Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Japan Inc's record profit streak threatened as yen bottoms

Japan Inc's record profit streak threatened as yen bottoms

[TOKYO] Japan Inc's currency cookie jar may be just about empty.
That's the message in forecasts for the yen, whose three- year slide under Prime Minister Shinzo Abe underpinned the expansion of profits to an all-time high and a doubling of stock prices.
The benefits went even further: every year, big exporters such as Mitsubishi Electric Corp beat their own forecasts after making assumptions about the currency's descent that proved too conservative.
Now the tailwind is fading. Companies in the Nikkei 225 Stock Average that provide forecasts see the yen at 119.76 per dollar, according to data compiled by Bloomberg from their latest filings.
The gap between the estimates and the rate at Sept 30 was the smallest in Mr Abe's era. And strategists say the prospects for further yen declines are fading: they see it slipping less than 2 per cent by the end of 2016.
"It's best to avoid expecting a big boost from the currency for future earnings," said Junichi Misawa, chief fund manager at Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Asset Management Co in Tokyo. "It's hard to keep expecting the yen to continue weakening and at about 125 per dollar, it's already at a pretty good level. The focus going forward will be on how much actual earnings are improving."
The Bank of Japan's record stimulus drove the yen to a 13-year low in June, the same month the Nikkei 225 rallied to the highest since 1996.
Analysts at Citigroup Inc estimate that currency declines accounted for 60 per cent of recurring profit growth in the latest quarter. For Allianz Global Investors Japan Co's Kazuyuki Terao, the prospect of that ending means he'll spend more time next year talking with companies and picking individual stocks.
STOCK PICKING
"The key will be choosing the right stocks and finding out why profitability is improving, or why some firms are able to grow revenue even as the whole market stagnates," said Mr Terao, the fund's Tokyo-based chief investment officer. "As earnings growth slows, shareholder payouts will be comparatively more important."
Mr Abe swept to power in 2012, vowing to create a sustainable economic revival through monetary easing, fiscal stimulus and structural reform. The Nikkei 225 is up 104 per cent since then, and companies have posted two straight years of record net income.
Now, the yen has declined less than 3 per cent in 2015, while economists are winding back expectations for further easing from BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda.
That's left investors eying other drivers for equities, including Mr Abe's corporate governance reforms - but they are aimed at long-term improvements, rather than an immediate profit boost.
Analysts see Nikkei 225 companies posting 1,105 yen in earnings per share over the next 12 months, little changed since the end of August. That's in contrast to an almost uninterrupted increase that's occurred so far under Mr Abe, and for Tetsuo Seshimo, highlights a threat to the index's 14 percent advance this year.
"Companies will find it more difficult to revise earnings higher," said Seshimo, a portfolio manager at Saison Asset Management Co in Tokyo. "It's hard to imagine the market will keep rising on expectations for an even weaker currency."
The yen was at 123.24 per dollar at 9.27am Tokyo time on Thursday. That compares with Toyota Motor Corp's assumption of 118 for the period through March, and Mazda Motor Corp's 121.
Firms relying on Europe for business forecast the yen at 133.07 per euro, the data compiled by Bloomberg show. That's weaker than its current level of 130.74.
Not everyone agrees the currency's declines are over. Credit Suisse Group AG's Stefan Worrall says his firm is forecasting the yen to trade at 130 per dollar in a year's time and that currency revisions will continue to contribute to profits.
"I wouldn't suggest we're coming back to a purely stock- picking market," said Mr Worrall, Tokyo-based director of equity cash sales at Credit Suisse.
"If you have the yen moving in the next 12 months from 122 to 130, that would still be a market that has macro tailwinds. For that to happen, you'd assume there would be continuing recovery in the US and that would be important for stocks such as Fuji Heavy, Kubota, Daikin or others with exposure to the US."
The yen hasn't weakened past 130 per dollar since 2002. In June, which marked the recent lows for the yen, Mr Kuroda said the currency's strength had largely corrected, while another BOJ voting member said the weakness has led to lower consumer sentiment and higher import prices, although positives still outweigh the negatives.
Even as the yen effect fades, depressed commodity prices will continue to buoy earnings, with lower input costs boosting profits by about 6 per cent in the period through March, according to Citigroup chief Japan equity strategist Naoki Iizuka.
Still, he expects the positive impact of both the weaker yen and cheaper oil to wear off completely by the second half of next year.
"From here on out, it's companies' ability to earn revenue and profits that will be tested," said Masamitsu Ohki, the chief portfolio manager at Fivestar Asset Management Co. "The next fiscal year will be a time for Japanese firms to prove themselves with actual business results."
BLOOMBERG

South Korea GDP growth hits 5-year high in Q3

South Korea GDP growth hits 5-year high in Q3

[SEOUL] South Korea's economy grew at the fastest pace in more than five years in the third quarter, driven by a strong rebound in consumer spending, central bank data showed Thursday.
Asia's fourth-largest economy expanded by 1.3 per cent in the July-September period, the fastest on-quarter growth since the second quarter of 2010, the Bank of Korea said.
The quarter saw consumers venture back into shopping malls as the threat posed by a serious outbreak of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS) receded.
Thirty-six people died in the outbreak, during which local businesses including shopping malls, restaurants and cinemas reported a sharp drop in sales as people shunned public venues with large crowds.
The tourism industry was hit particularly hard, with the number of foreign visitors plunging by up to 60 per cent.
The third-quarter figure was higher than an earlier estimate of 1.2 per cent and marked the first time in five quarters that it has exceeded the 1.0 per cent mark.
Output in the manufacturing industry inched up only 0.1 per cent on-quarter, reflecting a persistent slump in exports, which account for about half of South Korea's GDP.
The central bank has predicted South Korea's GDP would grow 2.7 per cent this year.
AF
P

Malaysia's PM Najib to meet anti-graft agency over 1MDB scandal

Malaysia's PM Najib to meet anti-graft agency over 1MDB scandal

[KUALA LUMPUR] Malaysia's Prime Minister Najib Razak will give a statement to an anti-graft agency on Thursday over funds worth 2.6 billion ringgit (S$863.4 million) that were transferred into his bank accounts, a source aware of the meeting said.
Najib is facing calls to step down over a graft scandal surrounding state fund 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) that erupted in July when the Wall Street Journal reported that investigators had found that funds had been transferred into Najib's bank accounts.
The source said the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) would record a statement in connection with its investigation into graft allegations at 1MDB and its subsidiary, SRC International.
Najib had earlier made a commitment to give a statement to the anti-graft agency and his office is also expected to take queries on the matter in parliament later in the day.
Najib has denied wrongdoing or taking any money for personal gain. The MACC has already said the money was a political donation from an unidentified Middle Eastern benefactor.
The prime minister has complained that the investigation had caused "various accusations and slander".
A spokesman at the Prime Minister's Office did not confirm whether Najib would be questioned by the MACC on Thursday, but said he had made a commitment to give a statement.
Najib is chairman of the 1MDB advisory board. The fund is also being investigated by law enforcement agencies in Switzerland, Hong Kong and the United States, media and sources have said.
Opposition leaders and some establishment figures, including former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, have called for Najib to resign over his alleged involvement in the scandal.
Critics also accuse the government of dragging its feet on the investigation and even Malaysia's royal rulers have called for a quick and transparent investigation.
At the end of August, tens of thousands of Malaysians rallied to call for Najib's resignation.
The controversy has battered Malaysian markets with the ringgit losing about a quarter of its value to become Asia's worst-performing currency this year.
REUTERS

China says to cut power sector emissions by 60% by 2020

China says to cut power sector emissions by 60% by 2020

[BEIJING] China will cut emissions of major pollutants in the power sector by 60 per cent by 2020, the cabinet announced on Wednesday, after world leaders met in Paris to address climate change.
China will also reduce annual carbon dioxide emissions from coal-fired power generation by 180 million tonnes by 2020, according to a statement on the official government website. It did not give comparison figures but said the cuts would be made through efficiency gains.
In Paris, Christiana Figueres, head of the UN Climate Change Secretariat, said she had not seen the announcement, but linked it to expectations that China's coal use would peak by the end of the decade. "I can only assume they are talking about the same thing,"she told Reuters.
Researchers at Chinese government-backed think-tanks said last month that coal consumption by power stations in China would probably peak by 2020.
An EU official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Wednesday's announcement seemed to relate more to air pollutants than greenhouse gas emissions.
China's capital Beijing suffered choking pollution this week, triggering an "orange" alert, the second-highest level, closing highways, halting or suspending construction and prompting a warning to residents to stay indoors.
The smog was caused by "unfavourable" weather, the Ministry of Environmental Protection said.
Emissions in northern China soar over winter as urban heating systems are switched on and low wind speeds meant that polluted air does not get dispersed.
The hazardous air, which cleared on Wednesday, underscores the challenge facing the government as it battles pollution caused by the coal-burning power industry and raises questions about its ability to clean up its economy.
Reducing coal use and promoting cleaner forms of energy are set to play a crucial role in China's pledges to bring its greenhouse gas emissions to a peak by around 2030.
Beijing has pledged to reduce the share of coal in total energy consumption to 60 per cent by the end of the decade. It has banned the use of low-grade coals.
Premier Li Keqiang has said China would set an efficiency"bottom line" of 310g of coal per kilowatt-hour for plants across the country, according to the government website.
The average for the first 10 months of 2015 was 318g, according to official data. "The efficiency target is in line with earlier emissions standards announced in 2014, but it tightens things up for coal-fired plants nationwide, without regional differences,"said Yuan Jiahai, a researcher with the North China Electric Power University.
The cabinet also said that it would provide more financial support, including preferential loans, to help firms renovate. China already provides subsidies for firms that have installed the mandatory equipment.
China's delegate at the Paris talks, Su Wei, "noted with concern" what he called a lack of commitment by the rich to make deep cuts in greenhouse gas emissions and help developing nations with new finance to tackle global warming.
China's coal-fired power sector is notoriously inefficient. Utilisation rates have fallen nearly 8 per cent this year to reach a record low, but surplus capacity could still be as high as 130 GW, or 14 per cent of the total, industry estimates show.
Also, local governments continue to approve new capacity even as the country shuts outdated ones. Around 200 GW of capacity was given the go-ahead in the first half of 2015, while only 4.9 GW of small and ageing plants were shut in 2014.
REUTERS

Nokia's shareholders approve Alcatel-Lucent deal

Nokia's shareholders approve Alcatel-Lucent deal

[HELSINKI] Shareholders in Finnish telecom group Nokia approved the company's acquisition of French-American rival Alcatel-Lucent on Wednesday, paving the way for the creation of a mobile phone networks giant.
They approved the transaction at an extraordinary general meeting in Helsinki without any dissenting voices from the shareholders present.
Shareholders representing 99.5 per cent of Nokia's capital had given their approval in advance.
Once the world's top mobile phone maker, Nokia hopes the merger will help it become the world's number one network equipment and service provider, with a combined revenue of nearly 25 billion euros (S$37.4 billion).
"The shareholders showed their strong support because we got 99.49 per cent of the vote in favour of the proposal," Nokia chief executive Rajeev Suri told AFP.
"While our portfolios are highly complementary, our cultures have many similarities," he said.
Nokia called its shareholders to authorise the deal after it had obtained all necessary regulatory approvals for the deal last month, mainly from the United States, France and China.
"The strategic logic remains as compelling today as on the day when we announced the transaction," said Mr Suri.
The acquisition will allow Nokia to expand from telecoms networks to Internet networks and 'cloud' services to better compete with its global rivals, the Swedish group Ericsson and Huawei of China.
"The combined company would lead in key geographies like North America and China... Our innovation capabilities will be massive, with an annual spending of 4.7 billion euros," Mr Suri said in mid-November.
Analysts view the deal positively.
"In our opinion it makes sense. Of course every transaction has its difficulties and it won't be easy but clearly it will bring the benefits of size," said Equity strategist Kristian Tammela at Nordea Wealth Management.
Nokia hopes to close the deal in the first quarter of 2016.
"By ratifying the transaction in such great numbers, they (shareholders) have endorsed our strongly-held belief that the combined company will be better positioned to compete as a world leader in network technologies over the long-term," said Risto Siilasmaa, chairman of the Nokia board of directors.
This year Nokia has recovered from the financial woes it suffered after failing to adapt to the rapid rise of smartphones, which ended with it selling its unprofitable handset division to Microsoft two years ago.
Some shareholders were nervous ahead of the decision.
Reijo Hakonen travelled 800km to Helsinki to hear what Nokia's board had to say about the deal. Hakonen has owned a small amount of Nokia's shares for many years.
"I am a little unsure about this union between Nokia and Alcatel-Lucent. It can be terribly difficult, two big companies with a different culture in each house. How will they manage to merge them? It isn't simple at all, as we saw with Microsoft. At least it will require a lot of work," he said.
The reformation is not Nokia's first. In its 150 years of existence, the company has redefined itself numerous times before, from a pulp, rubber and cable manufacturer to computers.
AFP

Baidu says will become default search engine for Amazon's Kindle in China

Baidu says will become default search engine for Amazon's Kindle in China

[BEIJING] China's Baidu Inc said it would become the default search engine for Amazon.com Inc's Kindle and Fire hardware platforms in China, effective on Thursday.
Baidu will also cooperate with Amazon on search service, distribution, and video content, it said on its website on Thursday.
REUTERS

728 X 90

336 x 280

300 X 250

320 X 100

300 X600