Thursday, January 21, 2016

US crude stockpiles rose to highest level since 1990: EIA

US crude stockpiles rose to highest level since 1990: EIA

[NEW YORK] US crude and gasoline stockpiles rose more than expected last week, while distillate inventories fell, data from the Energy Information Administration showed on Thursday.
Crude inventories rose by 4 million barrels in the last week, compared with analysts' expectations for an increase of 2.8 million barrels. Crude inventories climbed to the highest level since 1990.
The increase came as refiners cut runs, although crude imports fell.
Crude stocks at the Cushing, Oklahoma, delivery hub rose by 191,000 barrels, EIA said.
Refinery crude runs fell by 233,000 barrels per day, EIA data showed. Refinery utilization rates fell by 0.6 percentage points.
Gasoline stocks rose by 4.6 million barrels, compared with analysts' expectations in a Reuters poll for a 1.4 million barrels gain.
Distillate stockpiles, which include diesel and heating oil, fell by 1.0 million barrels, versus expectations for a 133,000 barrels increase, the EIA data showed.
US crude imports fell last week by 409,000 barrels per day.
REUTERS

IBM buys Upstream to build on cloud offerings

IBM buys Upstream to build on cloud offerings

[NEW YORK] International Business Machines Corp said on Thursday it bought Ustream Inc, an online video streaming service provider, to boost its cloud offerings for businesses.
Ustream, which counts NASA, Samsung Electronics Co Ltd, Facebook Inc, Nike Inc and Discovery Channel among its customers, offers both live and on-demand video to about 80 million viewers per month.
IBM did not disclose the financial terms of the deal. However, the Fortune magazine reported on Wednesday, citing sources familiar with the deal, that the transaction could be valued at US$130 million.
IBM has been shifting away from hardware by selling low-margin businesses such as low-end servers and semiconductors to focus on high-margin products such as cloud-based services, mobile security and big data.
The new businesses have so far failed to make up for revenue lost to divestitures.
The company reported on Thursday that revenue dropped to US$22.06 billion in the quarter ended Dec 31 from US$24.11 billion a year earlier.
However, revenue from the cloud business jumped 57 per cent to US$10.2 billion.
Ustream, which is headquartered in San Francisco, will be part of IBM's newly-formed IBM cloud video services unit, currently led by General Manager Braxton Jarratt.
REUTERS

Lagarde wins European Nominations for second term as IMF chief

Lagarde wins European Nominations for second term as IMF chief

[PARIS] Christine Lagarde picked up nominations from across Europe for a second term as leader of the International Monetary Fund as part of a selection process that member nations intend to complete by early March.
Germany, France and the U.K. all came out for Lagarde, whose current term ends on July 5. Aleksei Mozhin, dean of the fund's executive board, said in an e-mailed statement Wednesday that the board aims to reach a decision by consensus. Individuals can be nominated by a fund governor or executive director through Feb 10, the Washington-based institution said.
Lagarde, 59, has been seen as all but a lock to be reappointed, though concerns about legal charges related to actions taken when she was French finance minister damped those expectations slightly in December. At the fund's annual meeting in Lima in October, Lagarde said she'd be open to serving another term. While she's still the front-runner and analysts said the case is unlikely to derail her reappointment, the prospect of a politically charged trial in her home country may still complicate her future at the IMF. Lagarde has repeatedly pleaded her innocence in the case.
UK Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne said in a Twitter posting that he was "delighted" to nominate Lagarde for a new term, describing her as "an outstanding leader with vision & acumen" to steer the global economy in the coming years.
Germany's Finance Ministry said in a statement that Lagarde was "a prudent and successful crisis manager in difficult times" after the financial crisis. France also provided its backing.
Speaking from the World Economic Forum in Davos, Finnish Finance Minister Alexander Stubb said that Lagarde "definitely" has his country's support for a second term.
"Lagarde is an amazing professional and a true champion of financial issues," he said in an interview with Bloomberg Television.
The fund's 188 member countries will be keen to avoid adding to the negative publicity generated by the legal troubles of former IMF heads Dominique Strauss-Kahn and Rodrigo Rato, said Andrea Montanino, who served as an executive director at the fund until last year.
The executive board has adopted an open, merit-based, and transparent process for the selection of the managing director, similar to the one used in the previous round, Mozhin said.
BLOOMBERG

Taiwan billionaire shipping tycoon dies aged 90

Taiwan billionaire shipping tycoon dies aged 90

[TAIPEI] The founder of one of the world's largest shipping companies, the billionaire Taiwanese tycoon Chang Yung-fa, died Wednesday aged 90, his company said.
Mr Chang started Evergreen Marine Corp in 1968 with a single cargo vessel, today it has more than 160 ships and his sprawling business empire is one of the island's leading conglomerates.
"Mr. Chang Yung-fa passed away peacefully this morning ... The Evergreen Group staff are saddened by this news and mourn him," the company said in a statement.
It did not disclose the cause of death.
Mr Chang and his family also control EVA Air - Taiwan's second largest carrier - an international chain of hotels and a steel corporation.
He ranked 17th in the list of Taiwan's richest people with an estimated wealth of US$1.6 billion in 2015, according to Forbes magazine.
He had pledged to donate all his assets to charities in 2012.
President Ma Ying-jeou praised Chang for his "extraordinary contributions", his office said.
A statement from the Democratic Progressive Party, which will become the island's ruling party in May after securing a landslide victory at last weekend's elections, said in a statement: "Mr. Chang had a legendary life and was the entrepreneur who best represented Taiwan.
"Taiwan loses an exemplary entrepreneur and his accomplishment and contribution will be remembered by the Taiwanese people," the statement said.
The Evergreen Group also runs a charitable foundation, a symphony orchestra and a maritime museum.
AFP

Abandon coal, oil or face climate disaster, Davos experts warn

Abandon coal, oil or face climate disaster, Davos experts warn

[DAVOS, Switzerland] Humanity must stop burning coal, oil and gas to power the global economy or face an irreversible climate catastrophe, scientists, business chiefs and analysts warned at an elite gathering in the Swiss Alps.
Barely five weeks after the world hailed a 195-nation Paris accord to stop global warming, plummeting oil prices have thrown into perspective the challenge of bringing about its promised energy revolution.
Crude oil prices this week plunged to fresh 12-year lows under US$27, slammed by gloomy economic forecasts, China's slowdown and abundant crude supplies.
"The economics at these prices will mean that it is very cost effective to use oil rather than renewables which are still very expensive at these prices," said IHS chief economist Nariman Behravesh.
Governments would need to take drastic action, for example by imposing a carbon tax, he told AFP at the January 19-23 annual meeting of the rich and powerful in the snow-blanketed ski resort of Davos, casting doubt, however, on whether it would be possible to do so on a global scale.
The post-2020 Paris Agreement, reached December 12, aimed to avert the most calamitous effects of climate change: severe droughts, floods and storms, and rising seas that would engulf islands and coastal areas populated by hundreds of millions of people.
The Paris accord set a target of limiting warming of the planet to "well below" 2.0 degrees Celsius (3.6 Fahrenheit) compared with the Industrial Revolution, while aiming for an even more ambitious goal of 1.5 degrees. To do so, emissions of greenhouse gases will need to peak "as soon as possible", followed by rapid reductions, the agreement stated.
"Science indicates that if we can come close to 1.5 C it allows us to avoid what we call catastrophic tipping points," said Johan Rockstrom, executive director of the Stockholm Resilience Centre.
"We could avoid irreversible melting of the Greenland ice sheet - seven meters (23 feet) of sea level rise. We could avoid irreversible methane release from thawing permafrost," he added.
"This would allow us to stay in the adaptation realm rather than the catastrophic disaster realm." Already, Rockstrom said, disruption to the Earth's climate system was evident in the unprecedented impact of the 2015-2016 El Nino weather pattern, which is associated with a sustained period of warming in the central and eastern tropical Pacific and can spark deadly and costly climate extremes.
To avoid the worst, mankind would have to protect the oceans and the planet's ecosystem including its forests, in addition to slashing heat-trapping greenhouse gas emissions, he said.
"Why? because the biosphere - nature to put it simply - takes up 4.5 gigatonnes, actually half of our emissions of carbon dioxide." Renewable energies may start to win the financial argument, however, said Ratul Puri, chairman of Hindustan Power.
The cost of solar energy had plunged by about 25 per cent in the past decade, he said, increasing its lure in India, which relies heavily on coal to power its economic development.
"There will be a need for a balance because renewables including solar are intermittent in nature, and therefore any grid system as it is designed out needs to have a balanced approach," Puri said.
"India has an opportunity to leapfrog ahead," he said, by building a solar power distribution network and taking advantage of the broad availability of solar radiation across the nation.
The cost of inaction is incalculable, said a senior insurance executive, who estimated the economic burden of all natural catastrophes at $180 billion a year of which only about a quarter was insured.
"If we don't do anything we won't be talking about the market for the insurance industry in 50 years - the planet will simply be uninsurable," he said.
AFP

China faces deepening impact from world economy, commodity prices

China faces deepening impact from world economy, commodity prices


[BEIJING] The impact on China from the global economy and lower commodity prices is deepening, but the country's economic fundamentals are good and Beijing will make sure the economy runs within a reasonable range, the cabinet said on Thursday.
The State Council reiterated that the government would tackle over-capacity in the steel and coal sectors first in its campaign to reduce supply gluts, according to a statement on its website. It also said that China should price in risks and challenges from the world economy and commodity values.
REUTERS

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