Monday, January 11, 2016

Banks' borrowing rate for yuan in Hong Kong hits record

Banks' borrowing rate for yuan in Hong Kong hits record

[HONG KONG] The rate at which banks charge each other to borrow yuan in Hong Kong surged to a record high on Tuesday with speculation China's central bank was buying huge amounts of the unit to fend off speculators.
The overnight Hong Kong Interbank Offered Rate (HIBOR) for the offshore yuan jumped 53 percentage points to almost 67 per cent owing to tight liquidity. The one-week rate also surged, to 33.8 per cent from 11.2 per cent.
The surge comes as traders around the world grow increasingly worried about the state of China's economy, a key driver of global growth, as it suffers a painful growth slowdown that has sent markets into turmoil.
Beijing's decision last week to lower the value of the yuan against the dollar to a five-year low added to concerns, with the leadership's handling of the crisis being called into question.
This in turn has caused heavy selling of the Chinese unit, leading the People's Bank of China to step in to buy yuan and sell dollars, tightening liquidity.
Albert Leung, a Hong Kong-based rates strategist at Nomura Holdings said: "The PBOC's suspected intervention in the offshore currency market further tightened the liquidity. Yuan interest rates are expected to remain highly volatile in the next couple of days."
The move lifted the yuan's value in Hong Kong, where it is more freely traded than on the mainland. Last week it was almost three percent below its rate in Shanghai.
"It's a conscious effort to make funding costs high for speculators," Andy Ji, a Singapore-based foreign-exchange strategist at Commonwealth Bank of Australia, told Bloomberg News.
"The Hong Kong Monetary Authority is notably absent from the market. They're trying to help the PBOC achieve its objective of converging the yuan spot rates."
AFP

Icahn buying up Time Warner shares: sources

Icahn buying up Time Warner shares: sources

[NEW YORK] Billionaire activist investor Carl Icahn is building an equity stake in Time Warner Inc, people familiar with the matter said on Monday, in a move that could lead to a major shake-up of the media conglomerate.
Mr Icahn's intentions when it comes to Time Warner are not yet known, the people said, asking not to be named because the matter was private. Time Warner declined to comment.
Time Warner, the owner of cable channels HBO, TNT, TBS and Cartoon Network, said in November that ratings for its key domestic entertainment networks had dropped more than expected. Its shares have fallen around 30 per cent since last July.
The New York Post said on Sunday that Mr Icahn was believed to be buying up Time Warner shares and "will take another run at the company," citing anonymous sources.
Mr Icahn waged an unsuccessful break-up campaign against Time Warner in 2006, when current CEO Jeffery Bewkes was the No 2 executive at the company. In 2014, Time Warner snubbed a takeover offer from Twenty-First Century Fox Inc that valued it at US$85 per share.
Time Warner shares closed at US$69.66 on Monday.
The company also has other activist investors in the stock. Corvex Management, whose founder Keith Meister worked for Mr Icahn in 2006, owns 3.7 per cent of Time Warner shares as of Sept 30, Thomson Reuters data show.
Jana Partners and Greenlight Capital each own around 4 per cent of the stock, the data shows. As of Sept 30, Icahn was not a Time Warner investor, according to the data.
REUTERS

Singapore's next bond default looms amid Pacific Andes skirmish

Singapore's next bond default looms amid Pacific Andes skirmish

[SINGAPORE] Singapore's bond market may see its second default in as many months after creditors said Pacific Andes Resources Development Ltd hasn't honoured some obligations on S$200 million of notes.
The Hong Kong-based firm said it received a letter from bond trustee HSBC Holdings Plc alleging breaches on the 2017 securities, in a Singapore exchange filing on Jan 10.
Investors can request full immediate repayment if the company's shares are suspended, according to the bond's terms. Pacific Andes has halted trading in Singapore since Nov 25.
The HSBC letter adds a new twist to skirmishes at the troubled fishery group amid court battles and regulatory probes in Singapore and Hong Kong into its business transactions. In November, Singapore's bond market had its first default since 2009 when Indonesian phone retailer PT Trikomsel Oke missed coupon payments on its debt.
"This situation is opening a can of worms in Singapore," said Raymond Chia, head of credit research for Asia ex-Japan in Singapore at Schroder Investment Management. "Very few local corporate bonds are rated, and a number of issuers have weak credit profiles or challenging business dynamics, and that's starting to show."
Singapore investors have turned to high yielding bonds in the past seven years after interest rates hit a record low in the aftermath of the global financial crisis.
The number of notes with coupons of more than 6 per cent, a level associated with speculative grade in the local market, jumped from one in 2010 to 24 in 2014 before falling to 13 last year.
Notes issued by Pacific Andes and its unit China Fishery Group Ltd are mired in distressed levels. The 8.5 per cent bonds due July 2017 were last quoted at 20.5 cents on the dollar on Jan 11, according to prices compiled by Bloomberg. The securities fell 34 cents in December, capping a 73-cent plunge for the year.
The bonds' next coupon payment is scheduled for Jan 30.
Geoffrey Walsh, a Hong Kong-based spokesman for Pacific Andes, declined to comment. The company is seeking legal advice on the HSBC notice and is "in an active dialogue with a substantial holder of the bonds with a view to establishing a transparent process for discussions" with other debt holders, it said in the filing.
"There hadn't been a default in the Singapore dollar market in so many years that investors weren't vigilant enough and a certain complacency had set in," said Todd Schubert, the head of fixed-income research at Bank of Singapore, Oversea Chinese Banking Corp's private banking unit.
"Over the years as the number of outside, non-government related issuers increased, so did the potential for a default."
BLOOMBERG

Australia, New Zealand dollars find some reprieve, markets cautious

Australia, New Zealand dollars find some reprieve, markets cautious

[SYDNEY] The Australian and New Zealand dollars were off lows against their US counterpart and yen on Tuesday, but investors remained wary of China's recent erratic yuan guidance and its ultimate policy intentions.
The Australian dollar was squeezed higher to US$0.6990 in an extremely oversold market, having hit a four-month trough of US$0.6927 on Monday. It is still down 4 per cent so far this year and a break under US$0.6892 would take it to ground last trod in 2009.
It did prove resilient to a 1.5 per cent drop in prices of iron ore, Australia's top export earner.
Dealers warned the reprieve may only be short-lived as the market was still wary of China's policymaking, even after comments from a central bank official.
Ma Jun, chief economist at the People's Bank of China (PBOC), said that the central bank planned to keep the yuan basically stable against a basket of currencies, and fluctuations of the Chinese currency against the US dollar would increase.
Versus the safe-haven yen, the Aussie stood at 82.24 yen and up from a three-year trough of 80.84. The kiwi held at 77.24 yen, off from a four-month low on Monday.
The New Zealand dollar edged up slightly to US$0.6560 after falling as far as US$0.6509 in early morning trading.
Analysts said the kiwi, which has lost almost 5 per cent since the beginning of the year, was the victim of weakness in Chinese shares. "Given risk-off trading in global markets NZD/USD may continue to grind lower," said ANZ analysts in a research note."The market remains myopically focused on China."
Analysts said the Kiwi would likely encounter resistance around the US$0.6590 level.
New Zealand government bonds eased, sending yields 3 basis points higher along the curve.
Australian government bond futures dipped, with the three-year bond contract off 3 ticks at 98.000. The 10-year contract was down 3.5 ticks at 97.2150, while the 20-year contract also fell 3.5 ticks to 96.7300.
REUTERS

Singtel launches programme to tackle business challenges with global startups

Singtel launches programme to tackle business challenges with global startups

By
SINGTEL on Tuesday launched Singtel Innov8 Connect, a programme that seeks to bring global startups and Singtel together to create "innovative solutions" for business challenges faced by the Singtel group.
Selected startups will receive up to S$75,000 to test and validate their solutions with Singtel. Successful solutions may lead to commercialisation with the Singtel group, providing startups access to the group's over 575 million mobile customers across Asia, Australia and Africa.
Selected startups will also have the opportunity to seek funding from Singtel Innov8, the venture capital arm of the Singtel group, and tap its network of co-investors and partners across the globe.
"Entrepreneurs are looking for problems to solve. This programme enables Singtel to share real-world business challenges and invite solutions from startups globally. It is an excellent opportunity for startups to work directly with Singtel's business units and validate their solutions," said Edgar Hardless, chief executive of Singtel Innov8.
From Tuesday, Singtel Innov8 Connect will publish briefs detailing various business challenges on its website. Startups with relevant solutions are encouraged to submit their applications; after a "rigorous" selection process, one company per brief will be chosen to work with Singtel to trial its solution.
The first set of 10 project briefs are focused on business challenges in areas such as enterprise cloud, smart and safe city and customer experience.

Clinton's tax surcharge on highest earners would hit top 0.03%

Clinton's tax surcharge on highest earners would hit top 0.03%

[DES MOINES, Iowa] Hillary Clinton is calling for a 4 per cent tax "surcharge" on incomes of more than US$5 million annually, a move that would affect fewer than the top one twentieth of 1 per cent of Americans.
Her main Democratic presidential rival called the proposal "too little, too late." The proposal is the first of several Clinton plans to unveil this week aimed at ensuring that the wealthy pay a higher effective tax rate than the middle class.
About 0.03 per cent of 146 million individual income tax returns in 2013 had gross adjusted income of US$5 million or more, according to a 2014 Internal Revenue Service data book.
"Right now we're behind and we have to get the wealthy and the corporations to pay their fair share," Mrs Clinton said at a campaign rally in Waterloo, Iowa.
Mrs Clinton's surcharge proposal comes as her leading opponent for the Democratic nomination, Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, gathers strength in key early-state polls. He also wants to raise taxes on the wealthy and use the revenue to fund a range of proposals, including a single-payer health care system, and he plans to release a detailed tax plan before the Feb 1 Iowa caucuses.
While Mrs Clinton has said a tax code that favours nurses and truck drivers over hedge fund managers could pay for job, infrastructure, and health research initiatives, Mr Sanders said the plan isn't bold enough.
"At a time of grotesque income and wealth inequality and when trillions of dollars have been transferred from the middle class to the top one-tenth of 1 percent over the last 30 years, Secretary Clinton's proposal is too little too late," Sanders campaign spokesman Michael Briggs said in a statement.
The measure would raise US$150 billion over a decade and would be imposed on two out of every 10,000 taxpayers, said a campaign official who asked not to be named. Sanders said it would raise "less than half of what we need just to pay for paid family and medical leave." Daniel Shaviro, a tax professor at New York University School of Law,  said Mrs Clinton's proposal on its own doesn't affect high-income taxpayers' ability to shelter or otherwise legally understate their true incomes for tax purposes. Still, he said, that doesn't mean it won't have an effect.
"I wouldn't call this a radical proposal," Prof Shaviro said. "Keep in mind that, pre-1986, rates well above this used to apply to people starting at much lower income levels, even adjusting for inflation."
Mrs Clinton earlier this month vowed she would "go beyond" Warren Buffett's plan to set the minimum effective tax rate for those earning US$1 million per year at 30 per cent. The billionaire endorsed her in December.
Overseas, Mrs Clinton's "fair share surcharge" bears some similarity to a French measure introduced in 2011. The French version applies a 4 per cent surcharge to incomes exceeding 500,000 euros, according to an analysis published last year by Ernst & Young LLP, which called such surcharges an "increasingly popular way for governments too extract additional revenue," particularly in Europe. French taxpayers earning from 250,000 to 500,000 euros pay a 3 per cent surcharge.
The Republican presidential field in the US, in contrast to the Democrats, is largely opposed to raising taxes.
During a Monday speech in his home state, Florida Senator Marco Rubio charged that Mrs Clinton's "answer to every problem is to raise taxes and create a new government programme," according to prepared remarks. And, he said some in the GOP-including Senators Ted Cruz and Rand Paul-back the introduction of a value-added tax. "It's not just her, or the avowed socialist running against her. Believe it or not, multiple Republican candidates for president support new taxes on the American people," he said.
Republican front-runner Donald Trump said Saturday in Iowa, "Wall Street has caused tremendous problems for us. We're going to tax Wall Street." BLOOMBERG

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