Tuesday, November 10, 2015

US dollar rally fizzles, dealers await China release

US dollar rally fizzles, dealers await China release

[HONG KONG] The dollar edged down in Asia on Wednesday after rallying since last week's US jobs data while Asian equities mostly dipped as investors nervously await there release of more Chinese economic data.
Another run of disappointing figures out of Beijing this week, on trade and inflation, has reinforced worries about China's outlook. And Wednesday's readings will be pored over for further clues about the world's number two economy, a key driver of global growth.
Despite ongoing weaknesses in global economy, particularly in China, the Federal Reserve has been widely tipped to hike borrowing rates as it looks to prevent bubbles appearing at home.
Friday's bumper US jobs report ramped up speculation that central bank policymakers will announce a lift-off before the end of the year, which sent the dollar surging on Friday and Monday.
However, Masato Yanagiya, head of foreign-exchange and money trading at Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp. in New York, said the Fed would likely be studying world markets before making its decision.
"The wild card to the otherwise straight road to a rate hike is stock moves," Yanagiya told Bloomberg News.
"Tumbling stocks would overhaul the scenario of a Fed rate hike and dollar buying. The Fed may not like stock declines and in that sense, it now depends on markets not data."
On Wednesday the greenback dipped against the euro after hitting a six-month high in New York trade. Adding to selling pressure on the single currency are expectations the European Central Bank will further loosen its own monetary policy to try to kickstart the eurozone's torpid economy.
The euro was at US$1.0732 early Wednesday in Tokyo, from US$1.0727 in New York, where it at one point touched US$1.0675, its lowest level since late April.
The dollar also edged down to 123.04 yen from 123.19 yen.
Emerging market currencies also strengthened slightly for a second day, having been hammered at the start of the week.
Malaysia's ringgit, the Indonesian rupiah and South Korean won were the main winners after being hurt the most on Monday. There were also gains for the Australian and Singapore dollars, as well as the Thai baht.
On equities markets dealers were keeping to the sidelines before Beijing announces data on investment, retail sales and factory output.
Months of weak readings have put pressure on Beijing to act as it struggles to transform the nation's growth model to a more stable one driven by domestic consumption and away from decades of export reliance and state investment.
Economic growth continues to slow - at annual levels not seen in a quarter of a century - despite moves to boost lending, including six interest rate cuts in 12 months and several reductions in the amount of cash banks must keep in reserve.
Attention will also be paid to retailers Wednesday in China as it marks Singles' Day, which has become the world's biggest shopping day that sees billions spent by the country's cashed up consumers.
AFP

Strong 6.9-magnitude quake hits Chile: USGS

Strong 6.9-magnitude quake hits Chile: USGS

[WASHINGTON] A strong 6.9-magnitude earthquake struck off the coast of central Chile late Tuesday but there was no immediate tsunami alert, US seismologists said.
The epicenter of the quake was near the coast, about 93km north-west of Coquimbo, said the US Geological Survey (USGS). It initially gave the magnitude as 6.6.
The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said there was no tsunami threat from the quake, which struck at 8.54pm at a depth of 10km.
Chile is no stranger to earthquakes.
In September, the same area of the country was hit by an 8.3-magnitude earthquake and tsunami that left 15 dead and over 16,000 homeless.
In February 2010, an 8.8-magnitude quake off the southern Chilean coast killed more than 500 people and inflicted an estimated US$30 billion in damage.
Chile lies on what is known as the "Ring of Fire" - an arc of fault lines that circles the Pacific Basin and is prone to frequent earthquakes and volcanic eruptions.
AFP

Asia: Shares anxious ahead of China data

Asia: Shares anxious ahead of China data

[SYDNEY] Asian share markets drifted lower on Wednesday as anxiety mounted ahead of another batch of Chinese data while strength in the US dollar kept the screws on global commodity prices.
Markets will be vulnerable to any whiff of disappointment in Chinese figures on retail sales, industrial production and urban investment, particularly given recent downward surprises on inflation and trade.
The CSI300 index of the largest listed companies in Shanghai and Shenzhen fell 0.5 per cent, while the Shanghai Composite Index eased 0.3 per cent.
Concerns about Chinese demand were evident in Japan where a Reuters survey showed confidence among manufacturers fell in November for a third straight month to levels unseen in about 2-1/2 years.
Japan's Nikkei slipped 0.1 per cent, though that follows a run of strong gains.
MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was flat after touching a fresh one-month low. Bourses in South Korea and Taiwan lost ground.
Wall Street had offered no direction as the Dow ended Tuesday with a slight gain of 0.16 per cent. The S&P 500 added 0.15 per cent and the Nasdaq eased 0.24 per cent.
Weighing on the Nasdaq, Apple shares fell 3 per cent after Credit Suisse said the iPhone maker had lowered component orders by as much as 10 per cent.
In currency markets, the euro struggled as political uncertainty in Portugal provided an excuse to sell in a market already bracing for further monetary policy easing from the European Central Bank.
The common currency last stood at US$1.0755, having hit a six-month trough of US$1.0673 on Tuesday.
The dollar index eased back form a seven-month peak to be down 0.4 per cent at 98.900. The dollar ran into a little profit-taking against the yen, nudging it down to 122.94, from an early 123.15.
Yields on sovereign bonds were generally lower as soft Chinese inflation continued to point to global deflationary pressures.
Benchmark 10-year Treasury yields dipped a couple of basis points to 2.34 per cent, but remain hostage to the chance of a Fed rate hike next month. Indeed, concerns are growing that another strong payrolls report could lead to rates rising at a faster pace than was currently priced in.
The Treasury market is closed on Wednesday for Veterans Day, but Wall Street will be open.
In commodities, the firm US dollar continues to weigh on prices with zinc at its lowest in over five years.
Oil prices resumed their decline on news US crude stocks jumped last week. US crude lost 45 cents to US$43.76 a barrel, while Brent shed 23 cents to US$47.21.
REUTERS

Netflix hit by outage, vexing users

Netflix hit by outage, vexing users

[SAN FRANCISCO] An unexpected Netflix outage on Tuesday temporarily stymied unspecified numbers of members trying to stream television shows in the United States, Mexico and Brazil.
Vexed users turned to Twitter, where a message posted by the California-based company in the early evening said it was aware of "streaming issues on some devices" and was working to fix the problems.
About an hour later, Netflix fired off a tweet saying the trouble had been resolved and thanking people for their patience.
Netflix did not reply to an AFP inquiry regarding the extent and cause of the outage.
Exchanges posted at customer support account @Netflixhelps indicated the trouble interfered with show streaming in Brazil and Mexico, as well as in the United States.
"Our hamster just fell off its wheel," Netflix tech support said playfully while responding to a member on Twitter.
"Our geeks are working to put him back to running!" Netflix is the world's largest video streaming on-demand service by subscription, with a presence in over 60 countries and the aim to be in all markets of the world by the end of 2016.
Netflix said in October that its global membership grew to 69.17 million as it gears for further expansion.
AF
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EU misspent over 6b euros last year: watchdog

EU misspent over 6b euros last year: watchdog

[BRUSSELS] The EU misspent 6.3 billion euros (S$9.6 billion) in 2014, the bloc's financial watchdog said on Tuesday, urging Brussels to take a "wholly new approach" to make its budget more responsive to shocks like the migration crisis.
Examples of badly spent funds included underused airports of which only around half were worthy of EU funds, and aid paid for farmland in Spain that was actually being used as a motocross track, the European Court of Auditors said in a report.
The independent ombudsman urged the 28-nation European Union to be more flexible and free up unspent funds so they can be used where needed, such as on dealing with the wave of refugees and migrants coming to Europe.
"We call for a whole new approach - we cannot afford to do business as usual," Vitor Caldeira, the president of the independent ombudsman, told journalists as he launched the report.
The report said the so-called error rate for spending fell slightly to 4.4 per cent of the EU's 142.5 billion euro budget in 2014 from a revised 4.5 per cent in 2013, but was still far above the acceptable level of 2.2 per cent.
Mr Caldeira said the report came at a "particularly difficult time", with the EU facing major challenges ranging from the struggle to create jobs and growth and dealing with Europe's biggest migration crisis since World War II.
"Decision makers must align the budget better with the EU's long-term strategic priorities and make it more capable of responding in a crisis," he said.
The EU's budget has long been a source of debate, and particularly now, with the economy only weakly recovering after years of austerity and eurosceptic parties on the rise in many countries.
The European Commission said the rate of misspending continued to go down but said it would work harder to prioritise spending.
"We ought to be able to move resources accordingly to serve our citizens best," EU budget commissioner Kristalina Georgieva said.
The migration crisis has placed a particular burden on the EU's budget as states deal with an unprecedented flow of refugees and migrants from Syria and other conflict zones.
Mr Caldeira said the EU's budgetary system was slow to react to crises like migration, partly as it is planned in seven year stretches, with the current budget lasting from 2014 until 2020.
"The current migration problem would benefit from available funds that have been committed to different areas if they could be used in some more flexible way," the watchdog chief said.
The watchdog said it looks at whether or not money is spent according to EU rules, but does not specifically measure "fraud, inefficiency or waste", with any suspected fraud reported to the bloc's anti-corruption agency.
Spending managed jointly by Brussels and member states had the same level of error as that managed directly by the European Commission, the EU's powerful executive branch, the report said.
It did not give figures for individual countries.
The budget amounts to around one percent of EU gross national income and around two per cent of total public spending in EU member states, it said.
AFP

Pakistan to sign economic zone deal with China: official

Pakistan to sign economic zone deal with China: official

[Quetta, Pakistan] Pakistan's poorest province is set to sign a deal with China Wednesday allotting thousands of acres of land for Beijing to develop a massive special economic zone in the deep sea port of Gwadar, officials told AFP.
The 40-year lease will see the government of Baluchistan hand over a 923-hectare swathe of tax-exempt land as part of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, an ambitious US$46 billion investment plan linking western China to the Arabian Sea.
The contract assigning the land to the China Overseas Port Holding Company is being signed on Wednesday in Gwadar, according to Dostain Khan Jamaldini, chief of the Gwadar Port Authority.
The contract will allow China to build an export zone and an international airport, Baluchistan's top provincial official said Tuesday.
"China has asked us to provide land for building an export processing zone and a modern international airport in Gwadar," Baluchistan Chief Minister Abdul Malik Baloch told AFP.
China is also building a road network to link the zone to the airport and a sea port, and the provincial government will provide the land according to their requirements, he said.
As part of the wider plans, work on the Gwadar International Airport would start in the next couple of months.
Pakistan is also raising a special security force of between 10,000 and 25,000 men to protect the port.
Desperately poor Baluchistan has been roiled since 2004 by a separatist insurgency aimed at seeking greater control over the province's rich oil, gas and mineral resources.
Gwadar port, located 540km south-west of Karachi, was built in 2007 with technical help from Beijing as well as Chinese financial assistance of some US$248 million.
But acquiring the land from private owners to build the economic zone took several years and cost the Baluch government around US$62 million, officials have said.
Some Baluch nationalists have accused the Chinese of conspiring with the Pakistani elite to plunder the province's resources while doing little to share profits and create jobs for local people.
AFP

China's Q3 preliminary current account surplus at US$63.4b: FX regulator

China's Q3 preliminary current account surplus at US$63.4b: FX regulator

[BEIJING] China posted a preliminary current account surplus of US$63.4 billion in the third quarter of 2015 and a deficit of US$63.4 billion on its capital and financial account, the country's foreign exchange regulator said on Wednesday.
Preliminary data from the State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) also showed a US$212 billion current account surplus and a US$121.9 billion deficit on the capital and financial account in first nine months of this year.
REUTERS

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