Wednesday, February 10, 2016

Yen within 4% of wiping out declines from Kuroda's 2014 surprise

Yen within 4% of wiping out declines from Kuroda's 2014 surprise

[TOKYO] The yen is within 4 per cent of the level it traded at before a surprise monetary easing by the Bank of Japan in October 2014 drove the currency lower. Traders are now wondering what policy makers will do to arrest recent gains.
The currency has climbed against all 16 major peers this month with its biggest advances versus the Mexican peso, South African rand and US dollar. While Japanese markets are closed for a public holiday Thursday, traders will watch for comments from officials given the yen's strength, BNP Paribas SA said. HSBC Holdings Plc warned there's a growing risk the BOJ steps in to sell yen or cut interest rates, while Morgan Stanley sees authorities limiting themselves to warning investors against pushing the exchange rate too far.
"Markets appear to be testing the resolve of the BOJ and questioning the ability of monetary policy action to create a weakening Japanese yen," said Sam Tuck, a senior currency strategist at ANZ Bank New Zealand Ltd. in Auckland. "Nobody really wants their currency bouncing around too rapidly. That in itself, irrespective of the level, does suggest that there could be some smoothing action just to slow it down."
The yen traded 0.1 per cent higher at 113.28 per dollar as of 7:53 am in Singapore after touching 113.12 on Wednesday, the strongest level since Nov 4, 2014. It was at 109.21 on Oct. 30, 2014. Japan's currency has climbed almost 7 per cent since Jan 29. It fetched 128.07 per euro, following a 1.6 per cent advance Wednesday. Europe's common currency fell 0.1 per cent to US$1.1280.
"The growing event risk is that Japan intervenes directly in the FX market," David Bloom, HSBC's London-based global head of currency research, wrote in a report. He suggested policy intervention may take many forms, including rhetoric and more rate cuts.
The yen has climbed against almost all of the more than 150 currencies tracked by Bloomberg this year as evidence China is slowing and renewed concern about a global banking crisis drives investors into havens. About US$7.9 trillion has been wiped from global stocks in 2016, while around 30 per cent of global sovereign bonds - another relatively safe asset - now yield less than zero.
The BOJ unexpectedly said Jan. 29 that it will follow Europe by adopting negative interest rates, causing a brief slump in the yen. It's surprise easing in October 2014 has a more sustained impact, helping drive the yen to a 13-year low of 125.86 on June 5, 2015.
Intervention in the currency markets would be a major event for Japan. The nation hasn't bought or sold currency to sway the yen's price since a record intervention in 2011 helped stop its advance to a post-World War II record.
Action from the BOJ would likely roil other nations that are already dealing with the fallout of China's surprise currency devaluation last August. In recent weeks, India and Kenya have called for coordinated action by monetary authorities of Group-of-20 nations to address the turbulence in foreign- exchange markets this year. The G-20 summit in in Shanghai on Feb 26 and 27 will bring together finance ministers and central-bank governors from the world's biggest developed and emerging markets .
"Markets clearly want to test further lower on dollar-yen," Mr Tuck said. "One of the things holding it up is that perception of the possibility there'll be some smoothing action from the Bank of Japan or some official support for dollar-yen."
BLOOMBERG

US: Wall St opens higher after Yellen comments

US: Wall St opens higher after Yellen comments

[NEW YORK] US stocks opened higher on Wednesday after Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen said conditions in the United States would allow the Fed to pursue "gradual"adjustments to monetary policy.
The Dow Jones industrial average was up 53.11 points, or 0.33 per cent, at 16,067.49, The S&P 500 was up 10.48 points, or 0.57 per cent, at 1,862.69 and the Nasdaq Composite was up 48.49 points, or 1.14 per cent, at 4,317.25.
REUTERS

Former world's richest man Tsutsumi settles suit with Seibu

Former world's richest man Tsutsumi settles suit with Seibu

[TOKYO] Seibu Holdings Inc, the Japanese hotel and train operator, settled legal claims by its units against ex-chairman Yoshiaki Tsutsumi and four former managers over damages related to the falsification of shareholder records that led to the company's delisting a decade ago.
The company will book a 25.6 billion yen (US$223 million) one-time gain this quarter from the settlement, Seibu said in a statement Wednesday. To raise money for the agreement, the 81- year-old former chairman and others will sell stakes they hold in NW Corp, which owns about 15 per cent of Seibu, to the train operator, Tsutsumi said in a separate faxed statement in response to Seibu's announcement.
Tsutsumi amassed a US$16 billion personal fortune while at the helm of Seibu and was identified as the world's richest man by Forbes magazine in 1990. In 2005, Tsutsumi pleaded guilty to insider trading and falsifying shareholder records.
Seibu raised its net income forecast 33 per cent to 48.7 billion yen for the year ending March, the company said in a separate statement Wednesday. Seibu returned to the stock market almost two years ago in a initial public offering that valued the company at 547 billion yen.
BLOOMBERG

Opera to be sold to Chinese tech companies for US$1.2b

Opera to be sold to Chinese tech companies for US$1.2b

[STOCKHOLM] Opera Software ASA agreed to sell itself to a group of Chinese technology companies for about 10.5 billion kroner (US$1.2 billion) in a deal that will give the Norwegian maker of Web browsers additional financing and access to new customers in China.
The group will begin a 71-kroner-a-share cash tender offer for Opera, the Oslo-based company said in a statement Wednesday. That's 46 per cent above the last closing price, on Feb 5. Investors owning about a third of Opera and members of the executive team and the board holding shares have agreed to the offer, and the board is recommending it to stockholders, Opera said.
The buyers include private-equity firm Golden Brick Capital Management Ltd, Chinese game maker Beijing Kunlun Tech Co, Internet security provider Qihoo 360 Technology Co and Yonglian Investment Co. The sale will give Opera access to the Web-user base of Kunlun and Qihoo in China as well as additional financing, the company said.
"If you look at the industrial partners, it's an ecosystem idea," Chairman Sverre Munck said at a news conference in Oslo. "Ecosystem is a key word because we compete with the big ones, Facebook, Google, Apple. To compete alone against an ecosystem is rather demanding. Now we become part of an ecosystem that suits us well." Opera's browsers help mobile-phone, tablet and computer users surf the Web faster by using less data. The software maker has 350 million monthly active users of its consumer products. Its browsers are embedded in devices made by smartphone makers such as Samsung Electronics Co and Xiaomi Corp.
The Opera Mini browser had about 7.3 per cent of the mobile market last month, behind Chrome's 42 per cent, Safari's 34 per cent and Android browser's 11.1 per cent, according to data from NetMarketShare.com.
Opera started a review of its options in August after receiving strategic interest from a number of parties.
Fredrik Steinslien, an analyst at Pareto Securities AS, said the offer appears attractive given his 63 kroner share price target and Opera's 2016 earnings guidance that was "well below" its prediction.
Opera shares, which fell 47 per cent last year, climbed last week on speculation a deal was planned. The stock jumped 37 per cent to 66.90 kroner at 11:35 a.m. in Oslo, giving the company a market value of 10 billion kroner. Trading in the stock was halted on Feb. 5 because of media speculation about a bid.
BLOOMBERG

Smartphone chip designer ARM looks to car computing for growth

Smartphone chip designer ARM looks to car computing for growth

[MUNICH] As demand for smartphones slows, chip designer ARM Holdings Plc is looking to the automotive industry to fuel growth over the next five years.
Automotive demand for semiconductors will jump 50 per cent to US$15 billion a year by 2020, Chief Executive Officer Simon Segars said in a Bloomberg Television interview on Wednesday. ARM, whose chip designs are found in most of the world's smartphones, including Apple Inc.'s iPhone, reported royalty revenue trailing analysts' estimates, sending the stock lower.
"We're doing a lot of work now to develop the products that will be shipped in that future period," Segars said, citing driver assistance, in-vehicle automation and self-driving cars as growth markets.
ARM has so far sought to offset waning demand for smartphones by pushing adoption of its latest technology. The more profitable eighth-generation chips, which ARM designs and licenses to other companies to manufacture, helped the Cambridge, England-based company report rising fourth-quarter profit and revenue. Still, fourth-quarter processor royalty payments trailed analysts' estimates by about 4 per cent, Bernstein analyst Pierre Ferragu said in a note to clients.
Shares of ARM declined 3.8 per cent to 904 pence at 9:32 a.m. in London. The stock has lost 15 per cent in the past year.
While the smartphone industry currently accounts for about 45 per cent of ARM's $1.5 billion annual revenue, automotive technologies represented nine of the 51 agreements that ARM signed to license its chips to manufacturers in the fourth quarter. It will take time for such agreements to have a significant impact, though, said Robert Lamb, an analyst at Jefferies in London.
"There are long design cycles in automotive so it's probably going to be three years before ARM-based chips roll in," Lamb said.
Computing power in cars will jump 100-fold by 2020, Segars predicted. Each car will then have an average of $150 of silicon chips, or at least seven times as much as the average smartphone.
BLOOMBERG

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