Friday, January 29, 2016

China set to adopt 6.5-7% growth target range for 2016: sources

China set to adopt 6.5-7% growth target range for 2016: sources

[BEIJING] China's leaders are expected to target economic growth in a range of 6.5 per cent to 7 per cent this year, sources familiar with their thinking said, setting a range for the first time because policymakers are uncertain on the economy's prospects.
The proposed range, which would follow a 2015 target of "around 7 per cent" growth, was endorsed by top leaders at the closed-door Central Economic Work Conference in mid-December, according to the sources with knowledge of the meeting outcome.
The world's second-largest economy grew 6.9 per cent in 2015, the weakest in 25 years, although some economists believe real growth is even lower. "They are likely to target economic growth of 6.5-7 per cent this year, with 6.5 per cent as the bottom line," said one of the sources, a policy adviser.
Policymakers, worried by global uncertainties and the impact on growth of their structural economic reforms, struggled to reach a consensus at the December meeting, the sources said.
The State Council Information Office, the public relations arm of the government, had no comment on the growth forecast when contacted by Reuters.
The floor of 6.5 per cent reflects the minimum average rate of growth needed over the next five years to meet an existing goal of doubling gross domestic product and per capita income by 2020 from 2010.
The 2016 growth target and the country's 13th Five-Year Plan, a blueprint covering 2016-2020, will be announced at the annual meeting of the National People's Congress, the country's parliament, in early March.
Although the target range was endorsed by the leadership in December, it could still be adjusted before parliament convenes.
"The government will not be too nervous about growth this year and will focus more on structural adjustments," said a government economist. "Growth may still slow in the first and second quarter and people are divided over the third and fourth quarter. The full-year growth could slow to 6.5-6.6 per cent."
A string of cuts in interest rates and bank reserve requirements since November 2014 have failed to put a floor under the slowing economy. Beijing is expected to put more emphasis on fiscal policy to support growth, including tax cuts and running a bigger budget deficit of about 3 per cent of GDP.
China's leaders have flagged a "new normal" of slower growth as they look to shift the economy to a more sustainable, consumption-led model.
About half of China's 30 provinces and municipalities have lowered their growth targets for 2016, while nearly a third kept targets unchanged from last year, according to local media.
Guangdong and Zhejiang provinces have set a growth target of 7-7.5 per cent this year, while Jiangsu and Shandong are aiming for growth of 7.5-8 per cent.
In 2015, growth in Chongqing municipality was 11 per cent, the fastest in the country, while growth in Liaoning province in the rustbelt northeast, was 3 per cent, the country's lowest.
For this year, Chongqing is eyeing 10 per cent growth and Liaoning is aiming for 6 per cent.
At the enclave in December, leaders pledged to make monetary policy more flexible, expand the budget deficit to support the economy, and push forward "supply-side reform".
The central bank may be reluctant to cut interest rates or banks' reserve requirement ratios in the near term because of concerns over the impact on the yuan, but it remains under pressure to loosen policy further, policy insiders said.
"We think the central bank should ease policy, because China is a big economy and its monetary policy should focus on its own economic conditions," said the government economist.
REUTERS

Thursday, January 28, 2016

Oil up in Asia, analysts temper hopes on Russia: Opec talks

Oil up in Asia, analysts temper hopes on Russia: Opec talks 

[SINGAPORE] Oil extended a recent rally in Asia on Friday, boosted by weakness in the dollar and Russia saying it could meet the Opec producers' group for talks on possible output cuts to ease a painful supply glut.
But analysts cautioned against putting too much hope on such talks, noting that similar discussions in the past had failed to end with concrete results.
By 0700 GMT, US benchmark West Texas Intermediate was up 63 US cents, or 1.90 per cent, at US$33.85 and Brent for March gained 79 US cents, or 2.33 per cent, to US$34.68.
Prices have crashed by about three quarters since mid-2014 owing to weak demand, overproduction, the supply glut and a global economic slowdown, particularly in key user China.
But both contracts surged on Thursday after Russian reports that Energy Minister Alexander Novak had said Moscow was ready to take part in talks with OPEC to establish possible "coordination".
He said the discussions could be on making production cuts of up to five percent per country.
However, the gains were later pared and Phillip Futures analyst Daniel Ang said the rise has been driven more by a fall in the dollar after US data showed a steep 5.1 per cent fall in new orders for manufactured goods in December.
That was far worse that analysts expected and underlined the weakness in the manufacturing sector of the world's biggest economy and top oil consumer.
Mr Ang told AFP "there could be some bullishness" coming from Russia's plans to talk with Opec "but nothing concrete has been struck yet".
Research house Capital Economics said in a note it remains "sceptical that anything tangible will come of the latest calls for coordinated action" among oil producers.
"These discussions have never come to anything substantial in the past," it said.
AFP

Singapore slaps S$180,000 fine on North Korea-linked shipper

Singapore slaps S$180,000 fine on North Korea-linked shipper

[SINGAPORE] Singapore-based Chinpo Shipping Company (Private) Ltd was fined S$180,000 on Friday for facilitating a shipment of arms to North Korea in violation of UN sanctions.
The Singapore District Court had found Chinpo guilty in December of transferring financial assets or resources that could have been used to contribute to North Korea's weapon programmes. It also found Chinpo guilty for carrying out a remittance business without a license between 2009 and 2013.
Chinpo Shipping was named by a 2014 UN report as helping arrange the shipment of Cuban fighter jets and missile parts that were bound for North Korea when they were seized in Panama in 2013.
It was the largest amount of arms and related materiel interdicted to or from North Korea since the UN first began imposing economic and commercial sanctions on North Korea in 2006, according to the Singapore District Court.
REUTERS

McDonald's to launch 150 customised burger stores in China in 2016

McDonald's to launch 150 customised burger stores in China in 2016

[HONG KONG] McDonald's Corp plans to launch in China this year 150 outlets where clients can customise burgers to suit their tastes, as the world's top restaurant chain aims to grow sales in the country after being hit by a fast-food scandal in 2014.
The US burger chain currently has 11 such outlets on the mainland, including in Shanghai, Guangzhou, Shenzhen and Beijing, Regina Hui, senior director of communications for McDonald's China said in an email received late on Thursday, in which she also disclosed the plans for the 150 restaurants.
McDonald's beat analyst forecasts for quarterly same-restaurant sales this week, adding momentum to a global recovery for the chain as demand picked up in China.
Its same-store sales in China rose 4 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2015, the second straight quarter of growth after four quarters of falling sales.
McDonald's and Yum Brands Inc, the parent of KFC and Pizza Hut, are slowly turning things around in China, although same-restaurant sales for both firms remain below pre-scandal levels, according to a Reuters analysis of available data.
The so-called 'Create Your Taste' outlets allow customers to build customized burgers from a wide selection of ingredients.
Ms Hui said the chain had seen "very positive feedback" from local diners, who analysts say are increasingly tough to win over due to greater health awareness and a boom in the range of available dining options. "They like the taste of burgers, the digital experience and the table service," said Ms Hui.
McDonald's Chief Executive Steve Easterbrook launched a turnaround plan last year that involved making the menu simpler, improving service times and raising worker wages.
REUTERS

Sentiment in Singapore's services sector worsens

Sentiment in Singapore's services sector worsens

FIRMS in Singapore's services sector are now even more pessimistic about their short-term business prospects, according to a poll by the Department of Statistics (DOS) released on Friday.
Of the 1,500 services firms polled on their business expectations for the next six months, a weighted 10 per cent is optimistic while a weighted 28 per cent foresees a slower business outlook. The rest expect no change.
This translates into a negative net weighted balance of 18 per cent - a deterioration from the negative net weighted balances of 6 per cent a quarter ago, and 4 per cent for the same period last year (January to June of 2015).
The net weighted balance - the difference between the proportion of optimistic and pessimistic firms - is a widely-used measure of the nature and extent of business sentiment. Firms were polled between December and mid-January.
According to DOS, almost all industries within the services sector expect the level of business activity to decline for the six-month period of January to June 2016.
The accommodation and transport & storage industries are the most pessimistic, with negative net weighted balances of 48 per cent and 33 per cent respectively.

Singapore manufacturers grow more pessimistic

Singapore manufacturers grow more pessimistic

WEAK business sentiment is spreading through Singapore's manufacturing sector, on the back of global economic uncertainties, the ongoing slowdown in China, and lower oil prices, said a quarterly Economic Development Board (EDB) survey report released on Friday.
Of the more than 400 manufacturers polled between December and January, 29 per cent foresee expect business conditions to deteriorate in the next six months ending June 2016 - heavily outnumbering the 7 per cent who expect the climate to improve. The rest see no change.
That translates into a negative net weighted balance - the the difference between the proportion of optimistic and pessimistic firms - of 22 per cent.
This is a further deterioration from the negative net weighted balance of 16 per cent seen a quarter earlier.
EDB said the weak business sentiment is broad-based,with almost all clusters foreseeing a decline in the business situation in the next six months.
"The exception is the biomedical manufacturing cluster, where a net weighted balance of 17 per cent of firms anticipates a positive business outlook ahead," said EDB.

Singapore bank lending falls 0.7% in December

Singapore bank lending falls 0.7% in December

BANK lending in Singapore fell in December from the previous month, reflecting a contraction in business loans, preliminary data from the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) showed on Friday.
Loans through the domestic banking unit - which essentially captures lending in all currencies but mainly reflects Singapore-dollar lending - stood at S$600 billion last month, down 0.7 per cent from November, the MAS figures showed. In November, bank lending stood at S$604 billion, up 0.4 per cent.
Business loans in December fell 1.2 per cent to S$357 billion from November. A month ago, it rose 0.4 per cent.
Consumer lending grew 0.2 per cent to S$243 billion in December from a month ago. In November, it rose 0.4 per cent.
From a year ago, bank lending in December fell 1.3 per cent. This is a sharper contraction compared with the 0.7 per cent year-on-year fall posted in November.

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