Sunday, November 15, 2015

China says global war on terror should also target Uighur militants

China says global war on terror should also target Uighur militants

[BEIJING] The struggle against Islamist militants in China's violence-prone far western region of Xinjiang should become an "important part" of the world's war on terror, China's foreign minister said, following the attacks in Paris.
Hundreds of people have died in unrest in Xinjiang, home to the mostly Muslim Uighur people, and other parts of China over the past three years.
Beijing has blamed the violence on Islamist militants, led by the East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM), a group it says has ties to al Qaeda. More recently China has reported that some Uighurs have travelled to Syria and Iraq to fight with Islamic State and other groups.
Speaking in Turkey on Sunday on the sidelines of the G20 summit, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi called on the international community to form a "united front to combat terrorism" in the aftermath of Paris attacks, state news agency Xinhua said on Monday.
"The UN's leading role should be brought into full play to combat terrorism, and a united front in this regard should be formed," Mr Wang said. "China is also a victim of terrorism, and cracking down on ETIM should become an important part of the international fight against terrorism," he added.
Both the United Nations and Washington placed ETIM on lists of terror organisations after the Sept 11, 2001, attacks in the United States.
Many foreign experts doubt that ETIM exists as the coherent group China portrays.
Rights groups and exiles say the violence stems from widespread resentment among Uighurs at Chinese controls on their religion and culture rather than an organised militant group.
Xinhua pointed out that ETIM had claimed responsibility for three recent attacks, including a fatal vehicle crash in 2013 in Beijing's Tiananmen Square in which five died.
Chinese state media has already sought to link China's own "war on terror" with the Paris attacks.
Over the weekend, pictures appeared on the microblogs of state-run newspapers showing Chinese armed police supposedly on a mission to root out militants in Xinjiang, pictures put out to coincide with what happened in France.
REUTER
S

Deutsche Bank Japan bond veteran turned author warns of bubble

Deutsche Bank Japan bond veteran turned author warns of bubble

[TOKYO] The Bank of Japan's bond-buying stimulus is exposing investors to risks similar to the 2008 debt crisis, according to a Deutsche Bank AG veteran trader turned best-selling author.
The monetary authority's policies are "artificially lifting asset prices," misleading the public, said Yoshihiro Matsumura, who headed Japanese government bond trading at the German bank in 2004. His book, whose title translates as Why Do We Feel So Insecure About Our Future Now? overtook Thomas Piketty's Capital in the Twenty-First Century as the biggest seller online in Japan soon after being published in February.
Mr Matsumura, who retired in 2011 after trading in the world's second-biggest bond market for more than two decades, joins other investors who have criticized the BOJ's unprecedented stimulus for the distortions it creates.
He also sees Japan's commitment to using monetary policy to force-feed economic expansion as creating the sort of moral hazard that laid the foundations for the demise of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc during the crisis seven years ago.
"The BOJ is driving massive, speculative dealing," Mr Matsumura, 51, said in an interview in Tokyo. They are "luring everybody to jump on the bandwagon and make money now because markets are looking only up. It will be the Japanese public who'll get stuck with losses when it all ends."
Japan's benchmark 10-year JGB yields have declined 70 1/2 basis points since reaching a high of 1 per cent in May 2013, a month after the BOJ embarked on its easing policy in April.
The Nikkei 225 Stock Average has almost doubled and the yen has weakened about 30 per cent versus the dollar since Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was elected as a prime minister at the end of 2012, pledging to end more than a decade of deflation.
The yen depreciation has helped boost corporate profits and tax revenues, and the labour market has improved, according to Tetsuro Ii, the chief executive at Commons Asset Management. Japan's job-to-applicant ratio was 1.24  in September, the highest level since January 1992, and regular wages rose for a seventh straight month. Now, government spending is needed to further boost economic demand, Mr Ii said.
"Monetary policy was the most effective macro economic policy," he said. "Kuroda has pretty much done what he can do."
The BOJ refrained from expanding stimulus last month even as it postponed its time-frame for reaching a 2 per cent inflation target to the six-month period through March 2017. Mr Kuroda said the central bank isn't losing credibility and that its actions so far are having the intended effects.
KURODA'S DEFENCE
With the size of the BOJ's balance sheet now equivalent to more than two-thirds of Japan's economic output, critics worry that the governor will run out of options unless he succeeds soon.
"From a trader's perspective, the BOJ's quantitative easing framework is outright wrong," Mr Matsumura said. "A dealer always thinks of a strategy with an exit in mind. Policy that does not take into account an exit is unthinkable."
Gross domestic product declined an annualized 0.8 per cent in the three months ended Sept 30, following a revised 0.7 per cent drop in the second quarter, meeting the common definition of a recession.
When Lehman Brothers collapsed, Mr Matsumura was a proprietary JGB trader at Barclays Plc. Three years later, he gave up his 22-year trading career including stints at Goldman Sachs Group Inc and Merrill Lynch.
SOMETHING WRONG
His book, which analyses why many Japanese feel very insecure about their future and are skeptical of the effectiveness of current policies, briefly ranked No. 1 on Amazon.com Inc's Japan online list for economic books in August. It has sold more than 10,000 copies, according to the author.
"My book probably drew sympathy from people who are vaguely aware something is wrong," Mr Matsumura said. "There is no growth despite the aggressive money printing. They sense soaring stocks and higher wages aren't a real fundamental solution."
The BOJ's "miscalculation" is that rising corporate earnings as a result of a weaker yen haven't quite led to salary increases, said Hideo Kumano, the chief economist at Dai-ichi Life Research Institute.
"It's gotten even more difficult to read where monetary policy is headed," Mr Kumano said, following the decision at the Oct 30 meeting.
BIGGEST PLAYER
Asset purchases have made the BOJ the biggest player in Japan's US$8 trillion bond market. The central bank held a record 295 trillion yen (S$3.4 trillion) of outstanding sovereign debt and bills at the end of June, making up 28.5 per cent of the total pool of securities.
While a mark-to-market based performance in the JGB market may appear to look good, whether investors actually made profits will only become clear when the central bank exits its current stimulus, Mr Matsumura said.
"Lehman also held massive positions they couldn't get out of and went bust," he said. "But some people were paid bonuses because of mark-to-market gains. That's what the BOJ is doing right now."
BLOOMBERG

China's economy to grow at around 7% this year: Xi

China's economy to grow at around 7% this year: Xi

[BEIJING] China's President Xi Jinping said the country is able to maintain a medium to high economic growth rate and expects China's economy to grow at around 7 per cent this year.
Mr Xi's remarks at the G-20 Summit in Turkey on Sunday were published on the foreign ministry's website.
REUTERS

China watchdog starts probe into mutual funds: media

China watchdog starts probe into mutual funds: media

[SHANGHAI] China's markets regulator has started probing mutual funds for illegal activity, an unnamed source told the respected China Business News on Monday.
The country's regulators have been cracking down on illegal stock trading, "malicious" short-selling and insider dealing since bourses fell sharply in mid-June.
The investigation by the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) may include some brokerages and will involve a wide ranging audit which is expected to conclude before the end of this year, the source told China Business News.
The investigation is in its early stages, but the CSRC plans to announce details this month, the source said.
The CSRC was not immediately available for comment.
REUTERS

Singapore shares open lower on Monday after Paris attacks

Singapore shares open lower on Monday after Paris attacks

SINGAPORE shares opened lower on Monday morning, as Asian markets declined on jittery investor sentiments after Islamist militants launched coordinated attacks across Paris.
The benchmark Straits Times Index (STI) opened 29.64 points or 1.01 per cent lower at 2,896.04 on Monday at 9.04am.
Some 69.2 million shares worth S$54.4 million changed hands, with losers beating gainers 131 to 25.
Among the active counters were Noble, Tigerair and Stratech
.

UN chief Ban Ki Moon to visit North Korea: Yonhap

UN chief Ban Ki Moon to visit North Korea: Yonhap

[SEOUL] UN chief Ban Ki Moon is to visit North Korea, the first head of the world body to set foot in the isolated state for more than 20 years, South Korea's Yonhap news agency reported Monday.
Citing an unidentified high-level UN source, Yonhap said Mr Ban would visit Pyongyang in his official capacity as secretary general later this week, though no precise dates were given.
The UN spokesman's office in New York declined to comment on the report.
The high-level UN source told Yonhap that Mr Ban was almost certain to meet with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, who has yet to receive a single head of state since taking over power following the death of his father Kim Jong Il in 2011.
"There can't be such a situation where the UN secretary-general visits North Korea and does not meet with the supreme leader of the UN member state," the source said.
Mr Ban had been scheduled to visit North Korea in May this year, but Pyongyang withdrew its invitation at the last minute.
Although no official explanation was given, that cancellation was seen as a response to comments Mr Ban made in Seoul warning the North against raising tensions on the divided peninsula.
Two UN secretary generals have visited North Korea in the past - Kurt Waldheim in 1979 and, in 1993, Mr Boutros Boutros-Ghali who met with then-leader Kim Il Sung to discuss tensions over its nuclear ambitions.
It will not be Mr Ban's first visit to the North. He crossed the border to visit the joint industrial zone of Kaesong with a delegation of foreign diplomats in 2006 when he was South Korea's foreign minister.
AFP

Wary of capital outflows, Japan urges China to go slow on yuan reform

Wary of capital outflows, Japan urges China to go slow on yuan reform

[TOKYO] Japan has expressed concern to China about the pace of capital outflows from the country and has suggested Beijing moves very slowly in reforming its currency system to avoid repeating Japan's past mistakes.
After a summer of market turmoil, China now appears to be at a critical juncture as capital outflows reach hundreds of billions of dollars and Beijing draws down heavily on its, albeit large, currency reserves to offset the impact of the money moving offshore.
The stocks slump of more than 40 per cent in a matter of a few months and the shock devaluation of the yuan acted as a reminder of how quickly Beijing could lose control of its markets if it moves too quickly to open up to market forces, Japanese officials say. "The pace of capital outflows is alarming," said a senior official with knowledge of Japan's currency diplomacy. "If China's financial system is destabilised, the effect on Japan and the rest of Asia would be enormous." Publicly, Japanese officials have urged China to proceed with reform and expressed confidence that Beijing has the tools and expertise to manage. But privately, they have adopted a different tone, cautioning Beijing against moving too quickly to free up the yuan when large capital outflows could make the currency a target for speculators.
Japan has conveyed its concerns to Chinese officials at various meetings this year, including at the G20 financial leaders' meeting in Turkey in September.
China took a big step towards internationalising its currency on Friday, when IMF staff and the institution's head Christine Lagarde endorsed the inclusion of the yuan in the fund's benchmark foreign exchange basket, known as Special Drawing Rights (SDR). Analysts estimate inclusion could lead to demand for the yuan worth more than $500 billion. "It should be the other way around," said a Japanese official, who declined to be identified because of the sensitivity of the matter. "Reforms come first, then you debate whether the yuan can join the SDR." China is trying to engineer a shift in the economy away from manufacturing and towards consumption and services while promising to fully liberalise the yuan by 2020 - a goal some Japanese officials feel is to ambitious.
Japan's cautious tone is at odds with the more robust calls from Washington - underlined last week with comments from US Treasury Secretary Jack Lew urging Beijing to press ahead with its reform plans.
But Japan's views carry weight with Beijing, which has long taken a close interest in how Japan emerged in the past three decades as a global economic power.
It views Japan's handling of capital flows and the yen as key factors that led to its asset bubble blow-up in the early 1990s that led to nearly two decades of deflation Japan is still struggling to eradicate.
For decades, China's main concern was the amount of foreign currency coming into the economy as it built a huge export engine.
But since China surprised world markets by devaluing its currency around 2 per cent in August, net capital outflows have reached US$200 billion, while Beijing appeared to have spent US$229 billion in foreign exchange intervention to prop up the yuan in the third quarter, a US Treasury Department report showed last month.
Japanese policymakers are not suggesting there is an immediate risk of a financial crisis, but they say China's heavy intervention in markets to offset the capital outflows shows Beijing is worried.
If China liberalises its currency too quickly and before it fixes other problems in the economy, such as high debt, Beijing may struggle to contain capital outflows and that may take a toll on its US$3.5 trillion in currency reserves, Japanese officials say. "Market liberalisation sounds nice. But it could cause various problems," said Eisuke Sakakibara, who as a senior Japanese finance ministry official wrestled to contain volatile yen swings with heavy intervention in the late 1990s. "When an economy moves from fast-growth to stable growth, you're bound to have some market turmoil. The same thing could happen in China, so the worst thing to do is to move too quickly to a free-floating currency regime." China said the devaluation of the yuan reflected market forces, but the move jolted global markets on fears it meant the economy was in worse shape than previously thought.
China is Japan's biggest trading partner and its markets have become susceptible to big swings caused by Chinese policy decisions. Any repercussions to Asia also affect many Japanese firms and banks operating in the region.
Such impact was highlighted when China's yuan devaluation sent Japanese and global stock prices tumbling, as investors initially struggled to understand Beijing's motives. "There was lot of second guessing over China's policy intention and that was because the communication was poor," said a China-based Japanese government official.
Both Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and Finance Minister Taro Aso have called on China to address structural problems in the economy, such as bad loans and excess industrial capacity, and to provide transparency of policymaking.
If China fails to tackle these problems, the risk is that it will not be just China that will feel the impact. "The biggest risk for Japan is a hard-landing in China,"said Naoyuki Shinohara, a former IMF deputy managing director who retains close contacts with incumbent Japanese policymakers. "China's real 'black swan' is its bad-loan problems." REUTERS

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