Wednesday, October 7, 2015

Deutsche Bank says to post 6.2b euro loss in Q3

Deutsche Bank says to post 6.2b euro loss in Q3

[BERLIN] Deutsche Bank warned on Thursday that it would post a net loss of 6.2 billion euros (S$9.83 billion) in the third quarter and that dividends for the year may be scrapped.
The bank said it would book a charge of 5.8 billion euros in impairments, "largely driven by the impact of expected highly regulatory capital requirements... as well as current expectations regarding the disposal of Postbank." The group was also setting aside 1.2 billion euros to meet litigation costs.
Deutsche Bank is embroiled in the Libor rigging scandal and is being investigated by Swiss authorities for suspected price fixing on the precious metals market.
The bank further took a hit of 600 million euros in the value of its almost 20 per cent stake in Hua Xia Bank.
In what appeared to be a confirmation of reports that it was intending to dispose of the China-based bank holding, Deutsche Bank said there had been a "change of the intent of the holding" and that it "no longer considers this stake to be strategic".
The group added that it would have to slash or even eliminate dividends for the year.
Deutsche Bank is due to publish its third quarter results on October 29.
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Dollar little changed vs euro, yen

Dollar little changed vs euro, yen 

[NEW YORK] The dollar was little changed against the euro and the yen on Wednesday, while the pound rallied on solid economic data on the eve of the Bank of England's policy decision.
The euro slipped slightly to US$1.1237 and the dollar edged up to 120.00 yen.
"Neither has moved much of recent, perhaps due to the upswing in investor sentiment as evidenced by the turn higher in global equity markets," said Christopher Vecchio at DailyFX.
"We find ourselves back in what we saw at the beginning of the week, a little more risk appetite that boosts commodities and equities" at the expense of the euro, said Vassili Serebriakov of BNP Paribas.
The euro suffered from a larger-than-expected drop in industrial production in Germany, Europe's powerhouse, analysts said.
Meanwhile, the pound surged as "industrial production rose three times more than expected in the month of August, which was a breath of fresh air after back-to-back data disappointments," said Kathy Lien of BK Asset Management.
The Bank of England, expected to leave monetary policy unchanged Thursday, also will release the minutes of the meeting.
"The number of dissenters and the overall tone will have a significant impact on the currency," she said.
Traders also awaited the minutes of the September meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee, the Federal Reserve's policy arm, due on Thursday.
The FOMC passed last month on raising interest rates from near zero, leaving forex traders to hope they will gain insight into the central bank's thinking on the timing of the rate hike.
"Given that the meeting was held before the abysmal nonfarm payrolls report, investors will most likely look beyond the report," Ms Lien said.
AFP

Brazil court rules against Rousseff, opens way for impeachment

Brazil court rules against Rousseff, opens way for impeachment

[BRASILIA] Brazil's Federal Accounts Court on Wednesday rejected President Dilma Rousseff's handling of the government accounts last year, paving the way for the embattled leader's potential impeachment.
In a unanimous vote the court, known as TCU, ruled that Ms Rousseff committed a series of irregularities to cover a widening fiscal deficit last year. It is the first time the court has rejected the accounts of a head of state in nearly 80 years.
Although the ruling is not legally binding, it could be used by the opposition to build a case for Ms Rousseff's impeachment in a Congress increasingly hostile to the unpopular leftist.
REUTERS

New UK minimum wage weighing on hiring: REC survey

New UK minimum wage weighing on hiring: REC survey

[LONDON] Concerns among British employers about a new, higher minimum wage are contributing to a sharp slowdown in hiring via recruitment firms, according to a survey published on Thursday.
The number of people hired last month for permanent jobs via placement companies grew at the slowest pace since early 2013, when Britain's economy was just starting a recovery, the Recruitment and Employment Confederation (REC) said.
REC chief executive Kevin Green said the introduction of the higher minimum wage from April next year was causing companies in some sectors to think about investing more in automation. "This might have a positive impact on UK productivity, but it could also put the brakes on employment growth," he said.
Finance minister George Osborne has said the minimum wage will rise by 40 per cent by 2020. Britain's budget forecasters expect the change to cost a relatively low 60,000 jobs.
Mr Green also said employers were struggling to find qualified workers and that the government should help firms bring in skilled employees from other countries.
"This is now at a critical stage in the construction and engineering sectors, constituting a major threat to planned rail upgrades and house-building projects," he said, referring to some of the government's priority areas for investment.
The survey, which is sponsored by accountants KPMG, showed starting salaries for permanent hires grew at the weakest rate in 20 months. That contrasts with stronger growth in recent months in Britain's official measure of earnings.
Wage growth is a key factor for the Bank of England as it gauges when to raise interest rates from their crisis-era record low so it can keep future inflation in check. The BoE is expected to say on Thursday it is keeping rates at a record low.
REUTERS

Merkel says still against Turkey joining the EU

Merkel says still against Turkey joining the EU

[BERLIN] German Chancellor Angela Merkel said on Wednesday that Turkey's help was needed to stem the flow of refugees to Europe but that this hadn't changed her view that Ankara should not become a member of the European Union.
"I have always been against EU membership, President (Tayyip) Erdogan knows this, and I still am," Dr Merkel told a talk show on German public broadcaster ARD.
Dr Merkel was an outspoken opponent of Turkey joining the EU before she took power in 2005, advocating instead a "privileged partnership" that stopped short of full membership.
But she has avoided using that term or stating her opposition too loudly in recent years, maintaining instead that membership talks between Ankara and the EU, which were launched shortly before she took office, should proceed but have no pre-determined outcome.
Turkey's bid has stalled in recent years, as interest from the Turkish side has waned and European officials have grown critical of what they see as increasingly authoritarian policies from Mr Erdogan.
Now Europe is reaching out to Turkey again, hoping that it can help with the record flows of refugees from its neighbour Syria and other war-torn countries in the Middle East.
Dr Erdogan visited Brussels on Monday and was presented with a draft action plan under which Europe would offer more funding for Syrian and Iraqi refugees living in Turkey.
"We need to talk to Turkey about sharing the burden better," Dr Merkel said. "That will mean that we give Turkey money ... and that we fulfill certain demands that Turkey has, such as easing visa restrictions."
REUTERS

China brushes off IMF warning on 'unprecedented' challenges

China brushes off IMF warning on 'unprecedented' challenges

[LIMA] The IMF cautioned on Wednesday that China faces unprecedented challenges modernising its economy, carrying risks for the whole world, but a Chinese official brushed off the warning, saying: "Don't worry."
China's effort to transition to a more market- and consumption-based economic model will be a monumental, risk-fraught task that will "require great care," the International Monetary Fund said in its new review of global financial risks.
And the implications reach far beyond China: The world's second-largest economy is a lynchpin of global growth and a vital trade partner for fellow emerging markets, which depend heavily on the Asian giant's imports of their fuels, metals, minerals and other commodities.
"The Chinese authorities face an unprecedented policy challenge in carrying out their objectives to make the transition to a new growth model and a more market-based financial system," the IMF said.
"Achieving this outcome will require careful pacing of reforms and policy consistency." But a senior Chinese central bank official sought to downplay concerns that China's slowdown will weigh on the global economy.
"I would say don't worry," said Yi Gang, deputy governor of the People's Bank of China.
"China will still have pretty much middle-to-high growth in the near future," Yi said in the Peruvian capital Lima, where policy makers from around the world were gathering to review the state of the global economy at the annual meetings of the IMF and World Bank.
He insisted that Chinese imports of raw materials for its industrial economy will grow steadily in the future.
The focus on China came in the IMF's new Global Financial Stability Report, which stresses the increased dangers across the emerging markets from slow growth and global market turbulence, to very high levels of corporate borrowing.
If not handled well from a policy viewpoint, the cost to the world economy of the emerging market downturn could be a huge three percent of global output, warned IMF Financial Counselor Jose Vinals.
"The recommendation is for an urgent upgrade in policies, so as to avoid downside risks," he said.
In the worst scenario, corporate default rates could rise, particularly in China, "raising financial system strains, with implications for growth," the report said.
A particular risk is that emerging markets' state-owned enterprises like those in the energy sector, which have raised huge amounts of funding by issuing bonds, could find themselves falling back on governments to service their debt.
That could raise the risk of governments seeing their credit grades lowered to non-investment grade or junk status, as in Brazil a month ago, the IMF said.
LEGACIES OF CENTRAL PLANNING
The IMF said China will have challenges dealing with the legacies of its old centrally planned system as it moves to a more market-driven economy.
Chinese banks, for example, have only just begun to deal with growing problems on their loan books due to the difficulties many Chinese companies are having, the Fund said.
On Tuesday, the IMF cut its global growth forecasts to 3.1 per cent this year and 3.6 per cent in 2016, both numbers 0.2 percentage points lower than forecasts just three months ago.
The Fund made particular mention of the increasing global challenge from the growth pains in China, whose economy is forecast to expand 6.3 per cent next year, its lowest rate in 25 years.
Prices of commodities from oil to metals to grains have slumped over the past two years, taking a strong hit on emerging economies and government budgets around the globe.
"Commodity prices are highly volatile and unpredictable, posing significant challenges to policymakers in resource-rich economies," the IMF said.
The Fund said that natural resources should be a blessing for a country, but that many have struggled to leverage such resources to improve living standards and deepen economic strength.
"Especially in the case of exhaustible mineral and hydrocarbon wealth, many countries have apparently suffered from what is often termed a 'resource curse,'" when a country with abundant natural wealth lags in development for a range of complex reasons, it said.
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Clinton comes out against huge Pacific trade deal

Clinton comes out against huge Pacific trade deal

[WASHINGTON] Hillary Clinton, who regularly promoted White House efforts to complete a huge trade accord with Pacific Rim countries while she was US secretary of state, came out on Wednesday against the deal.
The apparent flip in position - which Republicans wasted no time in branding "painful waffling" - represents yet another Clinton break from President Barack Obama as she gears up for an intense 2016 campaign battle for the White House.
The Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) signed on Monday between 12 nations would be the largest regional trade pact ever, encompassing 40 per cent of the global economy and marking one of Mr Obama's key diplomatic and economic achievements.
But Mrs Clinton, frontrunner for the Democratic presidential nomination, said that given what she knows about the deal it falls short of her "high bar" for creating American jobs, raising wages and advancing US national security.
"As of today, I am not in favour of what I have learned about it," she told public broadcaster PBS in an interview.
"I don't believe it's going to meet the high bar that I have set." As a result of what she called Republican obstruction to needed investment in infrastructure, education and innovation, "America is less competitive than we should be," she said in a later statement confirming her opposition.
"Workers have fewer protections, the potential positive effects of trade are diminished, and the negative effects are exacerbated," she said.
"We're going into this with one arm tied behind our backs." A White House official said a Clinton staffer did alert them of her shift in position on the trade deal but the official declined to provide details.
'DON'T TRUST HER'
The hard-won trade deal aims to set the rules for 21st century trade and investment and press China, not among the 12, to shape its behaviour in commerce, investment and business regulation to TPP standards.
US lawmakers have cautiously welcomed the accord, but it faces intense scrutiny in Congress, which will vote on its ratification in 2016.
Mrs Clinton said she was "worried" that currency manipulation provisions were not included in the accord.
"We've lost American jobs to the manipulations that countries, particularly in Asia, have engaged in," she said.
Over time, TPP reduces thousands of small and large tariff and non-tariff barriers on trade between the group, from Japanese auto parts to the US market, Australian drugs to Peru, US rice to Japan and New Zealand cheese to Canada.
Mrs Clinton's position puts her on the same side as Democratic nomination rivals Bernie Sanders and Martin O'Malley, ahead of their first Democratic primary debate next Tuesday.
The Republican National Committee pounced on Clinton's "flip flop," recalling how she helped negotiate the accord as top diplomat.
"Hillary Clinton's painful waffling on TPP has been a case study in political expediency and is precisely why an overwhelming majority of Americans don't trust her," RNC chairman Reince Priebus said.
Last week, Mrs Clinton called for the creation of a no-fly zone in Syria, something the White House has resisted, and in August she opposed Obama's decision to allow Arctic drilling.
Last month, she announced she was against construction of the Keystone XL pipeline that would send Canadian crude to US refineries, a project that remains under consideration by the White House.
AFP

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