Monday, February 18, 2008

Euro zone growth may be weaker than hoped: Noyer

(Reuters) - European Central Bank (ECB) Governing Council member Christian Noyer said in an interview released on Sunday euro zone growth might be weaker than hoped as a result of market turmoil but he saw no "big setback."

In an interview with the Financial Times newspaper, Noyer said French banks' exposure to the U.S. subprime market was lower than others' and the European Union economy should resist financial turmoil better than that of the United States.

"Growth may be weaker than we hoped but I don't see a big setback," Noyer said when asked about the impact of the subprime crisis on the European economy.

ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet warned after the last rate meeting on February 7 that the euro zone economy might grow slower than potential in 2008.

In December ECB economists forecast 2008 growth of around 2 percent, but a number of ECB policymakers have suggested this might need to be revised down when fresh projections are published in March.

"If we are a little bit below potential, but still close to the average we've had for a number of years... I don't think that makes (structural) reforms impossible," Noyer said in a transcript of the interview released ahead of publication in Monday's edition.
 

Westland/Hallmark Recalls Record Amount of U.S. Beef

(Bloomberg) -- Westland/Hallmark Meat Co., the supplier of ground beef to U.S. school lunch programs, recalled a record 143.4 million pounds of meat after the government said it was unfit for humans.

The company, based in Chino, California, withdrew all raw and frozen products made since Feb. 1, 2006, because some of the cattle weren't fully inspected, the Department of Agriculture said in a statement yesterday. A total of 37 million pounds went to nutrition programs, including schools, since October 2006.

The order relates to so-called downer cattle discovered between the normal USDA inspection before slaughter and the killing of the animals, the department said. Downer cattle, those unable to walk, are banned from the food chain as a precaution against Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy, also known as mad-cow disease, the USDA said.

The risk of consumers contracting BSE from the meat is ``negligible,'' the USDA said in a separate statement. ``The prevalence of the disease in the United States is extremely low,'' with two animals testing positive for the disease out of 759,000 tested nationwide since June 2004, the department said.

A video taken at the plant released by the Humane Society of the U.S. shows workers kicking cows and using electric prods and forklifts to make them move. Two Westland/Hallmark former employees were charged with animal cruelty by the San Bernardino District Attorney's office Feb. 15.

Operations Ceased

The company ceased operations last month after the video was revealed. In a statement posted on the company's Web site Feb. 3, Westland/Hallmark president Steve Mendell said the company was cooperating fully with the USDA. Two messages left yesterday with Westland/Hallmark seeking comment weren't immediately returned. Today is a U.S. public holiday.

The U.S. consumed 28 billion pounds of beef in 2006 and the U.S. beef industry was worth $71 billion that year on a retail basis, according to the USDA. Beef exports totaled 1.15 billion pounds worth $1.63 billion.

The recall shouldn't create a supply problem, Kim Essex, vice president of communications at the National Cattlemen's Beef Association, said in a Bloomberg Television interview from Denver today. ``I am very confident in the safety of the beef supply,'' she said.

The recalled meat is considered a low risk to food supply because almost all the meat has either been consumed or is being held from distribution, Richard Raymond, USDA under secretary for food safety, said in a teleconference call yesterday.

Hamburger Patties

The ground beef bought for schools was processed into products such as hamburger patties, chili meat and taco meat, Bill Sessions from the USDA's Agricultural Marketing Service, said on the call, according to a transcript.

The recall is categorized as a Class II, meaning ``there is a remote probability of adverse health consequences from the use of the product,'' according to Raymond.

The recall is more than four times the size of the previous record, a 35 million-pound removal of Thorn Apple Valley Inc. ready-to-eat meats potentially contaminated with listeria in January 1999, Raymond said.

``All of the larger recalls done in the past were all Class I,'' Raymond said. ``In this one we feel there is a very, very remote possibility of anyone suffering health consequences.''

About 150 U.S. school districts are no longer using beef from Hallmark Meat Packing Co., the Associated Press reported, without saying where it got the information.

Kidney Exports

Schools in Washington state and California said they wouldn't serve students beef for now, Agence France-Presse reported, citing unidentified local officials.

Hamburger patties and meatballs in schools in South Florida are being destroyed as part of the recall, the South Florida Sun- Sentinel newspaper reported, without saying where it got the information.

Westland/Hallmark's exports last year consisted of kidneys and livers to Ivory Coast and livers to Angola, the USDA said. There have been no exports to Japan or South Korea since at least 2003, the department said.

Japan and South Korea banned U.S. beef imports after the first U.S. case of mad-cow disease was found in 2003. Japan, once the largest U.S. beef export market, now only imports meat from animals aged 20 months or younger, which have a lower risk.

The 27-nation European Union only imports hormone-free beef from the U.S., which has to be produced separately from other livestock, Michael Mann, a spokesman for agriculture and rural development at the European Commission, said by telephone today. The EU exported 87 tons of beef to the U.S. in 2006.
 

Rio Seeks Higher Prices Than Vale in Iron-Ore Talks

(Bloomberg) -- Rio Tinto Group, the world's second- largest iron-ore producer, is seeking bigger price increases from Asia steelmakers than Brazilian rival Cia. Vale do Rio Doce.

Rio wants to receive a ``freight premium'' to reflect the lower cost for customers in China, Japan and South Korea of shipping ore from ports in Australia rather than Brazil, it said today in a statement distributed by the Regulatory News Service. Nippon Steel Corp., JFE Holdings Inc. and Posco today said they agreed to a 65 percent increase in Vale's prices from April 1.

This ``could mark the end of the `one price fits all' settlements of the last few decades,'' Michael Rawlinson, head of mining, resources and energy at Liberum Capital Ltd. in London, wrote today in a report. A full recovery by Rio of the freight premium to China would mean a ``massive'' 154 percent boost in ore prices, he said.

In comparison, JFE agreed to a 71 percent boost for higher- grade ore from Vale's Carajas mine in Brazil, while the biggest- ever annual gain was 71.5 percent in the year that started April 1, 2005.

Contract prices for the steelmaking ingredient have risen to a record for a sixth straight year as China boosts output of the metal to feed a construction boom. Soaring freight fees last year added to the price increases for Asian steelmakers and made iron ore from Australia more cost effective than Brazilian supplies.

Carajas Settlement

Rio Tinto ``will continue to negotiate to obtain a freight premium, to reflect its proximity to Asia and its major customers,'' Sam Walsh, chief executive officer of the London- based company's iron ore unit, said today in the statement.

Rio will also seek ``further customer clarification about the settlements, and in particular the settlement for Carajas ore, which is the relevant reference ore for Rio Tinto products,'' Walsh said.

BHP Billiton Ltd., the world's largest mining company, tried and failed to negotiate a freight premium in 2005, Macquarie analyst Jim Lennon said today by telephone from London. The company didn't get the support of Rio and other producers at the time, he added.

``This has never happened before, but it's certainly a possibility,'' Lennon said. ``The fact that spot prices are three times higher than contract prices means that 65 percent is almost being viewed as a disappointment by the market.''

BHP, based in Melbourne, has started seeking regulatory approvals for its increased $141 billion all-share hostile bid for Rio, which was rejected by Rio on Feb. 6 as too low. A combination of the companies would rival Vale in iron-ore output.