Monday, February 25, 2008

Dresdner Bank says to support Ambac rescue

(Reuters) - Dresdner Bank, part of the Allianz (ALVG.DE: Quote, Profile, Research) insurance group, intends to support a rescue package for U.S. bond insurer Ambac Financial Group Inc (ABK.N: Quote, Profile, Research) with a sum in the low double-digit millions of euros, the head of Dresdner's investment banking operations said on Monday.

Various rescue options for Ambac were now under discussion, Stefan Jentzsch told reporters. "If what is now on the table comes to pass then we will take part in the package," he said.

 

Cheap Palm Oil May Overtake Soy on Rising Asia Demand

(Bloomberg) -- Palm oil, the world's most-used cooking oil, is also the cheapest, a discrepancy that won't last long as demand rises across Asia's biggest countries.

An ingredient in curries, stir-fries and Skittles candy, Malaysian palm oil costs 15 percent less than soybean oil on the Chicago Board of Trade. Tobin Gorey, a commodity strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia Ltd. in Sydney, said the two may soon be even money, raising the prospect of at least a $1.5 million profit from a $10 million investment.

Rising incomes mean billions of people in Asia's developing economies seek palm oil for fried and processed foods, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Crude oil at $100 a barrel is boosting demand for alternative fuels such as diesel from vegetable oil. As consumption rises, supply in China may drop after the worst snowstorms in five decades damaged rapeseed crops in January, the government reported.

``We may have a case of mass shortage of vegetable oil in China,'' said Rudolphe Roche, a manager at Schroders Plc's $6 billion agricultural commodities fund in London. ``This means they will continue to import from the rest of the world.'' Palm oil, produced in Malaysia and Indonesia, will benefit the most because its proximity to China lowers shipping costs, he said.

Rising prices will increase expenses at Nissin Food Products Co., Japan's biggest instant-noodle maker, and increase profits at Kuala Lumpur-based Sime Darby Bhd., the world's largest publicly traded owner of palm plantations. About 36 percent of the world's cooking oil comes from oil palm, more than any other plant, USDA data show.

The Precedent

``Ninety-three percent of all the palm oil in the world is going to food demand,'' William Doyle, chief executive officer of fertilizer maker Potash Corp. of Saskatchewan Inc., said in a Feb. 19 interview. ``It's enormously powerful, and we don't see this backing off.''

The last time palm oil was this cheap, in April 2007, prices rallied for two months because of increasing demand, gaining 38 percent to 2,855 ringgit ($889) a metric ton on the Malaysia Derivatives Exchange to reach parity with Chicago prices. Contracts for May delivery ended at 3,698 ringgit a ton (52 U.S. cents a pound) on Feb. 22 in Malaysia. May soybean oil finished at 63.02 cents a pound on the CBOT.

Palm oil and soybean oil reached records today. Palm oil rose as much as 5.8 percent to 3,914 ringgit a ton and closed 4.5 percent higher at 3,866 ringgit, the biggest gain since Dec. 26, 2006. Soybeans advanced as much as 2.4 percent to 64.52 cents a pound and last traded at 64.29. That narrowed palm oil's discount to 16 percent from 17 percent.

Food Inflation

``There is no reason why the price of soybean oil and palm oil cannot be the same,'' said Edgare Kerwijk, chief financial officer for Biox Group BV in Rotterdam, which has put on hold plans for three biodiesel projects in the Netherlands and the U.K. due to higher prices. ``The discount will narrow'' for palm oil, he said.

U.S. manufacturers will increase consumption of soybean oil for energy by 22 percent to 3.4 million pounds in the year ending November, the USDA forecasts. The total equals 16 percent of U.S. use.

Soaring food prices are fueling inflation. China's consumer- price gains accelerated to 7.1 percent in January, the fastest pace in more than 11 years, the statistics bureau said Feb. 19. U.S. inflation quickened to 4.3 percent in January from 4.1 percent in December, the Labor Department said Feb. 20.

China's January snowstorms and rains, the worst in 50 years, affected as much as 48 million mu (7.9 million acres) of rapeseed crops, almost half the total area planted, the China National Grain and Oils Information Center said Feb. 14.

China, U.S.

China, the biggest annual buyer of cooking oils, raised palm oil imports 18 percent in January to 360,000 metric tons, compared with a year earlier, according to customs figures. India boosted imports 75 percent to 366,353 tons that month, and imports of all cooking oils may gain 15 percent to 5.4 million tons in the year ending Oct. 31, according to a Bloomberg News survey of six traders and analysts.

``With the strong demand coming from the substitution effect this year, the discount should narrow further from here,'' said Ben Santoso, a plantations analyst at the brokerage arm of DBS Group Holdings, Singapore's largest bank. He said palm oil may reach the same level as soy by June.

Even the U.S., the world's largest soybean grower and exporter, is buying more palm oil. Soyoil is hydrogenated in some foods to make them last longer on store shelves, a process resulting in trans-fats that may raise the risk of heart disease, according to the Food and Drug Administration.

``Trans-fats are a big reason for more palm oil imports,'' Anne Frick, a senior oilseed analyst for Prudential Financial Inc. in New York, said in a Feb. 20 e-mail.
 

Home Resales in U.S. Probably Dropped, Further Eroding Growth

(Bloomberg) -- Sales of existing homes in the U.S. probably dropped in January to the lowest level in at least nine years, according to a survey of economists, signaling the housing slump is deepening and will weigh on growth in 2008.

The National Association of Realtors will report that purchases fell 1.8 percent to an annual rate of 4.8 million, the fewest since record-keeping began in 1999, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey of 63 economists.

Mounting foreclosures are adding to a glut of unsold homes that is driving down property values. Would-be homebuyers may be waiting for even lower prices, keeping the housing market depressed for a third year and dragging the economy close to a recession.

``With the backdrop of elevated inventories of unsold homes and continued falling home prices, prospects for the housing market in general seem quite grim,'' said Dana Saporta, an economist at Dresdner Kleinwort in New York.

The Realtors group is scheduled to release the report at 10 a.m. in Washington. Estimates in the Bloomberg News survey ranged from 4.65 million to 5 million.

For all of last year, sales of single-family homes declined 13 percent, the most since 1982, the group said Jan. 24. Earlier this month, it forecast sales this year would slip to 5.38 million, from 5.65 million for all of 2007.

The effects of the worst housing recession in 25 years have spread into other areas of the economy. The Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia's general economic index fell this month to minus 24, the weakest reading in seven years.