Monday, April 13, 2015

Top China official goes on trial for graft

Top China official goes on trial for graft

[BEIJING] China's former state assets chief Jiang Jiemin went on trial for corruption on Monday, one of the highest-ranking figures to fall in the country's much-publicised anti-graft drive and an ally of ex-security chief Zhou Yongkang.
Jiang's trial opened at the Hanjiang Intermediate People's Court in the central province of Hubei, it said on its Sina Weibo microblog.
He is accused of bribery and abuse of power, the court said.
Jiang worked for decades in China's petroleum industry and rose to become chairman of China National Petroleum Corp (CNPC), the country's biggest oil producer.
He has links going back to the 1980s with Zhou Yongkang, a former CNPC chief himself who went on to become China's hugely powerful internal security chief but was charged with bribery and abuse of power earlier this month.
Jiang was tapped in March 2013 to run the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission (SASAC), which oversees China's many powerful state-owned enterprises.
But less than six months later, the ruling Communist Party's internal watchdog announced that it was probing him for alleged "serious disciplinary violations," a euphemism for official corruption.
According to state-run media, the move marked the first investigation of a member of the party's powerful Central Committee, which has about 200 members.
Chinese President Xi Jinping, who took office two years ago, has vowed to oust corrupt officials all the way from low-level "flies" to high-ranking "tigers" amid fears graft could threaten the party's hold on power.
But critics note that China has failed to implement institutional safeguards against graft, such as public asset disclosure, an independent judiciary, and free media, leaving the effort open to being used for political faction-fighting.
Chinese courts are closely controlled by the ruling party and a guilty verdict is effectively a certainty.
AFP

Dubai's DGCX to set date in two weeks for launch of spot gold

Dubai's DGCX to set date in two weeks for launch of spot gold

[DUBAI] The Dubai Gold and Commodities Exchange (DGCX) will announce in two weeks the date for launching its spot gold contract, a senior executive at the exchange said on Monday.
"In a couple of weeks we will be able to announce when we will launch it," Ian Wright, chief business officer at DGCX, said on the sidelines of the Dubai Precious Metals Conference.
The exchange is still in talks with a local bank about the contract.
"We are heading in the right direction. It is moving forward and the discussions are advanced. I see no bumps in the road," Mr Wright said.
DGCX announced plans for a spot gold contract early last year as part of its growth as a top trading centre for the precious metal. The launch was originally scheduled for last June, but has been delayed.
The exchange, which currently trades gold futures, said last year that the spot contract was expected to be for 1 kilogramme (32 troy ounces) of 0.995 purity gold.
Asia, home to the world's top two gold buyers, China and India, has been keen to gain more pricing power over the metal and challenge the dominance of London and New York in trading.
The Singapore Exchange launched a 25 kg gold contract last October, after a short delay due to technical issues in setting up the trading system. Shanghai launched international gold contracts last September, opening up its gold market to foreign players for the first time.
The Shanghai Gold Exchange said on Sunday it would introduce new pricing products to serve market participants.
REUTERS

Oil companies' profits hit by quest for crude price exposure

Oil companies' profits hit by quest for crude price exposure

[LONDON] The drop in big oil companies'profits in the past eight months isn't just a function of lower crude prices - it also reflects strategic choices.
A Reuters examination of corporate filings by some of the biggest players in the industry, including BP, Shell and France's Total, shows the sensitivity of these companies' earnings to changes in oil prices has risen in recent years.
This means that for every dollar the oil price drops, their profits sink more than they might have done five years ago.
Of course, that wasn't the plan. Choices made by several oil majors that built more exposure to prices into their portfolio, mainly through the kinds of contracts they opted to sign, was aimed at enjoying prices that were historically high.
"In simple terms it (oil price sensitivity) has increased and that's been a deliberate choice," Simon Henry, Chief Financial Officer at Royal Dutch Shell Plc, Europe's largest oil group by market value, told Reuters.
"We took a view that prices were going to go up and that our portfolio was less exposed than it should be in that environment because of the types of contracts we had in place," he said.
Shell made the decision in the early 2000s and it took around a decade for that to have a real impact on the company's bottom line, Mr Henry said.
In 2009, Shell's then-CEO Peter Voser said a US$1 move in the crude price would shift earnings up or down by around US$200 million. In January, Mr Henry estimated the impact of a dollar move on earnings was around US$330 million and increasing.
Brent crude averaged US$54 per barrel in the first quarter of 2015 - half of what it was in the same period last year. If the current price holds, the hit to Shell's pre-tax earnings from the increased sensitivity alone could run to billions of dollars a year compared to what it would have been if the 2009 linkage between profits and oil prices had held steady.
Filings from Europe's second and third largest oil groups, London-based BP and Paris-based Total, show a similar trend.
In early 2013, London-based BP said a US$1 change in the oil price would lead to a US$250 million change in annual pre-tax replacement cost operating profit in its oil and gas production division. In March, the company said on its website that a US$1 movement in Brent would change earnings by US$300 million.
Total said in 2013 that a US$1 rise in Brent would lift adjusted net operating income by US$140 million. Earlier this year, it said the impact would be US$170 million.
The increase in sensitivity is despite the fact that production levels - the main determinant of how much oil prices hit earnings - have fallen at all three companies.
Many oil companies missed out on much of the benefit of the oil price surge from 2004 to 2008. Instead governments grabbed most of the gains, in part due to the contracts the companies had signed years earlier.
Historically, companies bought exploration licenses and agreed that, if they struck oil, they would pay governments a royalty - often a share of output - even if no profit was declared.
During the 1990s, when oil prices were low and profit margins tight, companies signed an increasing number of Production Sharing Agreements (PSAs), which offered returns based on the cash they invested. That meant companies had a better chance of getting their money back.
But the safety came at a cost. "You're protected on the downside, but you lose some of the upside," said Neill Morton, oil analyst with Investec.
Morton said the contracts became less popular with investors as oil prices soared in the mid-2000s.
Shell was one of the first companies to make the shift to projects with greater oil price sensitivity. It increased investments in OECD countries, which do not typically offer PSAs, and, where it did sign PSAs, it sought to link the returns to prices rather than accept a fixed return on money invested.
Others followed its lead. "It was a general trend. Companies were keen to capture the upside from oil prices," said Tom Ellacott, at consultants Wood Mackenzie.
In February 2008, Philippe Boisseau, president for Gas & Power at Total, told investors that his company was reducing the share of its production that came from production-sharing contracts that only offered a fixed return.
In July 2008, BP's then-CFO Byron Grote told investors the group was accelerating its exploration programme and looking for opportunities "especially in our key tax and royalty areas, that allow us to capture price upside".
Total declined to comment on its current strategy in respect to oil price exposure. BP said the company didn't target a specific exposure but rather managed its portfolio over time to maximize returns and balanced investments between PSAs and tax and royalty regimes.
BG Group, which last week agreed a US$70 billion takeover by Shell, said its oil price sensitivity increased simply because the historically gas-focused company discovered a lot of oil.
The world's largest oil company by market value, Exxon Mobil has seen no change in its sensitivity to oil prices in recent years, while Chevron does not publish figures. Both declined comment.
Ellacott said that while the strategy of gaining more exposure to oil prices may hurt today, oil projects had a long life and most oil companies remain optimistic about long term oil prices.
Shell is unapologetic about its decisions. CFO Henry said the world's growing energy needs would support crude prices in the years to come. "We still firmly believe that absence war, pestilence and famine, demand will continue to grow," Shell's Mr Henry said.
REUTERS

Oil rises towards US$59, supported by US drilling slowdown

Oil rises towards US$59, supported by US drilling slowdown


[LONDON] Brent rose towards US$59 a barrel on Monday in a volatile market, continuing gains after a strong end to last week as financial traders increased bets on higher prices amid a slowdown in US drilling.
Front-month Brent crude futures were up 82 cents at US$58.69 a barrel by 0934 GMT, having earlier touched US$59.54. US crude had risen 78 cents to US$52.42 a barrel, after touching US$53.10.
"We found a bit of a momentum this morning," said Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank. "The US rig count once again focused people's minds on the imminent reduction of production. The market's choosing to not focus on the ample supply we have at the moment."
Prices rose by more than a dollar between 0715 GMT and 0810 GMT on Monday, which was a result of traders covering short positions, said analysts.


"If the market rises a lot then a lot of short covers come into the market. It's the same when prices fall," said Ken Hasegawa, commodity sales manager at Newedge.
Speculators in US crude futures and options raised net long positions by 52 million barrels in the week to April 7, their biggest weekly rise since 2011, data from the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission showed.
Reuters data shows open interest in WTI strike options for US$60, US$70, US$80 and US$90 per barrel on NYMEX has risen steadily since January, showing that many traders are betting on rising prices. Volumes for US$100-a-barrel options have risen by almost 20 per cent.
While many traders speculate that prices may not fall much further, analysts said a big rally was also unlikely.
"Although there are tentative signs of demand improving and rig counts fell to the lowest level since 2010, an ongoing global market surplus - driven by swelling US inventories and Saudi Arabian output to record high levels - should limit any potential rally," ANZ said in a note.
Others were more cautious, warning that fundamentals were deteriorating.
"Global oil fundamentals have been quite strong YTD (year-to-date), but we now see signs that physical markets are weakening. Global refining margins, while still healthy, have fallen materially," Morgan Stanley said. "With US runs set to ramp over the coming weeks, global turnarounds rising and product demand weakening seasonally, we expect product builds and pressure on global refining margins, which should diminish the appetite for non US crudes."
REUTERS

Gold holds above US$1,200, but US rate hike worries weigh

Gold holds above US$1,200, but US rate hike worries weigh

[SINGAPORE] Gold steadied above US$1,200 an ounce on Monday after rising more than 1 per cent in a chart-based rebound the session before, but persistent concern that the US central bank is on course to lift rates this year should cap any gains.
Federal Reserve official Jeffrey Lacker repeated on Friday his call for the US central bank to consider hiking interest rates in June, and said there was no shame in adjusting them lower again if economic data demanded it.
Spot gold was flat at US$1,206.93 an ounce by 0212 GMT. Bullion climbed 1.1 per cent on Friday as bulls attempted to push the price past the US$1,210 resistance level.
US gold for June delivery was up 0.2 per cent at US$1,207.20 an ounce.
The timing of the first US rate hike in nearly a decade remains the "key wildcard" for gold, said Barnabas Gan, analyst at OCBC Bank. "If the Fed rate hike doesn't occur in June and if the (next) labour print doesn't come in as good as the market expects, gold could rise up to US$1,250," said Mr Gan.
US jobs grew at the slowest pace in more than a year in March, sending gold to a seven-week high of US$1,224.10 on April 6 amid speculation the Fed could delay the rate increase.
Hopes of a delay pushed hedge funds and money managers to raise their bullish bets on Comex gold futures and options for the second straight week during the week ended April 7, US Commodity Futures Trading Commission data showed on Friday.
Demand in No 2 gold consumer China remained tepid with the premium on physical gold on the Shanghai Gold Exchange at just above a dollar over the global spot benchmark on Monday from a small discount late on Friday.
The state-run Shanghai Gold Exchange said it was working on launching new price benchmark fixing products. Sources said in February that the bourse would launch a yuan-denominated gold fix this year as China, the world's top gold producer, seeks to gain more of a say over pricing.
REUTERS

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