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Found in WIKIPEDIA!
Exchange rate
In finance, the exchange rates (also known as the foreign-exchange rate, forex rate or FX rate) between two currencies specifies how much one currency is worth in terms of the other. For example an exchange rate of 102 Japanese yen (JPY, ¥) to the United States dollar (USD, $) means that JPY 102 is worth the same as USD 1. The foreign exchange market is one of the largest markets in the world. By some estimates, about 2 trillion USD worth of currency changes hands every day. The spot exchange rate refers to the current exchange rate. The forward exchange rate refers to an exchange rate that is quoted and traded today but for delivery and payment on a specific future date.

Quotations

An exchange rate quotation is given by stating the number of units of "term currency" or "price currency" that can be bought in terms of 1 unit currency (also called base...
In finance, the exchange rates (also known as the foreign-exchange rate, forex rate or FX rate) between two currencies specifies how much one currency is worth in terms of the other. For example an exchange rate of 102 Japanese yen (JPY, ¥) to the United States dollar (USD, $) means that JPY 102 is worth the same as USD 1. The foreign exchange market is one of the largest markets in the world. By some estimates, about 2 trillion USD worth of currency changes hands every day. The spot exchange rate refers to the current exchange rate. The forward exchange rate refers to an exchange rate that is quoted and traded today but for delivery and payment on a specific future date.

Quotations

An exchange rate quotation is given by stating the number of units of "term currency" or "price currency" that can be bought in terms of 1 unit currency (also called base currency). For example, in a quotation that says the EURUSD exchange rate is 1.5877 (1.5877 USD per EUR), the term currency is USD and the base currency is EUR. There is a market convention that determines which is the base currency and which is the term currency. In most parts of the world, the order is:
EUR - GBP - AUD - NZD - USD - *** (where *** is any other currency).
Thus if you are doing a conversion from EUR into AUD, EUR is the base currency, AUD is the term currency and the exchange rate tells you how many Australian dollars you would pay or receive for 1 euro. Cyprus and Malta which were quoted as the base to the USD and *** were recently removed from this list when they joined the euro. In some areas of Europe and in the non-professional market in the UK, EUR and GBP are reversed so that GBP is quoted as the base currency to the euro. In order to determine which is the base currency where both currencies are not listed (i.e. both are ***), market convention is to use the base currency which gives an exchange rate greater than 1.000. This avoids rounding issues and exchange rates being quoted to more than 4 decimal places. There are some exceptions to this rule e.g. the Japanese often quote their currency as the base to other currencies. Quotes using a country's home currency as the price currency (e.g., EUR 1.00 = $1.58 in the US) are known as direct quotation or price quotation (from that country's perspective) (_rif1_) and are used by most countries. Quotes using a country's home currency as the unit currency (e.g., $0.97 AUD = $1.00 US) are known as indirect quotation or quantity quotation and are used in British newspapers and are also common in Australia, New Zealand and the eurozone.
  • direct quotation: 1 foreign currency unit = x home currency units
  • indirect quotation: 1 home currency unit = x foreign currency units
Note that, using direct quotation, if the home currency is strengthening (i.e., appreciating, or becoming more valuable) then the exchange rate number decreases. Conversely if the foreign currency is strengthening, the exchange rate number increases and the home currency is depreciating. When looking at a currency pair such as EURUSD, the first component (EUR in this case) will be called the base currency. The second is called the term currency. For example : EURUSD = 1.5877, means EUR is the base and USD the term, so 1 EUR = 1.5877 USD. Currency pairs are often incorrectly quoted with a "/" (forward slash). In fact if the slash is inserted, the order of the currencies should be reversed. This gives the exchange rate. e.g. if EUR1 is worth USD1.59, euro is the base currency and dollar is the term currency so the exchange rate is stated EURUSD or USD/EUR. To get the exchange rate divide the USD amount by the euro amount e.g. 1.59/1.00 = 1.35 Market convention from the early 1980s to 2006 was that most currency pairs were quoted to 4 decimal places for spot transactions and up to 6 decimal places for forward outrights or swaps. (The fourth decimal place is usually referred to as a "pip.") An exception to this was exchange rates with a value of less than 1.000 which were usually quoted to 5 or 6 decimal places. Although there is no fixed rule, exchange rates with a value greater than around 20 were usually quoted to 3 decimal places and currencies with a value greater than 80 were quoted to 2 decimal places. Currencies over 5000 were usually quoted with no decimal places (e.g. the former Turkish Lira). e.g. (GBPOMR : 0.765432 - EURUSD : 1.5877 - GBPBEF : 58.234 - EURJPY : 165.29). In other words, quotes are given with 5 digits. Where rates are below 1, quotes frequently include 5 decimal places. In 2006 Barclays Capital broke with convention by offering spot exchange rates with 5 or 6 decimal places. The contraction of spreads (the difference between the bid and offer rates) arguably necessitated finer pricing and gave the banks the ability to try and win transaction on multibank trading platforms where all banks may otherwise have been quoting the same price. A number of other banks have now followed this.

Free or pegged

If a currency is free-floating, its exchange rate is allowed to vary against that of other currencies and is determined by the market forces of supply and demand. Exchange rates for such currencies are likely to change almost constantly as quoted on financial markets, mainly by banks, around the world. A movable or adjustable peg system is a system of fixed exchange rates, but with a provision for the devaluation of a currency. For example, between 1994 and 2005, the Chinese yuan renminbi (RMB) was pegged to the United States dollar at RMB 8.2768 to $1. China was not the only country to do this; from the end of World War II until 1966, Western European countries all maintained fixed exchange rates with the US dollar based on the Bretton Woods system. _rif2_

Nominal and real exchange rates

  • The nominal exchange rate e is the price in domestic currency of one unit of a foreign currency.
  • The real exchange rate (RER) is defined as RER = e \left(\frac{P^*}{P} \right), where P is the domestic price level and P^* the foreign price level. P and P^* must have the same arbitrary value in some chosen base year. Hence in the base year, RER = e.
The RER is only a theoretical ideal. In practice, there are many foreign currencies and price level values to take into consideration. Correspondingly, the model calculations become increasingly more complex. Furthermore, the model is based on purchasing power parity (PPP), which implies a constant RER. The empirical determination of a constant RER value could never be realised, due to limitations on data collection. PPP would imply that the RER is the rate at which an organization can trade goods and services of one economy (e.g. country) for those of another. For example, if the price of a good increases 10% in the UK, and the Japanese currency simultaneously appreciates 10% against the UK currency, then the price of the good remains constant for someone in Japan. The people in the UK, however, would still have to deal with the 10% increase in domestic prices. It is also worth mentioning that government-enacted tariffs can affect the actual rate of exchange, helping to reduce price pressures. PPP appears to hold only in the long term (3?5 years) when prices eventually correct towards parity. More recent approaches in modelling the RER employ a set of macroeconomic variables, such as relative productivity and the real interest rate differential.
N R_i = (R R_i + 1)(Expected \ inflation + 1) - 1

Bilateral vs effective exchange rate

Bilateral exchange rate involves a currency pair, while effective exchange rate is weighted average of a basket of foreign currencies, and it can be viewed as an overall measure of the country's external competitiveness. A nominal effective exchange rate (NEER) is weighted with trade weights. a real effective exchange rate (REER) adjust NEER by appropriate foreign price level and deflates by the home country price level. Compared to NEER, a GDP weighted effective exchange rate might be more appropriate considering the global investment phenomenon.

Uncovered interest rate parity

Uncovered interest rate parity (UIRP) states that an appreciation or depreciation of one currency against another currency might be neutralized by a change in the interest rate differential. If US interest rates exceed Japanese interest rates then the US dollar should depreciate against the Japanese yen by an amount that prevents arbitrage. The future exchange rate is reflected into the forward exchange rate stated today. In our example, the forward exchange rate of the dollar is said to be at a discount because it buys fewer Japanese yen in the forward rate than it does in the spot rate. The yen is said to be at a premium. UIRP showed no proof of working after 1990s. Contrary to the theory, currencies with high interest rates characteristically appreciated rather than depreciated on the reward of the containment of inflation and a higher-yielding currency.

Balance of payments model

This model holds that a foreign exchange rate must be at its equilibrium level - the rate which produces a stable current account balance. A nation with a trade deficit will experience reduction in its foreign exchange reserves which ultimately lowers (depreciates) the value of its currency. The cheaper currency renders the nation's goods (exports) more affordable in the global market place while making imports more expensive. After an intermediate period, imports are forced down and exports rise, thus stabilizing the trade balance and the currency towards equilibrium. Like PPP, the balance of payments model focuses largely on tradable goods and services, ignoring the increasing role of global capital flows. In other words, money is not only chasing goods and services, but to a larger extent, financial assets such as stocks and bonds. Their flows go into the capital account item of the balance of payments, thus, balancing the deficit in the current account. The increase in capital flows has given rise to the asset market model.

Asset market model

The explosion in trading of financial assets (stocks and bonds) has reshaped the way analysts and traders look at currencies. Economic variables such as economic growth, inflation and productivity are no longer the only drivers of currency movements. The proportion of foreign exchange transactions stemming from cross border-trading of financial assets has dwarfed the extent of currency transactions generated from trading in goods and services. The asset market approach views currencies as asset prices traded in an efficient financial market. Consequently, currencies are increasingly demonstrating a strong correlation with other markets, particularly equities. Like the stock exchange, money can be made or lost on the foreign exchange market by investors and speculators buying and selling at the right times. Currencies can be traded at spot and foreign exchange options markets. The represents current exchange rates, whereas options are derivatives of exchange rates

Fluctuations in exchange rates

A market based exchange rate will change whenever the values of either of the two component currencies change. A currency will tend to become more valuable whenever demand for it is greater than the available supply. It will become less valuable whenever demand is less than available supply (this does not mean people no longer want money, it just means they prefer holding their wealth in some other form, possibly another currency). Increased demand for a currency is due to either an increased transaction demand for money, or an increased speculative demand for money. The transaction demand for money is highly correlated to the country's level of business activity, gross domestic product (GDP), and employment levels. The more people there are unemployed, the less the public as a whole will spend on goods and services. Central banks typically have little difficulty adjusting the available money supply to accommodate changes in the demand for money due to business transactions. The speculative demand for money is much harder for a central bank to accommodate but they try to do this by adjusting interest rates. An investor may choose to buy a currency if the return (that is the interest rate) is high enough. The higher a country's interest rates, the greater the demand for that currency. It has been argued that currency speculation can undermine real economic growth, in particular since large currency speculators may deliberately create downward pressure on a currency in order to force that central bank to sell their currency to keep it stable (once this happens, the speculator can buy the currency back from the bank at a lower price, close out their position, and thereby take a profit).

See also

  • Bureau de Change
  • Continuous linked settlement
  • Currency Pair
  • Digital gold currency
  • Financial instruments
  • Foreign exchange market
  • Forex scam
  • Gold standard
  • List of international trade topics
  • Tables of historical exchange rates to the USD
  • ISO 4217
  • Foreign currency mortgage

References

External links


  • Free RSS Currency Rates Xurrency
  • Benchmark Currency Rates
  • Federal Reserve daily update
  • Federal Reserve daily history since 2000
  • Foreign Currency Units per 1 U.S. Dollar, 1948 - 2004



This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Exchange rate".
Found in MAILGATE!
TURMEL: Islington Timebanker "Volunteer of the Year 2007"
JCT: Financial good news is so rare. >Time Banker is Islington Volunteer of the Year 2007 >Posted by: "TIMEBANK" mildmaytimebank@btconnect.com >Date: Fri Feb 23, 2007 7:46 am ((PST)) Apologies for any cross-posting and sorry for taking the liberty of doing this Ann but I just thought all our time bank friends might like to hear the following bit of news. Last night at City University, Inge Rowlinson-Lauder of Hilldrop Time Bank was named "Islington Volunteer of the Year 2007." Inge was presented with her award by Emily Thornbury MP. This was at the annual celebration organised by the Islington Volunteering Association, the networking organisation that aims to bring together everyone from the voluntary, public and private sector involved with volunteering within Islington. Nobody in the Islington Time Bank Network had any idea this was going to happen. Wearing one of my other hats I am Treasurer of the Association and they even hid it from me! Inge is now in her...

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TURMEL: Islington Timebanker "Volunteer of the Year 2007"
JCT: Financial good news is so rare.

>Time Banker is Islington Volunteer of the Year 2007
>Posted by: "TIMEBANK" mildmaytimebank@btconnect.com
>Date: Fri Feb 23, 2007 7:46 am ((PST))

Apologies for any cross-posting and sorry for taking the
liberty of doing this Ann but I just thought all our time
bank friends might like to hear the following bit of news.

Last night at City University, Inge Rowlinson-Lauder of
Hilldrop Time Bank was named "Islington Volunteer of the
Year 2007." Inge was presented with her award by Emily
Thornbury MP. This was at the annual celebration organised
by the Islington Volunteering Association, the networking
organisation that aims to bring together everyone from the
voluntary, public and private sector involved with
volunteering within Islington. Nobody in the Islington Time
Bank Network had any idea this was going to happen. Wearing
one of my other hats I am Treasurer of the Association and
they even hid it from me!

Inge is now in her early 70s. You might get an idea of her
attitude to this from the fact that last year she took part
in the Walk for Life marathon and raised over #200 for
people living with HIV and Aids. Throughout her time in
Islington she has been involved in a large number and
variety of community activities but in 2005 she discovered
and joined Hilldrop Time Bank. All I can say is, lucky old
Hilldrop. There she is currently running two sewing courses.

She is very skilled so both courses are packed-solid and
both have a waiting list. The six sewing machines, irons and
ironing boards she decided she needed to run the courses
were all paid for with a Community Champions Award she
personally (of course) went and won from the Scarman Trust.
She is, quite frankly, amazing.

It was a pretty good night all round for us really because
three other Islington Time Bank members also collected
certificates in recognition of the value we all place on
them. These were Joan Hewitt, also of Hilldrop Time Bank,
Val Dunmow of Caxton House Time Bank and Kaaren Morris, the
(still) unpaid Broker and creator of the Upper Street Time
Bank. Well done everybody. Peter Roberts - Broker

The Mildmay Time Bank The Walnut Tree Bronte House
The Mayville Estate London N16 8LG
Telephone: 020 7249 5373 Fax: 020 7254 1320
http://www.islingtontimebanks.org

JCT: And these kinds of natural trading effects due to a
trading Currency are taking place all over Latin America due
to the Bolivarian Revolution which makes us of social
Currency too.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TURMEL: Islington Timebanker "Volunteer of the Year 2007"
JCT: Financial good news is so rare.

>Time Banker is Islington Volunteer of the Year 2007
>Posted by: "TIMEBANK" mildmaytimebank@btconnect.com
>Date: Fri Feb 23, 2007 7:46 am ((PST))

Apologies for any cross-posting and sorry for taking the
liberty of doing this Ann but I just thought all our time
bank friends might like to hear the following bit of news.

Last night at City University, Inge Rowlinson-Lauder of
Hilldrop Time Bank was named "Islington Volunteer of the
Year 2007." Inge was presented with her award by Emily
Thornbury MP. This was at the annual celebration organised
by the Islington Volunteering Association, the networking
organisation that aims to bring together everyone from the
voluntary, public and private sector involved with
volunteering within Islington. Nobody in the Islington Time
Bank Network had any idea this was going to happen. Wearing
one of my other hats I am Treasurer of the Association and
they even hid it from me!

Inge is now in her early 70s. You might get an idea of her
attitude to this from the fact that last year she took part
in the Walk for Life marathon and raised over #200 for
people living with HIV and Aids. Throughout her time in
Islington she has been involved in a large number and
variety of community activities but in 2005 she discovered
and joined Hilldrop Time Bank. All I can say is, lucky old
Hilldrop. There she is currently running two sewing courses.

She is very skilled so both courses are packed-solid and
both have a waiting list. The six sewing machines, irons and
ironing boards she decided she needed to run the courses
were all paid for with a Community Champions Award she
personally (of course) went and won from the Scarman Trust.
She is, quite frankly, amazing.

It was a pretty good night all round for us really because
three other Islington Time Bank members also collected
certificates in recognition of the value we all place on
them. These were Joan Hewitt, also of Hilldrop Time Bank,
Val Dunmow of Caxton House Time Bank and Kaaren Morris, the
(still) unpaid Broker and creator of the Upper Street Time
Bank. Well done everybody. Peter Roberts - Broker

The Mildmay Time Bank The Walnut Tree Bronte House
The Mayville Estate London N16 8LG
Telephone: 020 7249 5373 Fax: 020 7254 1320
http://www.islingtontimebanks.org

JCT: And these kinds of natural trading effects due to a
trading currency are taking place all over Latin America due
to the Bolivarian Revolution which makes us of social
currency too.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TURMEL: Islington Timebanker "Volunteer of the Year 2007"
JCT: Financial good news is so rare.

>Time Banker is Islington Volunteer of the Year 2007
>Posted by: "TIMEBANK" mildmaytimebank@btconnect.com
>Date: Fri Feb 23, 2007 7:46 am ((PST))

Apologies for any cross-posting and sorry for taking the
liberty of doing this Ann but I just thought all our time
bank friends might like to hear the following bit of news.

Last night at City University, Inge Rowlinson-Lauder of
Hilldrop Time Bank was named "Islington Volunteer of the
Year 2007." Inge was presented with her award by Emily
Thornbury MP. This was at the annual celebration organised
by the Islington Volunteering Association, the networking
organisation that aims to bring together everyone from the
voluntary, public and private sector involved with
volunteering within Islington. Nobody in the Islington Time
Bank Network had any idea this was going to happen. Wearing
one of my other hats I am Treasurer of the Association and
they even hid it from me!

Inge is now in her early 70s. You might get an idea of her
attitude to this from the fact that last year she took part
in the Walk for Life marathon and raised over #200 for
people living with HIV and Aids. Throughout her time in
Islington she has been involved in a large number and
variety of community activities but in 2005 she discovered
and joined Hilldrop Time Bank. All I can say is, lucky old
Hilldrop. There she is currently running two sewing courses.

She is very skilled so both courses are packed-solid and
both have a waiting list. The six sewing machines, irons and
ironing boards she decided she needed to run the courses
were all paid for with a Community Champions Award she
personally (of course) went and won from the Scarman Trust.
She is, quite frankly, amazing.

It was a pretty good night all round for us really because
three other Islington Time Bank members also collected
certificates in recognition of the value we all place on
them. These were Joan Hewitt, also of Hilldrop Time Bank,
Val Dunmow of Caxton House Time Bank and Kaaren Morris, the
(still) unpaid Broker and creator of the Upper Street Time
Bank. Well done everybody. Peter Roberts - Broker

The Mildmay Time Bank The Walnut Tree Bronte House
The Mayville Estate London N16 8LG
Telephone: 020 7249 5373 Fax: 020 7254 1320
http://www.islingtontimebanks.org

JCT: And these kinds of natural trading effects due to a
trading Currency are taking place all over Latin America due
to the Bolivarian Revolution which makes us of social
Currency too.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TURMEL: Islington Timebanker "Volunteer of the Year 2007"
JCT: Financial good news is so rare.

>Time Banker is Islington Volunteer of the Year 2007
>Posted by: "TIMEBANK" mildmaytimebank@btconnect.com
>Date: Fri Feb 23, 2007 7:46 am ((PST))

Apologies for any cross-posting and sorry for taking the
liberty of doing this Ann but I just thought all our time
bank friends might like to hear the following bit of news.

Last night at City University, Inge Rowlinson-Lauder of
Hilldrop Time Bank was named "Islington Volunteer of the
Year 2007." Inge was presented with her award by Emily
Thornbury MP. This was at the annual celebration organised
by the Islington Volunteering Association, the networking
organisation that aims to bring together everyone from the
voluntary, public and private sector involved with
volunteering within Islington. Nobody in the Islington Time
Bank Network had any idea this was going to happen. Wearing
one of my other hats I am Treasurer of the Association and
they even hid it from me!

Inge is now in her early 70s. You might get an idea of her
attitude to this from the fact that last year she took part
in the Walk for Life marathon and raised over #200 for
people living with HIV and Aids. Throughout her time in
Islington she has been involved in a large number and
variety of community activities but in 2005 she discovered
and joined Hilldrop Time Bank. All I can say is, lucky old
Hilldrop. There she is currently running two sewing courses.

She is very skilled so both courses are packed-solid and
both have a waiting list. The six sewing machines, irons and
ironing boards she decided she needed to run the courses
were all paid for with a Community Champions Award she
personally (of course) went and won from the Scarman Trust.
She is, quite frankly, amazing.

It was a pretty good night all round for us really because
three other Islington Time Bank members also collected
certificates in recognition of the value we all place on
them. These were Joan Hewitt, also of Hilldrop Time Bank,
Val Dunmow of Caxton House Time Bank and Kaaren Morris, the
(still) unpaid Broker and creator of the Upper Street Time
Bank. Well done everybody. Peter Roberts - Broker

The Mildmay Time Bank The Walnut Tree Bronte House
The Mayville Estate London N16 8LG
Telephone: 020 7249 5373 Fax: 020 7254 1320
http://www.islingtontimebanks.org

JCT: And these kinds of natural trading effects due to a
trading currency are taking place all over Latin America due
to the Bolivarian Revolution which makes us of social
currency too.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
as the free market screams let us cheat or we will move, look what's happening in asia
we hear about the free market with its libertarian/conservative allies
in government threatening to move to asia if they cannot gut sarbanes/
oxley so they can cheat. but look what's happening in a more rule of
law country in asia.
i can only imagine what's happening in a libertarian wet dream like
hong kong/china, singapore, or indonesia.
and of course free trade is a race to the bottom.

http://www.startribune.com/535/story/1022461.html

Did Sanyo amplify its past earnings?
A newspaper report of a probe of the struggling electronics giant's
books sent its stock tumbling.

By Yuri Kageyama, Associated Press

Last update: February 23, 2007 - 8:43 PM
TOKYO - Sanyo Electric Co. said Friday that it was fully cooperating
with an investigation by securities authorities into suspected window-
dressing of earnings at the struggling Japanese electronics maker.

Company spokesman Ryo Hagiwara said an investigation was underway. He
declined to elaborate, or to confirm an Asahi Shimbun newspaper report
saying Sanyo might have falsified its fiscal 2003 earnings report.

Sanyo shares plunged 21 percent to $1.50 in Tokyo.

Spokesman Noboru Takayama said the Securities and Exchange
Surveillance Commission does not comment on ongoing individual cases.

The Asahi said Sanyo had written off losses of $1.6 billion at its
subsidiaries, but reported the losses as $412 million. The Osaka-based
company might have falsely reported a profit when it was in the red,
it said.

Such differences have been corrected over the years, and the company's
recent earnings reports are not false, the report said.

The probe follows recent news of dubious accounting at some Japanese
companies, which raised questions about whether the world's second-
largest economy is keeping pace with world market standards.

On Friday, major machinery maker Komatsu said it was under
investigation by securities authorities and acknowledged it might be
fined for violations of insider trading laws in a share buyback in
2005.

In a high-profile court case, former executives at Internet services
company Livedoor Co. are on trial on charges of falsifying earnings.
Major Japanese brokerage Nikko Cordial Corp. was fined by securities
authorities in December for manipulating profits.

"What is going to weigh on people's minds is whether all this can
snowball into a Japanese Enron," said Motomi Hiratsuka, head of sales
trading at BNP Paribas.

The latest investigation is a blow to Sanyo at a time when it has been
struggling to turn around its business, trimming thousands of jobs,
reducing factory space and dropping some businesses since announcing a
restructuring plan in 2004.

Sanyo is forecasting a $412 million loss for the fiscal year through
March.

Like other Japanese electronics makers, Sanyo has been battered in
recent years by competition from cheaper Asian rivals. Its performance
was also hurt by a 2004 earthquake near its chip-making plant.

Sanyo has repeatedly promised a turnaround under what has been billed
as innovative management headed by former journalist Tomoyo Nonaka,
who became chairman and chief executive in 2005, one of a handful of
star female chief executives at major Japanese companies.

Nonaka, who joined the company's board in 2002, was appointed with
Toshimasa Iue, grandson of Sanyo's founder, who became president.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
as the free market screams let us cheat or we will move, look what's happening in asia
we hear about the free market with its libertarian/conservative allies
in government threatening to move to asia if they cannot gut sarbanes/
oxley so they can cheat. but look what's happening in a more rule of
law country in asia.
i can only imagine what's happening in a libertarian wet dream like
hong kong/china, singapore, or indonesia.
and of course free trade is a race to the bottom.

http://www.startribune.com/535/story/1022461.html

Did Sanyo amplify its past earnings?
A newspaper report of a probe of the struggling electronics giant's
books sent its stock tumbling.

By Yuri Kageyama, Associated Press

Last update: February 23, 2007 - 8:43 PM
TOKYO - Sanyo Electric Co. said Friday that it was fully cooperating
with an investigation by securities authorities into suspected window-
dressing of earnings at the struggling Japanese electronics maker.

Company spokesman Ryo Hagiwara said an investigation was underway. He
declined to elaborate, or to confirm an Asahi Shimbun newspaper report
saying Sanyo might have falsified its fiscal 2003 earnings report.

Sanyo shares plunged 21 percent to $1.50 in Tokyo.

Spokesman Noboru Takayama said the Securities and Exchange
Surveillance Commission does not comment on ongoing individual cases.

The Asahi said Sanyo had written off losses of $1.6 billion at its
subsidiaries, but reported the losses as $412 million. The Osaka-based
company might have falsely reported a profit when it was in the red,
it said.

Such differences have been corrected over the years, and the company's
recent earnings reports are not false, the report said.

The probe follows recent news of dubious accounting at some Japanese
companies, which raised questions about whether the world's second-
largest economy is keeping pace with world market standards.

On Friday, major machinery maker Komatsu said it was under
investigation by securities authorities and acknowledged it might be
fined for violations of insider trading laws in a share buyback in
2005.

In a high-profile court case, former executives at Internet services
company Livedoor Co. are on trial on charges of falsifying earnings.
Major Japanese brokerage Nikko Cordial Corp. was fined by securities
authorities in December for manipulating profits.

"What is going to weigh on people's minds is whether all this can
snowball into a Japanese Enron," said Motomi Hiratsuka, head of sales
trading at BNP Paribas.

The latest investigation is a blow to Sanyo at a time when it has been
struggling to turn around its business, trimming thousands of jobs,
reducing factory space and dropping some businesses since announcing a
restructuring plan in 2004.

Sanyo is forecasting a $412 million loss for the fiscal year through
March.

Like other Japanese electronics makers, Sanyo has been battered in
recent years by competition from cheaper Asian rivals. Its performance
was also hurt by a 2004 earthquake near its chip-making plant.

Sanyo has repeatedly promised a turnaround under what has been billed
as innovative management headed by former journalist Tomoyo Nonaka,
who became chairman and chief executive in 2005, one of a handful of
star female chief executives at major Japanese companies.

Nonaka, who joined the company's board in 2002, was appointed with
Toshimasa Iue, grandson of Sanyo's founder, who became president.