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Oil traded little changed near a seven-week high after U.S. second-quarter gross domestic product and weekly jobless claims beat economists’ estimates in signs that demand may improve.
Crude Oil Trades Near Seven-Week High on Economic Optimism
Crude jumped 2.7 percent yesterday, capping the biggest monthly gain since May 2009, after a government report showed that the U.S. economy grew at a 1.7 percent annual rate in the second quarter. Prices also rose as the drop in jobless claims indicated that companies are cutting back on firings.
“There is a level of optimism in the market,” said Jonathan Barratt, managing director of Commodity Broking Services Pty in Sydney. “Whether or not it has the ability to push through $80, or $82, we really have to see the numbers pick up in terms of business.”
The November contract traded at $80.112a barrel, up 15 cents, in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange at 11:25 a.m. Sydney time. Yesterday it added $2.11 to $79.97, the highest since Aug. 10.
Futures climbed 11 percent in September and 5.7 percent in the third quarter. Prices are 4.8 percent higher for the week.
U.S. initial jobless claims decreased by 16,000 to 453,000 in the week ended Sept. 25, lower than the 460,000 median forecast of 47 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News, Labor Department figures showed yesterday in Washington. Unemployment has hovered around 10 percent.

Business Activity
The revised GDP figure exceeded the 1.6 percent median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. Growth slowed from 3.7 percent in the first quarter.
Business activity in the U.S. also accelerated unexpectedly this month, according to the Institute for Supply Management- Chicago Inc. The group said its business barometer climbed to 60.4 in September, exceeding the highest estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News.
The government of Ecuador, the smallest oil producer in the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, called for international help after what it called a “coup attempt” yesterday by members of its security forces. The opposition is behind the attempt to take down the government, according to a statement on the president’s website.
Ecuador pumped 465,000 barrels a day of crude this month, or 1.6 percent of OPEC’s total, a Bloomberg News survey showed yesterday. OPEC’s current president is Wilson Pastor, Ecuador’s minister of non-renewable natural resources.
Brent crude for November settlement was at $82.44 a barrel, up 13 cents, on the ICE Futures Europe exchange in London.
To contact the reporter on this story: Ben Sharples in Melbourne at bsharples@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Clyde Russell in Singapore at crussell7@bloomberg.net
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Asian stocks rose, driving the MSCI Asia Pacific Index to a fifth consecutive weekly advance, as increased crude-oil prices and gold near a record high boosted commodity companies.
BHP Billiton Ltd., Australia’s biggest oil producer, climbed 1.7 percent and Woodside Petroleum Ltd. gained 0.9 percent in Sydney. Newcrest Mining Ltd., Australia’s No. 1 gold producer, advanced 0.7 percent. Mizuho Financial Group Inc. and Resona Holdings Inc. led Japanese banks lower after Morgan Stanley MUFG Securities Co. cut their investment ratings.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index gained 0.3 percent to 126.62 as of 10:16 a.m. in Tokyo, with about three shares advancing for every two that declined. The index gained 8.4 percent last month, the largest monthly advance since July 2009. The 12 percent climb in the three months ended yesterday was the biggest quarterly increase of the past year.
Japan’s Nikkei 225 Stock Average rose 0.6 percent today, while the broader Topix index fell 0.2 percent. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index increased 0.5 percent. South Korea’s Kospi Index climbed 0.3 percent. Markets are closed in Hong Kong and China for a public holiday.
Futures on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index increased 0.3 percent. The gauge fell 0.3 percent yesterday in New York, trimming its biggest September gain since 1939, as investors sold some of the month’s best-performing shares amid speculation that the improving economic data will reduce the need for the Federal Reserve to stimulate growth.
U.S. Economic Reports
U.S. stocks climbed yesterday morning after data showed the economy grew at a 1.7 percent annual rate in the second quarter, faster than the 1.6 percent previously estimated. Initial jobless claims fell to 453,000 in the week ended Sept. 25, less than the median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. The Institute for Supply Management-Chicago Inc. said its business barometer climbed to 60.4 in September, exceeding the highest estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News.
BHP Billiton rose 1.7 percent to A$39.57, and Woodside Petroleum advanced 0.9 percent to A$44.28. Newcrest rallied 0.7 percent to A$39.93.
Crude oil for November delivery rose 2.7 percent yesterday in New York to settle at a seven-week high of $79.97 a barrel, while gold futures gained 0.5 percent yesterday to a record.
Mizuho Financial fell 2.5 percent to 119 yen and Resona lost 4.1 percent to 718 yen after Morgan Stanley MUFG cut their ratings to ”underweight.” Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc., Japan’s largest publicly traded lender, retreated 1 percent to 385 yen.
To contact the reporters for this story: Norie Kuboyama in Tokyo at nkuboyama@bloomberg.net; Toshiro Hasegawa in Tokyo at thasegawa6@bloomberg.net.
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Darren Boey at dboey@bloomberg.net.
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Ireland is preparing to take majority control of Allied Irish Banks Plc and pump extra cash into Anglo Irish Bank Corp., raising the cost of repairing the financial system to as much as 50 billion euros ($68 billion).
Brian Lenihan, Ireland's Finance Minister

“The Irish banking system is at rock bottom today,” Finance Minister Brian Lenihan said today in a Bloomberg Television interview in Dublin. He rejected speculation Ireland will need outside help. “It can only revive from now because it’s recapitalized and reformed,” he said.
Ireland’s deteriorating finances fueled investor concerns that it would become the first government after Greece to tap the 750 billion-euro rescue fund set up by the European Union and International Monetary fund to stanch the debt crisis. Irish bonds have plunged this month, sending the yield on 10-year securities to higher than any other euro nation except Greece.
The cost of bailing out the country’s banks may ultimately rise to about 50 billion euros, under a “stress case” scenario for Anglo Irish, according to figures published by the country’s finance ministry and the central bank in Dublin today. The base case estimate is about 45 billion euros, the figures show. Allied Irish may need as much as 3 billion euros.
Among the biggest Irish lenders, only Bank of Ireland Plc and Irish Life & Permanent Plc will remain outside state control after the bailouts.
‘Believable Guidance’
“Investors have been looking for clarity and believable guidance on how bad things are,” said Padhraic Garvey, head of developed-market debt strategy at ING Groep NV in Amsterdam. “This morning should go some way to satisfying such calls.”
Ireland has pumped 22.9 billion euros into Anglo Irish since it seized the lender in January 2009 as its bad loans soared following the collapse of a decade-long real-estate bubble. The rising cost of the bank bailouts prompted Standard & Poor’s to downgrade Ireland’s credit rating last month.
The yield spread between Irish and German 10-year bonds narrowed to 436 basis points from 446 basis points yesterday. The Spanish-German 10-year yield spread narrowed 7 basis points to 189 basis points, after the country had its top credit rating cut one level by Moody’s Investors Service.

EU leaders in May announced a rescue package to prevent a fiscal crisis in Greece from spreading across the region. Greece is cutting spending and raising taxes in return for 110 billion euros in aid that allows the country to avoid tapping the bond market until 2012.
Losses
Ireland has injected about 33 billion euros into banks and building societies. Anglo Irish may need up to an additional 6.4 billion euros of capital, rising by another 5 billion euros in the event of unexpected losses, the government said today. Irish Nationwide Building Society may need another 2.7 billion euros.
The government will control Allied Irish, Anglo, Irish Nationwide and customer-owned lender EBS Building Society once the capital injections are completed. Ireland’s benchmark ISEQ Overall Index fell 0.4 percent in Dublin trading at 11:21 a.m. local time, led by a 30 percent fall by Allied Irish.
“The big surprise is the increased capital number for Allied Irish,” said Sebastian Orsi, an analyst with Dublin- based securities firm Merrion Capital. “The government could end up with over 90 percent of the group, subject to investor take-up of the planned stock sale to shareholders.”
Deficit
Bank of Ireland, which raised 2.93 billion euros in June, doesn’t need any extra capital, the central bank said. The government, which has an 18.7 percent stake in the lender, has said it will provide Allied Irish with any extra cash it needs in return for a higher stake.
Once the banks are shored up, the government will seek to narrow the budget deficit, which at 14 percent of gross domestic product was the highest in the euro region last year. Lenihan will lay out his plan to narrow the deficit to 3 percent by the end of 2014 in November.
Ireland’s deficit will be around 32 percent of gross domestic product in 2010, in a one-time “spike” on the banking costs, Lenihan said today.
“The final estimates are shocking, one would think that this draws a line in the sand on the issue,” said Dermot O’Leary, chief economist at Goodbody Stockbrokers in Dublin. “The market will determine though whether it believes Ireland can cope.”
To contact the reporter on this story: Joe Brennan at jbrennan29@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Edward Evans at eevans3@bloomberg.net
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Ecuador declared a state of emergency as police and soldiers protesting wage cuts blocked roads, shut the airport and roughed up President Rafael Correa.
Ecuador President Rafael Correa

The president, speaking from a hospital room, said he is the target of a coup attempt, and regional leaders appealed for calm. None of the groups protesting has demanded Correa step down, nor have opposition members called for his ouster.
Correa said security forces pointed guns at him as he tried to calm demonstrators at a police station. He said he was hurt in the scuffle and had to wear a gas mask to escape further harm. Correa, who was in the hospital for treatment of his injuries, said protesters were surrounding the facility and attempting to break into his room.
“Here I am. If they want to kill me, go ahead,” Correa said after protesters hurled a tear-gas canister at him and doused him with water at the police station while burning tires outside the presidential palace. “I won’t back down.”
The protests plunged Ecuador, which has seen three presidents ousted in the past 13 years, into political turmoil that could destabilize the 47-year-old economist’s rule. Opposition to Correa, who took office in 2007, has grown since July when the president pushed through an oil law by decree and ignored congressional objections to his plan to increase the state’s control over universities and local budgets.
Chavez Weighs In
“The social chaos weakens the government’s credibility,” Sebastian Abad, an analyst at Analytica Securities CA Casa de Valores, said in a telephone interview from Quito. “This is a radical protest by police. It’s a big risk for the president.”
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, who spoke with Correa by telephone, backed Correa’s claims of a coup and said it had been organized by the political opposition. Chavez, speaking on state television, said the life of his ally in the eight-nation Alba political bloc was in danger.
“It would be very naive to think that this has only a salary motive or that it’s due to some benefits that some say were eliminated,” Chavez said on Telesur. “We are facing a new attack from the fascist beasts -- it’s a coup attempt.”

Argentina, Colombia, Mexico and Brazil were among other neighbors who expressed concern in response to the government’s call for international solidarity. Chavez and other regional leaders are traveling to Buenos Aires for an emergency summit of the Union of South American Nations to defuse the political crisis.
OAS Resolution
The Organization of American States unanimously adopted a resolution to support Correa’s government and “defend democracy” against police protests.
The OAS should act “severely” and quickly to prevent the coup, Secretary-General Jose Miguel Insulza said today in an emergency meeting in Washington. Insulza spoke with Correa and told him he had the group’s “full support,” according to an e-mailed statement from the OAS.
Ecuador’s security situation has “degraded significantly,” the U.S. Embassy in Quito said in an alert posted on its website. The embassy urged Americans in Ecuador to stay in their homes and possibly to delay their travel plans.
The extra yield investors demand to hold Ecuadorean dollar bonds instead of U.S. Treasuries was little changed at 10.36 percentage points at 5:28 p.m. New York time, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s EMBI+ index. Ecuadorean debt is the second-riskiest after Venezuela’s among 15 emerging markets tracked by JPMorgan.
Bond Yields
The yield on Ecuador’s 9.375 percent bonds maturing in 2015 rose 1 basis point to 11.78 percent, according to Bloomberg prices. The bond’s price fell 0.29 cent to 90.82 cents on the dollar.
Jaime Nebot, the mayor of Guayaquil and a political foe of Correa, denied on local television that the opposition had any involvement in the protests and said he would “never support” a coup.
Correa’s claims he’s at risk of being ousted may be an attempt to drum up support among his allies, said Andres Ochoa, a researcher at the Washington-based Council on Hemispheric Affairs, said that.
“There is no clear leader trying to topple Correa,” Ochoa said from Quito. “This is a protest gone wrong.”
History of Turmoil
Correa has introduced a modicum of stability to the politically turbulent nation, which has had 105 presidents in 139 years. Last year he became the first president of the Andean nation of 14 million to win two terms in a row. The smallest member of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting countries, Ecuador uses the U.S. dollar as its official currency.
Ecuador’s government is rewriting at least 31 laws, including industrial, financial, labor, water and land regulations, after approving a new constitution in 2008.
Looters ransacked banks, supermarkets and shopping malls in the port city of Guayaquil amid a lack of security, CRE Radio reported. Classes were canceled nationwide and all television stations were broadcasting the government channel.
Congressional Measure
Ecuadorean police and soldiers are objecting to a measure passed by congress last night that would delay automatic promotions and slow salary increases. Correa defended his policies, telling Radio Publica in an interview that salaries had doubled since he came to office in 2007.
General Luis Ernesto Gonzalez, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the armed forces “respect the rule of law” and are subordinate to the president, according to comments broadcast by CNN. The military may patrol the streets to “guarantee external and internal security,” he said.
All flights into Quito have been canceled, Luis Galarraga, a spokesman for Quiport, the company that operates the airport, said today in a telephone interview. Protesters remained inside the airport this afternoon, he said.
Oil Output
PetroEcuador, the South American country’s state-owned oil company and biggest source of export revenue, said operations were normal as the military guarded refineries and oil fields.
Ecuador pumped 1.6 percent of OPEC’s total output this month, a Bloomberg News survey showed today. Ecuador accounts for 2.1 percent of U.S. oil imports, according to the most recent monthly data from the Energy Department.
Ecuador has a Caa3 long-term foreign currency credit rating from Moody’s Investors Service, eight levels below investment grade, while Standard and Poor’s rates the country’s debt B-, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The Andean nation defaulted on $3.2 billion of international debt since 2008.
Ecuador’s credit rating shouldn’t be affected by the protests because it “already implies a high possibility of default,” Erich Arispe, a New York- based analyst at Fitch, said today in a telephone interview.
“Because the country has defaulted in the past and Correa’s reform did not solve the country’s problems, there is still fiscal vulnerability,” Arispe said.
To contact the reporters on this story: Nathan Gill in Quito at ngill4@bloomberg.net; Alexander Emery in Lima at aemery1@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Joshua Goodman at jgoodman19@bloomberg.net
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U.S. regulators have concluded that Waddell & Reed Financial Inc.’s trading of Standard & Poor’s 500 Index futures spooked traders on May 6, turning an orderly selloff into a crash that erased $862 billion from the value of American equities in less than 20 minutes, according to two people with direct knowledge of the findings.
Waddell & Reed CEO Hank Herrmann

Waddell & Reed’s selling of the E-mini futures was part of a normal hedging strategy, according to a report from the Securities and Exchange Commission and Commodity Futures Trading Commission that may be released as soon as today, said the people, who declined to be identified before the findings are made public. The Overland Park, Kansas-based company didn’t attempt to do anything nefarious, and its actions may not have prompted a retreat had there not been other concerns in the market, such as the European debt crisis, the people said.

The SEC has come under pressure from Congress to explain the May 6 crash and prescribe solutions to keep it from happening again. All U.S. equity exchanges adopted circuit breakers in June that pause trading in more than 1,300 securities during periods of volatility to prevent selling from snowballing. SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro said earlier this month that regulators should examine stiffening the obligations faced by market makers who provide orders to buy and sell stocks.
‘Moving Violently’
“Stock prices generally follow futures,” said Mike Bleich, chief executive officer of Scout Trading LLC, a market-making firm in New York. He was previously head of liquidity strategy at Barclays Plc in New York, where he also ran an electronic market-making group. “If futures are moving violently, we’d expect stock prices to also move violently,” he said.
Waddell & Reed will not be identified by name in the report, the people said. The document won’t make any policy recommendations, they said. SEC spokesman John Nester declined to comment.
“I’m not sure it’s appropriate to comment on a report that doesn’t name us specifically, but it’s clear we were one of many traders that day,” said Roger Hoadley, director of communications at Waddell & Reed. “We were merely trying to manage downside risk in our portfolios.”
Lawmakers have asked if the high-frequency firms that have supplanted specialists and market makers with strategies that transact thousands of shares a second destabilized trading by stepping away when they were needed most. Schapiro is trying to protect investors in a fragmented U.S. stock market while maintaining liquidity -- the ease with which investors can buy and sell shares -- on exchanges dominated by firms that profit from computerized trading.
Only Sell Orders
About 250 trading firms processed transactions in E-mini S&P 500 futures from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m. New York time on May 6, regulators said in their May 18 preliminary report on the rout. One of the largest firms selling the E-mini contract accounted for about 9 percent of volume from 2:32 p.m. until 2:51 p.m., they said. The firm, which wasn’t named, sold the contract short to hedge other positions and “only entered orders to sell,” according to the May 18 report.
“The trader sold on the way down and continued to do so even as the price level recovered,” the report said four months ago. “This trader and others have executed hedging strategies of similar size previously.”
Regulators said in their earlier report they were examining possible linkages between price declines in equity index futures, exchange-traded funds and individual securities and the “extent to which activity in one market may have led the others.”
Spread Widens
CME data indicate trading volume in E-mini S&P 500 futures was high on May 6, with many more sell orders than buy requests from 2:30 p.m. to 2:45 p.m., according to the May 18 report from the SEC and CFTC. Data also showed that the bid-ask spread, or difference between the highest price at which investors can sell contracts and the lowest at which they can buy, “widened significantly at or about 2:45 p.m. and that certain active traders partially withdrew from the market.”
E-mini S&P 500 futures are the largest contract by volume traded on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, owned by CME Group Inc. Chief Executive Officer Craig Donohue said on June 22 that volume in the June E-mini S&P 500 futures on May 6 was 5.7 million contracts, with about 1.6 million, or 28 percent, trading from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m. New York time. At about 2:45:28 p.m. the contracts declined 12.75 points in half a second when 1,100 were sold by multiple traders, he said.
“Considerable selling pressure at this vulnerable period in time may have contributed to declining prices in the E-mini S&P 500 -- and other equivalent products such as” the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust, an exchange-traded fund tracking the benchmark measure of U.S. stocks, the report said.
“All of these markets are closely linked by a complex web of traders and trading strategies,” regulators wrote four months ago. “The precipitous decline in price in one market on May 6 may have influenced a sustained series of selling in other financial markets.”
To contact the reporters on this story: Jesse Westbrook in Washington at jwestbrook1@bloomberg.net; Nina Mehta in New York at nmehta24@bloomberg.net.
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Nick Baker at nbaker7@bloomberg.net; Lawrence Roberts at lroberts13@bloomberg.net.
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U.S. stocks fell, trimming the biggest September gain since 1939 for the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, as investors sold some of the month’s best-performing shares amid speculation that improving economic data will reduce the need for the Federal Reserve to stimulate growth.
U.S. Stocks Fall

Caterpillar Inc., which has rallied 21 percent in September for the top gain in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, fell 1.6 percent to lead the 30-stock gauge lower today along with biggest decliner American Express Co., which fell 2.3 percent. Apple Inc., up 17 percent this month, slumped 1.3 percent. Occidental Petroleum Corp. gained 2.2 percent, leading a measure of energy stocks to the only rise among 10 groups in the S&P 500.
The S&P 500 slipped 0.3 percent to 1,141.20 at 4 p.m. in New York, paring its monthly advance to 8.8 percent and its third-quarter gain to 11 percent. The Dow slid 47.23 points, or 0.4 percent, to 10,788.05.
“Things were due for a pause, this being the last day of the quarter,” said Michael James, a managing director at Wedbush Morgan Securities in Los Angeles. “Nothing goes up in a straight line,” he said. “We’ve had a hard time making an attempt at higher highs. You’re seeing traders exit positions and lock in gains for the quarter.”
All 10 industry groups in the S&P 500 and all 30 stocks in the Dow have gained in September, turning both measures positive for 2010, amid speculation the world’s largest economy will avoid slipping back into a recession and bets that the Federal Reserve will buy more debt to support the recovery.
‘Profit Taking’
Even after the rally, the S&P 500’s valuation of 12.5 times projected earnings over the next 12 months compares with a 16.5 average since 1954 using reported results, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
“With U.S. equities up a lot this month and this quarter, there’s some quarter-end balancing,” said Giri Cherukuri, money manager and head trader at Oakbrook Investments in Lisle, Illinois, which manages $2.2 billion. “People had a lot of gains on the books, so it’s a little bit of profit-taking at month-end.”
Stocks climbed earlier as government data showed the U.S. economy grew at a 1.7 percent annual rate in the second quarter, faster than the 1.6 percent previously estimated. Initial jobless claims decreased by 16,000 to 453,000 in the week ended Sept. 25, lower than the median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. The Institute for Supply-Management Chicago Inc. said business activity unexpectedly accelerated.
ISM Tomorrow
Stocks began paring gains as a measure of factories in the Milwaukee region trailed estimates, spurring concern that tomorrow’s ISM national manufacturing index will lag behind forecasts.

Philadelphia Fed President Charles Plosser said yesterday he opposes more monetary expansion to support the economy in part because he sees “little risk” of deflation. Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren said further large-scale purchases of securities would depend on the outlook and incoming data.
“The market’s been in a denial rally,” said Scott Armiger, who helps manage about $5.6 billion at Christiana Bank & Trust in Greenville, Delaware. “It’s overrated the good data and underrated the bad data. I’m kind of worried about October,” he said. “Today’s the last day of the month. It may be some ‘September’s been great. Let’s take some money off the table.’”
Caterpillar, the world’s largest maker of earth-moving equipment, slipped 1.6 percent to $78.68. American Express declined 2.3 percent to $42.03. Apple, maker of the iPhone and the iPad computer tablet, decreased 1.3 percent to $283.75.
Occidental Petroleum rose 2.2 percent to $78.30 as energy stocks rose 0.1 percent. Crude oil advanced as much as $80.18, a seven-week high, completing the biggest monthly gain since May 2009.
Prudential, AIG
Prudential Financial Inc. fell 4.2 percent to $54.18. The insurer said it expects the two Japanese life insurance units it’s buying from American International Group Inc. to earn less investment income because of Prudential’s lower tolerance for risk.
AIG Star Life Insurance Co. and AIG Edison Life Insurance Co. would have earned about $100 million less on investments last year if Prudential were managing the portfolios, Mark Grier, vice chairman of the Newark, New Jersey-based insurer, said today on a conference call with analysts.
AIG rose 4.4 percent to $39.10, the second-biggest gain in the S&P 500, as the rescued insurer agreed to wind down its $182.3 billion bailout by converting the government’s stake into common shares for sale. The U.S. Treasury Department will convert its preferred stake of about $49.1 billion for 1.66 billion shares of common stock and then sell the holdings in the open market.
Hertz, Education Stocks
Hertz Global Holdings Inc. fell the most in the Russell 1000 Index, dropping 8.8 percent to $10.59. Dollar Thrifty Automotive Group Inc.’s shareholders rejected the car rental company’s $1.46 billion takeover offer a day after Avis Budget Group Inc. added a breakup fee to its higher bid.
For-profit education stocks rose after Senator Tom Harkin said today at a hearing into the schools’ practices that the dropout rate at 16 for-profit schools was 57 percent over a three-year period. DeVry Inc. rose 5 percent to $49.21, the biggest gain in the S&P 500.
Staffing companies advanced after the bigger-than-expected decrease in jobless claims. Monster Worldwide Inc. climbed 1.3 percent to $12.96. Robert Half International Inc. rose 2.4 percent to $26.
To contact the reporter on this story: Inyoung Hwang in New York at ihwang7@bloomberg.net.
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Nick Baker at nbaker7@bloomberg.net
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U.S. stocks fell, trimming the biggest September gain since 1939 for the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, as investors sold some of the month’s best-performing shares amid speculation that improving economic data will reduce the need for the Federal Reserve to stimulate growth.
U.S. Stocks Fall

Caterpillar Inc., which has rallied 21 percent in September for the top gain in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, fell 1.6 percent to lead the 30-stock gauge lower today along with biggest decliner American Express Co., which fell 2.3 percent. Apple Inc., up 17 percent this month, slumped 1.3 percent. Occidental Petroleum Corp. gained 2.2 percent, leading a measure of energy stocks to the only rise among 10 groups in the S&P 500.
The S&P 500 slipped 0.3 percent to 1,141.20 at 4 p.m. in New York, paring its monthly advance to 8.8 percent and its third-quarter gain to 11 percent. The Dow slid 47.23 points, or 0.4 percent, to 10,788.05.
“Things were due for a pause, this being the last day of the quarter,” said Michael James, a managing director at Wedbush Morgan Securities in Los Angeles. “Nothing goes up in a straight line,” he said. “We’ve had a hard time making an attempt at higher highs. You’re seeing traders exit positions and lock in gains for the quarter.”

All 10 industry groups in the S&P 500 and all 30 stocks in the Dow have gained in September, turning both measures positive for 2010, amid speculation the world’s largest economy will avoid slipping back into a recession and bets that the Federal Reserve will buy more debt to support the recovery.
‘Profit Taking’
Even after the rally, the S&P 500’s valuation of 12.5 times projected earnings over the next 12 months compares with a 16.5 average since 1954 using reported results, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
“With U.S. equities up a lot this month and this quarter, there’s some quarter-end balancing,” said Giri Cherukuri, money manager and head trader at Oakbrook Investments in Lisle, Illinois, which manages $2.2 billion. “People had a lot of gains on the books, so it’s a little bit of profit-taking at month-end.”
Stocks climbed earlier as government data showed the U.S. economy grew at a 1.7 percent annual rate in the second quarter, faster than the 1.6 percent previously estimated. Initial jobless claims decreased by 16,000 to 453,000 in the week ended Sept. 25, lower than the median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. The Institute for Supply-Management Chicago Inc. said business activity unexpectedly accelerated.
ISM Tomorrow
Stocks began paring gains as a measure of factories in the Milwaukee region trailed estimates, spurring concern that tomorrow’s ISM national manufacturing index will lag behind forecasts.
Philadelphia Fed President Charles Plosser said yesterday he opposes more monetary expansion to support the economy in part because he sees “little risk” of deflation. Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren said further large-scale purchases of securities would depend on the outlook and incoming data.
“The market’s been in a denial rally,” said Scott Armiger, who helps manage about $5.6 billion at Christiana Bank & Trust in Greenville, Delaware. “It’s overrated the good data and underrated the bad data. I’m kind of worried about October,” he said. “Today’s the last day of the month. It may be some ‘September’s been great. Let’s take some money off the table.’”
Caterpillar, the world’s largest maker of earth-moving equipment, slipped 1.6 percent to $78.68. American Express declined 2.3 percent to $42.03. Apple, maker of the iPhone and the iPad computer tablet, decreased 1.3 percent to $283.75.
Occidental Petroleum rose 2.2 percent to $78.30 as energy stocks rose 0.1 percent. Crude oil advanced as much as $80.18, a seven-week high, completing the biggest monthly gain since May 2009.
Prudential, AIG
Prudential Financial Inc. fell 4.2 percent to $54.18. The insurer said it expects the two Japanese life insurance units it’s buying from American International Group Inc. to earn less investment income because of Prudential’s lower tolerance for risk.
AIG Star Life Insurance Co. and AIG Edison Life Insurance Co. would have earned about $100 million less on investments last year if Prudential were managing the portfolios, Mark Grier, vice chairman of the Newark, New Jersey-based insurer, said today on a conference call with analysts.
AIG rose 4.4 percent to $39.10, the second-biggest gain in the S&P 500, as the rescued insurer agreed to wind down its $182.3 billion bailout by converting the government’s stake into common shares for sale. The U.S. Treasury Department will convert its preferred stake of about $49.1 billion for 1.66 billion shares of common stock and then sell the holdings in the open market.
Hertz, Education Stocks
Hertz Global Holdings Inc. fell the most in the Russell 1000 Index, dropping 8.8 percent to $10.59. Dollar Thrifty Automotive Group Inc.’s shareholders rejected the car rental company’s $1.46 billion takeover offer a day after Avis Budget Group Inc. added a breakup fee to its higher bid.
For-profit education stocks rose after Senator Tom Harkin said today at a hearing into the schools’ practices that the dropout rate at 16 for-profit schools was 57 percent over a three-year period. DeVry Inc. rose 5 percent to $49.21, the biggest gain in the S&P 500.
Staffing companies advanced after the bigger-than-expected decrease in jobless claims. Monster Worldwide Inc. climbed 1.3 percent to $12.96. Robert Half International Inc. rose 2.4 percent to $26.
To contact the reporter on this story: Inyoung Hwang in New York at ihwang7@bloomberg.net.
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Nick Baker at nbaker7@bloomberg.net
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Business activity in the U.S. unexpectedly accelerated and fewer workers filed claims for jobless benefits, easing concern the world’s largest economy is retrenching further.
The Institute for Supply Management-Chicago Inc. said today its business barometer climbed to 60.4 in September, exceeding the highest estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. The number of applicants for unemployment insurance payments fell more than projected last week, another report showed.
Manufacturing figures tomorrow and next week’s September jobs report will need to confirm that a further slowdown in the economy has been averted in order to reassure Federal Reserve policy makers, who last week said they were willing to take more steps to spur growth. As firings abate, employers aren’t adding enough workers to reduce an unemployment rate that’s hovering near 10 percent.
“There are still significant headwinds that remain,” said Michael Gapen, a senior U.S. economist at Barclays Capital Inc. in New York. “It’s a moderate recovery. We see the Fed as being on a meeting-to-meeting basis at this point.”
Stocks fell, trimming the biggest September rally since 1939, as investors sold the month’s best-performing shares. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index fell 0.3 percent to 1,141.2 at the 4 p.m. close in New York. The yield on the benchmark 10-year note was little changed compared with late yesterday at 2.51 percent.
Readings greater than 50 for the ISM-Chicago index signal expansion. The median forecast of 57 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News projected the gauge would fall to 55.5. Estimates ranged from 53.6 to 58.3.
More Orders
The group’s measures of orders and production rose above their six-month averages, indicating corporate investment in new equipment will remain a source of strength for the economy.
“After a soft patch, manufacturing is in a process of mustering some activity,” said Ward McCarthy, chief financial economist at Jefferies & Co. in New York. “It seems to be moving in the right direction again and that will help the economy continue to grow.” McCarthy forecast the Chicago index would rise to 58.

Automakers including Dearborn, Michigan-based Ford Motor Co. are among manufacturers seeing sales picking up while holding below pre-recession levels.
“The auto business is pretty steady and coming back up a little bit,” Ford Chief Executive Officer Alan Mulally told reporters in Ann Arbor, Michigan, on Sept. 17. The economy “is coming back slower than past recessions.”
Outlook Nationally
Economists watch the Chicago index and other regional manufacturing reports for an early reading on the outlook nationally. The Chicago group says its membership includes both manufacturers and service providers, making the gauge of measure of overall growth. Its members have operations across the U.S. and abroad.
Today’s report was at odds with other measures of manufacturing that showed a slowdown. Another report today showed factories in the Milwaukee region stagnated. Regional Fed surveys earlier this month showed New York-region factories expanded in September at the slowest pace this year, while those in the Philadelphia area shrank for a second month.
The ISM’s monthly national factory index, due tomorrow, may drop to 54.5 in September, the lowest reading in 10 months, according to the median forecast of economists surveyed.
Fewer Claims
The number of applications for jobless benefits dropped by 16,000 to 453,000 in the week ended Sept. 25, Labor Department figures showed. The total number of people on benefit rolls and those getting extended payments also fell in the prior week, the report showed.
Companies in August added 67,000 workers to payrolls while total employment fell by 54,000, the Labor Department said earlier this month. Unemployment rose to 9.6 percent, and economists surveyed by Bloomberg forecast joblessness will hold near that level for the rest of the year.
“Employers are still kind of cautious,” said Russell Price, a senior economist at Ameriprise Financial Inc. in Detroit, who forecasted claims would fall to 455,000. “We need to regain that broader momentum in the economy, and something like that is just slow to develop.”
The economy grew at a 1.7 percent annual rate in the second quarter, revised figures from the Commerce Department also showed today. The increase in gross domestic product compares with a 1.6 percent estimate issued last month. GDP grew 3.7 percent in the first three months of the year and 5 percent at the end of 2009.
Little Pickup
Economists surveyed this month projected little pickup in growth for the rest of the year as joblessness hobbles consumer spending and housing languishes around record lows.
“We have a slow-growing economy,” said Michael Feroli, chief U.S. economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in New York. “What we’re getting will do nothing to bring down the unemployment rate. The improvement in the labor market is very slow.”
The economy is a top issue for voters in the November congressional elections, and polls show the public is increasingly skeptical of President Barack Obama’s performance. Earlier this week, Obama signed legislation that will cut taxes and provide credit help for small businesses, calling it an essential step for job growth in a slow economy.
-- With assistance from Shobhana Chandra in Washington and Keith Naughton in Southfield, Michigan. Editors: Carlos Torres, Vince Golle
To contact the reporters on this story: Bob Willis in Washington bwillis@bloomberg.net; Timothy R. Homan in Washington at thoman1@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Christopher Wellisz at cwellisz@bloomberg.net
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The U.S. government will face pressure to bail out struggling states in the next 12 months, said Meredith Whitney, the banking analyst who correctly predicted Citigroup Inc.’s dividend cut in 2008.
While saying a bailout might not be politically viable, Whitney joined investor Warren Buffett in raising alarm bells about the potential for widespread defaults in the $2.8 trillion municipal bond market. She said state and local issuers have taken on too much debt and that the gap between public spending and revenue is unsustainable.
Banking Analyst Meredith Whitney

“People will think the federal government will bail these states out,” Whitney, 40, the founder of Meredith Whitney Advisory Group Inc., said in an interview on Bloomberg Television’s “In the Loop.” “It’s going to be an incredibly divisive issue.”
Whitney’s comments coincide with her release of a report rating the financial health of the 15 largest U.S. states measured by gross domestic product, according to Fortune magazine. The report, which Whitney said took two years to complete and hasn’t been released publicly, ranks California’s finances the worst, with New Jersey, Illinois and Ohio tied for second-worst.
The longest recession since the Great Depression has left states facing budget gaps of $72 billion next fiscal year, according to a July report by the National Conference on State Legislatures. State pension funds face deficits of more than $1 trillion, according to the Pew Center on the States. The amount of municipal debt outstanding has increased about 90 percent in the last decade, according to Federal Reserve data.
Buffett and Bailouts
In May, Buffett, whose Berkshire Hathaway Inc. owns and insures municipal debt, told shareholders at the company’s annual meeting that the federal government would likely bail out a state that faced financial distress.
Municipal bond analysts including George Friedlander of Citigroup say those predicting widespread defaults are exaggerating the connection between budget pressure and failure to meet payments on general-obligation bonds.
“While states’ financial conditions are undeniably stressed now and will reasonably remain stressed for the next decade or more, GO bondholders are generally well-cushioned versus other interested parties -- taxpayers, service recipients, employees, vendors -- who will feel pain more directly,” said Municipal Market Advisors in a report today. The Concord, Massachusetts-based firm said it hasn’t seen Whitney’s report.
Bondholder Claims

Whitney overlooks the claim bondholders have over pledged revenue and the willingness of municipalities to pay debt obligations to maintain access to the capital markets, Municipal Market Advisors said.
A study last year by Moody’s Investors Service found 54 defaults in municipal bonds it rated from 1970 to 2009. Although gross domestic product declined 30 percent during the Depression, the cumulative default rate for municipal bonds was 2.7 percent, according to Citigroup.
Since December, the total net assets of municipal bond funds has increased 12.3 percent to $513.3 billion, according to the Washington-based Investment Company Institute.
Yields on 20-year general obligation bonds reached a 44- year low this month of 3.83 percent, according to the Bond Buyer 20 General Obligation Bond Index. The Build America Bonds program, which allows municipalities to issue taxable federally subsidized debt, has led some issuers to sell fewer tax-exempt bonds.
No ‘Systemic Risk’
Average yields on Build America Bonds yesterday fell about 3 basis points, or 0.03 percentage point, to 5.48 percent, the lowest on record, according to data from a Wells Fargo index dating to Aug. 26, 2009.
“I haven’t seen any significant widening of credit spreads or inability to finance,” Friedlander said in a telephone interview today. “Do I see any systemic risk for the U.S. economy coming out of this? No. I do see we’re going into a more fiscally conservative political climate and state and local governments will be held to more rigorous standards of behavior than they have in the last 30 years.”
Whitney’s report rates the states on four criteria: the economy, fiscal health, housing and the flexibility to raise taxes. Florida, which has the second-highest U.S. foreclosure rate, according to RealtyTrac, is better off than New York or New Jersey, because it can adopt an income tax if necessary.
From 2000 to 2008, while states increased their spending by 60 percent, their revenue base increased by 45 percent. They bridged the gap by using federal aid, raiding their pension funds or by borrowing, Whitney said in a separate interview with Tom Keene on Bloomberg Radio.
Avoiding ‘Pain’
“You take on more leverage to avoid long-term pain,” Whitney said.
U.S. states won’t default, Whitney said. Instead, they will cut aid to local governments, putting them at greater risk. Local governments get one-third of their revenue from state transfers, Whitney said.
Still, debt service is also a limited portion of the budget for most municipalities. State and local governments will make $111 billion in interest payments on their debt this year, 5 percent of the $2 trillion they collect in taxes, according to the U.S. Commerce Department’s Bureau of Economic Research.
State tax revenue has started to rebound. According to a survey by the NCSL, 40 states expect total tax collections in fiscal year 2011 to be higher than they were in 2010.
To contact the reporters on this story: Betty Liu in New York at bliu17@bloomberg.net; Martin Z. Braun in New York at mbraun6@bloomberg.net;
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Mark Tannenbaum at mtannen@bloomberg.net
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A senior manager at a company that churns out metals routinely used in U.S. smart bombs pauses in mid-sentence when his phone rings: a Wall Street stockbroker looking for information. He makes a note to have an assistant call back -- someone who is fluent in English, not just Chinese.
Workers Handling Neodymium Ingots In China
“It’s a seller’s market now,” says Bai Baosheng, 43, puffing a cigarette in his office in Baotou, China, where his company sells bags of powder containing a metallic element known as neodymium, vital in tiny magnets that direct the fins of bombs dropped by U.S. Air Force jets in Afghanistan.
A generation after Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping made mastering neodymium and 16 other elements known as rare earths a priority, China dominates the market, with far-reaching effects ranging from global trade friction to U.S. job losses and threats to national security.
The U.S. handed its main economic rival power to dictate access to these building blocks of modern weapons by ceding control of prices and supply, according to dozens of interviews with industry executives, congressional leaders and policy experts. China in July reduced rare-earth export quotas for the rest of the year by 72 percent, sending prices up more than sixfold for some elements.
Military officials are only now conducting an inventory of where and how U.S. suppliers use the obscure but essential substances -- including those that silence the whoosh of Boeing Co. helicopter blades, direct Raytheon Co. missiles and target guns in General Dynamics Corp. tanks.
Warning Signs
“The Pentagon has been incredibly negligent,” said Peter Leitner, who was a senior strategic trade adviser at the Defense Department from 1986 to 2007. “There are plenty of early warning signs that China will use its leverage over these materials as a weapon.”
China may already be flexing its muscles amid a diplomatic spat with its East Asian neighbor Japan. China last week imposed a “de facto” ban on exports to Japan of the metals used in liquid crystal displays and laptop computers, Japanese Economy Minister Banri Kaieda said Sept. 28. That followed Japan’s detention of a Chinese fishing boat captain whose ship collided with two Japanese Coast Guard vessels. Japan later released the man.
No such ban exists, China’s Ministry of Commerce spokesman Chen Rongkai said.
New Factor
“What it does, clearly, is bring a new factor into the consideration of supply of critical materials,” said Dudley Kingsnorth, director of Industrial Minerals Co. of Australia, a forecaster in Perth.
The U.S. Congress’s investigative arm, the Government Accountability Office, in April warned of “vulnerabilities” for the military because of the lack of domestic rare-earth supplies. The House of Representatives Armed Services Committee will hold a hearing in October, the same month a Pentagon report on how to secure future supplies of the metals is due.
“The department has long recognized that rare-earth elements are important raw material inputs for many defense systems and that many companies in our base have expressed concern regarding the future availability of the refined products of these elements,” Brett Lambert, director of the Pentagon’s Office of Industrial Policy, said.
While two rare-earth projects are scheduled to ramp up production by the end of 2012 -- one owned by Molycorp Inc. in California and another by Lynas Corp. in Australia -- the GAO says it may take 15 years to rebuild a U.S. manufacturing supply chain. China makes virtually all the metals refined from rare earths, the agency says. The elements are also needed for hybrid-electric cars and wind turbines, one reason supply may fall short of demand in 2014 even with the new mines, according to Kingsnorth of Imcoa.
Doggy Day Care
Just how far U.S. manufacturing has waned is apparent at a factory in Valparaiso, Indiana, where dogs skitter across a bare concrete shop floor, their nails clicking. This brick plant on Elm Street once made 80 percent of the rare-earth magnets in laser-guided U.S. smart bombs, according to U.S. Senator Evan Bayh, a Democrat from Indiana. In 2003, the plant’s owner shifted work to China, costing 230 jobs.
Now the plant houses Coco’s Canine Cabana, a doggy day care the current tenants started to supplement sagging income from their machine shop. On most days dogs outnumber the 15 metalworkers, said Kathy DeFries, co-owner of Excel Machine Technologies Inc.
“When things got slow for manufacturing, we had this big empty shop floor,” said DeFries, nuzzling a floppy-eared puppy. “It’s a great stress reliever.”
Expensive to Mine
The rare earths are chemically similar elements, with names such as yttrium and dysprosium. China has the largest share of worldwide reserves, about 36 percent, and the U.S. is second, with 13 percent, the U.S. Geological Survey says. While the elements aren’t rare, they’re less frequently found in profitable concentrations, expensive for Western producers to extract and often laced with radioactive elements.
China produced 120,000 tons, or 97 percent, of the world’s 124,000-ton supply last year, according to the GAO. Half of that came from Baotou, said Kingsnorth. The raw elements have many applications. Neodymium is used by Chinese companies including magnet makers, who sell to U.S. suppliers of defense contractors.
Export Quotas
Export quotas and taxes for overseas buyers that the GAO says can reach 25 percent are pushing up prices of elements even in relatively large supply. For example, the cost of a kilogram of samarium powder, needed for the navigation system of General Dynamics’ M1A2 Abrams tank, jumped to $34 in early September, from $4.50 in June, according to U.K. researcher Metal Pages Ltd.
The U.S. and the European Union consider Chinese restrictions on a range of raw goods part of a strategy to draw in higher-paying manufacturing jobs by making them cheaper to buy inside China. The export taxes violate World Trade Organization rules because China pledged to limit them to 84 product categories when it joined the trade group in 2001, said Terence Stewart, managing partner of Washington law firm Stewart & Stewart. In 2010, China had taxes on 329, he said.
The U.S. and the EU filed a WTO complaint over raw materials including bauxite and coke last year. China’s commerce minister, Chen Deming, said Aug. 28 that the policies comply with WTO rules.
Some manufacturers in China are lobbying the ministry to back off the latest quotas because a dispute will disrupt the market, said Constantine Karayannopoulos, chief executive officer of Toronto-based Neo Material Technologies Inc., which has rare-earth production facilities in China.
Risk of Trade War
“It was very sudden and didn’t give the industry any time to adjust,” he said. “This quota action could risk a trade war.”
For Western companies, China’s policies are creating the real “unobtanium,” the fictional mineral fought over in James Cameron’s 2009 film “Avatar.”
It’s taking as long as 10 weeks to get neodymium magnets, double the previous wait time, said Joe Schrantz, group supply chain manager at Moog Inc. in East Aurora, New York. He said the company buys hundreds of thousands of magnets a year to make motors for cars, trucks and weapons including Raytheon’s AMRAAM -- or Advanced Medium-Range Air-to-Air Missile -- and Boeing’s Joint Direct Attack Munition, a tail fin kit for making precision-guided “smart” bombs out of ordinary weapons.

Rising Prices
Rising neodymium prices are forcing up the price of magnets, which typically cost between $2 and $30 apiece. That’s having a “significant” effect on profit, and suppliers say costs will keep going up, Schrantz said. The company is considering buying blocks of raw material and storing it.
“If everybody does that, then it’s going to get really crazy,” he said.
Neodymium, a silvery metal, is essential in a magnetic alloy developed separately by engineers at General Motors Co. in Detroit and Sumitomo Special Metals Co. in Japan in the 1980s. The magnets are now in millions of stereo speakers, computer disk drives and motors.
In missiles, they replace a hydraulic system of pumps and fluids that was costlier and heavier. Motors in weapons like the JDAM might be three times as big without advanced magnets, said Todd Brewster, senior design engineer at Kollmorgen, a unit of Washington-based Danaher Corp. The JDAM has been used extensively in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Hybrid-Electric Motors
A Chinese supplier makes neodymium magnets for hybrid- electric motors the Navy is developing to cut fuel use of Arleigh Burke-class destroyers, according to the GAO. The agency also says Lockheed Martin Corp.’s SPY-1 radar on Aegis destroyers contains samarium-cobalt magnets that will need to be replaced over 35 years. China is virtually the only supplier of yttrium needed for laser gun sights in the General Dynamics Abrams tank, the U.S. Geological Survey says.
“It’s amazing how this issue seems to have caught the country off guard,” said U.S. Representative Mike Coffman, a Colorado Republican who was a U.S. Marine Corps infantry officer. He noted that China’s capabilities have expanded significantly since 2001, when the U.S. Army canceled plans to buy Chinese-made berets under pressure from Congress. “How ironic is that we were concerned about berets?”
Jon Kasle, a spokesman for Raytheon of Waltham, Massachusetts, said his company hasn’t experienced supply shortages. Spokesmen for Bethesda, Maryland-based Lockheed Martin; General Dynamics, of Falls Church, Virginia; and Chicago-based Boeing declined to comment. “There is a particular need to focus on rare-earth minerals,” said Alexis Allen, spokeswoman for the Aerospace Industries Association, an Arlington, Virginia-based lobby group for defense contractors. “The Department of Defense should consider many alternatives to reliable access.”
Stockpile
One option is to stockpile the metals with allies. Since 1994 the Pentagon has sold off excess raw materials for $7 billion.
Another is subsidies of U.S. manufacturing. The U.S. House of Representatives approved yesterday a proposal by Representative Kathy Dahlkemper, a Pennsylvania Democrat, that would set up a research and development program at the Department of Energy to help U.S. rare-earth manufacturers such as Molycorp with measures including loan guarantees. To become law the bill, which cleared the House on a 325-98 vote, must have a matching Senate version and be signed by the president. Currently there is no such measure.
While Molycorp plans to mine almost 20,000 tons of rare earths annually by late 2012, it doesn’t yet have the capacity to refine the raw elements into metals.
‘No Substitute’
Complicating matters is that even the Pentagon has been unsure of its own needs. Stephen Luckowski, chief of materials manufacturing and prototype technology at the U.S. Army’s Picatinny Arsenal in New Jersey, told participants at a February conference in Cleveland that it took him a month to learn that rare-earth metals are in the nose of the Excalibur missile, and he still wasn’t certain of the exact supply route. Luckowski, a metallurgist, was sure the Army needed the rare earths. “That may be a case where you have no substitute,” he said.
China’s dominance in the materials comes as it scours the planet for resources to feed its economy, which is expanding more than 10 percent this year while the U.S. struggles with an almost 10 percent unemployment rate. The country has been snapping up oilfields, buying copper mines and investing in wind power. China is also expanding its military, developing an aircraft carrier, nuclear-powered submarines and ballistic missiles, the Pentagon said in an August report.
Deng’s Quotation
In the lobby of Bai’s company, a unit of state-owned Baotou Iron & Steel Group Co., a now-famous 1992 quotation by Deng is emblazoned in pink marble. It reads: “The Middle East has oil, and China has rare earths.” A May interview with Bai is regularly interrupted by calls from stockbrokers, analysts and fund managers looking to learn more about the company.
“Because export quotas are limited, we basically can choose our clients; we are no longer compelled to sell to just about anybody who comes knocking,” said Bai, who handles investor relations for Inner Mongolia Baotou Steel Rare-Earth Hi-Tech Co. The shares have more than doubled in the past year, reaching 72.72 yuan on Sept. 29, giving the company a market value of $8.8 billion.
The company is especially proud of the samarium-cobalt magnets used in the Shenzhou 7 space capsule that lifted Chinese astronauts into space in 2008. They were developed at the nearby Baotou Research Institute of Rare Earths.
Environmental Costs
The export restrictions compensate for the heavy environmental toll, said Zhang Anwen, vice secretary of the Chinese Society of Rare Earths, a group of researchers in Beijing. “It’s unfair for the U.S. to be pointing fingers at China now,” he said. “To undo the damage done to the earth, we need to return the vegetation, increase water flow and treat the ground. It’s an extremely costly repair.”
Deng set China on its path with a 1986 initiative whose goals included acquisition of technology in “exotic materials” such as rare-earth metals, new energy compounds and high- capacity engineering plastics, according to a U.S. House of Representatives committee report.
That year Zhu Weiheng, an electrical engineer at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, wrote a report to Chinese officials suggesting they control exports of rare-earth minerals because of their high value in manufacturing. Zhu had studied at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and in 1965 designed a motor for China’s first satellite, the East is Red. Later he spent part of Chinese leader Mao Zedong’s Cultural Revolution under arrest as a suspected spy.
‘Real Revolution’
By the early 1980s, Zhu was testing samples of neodymium iron boron, the alloy perfected by engineers at GM and Sumitomo. Two Chinese research institutes also developed it, said Zhu, 91. “It was a real revolution,” he said.
In 1990, Zhang Hong, the Chinese academy’s deputy director of technology, visited Magnequench, a GM unit in Indiana that used a spinning wheel to quench, or cool, the molten alloy into flakes to make magnets. Five years later, a group including then state-owned San Huan New Materials and Hightech Inc. agreed to buy Magnequench.
The Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, a cross-agency board that reviews foreign takeover deals, allowed the purchase partly because the partners agreed to keep open facilities in the U.S.
Shipped to China
The company opened a new plant in Tianjin in 1998 and shut a former GM operation in Anderson, Indiana, four years later. Magnequench also purchased and later closed the factory in Valparaiso, where Kathy DeFries now boards dogs for $5 an hour. That plant’s tools were shipped to three San Huan operations in China, according to Shannon Song, a Beijing-based executive at Magnequench.
“What they were basically doing was replicating the production lines in China,” said Leitner, the former Pentagon official.
Indiana’s Bayh and Hillary Clinton, now U.S. secretary of state, both cited Magnequench as an example of the U.S. losing jobs and expertise to China. In the 1990s a dozen U.S.-based suppliers of magnets employed 6,000 people. Today there are four, employing 500, said Ed Richardson, vice president of Thomas & Skinner Inc. in Indianapolis, one of the survivors.
Business Decision
The plant closures were a business decision after the technology bust in 2000 hurt sales, Song said. Most of the Valparaiso factory’s business came from computer makers; defense was a minor share, she said. In 2001, labor costs in Anderson averaged $7.32 per kilogram of neodymium powder on top of $10.07 in direct production overhead, she estimates. In 2003 in Tianjin, labor costs were 16 cents and overhead $3.20.
“It was a question of letting the ship sink or doing something to cut the operating cost,” she said.
Toronto-based AMR Technologies Inc. bought Magnequench in 2005 and renamed the merged company Neo. The company’s shares rose to C$4.92 yesterday from as little as C$1.05 in early 2009.
San Huan, now known as Beijing Zhong Ke San Huan High-Tech Co., went public in 2000. Sales have risen more than fourfold, from 371 million yuan that year to 1.6 billion yuan in 2009. The stock has almost tripled in the past year, reaching 17.14 yuan on Sept. 29.
God and Magnets
“God created the universe from nothing and organized it with the help of a magnet,” the company declares on its website, in English and Chinese.
Shares of Aluminum Corp. of China Ltd. rose 18 percent over the past two days in Shanghai trading after its parent announced a plan to invest at least 10 billion yuan ($1.5 billion) to build a rare earth production base in Jiangxi province with a local partner.
A group of U.S. investors led by Denver-based private equity firm Resource Capital Funds wants to challenge China’s dominance by restoring the fortunes of Molycorp, the largest supplier of rare earths for much of the last century. Its mine, west of Las Vegas in California’s Mojave Desert, shut eight years ago, under pressure from Chinese competitors and regulatory scrutiny of wastewater spills.
Molycorp, based near Denver, says it needs $511 million to refurbish and expand. It raised $379 million in its July share sale, and has applied for a $280 million loan guarantee under a U.S. Department of Energy program for “innovative technologies.” The shares have almost doubled, closing at $26.73 yesterday from $14 in July.
Joshua Trees
Costs of environmental compliance will be steep, Molycorp warns in a filing that says it spent $3 million last year alone. Beyond a 300-foot-deep open pit, John Benfield, manager of quality assurance, points to a valley sheltering Joshua trees where slurry left after processing ore will be pumped and harden like concrete.
The trees, protected under California law, will be given new homes after their precise positions are measured with compasses. Their bark burns in the desert sun without the right orientation. Even so, only 20 percent of replanted trees survive, Benfield said.
The company will keep processing costs to $1.26 per pound, half the average in China, by recycling more water and using a single acid to separate elements, said Mark Smith, Molycorp’s CEO. Molycorp is also negotiating with potential partners to alloy metals and turn them into neodymium magnets in the U.S., creating as many as 900 jobs.
“It was a very, very strategic move that the Chinese made,” he said. “They created a very, very large number of jobs for the citizens of China. We ought to be looking at executing that exact same strategy here in this country.”
To contact the reporters on this story: Peter Robison in Seattle on robison@bloomberg.net Gopal Ratnam in Washington at gratnam1@bloomberg.net.
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Melissa Pozsgay in Paris at mpozsgay@bloomberg.net Gary Putka in Boston on gputka@bloomberg.net.
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