Friday, September 11, 2015

Indonesia's Pertamina to supply diesel to Adaro until 2022

Indonesia's Pertamina to supply diesel to Adaro until 2022

[JAKARTA] Indonesia's state-owned energy company Pertamina signed a deal on Friday to supply 400 million-550 million litres (2.5 million-3.5 million barrels) of diesel fuel per year to coal miner Adaro Energy, the two companies said. "With the deal, where previously we bought fuel from foreign companies worth US$340 million per year, now we will purchase from our brother, Pertamina, and the transaction will be done onshore," Adaro CEO Garibaldi Thohir told reporters.
The supply deal runs from November through to October 2022 and is expected to supply the bulk of Adaro's annual fuel demand of an estimated 600 million-700 million litres of diesel.
The deal follows a memorandum of understanding signed by the companies in May, in which Pertamina agreed to supply up to 800 million litres of diesel a year to Adaro until 2025.
REUTERS

Canada drops price-fixing probe of candy-maker Mars

Canada drops price-fixing probe of candy-maker Mars

[MONTREAL] Canada dropped a price-fixing charge against the local arm of US chocolate candy-maker Mars on Thursday, two years after accusing it of collusion with competitors Hershey and Nestle.
The official Competition Bureau said public prosecutors had ended their examination of Mars Canada Inc. in the case, but gave no reason.
It also said that the case against ITWAL, a network of independent wholesale candy distributors, had been dropped as well.
But the bureau said that Nestle Canada Inc. and its former president Robert Leonidas still faced prosecution in the case.
The case dates back to 2007, when, based on information supplied by a fourth candy company, Cadbury, authorities began investigating allegations that the three companies and ITWAL had been colluding on the pricing of chocolate candy sold across Canada since 2002, including popular brands such as Kit Kat, Coffee Crisp, Aero, Twix, Snickers, Bounty and M&Ms.
When the indictments were first announced in June 2013, US candy maker Hershey pleaded guilty to participating in the scheme and paid a C$4 million (S$4.23 million) fine.
AFP

China "red flags" report had errors, but nothing major, Moody's tells HK tribunal

China "red flags" report had errors, but nothing major, Moody's tells HK tribunal

[HONG KONG] Ratings agency Moody's Corp told a Hong Kong tribunal on Friday a report on Chinese companies had some errors, but it stood by the material outcome of the study, which raised concerns about corporate governance at 49 Chinese companies.
Moody's said the errors, however, were not serious enough to warrant a HK$6 million (S$1.1 million) fine by Hong Kong's Securities and Futures Commission (SFC), which said the mistakes were a serious breach of due diligence standards.
That fine was part of a larger US$3 million penalty the regulator imposed on Moody's. The ratings agency is appealing the ruling.
Moody's said there were 12 input and mathematical errors in relation to the methodology of its "red flags" report, but its counsel, Adrian Huggins, told the tribunal "those errors did not render the whole red flags framework fundamentally flawed."
"Errors did not have a material impact on overall accuracy of the report," Mr Huggins said at the SFC's appeals tribunal in Hong Kong.
The SFC fine is the first disciplinary action taken against a credit rating agency since their activities became directly regulated by the SFC in June 2011. It could have major implications for the types of services credit rating firms are able to offer in the financial centre.
REUTERS

Banks' US$3.2b payments put Euro-Area crisis fund on track

Banks' US$3.2b payments put Euro-Area crisis fund on track

[FRANKFURT] The biggest euro-area banks will put 2.8 billion euros (US$3.2 billion) this year into crisis funds intended to keep taxpayers off the hook for meltdowns in the financial industry.
Fourteen German banks are contributing 1.4 billion euros, while five in France will pay 856 million euros and six in Italy 351.3 million euros, their filings show. German banks are paying more than twice as much as their French competitors when considering the levies as a share of assets.
Banks and their investors are being put on the hook for losses after European governments rescued the industry following the financial crisis, with 1.6 trillion euros, equivalent to 13 percent of the bloc's annual gross domestic product, committed from 2008 to 2011.
"This is still the building-up phase, so the funds would probably not be enough should a bank run into trouble just yet," said Stefan Bongardt, an analyst at Independent Research GmbH in Frankfurt. "Even at full capacity, the fund on its own wouldn't be able to handle the kind of crisis we saw in 2008, but a lot has happened since then in terms of making the European banking industry safer." European Union law requires the bloc's 28 countries to have resolution funds as a buffer to prevent public bailouts. The funds have a financing target equivalent to at least 1 per cent of the amount of covered deposits of all lenders on their territory. In the euro area, these national pots will start to merge on Jan. 1 into a Single Resolution Fund with a target of about 55 billion euros, which will be built up over eight years. The fund will initially consist of national compartments that will gradually be merged, starting with 40 percent next year.
The euro area's Single Resolution Mechanism wants to raise 10 per cent of its target volume this year and 11.25 per cent annually through 2023, according to documents on the website of FMSA, Germany's fund for winding down failed banks.
The size of the contributions that 33 of the largest euro- area banks say they are making suggest the SRM is on track. The 2.8 billion euros those banks have set aside via national funds this year is equal to 5.1 per cent of the SRM's target volume. The firms have a combined balance sheet of 14.6 trillion euros, or 47 per cent of euro-area bank assets including interbank loans.
Payments must be made to national authorities by the end of December and will be transferred to the single fund early next year. A Single Resolution Board official declined to say what volume the fund will have next year.
Before recourse could be made to the Single Resolution Fund, other options including a bail-in tool for imposing losses on a bank's private investors would have to be exhausted.
"The SRF will only be used as last resort once shareholders and creditors have fully contributed to the resolution measures," said Single Resolution Board Chair Elke Koenig.
The formula for the levies takes account of a bank's liabilities, minus its equity and covered deposits, and is adjusted for risk.
German banks are paying more than lenders in other countries because they held 3.26 billion euros of deposits for non-banks in the euro area at the end of July, more than any other country in the currency bloc, including the 2.11 billion euros held by French banks.
"Banks are getting back to growth, which takes the sting out of the cost of the levies," said Bongardt, who has a neutral stance on European bank shares.
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Japan charges Bitcoin exchange CEO with embezzlement: Jiji Press

Japan charges Bitcoin exchange CEO with embezzlement: Jiji Press

[TOKYO] Japanese prosecutors on Friday charged the head of collapsed Bitcoin exchange MtGox with embezzlement, Jiji Press news agency said, amid fraud allegations over the disappearance of hundreds of millions of dollars worth of the virtual currency.
The charges, which could not be immediately confirmed, come after France-born Mark Karpeles, 30, was taken into police custody in Tokyo last month over the affair. It was unclear if the indictment related to all or a part of the missing money.
He has been held without formal charge for six weeks, as allowed under Japanese law.
Karpeles was first taken into custody over claims he fraudulently tinkered with data and transferred funds to other firms controlled by him dozens of times between 2011 and 2013.
He was later rearrested for allegedly pocketing about 321 million yen (S$3.81 million) worth of Bitcoin deposits, extending an initial three-week incarceration during which time police likely grilled him over the incident.
Tokyo-based MtGox froze withdrawals in early 2014 and was later shuttered over the missing money, which it said was linked to a bug in the software underpinning Bitcoins that allowed hackers to pilfer them.
The exchange - which once boasted it handled around 80 per cent of global Bitcoin transactions - filed for bankruptcy protection soon after the cyber-money went missing.
Karpeles later said he had found some 200,000 of the lost Bitcoins in a "cold wallet" - a storage device, such as a memory stick, that is not connected to other computers.
Bitcoins are generated by complex chains of interactions among a huge network of computers around the planet, and are not backed by any government or central bank, unlike traditional currencies.
Backers say virtual currencies allow for an efficient and anonymous way to store and transfer funds online. But critics argue the lack of legal framework governing the currency, the opaque way it is traded and its volatility make it dangerous.
Bitcoin's reputation was also damaged when US authorities seized funds as part of an investigation into the online black market Silk Road.
AFP

Asia-Europe container freight rates fell 23% last week: source

Asia-Europe container freight rates fell 23% last week: source

[COPENHAGEN] Shipping freight rates for transporting containers from Asia to Northern Europe fell 23 per cent to $588 per 20-foot container (TEU) in the week ended Friday, a source with access to data from the Shanghai Containerized Freight Index told Reuters.
The fall came after two weeks with rising freight rates on the world's busiest route. Container freight rates have so far increased in 8 weeks this year but fallen in 27 weeks.
In the week to Friday, container freight rates fell 29 per cent from Asia the Mediterranean while they rose 0.3 per cent to the US West Coast and were down 0.1 per cent to the US East Coast.
Average rates for 2015 are US$664 per TEU, compared with US$1,172 last year.
Maersk Line, the world's biggest container shipper with nearly 600 container vessels and part of Danish oil and shipping group AP Moller-Maersk, controls around one fifth of all transported containers from Asia to Europe.
REUTERS

Euro area toughens up as China deals blow to global fortunes

Euro area toughens up as China deals blow to global fortunes

[FRANKFURT] The euro area might have built up enough momentum to shrug off China's woes for now.
Domestic demand, a major driver of German growth in recent months, is showing signs of improvement in other European countries too, and trade within the 19-nation bloc is picking up. That's fortuitous timing - just as China, one of the biggest destinations for the region's exports, seems increasingly less of a sure bet.
"There are quite some things that are supporting the domestic euro-zone economy," said Aline Schuiling, senior economist at ABN Amro Bank NV in Amsterdam.
"Investment is gaining some strength and domestic demand is improving. Assuming a soft landing in China, we think the eurozone will continue to grow robustly."
Policy makers have nurtured Europe's recovery with unprecedented stimulus and plunging oil prices are adding to support as gradually declining unemployment and pent-up investment demand fuel spending. The slow revival comes as exporters contend with the impact of weakening growth in emerging markets, which have been a pillar of trade in recent years, and the Federal Reserve's first interest-rate increase since 2006.
Finance ministers and central bankers have a chance to discuss the region's economic outlook in Luxembourg this weekend, when they gather for their informal semiannual meetings.
European Union Economic Affairs Commissioner Pierre Moscovici said in an interview with Bloomberg Television on Sept 5 that "the recovery in Europe is getting stronger," supported by domestic demand and investment that has been lacking in previous years.
While the optimists can take hope from better-than- previously reported growth in the first two quarters of the year, that stands in contrast to a weaker outlook for the currency bloc through 2017 from the European Central Bank. ECB President Mario Draghi cautioned last week that the economic upswing may prove "somewhat weaker" than expected, citing a slowdown in global trade.
Data back both arguments.
The euro-area economy grew faster than initially reported in the first two quarters, driven by consumer spending. Investment jumped the most since 2011 at the start of the year, and a pickup in bank lending suggests a dip in the three months through June will prove temporary.
German factory orders in July offer a glimpse at what may be in store for Europe's largest economy and the rest of the region. Demand from within the country and the currency bloc rose, while orders from non-euro countries fell the most since 2009.
"In Europe we are seeing indicators of good growth, which is because of a need to make up lost ground," said Olaf Wortmann, an economist at Germany's VDMA machine-maker association, which represents 3,100 companies. "There are a raft of countries: all the former crisis countries such as Spain, Italy is also investing heavily, but then also the UK is doing well."
At the same time, China is leading a slowdown in emerging markets that has potential to disrupt the euro area recovery. Companies have relied on those destinations since the recession; between 2008 and 2014, the bloc's exports to Brazil rose 40 per cent while shipments to China doubled, making it the third- biggest market after the UK and the US.
Now, imports to China are declining. Infineon Technologies AG, Germany's largest chipmaker, has already felt the impact and looked elsewhere.
"In China, we saw a slowing of growth in the last quarter," spokesman Bernd Hops said by telephone. "Developments in the premium-car market in Europe and in the US helped make up for the slowdown."
In the US, households are supporting growth and will probably continue to do so. The Federal Reserve may raise interest rates as early as next week in a sign of confidence in the recovery.
In Europe, officials still talk about easing policy to rekindle the economy. After six months of quantitative easing, Mr Draghi presented downgraded staff forecasts for growth and inflation on Sept 3 and promised more stimulus if needed.
The ECB's "policy of very low interest rates and its asset purchases will continue for as long as necessary," Executive Board member Benoit Coeure said in an interview published on the bank's website on Friday. "But growth is still not strong enough to create a sufficient number of jobs."
France remains a concern after growth stagnated last quarter and industry data showed it started the current one on far weaker footing than anticipated. The region's second-largest economy still has "some way to go," Mr Coeure said.
"The intra European impulses are coming - they're an important pillar," said Alexander Koch, economist at Raiffeisen Schweiz in Zurich. For the euro area, "we see a sustainable, solid upswing which shouldn't be stymied by a controlled cooling in China."
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