Wednesday, November 4, 2015

China woes hurt chipmaker Qualcomm's profit forecast

China woes hurt chipmaker Qualcomm's profit forecast

[BENGALURU] Qualcomm Inc forecast first-quarter profit way below analysts' expectations as the chipmaker struggles against fierce competition from Chinese and Taiwanese rivals, and faces delays in closing new licensing agreements in China.
The company's shares fell nearly 6 per cent in extended trading on Wednesday.
Qualcomm's agreements with two major Chinese customers are taking longer than anticipated, Chief Executive Steve Mollenkopf said on a conference call.
President Derek Aberle said some Chinese customers were"improperly withholding" royalties on Qualcomm's patents by changing the way they report sales.
The company, which got half of its fiscal 2014 revenue from Chinese customers, said it expected the issue to be resolved once the new agreements were completed.
Qualcomm is in the middle of a strategic review after hedge fund Jana Partners urged it to separate its chip unit from its highly profitable patent-licensing business.
The company has also announced job cuts and other cost-cutting steps in the face of stiff competition, which is likely to intensify as chipmakers consolidate to meet demand for cheaper semiconductors and to diversify their portfolios.
Qualcomm said on Wednesday that demand for the new version of its flagship Snapdragon mobile chips was stronger than it had expected in the fourth quarter.
The company was hurt earlier this year by Samsung Electronics Co Ltd's decision to use an internally developed processor, instead of the Snapdragon chips, in its Galaxy S6 smartphones.
Samsung had not ruled out using Qualcomm's chips in the future and media reported last month that the South Korean company's Galaxy S7 phones for the US and China markets were expected to use Snapdragon 820 chips.
Samsung is seen rolling out the Galaxy S7 early next year.
Qualcomm forecast a profit of 80-90 cents per share for the current quarter, well below the average analyst estimate of US$1.08, according to Thomson Reuters.
The net income attributable to the company fell 44 per cent to US$1.06 billion, or 67 cents per share, in the quarter ended Sept 27.
Excluding items, Qualcomm earned 91 cents per share, beating analysts' estimates of 86 cents, partly due to lower costs.
Revenue declined 18.5 per cent to US$5.46 billion, but topped Street expectation of US$5.21 billion.
Qualcomm shares were trading at US$56.74 after the bell.
REUTERS

Historic Xi-Ma summit advances China's long game for Taiwan

Historic Xi-Ma summit advances China's long game for Taiwan

[HONG KONG] The upcoming summit between Chinese President Xi Jinping and Taiwanese President Ma Ying-jeou is historic - literally. It's been seven decades since top leaders from both sides, technically still in a state of war, have met in a formal diplomatic encounter.
The planned meeting in Singapore on Saturday - two years in the making - is the latest remarkable twist in a geopolitical contest that stretches back to the bloody, final days of the Chinese Civil War, when Chiang Kai-shek's Kuomintang, or KMT, fled and took residence in Taiwan in 1949 - or, in China's view, launched a renegade province.
Mr Ma on Thursday billed the gathering as a way to promote peace across the Taiwan Strait and maintain the "status quo."
Turns out, the status quo isn't a bad thing for Mr Xi right now. China hasn't yet realised its dream of political reunification with Taiwan, but its economic gravitational pull has increased steadily during Mr Ma's eight years in office.
Gone are the days of high-decibel, fulminations from Communist Party leaders about the "splittists" in Taiwan or the provocative Chinese military exercises in the Taiwan Strait that prompted the Clinton administration to sail two US aircraft carrier battle groups through the waterway.
Then again, if a military clash were to happen in 2020, the Chinese would have the military assets to mount a serious challenge to the island, according to a report released by Taiwan's Ministry of National Defense in September.
That's maybe a self-interested assessment by military planners, but China's array of ballistic missiles, fighter aircraft and submarines are real - if still inferior to the US military support required by the Taiwan Relations Act of 1979. Mr Ma said he'll discuss reducing hostilities between the two sides.
SHORT-TERM RISK
When it comes to short-term trends in Taiwan's politics, things may not go China's way. Mr Ma is a lame duck. Heading into a general election slated for January, opinion polls show Tsai Ing-wen- the candidate for the pro-independence Democratic Progressive Party - as the frontrunner over KMT rival Eric Chu. The cross-strait thaw may prove short-lived.
"The decision is not for the election," Mr Ma said at a briefing in Taipei. "It's for the happiness of the next generation, hoping this is the first step toward the normalization of the meetings between leaders from both sides."
Viewed through a different lens, the meeting is a significant achievement in China's long-game to bring "its long lost brother" back into the fold, said Xu Shiquan, a senior researcher at Chinese Academy of Social Sciences' Institute of Taiwan Studies.
Market reaction was muted on Wednesday as investors waited to assess the long-term impact. While the benchmark Taiex gauge closed at its highest level since July, the 1.7 per cent gain failed to keep pace with gains in Hong Kong and Shanghai.
GROUND-BREAKING MOMENT
The first high-level, non-governmental talks between both sides took place in 1993. The next ground-breaking moment came in 2005 with then-KMT Chairman Lien Chan's journey to the mainland.
A successful Xi-Ma summit "would feel like scaling the third peak of Everest," according to Mr Xu. "For mainland China, it both consolidates what has evolved in the past eight years, and fits its step-by-step strategy in achieving eventual reunification," he said.
Economic ties between both sides have intensified since the meetings. "As long as water flows, a channel will be formed one day," Mr Xu said. "Now, the water flow of the economic exchanges has become enormous."
China became Taiwan's biggest export market in 2003, when it surpassed the US for the first time, according to trade figures compiled by Societe Generale. Since then, the mainland's share of Taiwan's export market has doubled to 40 per cent. 
TRADE TIES
Cross-strait economic ties were given a major boost after Ma became Taiwan's president in 2008 and pursued policies to build relations with Beijing. In 2010, the two sides signed the Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement - their first ever trade treaty - paving the way for other pacts, including one for investment protection in 2012, a services accord in 2013. The two sides have signed more than 20 agreements covering everything from flights to tourism to crime-fighting to nuclear power safety.
True, there's plenty of anti-China sentiment in Taiwan, as shown by the "Sunflower" student protests last year and the KMT's loss of nine of their 15 city and county chief positions in local elections last November. There's a risk that Mr Xi's overtures to Mr Ma might fire up the opposition among those worried about closer ties to China.
However, a successful Xi-Ma summit might also put pressure on the DPP's presidential candidate, Tsai, according to Jean-Pierre Cabestan, director of government and international studies at Hong Kong Baptist University.
CHINESE DREAM
"It's going to narrow Tsai's room for maneuver, if she's selected next year," Prof Cabestan said. "Tsai wants to revive the economy and how can she revise the economy without China's goodwill?"
Mr Xi and Mr Ma "would like to try to lock in the status quo, securing a legacy for Ma and making a DPP presidency less threatening for Xi," said Joseph Fewsmith, a political science professor at Boston University who specialises in China's elite politics.
Yet China, if anything, has proven itself both patient and determined over decades when it comes to Taiwan. Reunification is a key part of Mr Xi's vision of "the Chinese dream" - the grand rejuvenation of the Chinese state, culture and civilization.
Mr Xi, who has shown a proclivity to borrow from Mao Zedong's toolbox, aspires to emulate the party patriarch, according to Zhang Lifan, a Beijing-based historian. The summit shows "Xi's greater ambition of rejuvenating the country," Mr Zhang said.
BLOOMBERG

US dollar steady as Fed chief keeps December rate rise in play

US dollar steady as Fed chief keeps December rate rise in play

[TOKYO] The dollar held steady in Asia on Thursday after US central bank chief Janet Yellen suggested that a December US interest rate lift-off was still on the table.
In congressional testimony, Ms Yellen said that if the world's top economy was "performing well" and, if conditions warrant, a rate hike in December "would be a live possibility".
Ms Yellen's remarks came ahead of Friday's release of a key US jobs report for October and as fresh data on the vast US services sector Wednesday supported the view that the economy was on the upswing.
"Solid US data and Yellen's comments that seemed to support a rate hike next month sparked dollar buying," Naohiro Nomoto, an economist at Bank of Tokyo- Mitsubishi UFJ, told Bloomberg News.
"The dollar is being bought gradually, with markets pricing in the rate increase as data come out and yields rise. Fed officials appear to be setting up for the move."
Ms Yellen's comments took a bite out of some Asian currencies Thursday with the Malaysian ringgit, the South Korean won and the Indonesian rupiah among the units falling against the greenback Thursday.
But the dollar ticked lower against the yen, edging down to 121.50 yen from 121.55 Wednesday in New York, after trading in New York at its highest level since August on Ms Yellen's comments.
High-yield, riskier emerging currencies have been hit hard this year on fears of a flight of capital back to the United States as dealers look for better, safer investments on the back of the looming US rate lift-off.
The greenback has suffered a heavy sell-off against the Asian emerging units in recent weeks, however, as the Federal Reserve stood pat on raising interest rates at its October policy meeting.
In other deals, The euro was nearly flat from US trade at US$1.0866 and 132.02 yen compared to US$1.0865 and 132.06 yen.
AFP

SBF appoints Lee Yi Shyan adviser to Africa, China and Mid-East business groups

SBF appoints Lee Yi Shyan adviser to Africa, China and Mid-East business groups

By
THE Singapore Business Federation (SBF) has appointed former senior minister of state for trade and industry Lee Yi Shyan as adviser to three of its business groups as part of its internationalisation efforts.
The three groups are the Africa Business Group, China Business Group and Middle East Business Group.
Mr Lee will be part of a resource panel advising key business issues affecting economic ties between Singapore and these markets.
"He will also contribute to strengthening SBF's in-market reach and business facilitation efforts, given his extensive relationships in the government and business sectors in the three regions," SBF said.
The SBF business groups have been established as platforms to bring together public and private sectors in Singapore and the respective regions.

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