Thursday, August 6, 2015

Gloom deepens for local firms in Q2: survey

Gloom deepens for local firms in Q2: survey

Economists lay blame on domestic and external factors, including the slowdown in China


Singapore
DARK clouds lingered over the local business environment in the second quarter this year, as firms in Singapore became even more downcast amid the ongoing global economic uncertainty and domestic restructuring of the economy. Economists, reacting to the findings of the latest Business Times-UniSIM Business Climate Survey, said they expect the pall to hang over Singapore at least until the US economy recovers.
The figures pointed to the continued deterioration in business sentiments from April through June; companies notched up poorer sales, thinner profits and a lower number of orders overall. The survey, for which 181 companies were polled in June and July, also found that pessimism over business prospects had spread to even more firms than in Q1.
Based on its findings, the poll predicts that the Q3 gross domestic product (GDP) will expand 1.8 per cent year on year - not much better than the official flash estimate of 1.7 per cent year-on-year growth in Q2 GDP. The full Q2 GDP figures will be out next week. Both the poor Q2 showing and bleak prospects for Q3 came as no surprise to economists, who attributed these to a combination of external and domestic factors, including the drastic slowdown in China and uncertainty in the euro zone.



OCBC economist Selena Ling, noting the sluggish growth in the US, potential headwinds from the upcoming US interest rate hike and domestic restructuring issues including the labour crunch and high business costs, said: "Market sentiments are also being hurt by the China-related volatilities and questions about whether the Chinese policy stimulus measures are really solving the problem."
Of the companies polled, half (51 per cent) said they expected their business prospects would be bleaker in H2 2015 than H2 2014. Only 15 per cent of companies believed that their prospects would brighten; the remaining 34 per cent expected no change.
The gap between the pessimists and optimists, known as the net balance, was thus -36 per cent for Q2, a substantial seven percentage points worse than the -29 per cent net balance for business prospects in Q1.
The BT-UniSIM business prospects figure, a year-on-year one, was far worse than those from two official business-expectations surveys released late last month, which were both not year-on-year. One set of figures came from a poll by the Economic Development Board, which asked manufacturers about their business outlook for July through December, compared with April through June. This survey produced a slightly-positive 2 per cent net balance.
The other set of figures, from a survey of the services sector by the Department of Statistics (DOS), also put the sector's business expectations net balance at 2 per cent. However, this poll asked firms to compare July through December with January through June.
A new Nikkei Singapore purchasing managers' index (PMI) by Markit gave an economy-wide PMI reading above 50, indicating optimism about anticipated orders, but this indicator was a month-on-month one.
The BT-UniSIM Q2 net balances for companies' sales, profits and orders remained mired in negative territory, and were worse for smaller firms.
For sales, the overall net balance worsened by nine percentage points to -25 per cent in Q2 this year, marking the 16th consecutive quarter that this figure has been in the red, and spurring concerns that Singapore firms might have lost their edge.
This represents the longest stretch of sales contraction since the survey began in Q4 1995, said survey co-authors Chow Kit Boey and Chan Cheong Chiam; in their report, they attributed the prolonged sales contraction phase mainly to global instability and domestic restructuring.
DBS economist Irvin Seah said the protracted contraction in sales suggests that companies could be losing competitiveness. Smaller companies, which have been bearing the brunt of Singapore's economic restructuring efforts, may need to step up in terms of productivity, he said.
The Q2 figures would have been worse if not for better performances in overseas business activities, which helped to offset a deterioration in local activity, the survey report said.
Economists said that a firm recovery in the US could prompt a pick-up here, though they warned that a likely accompaniment to that would be an interest rate hike by the US Federal Reserve. UOB economist Francis Tan said: "It's still quite tough for Q3 and Q4. We're still seeing a slowdown in the external environment. ... The only likely catalyst ahead is a US recovery."
Noting that investments would slow down in the wake of a rate hike, he added: "We're actively telling businesses to hedge." Ms Ling also warned the rate hike could trigger a "rude awakening". "While Yellen and her Fed gang have been guiding the markets that the lift-off trajectory will be shallow and benign, ... another 'taper tantrum' cannot be fully discounted."
The government is expected to narrow its full-year 2015 GDP growth forecast next week from the current 2 to 4 per cent band, after Q2 flash figures came in far worse than expected in July. Private-sector economists tip it to narrow the forecast range to 2 to 3 per cent or even lower it to 1.5 to 2.5 per cent.

Priceless Stradivarius, missing for 35 years, returned to heirs

Priceless Stradivarius, missing for 35 years, returned to heirs


[NEW YORK] A priceless Stradivarius stolen 35 years ago from an American concert violinist was back in the hands of his heirs Thursday - a happy ending to a long-running mystery cracked by a luthier's keen expert eye.
The violin - made in 1734 and estimated to be worth US$5 million - had been lifted in May 1980 from the office of Roman Totenberg at the Longy School of Music near Boston, where he taught.
Mr Totenberg died in 2012 at the age of 101 after a life that saw the Polish-born virtuoso, who emigrated to the United States in 1938, perform with a host of major American symphony orchestras.
"Our only sadness is that our father is not here to see this," said his daughter, NPR public radio justice reporter Nina Totenberg, as federal agents returned the violin at a ceremony in New York.


"But I think he is somewhere with my mother," she said, "celebrating with a shot of vodka." In an NPR blog, Ms Totenberg said she got a telephone call from an FBI agent in June, informing her that the violin - known among aficionados as the Ames Stradivarius - had been located.
It had been discovered by the widow of a musician named Philip Johnson - who died in 2011 - stashed inside a locked case inside their home, she wrote.
The elder Totenberg had suspected Johnson from the outset to be the thief, but police chose not to pursue the lead, she said.
The widow took the instrument in June to Phillip Injeian, a violin maker and appraiser, who examined it closely for a half-hour in a New York hotel room.
"Well, I've got good news for you, and I've got bad news for you," Ms Totenberg quoted Mr Injeian as telling the widow.
"The good news is that this is a Stradivarius. The bad news it was stolen 35, 36 years ago from Roman Totenberg."
Mr Injeian promptly reported the violin to the FBI's art theft unit, and Mr Johnson's widow relinquished any claim of ownership to the instrument.
"There is a label inside ... dated 1734," explained Mr Injeian at Thursday's handover ceremony in the office of Manhattan federal district attorney Preet Bharara.
"But what was really a giveaway ... were the characteristic markings of the wood. It's like a fingerprint. You can't forge that." Nina Totenberg said she and her sisters Jill and Amy intend to sell the Stradivarius in hopes that it will once again charm concertgoers in the hands of another great virtuoso violinist.
"None of us play the violin," she said, "and Stradivarius owners are really just the guardians of these great, great instruments. They are meant to be played by great artists." Around 550 of the highly coveted violins handcrafted by Antonio Stradivari still exist, Mr Injeian said, out of a total 1,100 by the 17th century Italian master craftsman.
They are highly prized for their incredible - and inimitable - sound. Many have experienced some remarkable adventures over the centuries.
One, known as the Lady Blunt, fetched about 11 million euros (S$18.7 million) in a 2011 charity auction for victims of the Japanese tsunami.
In January 2014, a Stradivarius was snatched from the concertmaster of the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra in Wisconsin by muggers armed with a stun gun. It was recovered in a matter of days.
In July 2012, a Stradivarius was turned in to a Swiss railway lost-and-found counter after an acclaimed violinist forgot it on a commuter train.
And in 2008, an American violinist left a US$4 million Stradivarius in the back seat of a New York taxi. The driver returned it to its owner.
AFP

Taiwan issues land warning as Typhoon Soudelor nears island

Taiwan issues land warning as Typhoon Soudelor nears island


[TAIPEI] Taiwan issued a land warning and cautioned against landslides and flooding as Typhoon Soudelor barrels westward toward the island and eastern China. Taipei saw rain on Thursday evening.
Traveling northwest at 22 kilometers (14 miles) an hour, Soudelor was expected to strengthen as it approaches Taiwan's shores, the island's Central Weather Bureau said in a land warning at 2:30 am local time on Friday. Ships and people working along its coasts were earlier warned to exercise caution and brace for wind and waves.
The storm is the fourth typhoon this year to trigger Taiwan sea or land warnings, according to the weather bureau. Heavy rains may douse the island on Friday and Saturday, the Taipei- based United Daily News reported.
China Airlines Ltd. and EVA Airways Corp will bring forward the departure time of some of its international flights to Europe and US, Taiwan's Civil Aviation Administration said in a statement late Thursday. TransAsia Airways Corp. canceled three flights from Japan and Macau to Taiwan.



In July, Typhoon Chan-hom prompted Taiwan to close its financial markets as well as schools and offices for one day.
BLOOMBER
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Europe: Shares slip back; Novozymes slumps on weak results

Europe: Shares slip back; Novozymes slumps on weak results


[LONDON] European shares fell on Thursday, with weak corporate results weighing on enzyme company Novozymes and Deutsche Post even as UK stocks outperformed on receding rate-hike fears.
The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 index, which rose 1.3 per cent in the previous session, closed down 0.8 per cent at 1,589.38 points. The euro zone's blue-chip Euro STOXX 50 index declined by 0.2 per cent.
Novozymes slid by around 13 per cent after reporting second-quarter earnings below expectations. Deutsche Post's shares also fell after cutting its 2015 profit outlook.
Weak oil prices also weighed on energy stocks.




However, Belgian financial company KBC rose 3 per cent after it posted higher profits. Reinsurer Munich Re firmed 1.5 per cent on an improved outlook.
The rise in Munich Re enabled Germany's DAX to slightly outperform the region, though Deutsche Post put a drag on the index when it lowered its profit target. Britain's FTSE was a big outperformer, down only 0.1 per cent, after a slew of Bank of England data showed the central bank was in no hurry to raise interest rates.
Greek stocks also recovered after slumping for the past three days, although many investors have cut their exposure to the debt-ridden country. "We retain our more favourable view on European equities," Oliver Wallin, investment director at Octopus, said in a note to clients. "However, we reduced European holdings in July as we await opportunities to buy back into the market when the situation in Greece becomes clearer." According to data from Thomson Reuters StarMine, 59 per cent of companies on the European STOXX 600 index have met or beaten market expectations for their results this quarter.
Along with the robust corporate results, economic stimulus measures from the European Central Bank have also propped up European stock markets this year, enabling them to shrug off lingering concerns over Greece's debt problems.
REUTERS

US: Media stock selloff leaves Wall Street bruised

US: Media stock selloff leaves Wall Street bruised


[NEW YORK] Wall Street ended sharply lower on Thursday as weak earnings reports from media companies stirred fears that more viewers are ditching cable TV, dragging the sector to its worst two-day loss since the financial crisis.
The selloff was compounded by nervousness ahead of key jobs data on Friday that could provide clues about the timing of the first Federal Reserve interest rate hike in almost a decade.
Viacom fell 14.22 per cent to its lowest in almost four years after reporting lower-than-expected quarterly revenue due to weakness in its cable TV business. Walt Disney was off 1.79 per cent and down for a second session after it lowered profit guidance for its cable networks unit on Tuesday.
The S&P 500 media index lost 2.12 per cent and notched its biggest two-day fall since November 2008, with Time Warner, Comcast and CBS all in the red and Twenty-First Century Fox down 6.4 per cent. "All the media stocks are down and it seems people just want to get out of the sector at any cost and take any loss," CLSA analyst Vasily Karasyov said.


Viacom's results and Disney's warning put the spotlight on a trend of viewers shifting from cable TV to Internet-based services such as Netflix, which rose 2.21 per cent.
The Dow Jones industrial average fell 0.69 per cent to end at 17,419.75 and the S&P 500 lost 0.78 per cent to 2,083.56. The Nasdaq Composite dropped 1.62 percent to 5,056.44, its biggest one-day tumble since early July.
Eight of the 10 major S&P sectors were lower, with the health index's 2.09 per cent fall leading the decliners. Allergan fell 5.1 per cent after the Irish drugmaker reported a second-quarter loss.
In other earnings-driven stock moves, Tesla fell 8.88 per cent and Keurig Green Mountain slumped as much as 29.75 per cent after reporting disappointing numbers.
Investors were also jittery ahead of the release of US non-farm payroll numbers, which are expected to have risen by 223,000 in July, matching gains in June.
The Fed has said it will raise rates only when it sees a sustained recovery in the economy.
After the bell, Zynga fell 6 per cent after it posted a disappointing quarterly report.
With about three-quarters of the S&P 500 companies having reported, second-quarter earnings are estimated to have increased 1.6 per cent while revenues are projected to have fallen 3.4 per cent.
However, valuations look stretched. The S&P 500 is trading at a 25 per cent premium to its historical median price-to-sales ratio, Jack Ablin, chief investment officer at BMO Private Bank said in a note to clients.
In Thursday's session, declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by a rate of 1.47 to 1. On the Nasdaq, that rate was 2.46 to 1 favoring decliners.
The S&P 500 index posted 18 new 52-week highs and 44 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite saw 64 new highs and 169 new lows.
About 7.8 billion shares changed hands on all US exchanges, well above an average 6.77 billion in the past five sessions, according to BATS Global Markets data.
REUTERS

Global oil glut pressures prices; WTI below US$45

Global oil glut pressures prices; WTI below US$45


[NEW YORK] Oil prices fell again Thursday in a glum market as the global oversupply of crude oil looked entrenched and demand prospects weak.
US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for September delivery fell 49 cents to US$44.66 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, closing below US$45 for the first time since March. The WTI contract was now barely US$1 above its lowest closing level in six years.
Brent North Sea crude for September, the international benchmark, closed at US$49.52 a barrel in London, down seven cents from the day before.
"Oil just can't seem to get a break right now because we're seeing a whole lot of overall negativity about the demand outlook, with the fears the Fed is going to raise interest rates and concerns about demand in China," said Phil Flynn of Price Futures Group.


"Oil prices are acting like the market is fearful the (oversupply) won't go away," he added.
The crude glut is largely responsible for the roughly 50 per cent decline in oil prices since mid-2014. The United States is producing crude at high levels and output by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) continues to exceed the cartel's quota of 30 million barrels per day.
In addition, investors were looking ahead to additional supplies of oil coming into the market as part of last month's historic deal between six major powers and Iran over its nuclear program.
In exchange for curbing its nuclear programme, Tehran would see the lifting of sanctions, which have slashed its oil exports.
"The current supply/demand surplus is one element of concern, but there also seems to be renewed worry over the eventual lifting of Iranian sanctions as US President Barack Obama's campaign for support is seen limiting the potential for a congressional override," said Tim Evans of Citi Futures.
US lawmakers will vote in September on whether to endorse the deal.
Traders also awaited the important US jobs report for July due on Friday. It was expected to be a key mover of the dollar, and as a consequence, have potential impact on dollar-priced crude oil.
Mixed economic signals have left the outlook for the US payrolls report uncertain. On average, analysts expect the unemployment rate will remain unchanged at 5.3 per cent, a seven-year low, and job growth to continue at a moderate pace.
AFP

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