Thursday, October 1, 2015

China, US rate hike loom over global finance summit

China, US rate hike loom over global finance summit   

[WASHINGTON] The global finance summit next week in Lima will try to scatter the clouds over the economy, beset by a slowing China and the prospect of higher US interest rates.
"On the economic front, there is... reason to be concerned," the head of the International Monetary Fund, Christine Lagarde, said Wednesday, in a speech ahead of the IMF and World Bank annual meetings in the Peruvian capital that gather the world's central bankers and finance ministers.
"The prospect of rising interest rates in the United States and China's slowdown are contributing to uncertainty and higher market volatility," Ms Lagarde said.
The new IMF global economic forecasts, which will be published on Tuesday, and the statement from the Group of 20 finance chiefs, expected on Friday, likely will reflect the gloom hovering most of all over the emerging-market economies - China at the forefront - upstaging the Greek and Ukrainian crises.
Already shaken by market turmoil, China, the world's second-largest economy, likely will have its weakest growth in 25 years this year, a downdraft threatening to pull many other countries in its wake.
China's slowdown has hammered prices on commodities such as oil and copper, eroding the financial resources of the countries that export them.
The result: Economies closely linked with China have fallen into recession, like Brazil, or been pushed to its brink, like South Africa.
"It is difficult to gauge the possible negative confidence effects on the other emerging-market economies and the global economy as a whole," said Andreas Dombret, a member of the executive board of the Bundesbank, Germany's central bank.
Coupled with the woes in Russia, the bottom line appears clear: After driving growth in the global economy during the 2008-2009 crisis, the major emerging economies, with the exception of India, are sputtering.
That was the conclusion of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development when it slightly lowered its forecasts for global growth in mid-September.
"Economic recovery is progressing in the world's advanced economies, but stagnating world trade and deteriorating conditions in financial markets are curbing growth prospects in many of the major emerging economies," the OECD said.
Emerging economies also appear in the line of fire from the Federal Reserve's plan to raise interest rates for the first time since 2006, an issue expected to be discussed at length at the Peruvian pow-wow.
The rate rise, on the Fed's radar for this year despite IMF objections, could drive investors to pull funds from emerging countries into the United States and further strengthen the strong dollar, the currency on which the debt of many companies is based.
Companies in emerging economies, where corporate debt has quadrupled in the past 10 years, according to the IMF, could pay a steep price, forced into bankruptcies that hit banks and public finances. "A vicious cycle," Lagarde said.
"They would do well to buckle their seat belts in case the ride gets bumpy," the World Bank recently warned.
Despite the dark clouds, the globe's finance leaders may have some reasons to find comfort in Peru, the first South American country to host the annual IMF-World Bank meetings in nearly 50 years.
The United States, the largest economy, seems to be doing modestly well, while two major international issues could see advances during the 188-nation meetings on October 9-11, which will include multiple forums, conferences and news conferences.
Two months ahead of the Paris global climate summit, the finance chiefs may provide details on their $100 billion annual contribution, pledged in Copenhagen in 2009, to fight against global warming.
"Has that pledge been met and how is that calculated, that will be a big topic," said Jennifer Morgan, director of the climate program at the World Resources Institute, a nongovernmental organization.
In Lima, the G20 finance officials also are expected to approve a broad action plan aimed at battling multinationals' strategies to reduce their tax burdens and shelter profits in tax havens.
These tax dodges are "a form of corruption that hurts the poor" by depriving their countries of public revenues, World Bank President Jim Yong Kim said Thursday.
The G20 agreement would be finalized in November in Turkey at a summit of the leaders of the major advanced and emerging economies.
AFP

Taiwan food and drug agency finds excessive pesticide residues in TWG Tea product

Taiwan food and drug agency finds excessive pesticide residues in TWG Tea product

TAIWAN'S Food and Drug Administration has found excessive levels of pesticide residues in TWG Tea's "Chamomile Green Tea" that was exported from India, the agency said in a Sept 29 notice found here:
https://consumer.fda.gov.tw/Food/detail/UnsafeFoodD.aspx?pid=4795
The report is making the rounds in Hong Kong, where the luxury tea seller has a glitzy outlet at IFC Mall.
TWG Tea is owned by Singapore mainboard-listed OSIM International.
The Business Times is awaiting comment from TWG Tea and OSIM.
A year ago, mainboard-listed traditional Chinese medicine retailer Eu Yan Sang had to reassure customers and investors after a US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) alert warned of a lead-poisoning risk from its best-selling "Bo Ying Compound" product.
Eu Yan Sang said then that varying health standards were in force in different territories, and that the product in the US health scare was made in Hong Kong and meant only for sale there.
OSIM shares last traded at S$1.63 on Friday morning, up half a cent from Thursday's close.

Samsung Electronics to use Qualcomm chips for some Galaxy S7 phones

Samsung Electronics to use Qualcomm chips for some Galaxy S7 phones

[SEOUL] Samsung Electronics Co Ltd will use Qualcomm Inc's mobile processors for some of its upcoming flagship Galaxy S smartphones, South Korea's Electronic Times reported on Friday citing unnamed industry sources.
The paper said Samsung will use Qualcomm's Snapdragon 820 chips for the Galaxy S7 phones, which is expected to launch early next year and which will be sold in the United States and China. Galaxy S7 phones sold in other markets will be powered by Samsung's own Exynos processors, the paper said.
A Samsung spokeswoman said the firm does not comment on rumours or speculation. Qualcomm could not be immediately reached for comment.
The South Korean firm used only its Exynos processors for the flagship Galaxy S6 smartphones this year, dealing a major blow to the US chipmaker. But Samsung said earlier this year that it could opt to use Qualcomm chips in the future.
Samsung has previously sourced mobile processors from both Qualcomm and through its own chips division for its premium devices including its Galaxy S and Galaxy Note series.
REUTER
S

Japan's finance ministry calls for transparency in China to internationalise yuan

Japan's finance ministry calls for transparency in China to internationalise yuan

[TOKYO] Japanese Finance Minister Taro Aso on Friday called for China to make its economic management more transparent in order to help the yuan become a global currency. "It would be good for the yuan to become a global currency," Mr Aso told reporters after a cabinet meeting, when asked about the prospect for inclusion of the yuan in the International Monetary Fund's currency basket.
Asked about an expected debate at next week's Group of 20 finance chiefs' gathering in Peru, Mr Aso said the global economy faced downside risks due to uncertainty about the outlook over China, Germany and Europe.
REUTERS

Oil ends lower after choppy session

Oil ends lower after choppy session

[NEW YORK] Oil prices finished lower on Thursday following a choppy session as traders looked ahead to Friday's US jobs report for September.
US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for November delivery dipped 35 cents to US$44.74 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
European benchmark Brent oil for November delivery lost 68 cents at US$47.69 a barrel in London.
Oil prices rose early in the US session, but the rally soon lost steam.
"It seems like we're just chopping around in directionless trade," said Gene McGillian, broker and analyst at Tradition Energy.
"Clearly the market is struggling with what it needs and wants to do," said Kyle Cooper of IAF Advisors.
The market seemed to pick up momentum early in the session from US petroleum data released on Wednesday that showed lower US oil production.
But McGillian said the declines so far - from about 9.6 million barrels per day to 9.0 million barrels per day - is not great enough to address the supply glut.
US economic data was mixed. A reading on manufacturing activity showed near-flat activity in September, while construction spending rose to a seven-year high in August.
Mr Cooper said the oil market will probably take its cues on Friday from the stock market following the release of the US jobs report. Analysts expect the US economy added 205,000 jobs in September and the unemployment rate was unchanged at 5.1 per cent, a seven-year low.
AFP

HKMA sells HK$3.9b to keep Hong Kong dollar in trading band on Oct 1

HKMA sells HK$3.9b to keep Hong Kong dollar in trading band on Oct 1


[HONG KONG] The Hong Kong Monetary Authority (HKMA) said it had stepped into the currency market and sold HK$3.875 billion (S$716.4 million) in Hong Kong dollars on Thursday afternoon as the local currency hit the strong end of its trading range.
Hong Kong's financial market were closed on Thursday for the National Day holiday.
The HKMA said the latest intervention will lift the aggregate balance - the sum of balances on clearing accounts maintained by banks with the authority - to HK$361.828 billion on Oct. 5, when the injected funds will be settled.
The Hong Kong dollar is pegged at 7.8 to the US dollar, but can trade between 7.75 and 7.85. Under the currency peg, the HKMA is obliged to intervene when the Hong Kong dollar hits 7.75 or 7.85 to keep the band intact.
REUTERS


China: Markets closed on October 1-7

China: Markets closed on October 1-7

[SHANGHAI] China's stock, bond, foreign exchange and commodity futures markets will be closed from October 1 to 7 for a national holiday.
Markets will resume trade on October 8.
REUTERS

Japan jobless rate edges up to 3.4% in August

Japan jobless rate edges up to 3.4% in August

[TOKYO] Japan's jobless rate edged up to 3.4 per cent in August, up slightly from the previous month and higher than analysts' expectations, official data showed Friday.
That was higher than July's 3.3 per cent rate. Analysts had predicted the August rate would remain unchanged from the previous month.
A separate survey showed that there were 123 job offers for every 100 job hunters in August, or a ratio of 1.23, the highest such figure in 23 years.
The closely-watched labour index, which was at 1.21 the previous month, showed that Japan's labour market remained tight despite the slight gain in the jobless rate.
The internal affairs ministry also said household spending rose 2.9 per cent year-on-year in August following a 0.2 per cent decline in July.
On Thursday, central bank data showed that a slowdown in China and weakness at home dented Japanese firms' confidence last quarter, suggesting the world's third-largest economy has slipped into recession.
The disappointing Tankan survey supplied the latest evidence that Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's growth blitz, dubbed Abenomics, was faltering, as speculation grows that the Bank of Japan would have to expand its massive asset-buying plan later this year.
AFP

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