Monday, February 18, 2008

Four bidders go through in Vin & Sprit auction: paper

(Reuters) - Sweden's centre-right government has chosen four bidders in its auction of Vin & Sprit that will be allowed to perform due diligence of the Absolut vodka maker, business daily Dagens Industri reported on Sunday.

The four selected bidders -- Fortune Brands Inc (FO.N: Quote, Profile, Research), Pernod Ricard SA (PERP.PA: Quote, Profile, Research), Bacardi and private equity group EQT in cooperation with investment firm Investor AB (INVEb.ST: Quote, Profile, Research) -- have been widely seen as the front-runners to buy Vin & Sprit.

The newspaper, which did not disclose its sources, said the four bidders would proceed to more closely scrutinize Vin & Sprit in a due diligence process before finalizing their offers.

Vin & Sprit is to be sold as part of Sweden's biggest-ever privatization, which also includes stakes in telecom operator TeliaSonera AB (TLSN.ST: Quote, Profile, Research), Nordea Bank AB (NDA.ST: Quote, Profile, Research), mortgage lender SBAB SBAB.UL and real estate firm Vasakronan ABVASA.UL.
 

Fed's Lower Rates Pressure China to Strengthen Yuan

(Bloomberg) -- Like it or not, China has no choice other than to let the yuan appreciate against the dollar.

The combination of the world's fastest economic growth, the highest inflation rate in 11 years and the rising cost of intervention will force gains in the yuan to accelerate, even as policy makers in Beijing resist calls from the West to let the currency appreciate at a faster pace, say Pacific Investment Management Co. and Pictet & Cie., Switzerland's largest closely held private bank.

Central bankers in Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore and the Philippines are in the same situation, making their currencies attractive, according to money managers at the firms and Merrill Lynch & Co. Nine of the 10 best-performing currencies against the dollar in 2008 will come from Asia, surveys of foreign exchange strategists by Bloomberg show.

``You're likely to see less intervention,'' said Ramin Toloui, who helps oversee more than $60 billion in emerging- market bonds and currencies at Newport Beach, California-based Pimco. ``Several Asian central banks see more rapid exchange- rate appreciation as an important tool to fight inflation.''

After rising 7 percent last year, the yuan has appreciated 1.9 percent to 7.1623 per dollar so far in 2008. New York-based JPMorgan Chase & Co., the world's ninth-biggest currency trader, predicts a further 14 percent increase, while Citigroup Inc. in New York, the third-largest, forecasts a 6 percent advance.

Thailand's baht has climbed 3.7 percent to 32.53 this year, while the Taiwan dollar is up 2.4 percent to NT$31.75. The yuan rose 0.3 percent today, the most in six weeks, and the Singapore dollar gained as much as 0.2 percent to S$1.4107, its highest in more than a decade.

Inflation Battle

While the International Monetary Fund expects growth in Asian emerging markets will slow to 8.6 percent in 2008 from 9.6 percent last year, that's still six times faster than the 1.5 percent expansion predicted for the U.S.

Consumer prices in the region's 10 largest economies outside Japan are rising at an average annual rate of 5.30 percent, compared with 4.10 percent in the U.S., data compiled by Bloomberg show. Faster inflation raises the odds that central banks in Asia will increase interest rates, bolstering the appeal of their currencies.

``We are long Asian currencies,'' said Donald Amstad, head of Asia-Pacific fixed-income at Aberdeen, Scotland-based Aberdeen Asset Management Plc, which oversees $205 billion. ``Asia is in relatively better shape than the rest of the world.'' A ``long'' position is a bet that a currency will gain.

Costly Option

To keep their currencies from appreciating too fast and hurting exporters, Asian central banks have bought U.S. dollars, accumulating $4 trillion in foreign-exchange reserves.

The downside to intervention is that it increases the supply of the local currency, which tends to fuel inflation. To prevent that from happening, Asian central banks typically sell bonds to remove those funds from the economy.

That option has become more costly because interest on the debt is paid with income from its reserves, which are invested in dollar-denominated securities. The People's Bank of China pays 1.31 percentage points more on its six-month bills than it earns on similar-maturity Treasuries following the U.S. Federal Reserve's five rate cuts since September. Six months ago, the spread was 2.2 percentage points in favor of U.S. debt.
 

Bond Insurer Split May Trigger Lawsuits, Analysts Say

(Bloomberg) -- Regulators' plans to break up bond insurers into ``good'' businesses covering municipal debt and ``bad'' businesses liable to subprime-related losses may trigger ``years of litigation,'' Bank of America Corp. analysts said.

New York Insurance Department Superintendent Eric Dinallo and New York Governor Eliot Spitzer said last week that insurers may need to be divided if they can't raise enough capital to compensate for losses on subprime-mortgage guarantees. FGIC Corp., the fourth-largest of the so-called monoline insurers, asked to be split on Feb. 15 after Moody's Investors Service cut the Stamford, Connecticut-based company's top Aaa ranking.

``Despite the regulatory interest in separating the exposures, the essential fact remains that all policy holders, whether municipal or structured finance, entered into contracts backed by the entire entity,'' analysts led by Jeffrey Rosenberg in New York wrote in a note to investors dated Feb. 15. A breakup is ``likely to lead to significant legal challenges holding up the resolution of the monoline issues for years.''

FGIC, owned by Blackstone Group LP and PMI Group Inc., insures about $314 billion of debt, including $220 billion in municipal bonds. The company said last week it applied for a license from New York state insurance regulators to create a standalone municipal company and separate the unit that guarantees subprime-mortgage bonds and related securities that led to rating downgrades.

New York-based Ambac Financial Group Inc., the second- largest bond insurer, may also seek a split, the Wall Street Journal reported today, citing a person familiar with the situation.