Friday, April 3, 2015

China central banker says deposit insurance premiums to be low, big impact on banks unlikely

China central banker says deposit insurance premiums to be low, big impact on banks unlikely

[BEIJING] China's recently launched deposit insurance scheme is unlikely to have a major impact on banks and premiums for the scheme will be much lower than in other countries, deputy central bank governor Pan Gongsheng said on Friday.
Mr Pan also told a media conference in Beijing that the scheme would not affect the ability of small banks to attract deposits.
Bankers and investors have been waiting for more detail on how premiums for the deposit insurance scheme would be handled. Some analysts believe the new policy could benefit smaller banks at the expense of larger ones, depending on how the government structures the premiums banks must pay into the deposit insurance programme.
REUTERS

Billions up for grabs if nuclear deal opens Iran economy

Billions up for grabs if nuclear deal opens Iran economy

[DUBAI] Iranian investment banker Ramin Rabii says he shouted in joy when he learned that Tehran and world powers had reached a deal which promises to lift economic sanctions on Iran. Then he called colleagues to discuss the business implications.
Mr Rabii, managing director of Turquoise Partners, a Tehran-based investment firm with about US$200 million of assets under management, has been grappling for years with the results of the sanctions: unstable growth, high inflation, international banking restrictions and hard currency shortages.
The agreement on curbing Iran's nuclear programme, reached on Thursday, will - if confirmed in a final deal by a June 30 deadline - begin to ease those crippling problems for Turquoise and thousands of other Iranian firms.
"We've been preparing for this moment for 10 years," Mr Rabii said by telephone, adding that in the months leading up to the deal Turquoise was in touch with hundreds of potential foreign investors about opportunities for them if sanctions were lifted.
He said the company now planned to develop its asset management and brokerage businesses, and would hold roadshows for investors in Europe and possibly Dubai.
Frozen out of the international banking system, its foreign trade slashed by the sanctions, Iran looks likely to become the biggest country to rejoin the global economy since post-Communist eastern Europe in the early 1990s.
The resulting boom could create tens of billions of dollars worth of business for both local and foreign companies and shift the economic balance in the Gulf, which has so far been heavily weighted towards the rich Gulf Arab oil exporting countries.
"Precautionary talks have already started between Iran and some big Western investors" in areas such as oil and autos, said Iranian-born economist Mehrdad Emadi of London's Betamatrix consultancy.
"Now there will be accelerating momentum."
He predicted annual growth of Iran's US$420 billion economy would rise by as much as 2 percentage points to over 5 per cent in the year after a final nuclear deal. It could accelerate further to 7 or 8 per cent in the following 18 months - matching the growth of Asia's "tiger economies" during their boom years.
Iran's trade with the European Union, which totalled 7.6 billion euros (S$11.32 billion) last year, could balloon 400 per cent by mid-2018, Mr Emadi said.
The complex web of financial, shipping, energy and technology sanctions woven by the United States, the European Union and the United Nations is expected to take years to remove, even if a final nuclear agreement is reached and implemented smoothly.
As a result Iran's oil exports, cut by the sanctions to about 1.1 million barrels per day from 2.5 million bpd in 2012, may not start rebounding before 2016.
But the single most damaging sanctions measure, the US Treasury's use of Section 311 of the USA PATRIOT Act to identify Iran as a money laundering area, could be lifted quickly by the Obama administration, analysts believe.
This would have a big impact on trade and investment by letting foreign banks deal with Iran without fear of being targeted by US officials. Iran could be re-admitted to the SWIFT global payments system, from which it was expelled in 2012, within three months of a final nuclear deal, Emadi said.
Mr Rabii said the boost to Iranian production from easier trade would quickly spur the economy, even if big foreign investment deals took longer to arrange.
"Iranian industry is currently operating at about 60 to 70 per cent capacity. Thirty per cent is idle - that's because of the sanctions. Getting this working again is the low-hanging fruit of lifting the sanctions."
The economic benefits would extend across the Gulf, particularly to Dubai, which is a traditional hub for business with Iran and has a large Iranian community.
The sanctions slashed Dubai's trade with Iran by more than a third; the emirate could now become a jumping-off point for foreign companies going back into Iran.
Airlines and logistics firms around the region also stand to profit. Tarek Sultan, chief executive of Kuwait-listed logistics giant Agility, said Iran was potentially attractive because its isolation had encouraged it to develop indigenous expertise that could allow it to leapfrog other economies.
"When the international situation is resolved and restrictions are lifted, we'll be among the first ones in there," Mr Sultan told Reuters late last year.
Other parts of the Gulf economy may at least temporarily be hurt by the rise of Iran. Gulf Arab stock markets are reforming themselves to attract foreign capital; Saudi Arabia plans to open its bourse to direct foreign investment within months. These markets will now have a major rival for funds in Tehran.
Any increase in Iranian oil sales could come at the expense of Saudi Arabia, Opec's biggest producer, which has lifted its output near 10 million bpd. The kingdom already faces a record budget deficit this year because of low oil prices.
REUTERS

French economy to pick up but jobless at record highs: forecast

French economy to pick up but jobless at record highs: forecast


[PARIS] France's economy, the second-largest in the eurozone, will perk up slightly in the first half of the year but unemployment is expected to stay at record highs, according to forecasts.
In estimates released late Thursday, the INSEE national statistics office said the economy would grow by 0.4 per cent in the first quarter of the year and by 0.3 per cent in the second.
The forecasts suggest there is a good chance the French economy will grow faster over the whole year than the 1.0 per cent Paris currently estimates.
"The one-per cent for 2015, seen by many as unrealistic a few months ago, now looks like the minimum," said Finance Minister Michel Sapin.


However, the more positive growth outlook will be insufficient to drive down stubbornly high unemployment in France, INSEE predicted.
The jobless rate was forecast to hit a 20-year record high of 10.2 per cent in mainland France.
Economists and the government estimate that a growth rate of around 1.5 per cent annually is required to push unemployment down.
President Francois Hollande has pledged not to seek re-election in 2017 if he does not succeed in reversing the trend of ever-increasing unemployment.
AFP

China expands investment scope of US$194b social security fund

China expands investment scope of US$194b social security fund

[BEIJING] China is expanding the investment scope of the country's 1.2 trillion yuan (S$267 billion) social security fund to allow it to buy more local government debt, investment trusts and shares in state-owned companies, the cabinet said on Wednesday.
The State Council said in an online statement that the investment limit for corporate and local government debt would be increased to 20 per cent from 10 per cent.
The fund backs China's pension system, which must cope with a rapidly ageing population and shrinking workforce.
The expanded scope will allow the fund to diversify its risk and become more stable while improving returns, the cabinet said.
The move may also aid the central government in finding buyers for local government debt being converted to bonds, an attempt to bring financial risks under control.
Local governments have amassed an estimated $3 trillion in debt, largely by rushing to finance infrastructure and real estate projects in efforts to stimulate economic growth.
The policy move additionally allows the fund to invest up to 10 per cent in trusts, compared to 5 per cent previously. Trust companies, generally considered part of the shadow banking sector, also act as important conduits to the lending-starved private sector.
The social security fund may also invest in certificates of deposit.
REUTERS

China to focus more on "degree of tightness" in policy: central bank

China to focus more on "degree of tightness" in policy: central bank

[BEIJING] China's central bank said on Friday it would focus more on the "degree of tightness" in monetary policy to keep the economy growing at a stable rate, adding to recent comments that it wanted policy to be neither too loose nor too tight.
Authorities should not underestimate the complexities that are clouding the outlook of the world's second-biggest economy, the central bank said in a short statement after the first-quarter meeting of its monetary policy committee.
The bank said it would maintain prudent monetary policy while keeping the yuan at a "reasonable and balanced" level.
REUTERS

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