Thursday, January 21, 2016

Oracle lawyer says Google's Android generated US$31b revenue

Oracle lawyer says Google's Android generated US$31b revenue

[SAN FRANCISCO] Google's Android operating system has generated revenue of about US$31 billion and profit of US$22 billion since its release, an Oracle Corp lawyer told a US court hearing the software company's copyright lawsuit against Google.
A lawyer for Google did not discuss the figure, according to a transcript of the hearing in a Northern California federal court last week. But he said the Alphabet Inc unit might be willing to disclose more information about the revenue produced by Android as part of the court proceedings, the transcript reviewed by Reuters showed.
The Android mobile operating system began with the release of the Android alpha in November 2007. The first commercial version, Android 1.0, was released in September 2008.
Oracle is accusing Google of using its Java software without paying for it to develop Android.
Google said in a court filing on Wednesday that the Android disclosures should not have been made public, and asked the court to place it under seal.
The document, which had been available electronically at a San Francisco courthouse, was removed from the publicly accessible portion of the court's computer system while a Reuters reporter was reviewing it on Thursday afternoon.
It is not clear what occurred or whether the document would become available again.
Google was not immediately available for comment. Oracle declined to comment.
The closely watched case involves how much copyright protection should extend to the Java programming language, which Google used to design the operating system. Oracle is seeking royalties for Google's use of some of the Java language, while Google argues it should be able to use Java without paying a fee.
BLOOMBERG

As oil slump rocks Petronas, Malaysians brace for hard times

As oil slump rocks Petronas, Malaysians brace for hard times

[KUALA LUMPUR] When Malaysian oil giant Petronas announced sharp spending cuts and described a dismal outlook this week, it was confirmation for millions that they will struggle to make ends meet this year amid high costs, a plunging currency and fewer jobs.
The country's only Fortune 500 company, state-owned Petroliam Nasional Bhd drove Malaysia's modernisation push in the last two decades that was symbolically crowned by its construction of the world's tallest twin towers in the heart of Kuala Lumpur.
But as the oil boom turns to bust, Petronas - and with it Southeast Asia's third-largest economy - is slowing down, and Malaysians are bracing for hard times. The company is one of Malaysia's biggest employers, and accounts for nearly a third of the government's oil and gas-related revenue.
All this piles pressure on Prime Minister Najib Razak, whose popularity has already been battered by rising costs, a new goods and services tax aimed at plugging the fiscal hole, and a scandal over millions of dollars mysteriously deposited in his personal bank account.
It could also fuel social unrest in a country where thousands took to the streets last year calling on Najib to resign. "It's going to be challenging this year given the falling oil price," said Michael Wan, a Singapore-based Credit Suisse economist. "Unemployment will rise. A lot of it will come from the oil and gas side. You put that with lower commodity prices and weaker ringgit, all in all it points to weaker private consumption this year." A slump in oil prices to below US$30 per barrel is squeezing Malaysia's finances, along with the drop in ringgit, the worst-performing Asian currency last year, when it lost around a quarter of its value against the dollar.
Petronas' business review, announced on Tuesday, includes a plan to cut its spending by up to 50 billion ringgit (US$11.4 billion) over the next four years.
As falling commodity prices, sluggish growth and dollar outflows take their toll on a region battered by the 1997/8 financial crisis, Malaysia is emerging as Southeast Asia's weakest link.
Spreading the pain across the economy, Najib is expected to cut government expenditure when he revises the 2016 budget next week to reflect the slide in oil prices.
Consumer confidence was already at a 10-year low in the third quarter, according to a Nielsen survey, and private consumption is slowing. The country posted its slowest growth in more than two years in the third quarter of 2015.
Another worry is rising debt, one reason cited by Moody's for cutting Malaysia's sovereign ratings outlook.
Household debt has risen by more than 15 percentage points of GDP since 2009 to around 87 per cent as of end-2014, levels similar to more advanced, higher-income economies, Moody's said.
Petronas said this week that contract jobs in the company's non-core businesses would be affected. Other companies in the oil and gas sector are also cutting jobs as they pull back from projects to save costs.
The country's unemployment rate rose to 3.2 per cent in November, from 3.1 percent in the prior month, Malaysia's department of statistics said on Friday. "Employees in oil and gas are trying to switch, especially in the support functions. They are going to be flooding into other industries," said Guru Mani, country manager for recruitment firm Reed Global.
A senior cabinet minister was widely ridiculed last month for suggesting that Malaysians should take two jobs to meet their rising costs, as were others who advised people to grow their own vegetables and avoid road tolls to save money. "When ministers tell the people to wake up earlier in the morning to avoid tolls, get multiple jobs and grow their own vegetables, it's clear they are disconnected from their people,"said Shen Lim, who works as a video producer in Kuala Lumpur.
The public scorn poured on Najib's cabinet will be a setback for the long-ruling UMNO alliance, which needs to build support ahead of a general election due in 2018.
UMNO scraped to a narrow victory in the 2013 poll - losing the popular while still winning a majority of seats in parliament - but that was in better economic times.
Still, many people do appear to be trying the two-job idea.
Ride-hailing app Uber expects to sign up 100,000 new Malaysian drivers in 2016 as they look for additional income. "The flexible, part-time model means ... it creates economic opportunities in a very challenging time," said Uber General Manager Leon Foong.
REUTERS

Goldman says investors overreacting to China creates problems

Goldman says investors overreacting to China creates problems


[NEW YORK] The problem with China isn't just a slowdown, it's investors freaking out over it, according to a new report by Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
"We believe that developed financial markets will, in all likelihood, overreact to deteriorating conditions in China," a team led by Sharmin Mossavar-Rahmani, chief investment officer at Goldman Sachs Private Wealth Management, wrote in a paper.
"We conclude that the direct and indirect economic and banking sector exposures to China are not of a scale to have significant impact on major economies and financial markets."
What to do? It's hard to tell markets to be calm about concerns over the world's second-biggest economy. China faces myriad challenges, from corruption to unreliable economic data, and Goldman Sachs expects the country to create volatility for the next five years, infecting other emerging markets. Their recommendation is to reduce exposure to these vulnerable assets.
China did not start 2016 on the right foot - for example, the decision to implement then abandon a controversial stock circuit-breaker system - and more mishaps are likely.
"Moreover, as evidenced by the measures taken to manage the equity and currency markets over the last several months, the risk of policy mistakes looms large," according to the report, entitled "Walled in: China's Great Dilemma."
Goldman Sachs's investment management team showed how the impact of slower growth in China on the global economy has been "overstated" by charting exports as a share of gross domestic product. In the US, exports to China account for just 0.7 per cent of GDP. It is 2.3 per cent for emerging markets, and as high as 10.3 per cent in South Korea.
China has shaken investor confidence with surprise currency moves and confused with chaotic market regulation. Chinese Vice President Li Yuanchao told Bloomberg in Davos this week that authorities are willing to keep intervening in the stock market to make sure that a few speculators don't benefit at the expense of regular investors.
Goldman Sachs predicts the yuan, also known as renminbi, will depreciate between 10 per cent and 20 per cent over the next two years: "Of course, the renminbi could weaken further by 2020, especially if the depreciation were to become disorderly, or if the capital account is opened up and China witnesses significant capital outflows."
Turning to growth, Goldman Sachs says China is likely to reach its 6.5 per cent minimum growth target in two to three years and have adequate resources to avert a so-called hard landing in 2016. In the long run, however, the outlook is somewhat grimmer.
After two decades of record-breaking growth, the world's most populous nation risks the fate of neighboring Japan: an extended period of slow growth and possibly deflation.
"China would be entering the slowdown from a much weaker starting point than Japan when it entered its lost decades," the report warns.
"China is poorer, has less favorable demographics, suffers from weaker human capital factors, is more dependent on investments and ranks lower on business environment indicators."
BLOOMBERG

Europe: Shares rise energised by Draghi; Italy boosted by bank rally

Europe: Shares rise energised by Draghi; Italy boosted by bank rally

[LONDON] European shares rose on Thursday after slumping in the previous session to 15-month lows, as a hint of more stimulus from ECB president Mario Draghi helped reassure investors following a turbulent start to the year.
Turmoil in financial markets and concerns over China and other emerging markets will prompt a March review of the European Central Bank's monetary policy, Draghi said on Thursday, holding out the prospect of further loosening. "Draghi's words have helped calm down the market,"Activtrades Chief Market Analyst Carlo Alberto De Casa said, noting how Italy had outperformed after heavy losses in banking shares led European stocks to their lowest point in 15 months.
Daniel Sugarman, Market Strategist at ETX Capital, said what really "energized" European markets was the prospect of more monetary stimulus in just two months time.
The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 index rose 2.1 per cent to 1,294.05 points. The index fell 3.3 per cent to its lowest level since October 2014 in the previous session. Milan's FTSE MIB index climbed 4.2 per cent while Germany's DAX was up 1.9 per cent.
Italian banks rebounded from another sell-off on Wednesday triggered by bad loan and liquidity worries, with embattled lender Monte dei Paschi soaring 43 per cent as Prime Minister Matteo Renzi sought to reassure investors that the sector was solid despite its mountain of bad loans.
Monte dei Paschi has borne the brunt of a sell-off in Italian banking shares this year, losing more than half its market value since the end of 2015, with some investors seeing current values as a buying opportunity.
Shares in Pearson surged 17 per cent after the British education publisher announced plans to cut 10 per cent of its workforce, cap its dividend and restructure after cutting earnings forecasts for 2015 and 2016. "Whilst it is disappointing to see further restructuring costs and little, if any, improvement in underlying markets, we are broadly encouraged that Pearson has decided to redouble its efforts to meet external and internal challenges," said Roddy Davidson, analyst at Shore Capital. "We believe the market will also be relieved by its decision to maintain dividends at 2015 year levels." Swiss-American technology accessories maker Logitech also jumped 9.6 per cent after its quarterly results beat analyst forecasts.
However, Deutsche Bank fell 3.4 per cent after saying it expected a net loss of 6.7 billion euros for 2015 due to writedowns, litigation charges and restructuring costs.
The announcement by Germany's biggest bank has renewed concerns that it will now need to raise new capital to strengthen its finances.
REUTERS

China: Shares retreat, shrug off global stimulus hopes

China: Shares retreat, shrug off global stimulus hopes

[SHANGHAI] Chinese shares' early gains quickly evaporated by midday on Friday, as investors were unimpressed by hints of more policy stimulus in Europe and Japan, which prompted a rally in battered oil prices and global equities.
The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index was down 0.3 per cent at the midsession interval, following Thursday's sharp losses. The CSI300 index of the largest listed companies in Shanghai and Shenzhen was also down 0.3 per cent.
The indexes started the morning with a shallow bounce, but it was shortlived and there was little volume behind it.
Investors appear increasingly reluctant to risk their money on China's fickle markets, which have slumped about 17-18 per cent so far this year, and morning gains have often turned to losses by close of day as traders quickly took profits.
Highlighting the lack of faith in the markets, trading volumes in January have been about a third of typical levels last year, which only exaggerates price movements.
On Thursday, Vice President Li Yuanchao sought to reassure investors that Beijing would use regulations to prevent volatility in a market that was "not yet mature". "An excessively fluctuating market is a market of speculation where only the few will gain the most benefit when most people suffer," Mr Li, who is attending the World Economic Forum in Davos, said in an interview with Bloomberg.
Measured by actions rather than words, regulators' attempts to curb volatility, notably a new circuit breaker mechanism that was ditched after three days of violent falls, have conspicuously failed.
The stock markets and China's yuan currency have come under pressure as a raft of economic indicators have confirmed the country's declining growth, putting the world's second-largest economy at the top of global investors' worry list along with plunging crude oil prices.
The Labour Ministry provided a rare nugget of good news on Friday, announcing that urban unemployment was unchanged at 4.05 per cent, comfortably below the government's target rate, and the job market would remain stable in 2016. But most economists believe China's real jobless rate is far higher.
Concerns about another near-term yuan devaluation are slowly fading as the People's Bank of China (PBOC) has steered a steady course for the currency daily midpoint fix in recent weeks. But currency markets remain puzzled over the formula the central bank is using to determine its value and say spot yuan will remain under pressure as the economy continues to cool.
Friday's fix was again barely changed at 6.5572 per dollar.
The spot yuan clung tightly to its previous close, while offshore it weakened slightly to 6.6107, nearly 0.5 per cent adrift from the onshore rate.
European and US markets took heart after European Central Bank President Mario Draghi dropped a heavy hint that more stimulus could come as early as March.
His comments sliced 1 per cent from the euro as markets quickly priced in a rate cut for March, three months ahead of previous forecasts.
Speculation is also rife that the Bank of Japan might ease further, possibly as early as next week.
The central bank is "taking a serious look" at expanding its asset-buying campaign as sliding oil prices make it ever harder to reach its 2 per cent inflation goal, the Nikkei newspaper reported on Friday.
All of which was grist to the mill for those expecting more action from the People's Bank of China (PBOC).
The central bank has already been generous with liquidity, pumping a net 315 billion yuan (US$48 billion) into the banking system ahead of the Lunar New Year holiday in early February.
It was the biggest weekly injection since January 2014 and analysts suspected it was larger than that warranted to avoid any hint of a cash crunch during the long holiday.
There was also more reassurance from officialdom in Davos.
Fang Xinghai, the vice chair of the Chinese Securities Regulatory Commission, sought to counter concerns China was seeking to devalue the yuan to gain a competitive advantage for its exports. "A depreciation is not in the interests of China's rebalancing; a too deep currency fall would not be good for consumption," Xinghai said.
Speculators have taken to using the yuan's cheaper offshore forwards market to wager China will finally devalue the currency around March or April.
Analysts at ING, however, said they were expecting policy measures to keep the yuan's fall in check, forecasting a mid-year rate of 6.72 to the dollar and a pick-up to 6.60 by year-end. "Earlier this month Li Daokui, an economist at Tsinghua University and former member of the PBOC MPC, said foreign reserves needed to be kept above $3 trillion. We expect tighter exchange controls and macroprudential measures to enable the authorities to do that and curb depreciation pressure while cutting interest rates." China has jolted global markets twice in the last six months by allowing sudden, sharp slides in the yuan and then intervening aggressively to stabilise it, sparking confusion over its policy.
Central bank action to temper the depreciation has brought China's foreign reserves down to about $3.3 trillion from nearly US$4 trillion in the middle of 2014.
REUTERS

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