Tuesday, December 20, 2016

The 10 most visited cities around the world in 2016

The 10 most visited cities around the world in 2016

London RainbowLondon will be the second most visited city in 2016.Flickr/August Brill
In September Mastercard released its Global Destination Cities Index, which provides a ranking of the 132 most visited cities around the world.
The study, now in its seventh year measured the number of international overnight visitors to assess which cities were the most popular.
From the AsiaPacific region to Europe to the Middle East and Africa, here are the 10 cities set to see the most visitors this year:

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10) Seoul, South Korea - 10.20 million international visitors

9) Tokyo, Japan - 11.70 million international visitors

8) Istanbul, Turkey - 11.95 million international visitors

7) Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia - 12.02 million international visitors

6) Singapore - 12.11 million international visitors

5) New York City, USA - 12.75 million international visitors

4) Dubai, United Arab Emirates - 15.27 million international visitors

3) Paris, France - 18.03 million international visitors

2) London, England - 19.88 million international visitors

2) London, England - 19.88 million international visitors
Flickr/Adrian Snood

1) Bangkok, Thailand - 21.47 million international visitors

The Bank of Japan has left monetary policy unchanged

The Bank of Japan has left monetary policy unchanged

Photo by Julian Finney/Getty Images
The Bank of Japan’s December monetary policy has just concluded, and they’ve done nothing.
Its so-called “quantitative and qualitative monetary easing (QQE) with yield curve control” was left unchanged by a majority vote of seven to two.
The bank pledged to purchase Japanese government bonds (JGBs) at an annual pace of around 80 trillion yen in order to maintain a 10-year JGB yield of around 0%.
Interest rates were also left unchanged at -0.1%.
As it did in its previous meeting, the BOJ said that it will maintain this policy as long as it is necessary to achieve and maintain the bank’s 2% price stability target in a stable manner.
It also said that it would continue to expand the nation’s monetary base at its current pace of around 80 trillion yen per annum until it core consumer price inflation exceeds 2% and stay there in a stable manner.
While it made no change to policy settings, it did upgrade its assessment of the economy, noting that a “moderate recovery trend had continued” while exports “picked up”.
It expects the moderate recovery to turn into a modest expansion in the period ahead, saying that domestic demand was likely to follow an uptrend with “a virtuous cycle from income to spending being maintained in both the corporate and household sectors”.
On exports, it said that they were expected to follow a “moderate increasing trend” on the back of an “improvement in overseas economies”.
Towards inflation, still of most importance when it comes to outlook for policy settings, the BOJ said that the “year-on-year rate of change in the CPI is likely to be slightly negative or about zero percent for the time being” due to lower energy prices.
“As the output gap improves and medium to long-term inflation expectations rise, it is expected to increase towards 2%,”, it said.
There has been little reaction to the data release, hardly as a surprise as it was predicted by all 39 economists surveyed by Bloomberg.
The USD/JPY is up around 30 pips from when it was announced while the TOPIX in Tokyo has trimmed its decline to 0.1%.
The 10-year yield for Japanese government bonds sits at 0.06%.
USD/JPY 5-Minute Chart
The full policy statement from the BOJ can be accessed here.
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Italian bank Monte Paschi says key investor unhappy with loan terms

Italian bank Monte Paschi says key investor unhappy with loan terms

MILAN, Dec 19 (Reuters) - A key investor in ailing Italian bank Monte dei Paschi di Siena's privately funded rescue plan is unhappy with one crucial aspect of the deal, a disagreement that could sink the entire plan if not resolved, the bank said on Monday.
Monte dei Paschi said the investor, banking industry bailout fund Atlante, had expressed "deep reservations" in a letter dated Dec. 17 over the terms of a bridge loan accord. The loan is an essential part of the bank's plan to sell 28 billion euros ($29.2 billion) in bad loans and raise 5 billion in capital.
It said it was trying to resolve the issue with Atlante.
"If issues raised by (Atlante's manager) Quaestio cannot be solved, the operation could not be concluded by Dec. 31, 2016 as requested by the European Central Bank," the bank said in a statement. ($1 = 0.9584 euros) (Reporting by Valentina Za; Editing by Mark Bendeich)
Read the original article on Reuters. Copyright 2016. Follow Reuters on Twitter.

Here’s the price tag for the latest batch of F35s

Here’s the price tag for the latest batch of F35s

amanda f35An F-35B begins a short takeoff from the deck of the USS Wasp on Aug. 16, 2013.Lockheed Martin
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ARLINGTON, Virginia — On Monday, the F-35 Joint Program Office released the finalized price for the most recent production contract for America's fifth generation stealth fighter.
After a little more than 14 months of negotiations between the Department of Defense and Lockheed Martin, the ninth Low Rate Initial Production (LRIP-9) contract for 57 F-35 jets was valued at $6.1 billion.
The LRIP-9, which is essentially the ninth batch of jets, includes 34 jets for the US and 23 for five international countries. 
f35 variantsAll three F-35 variants at Edwards Air Force Base.Lockheed Martin
The following is a breakdown of the unit price per variant in current year dollars (including aircraft, engine, and fee):
42 F-35A model aircraft: $102.1 million a jet
13 F-35B model aircraft: $131.6 million a jet
2 F-35C model aircraft: $132.2 million a jet
By comparison, in the previous contract, LRIP-8, the government paid $108 million for the Air Force's F-35A, $134 million for the Marine Corps' F-35B, and $129 million for the Navy's F-35C.
While the price for the Air Force and Marine Corps' variants saw a reduction of $5.9 million and $2.4 million respectively, the Navy model saw an increase of $3.2 million.
"Why did that happen?" asked Lt. Gen. Chris Bogdan, head of the F-35 Joint Program Office, during a briefing with reporters. "That happened because in lot nine the Navy bought two C models and in lot 8 the Navy bought four models."
"So they cut their production in half and as a result of that when you do an economies of scale in one direction it hurts you in the other direction. Having said that, I fully anticipate that when we do settle LRIP 10 you'll see all three variants, the A, the B, and the C come down in price significantly," Bogdan said.
And by "significantly" Bogdan added that he believes "somewhere on the order of 6 to 7 percent per airplane, per variant."
Meanwhile, the 57 aircraft in LRIP-9 are in various stages of production at Lockheed Martin's facility in Fort Worth, Texas. Deliveries for these aircraft are slated to begin in the first quarter of 2017.

WSJ: Apple is in talks with India to manufacture locally

WSJ: Apple is in talks with India to manufacture locally

Apple India Salesman iPhoneA salesman checks a customer's iPhone at a mobile phone store in New Delhi, India, July 27, 2016. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi
MUMBAI (Reuters) - Apple Inc is in talks with India's government to explore making products locally, the Wall Street Journal reported on Tuesday, as the U.S. firm aims to make deeper inroads in the world's second-largest mobile phone market by users.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi is trying to boost technology manufacturing in the country through his 'Make in India' initiative. His government in June exempted foreign retailers for three years from a requirement to locally source 30 percent of goods sold in their stores.
The Journal said Apple, in a letter to the federal government in November, outlined manufacturing plans and asked for financial incentives.
Government representatives were not available to comment while an Apple spokesman in India did not immediately respond to an email from Reuters seeking comment.
Local manufacturing would help Apple open retail stores in the country where its iPhones account for less than 2 percent of Indian smartphones sales.
Taiwan's Hon Hai Precision Industry Co Ltd (Foxconn), which makes Apple devices such as iPhones and iPads, has a manufacturing facility in southern India.
(Reporting by Sankalp Phartiyal)
Read the original article on Reuters. Copyright 2016. Follow Reuters on Twitter.

China set for slower growth, tighter policy in 2017 as government targets asset bubbles

China set for slower growth, tighter policy in 2017 as government targets asset bubbles

Workers leave a construction site at the end of their shift in Beijing, China December 6, 2016. REUTERS/Thomas PeterWorkers leave a construction site at the end of their shift in BeijingThomson Reuters
By Yawen Chen and Elias Glenn
BEIJING (Reuters) - China's economic growth is expected to cool in 2017 as its top leaders flag tighter monetary policy and further curbs to clamp down on asset price bubbles, especially in the property market, even as a sharp drop in the yuan has fed fears of markets turmoil.
The Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS) on Monday forecast China's economic growth will slow again next year to 6.5 percent, which would be the slowest pace in more than 25 years, down from expected growth of around 6.7 percent for this year.
The anticipated slowdown in the world's second-biggest economy comes at a time of heightened anxiety about the yuan, which slid to over eight year lows last month on speculation of capital outflows in the wake of Donald Trump's U.S. election victory.
On top of that, a rapid rise in bank lending, a dangerous build-up of debt in the corporate sector and a property market that has failed to fully flush out speculators are threatening to derail the economy.
That probably explains why China's top leaders, who held a key meeting on the economy last week, chose to stick to a "prudent and neutral" monetary policy in 2017, while vowing to keep the economy on a path of stable and healthy growth.
Indeed, an adviser to the People's Bank of China (PBOC) said on Monday that the tone set by China's top leaders for 2017 means the current monetary policy can be tightened.
Sheng Songcheng said there would be no grounds for easing next year considering risks from exchange rate volatility, rising inflation, the stock market and the property market.
Data earlier on Monday showed growth in China's home prices slowed again in November, suggesting that government curbs were starting to pay off, although it was too early to say if the slower trend will persist given a supply shortage in some of the bigger cities.
Analysts expect Beijing will start to remove some of the policy accommodation.
"We believe there will be some change from the current relatively loose monetary policies (to a more neutral stance), and the change will start to show up from the third quarter next year," said Wang Jianhui, an economist with Capital Securities in Beijing.
Wang cites potential risks from capacity reduction efforts including an increase in bad loans and a rise in unemployment. He expects the industrial capacity reduction campaign will expand from coal and steel currently to more industries including cement.
RECORD HOME PRICES, INCREASING RISKS
Policymakers also said China will control property bubbles and strictly limit credit flowing into speculative buying as property prices have risen at record rates this year.
Data on Monday showed new home prices rose 0.6 percent month-on-month in the nation's 70 major cities, slowing from October's 1.1 percent. But year-on-year price growth was at a record 12.6 percent, highlighting why regulators are keen to keep up the pressure on the sector lest it topples over and knocks the economy.
Analysts are already expecting the property sector - a major contributor to the economy - to be a drag on growth next year. The challenge for policymakers will be in ensuring home ownership remains attractive even as they put in place curbs to temper a speculative rally.
WEAKER YUAN
A key challenge will be stemming capital outflows amid a depreciating yuan, which has fallen almost 7 percent against the dollar this year.
The yuan will depreciate against the dollar by another 3 percent to 5 percent in 2017, Ministry of Commerce researcher Jin Bosong said on Monday at a press briefing.
In yuan terms, China's exports should grow 4 percent to 6 percent in 2017, with imports up 2 percent to 4 percent, Jin said.
China's yuan firmed against the dollar on Monday after the central bank set a much stronger midpoint than the market had expected.
China's benchmark CSI 300 Index has fallen 6.6 percent since hitting an 11-month higher on December 1 as liquidity tightens and markets begin to price in a more conservative monetary policy in 2017.
The policy signal from the economic planning meeting "disillusioned investors who had envisioned a further loosening in monetary policies. Now it's clear that policies tend to tighten," Changjiang Securities said in its latest strategy report.
Meanwhile, China's bond market weakness persisted on Monday, deepening concerns over liquidity stress toward the year-end. The price of China's 10-year treasury futures for March delivery tumbled more than 1 percent soon after open, although it trimmed some of the losses by midday.
"Expectations for GDP growth have fallen to 6.5 percent, but if growth is slower than that, I think anything above 6.3 percent can be considered stable," said Capital Securities' Wang.
"The main focus of policymakers is on controlling risk, not growth targets."
(Reporting by Yawen Chen and Elias Glenn; Editing by Shri Navaratnam)
Read the original article on Reuters. Copyright 2016. Follow Reuters on Twitter.
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