http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-11-28/copper-shortage-seen-extending-as-china-accelerates-commodities.html

Copper Shortage Seen Extending as China Accelerates: Commodities

By Glenys Sim - Nov 29, 2012 2:35 PM ET

Copper supply shortages will extend into the first half of next year as an accelerating Chinese economy more than doubles the pace of growth in global consumption even as mines extract a record amount of metal.

Demand will outpace supply by 316,000 metric tons in the first six months, more than all copper in London Metal Exchange warehouses, before a surplus emerges in the second half, Barclays Plc estimates. Production has lagged behind consumption since 2010, according to the International Copper Study Group. The metal may average $8,300 a ton in the second quarter, 5.1 percent more than now and the most in a year, according to the median of 21 analyst and trader estimates compiled by Bloomberg.

China, which uses 41 percent of the world’s copper, is rebounding from seven quarters of slowing growth after the government approved a $161 billion subways-to-roads construction plan in September. It’s being joined by central banks from the U.S. to Europe to Japan, who also pledged more stimulus. Housing starts in the U.S., the second-largest consumer, reached a four- year high last month and business confidence unexpectedly strengthened in Germany, Europe’s biggest economy.

“U.S. growth will be moderate and Europe is stabilizing, so that drag might reverse partially, and then it all falls back to China,” said Dominic Schnider, Singapore-based global head of non-traditional assets at UBS AG’s wealth-management unit. “Economic activity doesn’t have to be that strong in China for inventories to get drawn down and you could see a rally in the first half, but then you come into the second half where mine supply comes in on the strong side.”

Quarter Century Copper rose 3.9 percent to $7,899.50 a ton this year on the LME, the world’s largest metals bourse, as the LMEX gauge of six industrial metals gained 3.6 percent. The Standard & Poor’s GSCI gauge of 24 commodities added 0.6 percent, and the MSCI All- Country World Index (MXWD) of equities jumped 11 percent. Treasuries returned 2.7 percent, a Bank of America Corp. index shows.

The metal averaged $7,949.43 since the start of January, headed for the second-highest level in a quarter century after last year’s record $8,825.98. Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc. (FCX), the biggest publicly traded producer, may report a 44 percent gain in net income next year, according to the mean of 11 analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Shares of the Phoenix-based company will advance 28 percent in the next 12 months, the average of 21 predictions shows.

Global Shortfall Global demand will expand 3.4 percent to 20.85 million tons next year, from a 1.5 percent gain in 2012, Barclays estimates. Supply will climb 3.5 percent to an all-time high of 20.83 million tons. While that means an annual shortage of 19,000 tons, it’s driven by the projected first-half deficit, compared with a surplus of 297,000 tons in the second six months.

China’s copper demand may rise 5.5 percent to 8.1 million tons, from a gain of 4.8 percent this year, according to Beijing Antaike Information Development Co., which has researched metals for two decades. The infrastructure plans approved in September include about 2,000 kilometers (1,250 miles) of roads, subway projects in 18 cities and extra spending on railways.

The nation’s economy will rebound this quarter from the slowest pace in three years, and keep accelerating through at least the middle of 2013, according to the medians of as many as 37 economist estimates compiled by Bloomberg. That may not be enough to offset contractions elsewhere.

European Recession The 17-nation euro-area tumbled back into recession last quarter and economists surveyed by Bloomberg expect Japan to do the same this quarter. Europe accounts for 18 percent of copper demand and Japan 5 percent. U.S. leaders have yet to resolve the so-called fiscal cliff of automatic taxes rises and spending cuts, which the Congressional Budget Office has warned risks shrinking the economy. The International Monetary Fund cut its forecast for global growth in 2013 twice since July.

Hedge funds and other speculators are betting on lower prices, U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission data show. They held a net-short 2,649 futures and options in the week to Nov. 20, after turning negative the week before for the first time since August.

While stockpiles monitored by the LME fell 33 percent to 249,975 tons this year, those in bonded warehouses in China reached a record 700,000 tons, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. said in a Nov. 8 report. Those tracked by the Shanghai Futures Exchange, which are separate from the bonded-warehouse figure, have more than doubled to 205,933 tons, bourse data show.

‘Keep Up’ “The improvement in demand will probably be capped out by the ability of supply to keep up,” said Andrew Shaw, the head of industrial-metal and bulk commodity research at Credit Suisse Group AG in Singapore. “We’re probably past the trough but it’s not very convincing.”

Codelco, the largest producer, cut the premium it charges on top of the LME cash price on sales to Chinese buyers by 11 percent to $98 a ton for 2013, according to two people familiar with the talks. That compares with a 5.6 percent drop to $85 for European buyers and an 8.6 percent reduction to $85 for Japan and South Korea. Lower fees usually signal higher supply.

Chinese inventories may start contracting as the economy strengthens. Exports rose in October at the fastest pace in five months and a preliminary reading of HSBC Holdings Plc and Markit Economics’ purchasing managers’ index for November signaled the first expansion in 13 months.

‘More Positive’ “Next year will be slightly more positive than this year,” Jeremy Goldwyn, director at Sucden Financial Ltd., said in an interview on Bloomberg Television from Shanghai today. “That’s predominantly based on improvement in Chinese conditions, marginally better in the U.S. and pretty much the same in Europe,” said Goldwyn, who’s worked in the industry for more than 25 years.

Expectations for next year’s global supply are probably too optimistic, Macquarie Group Ltd. said in a report Nov. 6, citing constraints including power shortages in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The bank anticipates production growth of 4 percent next year and a “significant copper surplus remains unlikely.”

The mining industry is contending with rising costs from labor to energy and is extracting about 19 percent less metal from every ton of rock that it was in 2000, according to Macquarie. Codelco, based in Santiago, reported a 5 percent drop in nine-month production on Nov. 22 because of declining ore grades at its Chilean mines.

Freeport will report net income of $4.52 billion in 2013, from $3.14 billion in 2012, according to analyst estimates. Its shares rose 6.6 percent to $39.22 this year and will reach $50.05 in 12 months, the predictions show. Copper accounted for 78 percent of sales last year, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

“We’re still relatively positive on copper with China’s economy recovering, and the U.S. as well,” said Nick Trevethan, a senior commodities strategist at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. (ANZ) in Singapore. “Europe’s pretty much written off, but the China story’s becoming more and more about China and less and less about the rest of the world.”


 
 
http://silverunderground.com/2012/11/federal-reserve-officials-admit-qe3-wont-work/

Ben Bernanke is set to speak tomorrow about the Federal Reserve’s future plans. Recently, the private central banking cartel decided to initiate a third round of quantitative easing in response to a recent jobs report, believing falsely that inflation will somehow help stimulate job growth. Also, rather than just buying a set amount of Treasury bonds in one burst, the Fed opted to begin purchasing them in an ongoing manner, leading some to refer to this third round of quantitative easing as QE-infinity.

However, as Ben Bernanke considers QE4, some of the Federal Reserve’s own officials are speaking out against his wild monetary policy. Consumer prices have risen sharply over the past few months, especially in food and housing. Despite ultra-low interest rates, investors still remain on the sidelines, worried about the potential costs of new regulations. Let’s consider the arguments put forth by those dissenting Federal Reserve officials who fear Bernanke’s reckless inflationary policies.

Jeffrey Lacker, President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, Warns of Inflation Risks Bloomberg is reporting that Richmond Fed President Jeffrey Lacker publicly opposes any future efforts to continue the Federal Reserve’s bond-buying program, dubbed quantitative easing. “We cannot continually buy more securities and create more bank reserves without jeopardizing our inflation goal,” Lacker warned in a recent talk in West Virginia. Bernanke, meanwhile, sees inflation as the goal of the policy, putting the interests of debt-saddled consumers over the needs of those who save or live off of fixed incomes.

Jeffrey Lacker also spoke out against the previous round of quantitative easing, similarly citing rising inflation as his rationale for opposing the move. Lacker has been a frequent critic of Federal Reserve policy throughout 2012 and has remained in opposition to all of the decisions made by the Federal Open Market Committee since it started down this inflationary course.

Dallas Federal Reserve President Admits Reservations About QE3 Jeffrey Lacker is not the only Fed president worried about worsening inflation. The Wall Street Journal published comments by Dallas Federal Reserve President Richard Fisher, who expressed his skepticism about the effectiveness of quantitative easing. Fisher feels, like many fiscal conservatives, that the Fed’s policy is encouraging wasteful government spending. As the government spends more money, buying power is extracted from the private economy, thus impeding job creation.

Said Fisher of the policy, “What we’re accommodating is fiscal malfeasance and at some point it has to stop.” He also explained that recent economic data does not suggest that the policy will result in serious growth, and that investors from the business community do not believe that the easing techniques will work. With Congress careening towards a fiscal cliff, Fisher feels that the Federal Reserve is providing an incentive for elected officials to metaphorically step on the gas.

Five years after the Greenspan-caused crash that started this whole mess, the economy continues to suffer. Since that time, the Federal Reserve has rolled out a series of arcane, useless policies which have done little to encourage growth or business investment. Meanwhile, consumer prices continue to rise, forcing low income families and senior citizens into an untenable situation.

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http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/14/business/global/british-inflation-jumps-on-fuel-and-tuition-costs.html?_r=2&

British Inflation Jumps on Food and Tuition Costs By STEPHEN CASTLE

Published: November 13, 2012

LONDON — Only just out of recession, Britain’s fragile economic recovery is running into another familiar problem: inflation.

Annual consumer price inflation jumped to 2.7 percent in October from 2.2 percent the previous month, according to official figures released Tuesday, dampening prospects that the Bank of England would move to stimulate the economy in the short term, at least.

The data from the Office for National Statistics reflected increases in university tuition fees and in food prices but did not take into account some of the latest increases in energy bills, which look set to push the headline inflation figure higher in coming months.

Inflation remains an Achilles’ heel of the British economy.

Unlike its neighbors inside the euro, Britain saw its currency fall significantly on world markets after the financial crisis, resulting in imported inflation as the exchange rate pushed up the prices of non-British goods.

Rising commodity prices and increases in the value-added tax, a consumption tax, have also played their part in stoking British inflation, which hit a peak of 5.2 percent in September 2011.

The inflation data complicate the picture for the Bank of England, which has cut interest rates to a record low of 0.5 percent and spent £375 billion, or $593 billion, on purchases of financial assets to try to stimulate growth. Last week the bank decided to keep rates and the asset-buying program, known as quantitative easing, unchanged.

The rise in inflation is likely to strengthen the hand of members of the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee who are resisting more stimulus, according to a note from Steven Bryce, European economics analyst at Credit Suisse.

“Some of the increases in electricity and gas prices introduced in October did not show up in this month’s index,” he wrote. “This means that inflation was above expectations even without this component.” He said the data suggested that, once the increases in electricity and gas prices are included over the next two months, consumer price inflation “could be above 3 percent.”

But Robert Wood, chief U.K. economist at Berenberg Bank in London, said that growth remained a central concern and that the case for further stimulus of the British economy might only be delayed into next year.

Despite the fact that gross domestic product in Britain rose 1 percent from July to September, taking Britain out of recession, Mr. Wood, like many analysts, says that underlying growth is extremely fragile.

“There is a risk that the economy returns to contraction in the fourth quarter,” he said. “We believe that growth remains weak and that the case for policy stimulus will grow next year.”

Inflation is likely to hit 3 percent before falling back, he said, adding that one of the main factors pushing up the latest figures — tuition fees — was the result of government policy and therefore revealed little about the underlying economy.

Andrew Sentance, senior economic adviser to PricewaterhouseCooper and a former member of the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee with a reputation for being hawkish on inflation, said that consumer price increases remained “stubbornly above the 2 percent target.”

Further increases would reinforce the squeeze on British consumers and “add to concerns about the Bank of England’s ability to achieve its price stability objective,” he said in a statement.

“If above-target inflation persists through next year, it will add to the pressure” on the central bank “to raise interest rates sooner rather than later,” Mr. Sentance said.

This article has been revised to reflect the following correction:

Correction: November 13, 2012







 
http://www.cnbc.com/id/49817892

Japan's main opposition leader Shinzo Abe, seen as the most likely next premier if a snap election is held next month, called on the central bank to print "unlimited yen" to achieve a new inflation target.

Don Farrall | Photographer's Choice RF | Getty ImagesIn comments on Wednesday, he didn't spell out what the inflation target should be. But in recent weeks he has called for the Bank of Japan [BNJAF  0.00  ---  UNCH    ] to achieve 3 percent inflation, three times higher than the current target, after years of deflation pressures.

Abe's remarks keep the Bank of Japan under pressure ahead of its two-day rate review next week when its policymakers may debate the need for further economic stimulus to try to lift an economy widely seen as in recession. The economy contracted 0.9 percent in the September quarter, data showed this week, and many analysts expect another contraction in the current quarter.

"The BOJ must set a (new) inflation target and print unlimited yen [JPY=X  80.12    0.75  (+0.94%)   ] to achieve it. That's something similar to what the Fed and the ECB are doing. Only then would BOJ steps have a big impact on markets," Abe told a news conference.

"If we take power, we'd like to do our utmost to beat deflation," Abe said. "In doing so, monetary policy would be key."

He made the comments after incumbent Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda said he was ready to dissolve the lower house of parliament on Friday and hold elections next month.

"There must be policy coordination" between the government and the central bank, Abe said, adding that if he were to take power, he could consider revising the BOJ law guaranteeing its independence from political interference.

Abe also said that following an election, the new government should compile a big supplementary budget and increase public works spending, suggesting that he would prioritize steps to boost growth over measures to put Japan's fiscal house in order.

The 10-year Japanese government bond yield hit a one-week high and the yen weakened after Noda's remarks on suggested dates for an election, as markets bet Abe's Liberal Democratic Party would win and put more pressure on the BOJ to ease policy.

Many traders expect the BOJ to hold off on easing policy next week to save its limited policy ammunition for next month, when more data will be available to gauge how long Japan's downturn.

But the central bank may revise down its economic assessment to reflect the economy's weakness even after easing policy in both September and October.

With interest rates effectively at zero, the BOJ has put in place as its key monetary easing tool a pool of funds to buy assets ranging from government bonds to corporate debt. It boosted the asset-buying and lending program by 11 trillion yen ($138 billion) to 91 trillion yen on Oct. 30.