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•GM in last lap to Chapter11 bankruptcy; Obama administration pushes through a restructuring that will cost taxpayers billions of dollars more than previously envisioned •Fed's Fisher says US economy will not recover in a "meaningful" way before end of 2009; says deflation risk persists •South Korea's National Pension Service to lower its exposure on U.S. bonds, the Ministry for Health, Welfare and Family Affairs says •Japan's big banks to skip BoJ's loan offering; more inclined to raise capital from the capital markets, the Nikkei reports
• Japan's April industrial output rose 5.2%, biggest monthly gain since 1953 (est: +3.2%)
•Japan's unemployment rate in April rose to 5% from 4.8% in March, rising to a 5yr •Treasury's Geithner to reassure Chinese leaders that the US is committed to long-term fiscal discipline, a senior Treasury official says •UK consumer confidence held steady at -27 in May (est. -25) after 3 months of improvement, the GfK survey showed
Europe:
Credit Suisse has begun a sale of its London property estate that could raise as much as £500m (€572m) as part of a strategy to focus on core banking operations.
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/c54b7bd2-4bb6-11de-b827-00144feabdc0.html
UK consumer confidence held steady at -27 in May (est. -25) after 3 months of improvement, the GfK Consumer Confidence Survey showed.
Poland's central bank governor has reiterated his call for banks to refrain from paying out dividends this year in order to strengthen their balance sheets during the economic downturn, echoing similar calls from other central banks in the region.
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/92673510-4ba4-11de-b827-00144feabdc0.html
The Financial Services Authority was yesterday accused of going too easy with the stress tests on UK's troubled lenders by testing their financial resilience against unchallenging assumptions.
The FSA said the tests "will continue to evolve and the precise parameters used and will change over time".
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/banksandfinance/5402251/Bank-stress-tests-too-easy-analysts-say.html
US:
The Obama administration plans to usher General Motors into bankruptcy court Monday and push through a restructuring that will cost taxpayers billions of dollars more than previously envisioned. The government altered the terms of the restructuring and offered GM bondholders a sweetened deal if they would forgive $27bn in unsecured debt and pledge not to oppose the reorganization in court.
Fed's Fisher said the U.S. recession is fading but the economy will not recover in a "meaningful" way before the end 2009 and deflation remains a risk in this climate. He added that official foreign holdings of U.S. government bonds had grown and appetite to hold the country's assets remained intact, despite expected record U.S. government deficits.
The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation, the US clearing and settlement system, said it had applied to bring its “trade warehouse”, which stores information on credit derivatives trades, under the oversight of US federal regulators for the first time.
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/264a5562-4bcf-11de-b827-00144feabdc0.html
Bank of New York Mellon wants to be among the first round of US banks to repay Tarp money to counter concerns that clients could think the aid is a sign of weakness, and because it does not want restrictions on compensation. Chairman and chief executive of the bank said that he hoped to return the money in June or July.
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/65e0ed80-4bc5-11de-b827-00144feabdc0.html
Treasury's Geithner will reassure Chinese leaders that the US is committed to long-term fiscal discipline, a senior Treasury official said. Mr Geithner will also urge his hosts to accelerate moves to shift the composition of China's economy, so it relies less on exports and more on domestic demand, the official added.
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/88726e62-4bdb-11de-b827-00144feabdc0.html
OPEC ministers held output steady and instead bet on economic growth and recovering demand to drive an oil market that leapt to a six-month high above $65. Saudi Oil Minister Naimi said the world was ready to cope with oil at $75-$80 a barrel and predicted it could reach that level before the end of the year, although other ministers said it could take longer than that.
Home-mortgage rates have surged to their highest level in more than three months, threatening prospects for quick rebounds in the housing market and consumer spending. The average rate for 30-year fixed-rate loans jumped to 5.44% yesterday, the highest level since early February, according to a survey by HSH Associates, a financial publisher.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124352408197662869.html
U.S. government bonds account for 83% of the pension fund's direct holdings of foreign bonds, which are currently worth $6.5 billion.
Australia/ New Zealand:
Australian bank lending increased in April for a fourth month. Loans provided by banks and other finance companies climbed 0.1% from March, when they also gained 0.1%, the RBA said. Bloomberg estimated a 0.2% rise.
Japan:
Big banks to skip BoJ's loan offering and are now more inclined to raise capital from the capital markets, which have regained stability since March, the Nikkei said. http://www.cnbc.com/id/30990292
Japan's industrial output rose 5.2% in April, the biggest monthly gain since 1953 and sharply higher than the median market forecast for a 3.2% rise.
Japan's unemployment rate in April climbed to 5% from 4.8% in March, rising to a five-year high.
Japan's consumer prices excluding food declined 0.1% in April, declining for a second month in April, adding to signs that the recession will herald a return to deflation.
Asia & RoW:
South Korea's National Pension Service will lower its exposure on U.S. bonds while diversifying its investments to include instruments such as credit bonds, the Ministry for Health, Welfare and Family Affairs said. U.S. government bonds account for 83% of the pension fund's direct holdings of foreign bonds, which are currently worth $6.5bn.
http://in.reuters.com/article/fundsNews/idINSEO2163320090529
South Korea's industrial production in April rose 2.6% from March (Bloomberg est. +2.1%), increasing for a fourth straight month. From a year earlier, production decreased 8.2%.
South Korean manufacturers' assessment of the business outlook for June jumped to 74 (May: 67), an eight-month high, data showed on Friday. Non-manufacturing sector's seasonally-adjusted business survey index also climbed to an eight-month high of 75 for June from May's 68.
Events (London Time):
SWE 08:30 GDP s.a. (Q1)
DNK 08:30 Unemployment Rate - sa (Apr)
EMU 09:00 M3 money supply s.a. (Apr)
EMU 09:00 M3 mma money supply (Apr)
NOR 09:00 Retail sales - vol sa (Apr)
NOR 09:00 Unemployment rate (AKU) (Mar)
ITA 10:00 HICP (May P)
EMU 10:00 CPI Estimate (May)
EMU 10:00 Unemployment Rate (Apr)
CHE 10:30 KOF Swiss Leading Indicator (May)
ITA 11:00 PPI (Apr)
CAN 13:30 Current Account (BOP) (Q1) CAD-10.0bn
USA 13:30 GDP QoQ (Annualized) (Q1 P) -5.5%
USA 13:30 GDP deflator (Q1) 2.9%
USA 14:45 Chicago PMI (May) 44
USA 15:00 Univ. of Michigan Confidence (May F) 68
FRA 17:00 Total Jobseekers (Apr)
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