Tuesday, 19 November 2013

Japan's solar dream shatters as projects fail

The failure of solar developers to deliver on planned projects in Japan will cost the country's utilities close to $3.5 billion annually in additional coal and gas imports to generate power.
Japan's government banked on solar power to help meet the shortfall in electricity supply after the Fukushima disaster in 2011 shattered public confidence in nuclear energy. The country's reactors are shut while the government struggles to convince the population the plants are safe to restart.To encourage solar investment Tokyo introduced generous subsidies more than a year ago, sparking a rush from developers who came forward with plans that would have supplied the equivalent to 21 nuclear reactors.
But in contrast to the experience in countries such as Spain and Britain, where subsidies sparked solar booms that strained government finances, in Japan developers are struggling to deliver.
The promise of turning a quick profit from subsidized solar power encouraged speculative developers lacking the experience and expertise needed to deliver in Japan, industry experts say.

Source: Reuters

Tokyo yakuza boss demands cash, finger from retiring gang member

Tokyo Metropolitan Police on Tuesday arrested a gang boss for allegedly extorting a member who had sought retirement from organized crime without permission.
Officers arrested Yoshihide Ono, a 63-year-old boss with the Sumiyoshi-kai, and four others for allegedly participating in the abduction and extortion of a 55-year-old member in August.The group picked the victim from a street in Shinjku Ward and confined him inside a gang office. "We can do this by cutting off your finger or you can pay up," the suspects allegedly threatened.
The suspects demanded roughly 200,000 yen from the victim, who wished to retire due to the birth of a grandchild.

Source: NewsOnJapan

Tokyo cops bust Ueno hostess club for licensing violations

Tokyo Metropolitan Police on Monday announced the arrest of the manager of a hostess club in Taito Ward for licensing irregularities.
Officers took Yuichi Eitaka, the 41-year-old manager of Club Palace, located in the Ueno district, and one other suspect into custody for allegedly registering the proprietorship of the club in his name while another person was in fact the manager - a violation of the Law Regulating Adult Entertainment Businesses.According to police, Club Palace was shut down 13 years. In an effort to evade detection, Eitaka then received 1.2 million yen each month from the previous manager for the use of his name on the license. The club has generated 1.9 billion in revenue over that period.
Eitaka has reportedly denied the allegations.
Eitaka also manages more than 10 other clubs in the Ueno and Shinjuku areas. Law enforcement is now investigating these other businesses for similar violations.

Source: NewsOnJapan

500 Durians could make Southeast Asia cool for Silicon Valley

Southeast Asia has been ignored for far too long by Western VCs. Usually, when one mentions Asia in startup circles,China usually gets brought up first.
And for good reason. In terms of market volume and size of exits, nothing beats China, with Baidu, Tencent, and Alibaba making waves at home. Their presence is starting to be felt in Silicon Valley to.
Southeast Asia, unfortunately, can feel at times like a backwater area. But that could change, thanks to a new wave of Western investors that are starting to eye opportunities in a region that has some 600 million people. Indonesia alone makes up almost half of that. 
500 Durian a US$10 million micro fund started by 500 Startups, is leading the charge. An investment by the fund can mean greater exposure to venture capitalists in Silicon Valley, and that is what Southeast Asia needs.

A mouthful of durian

Heading this fund isKhailee Ng, a Malaysian entrepreneur with two exits to his name. He ran a daily deals site that got bought by Groupon, and started social news site Says.com that was merged with Catcha Media.
For now, 500 Durians’ activities has been a mystery since it was started in May, other than aninvestment in Noonswoon , a Thai mobile dating app.
Source: TECHINASIA

OECD upgrades 2014 growth forecast for Japan

The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development has revised upward its 2014 growth forecast for Japan.
In its latest report issued on Tuesday, the OECD said Japan's gross domestic product will grow 1.5 percent next year. That's up slightly from the projection of 1.4 percent the organization made 6 months ago.The OECD cites growing exports against the backdrop of the weaker yen, fiscal measures and recovering personal spending as the reasons for the upgrade.
The OECD expects that growth will slow to one percent in 2015, mainly because of the planned consumption tax increase.
It says regaining fiscal health is the top priority for Japan because its public debts account for 230 percent of GDP.

Source: NewsOnJapan

WeChat inks deal with Singapore telco to attract more young users

Tencent’s mobile chat app WeChat and Singapore telcoStarHub today launched a newWeChat Plan, in which pre-paid users of the telco can enjoy up to 1GB of social messaging for S$0.40 ($0.30) a day or S$6 ($4.82) per month.
According to StarHub’s head of personal solutions Chan Kin Hung, the move comes as a bid to attract more pre-paid users, who tend to be price-sensitive consumers. StarHub is the first local telco to partner with WeChat to offer such a service.
Charlotte Tan, on behalf of WeChat, explains that deal is geared towards the youth demographic in Singapore:
We are seeing high interest amongst youths internationally as they migrate from established social media platforms to mobile social applications and anticipate the same trend in Singapore, where tech-dependent consumers rely heavily on their mobile devices for communication and entertainment. GlobalWebIndex had recently reported in a blog post about this trend and we had referenced their findings about WeChat’s 1,021% growth in active users aged 16-19 in the press release.
Popular messaging appWhatsApp alsoinked a similar deal with local telco SingTel earlier in August, offering daily, weekly and monthly usage plans at $0.50 ($0.40), S$3 ($2.41), and S$6 ($4.82) respectively.
Source: TECHINASIA

China Plans Opening for Private Banks

   According to a report from the Wall Street Journal,"a reform program endorsed last week by the Communist Party leadership calls for letting private investors that meet certain as-yet-undefined requirements set up small and medium-size banks and other financial institutions".
The move, while vague, signals Beijing's greater willingness to support China's private sector, which has been starved for financial resources long dominated by state firms despite being an increasingly important part of the economy.
It comes after several nimble, well-known private companies have expressed interest in setting up banks, and it marks a change in strategy for the government. China's banking system has for decades effectively been the sole domain of state-owned companies, whose senior managers answer to political masters. A mainstay of China's economic growth model, the banks turned Chinese households' prodigious savings into cheap capital funneled to state-owned industrial firms.
Small and medium-size firms are major employers, but seen as a credit risk by state banks, they have traditionally relied on loans from informal sources—friends, family, other business, and underground banks—to run their businesses. Giving those firms better access to credit offers Beijing the prospect of growth, more jobs and innovation.

Slush 2013: "Get Big by thinking Small" Ilkka Paananen CEO of Supercell

Last week nearly 1,200 companies came together at a converted Cable Factory in Helsinki for the biggest startup conference in Northern Europe. The limelight went to BetterDoctor, a US doctor database with user rankings, and Weekdone, an elegant staff management tool, who won the two day Showcase demo and pitching competitions respectively.
But Slush 2013 was about far more than any individual startup. This year it preached cohesive ideologies and highlighted four key sectors which look to be ripe pickings for the savvy startup over the next few years.
Ilkka Paananen, CEO of Finnish startup sensation Supercell, and poster boy of Slush 2013 echoed Kaljundi’s words. Having sold 51 percent of the Clash of Clans creator for €1.5 billion in October, just two years after founding, Paananen was also keen to stress one point in particular: ‘the power of small’.
“Small independent cells is where the company name comes from,” he explained. “We say ‘get big by thinking small’. We value the speed of small teams and keeping things simple. Our employees don’t need layers of processes and layers of management… [just] do what is best for your team and the customer.”

Ideology

While different markets will always require different approaches, talking to numerous startups at Slush 2013 we witnessed near-consensus in the way to become a successful entrepreneur. The three key points were: treat everything as a service, put the customer at the centre of every business decision and test early.
The last of these argues it is better to trial what you are doing and pivot or fail than to invest a fortune bringing a fully realised version of the wrong concept to market.
“You must get the prototype out there and see what customers are saying,” stresses Weekdone CEO Juri Kaljundi. “I’m a big fan of [Eric Ries’] The Lean Startup model. You have to talk to customers and listen, but then you also have to make sure you don’t try to implement too many ideas. Be focused, what you don’t implement is as important as what you do.”

China Focus: Supervision urged for P2P lending as risks loom

- Chinese experts have called for better supervision of the booming online financing industry as bankrupt peer-to-peer (P2P) lending firms have put investors' money at risk.
According to "Wangdaizhijia" (home of online lending), a Chinese P2P lending portal, some 49 P2P lending companies have gone bankrupt or encountered capital chain problems this year.
P2P lending is the practice of lending money to unrelated individuals without going through a bank. This lending takes place online on P2P websites with an average interest rate of 15 to 20 percent, more than twice China's official benchmark.
As individuals and small companies in China have difficulty getting credit from banks, P2P lending with its simplified credit checks is the best way for them to get funding. It also offers a good chance for the middle classes to invest as they can normally get three or four times the return on bank deposits.
There were about 400 P2P lending companies in China at the end of 2012 with a yearly turnover of more than 20 billion yuan (3.26 billion U.S. dollars). The number of those companies is expected to exceed 800 with a yearly turnover of 100 billion yuan by the end of 2013, said Xu Hongwei, a senior executive of the Wangdaizhijia.
Competition among P2P lending firms pushed the interest rate up to 20 percent. Some firms even offer a 48 percent annual return to woo investors which increased the default risks for borrowers, said Xu.
Lack of government supervision allowed wild development of online finance. Not the central bank, nor bank regulators, nor industry and commerce authorities, have listed the online financing on their areas of supervision, said Huang Zhen, a professor of law with the Central University of Finance and Economics.
"With only tens of thousands of yuan (thousands of dollars), you can register a company as a 'consultancy' or 'e-commerce'," said Huang, "then you can establish a website doing online financing. The threshold is too low and sooner or later somebody will take the money and run."
Allwinsz, a P2P lending firm based in the southern city of Shenzhen, suspended operations only four months after its launch.
An investor surnamed Lu from the eastern province of Jiangsu invested 80,000 yuan in July on a 20-day program with an annual return of 48 percent. But so far he has received only 8,000 yuan. He opened negotiations with the company in October but failed to get his money back. "I have no hope now. Just take it as a nonperforming asset," said Lu, who has reported the case to the police.
Although most of the P2P lenders guarantee investors' loot in case of default, a small percentage of bad debt can easily swallow their registered capital completely.
Zhao Xijun, professor of finance at Renmin University of China, suggested the government set a threshold for P2P lenders as with micro-loan companies and pawnshops. The government can put restrictions on registered capital, personnel qualifications and credit records, said Zhao.
It can also ask all the P2P lending firms to register and report their data regularly. Licensing P2P firms is also an option, he said.
Source: Xinhua

European equities markets ease

European equities ease off of multi-year highs 
After posting a more than five-year high yesterday, the European equity markets are seeing some pressure in late-day action, with traders grappling with valuation concerns in the region as well as the lingering uncertainty regarding when the U.S. Federal Reserve may begin to rein in its stimulus measures. Moreover, sentiment may be being further depressed by a reduced global growth outlook for this year and next from the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), citing the slowing of emerging market economies. Meanwhile, the pullback in the region comes despite an upbeat reading on German investor sentiment. The German ZEW survey of analyst investor confidence, designed to forecast economic developments six months from now, improved to 54.6 in November, from 52.8 in October, and compared to the 54.0 reading that economists had projected. This was the highest level for the index since October 2009. Additionally, the losses for stocks in the region come even as shares of easyJet Plc. (ESYJY $81) are rallying after Europe's second-largest discount air carrier, per Bloomberg, posted a 50% jump in profits and announced a special dividend. In other economic news, eurozone construction output fell in September, while growth in Italian industrial orders decelerated for September. 

Source: Schwab

The UK FTSE 100 Index is down 0.3%, France's CAC-40 Index is declining 1.0%, Germany's DAX Index is decreasing 0.2%, Italy's FTSE MIB Index is falling 1.2%, Spain's IBEX 35 Index is dropping 1.1%, and Switzerland's Swiss Market Index is trading 0.5% lower. 

China's service trade up 13.4 % Jan.-Sept.

China's service trade grew 13.4 percent year on year in the first nine months of 2013 to reach 390.5 billion U.S. dollars, official data showed on Tuesday.
According to the Ministry of Commerce, service exports rose 6.8 percent from the same period last year to 146.4 billion dollars, while imports surged 17.8 percent to 244.1 billion dollars.
The service trade deficit expanded to 97.7 billion dollars, up 39.4 percent. Tourism and transportation service sectors contributed the most to the total deficit, ending 58.3 billion and 41.7 billion dollars in the red, respectively.
Meanwhile, the trade volume of the transportation service sector totaled 98.5 billion dollars, up 6.4 percent year on year, while tourism service sector trade totaled 129.3 billion dollars, up 14.5 percent.
Source: Xinhua

OECD calls on ECB to buy euro zone assets A

The European Central Bank must consider buying government and corporate bonds to help the euro zone avoid a Japanese-style deflationary spiral, the OECD said on Tuesday.

It was a direct call for the ECB to undertake quantitative easing (QE), a policy that currently divides the bank, in the face of what the think-tank said was a risk of deflation.
Inflation in the 17-nation euro zone fell to its lowest in nearly four years in October, with the economy struggling to recover strongly after emerging from its longest ever recession.
Despite a surprise ECB rate cut this month, the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development said in its latest economic outlook that the bank needs to take bolder measures at a time of massive unemployment and difficult credit.
"Risks of deflation may be slowly increasing," OECD chief economist Pier Carlo Padoan told Reuters. "The ECB must be very careful and be prepared to use even non-conventional measures to beat any risk of deflation becoming permanent," he said.
Under its statutes, the ECB is banned from buying bonds directly from governments but can find ways to purchase them from banks, for example, on the secondary market or accept them as security in return for finance.
Source: Reuters

Milan mayor says sustainable development "winning challenge" for whole world

Ahead of joining the European Union (EU) delegation of mayors and experts to take part in the EU-China Urbanization Forum in Beijing, Milan Mayor Giuliano Pisapia said that sustainable development was the "winning challenge" for the entire Planet.
Pisapia said in a recent exclusive interview with Xinhua that his official visit to Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou this week will be a precious occasion to discuss future opportunities for collaboration.
"Not only the exchange of views between different countries is important, but the positive choices of individual cities can set an example for the others," he said.
The Milan mayor said that sustainable development, which goes hand in hand with China's urbanization process, will be one of the main challenges of the country's new course, and "China is already making significant moves."
Milan, which will absorb its metropolitan area from 2014 for effect of a new law and will therefore exceed 3 million inhabitants, still has a much smaller size compared to China's metropolis.
Yet, the busiest Italian city has already experienced the development-led transformations that China is facing and can share the best practices as well as promote common agendas, Pisapia added.
Since he took power in June 2011, the Milan mayor has insisted on making citizens realize the importance of green policies. Step after step, Milan has achieved a leading role in what has been called the "Century of the Cities" in which cities will be regional catalysts of global growth.
The business capital, whose hinterland is Italy's most productive area, is part as Innovator City of the Cities Climate Leadership Group (C40), a network of cities from around the world committed to implementing sustainable actions locally. The organization has its European Regional seat in Milan.
Pisapia described the robust results with the initiatives delivered by his administration, such as the integrated mobility plan and congestion pricing, which generated a 30-percent traffic reduction and led to notable lowering by 60 percent of black carbon emissions in less than two years.
The charge, which replaced a previous limit on the most polluting vehicles, is 5 euros (6.7 U.S. dollars) per day and must be paid by motorists entering the city center. Residents are exempt for the first 40 entries but must pay a reduced fee of 2 euros per entry thereafter.
The lowered congestion also resulted in increased use of public transport as well as bike and car sharing. "The measure has the merit for arousing awareness. Many citizens who first opposed realized then the need for everybody to do their part in the fight against pollution," Pisapia said.
On the heating side, Milan has implemented "district heating." The mayor noted that around 93,000 apartments or a rough figure of 22 million cubic meters, 9.4 percent more than last year, are being treated with this system, which transfers heat from heating plants to consumers.
Energy efficiency, new technology services, collection of organic waste (that has reached a 44.6-percent level) and requalification of disused buildings and agricultural areas were among the other steps towards expanding Milan's spirit of Smart City also in light of the upcoming Expo 2015.
Pisapia noted that in a moment of trouble for the national industrial system, many young Italians have turned back to food production in the Milan territory, which has strong agriculture roots.
It was not by chance that the Milan Expo's theme "Feeding the Planet, Energy for Life" was aimed at raising an alarm regarding unacceptable wasting of food in a world where around 1 billion people are suffering from malnutrition while another billion are suffering from obesity.
In the wake of the successful Shanghai Expo 2010, the food-and-agriculture-themed event will further highlight the necessity of "sharing knowledge and technologies" at all levels to fight global hunger.
A total of 138 participants have signed up so far and a record number of 60 countries will build their own pavilions. China's pavilion will be second in size only to the Germany pavilion.
"We have different strengths but if we build cultural ties we find that we also have the same fundamental values: above all, we share the goal to achieve a better quality of life for our peoples," Pisapia pointed out.
The Milan mayor said he will bring to China his will to strengthen mutual confidence so to join efforts for sustainable development that he defined as "the winning challenge for Italy, for China and for the rest of the world."
Source: Xinhua

EU-China partnership essential to growth, prosperity: Barroso

The EU-China partnership is essential to growth and prosperity on both sides and the two should take a long-term approach to enhance their ties, European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso told Xinhua.
"The EU-China relationship must continue to be a major source of economic growth, jobs, development and innovation for both sides," Barroso said in an exclusive interview with Xinhua before leaving for an EU-China summit in Beijing.
At Thursday's summit, top leaders of China and the European Union (EU) will celebrate the 10th anniversary of their comprehensive strategic partnership and set the tone for future cooperation.
The two sides, for the past decade, have kept closer ties as they strengthen political dialogues, economic cooperation and culture exchanges.
"We are at an important juncture and the summit is of special significance ... It will be an important moment to look forward to the next decade of cooperation between the EU and China," Barroso said.
Source:  Xinhua

Alibaba's Chief Technology Officer present at Slush, Annual Startup event in Helsinski.

As the Slush conference, an annual startup event in Helsinski, attracted thousands more participants than last year, a top Chinese IT developer has seen the opportunity of emerging independent internet ecosystem rather than the current one dominated by Americans.
Wang Jian, Chief Technology Officer (CTO) of Alibaba group, made the remarks in an interview with Xinhua, after he briefed the Slush audience about China's e-commerce businesses.
The Slush, a unique interacting platform in Europe for technical business startups which saw its sixth annual gathering Wednesday and Thursday at a wider venue, proved successful as it received 5,000 participants, a number that surprised Finnish media considering merely about 300 people came to the event in 2008.
The Slush 2013 also drew 60 billion U.S. dollars worth of venture capital, almost twice the value last year.
Believing the global internet is still largely dominated by U.S. technology, Wang said the well-sold Slush entrance tickets gave him confidence to expect a non-American ecosystem to emerge.
He said, "80 percent of netizens are outside America, whereas 80 percent of internet services are provided in America. This is ... not only ... a huge challenge ... but an opportunity as well."
Wang said he was impressed by the "enthusiasm, determination and solidarity" at the Slush venue. "They are similar to us," referring to a recent conference in China organized by Aliyun, a cloud platform of e-commerce set up by Alibaba group.
Wang chaired the conference, which was held earlier this month in Zhejiang Province in eastern China, and attended by some 5,000 developers, customers and investors.
Like Europe, thousands of Chinese business startups began to generate huge revenues through internet and to provide services to millions of users beyond China. "This is a development thanks to the global internet," said Wang.
He noted that many of Chinese successful startups are gaming companies, just like Finland, a nordic country that saw its gaming industry the fastest growing sector in 2012.
Although a senior IT person, Wang said he just heard of Slush not long ago, and he described his negligence as "a result of blind spot."
After his first speech at the Blue Stage, where Finnish Prime Minister Jyrki Katainen voiced his optimism about European startups, Wang said he felt committed to persuading more Chinese developers and investors to attend Slush in order to know the latest development in Europe.
Chinese developers are "more of grassroot" compared with their European fellow entrepreneurs, said Wang.
Meanwhile, he believed the limited scale of market is an obstacle for European developers to better test their products and services, and therefore their Chinese partners can offer help in context of the huge, fast growing market.
Moreover, Wang said business startups are relatively easier to grow due to the better-organized financing systems in European countries like Finland, which is an opportunity for those Chinese companies eager to acquire internet know-how and upgrade their product lines.
Source: Xinhua

China: Official residence system

To "explore how to implement an official residence system" was among the decisions at the Third Plenary Session last week. Although there have been no details of when and how this will be implemented, it has caught the attention of the public. A signed article in Jinghua Times says this would be a concrete measure to restrict the power of cadres so that the housing benefits they enjoy will be transparent and based on rules.
It is a common practice in some Western countries that officials at certain levels live in a government-provided and maintained residence when they take office and move out after finishing their terms. But this concept is relatively new in China. Some corrupt officials acquire free or subsidized apartments at one place, and accumulate more houses as they move to serve in another place or get promoted, which they then pass to families, relatives, or even mistresses. Some officials sell the properties, which they have obtained for free or which are subsidized, at the market price and then keep the profits. There have been cases in recent years in which officials have been found to own dozens or even hundreds of apartments.
An official residence system would help prevent this kind of corruption and could save public money, since local governments would not have to build a new house each time a new leader entered office. It could also help prevent the loss of State assets and official corruption.
The Party has launched a campaign to clean up undesirable work styles including formalism, bureaucracy, hedonism and extravagance. However, what makes a good practice stick is a rigorous system to ensure it is followed. An official residence system would be a step in the right direction, but it will need top-level design to restrict and supervise official power, and it will also require concrete measures to implement it and ensure it is not abused.
The size, expense and maintenance of official residences should be kept strictly within official limits and who can live in them should be restricted. The name of the occupant, his or her official tenure, and changes of occupancy should be made known to the public. More transparency of the properties owned by officials is also needed to decide whether they are qualified to enjoy the benefits of official residence.
Source: China Daily

China, Xinhua Insight: Decisive market tackles overcapacity

 Giving prominence to the market will help tackle industrial overcapacity and transform the current growth model, experts said.
Tuesday's communique after the Third Plenary Session of the 18th Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee stressed profound economic reform, with the market to play the decisive role in allocation of resources and the government working harder.
Zhang Jiashou, an economics scholar in south China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, said that the reforms will deal with excess capacity.
"It will provide an opportunity for China to finish off extra industrial capacity which is wasting resources," he said.
China currently has severe overcapacity. The average utilization rate in oversupplied sectors such as steel is below 75 percent, far lower than the international average, and around 22 percent of production capacity in China's major industrial companies sat idle in the first half of the year.
Such extra capacity can be seen in Guangxi's Pingguo County, one of the major production bases for the Aluminum Corporation of China (Chinalco), a key state-owned enterprise. The county is known for its aluminum resources and has one of China's biggest aluminum processing industries.
Chinalco in Guangxi has a manufacturing capacity of 150,000 tonnes of electrolytic aluminum annually, but one sixth of that is idle, according to Yang Yurong, factory director.
"Although we have abundant aluminum resources, the high price of electricity price and the falling price of electrolytic aluminum have restricted development, leading to overcapacity," Yang said.
Electrolytic aluminum manufacture consumes a staggering amount of electricity, but lack of unified pricing allows some areas with low electricity costs launch new projects, exacerbating an already grievous overcapacity crisis, he added.
The poor electricity pricing mechanism is just part of a broader picture. Chi Fulin, head of the China Institute for Reform and Development, believed that marketization of productive factors is not good enough, causing waste and excess capacity.
"Over the past 30 years, marketization level of the commodities has grown by leaps and bounds, a glaring contrast to other production factors such as natural gas, coal, electricity," Chi said.
Another reason for excess industrial capacity is too much local governments intervention, which has blurred the line between marketization and interference, said Zhao Zhenhua, an economist at the Party School of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC).
Zhao noted that in many parts of China, slogans promoting big projects and investments can be seen everywhere, showing local governments' blind passions for economic development.
"What appears to be overcapacity is in fact a revelation of blind competition among local governments," Zhao said, adding that too much artificial interference has contributed to repeated production.
As China's economy slowed, extra capacity became a major issue, one that the central government is now resolved to tackle.
In October, the State Council, China's cabinet, issued a guideline on overcapacity in each sector: new projects expanding capacity are forbidden, projects under construction should be reappraised, illegal capacity should be cleared up, outmoded capacity should be eliminated in an orderly way.
Liu Shengjun, another researcher, pointed out that the market is the most efficient way of tackling extra capacity, as it guides allocation of resources by supply and demand.
"Governments should repeal mechanisms that obstruct the market, such as subsidies," he said.
More reform in pricing of productive factors is expected, analysts said.
"Industrial overcapacity could be resolved and a market mechanism could truly be established on the principal of 'survival of the fittest' " 
Source: Xinhua

Investor caution ends share rally, dollar steadies

World shares fell on Tuesday as concern that the recent stock rally has been overdone grew after the OECD cut its global economic forecasts, while doubt over when the Federal Reserve may trim its stimulus supported the dollar.

In its latest snapshot of economic activity, the Paris-based Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) cut its 2014 forecast for global economic growth to 3.6 percent from the 4.0 percent it saw in May.
Equity investors are concerned that the recent rally, driven by the loose policies of major central banks, has far outpaced the underlying economic improvement, leaving share prices ripe for a sharp fall.
MSCI's world equity index, tracking shares in 45 countries, followed the tone set by Wall Street and edged down 0.2 percent, backing away from Monday's 6-year peak.
In Europe, the worries about high share values amid a generally weak quarterly earnings season and signs of a fragile economic recovery left the broad FTSEurofirst 300 index was 0.6 percent lower by late morning, off from a 5-year peak.
Pan-European multiples are close to multi-year highs. 
Source: Reuters

Japan to craft stimulus package early December.

Japanese Economics Minister Akira Amari said on Tuesday the government will forgo issuing new bonds to fund its economic stimulus package.
The package, which will have a spending of roughly 5 trillion yen (£31.03 billion), will be compiled in early December, Amari told a news conference after a cabinet meeting.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has decided to compile the package to cushion the pain from an increase in Japan's national sales tax in April next year.
Spending for the package will be funded by an extra budget for the current fiscal year ending in March 2014.
Source;  Reuters

Bloomberg: Dropbox seeks new funding, valuing company at $8 billion: report

Fast-growing file-sharing and storage startup Dropbox Inc is trying to raise $250 million in additional funding in coming weeks, which would value the six-year-old company at more than $8 billion, Bloomberg Businessweek reported on Monday.
The company may become the latest hot Silicon Valley startup to take advantage of flush investors and stratospheric valuations for fledgling tech companies. Loss-making Twitter Inc is now valued north of $20 billion after its debut; Pinterest, which only recently began to clarify its business model, last month won a round of financing that valued the nascent website at $3.8 billion.

Dropbox, which is increasingly competing with Microsoft and Google as well as fellow startup Box in the fast-growing field of cloud storage, wants to beef up its sales and engineering teams and acquire technology, the Bloomberg story said citing two people with knowledge of its plans.

Brazil's OGX considers legal steps after Petronas rescinds $850 million deal

OGX Petróleo e Gás Participações SA , the Brazilian oil producer that filed for bankruptcy protection, is reviewing legal options after Malaysia's Petroliam Nasional Bhd PETR.UL canceled its agreed purchase of a stake in two OGX oil blocks.
OGX, controlled by Brazilian former billionaire Eike Batista, said in a securities filing late on Monday that it received notice from Petronas, as Malaysia's state oil company is known, that the latter had unilaterally rescinded the $850 million contract.

In its filing, OGX said that it is "analyzing the adoption of any potential legal measures" related to Petronas' move.
Source:  Reuters

OECD sees China growth accelerating in 2014, urges reforms.

 China's annual economic growth is likely to accelerate to 8.2 percent in 2014 from an expected 7.7 percent this year, driven by stronger domestic demand, the OECD said on Tuesday.
"Growth is picking up and inflation remains low, domestic demand has led the turnaround," the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development said in its latest report on the global economic outlook.

The OECD outlook was rosier than a recent Reuters poll that showed China's economic growth could slow to 7.4 percent in 2014 from an expected 7.6 percent this year - the weakest in 14 years.
"There are also downside risks, notably stemming from local public debt. Mishandled defaults, were they to occur, might jeopardise the health of the banking system and confidence in capital markets," it added.
Source:  Reuters

China foreign investment keeps steady growth in Jan-Oct

China's foreign direct investment inflows rose 5.8 percent in the first 10 months of 2013 from a year ago, extending gains since March and underlining a reviving appetite from global investors as the world's second-largest economy gained traction.
The Commerce Ministry said on Tuesday that China drew $97 billion in foreign direct investment between January and October, with October's inflow up 1.2 percent on year earlier at $8.4 billion.

FDI from the top 10 Asian economies, including Hong Kong,Japan and Singapore, rose 7.2 percent to $83.6 billion for the ten months.
Source:  Reuters

Monday, 18 November 2013

Asian shares edge to two-week high on China optimism

Asian shares edged to a two-week high on Tuesday, adding to the previous day's hefty gains on China's economic reform plans, while the dollar was hobbled by expectations the U.S. Federal Reserve will keep its stimulus a little longer.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan  added 0.2 percent, building on Monday's 1.4 percent rally fed by a sharp jump in Chinese stocks and heading for a fourth straight day of gains.
China's CSI300 Index surged 3.3 percent on Monday, its biggest one-day rise in two months, to hit a four-week peak. The index took a breather on Tuesday, slipping 0.4.
In Tokyo, the Nikkei  fell 0.8 percent, further moving away from a six-month high hit on Friday, with a trader saying domestic investors continued to cash in recent gains.
The yen was up 0.4 percent at 99.64 yen to the dollar, adding to a 0.2 percent rise overnight to end a two-day run of losses.
The euro rose 0.1 percent to $1.3515, not far from a two-week high of $1.3542 reached on Monday. Against a basket of major currencies, the dollar .DXY eased 0.2 percent to 80.661, languishing near a more than one-week low of 80.565 reached on Monday.
As the dollar weakened on expectations that the Fed will continue its bond-buying campaign under incoming chief Janet Yellen, the 10-year U.S. Treasuries yield slipped to below 2.70 percent.
Source: Reuters

Shanghai, Chongqing plan on property tax

Property taxes have been levied on home owners in a trial basis in Shanghai and Chongqing since 2011. The two cities now plan to fully implement the tax and have released details on how much property owners will have to pay each year.
The property tax code has many criteria that will exempt a large number of home owners but require those who own large properties to pay more.
The property tax rate in Shanghai will float between zero-point-four percent and zero-point-six percent of the average square-meter value of property for the year. In Shanghai this year the tax will only be imposed on property valued at more than 27,000 yuan per square meter.
The city of Chongqing will charge the tax on property with a market value of more 12,000 yuan per square meter, but will exempt many smaller homes and long-term home owners. People who purchased property of more than 180 square meters after 2011 will pay more.
Source:  CCTV

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