Kamis, 27 November 2008

Holiday sales begin before turkey grows cold

Thanksgiving Day may mean leisurely time with family for many Americans, but some U.S. stores were set to open to shoppers on the holiday itself, hoping to salvage what could be a disastrous holiday sales season.

The traditional start to holiday shopping begins on Friday and runs through year's end, with the lion's share of sales occurring up to Christmas Day on December 25.

Known as "Black Friday", the day after Thanksgiving used to allow some stores to turn their profit, or move into the black, for the year.

But in 2008, U.S. retailers fear that a contracting economy and mounting job losses could cost them billions of dollars during their most crucial season of the year when they can make up to 40 percent of annual sales. Some are staying open on Thursday in hopes of capturing as much business as possible.

"Consumer spending on gifts for the holiday season is going to be down considerably," said Eric Anderson, professor of marketing at the Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University. "Black Friday will be the first indicator of how bad it's going to be."

Experts predict this could be the worst sales season since the early 1990s as Americans hit hard by a housing slump and credit crunch make do with fewer gifts.

Based on analyst forecasts, retail sales at stores open at least a year could fall 2.2 percent for the entire month of November compared with a 4 percent rise a year ago, according to Thomson Reuters data.

Excluding expectations for growth at discounter Wal-Mart Stores Inc, one of the few companies that may prosper this season, the decline is a more precipitous 6.6 percent.

At stake is the ability for many retailers, from department stores like Macy's to specialty chains such as AnnTaylor Stores, to keep their loyal customers and eke out a profit as rivals cut prices up to 40 and 50 percent.

With times this grim, some are willing to sacrifice more profit rather than risk losing clients for good.

"It's the retailers in the middle who are trying to avoid losing customers," said Anderson. "Macy's is worried about customers who have never spent a lot of money at Wal-Mart trying out Wal-Mart and liking it."

Some consumers said they are putting a different emphasis on celebrating the holidays, focusing on time spent with family and friends rather than purchasing the latest hot toy or gadget. They may even choose to craft presents by hand or swap goods gathering dust in the attic to save money.

Others have the option of buying goods at firesale prices, after long-standing U.S. chains like Circuit City and Mervyns declared bankruptcy ahead of the holiday.

EARLY BIRDS

To drum up enthusiasm, many stores started offering steep discounts on everything from clothes to electronics weeks in advance.

Several chains are launching special promotions online and staffing stores on Thanksgiving Day itself, well before the traditional roast turkey meal has had time to grow cold.

Kmart, owned by Sears Holdings, was to open its doors early on Thursday, along with movie rental chain Blockbuster, which is touting electronics gifts like Blu-ray players and game consoles this year. Toy stalwart FAO Schwarz was also due to open.

Stores from Wal-Mart to electronics retailer Best Buy to Macy's planned to open before dawn on Friday.

One silver lining could be that penny-pinching shoppers held off buying until the Thanksgiving weekend, preferring to spend what cash they have only when better deals begin to appear. That could also explain some of the sharp decline in sales for most of November leading up to Black Friday.

Nearly 45 percent of consumers plan to shop during the Black Friday weekend, according to a survey released this week by the International Council of Shopping Centers.

More than 80 percent of those shoppers expect to stop at a discount store, while 78 percent said they would head to a department store.


Stocks Are Higher in Europe and Asia

PARIS — Stocks rose Thursday in Europe and Asia, following Wall Street’s lead and a deep cut in Chinese interest rates.

Indian stock markets were closed after a terrorist attack Wednesday in Mumbai left more than 100 people dead, and it was not immediately known when trading would resume.

In morning trading, the Dow Jones Euro Stoxx 50 index, a barometer of euro zone blue chips, rose 2.4 percent, while the FTSE 100 index in London gained 2.1 percent. The CAC 40 in Paris was up 2.6 percent, and the DAX in Frankfurt rose 2.5 percent.

“There is fresh risk-taking, but not enough to sustain a rally,” Adrian Pankiw, a strategist at Henderson Global Investors in London, said. “Everyone’s just waiting to close the books and getting ready for next year.”

“They’re doing everything they can to avoid deflation,” he said, referring to the trillions of dollars in financial bailouts and economic stimulus measures governments have announced in the last few months. “We’ve seen from the case of Japan that the cost of deflation is much higher than the cost of the measures they’re taking now. Japan is still paying for it.”

UBS rose 4.1 percent. Peter Kurer, the UBS chairman, told shareholders Thursday that 2009 would be a profitable year for the Swiss bank.

Trading in Woolworths was suspended in London. The 99-year-old British retailer appointed administrators to seek a buyer for its more than 900 stores. October data from the United States underlined the dismal economic picture. Consumer spending dropped a full percentage point, the biggest decline since 2001, while durable goods orders fell 6.2 percent, and sales of new homes declined 5.3 percent.

U.S. markets were closed Thursday for the Thanksgiving Day holiday, but futures traded on the Standard & Poor’s 500 index fell about 0.2 percent. On Wednesday, the index rose 3.5 percent in New York. Despite the rally, bond yields plunged to record lows, as prices were lifted by the Federal Reserve’s plan to buy mortgage securities.

The benchmark U.S. 10-year note closed Wednesday trading at a yield of 2.978 percent. Mr. Pankiw noted that, with the exception of Germany, most European government bonds were also trading near record lows. Part of the story, he said, is that after years of consumer “dissaving,” savings rates are beginning to rise, even as net pay falls.

The Chinese central bank’s move Wednesday to cut its main interest rate by 1.08 percentage point gave Asian stock markets a lift, with the Shanghai Stock Exchange composite index gaining 1.1 percent. Malcolm Wood, Head of Asia Pacific Strategy at Morgan Stanley in Hong Kong, said the move was an “extraordinarily aggressive policy action in the face of extraordinarily bad news,” but that this — and a flurry of measures around the world in the past two months — was grounds for optimism in the global effort to shore up the real economy.

The Tokyo benchmark Nikkei 225 stock average gained nearly 2 percent, while the Hang Seng index in Hong Kong rose 1.4 percent. The S&P/ASX 200 index in Sydney rose 1.4 percent.

U.S. crude oil futures for January delivery fell $1.68 to $52.76 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

The dollar declined against other major currencies. The euro rose to $1.2915 from $1.2880 late Wednesday in New York, while the British pound rose to $1.5388 from $1.5326. The dollar slipped to 95.08 yen from 95.67 and fell to 1.1982 Swiss francs from 1.2037 francs.

Nokia to Cease Sales In Japan

Nokia, the world's biggest cellphone maker, said on Thursday it will stop selling mobile phones in Japan except for its luxury Vertu brand after struggling to expand its presence.

Finnish Nokia has previously said it will cut costs 'decisively', expecting global mobile phone sales to shrink next year amid an economic downturn.

Japan is the world's fourth largest mobile phone market after the United States, China and India. But it makes up only a tiny part of sales at Nokia, whose products have failed to lure customers away from more sophisticated Japanese ones.

Mobile phone companies also see limited scope for growth in Japan, where 109 million subscribers, or some 85 percent of the population, already own a mobile phone. In addition, a new sales model based on higher handset prices is expected to slash annual mobile phone sales in Japan by some 20 percent.

"In the current global economic climate, we have concluded that the continuation of our investment in Japan-specific localized products is no longer sustainable," Nokia executive vice president Timo Ihamuotila said in a statement.

He added that Nokia's Japanese business would concentrate on research, development and sourcing for the global market as well as specific projects such as the Vertu brand.

The quirks of Japan's mobile phone market have prevented foreign companies, including Nokia's rivals such as Samsung Electronics and LG, from successfully targeting Japanese consumers.

Most of the mobile phones used in Japan are part of third-generation networks and boast features such as TV broadcasting and electronic payment functions.

This makes it tough for foreign manufacturers to compete with domestic handsets.

Foreign companies, excluding Sony Ericsson, only occupy around 5 percent of Japan's cellphone market, according to IDC Japan, a research firm. Japanese manufacturers, in turn, have only a small presence outside their home market.

"Nokia is facing global earnings problems and many other issues, and this shows Japan was a low-priority market at a time when they are shoring up global operations, even though it may still be attractive," IDC Japan analyst Michito Kimura said.

"I'm not very surprised by the decision."

The move was still rather abrupt as NTT DoCoMo Inc, Japan's biggest mobile phone operator, said just this month that it would sell a new Nokia smartphone as part of its product line-up for the winter shopping season.

Third-ranked Japanese operator Softbank Corp also sells Nokia phones.

Nokia, which has a nearly 40 percent global market share, had originally said it aimed to increase its market share in Japan to a double-digit figure. It took only around 0.3 percent of the Japanese market last business year, according to the Nikkei newspaper.

Instead of a broad expansion, it will now focus on Vertu, its luxury unit.

The Yomiuri newspaper reported on Saturday that Nokia plans to launch mobile phone services for Vertu customers in Japan, using DoCoMo's network.

Vertu, founded in 1998, sells gem-encrusted, hand-built mobile phones with prices ranging from 3,500 euros to over 100,000 euros.

(Additional reporting by Tarmo Virki in Helsinki; Editing by Sophie Hardach)

HK Index Rises on China's Rate Cut

Hong Kong's benchmark stock index advanced for a third straight session Thursday, boosted by China's biggest interest rate cut in 11 years to spur economic growth.

The blue chip Hang Seng index rose 182.61 points, or 1.4 percent, to 13,552.06.

The gains came after China slashed a key interest rate by 1.08 percentage point -- its biggest cut since 1997 and the fourth in three months -- after markets closed on Wednesday.

Analysts said China's aggressive move helped improve sentiment, but investors still remained cautious about the global economic outlook.

''Although it looks like sentiments are better, there are still concerns about negative news or any asset liquidation of financial institutions,'' said Castor Pang, an analyst at Sun Hung Kai Financial.

Mainland Chinese property stocks soared on the country's rate cut. Guangzhou R&F Properties Co., Ltd. jumped 12.2 percent to 4.14 Hong Kong dollars. China Overseas Land and Investment also gained 7.6 percent to HK$9.79 and China Res Land was 5.3 percent higher at HK$9.30.

Chinese financial stocks also moved higher with China Construction Bank adding 2.4 percent to HK$4.20. Major Chinese lender ICBC also rose 1.6 percent to HK$3.82.

Index heavyweight HSBC was 0.8 percent higher at HK$81.65.

World Stocks Hit 2 - Week Highs

Global stocks rose to their highest level in nearly two weeks on Thursday with European equities buoyed by sharp gains in Asia and the United States, dampening demand for safer assetssuch as government debt.

Renewed expectations that Washington will bail out the U.S. motor industry and China's aggressive interest rate cut on Wednesday helped to lift some of the gloom surrounding the global economy.

But a string of dismal U.S. economic reports this week left the dollar on a shaky footing while political risk emerged after attacks in India's financial capital.

At least 101 people have been killed with hundreds more trapped by Islamist gunmen in Mumbai after attacks on luxury hotels, hospitals and a tourist cafe.

Still, with U.S. financial markets closed on Thursday for the Thanksgiving holiday, analysts expect trading in Europe to be lackluster. While stocks were eking out gains, analysts said the outlook was still bleak.

"It's going to be a bit of a nothing day, as we wait for Black Friday in the United States -- the day where all retailers go from red to black," said Justin Urquhart Stewart, investment director at Seven Investment Management. "If it goes like the UK, it could be a black Friday in the wrong sense."

The day after Thanksgiving, known as black Friday, is traditionally the busiest time for U.S. retailers and investors would undoubtedly be on the lookout for retail sales figures.

MSCI world equity index climbed 1.1 percent to 218.20, having earlier reached a peak of 218.33 -- a level last seen in November 14.

The FTSEurofirst 300 index of top European shares gained 2.4 percent, Britain's FTSE 100 index put on 2 percent and Germany's DAX climbed 2.6 percent.

Bank stocks were among the best performers, with Standard Chartered rising 11 percent and Societe Generale gaining more than 5 percent. Earlier, Japan's Nikkei rose 2 percent, while MSCI's measure of other Asian stock markets climbed 2.2 percent.

Meanwhile, the dollar eased against a basket of major currencies with the dollar index slipping 0.3 percent.

"The greenback for long the beneficiary of safe haven flows has over the past couple of days been forced on the defensive as poor economic news weighed on the market," said Mitul Kotecha Head of Global Foreign Exchange Strategy at Calyon.

"Yesterday's data releases added to these woes, showing a huge drop in durable goods orders, a decline in personal spending, a weak Chicago PMI and another big increase in initial jobless claims. The latter points to a USD unfriendly non-farm payroll report next Friday."

BOND YIELDS UP

European government bond yields crept up as stocks gained ground, snapping recent declines that mirrored steep falls in U.S. Treasury yields.

On Wednesday, the U.S. benchmark 10-year yield hit a 50-year low below 3.0 percent after a flood of bleak U.S. economic reports spurred demand for safer government debt.

The 10-year euro zone government bond yield rose 1.7 basis points to 3.296 percent, off a near three-year low of 3.272 percent set on Wednesday.

Meanwhile, U.S. crude oil fell more than $1 toward $53 a barrel, reversing some of the 7 percent gains a day earlier as investors fretted about falling demand.

Recent data showed U.S. crude stocks rose sharply last week and U.S. September demand fell to its lowest level for any month in more than a decade.

Gold traded at $812.45 an ounce, near a six-week high of $830.10 set on Tuesday.

(Additional reporting by Sitaraman Shankar; editing by David Stamp)

Thai Economy Braces for Blow Amid Airport Shutdown

Thailand's already faltering economy is bracing for a fresh blow as the shutdown of the country's main airport by protesters entered its third day, stranding thousands during the tourist high season, disrupting exports and spooking investors.

Tourism losses alone in the remainder of this year could run to 150 billion baht ($4.2 billion), equal to 1.5 percent of gross domestic product, with ''devastating repercussions'' for the economy, CIMB economist Kasem Prunratanamala said Thursday.

Other vital pillars of the economy are also being hit, with exports of fresh produce and electronic components hurt as dozens of airlines cancel flights, and foreign investors pulling funds from a stock market already stricken by the global financial turmoil.

''If this crisis goes further, we will lose much more,'' said Thai Chamber of Commerce President Pramon Sutheewong.

''The confidence in Thai exporters is deteriorating, foreign importers are in doubt about our ability in deliver products on time and there is a high tendency that they will divert their orders to some place else,'' Pramon said. ''That's what we are concerned about the most.''

Beyond deterring tourists, the airport shutdown also halts exports of perishable produce such as fruit and vegetables and shipments of electronics components to places like Japan, said Federation of Thai Industries Chairman Santi Vilassakdanont.

''After one, two or three days there will be a production problem for electronics makers because their stockpiles of unsent goods will become too high,'' he said.

Losses on outbound shipments of car parts, fresh fruit and vegetables, live fish and orchids could run 2 billion to 3 billion baht a day ($57 million to $85 million), said Tanit Sorat, the federation's vice chairman.

All flights in and out of Bangkok's Suvarnabhumi were canceled after protesters took over terminals Tuesday in an attempt to unseat Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat's government, which they claim is a puppet for ousted premier Thaksin Shinawatra. It was the latest escalation in a sometimes violent four-month campaign by protesters to bring down the government.

On Wednesday night, protesters overran a second smaller airport that mainly serves domestic routes, cutting off all commercial flights to the capital of Southeast Asia's second-biggest economy -- an important manufacturing hub for automakers like Toyota Motor Corp. and General Motors Corp.

Thailand's economy is already in a fragile state, growing at 4 percent in the third quarter -- the slowest pace in more than three years -- because of the political unrest and the global financial crisis. Some economists say growth next year will slump to about 2.5 percent from the 4.5 percent expected for this year -- a forecast that doesn't factor in the latest woes.

Tourism, a vital industry that makes up 6 percent of the economy, will take the main hit from the airport shutdown.

CIMB's Kasem Prunratanamala said about half of 4 million tourists expected between now and the end of the year could cancel their trips, with spillover affects outside tourism such as lower spending at shopping malls and other retailers. The effects will linger into 2009, he said.

Up to 20 percent of the 1 million employed directly and indirectly by tourism could lose their jobs, said Tourism Council of Thailand boss Kongkrit Hiranyakit.

Tourism Minister Weerasak Kowsurat said airport closures not only drain the coffers of airports and airlines but deprive the country of 80,000 free-spending tourist each day and, most troubling, tarnish the country's image as safe place to travel.

''If we can't solve this problem soon enough, the memory of people in general about traveling in Thailand will be heavily damaged,'' Weerasak said.

Neighboring countries have voiced concern that Thailand may not be able to host the annual ASEAN summit for 10 southeast Asian nations, scheduled to take place Dec. 15-18 in the northern city of Chiang Mai. Thailand insisted Thursday that the meeting will go ahead as planned.

Jittery foreign investors pulled a net 1.5 billion baht from the market on Wednesday, the second highest selling by foreigners this month, adding to the 150 billion baht that they have withdrawn from the market this year. On Thursday, Thailand's benchmark stock index sank 1.4 percent -- even as most other Asian markets advanced.

''It's a nightmare scenario. I can't tell clients to buy Thai shares if they can't even get into the country,'' said Andrew Yates, vice president of foreign institutional sales at Asia Plus Securities in Bangkok. ''It seems like it's easier to get into North Korea than it is to Thailand.''

China Downturn Deepens

China warned on Thursday its economic downturn was deepening with the spread of the global financial crisis and a senior European policymaker said woes could extend beyond 2009.

In India, emerging Asia's other economic titan, financial markets were closed after Islamist militants killed more than 100 people in the commercial capital Mumbai.

Violence in India and political unrest in Thailand highlighted political risk as an extra potential threat to emerging markets battered by the global crisis.

"These awful events are reinforcing the nervousness about emerging markets, which have been weak any way for some time after the U.S. slowdown and the domino effect," said Justin Urquhart Stewart, investment director at Seven Investment Management in London.

The economic warnings from China's top planner came a day after its central bank cut interest rates by the biggest margin in 11 years in response to the worst global downturn in decades.

A crisis that began last year with the collapse of the U.S. housing market has spread around the world, bringing several financial institutions to their knees and pushing the United States, Japan and Europe into recession or to the brink of it.

China's State Information Centre, a government think-tank, forecast annual growth would slow to 8 percent this quarter from 9 percent in the third quarter, a rapid cooling from double-digit rates recorded in the past five years.

"The global financial crisis has not bottomed out yet. The impact is spreading globally and deepening in China. Some domestic economic indicators point to an accelerated slowdown in November," Zhang Ping, chairman of the National Development and Reform Commission, told a news conference.

With factories closing by the thousands, Chinese officials have grown increasingly concerned in recent weeks that slowing growth may threaten the stability that the ruling Communist party craves for its 1.3 billion people.

Slowing demand for Chinese exports in the West is curbing growth and there is no relief in sight.

The euro zone is likely to be in recession next year, European Union Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Joaquin Almunia said, reversing a forecast of slight growth made earlier this month.

Almunia would not give a specific forecast for 2009, but said next year may not mark the end of the euro zone's troubles. "The crisis may not end in 2009," he said.

Emphasizing the bleak outlook, the euro zone's business climate indicator fell to its lowest in more than 15 years in November, European Commission data showed.

BANKING WOES

Aggressive interest rate cuts and trillions of dollars in financial sector bailouts and stimulus packages have been the order of the day since the collapse of Lehman Brothers in September, followed by a lending freeze and the spread of financial pain to consumers and businesses.

The world's banking system is still not strong enough to support the economy and avoid a recession, the head of Britain's financial regulator told an Italian newspaper in an interview.

Adair Turner, chairman of Britain's Financial Services Authority, added that the two key issues were bank capital strength and liquidity.

Japan's Norinchukin Bank said it would raise more than $10.5 billion to shore up its capital, the largest fundraising by a Japanese financial firm since the start of the global credit crisis.

Norinchukin, the unlisted central bank for Japan's agricultural and fishery cooperatives, said it plans to raise more than 1 trillion yen ($10.5 billion) through its associated cooperatives by the end of March.

COMPANIES SUFFER

Battered global stocks rose to their highest level in nearly two weeks with European equities buoyed by sharp gains in Asia and the United States, dampening demand for safer assets such as government debt.

European government bond yields crept up as stocks gained ground, ending recent declines that mirrored steep falls in U.S. Treasury yields.

On Wednesday, the U.S. benchmark 10-year yield hit a 50-year low below 3.0 percent after a flood of bleak U.S. economic reports spurred demand for government debt. U.S. markets were closed on Thursday for the Thanksgiving Day holiday.

Despite the share price rises, there was little good news from companies.

Top global miner BHP Billiton cited a drop in China's demand for iron ore when it painted a gloomy outlook for its business and defended its decision to drop a $66 billion bid for rival Rio Tinto.

ArcelorMittal, the world's largest steelmaker, said it was likely to start short-time working and cut production at its German steel plants in December.

Two of Britain's most high profile retailers DSG and Kingfisher underlined the severity of the economic slowdown with downbeat results and gloomy outlooks, while variety story group Woolworths went into administration.

Britain's retailers face a brutal downturn in consumer spending, amid sliding house prices and rising unemployment.

China Shares Slightly Higher, Rate-Cut Rally Fades

China shares surrendered most of an early rally to close slightly higher Thursday as continued worries about the slowing economy overshadowed the country's biggest interest rate cut in 11 years.

The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index closed up 1.1 percent, or 19.98 points, at 1917.86 after rising as much as 6.6 percent. The Shenzhen Composite Index for China's smaller second market rose 1.7 percent to close at 544.1.

Elsewhere in Asia, markets rose on China's rate cut late Wednesday. Japan's benchmark Nikkei 225 jumped 2 percent, Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index was up 1.2 percent and Korea's KOSPI Composite Index added 3.3 percent.

China slashed the interest on a one-year bank loan by 1.08 percentage points to spur private borrowing and support a multibillion-dollar government package to boost slowing economic growth. Investors had been expecting a cut and markets fell Monday when it failed to materialize over the weekend.

''The interest rate cut already was factored into investors' expectations, although the cut was bigger than expected,'' said Zhang Gang, an analyst for Central China Securities.

More rate cuts and other stimulus moves are expected because ''the worst time for the economy has not arrived yet,'' Zhang said.

Real estate, construction and steel stocks gained on expectations that the rate cut might boost housing sales.

China Vanke Ltd., the country's biggest developer, jumped 3.1 percent to 7.01 yuan and Cofco Property Group added 3.5 percent to 6.17 yuan.

Baoshan Iron & Steel Ltd., the country's biggest steel producer, posted a 2.2 percent gain to 5.13 yuan, and Xinjiang Ba Yi Iron & Steel Ltd., surged by the daily limit of 10 percent to 6.29 yuan.

Tangshan Jidong Cement Ltd. soared by the daily limit to 9.65 yuan, Fujian Cement Inc. rose 5.5 percent to 4.41 yuan and Hebei Taihang Cement Ltd. added 2.2 percent to 6 yuan.

Major banks were flat on expectations that the rate cut might squeeze their profits.

China Southern Airlines and China Eastern Airlines were suspended from trading while they announced financing moves. Southern Airlines said it will get 3 billion yuan ($440 million) from the government to help the carrier through a financial crisis. China Eastern said it was seeking similar help.

In currency dealings, China's yuan was traded at 6.8289 to the U.S.dollar in over-the-counter trading around 0800 GMT, down slightly from the close of 6.8282 in the previous session.

Food Prices Expected to Keep Going Up

For more than a year, food manufacturers have been shaving package sizes and raising prices, declaring that they had little choice because of unprecedented increases in the cost of raw ingredients like corn, soybeans and wheat.

Now, with the price of grains and other commodities plunging, it may seem logical that grocery prices will follow. But while prices for some items like milk and fresh produce are dropping, those of most packaged items and meat are holding firm or even increasing. Experts warn that consumers should not expect lower prices anytime soon on most items at the grocery store or in restaurants.

Government and industry economists project that the overall cost of food will continue to climb in 2009, led by increases for meat and poultry. A big reason, they say, is that food companies still have not caught up with the prolonged run-up in commodity prices, which remain above historical averages despite coming down from their highs early this year.

The Agriculture Department is forecasting that food prices will increase 3.5 to 4.5 percent in 2009, compared with an estimated 5 to 6 percent increase by the end of this year.

Some economists project even steeper increases next year. For instance, Bill Lapp, principal at Advanced Economic Solutions in Omaha, said he expected food prices to jump 7 to 9 percent next year.

“For the last 21 months, food manufacturers, restaurants and livestock producers have been absorbing significant costs that in my view are likely to be passed on to consumers in 2009 and beyond,” said Mr. Lapp, a former chief economist at ConAgra Foods.

While predicting future food prices is an inexact science, data released by the Labor Department last week suggested the forecasters might be right.

Overall consumer prices recorded the biggest drop in the history of the Consumer Price Index, but food prices continued to inch upward, albeit at a slower pace than in previous months. The C.P.I. showed that grocery prices rose 0.1 percent in October.

Some of the more visible items on grocery shelves, including produce and dairy products, dropped sharply in recent weeks, but not enough to offset the general trend of rising prices. Restaurant prices rose 0.5 percent in October.

Commodity prices began climbing rapidly in the fall of 2007, and food companies were hit hard by the increases. They tried to slow eroding profit margins by cutting operating costs, making packages smaller and raising prices.

Some companies, like Kellogg and Heinz, have managed to offset the higher ingredient costs and post robust profits by using shrewd commodity hedges and by raising prices without losing many customers. They also benefited from a trend of consumers eating out less and buying more groceries.

But other food companies have struggled. Hershey, for instance, locked in high cocoa prices this year only to see prices drop this fall, analysts say. And meat and poultry companies have been hit by higher feed costs and a limited ability to charge higher prices, at least in the short term.

Now, even though costs for ingredients like corn and wheat have dropped, meat and poultry providers say they still have not raised prices enough to cover their increased costs. And packaged food manufacturers are unlikely to lower prices because commodity costs remain relatively high and they are still trying to rebuild eroded margins.

Michael Mitchell, a spokesman for Kraft Foods, said that the company’s food ingredient costs this year were running $2 billion higher than in 2007, a 13 percent increase, but that the company had raised its overall prices by only 7 percent.

William P. Roenigk, senior vice president and chief economist for the National Chicken Council, said his industry had been losing money for more than a year. Chicken producers are now trying to recover those costs by reducing production, which will eventually alter the balance between supply and demand. “The time is coming when we’re going to see a very significant increase in the retail price of chicken,” he said.

The restaurant industry, which has been battered by a sharp drop in customers, also says it has not been able to raise prices enough to keep pace with the cost of ingredients.

People in the restaurant business said they did not like raising prices during an economic downturn. “If anything in this environment, one would be looking at the ability to offer much greater emphasis on value pricing in restaurant menus,” said Hudson Riehle, chief economist of the National Restaurant Association. “In contrast, exactly the opposite is happening. Our operators are being forced to raise menu prices at the highest rate since 1990.”
Predictions about food prices are subject to change because commodity prices are unpredictable. Ephraim Leibtag, an economist for the Agriculture Department, said food inflation would slow by the middle of next year if commodity prices remained low. “Right now the forecast is about 4 percent, but that would be lowered if we do not see any surge in commodity costs over the next few months,” he said.

A reason that overall food prices are expected to continue increasing is the lag between price increases for basic commodities and for finished food products in the grocery store, particularly for meat and processed foods. Consider the price of corn, an ingredient in things like cereal and breaded shrimp. It was not too long ago that corn hovered around $2 or $3 a bushel.

But corn prices began climbing last fall and peaked around $8 a bushel in June. They have since dropped to about $3.50 a bushel, still above the historical norm. Some food manufacturers locked in prices for corn and other commodities in the spring and summer, fearing that prices could go even higher. But prices fell instead, and they are now stuck with the higher prices until their contracts expire.

When costs go up for livestock producers, they are often unable to immediately raise prices because those prices are set on the open market, which is dictated by supply and demand. Instead, they begin reducing the size of their herds or flocks, which eventually leads to less meat on the market and higher prices. But reducing livestock production can take months to years, and in the interim it can actually suppress prices as breeding animals are slaughtered to reduce production.

The prospect of more food inflation is inflaming a debate over its causes. Many food manufacturers and economists maintain that one culprit is government policies promoting the use of ethanol fuel made from corn.

About a third of the corn crop is used for ethanol, putting ethanol producers in competition with livestock farmers and food manufacturers. The result, they contend, is that prices for corn are now higher and more volatile.

“The connection of oil prices to agricultural commodities is new as of 2007, and it’s a major game changer for those in the food production business,” said Thomas E. Elam, president of FarmEcon, a consulting firm.

But ethanol advocates counter that the food industry’s arguments have been proved false, saying that corn prices have declined as ethanol production is increasing. Matt Hartwig, spokesman for the Renewable Fuels Association, an ethanol industry group, said food companies were “very quick to tell the American public that they had to raise food prices because corn was so expensive, and that the reason corn was so expensive was corn-based ethanol.”

Mr. Hartwig added: “Now, clearly, we know that relationship doesn’t exist. If ethanol isn’t the reason, what is the real reason for food prices going up?”