Wednesday, January 27, 2016

British PM defends Google tax deal

British PM defends Google tax deal

[LONDON] British Prime Minister David Cameron defended the tax deal struck with US Internet giant Google as he came under fire in parliament on Wednesday.
Google is to pay £130 million (US$185.4 million) in back taxes to Britain following a government inquiry into its tax arrangements, a company spokeswoman said Friday.
Cameron was grilled on the deal in the House of Commons by opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn.
The left-wing veteran claimed Google was paying an effective tax rate of three per cent on its profits made in Britain. The 2015-2016 corporation tax rate is 20 per cent.
"I do dispute the figures that you give," Cameron replied.
"But I am absolutely clear that no (British) government has done more than this one to crack down on tax evasion and aggressive tax avoidance." Corbyn said workers filling in their tax returns "do not get the option of 25 meetings with 17 ministers to decide what their rate of tax is.
"Why is there one rule for big multinational companies and another for ordinary, small businesses and self-employed workers?" Cameron said he was "genuinely angry about what happened to Google" under previous Labour governments.
The Conservative leader, who took office in 2010, said: "Google's taxes are going up under this government.
"We have put in place the diverted profits tax that means that this company and other companies will pay more tax in future.
"And more tax in future than they ever paid under Labour, where the tax rate for Google was zero per cent.
"We have changed the tax laws so many times that we raised an extra £100 billion from business in the last parliament." On its front page Wednesday, The Times newspaper said Italy was set to strike a far tougher deal with Google, equating to 15 per cent of its profits there.
Britain's tax deal with Google follows a six-year probe by Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs in response to controversy over low taxes paid by multinational corporations which operate in Britain but have headquarters and subsidiaries elsewhere.
The diverted profits tax - nicknamed the "Google tax" - is intended to stop firms moving profits abroad.
Google is among several top technology firms under pressure over complex tax arrangements.
Eva Joly, vice chairwoman of the Special European Parliamentary Committee on Tax Rulings, said it wanted to question Britain's finance minister George Osborne about the "very bad deal".
"We also want the head of Google to come and tell us, because this is not fair competition," she told BBC radio.
"This bad deal is very bad news for everybody because it shows that the UK prepares itself to become a kind of a tax haven to attract the multinationals." She added: "You have to do a lot of calculation to know whether the deal that was struck with Google was a good or a bad deal. And I can tell you it is a very bad deal."
REUTERS

BoE's Bailey wants clarity from fund managers on assets

BoE's Bailey wants clarity from fund managers on assets

[LONDON]Fund managers must give investors clarity on the quality of assets they hold and how these are likely to behave in stressed markets, Bank of England Deputy Governor Andrew Bailey said on Wednesday.
Mr Bailey, who heads the BoE's Prudential Regulation Authority, which supervises banks, said shrinkage in banking balance sheets and corresponding large growth in asset management since the financial crisis only made sense if two conditions were met. "First, that there is no lack of clarity about the nature of the assets held under management," Mr Bailey said in a speech delivered to a conference in Dublin.
The recent failure in the United States of the Third Avenue Focused Credit Fund did not produce major ripples in markets as it was clear to investors in advance that the assets were not of the highest quality, Mr Bailey said. "The second condition to meet is that there is no illusion about the liquidity of the assets. It is critical that investor expectations are well adjusted to the prevailing liquidity conditions," Mr Bailey said.
While Mr Bailey does not currently supervise asset managers, on Tuesday he was named as the next chief executive of the Financial Conduct Authority, which does regulate the sector and has a remit to protect investors from unsuitable products.
Central bankers are concerned that investors in bond funds in particular could face difficulties if many tried selling at the same time, given there are fewer banks prepared to buy.
The liquidity, or ease of redemptions or sales, promised by funds to their investors should mirror the market liquidity of the underlying investments, Bailey said.
At the global level, securities market regulators, whose ranks Mr Bailey will join in coming months, are looking at whether new rules are needed for handling large scale redemptions at funds during market turmoil.
REUTERS

RBS sees US$5.2b asset value hit, clouding dividend

RBS sees US$5.2b asset value hit, clouding dividend

[LONDON] Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc dropped after taking a 3.6 billion-pound (US$5.2 billion) hit to the value of its assets and set aside more money for past misconduct, overshadowing Chief Executive Officer Ross McEwan's efforts to resume dividend payments.
Measures to plug a pension deficit will hurt the tangible net asset value by 1.6 billion pounds in the fourth quarter, RBS said in a statement on Wednesday. It also took a 1.5 billion- pound charge tied to a US mortgage-backed securities lawsuit and 500 million pounds for wrongly-sold payment protection insurance, pushing it into a full-year loss for 2015.
McEwan, 58, is facing a pivotal year in his efforts to return capital to shareholders for the first time since the bank's 45.5 billion-pound taxpayer-funded bailout at the depth of the global financial crisis. His to-do list is dominated by a looming US settlement, as he shrinks the investment bank by eliminating thousands of jobs to focus on UK consumer lending.
"It's a set-back, but hardly fatal," said Ian Gordon, an analyst at Investec Plc with a buy rating on the shares. "There is some incremental bad news here which will cap the scale of the 2017 buyback." The shares slumped as much as 5.7 per cent, the biggest intraday decline since August, and traded at 253.40 pence at 10:47 am in London, down 2.9 per cent. RBS has decreased about 16 per cent this year, while Lloyds Banking Group Plc, which was also bailed out during the financial crisis, has declined 13 per cent.
RBS said it would alter the accounting policy for its pension program, which will hurt the value of its assets and reduce capital buffers. In addition, the bank said it would make a 4.2 billion-pound payment into its defined-benefit pension program in the first quarter to accelerate contributions that it would otherwise have made through 2023. The pension program has about 220,000 members and closed to new staff about a decade ago.
The lender took a charge for the lawsuit from the US Federal Housing Finance Agency after recent settlements by other banks, Chief Financial Officer Ewen Stevenson said on a call. The provision doesn't relate to a probe over mortgage-securities from the US Department of Justice, while the bank doesn't have any indication for the timing of any settlements, he said.
RBS made the mortgage-backed securities provision after similar deals cut by Barclays Plc and the Wachovia Corp unit of Wells Fargo & Co with the US National Credit Union Administration over similar cases of alleged wrongdoing, as well as a US$5.1 billion provision made by Goldman Sachs Group Inc. for settlements with various US authorities.
"We see the pension change as a clear negative," said Mark Phin, an analyst at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods in London with a market perform recommendation on the shares. "There is still no provision made for the ongoing DOJ/Attorney General investigations, so there will be more to come in our view." The increase in PPI provisions come as the UK's Financial Conduct Authority considers imposing a deadline for consumer complaints to put an end to the country's costliest banking scandal since the financial crisis. RBS's charge should be "sufficient to cover the costs" to the proposed time limit in early 2018, McEwan said.
The charge to cover the bank to the proposed deadline is likely to be followed by other British lenders including Lloyds, Andrew Coombs, an analyst at Citigroup Inc., wrote in a note to clients. Banco Santander SA's UK unit said on Wednesday it took a 450 million-pound charge in the fourth-quarter for wrongly-sold PPI, citing the FCA consultation.
RBS also said it set aside 498 million pounds to write down the value of its private-banking business in the fourth quarter, hurt by low interest rates, rising taxes, pressure on profitability margins and higher capital allocations. The move won't have an impact on the bank's net asset value or capital buffers, with the common equity Tier 1 ratio, a measure of financial strength, seen at 15 per cent at the end of 2015, it said.
The 2.5 billion pounds in combined costs of the US mortgage-backed securities provision, PPI charge and private- banking write-down will push RBS to a full-year loss for 2015, McEwan said.
RBS "made it quite clear with the heavy restructuring that we had going on in the business in 2015, plus these additional provisions, yes there will be a loss," he said.
While RBS has posted some profitable quarters since 2008, conduct charges and writedowns have pushed it into a string of annual losses since its bailout. The bank still sees a return to distributing capital early next year, Stevenson said.
Investors should "expect a few more bumps in the road this year" as the bank works through a "bunch of legacy issues," he told analysts on a call. "There is a path for us settling most of that this year if we can." To win regulatory approval to pay a dividend or buy back shares, the CEO must complete the bulk of his restructuring program this year, pass the central bank's annual stress test in December and reach a settlement in the US. He will also have to pay 1.2 billion pounds to the UK government to remove its dividend access share, which gives the state rights to a preferential payout.
"I am determined to put the issues of the past behind us and make sure RBS is a stronger, safer bank," McEwan said in the statement. "We will now continue to move further and faster in 2016 to clean up the bank and improve our core business. This announcement is a further step toward addressing legacy issues." The lender is scheduled to report full-year earnings on Feb 26.
BLOOMBERG

No end in sight for Europe's investment banking malaise: Gadfly

No end in sight for Europe's investment banking malaise: Gadfly

[LONDON] The bar is low for Europe's investment banks as earnings season begins. They could still set a disappointing tone.
The major US investment banks have already reported their numbers - revenue was more or less flat across the group. That doesn't bode well for the Europeans, who have struggled to compete against their US peers in recent years.
The dour mood is also baked in after Deutsche Bank and Barclays last week warned that performance would fall short of earlier expectations. Deutsche Bank said last week revenue fell to 6.6 billion euros in the fourth quarter, 15 per cent less than what analysts had estimated. Barclays said investment banking revenue for 2015 was "broadly flat" from the previous year, implying it fell 11 per cent in the fourth-quarter. Both banks said tough markets were the main culprit.
Overall, revenue at UBS, Credit Suisse, Deutsche and Barclays will fall by double digit per centages in dollar terms, analysts from Citigroup estimate.
But is there cause for optimism in 2016? Trading activity across asset classes has picked up in the first few weeks of January, with interest rate trading volume jumping 26 per cent from the year-earlier period, analysts from Barclays note. This is a welcome fillip for a business that has seen a steadily downward trend in recent years. But it's hardly the mark of a turnaround.
Greater trading volumes don't necessarily translate into much higher revenue, and a rebound of just a few weeks doesn't yet look sustainable.
There's good reason to think the outlook for the year ahead could be even worse. While trading is a known problem, other investment banking businesses are off to a poor start this year.
And though it's just as unsafe to spot long term trends here as in a few weeks of trading volume data, there are signs the banks' corporate clients are holding off on transactions amid volatile debt and equity markets.
Share sales in Europe, the Middle East and Africa are down 81 per cent so far this year from the same period in 2015, according to Bloomberg data. In the first three weeks of January, announced mergers were down 35 per cent, while debt issuance fell 22 per cent, according to analysts from Barclays.
Outside of investment banking, Europe's lackluster economic growth could weigh on consumer-oriented businesses, while further litigation and conduct charges can't be ruled out.
At Deutsche, Barclays and Credit Suisse, large scale restructuring efforts led by new CEOs are also likely to lead to charges that drag on results for some time.
In the long term, those efforts could pay off. In the meantime, the outlook still looks grim.
BLOOMBERG

Asset bubbles may be avoidable after all, Asian results show

Asset bubbles may be avoidable after all, Asian results show

[SYDNEY] Years after the biggest global financial meltdown since the Great Depression spurred debate over how policy makers can head off asset bubbles, tentative evidence is emerging from Asia-Pacific economies that prudent regulation can prove effective. 
From Singapore to Sydney to Seoul, regulators have implemented prudential rules that target house-price inflation at the same time as they deliver stimulus to their economies through monetary policy. As the list of countries dropping rates toward zero lengthens, macroprudential measures, once out of favor in the developed world, are staging a comeback.
"Asia has been a pioneer in macroprudential measures," said Frederic Neumann, co-head of Asian economic research at HSBC Holdings Plc in Hong Kong. "Ideally the region would've had higher interest rates in recent years to cool down speculative pressure, but that wasn't possible. So this was a substitute and early signs are it seems to have worked."
The crux of the debate over macroprudential measures harks back to an argument from former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan that a central bank could clean up the mess from financial excesses, not prevent it.
But following the US housing bust and freezing up of global credit markets in 2008, such a laissez-faire attitude became increasingly untenable. The conundrum of cheap money pouring into real estate in Asian economies as the Fed lowered its benchmark rate to near zero demanded action. 
Singapore led the response, introducing residential property curbs in 2009. These included: a cap on debt repayment costs at 60 per cent of a borrower's monthly income; higher stamp duties on home purchases; and increased real estate taxes. 
Hong Kong acted in 2010 and in subsequent years, introducing: a special stamp duty on properties resold within two years, later lengthened to three; an additional 15 per cent tax on purchases by foreigners and corporations in 2012 in response to overwhelming demand from mainland Chinese buyers; and a doubling of the progressive ad valorem rates in February 2013 to a maximum of 8.5 per cent. 
FALLING PRICES 
Prices in both jurisdictions are now falling with Singapore registering a ninth consecutive quarterly drop in December while secondary residential prices in Hong Kong dropped 6.9 per cent in the fourth quarter.
Adair Turner, chairman of the UK Financial Services Authority until it was disbanded in 2013, said city-states like Singapore are now international property markets and using interest rates alone would do some "pretty weird things" to their economies.
"It takes a hell of a lot to control an out-of-control property boom with an interest rate," he said in Singapore on Tuesday. "To deal with them monetary authorities and regulators need an array of tools and powerful macroprudential tools."
Elsewhere macroprudential measures weren't embraced so quickly. Australia's central bank Governor Glenn Stevens was reluctant to reimpose them, arguing that they were scrapped Down Under from the 1980s because people always found a way around them.
"As an economist you always regard macroprudential rules as second best," said Shane Oliver, head of investment strategy at Sydney-based AMP Capital Investors Ltd, reflecting on Mr Stevens's views. "You always prefer to raise interest rates and let the market sort itself out. But in the exceptional circumstances that the world has found itself in the last few years, they do seem to have proven their worth."
Across the Tasman Sea, New Zealand's central bank moved faster. In October 2013, it told banks that only 10 per cent of their portfolios could be composed of home loans with low down payments.
It relaxed that limit to 15 per cent in November for everywhere except Auckland, where prices continued to rise. It also required investors buying in the country's largest city to have a deposit of at least 30 per cent of a property's value to qualify for a mortgage. 
Australia succumbed to the inevitable as prices in its two biggest cities rocketed amid record-low rates. In December 2014, the banking regulator urged lenders to limit growth in mortgages to 10 per cent a year and in July last year it gave the four largest banks a year to increase the average capital they hold against mortgages to 25 per cent from about 16 per cent.
The measures forced Australian lenders to raise mortgage rates for property investors in July and for owner-occupiers in November, the first such increase in five years. That led to a 2.3 per cent fall in Sydney home prices in the quarter ending Dec 31.
In South Korea, regulators last year imposed stricter lending standards to curb swelling household debt and from as soon as February most new home buyers will have to take out amortised loans instead of those with interest-only payments.
Fitch Ratings is forecasting a sharp deceleration in house- price growth in Australia and New Zealand and a further fall in Singapore. It cited prudential measures as among the reasons, as well as very high prices that make housing increasingly unaffordable for owner-occupiers.
Macroprudential measures "had been a feature of policy in the US and many other industrial economies in the 1950s, '60s, and '70s, and it has remained a key aspect of the regulatory approaches in many emerging market economies in the 2000s," Donald Kohn, an external member of the Bank of England's financial policy committee and a former vice chairman of the Fed's board of governors, said in a speech in October.
"In the wake of the GFC, macroprudential regulation has been reborn in advanced economies."
Still, it's not a case of uninterrupted success. In the UK, house prices continue to climb, fueled by a reduced supply of properties coming onto the market, a reality that even macroprudential measures can't resolve.
But the reality is that more countries may experiment with macroprudential rules given the International Monetary Fund has downgraded global growth for this year and several central banks, including New Zealand's, are unwinding rate increases that proved too tough for their economies.
"Central bankers are going to have to keep interest rates extremely low for some time to come," said Mr Oliver. "The best way to deal with it is macroprudential controls."
BLOOMBERG

New US single-family home sales jump in December

New US single-family home sales jump in December

[WASHINGTON] New US single-family home sales surged in December, the latest indication that the housing sector remains on firmer footing despite a massive stock market sell-off and slowing economic growth.
The Commerce Department said on Wednesday sales increased 10.8 per cent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 544,000 units. November's sales pace was revised up to 491,000 units from the previously reported 490,000 units.
Economists polled by Reuters had forecast new home sales edging up to an annual rate of 500,000 units last month.
REUTERS

US: Wall St opens lower as oil, Apple drag

US: Wall St opens lower as oil, Apple drag

[NEW YORK] US stocks opened lower on Wednesday after oil prices gave up gains and as Apple's tepid quarterly revenue forecast weighed.
The Dow Jones industrial average was down 94.44 points, or 0.58 per cent, to 16,072.79; the S&P 500 was down 5.3 points, or 0.28 per cent, to 1,898.33; and the Nasdaq Composite index was down 20.16 points, or 0.44 per cent, to 4,547.51.
REUTERS

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