Tuesday, January 19, 2016

Netflix adds more subscribers than expected; shares rise

Netflix adds more subscribers than expected; shares rise

[LONDON] Video-streaming service Netflix Inc's quarterly subscriber additions topped its expectations, boosted by strong international growth, sending its shares up 8 percent in extended trading.
Netflix, known for its original shows such as "House of Cards" and "Orange is the New Black", said it added 5.59 million subscribers in the three months ended Dec. 31, higher than its forecast of 5.15 million.
Internationally, Netflix added 4.04 million subscribers, compared with its estimate of 3.50 million. The company said on Tuesday it added 1.56 million U.S. subscribers in the fourth quarter, below the 1.65 million it forecast in October.
Shares of Netflix were trading at US$116.50 after the bell.
Netflix, which started in 1997 as a DVD-rental-by-mail firm, forecast adding about 1.75 million customers in the United States in the current quarter.
It also said it expected to add about 4.35 million subscribers internationally.
Earlier this month, the company flipped the switch on its aggressive international plans, going live in more than 130 countries at once.
Netflix said revenue rose 22.8 per cent to US$1.82 billion.
Analysts on average had expected a profit of 2 cents per share and revenue of US$1.83 billion, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
Excluding items, Netflix earned 7 cents per share.
REUTERS

Insurance-linked securities market hits US$70b in 2015: Willis

Insurance-linked securities market hits US$70b in 2015: Willis

[LONDON] The market for non-life insurance-linked securities (ILS) rose to US$70 billion from US$65 billion in 2015, Willis Capital Markets & Advisory said on Tuesday, as more investors pumped money into the market in a hunt for yield.
ILS allow insurance risk to be shared with a broader range of investors than traditional reinsurance and can take the form of a range of securities including catastrophe bonds.
Among the ILS products proving popular were collateralised reinsurance, Willis said, and a broader array of risks were offered for investment, including accident & health and casualty risks.
"As investors continue (to) become more comfortable with this maturing asset class, there remains clear appetite to deploy capital across a broader array of risks and products as long as investment standards are met," said Bill Dubinsky, head of ILS at WCMA.
"Overall...the ILS market is healthy and of keen interest to institutional investors, insurers and reinsurers, and increasingly to corporates and governments as well."
REUTERS

Hong Kong dollar's rout sends a surprising message: buy equities

Hong Kong dollar's rout sends a surprising message: buy equities

[HONG KONG] Baring Asset Management Ltd is eyeing Hong Kong stocks at the lowest valuations in more than a decade, betting that the city's slumping currency make this an unexpectedly good time to buy equities.
The Hong Kong dollar, which is allowed to trade in a range versus the greenback, last week posted its steepest two-day drop since 1992 as investors pulled money out of the city amid concern about China's economy.
The Hang Seng Index sank to a three-year low, and is trading at the cheapest multiple versus global shares since Hong Kong's outbreak of severe acute respiratory syndrome in 2003.
For Baring Asset, the currency's decline shows that sentiment is at a negative extreme, and purchasing stocks now will ultimately prove a smart decision.
"It's like 2008, 2010, 2011 - when you look at the Hong Kong dollar over that period, it also hit those levels," said Khiem Do, head of multi-asset strategy at the fund manager in Hong Kong.
"It was very volatile during that period but you did make money after that. You have to take a long term view."
After the Hong Kong dollar's slump in May 2010 to a 1 1/2- year low, the Hang Seng Index bottomed within a week and jumped 31 percent to a peak in November of that year.
In 2011, the Hang Seng Index bottomed in October, two months after the currency's trough, then embarked on a 33 per cent rally through February 2012.
Mr Do's bullish stance this time contrasts with Core Pacific Yamaichi International Hong Kong Ltd, which sees little chance of outflows from the city's assets abating, and Linus Yip at First Shanghai Securities Ltd, who expects the weak economic environment to drag stocks lower.
WEAKER CURRENCY
The Hong Kong dollar weakened 0.41 per cent last week to HK$7.7950 versus the dollar. The city's currency trades within a range of HK$7.75-HK$7.85 against the greenback.
Its slide is a reflection of money leaving the city's lackluster stock market and shifting to assets in the US or Japan, said Ronald Wan, chief executive of investment bank Partners Capital International Ltd in Hong Kong.
A rout in mainland stocks and volatility in the yuan, combined with concerns about the economic outlook on both sides of the China-Hong Kong border, dragged the Hang Seng Index 10 per cent lower this year.
A gauge of Chinese companies took an even bigger hit, falling 13 per cent. The Hang Seng Index now trades at 9.8 times estimated earnings, 24 per cent below its 10-year average and 31 per cent less than the multiple on an index of globalstocks, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
"It's a very cheap market right now so one just needs the confidence to return," Baring's Do said, noting that sentiment still remains weak around the world. "We are looking at number of undervalued companies to add to the portfolio."
CHINA CONCERN
It may take time for investor confidence to return because China's economy is slowing and its equity markets continue to experience problems, said Mikio Kumada, a Hong Kong-based global strategist at LGT Capital Partners. The Shanghai Composite Index slipped back into a bear market last week, falling more than 20 per cent from its December high.
A sharp drop in the Hong Kong dollar usually means a stocks outflow cycle is nearing its end, said Kenny Tang, chief executive officer of Jun Yang Securities Co, who expects the Hang Seng Index to reach a bottom soon.
"The index is already down a lot," said Mr Tang. "Although the market is worried, I don't think funds will flow out too much from the Hong Kong market."
The Hang Seng Index may rise about 25 per cent by year-end from current levels, with Hong Kong's government likely to roll out stimulus to support growth, according to HSBC Holdings Plc.
"We've seen Hong Kong experience this and will be able to ride through it," said Baring's Do. "When you buy into the time of crisis you have to be prepared to accept the short term volatility. If you take a one- to two-year view, you make money."
BLOOMBERG

Confidence among CEOs sags as China's slowdown spooks Davos

Confidence among CEOs sags as China's slowdown spooks Davos

[DAVOS, Switzerland] Confidence about near-term sales growth among chief executives around the world has fallen to its lowest level in six years as China's economic engine slows and a slump in oil prices signals deep unease about the global outlook.
A survey of more than 1,400 CEOs released on Tuesday on the eve of the annual World Economic Forum in Davos paints a gloomy picture, as corporate leaders contemplate a rising tide of threats.
Despite the trillions of dollars of stimulus and ultra-easy money that central banks have pumped into the system since the 2008 financial crash, just 27 per cent of CEOs expect global economic growth to improve over the next 12 months, compared with 37 per cent at the same time last year.
China, whose demand helped bring the world back from the brink last time around, is at the centre of concerns. "You've got the second largest economy in the world that until now has seen very, very good growth rates when many others were really struggling, and now we are seeing a real slowdown,"said Dennis Nally, chairman of PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC), which conducted the annual corporate health check. "There are big concerns with regard to currency and the stock market, and there are real questions about what this means for China's ability to transform its economy." The latest official data on Tuesday showed China's growth in 2015 was 6.9 per cent, the lowest in a quarter of a century, adding to problems facing the government as it tries to transition from a centrally planned to a more market-oriented economy.
There is little to cheer CEOs elsewhere in the world. "Europe and North America are doing okay but if you look at many emerging markets, there are real concerns," Alex Molinaroli, chief executive of industrial group Johnson Controls, told Reuters.
Mr Molinaroli, whose company has major operations in China, does not think the country's economic fundamentals are as bad as the recent slump in the local stock market might suggest, but he worries about the ripples spreading from China. "We're seeing the impact on commodities, especially oil, and that is going to have major ramifications. The energy sector is what has got everybody as nervous as anything else," he said.
Only 35 per cent of CEOs in the PwC survey said they were"very confident" of growing their company's revenue in the next 12 months, down from 39 per cent in 2015 and the lowest reading since 2010.
Confidence among US bosses fell to 33 per cent from 46 per cent in 2015, echoing similar declines in other Western countries including Germany and Britain.
India was a rare bright spot among major economies in bucking the downbeat mood, with confidence in short-term sales growth rising to 64 per cent from 62 per cent.
Swiss CEOs, meanwhile, took the prize as the most pessimistic in the world, with a confidence reading of just 16 per cent, down from 24 per cent a year ago, after the"frankenshock" of January 2015, which saw the franc surge.
The PwC survey was conducted in the fourth quarter of 2015 in 83 countries. "You can imagine that if we had done it in the first weeks of January then the picture would have been even gloomier," Mr Nally said.
REUTERS

Only 27% of CEOs see global growth this year: PwC survey

Only 27% of CEOs see global growth this year: PwC survey

CHIEF executives of companies around the world have expressed increased pessimism about global economic growth in the year ahead, a survey has shown.
Only 27 per cent of the 1,409 CEOs from 83 countries polled expected the world economy to improve this year, compared to 37 per cent last year, and 44 per cent in 2014.
At the same time, the proportion of CEOs who thought the global economy would decline has increased. Some 23 per cent said growth would decline, versus 17 per cent last year and 7 per cent in 2014.
These results were detailed in the 19th Annual Global CEO Survey released by PricewaterhouseCoopers on the eve of the annual World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, as top corporate representatives, politicians, academics and journalists gather to discuss global issues amid a deepening oil and commodities price rout and China's economic results shakes global confidence.
Said Dennis Nally, PwC's global chairman: "There's no question that business leaders' confidence in both the global economy and their own company growth prospects has taken a knock."
Close to two thirds of those polled also said that they expect to see their revenues shrinking. Only 35 per cent said revenues would grow, compared to 39 per cent last year. CEOs in India were the most optimistic among them, with confidence levels reaching 64 per cent. Those in China were one of the most pessimistic, with only 24 per cent expressing confidence. Only 33 per cent of CEOs in America and the European Union were upbeat.
Over-regulation was cited as CEOs' top-most concerns, with 79 per cent expressing worries about it. Geopolitical risks were the second, at 74 per cent, and exchange rate volatility came in third, at 73 per cent.

CNOOC to cut spending, production amid crude's plunge below US$30

CNOOC to cut spending, production amid crude's plunge below US$30

[BEIJING] CNOOC Ltd, China's biggest offshore oil and gas producer, plans to cut spending and reduce production this year amid oil's plunge below US$30 a barrel.
The Beijing-based explorer will decrease capital expenditure to as little as 60 billion yuan (S$13.09 billion) this year from a target of as much as 80 billion yuan for 2015, while producing 470 million to 485 million barrels of oil equivalent, it said in a statement to the Hong Kong stock exchange Tuesday. CNOOC produced an estimated 495 million barrels of oil equivalent last year.
BLOOMBERG

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