Wednesday, January 27, 2016

Qualcomm forecasts show more competitive smartphone market

Qualcomm forecasts show more competitive smartphone market

[SAN FRANCISCO] Qualcomm Inc forecast fiscal second-quarter sales and profit that may fall short of analysts' estimates, indicating that increasing competition in the slowing smartphone market is weighing on semiconductor orders.
Net income in the period that ends in March will be 69 cents to 79 cents a share on revenue of US$4.9 billion to US$5.7 billion, Qualcomm said Wednesday in a statement. On average, analysts had projected earnings of 84 cents on sales of US$5.66 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Qualcomm's division that makes processors and modems for phones, its biggest business by revenue, is getting squeezed on two fronts: the overall market is slowing, and competitors are churning out chips that rival Qualcomm's on price or performance. At the same time, the top three smartphone makers - - Samsung Electronics Co, Apple Inc and Huawei Technologies Co - are increasingly designing their own parts, further eroding demand.
"Their issues are structural and not going away," said Stacy Rasgon, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein. He has the equivalent of a hold rating on the stock. "The market is saturating. The competitive environment is getting worse." Qualcomm shares slipped in extended trading after the report. Earlier, the stock dropped 2 per cent to US$47.53 at the close in New York, bringing the decline to 34 per cent in the past year.
Profit in the first quarter, which ended in December, fell to US$1.5 billion, or 99 cents a share, from US$1.97 billion, or US$1.17 a share, a year earlier, Qualcomm said. Sales declined to US$5.78 billion. Analysts had projected earnings of 83 cents on sales of US$5.68 billion.
Chief Executive Officer Steve Mollenkopf said the smartphone market continues to grow, but there's "weakness" among the top-tier brands, which includes Apple and Samsung.
"Worldwide, the premium tier is down a little bit from our previous expectations," he said following the report.
The overall smartphone market is becoming saturated, making it tougher for many of Qualcomm's customers to find growth. Apple yesterday reported its slowest iPhone growth since the device was introduced in 2007, and said that handset sales would fall for the first time ever in the March quarter.
Mollenkopf has been trying to halt and reverse sales declines that have cut Qualcomm's revenue by more than 10 per cent for three straight quarters. He's trying to get Qualcomm's technology into new markets such as servers, cars and medical devices as the company's main phone-chip business becomes more competitive and overall growth slows.
Last year was the first that the smartphone market expanded by less than 10 percent, according to market researcher IDC. Demand in China, which has fuelled market growth, is slowing to a percentage in the "low single digits" per cent because of economic concerns, IDC said. Phone purchases in that country will increasingly be driven by the replacement of existing devices, rather than new consumers buying for the first time.
Qualcomm is unique among semiconductor makers in that it gets most its profit from licensing patents. Makers of phones pay the company royalties, whether or not they use its chips. That lucrative profit pool has come under attack as governments around the world examine Qualcomm's business practices. Some Chinese manufacturers have used their government's investigation of the US company as a reason to hold off on paying all the fees that Qualcomm says these companies owe.
Derek Aberle, Qualcomm's president, said the company is making headway in getting Chinese companies to sign licensing agreements. Qualcomm signed four deals during the recent quarter and has "less than a handful" of key contracts left to work out, Aberle said in an interview on Wednesday.
Still, Qualcomm said it's deferring US$100 million in revenue per quarter as a result of a contract dispute with South Korea's LG Electronics Inc, which alleges it overpaid royalties to Qualcomm. While Qualcomm said it believes LG's claims are "without merit," the two companies are working through an arbitration process that could extend into next year.
Qualcomm's biggest source of revenue, the design and sale of modems and microprocessors, has lost some of its industry leadership as other companies have caught up in the capabilities their chips offer. The largest makers of phones are also increasingly designing their own chips as they try to distinguish their most expensive phones from others', cutting into Qualcomm's market.
Following a strategic review, Qualcomm last month rejected calls by some investors to split itself in two, deciding to keep the chipmaking and patent-licensing businesses together. Historically Qualcomm's chip business has generated patents that have then been turned into high-margin licensing revenue. That cash influx, in turn, has helped the company fuel industry-leading research and design efforts, keeping its products ahead of rivals in capabilities.
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Shanghai shares extend losses; Hang Seng down at open

Shanghai shares extend losses; Hang Seng down at open

[HONG KONG] Shares in Shanghai opened sharply lower Thursday, extending a sell-off to a third straight day, while Hong Kong tracked losses on Wall Street after the Federal Reserve left the door open to a March US interest rate hike.
The benchmark Shanghai Composite Index fell 0.89 per cent, or 24.40 points, to 2,711.16, while the Shenzhen Composite Index, which tracks stocks on China's second exchange, slid 1.37 per cent, or 23.27 points, to 1,676.88.
Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index lost 0.18 per cent, or 34.95 points, to 19,017.50.
AFP

Platinum industry group to develop more investment products in Singapore

Platinum industry group to develop more investment products in Singapore

SINGAPORE, which has seen a flurry of activity in its gold sector in recent years, could now see platinum take off in a similar way as the World Platinum Investment Council (WPIC) ramps up its promotional work here.
The industry body has joined the Singapore Bullion Market Association (SBMA) here as it seeks to stimulate investor demand for physical platinum and increase the ways in which Asian investors can invest in the metal.
As one of the most important wealth management markets globally with US$0.5 trillion in assets, Singapore offers "an abundance" of opportunities for both retail and institutional investment products, including coins and bars, and exchange-traded funds, said WPIC's director of market development Marcus Grubb.
SBMA chief executive Albert Cheng said WPIC is coming at "an interesting time" in the market's development.
"Since the removal of the Goods and Services Tax (GST) in 2012, there has been a real step-change in Singapore's prominence as a major hub for precious metals trading and investment, a position we are working hard to consolidate," said Mr Cheng. "The WPIC membership will undoubtedly contribute to our efforts by strengthening the region's range and availability of investor products."
International Enterprise (IE) Singapore, the government agency responsible for developing the commodities sector in here, said the partnership will further strengthen the country's position as Asia's precious metal trading hub.
"WPIC brings knowledge, experience and technical expertise in platinum as an investment, complementing SBMA's role as a major association for precious metals for the region," said IE Singapore assistant CEO Satvinder Singh.

Vietnam targets economic growth of up to 7% annually by 2020

Vietnam targets economic growth of up to 7% annually by 2020

[HANOI] Vietnam, which had one of the world's fastest economic growth rates last year, is aiming to achieve an average growth rate of 6.5-7.0 per cent by 2020, the country's ruling Communist Party said on Thursday.
The growth target won 98.74 per cent of votes at the five-yearly congress.
The congress re-elected Nguyen Phu Trong to its top post on Wednesday, an expected outcome that bolsters consensus rule but creates some uncertainty about the momentum of economic reform.
The Southeast Asian nation's economic growth accelerated last year to 6.68 per cent, the fastest growth since 2010, helped by an expanding industrial sector and record foreign direct investment.
REUTERS

Changi Airports Int'l to cooperate with Airports Authority of India on civil aviation

Changi Airports Int'l to cooperate with Airports Authority of India on civil aviation

By
nishar@sph.com.sg@Nisha_BT
CHANGI Airports International (CAI) has been nominated by Singapore Cooperation Enterprise (SCE) to cooperate with Airports Authority of India (AAI) on civil aviation.
SCE, on behalf of the Singapore government, and AAI, on behalf of the Indian government, had signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) on Nov 24 last year during Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's visit to Singapore. Under the MOU, both Singapore and India will promote and broaden bilateral cooperation in civil aviation.
The nomination of CAI marks a first step for CAI to explore cooperation with AAI, starting with the management of airports in Ahmedabad and Jaipur.
Areas of interest outlined in the MOU include master-planning and design, traffic development, commercial development, service quality improvement, training and development, cargo handling and management, and operation and management.
"The details of the cooperation are to be discussed and agreed between CAI and AAI following the nomination," said SCE in a release.

OECD countries agree to share info to combat corporate tax avoidance

OECD countries agree to share info to combat corporate tax avoidance

[PARIS] More than 30 OECD countries signed an agreement on Wednesday to share information about multinationals in a push to boost transparency following public anger over large corporations playing the system to lower their tax bills.
Under the new rules, multinationals will have to report country by country how much they make and what they pay in taxes.
The move is aimed at stopping firms from using complicated loopholes or moving money across borders to minimise or avoid paying corporate tax.
The head of the OECD economic grouping, Angel Gurria, said the agreement was a move towards "the goal of ensuring that companies pay their fair share of tax".
"Country-by-country reporting will have an immediate impact in boosting international co-operation on tax issues, by enhancing the transparency of multinational enterprises' operations," he said in a statement.
The exchange of information will start in 2017 and give tax administrations "a single, global picture" on the activities of big businesses, he added.
Australia, Britain, Chile, France, Japan, Luxembourg, Mexico and Switzerland were among the 31 signatories.
The United States had yet to sign up to the accord but would do so in the near future, the OECD said.
The proposals are part of a 15-point OECD package agreed by leaders at a G20 summit in Antalya, Turkey in November.
The OECD calculates that national governments lose US$100-240 billion, or 4-10 per cent of global tax revenues, every year because of the tax-minimising schemes of multinationals such as Apple, Facebook and Amazon.
Google agreed on Friday to pay £130 million (S$264 million) in back taxes to Britain after a scathing government inquiry into the search giant's tax arrangements.
AFP

Facebook quarterly profit doubles as user ranks grow

Facebook quarterly profit doubles as user ranks grow

[SAN FRANCISCO] Facebook on Wednesday reported that its quarterly profit more than doubled as its ranks of users swelled during the past year.
"Our community continued to grow and our business is thriving," said Facebook co-founder and chief executive Mark Zuckerberg in releasing quarterly results for the world's biggest social network which now has a user base of nearly 1.6 billion.
The world's leading online social network reported a profit of US$1.56 billion in the final three months of 2015 as compared with making US$701 million in the same period a year earlier.
Meanwhile, revenue in the quarter that ended on December 31 rose to US$5.84 billion from US$3.85 billion the prior year.
The results showed Facebook's growing power in online advertising, especially on mobile devices. Mobile accounted for some 80 per cent of the network's ad revenue in the quarter.
Net profit for the full year climbed to US$3.7 billion from US$2.9 billion in 2014, while revenue jumped to US$17.9 billion from US$12.5 billion.
"2015 was a great year for Facebook," Mr Zuckerberg said.
"We continue to invest in better serving our community, building our business, and connecting the world." An average of 1.04 billion people used Facebook daily in December in a 17 per cent rise from the same month the prior year.
The number of monthly active users in December was 1.59 billion in a 14 per cent climb from a year earlier, according to the social network.
AFP

China should let yuan float to avoid slump, ex-PBOC adviser says

China should let yuan float to avoid slump, ex-PBOC adviser says

[NEW YORK] Yu Yongding, a former adviser to the People's Bank of China, has a bold idea to stem the yuan's slump: Let it float.
Policy makers should stop intervening in the currency market and preserve foreign reserves, Mr Yu, a former academic member of the central bank's monetary policy committee, wrote on Wednesday in an opinion piece on Project Syndicate, a website.
In transitioning to the new regime, the PBOC should target the yuan against a basket of currencies within a band of 7.5 per cent or even 15 per cent, allowing market forces to determine the value of the exchange rate within the range, Mr Yu said.
Under such a regime, investors might start purchasing yuan before the exchange rate reaches the limit of the trading band if they think that the currency has fallen enough to reflect economic fundamentals, he said. In the meantime, the government should implement existing capital controls "much more strictly" to limit outflows, Mr Yu added.
"China is still running a large current-account surplus and a long-term capital-account surplus, and it has not fully liberalized its capital account," Yu wrote. "So the chances are good that the yuan would not fall too far or for too long."
CURRENCY DEFENCE
The yuan has weakened about 6 per cent against the dollar over the past six months as the economy slowed and capital outflows mounted. The decline prompted the central bank to spend a record US$513 billion in foreign reserves last year to shore up the currency.
Regulators have also tightened capital controls, reversing years of easing that had allowed the yuan to secure a global reserve status. To anchor investor expectations, the Chinese authorities have stressed that it aims to keep the yuan stable against a basket of currencies, breaking its tie to the rising dollar.
Under the current system, the PBOC sets the yuan central parity rate against the dollar on a daily basis with a trading band of 2 per cent up or down. 
Mr Yu's comments echoed those of other economists who have been advocating for a more flexible exchange rate. The central bank must give up the yuan's peg against the dollar to avert more damaging rounds of depreciation, Li Daokui, a professor at Tsinghua University who also served as an adviser to the PBOC, said last week in an interview at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
DEPLETED RESERVES
The current strategy to keep the yuan steady by burning billions of dollars in reserves did little to damp investor expectations for further weakening, according to Mr Yu.
The PBOC may soon deplete the country's US$3.3 trillion of reserves if it continues to defend the currency in this manner, and encourage more Chinese people to convert their savings to dollars, spurring additional capital outflows, he said.   Even if the yuan goes through a double-digit depreciation under his proposed currency system, it won't throw the country into a financial crisis because the currency mismatch at banks is small and inflation is just above 1 per cent, Yu said.
Mr Yu has called for more flexibility to boost the yuan's global usage before. "A flexible exchange rate will give greater impetus to China's economic readjustment and growth paradigm shift," he said in an interview last November.
At a forum this week, Mr Yu, who served as a member of the Advisory Committee of National Planning of the Commission of National Development and Reform, proposed economic stimulus similar in size to the 4 trillion yuan (S$870.5 billion) package in 2008 to boost growth. The expenditure seven years ago helped cushion the impact from the global financial crisis, but also led to a surge in lending to wasteful projects.
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