Friday, March 6, 2015

China central bank says M2 growth expectations should be flexible: report

China central bank says M2 growth expectations should be flexible: report


[SHANGHAI] China should remain flexible on M2 growth expectations and not be overly concerned about meeting numerical targets, People's Bank of China chief Zhou Xiaochuan told a news conference, the official Shanghai Securities News reported.
This year's growth target for China's M2 - a broad-based measure of money supply - is 12 per cent, but will be adjusted according to the needs of economic growth and may be higher, according to a working paper released during the annual full session of the National People's Congress, the country's parliament.
While assessing M2 supply is a useful indicator of economic health, as conditions change the connection between M2, the effect of macro-economic regulation and control, inflation and economic growth becomes unstable, the paper reported Zhou as telling the Friday news conference.
Zhou said other indicators, such as employment, growth and inflation were better measures of the real economy and central banks in many countries no longer considered M2 targets important.







Last year, China's M2 growth target was set at 13 per cent, while the actual growth rate was 12.2 per cent.
REUTERS


China says aims to finish Asian free-trade talks by Dec

China says aims to finish Asian free-trade talks by Dec


[BEIJING] China hopes to finish talks on creating an Asian free-trade bloc estimated to cover 28 per cent of the world economy by the end of this year, the country's trade minister said on Saturday.
Gao Hucheng said on the sidelines of China's annual session of parliament that China would work hard to wrap up talks for the RCEP, or Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, before the end of this year.
RCEP, which comprises of the 10-nation ASEAN club plus six others - China, India, Japan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand - is a Beijing-backed trade framework that has gained prominence as an alternative to US trade plans.
ASEAN, or the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, groups Vietnam, Thailand, Singapore, the Philippines, Malaysia, Myanmar, Laos, Indonesia, Cambodia, and Brunei.




The United States has been leading negotiations on a more comprehensive US-backed Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade plan that involves 12 countries, not including China.
Mr Gao said China was closely monitoring and assessing the impact of the TPP deal on global trade, and that the Chinese government welcomed any trade framework that was open and transparent.
China will "continue to unswervingly push forward and quicken the pace of China's free-trade agreement strategy", Mr Gao told a news conference.
He reiterated that China was confident of growing its trade flows by around 6 percent this year, as targeted by the government, even though he warned that the country's import and export growth likely shrank in February.
China is set to release its February trade data on Sunday, and exports are forecast to recover after a grim January reading.
The median forecast of 16 analysts polled by Reuters showed annual export growth probably shot up to 14.2 per cent on an annual basis in February, recovering from a 3.3 per cent contraction in January that surprised analysts.
Imports are seen declining again, however, dropping 10.0 per cent, although still an improvement compared to January's plunge of 19.9 per cent.
REUTERS


Dollar rallies as jobs growth spurs rate hike expectations

Dollar rallies as jobs growth spurs rate hike expectations


[NEW YORK] The dollar jumped to an 11-1/2-year high against a basket of currencies on Friday as robust US employment growth fueled expectations that the Federal Reserve was closer to raising interest rates.
The euro fell below US$1.09 for the first time since September 2003. It was last at US$1.0862, off 1.50 per cent for the day.
The dollar accelerated after the government reported that US nonfarm payrolls grew by 295,000 in February, exceeding expectations of 240,000 new jobs. The unemployment rate fell to a more than 6-1/2-year low of 5.5 per cent. "We feel the economy is in a position for the Fed to begin normalising policy," said Sam Bullard, senior economist at Wells Fargo Securities in Charlotte, North Carolina. "We think it is on the path to make a rate change in June." The dollar index, which measures the greenback against six major currencies, climbed more than 1 per cent to 97.726, the highest level since September 2003, according to Thomson Reuters data.
US interest rates futures signaled that investors were placing more bets the Fed might raise rates this summer, though they have not fully priced in such a move until late 2015. "Markets are pricing in something less dovish," said Nick Verdi, currency strategist at Standard Chartered Bank in New York.





US bond yields, relatively high in comparison to European rates and a key attraction for foreign investors, also rose sharply after the unexpectedly strong employment report.
The euro has been in a long slide and slipped below US$1.10 on Thursday, when the European Central Bank set a Monday start for its 1.1 trillion euro bond-buying programme, designed to lower euro zone interest rates and spur growth.
The dollar was last up 0.50 per cent against the yen, to 120.72 yen, while the British pound lost 1 per cent against the dollar and last hovered just over US$1.50.
The 30-year Treasury fell sharply in price, which lifted its yield to 2.8703 per cent, a high not seen in more than two months.
REUTERS


Wall Street firms more convinced of June rate hike: Reuters poll

Wall Street firms more convinced of June rate hike: Reuters poll


[NEW YORK] Many of Wall Street's biggest banks are more convinced that the Federal Reserve will raise rates in June after a strong February jobs report Friday pointed to a sustained economic growth and as the lowest jobless rate hit a more than 6-1/2 year-low.
Nine of 16 primary dealers, or the banks that deal directly with the Fed, said they expect a June lift-off date, compared to 10 of 19 who predicted the rate hike in a Feb 6 poll. All but one expect more than one rate hike in 2015.
Though just over half the economists polled predicted a mid-year rate hike, six dealers polled said their conviction that the Fed would raise rates in three months time had increased in the last month.
The median expectation for where the federal funds rate will end the year was 0.875 per cent for 2015 and 2.375 per cent for 2016, compared to 0.75 per cent and 2.125 per cent, respectively, in a February Reuters poll.





The Fed has held rates near zero since the 2008 financial crisis, having ended its bond-buying program in October. Fed Chair Janet Yellen has reiterated that policymakers will remain "patient" in deciding when to raise rates, which she defined in December and January as a "couple" of meetings.
But Friday's jobs report, which showed that US employers added 295,000 jobs in February - far exceeding expectations - means the Fed could move more aggressively to tighten policy, economists said. "The strength of the jobs data today argues in favor of the Fed allowing itself the flexibility to soon drop the word 'patient'" from its statement, said Dana Saporta, economist at Credit Suisse, who expects a June rate hike. "Policy right now is geared toward emergency conditions and we've been recovering since 2009." On average, economists said there was a 47.5 per cent probability the Fed will raise rates in the first half of 2015. Of the nine who predicted a mid-year rate hike, seven answered a Reuters question on the probability of such an occurrence, with the median probability at 55 per cent.
Traders on Friday were pricing in a more aggressive pace of policy tightening, though the consensus, based on market rates, still puts September as the most likely point for the first increase.
Fed funds futures contracts on Friday suggested traders were pricing in just a 22 per cent probability of a June rate hike. The first contract with a greater-than-50 per cent probability of a hike is September 2015, at 66 per cent, according to CME Fed Watch.
Goldman Sachs economist Jan Hatzius told CNBC that he expects the Fed to raise rates by September; the firm did not respond to the Reuters poll. Five other firms also did not take part.
REUTERS


Thursday, March 5, 2015

For the 'unbanked', mobile money still has some way to go

For the 'unbanked', mobile money still has some way to go


[BOSTON] Globally, an estimated 2.5 billion people don't have a bank account, but many own a cellphone, fuelling a race to turn these phones into bank books for the 'unbanked' to store cash, manage their accounts, make purchases and send and receive money - part of so-called 'financial inclusion'.
In a report this week, the GSMA, the association of mobile phone companies, said mobile money "has been growing at a dizzying rate."
The Boston Consulting Group said last month mobile money transfers in sub-Saharan Africa alone could generate fees of up to US$1.5 billion by 2019.
However, consultants and others working at banks, government agencies and even the phone companies note that, while many people have mobile money accounts - usually with the phone companies - few are actively used. While money flows through these networks, nearly two thirds of the volume comes from users merely topping up prepaid mobile accounts in transactions averaging less than a dollar.



"If you take out air-time, you have a true view of mobile money, and it's not a good story, more than a decade on," says South Africa-based Johan de Lange, who works with banks and phone companies.
And, when people do make remittances, those receiving the money tend to cash it in, taking the money out of the system and limiting the potential for mobile money to become a medium of exchange - a mobile wallet for buying things or to provide banking services over mobile networks.
A GSMA spokesperson said air-time top-ups were decreasing as a proportion of overall transactions, and domestic money transfers via mobile were cheaper or safer than other options, and so were "a key piece of the financial inclusion story."
POLICE PAY
Use of mobile money, indeed, is spreading and there are success stories, but these are few relative to the number of projects, and consultants and others question just how successful they are.
In Afghanistan, for example, much has been made of a service to send police salaries direct to their cellphones via a code they present to an agent or bank for cash. This has reduced corruption, where police pay was often halved as it made its way through the bureaucratic chain.
But the service last year reached less than 1 per cent of the police force, and cost the Law and Order Trust Fund For Afghanistan more than US$10 per transaction - much of which goes to Roshan, the phone company which runs the service with Vodafone.
The fund said last year it was exploring cheaper options.
The poster child for telco-driven mobile money services is M-Pesa, set up by Vodafone and run by Kenya's Safaricom Ltd . Mobile money accounts for more than a fifth of its 145 billion shillings (US$1.59 billion) annual revenue.
Daniel Maison, a consultant in Kenya, uses M-Pesa to buy petrol, pay restaurant bills or shop at the supermarket.
"It's a part of our lives. We wonder what we did without it. I don't need to physically have cash. The beauty is you can even have a savings account on your mobile phone," he told Reuters.
But some note the M-Pesa service owed much of its take-off to the electoral violence in 2007-08 that displaced many Kenyans and made it hard for others to travel. Sending money by phone was the next best thing. Consultants also say the company's figures hide the fact that mobile money transactions involve sending notifications via short service message (SMS), a cost the operator effectively subsidises.
"If everyone had to pay for these messages, I wonder how many (telco) 'rock stars' there would be," said Malcolm Vernon, a London-based mobile money consultant who works in Africa, Asia and Europe.
TAKING WING
This is not to say that mobile money has no future in emerging markets.
After six years, Wing in Cambodia made a modest profit last year with fewer than 50,000 active accounts, many of them held by farmers and shopkeepers paying their suppliers remotely.
Anthony Perkins, CEO of Wing, once part of Australia and New Zealand Banking Group, says the secret is to think more like a bank than a phone company, such as nurturing a network of agents who can receive and dispense cash.
Some of these 'human ATMs' can earn eight times the average national income. "Running an agent network is really no different than running a branch network," Mr Perkins said.
He and others say that while phone companies, with their reach and flexibility, are good tools for rolling out networks, they aren't necessarily the best to move mobile money beyond simple transactions into becoming a nationwide, or international, digital money system.
The telcos' main priorities, they point out, aren't so much the social goals of financial inclusion, but to reduce churn - keeping customers from jumping to a rival firm - and to maximise the amount users spend on their network. "I don't understand why it's being left to telcos to bring this financial inclusion to the masses," said Mr Perkins.
"Even in a small country like Cambodia you can make money out of this."
REUTERS

China loses millionaires as overseas citizenship tempts richest

China loses millionaires as overseas citizenship tempts richest


[BEIJING] More than 76,000 Chinese millionaires emigrated or acquired citizenship of another country in the decade through 2013 amid global expansion by the nation's companies.
Australia was among the most favored destinations, broker Knight Frank LLP said on Thursday, citing data compiled by law firm Fragomen LLP. The Chinese accounted for more than 90 percent of applications for the country's significant investor visa in the two years to the end of January, representing 1,384 people. They also make the most applications for high-net-worth visas in the UK and the US.
"Ultimately, there is a desire from wealthy Chinese to relocate," said Liam Bailey, head of research at Knight Frank. Some work for a business "that's trying to become a global player so they need a footprint in London, New York and LA, and having staff relocate is quite a positive," he said.
More than 300 Chinese investors applied for the UK's Tier 1 visa, which requires a 2 million-pound (S$4.1 million) investment in British assets, in the first nine months of last year, according to the report. More than 160 of the 703 applications were from Russia.






India follows China in the export of its millionaires, with 43,400 emigrating or getting overseas citizenship during the decade, according to the report. Russia was fifth at 14,000.
More than 114,000 of the world's millionaires moved to the UK in the period, making it the most popular destination. Singapore ranked second with 45,000 and the US was third with 42,400.
Switzerland's increased banking transparency has made it less attractive to the "mobile wealthy" and some millionaires who had moved there are now relocating to Singapore, the UK and the United Arab Emirates, the report said.
"There is a small but growing number of potential buyers who will find it increasingly difficult to access foreign property markets" because of new regulations and increased tax data sharing between governments, the report said.
BLOOMBERG


Britain seeking quick sale of RBS bank: report

Britain seeking quick sale of RBS bank: report


[LONDON] Britain is looking to sell the Royal Bank of Scotland as quickly as possible, Chancellor George Osborne told the Financial Times on Thursday.
Mr Osborne told the newspaper he hoped to sell the bank "as quickly as we can get rid of it" after the May general election, and that the public "want to see they get their money back" but that it could take years.
RBS is about 80 per cent owned by the British government after it stepped in to bail out the bank with £45.5 billion (S$95 billion) of public money in 2008 at the height of the financial crisis, the world's biggest bank bailout.
Despite major restructuring and thousands of job cuts the bank has since reported losses of almost £50 billion.
RBS announced in February it would hugely reduce its investment banking operations worldwide, and Mr Osborne told the Financial Times he regretted not imposing a radical restructuring on the bank earlier.
AFP


Fed should not be too patient on US rate hikes, Williams says

Fed should not be too patient on US rate hikes, Williams says


[HONOLULU] Federal Reserve policymakers should not wait too long to raise interest rates, a top US central banker said on Thursday, because doing so could mean"drastically" overshooting on inflation and forcing the Fed to hike rates dramatically.
"I think that by mid-year it will be the time to have a serious discussion about starting to raise rates," San Francisco Fed chief John Williams said.
With the US economy likely to reach full employment by year's end or even sooner, and inflation looking likely to return to 2 per cent within the next two years, waiting on raising rates is riskier than going ahead and starting, he said.
"Overshooting our target would force us into a much more dramatic rate hike to reverse course, which could have a destabilizing effect on the markets and possibly damage the economic recovery," Mr Williams said in remarks prepared for delivery to the CFA Society of Hawaii. "I see a safer course in a gradual increase, and that calls for starting a bit earlier."





The hawkish remarks from the normally centrist Mr Williams do much to suggest the era of rock bottom interest rates is nearing an end.
At a meeting in less than two weeks, Fed policymakers are set to debate whether to open a door to the possibility of a June rate hike by removing a vow to be "patient" in raising rates.
Mr Williams' concern over waiting too long marks a stark contrast with the dovish worries of another policymaker, Chicago Fed chief Charles Evans, who earlier this week called for delaying rate hikes until 2016, citing the dangers of premature rate increases.
Mr Williams wrote his speech before Evans gave his, yet his pointed comments suggest the depths of disagreement over the course of policy at the US central bank.
"The case for extensive patience certainly has valid points, and esteemed supporters, so let me explain my position," Mr Williams said as he launched into a defence of early rate hikes, including a look back at 1965, when similarly low inflation during a time of similar economic growth gave way in short order to an economy "on a tear."
REUTERS


Bank of England keeps rates on hold, six years after crisis cut

Bank of England keeps rates on hold, six years after crisis cut


[LONDON] The Bank of England marked the sixth anniversary of the introduction of its lowest ever interest rate by standing pat once again on Thursday, but an improving economy suggests rates are likely to rise at some point over the next 12 months.
While no economist polled by Reuters expects the Monetary Policy Committee to raise rates before a May 7 national election, given Britain's record low inflation, there are signs that policymakers believe a rate hike could come sooner than markets believe.
The Bank said on Thursday it was keeping rates at 0.5 per cent, their level since the depths of the financial crisis.
Minutes of the meeting, explaining the debate among rate-setters, are due to be published in just under two weeks'time.





Business surveys this week showed Britain's economy started 2015 strongly, and wage data in the next few months could provide some policymakers with enough evidence that it can start to be weaned off low borrowing costs.
"The MPC's decision to stand pat today ... looks set to repeated over the next few months while inflation hovers near zero," said Samuel Tombs, economist at Capital Economics. "But by the summer, it should be clear that the UK's deflation is neither pernicious nor long-lasting."
While there has been scant evidence that uncertainty around May's election has deterred business investment, the strong possibility of an indecisive outcome presents another reason to hold rates until later in the year.
Financial markets currently price in a first rate hike around the turn of 2016, but two policymakers - Martin Weale and Kristin Forbes - have warned that rates could rise in the near future if inflation shoots up from current low levels.
MPC member Ian McCafferty, who voted with Weale to raise rates from August through December, has said he will keep a close eye on wage data over the next few months before deciding whether to resume voting for higher rates.
For now, though, most MPC members seem content to wait and see how far inflation falls before considering a rate hike.
Last month's quarterly economic forecasts from the Bank indicated that consumer price inflation is likely to turn negative for the first time on record in the next few months.
Governor Mark Carney has said he expects the Bank's next move to be an increase in interest rates, although he said more stimulus could be required if inflation stayed around zero for more than a year.
The timing of a first interest rate hike from the US Federal Reserve will also weigh on BoE policymakers.
Seven of the 17 members of the Fed's policy committee have now said they at least want the option of a June tightening on the table.
The situation in Britain stands in contrast to the eurozone, where the European Central Bank was due to flesh out its bond-buying stimulus plan later on Thursday.
REUTERS

Bitcoin’s golden moment: BIT gets FINRA approval

Bitcoin’s golden moment: BIT gets FINRA approval

Philippe Lopez | AFP | Getty Images
Online wallet and exchange services such as Coinbase have made it incredibly easy for the everyday investor and user of bitcoin to buy the currency. But what if you want to buy and hold bitcoin as an investment? Or, what if you want to diversify your investment portfolio into this new asset class, but do not have the expertise or resources to securely procure and store bitcoin?
One solution to this problem has been the Bitcoin Investment Trust (BIT), which holds bitcoin in a trust in which investors can then buy shares. The BIT has been a private vehicle open to accredited investors since 2013, but that is about to change.
On March 1, 2015, Grayscale Investments (the sponsor of the BIT) announced that it has received regulatory approval from FINRA for the fund to trade publicly on an electronic platform operated by the OTC Markets Group.
This announcement ensures that the BIT will be the first publicly traded bitcoin investment fund and could pave the way for more stability in the price of bitcoin. It is also possible that a publicly traded fund like the BIT could have the same effect on the price of bitcoin as the SPDR Gold ETF had on the spot price of gold.
When GLD began to trade, the spot price of gold was trading just above $400 per ounce. Prior to launch of the GLD, in order to purchase and store gold, investors needed to call a broker who specialized in buying spot gold and then arrange for storage. This meant opening new accounts and paying for vault space.
Alternatively, many investors opted for the simple solution of buying gold coins and storing them in a safe deposit box. However, this method was not very efficient and as a result investing in gold was difficult for the average investor.
Once investors had an ETF option, the diversification into gold began in earnest. Propelled by ease of investment and a well-timed financial crisis, the price of gold more than quadrupled to over $1900 in 2011.
I have previously written about the inverse relationship between the price of bitcoin and merchant acceptance. There has been a flawed assumption that merchant acceptance will push the price of bitcoin ever higher. However, the evidence suggests differently. In fact, it appears that increased merchant acceptance has been a drag on the bitcoin price. The following chart illustrates that as bitcoin transactions increase the price declines.
The best explanation for this phenomenon is that as merchants receive bitcoin they immediately convert to fiat currencies. This selling pressure could be a big driver of the downward slope in price despite corporations like Dell and Microsoft accepting the digital currency. However, the public listing of the BIT could change this relationship.
There is really nothing mysterious about financial markets, they simple represent a place where buyer and seller agree on price, but disagree on value. If the seller values fiat currency more than bitcoin (perhaps to pay employee salaries in US Dollars) then they are more likely to accept a lower price.
On the other side of the bitcoin transaction is the buyer which currently consists of long term investors. A falling price suggests that the sellers either outnumber the buyers or are more aggressive in terms of price.
Presently there is very little competition between buyers, but an easy on-ramp to investing could change that dynamic. As long term investors enter the space the BIT may provide the needed competition for a scarce resource that will push the price higher. This is exactly what occurred when GLD was launched.
Competition for a scarce resource is not a development unique to digital currency - this is the way markets have operated for thousands of years.

Oil under pressure on US stance over Iran; dollar strength

Oil under pressure on US stance over Iran; dollar strength


[NEW YORK] Oil prices came under pressure in Thursday's early trading in New York as the United States maintained its stance of pursuing a nuclear deal with Iran even as it said it will closely watch the Opec member's actions.
The dollar's strength against the euro, which fell to 11-1/2 year lows, also weighed on oil and other dollar-denominated commodities, traders said.
US crude were down 40 cents at US$51.13 a barrel by 9:20 am EST (1420 GMT), after rallying nearly US$1 earlier in the session. Benchmark Brent crude was up 30 cents at US$60.85 a barrel, sharply paring gains from an earlier high at US$61.57.
US Secretary of State John Kerry said Washington was not seeking a "grand bargain" with Iran, in reference to wider political and security cooperation, and that a nuclear deal with Tehran would address security concerns of Gulf Arab countries.
REUTERS



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