News Focus
News Focus
icon url

amarksp

11/08/05 3:08 PM

#14672 RE: lvlamb #14671

correction:
"are a god's sent gift for the Dollar"

should be:
"are a god's sent gift for the US Treasury Auctions"
____________________
Auctions

The three-year notes were sold at a yield of 4.458 percent, compared with the pre-auction estimate of 4.463 percent based on the average forecast of seven bond-trading firms surveyed by Bloomberg News. The securities will mature in November 2008.

Dealers and investors placed bids for 2.42 times the amount of securities offered. The so-called bid-to-cover ratio was the highest since 1998 and compared with 2.31 at the most recent sale of three-year securities in August.

``The higher yields are more attractive for a lot of people,' said David Glocke, who manages about $10 billion in Treasury bond funds at Vanguard Group Inc. in Valley Forge, Pennsylvania.

Indirect bidders, the class of investors that includes foreign central banks, bought 29.9 percent of the securities, compared with 28 percent in August. Since the Treasury Department started releasing bidder-participation figures in May 2003, the share of three-year note sales won by indirect bidders had ranged from 18.7 percent to 53.6 percent, and averaged 37.5 percent.

Foreign Demand

Foreign investors own about half the $4 trillion of U.S. marketable securities outstanding, up from less than 40 percent three years ago, according to the Treasury.

The dollar's recent gain against the euro and yen will help spur demand, said Hidehiko Maejima, international bond strategist at BNP Paribas Securities Japan Ltd. in Tokyo. The dollar this quarter has climbed 2.5 percent versus the euro, rising to a two- year high today, and 3.9 percent against the yen.

``The upward momentum of the dollar will encourage foreign investors to participate in the auctions,' Maejima said.

Today's auction will be followed tomorrow by the sale of $13 billion in five-year notes, and $13 billion in 10-year notes the day after.



icon url

Canuck Dave

11/08/05 4:17 PM

#14674 RE: lvlamb #14671

Strasbourg is in Germany only on German maps, Louis.

Lovely FRENCH city, LOL. I was in that area a few years ago, and the Alsace-Lorraine passions stil burn...

At least in Colmar.

icon url

amarksp

11/12/05 5:22 PM

#14699 RE: lvlamb #14671

Louis, any opinion?
BERLIN -- German Chancellor-designate Angela Merkel's new government may sell some gold reserves and a stake in the state-owned railway to help plug the budget deficit, the country's new finance minister, Peer Steinbrueck, said.

Steinbrueck said Merkel's coalition, which brokered policy accords for the next four years on Nov. 10, aims to cut the deficit while raising investment to help the economy. Proceeds from a partial sale of Deutsche Bahn AG and some of the central bank's gold reserves may be used to set up a 25 billion-euro investment fund, Steinbrueck said.

"There may be scope to sell" central bank gold within an international treaty, Steinbrueck told reporters in Berlin, adding that Bundesbank approval is needed to sell gold. "We would want to uphold both the Bundesbank's independence and the substance of the reserves."

Germany's new coalition is gambling that spending cuts and higher taxes next year, combined with investment, will help bring the budget deficit below a European Union limit by 2007 without choking the economy. The plan by Christian Democrat Merkel, 51, and the Social Democratic Party also rests on economic growth and a record credit line to help pay for investment.

The Bundesbank has so far resisted government calls to use the world's second-largest gold reserves to help plug the deficit. The bank sold less than 7 percent of its allotment in the first year of a European agreement on central bank gold sales.

"It's early days and we have to speak about details," Steinbrueck said today.

Germany has breached an EU rule limiting the deficit to 3 percent of gross domestic product for the past three years. Merkel's coalition has pledged to bring the deficit in line with that limit for the first time in six years in 2007.

The move to run up a new net credit line that will exceed 1996's record 40.1 billion euros is "deliberate," Steinbrueck said. "`We have to let the economy breathe before 2007."

Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder's decision to call early elections on May 23 has led to a six-month suspension of proposals to help the budget, ranging from selling index-linked bonds to introducing real estate investment trusts.

Steinbrueck said he's looking into the possibility of introducing REITs, which allow smaller investors to invest in property by buying shares in the trust, providing he won't lose revenue.

The new coalition plans to channel about a quarter, or 6 billion euros, of its investment fund into research and development, Steinbrueck said. The goal may be reached in part by selling a stake of Europe's biggest rail network.

Merkel plans to sell shares in the railway as early as next year, the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung reported on Nov. 3, citing unnamed lawmakers.

The SPD and the Christian Democratic Union, including its Bavarian affiliate party, the Christian Social Union, are due to vote on combined policy proposals on Nov. 14.