Tuesday, November 17, 2015

US dollar hits 7-month high against euro

US dollar hits 7-month high against euro

[NEW YORK] Signs of possible inflation gains in the United States helped boost the dollar to its highest level against the euro since April on Tuesday.
The dollar rose to US$1.0644 per euro, and was slightly higher against the yen but fell against British pound.
Analysts said that although the 0.2 per cent rise in the US consumer price index in October was weak, underlying gains in health care, insurance and housing costs were likely to accelerate core inflation, giving the Federal Reserve more reason to begin raising interest rates in December.
Meanwhile, another senior European Central Bank official suggested it might need to loosen monetary policy in the coming month.
"It's key for a central bank to keep inflation expectations anchored, especially in a period of slack in the economy, and we have some signals that these inflation expectations are still fragile," ECB executive board member Peter Praet said in a Bloomberg interview.
AFP

SGX's bond-market foray now includes a dark pool

SGX's bond-market foray now includes a dark pool

[SINGAPORE] Singapore Exchange Ltd will open a dark pool for bonds as the 42-year-old bourse prepares to enter the institutional fixed-income trading business for the first time next year.
The venue, which allows traders to flag interest in a security without indicating the size or the price of their desired transaction, will form part of SGX's Bond Pro platform scheduled for the first quarter of 2016, Tsai Li Renn, the bourse's head of fixed income, said in an interview on Monday.
Designed to minimise the price impact of buy and sell orders, the dark pool will be the first of its kind set up by an exchange operator, according to SGX.
"We asked participants: 'How would you like to access liquidity in this marketplace?'" Mr Tsai said. "We found that they really wanted a dark pool."
The city-state's exchange is pushing into the fixed-income market at a time when tougher bank regulations and an impending Federal Reserve interest-rate increase make it more difficult for investors to execute large trades.
A dark pool for bonds started by Liquidnet Holdings in September is handling up to US$5 billion in daily turnover and plans to double that amount by year-end.
GLOBAL SPREAD
Dark pools have expanded worldwide in recent years, driven by the spread of electronic trading and regulatory efforts to cut transaction costs for investors.
In the US, more shares now change hands in dark pools than on the New York Stock Exchange. Proponents say the venues should play a greater role in bond markets as global banks pull back from their traditional roles as fixed-income market makers.
When a bond trader enters an order into SGX's dark pool, the venue will flag to participants only the name of the company or government that issued the security. Details on size, price and whether the trader is buying or selling will be hidden.
If another trader enters an order on the opposing side at a matching price and size, the debt will change hands. In cases when two orders are close to matching, the dark pool gives the buyer and seller a chance to negotiate. None of the trades will be disclosed publicly, though the exchange may consider providing more transparency in future, Mr Tsai said.
CURRENCIES COVERED
Initially, the new platform will deal only in bonds denominated in dollars, euros and yen, though it may expand to overseas notes issued in local currency, such as yuan- denominated bonds issued offshore. SGX already operates a bond- trading platform for individual investors.
While dark pools have become more common around the world, they've come under regulatory scrutiny amid concerns the secrecy surrounding trades on the venues could lead to abuses.
In September, authorities in the European Union published new requirements to disclose bond trades in an effort to make markets more transparent. The US Securities and Exchange Commission is considering limits to dark pool trading, while Hong Kong will implement curbs on bank-operated venues starting on Dec 1.
Bloomberg LP, the parent of this news organisation, runs an off-exchange trading system called Tradebook and owns a stake in Bids Trading LP, which operates a dark pool.
While there's a need for new ways to match buyers and sellers in the bond market, it's unclear at the outset whether SGX's new platform will provide a solution, according to Ben Sy, the head of fixed income, currencies and commodities at the private banking arm of JPMorgan Chase & Co in Hong Kong.
"It's something interesting, because we need to search for new sources of liquidity, but this is not proven," Mr Sy said.
Aside from the dark pool, SGX will operate venues for trading between investors and their dealers, as well as one for market-makers.
Banks acting as intermediaries in the corporate bond market will be able to transact with each other in three daily auctions, while investors seeking to trade bonds with banks can ask them for quotes through two different systems.
BLOOMBERG

Germany-Netherlands 'freedom' match called off for 'security reasons': police

Germany-Netherlands 'freedom' match called off for 'security reasons': police

[BERLIN] A football match in Germany that had been hailed as a "symbol of freedom" after the Paris attacks and was to be attended by Chancellor Angela Merkel was called off for security reasons on Tuesday, police said.
Thousands of fans were evacuated, without signs of panic, from Hanover's 49,000-capacity HDI Arena, where the German national side had been due to play a friendly against the Netherlands.
The German team was playing France last Friday when players and fans were shaken by the blasts of jihadist suicide bombers outside the venue that echoed through the Stade de France.
Head coach Joachim Loew had called the planned match "a clear message and symbol of freedom and a demonstration of compassion, as well as sorrow, for our French friends - not only in France, but throughout the world".
Before the match, players were practising the French anthem "La Marseillaise", which they had been set to sing in a sign of solidarity with the shaken nation.
The victims of the Paris attacks - which claimed at least 129 lives with more than 350 injured - were set to be honoured by candlelight in what has been described as "a friendly in the true sense of the word".
The German Football Association (DFB) had at the weekend already come close to calling off the match, while Belgium have cancelled their friendly against Spain on Tuesday.
"We want to take this opportunity to use light as a sign of sympathy to the world," the chairman of the Friends of Hanover, Roger Cericius, had told the Hannoversche Allgemeine newspaper.
Germany are still coming to terms with what they experienced last Friday during their international against France.
After the blasts, the Germans spent the night in the Stade de France changing room, as it was still considered too dangerous to cross Paris, before flying home early the next morning.
"There was a lot of fear and anxiety in the dressing room that night. We were afraid," said Loew, who revealed the players had asked to leave as soon as the match was over.
AFP

All work and not much pay for India's manufacturers

All work and not much pay for India's manufacturers

[VADODARA] In the office of the small paint factory he helps run, Pramod Patel is clear on the problem holding back India's manufacturing growth: cash, or a lack of it.
Clients, he says, are taking months to pay, sometimes 150 days compared to the standard 30, choking up businesses like his Reliable Paints and hampering the creation of much-needed jobs. "We have a lot of potential in our business, but we have no confidence in the payments," says Mr Patel, speaking over the noise of a mixer whirring behind him. Workers around him prepare paint to be decanted by hand into cream and grey coloured cans.
While there is no comprehensive data for the cash cycle of India's manufacturing industry, manufacturers interviewed by Reuters in the industrial heartland of Gujarat say cash is moving at a glacial pace.
All those interviewed by Reuters reported clients delaying payments, sometimes for the best part of a year, evidence of an uneven recovery and of India's credit drought as banks tackle US$100 billion of troubled loans.
Central bank data shows that loans to medium-sized industrial companies were down 10 per cent by mid September, compared to the start of the financial year in April. Loans to small companies dropped more than 3 per cent in the period.
Under Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who once ran Gujarat as chief minister, India has sought to improve life for manufacturers. He wants to boost a sector that accounts for under a fifth of the economy, compared to a third for China, the world's largest manufacturer.
But the reality on the ground is tough.
Even India's industrial bellwether, Larsen & Toubro , has reported deterioration. Chief Financial Officer R. Shankar Raman says payments take around 100 days after they fall due, compared to a standard 60-75 days.
That is hovering around the longest payment period in over a decade, he said.
"MADE IN INDIA"
India badly needs manufacturing to fuel its recovery and create jobs. After all, India will be home to a working age population of 900 million people by 2020, roughly a fifth of the world's potential workers.
Mr Modi's government has promised to make it simpler to operate in the country, with plans for a unified bankruptcy code, a unified goods and service tax, and more flexible labour laws. Last week, it lifted restrictions on foreign investment in 15 sectors, including defence.
But in this corner of Gujarat - a state that was ranked top in a World Bank-supported study on the ease of doing business in India's 29 states - manufacturers say the smallest and weakest among them could be pushed to the wall, unless reform is implemented and recovery arrives swiftly.
A plethora of different taxes still wrap small firms like Reliable Paints in red tape. Others report battling outdated factory rules: some are fined for a lack of spittoons, for example, in areas where spitting on the floor is forbidden.
There are signs of hope. L&T's Raman says he expects the numbers to have hit the bottom, provided promised government spending kicks in and banks pass on lower rates.
"The way the recovery is structured right now, it is not broad based," said economist Sonal Varma at Nomura. Government spending, however, could improve cash flows even for smaller firms within six to 12 months, she estimates.
Gujarat, for one, has pushed taxes online, cutting down on the paperwork and opportunities for corruption, and manufacturers say that had made processes smoother.
But until reforms come in, the bureaucracy is overhauled and real spending starts, factory managers in this baked corner of Gujarat - where paints, pumps and engineering parts dominate production - say their clients will continue to struggle.
"Our big problem is client liquidity," said the director at one European firm supplying the construction industry. "And of course we have to deal with bureaucracy and corruption." Four years after shutting an office in Mumbai, he said he was still battling to conclude the process.
And with lots of workers, India needs more skilled ones.
"We have a young workforce," said Vivek Sarwate, who runs plants outside the city of Vadodara for Schneider Electric , making components for the Indian power sector. "But if this young country is not a skilled country, instead of an asset, this becomes a liability."
REUTERS

Obama says China must stop land reclamation in South China Sea

Obama says China must stop land reclamation in South China Sea

[MANILA] US President Barack Obama said on Wednesday China must stop land reclamation in the disputed South China Sea and reaffirmed Washington's commitment to the defence and security of the Philippines, one of the parties to the dispute.
Mr Obama, speaking after a meeting with Philippine President Benigno Aquino on the sidelines of an Asia-Pacific summit in Manila, said he looked forward to working with all claimants to the waterway to resolve their disputes.
On Tuesday, Mr Obama visited an American-donated coast guard cutter now owned by the Philippines, one of its closest allies in the region.
REUTERS

Obama says confident TPP will be ratified before he ends term

Obama says confident TPP will be ratified before he ends term

[MANILA] President Barack Obama said on Wednesday all trade deals faced opposition and he was confident the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) deal will be ratified by the US Congress before he ends his term in November 2016.
Mr Obama was reacting to comments by some Republican lawmakers that the 12-nation Pacific Rim free-trade deal aimed at liberalising trade for 40 per cent of the world economy was unlikely to be voted on by the US Congress before he steps down from office.
"I'm confident we're going to get it done," Mr Obama told reporters in Manila on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit.
Mr Obama will be meeting leaders of TPP countries in Manila later in the day.
REUTERS

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