Friday, 30 May 2014

WSJ:Safra de soja argentina alivia governo, mas não os produtores

"Agricultores em toda a Argentina vêm batalhando contra o governo populista da presidente Cristina Kirchner há anos.
Agora, a safra recorde de soja produzida por eles está ajudando a sustentar seu oponente, gerando reservas internacionais essenciais para que o governo de Kirchner evite outra crise cambial. O Banco Central do país informou esta semana que a safra contribuiria para manter o atual nível de reservas de US$ 28 bilhões até o fim do ano.
Os agricultores veem a situação com ironia. "Um em cada três caminhões carregados vai direto para o governo", diz Carlos Bunge, agricultor e descendente da família que fundou uma das maiores empresas de comércio de grãos do mundo 130 anos atrás. "Você se sente como se estivesse alimentando um monstro."
Com a colheita em pleno andamento até julho, os embarques de soja já geraram mais de US$ 8 bilhões e devem atingir um recorde de US$ 29 bilhões, segundo informações oficiais e projeções de analistas. A soja, o grão mais lucrativo da Argentina, é responsável por quase um terço da receita com exportação do país.
Para a Argentina, o dinheiro não poderia vir em melhor hora, já que o país enfrenta uma desaceleração, uma inflação que é a segunda maior da América Latina, só atrás da Venezuela, e uma escassez aguda de reservas estrangeiras, com pouco acesso aos mercados financeiros internacionais desde a moratória de 2001.
O governo de Kirchner tem pressionado os agricultores a vender rapidamente a safra — contra a vontade deles — para ajudar o país a evitar uma repetição da prejudicial desvalorização do peso em janeiro. Recentemente, o chefe de gabinete Jorge Capitanich convocou os principais exportadores de grãos à Casa Rosada para reforçar o pedido".
"Há boas perspectivas para este trimestre, com preços muito bons", disse Capitanich a repórteres depois da reunião. "Isso significa entrada de recursos e novos empregos."
Mas os produtores — que dizem sofrer com impostos e regulação excessiva — estão resistindo. Eles estão vendendo parte da safra para pagar dívidas depois que o governo acabou com os empréstimos subsidiados para os agricultores este ano. Os produtores dizem que querem reter o restante da produção como uma forma de se proteger contra a inflação e contra o enfraquecimento do peso, além de lucrar com os maiores preços da entressafra.
"Grão é como dinheiro embaixo do colchão", diz o agricultor Francisco Santillan, que administra 2.266 hectares na zona rural de Pergamino. "Nós não usamos bancos. Usamos silos."
Pergamino, a cerca de 240 quilômetros de Buenos Aires, é uma cidade pacata e conservadora com 100.000 habitantes, rodeada por enormes e prósperas fazendas do rico cinturão agrícola argentino. Mas a calma aparente esconde um temperamento rebelde que remonta ao século XVII, quando Pergamino costumava ser uma parada de uma rota clandestina de bens contrabandeados para burlar as restrições comerciais da Espanha.
Em 2008, quando o predecessor de Cristina, seu marido Néstor Kirchner, já falecido, tentou elevar o imposto de exportação para a soja de 35% para uma taxa flutuante que chegava a 50%, os produtores da região se revoltaram, paralisando as vendas de grãos e bovinos e bloqueando as estradas. O Congresso argentino então não aprovou o novo imposto.

Gold Prices Post Biggest Weekly Decline in Eight Months

Gold futures fell, capping the biggest weekly drop since September, after a U.S. equity rally and signs of easing tensions in Ukraine curbed demand for the precious metal as a haven. Silver dropped to an 11-month low.
U.S. durable-goods orders unexpectedly rose in April, indicating manufacturing is gaining, government data showed on May 27. Today, the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index of stocks climbed to a record. Last year, gold tumbled 28 percent on concern that the Federal Reserve would taper the pace of monetary stimulus as the economy rebounded.
Russia has pulled back most of its troops from the border with Ukraine, according to a U.S. defense official. Gold dropped below $1,250 an ounce to a 16-week low and posted the fifth straight daily decline, the longest slump since April 1.
Gold futures for August delivery fell 0.9 percent to settle at $1,246 an ounce at 1:39 p.m. on the Comex in New York. Earlier, the price touched $1,242.20, the lowest for a most-active contract since Feb. 3. This week, the metal dropped 3.6 percent, the most since Sept. 13.
On May 22, assets in global exchange-traded funds backed by gold fell to 1,715.8 metric tons, the lowest since Oct. 2, 2009, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
This month, gold futures dropped 3.9 percent, the most since December. The metal has climbed 3.6 percent in 2014.
Source: Bloomberg

Canada Dollar Declines on Slump in 1st-Quarter Growth

The Canadian dollar declined the most in more than a week after a report showed economic growth slumped in the first quarter as a harsh winter in North America slowed housing construction, business spending and exports.
The currency trimmed a fourth monthly advance against its U.S. peer as gross domestic product grew at a 1.2 percent annualized pace in January through March, compared with a downwardly revised 2.7 percent in the prior three months, Statistics Canada said in Ottawa. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg predicted growth would slow to a 1.8 percent pace. The U.S. economy contracted at a 1 percent annualized rate in the first quarter, the Commerce Department reported yesterday.
“The GDP just disappointed in Canada,” Darcy Browne, managing director of currencies at Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce’s capital markets unit, said by phone from Toronto. “There could be another camp that looks at this and says, the U.S. printed minus 1 percent and we printed significantly better than that, so maybe this isn’t a sell-Canada environment. But markets are traditionally built around expectations, and expectation wasn’t met on this number.”
The loonie, as the currency is known for the image of the waterfowl on the C$1 coin, dropped 0.1 percent to C$1.0846 per U.S. dollar at 5 p.m. in Toronto after falling as much as 0.3 percent, the most since May 21. It gained 0.1 percent this week, extending its monthly advance to 1.1 percent. It is down 2.1 percent this year.
Source: Bloomberg

Africa Rising Conference. Speech by IMF Chief Director Christine Lagarde

Good morning, bom dia.
It is my great pleasure to welcome you to this conference on Africa. I wish to thank President Guebuza and the government of Mozambique for hosting this event, and the many other partners who have made it possible.
It is indeed a great privilege to be here today, five years after the Tanzania Conference. Africa’s achievements are remarkable, and the overall outlook for the continent is optimistic. This is an exciting time for Africa. And the theme of the conference, Africa Rising, captures this excitement.
Mozambique’s Journey
In many ways, Mozambique epitomizes this positive spirit. Over the past two decades, Mozambique has posted one of the fastest growth rates in the Sub-Saharan region—an average of 7.4 percent per year.
Major steps have been taken to reduce poverty and raise life expectancy. These are the fruits of years of institution-building and sound economic management. The recent discovery of natural resources offers a unique opportunity to further build on these gains and make growth more inclusive.
An African proverb says: “If you want to go quickly, go alone. If you want to go far, go together.”
Mozambique has come far—and the journey continues; the IMF has been and will continue to be by its side. We have been working together providing both financial support and policy advice. We have also supported Mozambique’s reform agenda with stepped-up technical assistance and capacity building efforts, which continue today.
I would like to commend Mozambique—and indeed the region—on this impressive performance. Africa has taken its destiny into its own hands. Now is the time to build the future.
This conference offers a unique opportunity to reflect—together—on the lessons learned from Africa’s success and the challenges ahead. There is still much to be done. The continent is very diverse, and some countries risk being left behind, especially those faced with recurring conflict. In others, the rapid growth is yet to be widely shared across the population, with many Africans failing to see the fruits of economic success.
In that spirit, I would like to share with you three perspectives:
(i) Where we stand— taking stock of Africa’s achievements;
(ii) What near-term and longer-term challenges are emerging; and
(iii) What are the key policy priorities to address these challenges and help deliver on the promise of Africa’s future.
1. Where We Stand—Africa’s Takeoff
Let me start with where we stand. Sub-Saharan Africa is clearly taking off—growing strongly and steadily for nearly two decades and showing a remarkable resilience in the face of the global financial crisis.
Economic stability has paid off. More than two-thirds of the countries in the region have enjoyed ten or more years of uninterrupted growth.
This growth has delivered a more educated population, with significant declines in infant mortality. In Benin and Madagascar, for example, primary school enrolment has increased by more than 50 percentage points. This may be from low levels, but it is still a huge improvement.
And for good reasons, Africa is now a growing investment destination for both advanced and emerging economies—with a record $80 billion inflow expected this year.
Indeed, it is no surprise that ‘frontier economies’ such as Kenya, Uganda, and Botswana are challenging old stereotypes and roaring loud as Africa’s lions.
And yet, the tide of growth has not lifted all boats.
Poverty remains stuck at unacceptably high levels—still afflicting about 45 percent of the region’s households. Inequality remains high. And some countries, still facing recurring internal conflict, are struggling to exit from fragility.
Africa’s success journey has been truly remarkable. But if the global crisis has taught us anything, it is the importance of making the benefits of growth more broadly shared. When everyone benefits, growth is more durable.
Over the years, the IMF has been a close partner in Africa’s journey—including during the crisis. We have listened, we have learned, and we have responded.
We have reformed our lending instruments to increase access and flexibility to countries in need; extended our zero-interest policy; and streamlined conditionality.
We have tailored our policy advice to better address the very specific challenges facing the region. And we have supported this advice with five regional technical assistance centers—in Gabon, Ghana, Côte d’Ivoire, Mauritius, and Tanzania. Today, the largest share of the IMF’s capacity development services is devoted to Africa.
We look forward to continuing—and strengthening—this fruitful partnership.
Africa’s future lies with itself and its people. True—the outlook for the region is very positive. Africa is expected to grow by about 5.5 percent this year and next, and the poorest countries even faster—close to 7 percent.
But it must keep a firm eye on what’s going on beyond its horizons. Globally, even as the world turns the corner of the Great Recession, the recovery remains weak and uneven. What does this mean for Africa?
Near- term worries
In the near term, the region’s outlook could be clouded by three main worries:
(i) slower growth in advanced economies, and in particular emerging market economies which are major trading partners for Africa;
(ii) lower prices for some commodities; and
(iii) tightening external financial conditions and potentially increased market volatility as monetary policy is normalized.
Policymakers will no doubt have their hands full. But they know what to do. The IMF stands ready to help with its policy advice, its technical assistance, and if needed, financial support.
Longer-term challenges
Beyond these more immediate worries, there are a number of longer-term challenges that can dramatically affect the outlook for Africa. Some for the better; others—not so much.
Demographic challenges: Africa is the youngest continent in the world. By 2040, the continent is projected to boast the largest labor force in the world—1 billion workers strong—more than China and India combined. Channeling this increasing reservoir of human capital to productive sectors offers unrivalled economic and social opportunities. To take full advantage of them will require skillful management and vision.
Technological challenges: Technological innovation offers great possibilities. It can help support global integration, improve productivity, and foster inclusion. Harnessing its power effectively and efficiently is the challenge.
Environmental challenges: Climate change and sustained demand growth press on the sustainability of natural resources—further exacerbating inequality and exclusion. The challenge is to implement policies to foster growth that is, in turn, inclusive and environmentally sustainable.
Building to the Future—Three Policy Priorities
First, build infrastructure—energy, roads, and technology grids. These are the foundations of any strong and durable edifice.
What does this mean in practice? Closing Africa’s infrastructure gap.
Over the past three decades, per capita output of electricity in Sub-Saharan Africa remained virtually flat. Only 16 percent of all roads are paved, compared with 58 percent in South Asia. These shortfalls represent huge costs to businesses—and to people.
Many countries in the region are taking encouraging steps to close this infrastructure gap. In Ethiopia and Mozambique, for example, investments in the energy sector are being scaled up, including through projects that promote cross-border trade in electricity. Kenya and Côte d’Ivoire are also initiating regional infrastructure projects in electricity, and road and railroad networks.
Yet the costs of closing this infrastructure gap can be daunting. The investment needs for the region are estimated at about $93 billion—annually. In most cases, the investments are large and upfront. They need to be carefully selected, managed and implemented within a medium- to long-term budget perspective.
Here, the Fund can help. We are working with many of our member countries—through our capacity building centers and on-the-ground technical assistance—to strengthen public investment and debt management capacity.
Build institutions
Let me turn to the second policy priority: build institutions. This means governance, transparency, and sound economic frameworks.
We talked about the foundations for the building; now think of institutions as the systems that ensure that the building functions properly and lasts a long time—like the heating, cooling and water systems.
We all know that Africa has tremendous potential—it is home to more than 30 percent of the world’s mineral reserves. Properly managed, these endowments offer unparalleled opportunity for economic growth and development. Moreover, these resources can be instrumental in relieving the large constraints in infrastructure that I just talked about.
So, we have the foundations of our building (infrastructure); we have set up the systems to ensure that it functions effectively and efficiently (institutions); now we need to let the people in.
This brings me to my third priority: build people—children, youth, workers, and in particular, women.
Let me be clear: Africa’s greatest potential is its people. They are the key for the region to fully capture the dividends from population growth. By some estimates, a one percentage point increase in the working age population can boost GDP growth by 0.5 percentage points. This is huge.
For this to happen, however, “good” jobs need to be created in the private sector. Today, only one in five people in Africa finds work in the formal sector. This must change. With wider access to quality education, healthcare and infrastructure services, itcan change.
Similarly, technology can be tapped to extend the reach and access of financial services to millions of people. Here, Kenya’s experience offers valuable lessons to the rest of the world on how to empower the poor through financial access.
 I know that most of the women in Africa cannot afford not to work. But when they do, they are mostly employed in informal activities. We all know what this means: low productivity, low incomes, low prospects. We also know the constraints: access to education, credit, and markets.
The gains to be made by overcoming these constraints are immense—particularly through girls’ education. By some estimates, the economic loss in developing countries from the education gap between girls and boys could be as high as $90 billion a year—almost as much as the infrastructure gap for the whole of Sub-Saharan Africa!
As the old African adage goes: “If you educate a boy, you train a man. If you educate a girl, you train a village.
My bottom line: invest in women. It has a great rate of return—economically and socially for the future.
Africa Rising will benefit the lives of people on the continent. Beyond that, Africa Rising will benefit the world. An Africa ever more integrated in the world— and the world learning from Africa.
Thank you – obrigada.

Crop Prices Post Biggest Monthly Decline Since June

"A gauge of crops from corn to sugar posted the biggest monthly loss since June as sowing accelerated in the U.S. and supply concerns eased in Brazil.
Today, the Standard & Poor’s Agricultural Spot Index fell 0.7 percent to 389.58, capping the fifth straight weekly drop, the longest slump in four months. The measure dropped 8.1 percent in May. In the U.S., rain across the Great Plains boosted wheat, and farmers are forecast to collect record corn and soybean harvests. Money mangers are holding the fewest bullish bets on agriculture prices since February.
In the first four months of the year, crop prices jumped the most ever for the period as drought in Brazil threatened coffee, sugar and citrus supplies. Now, North American farmers are speeding up sowing, while rising coffee stockpiles in the U.S. cushion the impact of production losses.
“The weather is good, and people have gotten the crops in,” said Shonda Warner, the managing partner of Chess Ag Full Harvest Partners in Clarksdale,Mississippi, which oversees about $150 million. “It seems we’re going to have abundant harvests,” she said in a telephone interview from Chicago.
This week, the S&P GSCI Agricultural Index of eight crops dropped 2.1 percent 389.58, while the GSCI gauge of 24 raw materials, including energy and metals, fell 1.3 percent. In May, the broad measure fell 0.4 percent with coffee slumping 14 percent and wheat down 13 percent, the biggest declines for the individual commodities since September 2011.

Winter Wheat

Thirty percent of U.S. winter wheat was in good or excellent condition as of May 25, up from 29 percent the prior week, the Department of Agriculture said. Areas of TexasOklahoma and central Kansas received an inch (2.5 centimeters) of rain in the past week, government data show. Planting has accelerated Canada and Ukraine, and the USDA has forecast that world reserves will rise to a three-year high.
“Global grain supplies are on the rise, and that remains the biggest negative for the market,” Greg Grow, the director of agribusiness for Archer Financial Services Inc. in Chicago, said in a telephone interview. “There just are not any major weather problems developing.”
U.S. farmers planted 88 percent of the corn crop as of May 25, matching the five-year average pace, and soybean sowing was 59 percent complete, the USDA said May 27. Widespread rain in the next two weeks will boost soil moisture and crop development, according to T-Storm Weather LLC.
Arabica coffee dropped on speculation that global supplies will be enough to meet demand, even as a drought in the first quarter damaged plants in Brazil, the world’s top grower. Stockpiles of unroasted beans in the U.S., the biggest consumer and importer, rose 7.6 percent in April from a year earlier, the New York-based Green Coffee Association said May 15."
Source: Bloomberg.

Japan and China Face Off on Asian Security

    The WSJ reports, "this weekend, defense ministers and military leaders will converge on Singapore for a summit, where China and Japan are expected to set out rival visions for the future of Asia-Pacific security. The meeting could be a “face-off” moment, as the WSJ’s Trefor Moss and Yuka Hayashi report:
The Shangri-La Dialogue, which will include speeches by Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and U.S. Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel, is the first major event bringing top U.S., Chinese and other Asian military brass together since China rattled the region in recent weeks by deploying a deep-sea oil-drilling platform in waters claimed by Vietnam.
Hanoi labeled the move as dangerous and provocative, and several other countries have also expressed misgivings over the deployment, which China describes as part of its normal activities within its own sovereign territory.
In a curtain-raising speech on Friday night, Mr. Abe is expected to lay out what some Japanese media have termed the “Abe Doctrine”—a vision of a Japan that is more proactive in defense affairs, and that works with multinational partners, including the U.S., to bolster regional security and prosperity.
China’s Ministry of Defense confirmed on Thursday that its delegation, led by Lt. Gen. Wang Guanzhong, the Chinese military’s deputy chief of general staff, would detail President Xi Jinping‘s “new Asian security concept,” a regional security approach that rivals the one Mr. Abe envisions.
Mr. Xi’s concept emphasizes Asian countries solving Asian problems—potentially cutting out the U.S.—while Mr. Abe’s proposed framework is “more inclusive” and seeks to draw in partners from outside Asia, said Tim Huxley, executive director of the International Institute of Strategic Studies-Asia, a think tank and the organizer of the event.
Besides pushback from Japan, China is also likely to face up to increasingly tense relation with the Philippines, which launched an arbitration case at the U.N. earlier this year to challenge what it regards as Beijing’s illegal claims to almost the entire South China Sea".

Ukraine and Russia closer to resolve Gas Dispute

Source:  WSJ

Wti AND Brent Oil Falls,with the former increased supplies and the latter with less geopolitical risks at Ukraine

WTI crude headed for the first weelky loss to US$ 102.71 -0.95,-0.92% since May 2 as U.S. consumer spending fell in April and  U.S: crude oil inventories increased, signaling ample supplies.  The Russians pulled their troops back in Ukraine and that probably diminished geopolitical risks and therefore less premium for the price of Brent crude which is falling to US$ 109.39 -0.48
-0.44% today.
             

China's democracy to prosperity

Addressing College of Europe students during his state visit to Belgium in April, President Xi Jinping said: "In 1911, the revolution led by Sun Yat-sen overthrew the autocratic monarchy that had ruled China for several thousand years. But once the old system was gone, where China would go became the question. The Chinese people then started exploring long and hard for a path that would suit China's national conditions. They experimented with constitutional monarchy, imperial restoration, parliamentarism, multi-party system and presidential government, yet nothing really worked. Finally, China took the path of socialism."
This is a profound summary of China's historical and practical experience in the search for a development path that suits its national conditions. People's democracy is the life of socialism, and developing socialist democracy is the unswerving goal of the nation and the Communist Party of China. As an important component of comprehensive reform, political restructuring has been deepening in China along with economic and social development, and wider participation of people in politics.
Socialism with Chinese characteristics is a historical choice for China. Contrary to what some Western experts say, the Western-style democratic system does not have universality. Democracy as a part of the socio-political superstructure is closely linked with a certain economic base and a certain development level of productivity. As such, the democratic system is not a constant pattern. Western-style democracy may suit Western countries, but it is not necessarily applicable to all countries and regions.
Instead of opting for a so-called mature democratic model, a country should choose one that reflects its political, economic, social and cultural characteristics. As Xi once said, "only the wearer knows if the shoe fits his foot". The result of China's political exploration is that Western-style democracy will not help it realize national rejuvenation.
After the founding of the People's Republic of China, the CPC put democratic centralism into practice, mobilized social resources and transformed the country from a backward agricultural society into an industrial power within just a few decades. The fact that China has already become the world's second-largest economy proves that the political system it follows is in no way inferior to that followed by the West.
Western powers' attempt to impose their style of democracy on other countries is what led to the so-called Color Revolution in the Caucasus, the "Arab Spring" in the Middle East and the Ukraine crisis. The "democratic regimes" that the West helped establish failed to bring stability and prosperity to these countries, with some even falling into the abyss of civil war. It is because of the hypocrisy of Western-style democracy that the term "democratization" is losing its charisma across the world.
An article published in The Economist a couple of months ago said that democracy is going through a difficult time and has experienced many setbacks since 2000. That Western-style democracy is not a panacea for all the political, social and economic ills can be seen in the findings of a 2013 Pew Research Center survey which shows that about 85 percent Chinese people are very happy with China's development direction while only 31 percent Americans are satisfied with the US' .
China has made remarkable progress in democratic politics after the launch of reform and opening-up, especially after the 1990s, which saw a dramatic rise in its economic and strategic strength. Socialist democracy with Chinese characteristics includes the people's congress system, multi-party cooperation and political consultation under the Party's leadership, and the regional ethnic autonomy and democratic grassroots self-government systems.
To build socialist democracy, China has always combined the Marxist theory of democracy with the realities of the country, borrowed from the useful achievements of successful political systems, and assimilated the democratic elements of the country's traditional culture and institutional civilization. As a result, China's socialist democracy shows distinctive Chinese characteristics.
China's democracy is a people's democracy under the leadership of the CPC; a democracy in which the people are the masters of State affairs; a democracy with democratic centralism as the basic organizational principle and mode of operation.
The overall goal of deepening reforms is to improve and develop socialism with Chinese characteristics and modernize national governance. The Third Plenum of the 18th CPC Central Committee emphasized the task of bringing the people's congress system in line with the times, promoting wide, multi-tiered and institutionalized consultative democracy, and giving full play to democracy at the community level.
China needs the CPC's leadership to ensure that the people really become the masters of the State. The CPC is also needed to make the hundreds of millions of Chinese work unitedly to build a beautiful future, promote socialist modernization, and maintain harmony and stability in China, and to safeguard national sovereignty and realize national rejuvenation. Only under the Party's leadership can China's reform and opening-up move forward smoothly and socialist democracy with Chinese characteristics make orderly progress.
Therefore, the CPC has to continue to follow scientific and democratic principles, rule the country in accordance with the law and promote people's democracy by deepening intra - Party democracy. A transparent, service-oriented government is taking shape in China, and the intensified anti-corruption campaign has reassured the people that the Party is determined to fight the "tigers as well as the flies" to safeguard social justice and promote a clean government.
Like most countries China, too, has traveled a long arduous path to find a development path that suits its ground realities, and it should stick to it to achieve ultimate success.
Source: ChinaDailyUSA 

By Ren Jingjing

PERU Produccion de Hidrocarburos Mayo 2014



Sino-Vietnamese Row. Time for China to go it alone?

Country will no longer allow its legitimate rights to be wantonly encroached upon by some of its neighbors
In recent days, Vietnam has been disturbing China's routine drilling operations in the waters off Zhongjian Island, part of China's Xisha Islands. In a move to attract the world's attention, Vietnam also invited some international journalists to the operating site.
Surprisingly, the Vietnamese government also encouraged anti-China demonstrations and even acquiesced in the riots against foreign enterprises, mostly Chinese investments in the country, which resulted in the loss of innocent lives and huge damage to property. The Vietnamese move, which finally turned out to be a farce against itself, only proved the government's lack of deep thinking about the situation. After all, the drilling site is just 17 nautical miles from China's Zhongjian Island, yet 150 nautical miles from Vietnamese coastline. As pointed out by Chinese officials time and again, Vietnamese vessels have to sail a long way across the stormy sea to disturb the normal operations of the Chinese company on the doorstep of China.
Meanwhile, there has also been much speculation about the timing of China's drilling operations and the real intention behind it. Some say the drilling operations began just days after the visit of US President Barack Obama to Asia, and that by starting the drilling, China is flexing its muscles to neutralize the influence of the United States in the region. Others have taken it as response to Vietnam's recent purchase of a patrol vessel from Japan. There are even those who say that China is resolved to act on its own wishes and will in the South China Sea, in which the drilling operations are just a starter on China's set menu.
However, people will not understand China correctly if they do not look at a longer time frame. No one can deny the fact that under the leadership of the Communist Party of China, Chinese foreign policy has been very stable and consistent over the years. Although there have been many modifications and adjustments, the fundamentals have remained unchanged over the years after opening-up to the outside world. Therefore, to understand what China is doing today, we have to review what China has done in the past.
It is now 20 years since the former Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping put forward the constructive initiative of shelving disputes and seeking joint development at the Third Plenary Meeting of the Central Advisory Committee in October 1984. Over the past 20 years China has upheld this initiative and made unremitting efforts to promote it, in the hope that some day it would be made a reality and put into practice.
To demonstrate its good will, China embarked on negotiations with the members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations countries to draw up a Code of Conduct in the South China Sea. These negotiations finally led to the Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea in 2002, which has contributed a lot to the peace and stability of the South China Sea. China has made every effort to push for the full implementation of the DOC.
But when the Guidelines for the Implementation of the Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea were eventually agreed by the contracting parties it was already 2011, nine years had passed. Despite all the efforts, the cooperation stipulated in the DOC and the Guidelines has not been really started yet. Predictably the low-sensitivity fields, as clearly listed in the DOC, have not been seriously taken by some signatories; let alone the joint development promoted by China.
There was a glimmer of hope in 2005 when state oil companies of China, Vietnam and the Philippines signed an agreement on joint seismic research in some areas of the South China Sea. This agreement, which can be seen as a step toward joint development, was actually an experiment in low-sensitivity cooperation. But despite the strong feasibility of putting the agreement into practice, the cooperation was halted abruptly when the new government of the Philippines refused to accept the former government's deal with other nations. Later on many other initiatives were put forward by China, but few of them have received a positive response.
To get the whole picture of the situation, we also need to look at what other littoral states have done at sea in the past 20-plus years. Vietnam and some other countries have unilaterally concluded many contracts with Western companies and drilled many wells in the southern areas of the South China Sea, many of which are in areas that China also has legitimate claims to. Taking Vietnam as an example, more than 50 oil wells operated by Vietnam fall within waters that are disputed with China.
China lodged diplomatic protests in the face of these infringements upon its legitimate rights, but did not take any forcible measures to stop them. As pointed out by an China Foreign Ministry official, it is not that China did not have the ability to stop the encroaching, but China values the peace and stability in the South China Sea more highly and was willing to show self-restraint.
Many equitable and feasible scenarios for joint development have been laid out and promoted by China and widely acknowledged by the international community, sometimes including the US.
Now China might have had enough, it will not allow its legitimate rights to be wantonly encroached upon by some of its neighbors any more. Vietnam's reckless move of forcibly disturbing the normal operations of a Chinese company in areas without any dispute is likely to trigger new thinking from China about exploiting the resources in the South China Sea. In the coming years if Vietnam continues its troublemaking, China will probably have no option but to weigh the possibility of blazing a trail and drilling alone in some sea areas where disputes exist between China and Vietnam.
Source: ChinaDailyUSA

China CPI All eyes on pig exchange rate

BEIJING - It will never get the same attention as the Chinese currency, but another exchange rate is quietly straining every nerve of the market, from policymakers to farmers: the hog-to-corn ratio.
The exchange rate is closely monitored as a critical reference and a key indicator of inflation. It is used to speculate on changes in policy in a broader context.
Pork is the staple meat in China and is a heavyweight in the basket of prices used in calculating the Consumer Price Index (CPI). The ratio of live hog sales prices at farms to wholesale corn price, calculated by the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), rebounded to 5.29 on Wednesday after it fell to a five-year low of 4.6 in April. When the ratio is above 6, pig farmers can start thinking about profits.
Live pig prices have fluctuated wildly in recent years, raising concerns that volatility could bleed into monetary and fiscal policy due to the CPI weighting.
The weak pig-to-corn rate in the past year has meant Anhua Agricultural Insurance dishing out compensation of 4.1 million yuan ($660,000) to 143 pig farmers in Beijing this month.
"With the compensation, I feel a little bit better," said Cao Xueyi, a veteran pig farmer who got 94,000 yuan for his loss of 1.08 million yuan last year. To help stabilize pork prices, Anhua started selling price insurance last year to offset losses incurred through pig price declines.
"Insurance of live pig prices is a very good way to protect farmers from huge losses," said Tuo Guozhu, an insurance professor with the Capital University of Economics and Business.
The NDRC has also intervened, buying frozen pork on the market for national reserves in March and May, which raised the national average hog price to 11.14 yuan per kilogram by April 30, ending 19 weeks of decline.
Oversupply has been blamed for the price decline since the beginning of this year. Farmers sold 716 million live pigs last year, 20 million more than 2012.
As the government aims for CPI growth of around 3.5 percent this year, with continuing prudent monetary policy and proactive fiscal policy, too weak or too strong an inflation reading might prompt the central bank to adjust its monetary policy.

Source: Xinhua


"We are not sure whether changes in supply and demand have happened yet, because only price increases for two consecutive months can send a clear signal," said Feng Yonghui, chief analyst with the monitoring website souzhu.com. "So far, we've seen no obvious reduction in pig production capacity."

WSJ: Even With Pullback, Russia Holds Huge Financial Sway Over Ukraine

         The WSJ reports,"Russian President Vladimir Putin may be toning down his rhetoric toward Ukraine, but he still holds potent financial levers to keep Kiev from turning westward.
First, Moscow can use the price it charges for natural gas supplies Ukraine relies on to fuel its economy, a power that gives it unprecedented to make or break the country’s finances. Ukraine’s turn to the West coincides with an escalation in the price dispute. The more Kiev looks to Europe as its future trade partner, the higher the natural gas bills seem to head.
Second, Moscow may be able to use a special clause in the $3 billion in Ukrainian bonds Russia bought in December to trigger a system-wide debt meltdown, says aGeorgetown University law professor and debt expert Anna Gelpern. That financial nuclear option could pressure Ukraine’s new pro-West government from embracing a full-fledged European integration and a turn away from its former Soviet masters".
Ukraine’s newly-elected President Petro Poroshenko has already asked his European counterparts for more time to commit to a major economic and deal with the European Union.
Financial levers are part of the broader battle being waged over Ukraine, says Jacob Kirkegaard, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. Mr. Putin not only wants the country’s strategic assets such as the Black Sea naval port in Crimea, but he also wants Ukraine to be part of a Eurasian trade bloc and to prevent the country from becoming another member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, analysts say.
The country is in a particularly precarious economic position, even with an International Monetary Fund bailout.
The financial lifeline is already one of the IMF’s riskiest emergency loans. Just a day after the fund approved a $17 billion bailout for Ukraine in late April, IMF brass warned a bigger bailout than currently planned might be necessary, given the political turmoil the new leadership faces. Those risks are underscored as government forcescontinue to clash with militant separatists.
Some economists warn that a restructuring shouldn’t be ruled out and wonder if Ukraine is the new Greece, which received a record-sized bailout that eventually led to the biggest private debt restructuring in modern history.
“We see the IMF’s growth forecasts for Ukraine and Greece not as forecasts at all, but rather as assumptions necessary to justify the IMF’s interventions,” say Benn Steil andDinah Walker in a Council on Foreign Relations blog post.

Fitch Places NBG Programme 1 mortgage covered bond on rating watch positive

Source: Reuters

Gran Tierra Energy Enters into an Agreement to Sell its Argentina Business

  News Release

CALGARYMay 29, 2014 /PRNewswire/ - Gran Tierra Energy Inc. ("Gran Tierra Energy") (NYSE MKT, TSX: GTE), a company focused on oil and gas exploration and production in South America, today announced it has entered into agreements (the "Agreements") whereby Madalena Energy Inc. ("Madalena") (TSX-V: MVN) has agreed to acquire Gran Tierra Energy's Argentina business unit for an aggregate consideration of approximatelyUS$69 million, comprised of US$49 million in cash, US$14 million in Madalena shares, and expected working capital adjustments of approximately US$6 million. Gran Tierra Energy has received a deposit ofUS$12.6 million and Madalena is expected to raise the remainder of the cash required to complete the transaction pursuant to a subscription receipt offering on a bought deal basis.
"The board of directors and management team of Gran Tierra Energy are committed to continuously managing its portfolio of opportunities in South America to enhance value for our shareholders," saidDana Coffield, Gran Tierra Energy President and Chief Executive Officer. "As a result of our recent significant exploration success in Peru, ongoing success in Colombia and ongoing evaluations in Brazil, we are focusing Gran Tierra Energy's human and capital resources in areas that we believe will provide the greatest return for our shareholders and drive growth in the future."
In 2013, the Argentina business unit contributed average annual production of 3,028 barrels of oil equivalent per day, net after royalty and spent US$6.5 million of its 2014 planned Argentina capital program of US$48 million in the first quarter of 2014.
"With the April 30, 2014 effective date of the transaction, Gran Tierra Energy plans to reduce its 2014 corporate capital spending program by an amount comparable to the planned Argentina capital program of US$48 million, less the amount spent up to the closing date of the transaction. This reduction in corporate capital spending, in addition to the approximate US$69 million aggregate consideration, will further strengthen the balance sheet for future capital spending requirements and allow us to dedicate our resources to where they will have maximum impact and to focus on our more profitable operations," concluded Coffield.
The Madalena board of directors has unanimously approved the Agreements.  The closing date is expected to be on or before June 30, 2014and it is subject to TSX Venture Exchange approval.
J.P. Morgan Securities LLC is acting as exclusive financial advisor to Gran Tierra Energy in connection with this transaction.

Popular Posts