Tuesday, November 3, 2015

HKEx says no agreement yet on planned Shenzhen-HK Stock Connect

HKEx says no agreement yet on planned Shenzhen-HK Stock Connect

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THE Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Limited (HKEx) said on Wednesday that no agreement has been entered into with its Chinese counterparts with regards to the proposed Shenzhen-Hong Kong Stock Connect programme.
"HKEx wishes to emphasise that as at the date of this announcement, the proposed Shenzhen Stock Connect is still subject to regulatory approval and no agreement with our counterparts has been entered into,'' it said.
The clarifications came after a 3.3 percent surge in the Shenzhen Composite Index and a 3.1 percent gain in Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index.
HKEx was forced to issue the clarification after China's central bank unintentionally sparked a surge in the nation's stock market by publishing five month-old comments from governor Zhou Xiaochuan that said a link between exchanges in Shenzhen and Hong Kong would start in 2015.
According to Bloomberg, China's central bank later confirmed in a text message that Zhou's comments on the link were taken from a speech on May 27.

Lloyd's launches expanded underwriting platform in Singapore as business grows

Lloyd's launches expanded underwriting platform in Singapore as business grows

SPECIALIST insurance and reinsurance market, Lloyd's, has launched its new expanded specialist underwriting platform in Singapore, as it looks to grow its business in the Asia-Pacific.
Since 2009, premium income from Asia has grown 170 per cent, with more than 90 per cent of that coming from regional markets outside Singapore.
Data from the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) showed that Lloyd's is the largest provider of off-shore insurance premium income here.
Lloyd's syndicates write local and offshore business from Singapore through the establishment of local service companies.
The Singapore platform now has 20 service companies with 24 syndicates and some 380 staff, making it Lloyd's largest hub outside London.
The 20 Lloyd's businesses trading in the CapitaGreen building include recent entrants Antares and Standard, as well as Amlin, Tokio Marine Kiln and XL Catlin.
In April, MAS gave the green light for Lloyd's Asia service companies to sub-delegate their underwriting authority to insurance intermediaries (coverholders), both within Singapore and overseas.
This has enabled Lloyd's to further develop its distribution network and strengthen its ability to offer clients specialist insurance coverage in the region.
Lloyd's Asia platform opened in 1999.

Standard Chartered's bad loans show cracks in Asia economies

Standard Chartered's bad loans show cracks in Asia economies

[BEIJING] As China's growth sputters, the troubles at Standard Chartered Plc are another bad omen for what were once Asian economic darlings.
The bank, which generates most of its income in the region, had gambled on success in emerging markets such as India, which instead saddled the lender with delinquent loans. As a result, the company which opened its offices in Mumbai under Queen Victoria is now axing 15,000 jobs and is asking investors for US$5.1 billion.
"Standard Chartered are Asian specialists and are in all the main markets in the region, so in looking at them you can get a good sense for credit direction and lending appetite," said Mark Holman, chief executive officer at TwentyFour Asset Management in London, which oversees 5 billion pounds (S$10.7 billion).  For now, Asia still has fewer corporate debt defaults than other developing countries, but rising leverage from India to Indonesia point to the risk of further nonpayments. More stringent conditions from banks like Standard Chartered are slowing loan growth in the region, exposing more fissures in the corporate credit market.
"The picture that emerges is that Asian credit cycles are far more advanced than those in Europe and loan losses and impairment charges are mounting," Mr Holman said.
Like other developing nations, Asian companies took advantage of low interest rates overseas to go on a borrowing binge. The move is backfiring as slower economic growth makes it more difficult to pay back the obligations.
Fitch Ratings warned on Nov 2 that 11 per cent of India's loans will fall into the category of "stressed assets" in the fiscal year ending in March 2016 and only improve "marginally" the next year. In China, Sinosteel Co, a state-owned steelmaker, missed an interest payment last month, becoming the latest firm that teeters on the verge of default.
While they are still posting positive returns, dollar- denominated bonds sold by Asian companies are trailing their emerging-market peers for the first time since 2012. The bonds returned 2.8 per cent this year, compared with 3.2 per cent for the average gain in emerging markets, according to data compiled by JPMorgan Chase & Co.
Own Fault?
To be fair, Standard Chartered created its own problems. Under former CEO Peter Sands, the bank relaxed lending standards to expand across emerging markets. Rival HSBC Holdings Plc, whose earnings are also mostly in Asia, made no such bet and beat analyst estimates to report third-quarter pretax profit rose 32 per cent.
Defaults in Asia are still far and between. Standard & Poor's recorded Indonesian coal miner PT Berau Coal Energy as the sole defaulter from Asia this year, compared with seven in Latin America and nine in Eastern Europe and Middle East.
Still, other Asian companies including Kaisa Group Holdings Ltd. and Winsway Enterprises Holdings Ltd. - which sold debt using offshore tax haven units - have also reneged on obligations this year. In China's latest bond scare, coal miner Hidili Industry International Development Ltd said on Oct. 30 it couldn't pay US$190.6 million of bond principal and interest due Wednesday.
"The rapid credit growth in Asia raises some concern, and people are definitely mindful of the credit growth in China," Steve Hooker, a money manager at Newfleet in Hartford, Connecticut, who helps oversee about US$12.5 billion of debt, said by phone. "But generalisation doesn't really work here. Corporate credit risks are usually industry specific."
1997 Again?
With banks retreating, lending is drying up. Strip out Japan, loans in Asia plunged 25 per cent this year to US$259 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Fortress Investment Group LLC warned investors in September that the "contraction of credit" among developing countries would deepen a selloff that could rival the Asian financial crisis of 1997.
"There's been dramatic change in values from energy and mining related holdings and the general sentiment of moving away from emerging markets," said David Tawil, a founder of Maglan Capital in New York, an US$80 million hedge fund specialising in distressed debt. "It's only the beginning of the new wave."
BLOOMBERG

Dollar retreats against emerging currencies as concerns fade

Dollar retreats against emerging currencies as concerns fade

[TOKYO] The US dollar fell against emerging market currencies in Asia on Wednesday as worries over China's economy faded and investors awaited fresh input from the Federal Reserve on its timeline for an interest rate hike.
The Malaysian ringgit and the Indonesian rupiah booked solid gains against the greenback as a commodity price recovery pushed equity markets into positive territory.
The South Korean won, the Taiwan and Singapore dollars and the Thai baht were also up against the US currency.
But the dollar gained against Japan's currency, rising to 121.19 yen (S$1.397) from 121.03 yen Tuesday in New York.
Expectations remain that the Japanese central bank may need to increase its bond-buying programme to further stimulate the country's slumping economic growth and weak consumer prices.
The euro, meanwhile, dropped to US$1.0948 from US$1.0959 but showed continued strength against the yen, edging up to 132.68 yen from 132.64 yen.
High-yield, riskier assets have taken a big hit this year on fears of a flight of capital back to the United States as traders look for better, safer investments.
But the dollar suffered a heavy sell-off against emerging currencies in October, as concerns about the world's top economy boosted the argument the Fed would delay a rate hike until 2016.
"We still have some uncertainties over when US interest rates will start to climb, but it seems the clouds of pessimism around China's economy are starting to clear," chief market strategist Michael McCarthy of CMC Markets Plc told Bloomberg News.
"It's unlikely we'll see a hard landing in China. There's been demonstrated commitment from authorities in China to underpin the economy. We're certainly seeing good support for risk assets." Many economists say the Fed's interest rate hike could come sometime next year, citing weakness in the US economy - including last week's soft data on consumer spending - and ongoing worries about the global economy, namely China's ongoing slowdown.
That, in turn, boosts the case for a later rate lift-off and bolsters emerging currencies.
The ringgit added 0.60 per cent, while the Indonesian rupiah rose 0.62 per cent. The won gained 0.37 per cent and the Taiwan dollar advanced 0.56 per cent.
The Thai baht was up 0.13 per cent, while the Singapore dollar traded 0.12 per cent higher.
The US dollar strengthened against the yen on hope of further action by the Bank of Japan after it held the trigger on extra stimulus last week.
"The US is the only one that is ready to hike," Koon How Heng, senior foreign exchange strategist at Credit Suisse Group AG's private banking and wealth management unit, told Bloomberg News.
"The rest of the world is either neutral or dovish. That supports the positive dollar view." Investors are now looking ahead to Fed Chair Janet Yellen's congressional testimony Wednesday and fresh US employment and trade figures.
AFP

Indonesia chief econ minister says there is room for interest rate cut

Indonesia chief econ minister says there is room for interest rate cut

[JAKARTA] Indonesia's chief economic minister said on Wednesday the central bank has room to cut interest rates after inflation eased to 6.25 per cent in October.
"I say there is a chance (for a rate cut)," Coordinating Minister of Economics Darmin Nasution told reporters, citing cooling inflation and a shrinking current account deficit.
The central bank will next meet to decide monetary policy on Nov 17. In last month's meeting, it said it saw economic pressure receding and there might be room to ease monetary policy in the future.
REUTERS

Thai junta turns to populist subsidies to ease farmer tensions

Thai junta turns to populist subsidies to ease farmer tensions

[BANGKOK] Thailand's junta has approved US$1.3 billion in rural subsidies, akin to the populist policies of the government it ousted, to appease disgruntled and politically powerful farmers who are struggling with record low commodity prices and weak exports.
The rural heartland of Thailand's deposed leader Yingluck Shinawatra and her exiled billionaire brother Thaksin is hurting as a result of the military government's economic policies, stirring discontent and the threat of protests.
The military government had pledged to wean farmers off expensive subsidies used by the previous government which it ousted in a 2014 coup.
But last week it approved measures worth around US$1 billion to help rice farmers and on Tuesday gave the greenlight to US$365 million to help rubber farmers who had threatened to rally in defiance of a ban on political gatherings.
"In a situation of economic difficulty they have to stimulate consumption and what they think is: give grassroots people money and it will circulate," said Gothom Arya, an advisor to the Institute of Human Rights and Peace Studies at Bangkok's Mahidol University. "Though the junta's action is exactly the same as previous governments, they claim that this time money will not leak," said Mr Arya.
Such measures would have been unthinkable immediately after the coup which ushered in a junta pledging to "clean up" Thailand and move the country away from corruption associated with politicians and their populist policies.
But seventeen months on, incomes in rural areas, where more than 34 million Thais live, have collapsed and farmers in the world's second-biggest rice exporter and top rubber exporter have been calling for the re-introduction of subsidies.
JUNTA FALLING TO SOOTHE TENSIONS
Thailand's farmers have been at the centre of a decade of political turmoil. Military attempts to disperse 10 weeks of protests by Thaksin's "red shirt" supporters in 2010 left scores dead and sparked the worst violence in modern Thai history.
The subsidies are the latest in a raft of measures, including soft loans through village funds, by newly appointed Finance Minister Somkid Jatusripitak, one of the architects of the Shinawatra's populist policies, to appease farmers and boost the economy.
But while aid is rising, farmers remain critical of the junta, which has not guaranteed crop prices as farmers demand, and their measures are far from the scale of Yingluck's schemes. "Rubber prices drop. We make less money. I would rather see the government help raise rubber prices," said Samai Sribang, 58, a rubber farmer.
A Yingluck rice programme which paid almost 50 per cent above global market prices, cost around US$14 billion, and fuelled criticism of vote-buying. She also spent US$620 million building rubber stockpiles under a price support programme.
In January, a military-appointed legislature impeached Yingluck for negligence over the rice scheme that distorted markets and built up massive rice stockpiles.
REUTERS

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