Monday, December 7, 2015

INSIDE THE ECB: How Mario Draghi's dovish speeches backfired

INSIDE THE ECB: How Mario Draghi's dovish speeches backfired

A general view of the exterior of the European Central Bank (ECB) headquarters in Frankfurt, Germany, December 3, 2015.   REUTERS/Ralph Orlowski  Thomson ReutersA general view of the exterior of the European Central Bank headquarters in Frankfurt
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Hints by Mario Draghi ahead of last Thursday's ECB rate meeting that the euro zone may need another big injection of money backfired, stiffening the resolve of more conservative central bankers who criticized him for raising expectations too high, sources familiar with the discussions said.
The European Central Bank President and his chief economist Peter Praet stoked expectations with dovish speeches in the weeks before the meeting but the ECB’s Governing Council concluded that markets needed to be disappointed this time because the economic outlook has improved and new inflation forecasts were not as bad as feared, the sources said.
A pending U.S. Federal Reserve rate hike also factored into the decision, though to a lesser extent, as policymakers were concerned that a big move by the ECB would weaken the euro further and possibly force the Fed to delay its own action on rates to prevent a too rapid divergence of policy between the world’s top two central banks.
The ECB cut its deposit rate on Thursday and extended its monthly asset buys by six months to boost stubbornly low inflation and lift growth. But the moves were considered by markets to be the bare minimum in the light of the bank’s previous signals.
One source with direct knowledge of the situation interpreted Draghi’s public stance ahead of the meeting as trying to pressure the Governing Council to take bigger action.
"Draghi raised expectations too high, on purpose, and attempted to paint the Governing Council into a corner," the source said. "This was problematic and he was criticized for this by several governors in private."
Unlike last year, when opponents of quantitative easing made their stance public before the decision, the hawks mostly worked behind the scenes.
Opponents worked to curtail proposals coming out of the ECB’s committees that prepared the decisions, ensuring that some of the more radical measures expected by market players never made it onto the table.
Markets also expected a 25 percent increase in monthly asset purchases and possibly even a deeper rate cut. More radical options under discussion included the purchase of corporate debt or a split deposit rate that would punish banks parking too much cash with the central bank, sources told Reuters earlier.
"What was in the end adopted was the set of options that could gather a comfortable majority. More exotic ones, obviously could not, and were hence not even proposed," another source said. "Sometimes discussions at the committees provide a clear enough picture."
In the weeks leading up to Governing Council meetings the ECB’s inner core of executive board members regularly sound out national central banks to gauge their positions and formulates proposals it knows will get a comfortably majority.
"It was better for Mario to have more or less a consensus than to push something that could backfire," another source said.
Draghi defended the package, arguing that it was meant to address inflation expectations not market predictions.
"There is no doubt that if we had to intensify the use of our instruments to ensure that we achieve our price stability mandate, we would," he said on Friday.
The smaller than expected move is seen by some as a disappointment for Draghi, who has established a track record for promising and delivering big, as he did with his July 2012 pledge to "do whatever it takes" to preserve the euro and pushing through bigger than expected QE earlier this year.
"Like the Fed earlier this year the ECB has now managed to confuse markets and the public. From now on, markets will treat hints dropped by ECB president Mario Draghi and some of his colleagues with much more scepticism than before," brokerage Berenberg said.
Although raising expectations too high was seen by some as a communications error, Draghi still managed to form a broad consensus and proved that he is not always guided by markets, as some critics have suggested, several sources said.
"So far Draghi was always seen as the perfect communicator. Maybe you can’t be perfect all the time," one of the sources said. 

FED CONCERNS

Some council members were also concerned that too much easing by the ECB could force the U.S. Federal Reserve to delay its rate hike, which could increase market volatility as investors would need to reassess their Fed rate path forecasts.
"If we had over delivered, the euro could have gone down to parity and it would have been more difficult for (Fed Chair Janet) Yellen to defend an even stronger dollar. Now the Fed will be quite relaxed," one of the sources said.
The Fed is widely expected to raise interest rates for the first time in nearly a decade later this month but some rate setters have been concerned over the strength of the dollar, especially against the euro.
"There was a good argument for a smaller move so as to not influence the Fed and let them do what they needed to do," the source said.
The euro surged nearly 4 percent against the dollar after the ECB’s decision was announced on Thursday, a bigger rise than expected by the bank.
"We knew there would be a market reaction but it’s been bigger so far than we anticipated," one of the sources said.
Fresh economic forecasts by the bank's staff, which showed only a modest cut in the inflation outlook and an increase in some GDP projections, also made it tough to argue for a bigger easing, the sources said.
"Don’t forget in October everyone was worrying about China and the meltdown in emerging markets. Things have steadied in both cases," one of the sources said.
Several central bankers also argued that the ECB needed to hold back as governments in Germany, France, Italy and Austria were having to increase spending on refugees, security and defense.
"Up to now we had headwinds from fiscal policy. Now we have a tailwind from fiscal policy," a source said.
"We have kept some powder dry. Now if we need to, we can react," the person added.

(Additional reporting by Paul Taylor; Editing by Mark John, Greg Mahlich)
Read the original article on Reuters. Copyright 2015. Follow Reuters on Twitter.

Greek parliament just approved an austere budget for 2016

Greek parliament just approved an austere budget for 2016

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras addresses lawmakers during a parliamentary session before a budget vote in Athens, Greece, December 6, 2015. REUTERS/Alkis KonstantinidisThomson ReutersGreek PM Tsipras addresses lawmakers during a parliamentary session before a budget vote in Athens
ATHENS (Reuters) - The Greekparliament approved a 2016budget featuring sharp cuts in spending and some tax increases to satisfy the country's international lenders at a time of growing austerity fatigue.
The leftist-led government of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras is under pressure to deliver tangible benefits to its poorest citizens after having signed to a third rescue package from euro zone governments in August worth up to 86 billion euros.
The budget makes 5.7 billion euros ($6.2 billion) in public spending cuts including 1.8 billion from pensions and 500 million from defense. The savings are greater than this year's 1.5 billion euros. It also included tax increases of just over 2 billion euros.
It was passed by 153 votes to 145 with two members absent.
"This budget is a difficult task for a government that wants to leave its mark with social justice," Tsipras told lawmakers just before the vote.
He stressed that for the first time in five years, spending on hospitals, social welfare and job creation was being increased modestly within the bailout's constraints.
Tsipras said that was possible because his government had secured greater fiscal space by reducing its primary budget surplus target before debt service to 0.5 percent of gross domestic product in tough negotiations with the creditors.
The budget will have a deficit of 2.1 percent of GDP next year compared with 0.2 percent this year.
Tsipras' coalition majority fell to three last month after two lawmakers rebelled against a set of reforms demanded by the lenders, raising questions about his ability to push through a more ambitious long-term reform of the country's complex, underfunded pension system next month.
Representatives of the euro zone, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund return to Greece on Monday for more talks about pending reforms of the pension and tax systems and public administration.
Having recapitalized the countries' four systemic banks at less expense to the taxpayer than expected, the government aims to complete a first review of the latest bailout program in February in order to open promised talks on long-term debt relief from euro zone governments.
For the center-right opposition, interim New Democracy party leader Yiannis Plakiotakis said: "Syriza's first national budget proves that what they have been saying about social sensitivity is just a myth. The budget shows that 2016 will be much worse than 2015."



(Additional reporting by Lefteris Karagiannopoulou; Editing by Paul Taylor)
Read the original article on Reuters. Copyright 2015. Follow Reuters on Twitter.

Chipotle just warned its sales are tanking right now

Chipotle just warned its sales are tanking right now

Chipotle just warned that its sales are tanking.
In a regulatory filing on Friday, the fast-food chain forecast that its comparable sales — at stores open for at least a year — will fall by between 8% and 11% in the fourth quarter.
The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is investigating E. coli cases linked to Chipotle.
"Sales trends during the quarter so far have been extremely volatile," the company said in the filing. "Future sales trends may be significantly influenced by further developments, including potential additional announcements from federal and state health authorities."
Shares dropped by as much as 6% in after-hours trading.
Sales fell 20% in the days after it first closed 43 restaurants in Washington and Oregon on November 3, following the CDC's observations.
Those restaurants reopened a few days later, and sales recovered to about -9%.
But after the CDC announced four new E. coli cases linked to Chipotle, comparable sales fell by about 22%.
Earlier on Friday, the CDC said that seven more people had come down with E. coli, including cases in three new states: Illinois, Maryland, and Pennsylvania. And of the newest cases, one person reported eating at Chipotle a week before they fell ill.
The company said that it had "significantly increased" its efforts to ensure the safety of its food since the incidents were reported.
In the filing, Chipotle also said that its board had authorized share buybacks worth $300 million, in addition to previously announced repurchases totaling about $1 billion.
Screen Shot 2015 12 04 at 4.33.17 PMGoogleChipotle shares in after-hours trading on Friday.
More: Chipotle

The hard-right, anti-immigration National Front just took France's latest elections by storm

The hard-right, anti-immigration National Front just took France's latest elections by storm

France Front National Marine Le PenREUTERS/Pascal RossignolFrench National Front political party leader and candidate Marine Le Pen after the announcement of the results during the first round of the regional elections in Henin-Beaumont, France, on Sunday.
France's hard-right National Front has just made history, storming to first place in the country's regional elections.
The exit polls on Sunday evening showed National Front, or FN, in first place on 30.6% of the vote. The two mainstream centre-right and centre-left parties racked up 27% and 22.7% respectively.
For the first time, the country seems likely to have at least one region controlled by the hard-right, anti-immigration populist party.
FN is just one of a group of similar (and previously fringe) political movements making massive headway across Europe.
The two best areas for FN seem to be Nord-Pas-de-Calais-Picardie, where party leader Marine Le Pen is running for the regional council, and the southern Provence-Alpes-Cote-d'Azur, where her niece Marion Marechal-Le Pen is leading the FN effort.
Overall, the party seems to have come in first place in six regions out of 12.
France24 offers a look at FN's policies: In short, the party is more strongly against immigration than any European party currently in government, and it wants to boost security and justice spending. Economically, the bloc is quite protectionist and against the euro, and members favour a socially conservative line on family issues, opposing same-sex marriage and adoption by same-sex couples.
Marion Marechal-Le Pen, French National FrontREUTERS/Jean-Paul PelissierMarion Marechal-Le Pen, French National Front candidate in the Provence-Alpes-Cote d'Azur region, during her speech after the announcement of the results during the first round of the regional elections in Le Pontet, near Avignon, France, on Sunday.
France's electoral system is stacked heavily against more extremist parties. In this case there will be a second round of regional elections, and the Socialist Party (of Francois Hollande, France's president) will withdraw from the ballot in the north and southeast, leaving it as a competition between FN and the centre-right Republicans.
It's not the first time FN has done well — in France's 2002 presidential election, Jean-Marie Le Pen (Marine Le Pen's father) edged out the Socialist Party candidate to come in second place. But in the second round between Le Pen and Jacques Chirac, Le Pen was crushed, getting 17.8% to Chirac's 82.2%.
National Front was expected to perform well in the elections, and it has picked up much more support in the past few years, but it may have gained even more in the aftermath of the brutal attacks on Paris in November.
Here's what Barclays analyst Francois Cabau had to say about the vote before it happened:
[The elections] are the last occasion to gauge the mind of the population before the 2017 Presidential and General elections. Furthermore, two key topics have dominated the news recently — the migrant crisis and the fight against terrorism — and voting is likely to reflect opinions on national issues rather than regional ones.
The party's anti-immigrant, anti-Islam, and eurosceptic policies have racked up support in recent years, and Marine Le Pen is not associated as closely with fascist politics as her father was. In fact, Jean-Marie Le Pen was expelled from FN earlier this year for "playing down the Holocaust" according to The Wall Street Journal.

Obama in major Oval Office address: 'This was an act of terrorism'

Obama in major Oval Office address: 'This was an act of terrorism'

President Barack Obama delivered a major Oval Office address Sunday night, seeking to reassure the nation about threats facing the US days after the deadliest terrorist assault on US soil since September 11, 2001.
In Sunday's speech — Obama's third from the Oval Office andsecond official Sunday-night primetime address — the president laid out his strategy for confronting the evolving nature of foreign and homegrown terrorist threats, including plots inspired by the terrorist group the Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL.
"The threat from terrorism is real, but we will overcome it," Obama said. "We will destroy ISIL and any other organization who seeks to harm us."
Obama's speech came days after the attack in San Bernardino, California, which left 14 dead and more than 20 others wounded. One of the shooters allegedly pledged her allegiance to the terrorist group ISIS on Facebook as the attack was unfolding.
Obama spent the majority of his speech detailing the tactics that the administration is already employing to fight ISIS — including deploying special operations forces to Iraq and Syria, bombing ISIS targets, boosting intelligence-sharing with allies, supporting Iraqi and Syrian forces on the ground, and pursuing a political settlement to end the Syrian civil war.
But Obama also spoke directly to members of Congress, urging action on the authorization of military force against ISIS and congressional action to make it easier to monitor individuals traveling to the United States without visas. 
The president also called for congressional action to place greater restrictions on assault rifles and a ban on gun purchases by individuals on the FBI's "no-fly list." 
"What could possibly be the argument for allowing a terror suspect to buy a semi-automatic weapon? This is a matter of national security," Obama said.
"I know there are some who reject any gun-safety measures, but the fact is that our intelligence and law-enforcement agencies, no matter how effective they are, cannot identify every would-be mass shooter, whether that individual is motivated by ISIL, or some other hateful ideology. What we can do, and must do, is make it harder for them to kill."
Attempting to address many Americans' mounting fear of future terrorist attacks, the president ended his speech by emphasizing what he would not do: commit more ground troops to Iraq or Syria, and not let "this fight be defined as a war between America and Islam."
"ISIL does not speak for Islam. They are thugs and killers, part of a cult of death. And they account for a tiny fraction of a more than a billion Muslims around the world, including millions of patriotic Muslim-Americans who reject their hateful ideology," Obama said.
He added soon after: "Let's not forget that freedom is more powerful than fear."

Watch the speech below:

Sunday, December 6, 2015

Foreign claims on Chinese borrowers below peak

Foreign claims on Chinese borrowers below peak

[HONG KONG] Foreign claims on Chinese borrowers have declined over the nine months since they hit an all time peak, driven by a reduction in lending between offshore and mainland banks, the Bank for International Settlements said in its latest report.
Such claims - comprising local claims on Chinese banks' offices abroad as well as cross-border claims of banks' offices globally - declined to US$1.2 trillion at the end-June from a peak of US$1.3 trillion at end-September 2014, according to data compiled by the Swiss-based forum for major central banks in its quarterly report.
While western banks have led the increase in lending to China since the global financial crisis thanks to record-low interest rates in recent years, Asian banks have also emerged as significant lenders.
Despite the small decline, foreign banks' exposure to China remains significant and indicates that many lenders' balance sheets may be vulnerable to a deepening slowdown in the Chinese economy and the growing likelihood of more bankruptcies on the mainland.
While a breakdown on a country-wide basis is not available uniformly, as some countries such as China don't report their international banking statistics to the BIS, banking activities in BIS-reporting cities such as Hong Kong show how quickly some banks have ramped up lending to Chinese borrowers.
The claims of so-called "outside area banks" contracted to US$460 billion at end-June 2015 from US$512 billion at end-September 2014 though some of these claims may be due to intra-group positions, according to the BIS.
In recent years, Hong Kong's banks led by Bank of East Asia have aggressively ramped up their cross-border lending activities thanks to a sluggish domestic economy and drawn by the increasing opportunities offered by the opening up of China's economy.
On a geographic basis, external claims of Hong Kong's banking sector on China accounted for nearly a third of its total claims, according to a September report from the Hong Kong Monetary Authority.
More than half the growth in foreign claims on China over the past few years has taken the form of credit to banks. The outstanding stock of such interbank claims has dropped to US$532 billion at mid-2015 from US$660 billion at mid-2014.
That decline is in sharp contrast to the growing demand for foreign credit from the Chinese non-bank private sector whose outstanding stock has more than quadrupled to US$395 billion at mid-2015 over the past five years, the BIS said.
REUTERS

Opec decision to keep output high pulls oil prices close to 2015 lows

Opec decision to keep output high pulls oil prices close to 2015 lows

[SINGAPORE] Crude prices fell on Monday in the first trading session after Opec-members failed to agree on output targets to reduce a bulging glut that has resulted in oil prices falling by more than 60 per cent since June 2014.
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries failed to agree on an oil production ceiling on Friday at a meeting that ended in acrimony after Iran said it would not consider any production curbs until it restores output scaled back for years under Western sanctions.
This compounded an oil glut that sees production exceed demand between 0.5-2 million barrels per day and that has resulted in a more than 60 per cent price drop since 2014.
US crude was trading at US$39.58 a barrel at 0038 GMT, down 39 US cents. Internationally traded Brent futures were down 16 US cents at US$42.84 per barrel. This left both benchmarks near 2015 lows and not far off levels seen during the peak of the global financial crisis of 2008/2009.
Analysts said that Opec would likely maintain its production around current levels of 31.5 million barrel per day and that a decision on how to handle new volumes expected to come to the market once western sanctions against Iran are dropped would be delayed until the group's next meeting in June 2016. "Past communiques have at least included statements to adhere... or maintain output in line with the production target (of 30 million barrels per day). This one glaringly did not," Barclays bank said.
Not only did Opec decide to keep its output target high, but analysts said that it would likely continue to exceed its quota as individual members offer discounts to customers in defense of market share.
Barclays said that Opec faced an "impossible trinity of achieving higher market share, higher prices and higher demand through a nominal target which members continue to breach."
As a result of ongoing oversupply, analysts said that prices would fall further, with Goldman Sachs seeing a possibility of US$20 per barrel.
"The effective removal of the OPEC quota leaves the market in a more vulnerable position. Prices are likely to weaken this week as the market turns its attention back on US supply," ANZ bank said, referring to near record U.S. crude inventories of almost 490 million barrels.
"The formal production target was not even discussed, essentially signalling to the market that members would continue production at individual requirements. With Iran exports likely to start increasing next year, this increases the likelihood of further weakness in crude oil markets," it added.
REUTERS

Update: Temasek supports S$3.4b CMA CGM offer for NOL

Update: Temasek supports S$3.4b CMA CGM offer for NOL

NEPTUNE Orient Lines (NOL) said on Monday CMA CGM has offered to buy it for S$3.4 billion, at a 6.1 per cent premium over the last traded price. NOL's majority shareholder, state investor Temasek Holdings, fully supports the transaction and will be selling their shares to CMA CGM. Temasek owns two-thirds of NOL.
CMA CGM plans to offer S$1.30 per share in cash for the Singapore-based container liner. NOL shares were halted from trading. The total number of company shares are 2.6 billion, and these exclude other stock such as treasury shares and shares to be issued under company options.
The NOL acquisition by the world's third-largest container shipping company will mean a combined turnover of US$22 billion, and a fleet size of 563 vessels. 
"At a time when the shipping industry is facing strong headwinds, scale is more critical than ever to capitalise on synergies and capture growth opportunities wherever they arise. I firmly believe CMA CGM will enable NOL to address the industry’s new challenges,"  said Rodolphe SaadĂ©, vice-chairman of CMA CGM, in a press statement.
"We recognise the strategic importance of Singapore as a key hub for the maritime industry and we are committed to reinforcing its regional leadership.”
CMA CGM plans to establish its regional head office in Singapore. The commitment of CMA CGM to enhance Singapore’s position as a key maritime hub and grow Singapore’s container throughput volumes was noted, and welcomed, said Tan Chong Lee, head of portfolio management at Temasek.
Ng Yat Chung, CEO of NOL, said the combined market presence delivered by the transaction would achieve the scale needed to enhance competitiveness for NOL’s operations and offer "a clear and sustainable long term direction for the combined entity".
The transaction valued NOL at a price to book ratio of 0.96 times, and the acquistion will be financed by a combination of available cash and bank financing provided by a syndicate of international banks. 
CMA CGM intends to deleverage its balance sheet within 18 to 24 months through "synergies" and assets sales for an amount of at least US$1 billion. The aim is to cut debt gearing ratio to below 0.8 times.
NOL had signed an exclusivity agreement with France's CMA CGM for the takeover, valid till 11.59pm on Monday, for the firm to complete due diligence on NOL and negotiate definitive agreements on the offer. The NOL board has approved of this offer. 
CMA CGM intends to delist NOL.
NOL closed Friday trading at S$1.225, up two cents
.

728 X 90

336 x 280

300 X 250

320 X 100

300 X600