Monday, August 31, 2015

Gold gains as equities, dollar retreat; Fed hike view caps rise

Gold gains as equities, dollar retreat; Fed hike view caps rise  

[MANILA] Gold edged higher on Tuesday as equities faltered on mounting expectations that the US Federal Reserve will likely go ahead with an interest rate increase this month.
Fed Vice Chairman Stanley Fischer said on Saturday that US inflation will likely rebound as pressure from the dollar fades, allowing the US central bank to raise interest rates gradually.
Mr Fischer's comment sent Wall Street lower overnight and US stock futures stretched losses on Tuesday, with Asian shares also falling, led by China. The dollar similarly weakened as risk aversion favored the euro and yen. "We are seeing some general risk-off moves in the Asian timezone and some buying of gold would be consistent with that," Ric Spooner, chief market analyst at CMC Markets in Sydney.
Spot gold was up 0.5 per cent at US$1,139.60 an ounce by 0153 GMT, after an uneventful session on Monday.
Bullion ended August 3.5 per cent higher as worries over China's slowing economy sparked safe-haven bids, although the metal has since come off a seven-week top.
Growing indications that the Fed could lift rates on its next policy meeting on Sept 16-17 could limit gold's upside potential.
Mr Spooner said only another "fear-based" deep rout in global equities like that seen on Aug 24 following a slump in Chinese stocks would "dissuade the Fed from easing." "And I think if we did see a very strong number in the nonfarm payrolls this week, it would certainly give them an opportunity ... to make their move in September," he said.
But Mr Spooner said there is a chance that the US rate hike - which would be the first since 2006 - could induce profit-taking in the dollar and potentially buoy gold.
US gold for December delivery rose 0.6 per cent to US$1,139.20 an ounce.
MKS Group trader James Gardiner said he sees resistance for bullion at US$1,145 and then at US$1,150 with immediate support around US$1,125.
Spot palladium fell 0.8 per cent to US$594.05 an ounce and platinum eased 0.1 per cent to US$1,005.50. Silver edged up 0.2 per cent to US$14.63.
REUTERS

Housing-affordability gap in Toronto, Vancouver widens

Housing-affordability gap in Toronto, Vancouver widens

toronto-harbour
Canadian housing prices continued to soar in the second quarter of the year, eroding affordability for buyers even in the face of a falling dollar and weak economic growth. But while detached house prices are marching out of reach of buyers in Canada’s hottest housing markets, they are becoming more affordable in many other regions.
Two new reports from Royal Bank of Canada and Toronto-Dominion Bank put the growing disparity between detached house prices in Toronto and Vancouver and the rest of the country into stark relief. Even as record-low interest rates have made house ownership more affordable than ever for many Canadians, it now takes 91 per cent of the average pretax household income to afford a two-storey house in Vancouver, nearly 4 per cent more than at the start of the year and roughly 40 per cent above the city’s long-term average, RBC said. The figure takes into account the cost of a mortgage, property taxes and utilities.
In Toronto, a standard two-storey house now consumes more than 67 per cent of the typical household income, roughly 24 per cent more than the city’s long-term average. Housing prices in the two markets have been rising at an “unsustainable pace,” TD economist Diana Petramala warned. “The risk of a deeper correction rises with every month of double-digit home price growth.”
Both cities are also seeing a widening gap between the cost of houses and condos. In Vancouver, it now takes roughly 40 per cent of the average household income to buy a condo, while in Toronto the figure is just shy of 34 per cent.
The residential housing sector continues to defy expectations of a soft landing as buyers have rushed into the market to take advantage of low interest rates, TD said. The bank expects Canadian housing prices to end the year 7 per cent higher before starting to cool next year. It now takes 48.3 per cent of the average income to afford a two-storey house, up slightly from the first three months of the year and roughly 10 per cent above the long-term average. Buying a condo, meanwhile, takes up about 27 per cent of the average household income, with affordability remaining roughly in line with the long-term average.
Affordability took the biggest hit in British Columbia thanks to what RBC calls “the extreme situation in Vancouver.” The average household would now have to spend almost all of its income to afford a detached house in the city, with affordability reaching an all-time low for any market in Canada. While no other B.C. market comes close to Vancouver, RBC noted that prices have been heating up in other regions of the province, including Victoria, Fraser Valley, Chilliwack and Kamloops.
A recovery in oil prices in the second quarter helped restore confidence in Alberta’s housing market, although the more recent drop is likely to keep buyers nervous. Prices in the province have held up remarkably well, but slowing sales and low interest rates have created opportunities that many buyers haven’t seen in years.
“Owning a home in Calgary at market price remains more affordable than it has been on average since the middle of the 1980s,” RBC economists Craig Wright and Robert Hogue wrote. Housing prices should start to fall further as the months wear on, TD said. Already, houses are taking longer to sell, as both Calgary and Edmonton are still in the midst of a residential construction boom started when oil prices were high. Edmonton, in particular, now has more new housing under construction per capita than in either Toronto or Vancouver, TD’s Ms. Petramala noted.
Saskatchewan’s housing market has been hard hit by the drop in prices for oil and other commodities, although buyer confidence rebounded in the second quarter of this year, with prices of detached houses become slightly less affordable, RBC said. Condos remain a comparative bargain because of a glut of supply. In Regina, which is facing a backlog of unsold condos, resale housing prices dropped 5 per cent in July from the same time last year, which TD said reflected a jump in new housing on the market rather than a sharp drop in demand.
In contrast to many other parts of the country, two-storey houses in Manitoba were the only segment of the housing market that got cheaper for buyers, with prices rising for condos and bungalows. It now takes 36.5 per cent of the average household income to afford a two-storey house, down from 37 per cent in the previous quarter. Manitoba’s market should rebound later this year, TD predicted, given that the economy has churned out nearly 10,000 new jobs since December and the province is less exposed to falling oil prices that other regions. Developers have been holding on to record levels of unsold condos, however, which should keep prices affordable for condo buyers.
Ontario’s housing market has become a study in contrasts. Bungalows and two-storey houses continue to skyrocket, while condo prices have stayed comparatively flat. It now takes 52.3 per cent of the average income to afford a bungalow in the province, a two-year high, compared with 28.8 per cent of income for a condo.
The gap is being driven by a major shift in new housing construction. Ontario is in the midst of a boom in condo construction, while there are now half the number of single-family houses being built in the province compared with a decade ago, RBC said.
With prices of single-family housing rising at double-digit rates in Canada’s largest city, “affordability in Toronto is moving ever closer to the historically poor levels that prevailed in 1990,” RBC wrote, “which may signal that risks are mounting because those were associated with a housing bubble at the time.”
Meanwhile in Ottawa, years of sluggish housing price growth and a spike in the supply of newly built condos have made owning housing in the capital city more affordable. New housing listings hit a 15-year high in the city, while demand has been held back by government belt-tightening. “In a fiscally constrained world, job prospects in Ottawa are likely to remain soft in the coming months, keeping housing activity in check,” TD said.
Housing ownership has become cheaper than at any point in the past decade in Quebec as weak economic growth and the fallout from an earlier condo boom has kept prices down. It now takes 40 per cent of the average household income to afford a two-storey house in the province, and 25 per cent for a condo. Montreal buyers saw the biggest boost to affordability of any major urban market this year, with the average Montrealer spending 46.3 per cent of their household income to buy a two-storey house, down 1.5 percentage points from the start of the year.
While low interest rates, a cheaper dollar and an improving U.S. economy are expected to help boost Quebec’s housing market this year, the province faces a number of challenges, TD said. Most significantly, migration both internationally and from other parts of the country has fallen to a 15-year low, which has affected demand in the housing market.
The housing market in Eastern Canada has been struggling for the past two years as a result of an aging population and a poor job market. That has made housing prices in the region more affordable for cash-strapped buyers.
While existing housing sales have risen this year in Newfoundland, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island, it hasn’t been enough to offset a jump in new listings. In Halifax, housing resales hit a 17-year low amid a spike in new listings, although TD predicts that an improving economy, population growth and the start of work on a major federal shipbuilding contract should help boost the city’s housing market this year. Atlantic Canada remains among the country’s most affordable housing market, with two-storey houses consuming less than 34 per cent of the average household income.
“The upside of persistent price stagnation in large pockets of Atlantic Canada is that housing affordability improved further in the region,” RBC wrote.

Oil prices tumble in Asia on Chinese data

Oil prices tumble in Asia on Chinese data

[SINGAPORE] Oil prices tumbled in Asia on Tuesday, surrendering some of their big gains after fresh data showed manufacturing activity in top energy consumer China contracted in August, analysts said.
The contraction in the Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) for China's factory sector added to concerns about the health of the world's second biggest economy.
US benchmark West Texas Intermediate (WTI) for October fell US$1.50 to US$47.70 and Brent crude for October dropped US$1.46 to US$52.69 a barrel in late-morning Asian trade.
WTI surged 8.8 per cent and Brent advanced 8.2 per cent on Monday as the US government lowered its domestic production estimate and the Opec cartel said it was "ready to talk" to producers about prices which had fallen to their lowest levels in six and a half years last month.
The PMI for China's key manufacturing sector slumped to a three-year low of 49.7 in August, an official index showed, in the latest sign of slowing growth in the country, a major engine for global economic growth.
The reading, which tracks activity in China's vast factory and workshop sector, was worse than the 50.0 reading in July, and the first time it showed contraction since February. A figure above 50 signals expansion in the sector, while anything below indicates shrinkage.
US financial giant Citigroup said in a market commentary that China was driving commodity prices, including oil, "as never before, and it is driving them lower".
"We expect China to continue to exert downward pressure on commodity prices in the coming months, representing one of the three key drivers for commodity prices." Other analysts said the global crude oversupply remains a drag on prices despite talk by the US and the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) of possible cuts in the elevated production levels.
"Firstly, talk is cheap," said Nicholas Teo, market analyst at CMC Markets in Singapore.
"Secondly, even though US production has started to fall, June production was still up 7.1 per cent over a year ago," he said in a market commentary.
"In the near term, there is likely to be little or no relief on either the supply or demand fronts," said business consultancy IHS.
"In particular, the oversupply problem could take a long time to correct."
AFP

South Korea Q2 short-term external debt burden rises vs Q1

South Korea Q2 short-term external debt burden rises vs Q1

[SEOUL] South Korea's ratio of short-term external debt to foreign exchange reserves edged up during the second quarter to the highest in nine months as debt rose faster than reserves, central bank data showed on Tuesday.
The ratio rose to 32.3 per cent by the end of June from 31.1 per cent ratio at the end of March, data from the Bank of Korea showed, the highest level since the end of September last year but still well below past levels.
South Korea's short-term external debt rose to US$121.2 billion by the end of June from US$112.8 billion three months earlier, while foreign reserves increased to US$374.8 billion from US$362.8 billion over the same period.
Total external debt owed by South Korea rose slightly to US$420.6 billion by the end of June from US$418.9 billion at the end of March, the data showed.
REUTERS

Vietnam, in economic reform drive, eases foreign ownership caps on some stocks

Vietnam, in economic reform drive, eases foreign ownership caps on some stocks

[HANOI] Long-awaited new rules allowing foreigners to take bigger stakes in Vietnamese equities took effect on Tuesday, but confusion over which sectors are eligible could dim their investor appeal.
The move to allow foreign shareholdings of up to 100 per cent in some firms, versus the previous 49 per cent ceiling, is one of the most liberal measures yet adopted as Vietnam pursues broad economic reform.
Vietnam is also bidding to have its VN Index included in MSCI's emerging market index, increasing its appeal to a wider range of investors.
The VN Index is the only Southeast Asia gauge to have gained this year and "stands out in Asia", investment advisor Marc Faber, writer of the Gloom, Boom & Doom Report, told CNBC recently.
But with the government yet to provide detailed guidance on which sectors are restricted and which will be opened, investors say Vietnam's "grand opening" is unlikely to raise pulses.
Le Anh Tuan, chief investment officer at Dragon Capital, said foreigners won't jump in yet. "Foreign investors only care when the new rules are actually implemented, not a promise to implement," he said.
The delay in raising the foreign ownership ceiling has frustrated investors keen to tap Vietnam's potential. Now they must contend with rules that appear complex, vague and could cause regulatory overlaps with sector-specific legislation, banking for example.
Except sectors carrying conditions on foreign investments, the decree says full foreign ownership is allowed in areas Vietnam has committed in unspecified international agreements to liberalising - unless subject to other laws.
In a research note, Vietnamese fund Dragon Capital said the easing of restrictions would effectively be staggered while regulators classify dozens of sectors, muddied by multilateral trade deals under negotiation.
But where there's clarity, there have been big gains.
Shares in top insurer BaoViet Holdings soared 65 per cent over a two-week period in July to a high of over three years after the finance minister said insurers would have no foreign ownership ceiling.
Top broker Saigon Securities Incorp climbed 6.64 per cent on Friday after the State Securities Commission (SSC) confirmed it could remove foreign limits.
REUTERS

China: Stocks fall at market open

China: Stocks fall at market open  

[SHANGHAI] China's major stock indexes opened down on Tuesday.
The CSI300 index fell 2.1 per cent to 3,296.53 points at 1:28 GMT, while the Shanghai Composite Index lost 1.5 per cent to 3,157.83 points.
China CSI300 stock index futures for September fell 0.5 per cent, to 3,049.6, -246.93 points below the current value of the underlying index.
The Hang Seng index in Hong Kong was up 0.1 per cent, at 21,692.78 points.
REUTERS

Singtel completes Trustwave acquisition at lower price

Singtel completes Trustwave acquisition at lower price

SINGAPORE Telecommunications has completed its purchase of a 98 per cent stake in cyber security firm Trustwave for a lowered price of US$770 million.
The acquisition was initially priced at US$810 million, excluding net debt, when the deal was announced in April. Following working capital adjustments at closing, the aggregate consideration was trimmed by US$40 million.
Trustwave chairman and chief executive Robert J McCulen holds the remaining 2 per cent interest in Trustwave.
Singtel shares last traded at S$3.74 on Monday.

SembMarine wins US$1b North Sea contract

SembMarine wins US$1b North Sea contract

SEMBCORP Marine has clinched a more than US$1 billion engineering, procurement and construction contract to build three topsides for the Culzean Field development in the North Sea, the rig builder announced early Tuesday.
The contract amount, which includes long lead items, is for building a central processing facility, two connecting bridges, a wellhead platform and utilities and living quarters platform for Maersk Oil North Sea UK.
Sembcorp Marine unit SMOE Pte Ltd will provide engineering, procurement, construction and onshore pre-commissioning services while detailed engineering work will be performed by a subcontracting partner.
"We are pleased to secure this mega contract despite stiff competition from world class yards," said Ho Nee Sin, SembMarine's head of offshore platforms, in a statement.
SembMarine shares closed at S$2.39 on Monday.

Obama to test wilderness skills on Bear Grylls TV show

Obama to test wilderness skills on Bear Grylls TV show

[NEW YORK] President Barack Obama will test his wilderness survival skills with an appearance on the television show "Running Wild" in an Alaska adventure that will air later this year, the network NBC said on Monday.
Mr Obama will be the first US president to appear on the show, in which British outdoor adventurer Bear Grylls takes celebrities through grueling treks in remote forests and mountains.
NBC made the announcement on the same day Mr Obama began a three-day visit to Alaska that is focused on climate change. The network said Mr Obama and Mr Grylls would meet to observe the effects of climate change on the area.
The show will be taped and will air on NBC later this year, the network said.
Actors including Ben Stiller, Kate Winslet and Jesse Tyler Ferguson are among those who have joined Grylls, a former soldier with the British Special Forces (SAS), on one-on-one expeditions that test their mental and physical endurance skills.
REUTERS

Oil prices leap 8% on lower US output, Opec signal

Oil prices leap 8% on lower US output, Opec signal

[NEW YORK] Oil prices surged higher on Monday as the US government lowered its domestic production estimate and Opec said it was "ready to talk" to producers about multi-year low prices.
US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for October delivery jumped US$3.98 (8.8 per cent) to US$49.20 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, its third straight winning session.
In London, Brent crude for October delivery closed at US$54.15 a barrel, up US$4.10 (8.2 per cent) from Friday's settlement.
Over the past three winning sessions WTI has gained 27.5 per cent and Brent is up 25.52 per cent.
Oil prices opened lower Monday but pulled out of negative territory after the Department of Energy said that US domestic production in June was 9.3 million barrels a day, about 100,000 barrels lower than its previous estimate. Monthly estimates for the January to May period were revised lower by as much as 130,000 barrels a day.
US production had been running at record levels since the beginning of the year, exacerbating the global oversupply situation.
Also boosting prices was a statement by the Opec oil cartel to the effect that the continuing downward pressure on prices "remains a cause for concern" for the group.
The Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, responsible for about 40 per cent of global crude production, tied the price pressure to higher production and market speculation.
"Needless to say, Opec, as always, will continue to do all in its power to create the right enabling environment for the oil market to achieve equilibrium with fair and reasonable prices," Opec said in a monthly report.
"As the organisation has stressed on numerous occasions, it stands ready to talk to all other producers. But this has to be on a level playing field. Opec will protect its own interests." Analysts cast doubt on whether Opec was willing to curtail production.
"Oil traders appear to be reading this as a pledge to rein in production, or at least, to avoid letting production get any higher. That will prop up prices - if it works," said Paul Ausick at 24/7 Wall St, who added: "Colour us skeptical." Opec crude output climbed by 108,000 barrels to 32.32 million barrels a day in August, Bloomberg News reported on Monday, noting that was well above the cartel's official limit of 30 million barrels per day.
Mr Ausick said that it appears the Opec leadership "agreed to take to the bully pulpit on behalf of those members hit the hardest, knowing that any indication that the cartel was ready to resuscitate pricing by (obliquely implying) lowering production would give crude a shot in the arm."
AFP

Belgium plans collection of plane, train, ferry users' data

Belgium plans collection of plane, train, ferry users' data  

[BRUSSELS] Belgium on Monday unveiled plans for a controversial system to collect data on all airline passengers, as well as international train and ferry travellers, in the wake of a foiled attack on a train running between Belgium and Paris.
Interior Minister Jan Jambon said he floated the plan at a meeting Saturday in Paris of ministers from nine European Union countries linked by train.
The ministers from Belgium, Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Luxembourg, The Netherlands, Spain and Switzerland met to discuss tightening security on trains after a thwarted jihadist attack on a Thalys train on August 21.
Ayoub El Khazzani, the 25-year-old Moroccan arrested over the attack, boarded the Amsterdam-Paris train in Brussels.
"I argued for a European PNR (Passager Name Record system)," Mr Jambon told a Belgian parliamentary commission.
The European Parliament has been considering a PNR system for airline travellers since 2011 but the measure sought by the United States has been held up by concerns among lawmakers over privacy concerns.
"My personal opinion is that it must be done for airline traffic but that we must also examine whether we can extend it to trains and other modes of transport, including boats," the minister said.
"We must check whether the identity given is correct. If the name is on a blacklist we can arrest them before they board," he added.
Mr Jambon called for the European PNR to be adopted "by the end of the year", adding that he was working on a parallel bill to establish a Belgian passenger data collection system that he hoped would be also be implemented by the year's end.
Khazzani was already on the radar of several European intelligence agencies, who had flagged him as a radical Islamist, when he took his seat in the Thalys.
Shortly after the train crossed from Belgium into France he came bursting out of a toilet armed with an assault rifle, 270 rounds of ammunition and a Luger pistol. He was quickly overpowered by a group of passengers.
Three EU countries - Britain, Italy and Spain - already have a national data collection system for airline passengers.
Belgium is however the first country to suggest extending the measure to trains and boats.
A European Commission spokesman said Monday that the issue of transport security would be discussed by EU transport officials on September 11, ahead of a meeting of EU transport ministers on October 7.
But it was "far too soon to think about extending" passenger data collection to other transport forms beside planes, he said.
AFP

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