Wednesday, 4 June 2014

Landmark China-Arab ministerial meeting to reap harvest: Chinese FM, AL chief

The upcoming Sixth Ministerial Conference of the China-Arab Cooperation Forum(CACF) will be a landmark and reap a good harvest, Chinese foreign minister and Arab League (AL) chief said on Wednesday.
"The ministerial meeting, which coincides with the 10th anniversary of the CACF's founding, will be a landmark in bilateral relations and produce important results," Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi and Secretary-general of the League of Arab States Nabil Elaraby said.
Their meeting came on the eve of the CACF's Sixth Ministerial Conference, which will open in Beijing on Thursday.
"China and Arab nations have worked together, kept close communications and made preparations productive," Wang and Elaraby were quoted as saying in a statement issued by the Chinese Foreign Ministry.
Wang said China places great importance on the AL role in promoting the solidarity between Arab countries, developing their economies and safeguarding their interests.
China will continue to support Arab countries' core concerns on issues concerning Palestine and others and back Arab countries' endeavor to explore their own paths of development, Wang said.
No matter how the international and regional situation changes, China's determination to carry on friendship with AL, its policy of deepening China-Arab strategic cooperation and its goal of working with Arab to safeguard regional peace and stability will not change, Wang said.
Elaraby hailed China as a trustworthy power, saying it is in the interests of Arab and China to properly resolve the hotspot issues in the region.
Wang and Elaraby also exchanged views on issues concerning Palestine, Libya and Syria, the statement said.
Also on Wednesday, Wang met with Moroccan foreign chief Salaheddin Mezouar, who also came to Beijing for the CACF's Sixth Ministerial Conference.
Wang appreciated the work Morocco has done as the rotating chair of AL foreign ministers' council and the co-chair of the CACF's Sixth Ministerial Conference, calling for Morocco's continued active role in promoting China-Arab collaboration.
On China-Morocco relations, Wang said China would like to encourage more Chinese businesses to invest in Morocco and play a part in Morocco's construction of high-speed railroads, highways, ports, airports and other key projects.
Wang called on Morocco to create a favorable and efficient environment for Chinese investment.
Mezouar said his country expects to work more closely with China in infrastructure, agriculture, service and culture.
Mezouar also proposed the two countries seek stronger collaboration in Africa and Europe.

Asia's biggest computer expo starts in Taipei

Computex Taipei, the biggest computer expo in Asia, opened here on Tuesday.
The five-day event will present the latest designs in the information and communication technology (ICT) sector, with two themed zones to launch: Touch & Display and Smart Tech Applications.
Wang Chih-kang, chairman of the island's external trade development association, a co-organizer of the expo, said at the opening ceremony that this year's Computex is expected to generate business worth 25 billion U.S. dollars for Taiwan's ICT sector, an amount equal to 20 percent of the island's ICT export output in 2013.
Wang said that he had extended an invite to the event to Bai Weimin, vice head of the mainland's China Video Industry Association, in April, when he visited the association in Beijing.
It will be the first time that Bai has led a delegation to purchase panels from the expo. She will visit suppliers in Taiwan and attend a seminar on cross-Strait display industry cooperation.
According to Wang, Computex Taipei will feature more than 1,700 exhibitors and attract more than 130,000 buyers from the island and overseas.
Source: Xinhua

China's supreme court mulls crackdown on terror videos

- China's Supreme People's Court (SPC) is considering ways to halt the spread of violent terror videos and audios, according to a statement issued Tuesday.
The SPC urged courts at all levels to intensify a high-pressure crackdown on terrorists and separatists. Subordinate courts in Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, hit by series of bloody terrorist attacks, will get special instructions on dealing with terror cases in a "harsh and quick" manner, the statement said.
In civil and commercial cases, the SPC said equal protection should be given to enterprises and people of all ethnic groups in Xinjiang to secure their legal interests, boost employment and improve their livelihood.
The SPC vowed to improve the skills of court staff and promote bilingual training of judges.
Hardware support will also be enhanced in Xinjiang courts.
Source: Xinhua

Healthcare reforms to be good for China's economy: U.S. Nobel laureate

- China's planned healthcare reforms will be beneficial for the whole of the country's economy, Daniel McFadden, Presidential Professor of Health Economics and Policy at the University of Southern California, told Xinhua in a recent interview.
"I know about the efforts to reform the Chinese system. It is a very ambitious and very difficult program that they have undertaken," said McFadden, who received the 2000 Nobel Prize in Economics for developing methods and theory used in analyzing how consumers and households make choices from sets of discrete alternatives.
The Chinese State Council has recently issued a guideline to boost healthcare reforms this year, which puts forward 31 tasks in six fields to deepen the reforms and expedite the building of a universal healthcare system.
In McFadden's view, the reforms would work very well in the cities, while will be a much more difficult challenge to accomplish in some of the rural areas.
"But I believe they would be very good for the citizens of China and also for the economy as a whole," said the U.S. professor, who was in Italy to participate in the Trento Economics Festival which closed earlier this week.
McFadden noted that over the past years, due to a fairly weak system of social insurance, individual savings rates were extremely high in China.
One of the results of this trend, he added, was that "China had been growing primarily by exporting than through domestic consumption, which was a very successful strategy in the past but is not a strategy that can be continued indefinitely."
Therefore, he said, "it is important for China to have a vast consumer sector in which citizens spend most of the money they earn on goods rather than saving to have them for the health costs in the future."
The Nobel Economics Prize Winner praised China's economic success which he defined as "remarkable."
The opening up in China, he said, "has been a great success."
"But I would hesitate to free up the health sector so quickly. I think that is one of the sectors in the economy where the public control actually makes sense," he pointed out.
"Looking at the healthcare systems around the world, the ones that are most efficient in terms of keeping people healthy and less costly are the ones where the community medical providers are either employed by the government or employed by companies that are largely contracting to the government and not operating as separate businesses," McFadden elaborated.
"Do not copy the United States, that is a very inefficient healthcare system," he underlined.
The professor noted that in most countries the healthcare system accounts for around 10 percent of the gross domestic product (GDP).
"In the United States it is 17 percent, very expensive, while there are some countries including China which need to put more of the national income into health," he explained to Xinhua.
However, McFadden stressed, the benchmark should not be how much a country spends on health but how healthy it keeps the population and how truly concerned its doctors are about the health of their patients.
By these standards, he said, "China still has a ways to go" but has started a reform process which has already led the country to "doing a lot better than it used to."

Fuel cell system to power the home

The cell stacks that are the heart of a home fuel cell system being developed by Fraunhofe...
As the world shifts to alternative forms of energy, ways to make homes less dependent on the grid continue to gather steam. Fuel cells, which are more efficient and have lower emissions than internal combustion engines seem like a logical candidate for taking up the slack, so the Fraunhofer Institute for Ceramic Technologies and Systems (IKTS) in Dresden is partnering with the heater manufacturer Vaillant to develop a domestic fuel cell system that uses natural gas to produce both heating and electricity.
Fuel cells have been around since 1838, and have long seemed like the power source of tomorrow, but it wasn’t until the 1960s that the first commercial fuel cells appeared, when they were used to power spacecraft. Though they’ve seen some applications in the automotive industry in the 1990s and the Ene-Farm home fuel cell became the world's first commercialized fuel cell system targeted at household heating and electricity generation with its release in Japan in 2009, fuel cells have struggled to find widespread adoption.
Part of the reason is their complexity and another is that they tend to be very expensive due, in part, to the need for precious metals like platinum for catalysts. Because such catalysts are easily poisoned by impurities, fuel cells also have a reputation for poor reliability. The Fraunhofer approach was to come up with a fuel cell for the home that’s simple, and can be installed and maintained like a common household gas heater that runs on natural gas.
Like the Bloom Box and SOFC system developed at the Technical Research Centre of Finland (VTT), the Fraunhofer system is based on solid oxide fuel cell (SOFC) technology, which uses a ceramic electrolyte to produce electricity as oxygen combines with hydrogen. SOFC's work at a higher temperature than other fuel cell designs, such as those used in cars. Where proton exchange membrane fuel cells (PEMFCs) car fuel cells can only reach 80⁰ C (176⁰ F), SOFCs can reach up to 850⁰ C (1,562⁰ F). In other applications, such heat is a problem, but for home applications it can be turned to the homeowner’s advantage for keeping the home warm or heating water.
Since ceramics can withstand high temperatures, its suitable for a SOFC, and this higher temperature makes it simpler to design and cheaper to operate. It also avoids using platinum or other precious metals as a catalyst, which brings down the cost.
Like most fuel cells systems, the individual CD-like Fraunhofer cells are very low power, producing less than a volt, so they need to be organized into stacks. In practice, the fuel cell is hooked up to the domestic gas supply. As the gas enters, a reformer breaks up the gas into a hydrogen-rich mixture, which reacts with the stack in what is called “cold combustion” to produce heat and electricity. Meanwhile, there’s an afterburner to increase efficiency from the exhaust gases.
According to Fraunhofer, the current design is as compact as a gas heater, and can be installed in the same places as a heater. But instead of producing just heat, it also puts out one kilowatt of electricity as well, which is about enough for a family of four. The technology is currently undergoing trials involving 150 units in homes in Europe as part of the Callux practice test to see how well they function in a domestic environment.
Fraunhofer and Valiant are now working on decreasing the cost of the fuel cells and increasing their service life.
Source: Fraunhofer

Volkswagen blurs boundaries with the sensational GTI Roadster Vision Gran Turismo

Much like Mercedes did with last year's AMG Vision Gran Turismo, Volkswagen brings the virtual world to reality with its own Vision Gran Turismo. Designed to drive the courses of PlayStation3's "Gran Turismo 6", the juiced up GTI Roadster Vision Gran Turismo was also built out as a show car for this year's Wörthersee festival. The 503-hp roadster takes styling from last year's Design Vision GTI to new extremes.
Because it was designed for a video game, the GTI Roadster Vision GT was developed jointly by Volkswagen and Sony Computer Entertainment. After Sony asked VW to develop a car exclusively for GT6, the automaker held an in-house design competition and the two companies pursued the process through to both virtual and real-world GTI Roadster Vision GTs. They unveiled the GT6 virtual car on May 26 and the real version a few days later at Wörthersee.
Just like last year's Design Vision GTI, the GTI Roadster Vision GT packs 503 horses (375 kW) and 413 lb-ft (560 Nm) of available torque in a 3.0-liter twin-turbo TSI V6. That engine shoots output to all four wheels via a seven-speed DSG dual-clutch transmission and 4MOTION all-wheel drive. The GTI Roadster is actually a bit speedier than last year's hatchback, capable of tearing to 60 mph (96.5 km/h) in 3.5 seconds and cranking the speedometer needle to 192 mph (309 km/h).
The powertrain behind the Vision concept is familiar, but the look and feel are brand new. Volkswagen used the Design Vision GTI as a starting point before slicing off the roof and most of the windshield, exaggerating the styling out further, and covering it all in a luscious red paint job. The result is video game-level awesomeness that you can touch, feel and (theoretically) drive. Volkswagen calls it the "most spectacular GTI ever," and we'd have trouble arguing.
The GTI Roadster Vision GT has a low-set carbon tub and low-profile windscreen
Specific styling elements developed from last year's Design Vision include the body wrapping C pillars and beefy side skirts, which are even more pronounced on the Roadster. Without a roof to blend into, the C pillars are left to round up into a rollover bar and float backward over the rear wheels, blending with the rear bumper. The pillars also serve as the end points for the sharp side creases.
The concept's low windscreen is flanked by equally low-profile side windows designed to give the car a speedboat-like look. Up front, a three-dimensional face provides home for squinty LED headlights, a large, smiley grille and a splitter. Carbon edging stretches from the front splitter, around the fenders, back via the side skirts and around into a rear diffuser highlighted by red light strips. Above that diffuser, exhaust finds its way out via dual trapezoidal tailpipes and air shooting over the low, race-inspired cabin is transformed into downforce by a huge rear wing. The car stands on 20-in center-lock aluminum alloys with body color accents and 235/35 ZR20 front and 275/30 ZR20 rear tires.
"The Vision GT project offered a wonderful opportunity to sketch out extreme ideas and design elements of the GTI that are portrayed as vibrantly, dynamically and emotionally as possible," explains Klaus Bischoff, VW head of design.
The rear-end has a diffuser and mid-mounted exhaust
The Roadster Vision GT has been downsized compared to the Design Vision and production GTI. It measures 163.7 x 74.6 x 42.9 in (415.8 x 189.5 x 109 cm) and rides on a 98.2-in (249.4-cm) wheelbase. It weighs 3,133 lb (1,421 kg).
The Roadster Vision GT is a design that would look good in nearly any color, but the glossy metallic red paint accentuates it perfectly. The "Gran Turismo Red" is a new interpretation of the classic Golf GTI option "Tornado Red."
"We were looking for a very provocative and aggressive red," says Malte Hammerbeck, one of the designers behind the new show car. "The car should look fast, even when it is standing still, and the paint should emphasize its surface contours."
Matte carbon wrestles the viewer's attention (briefly) away from the dazzling red body, drawing focus on the bolt-on parts. The radiator and engine compartment screen have a high-gloss black finish.
Driver and passenger enter the GTI Roadster Vision GT by way of doors that swivel up and forward. They're seated in racing seats set low in a dual carbon fiber monocoque, a set-up that's inspired by formula racing cars. The two occupants are separated by a central bar, an element that reminds us of another fiery red VW Group roadster concept, the 2012 Lamborghini Aventador J. That central bar houses a fire extinguisher. There is a bit of GTI red contrast stitching to offset the black and anthracite interior, but Volkswagen keeps decorative elements to a minimum, remaining true to the race car-inspired nature of the car.
Source: Volkswagen

Fed's Beige Book finds modest to moderate economic growth prevalent

 U.S. economic activity continued at the same plodding pace seen over much of the last two years without any sign of a break higher, according to a summary of economic conditions released Wednesday.
The Beige Book, a collection of anecdotes about the economy published by the Federal Reserve, said the pace of growth picked up in only 2 of its 12 districts —Cleveland and St. Louis. And these two regions had reported slowing growth in the last Beige Book in April.
The remainder of the Fed’s districts reported “moderate” or “modest” growth except Kansas City, where there was a decline in activity.
Things were by no means bad. Consumer spending expanded across almost all districts, with six districts reporting increasingly strong new car sales.
The assessment is likely to keep the Fed on its steady path to end its bond-buying program by the fourth quarter. The central bank will then be faced with the question of when the economy will be strong enough for higher short-term interest rates.

Residential real estate activity was a trouble spot. Home sales were described as “mixed across the country” and the report pointed the finger at low inventories for holding down home sales.
According to the report, tourism was another bright spot and manufacturing activity expanded across the country. picking up along the East Coast and around St. Louis and Kansas City. Energy production was another source of strength.
Home prices were still rising and condo and apartment sales were mostly robust. Construction activity was also seen as mixed.
Labor market conditions were seen as generally strengthening, with “steady to stronger” hiring activity across most of the country. Seven districts reported wage increases but mainly for highly skilled workers.
Prices were seen as “mostly steady to up slightly” but higher food prices were reported by five districts and others mentioned high or rising prices for construction materials, energy products, and precious metals.
Lending activity also increased across the country, led in many districts by demand for auto loans. Mortgage lending was only up in three of its districts.
Source: Marketwatch

China Rebuffs International Court's Request Over Sea Dispute

        The WSJ reports, "China has flatly rejected an approach from an international court in The Hague seeking Beijing's side of the story in an arbitration case over territorial sea claims brought against it by the Philippines last year.
The Permanent Court of Arbitration, which hears international dispute cases, instructed Beijing that it had until Dec. 15 to file its response to the Philippines' own 4,000-page submission, handed to the court in March, which argues that the Chinese claim to most of the South China Sea has no legal basis.
China's Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei confirmed at a daily news briefing Wednesday that Beijing had no intention of responding to the court's approach. "We are aware of relevant reports," Mr. Hong said. "We do not accept and will not participate in such arbitration."
The Foreign Ministry's rejection of the proceedings came as no surprise, with China's having refused to take part in the arbitration case ever since Manila first launched its legal action in January 2013. Beijing has sharply criticized the Philippine government for seeking legal recourse.
The Philippines' complaint against China comes under the United Nations Convention of the Law of the Sea, or UNCLOS, which both countries have ratified. China, however, didn't sign up to the treaty's arbitration processes, and it has always maintained that the best way to solve territorial disputes is through bilateral dialogue.
The countries engaged in disputes with China have expressed frustration over Beijing's apparent reluctance to negotiate meaningfully. Last month, Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung told a World Economic Forum meeting in Manila that his country had "exhausted all dialogue channels" with Beijing, with the Foreign Ministry in Hanoi confirming that it was weighing the possibility of legal action.
The Philippines has garnered international support for its legal challenge to Beijing's claim to most of the South China Sea according to the "nine-dash line," which roughly delineates China's claim but has never been publicly backed up by precise coordinates or any legal rationale.
U.S. Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker, speaking to reporters during a visit to Manila on Wednesday, confirmed that the U.S. backed the Philippine government's bid to resolve its dispute with China through legal means, and criticized China's "provocative" and "dangerous conduct" in the region".

China's Foreign Policy: Beijing Moves Boldly, Calculates Carefully

        The WSJ reports,"Until quite recently, China's aggressive moves in the South China Sea were widely viewed as the product of an erratic foreign policy driven by competing agencies in which hawkish players usually came out on top.
In Chinese policy circles this free-for-all was dubbed "The Nine Dragons stirring up the sea," and it replaced the more orderly—and far more friendly—approach to the region during the 1990s.
But the latest Chinese moves that have so alarmed the U.S. and China's neighbors—including, dramatically, the decision to drag an oil drilling platform into waters disputed with Vietnam—appear to be the result not of policy confusion but deliberate planning, say Chinese and foreign security analysts. They are most likely centrally coordinated at the highest level. Ultimately, they seem to bear the stamp of the country's president, Xi Jinping.
If that's the case, it suggests that China's unyielding approach to territorial disputes is now firmly entrenched. And it's much harder to see hope of compromise that's urgently needed to avoid an outbreak of more serious conflict in the region, whether by accident or design.
Mr. Xi heads a new security supercommittee set up late last year partly to bring order to a chaotic situation in which powerful groups that included the People's Liberation Army, maritime enforcement agencies and state-owned energy giants—collectively, the "Nine Dragons"—hijacked foreign policy for their own narrow purposes, such as grabbing a higher share of state budgets or enlarging their own business opportunities.
In doing so, these actors often bypassed the foreign ministry, which is supposed to take the wider view of China's national interests''.
"As head of the new National Security Commission Mr. Xi now seems to be stirring it up himself. And, since China's assertive moves can no longer be seen as tactical aberrations, the big question is what strategic purpose he is pursuing.
Mr. Xi is a nationalist. And at the core of the "China Dream" he has been promoting since he took office is the idea of restoring the country's traditional place of dominance in its own region before its "century of humiliation" at the hands of Western imperialists starting in the early 1800s. Among his goals are the recovery of what China regards as national territory lost to Japan, and maritime possessions that have been encroached upon by Southeast Asian countries, including Vietnam and the Philippines.
That much is easy to understand. What's baffling to many veteran China-watchers is the way that Mr. Xi, in asserting what China sees as its historic rights, is pushing ahead with what looks like a series of confrontations with multiple Asian countries all at the same time.
The security situation in the waters of China's periphery are, without doubt, even more tempestuous than when the "Nine Dragons" were thrashing around in competition with each other—and the outlook is for yet more turbulence. Chinese ships now regularly surge into waters surrounding the disputed Senkaku Islands controlled by Japan, which China calls the Diaoyus. This has strengthened anti-China right-wingers in Japan and has encouraged Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to promote a more muscular military stance. It's also enhanced Mr. Abe's standing in much of the region.
Likewise, drilling for oil off Vietnam, in an area not regarded as particularly promising in terms of the reserves it holds, is interpreted in Hanoi as a deliberate provocation driven by raw politics more than the quest for resources. The result: riots against Chinese businesses, and a setback for pro-China elements in the Vietnamese leadership.
Meanwhile, Chinese pressure on the Philippines has driven Manila to seek a U.N. legal ruling against China's territorial claims to the South China Sea, a move that if successful would be a diplomatic blow to China. Vietnam has said it is considering similar legal action.
On the surface, this may look reckless. But one theory gaining traction among senior officials and policy analysts around Asia and in Washington is that the timing is well calculated. It reflects Mr. Xi's belief that he is dealing with a weak U.S. president who won't push back, despite his strong rhetorical support for Asian allies.
Mr. Xi's perception, say these analysts, has been heightened by U.S. President Barack Obama's failures to intervene militarily in Syria and Ukraine. And it's led him to conclude that he has a window of opportunity to aggressively assert China's territorial claims around the region""".

Putin says Gazprom may need new capital after China deal

 President Vladimir Putin said on Wednesday that Russia should consider recapitalising state gas company Gazprom after a $400 billion deal with China which will require multi-billion-dollar investments in pipelines and new fields.

"The government and finance ministry should consider the possibility of recapitalising Gazprom in the amount needed to build up new infrastructure," Putin said at a meeting on energy strategy in the southern city of Astrakhan.

Boosting Gazprom's capital would put additional pressure on the Russian economy, already slowing due to a lack of reforms and following Western sanctions on Russia over its annexation of Crimea, which have weighed on the rouble and triggered capital outflows.

Russian authorities have estimated that the 30-year China deal could add 0.3-0.4 percentage points to economic growth annually from 2015. The economy is likely to grow by around 0.5 percent this year, the central bank said.

The $400 billion deal, signed during a visit by Putin last month, secured a major source of supply for China, the world's top energy user, and opened up a new market for Moscow, which risks losing European customers over the Ukraine crisis.

Russia plans to invest $55 billion in exploration and pipeline construction to China's border, and China's CNPC said it would build the Chinese section of the pipeline. A Gazprom executive said China would provide a $25 billion pre-payment.

Putin did not say how exactly Gazprom could be recapitalised but hinted it could be done from Russia's gold and foreign exchange reserves.

"In the modern world, endless increases in gold and foreign exchange reserves hold some risks as well," Putin said, adding that the Chinese contract was certain to recoup the investments in the long run.

Russia's gold and foreign exchange reserves, the world's fourth largest, stood at $468.4 billion as of last week, down almost $41 billion since the start of the year because of market volatility caused by the Ukraine crisis.

For now, Europe is Gazprom's key export market. The continent gets a third of its gas needs from Moscow, and about half of this is pumped via Ukraine.

Moscow and Kiev are in the middle of their third gas row in a decade, which also threatens to disrupt supplies to Europe.


CALL TO CUT RELIANCE

Following the annexation of Crimea from Ukraine in March, the United States and European Union imposed sanctions on Moscow, spurring talk of a need to diversify the Russian economy, including its financial and energy sectors, away from the West.

Putin told the meeting Russia should reduce reliance on foreign equipment in the energy sector and step up efforts to exploit oil and gas in Siberia and Russia's Far East, which borders China.

"Import substitution is not a panacea for all the problems but we understand that it may allow us to guarantee the implementation of many projects," Putin said, adding that Russia would not halt imports altogether.

Russian energy companies have so far said that Western sanctions have not affected their cooperation with global energy majors such as ExxonMobil and Royal Dutch Shell .

Oil production in Russia, the world's top crude producer, has fallen for five months running, highlighting the need to explore for unconventional resources and remote fields, where foreign know-how is most needed.

Gazprom Neft, Russia's No.4 oil producer, has already said it may look to domestic or Asian suppliers for drilling rigs if needed.

Some companies admit there could be risks in borrowing abroad because of sanctions.

Igor Sechin, CEO of Russia's state oil producer Rosneft , publicly acknowledged this for the first time on Wednesday when he told Putin the company faced potential risks both in borrowing abroad and implementing its foreign projects.

Sechin, although not Rosneft, is on the U.S. sanctions list as a close ally of Putin.


Source: Reuters

Mexico's Pemex ends 25-year partnership with Repsol

 Mexico's national oil company Pemex [PEMX.UL] said it has sold most of its stake in Spain's Repsol SA for 2.09 billion euros ($2.9 billion) on Wednesday, and plans to unload the rest soon, ending a quarter-century partnership and freeing up cash to invest in its own energy sector.

Pemex sold 7.86 percent of Repsol to unspecified private investors at 20.10 euros each, a 3.7 percent discount to the Spanish company's closing price on Tuesday. The Mexican company later said it aimed to sell its remaining 1.4 percent stake in Repsol in August.

Pemex's exit as one of Repsol's top three shareholders ends a relationship that had become increasingly fractious in recent years due to disagreements on policies ranging from top management to the handling of Repsol investments in Argentina.

"The decision to end the Repsol investment is due to the low profitability of the shares obtained by the current administration compared with other oil firms and our differences on its corporate governance," Pemex said in a statement.

The sale comes five days before Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto makes his first official visit to Spain and as the Latin American country is putting an end to the oil and gas production monopoly Pemex has had since 1938.

Two sources close to the matter said that the books were not covered, leaving bookrunners Citigroup Inc and Deutsche Bank AG holding an unspecified number of shares.

Separately, HSBC Holdings PLC declared a 5.37 percent stake in Repsol worth 1.4 billion euros on Tuesday, becoming the oil firm's fourth-largest shareholder behind lender CaixaBank SA , builder Sacyr SA and Singapore's Temasek Holdings Ltd [TEM.UL].

Shares in Repsol were down 3.62 percent at 20.11 euros at 1507 GMT, hovering around the price of the placement.

Pemex Chief Financial Officer Mario Beauregard said the company would look to sell its remaining shares in due course.

"Once this financing is complete, we'll look for the best market conditions to get rid of the remaining position," he said.

The plan was to sell the shares in August, Beauregard said, confirming what company sources had earlier told Reuters.

Pemex said it would remain open to making investments in other companies if opportunities arose.


NO TEARS

Repsol analysts welcomed the departure of Pemex, saying it should help ease boardroom tensions at Repsol and allow the Spanish group's chairman, Antonio Brufau, to focus on acquisition plans.

"We believe that this gives Repsol management a free rein to decide on the next strategic steps for the company," Exane BNP Paribas analyst Alejandro Demichelis said.

Repsol has raised $6.3 billion from its exit from Argentina after that country seized the oil major's YPF unit in 2012. It could spend part of the funds boosting growth at its upstream business, with a search for cash-generating oil assets.

It will also pay a 1 euro-per-share special dividend with part of the Argentine proceeds on June 6.

After being left with a significant Repsol holding, Citi and Deutsche Bank said in a regulatory filing a "guarantee" on the deal had come into effect, without giving details on what type.

Deutsche Bank and Citigroup declined to comment.

The banks' position in Repsol may be as much as 6 percent, one banking source said.

Analysts said they do not rule out its second-largest shareholder, Sacyr, selling up to 4 percent of its Repsol stake in coming months as it tries to refinance a 2.4 billion euro loan linked to its Repsol purchase before the start of 2015.

Gazprom pushes back gas prepayment deadline for Ukraine to June 10

 Russian gas producer Gazprom said on Wednesday it was pushing back a deadline for Ukraine to move to prepaying for gas by one day to June 10 because of a public holiday in Kiev.

Gazprom and Naftogaz were holding talks on Wednesday in Berlin trying to settle gas dispute that could hurt onward supplies to the European Union.


Source: Reuters

Copper miners agree on Indonesia's export tax, talks to continue

Foreign copper miners in Indonesia have agreed in principle to pay a controversial export tax, the country's deputy finance minister said, following a series of talks aimed at restarting concentrate exports after a near-five-month halt.

The move would signal progress in reaching a deal over the tax that was introduced on Jan. 12 along with a ban on mineral ore shipments as part of moves to force miners to build smelters and processing plants in Southeast Asia's largest economy.

The new export tax halted about $500 million worth of monthly mineral ore and concentrate exports and led Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc and Newmont Mining , which account for 97 percent of Indonesia's copper output, to slash production, arguing it conflicts with their contracts.

"What has been agreed on is the principle of the export tax," Deputy Finance Minister Bambang Brodjonegoro told reporters after government talks involving Freeport chief executive Richard Adkerson. "They agreed to an export tax."

Brodjonegoro said he did not expect the government and miners to reach a deal on the tax this week.

Freeport and Newmont have previously argued that they should be exempt from the tax, which kicks in at 25 percent and rises to 60 percent in the second half of 2016, before a total concentrate export ban in 2017. They said their current contracts prohibit any extra taxes.

Under the new proposal, officials would draft a new tax regulation that would set a lower rate for miners who were progressing with plans to build smelters.

Freeport's Chief Financial Officer Kathleen Quirk said at an investor conference in Chicago on Wednesday that the company expects to resume exports very soon. Its production forecasts for the year had assumed exports would resume in May.

"The deal is not done yet, we're not in a position today to announce it, but I can report that we are making progress," Quirk said. Freeport expects the export tax would be

"significantly reduced," she said.

Representatives of Newmont could not be reached for comment.

Both U.S. miners have questioned the economic viability of building new copper smelters in Indonesia, but have agreed to study the possibility of building a copper smelter with state-owned miner Aneka Tambang .

Separately, Indonesia's Industry Minister M.S. Hidayat said the export tax would be reduced. He was unable to give details but said the government and mining companies were close to an agreement.

The push to settle the dispute follows the appointment of billionaire businessman Chairul Tanjung as chief economics minister last month. Tanjung made restarting copper exports a top priority, amid a widening trade deficit, a slowdown in first-quarter economic growth and the prospect of job layoffs at mines.
Newmont said on Tuesday it had halted copper concentrate production at its Batu Hijau mine as its storage facilities were full, but had delayed standing down its 8,000 employees and contractors ahead of this week's meetings.

Tanjung led a series of high-level government and industry meetings on Wednesday, aimed at brokering a deal on the tax, and resolving contract renegotiations for major miners.

Source: Reuters

Walmart's 'Made in USA' push exposes strains of manufacturing rebirth

When Walmart pledged last year to buy an extra $250 billion in U.S.-made goods over the next decade, it appeared to be just what was needed to help move America's putative manufacturing renaissance from rhetoric to reality.

But suppliers trying to reshore production as part of the initiative by the world's largest retailer are running into practical problems as they try to restart long-idled corners of U.S. manufacturing.

Companies that make the leap have to grapple with a host of challenges, including a shallow pool of component suppliers, an inexperienced workforce, and other shortcomings that developed during the country's long industrial decline.

"A lot of the tribal knowledge and skill sets are gone because the humans who used to do that work have either retired or died," says H. Kim Kelley, the CEO of Hampton Products International, a privately held maker of locks, lighting and other household hardware. The Foothill Ranch, California-based company began selling products made in Asia to Walmart in the 1990s and is now supplying it with some U.S.-made products.

Trying to rebuild that manufacturing capability, while making products that meet Walmart's standards, can require companies to “start from scratch,” Kelley says.

Cindi Marsiglio, the Walmart vice president overseeing the U.S. sourcing push, says the retailer and its existing suppliers have 150 active reshoring projects in various stages of development. For all too many, she says, finding U.S.-made component parts has emerged as a vexing problem.

Hampton, which also makes tow straps, tie-downs and bungee cords for the automotive market, had a hard time locating a U.S. maker of lightweight but strong polyester yarn. Marsiglio says other suppliers complain of difficulty finding small motors, as well as plastic injection molding equipment and computerized cut-and-sew tools.

The issue is so widespread that Walmart is making it the focus of a two-day summit it is hosting in August in Denver. At a similar summit held in Orlando last year, Walmart focused on connecting suppliers with economic development officers from states hoping to lure the new factories.

The retailer says it is especially interested in having factory owners with excess capacity attend the August event - even those that aren't interested in supplying Walmart directly. The hope is that they can become contract manufacturers to Walmart suppliers looking to produce in the United States.

On July 8, it is also inviting hundreds of potential vendors to an "open call" to pitch U.S.-made products to the retailer in Bentonville, Arkansas, where it is based.


SHUT PLANTS

Walmart's critics say the company bears some responsibility for the diminished capability of U.S. manufacturers. For years, its relentless insistence that suppliers cut costs prompted companies to shut domestic plants and shift production to low-wage countries.

Now, the retailer is asking companies to come back home - though they need little prompting. The forces pulling production back to the United States are powerful and real and include lower domestic energy prices, increasingly competitive wage rates, the benefits of greater automation, and a renewed appreciation for the value of being able to respond quickly to shifting U.S. customer demands.

Still, starting up a manufacturing operation is a complex undertaking, especially for vendors like Hampton and Redman & Associates, an Arkansas-based toymaker.

Last year, Redman sold 1.1 million battery-powered ride-on toys, such as large toy cars, in the United States - every one of them made in Chinese contract plants. By 2016, the privately held company plans to be producing about 600,000 of those toys each year out of a brand-new company-owned and run plant in the U.S.

Mel Redman, the company's CEO and chairman, says the transition has required the company to reverse engineer everything its Chinese contractors were doing - an exercise that wasn't easy given his executive team's background in retail.

“We didn’t know much about manufacturing – we didn’t know anything about it really,” he says.


SHIPPING COSTS

Walmart declines to say how many products it has introduced as a result of the 18-month-old Made in USA initiative. But the company says consumers can now buy everything from U.S.-made flat-screen TVs, light bulbs and towels and curtains in its stores and on its website.

The flat-screen TVs, made in Winnsboro, South Carolina by Element Electronics, may be the campaign’s biggest surprise to date.

Founded in 2007, Element had until this year made all its TVs in Asia - but it was unable to get them on Walmart's shelves because there was nothing that differentiated them from rivals' products, says CEO Mike O'Shaughnessy.

“So we began to think about what we could do differently. Well, one of the things we could do differently is to make our TVs at home,” he says.

Element built a small test plant in Michigan that began producing flat-screen TVs shortly before Walmart announced the Made in USA push in January 2013. The announcement prompted the company to fast-track its expansion. Today, Element’s 315,000-square-foot plant in South Carolina has six assembly lines making 32- and 40-inch TVs that are now available in all of Walmart's more than 4,000 U.S. stores.

The switch has led to significant savings in ocean freight charges and customs duties on finished goods - though like so many companies involved in the initiative Element has had difficulty finding domestic suppliers. "We import the vast majority of our parts," says O'Shaughnessy. "Longer term, the more success we have procuring our parts domestically, the better off we expect to be."

Although Walmart has given itself 10 years to meet its $250 billion goal, Marsiglio says the retailer hopes to meet the target ahead of schedule. She says the point of the "open call" next month is to simplify a product pitching process that can challenge even long-time suppliers.

But while the door is open, the bar is high and Walmart will require any applicants to open their financial books as part of the screening process.

Given Walmart’s reputation as a tough negotiator with suppliers, the disclosure of sensitive financial information to the retailer requires a leap of faith. But Element's O'Shaughnessy said his company had no misgivings about opening its books. Walmart needs to know it can rely on its vendors, he said.

“What does it cost to produce product? What does it cost to move product? Every one of the variables that make up the cost of the product we (shared) with Walmart,” he says.


Source:  Reuters

Euro zone economy stutters as ECB gears up for action

Price cuts by euro zone firms failed to prevent business growth from losing momentum in May, all but sealing the case for looser monetary policy a day before the European Central Bank meets.

Markit's Composite Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) showed that while output across the bloc remained solid in May the pace of growth eased - despite output prices falling for the 26th straight month.

"Today's PMIs remain consistent with some recovery in the euro zone," said Annalisa Piazza at Newedge Strategy.

"That said, we rule out that the picture of moderate recovery will be an obstacle for the ECB to justify further accommodation this week."

ECB policymakers have flagged a move at Thursday's meeting. Sources told Reuters last month the bank was preparing a package of policy options, including cuts in all its interest rates and targeted measures aimed at boosting lending to small and mid-sized businesses.

Annual euro zone inflation, which the ECB prefers to be just under 2 percent, fell unexpectedly in May to just 0.5 percent, increasing the risks of deflation and making a policy response on Thursday a virtual certainty. 

Industrial producer prices, a proxy for consumer prices, fell as expected both on the month and on a year ago in April, Eurostat also said on Wednesday.

In Britain, which does not use the euro, the services industry expanded faster than expected in May, and hiring notched a 17-year high, adding to a debate at the Bank of England about how soon it should raise rates. 
The BoE is widely expected to be the first major central bank to begin hiking interest rates from a record low of 0.5 percent - although not until next year.

"Record low interest rates are no longer necessary. The (UK) economy is growing rapidly and, if anything, is picking up pace," said Christian Schulz at Berenberg.


DIFFERENT ROADS

Just as Britain's recovery seems to be progressing at a faster rate than that of the neighbouring euro zone economy, parallel divergences have emerged within the currency union.

The bloc's growth was once again supported by Germany and pointed to euro zone GDP expanding 0.4-0.5 percent this quarter. But French business activity slipped back into contraction after just two months of growth.

Similarly, accelerating growth in the service industry was offset by an easing in manufacturing.

The Composite PMI, widely seen as a good gauge of growth, dipped to 53.5 in May, shy of a flash reading of 53.9 and below April's final 54.0. But it held above the 50 mark dividing growth from contraction for the 11th month running.

The slowdown in growth came despite firms again cutting prices. The output price index nudged up to 48.8 from 48.7 but has held below the break-even mark since April 2012.

"The overall rate of growth is just not strong enough to allow firms to push through price hikes. This is perhaps the final nail in the coffin for hopes of a robust recovery without stimulus," said Chris Williamson, chief economist at Markit.

The index for the euro zone's vast service industry rose to a near three-year high of 53.2 in May from 53.1 in April as new business came in at its fastest pace since mid-2011, with the related subindex rising to 52.8 from 52.3.

First quarter GDP growth was confirmed at just 0.2 percent earlier on Wednesday, leaving currency and bond markets little moved as they await the ECB's decision on Thursday. 
Source: Reuters
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U.S. Weekly Petroleum Report

Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration

Fed may shun global risk rules banks spent billions to meet. "They are flawed and can be gamed"

The Federal Reserve may scrap international measures aimed at assessing bank health in favor of imposing its own rules, frustrating bankers who have spent billions of dollars retooling their books to meet global standards.

Fed officials are concerned that parts of a key tool that regulators have developed to measure banks' riskiness—known as

"Basel III capital rules" -- are flawed and can be gamed by the companies.

Under Basel, banks can determine how much debt they can take on by using their own models and computer systems to calculate how risky their assets are, among other methods. The higher the risk, the less money banks can borrow and lend, in turn cutting income banks can earn. In other words, the Basel rules give banks a chance to monkey with their risk models to boost profit.

In a May speech, Fed Governor Daniel Tarullo condemned the latitude that Basel III gives banks to use their own models. While he was expressing his own views, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters that Tarullo's opinion is held by other governors.

Instead of the Basel rules, Tarullo promoted the use of the Fed's own yardstick of bank health, a test of how bank assets would perform during market turmoil or an economic slump. That process, which the Fed has developed separately from the Basel regulations, is known as the "stress test."

"As a practical matter, it is our binding capital standard," said John Dugan, former U.S. Comptroller of the Currency and now a partner at the law firm of Covington & Burling in Washington.

The Fed's decision to emphasize a different process for evaluating risk is maddening to banks, who complain that the Fed's tests are opaque. The regulator fears that banks would find ways to cheat the tests if they knew too much about the methodology, so it gives them little detail about it. Every year, the Fed can also change the stressful situations it tests for.

Wall Street says it's getting mixed signals about Basel III from the Fed. Tarullo's remarks come less than three months after U.S. regulators gave the green light to eight big U.S. banks to use their own risk models. [ID:nL2N0LQ1M7]

One senior bank executive who refused to be named complained that the regulator wants "a private playbook" which it can redesign every year. Another called the stress test process

"arbitrary and scary."

The world's biggest banks have probably spent billions of dollars in recent years building computer models, hiring staff and selling assets to comply with Basel III, analysts said. An executive at a major bank told Reuters last year that his firm had spent $500 million on models and systems alone.

Without more detail about the Fed's rules, banks must hold more capital, possibly constraining their lending and global growth, bankers said. Wells Fargo & Co , the fourth-largest U.S. bank, said at a recent conference that it is holding more capital in large part because of the Fed's stress test.

Many regulators have little patience with these complaints. In the run-up to the financial crisis, banks succumbed to the temptation to boost earnings by borrowing more money to fund their assets. If a bank has too much debt, even slight declines in the value of its assets can put it out of business, a lesson that Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc learned the hard way.

The Fed and other regulators are charged with maintaining the health of the financial system, not maximizing bank profits.

Regulators may have reason to be alarmed about the way banks are measuring asset risk. Last year, the Basel Committee, which is refining the current generation of Basel rules, said it found wide variance in how banks assessed the riskiness of hypothetical portfolios of loans and trading assets. A Barclays Capital survey in 2012 found that half of investors distrust banks' assessments of the riskiness of their assets.

Banks rarely confess to changing their risk models to reduce their capital requirements, but evidence of its happening came to light last year, when a U.S. Senate subcommittee released e-mails in which JPMorgan Chase & Co executives discussed how they were changing their models to reduce the apparent riskiness of their assets.

Policing banks' models is labor intensive, and regulators are finding their staff and resources stretched. Even the head of the Basel Committee acknowledged in March that adjusting assets for risk poses difficulties for regulators.

"The message I would like to leave you with today is that there is one (a problem), and we plan to do something about it," said Basel Committee Chairman Stefan Ingves in a speech in New York.

The Federal Reserve is not inclined to wait to fix rules that global regulators have been discussing and refining for a decade. The central bank has added its own rules to a separate part of the Basel capital requirements, known as the leverage ratios, which do not consider the riskiness of assets.

Tarullo's harsh criticism of the Basel risk measures came in a May 8 speech.

Referring to bank models for calculating asset risk, called the "internal-ratings-based approach," he said, the "combined complexity and opacity of risk weights generated by each banking organization for purposes of its regulatory capital requirement create manifold risks of gaming, mistake, and monitoring difficulty."

Later, he said, "in light of all that has happened in the last decade, I see little reason to maintain the requirements of the IRB approach for our largest banks."

Fed staffers interviewed by Reuters said Tarullo's tone and timing were surprising, given the amount of energy that both U.S. regulators and the banks have put into adopting the third generation of Basel rules, which must be fully implemented by the beginning of 2019.

"They've invested so much time and effort into that process, and it's an international agreed-upon standard, so to say to scrap it – it's a pretty bold statement," said an employee at a regional Federal Reserve bank who did not want to be identified.

Federal Reserve spokeswoman Barbara Hagenbaugh declined to comment.


CRISIS AFTERMATH

Regulators have been working on the third set of Basel rules for a decade, but the effort gained extra momentum after the financial crisis, when investors and depositors feared that banks had too much debt and too little equity, or capital, funding their assets.

Capital represents a cushion that banks have against their assets losing value during times of stress—maintaining enough of a buffer is critical to preventing runs on banks during crises. When investors and depositors lost faith in banks, governments and central banks globally had to pump trillions of dollars into the financial system to bail out lenders.

The Fed developed the stress tests in 2009 in part to restore trust in the financial system. Investors unsure about bank-asset values took comfort that regulators were checking that banks would be solvent during a crisis.

These tests, combined with the Fed's decisions about whether banks can afford to buy back more shares and increase their dividends, have become increasingly important to the regulator, sources said.

The European Central Bank, which will become the continent's bank supervisor before the end of the year, is also developing its own stress tests known as the asset quality review.

Banks including Citigroup Inc and Bank of America Corp have been embarrassed to have had capital plans rejected by the Fed. Their failures have encouraged others to be more cautious managing their capital, analysts said.

John McDonald of Bernstein Research in New York recently estimated that changes in the Fed's grading methods this year canceled out some $60 billion of excess capital at three big banks, Citigroup, Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase & Co.

Changing complexities of the Fed's testing "could have negative implications for the way banks are run," according to McDonald.

Three senior Wall Street executives complained to Reuters about the Fed's shifts towards its own tests, though none would be named for fear of insulting their regulator.

A former Fed staffer who now works in the industry said Tarullo is wrong to be so confident in the Fed's own models, which have been changing year-to-year and haven't been tested in another crisis. In the most recent round of stress tests, the Fed discovered flaws in its models that it said were minor.

It had to adjust its calculations and release revised numbers the next day. Even if one bank's model is not the best, the person said, models from the top 150 banks in aggregate are likely better than a single model from one regulator.

A consequence of banks not knowing how the models will work, the person said, is that banks will be more reluctant to take chances lending and investing. "You are really tamping down potential growth in the economy," the person said.

Source: Reuters

U.S. The private sector added 179,000 jobs in May

 Private-sector hiring in May hit the slowest pace in four months as service providers decreased their rate of hiring, according to data released Wednesday morning.
Employers in the private sector added 179,000 jobs in May — the fewest new positions since January — down from 215,000 in April, Automatic Data Processing Inc. reported. Economists polled by Dow Jones Newswires had expected a May gain of 210,000 private-sector jobs, compared with an originally estimated increase of 220,000 jobs in April.
“The job market has yet to break out from the pace of growth that has prevailed over the last three years,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist of Moody’s Analytics, which prepares the report using data from ADP.
However, longer-term trends look more promising, as May’s private-sector hiring was up from a gain of 163,000 jobs in the year-earlier period. And the three-month moving average, which smoothes out some monthly volatility, shows that private-sector employers added an average of 198,000 jobs per month over the quarter through May, up from 153,000 during the year-earlier period.
Details of ADP’s report show that private-sector service providers added 150,000 jobs in May, down from an increase of 194,000 in April. Meanwhile, goods producers added 29,000 jobs in May, up from 21,000 in April. By company size, small businesses added 82,000 private-sector jobs in May, medium businesses added 61,000 and large businesses added 37,000.
Economists use ADP’s data to get a feeling for the U.S. Labor Department’s employment report, which will be released Friday and covers government jobs in addition to the private sector. Economists polled by MarketWatch expect the government’s report to show that nonfarm employment rose by 210,000 jobs in May, compared with a gain of 288,000 jobs in April.
A variety of labor-market data signal that the country’s jobs environment is continuing to heal, though at a slower pace than economists would like. Weekly claims forunemployment-insurance benefits are near the lowest levels since the recession ended. And workers see greater career opportunities, though many remain cautious over quitting .
Source: Marketwatch

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