Wednesday, January 16, 2008

U.S. Economy: Inflation Slows, Industrial Production Unchanged

(Bloomberg) -- Consumer prices in the U.S. rose at a slower pace in December and industrial production failed to grow, giving the Federal Reserve the room and reason to cut interest rates at their next meeting on Jan. 30.

The cost of living increased 0.3 percent after a 0.8 percent gain in November, the Labor Department said today in Washington. Output at U.S. factories was unchanged in December as exports helped make up for declines in auto and housing- related production, the Federal Reserve said separately.

Slower growth will make it more difficult for companies to pass on higher costs, suggesting inflation will cool from last year's pace, the fastest in 17 years, economists said. Investors' attention may now shift to Chairman Ben S. Bernanke's testimony on the economy tomorrow at a hearing in Congress.

``With the sluggish growth outlook and rising risk of recession, inflation concerns have receded,'' said Zach Pandl, an economist in New York at Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., which correctly forecast the increase in prices. ``The Fed is clearly focusing on growth at this point.''

Economists had anticipated a 0.2 percent increase in consumer prices last month, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey.

Prices excluding food and energy advanced 0.2 percent, after a 0.3 percent increase, matching the median estimate.

Treasury notes were little changed after the consumer price report and later slipped. The yield on the benchmark 10-year note was 3.68 percent at 10:33 a.m. in New York, little changed from late yesterday. Stocks dropped after an Intel Corp. sales forecast spurred concern technology profits will weaken.

Capacity Use

Capacity utilization, which measures the proportion of plants in use, fell to 81.4 percent from 81.6 percent in November, indicating greater slack in the economy, the Fed's report showed. Economists had predicted a 0.2 percent drop in output and a capacity-in-use rate of 81.2 percent.

``There is nothing that would keep the Fed from cutting 50 to 75 basis points later this month,'' based on today's data, said Michael Woolfolk, senior currency strategist at the Bank of New York Mellon Corp. in New York.

Traders anticipate the Fed will cut its benchmark rate to 3.75 percent, from 4.25 percent, this month, futures prices show. The chance of a 75 basis-point cut was 42 percent. Policy makers are next scheduled to gather Jan. 29-30. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point.

For all of last year, consumer prices rose 4.1 percent, the most since 1990. The core rate climbed 2.4 percent after a 2.6 percent increase in 2006.

Energy Costs

Energy prices last month rose 0.9 percent, after gaining 5.7 percent the previous month. Fuel costs were up 18 percent in 2007, also the most in 17 years.

Food prices, which account for about one-fifth of the CPI, increased 0.1 percent, the smallest gain of any month in 2007.

The consumer price index is the government's broadest gauge of costs for goods and services. Almost 60 percent of the CPI covers prices that consumers pay for services ranging from medical visits to airline fares and movie tickets.

The government yesterday said producer prices unexpectedly eased 0.1 percent at the end of a year that saw the biggest annual jump in more than a quarter century. The cost of imported goods was unchanged in December, a report last week showed.

PPI and CPI have some differences in timing that may cause discrepancies. In calculating wholesale prices, the government asks survey participants to report costs as of the Tuesday of the week that includes the 13th. Consumer prices are based on average costs over the entire month.

Rents, which make up almost 40 percent of the core CPI, rose 0.3 percent.
 

BEA accepts $8.5 billion Oracle offer

(Reuters) - Oracle Corp (ORCL.O: Quote, Profile, Research) on Wednesday won a three-month-long campaign to buy BEA Systems Inc (BEAS.O: Quote, Profile, Research) by raising its bid for the business software maker by 14 percent to $8.5 billion.

Activist investor Carl Icahn, BEA's largest shareholder with a nearly 13 percent stake, said he supported the deal, one of last year's highest profile corporate takeover battles.

Icahn and BEA's board initially rejected Oracle, saying it undervalued the company, but no other buyers emerged even as BEA's investment bank, Goldman Sachs, solicited bids from other software makers.

The price that BEA finally agreed to, $19.375 per share in cash, represents a compromise between the $17 that Oracle offered in October and the $21 that BEA had demanded.

"It's a fair price. It's a good deal for Oracle. It's a good deal for BEA," said Trip Chowdhry, analyst at Global Equities Research.

Shares of BEA rose 19 percent to $18.59 in morning Nasdaq trade, while Oracle shares were down 2 cents to $21.29.

BEA is a maker of "middleware," which helps business computer systems interact with each other. Oracle could sell its technology alongside its own middleware, database products and business-management software.
 

Shoprite pockets rise in sales

(Fin24) - Pan-African food retailer Shoprite said sales for December 2007 rose by 16.1% when compared with 2006, which analysts have billed as "pleasing".


The 16.1% increase accounted for both inflation and volume
growth; for the same month, same-store sales grew by 11.7%.


Shoprite says that for the six months to end-December, sales rose by 21.8% to R23.3bn, but notes that the increase should be seen against the three-month strike which took place from August to October 2006, as earnings in thatperiod were affected.


It says like-for-like business in the six-month period
grew by 16.5%.


Nedcor Securities retail analyst Syd Vianello says that
while the numbers were good, the market may be a little disappointed and may have expected more growth given increased social grants, higher food inflation and the perception that Shoprite is taking market share away from Pick n Pay.


Room to fall further


Coronation Fund Managers' food retail analyst Quinton Ivan
says high food inflation - especially in staple foods, which comprise a large part of the Shoprite basket - was beneficial for food retailers' numbers because, despite higher prices, sales volumes do not drop as food is a basic commodity.


Ivan says that while Shoprite is on a heavier rating
(trading on an earnings multiple of 19.3) when compared with Spar (17.6) and Pick n Pay (19.2), its earnings have grown at a faster rate.


Ivan's preference in the food-retail space remains Spar.


Ivan was particularly impressed with the 32.5% growth (20.2% on a like-for-like bases) in Shoprite's African operations. As at end-June 2007 (the most recent figures available), Shoprite had 120 stores in 16 African countries.


Negative overall market sentiment, which saw the all-share index down 3.4% by 13:00 - overshadowed the positive trading update, with Shoprite shares falling 5.4% to 3 700c.


Shoprite's fall was in line with that of fellow food
retailers Pick n Pay (down ) and Spar Group (down 3.6% to 5 300c).


Nedcor Securities retail analyst Syd Vianello says that food retail stocks have, until now, held up well due to them being defensive plays.


Vianello says that while the sell-off presented a buying opportunity, there was room for food retailers to fall further relative to apparel retailers, which have been trading at low price levels.
 

Rand on back foot

(Fin24) - The rand remained on the back foot in late trade on Wednesday amid continuing turmoil in global stock markets with a raft of recent US economic data adding to fears of a
recession in the world's biggest economy.


Dealers added that local data indicating a slowdown in retail sales which supports the argument against another South African rate hike later this month had also contributed to the rand's weakness.


By 15:55 the rand was bid at R6.9210 to the dollar from its previous close of R6.8050. It was bid at R10.2638 to the euro from a previous R10.1070 and at R13.6167 against sterling from R13.1853 before.


The euro was bid at $1.4805 from $1.4780 overnight, while gold was quoted at $890.75 a troy ounce from its previous close of $889.10/oz.