Tuesday 7 January 2014

Asia gets some relief as Wall Street, Europe rally

Asian markets got a hand up on Wednesday after strong trade data boosted expectations for U.S. growth while a lessening of sovereign strains in Europe lifted stocksthere to the highest since 2008.

Japan's Nikkei led the way with a rise of 1.1 percent, though some other regional markets remain out of favour as funds flock to assets in the western world.
The dollar climbed against the yen after the U.S. trade deficit shrank to its lowest in four years, thanks mainly to a renaissance in energy production, prompting analysts to revise up forecasts for economic growth.
Barclays, for one, doubled its estimate for last quarter and now predicts growth of 3 percent annualised.
The figures offered investors reassurance that the Federal Reserve's decision to taper its asset buying was justified by fundamentals. Minutes of the Fed's December meeting are due later on Wednesday and markets will be hoping for a clear commitment to keeping rates low for a long time to come.
Underlining the brighter mood were reports that the International Monetary Fund will raise its forecast for global growth in about three weeks, breaking a depressingly-long run of downgrades.
All of which helped MSCI's all-country world stock index hit its highest since mid-2008. Both the Dow and the S&P 500 rose 0.6 percent.
That was enough to give most Asian markets a break from recent selling pressure. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan added 0.44 percent.
Stocks in Shanghai, Singapore and Taiwan all made ground.
Source: Reuters

Forest Labs nears $3 billion deal for Aptalis: source

Forest Laboratories Inc  is nearing an agreement to acquire specialty pharmaceutical company Aptalis Holdings Inc from private equity firm TPG Capital LP for about $3 billion, a person familiar with the matter said on Tuesday.

A deal announcement could come as early as Wednesday, the person said, cautioning that negotiations were still being finalized. The source asked not to be identified because the talks are confidential.
Aptalis has a number of drugs that treat cystic fibrosis and gastrointestinal disorders, and sells its products primarily in North America and Europe.
Forest was one of the drug companies that held talks with Aptalis about a possible deal last year as TPG sought an investment exit by riding a wave of dealmaking in specialty pharma, Reuters reported previously, based on people familiar with the matter.
These talks were put on hold when Forest Chief Executive Howard Solomon announced in May that he would retire, according to the sources.
In October, Brenton Saunders, former chief executive of company Bausch & Lomb Holdings Inc, took over as Forest CEO. With top leadership at Forest restored, talks with Aptalis resumed.
TPG was seeking between $3 billion and $4 billion for a sale of Aptalis, the sources previously told Reuters. It had registered the Bridgewater, New Jersey-company for an initial public offering on December 26 in case a deal to sell the company outright did not materialize.
Source: Reuters

Japan: Undersea drilling reaches a record 3000 meters

Japanese scientists conducting undersea drilling in the Pacific off western Japan have reached a record 3,000 meters beneath the seabed.
The Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology has been working with the deep-sea survey vessel Chikyu since November in waters about 75 kilometers off Shingu City.The aim of the survey is to examine layers of the seabed in the area, which seismologists see as the possible hypocenter for a massive earthquake that may strike along the Nankai Trough.
The agency says the vessel will continue the drilling and reach 3,600 meters by January 20th after widening the hole it has already made. The agency aims to reach 5,200 meters as early as next year.

Source: NHK

China: Virtual telecom operators business nears reality

Sixteen companies are expected to get licenses for virtual telecom operators- business of resale mobile communication services- by the end of the year and open for business in 2014,Economic Information Daily reported.
Virtual operators business is reselling mobile communications services to introduce its own brand of telecommunication services through leased telecommunication operator's network and facilities or other forms of cooperation.
The three major telecom operators in China have completed the accreditation work on the companies applying to be virtual operators. The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology of China (MIIT) will further review the shortlisted companies and award business licenses to the qualified ones.
“China Telecom and China Unicom have both reached a preliminary cooperation deal with some companies and are now signing agreements; China Mobile is ratcheting up the final negotiations and is expected to complete the agreement soon,” deputy director of development department of MIIT said on Oct 24.
There are 70 companies applying to be virtual operators, and three kinds of companies are finally chosen as future partners: channels such as Suning, Gome and Dixon, Internet companies and those who already have the industrial resources such as Kingdee and UF. So far, 16 companies have signed agreements with the operators.
Both internal and external reasons have led to the promotion of virtual operators, said Zhao Xiaojie, Central London business manager of British Telecom O2. The growing demand for breaking the monopoly of the telecom industry, enormous pressure from the transformation of the State’s economic development and the rapid development of mobile Internet have forced traditional operators to find a new impetus, Zhao added.
“For example, after cooperating with Virgin, a company that is very popular among young people, market share of European operator T-Mobile jumped from fifth to second,” Zhao said.
“If there are 16 or more companies getting the license for virtual operators, the telecom market that has long been criticized will undergo a significant change. The degree of the market development will increase, and the process of openness will accelerate,” said an official from one of the shortlisted companies.
Source: Chinadaily

China imposes air quality targets

China's 31 provinces, municipalities and autonomous regions have been set targets to reduce main air pollutants by 5 to 25 percent, in the country's latest effort to combat pollution.
Among the provincial-level regions, eleven were given PM2.5-reducing tasks, including an annual 25 percent decrease, the highest, for Beijing and neighboring Tianjin municipality and Hebei Province, according to a liability paper signed Tuesday by the regions and the Ministry of Environmental Protection.
Shanghai, Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Shandong and Shanxi will have to cut the indices by 20 percent, followed by 15 percent for Guangdong and Chongqing and 10 percent for Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region.
The other regions were ordered to cut their PM10 readings by 5 to 15 percent, with only Hainan and Yunnan provinces and Tibet Autonomous Region, where air pollution is relatively slight, given no specific goals but "continuous improvements" must be made.
PM2.5 refers to airborne particles measuring less than 2.5 microns while PM10 gauges particulate matter under 10 micrometers. Both are main air pollution indicators.
The paper also urged regions to take various measures such as reducing the use of coal, eliminating outdated industrial capacity as well as better management and control of heating boilers, vehicles and dust.
Local governments have been ordered to map out detailed plans to ensure the implementation of various anti-pollution methods and lay down specific goals for each year.
Meanwhile, the State Council, or China's Cabinet, is mulling a system to evaluate each provincial-level government's progress, and those failing to reach their goals will be named and shamed. They will have to provide explanations and make corrections.
Despite a wide spectrum of measures including severer punishment for industrial polluters and the auction and lottery of car license plates, a government report revealed last month that progress was lagging in four environmental targets, including carbon dioxide emissions and energy consumption.
In the relatively more polluted northern area, Beijing reported 58 days of heavy air pollution last year, or roughly one heavy pollution day in every six.

CEA: global tech market poised to shrink in 2014

Ahead of the gathering of International Consumer Electronics Show, an industry body has painted a gloomy outlook for the global tech market.
The Consumer Electronics Association, or CEA, estimates the whole sector's sales will total 1.055 trillion US dollars this year, a slight decline from the estimated 2013 figure.
Sales in developed markets are expected to fall 4 per cent. In emerging economies will increase only 2 per cent, a huge contrast to a 9 per cent surge last year.
The CEA warned that the industry has not yet found a new growth driver that could replace smartphones and tablets. The CEA is optimistic that wearable technology will see explosive growth, giving the industry a boost.
Source: CCTV

Las Vegas Consumer Electronics Show to kick off

The Consumer Electronics Show will kick off in the casino city of Las Vegas on Tuesday. The annual event hopes to be a launch pad for new must-have devices, as spending on gadgets has flattened in a world obsessed with smartphones and tablets.
The annual technology extravaganza in glitz-laden Las Vegas has evolved beyond the eye-popping television technology to serve as a stage for once-dumb devices given brains in the form of computer chips and Internet connections. South Korean electronics company LG unveiled its new webOS-based smart TVs, which it claims will "make TV simple again". It also expects the new OS will make it easy for developers to write applications for its TVs.
"We've simplified the way you connect your TV, the way you switch between content and input and the way you discover new content and services," Dr. Skott Ahn, President and CTO of LG Electronics, says.
A key trend at this year's show however is wearable technology.
"The LG Lifeband Touch is an activity tracking wristband designed to monitor and collect fitness data during exercise or just during everyday life," Tim Alessi, Head of New Product Development of Home Entertainment LG Electronics USA, says.
Japanese electronics company Panasonic is keen to show off it's Toughpad FZ-M1, so keen that the device was thrown across stage to demonstrate its durability.
"The M1. And this device runs Windows, the latest intel processor and allow options like GPS, 4G, barcode and Max-drive," Rance Poehler, President of Panasonic System Company of North America, says.
Panasonic is also moving ahead with its TV technology, although it is no longer producing plasma displays. It introduced the Firefox OS, which let viewers watch Internet video and interact with friends online on the big screen.
"Imagine going beyond the smart TV, well you don’t have to imagine anymore. Introducing the latest home innovation from Panasonic, the Life plus Screen," Julie Bauer, President of Panasonic Consumer Electronics Co., says.
The annual electronics event counts 3,200 exhibitors, and will last to January 10th.
Source: CCTV

Japan offers to lend US half the cost of 'Super Maglev' train between Washington and Baltimore

The Japanese government has promised to lend the United States half of the cost of building the first "Super-Maglev" train, reducing travel time between Baltimore and Washington DC to just 15 minutes.
Tokyo is so keen to show off its technology that it will provide loans for half the estimated $8 billion cost of installing the tracks, Japan's Asahi newspaper said on Tuesday.Masahiro Nakayama, a general manager at Central Japan Railway Co, told The Daily Telegraph that the American federal government was keen, and that the state authorities were especially enthusiastic about the project.
"The national government has shown interest," he said. "But a number of the states in the north-east corridor - such as Maryland - are particularly keen for faster rail links and more advanced technology."
The 37-mile journey between Washington DC and Baltimore presently takes one hour by conventional rail link, and the Japanese government and Central Japan Railway Co. hope to use the project to showcase what it believes will be the transportation technology of the future.

Eventually, a 453-mile track linking the US capital with Boston will be constructed.

Source: telegraph.co.uk

China to set up 3 or 5 private banks

China will set up three to five fully private banks in a pilot program this year, in a bid to further open up the financial industry to domestic and foreign capital. This is according to the country's top banking regulator the China Banking and Regulatory Commission.
The private capital will either aim at restructuring the current banking institutions, or setting up new ones. Regulation will be strict and only a limited number of licenses will be issued.
Experts say the private banks may be restricted to basic practices such as deposits, loans, and wealth management, but may not include riskier operations.
Source: CCTV

Why are China and Japan accusing each other of being Voldemort?

Tension between the Asian powerhouses grew in 2013. Now, Chinese and Japanese diplomats are comparing each other's country to the Harry Potter villain.

In an ill-tempered exchange between the Chinese and Japanese ambassadors to London, both invoked another British institution - Harry Potter - to embellish attacks on the other country's contribution to tensions in the Asia-Pacific, not least over ownership of a small cluster of islands in the East China Sea.
For China's envoy, Lui Xiaoming, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's year-end visit to Yasukuni Shrine - where Japan's war dead are honored - was evidence that dark forces were at play at the heart of the administration in Tokyo.
"In the Harry Potter story, the dark wizard Voldemort dies hard because the seven horcruxes, which contain parts of his soul, have been destroyed," he wrote. "If militarism is like the haunting Voldemort of Japan, the Yasukuni Shrine in Tokyo is a kind of horcrux, representing the darkest parts of that nation's soul."
Mr. Liu went on to accuse Abe of putting Japan back on the path of prewar-style militarism, citing his plans to raise military spending, his eagerness to reform the postwar pacifist Constitution, and his apparent lack of remorse for his country's wartime conduct.
It took Japan just a few days to respond in kind, again in the pages of the Daily Telegraph. "East Asia is now at a crossroads," Japan's envoy to London, Keiichi Hayashi, wrote. "There are two paths open to China. One is to seek dialogue, and abide by the rule of law. The other is to play the role of Voldemort in the region by letting loose the evil of an arms race and escalation of tensions, although Japan will not escalate the situation from its side."
Source: NewsOnJapan

Japan whalers driven from hunting ground, says Sea Shepherd

Anti-whaling activists Sea Shepherd on Tuesday said Japan's fleet had been separated and driven out of its Antarctic hunting ground, declaring an early success in its campaign to disrupt the annual hunt.
The militant group said the five-vessel fleet was "in disarray" and currently not hunting whales, with the harpoon ships separated from each other by hundreds of miles and the factory ship Nisshin Maru well outside its kill zone."The Nisshin Maru is on the run and unable to stop and whale in its self-designated whale-poaching grounds," Sea Shepherd said in a statement.
Sea Shepherd has three ships on the high seas to disrupt the harpooners and on Monday said it had located all five Japanese vessels, releasing photo evidence that four whales had been killed.
Since then the Japanese fleet has split up and their operations cut short, the activist group said.

Source: Bangkok Post

Bernanke's tenure winds down

Ben Bernanke's tenure as the Chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve is starting to wind down. He presided over the 2008 financial crisis and its aftermath and is holding what's expected to be his final official press conference.
Ben Bernanke will be remembered as the man who steered the U.S. economy out of the worst crisis since the Great Depression, a crisis he studied carefully as a professor of economic history. But like most economic luminaries of his generation, Bernanke stands accused of missing the warning signs.
"They should have acted more quickly, in retrospect, to head off this build up of this bubble economy that became so evident, particularly in the housing market in 2007. So they were slow. But once the crisis hit, I think he will get very good grades for moving aggressively and quickly and with the maximum tools available," Barry Bosworth, Senior Fellow at Brookings Institution, says.
When the crisis hit, Bernanke was one of the key architects of the bailouts of failing financial institutions. Earlier this week, he joined his predecessors to mark the 100th anniversary of the Federal Reserve, looking back at his crisis.
"Federal Reserve's extraordinary response to the financial crisis and the 'Great Recession' was in some ways nothing new. We did what central banks have done for many years in what they were created to do. We served as the source of liquidity and stability in the financial markets and the the broader economy and we worked to foster economic recovery and price stability," Bernanke says.
Under Ben Bernanke the Federal Open Market Committee slashed the U.S. benchmark interest rate to almost zero and then adopted an economic stimulus strategy previously rejected by the Japanese as ineffective, the purchase of trillions of dollars of government bonds and mortgage backed securities in an effort to further pull down the cost of borrowing and boost employment.
The final verdicts on that experiment haven't yet been handed down, and may not for years to come, because critics say there will be long term, unintended consequences for the world's over-reliance on cheap dollars.
As the Fed begins the process of unwinding its almost four trillion dollar balance sheet under his anticipated successor Janet Yellen in the coming months, those verdicts are likely to start coming in.
Source: CCTV

CCTV Backgrounder: New U.S. Fed head's policy, academic record

Still the Fed's vice chair until February, Janet Yellen is seen as a dove in US monetary policy, with an extensive policymaking experience.
Before her appointment as Fed vice chair in 2010, Yellen was actively involved in U.S. monetary policymaking as the president of the San Francisco Federal Reserve Bank, from 2004 to 2010. She also served as governor on the Fed's board from 1994 to 1997.
In addition, she chaired President Bill Clinton's Council of Economic Advisers from 1997 to 1999. An economist with a PhD from Yale, she has taught economics at the University of California, Berkeley, Harvard University and the London School of Economics. She is married to Nobel Prize-winning economist George Akerlof.
Source:  CCTV

China issues rules on trust firms, shadow-banking

China's banking watchdog and other seven government agencies are launching a program tackling fake trust companies.
Regulators are saying these fake trust companies absorb deposits and funding without providing trust services.
Meanwhile, China's State Council is said to issue new rules to strengthen regulation of the shadow-bank lending that has helped fuel an explosion in debt levels since 2008.
The wide-ranging new rules contain new restrictions on banks' cooperation with trust companies, securities brokerages and other intermediaries. The rules also address internet finance, micro-lending, and informal lending by friends and family members.

Overseas returnees flock to Shanghai

Shanghai remains the most sought after destination for Chinese returning from overseas with many of them venturing into businesses in the city that is viewed as offering better opportunities for entrepreneurs.
Statistics from the Shanghai Association of Enterprises of Overseas Talents show that as of June last year some 4,500 companies have been established in the city by Chinese returnees, far more than any other Chinese cite.
"About 100,000 students studying abroad who have returned to China have chosen Shanghai to work or start their own business. Most of them are hi-tech related enterprises. The local government has set up many preferential policies for the returnees," Li Xinxin, General Secretary of Shanghai Association of Enterprises of Overseas Talents, says.
The city's latest attempt to attract more returning talent includes potentially setting up a free-trade zone that will give them yet another reason to set up a business in Shanghai.
Source: CCTV

The Two Latin Americas by David Luhnow WSJ. January 3rd 2014


"There are two Latin Americas right now. The first is a bloc of countries—including Brazil, Argentina and Venezuela—that faces the Atlantic Ocean, mistrusts globalization and gives the state a large role in the economy. The second—made up of countries that face the Pacific such as Mexico, Peru, Chile and Colombia—embraces free trade and free markets.
For almost a decade, the economies of the Atlantic countries have grown more quickly, largely thanks to rising global commodity prices. But the years ahead look far better for the Pacific countries. The region as a whole thus faces a decision about (as it were) which way to face: to the Atlantic or the Pacific?"
"There is good reason to think the Pacific-facing countries have the edge. Much of the continent is "paying the costs of exaggerated protectionism and…irresponsible policy," said Alan Garcia, Peru's former president, at a recent conference in Mexico City".
"In 2014, the Pacific Alliance trade bloc (consisting of Mexico, Colombia, Peru and Chile) is slated to grow an average of 4.25%, boosted by high levels of foreign investment and low inflation, according to estimates from Morgan StanleyBut the Atlantic group of Venezuela, Brazil and Argentina—all linked in the Mercosur customs union—is projected to grow just 2.5%, with the region's heavyweight, Brazil, slated to grow a meager 1.9%".
 "When China's economic growth was at its peak, the rising giant snapped up Venezuelan oil, Argentine soy, Chilean copper and Brazilian iron ore. But as China's economy has slowed, commodity prices have followed suit, hitting the Atlantic economies hardest. Brazilian Finance Minister Guido Mantega used to boast that his country's model of economic development would soon spread throughout the world. But Brazil—with its high taxes, red tape and tariffs—did little to prepare for the day when commodity prices might weaken".
 "The free-trading side of Latin America is better poised to prosper, with higher productivity gains and open economies more likely to attract investment. The Pacific countries, even those like Chile that still rely on commodities such as copper, have also done more to strengthen exports of all kinds. In Mexico, manufactured exports now account for nearly a quarter of annual economic output. (The figure for Brazil: a paltry 4%.) The Pacific economies are more stable too. Countries such as Mexico and Chile enjoy low inflation and bulging foreign reserves.
On the Atlantic side Venezuela and Argentina are doing worse with high inflation,and weak government finances.In Venezuela, inflation is running above 50%. President Nicolás Maduro, the successor to the late populist Hugo Chávez, is doubling down on price controls to try to tame inflation. The fairly predictable result: widespread shortages of everything from new cars to toilet paper.
Argentina has also suffered from heavy-handed regulation. In Buenos Aires, the southern hemisphere's summer months have brought soaring temperatures—and regular blackouts. The government slapped price controls on energy prices back in 2002, hoping to help the poor overcome the 2001 financial collapse. But what was supposed to be a temporary measure became permanent. Electricity companies scared off by the price controls stopped investing in the city's aging electricity grid.
Even Brazil, which has had far more responsible economic management than Venezuela or Argentina, is starting to struggle with rising prices and a boom in credit that is starting to turn. 
While the Atlantic bloc often views the U.S. with suspicion or outright hostility, the Pacific countries tend to have closer ties to Washington. "We set out to create the Pacific Alliance because we wanted to set ourselves apart from the populists," said Pedro Pablo Kuczynski, a former Peruvian finance minister. "We wanted a thinking man's axis."
Many of the region's young, the bulk of the population, have cast ballots for politicians such as Mr. Chavez, who offered painless growth by printing money. These youthful voters may have painful lessons ahead of them".
"In the end, the results from the different blocs will resolve the debates," Mr. Kuczynski said, "but bad ideas take a long time to die."

J.P. Morgan to Pay $2.6 Billion in Madoff Fraud Settlements

  According to a report from the Wall Street Journal,"the various deals announced Tuesday include a deferred-prosecution agreement with Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara and a total of $2.24 billion in compensation for victims of Mr. Madoff's fraud. Of that amount, $1.7 billion will be forfeited through the Justice Department and another $543 million will go separately to a court-appointed bankruptcy trustee collecting funds for Madoff victims and other plaintiffs.
Mr. Bharara said at a press conference that J.P. Morgan "failed miserably" as an institution concerning Madoff and that the bank repeatedly ignored warnings about him despite "plenty of reasons to be uniquely suspicious."
The deferred-prosecution agreement means criminal charges against the bank for violations of the Bank Secrecy Act will be lifted in two years pending the payments and reforms of J.P. Morgan's anti-money-laundering policies. The Justice Department, however, said it can't "make any promises" about the prosecution of J.P. Morgan for criminal tax violations.
A J.P. Morgan spokesman said, "we recognize we could have done a better job pulling together various pieces of information and concerns about Madoff from different parts of the bank over time" but "we do not believe that any J.P. Morgan Chase employee knowingly assisted Madoff's Ponzi scheme." He said the bank is "making significant efforts" to improve its practices, and "we believe the lessons we have learned will make us a stronger company."
The $1.7 billion payment to the Justice Department is the largest U.S. penalty ever for a violation of the Bank Secrecy Act, according to the government. The 1970 law requires banks to maintain an effective anti-money-laundering program and file a suspicious-activity report, or SAR, when they "detect certain known or suspected violations of federal law or suspicious transactions."

Stocks Notch Broad Gains U.S. Trade Deficit Narrows; Europe Markets Advance

Stocks held strong gains, leaving the S&P 500-stock index on track to finish with its first advance of the new year.
The S&P 500 added 11 points, or 0.6%, to 1838, with health-care and technology shares leading gains in nine of 10 sector groups. The Nasdaq Composite Index gained 37 points, or 0.9%, to 4151.
"Volumes are still on the light side for the start of the year," said Stephen Carl, head of U.S. equity trading at Williams Capital Group in New York. "It's still early in the week and early in the year, and it seems a lot of traders are waiting for the first round of big economic numbers," he said.
In economic news, the trade deficit for November narrowed to $34.25 billion on the month from a revised $39.33 billion in October, versus expectations of $40 billion, as exports increased to record levels and imports declined. November's deficit was the smallest since October 2009.
"Stocks were lower in the first few days of the year as investors took some profits," said Joseph Tanious, global market strategist at J.P. Morgan Asset Management, which oversees $1.5 trillion in assets. "For tax purposes, some investors waited until the new year, but the economic backdrop remains favorable for stocks," Mr. Tanious said. He sees industrial, consumer-discretionary and financial stocks leading the market higher this year.
The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 2.941% from 2.962% late Monday, as prices rose.
Investors are still looking ahead to a reading on private-sector jobs growth and the minutes to the Federal Reserve's December policy meeting due out on Wednesday, and the government's monthly employment report due Friday.
If economic growth comes better than expected it should drive revenue and profit growth,and also a continuing rally on stocks.
Source: WSJ

Ctrip Reportedly Invests Over $100 Million in Overseas Travel Platform ToursForFun

Chinese online travel giant Ctrip reportedly invested more than $100 million in overseas tourism service ToursForFun . According to official website of ToursForFun, the company will become part of Ctrip’s North American branch, which was set up in last November.
Founded in 2006, ToursForFun is a thriving online travel supplier dedicated to providing online purchasing experience for all travel needs. It is focused on overseas tours and vacation packages in North America, Europe, Asia, Australia & New Zealand, and South & Central America.
Ctrip launched acquisition spree last year, especially after the company raised 800 million yuan ($132.18 million) last November by issuing convertible bond. Here is a list of Ctrip’s investment and acquisition cases in 2013:
  • April: Invested in online travel searching engine Kuxun (amount not disclosed);
  • May:Invested in hotelapp EconomyHotelManager (amount not disclosed);
  • October: Invested undisclosed amount of capital in Chanyouji, a well-designed trip story sharing platform that supports videos and has features such as check-ins and bookkeeping;
  • December: Led a $60millionround  in car rental service Yongche together with DCM;
  • December: Led a $100million funding round in Chinese car rental company eHi AutoServices for a 20% stake;
  • December: Invested in ToursForFun.
The number of China’s outbound travelers is expected to surge 13% year-on-year to 110 million in 2014, according to data released by 2014 National Conference of Tourism Industry. The overseas travelling revenue is expected to climb 3% year-on-year to $49.2 billion ).
In addition to acquiring companies that have established presence in foreign markets like ToursForFun, Ctrip’s newly launchedonlineticketplatform included tourist attractions in over 30 countries or regions outside China. Moreover, the company also launched an overseas private tour platform with international car rental companies  in a bid to tap overseas tourism market.

Source: TechNode

Sina and Alipay Launches Weibo Payment, to Fight against WeChat Payment

"Sina launched a payment solution, Weibo Payment, together with Alipay today. It is already available with the 4.2 version of Sina Weibo app released yesterday. Fan Zhiming , head of Alifinance for Domestic Market, made it clear that Weibo Payment is aimed at WeChat Payment when it comes to the convenience of making payments online or offline, and social shopping. He asked the audience to “forget about WeChat Payment” at the press conference today, saying Weibo Payment will perform better. 
From now on all the items from Alibaba’s Taobao and Tmall shared or shown as ads on Sina Weibo will have a “buy” button that will lead users to make payments directly with Alipay.
Not only can the Weibo Payment be used for buying items online, it also supports payments at offline businesses who have Alipay accounts to receive money. Payments at offline merchants will be through QRcode. QRcodes will be made available for payments with both Weibo app and Alipay Wallet app. 
Ubox, a Chinese vending machine provider, has added Sina Weibo-Alipay payment. The solution will first be available at restaurants and be introduced to businesses of other categories later, according to Sina. 
Sina pointed out earlier that their payment and future financial services would be targeted at mobile. 76.5% Weibo users log in Weibo through mobile devices, according to a Sina Weibo report. 88% of Weibo users ever made payments through mobile devices as of 2013. 78.3% of the mobile payment users use Alipay.
Alibaba, the parent company of Alipay, made a strategic investment in Sina Weibo last year, with not only cash but also a promise of bringing in no less than $380 million worth of advertising revenue for Sina Weibo through displaying Taobao/Tmall items in the next three years.
Shortly after that user accounts on either platform can use the services on the other after a setup. 48% daily active Weibo users have integrated their Alibaba accounts.Then the two launched a Weibo for retailers on Alibaba’s marketplace that they can share items directly to Sina Weibo from Taobao retailer system — now Weibo users can buy their items directly at a Weibo message. Hundreds of thousands retailers have been on board.
  Alipay Wallet will launch a major update, version 8.0, on 10th this month. It has been working hard in order to be the first choice for users to make payments in the offline world. As of last month, 20,000 cabs accepted Alipay and 50,000 users used it to pay for taxi fares. As Chinese New Year is coming and buying train tickets is a pain to so many Chinese, the app reached partnership with 12306.cn, the state-owned online train ticket seller". 

Source: TechNode

QingCloud announced today completion of $20 million funding

Chinese Cloud service provider QingCloud  today announced completion of $20 million funding in Series B. The round is led by Lightspeed China Partners and joined by Matrix Partners China and existing investor BlueRun Ventures.
Launched in July 2013, the young service has had 5000 customers. The startup behind QingCloud was founded two years ago.
The funding will be used for launching nodes in South China in March and more in other areas of China, Asia-Pacific and North America, according to Richard Huang, CEO of the company.

Source: TechNode

Los mercados emergentes (algunos) serán(son) una oportunidad. (Continuará)

En los próximos seis meses habrá probablemente una serie de mercados emergentes entrando de lleno en la confusión. A medida que la Reserva Federal empiece a reducir -la flexibilización cuantitativa-, y a medida que crezcan las rentabilidades en el mundo desarrollado, el dinero que ha estado inundando nuevos mercados en busca de mejores rendimientos empezará a dirigirse a casa de nuevo. Desde Turquía hasta Sudáfrica, Rusia e India, podemos esperar ver una serie de mercados sumergidos en pánicos financieros.
Y sin embargo, hay que tener en cuenta que esto es sólo ruido a corto plazo. Un país como Turquía tiene una excelente demografía, bajo endeudamiento, una base industrial en expansión, y está situado en la unión de dos grandes bloques comerciales. Lo mismo puede decirse de la mayoría de mercados emergentes. Habrá una oleada de ventas y cada una de ellas será una oportunidad de comprar activos a precio de ganga.

Desde luego que Turquía no carece de problemas ahora mismo. La última crisis comenzó el 17 de diciembre, cuando el gobierno arrestó a los hijos de tres ministros del gabinete acusados de corrupción, junto con algunos importantes empresarios. Eso provocó revueltas en las calles contra el Gobierno del primer ministro Recap Erdogan. Ha habido rumores de golpe militar y el conflicto ha sido ampliamente interpretado como parte de una batalla más grande entre el régimen modernizador, pero cada vez más autoritario, de Erdogan y los activistas musulmanes. Difícilmente podría enfrentarse a un contexto peor, con la economía ralentizándose y una guerra civil desarrollándose en la vecina Siria, a la que el país puede acabar viéndose arrastrada. Turquía ya había sido sacudida el pasado verano por protestas políticas.

Fuente: elEconomista.es

CCTV: New U.S. Fed chair faces magnitude of tapering

U.S. lawmakers gave their nod to a new Federal Reserve chair, making Janet Yellen the first woman to lead the central bank in its 100-year history. While Yellen enjoys widespread support across the political and financial spectrum, the headwinds she's facing are freezing.
It is official now. Janet Yellen is set to head the U.S. Federal Reserve, the most powerful central bank in the world, starting from next month. "The yays are 56. The nays are 26. The nomination is confirmed."
Arctic weather has delayed many flights across the U.S., leading to a significant number of absentees. Yet the lopsided margin shows how much hope and trust lawmakers have put on her, and so is the challenge to wind down the Fed’s huge balance sheet, which has been bloated to four trillion US dollars.
"She is managing the landing that we are going to have and trying to make that as smooth as possible. I can't think of another Fed Chair that has faced challenges that are as important and as big as she is facing right now," Mark Thoma, Professor of Economics at University of Oregon, says.
The outgoing Fed chairman Ben Bernanke has pumped massive liquidity into the market, most notably the 85 billion US dollar monthly bond purchase, which critics say, have inflated home prices and created investment bubbles.
"My concerns about the Fed's easy money policies and inflation led me to vote against Chairman Bernanke for his second term at the Fed. Because it appears that Miss Yellen will continue to pursue these misguided policies, I cannot in good conscience vote in favour of her confirmation," U.S. Senator Charles Grassley says.
The U.S. economy seems on a recovery track. The most recent jobless rate fell to 7 percent and the annualized economic growth revved up to 4 percent in the fourth quarter of 2013. Yellen admitted in her nomination hearing last month that the easy money policy will not stay forever and the question remains: how fast and how much will the central bank hit the brake pedal?
"She'll be judged in the future quite a bit by how she manages the exit from QE and also how well she manages once they start increasing the Federal Funds rate how well that goes, how fast they do it," Thoma says.
At least for now, she is free of scrutiny. Yellen will preside over her first Fed meeting on March 18 and 19, with global markets eagerly awaiting her first monetary policy steps as new Fed chair.

China: Plans underway for new child policy

For more, let’s bring in our reporter Zhang Nini. Nini, we know that China’s reform of its family planning policy has drawn wide attention. What’s latest from the press conference?
A1: Well, Reform is a key word for healthcare system last year, and the biggest highlight is a major shift from the decades-long family planning policy. China is to allow couples to have two children if either parent is an only child. The easing of the policy is expected to benefit 15 million to 20 million couples. Mao Qunan said there’s no uniform timetable for implementation nationwide. It should rather be based on the local population and social economic development. Each province will also need to report its adjustment to the Commission and get approval by the local People’s Congress for the policy to take effect. Preparation is now well underway. The health authorities are listing the policy change as a major priority in 2014. Maternal and child health facilities will also be improved to cope with what could be a baby boom.
Source:  CCTV

Southeast Asia Currency and Bond Markets Fall on Political Worries

  According to a report from the Wall Street Journal, "a selloff across Southeast Asia's markets has accelerated in the new year with currencies falling sharply and bond yields jumping as a cocktail of rising political protests, worries over upcoming elections and shaky growth prospects scares investors away".
Indonesia was in the spotlight Tuesday with the government scheduled to sell 10-year dollar debt at a yield of about 6.2%, almost double the levels when it issued similar bonds last April, according to term sheets seen by The Wall Street Journal. Elsewhere, the Philippine and Thai currencies have fallen to their lowest levels in about three years, Indonesia's rupiah is at its lowest since levels seen in 2008, while stocks in the region are down as well.
The declines started over six months ago, when fund managers retreated from emerging markets after the U.S. signaled it would scale back its bond-buying program. But the selloff has barely paused for breath despite efforts by governments and central banks to put in place measures to lure money back, and even some signs of improving trade finances.
Now investors are grappling with two months of street protests in Bangkok and rising discontent in Cambodia and Bangladesh. Upcoming elections this year in Indonesia and Thailand may delay policy-making and will be another deterrent to rekindling interest in those markets, investors and analysts say. Political troubles are already threatening to derail an infrastructure program in Thailand worth two trillion baht ($60.4 billion).
"I can't see compelling reasons to jump into Southeast Asia right now," said Sam Le Cornu, senior portfolio manager at Macquarie, who oversees assets under management of $1 billion. "Negative sentiment has really caused many of these Southeast Asian markets to be sold off."

Ex-Im Bank Continues to Support U.S. Jobs by Financing U.S. Exports

U.S. Exports Reach a Record $195 Billion in November

Ex-Im Bank Continues to Support U.S. Jobs by Financing U.S. Exports
Washington, D.C. – The United States exported a record $194.9 billion in goods and services in November 2013, according to data released today by the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) of the U.S. Commerce Department.
“Once again, American entrepreneurs are proving why exports are so critical to our economic growth.”said Export-Import Bank Chairman and President Fred P. Hochberg. “Today’s numbers showcase the importance of exports to the U.S. economy and how Ex-Im Bank plays a critical role in supporting American businesses overseas. We provide critical financing to increase sales and create jobs.”

November’s figure is considerably larger than the previous high recorded in October, which was revised upward this month to $193.1 billion.

Exports of goods and services over the last 12 months totaled $2.3 trillion, which is 43.7 percent above the level of exports in 2009. Over the last twelve months, exports have been growing at an annualized rate of 9.7 percent when compared to 2009.
During the same time period among the major export markets (i.e., markets with at least $6 billion in annual imports of U.S. goods), the countries with the largest annualized increase in U.S. goods purchases, when compared to 2009, were Panama (27.3 percent), Russia (21.3 percent), Hong Kong (20.1 percent), United Arab Emirates (20.0 percent), Peru (19.9 percent), Chile (18.7 percent), Colombia (18.6 percent), Argentina (16.7 percent), Ecuador (16.6 percent), and Indonesia (15.4 percent).

WSJ: Diverging Global Fortunes Reveal Differences at Country Level

      According to a report from the Wall Street Journal, "Data out today show real divergences in fortunes between countries and regions. Although Europe is experiencing disinflation, there’s strong growth in the U.K.’s consumer demand, and even in Germany. And whereas places like Turkey are in real trouble, Australia is showing signs of emerging from a yearlong slump.
"The question is whether those regions of the world that are in an upswing–especially the U.S.–have enough momentum and are generating enough outside influence to drag the laggards along with them, whether the slowpokes end up holding back the faster ones, or whether we continue to muddle along with a mix of pluses and minuses around the world. It’s probably most likely the latter, with the general shift for 2014 being that singular, monolithic trends in the global economy will be less discernible than in recent years. Each economy’s fortunes will be determined more by its own internal circumstances than those of the global forces".
GERMANY:
–November retail sales rose 1.5% from October against an expected 0.6% monthly rise and following a 0.9% drop in October.
–The December seasonally adjusted unemployment rate was 6.9%, in line with expectations and unchanged from November. December seasonally adjusted jobless claims fell 15,000 and following a rise of 9,000 in November.
After some surprisingly and worryingly weak numbers, German data is looking a bit better. Unemployment claims dropped significantly against expectations of no change, while the overall unemployment rate remained stable. Meanwhile, retail sales showed a big turnaround from two months of declines. Inflation-adjusted sales were up 1.6% on November 2012 while sales on the year to November rose 0.3% from same period a year earlier, boding well for hopes that German domestic demand could finally be picking up. The caveat is that the data are subject to significant revisions and only represent a quarter of private consumption.
U.K.:December new-car sales were up 24% on the year while 2013 new car sales rose 11% from 2012.
Another data point showing the boom in British consumption. Car sales have been very strong, boosted by generous financing schemes and underpinned by low rates. Unfortunately, this sort of growth is exactly the sort that predominated before the financial crisis–debt-driven consumption leading to large current-account deficits.
The worry in the Euro Zone is the drop in inflation.
The November producer price index was down 0.1% on the month and down 0.3% on the year against expectations of down 0.1% and down 1.2%, respectively. The PPI was down 0.5% on the month and down 1.4% on the year in October.
–The December CPIwasup0.8%on the year, below expectations of +0.9% and down from +0.9% in November.
Inflation is running worryingly below the European Central Bank’s not-quite-2% target. The drop in year-on-year CPI will make the ECB’s policymakers squirm about looming deflation, not least because core inflation was just 0.7%. But they might take some relief in the fact that pipeline deflationary pressures in the form of PPI are moderating. They could well look through the current dip in price pressures and point to more positive recent data flows, not least recent manufacturing purchasing managers’ surveys and today’s German numbers. And the fact that the ECB’s own forecasts are for inflation to stay well below target through 2014 means it has set a high bar for forcing action, suggesting it would rather tolerate disinflation at these levels than be forced into some extraordinary stimulus measures such as setting deposit rates in negative territory.
TURKEY: As concerns run high over a crippling political and financial crisis, the Turkish lira is softening again but is still shy of the record lows from it which it bounced on Monday afternoon. This comes as the Turkish government fired 350 police in Ankara as part of a corruption scandal. 
AUSTRALIA: Business confidence is rising, according to a survey by Dun & Bradstreet, with more than two thirds of companies growing more optimistic about the economy in 2014, while expectations for sales, employment, selling prices, capital investment and profits have all turned up.
The growing confidence is a sign that the impact of cheap credit is final being felt, months after the Reserve Bank of Australia cut interest rates to a record low of 2.5% last August. Much will depend on China: If the world’s second-largest economy wobbles, Australia’s will too. But for the moment, China retains a healthy appetite for Australian iron ore and coal. Data out Tuesday showed that in the year to November, Australia’s exports to China hit a record A$92 billion, and its trade surplus with China reached a record A$45.6 billion. China absorbed 35.6% of Australia’s exports and accounted for 27.8% of Australia’s total two-way trade, also record highs. 

PBOC Shows Strongest Hand on China's Shadow Banks

   According to a report from the Wall Street Journal, "China's move to step up regulation of its shadow-banking system highlights the weakness of its financial regulators.
The inability of China's securities and banking watchdogs to limit the growth of lending outside traditional banks contrasts with the country's central bank, which has emerged as the main bulwark against shadow banking".
The central bank, known to be relatively reform-minded, sought to control lending by engineering three financial squeezes—in June, October and December—that sent banks scrambling for cash and drove up short-term interest rates in the interbank lending market.
The squeezes were direct efforts to limit the lending boom because the banks and shadow banks that have been the most aggressive lenders generally depend on short-term borrowing to fund their loans. The problem was that by engineering a cash crunch—a relatively blunt instrument but one of the few available to it—the People's Bank of China raised fears about the stability of the Chinese financial system.
The results of the squeezes have been higher interest rates, which can potentially slow the economy, and selloffs in the stock market. In June, concerns about the cash squeeze rippled through global markets.
China's cabinet last month distributed rules to regulators that call for stronger oversight of informal lending by the central bank and other regulators. The plan isn't a crackdown on shadow banking, which suggests the leadership wants to preserve a key source of credit for the economy. But it addresses the risks that have been compared to the U.S. subprime credit boom that preceded the housing bust and financial crisis.
The document, which was reviewed by The Wall Street Journal, appears to address the split between the central bank and the separate regulatory agencies for the banking, securities and insurance sectors when it comes to policing shadow-banking activities. China's central bank and other top financial regulators didn't respond to requests for comment on the new rules or on the regulators' efforts to rein in shadow banking.

U.S. Trade Gap Narrows to $34.25 Billion in November

U.S. exports continued to climb in November, more evidence that stronger growth abroad could boost the American economy.
U.S. exports rose by 0.9% to a seasonally adjusted $194.86 billion in November from a month earlier, the Commerce Department said Tuesday, the highest level on record. Imports fell by 1.4% to $229.11 billion.
The trade gap narrowed to $34.25 billion from $39.33 billion in the prior month. November's deficit was the smallest since October 2009.
Economists surveyed by Dow Jones had forecast a trade deficit of $40.0 billion in November.
The global economy has shown signs of stabilizing in recent months, a potential boost for the U.S. heading into the new year. Weakness in Europe, Japan and some emerging markets had held back U.S. exporters during much of the recovery.
Source: The Wall Street Journal

Ireland sees strong demand for first debt aucion since bailout exit

Ireland appeared to be experiencing enormous demand for its first debt auction since exiting its bailout in December, according to various media reports on Tuesday.

Financial Times reported that the order book had already surpassed €13bn even though the Irish Treasury had originally planned to issue just €3bn-€3.5bn.

In a separate report, Reuters said that the sale of the 10-year bonds could be priced later on Tuesday at mid-swaps plus 140 basis points. According to the agency, this would place the yield at current market prices just below 3.5%.

Banks are now the best performing group out on the DJ Stoxx 600 rising by 1.97%.

Shares of Lloyd´s are pacing gains on the Footsie, with a 2.5% advance.

Source: LiveCharts

Eurozone inflation sleeps further below ECB target

Eurozone inflation slipped further below the European Central Bank's (ECB) target, according to preliminary data for December published by Eurostat on Tuesday.

Specifically, the consumer price index (CPI) for the region registered an increase of 0.8%, decreasing slightly from November's 0.9% rise (consensus: 0.9%). 

The ECB, that is not expected to make changes to its monetary policy on Thursday, holds 2% as its target rate for inflation. 

The core inflation rate, as per the ECB´s definition [which excludes food, energy, alcohol and tobacco prices] slowed down to a 0.7% year-on-year pace, comfortably below the 0.9% expected by economists and the previous month´s 1.0% clip. 

Commenting on today´s numbers economists at Capital Economics had this to say: "[...] the latest prices data support the view that CPI inflation is likely to remain significantly below the ECB's 2% price stability ceiling for rather longer than the central bank expects. While the ECB may refrain from providing additional policy support on Thursday, we expect further action in the months ahead."

In a separate report out on Tuesday Eurostat revealed that producer prices in the single currency area dropped by 1.2% over the year in November, versus the 1.3% fall seen in October. Excluding construction and energy prices were off by 0.3% over that same time period, just as in October. 

In quarter three of 2013 euro area gross domestic product (GDP) contracted at a 0.4% pace year-on-year pace, although it did manage to grow by a tenth of a percentage point in terms of quarterly rates of change, thus expanding for a second consecutive quarter. 

Source: LiveCharts

German Unemployment unexpectedly drops

Unemployment in Germany dropped for the first time in five months in December, according to data published by the German Federal Employment Agency on Tuesday. 

Seasonally-adjusted unemployment registered a drop of 15,000 after the revised increase of 9,000 in November. The consensus of analysts had expected no change in the number. 

Despite the downturn in unemployment in the Eurozone's largest economy, the adjusted jobless rate remained steady at 6.9%. 

Earlier on Tuesday, Germany's national statistics office Destatis reported another sign of recovery as the country's November retail sales rose 1.5% month-on-month, beating analyst estimates for a 0.5% increase.

Source:  LiveCharts

German retail sales beat consensus

German retail sales registered a stronger-than-expected rebound in November, according to data published on Tuesday by the Germany's national statistics office Destatis. 

Provisional data showed that November retail sales rose 1.6% year-on-year after a revised 0.1% annual drop in October.

Month-on-month, the data showed a 1.5% rise compared to the prior 0.8% fall and consensus expectations for a 0.5% increase.

Source: LiveCharts

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