Thursday, January 7, 2016

UBS Asset says China volatility spells continued bond boost

UBS Asset says China volatility spells continued bond boost

[SHANGHAI] UBS Asset Management said turmoil in China's stock market will help extend a bull run in the nation's bonds, as investors channel more funds into debt securities to avoid equity volatility.
The yield premium on the country's top-rated corporate notes over similar-maturity government bonds has fallen eight basis points this week, set for its biggest weekly decline in two months. China's CSI 300 Index of shares has extended this year's drop to 12 per cent, plunging 7.2 per cent Thursday before trading was halted by automatic circuit breakers. The onshore yuan weakened 0.6 per cent versus the dollar to a five-year low.
The stock slump "just shows that sentiment remains fragile - in China and globally - which is likely still supportive for bonds, as we have seen," said Ashley Perrott, the Singapore- based head of Asian fixed-income at UBS Asset Management, which oversaw US$652 billion at the end of September. "China onshore bonds will continue to benefit from the equity caution - a trend seen in the second half of last year and likely to continue for a while yet."
Rising demand for fixed-income securities would help Chinese companies raise money while they are struggling with debt repayment amid the worst slowdown in a quarter century. Chinese corporate defaults will likely spread in 2016, financial companies surveyed by Bloomberg said late last year, after at least seven companies reneged on bond obligations in 2015.
The overnight repurchase rate, a gauge of interbank funding availability, fell one basis point to 1.95 per cent as of 11:51 am in Shanghai, according to a weighted average from the National Interbank Funding Center, after dropping as much as five basis points earlier. The rate has declined 17 basis points this year from 2.12 per cent on Dec 31, the highest since April, showing that borrowing costs are falling.
"If the stock slump continues, more funds will flow into the bond market, which will lead to a decline in borrowing costs," said Ji Weijie, a bond analyst at China Securities Co in Beijing. "The funds would prefer bonds with better liquidity, such as government or policy bank bonds."
Some investors said not all about the current turmoil is positive for debt securities, as the yuan's fall could affect the onshore cash supply. The Chinese currency has dropped about 1.4 per cent against the dollar this year. Outflows of capital from China in the most recent three months for which figures are available amounted to greater than the size of the Greek economy, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
"If the yuan declines a lot against the dollar, depreciation will add pressure on liquidity, which won't be good for the bond market," said Qiu Xinhong, a bond fund manager in Shenzhen at First State Cinda Fund Management Co. "Even though the central bank can inject cash to make up for the capital outflows, it can't inject without limit."
BLOOMBERG

Bill Gross urges exposure to developing markets on demographics

Bill Gross urges exposure to developing markets on demographics

[NEW YORK] Bill Gross, the closely-watched bond investor, on Thursday said investors should consider increasing their exposure to developing markets over the long-term while buying 10-year inflation-protected Treasuries given demographic factors.
Mr Gross, who oversees the US$1.3 billion Janus Global Unconstrained Bond Fund, said in his January Investment Outlook that demographics would dominate financial markets over the next few decades and that developed nations like the United States should invest more in emerging markets in order to compensate for a growing number of retired baby boomers.
"Demographics may not rule absolutely, but they likely will dominate investment markets and returns for the next few decades until the Boomer phenomena fades away," Mr Gross said.
REUTERS

China suspends 'circuit breaker' mechanism after stock trading halted again

China suspends 'circuit breaker' mechanism after stock trading halted again

[BEIJING] China will suspend "circuit breakers", the top securities regulator said, after the trading curbs were again triggered Thursday when share prices dropped more than seven percent, halting share trading early for the second time this week.
The circuit breaker mechanism, which went into force at the beginning of the year to reduce volatility on China's bourses, will be lifted from Friday, the Xinhua news agency added.
"After weighing advantages and disadvantages, currently the negative effect is bigger than the positive one. Therefore, in order to maintain market stability, CSRC has decided to suspend the circuit breaker mechanism," a statement from the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) said.
Analysts said Beijing's introduction of the circuit breaker mechanism had proved counter-productive and investors were panicked they would not be able to sell shares they do not want, rather than reassured over market stability.
The system is based on the CSI 300 index, which tracks the largest 300 stocks on the two exchanges and was triggered for the first time on Monday.
If the index falls by five percent, the markets are suspended for 15 minutes. But when trading resumed after the initial halt on Thursday it took only one minute for the seven percent threshold to be reached, prompting a shutdown for the rest of the day.
AF
P

Consumer comfort rises as Americans turn more upbeat on economy

Consumer comfort rises as Americans turn more upbeat on economy

[WASHINGTON] Consumer confidence climbed to a 12-week high, boosted by improving household attitudes about the state of the economy.
The Bloomberg Consumer Comfort Index rose to 44.2 in the week ended Jan. 3 from 43.6 in the prior period. It marked the fifth straight increase and left the gauge at the highest level since Oct. 11.
The gain was propelled by the index tracking Americans' views on the state of the economy, which advanced to 37, the highest level since late April, from 34.5. A gauge of consumers' views on personal finances rose for a fourth consecutive week, to 56.2 from 55.6.
The buying climate index slipped to 39.4 last week from 40.6.
The gain in sentiment was led by more optimism in the Northeast and the Midwest, where it climbed to a six-month high. Confidence was little changed in the South and fell to a seven- week low in the West.
The report also showed that sentiment of households earning at least $50,000 a year matched its highest point since August 2007, months before the last recession began.
Steady gains in the labor market may be helping to burnish consumers' views on the economy. Employers probably added about 200,000 workers to payrolls in December, according to the median estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg before the Friday report. That would mean roughly 2.5 million people were hired in 2015.
The Bloomberg consumer comfort measure is in line with other gauges that show household attitudes ended the year on a bright note. The latest index from the University of Michigan showed sentiment rose in December to a five-month high as low prices supplemented income gains and made consumers feel more comfortable buying big-ticket items such as autos and appliances.
Meanwhile, the Conference Board's confidence measure rebounded more than forecast last month as Americans grew more upbeat about the economy and job market.
BLOOMBERG

Yahoo is prepping to lay off 10% or more of its workforce

Yahoo is prepping to lay off 10% or more of its workforce

Major layoffs will be coming to Yahoo as part of its planned reorganization to get its business back on track.
The company is working on a plan to cut at least 10% of its workforce, said sources familiar with the situation. The cuts would reduce Yahoo's headcount by more than a thousand employees and could begin as early as this month, the sources said.
While the cuts are expected to affect all parts of the company, Yahoo's media business, European operations, and platforms-technology group, which includes the technology that supports the company's services, could be particularly hit in the restructuring.
"A team is working on it and they want to do it this quarter," one of the sources said of the layoffs.
Yahoo declined to comment on the layoffs, but the company has acknowledged that change is afoot. In response to criticism from activist investor Starboard, Yahoo told Business Insider earlier on Wednesday that the company plans to announce "additional plans for a more focused Yahoo on or before our Q4 earnings call," which should be in the next few weeks.
There's been considerable pressure on the company to find a new path forward after a three-year turnaround failed to revitalize the business. At least one investor called for CEO Marissa Mayer to slash the company's size to only 3,000 people, while others are hoping that Mayer will be taken off the roster.
Several employees told Business Insider that they have been bracing for layoffs since Yahoohired McKinsey & Co. in November to mull a reorg and decide which units to potentially shutter. The company has decreased its headcount by 14% over the last year in a steady drip of layoffs, according to its most recent quarterly report, but it still employs more than 10,000 people. Trimming by 10% means that more than 1,000 people would leave Yahoo.
One major focus of Yahoo's reorganization is its media properties, or "digital magazines," as the company calls them.
Last week, the company announced that it had shuttered Yahoo Screen, its larger all-encompassing video hub to build out the magazines. But those magazine divisions still have not seen their budgets for 2016, stalling their coverage, one Yahoo insider tells us. Without a budget, coverage of events like the Golden Globes this weekend is up in the air, a person familiar with the matter said.
To cut more costs, the company also scaled back operations at its production studios for the last two weeks of the year to save money on contractors, another person familiar with the matter said. The timing of the layoffs also comes ahead of when Yahoo typically doles out annual bonuses.
Meanwhile, the company has been quietly shopping around a large parcel of land near its Silicon Valley headquarters that was once its designated landing zone for corporate expansion, signaling that those plans have likely been put on hold indefinitely.
Re/Code's Kara Swisher first reported in December that a major media restructuring was expected. That part of Yahoo's business had moved to the control of Martha Nelson, who replaced Kathy Savitt after she left to join STX Entertainment. Under Nelson, Yahoo hired another Time veteran, Mark Golin — a leader some Yahoo employees feel is there to lead the consolidation of some of the media teams.
It will take a few weeks before the full picture of the future of Yahoo crystallizes, but its employees are bracing for the ax to fall soon.
Part of Yahoo's layoffs? Email the reporter at bcarson@businessinsider.com.

The World Bank has downgraded its global economic forecast for 2016

The World Bank has downgraded its global economic forecast for 2016

A bank clerk counts Chinese yuan banknotes at a branch of Industrial and Commercial Bank of China in Huaibei, Anhui province, June 8, 2012. REUTERS/Stringer Thomson ReutersBank clerk counts Chinese yuan banknotes at a branch of Industrial and Commercial Bank of China in Huaibei
The World Bank has cut its forecast for global growth this year given weakness in the developing world.
The aid agency said Wednesday that it expects the world economy to expand 2.9 percent in 2016, down from the forecast of 3.3 percent it made in June. The global economy grew 2.4 percent in 2015.
Several big developing economies — including Brazil and China — are slowing or shrinking. Their troubles have disproportionately hurt their smaller trading partners, which have also been squeezed by depressed commodity prices.
The World Bank expects developing countries to collectively grow 4.8 percent, up from a six-year low 4.3 percent in 2015. China, the world's second-biggest economy, is expected to register 6.7 percent growth, down from 6.9 percent in 2015 and the slowest pace since 1990.
The economic prospects of advanced economies appear to be brightening as the developing world struggles. The World Bank expects the U.S. economy to grow 2.7 percent this year, up from 2.5 percent in 2015 and the fastest pace since 2006.
The agency foresees the 19-country eurozone economy expanding 1.7 percent, up from 1.5 in 2015 and fastest since 2011. And it expects the Japanese economy, lifted by the Bank of Japan's easy-money policies, to grow 1.3 percent, up from 0.8 percent in 2015.
Since the 2008 financial crisis and the Great Recession, the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and others have frequently overestimated the strength of the world economy and have later had to downgrade their initial predictions.
The World Bank's 2016 forecast involves two key optimistic assumptions for global growth: That commodity prices will stabilize after plummeting in 2015. And that the Chinese government will keep growth in the world's second-biggest economy from imploding as it manages a difficult transition away from fast but unsustainable growth based on excessive investment in factories and real estate.
"China is going to continue slowing in an orderly fashion," says World Bank economist Ayhan Kose, who helped put together the forecast.
The agency also assumes that the Federal Reserve's interest-rate hike last month — and any further rate hikes — won't damage the U.S. economy or cause much turmoil in financial markets.
Its outlook differs from region to region and country to country.
Latin America, forecast to grow just 0.1 percent this year, has been especially hard hit by falling commodity prices. Brazil's economy, once an emerging powerhouse, is forecast to drop 2.5 percent this year after shrinking 3.7 percent in 2015.
The Russian economy, squeezed by low oil prices and international sanctions, is expected to slide 0.7 percent this year on top of a 3.8 percent drop last year.
The Iranian economy, which is getting relief from economic sanctions after reaching a nuclear deal with the Obama administration, is forecast to surge 5.8 percent this year, up from 1.9 percent in 2015.
The oil-importing countries of South Asia are expected to benefit from lower energy prices. The World Bank predicts that India will grow 7.8 percent, Pakistan 5.5 percent and Bangladesh 6.7 percent.
The countries of sub-Saharan Africa are expected to grow 4.2 percent, up from 3.4 percent last year. But the World Bank expects wide disparities among African countries. South Africa, for instance, is forecast to grow just 1.4 percent, while Ethiopia is expected to expand 10.2 percent and Rwanda 7.6 percent.

OIL AT 14-YEAR LOWS

OIL AT 14-YEAR LOWS

The price of oil is still nosediving.
After hitting 11-year lows on Wednesday, prices of both UK Brent and US crude tanked to 14-year lows on Thursday.
Brent was down 4.15% at $32.89 (£22.49) at 7 a.m. GMT (2 a.m. ET), and US crude was down 3.84% at $32.66 (£22.33). Both reached levels not seen since 2002, when the oil price was recovering from the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
Since then the price has recovered slightly, however, and, at 1:02 p.m. GMT (10:02 a.m. ET) Brent is down 3.18% at $33.14 (£22.76) and US crude is down 3.02% at $32.95 (£22.63). Those are still levels not seen since 2002.
Here's the earlier Brent price in context (Investing.com'sce graph covers a maximum of 10 years, meaning we can't see the most recent time the price was this low — that's how bad things are):brentInvesting.com
What's driving the price down? Lots of things. Oil started January on the back foot thanks toescalating tensions between Saudi Arabia and Iran, and traders have been jittery ever since.
The immediate catalyst for Thursday's collapse appears to be China. China weakened the value of its yuan currency by 0.51% to 6.5646 against the US dollar overnight, the biggest drop since August.
Stock markets are also in turmoil — China's market "circuit breaker" was triggered for the second time in four days, halting trade after a 7% collapse in 15 minutes. That has had a knock-on effect for Asian markets, sending them falling to three-month lows.
In the context then, you can understand why oil traders are reaching for their tin hats on Thursday.

China's market rout was sparked by confusion over its currency devaluation

China's market rout was sparked by confusion over its currency devaluation

China weakened the value of its yuan currency by 0.51% to 6.5646 against the US dollar on Thursday, figures from the China Foreign Exchange Trade System showed.
Here's the chart, courtesy of Bloomberg:
CNY_to_USDBloomberg
Confusion over the devaluation helped send markets in the country tumbling, and led to the triggering of the Chinese market's "circuit breaker" for the second time in just four days of trading.
A Bloomberg report on the chaos has a telling quote:
“China isn’t communicating its policy intentions in a clear manner,” said Sue Trinh, head of Asia foreign-exchange strategy at Royal Bank of Canada in Hong Kong. “It’s disappointing that their communication policy is less than transparent.”
Thursday's devaluation is the biggest drop in the yuan since August when Beijing guided the unit down by nearly 5% in a week. That surprise devaluation sparked market chaos and "Black Monday."
Shares tanked as much as 7% on Thursday in just 15 minutes from the opening. This then sparked a market rout across Asia, sending shares to three-month lows.

China has shut down its stock market after a 7% meltdown in 15 minutes

China has shut down its stock market after a 7% meltdown in 15 minutes

China has shut its share market for the day after a meltdown in early trade.
Shares plunged 5% when the market opened, triggering a new “circuit-breaker” closure of markets for 15 minutes.
When trade resumed, the selling continued, with the benchmark CSI300 falling through 7%, triggering an automatic shutdown of trading for the rest of the day.
The market was only open for around 15 minutes of trade.
It’s the second time this week that China has had to shut its markets under the new rules designed to avoid panic selling of shares. But today, the circuit-breakers were invoked much faster than they were earlier in the week.
Michael McDonough of Bloomberg Intelligence tweeted these comparison charts showing the price action through the two affected days. As you can see, today’s sell-off was much more dramatic:

Chris Weston, chief markets strategist at IG Markets in Melbourne, believes the current rules for the circuit breakers will need to be adjusted, as they are proving ineffective, even with the market power of China’s so-called “national team” of state financial institutions that intervene to guard against tumbling stock prices by buying shares.
“The distance between the initial 5% circuit break (the 15 minute window) and the full halt of the market at 7% is just way too narrow,” Weston told Business Insider. “When the market hits 3.5% to 4% we see everyone panic and put in their sell orders. When the 15 minute window ceases the market shoots through to 7% straight off the bat.
“The distance between the two needs to be wider otherwise we are going to see this happen time and time again. I would look at a full halt at 9-10% and sufficient breathing room that the national team can convince people to buy after 5%. Failing that they can remove the breakers and allow the market to fall to a level that many feel reflects economic reality.”
Fifteen minutes before the equity markets opened in China, for the second session China’s central bank fixed the Chinese yuan substantially weaker, leading to a wave of selling across Asia.
The PBOC set Thursday’s USD/CNY fix at 6.5646, higher than the 6.5555 level it closed at yesterday and Wednesday’s fixing level of 6.5314.
The decision has yet again rattled financial markets with risk assets across the region tumbling in the minutes following the fix.
Here’s the current Asian market scorecard as at 1pm AEDT.
Stocks
  • ASX 200 5039.70 , -83.43 , -1.63%
  • Nikkei 225 17838.61 , -352.71 , -1.94%
  • Shanghai Composite 3115.89 , -245.96 , -7.32%
  • Hang Seng 20523.56 , -457.25 , -2.18%
  • KOSPI 1903.14 , -22.29 , -1.16%
  • Straits Times 2759.54 , -44.73 , -1.60%
  • S&P 500 Futures 1964.75 , -21.25 , -1.07%
Forex
  • USD/JPY 117.89 , -0.57 , -0.48%
  • USD/CNY 6.5915 , 0.0361 , 0.55%
  • AUD/USD 0.7030 , -0.0041 , -0.58%
  • NZD/USD 0.6619 , -0.0016 , -0.24%
  • AUD/JPY 82.88 , -0.88 , -1.05%
  • EUR/USD 1.0806 , 0.0028 , 0.26%
  • GBP/USD 1.4630 , 0.0004 , 0.03%
  • USD INDEX 99.021 , -0.1600 , -0.16%
Commodities
  • Gold $1,100.25 , $5.95 , 0.54%
  • Silver $14.14 , $0.14 , 0.96%
  • WTI Futures $33.15 , -$0.82 , -2.41%
  • Copper Futures ¥36,360 , -¥90 -0.25%
  • Iron Ore Futures ¥320.00 , ¥0.50 , 0.16%
10-Year Bond Yields
  • Australia 2.716%
  • New Zealand 3.400%
  • Japan 0.245%
  • Germany 0.510%
  • UK 1.803%
  • US 2.153%
Read the original article on Business Insider Australia. Copyright 2016.

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