Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Basel plays down impact of trading rule changes on capital

Basel plays down impact of trading rule changes on capital

[LONDON] Overall capital requirements for banks would rise by 4.7 per cent under planned rules to ensure lenders set aside enough capital to cover the risk of trading book assets turning sour, global regulators said on Wednesday.
The Basel Committee, made up of banking supervisors from nearly 30 countries, published its long-awaited impact assessment for new capital rules that form part of its fundamental review of bank trading books.
Banks have complained the rules will lead to a quantum increase in capital, making it harder to keep trading for investors at a time when liquidity in markets is already falling, helping to trigger bouts of extreme volatility. "It shows that the change in market risk capital charges would produce a 4.7 per cent increase in the overall Basel III minimum capital requirement," the committee said in a statement. "When the bank with the largest value of market risk-weighted assets is excluded from the sample, the change in total market risk capital charges leads to a 2.3 per cent increase in overall Basel III minimum regulatory capital."
REUTERS

Barclays said to pay US$100m to settle currency probe

Barclays said to pay US$100m to settle currency probe

[NEW YORK] Barclays Plc is expected to pay at least US$100 million to settle an investigation by New York's banking regulator into whether it abused the "last look" practice on its electronic currency-trading program, according to a person briefed on the matter.
Barclays pleaded guilty in May to charges from the US Justice Department related to the rigging of foreign exchange rates and paid a total of US$2.4 billion to a variety of regulators, including New York's Department of Financial Services. The DFS received US$485 million of that sum, but stipulated that its own investigation would continue. The US$100 million settlement being discussed would resolve the "last look" issue.
Britain's second largest bank is among global lenders hardest hit by a worldwide investigation from regulators into allegations of collusion in the US$5.3 trillion-a-day currency market. While the London-based lender has reached settlements with most of the major authorities such as in the US and UK, it could still face litigation from clients.
"It would seem they're getting very close to the end of their major investigations," said Joseph Dickerson, an analyst at Jefferies International Ltd in London with a buy rating on shares. "That's outside of civil claims, which can be hard to gauge but tend to be small." The New York probe, which started a year ago, focuses on electronic-trading platforms of the biggest banks operating on foreign currency markets. It's seeking to determine whether banks abused the practice of "last looks," which allow the firms to back out of currency trades that shift against them.
In May, Citigroup Inc, JPMorgan Chase & Co and Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc pleaded guilty to conspiring to manipulate the price of US dollars and euros as part of settlements with the Justice Department. UBS Group AG won immunity in the settlement in exchange for cooperating, but pleaded guilty to a wire-fraud charge stemming from a previous matter involving the fixing of interest rates.
Kerrie Ann Cohen, a spokeswoman for Barclays, declined to comment, as did Ciara Marangas, a DFS spokeswoman. News of the expected settlement was reported earlier by the Financial Times.
Barclays is facing a "high risk" of substantial costs from a probe by various regulators around the world into its 2008 capital raising from Qatari investors, as well as allegations of misconduct over the operation of its dark pool trading venue, Moody's Investors Service said on Tuesday. Costs tied to other past misconduct, including alleged currency-rigging and benchmark manipulation, are seen posing a "medium risk," it said.
The bank set aside 290 million pounds (S$629 million) in the third quarter to compensate customers who were overcharged for currency trades. Barclays Finance Director Tushar Morzaria declined to elaborate on the charge at the time, calling it a "historical item" that occurred between 2005 and 2012.
BLOOMBERG

Commodity markets in worse shape than in 2009, and more risks to outlook

Commodity markets in worse shape than in 2009, and more risks to outlook

[SINGAPORE] With oil, copper and coal trading around their lowest levels since the global financial crisis, some investors are betting that the bottom may be close for these critical commodities and have increased their long positions in the market.
Yet those hoping for a similar strong recovery seen in 2009 need to tread with care.
For industrial commodities like copper, China was the saviour of markets following the 2008-09 crisis after Beijing unleashed massive economic stimulus programmes to boost demand.
Back then, confidence in China's capacity to underpin demand for commodities supported a contango forward curve with copper futures contracts for later months above the spot price.
But signalling a far more cautious environment this time forward prices through the first half of 2016 are trading at a discount to nearby levels.
This has been attributed to a sharp slowdown in economic activity and a shift towards less commodity-intensive industries in China, that have helped knock a third off copper prices this year.
The world's top consumer of base and ferrous metals for the past decade has also built up huge metal inventories. "With China decisively moving away from an industrial focus to consumer growth, there is little reason to be bullish long-term for metals," said Virendra Chauhan, analyst at consultancy Energy Aspects.
Forward prices in oil markets also showed more confidence in 2009 than they do today.
At the start of 2009, US crude oil futures for the following January were more than a third above spot prices, giving buyers a sense that prices would likely rise.
Yet now forward prices for oil indicate that such optimism is not widely shared.
A modest contango is in place whereby January 2017 prices are trading US$6 a barrel above those for January 2016, just half of the spread seen six years ago.
The curve is also too flat to make it attractive to buy oil and store it for sale at a later stage, as freight and storage costs still have to be included. "I think it (the flat forward curve) reflects the 'lower for longer' price thesis," said Energy Aspect's Chauhan.
Since 2008-2009, soaring output from US shale drillers has added to record output from Middle East and Russian producers, overwhelming the market and contributing to a 60 per cent slump in crude prices since mid-2014.
Most analysts see the glut lasting well into 2016 and beyond. "The flat curve is related to the shale oil boom. The back of the curve is broken because of producers selling as soon as curve prices edge up. They need the cash, especially shale and medium-sized producers," said Oystein Berentsen, managing director of crude oil at Strong Petroleum in Singapore.
Arguably in the worst condition is coal, which meets almost two thirds of China's energy demand, and where forward prices are trading steeply below current values that are already near their lowest in more than a decade.
As China shifts away from heavy industry and towards cleaner energy sources, coal demand is falling.
While coal still enjoys growing demand in other emerging markets, China's diminishing appetite means that some analysts, including Goldman Sachs, have called a stop to any investments in coal mining capacity, arguing current production will suffice to meet future demand.
Despite the bleak outlook, there are bargain hunters in the market who are expecting prices to bottom out soon.
Data showing traders' positions in the market show an increase in long exposure to crude oil and copper lately.
Non-commercial long positions in US crude are at their highest since May, while managed money long positions in LME copper are at their highest since June.
In the energy arena, bargain hunters appear to be spurred on by expectations that low oil prices will encourage fuel demand, while copper buyers are motivated by expectations that China's infrastructure plans and growth in other emerging markets will increase the use of metals.
Though others question this optimism. "Decelerating demand growth is the key downside risk to oil prices and we see few encouraging signs that global GDP growth will stimulate acceleration in demand for these fuels,"investment bank Jefferies said on Wednesday.
REUTERS

UAE oil minister defends Opec's decision not to cut production last year

UAE oil minister defends Opec's decision not to cut production last year

[DUBAI] United Arab Emirates' energy minister said he did not regret last year's Opec decision not to cut the production ceiling in the face of falling prices.
"I am sure that the decision was right and I am confident that the market will stabilise," Suhail al-Mazrouei said at in industry conference in Dubai on Wednesday.
"We are not regretting the decision we took, we had no option," he said. "Yes it's painful for many producers around the world and we share that pain, but it doesn't mean that we need to do something that is not sustainable."
Mr Mazrouei also said the oil market would decide what the best price was, adding that the decision not to cut production was not just about defending market share. "The drive was not to protect market share and not to care about the price. I think we need to look at it differently than just protecting the market share," he said.
REUTERS

Europe: Stock markets drop at open

Europe: Stock markets drop at open

[LONDON] Europe's main stock markets fell at the start of trading on Wednesday awaiting minutes of the Federal Reserve's last policy meeting and on unease following the Paris terror attacks.
London's benchmark FTSE 100 index lost 0.4 per cent compared with Tuesday's close to open at 6,242.60 points.
In the eurozone, Frankfurt's DAX 30 shed 0.6 per cent to 10,901.74 points and the Paris CAC 40 gave up 0.7 per cent to 4,901.12.
AFP

US: Stocks open higher; Fed minutes eyed

US: Stocks open higher; Fed minutes eyed

[BENGALURU] US stocks opened higher on Wednesday ahead of the release of the minutes of the Federal Reserve's October meeting, but investors remained cautious due to heightened security concerns after last week's attacks in Paris.
The Dow Jones industrial average rose 27.66 points, or 0.16 per cent, to 17,517.16, the S&P 500 gained 5.11 points, or 0.25 per cent, to 2,055.55 and the Nasdaq Composite index added 17.33 points, or 0.35 per cent, to 5,003.35.
REUTERS

China: Stocks fall despite surge by property shares on price data

China: Stocks fall despite surge by property shares on price data

[SHANGHAI] China stocks fell roughly 1 per cent on Wednesday as a surge in property shares in the wake of encouraging home price data was offset by slides in many other sectors as investors took profits.
The market has rebounded more than 25 per cent from the low hit during the summer rout, but selling pressure is increasing as China will soon resume initial public offerings and many investors remain worried about the economy's health.
The CSI300 index of the largest listed companies in Shanghai and Shenzhen fell 1.1 percent, to 3,715.58, and the Shanghai Composite Index lost 1.0 per cent, to 3,568.47 points.
The real estate sector was the only bright spot on Wednesday, with major developers including China Vanke and Poly Property jumping on signs that the sector may have bottomed out.
China's home prices edged up 0.1 per cent in October from a year earlier, the first monthly rise in 14 months, triggering interest in the sector that lifted the CSI300 property index 3.5 per cent.
But small caps, which had led the recent market rebound, fell sharply. Shenzhen's start-up board ChiNext dropped 2.1 per cent.
REUTERS

Islamic State shows photo of improvised Russian plane bomb

Islamic State shows photo of improvised Russian plane bomb

[CAIRO] Islamic State's magazine posted a photo on Wednesday of what it said was the improvised bomb that brought down the Russian airliner over Egypt's Sinai Peninsula last month.
The photo showed a can of Schweppes Gold soft drink and what appeared to be a detonator and switch on a blue background.
It also published a photo of what it said were passports belonging to dead Russians "obtained by the mujahideen".
It was not immediately possible to verify the authenticity of the photos carried online in the magazine Dabiq.
REUTERS

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