Tuesday, January 26, 2016

Sony moves PlayStation business to Silicon Valley

Sony moves PlayStation business to Silicon Valley

[SAN FRANCISCO] Sony announced on Tuesday it is moving its PlayStation business to Silicon Valley and consolidating its game console offerings under one roof.
The Japanese entertainment and consumer electronics giant said that as of April, its PlayStation hardware, software and online businesses will be unified in a new company called Sony Interactive Entertainment.
The freshly formed company will bring together Sony Computer Entertainment and Sony Network Entertainment International and be based in the northern California city of San Mateo.
"By integrating the strengths of PlayStation's hardware, software, content and network operations, SIE will become an even stronger entity, with a clear objective to further accelerate the growth of the PlayStation business," said Sony Computer Entertainment global chief executive Andrew House.
Units being consolidated include the one working on virtual reality head gear synched to PlayStation and the teams handling streaming music, television and online game play.
PlayStation consoles have been a bright spot for Sony, with the latest generation far outselling rival Xbox One and Wii U consoles fielded by Microsoft and Nintendo, respectively.
PlayStation 4 has seen the fastest and strongest adoption since the first generation of the video game console was introduced in late 1994, according to Sony Computer Entertainment (SCE).
Some 30.2 million PS4 consoles were sold worldwide as of November 22, SCE announced late last year.
PS4 and Xbox One were both released in 2013.
SCE was established in late 1993 and released the first PlayStation video game system in Japan a year later.
AFP

Oil prices resume slide in Asia

Oil prices resume slide in Asia

[SINGAPORE] Oil prices resumed their slide in Asia Wednesday as long-running concerns over the saturated market overshadowed talk of possible coordination between some major producers to slash output.
Trader are also keeping an eye on the release later in the day of a report on US stockpiles, hoping for an idea about demand in the world's biggest economy and key oil user.
At around 0300 GMT, US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for March delivery was down 59 cents, or 1.88 per cent, at $30.86 and Brent crude for March fell 43 cents, or 1.35 percent, to $31.37 a barrel.
They had risen around four per cent Tuesday on hopes for output talks.
Iraqi Oil Minister Adel Abdulmahdi said Tuesday at a conference in Kuwait that Baghdad was "ready to cooperate" on cutting production, but only if non-Opec producers did so as well.
Abdulmahdi was also quoted by Bloomberg as describing increased "flexibility" on output between Russia and the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec), fuelling hopes for talks on an agreement.
State-owned Russian news agency Tass reported Russian oil company Lukoil has asked the Kremlin to work with Opec to limit output.
On Monday, Abdullah el-Badri , general secretary of Opec called for the grouping and other producers to work together to lift prices. Opec in December rejected calls for a production cut, preferring to fight for market share with rival producers, particularly the United States.
Prices of the battered commodity soared late last week from 12-year lows on hopes for fresh stimulus by the European and Japanese central banks.
However, the ongoing worries about a supply glut, weak demand and slowing global economy returned to the fore.
"Prices are moving in somewhat of a range-round movement... You can't really adjust supply to support prices at this point of time," Phillip Futures analyst Daniel Ang said.
He said the key for a sustained price rebound is for demand to pickup and for major crude producers to slash output.
Ang said he was sceptical production would be slashed soon.
"We've seen over the past one-and-a-half years... there was a lot of talk about working together to keep prices strong but none of these has come to fruition," he said.
A strengthening US currency has also been helping dampen demand for dollar-priced oil, which becomes more expensive for holders of weaker units.
The market is waiting for the results later Wednesday of a meeting of US central bank policymakers on the timing of another hike in US interest rates, having lifted them in December for the first time in almost a decade.
AFP

Evidence points to Soh Chee Wen as mastermind of 2013 penny stock collapse: Public Prosecutor

Evidence points to Soh Chee Wen as mastermind of 2013 penny stock collapse: Public Prosecutor

INVESTIGATORS into the 2013 penny stock collapse have found enough evidence to show that Malaysian businessman Soh Chee Wen was the mastermind behind the companies at the heart of the market crash, the Public Prosecutor said on Wednesday at a hearing on Mr Soh's bail conditions.
Authorities also expect to file charges by the end of the year, possibly before September. Mr Soh, however, maintained his innocence and said he was keen for light to eventually be shed on the matter.
The High Court of Singapore rejected Mr Soh's application to set bail terms and to allow him to visit his ailing mother in Malaysia.
Mr Soh, whose passport had been impounded by the Commercial Affairs Department since April 2014 as part of investigations into the October 2013 crash, had argued that the restriction of his movements was "unfair and unreasonable".
Mr Soh's lawyer, Tan Chee Meng of Wong Partnership, argued that his client had willingly remained in Singapore in the period between the October 2013 crash and the formal start of investigations; if Mr Soh was inclined to flee, he would not have continued to come to Singapore. He has also been fully cooperative with investigators, Mr Tan said.
The Public Prosecutor, however, argued that Mr Soh was a clear and present flight risk. It would not have been obvious that Mr Soh would have been a subject of investigations initially because his name was not featured in any of the companies at the heart of the investigations. It would also be difficult to enforce any warrants for Mr Soh's arrest if he was not in Singapore, the Prosecutor said.
The investigations are still ongoing in order for investigators to assemble a more complete case, the Prosecutor said.

Rio Tinto sells Australia coal mine to Indonesia's Salim for US$224m

Rio Tinto sells Australia coal mine to Indonesia's Salim for US$224m

[MELBOURNE] Global miner Rio Tinto Plc has agreed to sell one of its last remaining coal mines in Australia to a group owned by Indonesia's third-richest man, Anthoni Salim, continuing an exit from coal as it battles a sharp slump in prices.
Rio Tinto said on Monday it was selling its Mount Pleasant thermal coal assets in the Hunter Valley in New South Wales to a private company, MACH Energy Australia Pty Ltd, for US$224 million plus royalties.
MACH is an entity owned by Indonesian conglomerate Salim Group.
The royalties from the mine would only be paid when coal prices top US$72.50 a tonne, well above the current price of US$47.37.
"We believe Mount Pleasant can have a very positive future under its new owners with different priorities for development and capital allocation," Rio Tinto copper and coal chief executive Jean-Sebastien Jacques said in a statement.
The sale of the Mount Pleasant mine, which has marketable reserves of 474 million tonnes, follows Rio Tinto's sale of its stake in the Bengalla joint venture last year for US$606 million and leaves it with the Hunter Valley Operations and Mount Thorley Warkworth mines.
REUTERS

Oil price plunge threatens shale revolution

Oil price plunge threatens shale revolution

[NEW YORK] Producers of oil and gas from once hard-to-tap shale deposits are now facing the payback of the energy revolution they wrought: ultra-low prices forcing them out of business.
This year is expected to be a make-or-break year for US shale producers, after the 70 per cent plunge in crude prices, with many at risk of failure.
Dozens of shale drillers sought bankruptcy protection in the last year as low oil prices made their operations uncompetitive and they could not pay debts.
But many are holding on toughly, hoping desperately for a turnaround in the market.
It has been a rapid reversal for an industry barely a decade old. While shale and other deep-rock strata have long been known to hold substantial oil and gas deposits, it was only recently that techniques were developed to economically tap this "tight" oil by hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking" the strata to release it.
Encouraged by US policy to cut the country's dependence on imported energy, the fracking revolution led to a stunning increase in US domestic crude oil production.
Total US output rose from about 5.6 million barrels a day in 2010 to 9.4 million barrels a day last year.
But most of that surge, which made the United States rival Saudi Arabia as a crude producer, came while crude prices held above US$80 a barrel. That made the relatively costly process of tapping shale reserves lucrative.
It is different now that crude is close to US$30 a barrel, with estimates that US oil and gas producers as a group are losing about US$2 billion a week.
With the estimated price for survival at US$50 a barrel, "we expect a sharp jump in bankruptcies at some stage in 2016," said analysts at the VTB Capital in a note.
Law firm Haynes and Boone, specialists in the oil industry, counts more than 40 shale-oil companies having filed for bankruptcy in 2015, with the failures accelerating at the end of the year.
Another indicator of the crunch: The number of active drilling rigs in the United States has fallen 60 per cent, with the biggest losses in the main fracking zones of Texas, Oklahoma and North Dakota.
"Unless the prices come up in spades, the drilling activity is going to continue to get lower probably to mid-year," said James Williams of WTRG Economics.
For the moment, however, overall US oil output has not fallen significantly, in part because operators will produce at a loss to keep servicing their debts while hoping for a price upturn.
VTB Capital says lender banks are pushing them to keep the wells running.
Analysts at business consultancy AlixPartners say the fracking industry has also been able to lower its costs and adapt to market changes, allowing some in the industry to survive better.
"US shale has the advantage of lower and shorter investment cycles compared with conventional oil, which makes US shale more responsive to oil prices," they said.
And that has, in a way, guaranteed that prices will not bottom out soon.
"The market has lost confidence that US shale will decline quickly enough to perform its job this year of beginning the global rebalancing process," said an analysis from French bank Societe Generale.
Still, said VTB Capital, "something has got to give soon." Mr Williams says the crude oil price needs to come up to US$50 dollars a barrel to allow most shale producers to keep going. It was below US$32 on Tuesday.
"For some, it still would be too expensive to drill at US$50." "Until then, we're going to see a decline in oil production here in the US."
AFP

Taiwan to punish nine banks on yuan derivative business

Taiwan to punish nine banks on yuan derivative business

[TAIPEI] Taiwan's Financial Supervisory Commission (FSC) said it will punish nine banks for inappropriately selling yuan derivative product to clients, in its latest effort to prevent further defaults.
Local banks have been forced to realise the losses stemming from client-traded target redemption forward (TRF). The yuan's sharp depreciation this month has turned against their clients as they had bet the currency would rise.
Banks included Citibank, Standard Chartered, Cathay Bank, CTBC Bank, Taipei Fubon Bank and Bank Sinopac will be punished, the FSC said in a statement late on Tuesday, without offering details of the punishment.
Worries of growing defaults have hit banking stocks, which are hovering at their lowest level in more than two years.
Earlier this month, sources told Reuters the FSC will require banks to set aside reserves for possible default of TRF amid sharp falls of the Chinese currency. The regulator will also ask investors to put down a 2 per cent deposit for buying such products.
The FSC recently said banks sold TW$80 billion (S$3.45 billion) in TRF contracts, halving from its peak of TW$160 billion hit in 2014.
About half of current contracts will expire in January, while the rest expires between February and June, the sources said.
Hong Kong and Taiwan are Asia's two biggest markets for TRFs, in part because of their close trade ties with China.
REUTERS

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