Wednesday, September 2, 2015

Ringgit falls on concern data to show further reserve depletion

Ringgit falls on concern data to show further reserve depletion

[KUALA LUMPUR] The ringgit extended the week's losses on concern the erosion of Malaysia's foreign-exchange reserves will further hurt investor sentiment in an economy reeling from falling oil prices and a political scandal.
The reserve holdings have fallen 19 per cent this year to US$94.5 billion and data on Friday for the last two weeks of August may show the extent of central bank ringgit purchases to prop up Asia's worst-performing currency this year. Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. sees a figure of around US$92 billion. Growth in exports may also have slowed in July following June's rebound from two-months of contraction, according to a Bloomberg survey before tomorrow's report.
"Any signs of further reserve draw-down or narrowing in the trade balance will hurt sentiment further toward the ringgit," said Khoon Goh, a strategist at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group in Singapore. "The dollar's strength isn't helping." The ringgit fell 0.5 per cent to 4.2325 a dollar as of 10:50 am in Kuala Lumpur, adding to Wednesday's 1.1 per cent decline, according to prices from local banks compiled by Bloomberg. It reached a 17-year low of 4.2990 on Aug 26. The Bloomberg US Dollar Index, which tracks the greenback versus 10 major currencies, rose 0.1 per cent after gaining 0.3 per cent yesterday.
Asia's only major net oil exporter has been hurt by the drop in Brent crude prices, which are down by about half from their year-ago level. A looming US interest-rate increase is also spurring capital outflows, just as Prime Minister Najib Razak faces pressure to step down. Malaysia's economic foundation is "strong" and local markets have been exposed to global volatility in recent months, he said during a speech in Kuala Lumpur Thursday.
Overseas shipments from the Southeast Asian nation rose 3.2 per cent in July from a year earlier, slowing from 5 percent the previous month, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey. The trade balance probably narrowed to 6.3 billion ringgit (S$2.13 billion) from 7.98 billion ringgit.
Malaysia's 10-year government bonds fell for a second day, with the yield rising one basis point to 4.28 per cent, according to prices from Bursa Malaysia.
BLOOMBERG

G20 will seek to smooth economic shock waves from China

G20 will seek to smooth economic shock waves from China

[PARIS] World finance ministers gather in Turkey this weekend confronted by slowing growth in China, tanking emerging economies and panicked global stock markets.
And with looming US interest rate hikes adding to the uncertainty and concern, finance ministers and central bankers of the Group of 20 nations will be meeting in Ankara under dramatically changed circumstances than when they last huddled in April.
After those talks, policymakers from the world's biggest advanced and emerging economies spoke optimistically about the risks to a global recovery having diminished.
This weekend, the G20 word out of Ankara is expected to be more subdued.
Signs that China's economy - the world's second-largest - is slowing more than expected has panicked stock markets, pushed commodity prices to fresh lows, seen a rout in emerging market currencies and thrown into question a US interest rate rise previously expected in September.
This week International Monetary Fund head Christine Lagarde conceded global economic growth will likely be weaker in 2015 than the 3.3 per cent estimate the IMF made just two months ago, due in part to fallout from China's slowdown."What has been demonstrated in the last few weeks is how much Asia is at the core of global economy, and how much disruptions occurring in one market in Asia can actually spill over to the rest of the world," she said.
Whether China can manage a soft landing after years of explosive economic growth will be at the heart of G20 talks.
One Western government official said China's enormous reserves and determination to ease its economy from reliance on state investment and exports to increased domestic consumer spending should be sufficient to overcome its current troubles."The Chinese economy has the means to confront its economic slowing in the near-term," said a Western governmental source, who acknowledged the "real question is the one of switching to a more sustainable development model".
Andrew Kenningham, senior economist at Capital Economics in London, says some of the reaction to China's slowing has been over-blown anyway."For China we don't think the outlook is nearly as bad as many people are suggesting. We could even see some re-acceleration of growth in the second half of this year, partly because of policy stimulus," he said."If you look forward China is then likely to continue slowing but at a relatively gradual pace and a pace that should not cause too many problems for the rest of the world." Not all observers are as optimistic, however, and calls have multiplied for Beijing to step up efforts to address the panic.
The US has appealed to China to be more transparent to financial markets, especially concerning the "actions and objectives" of its economic policies, a senior official with the US Treasury said."It's important for communication to be clear and effective across a range of issues, be they related to growth, financial markets and so forth." But China isn't alone in encountering problems. The US has produced mixed economic data, French growth has again stalled, and both Canada and Brazil have entered recession - leaving the G20 with few members in a position to crow in Ankara.
Even surging Germany will avoid any swagger that might generate renewed criticism from partners about its huge trade surpluses.
Given that context, messages from gathering G20 officials will likely seek to be more reassuring than resounding."I am convinced that the recent market developments - which are not yet over - are not the sort to destabilise the European economy," European Economic Affairs Commissioner Pierre Moscovici said Tuesday in a preview of the expected G20 tone.
Sebastien Jean, director of the CEPII economic research institute says one focus of the meeting should to clearly differentiate market panic about China from effective action that must be taken to address the situation."There's been a lot of over-interpretation, so it will be important for G20 leaders to reaffirm their determination to coordinate" action, Mr Jean said.
Concerted action is even more important amid what Mr Jean calls "the really sensitive moment" of the US preparing to raise interest rates after years at rock-bottom levels.
The consequence that domestic monetary policy adjustments can have internationally is a critical issue that must be deliberated at the G20 level, a European governmental source says, rather than exclusively determined on the basis of national priorities.
In 2013, for example, the mere mention of rate increases by the Federal Reserve was enough to rock emerging markets that suffered flights of investment funds toward more lucrative US returns.
That response by investors has already begun awaiting US rate hikes - further slowing emerging economies that had been motors of global growth in recent years."It is a bit of a mixed picture but there is no doubt emerging economies are growing as a whole much slower than they were several years ago," said Mr Kenningham.
AFP

Indonesia plans almost US$1.37b in Islamic bonds for infrastructure projects to kickstart economy

Indonesia plans almost US$1.37b in Islamic bonds for infrastructure projects to kickstart economy

[JAKARTA] Indonesia will double sales of project Islamic bonds next year as it seeks to kickstart a slowing economy with spending on roads, ports and power plants.
Some 13.7 trillion rupiah (S$1.37 billion) of Shariah- compliant sovereign debt tied to particular ventures will be offered, up from 7.14 trillion in 2015, Finance Minister Bambang Brodjonegoro said on Aug 25.
Project sukuk fits well with the government's infrastructure focus and the funds will be used to build Islamic universities, Jakarta rail lines and roads and bridges across the archipelago, Suminto, Islamic financing director at the debt management office, said in an interview on Tuesday.
As commodity prices slump and consumer confidence evaporates, President Joko Widodo is turning to state construction projects to spur an economy growing at the slowest pace since the aftermath of the global financial crisis.
Demand for Shariah debt may be stronger than for non-Islamic notes because it usually offers a yield advantage, said Ezra Nazula, who manages more than US$2 billion as head of fixed income at PT Manulife Aset Manajemen Indonesia."Investors in project-based sukuk tend to be local investors seeking more stability than the conventional bonds," he said. Indonesian sukuk "gives us an attractive spread over conventional bonds with relatively identical risk," said the Jakarta-based Mr Nazula.
The yield on Indonesia's Shariah-compliant sovereign debt due January 2025 has been 46 basis points higher on average over the past year than that on the non-Islamic notes due September 2024, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The yield advantage has reversed since the end of July with the sukuk yield rising three basis points to 8.66 per cent and the conventional yield increasing 29 basis points to 8.95 per cent.
Investors tend to hold Indonesia's Islamic bonds until maturity. That makes them less volatile in times of market stress such as the emerging-market selloff that saw foreign funds pull a net 7.96 trillion rupiah from the country's debt last month in the biggest outflow since December.
Southeast Asia's biggest economy is feeling the chill as slowing demand from China depresses prices for its coal, palm oil, tin and rubber exports. Indonesian shipments have fallen for 10 straight months through July.
The government has allocated 313.5 trillion rupiah for infrastructure spending in 2016 in its budget released Aug 14, an increase of 8 per cent from this year. It's struggling to spend this year's allocation, with PT Trimegah Securities saying the Public Works and Housing Ministry had only spent 24 per cent of funds earmarked for 2015 in an Aug 20 research note.
Next year's project sukuk goal represents a more than tenfold increase from sales of 800 billion rupiah of the notes in 2013 and 1.5 trillion rupiah last year.
The government sold 1.94 trillion rupiah of project sukuk on Aug 25 tied to three separate ventures with bid-to-cover ratios ranging from 1.19 times to 3.49 times."In the previous sales, especially this year, the response to project-backed sukuk was very good," said I Made Adi Saputra, a fixed-income analyst at PT BNI Securities in Jakarta. That bodes well for the offers next year, he said.
BLOOMBERG

PUB calls tender to build Singapore's fourth desalination plant

PUB calls tender to build Singapore's fourth desalination plant

By
National water agency PUB said on Thursday that it would call a tender to build Singapore's fourth desalination plant at Marina East.
Planned with a capacity of 30 million imperial gallons per day (mgd), the plant will help meet future water demand in the city area and strengthen Singapore's drought resilience.
Located near water demand zones in the city and eastern Singapore, the Marina East desalination plant will also have the capability to treat freshwater from Marina Reservoir.
The tender will include the engineering design for the development of the plant under a Design-Build-Own-Operate (DBOO) arrangement.
PUB is a statutory board under the Ministry of the Environment and Water Resources. It is the water agency that manages Singapore's water supply, water catchment and used water in an integrated way.

Malaysia's economy in stronger position to meet any incoming storms: Najib

Malaysia's economy in stronger position to meet any incoming storms: Najib

[KUALA LUMPUR] The Malaysian economy is in a stronger position than it was during the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis to bear any "incoming storms", Prime Minister Najib Razak said on Thursday.
Local companies now have stronger balance sheets and governance, while structural reforms to the financial and banking sector has strengthened it against "intense bouts of volatility", Mr Najib said at the World Capital Markets Symposium, an event organised by the country's Securities Commission. "We are on track to achieve our goal of becoming a high income status nation by 2020," Mr Najib said.
The ringgit, Asia's worst-performing currency this year, has been hit by China's slowing economy and the ongoing political crisis in the country.
Mr Najib established a special economic team last month to ensure continued growth and boost confidence in the ringgit and the country's stocks.
REUTERS

China holiday brings respite as stocks rally, havens backtrack

China holiday brings respite as stocks rally, havens backtrack

[HONG KONG] Asian stocks rose for the first time this week as a two-day holiday in China gave investors relief from a market that has whipsawed world trading over the past two weeks. The yen led a pullback in safe-haven assets.
A rebound in US and European equities opened the door to Asia's rally, with Japanese shares rising from a one-week low, aided by weakness in the yen. Oil see-sawed as investors weighed optimism over the US economy with data showing an increase in American crude stockpiles. The euro extended losses amid a resurgence in inflation concerns before policy makers meet Thursday.
"A major source of market disruption is sidelined as markets in China are now closed for the week," Michael McCarthy, chief market strategist in Sydney at CMC Markets, said in an e- mail. "Asia-Pacific investors are anticipating relief today." Buying by state-backed funds ensured the Shanghai Composite Index recovered into the close Wednesday, buoying sentiment from Europe to the US and igniting a rebound in global stocks. With the spotlight off China until next week, attention shifts back to the outlook for US interest rates. Friday's payrolls report is expected to color expectations over whether the Federal Reserve will start raising key borrowing costs as soon as this month.
The MSCI Asia Pacific Index added 0.6 per cent by 10:14 am in Tokyo as Japan's Topix index jumped 1.8 per cent, leading gains in the region. S&P 500 futures were little changed after the US benchmark's 1.8 per cent recovery. Copper advanced a second day and New Zealand's dollar strengthened, while the yen extended last session's 0.8 per cent slide. The euro was at US$1.1220 after data Wednesday indicated wholesale prices in the region were declining.
Global equity volatility climbed to its highest level since 2011 earlier in the week, as signs China's economy may be headed for a hard landing fueled anxiety over the global outlook. While losses in the Shanghai Composite have been mitigated by regulators ahead of this week's holiday, the gauge's movements have held sway over sentiment toward equities around the world.
Australia's S&P/ASX 200 Index erased early gains Thursday, trading down 0.4 per cent, while the Kospi index in Seoul climbed 0.5 per cent. New Zealand's NZX 50 Index added 0.2 per cent, rising for the first day this week, and Malaysia's benchmark also advanced.
Signs of growth in the US also aided the stock rebound there. The Fed's Beige Book indicated the economy expanded across most regions and industries in the past two months, based on reports gathered on or before Aug 24. The nonfarm payrolls report will provide the last major data point before Fed policy makers meet from Sept 16-17.
The absence of any negative newsflow related to China bolstered the kiwi and its Australian counterpart, with New Zealand's currency adding 0.3 percent after a bigger-than- expected increase in building construction. The Aussie held onto Wednesday's 0.3 percent rebound, while yields on Australian bonds due in a decade rose two basis points to 2.71 percent.
The euro held Wednesday's 0.8 percent retreat, losing another 0.1 percent ahead of the European Central Bank meeting. The yen dropped 0.2 percent to 120.50 per dollar after strengthening earlier in the week.
The Korean won and Malaysian ringgit weakened at least 0.5 percent after the dollar reasserted itself late Wednesday. The Bloomberg Dollar Index, a gauge of the U.S. currency against 10 major peers, rose 0.1 percent after gaining 0.3 percent last session.
West Texas Intermediate oil dropped 0.4 per cent to US$46.05 a barrel after gaining 1.9 per cent Wednesday and sliding 7.7 per cent the day before. Prices tumbled earlier in the Wednesday session as the Energy Information Administration said US crude stockpiles rose by 4.67 million barrels last week, the most since April.
Copper for three-month delivery rose 0.1 per cent to US$5,124.50 a metric ton in London, while gold for immediate delivery slipped 0.1 per cent to US$1,133.18 an ounce after snapping a three-day gain to fall 0.6 per cent Wednesday.
BLOOMBERG

Wikipedia blocks accounts linked to paid edits

Wikipedia blocks accounts linked to paid edits

[SAN FRANCISCO] Wikipedia on Wednesday said that it has blocked more than 300 accounts being used by people being paid to create or tweak entries at the communally sourced online encyclopedia.
Weeks of investigation revealed 381 accounts being used at the English version of Wikipedia for "black hat" editing in which people took money to promote outside interests without disclosing they were on someone's payroll, according to a blog post.
Wikipedia is powered mostly by volunteers and bars paid advocacy that is not disclosed, such as in the case of museums or universities having employees tune entries related to exhibits or institutions.
"Neutrality is key to ensuring Wikipedia's quality," Ed Erhart and Juliet Barbara of the nonprofit Wikimedia Foundation said in the blog post.
"Although it does not happen often, undisclosed paid advocacy editing may represent a serious conflict of interest and could compromise the quality of content on Wikipedia." Along with blocking the 381 "sockpuppet" accounts, Wikipedia editors deleted 210 articles created by people using those accounts. There was a potential for more entries to be removed as the investigation continued.
"Most of these articles, which were related to businesses, business people, or artists, were generally promotional in nature, and often included biased or skewed information, unattributed material, and potential copyright violations," Erhart and Barbara said.
"The edits made by the sockpuppets are similar enough that the community believes they were perpetrated by one coordinated group." The accounts identified in during the investigation were used from the end of April to early August, but the nature and quality of the nature and quality of edits suggested that the paid-scheme was operating "for some time" before being discovered, according to Wikipedia.
A team of volunteers tends to Wikipedia entries, which rely on crowd-sourcing for accuracy.
"Editing Wikipedia is completely free, and only requires compliance with the project's editorial guidelines," Erhart and Barbara said.
"No one should ever have to pay to create or maintain a Wikipedia article."
AFP

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