Tuesday, August 11, 2015

China just gave Apple's biggest suppliers a welcome surprise

China just gave Apple's biggest suppliers a welcome surprise


[TAIPEI] Apple Inc suppliers Hon Hai Precision Industry Co and Pegatron Corp will benefit from a surprise devaluation in China's currency because both pay a major share of their workforces in yuan and sell in US dollars.
China's central bank devalued the yuan by the most in two decades, a move that may help shore up margins at Pegatron and Hon Hai, which assembles the iPhone and other Apple devices and gets half its sales from the US company.
"Assuming that revenue doesn't change and suppliers don't have to pass the benefits on to Apple, the yuan cut should boost margins for the suppliers," said Alberto Moel, a Hong Kong- based analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein.
The suppliers' gross margins, which measure the ratio of sales left after production costs, could climb as much 0.5 percentage points after dollar-denominated sales are converted into yuan to pay off local workers and other costs, Moel said.



The full magnitude of the yuan's depreciation would not get passed on to Apple because many of the two suppliers' costs are still denominated in the US currency, he added.
Hon Hai depended on Apple for half of its US$139 billion in revenue last year. The US company last month reported iPhone shipments that missed expectations, and forecast sales for the current period that also fell short of estimates.
Hon Hai, the largest member of Terry Gou's Foxconn Technology Group, employs over a million workers in China during its peak season to assemble iPhones, iPads as well as game consoles, personal computers and televisions.
"A yuan cut is going to soften the impact of Apple's weak outlook because if there's no room to boost top line, then at least the currency change can help their bottom line," Mr Moel said.
Both Hon Hai and Pegatron declined to comment on the impact of Tuesday's yuan devaluation.
The yuan's devaluation underscores policy makers' efforts to supports the country's exporters and combat the deepest economic slowdown since 1990, economists say.
China is Apple's largest market after the US, a region the iPhone maker is counting on to sustain its growth. The Greater China area, including Hong Kong and Taiwan, accounted for US$13.2 billion or 27 per cent of the company's June-quarter revenue.
Although sales of the iPhone rose 87 per cent in China in that period, disappointing global smartphone shipments and expectations for slower Chinese growth have helped drive Apple shares 4.4 per cent lower since its quarterly report in July.
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Google overhaul "shareholder friendly", though details scarce

Google overhaul "shareholder friendly", though details scarce


[SAN FRANCISCO] Google Inc's overhaul of its operating structure is an acknowledgement of the lack of transparency surrounding its disparate businesses and projects, analysts said, but it remains to be seen how much more the company will actually disclose.
Analysts and investors have long sought more granular detail on Google's capital spending and cash flow, as well the financial performance of YouTube and the Android operating system.
Google said on Monday it would split into two reporting companies under a new holding company called Alphabet.
One will hold its core search and Web advertising business, and the other its newer ventures such as driverless cars and Internet-connected thermostats made by its Nest business.




Google shares were up 5.7 per cent at $701 in premarket trading as investors looked forward to a new era of transparency.
"This supports our view that GOOGL has entered a new era of shareholder friendliness," said MKM Partners analyst Rob Sanderson, who rates the stock "buy." Still, Google did not say what details would be disclosed.
"Should Google move to 'segment reporting' as referenced in its filing, we would expect to get revenues and expenses for the core and non-core businesses, which should help bring clarity to any profitability drag caused by its non-core assets and their trajectory," said Goldman Sachs analyst Heather Bellini, who has a "neutral" rating on the stock.
JP Morgan analysts said fuller disclosure could make the market more accepting of Google's heavy non-core investments.
Some analysts also expect the split to mark the start of a more aggressive approach to expense management.
At least 14 brokerages reiterated their top ratings on the stock while Mizuho Securities raised its rating to "buy" from"neutral" and Stifel Nicolaus to "buy" from "hold".
Several analysts likened Google's decision to break into two reporting entities to Amazon.com Inc's move to start reporting revenue from its cloud-computing unit.
Amazon's shares have risen by about a third since the company first broke out results for the cloud business in its first-quarter results in April.
"Similar to Amazon's share price moves in anticipation of and subsequent to the separate disclosure of its AWS segment, we believe this change sets up Google shares well as investors will now have more clarity around the core Google business'profitability and growth of some of its longer-term investments," Stifel analyst Scott Devitt said.
Of 50 analysts covering Google, 43 have a "buy" or higher rating on the stock and seven rate it "hold." The median price target is US$750.
REUTERS

Indonesia central bank "heavily" intervenes to defend rupiah: traders

Indonesia central bank "heavily" intervenes to defend rupiah: traders


[SINGAPORE] Indonesia's central bank was spotted "heavily" intervening to defend the rupiah on Wednesday, traders said, as the currency fell to a level last seen during the Asian financial crisis 17 years ago.
The rupiah was down 1.6 per cent to 13,820 per dollar as of 0450 GMT, after hitting 13,825, its weakest since July 1998.
Bank Indonesia Senior Deputy Governor Mirza Adityaswara told Reuters earlier that the central bank will guard the rupiah against volatility, adding that the currency's depreciation does not reflect economic fundamentals.
He declined to comment further.
One trader in Jakarta said he believed the central bank had spent no more than US$400 million on Wednesday to support the rupiah.
REUTERS

Malaysia ringgit falls below 4 per dollar to 17-year low

Malaysia ringgit falls below 4 per dollar to 17-year low


[SINGAPORE] Malaysia's ringgit weakened past the psychologically important 4 per dollar level on Wednesday as regional currencies lost ground after China allowed the yuan to drop for the second straight day.
The ringgit fell 1.1 per cent to 4.0040 to the dollar as of 0335 GMT, its weakest since Sept 1, 1998.
Malaysia pegged the ringgit at 3.8000 from early September 1998 to support the currency during the Asian financial crisis. The country took the ringgit off the peg in 2005.
Confidence in Malaysia had already been weakening due to falling commodity prices and growing pressure on Prime Minister Najib Razak amid corruption allegations circling the indebted 1MDB state fund.
REUTERS

Singapore's key short-term interest rate hits 4-month high

Singapore's key short-term interest rate hits 4-month high


[SINGAPORE] Singapore's benchmark three-month interest rate rose to a four-month high on Wednesday, after the Singapore dollar slid to a five-year low following thedevaluation of the Chinese yuan.
The three-month Singapore interbank offered rate (Sibor), which is used to set interest rates on mortgages, rose to 0.9345 per cent, its highest level since April 16.
Three-month Sibor rose 5.5 basis points from Tuesday's levels, the biggest one-day rise since early January.
A softer Singapore dollar can put upward pressure on local interest rates as investors seek higher yields as compensation for holding the weakening currency.



The Singapore dollar fell to as low as 1.4155 versus the US dollar as of 0421 GMT on Wednesday, the lowest level for the city-state's currency since June 2010.
The Singapore dollar has come under pressure after China shocked global markets on Tuesday by devaluing the yuan, which weakened further on Wednesday.
The Singapore dollar closely tracks the yuan as traders and analysts believe it is included in the undisclosed currency basket used by the Monetary Authority of Singapore to manage monetary policy.
Singapore's monetary policy is focused on managing the exchange rate, rather than interest rates, due to the trade-reliant nature of the city-state's economy.
REUTERS

Singapore spares 'no effort' in biggest securities fraud probe

Singapore spares 'no effort' in biggest securities fraud probe


[SINGAPORE] Singapore warned that it's sparing no effort in its largest securities-fraud probe as it seeks to shore up confidence after an S$8 billion stock rout in 2013.
"We are acutely aware of the impact on investor confidence and the need to resolve this quickly and effectively," the Commercial Affairs Department said in its latest annual report. "The joint team is working tirelessly to get to the bottom of the matter."
The white-collar crime agency and the Monetary Authority of Singapore announced in April 2014 they were probing suspected stock-trading irregularities related to Asiasons Capital Ltd, Blumont Group and LionGold Corp. The stocks had surged by at least 800 per cent in the nine months before their shares plunged. That spurred brokers to clamp down on margin lending and dented trading sentiment.
The three companies have said they don't know what caused the sudden declines. Banks and brokers have sued to recover at least US$230 million from the stock rout.



"Together with the MAS, we are sparing no effort to bring those responsible to justice in the course of our biggest securities fraud investigation to date," the financial police said.
The joint probe "is the first of many to come."
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