Thursday, October 8, 2015

Malaysia arrests lawyer critical of PM Najib

Malaysia arrests lawyer critical of PM Najib

[KUALA LUMPUR] Malaysian police have arrested and detained the lawyer of a local politician who has been calling for US law-enforcement authorities to probe an international financial scandal involving Prime Minister Najib Razak.
In a blog post that appeared under the lawyer's name, Matthias Chang said he had been arrested on Thursday as he was visiting his client, Khairuddin Abu Hassan, a former member of Malaysia's ruling party who was also arrested last month.
A police spokeswoman confirmed that Chang was arrested but did not say what charges had been made against him.
The scandal surfaced in July when the Wall Street Journal reported that investigators looking into state investor 1Malaysia Development Bhd (1MDB) found that nearly US$700 million dollars were transferred into bank accounts of the prime minister.
Najib, who chairs 1MDB's advisory board, denied taking money for personal gain.
Khairuddin was detained on Sept 18 at a Malaysian airport, hours before he was to board a flight to the United States, on charges of undertaking activities detrimental to parliamentary democracy. He had planned to persuade US police to investigate the 1MDB scandal, which reportedly also involved US banks.
The prime minister has faced anti-government protests and calls to step down over the scandal.
The country's anti-graft agency has declared the funds a donation and the government's attorney general has cleared 1MDB officials of any wrongdoing.
Khairuddin's lawyer, Chang, has begun a hunger strike in protest at his detention, according to the blog post. "This is crass intimidation against Malaysians who are fighting for justice and truth," the post said.
Chang is an associate of former Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, who is leading a campaign calling for Najib to step down over the allegations of corruption.
In February, Najib's United Malays National Organisation ousted Khairuddin from the party after he was declared bankrupt. Khairuddin then travelled to several countries to campaign against Najib and 1MDB before his detention. He remains in police custody.
REUTERS

Indonesia loses up to US$9b from timber clearing: anti-graft body

Indonesia loses up to US$9b from timber clearing: anti-graft body

[JAKARTA] Unreported forest clearing cost Indonesia up to US$9 billion between 2003 and 2014 in lost timber royalties - about three times the royalties it actually received, an investigation by the country's main anti-graft agency showed on Friday.
An eight-month investigation by the country's Corruption Eradication Commission (KPK) estimated the value of the lost timber at up to US$81 billion, with the cleared land often used for growing crops or mining.
A copy of its report, seen by Reuters and due to be handed to government ministers on Friday, will put further pressure on President Joko Widodo who has been criticised by green groups and other Southeast Asian nations on forestry policy and for failing to stop the annual "haze" problem from forest-burning. "Where does the money go - it goes to the corrupters," Dian Patria, group head of corruption prevention for natural resources at the KPK told Reuters. "It could be US$9 billion, it could be more, because these are quite conservative figures. "This is not only a corruption issue, it's also about the long-term environmental impact." Home to the world's third-largest tropical forests and a major palm oil and pulp and paper producer, Indonesia will be in the spotlight at the UN's climate change conference in Paris in December.
Unregulated land clearing has long been a problem in the country, which lost 1.5 million hectares of tree cover last year, up from 1.1 million hectares in 2013.
The KPK report cited ineffective law enforcement, inaccurate production data and auditing by timber plantations, a lack of transparency on royalties data within government ministries, and poor coordination between central and regional governments as causes for the lost timber revenue.
Over the 12 years to 2014, Indonesia earned just US$3.2 billion from timber royalties, said the report, which comes as Jokowi's government battles sluggish economic growth.
Late last month, Indonesia announced it would borrow US$4.2 billion from international agencies to cover a widening budget deficit.
The report, which did not name any companies or individuals, highlighted rising timber prices and land clearing for the rapid expansion of palm oil and pulp and paper production, as well as mining.
The worst year for state losses was in 2012, it showed, one year after the government signed off on its ban on primary forest clearing.
The KPK will hand its report to the forestry and finance ministries and the country's audit agency, and will monitor the development of action plans to correct problem areas, Mr Patria said.
If no action was taken within 12 months it could hand its findings to its corruption investigations arm, he added.
REUTERS

IMF told that amid 'new mediocre' no room for mistakes by central banks

IMF told that amid 'new mediocre' no room for mistakes by central banks

[LIMA] Central banks have little room for error in a low-growth world in which over-leveraged and commodity-dependent emerging economies and a slowing China are major risks, top international financiers told the International Monetary Fund's meeting.
Despite US$7 trillion in quantitative easing from banks in industrial nations since the global financial crisis, the world is stuck in a "new mediocre" growth pattern, IMF chief Christine Lagarde said on Thursday.
In a bid to shore up finances and punish companies that arbitrage tax regimes, governments pushed ahead with plans to improve tax collection.
The IMF meeting comes as the Bank of Japan looks poised to extend its money printing program, known as quantitative easing, as it stares down the barrel of a fifth year of recession.
The European Central Bank is also expected to extend quantitative easing, while the two major central banks closest to raising rates, the US Federal Reserve and the Bank of England, are holding their fire. "It is not the kind of economy in which you can make a mistake," Bank of England Governor Mark Carney told the meeting.
For both the Fed and the Bank of England, inflation targets are far out of reach, although both central banks insist they are ready to hike rates. The Fed's chair, Janet Yellen, has said the US central bank is on track to raise rates this year.
Markets, however, are not pricing in hikes until next year for both.
The IMF has urged the Fed and the Japanese and European central banks to wait for more signs of recovery before tightening. Lagarde on Thursday repeated her plea to Yellen to stay her hand.
TURMOIL IN EMERGING MARKETS
Many emerging markets, once the world's fastest-growing economies which had been expected to shape a new world economic order, are now in turmoil. Brazil, Latin America's largest economy, is facing a leadership crisis and is in recession. Russia is engaged in conflicts in Ukraine, and Syria and has been hammered by low oil prices.
China's growth is slowing, although Ms Lagarde was optimistic that the slowdown was manageable.
While the world's central banks' money-printing programs have staunched losses in the financial sector, they have failed to reach their goal of boosting global credit.
With widening current account balances and excessive lending to local companies, the IMF estimates that emerging market companies are overleveraged by the equivalent of 15 per cent of their economic output, raising the risk of a sudden collapse in credit and of banking crises.
The IMF cut its estimate for growth in emerging economies for a fifth successive year this week, citing the collapse of the "commodities supercycle" in which buoyant demand for raw materials had boosted prices.
From a record of US$145 per barrel in 2008, oil prices have fallen to around US$50, driving holes in the budgets of major producers like Russia and Angola, among emerging economies.
Brazilian Finance Minister Joaquim Levy called on Thursday for cash-rich pension funds and institutions to invest in infrastructure projects, although few seem willing to do so as returns are uncertain in a low-demand world with the risk of financial contagion. "There are plenty of savings in the world," he told the IMF meeting.
Ms Lagarde repeated the IMF's mantra for structural economic reforms and for those countries with the room to raise spending to do so. However, that appears politically impossible in the euro zone, while in the United States, Congress is deeply divided.
Eurogroup Chairman Jeroen Dijsselbloem shrugged off dire predictions on future growth, at least for Europe, and said policies there were working. "Already this year, except for Greece, all euro-zone countries will have returned to growth," Dijsselbloem said.
His comments came after a stark message from former US Treasury Secretary Larry Summers, who has long warned of the risks of "secular stagnation," or permanent damage to growth. Mr Summers chided policymakers for relying on the same old tools to boost demand. "Traditional approaches of focusing on sound government finance, increased supply potential and the avoidance of inflation court disaster," he wrote in editorials published to coincide with the IMF conference. "Moreover, the world's principal tool for dealing with contraction - monetary policy - is largely played out." The G20 group of leading emerging and developed economies is also pushing at the IMF meeting to move ahead with measures to end a situation that allows multi-national companies such as Apple Inc and Vodafone Group Plc to pay almost no tax on their profits in many jurisdictions.
The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development estimates the amount of money moved by companies into tax havens was US$100 billion to US$240 billion annually, suggesting tens of billions of dollars in lost tax revenue.
That would be a tiny amount relative to the size of budget deficits across the world.
US Treasury Secretary Jack Lew urged countries to cooperate on higher standards. "The question here is on base erosion in taxes. Will countries agree to have a high standard or will we revert to a system where there is a race to the bottom?" Mr Lew said.
REUTERS

FOMC minutes sap confidence in Fed's 2015 rate hike resolve

FOMC minutes sap confidence in Fed's 2015 rate hike resolve

[WASHINGTON] Many economists still take Federal Reserve policy makers at their word and predict the central bank will raise interest rates this year. Yet, even their confidence was shaken a bit on Thursday after the Fed released the minutes of its most recent policy meeting.
"We're still in the camp of December," said Thomas Costerg, a senior economist at Standard Chartered Bank in New York. "For now we're going to trust them, but they seem to find a lot of excuses each time" not to raise rates.
Minutes of the Sept 16-17 Federal Open Market Committee meeting showed officials were feeling pretty good about the US economy. Unemployment had fallen faster than they anticipated, consumer spending was picking up and the housing market was showing encouraging signs. Headwinds keeping inflation well below the Fed's 2 per cent goal, like lower oil prices and a strong dollar, were firmly judged to be transitory. All systems go.
Yet the solid reading on the domestic economy was darkened by threats from abroad. China's slowing growth, which could spill over to other emerging market economies, raised risks the dollar might strengthen further, making US exports more expensive in foreign markets and creating an additional drag on the economy. That didn't change the committee's outlook for growth and inflation in the US, just their views on the "risks to the outlook." And in the end, caution carried the day.
"The committee decided that it was prudent to wait for additional information confirming that the economic outlook had not deteriorated,'' the minutes said, even as they noted that most Fed officials believed conditions would merit a hike later this year.
"They were really prepared to go, but they had just enough hesitancy based on the data and the news from abroad that they decided to hold off," said Terry Sheehan, an economic analyst at Stone & McCarthy Research Associates in Princeton, New Jersey.
Some economists and market participants had already stopped believing the Fed will pull the trigger this year on the first rate increase in almost a decade. For them, the minutes bolstered that view.
"The Fed's credibility is already in tatters," Stephen Stanley, chief economist at Amherst Pierpont Securities LLC in Stamford, Connecticut, wrote in a note to clients. "Market participants have concluded that the Fed is going to find an excuse to extend super-accommodative policy for a very long time."
Michael Feroli, chief US economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co. in New York, is still calling for a December move but didn't find much reassurance in the minutes for that assessment.
"Relative to our December call, the tone of these minutes increases the risk of a later liftoff," he wrote in a note to clients.
Mr Feroli also focused on language in the minutes suggesting that voting members of the committee were somewhat less inclined to hike than the full FOMC, where 13 of 17 members in September forecast a rate hike by year's end, according to projections that they prepared for the meeting.
"Among those voters, 'many' expected the conditions for liftoff to be met later this year," Mr Feroli wrote. "Many, but not most." All members of the Fed's Board of Governors in Washington - of whom there are currently five - have permanent votes on the FOMC, as well as the head of the New York Fed. Four other regional Fed presidents vote on an annually rotating basis.
"It seems they wanted to emphasise their intent to move before year end," Mr Costerg said. "Still, I have this feeling it's a horse that doesn't want to jump the hurdle."
BLOOMBERG

Fed awaiting evidence global chill not knocking US off track

Fed awaiting evidence global chill not knocking US off track

[WASHINGTON] The US Federal Reserve thought the economy was close to warranting an interest rate hike in September but policymakers wanted firmer evidence a global economic slowdown was not knocking America off course.
The minutes from the Sept. 16-17 meeting released on Thursday pointed to a deeply cautious Fed even before subsequent economic data showed a sharp slowdown in hiring by US employers. "Most" policymakers, according to the minutes, thought the Fed's first rate hike in a decade should still come this year and that financial market turmoil had not "materially altered"the outlook for the US economy.
At the same time, US central bankers appeared unsettled and discussed at length the possibility that the China-led slowdown could weigh on America. "The committee decided that it was prudent to wait for additional information," the Fed said in the minutes, referring to its policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee.
The Fed surprised much of Wall Street by keeping interest rates unchanged at the September meeting, and many analysts expected the minutes to show the decision was a close call.
However, while some central bankers at the September meeting said the US labor market was at full strength and Richmond Fed President Jeffrey Lacker was ready to hike right then and there, worries about a global economic chill clearly extended throughout the central bank.
In discussing the economy's health, "many acknowledged that recent global economic and financial developments may have increased the downside risks to economic activity somewhat," the minutes said. "It was pretty clear cut that they were in favor of holding off raising rates," said Gus Faucher, an economist at PNC Financial Services in Pittsburg.
Still, the minutes showed a committee seemingly convinced it was time to move as soon as it was sure the economy was not about to slip off course.
Only a "couple" of policymakers felt the economy is at risk of seeing inflation expectations start drifting lower, an event that might precede a slide into deflation. "They see everything in pretty good condition, but they figured no harm in waiting," said Brad McMillan, chief investment officer for Commonwealth Financial in Waltham, Massachusetts.
Even last month's slowdown in job creation should be viewed in the context of an economy that is at or near full employment, San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank president John Williams said on Thursday, holding to a position he has laid out in recent days.
US employers slammed the brakes on hiring in August and September, hardening views among investors that the first rate hike won't come until March.
But Mr Williams cited the economy's low, 5.1 per cent rate of unemployment and evidence of fast-rising real estate prices in his West Coast district as signs it may be risky to wait much longer to raise rates. "Given the progress we've made and continue to make on our goals, I view the next appropriate step as gradually raising interest rates, most likely starting sometime later this year," Mr Williams said.
Yields on US government debt rose to a one-week high following the publication of the minutes, while US stocks added to gains.
REUTERS

US dollar dips after Fed minutes show inflation worries

US dollar dips after Fed minutes show inflation worries

[NEW YORK] The dollar fell modestly against other major currencies Thursday after the Federal Reserve released minutes of its last policy meeting showing officials were worried about the strong dollar and inflation.
Policymakers at the September 16-17 meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee decided to keep unchanged the zero-level federal funds rate, as some members expressed concern that low inflation, well below the Fed's 2.0 percent target, has persisted despite a moderately growing economy.
The dollar, which has strengthened since mid-2014, has weighed on growth and particularly on exports, the policymakers said.
The stronger dollar was also keeping a lid on import prices, feeding into the low inflation environment.
"Several members saw a risk that the additional downward pressure on inflation from lower oil prices and a higher foreign exchange value of the dollar could persist and, as a result, delay or diminish the expected upturn in inflation," the minutes said.
The dollar fell 0.3 per cent against the euro, which traded at US$1.1275 in the late afternoon, and slipped slightly to 119.92 yen.
The FOMC minutes had a more dovish tone than expected, underlining Fed caution in making the first rate hike in more than nine years.
"We now know that not only did the Fed want to see a further improvement in the labor market but they also need to see a turnaround in inflation," said Kathy Lien of BK Asset Management.
"We anticipated a more hawkish tone and based on the price action of the dollar, the rest of the market did as well."
AFP

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