* Germany's Merkel meets coalition on stimulus plans
* Obama eyes up to $310 billion in tax cuts
* Euro zone investment survey shows unexpected rise
* US stocks slip; Asian, European shares rally
* U.S. December auto sales tumble again
(For stories on the financial crisis, click on [nCRISIS])
(Recasts, adds U.S. auto sales data)
By Matt Daily
NEW YORK, Jan 5 (Reuters) - The prospect of new tax cuts in
the United States and Germany injected a measure of New Year
cheer on Monday, even as automakers wrapped up 2008 as their
worst in more than 15 years with yet another month of slumping
U.S. sales.
Automakers continue to suffer from weak U.S. demand, with
General Motors Corp , Ford Motor Co and Toyota all
reporting December sales declines of more than 30 percent.
[ID:nL5118725]
Asian stocks climbed to a two-month high on optimism that
massive government spending programs will revive global growth,
and European shares also advanced, though U.S. stocks gave back
part of the strong gains racked up last week.
In a move that could help speed approval of a new stimulus
plan in the United States, U.S. President-elect Barack Obama
will seek as much as $310 billion in tax cuts as part of a move
to counter what senior policymakers warned could be a prolonged
period of economic stagnation and deflation. [ID:nN04350872]
Still, one top Democratic senator said enactment would not
likely come until February despite congressional Democrats'
hopes to present the incoming president with a stimulus measure
to sign in the early days of his term.
In Germany, Chancellor Angela Merkel met her Social
Democrat (SPD) coalition partners to discuss a second fiscal
stimulus deal worth up to 50 billion euros. That would come on
top of a 31 billion euro package last year that Merkel's
critics -- including some European Union allies -- believe was
too small to haul Europe's leading economy out of recession.
[nL57838]
Merkel on Sunday came out in favor of tax relief moves she
had previously ruled out until after September's federal
election. But she faced tough talks to get the SPD to agree.
"It will be very difficult to get a common denominator on
tax," Andrea Nahles, SPD deputy leader, told German radio. No
firm decisions were expected on Monday, but a government
spokesman said talks would prepare the groundwork for a Jan. 12
deal.
The stimulus plans by the world's No. 1 and No. 3 economies
mark the latest attempts to tackle a financial crisis that
began with U.S. mortgage defaults in 2007 and snowballed into
global market turmoil that threatens much of the world with a
deep recession.
Along the way, the crisis has reshaped the banking
landscape and pushed countries to the brink of bankruptcy.
U.S. CAR WOES
Chrysler LLC led the industry lower with U.S. sales that
dropped by 53 percent in December, a month when the struggling
automaker and larger rival GM fought to clinch a $17.4-billion
bailout from the U.S. government.
Toyota Motor Corp <7203.T>, the world's largest automaker,
posted a sales drop of 37 percent, followed by Honda Motor Co
<7267.T> at 35 percent and Ford Motor Co at 32 percent.
GM and Nissan Motor Co <7201.T> saw sales drop 31 percent.
That followed December auto sales figures from Japan and
France, which posted steep falls of 22 percent and 15.8
percent, respectively, adding to a swathe of grim data from an
industry bearing the brunt of wrecked consumer confidence.
Meanwhile overseas, data published on Monday increased the
pressure on the ECB to keep cutting interest rates. Spanish
inflation in December was the lowest in a decade, at 1.5
percent, while Italian inflation fell to a 14-month low of 2.3
percent. [nL581407]
In Asia, December data showed greater-than-expected easing
of inflation in Thailand, Indonesia and Taiwan, raising the
prospect of temporary deflation and further rate cuts there.
[nTP361427]
Some investors, however, have begun to make tentative bets
that the worst of the turmoil, which took a sharp turn for the
worse in September with the collapse of investment bank Lehman
Brothers, is over.
Kicking off the first full week of 2009, they pushed up
Asian and European stocks, the dollar and commodities while
selling safe-haven plays such as government bonds and the
Japanese yen. [MKTS/GLOB]
In the United States, government spending on projects
helped limit a decline in construction spending to 0.6 percent
in November, beating Wall Street forecasts, although private
home building remained dismal and was likely to keep
tumbling.[nN05374612]
SURPRISE UPTURN
Sentiment among euro zone investors improved for the first
time in seven months in January, showing its biggest rise since
August 2005, though morale among the 16 nations remained
negative, the Sentix research group said. [nL5126936]
"In the eyes of investors, measures taken by many states
and central banks worldwide seem to be having an impact. We
assume many indicators will follow the early indication from
Sentix in the coming weeks and months," Sentix said.
Asian stocks hit a two-month high and the FTSEurofirst 300
<.FTEU3> fell 1.9 percent, but U.S. stocks <.DJI> dipped nearly
1 percent.
Oil prices were above $48.50 a barrel as crude extended its
rise to more than 40 percent since late December on Israel's
incursion into Gaza and the Russian gas dispute continued.
(Reporting by Reuters bureaus worldwide; Editing by Mike
Peacock, Brian Moss and Bernard Orr)