Monday, January 25, 2016

French firms to invest US$10b in India: Sapin

French firms to invest US$10b in India: Sapin

[NEW DELHI French companies will invest US$10 billion in India over the next five years, Finance Minister Michel Sapin said on Monday during a visit by President Francois Hollande to India.
Hollande, invited as guest of honour for India's Republic Day celebrations, hopes to seal an intergovernmental deal that would pave the way for the multi-billion-dollar sale of 36 Rafale combat jets.
REUTERS

Oil falls 3% on swelling oversupply

Oil falls 3% on swelling oversupply

[LONDON] Oil prices fell 3 per cent on Monday as Iraq announced record-high oil production feeding into a heavily oversupplied market, wiping out much of the gains made in one of the biggest-ever daily rallies last week.
Brent crude, the global benchmark, was down 84 cents at US$31.34 a barrel at 1122 GMT, losing 2.6 per cent from its closing price on Friday, when Brent surged 10 per cent.
US crude traded 95 cents lower at $31.24 a barrel.
Iraq's oil ministry told Reuters on Monday oil output had reached a record high in December. Its fields in the central and southern regions produced as much as 4.13 million barrels a day, the government said.
"The news that Iraq has probably hit another record builds on the oversupply sentiment," said Hans van Cleef, senior energy economist at ABN Amro in Amsterdam. "The oversupply will keep markets depressed and prices low, and on the other hand short positions are in excessive territory," he said.
The closing of large amounts of short positions had caused a huge rally on Friday that was largely undone again on Monday, creating huge volatility in the oil market.
Fundamental factors remained bearish.
Indonesia's Opec governor said support among the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries for taking steps to prop up crude prices is slim, with only one Opec country supporting an emergency meeting over the matter.
Striking a more bullish tone, the group's Secretary-General Abdullah al-Badri said at a separate event in London that he saw some signs the market was rebalancing.
He also said Opec and non-Opec producers needed to work together to tackle oversupply in order to prop up oil prices.
The chairman of Saudi Aramco said on the sidelines of a different conference on Monday that oil prices would ultimately balance at a moderate level as demand continued to rise.
In the United States, one of Opec's largest production rivals, a further drop in the number of oil rigs was expected to weigh on output.
US investment bank Goldman Sachs said it expected production to decline by 95,000 barrels per day in 2016, including well deferrals, higher than previously assumed.
REUTERS

Total to make most spending cuts among oil majors: ratings agency Fitch

Total to make most spending cuts among oil majors: ratings agency Fitch

[LONDON] French oil group Total has to make the steepest cuts to investments and shareholder returns among Europe's oil majors if oil prices remain weak, in order to maintain its current credit rating, Fitch said on Monday.
Total's spending has to fall by around a third this year compared with 2015 to bring net leverage, a measure of a company's ability to meet financial obligations, to a level needed to keep its 'AA-' rating with Fitch, the ratings agency said in a report.
Total has previously said it expects to have beaten its 2015 cost-cutting target of US$1.2 billion and plans to raise US$10 billion from asset disposals by 2017. It has also forecast capital spending in 2016 would be US$20-21 billion, down from US$23-24 billion in 2015.
"If Total is not successful in its disposal plans, the cuts to discretionary expenditure would have to go up to 44 per cent compared with 2015," Fitch said. The agency assumes oil prices to average US$45 a barrel this year, US$50 in 2017 and US$55 in 2018.
Major oil companies have announced plans to sell billions worth of assets in a bid to ride out weak oil prices but few large sales have so far been agreed as volatile oil prices make it difficult for buyers and sellers to agree on a price.
Royal Dutch Shell has announced a US$30 billion divestment programme following its expected takeover of BG Group .
Fitch said if Shell makes no disposals, it would have to cut discretionary spending by 49 per cent to maintain its current rating by 2018.
"Companies can do more than just cut capex and shareholder returns," Fitch said. So far, only Italy's ENI has reduced shareholder returns to rein in spending. "As with capex, (operating expenditure) cuts should be easier over time as contracts can be renewed at lower market prices."
REUTERS

World steel output drops after 5yr rise

World steel output drops after 5yr rise

[PARIS] After five years of constant rises, world steel production dropped 2.8 per cent last year to 1.62 billion tons, with China now producing just under half of the total, the World Steel Association said Monday.
China, easily the world's largest consumer and producer, last year produced 803.8 million metric tons (Mt), down 2.3 per cent on 2014, though its actual share of world ouput rose 0.2 per centage points to 49.5 per cent.
"Crude steel production decreased in all regions except Oceania in 2015." the WSA said following the first overall annual drop since 2009, when overall output stood at 1.24 billion tons.
Last October, the WSA had initially forecast a 1.7 per cent rise in world demand for 2015, followed by a 0.7 per cent rise this year.
Its next forecasts are due in April. The association estimates it represents some 85 per cent of world production.
Japan, the world's second largest producer, saw 2015 output slide five per cent to 105.2 Mt.
Indian production rose 2.3 per cent to 83.2 Mt, propelling it to number three globally while South Korea fell back 2.6 per cent to 69.7 Mt.
Asia overall saw production fall 2.3 per cent to 1.11 billion tons.
Last year saw EU states produce 166.2 Mt of crude steel, a decrease of 1.8 per cent on 2014. Germany dipped just 0.6 per cent - number five producer Russia, a non-EU member, likewise fell just 0.5 per cent, to 71/1 Mt - but Italy and France slumped seven per cent.
Spain, however, produced 14.9 Mt in 2015, an increase of 4.4 per cent.
North American production came in 8.6 per cent lower at 110.7 Mt, with fourth largest producer, the United States, seeing production dropping 10.5 per cent to 78.9 Mt.
Leading South American economy Brazil saw production off 1.9 per cent to 33.2 Mt.
The overall world steel cacacity utilisation ratio fell to 69.7 per cent from 73.4 in 2014.
AFP

BoE's Forbes says oil price fall allows "a bit more time" before rate rise

BoE's Forbes says oil price fall allows "a bit more time" before rate rise

[LONDON] The latest fall in oil prices allows the Bank of England "the luxury of a bit more time"before deciding if the job market is tight enough to require an interest rate rise, BoE policymaker Kristin Forbes said in a speech on Monday.
Forbes said Britain's labour market was stronger than weak headline wage growth suggested. But she wanted more confidence that lower unemployment would lift wages in the same way as previous recoveries before she voted to raise rates. "Tightening monetary policy today would require faith that our forecasting models will work and the tightness in labour market quantities and measures of labour market churn will soon translate into stronger wages," she said. "The most recent falls in oil prices, by delaying the recovery in inflation, provide the luxury of a bit more time to build this confidence," the U.S. academic added.
The BoE published the text of Forbes's speech on Monday, and she will deliver it on Tuesday to lawmakers attending a meeting of the Henry Jackson Society, a think tank named after the late anti-communist US senator for Washington.
Forbes said she expected British wages to pick up, despite a slowdown in recent months, in a position similar to that expressed last week by a fellow external member of the BoE's Monetary Policy Committee, Martin Weale.
Financial markets have pushed back their expectations for the BoE's first interest rates rise since the financial crisis deep into 2017.
But Forbes said that Britain was not in a much different position to the United States, where the Federal Reserve raised interest rates last month. "The relatively smooth experience of 'lift-off' in the US suggests that, at least in this 'Tale of Two Cities', there will not be a revolution," she said, alluding to the Charles Dickens novel set in revolutionary France.
BoE Governor Mark Carney last week said he would need to see above-average economic growth, a pick-up in labour costs and a move upwards in underlying inflation, and added that the US economy had been in recovery for longer than Britain's.
Forbes said she would like to see "a bit more upward momentum" in wages and measures of labour costs before raising rates.
REUTERS

Opec officials see oil market begin to start rebalancing

Opec officials see oil market begin to start rebalancing

[LONDON] Opec officials said on Monday the oil market was poised to start rebalancing itself after prices sank to their lowest since 2003, a sign the exporter group will stick to its policy of not cutting supplies without help from rival producers.
Oil prices have collapsed to below $28 a barrel this month from $100 in mid-2014 on a supply glut. The drop gained impetus after the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries in late 2014 shifted strategy to defend market share, not prices.
The price drop has started to slow the development of relatively expensive supply sources such as U.S. shale oil and forced companies to delay or cancel billions of dollars worth of projects, putting some future supplies at risk. "We expect that we will go through one more downturn cycle of oil price. But we will recover. The market is definitely going to balance itself because today's oil price is not sustainable whatsoever," Qatar's Energy Minister Mohammed al-Sada told a conference in London.
Speaking at the same conference, Opec Secretary-General Abdullah al-Badri said he also saw reason for optimism, citing forecasts for further growth in global oil demand in 2016 and a contraction in non-Opec supply. "We already see some signs that supply and demand fundamentals will start to correct themselves in 2016," Badri said at the conference at Chatham House.
Earlier, Badri said Opec and non-Opec producers needed to work together to tackle an excess of oil inventories so prices can recover and investments in new fields begin.
So far, major non-Opec producers such as Russia have refused to work with Opec by cutting supplies, although Oman and Azerbaijan have expressed willingness to do so. "It is vital the market addresses the issue of the stock overhang," Badri said. "This is now central to the return of a balanced market." EMERGENCY MEETING?
The price slide has squeezed income in producing nations and is particularly painful for Opec members such as Venezuela, who depend heavily on oil income and lack the capacity to pump more.
Venezuela has requested Opec hold an emergency meeting to discuss steps to prop up oil prices. But Opec's Gulf members including Saudi Arabia, who led the 2014 policy shift, have opposed earlier calls for emergency meetings.
The Qatari minister, whose country holds Opec's rotating presidency this year, said the request was being considered although he declined to say if he was in favour. "We received a request and oil ministers are discussing that," he said. "It is being evaluated." While non-Opec supply is expected to fall this year, output from Opec could rise following the lifting of sanctions on Iran, Iraq's plan to further expand supplies and no sign of Saudi Arabia cutting back from near-record levels.
Iraq may further raise oil output in 2016, reaching levels as high as 4 million barrels per day (bpd) from the country's south, a senior Iraqi oil official, who asked not to be named, said on Monday.
Iraq has been producing from its southern fields around 3.7-3.8 million bpd in recent months.
REUTERS

Gold rises on lower dollar and global economy concerns

Gold rises on lower dollar and global economy concerns

[LONDON] Gold rose on Monday, as the dollar edged lower on renewed oil market weakness and concerns over the global economic outlook which have raised questions about the Federal Reserve's pace of interest rate tightening.
The Federal Open Market Committee meets this week and is widely expected to leave its federal funds rate unchanged at 0.25-0.50 per cent on Wednesday.
Spot gold rose 0.5 per cent to US$1,103.35 an ounce by 1052 GMT, extending a near one per cent increase made last week, when investor appetite for risk evaporated on worries China's economic growth is slowing down.
US gold for February delivery gained 0.8 per cent to US$1,104.70 an ounce.
Gold had scaled a two-month high of US$1,112 on Jan 8, but lacked upward momentum before steadying mostly below US$1,100.
"Gold's technical picture is slowly improving but a more sustained rally could only be confirmed by a break above US$1,112-US$1,113," said ActivTrades chief analyst Carlo Alberto de Casa.
Gold fell more than 10 per cent last year, on expectations that higher U.S. interest rates would hit demand.
The Fed lifted rates for the first time in nearly a decade in December and hinted at gradual increases in 2016.
But a possible consumer pullback could now derail the US central bank's tightening plans.
"Given the turbulence in financial markets, the Fed might not be able to hike interest rates too many times in 2016," said Mark To, head of research at Hong Kong's Wing Fung Financial Group.
"If gold can stay above US$1,100 in the coming days, it may signal a further rebound, maybe even to US$1,200 in the coming months."
Expectations for a March rate increase are starting to fade, and economists polled by Reuters now forecast three hikes in 2016 rather than the four initially floated by the Fed.
The US government will release its first reading on fourth-quarter economic growth on Friday. Economists polled by Reuters suggest US GDP growth of 0.80 per cent in October-December and annual expansion of 2.5 per cent in 2016.
Hedge funds and money managers increased their bullish bets in Comex gold in the week to Jan 19, and boosted their positive bets in silver to the highest in more than two months, U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission data showed on Friday.
Spot silver rose 0.9 per cent to US$14.15 an ounce and palladium fell 0.1 per cent to US$495.90. Platinum climbed 1 per cent to US$837.74 per ounce, regaining some lost ground after falling to a seven-year low of US$806.31 last week.
REUTERS

Singapore's 80-Cent loans not cheap enough for distressed funds

Singapore's 80-Cent loans not cheap enough for distressed funds

[SINGAPORE] Southeast Asia's souring loans are becoming unpalatable even for some distressed-asset funds.
SC Lowy Financial, an independent fixed-income firm founded by former Deutsche Bank AG employees, says secondary loan trading volumes are at the thinnest in a decade even with discounts near 20 per cent for borrowers including Singapore- listed Noble Group Ltd and Mercator Lines Singapore Ltd. The primary market is also receding after Southeast Asia syndicated loan volumes slumped 39 percent to a five-year low in 2015.
"The secondary loans market, in 2015 and continuing into this year, has been totally dead," said Michel Lowy, co-founder and chief executive officer of SC Lowy, which focuses on loans, bonds, trade claims and special situations. "It's the lowest volume I have come across in over 10 years, mainly because there's been a massive gap between the buyers' and the sellers' expectations."
Investors that buy loans, or portions of them, in the secondary trading market are being more discerning as some of Southeast Asia's vulnerable borrowers endure a multi-year slump in commodity and shipping prices. China's slowest economic growth in a quarter century, the lowest shipping rates in three decades and crude below $30 a barrel have pushed Asia's bond risk to the highest in almost four months, based on credit- default swap prices.
Non-performing loans in Indonesia, Singapore and Thailand are at their highest levels in at least five years, according to data from the nations' central banks. Net troubled loans rose to 0.8 per cent of all bank assets in Singapore in the third quarter of 2015, the highest for a three-month period since that ending March 2010, official data show.
Asian junk bonds traded at a four-year low this month, based on the average price in a Bank of America Merrill Lynch regional high-yield dollar debt index. The last 15 months has seen Indonesian coal producers PT Berau Coal Energy and PT Bumi Resources and Singapore-listed China Fishery Group Ltd renege on their borrowings. Ratingsfor energy and mining companies have been put on review for downgrades.
Commodity trader Noble Group's credit rating was cut to junk by Standard & Poor's this month, following a similar move by Moody's Investors Service in late December, sending the price of its 2020 dollar bonds to 41 percent of their face value on Friday.
The company's loans are trading at a "very high" yield on the secondary market, with its unsecured facilities due in May being offered in the 80s, said Lowy. Its loans were seen at 89-92 cents in the dollar early December, having traded at 92 in October and 87 in September, according to Bloomberg-compiled prices.
"Noble's loans have seen very little trading," said Lowy. "The spreads are widening. The offer prices are coming down and so are the bids. As a result, they don't trade much at all." Noble Group declined to comment on the prices of its loans in secondary trading in an e-mail on Jan. 24.
Mercator Lines Singapore has reported losses for the last 13 quarters and its chief executive officer resigned last week. While its loans are more actively traded, they're at "very stressed levels," according to Lowy. The coal and crude shipper said a local court appointed Yit Chee Wah as its judicial manager on Jan 18, following an application by lender HSH Nordbank AG in September, according to stock exchange filings.
Yit declined further comment when reached by phone on Jan. 22. The company earlier said he will evaluate all options to preserve the value of Mercator Lines Singapore's assets for the benefit of its creditors.
"Asset quality will generally deteriorate in Southeast Asia, particularly mining and metal producers," said He Xuanlai, a credit analyst in Singapore at Commerzbank AG. "Banks' balance sheets will be tested." Syndicated bank loans for Southeast Asian borrowers fell to US$75.8 billion last year, versus a record US$124.5 billion in 2014. Barclays Plc has cut jobs across Asia and said it is exiting Indonesia and Malaysia. Standard Chartered Plc has also retreated from parts of Asia after being saddled with non- performing loans.
The cost of protecting Asian corporate and sovereign bonds from defaulting jumped to 162 basis points in mid-January, the highest level since Sept. 29, according to data provider CMA.
"Investors are nervous because there's so much price volatility and macro uncertainty," Lowy said. "The sector of focus will remain the commodity space, and those related like shipping or mining services, over the next three to six months."
BLOOMBERG

UK's Investment Association says total funds hit record US$1.24t in 2015

UK's Investment Association says total funds hit record US$1.24t in 2015

[LONDON] Britain's Investment Association said on Monday that total funds under management rose 4 per cent to a record 871 billion pounds (US$1.24 trillion) in 2015, driven by an increase in sales to retail investors.
The Investment Association is the trade body that represents UK investment managers.
Equity was the best-selling asset class for the second consecutive year with net retail sales of 8.4 billion pounds, while UK Equity Income was the best-selling of the IA's sector funds, with net retail sales of 4.3 billion pounds.
Sales of tracker funds, meanwhile, hit a record 5.4 billion pounds to take total funds under management to an all-time high of 108 billion pounds, it said.
"After a slow start, net retail sales bounced back in the final three quarters of the year with investors favouring equity products, particularly European funds and those with an income focus," said IA Interim Chief Executive Guy Sears.
REUTERS

Cracks exposed in US bond market as liquidity woes warp prices

Cracks exposed in US bond market as liquidity woes warp prices

[NEW YORK] In today's bond market, there's plenty of hand-wringing about liquidity, or rather, the lack of it.
But it's become so pervasive that even in the market for US Treasuries - the deepest and most liquid on the planet - buyers are gravitating to the newest, easiest-to-sell debt. This year, investors are paying almost twice the average premium to own the most-recently auctioned 10-year notes, known as "on-the- run" securities, instead of "off-the-run" ones issued just a few months earlier, data compiled by Barclays Plc show.
Part of it can be explained by the turmoil in financial markets, which has boosted demand for haven assets. At the same time, selling by emerging-market central banks, which typically own older Treasuries, to shore up their economies has also widened the gap in prices.
Yet beyond those issues lie deeper concerns about the very structure of the US bond market, and whether post-crisis rules intended to prevent another financial catastrophe have ultimately left it broken. The signs of strain have even caught the attention of the Treasury Department, which this month called on market participants to provide suggestions for fixes.
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"We've been seeing erratic behavior overall in debt markets," said Michael Cloherty, the head of US interest-rate strategy at RBC Capital Markets LLC, one of 22 primary dealers required to bid at US debt auctions. "That includes dislocations in Treasury off-the-run securities. This is all related to liquidity issues" as regulations cause banks to pull back from trading.
Spline Model Since the start of the year, buyers of on-the-run 10-year Treasuries are, on average, paying a 0.022 percentage point premium relative to off-the-run notes, based on yields relative to Barclays' spline fair-value pricing model.
In the previous five years, the annual average premium was 0.0126 percentage point. As recently as 2014, it amounted to less than 0.01 percentage point, the data show. Yields on the benchmark 10-year note dropped three basis points, or 0.03 percentage point, to 2.03 per cent as of 6:22 am Monday in New York, falling from 2.27 per cent at the end of last year.
Bond investors are sacrificing returns to own the most- liquid Treasuries because trading large blocks at a moment's notice without causing prices to move has gotten harder and harder. Based on Bloomberg's US Government Securities Liquidity Index, conditions have deteriorated significantly over the past two years.
The issue of liquidity, and how it can exacerbate price swings as more and more trading happens electronically, has become increasingly important since Oct 15, 2014. That's when, for no apparent reason, yields suddenly plunged before rebounding just as quickly in what became one of the most volatile trading days in a quarter century.
While Treasury officials including Secretary Jacob Lew have said regulations didn't play a significant role in what happened that day, the concern is that many of those same rules are responsible for the distortions that have emerged in the US bond market.
"The backdrop to all this is that you have dealer balance- sheet constraints and risk aversion - both of which are leading to an increase in premium for more liquid securities," said Anshul Pradhan, a New York-based debt strategist at Barclays.
Echoing comments made by executives at the biggest financial firms, Pradhan says that rules implemented after the 2008 financial crisis, such as Dodd-Frank and Basel III, have made it costly for bond dealers to maintain large inventories of Treasuries on their balance sheets. In Basel's so-called supplementary leverage ratio requirement, government bonds are considered just as risky as corporate debt.
With dealers warehousing fewer bonds, trading of older Treasuries has gotten even harder and caused investors to favor on-the-run securities.
"It's all about the cost of balance sheet," said Ward McCarthy, the chief financial economist at Jefferies Group LLC. "This makes it more expensive for anybody to be involved in the Treasury market in anything besides the active securities. That makes it more difficult and probably more costly for investors to manage portfolios." It has gotten to a point where the Treasury, in its quarterly dealer survey on Jan 15, asked for feedback on "liquidity conditions for off-the-run Treasuries" and "what steps the Treasury should consider if you believe that liquidity in off-the-runs has diminished."
Last week, the Treasury also asked industry participants for input on how the market has changed and what should be done to operate it more smoothly.
Isaac Chang, the head of KCG Holdings Inc.'s client Treasury market-making business, says separately that making trading data more accessible would bring in more players and help reduce the price disparities of on-the-run and off-the-run securities.
"There is a clear supply-demand imbalance that has led to this cheapening of off-the-runs versus on-the-runs," he said. "These conditions are exacerbated by the current market structure." With global markets buckling, things aren't likely to get better any time soon as investors seek shelter in the easiest- to-buy Treasuries. Global equities are off to one of their worst starts on record, with Chinese and European stocks falling into bear markets. Oil's slump to about $30 a barrel, from more than $100 just two years ago, is also deepening concern that the world economy is faltering.
Compounding the problem is the fact that the fallout has prompted many developing-nation central banks to sell Treasuries for needed cash as they try to prop up their economies and currencies.
China, which has more than quadrupled its stockpile of Treasuries to US$1.4 trillion over the past decade, has led the way as it sought to ease capital flight amid the weakest growth since 1990. The country burned through a half-trillion dollars of foreign-currency reserves in the past year, much of it by selling US government debt.
"You have the world's largest central banks reducing their reserves," said Subadra Rajappa, the head of US rates strategy at Societe Generale SA. "That is definitely putting pressure on off-the-runs."
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