Monday, January 14, 2008

Bank of America Bags Countrywide

(Businessweek) - The $4 billion acquisition of Countrywide Financial rescues the U.S.'s largest mortgage lender. BofA chief Ken Lewis calls it a "rare opportunity"
 

Every go-go period on Wall Street has a spectacular flame-out that comes to symbolize the excesses of the day, from Sam Insull's Middle West Utilities during the Great Depression to Pets.com in the dot-com era. Now it's Countrywide Financial's (CFC) turn.

Bank of America (BAC) announced Jan. 11 that it is buying Countrywide in a deal that values the nation's largest mortgage broker at just $4 billion, or roughly $6.90 per share. Even that was a bit of a gift for Countrywide investors, who had seen their stock slip to just $5 a share in the past week as the company denied rumors it would seek bankruptcy protection. As recently as January, 2007, Countrywide's shares were selling for $42.

Bank of America Chairman and Chief Executive Kenneth Lewis said he did not plan on having Countrywide Chairman and Chief Executive Angelo Mozilo head the combined operations. "I would want him to stay until the deal gets done and then probably I would guess that he would want to go have some fun," Lewis said in a conference call announcing the deal.

Read more at Businessweek

Movers: IBM, Harman, Sovereign Bancorp, Sears

(Businessweek) - International Business Machines (IBM) announces preliminary fourth quarter EPS from continuing operations of $2.80, vs. $2.26 a year ago, on 10% higher revenues, including 6 points of currency benefit.

Harman International Industries (HAR) now sees non-GAAP 2008 EPS of $3.00-$3.10, before after-tax merger-related costs of $0.13 per share but including impact of the company's ongoing accelerated share repurchase. It says the change in guidance caused by major shift in market for Portable Navigation Devices (PNDs), which experienced significant pricing pressure.

Sovereign Bancorp (SOV) expects to take a combination of charges due to the continued volatility in the financial markets and deterioration in the credit environment; charges are expected to adversely impact its fourth quarter financial results.

Sears Holdings (SHLD) says Sears Domestic's same-store sales declined by 2.8% during the nine-week period ended Jan. 5, while Kmart's same-store sales declined by 4.2%; total domestic same-store sales declined 3.5%. Due to lower sales, gross margin rates, it sees fourth quarter EPS of $2.59-$3.48, vs. $5.33 last year. It sees $5.13-$5.96 fiscal year 2008 EPS. Goldman reportedly downgrades to sell from neutral.

The Financial Times reports that as Merrill Lynch (MER) is seeking about $4 billion in a second capital raising, Kuwait Investment Authority is expected to be a significant investor in this new deal, which could be announced as soon as mid-week, according to people familiar with the matter. Other investors could come from Europe. Separately, WSJ reports the SEC is probing whether several current and former Merrill employees improperly placed trades for the firm's own account ahead of client orders.

Weyerhaeuser (WY) agrees to sell its iLevel European engineered wood products operations to Finnforest of Finland, part of the Metsaliitto Group. Terms of the sale were not disclosed.

Blue Nile (NILE) posts 24% rise in fourth quarter revenue. Anticipates reporting strong profitability for fourth quarter earnings.

Western Alliance Bancorporation (WAL) sees fourth quarter EPS of $0.09. It says decline from third quarter's $0.35 EPS primarily results from increase in loan loss provision expense to $13.9 million.

FTD Group (FTD) sees $0.30 second quarter EPS on $155 million consolidated revenue, vs. year ago's $0.21 EPS on $152 million consolidated revenue.

PeopleSupport (PSPT) receives unsolicited revised proposal from IPVG Corp. and AO Capital Partners Ltd.

Compuware (CPWR) sees lower-than-expected $0.14 third quarter adjusted EPS. It says there was a high ratio of ratable versus up-front recognition for new software licenses in the quarter, and this resulted in lower-than-expected revenue and EPS.

Terex (TEX) agrees to acquire A.S.V. ( ASVI) for about $488 million. Terms: $18 for each ASVI share. Expects transaction to close by end of the first quarter 2008.

Kirby (KEX) expects fourth quarter EPS to exceed $0.62, above the top end of $0.57- $0.62 guidance, substantially above fourth quarter 2006 EPS of $0.44. It cites strength in core businesses.
 

Malawi tobacco output higher

(Fin24) - Tobacco production in Malawi is expected to rise to 150 million kilograms this season, encouraged by higher prices and good rains, says the Tobacco Association of Malawi (Tama).


Tama president Charles Mwamsambo told Reuters more farmers had signed up to grow tobacco this season because of a number of factors, key among them an anticipated spike in prices that is likely to encourage tobacco growers to lift production.


The expected increase in prices follows a slump in production last year, when growers only managed production of only 140 million kilograms, down from 158 million the previous season.


"There are several factors like the motivation that farmers have from last year's good prices: more buyers on the market and good rains that will result in high production of about 150 million kilograms this growing season," he said.


More farmers


Mwamsambo said Tama had registered 27 000 new farmers this season compared to only 10 000 new growers signed up last year.


Tobacco accounts for over 70% of Malawi's exports and 15% of its gross domestic product, but for the last two years low prices have led to cuts in production.


About 2 million of the country's 13 million people depend on tobacco and related industries for their livelihood.


The biggest auction floors last year saw farmers sell their crop between $1.70 and $1.60 per kg for the first time in several years, after President Bingu wa Mutharika ordered buyers to offer better prices or leave the country.


 

India sweetens Ethopian sugar

(Fin24) - India has agreed to give Ethiopia a $640m credit out of a total $1.3bn needed to boost Ethiopia's sugar production, say officials from the two countries.


Late last year Ethiopia announced plans to increase its annual sugar production to 1.3 million tons by 2011 from a current 300 000 tons.


India's Exim Bank will finance the $640m.


"It is the largest ever line of credit that India has provided to any country so far," Gurjit Singh, the country's ambassador to Ethiopia, said while signing an agreement between India and Ethiopia.


New factory


The remaining $660m will be covered by the Ethiopian government.


The money will mainly go towards erecting a new factory at Tendaho in the country's Afar region, and expansion of Finchaa, one of four existing sugar factories in Ethiopia within the next two years.


"With the completion of Tendaho... and the enhanced production of the existing four sugar factories... annual sugar production is expected reach up to 1.3 million tons within the next two years," Trade and Industry Minister Girma Birru said.


Tendaho will have an annual production capacity of 600 000 tons and will be Ethiopia's largest sugar factory. It will be located in the lower Awash Valley, in the Afar region, along the Addis Ababa-Djibouti highway and railway line.
 

China Mobile Apple talks over

(Fin24) - China Mobile Limited says that it has discontinued talks with Apple over the launch of iPhone handsets in China.


"We have held talks with Apple to launch the iPhone device in China. However, those talks have ended," China Mobile spokesperson Rainie Lei said. She declined to say why the talks ended.


China Mobile Chairperson Wang Jianzhou said in November last year that the two companies had been unable to agree on a revenue-sharing model.


Calls to Cupertino, California-based Apple were not answered today.
 

Metorex plunge may hurt deals

(Fin24) - The share price of Metorex is plunging inexplicably and has fallen 38% from its 12-month high at a time of bullish conditions for two of its main products - copper and gold.


The fall is particularly embarrassing in terms of Metorex's bid to minority shareholders in Copper Resources Corporation (CRC) which has just been extended for the second time to January 18.


CRC owns three copper projects in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) with resources and reserves totalling up to 2.4 million tonnes of contained copper metal.


Metorex bought 38.7% of CRC in July last year plus a 5% stake in its 75% held subsidiary MMK from the Forrest group for R600m. The Metorex share price stood around 2 400c at the time and it subsequently rose to an all-time high of 2 950c.


The CRC share price at the time sat around 87p and, when Metorex pitched its equity offer to the CRC minorities, it also included an alternative cash offer of 125p per CRC share.


But Metorex shares hit 1 725c today before recovering to around 1 830c while CRC shares have risen to around 160p.


Read more at Fin24

Reuters, Thomson expect deal to close in Q2

(Reuters) - News and information groups Reuters Group Plc (RTR.L: Quote, Profile, Research) and Thomson Corp (TOC.TO: Quote, Profile, Research) said they expect Thomson's proposed acquisition of the British group to close early in the second quarter of 2008.

The pair said the U.S. Department of Justice, which had been expected to give its decision on the 8.2 billion pound ($16.1 billion) deal by Tuesday, would now give its ruling around the same time as the European Commission's.

The Commission is set to give its ruling by March 10, and it could then take four to six weeks to secure shareholder approval.

"Thomson and Reuters have had productive discussions with the (United States) Department of Justice and the European Commission," the companies said, adding that they "have a high degree of confidence that the acquisition will receive clearance on an expedited timetable".
 

M&T Bank Q4 profit sinks

(Reuters) - M&T Bank Corp (MTB.N: Quote, Profile, Research), the first large U.S. bank to report fourth-quarter results, said on Monday that profit tumbled 70 percent, hurt by debt write-downs and turmoil in residential real estate markets.

The bank, which counts Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc (BRKa.N: Quote, Profile , Research) (BRKb.N: Quote, Profile, Research) among its largest investors, said net income fell to $64.9 million, or 60 cents per share, from $213.3 million, or $1.88, a year earlier. Operating profit totaled 77 cents per share, the bank said.

Analysts on average expected profit of $1.85 per share, according to Reuters Estimates. Buffalo, New York-based M&T was one of the few large U.S. banks that had not in the last two months specifically cautioned investors how credit and mortgage market turmoil would hurt fourth-quarter results.

M&T shares fell $3.24, or 4.4 percent, to $70.51 in pre-market electronic trading.

The company reduced profit by $78 million, or 71 cents per share, to write down collateralized debt obligations, and by $29 million, or 27 cents per share, for credit losses.

Earnings were also reduced 13 cents per share for M&T's share of antitrust litigation involving credit card network Visa Inc, and 8 cents per share for acquisitions.

M&T Bank said it has $64.9 billion in assets and more than 650 branches in seven mid-Atlantic states and Washington, D.C.

Its results may foreshadow those at other large U.S. banks, most of which are to report by the middle of next week. Nearly all are expected to report lower profits, or losses.
 

Ford sees challenges in first half of 2008

(Reuters) - Ford Motor Co (F.N: Quote, Profile, Research) expects a challenging first half of 2008 for all automakers in the United States with a drop in industrywide retail sales, Ford's North American president said on Monday.

Mark Fields also said he hopes prior Federal Reserve rate cuts would begin to support the economy in the second half of the year, and that the U.S. government would take a look at tax rates as part of an economic stimulus package.
 
 
 

Wall Street's $35 Billion Writedown Puts Squeeze on '08 Profits

Bloomberg) -- Citigroup Inc., Bank of America Corp. and Merrill Lynch & Co. may report their worst-ever quarter, beset by $35 billion of writedowns that threaten to crimp profit through 2008.

The losses have depleted the banks' capital, forcing New York-based Citigroup and Merrill to seek more than $13 billion from foreign investors, and hobbled their ability to make new loans. Other sources of fees, including credit cards, are also in jeopardy as the U.S. economy slows, said CreditSights Inc. analyst David Hendler, who estimates Citigroup, Bank of America and Merrill won't earn more this year than they did in 2006.

``The banks are already operating like they're in a recession,'' by ratcheting back on trading and lending, said Adam Compton, who helps oversee $150 billion at San Francisco- based RCM Capital, which holds shares of Citigroup, Bank of America and Merrill. ``Everybody has tightened up tremendously.''

Citigroup may report a fourth-quarter loss tomorrow of $4 billion, the first for the largest U.S. bank since its commercial real estate holdings plummeted in value during the early 1990s, according to a survey of 8 analysts by Bloomberg. The company also may announce that it received a new cash infusion of as much as $10 billion from investors in China and the Middle East, the Wall Street Journal reported on Jan. 11, citing people familiar with the matter.

Merrill, the world's biggest brokerage, probably will post a loss of $3.23 billion on Jan. 17, topping the record $2.24 billion loss reported in the third quarter, Stan O'Neal's last as chief executive officer, analysts estimate.

New CEOs

John Thain, O'Neal's replacement, may use the quarter's earnings to write down most remaining investments infected by subprime defaults, said Sandler O'Neill & Partners analyst Jeffrey Harte. Citigroup replaced CEO Charles O. ``Chuck'' Prince III with Vikram Pandit, who turns 51 today, a former investment banker with a Ph.D. in finance who has formed a dedicated task force to mitigate losses in the bank's subprime investments.

Prince, 58, resigned in early November when the bank said it might have $8 billion to $11 billion of subprime writedowns, based on a slide in prices for mortgage-related securities during October.

In a Nov. 15 interview, Thain, 52, said that in many market declines, ``asset prices tend to go much lower than they ultimately are worth, and it takes longer to work out of them than people think.''

Writedown Estimates

The loss at Citigroup may include almost $19 billion of writedowns on holdings of mortgage-related securities known as collateralized debt obligations, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc. analyst William Tanona. Merrill was battered by $11.5 billion of writedowns, Tanona estimates.

Bank of America's fourth-quarter net income probably fell 79 percent to $1.08 billion, the biggest drop in at least a decade, according to a Bloomberg survey. Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. analyst Howard Mason estimates the bank had $5.5 billion of writedowns on mortgage-related securities.

Earnings per share would be 23 cents, the lowest since the Charlotte, North Carolina-based company was formed from the 1998 merger of BankAmerica and NationsBank, according to analysts' estimates. Citigroup was put together the same year through the combination of Travelers Group Inc. and Citicorp.

Bank of America, the second-biggest U.S. bank, increased its bet on the U.S. housing market last week when it agreed to acquire unprofitable mortgage lender Countrywide Financial Corp. of Calabasas, California, for about $4 billion.

JPMorgan's Outlook

Bank of America, led by 60-year-old CEO Ken Lewis, may face writedowns caused by the declining value of Countrywide's loan portfolio, said Sean Egan, managing director of Egan-Jones Rating Co. in Philadelphia. A 5 percent writedown on the portfolio would be more than $10 billion, or about half of Bank of America's 2006 profit of $21 billion, he said.

Even New York-based JPMorgan Chase & Co., the least damaged by the subprime losses, faces ``a challenging credit environment mired by further asset write-offs'' of $3.4 billion, Tanona wrote in a Dec. 26 report. JPMorgan's fourth-quarter earnings may drop 29 percent to $3.21 billion, the first decline in three years, analysts estimate.

JPMorgan fell 15 percent during the past 12 months in New York Stock Exchange composite trading, compared with Citigroup's 47 percent, Bank of America's 28 percent and Merrill's 43 percent.

Great Depression

Banks haven't lost this much money, in relative terms, since the Great Depression, said Richard Sylla, a professor of the history of financial institutions and markets at New York University's Stern School of Business.

U.S. banks, insurers and real-estate companies earned about $1 billion a year during the 1920s until the stock market crash of October 1929. The industry lost about $500 million in 1930, $1.7 billion in 1931, and $2 billion in 1932, Sylla said.

Within days of being inaugurated in March 1933, President Franklin Roosevelt issued an emergency order declaring a ``bank holiday'' to stem a run on deposits. About 7,000 banks, or a third of the U.S. total, failed and financial companies didn't return to profitability until 1936, Sylla said.

Last year's collapse of the subprime mortgage market was worse than the third-world debt crisis of the early 1980s, when soaring oil prices and surging interest rates pushed Mexico and other developing countries into default on their loans, said Charles Geisst, a finance professor at Manhattan College in Riverdale, New York, and author of ``100 Years of Wall Street.''

Abu Dhabi

``This is the classic credit crunch,'' Geisst said. ``It might not have gotten to credit cards, it might not have gotten to car loans, but it's coming.''

Citigroup, Bank of America and Merrill probably were profitable in 2007, earning about $23 billion on a combined basis, even after the second-half writedowns, according to Bloomberg data. The banks earned about $50 billion in 2006. They may earn $44.8 billion this year, analyst surveys by Bloomberg show.

Citigroup, which in November had to seek a $7.5 billion capital infusion from the ruling family of oil-rich Middle Eastern emirate Abu Dhabi, may have to cut shareholder dividends to maintain the capital cushion it keeps to absorb loan losses, Tanona wrote in a Dec. 26 note.

Even with the Abu Dhabi investment, Citigroup's so-called Tier 1 capital ratio, which regulators monitor to assess banks' ability to withstand loan losses, may fall to 7 percent by the end of this year, he estimated. While above the 6 percent needed to maintain its ``well-capitalized'' status from federal regulators, the capital ratio is below Citigroup's own target of 7.5 percent.

Fed Data

Bank of America's Tier 1 ratio fell to 8.22 percent in the third quarter, from 8.52 percent in the second quarter and 8.48 percent a year earlier. JPMorgan's ratio was 8.4 percent in the third quarter, down from 8.6 percent a year earlier.

The resulting tightfistedness at the banks may help push the U.S. economy toward recession, RCM's Compton said. In the third quarter, less than a tenth of U.S. bank loan officers witnessed ``substantially'' higher demand for commercial loans, down from more than 50 percent in the second quarter of 2005, CreditSights reported, citing data from the Federal Reserve.

The banks' ``willingness and ability to lend remain the leading issues for the risk and extent to which current turmoil in the financial credit markets spreads to the broader economy,'' wrote Jeffrey Rosenberg, Bank of America's senior debt-investing analyst, in a Dec. 20 report.

Loss Ratios

Profits may suffer as banks set aside higher reserves for bad loans, Sanford Bernstein's Mason wrote in a Dec. 31 report. Bank of America's net loss ratio on commercial loans this year may average 0.7 percent, compared with 0.42 percent in the third quarter and more than triple the rate of the fourth quarter of 2006, Mason estimated. Citigroup's losses on credit-card loans may climb to $7.6 billion this year from $6.4 billion last year and $5.8 billion in 2006.

``A lot of these banks have large consumer portfolios in addition to the subprime side,'' said Malcolm Polley, who helps oversee $1 billion at Stewart Capital Advisors in Pittsburgh, including Bank of America shares. ``As we sink closer to recession, consumer delinquencies are going to tick up.''

U.S. construction loans that were 30 days to 89 days overdue represented 0.7 percent of those outstanding in the third quarter, more than double the rate of a year earlier, according to analysts at Arlington, Virginia-based Friedman, Billings, Ramsey & Co. Delinquent commercial loans climbed to 0.36 percent from 0.3 percent in the same period.

Default Rates

The default rate on U.S. junk-grade corporate loans may reach 2 percent to 3 percent this year, compared with about 0.9 percent in 2007, according to Bank of America's Rosenberg.

``Credit deterioration will continue to pressure industry valuations well into 2008,'' Friedman Billings analysts James Abbott, David Rochester and Scott Cottrell wrote in the Jan. 3 report. ``Even modest upticks in delinquencies can drive lower returns.''

The banks misjudged how bad the home-loan market would get, and they accumulated more than $100 billion of AAA-rated securities they thought were safe. This quarter's writedowns may acknowledge that prices for mortgage bonds and collateralized debt obligations, which repackage assets such as buyout loans and mortgage bonds into new debt with varying risks, probably won't recover anytime soon, RCM's Compton said.
 

Natural Gas Windfall Seen in Pricey ICE, Cheap Nymex

(Bloomberg) -- The smartest money in natural gas may get its best trade this year by exploiting the difference between London, where prices are the highest in almost two years, and New York, where the market is cheapest.

Investors should sell natural gas in London and buy contracts in New York for the summer, where prices are ``the lowest in the world,'' Goldman Sachs Group Inc. analysts wrote Jan. 11. The opportunity may become more lucrative because London gas will drop 50 percent to $4.88 per million British thermal units as imports rise and demand slows, said Jason Kenney, an energy analyst at ING Wholesale Banking in Edinburgh.

``Towards the end of the month, gas prices will start to come off,'' said John Fahy, managing director at Eras Ltd. in London, which advises energy producers including the United Arab Emirates. He expects a 50 percent decline in U.K. gas prices, similar to last year.

A drop in London would reduce power costs for consumers across Europe, where natural gas represents about one-third of all energy, estimates BP Plc. It would save money for buyers such as Ineos Group Holdings Plc, the world's third-biggest chemical company, while hurting profit at producers including BP, Exxon Mobil Corp. and Royal Dutch Shell Plc.

U.K. summer natural gas, for delivery in the six months through September this year, fell 1.5 percent to 49.75 pence a therm today, according to broker ICAP Plc. That's equivalent to $9.76 a million British thermal units. A therm is 100,000 Btus.

Exxon, BG

Exxon Mobil and BG Group Plc plan to open two liquefied natural gas terminals in the U.K. capable of increasing the nation's supply 15 percent by the end of the year. Norway's StatoilHydro ASA is working to fix the Kvitebjoern and Ormen Lange gas fields to boost shipments to England.

The end of winter will sap demand. The U.K.'s summer consumption of natural gas bottomed at 169 million cubic meters last year, 61 percent lower than the wintertime peak, data from National Grid Plc show. Average London temperatures of 16.8 degrees Celsius (62.2 Fahrenheit) in June do little to spur need for air conditioning.

Futures traders have wrongly expected London's summertime prices to be higher than New York's before. The last time was in 2002, when gas for June delivery instead plunged 39 percent on the ICE Futures Europe exchange to the equivalent of $1.73 per million British thermal units. Natural gas rose 41 percent to $3.623 on the New York Mercantile Exchange in the same period. A $10 million bet against them made a $4 million profit.

British Benchmark

British prices are the benchmark for Europe, the source of one-third of global gas production for Irving, Texas-based Exxon Mobil, the world's largest oil company, and 30 percent of supplies for The Hague-based Shell, Europe's biggest producer. Lower commodity prices reduce earnings from pumping oil and gas, Exxon's most profitable unit. Exxon made $18.3 billion from exploration and production in the first nine months of 2007, or 63 percent of its total.

Centrica Plc, the U.K.'s biggest energy supplier, benefits when falling gas prices lower the cost of generating power at the Windsor-based company. Winners also include Ineos, of Lyndhurst, England, and the British unit of Terra Industries Inc., a fertilizer maker in Sioux City, Iowa. Gas represents more than half of the raw materials used to make chemicals, according to the American Chemistry Council.

By selling gas in London and buying it in New York, investors can speculate on changes in the value of the two contracts. ICE's natural gas futures for June delivery have never expired at prices above comparable contracts in New York, Bloomberg data show. U.K. contracts, introduced in 1997, are now $1.45 per million British thermal units higher than in New York.

LNG Terminals

U.K. gas is ``overvalued,'' said Sam Shoro, a senior analyst in Sittingbourne, England, at McKinnon and Clarke Ltd., which helps advise energy buyers including Microsoft Corp. As summer approaches, the country will get more gas from Norway and Wales, where the two liquefied natural gas terminals are being completed. The plant from Reading, U.K.-based BG is slated to start imports by June 30, taking in natural gas that's been cooled to a liquid and shipped in tankers.

LNG supplies to the U.S. are declining because Asian and European customers are paying higher prices, according to the U.S. Energy Department. Asian buyers are paying more than $15 per million British thermal units this winter for LNG cargoes, Fahy said.

U.S. LNG imports in December were 0.9 billion cubic feet a day, down 47 percent from 1.7 billion a year earlier, according to Stacy Nieuwoudt, an analyst at Tudor, Pickering, Holt & Co. Securities Inc. of Houston.
 

Dollar Falls to Within a Cent of Euro Record on Bets Fed to Cut

(Bloomberg) -- The dollar fell to within a cent of its all-time low versus the euro on speculation U.S. interest rates will drop below those of the 15 nations that share the single European currency for the first time in three years.

The dollar extended three weeks of declines as Federal Reserve officials including Chairman Ben S. Bernanke last week signaled they favor greater ``insurance'' against an economic slowdown amid the slump in the housing market. European Central Bank council member Klaus Liebscher today said he sees ``significant'' upside risks to inflation.

``Interest rates in the U.S. are falling below those in Europe,'' said David Watt, a senior currency strategist at RBC Capital Markets Inc. in Toronto, a unit of Canada's biggest bank by assets. ``There are few reasons to buy the dollar.''

The dollar fell to as low as $1.4915 against the euro, the weakest since declining to a record low on Nov. 23 of $1.4967, and traded at $1.4888 as of 9:16 a.m. in New York, from $1.4776 on Jan. 11. It depreciated the most against the yen since Jan. 2, to 107.86 from 108.84. Watt said the dollar could weaken to $1.50 per euro this week.

The U.S. currency may fall to $1.55 per euro by the end of the first quarter, said London-based Bilal Hafeez, global head of currency strategy at Deutsche Bank AG, the world's largest foreign-currency trader. That compares with a median forecast of $1.47, compiled by Bloomberg from reports by 45 strategists and economists. Investment banks including UBS AG, the world's second-biggest currency trader, cut their dollar forecasts last week.

Euro Record

The euro rose to a record against the currencies of the region's 24 biggest trading partners on Jan. 11. It advanced against all but five of the 16 most-active currencies today. The single currency also climbed to a record 76.08 British pence and was recently at 76.06 pence, from 75.52 pence on Jan. 11.

The pound declined against 15 of the 16 major currencies even as a report showed U.K. factories increased prices at the fastest annual pace since 1991 in December. Investors are still betting the Bank of England will cut interest rates again later this year.

The common European currency extended gains against the dollar after rising beyond $1.4825 and $1.4850, where orders to buy the euro were placed, said Lee Wai Tuck, a strategist at Forecast Pte Ltd. in Singapore. Traders sometimes use automatic instructions to limit losses in case bets go the wrong way.

The dollar fell against all of the 16 most-active currencies before a Commerce Department report economists in a Bloomberg News survey say will show retail sales were unchanged in December. The data will be released tomorrow. The currency dropped for a third consecutive day against the Swiss franc and was trading at 1.0927 from 1.1014.

Bank Writedowns

The dollar also declined amid speculation U.S. investment banks will announce writedowns of as much as $25 billion worth of assets this week, strategists at UBS wrote in a note to clients. Citigroup Inc., Bank of America Corp. and Merrill Lynch & Co. may report their worst-ever quarter, beset by $35 billion of writedowns that threaten to crimp profit through 2008.

The euro has risen 15 percent in the past 12 months against the dollar as the Fed cut borrowing costs three times since Sept. 18 to prevent the worst housing slump in 16 years from dragging the economy into recession.

``We're expecting continued U.S. dollar weakness,'' Tobias Davis, senior foreign-exchange dealer at Custom House Global Foreign Exchange in Sydney, said in an interview with Bloomberg Television. ``It really is a concern that growth is grinding to a halt faster than some people expect.''

Futures Bets

Fed funds futures contracts on the Chicago Board of Trade show 58 percent odds the Fed will cut its 4.25 percent target rate for overnight bank loans to 3.75 percent at its Jan. 30 meeting. The odds have risen from no chance a month ago. The odds of a decrease to 3.5 percent were 44 percent, compared with zero a week ago. The ECB kept its benchmark rate unchanged at 4 percent last week.

The yield spread between German two-year notes and same- maturity Treasuries was 1.1 percentage points, near the widest since November 2002.

The ECB is under pressure to keep interest rates unchanged even as inflation stays above its 2 percent ceiling.