Sunday, May 3, 2015

ACCA names Singapore office chief as new Asia-Pacific director

ACCA names Singapore office chief as new Asia-Pacific director

THE Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA) on Monday announced the appointment of Leong Soo Yee, the current head of its Singapore office, as its director for Asia-Pacific.
Ms Leong will be responsible for supporting the development of the accountancy profession in the region and for building ACCA's profile across Australia and New Zealand, Cambodia, China, Hong Kong, Laos, Malaysia, Singapore and Vietnam.
She is also tasked to explore new partnerships with relevant entities to create fresh training and professional development opportunities for the 163,000 ACCA members and students based across these nine markets, to ensure that they continue to remain at the cutting edge of the profession.
Said Ms Leong: "As the global body for professional accountants with more than 600,000 students and members globally, ACCA recognises the important role finance professionals play in the worldwide economy. As the economies in Asia Pacific continue to grow, there will be an increased demand for finance professionals who can bring a broad range of finance skills to the table. Having a presence in countries where our members and students live and work - and where future demand for the international skills and expertise our qualification provides might be greatest - is central to the value of our global brand."

China's leadership shuffle at Big Oil clears path for reform

China's leadership shuffle at Big Oil clears path for reform

[SINGAPORE] China is preparing to shuffle the leadership of its biggest oil companies, helping clear a path in a crucial area of the economy for President Xi Jinping as he plans his overhaul of the nation's bloated state sector.
Changes to the top executives at China National Petroleum Corp, Sinopec Group and China National Offshore Oil Corp could accelerate market-driven reform of the oil and gas industry. The new chairmen will also be challenged to steer the oil giants through Mr Xi's corruption crackdown, which has wracked the industry, and a tumble in global crude prices.
The departure of CNPC Chairman Zhou Jiping after two years in the job has been anticipated as he nears retirement. Most chiefs of state-owned enterprises step down at 63. The planned exit of Sinopec's Fu Chengyu, who has led the company since 2011, may be more of a surprise after he was allowed last year to go beyond the designated age.
Former CNPC executive Wang Yilin will leave China National Offshore and take over as CNPC chairman, according to people familiar with the matter. He will be replaced by the company's president, Yang Hua. Sinopec's Fu will give way to Wang Yupu, deputy head of the Chinese Academy of Engineering. The changes could be announced as early as this week, according to local media.
"New leaders would have better opportunities and less of a burden to move the reform forward quickly, that is exactly what the leadership change is about," said Gordon Kwan, Hong Kong- based head of regional oil and gas research at Nomura. It comes against a backdrop of "internal reforms, the overwhelming challenge of low crude prices and pressures from the sweeping anti-corruption campaign," he said.
Shares Gain CNPC's listed unit PetroChina Co gained 1.2 percent to HK$10:08 at 10am in Hong Kong, China Petroleum & Chemical Corp, Sinopec Group's listed unit, rose 0.9 per cent to HK$7.32, while China National Offshore's listed arm Cnooc Ltd gained 0.8 per cent. The city's benchmark Hang Seng Index was little changed.
Spokesmen for the three companies in Beijing didn't answer two calls each to their office lines seeking comment today.
What happens next to China's energy sector is the subject of much speculation. CNPC and Sinopec Group's listed units spiked on April 27 on rumours they could merge after a newspaper reported that China may cut the number of its state-owned enterprises to 40 from 112.
In March, people familiar with the government's plans told Bloomberg that reform could see companies bundled by industry and their control handed to state asset-management firms.
The reforms are part of China's bid to bolster flagging economic growth and Xi's insistence that market forces play a more decisive role. State-owned companies account for roughly a third of the economy and more than a quarter of them are loss- making, Barclays Plc analysts said in August.
Leadership changes in energy "signal that the central government wants to continue to deepen reform of the state-owned sector, and the change starts from the top," said Willy Wo-Lap Lam, an adjunct professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. That could involve scaling back "the oil companies' monopoly in certain areas little by little."
A full-blown merger of CNPC and Sinopec is unlikely, according to some analysts, largely because of their size. CNPC's listed unit PetroChina vies with Exxon Mobil Corp as the biggest energy company by market value, while Sinopec is Asia's largest refiner.
The two control most of China's crude imports, most of its oil and gas exploration rights and pipelines, and over half of its petrol stations, suggesting a greater risk of inefficiency if combined. Any resulting job losses - PetroChina alone employs over half a million people - would also be difficult for the government to stomach.
Both PetroChina and Sinopec said last week they hadn't been told of any merger plans.
Cnooc, China's third biggest oil company, is its largest in terms of offshore oil and gas production.
Although pinned with an official demerit last year after a pipeline explosion killed 62 people in China's eastern city of Qingdao, Mr Fu was allowed to stay on as chairman of Sinopec for an unspecified period after reaching retirement age.
Under his stewardship, Sinopec was at the forefront of China's push to restructure its state-controlled companies. His plan was to evolve Sinopec into a shareholding company with professionally-run, listed units handling businesses such as oil and gas exploration, engineering and oilfield services. He oversaw last year's sale of 30 per cent of its fuel retail unit to 25 investors for US$17.5 billion, and stole a march on CNPC in the early exploitation of China's massive shale gas reserves.
Further out, Mr Fu's vision as articulated earlier this year was to cut Sinopec's dependence on fossil fuels and invest over the next decade in clean energy, environmental protection and new materials - an effort, according Shi Yan, an analyst at UOB-Kay Hian Ltd, to transform the company into China's equivalent of US chemicals giant DuPont Co.
What may have hurt Mr Fu was news last week that his no. 2 at the company, Wang Tianpu, had been swept up in Xi's anti-graft push. Until that point, Sinopec was much less affected by the corruption probes that had snared more than a dozen top CNPC executives since 2013, including Mr Zhou's predecessor as chairman.
Mr Zhou's leadership of CNPC has been blighted by those corruption investigations and the company's association with its disgraced former head, Zhou Yongkang, the highest ranking member of the Communist Party to face sanction for graft. That forced CNPC to hunker down, although some progress was made on Xi's reforms, with PetroChina opening up oil and gas fields in the west for joint ventures with local companies.
"Obviously, the new leaders would have passed the central government's corruption screening, and they don't have to face the kind of questions that many of the older generation faced when China's anti-corruption push swept the industry," said Nomura's Mr Kwan. "In that sense, the leadership changes also provide the oil companies with a fresh beginning."
BLOOMBERG

Philippines central bank says current policy settings remain appropriate

Philippines central bank says current policy settings remain appropriate

[MANILA] The Philippine central bank's monetary policy doesn't necessarily have to move in sympathy with other economies, its governor said, and reiterated that current settings remain appropriate for now.
Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas Governor Amando Tetangco said he expects markets to be volatile as central banks in advanced economies and the region adjust their monetary policies but this should only be "transitory." "While we incorporate other jurisdictions' policy moves into our own reaction function, we do not necessarily have to move in sync with them," Mr Tetangco said in an email to reporters on Sunday.
"For us, our view is that, for now, our policy settings are appropriate. Inflation is seen to be closer to the lower end of our target range over the policy horizon, and demand conditions are strong," Mr Tetangco said.
The central bank will meet on May 14, a few days after the release of April inflation data on May 5.
It kept the overnight borrowing rate steady at 4 per cent at its meeting in March, bucking a global tide of policy easing.
REUTERS

China April HSBC PMI shows biggest drop in factory activity for a year

China April HSBC PMI shows biggest drop in factory activity for a year

[BEIJING] China's factories suffered their fastest drop in activity for a year as new orders fell in April, a private business survey showed on Monday, hardening the case for fresh policy stimulus to boost a flagging economy.
The HSBC/Markit Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) fell to 48.9 in April - the lowest level since April 2014 - from 49.6 in March, as demand faltered and deflationary pressures persisted.
The number was weaker than a preliminary reading of 49.2, and below the 50-point level that separates growth from contraction compared with the previous month.
The overall new orders sub-index dipped to 48.7 in April, also the sharpest contraction in a year, although new export orders showed tentative signs of improvement.
Both input and output prices declined for a ninth month in April, while manufacturing employment contracted for an 18th month. "China's manufacturing sector had a weak start to Q2, with total new business declining at the quickest rate in a year while production stagnated," said Annabel Fiddes, an economist at Markit. "The PMI data indicates that more stimulus measures may be required to ensure the economy doesn't slow from the 7 per cent annual growth rate seen in Q1." An official survey released on Friday showed China's factories struggled to grow in April as domestic and export demand remained weak, reinforcing expectations that Beijing will roll out more measures to support the slowing economy.
REUTERS

China's economy seen slowing to 6.8% in Q2: state think tank

China's economy seen slowing to 6.8% in Q2: state think tank

[SHANGHAI] China's economy is expected to slow further to 6.8 per cent in the second quarter from a six-year low hit in the first, a top government think tank said in a research report that underscored the need for more stimulus to shore up faltering growth.
The forecast by the State Information Centre backed last month's move by China's central bank to cut the amount of cash that banks must hold as reserves, the second industry-wide cut in two months, to combat slowing growth. "China's economic growth will slow in the second quarter (of this year), impacted by structural reform," the think-tank said in its research report published in the official China Securities Journal on Monday.
The think tank operates under the purview of China's top economic planner, the National Development and Reform Commission.
China's economy grew an annual 7.0 per cent in the first quarter, its slowest pace in six years. Recent data have also failed to impress, with analysts speculating that authorities will have to inject more stimulus to prevent a sharper downturn.
REUTERS

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