Tuesday, December 1, 2015

Asia's factories still struggling as US rate hike looms

Asia's factories still struggling as US rate hike looms

[JAKARTA] Factory activity deteriorated across much of Asia in November, with China sinking to a three-year low, as policymakers braced for an expected rise in US interest rates later this month that could jolt the global economy.
Business surveys showed few signs of vigour across the trade-reliant region apart from Japan, with sluggish demand at home and abroad forcing manufacturers from China to Indonesia to throttle back production, cut selling prices and shed more jobs. "Asia's economy looks decidedly wobbly going into year-end. Exports continue to struggle amid sluggish demand in the West and other emerging markets," said HSBC economist Frederic Neumann. "A Fed rate hike would represent a further pinch. With growth having been highly credit dependent in recent years, higher interest rates in the US will inevitable add to the region's challenges." Global policymakers and investors are bracing themselves for the first hike in US rates since 2006, which most analysts see coming at the Federal Reserve's Dec. 15-16 meeting.
After many months of speculation, a rate increase might remove some of the uncertainty that has caused large swings in emerging-market currencies and stock markets. But Asian exporters will be on edge, hoping rising US rates at a time of global weakness will not backfire and stunt demand in one of their biggest markets. "Industrialised Asia is still feeling the hurt from reduced external demand," said Barclay's economist Wai Ho Leong. "The US is providing some year-end festive lift but these economies are saddled with high inventories which take time to clear." Similar business surveys will be released later in the day for Europe and the United States. The European Central Bank has all but committed itself to announcing more stimulus at a meeting on Thursday, but that may not be enough to lift Asia's sagging exports.
GLOOM IN ASIA
On the whole, there was little in Tuesday's Asia survey numbers to cheer about. Business conditions did not deteriorate as badly in some countries as in past months, but there were scant signs of any recovery.
China's official Purchasing Managers' Index fell for a fourth month in a row in November, hitting its lowest level since August 2012, as new export orders dropped for the 14th month.
A private survey, the Caixin/Markit China PMI, which focuses on small and mid-sized companies, edged up to its highest reading since June, but still pointed to a ninth month of contraction.
However, a pickup in services activity in a similar official survey offered some hope that the sector would offset persistent weakness in "old economy" growth drivers such as manufacturing.
Many of China's major trading partners and global suppliers of goods from iron ore to excavators had hoped for some signs of improvement in the economy in the fourth quarter, but Nomura economists said the weak PMI findings suggest November official data in coming weeks will largely remain on the soft side.
Facing what could be its slowest pace of economic expansion in a quarter of a century, China has slashed interest rates six times in the past year as part of sweeping stimulus efforts, and more easing is expected next year.
While the moves may have reduced the risk of a so-called hard landing for the economy, so far they have yet to show signs of re-energising demand. "With soft growth momentum and deflation pressures creeping up, we expect the authorities to further ease monetary policy and continue to implement an expansionary fiscal policy," said economists Li-Gang Liu and Louis Lam at ANZ bank.
Meanwhile, in the first indication of how Asian trade performed in November, South Korea's exports fell by 4.7 per cent from a year earlier, the 11th month of contraction.
There was much better news out of Japan, where manufacturing firms, possibly aided by a weak yen, may be producing enough to lift the world's third-largest economy out of recession.
Manufacturing production expanded by its fastest pace in 20 months in November as new orders picked up, according to Markit/Nikkei Japan Final Manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is piling pressure on companies to increase investment to spur economic growth, as his "Abenomics"recipe of monetary stimulus, public spending and reform continues to struggle for traction.
There were signs that firms are loosening the purse strings, with corporate spending on plant and equipment up by 11.2 per cent from a year earlier in July-September, the fastest pace since 2007, government data showed on Tuesday.
With financial markets on edge ahead of any fallout from the Fed's decision this month, Asian central banks are for the most part staying pat for now while hinting there is room to ease policy further if conditions do not improve next year.
Australia's Reserve Bank held rates on Tuesday in a widely expected move after Governor Glenn Stevens told markets to"chill out" over the Christmas holidays, meaning that rates will now remain where they are at least until February.
In India, where the economy is now growing faster than China's, after expanding by 7.4 per cent year on year in the third quarter, its central bank also held rates on Tuesday, as expected, while leaving the door open for more easing if needed.
When the Fed does raise US rates, there may be pressure on some Asian central banks to follow. But economists said many others will not have to tighten policy. "In Singapore and Hong Kong, where local rates are closely linked to the Fed funds rate, US tightening will be a headwind, but there is no compelling reason why other central banks in the region should follow the Fed's lead," said Dan Martin at Capital Economics. "And the Fed will only be hiking rates if the US economy is doing well, which will be good for Asian exports," he added.
REUTERS

Swiss economy stagnates in third quarter

Swiss economy stagnates in third quarter

[ZURICH] Switzerland's economy stagnated in the third quarter, missing analysts' expectations for modest growth, as a strong franc continued to hurt Swiss companies.
Third-quarter gross domestic product was flat compared with the prior three months, when the economy grew 0.2 per cent. Year-on-year, growth fell to 0.8 per cent compared with a revised 0.9 per cent in the second quarter.
Economists had forecast growth of 0.2 per cent on a quarterly basis and 0.9 per cent on a year-on-year basis.
The economy has been kept in check by a surge in the value of the Swiss franc against the euro since January, when the Swiss National Bank (SNB) abandoned its cap of 1.20 francs to the euro. The franc remains about 10 per cent stronger against the euro than it was 11 months ago. "GDP growth was held back by the weak performance of the energy sector, the construction sector, the financial sector as well as trading," the Swiss Department of Economic Affairs said in a statement. Growth in healthcare and social work activities, as well as insurance services and manufacturing, helped to offset declines, it said.
The SNB's policy of currency intervention and negative interest rates has helped curb the value of the franc, which has stabilised around 1.08 per euro. It had gained to 0.86 per euro on Jan. 15.
But analysts have questioned the SNB's ability to keep a lid on franc. The European Central Bank will give an update on its policy on Thursday, which may include expanding its quantitative easing programme and cutting interest rates. Both would tend to weaken the euro.
The third quarter's stagnation follows unexpected growth in the second quarter, which meant Switzerland narrowly skirted a recession as exporters weathered the strong franc better than some had expected.
In September, the Swiss government upped its economic growth forecast for 2015 to 0.9 per cent but cautioned that a continued recovery in the euro zone was crucial to the country's prospects. It estimated the economy would grow 1.5 per cent in 2016.
REUTERS

UK plans to make banks hold up to US$15b more capital

UK plans to make banks hold up to US$15b more capital

[LONDON] The Bank of England set out plans on Tuesday to require banks to hold a total of up to US$15 billion more capital as they start to lend more freely in a recovering economy, but stopped short of demanding immediate action.
The central bank said credit conditions in Britain had largely recovered from the financial crisis, and warned asset prices were vulnerable to a big rise in interest rates and emerging market risks, meaning banks needed an extra buffer. "With today's announcement, the basic amount of capital our system requires is settled," said Bank of England (BoE) Governor Mark Carney, setting out plans for top UK banks including HSBC , Lloyds, Barclays BARC.L and RBS. "By moving early, before risks are elevated, the FPC (Financial Policy Committee) expects to be able to vary the countercyclical capital buffer gradually," he added, referring to further changes the BoE may make to capital requirements at different stages of the economic cycle.
Mr Carney said the central bank didn't want to force banks to hold excessive amounts of capital. "While the benefits of increased resilience are clear, higher capital costs are ultimately passed on to borrowers," he said.
The BoE also released the results of annual 'stress tests'into how Britain's big seven lenders would deal with unexpected economic shocks.
This year the focus was on emerging market and trading risks, and Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) and Standard Chartered both only passed thanks to steps they took to improve their capital ratios during the process, which lifted their leverage ratios above the minimum 3 per cent level.
The other five big lenders tested - HSBC, Barclays, Lloyds Banking Group, Santander and Nationwide - did not have to take action. "RBS was always still further behind in the journey but Lloyds and Barclays are fine, with no material threats of further capital raising or, in Lloyds case, growing dividends over time," Richard Buxton, CEO of Old Mutual Global Investors, a shareholder in RBS, Barclays & Lloyds, told Reuters.
Shares in Lloyds were up 2.8 per cent in early trading, with RBS, Barclays and Standard Chartered up about 2.2 per cent and HSBC up 1.3 per cent.
The BoE said it expected banks to hold a so-called counter-cyclical capital buffer (CCB) of 1 per cent during normal times, and was in the process of tweaking bank-specific requirements with a view to imposing this step-by-step from March.
The CCB aims to rein in risky lending at frothier stages of the credit cycle. It stands at zero currently, but the BoE has already required some banks to hold extra capital due to firm-specific risks. Some economists and banking analysts had expected the BoE to raise the CCB this month to 0.5 per cent.
The BoE also said it expected the banking sector as a whole to hold high-grade tier one equity capital of 13.5 per cent of risk-weighted assets by 2019, up from 13 per cent now - part of which would overlap with the capital required for the CCB.
The BoE has said it wanted to give banks more clarity about its long-run aims for the amount of capital they hold. Banks have complained that in the past, the BoE has unexpectedly piled on extra capital requirements, making it hard for them to lend or decide which lines of business to stay in.
REUTERS

Online sales on track to break 'Cyber Monday' record

Online sales on track to break 'Cyber Monday' record

[WASHINGTON] Online sales for the key holiday retail day of "Cyber Monday" were on track for a record, helped by surging smartphone shopping, market trackers said.
The Adobe Digital Index showed that sales in the first 10 hours of the day were US$490 million, up 14 per cent from a year ago. That puts sales on track for US$3 billion, Adobe said.
The big jump in online sales may have caught some retailers off guard. Retail giant Target's website went down briefly, as did the payments service PayPal, and some high-demand items were selling out.
"Out of stock is at an all time high this Cyber Monday - 15 out of 100 product views are returning out of stock messages," Adobe said.
Cyber Monday tradition dates back a decade when retailers launched promotions for the Monday after the US Thanksgiving holiday - when many people took advantage of high-speed Internet at their offices.
The day still features numerous promotions and discounts for shoppers looking for an early start for holiday gift-giving.
According to Adobe, 53 per cent of online retail traffic came from mobile devices, as did 32 per cent of sales.
"US consumers have turned into digital shopping ninjas this holiday season as retailers continue to adjust to a huge influx of smartphone shoppers," said Adobe analyst Tamara Gaffney in a statement.
Some of the hot items according to Adobe included the Star Wars R2D2 Interactive Robotic Droid, the PlayStation 4 bundled with the Disney Star Wars game, and the Xbox One bundled with the Fallout 4 game.
Adobe said online sales between the Thanksgiving holiday Thursday and Sunday morning totaled US$8.03 billion, a 17 per cent increase from last year.
IBM meanwhile predicted Cyber Monday online sales would grow by more than 18 per cent from last year, led by big-ticket items such as Samsung, Sony and LG televisions as well as Apple Watch and Beats headphones.
Cyber Monday was set to break the record for US ecommerce sales but it was dwarfed by the big November 11 "Singles Holiday" in China which generated some US$14 billion in sales, according to online giant Alibaba.
AFP

Grab Taxi, Hailo get nod to operate in Singapore; UberTAXI, MoobiTaxi pending

Grab Taxi, Hailo get nod to operate in Singapore; UberTAXI, MoobiTaxi pending

GRAB Taxi Pte Ltd and Hailo Singapore Pte Ltd are among third-party taxi booking service providers which have been given the nod to operate in Singapore.
On Tuesday, the Land Transport Authority (LTA) said in a release that the two have been issued certificates of registration to operate their third-party taxi booking mobile applications in Singapore. The certificates are valid for three years starting from Dec 1, 2015.
LTA added that it is currently processing applications from UberTAXI, MoobiTaxi, Karhoo, and ConnexTaxi. The application from PAIR Taxi has been rejected because its fare model did not meet the fare charging conditions stipulated in the regulatory framework, LTA said.
Radiophone taxi-booking operators Taman Jurong Radiophone Taxi Services and Boon Lay Garden Radio Taxi Services have also been issued certificates of registration, also valid for three years starting from Dec 1, 2015.
Under Singapore's newly enacted Third-Party Taxi Booking Service Providers Act, all third-party taxi booking services with more than 20 participating taxis are required to register with the LTA.
New service providers must apply to register with the LTA and receive their certificates of registration before they can operate in Singapore. Existing providers already operating before Sept 1, 2015, are allowed to continue operating but have to register by Dec 1.
Service providers which operate without certificates of registration are liable to a fine not exceeding S$10,000, or imprisonment for a term not exceeding six months, or both.

Burger King to open first West Africa Restaurant in Ivory Coast

Burger King to open first West Africa Restaurant in Ivory Coast

[ABIDJAN] Burger King will open its first restaurant in West Africa this month in Ivory Coast, a country more famous for slow-cooked chicken than fast consumption of beef patties.
Air France-KLM's in-flight caterer, Servair, will operate the 90 square-meter restaurant in Carrefour SA's first mall in sub-Saharan Africa, Servair said Tuesday in a statement. The shopping center, operated by CFAO SA, is due to open this month in Abidjan, Ivory Coast's commercial capital.
Through its Ivory Coast restaurant, Burger King is expanding its operations in sub-Saharan Africa, where it currently operates only in South Africa. The burger chain is also targeting a fast-growing economy that's expanded an average 9 per cent annually in the past three years following a decade of political crisis. The country has attracted foreign investors such as the Dutch brewer Heineken NV and Groupe Fnac SA, the French retailer. Ivory Coast is the world's top cocoa producer.
Servair, the world's third-largest in-flight caterer, said that operating Abidjan's Burger King is part of an "international development strategy" to expand beyond airports. Burger King is owned by Restaurant Brands International Inc, whose investors include billionaires Warren Buffett and Bill Ackman.
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