Tuesday, 31 July 2012

Lahore Grain Market Rates 30/07/2012

RECORDER REPORT
LAHORE: Grain and other commodity rates in rupees on Akbari Mandi on Monday (July 30, 2012).

====================================

                          Per 100 kg

====================================

Sugar                      5200-5250

Gur                        5800-6000

Shakar                     6500-7000

Ghee (16 kg)               2470-2710

Almond (Kaghzi)          28000-40000

Almond (Simple)          10500-15000

Sogi                     20000-25000

Dry Date                  8000-15000

Chilli (Sabat)           25000-40000

Chilli (Pissi)           16000-26000

Turmeric                 10000-12000

Darchini (large)               18000

Mong (Sabat)               9000-9500

Dal Mong (Chilka)         8000-10000

Dal Mong (Washed)          8500-9500

Dal Mash (Sabat)          9000-11000

Dal Mash (Chilka)        10000-11600

Dal Mash (Washed)        10500-13000

Dal Masoor (Local)         8500-9000

Dal Masoor (import)        6500-7500

Masoor (salam)             6500-8000

Gram White                9000-10500

Gram Black                8800-10000

Dal Chana (Thin)           9700-9800

Dal Chana (Thick)        10000-10200

White Kidney Beans Lobia   9000-9500

Red Kidney Beans Lobia   10000-12500

------------------------------------

RICE                    (per 100 kg)

------------------------------------

Basmati Super (Old)      10000-11000

Basmati Super (new)       9000-10000

Rice Basmati (386)         6000-6300

Basmati broken             4500-5100

------------------------------------

TEA                       (per 1 kg)

------------------------------------

Tea (Black)                  350-440

Tea (Green)                  600-900

====================================

US, Germany hopeful on euro reforms after island talks

MUNKMARSCH: German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble and US counterpart Timothy Geithner said on Monday they were confident the countries of the euro zone would implement reforms needed to overcome their sovereign debt crisis.

In a statement issued after talks on a blustery German island in the North Sea where Schaeuble is holidaying, the two men said their countries would cooperate closely to stabilise the global and European economies.

Geithner�s trip to the remote island, against a backdrop of stormy weather and heavy seas, underlined US concerns about a euro zone crisis that now threatens the wider global economy and US President Barack Obama�s re-election hopes in November. �(The two men) emphasised the need for ongoing international cooperation and coordination to achieve sustainable public finances, reduce global macroeconomic imbalances, and restore growth,� they said in their statement.

�Both expressed confidence in euro area member states� efforts to reform and move towards greater integration,� said the statement, issued shortly after their talks in an elegant hotel on the island. The two men gave no news conference.

They cited Ireland�s success in placing longer term bonds and fiscal and structural reforms in Italy and Spain as examples of such efforts.

Their statement also referred to comments by several European leaders in recent days - including German Chancellor Angela Merkel and European Central Bank president Mario Draghi - to do whatever is necessary to save the euro.

Financial markets have rallied in recent days on expectations that the ECB will back up Draghi�s rhetoric with bold action, possibly the resumption of its controversial bond-buying programme.

Washington has long urged bolder steps to tackle the euro crisis, but Germany, Europe�s largest economy, remains deeply uneasy about the ECB buying up debt on the secondary market or adopting other unconventional measures that could undermine its core role of pursuing price stability. Earlier, a German finance ministry spokeswoman played down suggestions that the meeting on the sparsely populated island about six hours� drive from Berlin amounted to crisis talks.

�It�s not an unusual thing for the minister to meet a visitor on his holiday. It�s a normal procedure. Because the minister is on holiday, the meeting is happening there.�

Schaeuble had been hoping to forget the euro zone crisis for a few weeks on Sylt and said in one newspaper interview that he planned to �read a few books� and �clear my head�.

He said another aim for his holiday was �not to be put on the spot too much by journalists� for a few weeks.

But the spokeswoman played down suggestions that the meeting amounted to crisis talks.

Schaeuble spends the better part of a month each summer on Sylt, a narrow island 40 km long that is Germany�s largest North Sea island. Long a summertime playground for the country�s rich and famous, the resort is known for its sandy beaches, fine fish restaurants and relaxing atmosphere.�Reuters

Monday's midday trade: Wall Street edges down; Fed, ECB eyed

NEW YORK: US stocks edged down on Monday following their best two-day run this year as investors awaited announcements from central banks later in the week.

The Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank will both meet amid investor expectations of action to stimulate economic growth, but it was unclear what, if any, measures might be taken.

Hopes the central banks would move to revive sluggish growth pushed the Dow above 13,000 for the first time since early May last week, and the S&P 500 had its biggest two-day rally since December.

But the major indexes erased gains in midday trade on Monday. Utilities and telecom services stocks were still up, while the biggest decliners were the consumer discretionary and healthcare sectors.

�People have had smoke signals from Europe for the last few days, so they�ve been forming opinions on whether there�s going to be some concrete activity, and the market�s had time to build that in,� said Joseph Benanti, managing director of Rosenblatt Securities in New York.

�It rallied pretty well over the last few days, but now it�s time for the smokescreen from those signals to fade. We are looking at earnings as the driver for the day. There were lowered expectations, so earnings have come in okay, but a lot of the outlook is downbeat for Q4,� Benanti added.

S&P 500 companies set to report quarterly earnings on Monday include Anadarko Petroleum Corp and Eastman Chemical Co.

According to Thomson Reuters data through Friday, of the 280 companies in the S&P 500 that have reported earnings to date for Q2 2012, 67 percent have reported earnings above analyst expectations. The average over the past four quarters is 68 percent.

The Dow Jones industrial average was down 19.11 points, or 0.15 percent, at 13,056.55. The Standard & Poor�s 500 Index was down 3.11 points, or 0.22 percent, at 1,382.86. The Nasdaq Composite Index was down 13.65 points, or 0.46 percent, at 2,944.44.

There were still some bright spots, however, as blue chips like Wal-Mart Stores and AT&T hit new 52-week highs.

Wal-Mart was up 0.6 percent at $74.97 after hitting $75.24 earlier, and AT&T was up 1.3 percent at $37.61 after hitting $37.69.

Coca-Cola Co shares were 0.7 percent higher at $80.58.

In M&A news, Shaw Group surged 60.8 percent to $44.91 after the engineering company agreed to be acquired by Chicago Bridge & Iron Co for about $3 billion in cash and stock.

Also, diversified US manufacturer Roper Industries Inc said it will buy privately held Sunquest Information Systems Inc, a provider of diagnostic and laboratory software services, for about $1.4 billion in cash, cheering investors who drove the stock up as much as 10 percent.

But Progenics Pharmaceuticals Inc plunged 43.6 percent to $6.09 and Salix Pharmaceuticals Ltd tumbled 11.8 percent to $46.90 after US health regulators declined to approve wider use of their drug for opioid-induced constipation and asked for more data.

Apple Inc climbed 1.5 percent to $594.15. Jury selection is due to begin on Monday in the United States in a high stakes patent battle between the iPad maker and Samsung Electronics Co Ltd, the culmination of over a year of pretrial jousting with billions of dollars in the balance.�Reuters

UK stocks jump on fresh economic stimulus hopes

LONDON: Strength in risk-sensitive energy, miners and banking stocks propelled Britain�s top share index back up to touch the 5,700 level on Monday, fuelled by hopes central banks could launch fresh measures this week to stem the global economic slowdown.

Recent comments from European policymakers vowing to take all steps to tackle the euro zone sovereign debt crisis, as borrowing costs for under-pressure Spain and Italy have soared, have heightened speculation of European Central Bank action.

The ECB has been hinting, hinting, hinting but now it's the time to deliver, said Henk Potts, market strategist at Barclays Wealth.

If they don't do something concrete at Thursday's meeting the markets are going to see some hefty falls. There are no in-between measures this time, if the central bankers fail to deliver there is nothing else to underpin the market, Potts added.

The biggest support for the blue chips came from the energy and mining sectors, which rose on hopes that expected central back action would lift the gloom surrounding the global economy and boost demand for commodities.

The FTSE 100 index closed up 66.42 points, or 1.2 percent at 5,693.63 points, just holding below the 5,700 level breached intraday for the first time in 10 days, though volume was modest at 69 percent of the 90-day daily average.

�Overall, volumes were rather low today as the summer season kicks off and Olympic Games are in full swing. We can expect continued volatility heading into August, together with some position squaring,� said Ishaq Siddiqi Market Strategist at ETX Capital in a note.

Banking shares were higher on hopes for central bank action, as lenders are big holders of euro zone debt, and as the sector�s first-half results season was continued by global giant HSBC, shares in which gained 2.3 percent in strong volume at 120 percent of its 90-day daily average.

Europe�s biggest bank reported a 3 percent dip in underlying profit and said it had made a provision of $700 million to cover �certain law enforcement and regulatory matters� after a US Senate report this month criticised HSBC for letting clients shift funds from dangerous and secretive countries.

Peer Barclays - which posted well-received first-half results on Friday as it said it faced fresh lawsuits over its role in a Libor rate-fixing scandal - gained 2.1 percent, helped by a broker update.

Societe Generale raised its rating for Barclays to buy from hold and increased its target price to 190 pence from 170 pence, citing a firmer commitment by the lender to control costs in its investment banking business.

As investor focus switched to stocks generally perceived as more risky, defensive plays were the main blue chip fallers.

Food retailers were among the worst off, with Tesco and J. Sainsbury both down 0.8 percent.

Publishing group Pearson was the biggest individual blue chip faller, losing 3.3 percent, weighed down by a hangover from an earnings disappointment on Friday.

On the second line, electrical retailer Dixons was a good performer, adding 4.2 percent with traders citing the impact of an Olympics boost for the sale of televisions mentioned by department stores group John Lewis in its weekly sales figures last Friday.

Other high street retailers were under pressure, however, after a survey by the Confederation of British Industry on Monday showed British retail sales rose in July more slowly than stores had expected, dented by unusually rainy weather.

The CBI distributive trades survey�s July sales balance fell to +11 from an 18-month high of +42 in June. Analysts had forecast a fall to +15.

Blue chip clothing retailer Next shed 0.4 percent, with the firm due to issue a trading update on Wednesday.�Reuters

Euro falters as invetors become wary

LONDON: The euro slipped on Monday as investors became wary that hoped-for action from the European Central Bank this week may fall short of expectations, prompting traders to take profits on gains made late last week.

Some in the market have speculated the ECB may reactivate its bond-buying programme to help cut Spanish and Italian borrowing costs, but traders were aware that Germany has repeated its opposition to this and they saw scope for disappointment.

The central bank meets on Thursday. Talk of policy action intensified after president Mario Draghi said last week the bank would do whatever it took to save the euro, a message echoed by German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Francois Hollande.

But German Economy Minister Philipp Roesler warned the ECB about any large-scale government bond purchases and a German government spokesman on Monday reiterated Berlin�s opposition to any form of mutualisation of euro zone debt.

The euro was down 0.5 percent at $1.2259, retreating from a three-week high of $1.2390 hit on Friday, but still holding above a two-year low of $1.2042 hit last Tuesday on trading platform EBS.

�Draghi has to put some action behind his words last week ... The bias is towards disappointment and that�s what�s creeping into markets now,� said Niels Christensen, currency strategist at Nordea in Copenhagen.

Markets will keep an eye on any comments from US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, who is due to meet German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble and Draghi on Monday.

The US Treasury said Geithner and the officials would discuss the US, European and global economies.

Markets were bracing for a busy week, with central bank decisions due in the United States and the UK as well as the euro zone, in addition to key US jobs data on Friday.

Before the ECB meeting, analysts said euro losses were likely to be limited.

�Clearly, if nothing is announced that would be a massive disappointment ... But there is an expectation that we�re going to see something meaningful on Thursday,� said Callum Henderson, global head of FX research for Standard Chartered Bank in Singapore.

But he said the euro�s failure on Friday to close above a key technical level near $1.2325 was weighing on the currency.

The euro fell 0.8 percent to 95.85 yen, though it remained above last week�s low of 94.12 yen, its lowest level against the Japanese currency in more than 11-1/2 years.

It struggled against the Swedish crown, which hit a 12-year high after data showed the Swedish economy grew much more than expected in the second quarter. The euro fell 1.3 percent to 8.3400 crowns.

The Australian dollar also rallied, reaching a record high of around A$1.1680 against the euro and a four-month high of US$1.0500 versus the US dollar.

Many market players said the Australian currency�s gains could be vulnerable however, given its close correlation with the global growth outlook.

�People are selling euro/Aussie and that provides Aussie/dollar with an indirect degree of support. But exposure there is pretty big if we get any negative economic developments in Asia and if Draghi and (Federal Reserve Chairman Ben) Bernanke do not deliver,� said Daragh Maher, FX strategist at HSBC.

The dollar was steady at 82.786 against a basket of major currencies, above a three-week low of 82.343 hit on Friday. Against the yen, the dollar eased 0.3 percent to 78.41 yen.�Reuters

US Afghan aid could flop on counterinsurgency goals: watchdog

WASHINGTON: Costly US efforts to build major infrastructure projects in Afghanistan are running far behind schedule, and may fall short of counter-insurgency goals central to the US military campaign there, a government watchdog warned on Monday.

Almost $400 million in power grid, roads and other construction projects from fiscal 2011 may not achieve the desired COIN effects, the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR) said.

The COIN acronym refers to the military strategy, credited with helping turn around the war in Iraq, that is now a mainstay of the Pentagon's bid to weaken the Afghan Taliban. With the strategy, the counter-insurgency campaign depends on winning the local populace's backing, turning it away from insurgents.

In some instances, these projects may result in adverse COIN effects because they create an expectations gap among the affected population or lack citizen support, the inspector general said of activities under the Afghanistan Infrastructure Project, jointly backed by the Defence and State departments and carried out by the US Agency for International Development.

SIGAR found that procurement and funding delays - from many sources including poor security, personnel changes, faulty cost estimates and slow transfer of funds between government agencies - had put five of seven projects from fiscal 2011 six to fifteen months behind schedule.

And most projects may not achieve desired COIN benefits for several years, SIGAR said.

The report comes as the Obama administration pushes ahead with its gradual exit from Afghanistan, where the Taliban remains a dire threat after more than a decade of US and NATO efforts to defeat it.

Equally daunting, as NATO nations plan the removal of most troops by the end of 2014, is the challenge of making sure that billions of dollars in aid since 2001 makes a permanent, positive mark.

While donor nations are pledging to give $16 billion in development aid through 2015, annual Western assistance is already shrinking. US assistance peaked in 2010.

The Afghanistan Infrastructure Project, or AIP, is a US effort to provide better roads, power grids and water supplies for Afghans, in part to erode support for the Taliban and its allies, who have deep roots in much of the Afghan south and east.

The report also found that the projects could remain uncompleted or fall into disrepair because officials had not properly arranged for future maintenance and funding, or because they planned to rely on Afghan government agencies of �questionable capacity.

The success and viability of many ... projects hinge, in part, on unidentified, unfunded infrastructure projects and the successful, timely completion of other projects that the US government has been unable to complete for more than 7 years, SIGAR said.

Widespread public corruption remains a major concern in Afghanistan even as President Hamid Karzai promises outside donors he will crack down on fraud.

In its response, the Defense Department said that SIGAR's study revealed a clear lack of understanding of US counterinsurgency doctrine and failed to note that Afghans might rally around a building project long before it was finished.

Clearly, if dashed hopes can produce adverse effects, then that very hope produces positive COIN effects in advance of project implementation, it said

Fire kills 32 on Indian express train

HYDERABAD: Thirty-two people were killed Monday when an overnight fire ripped through a coach of an express train as it carried sleeping passengers to the southern Indian city of Chennai, officials said.

The accident, on a long-distance service from New Delhi, occurred in the early hours of the morning near the town of Nellore in Andhra Pradesh state with an electrical short-circuit seen as the most likely cause.

Images showed dozens of rescuers, survivors and crowds of onlookers milling around as the blackened and twisted bodies of victims, some burnt beyond recognition, were lifted out and laid in rows alongside the railway line. Family members of the victims wailed and screamed, while other dazed survivors sat around quietly with their belongings.

I woke up when people were rushing into our compartment, I was in S-10 which was attached to the S-11 coach that caught fire, passenger Shantanu, who gave only one name, told the NDTV news channel. There was smoke all around. We tried to open the emergency window, people jumped out of it.

The central government press office said that 32 people had lost their lives and 25 had been injured, with 500,000 rupees (9,000 dollars) offered to the families of the deceased.

Nellore chief district official B. Sreedhar said preliminary investigations suggested a short circuit near a toilet had triggered the blaze, while Railway Minister Mukul Roy said an investigation was underway. �Nothing can be excluded and nothing can be said without an investigation,� Roy told reporters shortly before rescue officials wrapped up their nearly 12-hour search for bodies.

The train was travelling at 110 kilometres per hour (70 miles per hour) when it passed through Nellore station, where staff noticed the fire and informed the railway authorities.

The burning carriage was quickly detached from the rest of the train which prevented the fire from spreading.

India�s accident-prone rail network is still the main form of long-distance travel in the huge country despite fierce competition from private airlines.

While new shiny airport infrastructure is springing up, the Indian railways � a much-romanticised legacy of British colonial rule � often appear stuck in a time-warp.

There were two fatal accidents this May alone, including a collision that killed 25 people near the southern city of Bangalore. Four passengers also died after a train derailed in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh.

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh sent his condolences over the deaths and has asked the national railways ministry to coordinate the relief effort, his office said.

In March, the then railway minister Dinesh Trivedi unveiled a draft budget for 2012-13 that included a major safety upgrade to be financed by across-the-board fare hikes

Monday, 30 July 2012

Google unveils ultrafast wired home project

SAN FRANCISCO: Google on July 26 unveiled an ultrafast Web service along with an Internet television subscription in the Kansas City area as part of a pilot project to boost broadband speeds.

The Google Fiber superfast broadband network will be available starting in September, with one-gigabyte per second speeds - about 100 times faster than most current Internet subscriptions.

The wired home project will allow people to replace cable television and Internet with a single subscription to be controlled by a Google tablet computer, which will be offered for free.

Google Fiber is 100 times faster than todays average broadband, Google vice president Milo Medin said.

No more buffering. No more loading. No more waiting. Gigabit speeds will get rid of these pesky, archaic problems and open up new opportunities for the web. Imagine: instantaneous sharing; truly global education; medical appointments with 3D imaging; even new industries that we haven't even dreamed of, powered by a gig.

The packages offered will include not only Internet but regular TV, the kind you could only get from your cable provider, as well as on-demand programs, Medin told the kickoff event.

Google said it was offering a full ultrafast Internet and television package for $120 a month, with waived installation fees and a free tablet. It also will offer Internet only for $70 a month.

It will also offer free Internet at the current speed of five megabytes per second but will charge an installation fee.

Google asked residents to register to determine the neighbourhoods where the project will be introduced in Kansas City, Kansas, and neighbouring Kansas City, Missouri.

It was not immediately clear when or if Google would expand the project to other US cities.

Google announced its plan to build an experimental high-speed Internet network two years ago, saying the United States had fallen behind other major nations in broadband speed and access.

Fast is better than slow. On the web, nobody wants to wait for a video to buffer or a website to load,Medin said.

Abundance is better than scarcity. There's a plethora of rich content available online - and it's increasingly only available to people who have the speeds and means to access it.

Federal Communications Commission chief Julius Genachowski praised the Google effort.

For the United States to remain globally competitive, we need to keep pushing the boundaries of broadband capabilities and foster testbeds of broadband innovation, he said in a statement.

Abundance in broadband speeds and capacity - moving from megabits to gigabits  will unleash breakthrough innovations in healthcare, education, business services, and more.

US big bank's glory days feared to be gone for good

NEW YORK: The summer of 2012 may be remembered as the time when regulation, scandals and a protracted slow-growth economy finally caught up with big American banks.

Ever since the financial crisis, US banks and their investors have held out hopes of a return to the good times, when lending profits steadily rose and commercial and investment banking flourished together. But analysts and investors are now questioning whether things have changed for good.

�My gut says all these megabanks are worth more separately than combined,� said Bill Black, managing partner of Consector Capital, a hedge fund that focuses on bank trading. Smaller, more focused banks could attract investors, satisfy regulators and increase depressed stock prices, he said.

Seven of the 10 biggest US banks beat analysts� average earnings expectations in the second quarter. But much of that came from cutting costs and dipping into money previously set aside to offset bad loans, rather than from growth in their main businesses, which is what investors want to see.

Revenue from lending, trading and advising corporate clients on mergers is still weak, and low interest rates continue to squeeze profits on loans and other investments. Banks and their already depressed stocks appear headed for a long, grim future.

Nancy Bush, who has been a bank analyst and investor for three decades, said she is ready to throw in the towel on banks of all sizes.

�What�s left at this point, barring a really significant improvement to the economy and a miraculous ramp-up in lending?� Bush asked. �Why invest in these companies? Somebody, give me a reason to believe.�

Toughing out a cyclical economic downturn with more job cuts is not a long-term answer, some banking experts say. Today�s problems derive from structural changes in the financial sector, including increased regulation, and demand a radical restructuring.

�The bottom line is that they have to get smaller so they can manage better,� said Roy Smith, a finance professor at New York University�s Stern School of Business. �They have to give up the idea of being a universal bank holding company that jams together businesses that have nothing to do with each other.�

Morgan Stanley is one financial Goliath that is signaling it gets the message. By the end of 2014 it plans to reduce its risk-weighted fixed-income trading assets by about 30 percent from third-quarter 2011 levels, bank officials said on their second-quarter conference call.

BALANCE SHEET PRESSURE

Government data shows loans on US commercial banks� balance sheets last month grew by 5.3 percent from June 2011, the 10th consecutive month of growth. But low rates and intense competition for the highest-quality borrowers are cutting into the returns earned on mortgage, business and corporate loans, banks� most robust lending sectors.

Even if banks are making more loans to better borrowers, they are doing so less profitably.

�A protracted period of low interest rates puts a lot of pressure on balance sheets,� said Consector�s Black.

Bankers on their second-quarter calls also raised concerns by warning that the mortgage refinancing boom will likely have run its course by year end.

US Bancorp, the seventh-largest US commercial bank, posted about a 17 percent increase in quarterly profit, but cautioned that much of the growth came from mortgage refinancing that is ebbing.

If the economy were turning around, banks might have less to worry about. But Dick Bove, an analyst at Rochdale Securities, said he is feeling squeamish about the economy after reviewing second-quarter earnings calls from 22 bank executives.

�They are seeing very clearly that their clients do not want to hire people or get involved in many capital expenditures,� he said. �If banks from all over the US are saying exactly the same thing, and they did, they are telling you clearly that we are going into a recession.�

One sign of trouble: loan growth is not keeping up with deposit growth.

In March 2010, banks loaned out about 99 percent of money collected from depositors. In March 2012, the figure plunged below 77 percent, the lowest ratio in more than a decade, according to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.

Bankers also said on their conference calls that their best clients are increasingly reluctant to invest in their businesses because of uncertainty about the US presidential elections, the end-of-year tax-and-budget �fiscal cliff� battle and ongoing problems with the global economy.

For many banks, however, issues go deeper than just a slowing economy. Capital markets businesses, including trading stocks and bonds, are just not as profitable as they used to be. Trading volumes are in a long-term downtrend globally, and regulators are clamping down on banks� ability to bet their own money.

The big banks also must use more capital to support their riskier trading businesses at a time when the businesses provide sub-par returns. Major commercial banks with investment banking arms, along with standalone investment banks such as Goldman Sachs Group, will suffer, analysts said.

�Nine out of the 10 biggest capital-markets banks in the world can�t earn their cost-of-equity capital,� said NYU�s Smith, a former partner at Goldman Sachs. �If you sit around and bet on these guys because they are undervalued, your patience is running out.�

There are some banks, to be sure, that have stuck to their commercial bank knitting and won perennial plaudits - and strong valuations - from investors and analysts. They include Wells Fargo Corp, the fourth largest US bank by assets, and US Bancorp. These banks have strong credit controls, have generally avoided cut-rate pricing to gain market share, and have been gradually adding fee-based, rather than interest-centered, businesses.

GIVING UP

Analysts, however, say their top institutional clients are increasingly reluctant to invest in any bank stocks. Last week prominent hedge fund manager Bill Ackman said his firm sold its big position in Citigroup, despite his general admiration for the bank�s management, because the banking system has become too risky.

JP Morgan Chase & Co�s almost $6 billion of derivative losses and the Libor interest-rate-fixing scandal in the last few months proved to be the �proverbial straw that broke this camel�s back,� Ackman wrote to his clients at Pershing Square Capital Management.

For months, JP Morgan Chief Executive Jamie Dimon had no idea of the size of the losses brewing inside his bank, signaling to many investors that major banks are too big and too complex to manage, investors said.

�If I don�t think that even insiders have a great handle on what�s going on, I�m certainly not comfortable about investing my capital there,� said Consector Capital�s Black.�Reuters

Wall Street Week Ahead Rolling out red carpet for central banks

NEW YORK: Stocks took off at the end of last week, drawn by the allure of a helping hand from the world�s two most powerful central banks. Traders are unlikely to resist those charms again this week.

The US Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank both meet this week amid investor expectations of action to stimulate economic growth and, in the case of the ECB, tackle the spreading euro zone debt crisis.

The drumbeat of weak economic data and disappointing US corporate profits and outlooks mean central banks can be stocks� best friends.

Equity prices tend to rise sharply in the hours before a Fed statement like the one expected on Wednesday as traders and investors jockey for position and a chance to make a profit.

This week�s calendar has a double-whammy. The Fed�s monetary policy statement will come one day before an ECB meeting packed with intrigue. ECB President Mario Draghi said last week the bank was ready to do whatever was necessary, within its mandate, to save the euro.

�People in this business like to get in front of big events, especially if (they) could be very, very positive for the market,� said Brian Reynolds, chief market strategist at agency brokerage Rosenblatt Securities.

In that sense the strategy �is almost like a lottery ticket,� he said.

But was that ticket already cashed? The S&P 500 rallied to levels not seen since May on Friday, a rally that was sparked a day earlier after Draghi stoked expectations the ECB might resume its Securities Markets Programme (SMP) and possibly adopt more aggressive quantitative easing.

Reports of meetings with the head of Germany�s Bundesbank fueled a Friday rally that outpaced Thursday�s gains.

Equity markets have for weeks been leaning on hoped-for stimulus from the Fed or ECB. Despite weeks of softening economic data, including a dismal payrolls report for June and a poor outlook for corporate profits, the S&P 500 has risen in seven of the past 10 weeks. It closed on Friday near a three-month high.

At the same time that traders position themselves to benefit from the Fed�s latest easy-money policy, those betting against market gains get out of the way and selling pressure recedes.

�It�s very scary to short the market ahead of a Fed meeting,� said Dennis Dick, a proprietary trader at Las Vegas-based Bright Trading and co-founder of Premarketinfo.com. �So you have this short-covering that drives prices up.�

That helps explain the rise in stocks in the 24 hours prior to the US central bank�s policy decisions � a pattern that tends to hold irrespective of what the Fed actually says in its statement.

Economists at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York performed a study of the pattern.

Starting mid-afternoon the day before such decisions, stocks in the United States, Britain, Germany and other major markets begin a sharp rise and don�t stop, on average, until just before the Fed unveils its policy decision at 2:15 p.m. EDT (1815 GMT) the following day.

Since 1994 a whopping 80 percent of the premium in gains of US stocks over yields on short-term government bonds has been earned in these 24-hour periods, the study found.

The pattern has grown starker as the Fed took increasingly aggressive actions to rescue the US economy from recession. The two rounds of major asset purchases, known as quantitative easing, or QE1 and QE2, in recent years, strongly boosted stocks.

�Perhaps this shows markets have given the Fed their seal of approval,� said Brian Jacobsen, chief portfolio strategist at Wells Fargo Funds Management in Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin.

�At least from a market participant perspective, they are confident the Fed will fulfil its mandate. I try to talk to individual investors to remind them that the stock market is going to react much more quickly than the economy to what the Fed does,� he said.

The focus on central bank meetings will get in the way of a heavy week of earnings for S&P 500 companies at a time when the outlook continues to worsen.

Major companies due to report include AIG, Kellogg, Procter & Gamble, Kraft Foods, Pfizer , MasterCard and General Motors.

Among the 290 companies in the S&P 500 index that have reported earnings for the second quarter, about 67 percent have beaten analysts� estimates, slightly higher than the long-term average of about 62 percent.

But just 40 percent have beaten on revenues, the worst record since the first quarter of 2009.

More worrisome is the market�s outlook. Third-quarter earnings are now expected to decline 0.4 percent from a year ago, compared with an expected rise of 1.4 percent last week, according to Thomson Reuters data.

Also on investors� radar this week is another legal battle in California over patents between Apple and South Korea�s Samsung. The trial�s outcome could reshape the smartphone and tablet wars between the iPhone�s maker and its rivals

US leads sanctions warnings to Sudans over peace talks Advertisement

UNITED NATIONS: The United States is leading international warnings to Sudan and South Sudan to step up efforts to reach a peace accord this week or face possible UN sanctions.

The UN Security Council has given the rival neighbors, who this year came close to all-out war, until Thursday to make their peace.

Tentative talks are being held in Addis Ababa. Diplomats said however that while no accord is expected the 15-nation council will probably hold back from ordering immediate action.

�It appears increasingly unlikely that a comprehensive agreement on outstanding issues will be reached� by the August 2 deadline, said Susan Rice, the US ambassador to the United Nations.

South Sudan broke away from Sudan in July last year but no deal has ever been made to set their frontier, how to share revenues from oil reserves that straddle the border, or how to settle citizenship disputes.

�The United States calls on the parties to fulfill immediately their obligations under Resolution 2046,� Rice said in a statement referring to the resolution passed by the Security Council in May which set the deadline.

�The US wishes to reiterate the UN Security Council�s decision � in the event that any or all of the parties have not complied with the decisions set forth in this resolution to take appropriate additional measures under Article 41 of the (UN) Charter as necessary,� the envoy added.

The United States has taken a tough line with Sudan, which is accused of staging an air raid across the border on July 20. Other Security Council nations say that pressure has to be put on both sides.

�The United States strongly condemns Sudan�s July 20 bombing� in South Sudan�s Bahr El Ghazal state, said Rice.

�This incident constitutes a serious violation of Resolution 2046 and marks a recurrence of violence, which had abated in the period since the resolution�s adoption.�

The UN resolution ordered the two countries to halt hostilities, withdraw their forces from the disputed Abyei frontier region and make a comprehensive accord in three months.

Sudan has however kept a special police force to protect oil facilities in Abyei and has yet to agree a demilitarized border zone map. It also faces international criticism over its war with rebels in South Kordofan and Blue Nile states, on the border with South Sudan.

Tens of thousands of refugees from the conflict have crossed into South Sudan and Ethiopia.

Rice highlighted international concern over what the United Nations has called a humanitarian crisis in South Kordofan and Blue Nile, where the Khartoum government has severely restricted access to aid agencies.

Sudan accuses the South of supplying the Sudan People�s Liberation Movement-North (SPLM-N), which is battling government forces.

The United States praised South Sudan for keeping to most provisions of the UN resolution but Rice said: �At the same time, the United States reiterates the Security Council�s call to cease support to rebel groups.�

Former South African president Thabo Mbeki is leading African Union efforts to mediate between the two rivals at the Addis Ababa talks, which started last week, but diplomats have cited no progress.�AFP

Seven Iraqi police killed in attacks

BAGHDAD: Two bombings and a drive-by shooting Sunday killed seven Iraqi police in a former al-Qaida stronghold in the western part of the country, authorities said, another sign of the militants resurgence.

The attacks before dawn around the city of Fallujah also wounded nine police. They come a week after the leader of al-Qaida in Iraq announced a deadly campaign to reclaim parts of the country the Sunni insurgency was forced to leave before the US military pulled out last December. After the attacks Sunday, security forces sealed off all roads leading into Fallujah and imposed a curfew on the city, 65 kilometers (40 miles) west of Baghdad.

Officials said two explosives-packed cars blew up within a few minutes of each other in Fallujah and the nearby village of Karma as security patrols drove by, killing three policemen. Fifteen minutes later, a gang of gunmen fired on a Karma police station, killing four. The gunmen escaped.

The casualties were confirmed by local hospital officials. All spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to release the information to reporters.

Fallujah was the site of some of the bloodiest battles of the war in 2004 between US forces and the Sunni insurgency. In 2007, some local tribal leaders in Fallujah and elsewhere in Iraq's Sunni-dominated western Anbar region joined forces with the American troops and forced al-Qaida to retreat in what was a turning point of the war.

Now, however, al-Qaida in Iraq is seeking to make a comeback in Anbar and other Sunni areas, launching dozens of deadly attacks in the days since last weekend's statement by Islamic State of Iraq leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi that the militant group would push back into its former strongholds .

Al-Qaida's local wing in Iraq is known as the Islamic State of Iraq, and has for years had a hot-and-cold relationship with the global terror network's leadership.

Both shared the goal of targeting the US military in Iraq and, to an extent, undermining the Shiite government that replaced Saddam Hussein's regime. But al-Qaida leaders Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahri distanced themselves from the Iraqi militants in 2007 for also killing Iraqi civilians instead of focusing on Western targets.

Generally, al-Qaida in Iraq does not launch attacks or otherwise operate beyond Iraq's borders. But in early 2012, al-Zawahri urged Iraqi insurgents to support the Sunni-based uprising in neighboring Syria against President Bashar Assad, an Alawite. The sect is a branch of Shiite Islam.

There is evidence of al-Qaida involvement in the Syrian civil war, especially the appearance of suicide bomb attacks.

We don't need nuclear power (JAPAN)

TOKYO: Tens of thousands of people protested against nuclear power outside Japan's parliament on Sunday, the same day a proponent of using renewable energy to replace nuclear following the Fukushima disaster was defeated in a local election.

The protesters, including old-age pensioners, pressed up against a wall of steel thrown up around the parliament building shouting, We don't need nuclear power and other slogans.

On the main avenue leading to the assembly, the crowd broke through the barriers and spilled onto the streets, forcing the police to bring in reinforcements and deploy armoured buses to buttress the main parliament gate.

The protest came as results from rural Yamaguchi showed that Tetsunari Iida, an advocate of renewable energy to replace nuclear power, lost his bid to become governor to a rival backed by the opposition Liberal Democratic Party (LDP), which promoted nuclear power during its decades in power, Kyodo news agency reported, citing exit polls.

Iida, who wants Japan to exit nuclear power by 2020, had promised to revitalise Yamaguchi�s economy with renewable energy projects and opposed a project by Chubu Electric Power Co to build a new nuclear plant in the town of Kaminoseki.

Energy policy has become a major headache for Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda, who less than a year in office is battling to hold his Democratic Party together before a general election due next year but which could come sooner.

Weekly protests outside Noda's office have grown in size in recent months, with ordinary salary workers and mothers with children joining the crowds.

On Sunday, the protesters - holding candles as darkness fell on the hot summer day - took their demonstration to parliament.

Chanting oppose restarts, they pressed against steel barriers erected around the parliament building, where thousands of police were deployed to keep the peace. Many of the crowd had marched past the headquarters of Tokyo Electric Power Co, the company at the heart of the worst nuclear crisis since the Chernobyl disaster in 1986.

We are here to oppose nuclear power, which is simply too dangerous, Hiroko Yamada, an elderly woman from Saitama prefecture near Tokyo, said.

(Noda) isn't listening to us. He only listens to companies and Yonekura, she said, referring to Hiromasa Yonekura, the chairman of Japan's biggest business lobby.

An upset victory by Iida, 53, would have added to Noda's woes as the government tries to decide on an energy portfolio to replace a 2010 programme that would have boosted nuclear power's share of electricity supply to more than half by 2030.

Still, Iida's support from volunteers in the conservative stronghold bodes ill for the Democrats and the LDP, support for which has failed to benefit greatly from Noda's woes, Kyodo said in an analysis of the local vote.

The brave battle by Iida, who sought a change in energy policy, can be said to be proof the popular call to exit nuclear power has spread even to Yamaguchi, the news agency said.

Noda, who approved the restart of two idled reactors this month, has said he would decide on a new medium-term energy plan in August, although media reports over the weekend said that decision could be delayed.

Experts have proposed three options: zero nuclear power as soon as possible, a 15 percent atomic share of electricity by 2030, or 20-25 percent by the same date compared to almost 30 percent before the Fukushima disaster.

Under pressure from businesses worried about stable electricity supply, Noda has been thought to be leaning toward 15 percent, which would require all of Japan's 50 reactors to resume operations before gradually closing older units.

The growing anti-nuclear movement, however, may make that choice difficult, some experts said.

Multiple inquiries into the March 11, 2011 nuclear crisis, in which a huge quake-induced tsunami devastated the Fukushima plant, causing meltdowns and forcing mass evacuations, have underscored the failure by authorities and utilities to adopt strict safety steps or disaster response plans.

Saturday, 28 July 2012

Onslaught looms as Assad forces pound Aleppo rebels

US State Dept fears massacre in the city

AMMAN/BEIRUT: President Bashar al-Assad�s artillery pounded rebel-held areas in and around Aleppo on Friday in preparation for an onslaught on Syria�s biggest city where the United States has said it fears a �massacre� may be imminent.

Opposition sources said the shelling, which follows intensive ground and air bombardment, was an attempt to drive fighters inside Aleppo from their strongholds and to stop their comrades outside the city from resupplying them.

�They are shelling at random to instil a state of terror,� said Anwar Abu Ahed, a rebel commander outside the city.

The battle for Aleppo, a major power centre that is home to 2.5 million people, is being seen as a potential turning point in the 16-month uprising against Assad that could give one side an edge in a conflict where both the rebels and the government have struggled to gain the upper hand.

A rebel commander said insurgents had attacked a convoy of Syrian army tanks heading towards the city, as the government continued to redeploy forces from other parts of the country to bolster its forces there.

The fate of Syria itself - an ethnically fragmented nation of 22 million people - is likely to determine the future of the wider region for years to come amid fears that its own sectarian tensions could spill across borders.

The US State Department said credible reports of tank columns moving on Aleppo, along with air strikes by helicopters and fixed-wing aircraft, represented a serious escalation of Assad�s efforts to crush his opponents.

�This is the concern: that we will see a massacre in Aleppo, and that�s what the regime appears to be lining up for,� Victoria Nuland, a spokeswoman for the State Department, said.

Turkey, a former ally of Assad and now one of his fiercest critics, cheered on the rebels in Aleppo. �In Aleppo itself the regime is preparing for an attack with its tanks and helicopters ... my hope is that they�ll get the necessary answer from the real sons of Syria,� Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said in remarks broadcast on Turkish TV channels.

As the remaining residents of Aleppo braced themselves for more bloodshed, General Robert Mood, the outgoing head of the UN monitoring mission, told Reuters he thought Assad�s days in power were numbered.

�In my opinion it is only a matter of time before a regime that is using such heavy military power and disproportional violence against the civilian population is going to fall,� the Norwegian general, who left Damascus on July 19, said.

Navay Pillay, the United Nations human rights chief, said a pattern had emerged as Assad�s forces resorted to shelling, tank fire and door-to-door searches.

Government troops stationed on the outskirts of the city unleashed barrages of heavy-calibre mortar rounds on its western districts, while Russian-built MI-25 helicopter gunships struck in the east, opposition activists inside the city said.

The heavy fighting follows an audacious bomb attack on July 18 that killed four of Assad�s closest lieutenants in Damascus, a development that led some analysts to speculate that the government�s grip was slipping.

In the first reported casualty on Friday, a man of about 60 wearing a traditional white prayer, outfit was killed near a park in Aleppo, while fighting spread across several neighbourhoods.

A dawn bombardment killed five people who had been sheltering in a vegetable market. Video footage posted by opposition activists showed people gathering up the victims� body parts in plastic bags.

On Thursday, thirty-four people were killed in and around Aleppo, according to opposition activists, in an uprising that has cost the lives of 18,000 people across the country. Nour said tens of thousands of people had fled Aleppo to nearby northern rural regions close to Turkey.

In the city, rebels have detained at least 100 Syrian officers, soldiers and pro-government militiamen this week, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, an opposition group, said.

A video posted on YouTube showed rebels with Kalashnikovs from �The Tawheed (monotheism) Brigade� guarding the detainees, who were lined up on a school playground.

In Damascus on Friday, four helicopters flew over southern areas of the capital, firing heavy machine guns into the districts of Hajar al-Aswad and Tadamon as well as into the Yarmouk Palestinian refugee camp, a resident said.

A Syrian parliamentarian, Ikhlas al-Badawi, from the northern province of Aleppo said on Friday she had fled to Turkey, becoming the first member of the rubber-stamp assembly dominated by Assad�s Baath Party to defect.�Reuters

Facebook's value slides $10bn; outlook unclear

NEW YORK: Investors wiped $10 billion off the value of Facebook Inc on Friday, taking the recently listed shares to a new low, after the social network offered no forecast and analysts said mobile investments would put future earnings under pressure.

The 17 percent slide in the shares took Facebook's market capitalization to $48 billion ' half its IPO launch value of $100 billion in May.

The latest slide cost CEO Mark Zuckerberg, the 28-year-old who founded Facebook in his Harvard dorm room, around $2.3 billion, based on his shareholding.

The social network just beat revenue expectations on Thursday in its first quarterly earnings but the company failed to reassure investors about its future prospects.

Facebook has established itself as an Internet utility but it might take a while for Facebook to gain Wall Street love, Citi Investment Research analysts said in a note.

Investors worried about how the social network would make money from mobile advertising had hoped that the company would signal that revenue growth was picking up.

The shares have shed around 40 percent of their value since the company's ill-starred debut at $38 on May 18.

They fell to a record low $22.28 in morning trading on Friday before recovering a little to $23.03. It was far and away the most heavily traded stock, with 52 million changing hands.

At least four brokerages, including Barclays Capital, cut their price targets on Facebook stock, although most suggested it was worth much more than current trading levels.

Created just eight years ago, Facebook continues to grow  hitting 955 million active users a month at the end of June  but its shares have slid since its May IPO as investors questioned a valuation of more than 50 times earnings.

MOBILE MOJO

J.P. Morgan Securities analysts said the stock could also be under pressure because some early investors will be able to sell shares from Aug. 19, potentially flooding the market with stock.

But most focus was on the company's mobile strategy, with big questions about whether it can sustain growth as users increasingly access Facebook on mobiles, where it has found it hard to squeeze in advertisements.

Facebook only recently began to offer limited advertising on its mobile platform, so far generating little revenue.

Facebook is investing heavily in improving mobile apps and building a platform on top of which new apps can be built, but so far that has increased capital expenditure but not delivered big gains in revenue.

The company, which competes with established Web companies such as Google Inc and Yahoo Inc, said capital spending more than tripled to $413 million in the second quarter.

Facebook is in the early stages of an important transition in its (mobile) advertising business that should drive accelerating growth and margin expansion over time, J.P. Morgan Securities analysts said.

The company ended the quarter with 543 million active monthly mobile users, up two-thirds from a year earlier but advertising views lagged user growth. Mobile access now accounts for 57 percent of total users.

The bright spot was that sponsored stories brought in much better rates than traditional ads, allowing Facebook to increase prices by 9 percent, Morgan Stanley analysts said.

A sponsored story is an advertisement that appears on a user's Facebook page and tells the user that a friend likes the advertiser.

Despite Facebook's slide from grace, many analysts still see the stock bouncing back.

Six analysts rate the stock a strong buy, 11 rate it buy, 17 rate it a hold, while one each rate it a sell and strong sell, according to Thomson Reuters StarMine. The mean price target on the stock is $38.00, suggesting a 71 percent upside to Friday�s low of $22.28.

Facebook's woes add to pressure at Zynga Inc, which gets nearly all of its revenue from the social platform's users. Fading fortunes of hit games such as FarmVille forced the company on Wednesday to slash its outlook.

Rising power dues: Energy sector�s collapse feared

ISLAMABAD: Top policymakers fear that Pakistan's energy sector may collapse within a week due to rising power sector dues which have touched Rs 210 billion unless sufficient resources are promptly made available to forestall the collapse.

I fear that the entire energy sector will choke up within a week time as neither Finance Ministry nor Water and Power Ministry are extending funds according to the agreed timeframe, said one of the top government functionaries on condition of anonymity.

Asked whether he thinks that circular debt will be tackled by the economic managers, the reply was in the negative.

The Federal Cabinet recently decided that Pakistan State Oil (PSO) would supply 28,000 tons of oil daily to add 1,200MW to the national grid which was implemented for awhile however with PSO not getting agreed funds to open LCs for further import the cabinet decision is simply not implement able.

Petroleum Ministry was also directed to provide 15mmcfd gas immediately to Faisalabad Power Plant for generation of 65MW which, according to official documents, is being implemented.

Cabinet had also decided that Petroleum Ministry would divert 207mmcfd gas to the power sector on the request of Water and Power Ministry, but this decision has not been implemented in letter and spirit, said another official.

PSO's receivables from power sector have surged to Rs 220 billion. The Hub Power Company (Hubco) is the leading defaulter of PSO with Rs 108.044 billion outstanding followed by Water and Power Development Authority (Wapda) with Rs 62.064 billion, Kot Adu Power Company (Kapco) with Rs 34.733 billion, Karachi Electricity Supply Company (KESC) with Rs 11.138 billion and Independent Power Plants (IPPs) with Rs 6.19 billion.

The national fuel supplying company has to pay Rs 176.418 billion to local and international fuel suppliers and Rs 30.459 billion to Pak-Arab Refinery (Parco), Rs 17.45 billion to Pakistan Refinery Limited (PRL), Rs 9.7 billion to National Refinery Limited (NRL), Rs 32.96 billion to Atock Oil Refinery Limited (ARL), Rs 2.6 billion to Bosicor and Rs 82.5 billion to Kuwait Petroleum Company Limited.

Lahore Grain Market Rates 26/07/2012

LAHORE: Grain and other commodity rates in rupees on Akbari Mandi on Thursday (July 26, 2012).

=====================================

                           Per 100 kg

=====================================

Sugar                       5100-5200

Gur                         5800-6000

Shakar                      6500-7000

Ghee (16 kg)                2510-2730

Almond (Kaghzi)           28000-40000

Almond (Simple)           10500-15000

Sogi                      20000-25000

Dry Date                   8000-15000

Chilli (Sabat)            25000-40000

Chilli (Pissi)            16000-26000

Turmeric                  10000-12000

Darchini (large)                18000

Mong (Sabat)                9000-9500

Dal Mong (Chilka)          8000-10000

Dal Mong (Washed)           8500-9500

Dal Mash (Sabat)           9000-11000

Dal Mash (Chilka)         10000-11600

Dal Mash (Washed)         10500-13000

Dal Masoor (Local)          8500-9000

Dal Masoor (import)         6500-7500

Masoor (salam)              6500-8000

Gram White                 9000-10500

Gram Black                 8800-10000

Dal Chana (Thin)            9700-9800

Dal Chana (Thick)         10000-10200

White Kidney Beans Lobia    9000-9500

Red Kidney Beans (Lobia)  10000-12500

-------------------------------------

Rice                     (per 100 kg)

-------------------------------------

Basmati Super (Old)       10000-11000

Basmati Super (new)        9000-10000

Rice Basmati (386)          6000-6300

Basmati broken              4500-5100

-------------------------------------

Tea                        (per 1 kg)

-------------------------------------

Tea (Black)                   350-440

Tea (Green)                   600-900

=====================================

US jobless claims fall, still volatile due to auto jobs Advertisement

Durable goods orders up in June, details of report weak

WASHINGTON: The number of Americans filing new claims for jobless benefits fell last week to near a four-year low but an unusual pattern for summer factory shutdowns kept hopes in check that the weak labour market was improving.

Other data on Thursday showed new orders for long-lasting US manufactured goods rose in June although a gauge of planned business spending plans dropped, pointing to a slowdown in factory activity.

Economists said the two economic reports did little to change the view that the economy was stuck in a rough patch.

�They both look good on the surface, but I don�t think there�s really anything to get excited about,� said Stephen Stanley, an economist at Pierpont Securities in Stamford, Connecticut.

A third report showed contracts to buy previously owned US homes unexpectedly fell in June, a worrisome sign for the housing market.

Job creation slowed dramatically during the second quarter a s the economy suffered from fears over Europe�s debt crisis and a planned belt tightening by the US government.

Last week, initial claims for state unemployment benefits dropped 35,000 to a seasonally adjusted 353,000, the Labour Department said, near a four-year low touched earlier this month. That was a much sharper drop than economists expected.

This year, automakers are carrying out fewer temporary plant shutdowns, throwing off the model the department uses to smooth the data for typical seasonal patterns. One measure that tries to smooth out this volatility, the four-week moving average, fell 8,750 last week to 367,250.

�The good news ... on average over the last four weeks the number is improving,� said Art Hogan, managing director of Lazard Capital Markets in New York.

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke told lawmakers last week that the US central bank, which in June expanded its efforts to spur the economy, would take additional action if officials concluded no progress was being made towards higher levels of employment.

Little action, if any, is expected at the Fed�s policy review next Tuesday and Wednesday, although some economists think the Fed could tell investors it will keep interest rates low for even longer than currently pledged.

The Labour Department release its employment report for July on Aug. 3, and it is expected to show a still-tepid rate of job growth.

In a separate report, the Commerce Department said durable good orders increased 1.6 percent in June, but this was mostly because demand for aircraft surged. Details of the report were generally weak, with declines in new orders for computers, electrical equipment and appliances and machinery. Factoring out transportation, new orders dropped 1.1 percent.

Non-defence capital goods orders excluding aircraft, a closely watched proxy for business spending plans, fell 1.4 percent. This could be another sign that worries about Europe�s woes and tighter fiscal policy in Washington are hampering economic growth, said Scott Brown, an economist at Raymond James in St. Petersburg, Florida.

�All these things have made companies reluctant to make big capital investments,� Brown said.

Manufacturers are feeling the pinch as the global economy slows.

United Technologies Corp reported a drop in quarterly sales on weaker global demand for its elevators and jet engine parts, while Do w Chemical Co reported lower-than-expected profits on a plunge in demand for chlorine, plastics and electronic parts.

Shipments of non-defence capital goods orders excluding aircraft, used to calculate equipment and software spending in the gross domestic product report, increased 1.2 percent in June. The increase suggests spending on equipment and software grew in the second quarter, but probably nowhere near levels in 2011.

The government is expected to report on Friday that the economy grew at a 1.5 percent annual rate in the second quarter, according to a Reuters survey, slowing from the 1.9 percent rate in the prior three months.

Housing has been a relative bright spot in the US economy this year, but the National Association of Realtors said its Pending Home Sales Index, based on contracts signed in June, slipped 1.4 percent during the month.

Economists have been optimistic that the housing sector, which collapsed during the 2007-2009 recession, was showing signs of life, as prices have appeared to stabilize.

PulteGroup Inc, the nation�s second largest home builder, reported a sharp jump in new orders as home buyers took advantage of rock-bottom interest rates.

The data on pending home sales, however, appeared to dampen some of the optimism over a housing recovery.

�It�s another clear sign that a bottom may be close, but has not yet been found in housing,� said Omer Esiner, a market analyst at Commonwealth Foreign Exchange

HK shares eke out gain, China index slips

HONG KONG: Hong Kong shares eked out their first gain in four days on Thursday, as strength in defensives offset weakness for Sands China after its parent posted underwhelming second-quarter earnings, dragging the broader Macau gambling sector lower.

Tepid sentiment was further weakened by a fresh spate of profit warnings from Chinese companies ahead of their second-quarter corporate earnings reporting season that will start in August.

The Hang Seng Index rose 0.1 percent, helped by strength in defensive counters such as the Chinese telcos as turnover in Hong Kong stayed feeble, which has hurt the bourse operator, Hong Kong Exchange (HKEx).

HKEx fell 1.3 percent to its lowest since last October, but held above HK$100 a share after London Metal Exchange (LME) shareholders voted convincingly on Wednesday to accept its $2.2 billion offer. In 2012, it is down 19 percent.

Sands China is the big theme today for shorts, said Benjamin Chang, chief executive officer of LBN Advisors, a firm that manages $450 million of assets in two China funds.

Sands China tumbled 4.9 percent, closing at its lowest since Dec. 20 and spreading weakness to its Macau gambling peers after its parent Las Vegas Sands Corp posted much worse-than-expected quarterly earnings. The parent was hit by lower profits at casinos in its key Asian markets, which previously helped offset flagging US revenue.

SJM Holdings lost 3.5 percent, while MGM China shed 3.4 percent and Wynn Macau declined 3 percent.

Restaurant chain operator Ajisen (China) Holdings Ltd was one company issuing a warning of significantly lower first-half net profit.

Chinese shampoo maker BaWang International (Group) Holding Ltd slumped 10 percent after it warned of a first half loss.

Mainland Chinese markets reversed midday gains to end lower, with property developers weak after the official Xinhua News Agency said China's local governments must not challenge Beijing on property market controls, especially its limits on home purchases.

The CSI300 Index of the top Shanghai and Shenzhen listings shed 0.5 percent, almost wiping out its gains for the year. It is now up 0.1 percent in 2012.

The Shanghai Composite Index also slipped 0.5 percent. Shanghai volume rose from Wednesday, but was still 16 percent below the 20-day moving average.

China Vanke shed 2.1 percent in its fifth loss in six sessions, but bounced off day's lows which were its lowest intra-day level since June 26.

Friday, 27 July 2012

UK's top shares index surges Advertisement

LONDON: Britain's top share index rose on Thursday after European Central Bank president Mario Draghi pledged to act if needed to preserve the euro, boosting sentiment among investors hoping for a fresh round of stimulus.

Speaking at an investment conference in London, Draghi said the central bank was ready to do whatever it takes within its mandate to preserve the euro, adding that the euro area was much stronger than many acknowledged.

The comments sparked a share rebound across Europe, halting a four-day losing streak and offsetting earlier losses driven by weak results in the energy sector.

The market has responded favourably. There is an expectation about some action from the ECB and the Fed. All the market is looking for is some kind of signal that perhaps in a month or so we are going to see some easing, said NewEdge strategist Neil Marsh.

The market rally in anticipation of fresh stimulus, however, could mean markets are disappointed next week if central banks - including the US Federal Reserve - fail to provide a strong enough expansionary signal, said RMG partner and CIO Richard Stewardson.

Overall we think the current rally in the markets is all we are going to get assuming we don't get QE (quantitative easing) from the Fed next week. The ECB can't do that much because to do more than we expect is to print money, which it cannot do.

At the close, the FTSE 100 was up 74.84 points, or 1.4 percent, at 5,573.16, recovering from a one-month low of 5,498.32 points set the previous day. Volume was once again relatively weak, at 88 percent its 90-day daily average.

Banks and miners were the session's best performers, adding a combined 17.6 points to the index as investors piled into both sectors, which fell earlier in the week.

Lloyds, however, did not join its peers and was instead down 0.5 percent, ranking among the FTSE's top losers after it reported weak results for its first half, kicking off earnings season for the banks.

The shares were also hit by the bank's involvement in the Libor scandal after it received subpoenas from government agencies investigating interest rate rigging.

Poor earnings also weighed on Royal Dutch Shell, the session's worst performer and biggest individual drag on the FTSE.

The energy heavyweight dropped 2.3 percent, after it reported a fall in second-quarter earnings to around $6 billion, hit by weaker oil prices worldwide and for gas in North America. Analysts predictions had been around $6.3 billion

For others, however, the results season proved a boost. ITV shares rose 6.2 percent, leading the UK blue chips for most of the session in high trading volume, after the broadcaster reported better than expected revenues and said it expects to outperform in a broader TV advertising market on which it remains cautious for the rest of 2012.

Rolls-Royce shares gained 6.7 percent after the aircraft engine-maker posted a forecast-beating 7 percent rise in first-half profits driven by growing fuel-efficient jet demand.

Unilever shares climbed 5.4 percent trading at over almost twice their 90-day daily average volume, after the consumer goods giant stuck to its 2012 targets helped by a strong performance in emerging markets.

Euro rises in NY

NEW YORK: The euro rose against the dollar for the first time in six days on Wednesday after a European Central Bank official said he could see grounds for giving the euro zone bailout fund a banking license that would increase its crisis fighting firepower.

The comments from Ewald Nowotny, a member of the ECBs Governing Council, prompted a flurry of short-covering and helped the euro rebound from a two-year low as investors who had bet against the single currency were squeezed out of those positions.

Nevertheless, many analysts said the downtrend for the euro remained intact. While a banking license would enable the bailout fund to borrow unlimited central bank money to fight the debt crisis, it is still just an idea and one that may not come to fruition given other ECB officials opposition.

Just the prospect that you can see an alternative solution to help prop up Europe is being viewed as a positive, said Gareth Sylvester, senior currency strategist at Klarity FX in San Francisco.

The reality is that it's simply an idea and nothing more than that just yet, he said. The actual EU constitution would have to be amended to give (the European Stability Mechanism) those powers and it has to be ratified by all member states.

The euro hit a session high of $1.2169, recovering from a two-year low of $1.2040 set on Tuesday. It was last up 0.8 percent at $1.2154.

The euro garnered an added boost after Spain and France said on Wednesday in a joint statement that for stability in the euro area, the adoption of a single supervisory mechanism for the bloc's banks is needed by the end of this year..

Against the yen, the euro rose as high as 95.20 yen, having carved out a 12-year low of around 94.11 earlier in the week. It was last up 0.8 percent at 95.01 yen.

The dollar was little changed at 78.15 yen.

Sentiment toward the euro remained bearish given spiralling Spanish borrowing costs that have fuelled concerns the country will need a full sovereign bailout.

A break below support at the psychologically important level of $1.20 would open up a test of the 2010 low of $1.1875.

It's going to be a slow grind down towards that - two steps backward and one step forward, said Fabian Eliasson, vice president of currency sales at Mizuho Corporate Bank in New York. �Volatility is just too high to see it going straight down.

Yields on Spanish debt have jumped since last week when the region of Valencia said it would need financial help from Madrid, with investors concerned other indebted regions will also seek aid.

The US dollar briefly pared losses against the euro after data showing new US single-family home sales in June fell by the most in more than a year dented risk appetite. But the impact was short-lived as the data fuelled expectations of further stimulus from the Federal Reserve.

Syria's humanitarian crisis worsening, more funds needed: EU Advertisement

BRUSSELS: The humanitarian situation in Syria has taken a dramatic turn for the worse in recent days, placing fresh strain on operations that are already severely under-funded, EU officials said Thursday.

With an escalation in fighting that has prompted increasing numbers of Syrians to flee, �the humanitarian situation has changed significantly in the last four or five days, said an aid expert from the European Commission.

Its like running behind a train that constantly keeps accelerating, he said.

While a current programme headed by the UN High Commissioner for Refugees provides for aid to 185,000 refugees from Syria by year's end, 120,000 have already registered with UNHCR and the real number is much higher, he said.

This will get worse before it gets better, the source added. We need to scale up further... There is far too little money.

A $193-million appeal for Syrian refugees in Turkey, Jordan, Lebanon and Iraq is 80 percent under-funded and a $189-million plan to aid Syrians inside faces a 74 percent shortfall.

The EU experts said three out of four Syrian refugees were women and children who fled with only the clothes they were wearing.

Within the country, hundreds of thousands were on the move, some sleeping on the streets with nowhere to go. International donors plan to extend food aid to 1.5 million people compared to current aims of 850,000 people a month.

The EU appears to be by far the largest donor to humanitarian programmes, though Arab League nations were known to have handed big cheques to help Syria's neighbours cope with the exodus.

Russia and China too contributed to appeals from the International Committee of the Red Cross, and Moscow appeared to have exercised useful influence in convincing Damascus to cooperate with the international humanitarian response. But the EU experts called for greater access to detainees, more visas for foreign aid workers, and increased protection for those working with the Syrian Arab red Crescent to provide medical help.

They said the European Union had prepared contingency plans to evacuate 25,000 to 30,000 EU passport holders if necessary, but that the majority had dual nationality.AFP

11 killed in Bajaur Agency blast

PESHAWAR: Eleven people were killed and more than twenty injured when a bomb explosion rocked a busy market in Salarzai Tehsil of Bajaur Agency on Thursday.

The device planted in a pickup truck, exploded in Pasht bazaar of Salarzai in Bajaur district, one of the toughest battlegrounds in Pakistan�s fight against the Taliban in the northwest.

There are eight bodies and 21 wounded brought to hospital, Doctor Khalilur Rehman told Business Recorder.

Two children aged eight and 13 were among the dead and four children aged five to 11 were among the injured, he said.

Five shops were also destroyed due to blast�s impact. Security forces cordoned off the area while the locals along with rescue teams are transferring the bodies and injured to the hospital. Nobody claimed the responsibility for the bombing, but the Taliban have carried out several attacks against Salarzai tribesmen for forming pro-government militias and supporting military operations.

Acting Central President, Awami National Party (ANP) Senator Haji Mohammad Adeel and Provincial President, Senator Afrasiab Khattak have condemned bomb blast in Pashat, Bajaur Agency and expressed deep grief and sorrow over the death of eight persons in it.

According to condemnation statement issued here from Central Media Cell at Bacha Khan Markaz, Peshawar, the ANP leaders said that people could not be demoralised through such cowardice activities. They said that those carrying terror activities are the enemies of Pakistan and have no concern with any ideology or religion. They said that like past subversive activities will be foiled in future too.

They appealed the people to exhibit patience and courage. They also prayed for the eternal peace of those killed in the incident and early recovery of the injured.

Fears of attacks on Nato trucks: Supply route temporarily suspended

PESHAWAR: Pakistan has temporarily stopped Nato supply trucks crossing its northwestern border into Afghanistan over security concerns due to fears of Islamist attacks, officials said Thursday.

Gunmen on Tuesday attacked a convoy of Nato supply trucks, killing a driver, in the town of Jamrud near the main northwestern city of Peshawar, in the first such attack since Pakistan lifted a seven-month blockade of the border.

Movement of Nato vehicles has been temporarily suspended since Wednesday evening to beef up security, a paramilitary official told AFP.

We have launched a search operation in the hills surrounding Jamrud, the official added.

On Wednesday, officials at the northwestern Torkham crossing had said traffic was picking up for the first time since the blockade ended, with more than 100 vehicles crossing in recent days.

But local administration official Bakhtiar Khan confirmed Thursday the supply route had been suspended due to security reasons.

Intelligence officials have informed the authority that attacks may occur on NATO vehicles this week and in the light of this a security plan is being chalked out, Khan told AFP.

He said the Nato route would resume very soon, but that until then trucks carrying supplies for the 130,000-strong US-led mission in Afghanistan had been told not to approach the border.

We have been told by authorities to wait here as they are building up security after the firing incident,� Amanullah Khan, a Nato truck driver, told AFP in Peshawar.

So far, the closure has only affected the Torkham crossing.

At the southwestern crossing of Chaman, some 17 trucks were awaiting clearance to enter Afghanistan and 20 other trucks were parked in Quetta, clearing agent Ashraf Khan told AFP.

Islamabad closed its land routes to Nato convoys after US air strikes killed 24 Pakistani soldiers on November 26, but reopened them after Washington said sorry for the deaths.

Before the blockade, around 150 trucks crossed into Afghanistan each day at Torkham  the closest border crossing to Kabul  and officials say the flow will rise to up to 300 a day.

But three weeks after the blockade ended, trucks and containers are still holed up at the Arabian Sea port of Karachi, where Nato goods are unloaded for the overland route.

Workers are waiting for security guarantees and compensation for the last seven months, said Rana Mohammad Aslam, vice president of the All Pakistan Goods Carriers Association. Not a single truck has left town so far because of the payment issues with the subcontractors and the governments failure to devise a plan to provide adequate security to the trucks, he said.

He told AFP that Tuesdays killing had spread more fear among truck owners and their employees.

An official at the ports and shipping ministry told AFP on the condition of anonymity that not a single container had left the port, pending customs clearance and the payment of damages.AFP

Thursday, 26 July 2012

Lahore Grain Market Rates 25/07/2012

RECORDER REPORT
LAHORE: Grain and other commodity rates in rupees on Akbari Mandi on Wednesday (July 25, 2012).

======================================

                            Per 100 kg

======================================

Sugar                        5100-5200

Gur                          5800-6000

Shakar                       6500-7000

Ghee (16 kg)                 2510-2730

Almond (Kaghzi)            28000-40000

Almond (Simple)            10500-15000

Sogi                       20000-25000

Dry Date                    8000-15000

Chilli (Sabat)             25000-40000

Chilli (Pissi)             16000-26000

Turmeric                   10000-12000

Darchini (large)                 18000

Mong (Sabat)                 9000-9500

Dal Mong (Chilka)           8000-10000

Dal Mong (Washed)            8500-9500

Dal Mash (Sabat)            9000-11000

Dal Mash (Chilka)          10000-11600

Dal Mash (Washed)          10500-13000

Dal Masoor (Local)           8500-9000

Dal Masoor (import)          6500-7500

Masoor (salam)               6500-8000

Gram White                  9000-10500

Gram Black                  8800-10000

Dal Chana (Thin)             9700-9800

Dal Chana (Thick)          10000-10200

White Kidney Beans Lobia     9000-9500

Red Kidney Beans (Lobia)   10000-12500

--------------------------------------

Rice                      (per 100 kg)

--------------------------------------

Basmati Super (Old)        10000-11000

Basmati Super (new)         9000-10000

Rice Basmati (386)           6000-6300

Basmati broken               4500-5100

--------------------------------------

Tea                         (per 1 kg)

--------------------------------------

Tea (Black)                    350-440

Tea (Green)                    600-900

======================================

Apple blames rare miss on new iPhone anticipation, economy

SAN FRANCISCO: Apple Inc results fell short of Wall Street's lofty expectations as a sagging European economy and a pause in iPhone sales ahead of a new version saw revenues slip from the previous quarter.

Shares fell more than 5 percent to $570.81 in late trade after the world's most valuable technology company - which beats expectations with near regularity - reported its second quarterly miss in less than a year.

Apple's suppliers also felt the pain. Shares of LG Display, Toshiba and Hon Hai sank between 5 and 7 percent.

The rare miss highlights how the Apple brand is becoming less resistant to the economic and product cycles that have plagued rivals.

Clearly it was a disappointment, said Channing Smith, Co-Manager of Capital Advisors Growth Fund. We expected a lot of consumers will probably delay their upgrade and their purchases until the iPhone 5 comes out. We saw a similar trend occur last year with the iPhone 4S.

Apple did post a 23 percent jump in revenue from the same quarter the previous year to $35 billion, but that was about $2 billion below Wall Street's average forecast. Net income jumped 21 percent from a year earlier to $8.8 billion, or $9.32 a share, about 10 percent below expectations.

From the previous quarter, sales fell 22 percent in Asia-Pacific, outstripping a 3 percent to 6 percent drop in the Americas and Europe.

Apple, which Tim Cook has led since last August, divided the blame for the shortfall between muted consumer purchases in Western Europe and a pullback in demand as consumers wait for a new iPhone model that many expect will be launched in September or October.

From April to June, Apple shipped 26 million iPhones, well below the 28 million to 29 million that Wall Street analysts had predicted, even taking into account a pause in buying ahead of the iPhone 5. It was a far cry from the 35.1 million that moved in the March quarter.

The wait for a new iPhone caused Apple to miss quarterly expectations last fall. This year the phenomenon started early, which could mean that Apple's iPhone sales may also stall in the current quarter. Apple, notorious for its conservative forecasts, estimated earnings for the September quarter of $7.65 a share on revenue of $34 billion, well below the average estimate of $10.23 a share on revenue of $38.03 billion, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

The Silicon Valley giant has a lot riding on its next iPhone, the product that yields more than half its revenue and helps shore up overall margins.

Apple has seen Samsung Electronics  now the world's largest seller of smartphones  and other handset manufacturers using Google Inc's Android software chip away at its market share.

As consumers wait for the new iPhone, Samsung's Galaxy is expected to keep chalking up robust numbers. Analysts say profit from Samsung's mobile division is likely to have more than doubled from a year ago, with sales of around 50 million smartphones in the June quarter.

Fans are expecting Apple to launch a completely redesigned phone that has a bigger screen, rather than just add or change a few features as it did with the current model.

Less than stellar sales of the iPhone were partly offset by robust sales of the iPad, which accounts for well over half the world's tablet market. Sales came in at 17 million in the fiscal third quarter, above expectations.

It really is the iPhone company. The iPad is not strong enough to beat numbers,� said BGC Partners analyst Colin Gillis. The iPhone 5 is already the most hyped device and for it to exceed expectations is going to be really hard.

iPhone sales had surged when Apple began selling its Siri voice-search-equipped iPhone 4S and China Telecom signed on as a second carrier, Cook said.

In addition, the latest iPad also hit Chinese store shelves late  last Friday, months after it had debuted elsewhere around the world. Apple sold 4 million Mac computers, which was about flat from the previous quarter but 2 percent higher than the year-ago period.

US stocks fall

NEW YORK: Wall Street stocks fell on Tuesday, hit by signs the eurozone crisis is worsening and evidence that Europe's slowdown is hurting US companies, including bellwether UPS.

The decline was the third straight for the S&P 500 index, which tested its 50-day moving average, a technical support level which could trigger more selling if convincingly broken.

Stocks got a lift late in the session after the Wall Street Journal said Federal Reserve officials were moving closer to taking new steps to spur activity and hiring. Fed officials recently have spelled out what measures they might take, including Chairman Ben Bernanke in a speech last week.

After the market's close, S&P 500 and Nasdaq futures fell on disappointing results from Apple, which reported quarterly revenue below analysts expectations. Apple�s shares fell 4.8 percent to $572.12 in extended-hours trading.

During the regular session, United Parcel Service, seen by many as a proxy for economic activity, fell 4.6 percent to $74.34 after reporting quarterly results that missed forecasts and cut its 2012 outlook, citing uncertain global economic conditions. UPS helped pull the Dow Jones Transportation average down 1.2 percent.

We are going through an adjustment period where there has been a lot of talk about Europe facing a recession in 2012. Now we are actually seeing it in the earnings and the market is reacting to that,� said Gail Dudack, chief investment strategist at Dudack Research Group in New York.

The struggles of the US and euro zone economies intensified in July, surveys showed on Tuesday. Europe's private sector looked set for a prolonged slump as the surveys showed the downturn that began in the euro zone's small economies has since become entrenched in Germany and France.

Concerns about the euro zone grew after Spain was forced to pay the second highest yield on short-term debt since the launch of the euro and European Union officials said Greece had little hope of meeting the terms of its bailout.

AT&T Inc lost 2.1 percent to $34.63 after the company reduced its outlook for business services this year. The S&P telecom index dropped 1.8 percent.

Whirlpool Corp slumped 7.5 percent to $62.25 after the world's largest appliance maker missed Wall Street's expectations for quarterly earnings and sales, hurt by weak demand in Europe and a stronger dollar.

The Dow Jones industrial average was down 104.14 points, or 0.82 percent, at 12,617.32. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index was down 12.21 points, or 0.90 percent, at 1,338.31. The Nasdaq Composite Index was down 27.16 points, or 0.94 percent, at 2,862.99.

The Fed says it is still considering a third bout of quantitative easing, or QE3, and some analysts expect recent weakness in the US economy could prompt policymakers to launch such a program as early as September.

Given the events going on around the world, I think the odds are increasing the Fed will take action at one of the next two meetings,� said Michael Sheldon, chief market strategist, RDM Financial, Westport, Connecticut.

Of the 145 companies in the S&P 500 that have reported earnings for the quarter, 66.9 percent have beaten analysts expectations, Thomson Reuters data showed. Over the past four quarters, 68 percent have beaten estimates.

Cisco Systems Inc fell 5.9 percent to $15.12 after VMWare Inc said it would acquire privately held Nicira Inc, a move seen as a threat to Cisco's core switching and routing business.

In another sign of the economic malaise from Europe, Texas Instruments Inc warned that its third-quarter revenue would be weaker as customers show caution due to global uncertainties. The shares lost 0.9 percent to $26.57.

Spanish five-year government bond yields rose above 10-year yields for the first time since June 2001 as investors fretted about the possibility that Madrid may need a full-blown sovereign bailout. The 10-year note last traded at around 7.6 percent.

Volume was about 6.71 billion shares on the New York Stock Exchange, the Nasdaq and Amex, compared with the year-to-date daily average of 6.74 billion shares.

Decliners beat advancers on the NYSE by about 22 to 7. On the Nasdaq, decliners beat advancers about 17 to 7

Most Asian currencies fall

SINGAPORE: Most emerging Asian currencies fell on Wednesday as the European debt crisis deepened with Spain's borrowing costs surging and Greece unlikely to meet conditions of its aid package, while a weaker Chinese yuan put further pressure on regional units.

Offshore funds sold the South Korean won and stock outflows hit the Taiwan dollar. The Philippine peso slid after data showed the country's trade deficit in May more than tripled.

The Chinese yuan touched a 10-month low against the dollar after the central bank set its weakest fixing for the local unit in eight months, denting sentiment in its Asian peers.

Any form of weakness in the yuan will be translated into the rest of Asia ex-Japan FX. The question is how much currency weakness they can absorb, said Suresh Kumar Ramanathan, head of regional interest rate and FX strategy at CIMB Investment Bank in Kuala Lumpur.

Without a greater signal of monetary easing from the Fed, we expect that Asia will continue to find difficulty in clawing back ground so long as EUR remains under pressure, said Sacha Tihanyi, senior currency strategist for Scotiabank in a note, referring to the Federal Reserve's meeting next week.

The won fell on selling by offshore funds, which some dealers said appeared to prompt stop-loss selling among interbank players.

But the South Korean currency recovered some of its earlier losses as local exporters took falls as chances to buy it on dips for month-end settlements and interbank speculators chased the unit when it was weaker than 1,150 per dollar, dealers said.

That caused squeezes in short won positions among some offshore funds, they added.

Investors were looking to add long bets on the won against the euro, limiting downside in the local unit to the greenback, dealers said.

The won eased 0.5 percent versus the euro for the day after on Tuesday hitting 1,383.13, the strongest since February 2008.

It is difficult for the won to ignore a global economic slowdown. But the won's fundamentals are not that negative and it will keep decoupling the euro's move. Investors will keep buying the won against the euro, said Jeon Seung-ji, a currency analyst at Samsung Futures in Seoul.

The Taiwan dollar slid on stock outflows and foreign investors sold the island's currency in active trading, dealers said. The local unit found some relief as domestic exporters bought it for month-end settlements, especially when it was softer than 30.20 per dollar.

The central bank was spotted smoothing the currency's fluctuation, but its intervention was mild, dealers added.

Foreign investors sold a combined net T$51.7 billion ($1.72 billion) during the first 24 days of July.

The rupiah weakened in thin trading to touch 9,500 per dollar, the level which the Indonesian central bank has been seen defending.

Local banks bought the dollar, while Bank Indonesia was spotted selling the greenback through state-run banks, dealers said.