Monday, October 5, 2015

Pilot falls ill, dies on American flight from Phoenix to Boston

Pilot falls ill, dies on American flight from Phoenix to Boston

[BOSTON] A pilot fell ill and died on an American Airlines flight headed to Boston from Phoenix on Monday and the copilot landed the plane safely in Syracuse, New York, airline and police officials said.
The Airbus A320, which had left Phoenix with 148 passengers and five crew members, touched down at Syracuse Hancock International Airport shortly after 7 am EDT (1100 GMT), said spokeswoman Brianna Jackson. "Medical emergency. Captain is incapacitated," the copilot told air traffic controllers in a calm voice, according to a recording posted on LiveATC.net.
Asking for directions to an airport gate that could be quickly accessed by emergency medical personnel, he said, "We'll need them to get to the captain." The 57-year-old pilot from Utah was pronounced dead on board the plane a few minutes after it landed, Syracuse Police Lieutenant Eric Carr said.
Ms Jackson said Flight 550 left Phoenix Sky Harbor International shortly before midnight on Sunday, but was diverted "due to pilot illness."
"Unfortunately, our pilot passed away," Ms Jackson said.
Both Mr Carr and Ms Jackson declined to comment further, including on whether the pilot died in the air or on the ground, the nature of the illness and any further identification of the pilot or copilot. The Onondaga County, New York, medical examiner's office referred all questions to the police. "We are incredibly saddened by this event," Ms Jackson said.
The flight later continued with a replacement crew and landed in Boston in the early afternoon, according to FlightAware.com.
REUTERS

Samsung seen tapping US$55b cash pile for share buyback

Samsung seen tapping US$55b cash pile for share buyback

[SEOUL] Investors in Samsung Electronics Co are watching their holdings plunge as new Galaxy smartphones get a lukewarm public response. With US$55 billion in cash, the company may be poised to offer consolation.
Analysts expect the world's biggest smartphone maker to buy back shares as early as this month in an effort to return some value to stockholders. Removing more than US$1 billion of stock from the market could prompt shares to rally by as much as 20 percent, according to the top-ranked analyst covering Samsung, potentially erasing their declines this year.
Samsung has lost about US$25 billion in market value - roughly equivalent to a Nintendo Co - this year as sales of the S6 and Note 5 devices sputter against new models from Apple Inc and Chinese makers. A buyback would be just the second in eight years and may take the sting out of sliding market share and sales projected to hit their lowest since 2011.
"A share buyback should happen anytime now because the earnings haven't been performing well," said Dongbu Securities Co's Yoo Eui Hyung, who tops Bloomberg Absolute Return rankings for his calls on Samsung Electronics.
Suwon-based Samsung is scheduled to release third-quarter operating profit and sales estimates Wednesday. That three-month period was marked by price cuts for the S6 and curved-screen S6 Edge phones just months after their debuts.
Analysts expect profit of 6.7 trillion won in the period ended September. While that is up from 4.1 trillion won a year earlier, it's 34 per cent below a record 10.2 trillion won two years ago. Net income and details of division earnings will be released later this month.
Shares of Samsung rose 3.4 per cent to 1,153,000 won as of 10:36 am in Seoul, paring this year's decline to 13 per cent.
A stock repurchase also would help the founding Lees tighten their grip on the crown jewel of South Korea's biggest conglomerate since the family typically doesn't sell stock in a buyback, Mr Yoo said. Vice Chairman Lee Jae Yong, the heir apparent, and his relatives control Samsung Group through a web of cross shareholdings with less than 10 per cent of total shares.
The Lees are revamping businesses amid pressure from the South Korean government to simplify the chaebol's organisation. Buying back shares from smaller holders would help them fend off any efforts to wrest control away.
Since family patriarch Lee Kun Hee's heart attack last year prompted his son to take on more of a leadership role, Samsung Electronics shares are on their longest losing streak in more than three decades. The stock is headed for a third straight annual decline and has lost about US$58 billion of market value since its peak, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
"It's a golden time now to do this because the stock is cheap," said Park Ju Gun, president of corporate watchdog CEOSCORE in Seoul. "Investors may not be happy to see shares falling, but it could be good news for the family so it can better position itself during the group restructuring." Samsung may purchase as much as 1 per cent of its stock, Mr Yoo said. That would equal about US$1.4 billion, based on the company's market capitalization of about US$141 billion. Mr Yoo bases his estimate for a 20 per cent rally on how shares have reacted to previous buybacks.
Samsung Electronics declined to comment in an e-mail.
The possibility of a Samsung buyback comes after the government imposed a 10 per cent tax on chaebol conglomerates' income unless their spending meets certain minimum levels. The measures are aimed at pushing chaebol to increase salaries and boost investment.
"Samsung is holding the 'return shareholder value' card and hasn't used it yet," said Claire Kim, an analyst at Daishin Securities Co in Seoul. "That has triggered a market expectation that the company will announce a buyback plan."
There have been at least 34 announced buybacks by Kospi- listed companies this year, compared with 27 during the same period last year, according to the Korea Exchange.
Samsung said in November 2014 it would buy back common and preferred shares valued at 2.19 trillion won (S$2.85 billion). That plan included repurchasing US$1.8 billion of common shares, about 1 per cent of its market value at the time.
Hyundai Motor Co and Kia Motors Corp. also said in November they would buy back a combined 670 billion won of stock.
"There is an expectancy that the company will announce plans like dividend payout or share buyback as the year comes to an end, " said Yoo Jong Woo, an analyst at Korea Investment & Securities Co. "If there's some sort of announcement from the company before that on its plans to return shareholder value, this will have a positive impact on shares."
BLOOMBERG

Singtel in MOU with Cyber Security Agency

Singtel in MOU with Cyber Security Agency

By
SINGAPORE Telecommunications (Singtel) and the Cyber Security Agency of Singapore on Tuesday signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) to develop and strengthen Singapore's cyber security capabilities.
Under the MOU, the two will cooperate to build up local capabilities and deliver advanced cyber security services.
They will also help develop industry's cyber security talent capabilities and capacity to meet fast-growing demand, as well as develop indigenous research and development (R&D). The latter includes joint R & D with institutes of higher learning and research institutes.

SMEs to benefit from TPP: Lim Hng Kiang

SMEs to benefit from TPP: Lim Hng Kiang

By
nishar@sph.com.sg@Nisha_BT
THE Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) deal was designed to be more inclusive so that small and medium enterprises (SMEs) may benefit as well, Singapore's Minister for Trade and Industry (Trade) Lim Hng Kiang said on Tuesday.
On Monday, Singapore and 11 other countries - including Australia, Canada, Japan, Malaysia, the United States and Vietnam - concluded drawn-out negotiations for the TPP. The countries include some of Singapore's biggest trading partners.
M Lim said: "It will transform the region by reducing tariff and non-tariff barriers substantially for both goods and services, encouraging greater investment, and addressing new trade challenges in the modern economy. The TPP has also been deliberately designed to be more inclusive, so that small and medium-sized enterprises can take full advantage of its benefits."
The free trade agreement (FTA) will boost trade and investment flows between TPP countries as well as integrate the region into a single manufacturing base and market. As such, firms in companies will benefit from increased market access.
Under the TPP, new and updated trade rules will deliver a more open and transparent environment for Singapore investors and traders.
"Robust and balanced rules to promote fair competition and good governance, encourage innovation and grow the digital economy, will create more opportunities and allow Singapore-based companies to operate in the region with greater ease and confidence," the Ministry of Trade and Industry (MTI) said in a release.
Collectively, the TPP countries offer a population of 800 million and a combined gross domestic product (GDP) of around US$30 trillion, or 40 per cent of global GDP. In 2013, the TPP countries accounted for 30 per cent of Singapore's total goods trade, worth S$300 billion, and 30 per cent of foreign direct investment in Singapore, amounting to S$240 billion.
"The 12 TPP countries will work intensively to tie up remaining details, and produce the final text for public review," said MTI in the release, adding that the respective countries will also each commence their domestic approval processes.

SE Asia economic woes test reserves, defences built after 1997/98 crisis

SE Asia economic woes test reserves, defences built after 1997/98 crisis  

[JAKARTA] Many economists believe Southeast Asia is better protected from the economic storm clouds slowly gathering over the region than when the 1997/98 crisis ripped through markets with sudden, devastating effect.
Compared with the late 1990s, much of the region now has freer exchange rates, stronger current-account positions, lower external debt and better regulatory oversight - all of which cut its vulnerability to speculative currency attacks.
Some countries could still be severely tested, economists cautioned, by the pressures building on their currencies and reserves.
Malaysia and Indonesia, heavily reliant on commodity exports to China, are looking particularly vulnerable as the world's second-largest economy heads for its slowest growth in 25 years. "We are worried about the contagion effect," Indonesian Finance Minister Bambang Brodjonegoro said last week, using a word widely used in 1997/98.
In 1997, "the thing happened first in Thailand through the baht, not the rupiah. But the contagion effect became widespread," he added.
Taimur Baig, Deutsche Bank's chief Asia economist, said that unlike 1997, when pegged currencies were attacked as over-valued, today's floating ones are "weakening willingly" in response to outflows.
But there can still be contagion, as markets lump together economies reliant on China or on commodities. "If you see a sell-off in Brazil, that can easily spread to Indonesia, which can spread to Malaysia, and so on," he said.
Foreign funds have sold a net US$9.7 billion of stocks in Malaysia, Thailand and Indonesia this year, with the bourses in those three countries seeing Asia's largest net outflows, Nomura said on Oct 2.
Mr Baig said that as in 1997/98, falling currencies will naturally pose balance-sheet problems for companies with dollar debts and local-currency earnings.
This year, Malaysia's ringgit has fallen nearly 21 per cent against the dollar and its reserves dropped by the same percentage, to below US$100 billion. "It's almost like a perfect storm for Malaysia," the country's economic planning minister, Abdul Wahid Omar, said.
Malaysian officials insist the economic fundamentals are stronger than two decades ago, but some economists aren't sure.
Chua Hak Bin of Bank of America Merrill Lynch said he draws "little comfort" from comparisons with 1997. While in many ways Malaysia's economy is stronger now, for example by having a current account surplus, its external debt is 70 per cent of gross domestic product, compared with 44 percent in 1997, and there's "significant downside risk even after the sharp ringgit correction".
None of the three main credit-rating agencies has downgraded Malaysia's creditworthiness in response to market ructions, but Moody's said in September the currency's fall was a symptom of declining exports and other factors negatively impacting key credit buffers.
SOURING SENTIMENT
Indonesia, Southeast Asia's largest economy, has a lower external debt relative to GDP - 32 per cent - but foreigners also own a large share its local-currency bonds.
This makes that rupiah, down nearly 15 per cent against the dollar this year, vulnerable to souring sentiment. "We are trying to differentiate ourselves from Malaysia," Indonesia's Brodjonegoro said. "At least we can get the inflows, we can still create positive sentiment." At end-February, Indonesia's reserves topped US$115.5 billion. On Sept 21, they were US$103 billion.
On Wednesday, the central banks of Indonesia and Malaysia are due to announce fresh reserve figures.
By months of import cover, Southeast Asia's holdings of foreign reserves still seem sufficient. But looking at them relative to overall foreign financing needs, they are more stretched.
Malaysia's reserves barely cover its short-term external debt due this year, while Deutsche Bank says Indonesia's are about 1.5 times what's needed to finance its debts and current-account deficit.
The Philippines, by contrast, has reserves equal to 11 times its financing needs. The US$2 billion monthly remittances from its overseas workers provides a solid buffer.
REUTERS

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