GRAINS-Russian drought sends U.S. wheat surging above $6/bu
http://news.alibaba.com/article/detail/agriculture/100366353-1-grains-russian-drought-sends-u.s.-wheat.html
Published: 22 Jul 2010 19:52:31 PST
* Wheat soars on dim Black Sea export prospects
* Ukraine sees smaller exportable surplus
* Corn retreats from early gains on profit-taking
* Coming up: U.S. CFTC commitments data on Friday (Updates with closing prices)
CHICAGO, July 22 - U.S. wheat futures rose above $6.00 a bushel for the first time in 13 months on Thursday and extended the rally to 28 percent in July on drought reduced crop prospects in parts of Europe and the Black Sea region.
Front-month September wheat on the Chicago Board of Trade settled up 8-1/4 cents at $5.96-1/2 per bushel, after climbing to $6.10, the highest level for a front month on continuous charts since June 2009.
Profit-taking knocked wheat off its highs by the CBOT midsession and turned corn lower, erasing an early rally. Soybeans finished narrowly mixed.
U.S. traders said CBOT wheat took cues from the European wheat market in Paris, where benchmark November wheat futures roared to a contract high of 183.50 euros per tonne but pared gains by the close, settling at 178.75 euros.
CBOT September corn fell 3-1/4 cents to finish at $3.76-1/2 per bushel while August soybeans ended up 3/4 cent at $10.16 a bushel.
Grain markets remained focused on the Black Sea region, where drought is forcing major exporters -- Russia, Ukraine and Kazakhstan -- to cut their 2010 forecasts further. As a result, their exportable surplus may shrink.
"European and Russian weather are driving the market," said Glenn Hollander, of Chicago cash grain merchant Hollander & Feuerhaken.
"We can talk all we want about some hot and dry (U.S.) weather here longer-term, but the big problems are in the Russian and European grain areas," Hollander said.
Ukraine said it would likely cut its grain exports in the 2010/11 market year to 16 million metric tonnes, from 21.5 million in 2009/10.
Farming association DBV said 2010 wheat yields in Germany would drop 10 to 20 percent from last year due to a recent heat wave.
And temperatures in Moscow hit 95 degrees fahrenheit (35 celsius) for the first time since 1981. Russia has experienced higher than average temperatures since late June, affecting central parts of European Russia, the Volga region, southern Urals and Siberia.
A weaker dollar and stronger equity markets also helped support grains, as well as other dollar-denominated commodities including crude oil and gold. The Reuters-Jefferies CRB index, a global commodities benchmark, hit a one-month high as oil and copper prices surged.
The dollar fell more than 1 percent against the euro after U.S. housing data and better-than-expected euro zone manufacturing and services data revived appetite for risk.
CORN SETS BACK
Corn was unable to hold its early strength, retreating despite the strength in wheat and a higher-than-expected weekly U.S. corn export sales tally from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Traders said corn bulls were undermined by lackluster cash markets and forecasts for mostly benign weather as the U.S. corn crop continues pollinating this month, a key phase in determining yield.
Technical factors added pressure, with September corn futures unable to match last week's multi-month highs.
RenCap Says Economy Improving
http://www.themoscowtimes.com/business/article/rencap-says-economy-improving/410893.html
23 July 2010
Reuters
Renaissance Capital on Thursday upgraded its view on the Russian equity market for the third quarter based on a wider economic recovery, increased government support and an improved geopolitical climate.
"It is increasingly apparent that the Russian economy is recovering gradually as we move through 2010," RenCap said in a report. "On almost all metrics, the country is well beyond crisis mode."
It said Russian corporates looked undervalued compared with peers in other emerging markets, while much had been done to repair balance sheets damaged during the financial crisis.
RenCap said it remained cautious about falling oil prices — a major influence on the Russian equity market and the greatest risk for its future performance.
"From an economic perspective, the recent decision by the Russian government to increase the oil price used in its assumptions (from $59 per barrel to $75 per barrel), leaves Russia far more vulnerable to an oil price correction than a more conservative assumption," the bank said.
RenCap analysts credit the government for much of the improvement in the domestic economy, including real wages and industry output growth. The latter was pushed by government sponsored incentive schemes, such as the cash-for-clunkers program.
Some 21 percent more people were able to find jobs by June 2010 than did a year ago, with most of the rehiring taking place in infrastructure, according to RenCap.
"We therefore recommend selectively increasing Russian exposure," RenCap said, adding that it prefers stocks that offer "substantial upside potential," "exposure to growth," "a turnaround story" or "have a high dividend attached."
Russia Yield Advantage Shrinks to 10-Month Low Amid Bond Sales
http://www.businessweek.com/news/2010-07-23/russia-yield-advantage-shrinks-to-10-month-low-amid-bond-sales.html
July 23, 2010, 1:54 AM EDT
July 22 (Bloomberg) -- Russia’s borrowing cost advantage is falling to a 10-month low as the economic recovery in the world’s largest energy exporter lags behind peers and almost $12 billion of debt sales outstrip investor demand.
Yields on foreign-currency debt sold by Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s administration were 54 basis points, or 0.54 percentage point, less than the emerging-markets average yesterday and touched 47 on July 20, the smallest gap since September, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s EMBI+ Indexes. Just five months ago, the spread was 105.
Russia’s bonds returned less than emerging-market debt for six months, the longest streak since 2006, according to JPMorgan data. Government yields are about 60 percent below the average since 1997. That’s hurting demand as the economy expanded 2.9 percent in the first quarter, compared with 8.95 percent in Brazil and 11.9 percent in China.
“At these levels there’s not a lot of screaming value” in Russian sovereign debt, said Edwin Gutierrez, a London-based emerging-market money manager at Aberdeen. The firm’s $531 million Aberdeen Emerging Markets Bond Fund beat 84 percent of peers in the past year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. “They happened to price a lot of bonds almost at the market top. Among the BRIC economies, Russia is the laggard.”
Russian debt has underperformed as investors speculated spending cuts by indebted European countries and China’s efforts to slow its economy will curb global demand for oil, Russia’s largest source of export earnings. Gross domestic product will probably expand 4.3 percent this year, compared with 6.8 percent in developing nations as a group, according to the International Monetary Fund. Crude has slumped 9.4 percent from this year’s closing high on April 6 to $78.65 a barrel in New York.
Record Low
The government’s foreign-currency debt returned 4.3 percent from January through July 21, about half the 8.3 percent rally in global emerging-market bonds, according to EMBI+ Indexes. The extra yield investors demand to own Russia bonds over U.S. Treasuries was 244 basis points yesterday, compared with 298 for emerging markets, according to JPMorgan’s EMBI+ Index. Similarly rated Mexico notes trade at 167 and Brazil, which is rated one step lower at BBB- by S&P, has a spread of 216, according to JPMorgan’s EMBI+ Indexes.
Russian sovereign yields fell to a record low 4.9 percent on April 20 and were at 5.18 percent on July 21. That compares with an average 13.4 percent since the JPMorgan index started in December 1997. Russia has a BBB rating from Standard & Poor’s, the second-lowest investment-grade ranking.
The cost of protecting Russian debt against non-payment for five years with credit-default swaps dropped about 3 basis points to 170 basis points on July 21, according to London-based CMA’s prices. Default swaps, which rise as the perception of credit quality deteriorates, pay the buyer face value in exchange for the underlying securities or the cash equivalent should a government or company fail to adhere to its debt agreements.
1998 Default
The yield on ruble bonds sold by state-controlled gas producer OAO Gazprom is 220 basis points more than the same- maturity Gazprom debt in dollars, down from a yield difference of about 600 a year ago, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The spread narrowed to as little as 115 on June 14.
The ruble strengthened 0.1 percent to 30.425 per dollar in Moscow yesterday. Non-deliverable forwards, or NDFs, which provide a guide to expectations of currency movements as they allow foreign investors and companies to fix the exchange rate at a specific level in the future, show the ruble weakening to 30.5612 per dollar in three months.
The government’s $5.5 billion April bond sale, the first international issue since Russia defaulted on $40 billion of ruble debt in 1998, is the most dollar debt sold by an emerging- market government this year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. State companies, led by Vnesheconombank and OAO Sberbank, issued $6.4 billion of debt.
‘More Time’
Russian debt is likely to outperform emerging-market peers as issuance slows, said Jeremy Brewin, head of developing-nation bonds at Aviva Investors in London, which oversees about $377 billion.
“We had quite a bit of Russian supply and it means the range of investors in Russian debt need more time to absorb it,” Brewin said in an interview. “The Russian asset class, in particular the sovereign and the sub-sovereign, they have some good value.”
Russia raised 34 billion rubles ($1.1 billion) less than offered at two bond auctions on July 21 as investors demanded higher yields than the government was willing to pay. The Finance Ministry has sold about 21 percent of the 1.2 trillion rubles of bonds planned for this year to plug its second budget shortfall since 1999.
Economic growth may continue to trail peers because Russian banks are reluctant to lend, said Aberdeen’s Gutierrez. Total lending rose 2 percent in June, down from a 2.6 percent gain in May, Mikhail Sukhov, a central bank board member, said in St. Petersburg on July 8.
“It does have an impaired banking system, and that unfortunately isn’t going to change in the near term,” said Gutierrez. “Credit is not going to be a strong engine of growth.”
--Editors: Stephen Kirkland, Gavin Serkin
To contact the reporters on this story: Denis Maternovsky at dmaternovsky@bloomberg.net; Michael Patterson in London at mpatterson10@bloomberg.net.
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Gavin Serkin at gserkin@bloomberg.net.
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