Wednesday, October 7, 2015

Standard Chartered says has completed yuan clearing for Sweden's Ikea via CIPS

Standard Chartered says has completed yuan clearing for Sweden's Ikea via CIPS

[HONG KONG] Standard Chartered Bank (China) Limited said on Thursday it had completed a yuan clearing transaction for Sweden's Ikea through the China International Payment System (CIPS), the first such deal to be announced hours after Beijing launched the worldwide system.
The bank said it had finished the transaction from China to Luxembourg for the Swedish home furnishing retailer, noting it was the bank's first international yuan direct clearing via CIPS.
China's central bank earlier on Thursday launched the worldwide payment superhighway to encourage greater use of the yuan for trade settlement and investment, confirming an earlier Reuters report. "Direct international RMB payment clearing via Standard Chartered enables a simpler payment route and enhances Ikea's liquidity management," said Lena Li, Treasury manager at Ikea China.
Before the new system was launched, cross-border yuan clearing had to be done either through one of the offshore yuan clearing banks in the likes of Hong Kong, Singapore and London, or else with the help of a correspondent bank in mainland China.
The launch of CIPS will remove one of the biggest hurdles to internationalising the yuan and should greatly increase global usage of the Chinese currency by cutting transaction costs and processing times.
"CIPS will enhance China's connectivity with the global financial system, providing a highly efficient platform for cross-border RMB settlement," said Michael Vrontamitis, head of Trade at Standard Chartered Bank.
REUTERS

Macquarie to buy ANZ's dealer finance book for A$8.2b

Macquarie to buy ANZ's dealer finance book for A$8.2b

[SYDNEY] Top Australian investment bank Macquarie Group on Thursday said it has agreed to buy ANZ Banking Group's dealer finance portfolio for A$8.2 billion (S$8.32 billion).
The portfolio had net lending assets with a book value of A$7.8 billion while the remaining A$400 million in the purchase price would be raised through an institutional share placement offer, Macquarie said in a statement.
ANZ, Australia's No. 4 lender by assets, put the business on the block earlier this year to cut its capital requirements in line with tough new rules.
Macquarie's bid beat offers from US private equity giant Carlyle and China's HNA Group.
REUTERS

Mobius says he's bargain hunting for abandoned Brazil stocks

Mobius says he's bargain hunting for abandoned Brazil stocks

[LONDON] Mark Mobius hasn't given up on Brazil. Yet.
The chairman of the emerging-markets group at Franklin Templeton Investments is looking for investment opportunities among Brazil's battered equity market, he said in a blog post Tuesday. There's an opportunity for "tremendous changes," should Brazilian leaders find a way to tap resources more effectively, he wrote. The Ibovespa stock gauge rallied for a seventh day, leading gains among major benchmarks in the Americas.
Latin America's biggest economy is facing its longest contraction since the 1930s amid a corruption scandal and falling commodities prices. Brazil's economic malaise, exacerbated by President Dilma Rousseff's inability to shore up the budget because of her dwindling popularity, has pushed the Ibovespa down 34 per cent in dollar terms this year through Tuesday. The real lost 31 per cent over the span.
"While Brazil's situation seems dire, this does not mean that we, as investors, will be abandoning Brazil or Brazilian stocks," he wrote. "When investor sentiment is at extreme lows, I believe the best opportunities can be uncovered if one is patient, and selective." Mr Mobius didn't cite any specific company names.
The Ibovespa is poised for a third year of declines, the longest losing streak since 2002. The plunge has pushed its valuation to 11 times estimated earnings, or 18 per cent below the average in the MSCI Emerging Markets Latin America Index, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Lender Itau Unibanco Holding SA is at the lowest valuation level since 2008, while brewer Ambev SA is trading 14 per cent below its peak in 2012.
Still, without spending cuts and higher taxes, both of which are facing opposition from lawmakers and the general public, "the near-term prognosis does not look good for Brazil," wrote Mr Mobius.
After seeing its economy quadruple in dollar terms during Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva's presidency from 2003 through 2010, Brazil was stripped of its investment-grade credit rating by Standard and Poor's last month, citing an erosion of fiscal accounts.
In addition to bolstering the government's accounts to avoid another downgrade, Ms Rousseff and lawmakers must work toward reducing government bureaucracy, supporting the expansion of small- and medium-sized companies, and making it easier to do business in Brazil, said Mr Mobius. They should also focus on fighting corruption, he wrote.
"There has to be a change in attitude," Mr Mobius said. "If the economy does not revive, companies' earnings will likely not be very good, so we do need to be cautious," he added. "The potential growth is so great in Brazil that it is a shame the government hasn't been more effective." In Latin America's largest economy, a sweeping graft scandal engulfing state-run oil giant Petroleo Brasileiro SA and the country's biggest builders has pushed the nation toward its deepest recession in at least a quarter-century and left Rousseff fighting for her political survival.
There are other areas of concern in the region, which is forecast to show the first economic contraction since 2009. The world's highest inflation rate has left Venezuela struggling with shortages of food and medicine, while Mexico is trying to revive growth after its first attempt to sell licenses for oil drilling failed to attract major oil producers. Chile and Peru, which are among the biggest producers of copper and zinc, have seen export revenue tumble as prices for the metals have fallen.
Even with all of the headwinds, Latin America is "an attractive investment destination," Mr Mobius said, without mentioning specific countries. The region will benefit from longer-term demand for basic materials that will improve with global growth, he said.
Federal Reserve Raw materials and emerging markets have surged since the end of the third quarter on bets the Federal Reserve will keep rates lower for longer. The weakening US currency boosted dollar-denominated commodity assets.
The recent selloff in emerging-market assets, including Mexico and Malaysia's currencies, has opened up investment opportunities not seen for decades, according to Franklin Templeton's Michael Hasenstab, who's well known for making contrarian bets. Developing nationsare set to record the first net capital outflow since 1988, the Institute of International Finance estimated last week.
"On a valuation basis, this is not a once-a-decade, this is a multi-decade opportunity to be buying very cheap assets," Mr Hasenstab, who oversees 30 funds with US$143 billion in assets, said in an interview posted on YouTube Monday. "We are not buying everything," but "there are a handful that have been caught up in the turmoil that we think are diamonds in the rough," he said.
BLOOMBERG

Australia's Macquarie Group on trading halt amid acquisition rumours

Australia's Macquarie Group on trading halt amid acquisition rumours

SYDNEY] Macquarie Group's shares were placed on a trading halt on Thursday amid market rumours Australia's top investment bank will buy ANZ Banking Group's vehicle finance unit in a deal worth A$1.5 billion (S$1.52 billion).
Macquarie told the stock exchange on Thursday it expects to make an announcement on "a proposed transaction" before the market opens on Monday.
Last month, Australia's competition watchdog approved Macquarie's proposed bid for Esanda, saying the possible acquisition was unlikely to substantially lessen competition in the car finance market.
Deutsche Bank is advising ANZ on the sale, which will help Australia's No. 4 lender by assets cut its capital requirements in line with tough new rules.
REUTERS

Japan Aug core machinery orders down 5.7 per cent on month

Japan Aug core machinery orders down 5.7 per cent on month

[TOKYO] Japan's core machinery orders unexpectedly fell 5.7 per cent in August from the previous month, Cabinet Office data showed on Thursday, which could cast doubt on the strength of capital expenditure.
The month-on-month fall in core orders, a highly volatile data series regarded as an indicator of capital spending in the coming six to nine months, compared with a 3.2 per cent increase expected by economists in a Reuters poll.
Compared with a year earlier, core orders, which exclude those of ships and electric power utilities, fell 3.5 per cent in August, versus a 4.2 per cent annual increased expected in the Reuters poll.
The Cabinet Office lowered its assessment of machinery orders, saying they are stalling.
REUTERS

Indonesia accepts international help to combat fires

Indonesia accepts international help to combat fires

[JAKARTA] Indonesia has agreed to accept international help to combat forest and agricultural fires that are cloaking Southeast Asia in haze after weeks of failed attempts to douse the blazes, officials said on Thursday.
Fires illegally started to clear land for plantations in Indonesia have shrouded Singapore and Malaysia in acrid smog, worsening air quality, closing schools and forcing the cancellation of outdoor events.
The blazes are an annual occurrence during the dry season, but scientists have warned this year's are on track to be the worst ever due to an El Nino weather system that has created tinder-dry conditions in Indonesia.
Jakarta has deployed about 25,000 personnel and aircraft to combat the blazes on Sumatra island and the Indonesian part of Borneo, but the fire-fighters have seemed overwhelmed by the extent of the fires.
Tensions have been rising between Jakarta and its neighbours as the haze spreads, with Singapore's biggest supermarket chain on Wednesday withdrawing paper products made by an Indonesia-owned company accused over the haze.
Authorities had rejected offers of help from affluent Singapore, but officials said Thursday Indonesian President Joko Widodo had announced that international assistance would now be accepted at a cabinet meeting a day earlier.
"It was agreed that we will cooperate with a number of our partners in our efforts to suppress the forest fires," foreign ministry spokesman Arrmanatha Nasir told AFP.
"We are working with a number of countries including Singapore." Other countries who may help Indonesia in tackling the fires include Malaysia, Russia, Australia and China, he said, adding that the specifics had not yet been agreed.
Singapore's Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan said in a Facebook post late on Wednesday his Indonesian counterpart Retno Marsudi had "indicated that Indonesia will now take up our offer".
Singapore has offered to provide Indonesia with aircraft to artificially induce rain and carry out water-bombing, as well as personnel to help fight the blazes.
"The kind of assistance needed will be related to measures to put out the fires, like water-bombing and creating artificial rain, as the areas affected this time are far larger than in previous years," Indonesian presidential spokesman Ari Dwipayana told AFP.
AFP

728 X 90

336 x 280

300 X 250

320 X 100

300 X600