its market. President Barack Obama this month expanded trade complaints against China, accusing the nation of imposing unfair taxes on American vehicles, mostly from General Motors Co. and Chrysler Group LLC.
China’s View

Premier Wen Jiabao said promoting investment growth is the key now to stabilizing China’s economic expansion, signaling officials may boost spending to counter a slowdown that probably extended into a sixth quarter.

Stabilizing economic growth is not only a pressing priority for China now, it is also a long-term “arduous” task, Wen said in a statement posted on a government website yesterday.

“Growth-stabilizing policies include boosting consumption and diversifying exports, but currently, what is important is to promote a reasonable growth in investment,” Wen said.

China, the world’s second-biggest economy, on July 5 reduced benchmark interest rates for the second time in a month in an effort to reverse a slowdown in growth.
Export Outlook

The outlook for U.S. exports may dim. The Bank of England, which announced July 5 that it would restart buying bonds two months after stopping, said output will likely remain sluggish after contracting in the past two quarters. The European Central Bank the same day cut its main rate to a record low as sovereign debt turmoil threatens to drive the 17-nation euro economy into a recession.

Cooling overseas demand is hurting some American companies like Harley-Davidson Inc. (HOG) A pickup in the value of the dollar against the euro, which makes U.S.-made goods less attractive to overseas buyers, is also among reasons the biggest U.S. motorcycle maker said first-quarter sales fell 1.1 percent.

“There is an impact with regards to the events and the debt crisis and consumer confidence and potential recessionary pressures in Europe on our business there,” John Olin, chief financial officer, said on a June 26 conference call. “We are seeing the pressures of a devaluing currency” as “everything that we send to Europe is made here” in the U.S., he said.

The dollar climbed 6.7 percent in the 12 months to June 29 against a trade-weighted basket of currencies from its biggest trading partners, according to Fed data.
 

U.S. Stocks Pare Drop as Investors Dissect Fed Minutes

U.S. stocks pared losses in the final half hour of trading as investors debated whether the Federal Reserve will embark on another economic stimulus program. The Dollar Index touched a two-year high while commodities gained and Treasuries were little changed.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index slipped less than 0.1 percent to 1,341.45 at 4 p.m. in New York, paring a drop of 0.6 percent. The Dollar Index, a gauge of the currency against six major peers, rose as much as 0.3 percent to 83.61 before paring its gain to 0.1 percent. The S&P GSCI Index of commodities added 1.1 percent as oil rose following a drop in U.S. supplies. Gold lost 0.5 percent. Ten-year Treasury yields rose one basis point to 1.51 percent after approaching a record low.

Stocks slid and the dollar rose as Fed minutes showed two participants said more bond purchases are appropriate, while two others said they would be needed in the absence of “satisfactory progress” in cutting unemployment or if downside risks grew. Equities recovered as analysts dissected the minutes, with Jefferies & Co. economist Ward McCarthy saying in a note there’s a “reasonable probability” a third round of quantitative easing is announced in coming months.

“What often happens is when the market is looking for something positive and doesn’t get it, it will read into the notes and see what the implication of the Fed’s posture is and the posture is clearly more toward an accommodation than it was a month ago,” said Peter Kenny, managing director in institutional sales at Knight Capital Group Inc. in Jersey City, New Jersey.
‘Cheerleading’

The minutes from the June meeting also show policy makers considered the risk that further easing might pose. Some central bankers noted that excessive purchase of Treasuries may lead to deterioration in the functioning of the Treasury market. UBS AG economist Drew Matus wrote in a client note that the language in the Fed minutes indicates the threshold for a third round of quantitative easing is high and should not be taken as a given.

“There is not much cheerleading in these minutes,” Mike Shea, a managing partner at New York-based brokerage firm Direct Access Partners LLC, said in an interview. “We see a lot of discussion on what the real benefits of more stimulus would be, and it appears there is a conclusion that benefits would be modest.”

The Fed minutes come amid growing concern that the U.S. economic recovery is faltering and corporate profits are shrinking. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. cut its estimate for second- quarter U.S. gross-domestic product growth twice today, lowering it to 1.3 percent after data on wholesale inventories and the trade deficit dimmed prospects for the economy.
Earnings Season

Earnings at S&P 500 companies decreased 1.8 percent in the second quarter, according to analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg. That would mark the first year-over-year decline since 2009.

Technology shares in the S&P 500 slipped 0.6 percent as a group and were the biggest drag on the index for a second day. The group lost 1.2 percent yesterday as reduced sales projections at Advanced Micro Devices Inc. and Applied Materials Inc. (AMAT) spurred concern about profits at technology companies, the group forecast to have the strongest second-quarter earnings growth among 10 industries.
Five-Day Slump

The S&P 500 has slipped for five straight days, the longest slump in almost two months. United Technologies Corp., Boeing Co. and Microsoft Corp. lost at least 1.5 percent to lead declines in 21 of 30 stocks in the Dow Jones Industrial Average (INDU), which fell 48.59 points to 12,604.53. Exxon Mobil Corp. and Chevron Corp. rose at least 0.9 percent as energy shares had the biggest advance in the S&P 500, while Bank of America Corp. rose 2 percent to pace an advance in banks.

Last’s month Fed meeting came before a report July 6 that showed U.S. employers added fewer workers than forecast in June and growth in private payrolls was the slowest in 10 months.

The Dollar Index reversed a decline of as much as 0.4 percent. The U.S. currency strengthened against nine of its 16 major peers, rising the most against the South African rand, Swedish krona and Japanese yen.

Almost two shares fell for each that gained in the Stoxx Europe 600. (SXXP) Burberry Group Plc tumbled 7.4 percent after the U.K.’s largest luxury-goods company reported sales that missed estimates. Britvic Plc plunged 13 percent after the maker of Robinsons fruit drinks said full-year results will be at the bottom end of analysts’ estimates. Bankia SA, the nationalized Spanish lender, tumbled 7.8 percent.
Spain Rally

Spain’s IBEX 35 Index of stocks rallied 1.2 percent and its bonds surged for a second day after Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy said the government will take more measures amounting to 65 billion euros ($79.9 billion) to shore up the budget.

The prime minister announced cuts in jobless benefits and public wages, signaled reductions in pensions and raised sales taxes as part of a 65 billion-euro ($80 billion) package of deficit cuts, risking a deeper recession. As striking miners clamored for aid to keep their industry alive in a march along Madrid’s main boulevard, Rajoy trimmed union funding by 20 percent.

The yield on Spain’s 10-year bond fell 23 basis points to 6.58 percent, while the rate on similar-maturity Italian securities slipped 14 basis points to 5.81 percent.

The yield on 10-year German bunds decreased five basis points to 1.27 percent as the government sold 4.15 billion euros of the securities at a record-low yield of 1.31 percent. Two- year German yields were minus 0.016 percent.
Corn Reverses

Corn fell 2.2 percent to $7.015 a bushel, retreating from a 10-month high on speculation that a drought-fueled rally in prices will curb demand. Earlier, the grain reached $7.48, the highest for the most-active contract since Sept. 13. Today, the USDA cut its domestic production estimate by 12 percent a month after predicting a record harvest. The U.S. is the world’s largest grower and exporter.

Corn prices through yesterday surged 42 percent since mid- June as areas of moderate to extreme drought expanded to 53 percent of the Midwest. Crop conditions as of July 8 were the worst for that date since the drought of 1988, government data show.

Oil in New York rose 2.3 percent to $85.81 a barrel today after the U.S. Energy Department reported supplies dropped and refineries operated at the highest rate in almost five years.

The MSCI Emerging Markets Index fell 0.2 percent, retreating for a sixth day in the longest run of declines since May. Russia’s Micex Index lost 1.3 percent and India’s Sensex slipped 0.7 percent. The Shanghai Composite Index rose 0.5 percent. The Turkish lira strengthened against 13 of 16 major peers after the current-account deficit narrowed.