Tuesday, September 8, 2015

China economic planner approves 70b yuan worth of railway projects

China economic planner approves 70b yuan worth of railway projects

[BEIJING] China's top economic planner on Tuesday approved two railway projects with a total value of nearly 70 billion yuan (S$15.7 billion), the latest move to hasten infrastructure projects to boost growth in the world's second largest economy.
One involves a 51.6-billion-yuan plan to build a railway in southwestern Yunnan province, while another will see 18.1 billion yuan invested on a high-speed railway linking the northern provinces of Hebei and Shanxi, the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) said on its website.
The NDRC approved another 77 billion yuan worth of highway and bridge projects on Monday.
REUTERS

Indonesia investigates 10 firms over smog-causing forest fires

Indonesia investigates 10 firms over smog-causing forest fires

[JAKARTA] Indonesia is investigating 10 firms over worsening forest fires that have created a blanket of smog over Southeast Asia, threatening them with sanctions if they are found responsible, a government minister said on Tuesday.
The thick haze from Indonesia's Sumatra and Kalimantan islands has forced the repeated cancellation of flights in the area and pushed air quality to unhealthy levels in neighbouring Singapore and Malaysia.
Environment Minister Siti Nurbaya Bakar said companies could face sanctions if found violating their permits. "While the legal process is going on, in parallel, there has to be a decision or act taken on the company's permit," the minister told reporters.
Sanctions range from a written warning to a fine to revoking a firm's permit.
The minister named only one of the 10 firms under investigation, a small private company called Tempirai Palm Resources. It was not immediately possible to reach it for comment.
Indonesia has failed in previous attempts to stop the regional haze, with 2013 giving the worst pollution readings since 1997.
The heavy smoke from slash-and-burn clearances often comes from the islands of Sumatra and Kalimantan, where large forest concessions are used by pulp and paper and palm oil companies, some of which are listed in Singapore.
The companies blame smallholders for the fires, but they have been criticised by green groups for not doing enough to stop the haze or the rampant deforestation and destruction of carbon-rich peatlands in Indonesia.
REUTERS

World Bank's IFC to price US$100m sukuk as early as Weds: leads

World Bank's IFC to price US$100m sukuk as early as Weds: leads 

[DUBAI] International Finance Corp (IFC), a unit of the World Bank, has set initial price thoughts for a US$100 million sukuk, which may be price as early as Wednesday, a document from lead arrangers showed.
The initial guidance for the five-year floating rate note is at around 6 month Libor minus 10 basis points, the document showed. The average life of the bond - the average time before the principal is expected to be repaid - is 3.75 years.
IFC has picked Dubai Islamic Bank, HSBC, National Bank of Abu Dhabi and Standard Chartered as joint lead managers for the sukuk transaction, the document showed.
The sukuk will have a wakala structure and will be listed on Nasdaq Dubai and London Stock Exchange. Under wakala terms, one party acts as an agent managing assets for another.
REUTERS

China's FX forwards measure is not capital control: central bank

China's FX forwards measure is not capital control: central bank

[BEIJING] China's central bank defended on Tuesday new regulations imposed on the currency forwards market this month, saying they were not a form of capital control and were introduced after investors had speculated in the market.
The controls would help to stabilise China's financial system at a time when increased yuan volatility is likely to cause more companies to incur foreign exchange losses, the People's Bank of China said in a statement on its website.
REUTERS

China cenbank: any future fluctuations in forex reserves will be "normal"

China cenbank: any future fluctuations in forex reserves will be "normal"

[BEIJING] China's Central Bank said on Tuesday its intervention in the forex market was one of the reasons for a fall in foreign exchange reserves and any future fluctuations in reserves would be "normal".
China's foreign exchange reserves, the world's largest, shrank by US$93.9 billion in August, the biggest monthly fall on record - to US$3.557 trillion, central bank data showed on Monday.
The bank said the fall in forex reserves was also due to currency fluctuations.
The bank also said in a statement the Chinese economy could maintain medium- to high-speed growth in the long term and the current account would remain in surplus over the long term.
REUTERS

Schaeuble sees low rates enduring with risk of financial excess

Schaeuble sees low rates enduring with risk of financial excess

[BERLIN] German Finance Minster Wolfgang Schaeuble said he expects interest rates to stay low, increasing the risk of bubbles as an "overweight" financial industry distorts investment decisions.
In a speech to parliament in Berlin introducing Chancellor Angela Merkel's balanced budget for 2016, Schaeuble said global acceptance of the idea that sustainable growth requires sustainable finances is increasing.
"Voices are growing louder even in the international debate that an overweight of the financial sector versus the real economy, caused by the immense short-term profit opportunities, is a danger for sustainable global growth," Mr Schaeuble told the lower house on Tuesday. At the same time, "we need to get used to the idea of an extended, even longer phase of low interest rates," he said.
Mr Schaeuble coupled his warning with a rebuff of critics who say Germany is too focused on fiscal discipline, while pledging to avoid net new borrowing in the years ahead. German government bonds last week had the longest winning streak since July as traders speculated the European Central Bank will expand its asset-buying program.
"It is undisputed that high global liquidity and debt promotes the willingness in the financial sector to take risks and leads to the danger of new bubbles, further debt and bad investments," Mr Schaeuble said.
BLOOMBERG

Weak Japan GDP stirs speculation on yet more easing

Weak Japan GDP stirs speculation on yet more easing

[TOKYO] Disappointing growth figures released in Japan on Tuesday rekindled speculation that the central bank might have to unleash yet more stimulus to prop up a faltering recovery that is refusing to take root.
The numbers came as data from China showed its international trade was slowing, underlining the difficulties the world is facing as Beijing re-orientates its export-driven economy.
Tokyo's revised GDP figures on Tuesday showed the world's number three economy shrank a little less than previously thought - 0.3 per cent, against an earlier estimate of 0.4 per cent.
But analysts said the slightly-better-than-expected headline concealed worrying details that showed domestic demand was not in great shape.
Marcel Thieliant of Capital Economics said manufacturers were running up inventory - indicating they were not selling their products - and were investing less in new machinery and plants.
"The details were hardly reassuring," he wrote in a commentary.
"The upward revision was mostly due to a larger contribution from stock building," he added.
The latest numbers present another challenge to Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, whose bid to kickstart Japan's long-laggard economy has stumbled.
However, Mr Abe - who swept to power in late 2012 - was on Tuesday re-elected unopposed as head of his ruling Liberal Democratic Party in a rubber stamp poll that could give him three more years at the helm.
He sought to put a positive gloss on the state of the economy, which he has vowed will return to growth and banish the years of deflation.
"Employment and incomes are both getting stronger. The remaining (task) is to keep this virtuous economic cycle going so people feel that a recovery in under way and that the exit from deflation will drive future economic growth," he said.
The slowdown comes more than two years after Mr Abe launched his policy blitz, dubbed "Abenomics", aimed at breathing life into the economy.
The programme called for big government spending, massive Bank of Japan (BoJ) monetary easing and reforms to cut red tape in Japan's highly regulated economy.
But reforms, including shaking up a protected agricultural sector and drawing more women into the workforce, have not moved as fast as initially expected.
Household spending has also been unsteady following a sales tax rise last year, brought in to pay down a massive national debt, which saw consumers rush to stores before prices rose.
"The economic outlook will likely depend on a recovery in domestic demand, such as capital investment and household spending," said SMBC Nikko Securities.
"If household consumption fails to recover, it will raise the possibility of an extraordinary budget" to deal with the downturn.
Beijing - one of Japan's biggest trading partners and a huge market for Japanese goods - said Tuesday that imports in August fell 13.8 per cent on year.
It was the 10th consecutive monthly fall in import values.
Exports, the powerhouse behind China's massive economic run-up of recent years, fell 5.5 per cent year-on-year, with shipments to Japan and the European Union taking a hit.
Thieliant predicted Japan's GDP would expand by 0.3 per cent in each of the next two quarters, "which would imply a below-consensus rise of 0.5 per cent in 2015".
BoJ chief Haruhiko Kuroda has pushed back a timeline for hitting 2.0 per cent inflation, a cornerstone of Abenomics, although he insists healthy price rises are around the corner.
But Mr Kuroda has said he would consider expanding the bank's record 80 trillion yen (US$640 billion) annual asset-buying scheme - a means to pump money into the economy similar to the US Federal Reserve's quantitative easing - if weak oil prices keep holding back near-zero inflation.
"We stick to our view that the Bank of Japan will step up the pace of easing at its end-October meeting," Mr Thieliant said.
The downturn follows stronger-than-expected growth in the first quarter owing to a temporary pickup in capital spending, with Japanese firms generally reporting upbeat profits.
In the January-March period, Japan's economy expanded 1.1 per cent.
AFP

China economy weakening further, OECD leading indicator says

China economy weakening further, OECD leading indicator says

[PARIS] China's economy is losing steam and other big emerging market economies such as Brazil and Russia are also showing signs of weakness, the Paris-based Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development said on Tuesday.
While growth in the eurozone looks stable, it seems to be tapering in the US, UK and Canadian economies, albeit from relatively high levels for mature economies of their kind, the OECD said in its latest report on a forward-looking indicator it compiles monthly.
The leading indicator, a synthetic index designed to detect turning points, dipped to 97.6 from 97.9, retreating further from the 100 mark that represents the long-term average.
In advanced economies, the think tank reported slips of a tenth of a point for the US, UK and Canadian economies, to 99.5, 99.7 and 99.4 respectively.
"Growth momentum is anticipated to moderate in Canada as well as in the United Kingdom and the United States, albeit from relatively high levels," it said.
"On the other hand, the outlook continues to deteriorate for China, with the CLI (leading indicator) pointing more strongly to a loss of growth momentum. Signs of slowing growth momentum are also re-emerging in Russia. In Brazil, weak growth momentum is anticipated."
While the reading for the eurozone edged back to 100.0 from 100.1, the OECD described the climate as one of "stable growth momentum". It said likewise for Japan, with an index that remained at 100.0.
Among the large eurozone economies, the OECD said growth momentum was stable in Germany and Italy, while it singled out France, saying its index of 100.7 signalled "firming growth"even though 100.7 was an unchanged reading.
REUTERS

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