Sunday, July 29, 2007

Yen May Rise to 116 Per Dollar; Abe Remains Prime Minister, Deutsche Says

(Bloomberg) -- The yen may rise to a four-month high
of 116 per dollar as Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will
remain in office after his ruling coalition lost its majority in
upper house elections, according to Deutsche Securities.

Abe's decision to retain his post lessens political
instability that may have forced the Bank of Japan to delay an
interest-rate increase next month. The government is likely to
avoid raising sales taxes and close the income gap to appease
opposition parties, supporting consumer spending and the currency.


Read more at Bloomberg Currencies News

China CNPC strikes oil of commercial value in Chad

(Reuters) - China National Petroleum Corp. (CNPC) has struck oil of commercial value for the first time in Chad, after buying a 50 percent share of an oil exploration partnership in the landlocked African nation last year.

CNPC, China's top oil and gas producer, did not provide any estimates of oil in place or an even more useful gauge such as recoverable reserves in a news release posted on its Web site (www.cnpc.com.cn) on Monday.


Read more at Reuters Africa

Argentina Construction, Brazil Inflation: Latin America Bond Preview

(Bloomberg) -- The following events and economic
reports may influence trading in Latin American local bonds
today. Bond yields are from the previous session.

Argentina: Construction activity rose 4.3 percent in June
from a year earlier, the National Statistics Institute reported
on July 27. Construction activity rose a seasonally adjusted 1.4
percent in June from May, the Institute said in Buenos Aires.


Read more at Bloomberg Bonds News

U.S. Treasuries Decline on Speculation Bonds Have Become Too Expensive

(Bloomberg) -- Benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasuries
fell, snapping four days of gains, on speculation the securities
have become too expensive with yields near a 10-week low.

The yield on the 10-year note rose 2 basis points, or 0.02
percentage point, to 4.78 percent at 1:32 p.m. in Singapore,
according to bond broker Cantor Fitzgerald LP. The price of the
4 1/2 percent note due May 2017 fell 5/32, or $1.56 per $1,000
face amount, to 97 26/32. Yields move inversely to bond prices.
Ten-year note yields fell 19 basis points last week, the biggest
decline since the period ended Sept. 22.


Read more at Bloomberg Bonds News

Barclays, HSBC, Beazley, Pearson, EMI Group Plc: U.K., Irish Stock Preview

(Bloomberg) -- The following stocks may rise or fall
in U.K. and Irish markets today. Stock symbols are in parentheses
and prices are from the last market close.

The benchmark FTSE 100 Index dropped 36.00, or 0.6 percent,
to 6215.20. The FTSE All-Share Index declined 18.24, or 0.6
percent, to 3210.69.


Read more at Bloomberg Stocks News

TIPS Prove Poor Tip for Bond Traders Anticipating Inflation's Acceleration

(Bloomberg) -- Treasury investors say inflation is
abating, even if the oil bulls are right and crude heads to $100
a barrel.

Pacific Investment Management Co. and Fidelity Investments
sold Treasury inflation-protected securities maturing next year,
confident that consumer prices will remain in check. Money
managers lost as much as $275 million on so-called TIPS in the
second half of 2006 because oil fell from record highs and
gasoline prices dropped.


Read more at Bloomberg Bonds News

JGB futures fall from 2-month high on BOJ jitters

(Reuters) - JGBs quickly gave up early gains made on a drop in Tokyo
share prices as investors were concerned that bond yields have
fallen too far if the BOJ decides to lift the overnight call rate
to a 12-year high of 0.75 percent in August from the current 0.5
percent.




A slump in Japanese stock and credit markets in the past week
and a plunge in global equity markets have stirred doubts about a
BOJ interest rate increase next month, driving benchmark JGB
yields to two-month lows.


Read more at Reuters.com Bonds News

Taiwan's CPC Says Kaohsiung Crude Unit Is Unaffected by Yesterday's Fire

(Bloomberg) -- CPC Corp., Taiwan's state-owned oil
refiner, said a crude distillation unit at its refinery in
Kaohsiung in southern Taiwan was unaffected by a fire yesterday.
No one was hurt in the incident.

The fire, which broke out during an attempt to restart the
unit, was extinguished within 10 minutes, Jessica Tang, a
Taipei-based spokeswoman, said by telephone today. The plant has
the capacity to process 100,000 barrels of crude oil a day and
closed since June 6 for scheduled maintenance.


Read more at Bloomberg Energy News

UPDATE 1-Doosan to buy Ingersoll units for $4.9 bln

(Reuters) - The biggest ever overseas acquisition by a South Korean
company will make Doosan one of the world's top seven
construction equipment makers, the South Korean firm said.




Ingersoll signed a definitive agreement to sell Bobcat, the
world's top compact construction equipment firm, and its utility
equipment and attachment businesses, which in 2006 together
generated $2.6 billion in sales and $370 million in operating
profits.


Read more at Reuters.com Mergers News

JGB futures fall from 2-mth high on rate jitters

(Reuters) - The Nikkei share average was down 1.1 percent by late
morning.




A slump in Tokyo share prices in the past week along with a
plunge in global equity markets has stirred doubts about a BOJ
interest rate increase next month, driving benchmark JGB yields
to two-month lows.


Read more at Reuters.com Bonds News

South Korea's Stocks Fall on U.S. Housing Concern; Hyundai Heavy Declines

(Bloomberg) -- South Korean stocks fell for the
third day. Kookmin Bank led declines on concern a deepening U.S.
housing slump will damp the world's biggest economy and prompt
investors to shun riskier assets.

The Kospi index dropped 17.86, or 1 percent, to 1,865.36 as
of 9:25 a.m. in Seoul. Stocks plunged on July 27 by the most in
more than three years, wiping out $46 billion in market value.


Read more at Bloomberg Stocks News

Bank ratings intact despite LBO funding jam -S&P

(Reuters) - Turmoil in the global credit markets has left banks unable
to syndicate funding for a string of high-profile leveraged
buyouts, including those of British health and beauty chain
Alliance Boots [AB.UL] and U.S. carmaker Chrysler.




The funding, often with aggressive terms, was committed to
when the credit-market sky was clear and investors seemed to
have an unquenchable thirst for debt.


Read more at Reuters.com Mergers News

Valero's Port Arthur Refinery Releases Odorous Vapor From Faulty Oil Tank

(Bloomberg) -- Valero Energy Corp., the largest
U.S. refiner, said a faulty storage tank at its Port Arthur,
Texas, refinery, yesterday released smelly vapors.

``Due to a mechanical problem with a roof of a storage tank
at the Valero Port Arthur Refinery on Saturday, there was a
release of vapors that caused a noxious odor,'' spokesman Bill
Day said. ``Refinery officials notified the proper authorities
and immediately began efforts to halt the release.''


Read more at Bloomberg Energy News

Paulson Rejects Criticism, Says Talks With China Have Led to Stronger Yuan

(Bloomberg) -- U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry
Paulson, rejecting claims in Congress that he's too soft on
China, said negotiations rather than sanctions have led to a
faster appreciation of the yuan.

``We are getting results through this process that wouldn't
have been achieved without it,'' Paulson told reporters as he
traveled to China, where he arrived late yesterday. The Chinese
currency's ``rate of appreciation has gone up materially over
the past year,'' he said.


Read more at Bloomberg Emerging Markets News

Cheapest Stocks in 16 Years Entice Investors After $2.1 Trillion Decline

(Bloomberg) -- Investors are preparing to snap up
shares of telephone, health-care and computer companies after
last week's $2.1 trillion global stock market rout left U.S.
equities the cheapest in 16 years.

``The window for buying is starting to open,'' said D.A.
Davidson & Co. chief market strategist Frederic Dickson, who
oversees $23 billion. His Great Falls, Montana-based firm plans
to buy drug and technology stocks as long as bond market losses
don't worsen.


Read more at Bloomberg Stocks News

Egypt's El Sewedy H1 net profit rises 32 pct

(Reuters) - Egypt's El Sewedy Cables posted a 32 percent rise in consolidated net profit to 337 million Egyptian pounds in the first half of 2007, the stock exchange said on Sunday.

Net profit in the year-ago period was 256 million pounds.


Read more at Reuters Africa