Wednesday, February 3, 2016

China banking regulator warns lenders to curb growing risks: Caixin

China banking regulator warns lenders to curb growing risks: Caixin

[BEIJING] China's top banking regulator has told commercial lenders they will need to inject capital, restructure or even shuffle senior executives if they miss regulatory targets, local media Caixin reported on Wednesday.
Shang Fulin, chairman of the China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC), told bank executives at a recent internal meeting to pay special attention to key ratios, including provisioning ratios, Tier One and other capital adequacy ratios, which measure banks' capability to absorb potential losses from its bad loans, Caixin reported.
If ratios worsen below reasonable levels, banks will be required to take measures so as to not cause systematic risks, according to the Caixin report.
The measures would include injecting new capital, restructuring and even changing senior management, Caixin added, without naming the source of the information.
CBRC could not be immediately reached for a comment outside normal business hours.
This comes on the heels of news that new non-performing loans (NPLs) held by Chinese banks had more than doubled in 2015 from the previous year.
NPLs at Chinese commercial banks grew 36 per cent to 1.95 trillion yuan (US$296.52 billion) during 2015, representing 17 consecutive quarters of increase. The banking sector's NPL ratio rose to 1.59 per cent at the end of last September, the highest since the global financial crisis.
REUTERS

China sets 2016 growth target at 6.5-7%

China sets 2016 growth target at 6.5-7%

[BEIJING] China has set its growth target for this year at between 6.5 and 7 per cent, the country's top economic planner said Wednesday, an acknowledgement that expansion will continue to weaken.
Global investors are closely watching the slowdown in the world's second largest economy, which has created turbulence in world markets.
In 2016 "downward pressure on economic growth still exists and will expand to some extent", Xu Shaoshi, chairman of the National Development and Reform Commission, told a press briefing.
"Business operations remain in a tough situation and risks in some areas are accumulating," he said, adding "but we are capable and confident to deal with the issues and challenges." Xu said China would move to tackle chronic problems with overcapacity and underperforming "zombie" companies.
The announcement was the first time in two decades that the country has expressed its economic target in a range, instead of a single number, Bloomberg News reported.
The spread, said Natixis SA economist Iris Pang, "gives more room for policymakers to exercise their creativity to boost the economy", according to Bloomberg.
Chinese leaders have previously hinted that they might move away from strict growth targets. Last year Premier Li Keqiang said Beijing had "never said we must defend any target to the death".
Diminished growth, he said, is an inevitable consequence of the country's shift to a "new normal" of slower and more sustainable expansion following the double-digit growth of the past.
China's economy, a vital driver of global expansion, grew 6.9 per cent last year, its weakest rate in a quarter of a century.
China's leaders - who last year targeted growth of "about seven per cent" - are looking to transform the economy away from the investment and exports of the past to one more oriented towards domestic consumer demand.
But the transition is proving bumpy and the growth slowdown has alarmed investors worldwide.
In recent months China has struggled to get a handle on plunging stock prices and increasingly anaemic economic indicators.
Manufacturing data released Monday, for example, showed activity contracting at its fastest pace in three years.
Beijing has set 2021 - the 100th anniversary of the Communist Party's founding - as the deadline for achieving a "moderately prosperous society", a goal that includes doubling income from 2010 levels.
Li has said the country should keep its growth at or above 6.5 per cent over the next five years to achieve that goal.
But Yang Zhao, an analyst at Nomura, said the 2016 target would likely prove "too challenging" for the country to achieve.
"Because of strong headwinds and the lack of clarity on how the government will stimulate the economy, we maintain our forecast that real GDP growth will slow to 5.8% in 2016," he wrote in a research note.
AFP

ADP says companies in US added 205,000 workers in January

ADP says companies in US added 205,000 workers in January

[WASHINGTON] Companies in the US added 205,000 workers to payrolls in January after a 267,000 increase a month earlier, figures from the ADP Research Institute showed on Wednesday.
The median forecast of 45 economists surveyed by Bloomberg called for a 195,000 advance, with estimates ranging from gains of 160,000 to 295,000 after a previously reported 257,000 increase in December.
A Labor Department report on Friday is projected to show employers, including government agencies, took on 190,000 workers last month, while the jobless rate held at 5 per cent.
BLOOMBERG

Service industries in US expand at slowest pace since 2014

Service industries in US expand at slowest pace since 2014

[WASHINGTON] Service industries expanded in January at the slowest pace in nearly two years, raising the risk that persistent weakness in manufacturing is starting to spread to the rest of the US economy.
The Institute for Supply Management's non-manufacturing index fell last month to 53.5, the lowest since February 2014, from 55.8, the Tempe, Arizona-based group's report showed on Wednesday. Readings above 50 signal expansion. The result was less than the median forecast in a Bloomberg survey.
The industries that account for about 90 per cent of the economy may be adjusting expectations after consumers tempered spending and businesses cut back on investment in the fourth quarter. While service providers can be more insulated than their factory counterparts from sluggishness overseas and a stronger dollar, the January retreat reflected a sudden shift lower in sentiment about business activity.
"We're seeing signs of a slower US economy," Jennifer Lee, a senior economist at BMO Capital Markets in Toronto, said before the report. "We had a weak hand-off to the first quarter. Consumers are still spending, but the pace has slowed." The ISM non-manufacturing survey covers an array of industries including utilities, retailing, and health care, in addition to construction and agriculture.
The group's factory survey released on Feb 1 showed manufacturing shrank for a fourth straight month. The 48.2 reading for the index in January was little changed from 48 a month earlier, which was the weakest since June 2009.
Details of the services survey showed the business activity index dropped to 53.9 from 59.5 in the prior month, marking the biggest decrease since November 2008. The measure parallels the ISM's factory production gauge.
Weaker Employment The services employment index fell to 52.1 in January, matching the lowest since April 2014, from 56.3 the prior month.
The new orders measure decreased to 56.5 from 58.9, while a measure of supplier deliveries climbed to 51.5 from 48.5.
The index of prices paid dropped to 46.4, the first contraction in three months, from 51.
The economy grew at a 0.7 per cent annualized rate in the fourth quarter, Commerce Department data showed last week. Consumer spending, which accounts for about 70 per cent of the economy, moderated to a 2.2 per cent pace, while business investment fell at a 1.8 per cent rate, the first drop since the third quarter of 2012.
Sustained job creation and lower fuel bills have the potential to spur demand. At the same time, wage growth has been sluggish and Americans have been intent on boosting savings rather than ramping up purchases.
Housing, which is included in the ISM services report, is also benefiting from strong hiring and low mortgage rates that are boosting purchases, though bigger advances in income would help accelerate sales this year.
BLOOMBERG

Private businesses start 2016 on weak footing

Private businesses start 2016 on weak footing

[LONDON] The private sector began 2016 on a slightly weak note around the world, and with scant signs of inflation picking up, pressure will remain on central banks to keep or even ease their already ultra-loose monetary policies, surveys showed on Wednesday.
While eurozone businesses started the year in slightly better shape than first thought, this was partly due to firms cutting prices at the steepest rate since March.
In China, where Beijing is trying to rebalance the world's second-largest economy, activity in the services sector expanded at its fastest pace in six months, partially offsetting weakness in the vast manufacturing industry.
Worries about China's impact on the global economy have hammered stocks and commodities this year, although Britain's huge services sector appeared to have escaped largely unscathed.
Comparable data on the US economy is due out at 1445 GMT. "If external concerns grow and some of those downside risks with respect to China crystallise, then the situation for this year looks pretty bad," said Ben May at Oxford Economics. "But equally, if in a couple of month's time people are less concerned about China, there are tentative signs of export growth picking up, then it may well be the outlook is much brighter." Markit said its latest Purchasing Managers Indexes suggested a quarterly 0.4 per cent growth pace for the euro zone, a rate it has struggled to beat for a long time.
The final Composite PMI, an indicator of overall growth in the private sector, at 53.6 just pipped a flash estimate of 53.5 but was below December's 54.3.
The pace of expansion matched only the weakest rate clocked over the past year and comes as the European Central Bank battles to push inflation, at a feeble 0.4 per cent, back towards its 2 per cent target. "It is worth highlighting that despite this correction, new orders remained at elevated levels, close to multi-year highs, and thus suggesting that the moderate growth momentum is likely to be sustained in Q1," said economist Apolline Menut at Barclays Capital. "Deflationary pressures intensified, as lower oil prices impacted both input and output costs, consistent with our view that the moderate euro area recovery will continue to take place in a 'missingflation environment'." Growth in Germany, Europe's largest economy, slowed but remained relatively solid, while in euro zone No. 2 economy France which has been struggling to produce much growth of late, services businesses perked up a bit.
In one bright spot, retail sales across the 19 countries using the euro increased in December thanks as sales of food, drinks and tobacco rose over the Christmas period, according to official data released on Wednesday.
The Caixin/Markit Purchasing Managers' Index rose to 52.4 in January from a 17-month low of 50.2 in December, but overall prices charged hovered in deflationary territory for a fifth consecutive month.
China's leaders have flagged a "new normal" of slower growth as they look to shift the economy to a more sustainable, consumption-led model. He Fan, chief economist at Caixin Insight Group, said the fast expansion of the services sector indicated a better economic structure. "The government should continue to deepen reform, relax administrative controls and reduce restrictions on market entry for service providers," He said. "This will release the potential of the services sector." Services growth likely slowed in the United States, the world's largest economy, after the Federal Reserve raised interest rates for the first time in nearly a decade at the end of last year.
Britain's huge services sector appeared to have performed better despite a tough January on financial markets, although firms were concerned about risks ahead, including a referendum on European Union membership.
The Markit/CIPS services PMI for Britain, which doesn't use the euro, edged up to 55.6, a level it has surpassed only once since last July.
The sign Britain's economy started 2016 strongly will be certainly be noted by the Bank of England.
According to the latest Reuters poll, its Bank Rate, which has sat at a record low of 0.5 per cent since early 2009, probably won't rise until Octobers at the earliest - and even then by only 25 basis points.
Sterling markets don't expect a rate rise until 2018. "There are some reasons to be cautious. In particular, there is clearly some scope for the economy to be hit by uncertainty ahead of the EU referendum," said Vicky Redwood at Capital Economics.
Prime Minister David Cameron has promised a vote on whether Britain stays or leaves the EU under a "Brexit" scenario. Reuters polls have consistently shown that uncertainty over the outcome is seen as the biggest threat to the economy.
As the ECB fights its own threats, it is widely expected to ease policy again next month, pushing its deposit rate even deeper into negative territory. There is also an even chance it will increase the 60 billion euros a month it currently spends buying bonds, a Reuters poll found.
Markit's euro zone output prices index fell further below the breakeven 50 mark to a 10-month low, underscoring the ECB's inflation dilemma.
However, the prospect of yet more stimulus from the ECB meant firms were at their most optimistic about the upcoming year since mid-2011.
REUTERS

Bets against China's yuan build as traders eye G20 deal

Bets against China's yuan build as traders eye G20 deal

[LONDON] Billions of dollars in new bets against China's yuan have been placed on derivatives markets this week as currency dealers weigh the chance of an official devaluation around this month's G20 finance chiefs' meeting in Shanghai.
Yuan volatility and the bias towards a weaker yuan in options markets have surged to record highs in the past week and dealers say billions of "low delta puts", which pay out only when the offshore yuan rate gets above 7.20 per dollar, have been taken out.
The yuan is also back under pressure in the offshore spot market, falling to a three-week low of 6.6510 yuan as London opened on Wednesday. Onshore rates, which China controls tightly, were steady at 6.5778.
One-month volatility on the offshore yuan jumped from below 8 per cent to almost 10 per cent, a record high, versus 8.5 per cent on the euro-dollar equivalent.
Traders said option volumes - difficult to track because most of the market is conducted over-the-counter rather than on traceable platforms or exchanges - reached US$12 billion on Monday and almost US$17 billion on Tuesday.
In morning trade in London, when dealers in the world's biggest currency trading centre are operating alongside their counterparts in Beijing and Shanghai, the bias toward a weaker yuan - essentially a net measurement - on 1-, 2-, 3- and 6-month contracts all surpassed record levels hit in August.
"Clearly, the market sees that the intensive intervention from PBoC (People's Bank of China) is not sustainable, and therefore the central bank will have to let the currency go at some point," said Hao Zhou, a currency strategist at Commerzbank in Singapore.
Much talk centres around how much more China will have leaked in reserves in January, in data due by the end of this week.
Reuters polling of more than a dozen banks puts the fall at a record US$130 billion, reducing China's warchest to combat yuan weakness to US$3.2 trillion.
Some hedge funds betting against the yuan have speculated the drop will be US$200 billion or more. The sales desk of one large international bank in London was circulating an estimate of US$262 billion to selected clients on Tuesday in an email seen by Reuters.
Analysts from Bank of America Merrill Lynch called on Friday for G20 financial leaders to agree next month in Shanghai to joint steps that would include a one-off devaluation of the yuan and a commitment to a stable dollar to prop up flagging growth and head off another financial market panic.
Against that, China has repeatedly warned "speculators" in the run up to the week-long Lunar New Year starting this weekend that it will keep the yuan steady.
China launches its 12-month presidency of the G20 group of developed and developing economies with the Shanghai meeting of finance ministers and central bank governors on Feb. 26-27.
Another big report this week on the yuan, from analysts at French bank Societe Generale, gave a one-in-three probability of the currency sliding to 7.50 by the end of 2016.
"The People's Bank of China (PBoC) may insist that it has no intention to devalue the yuan, but capital flows are putting significant downward pressure on the currency. China's FX reserves are large but far from unlimited, or even sufficient, if large capital outflows persist. "Our central scenario (65 per cent probability) envisions USD/CNY reaching 6.80 in 2016 in a largely gradual and controlled manner, but there is a large and growing risk that USD/CNY trades up to 7.50 this year."
REUTERS

Europe: Stock markets fall further at open

Europe: Stock markets fall further at open

[LONDON] Europe's main stock markets dropped once more at the start of trading on Wednesday following another rout across Asia.
London's FTSE 100 benchmark index of top blue-chip companies slipped 0.2 to 5,912.9 points compared with Tuesday's close.
In the eurozone, Frankfurt's DAX 30 index dropped 0.4 per cent to 9,541.5 points and the Paris CAC 40 nudged down almost 0.1 per cent to 4,282.4.
AFP

US: Wall St opens higher as oil recovers some losses

US: Wall St opens higher as oil recovers some losses

[NEW YORK] US stocks opened higher on Wednesday as oil prices rose after two straight days of losses and data showed that the private sector added more jobs than expected in the United States.
Oil prices pared some losses after Russia reiterated its openness to talking with OPEC about output cuts, which helped revive hope among investors that the world's largest producers could act to boost prices.
Shares of oil majors Exxon and Chevron were up about 1 per cent.
Oil prices have fallen about 70 per cent in the past 18 months, hit by a growing glut and cooling economic growth in China and other emerging markets.
Falling oil prices, tepid U.S. growth and fears regarding a China-led global slowdown have been major factors for a torrid start to the year for stocks. The S&P 500 is already down 6.9 per cent this year. "The market is likely to take its cue today again from oil prices," said Peter Cardillo, chief market economist at First Standard Financial in New York.
"Lower oil prices are a sign of weak global economic activity. And that's why we have this correlation between oil and other markets." At 9:38 am ET (1438 GMT) the Dow Jones industrial average was up 74.44 points, or 0.46 per cent, at 16,227.98, the S&P 500 was up 6.75 points, or 0.35 per cent, at 1,909.78 and the Nasdaq Composite index was up 13.32 points, or 0.29 per cent, at 4,530.27.
Comcast rose 3.2 per cent to $56.30 after the company posted better-than-expected revenue. The stock was the biggest boost on the S&P and the Nasdaq.
Nine of the 10 major S&P sectors were higher with the materials index's 1.56 per cent rise leading the advancers. The energy index gained 1.1 per cent.
Investors have been keeping a keen eye on US economic data for clues regarding the pace of future rate hikes by the Fed. Fed fund futures are pricing in only one hike this year.
Investors were also assuaged after New York Fed President William Dudley said in an interview that continued tightening of financial conditions would weigh on the decisions of the Fed's policy board.
Payrolls processor ADP showed that private employers added 205,000 jobs in January, higher than the 195,000 expected by economists polled by Reuters. The data comes ahead of the more comprehensive employment report by the US government on Friday.
Weak quarterly earnings by US corporations are adding to the worries. Fourth-quarter S&P 500 earnings are expected to have fallen 4.4 per cent from a year earlier, according to Thomson Reuters data.
Merck fell 1.7 per cent to US$49.59 after the drugmaker reported lower-than-expected revenue.
Match Group slumped 18 per cent to US$9.99 after the owner of Tinder mobile app reported revenue that fell short of expectations.
Chipotle Mexican Grill was down 4.4 per cent at US$455.76.
Advancing issues outnumbered decliners on the NYSE by 2,016 to 628. On the Nasdaq, 1,362 issues rose and 833 fell.
The S&P 500 index showed 14 new 52-week highs and 9 new lows, while the Nasdaq recorded 9 new highs and 25 new lows.
REUTERS

China: Shanghai stocks fall despite property easing measures

China: Shanghai stocks fall despite property easing measures

[SHANGHAI] China's stocks resumed their slide on Wednesday as sceptical investors quickly booked profits on gains made in the previous day, shrugging off fresh government measures to boost the property market.
The CSI300 index of the largest listed companies in Shanghai and Shenzhen fell 0.4 per cent to 2,948.64 points.
The Shanghai Composite Index also lost 0.4 per cent to 2,739.25 points.
Late on Tuesday, China said it would reduce the minimum down payment required for first and second time home buyers in most cities, a move aimed at clearing a massive housing glut that is weighing on the property market and the broader economy.
But some analysts say continued easing to prop up China's frothy property prices would do little to spur new property investment, and would put the yuan currency under even more downward pressure.
REUTERS

Only days after introducing negative interest rates, Japan is already talking about more stimulus

Only days after introducing negative interest rates, Japan is already talking about more stimulus

bank of japan haruhiko kurodaREUTERS/Toru HanaiBank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda smiles as he leaves the International Conference on the Future of Asia in Tokyo May 24, 2013.
Bank of Japan governor Haruhiko Kuroda is going all out to ensure markets understand that the bank can, and will, cut interest rates further into negative territory should the need arise.
Speaking at a seminar earlier today, Kuroda delivered a Mario Draghi-like address to the audience, describing last week’s decision to adopt a negative interest rate policy as “the most powerful monetary policy framework in the history of modern central banking”.
Even with that belief, Kuroda went further, suggesting that even larger and more innovative forms of monetary policy could be delivered in order to achieve its medium-term 2% inflation target.
“If we judge that existing measures in the toolkit are not enough to achieve (our) goal, what we have to do is to devise new tools,” said Kuroda. “I am convinced that there is no limit to measures for monetary easing.”
Keeping his cards close to his chest, the BOJ governor provided no indication as to what circumstances would warrant an even more aggressive, and innovative, policy stance.
However, as was the case in the bank’s January monetary policy statement, he noted that recent volatility across financial markets could negatively impact confidence, both for business and consumers.
According to Reuters, Kuroda also countered criticism that the bank was running out of ammunition to accelerate the nation’s core inflation rate – something that rose just 0.1% in the 12 months to January – saying negative rates won’t hamper its efforts to gobble up government bonds.
Despite the aggressive tone from Kuroda, Japanese markets – unlike last Friday – are having a tough session on Wednesday.
The Nikkei 225 is off 2.80% at 17253.35 while the USD/JPY has fallen back below the 120 level, currently trading at 119.62.
You can read more here.
Read the original article on Business Insider Australia. Copyright 2016.

China is delivering more stimulus to its property market

China is delivering more stimulus to its property market

Japan stimulusChina Photos/Getty Images
Amidst signs that the tepid rebound in prices is stalling, China’s central bank has announced further measures designed to support its housing market.
Overnight the PBOC said that it will allow lenders to cut the minimum mortgage down payment for first-home buyers from 25% to 20%, taking the required level to the lowest level ever.
Alongside the sweetener delivered to first-time buyers, the PBOC also lowered the minimum down payment for those looking to purchase a second home, dropping the rate by 10 percentage points to 30%.
“The eased requirements will be for buyers in areas without the purchase restrictions that are applied in some of the biggest metropolitan areas such as Beijing and Shanghai,” the bank said in a statement.
The relaxed restrictions on home purchases, in conjunction with six interest rate cuts delivered by the bank since November 2014, is the latest attempt to clear mounting stockpiles of unsold property in smaller Chinese cities, something that has pressure property prices and led to a sharp slowdown in the nation’s construction sector.
As the chart from CBA reveals below, property prices in smaller Chinese cities have grossly under performed those in larger cities over the past year.
CBA China house price change by tier dec 2015Vivek Dhar
By median value, house prices rose by 1.4% in large tier one cities in December, outpacing a gain of 0.3% for smaller tier two cities and flat growth in smaller tier three and four cities.
“This is clearly in line with the ‘destocking’ theme in the property market,” Zhou Hao, an analyst with Commerzbank AG in Singapore told Bloomberg. “We believe that the relaxation of mortgage policy will somewhat help accelerate the destocking process in the lower-tier cities.”
According to data recently released by the China’s National Bureau of Statistics, unsold home inventories across the nation hit a record 686.3 million square meters as at the end of October, up 17.8% on the levels of a year earlier.
The chart below from Deutsche Bank reveals the ballooning level of unsold housing inventorywithin the nation over the past two years.
China unsold property inventory DB Jan 2016Deutsche Bank
The growing property glut has also created tough conditions for Chinese property developers.
According to the state-run People’s Daily newspaper, 15 Chinese real estate companies projected a loss for 2015, accounting for nearly 30% of developers that have already released their preliminary earnings reports.
Alongside the 15 firms that reported an operating loss, 23 indicated that their profitability had declined compared to a year earlier.
The deterioration in profitability followed a sharp deceleration in Chinese real estate investment in 2015. It grew by just 1%, well below the 10.5% pace seen a year earlier. 
While some believe that the relaxation of rules will help clear mounting inventories, not everyone shares that view. 
“Most of the home glut, which the government aims to clear, is in small cities. But buyers in small cities don’t typically use high mortgage leverage,” Du Jinsong, a Hong Kong-based analyst at Credit Suisse Group told Bloomberg.
You can read more here.
Read the original article on Business Insider Australia. Copyright 2016.

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