Monday, 24 February 2014

TechCrunch: Tell Us The Damn Prices, Samsung

Samsung just unloaded its mobile product pipeline in Barcelona. All at once, the company revealed the Galaxy S5, Gear 2, Gear Nano and Gear Fit. These are legitimately exciting products.
The Galaxy S5 packs new sensors and is finally waterproof like Sony’s smartphones. It’s pushing into phablet territory with a 5.1-inch, 1920×1080 display, and it comes with a fingerprint reader on the home button, as well as a heart rate monitor around back near the camera flash. The Galaxy S5 is also dust and water-resistant, which may be the most useful new feature to ship on the phone.
Then there are the new Gear watches. Rebranded from Galaxy Gear, the Gear 2, the Gear Nano, and best of all, the Gear Fit, are fine iterations from the original Galaxy Gear. They pack new capabilities and thanks to the use of Tizen instead of Android, feature three times longer battery life.
The Gear Fit is especially interesting since depending on the price, it could steal a serious chunk of the marketshare away from Fitbit, Pebble and Jawbone.
But that’s the thing. Samsung didn’t announce any prices. For anything. The Gear Fit could be $17,000. The Galaxy S5 could be twice the price of the S4.
This is standard practice for Samsung. The company will throw a big festive for a new product (remember the Broadway show for the S4?) and then not announce the price. This is by design, as it wants to watch the competition react and then to drum up more press by announcing the price at a later date. Plus, to Samsung’s credit, pricing does vary per market.
However, this is the one thing Samsung should copy from Apple: Announce the product, reveal the capabilities and then announce the price and ship date. Please
Source: by  Matt Burns, TechCrunch

Depending On Price, The Samsung Gear Fit Could Dominate The Wearables Market


Forget about the rest of Samsung’s MWC offerings. The Gear Fit is about the most exciting product announced in Barcelona today. It’s the first Samsung wearable that has a legitimate chance of catching on.
The Fit is focused to the fitness crowd – natch – but it packs enough features to be a hit with the general consumer. Like other wearables in this category, the Fit tracks movement, heart rate and sleep patterns. But unlike other current products, the Fit is water-resistant and packs phone notifications, a timer, stopwatch and a sleek curved OLED screen.
Best of all it lacks all the nonsense found on its larger brothers. The Fit doesn’t sport a camera, speaker or a massive screen. It’s svelte and sexy just like a smartwatch should be.
With over 200m Galaxy S smartphones sold, Samsung has serious brand equity. If even a fraction of those owners opt for this fitness tracker over competitors, Samsung will have a hit.
Samsung has yet to reveal the price on the Fit and that could be the deciding factor here. If the Fit was priced under $200, say, $179 or $149, Samsung could have a big hit on its hands. With a smart feature set and the right price, the Fit could be the missing link from fitness device to smartwatch the market has so far been missing.
Source: TechCrunch

Worldwide Smartphone Shipments Top One Billion Units for the First Time, According to IDC

The worldwide smartphone market reached yet another milestone, having shipped one billion units in a single year for the first time. According to the International Data Corporation (IDCWorldwide Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker, vendors shipped a total of 1,004.2 million smartphones worldwide, up 38.4% from the 725.3 million units in 2012. This aligns with IDC's most recent forecast of 1,010.4 million units, making for a difference of less than 1%. Smartphones accounted for 55.1% of all mobile phone shipments in 2013, up from the 41.7% of all mobile phone shipments in 2012. In the fourth quarter of 2013 (4Q13), vendors shipped a total of 284.4 million smartphones worldwide, up 24.2% from the 229.0 million units shipped in 4Q12.
In the worldwide mobile phone market (inclusive of smartphones), vendors shipped 1,821.8 million units, up 4.8% from the 1,738.1 million units shipped 2012. In 4Q13 alone, vendors shipped a total of 488.4 million units worldwide, up 0.9% from the 484.0 million units shipped in 4Q12. This is 2.8% lower than the 502.4 million units that IDC had recently forecast.
"The sheer volume and strong growth attest to the smartphone's continued popularity in 2013," says Ramon Llamas, Research Manager with IDC'sMobile Phone team. "Total smartphone shipments reached 494.4 million units worldwide in 2011, and doubling that volume in just two years demonstrates strong end-user demand and vendor strategies to highlight smartphones."
"Among the top trends driving smartphone growth are large screen devices and low cost," said Ryan Reith, Program Director with IDC's Worldwide Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker. "Of the two, I have to say that low cost is the key difference maker. Cheap devices are not the attractive segment that normally grabs headlines, but IDC data shows this is the portion of the market that is driving volume. Markets like China and India are quickly moving toward a point where sub-$150 smartphones are the majority of shipments, bringing a solid computing experience to the hands of many.
Smartphone Vendor Highlights:
Samsung ended the quarter the same way it began the year: as the clear leader in worldwide smartphone shipments. But even with sustained demand for its Galaxy S III, S4, and Note models, as well as its deep selection of mid-range and entry-level models, the company realized a decline compared to the previous quarter. Nevertheless, the company maintained a sizable double-digit lead over the next vendor.
Apple posted record shipment volume during 4Q13, driven primarily by the addition of multiple countries offering the iPhone 5S and 5C, and sustained demand from its initial markets that saw these models launch at the end of 3Q13. Still, Apple had the lowest year-on-year increase of all the leading vendors. Now that Apple has finally arrived at China Mobile, it remains to be seen how much Apple will close the gap against Samsung in 2014.
Huawei maintained its number three position worldwide, attained the highest year-on-year increase among the leading vendors, and raised its brand profile with a higher proportion of self-branded units compared to the ODM work it had done for other companies. Still, even with its success, Huawei faces a crowded group of potential competitors within striking distance.
Lenovo, despite having no presence in North America nor Western Europe, finished the quarter in the number four position. The company's strength lies in its strong presence within key emerging markets and a well-segmented product portfolio spanning from simple, affordable smartphones to full-featured 5" screen models. Should the company become successful at branching into more developed markets in 2014, it could challenge Huawei for the number three spot.
LG finished just behind Lenovo and edged out ZTE for the number five position, with just five million units separating the two companies. At the same time, its year-on-year improvement put the company on par with Huawei and Lenovo with market beating growth. LG's success can be directly attributed to its revived portfolio from a year ago, which featured more large-screen and high-end models, including the Nexus 5 and its Optimus G series.



Top Five Smartphone Vendors, Shipments, and Market Share, 2013 (Units in Millions) 
Vendor
2013 Shipment Volumes
2013 Market Share
2012 Shipment Volumes
2012 Market Share
Year-over-Year Change
Samsung
313.9
31.3%
219.7
30.3%
42.9%
Apple
153.4
15.3%
135.9
18.7%
12.9%
Huawei
48.8
4.9%
29.1
4.0%
67.5%
LG
47.7
4.8%
26.3
3.6%
81.1%
Lenovo
45.5
4.5%
23.7
3.3%
91.7%
Others
394.9
39.3%
290.5
40.1%
35.9%
Total
1,004.2
100.0%
725.3
100.0%
38.4%


Source: IDC Worldwide Mobile Phone Tracker, January 27, 2014

351 million new smartphones shipped in China in 2013: IDC

351 million new smartphones shipped to stores across China in 2013, according to data from market intelligence firm IDC. That means China accounts for just over one-third of all smartphone shipments around the world at the end of 2013. Smartphones now account for over 80 percent of China’s total phone sales.
While shipments don’t equate to sales (who knows how many are lying unsold on shelves or in warehouses), the number gives us a good sense of the momentum behind smartphones in the nation. It’s harder to tell how many active smartphone users there are in China – mainly due to China’s much-altered Android phones not registering with the mothership at Google – but search giant Baidu reckons there are 270 million active Android users in China in Q3 2013.
IDC is milking its numbers by revealing 2013 data in dribs and drabs. The rest of IDC’s numbers revealed today are rehashed from earlier reports. Here’s a summary:
  • 1 billion smartphone shipments globally in 2013.
  • That figure is up from 752 million worldwide in 2012.
  • As smartphone uptake reaches the saturation point in China, growth is slowing.
IDC’s Simon Baker adds today:
 
The next half billion new smartphone customers will increasingly come mainly from poorer emerging markets, notably India and in Africa. Emerging markets in Asia-Pacific outside of China, together with the Middle East and Africa, Central and Eastern Europe, and Latin America, account for four fifths of the global feature phone market. This is a very big market opportunity.

Source: TECHINASIA 

1cak, Indonesia’s version of 9gag, now has 9 million monthly pageviews

It’s been more than a year since we last talked about 9gag’s clone in Indonesia, 1cak. We recently spoke with founder Aji Ramadhan about how the site is doing, and he revealed it now has about nine million pageviews per month with about 560,000 unique visitors.
Ramadhan is 1cak’s only full-time staffer, who runs the site from Bandung. “It’s still under control,” he says, regarding him running the entire scene. A few major updates he mentioned include the startup’s new Android app (pictured above) and other features like being able to follow users and receive notifications when new comments are posted.
1cak is not just a clone of 9gag. The Indonesian site now has a lot of localized jokes and memes catered to local readers. Some examples of them are the “Mad Dog” meme from Indonesia’s famous movie The Raid and jokes about current boy band trends.
Ramadhan says 1cak is a proftable company, running on Google Adsense ads alone. He isn’t currently looking for an investor. In the future, 1cak wants to update its Android app and launch an iPhone version.
Other humor sites in Indonesia include MalesBanget and na9a. The latter doesn’t seem to be very active anymore, though. There are also 9gag lookalikes in Vietnam in the form of HaiVL and Hamvuivn.
Source: TECHINASIA

Amazon Officially Rolling Out Three Kindle Fire Tablets in Chinese Market

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After tapping Chinese tablet market with Kindle Paperwhite and Kindle Fire HD series last June, Amazon is going to deepen is forays into the market by officially releasing three Kindle devices on Amazon China in a roll tomorrow, including two latest refresh of the Kindle Fire lineup, Kindle Fire HDX 7” and Kindle Fire HDX 8.9”, as well as Kindle Fire HD.
The specs and new features of these products are the same as their U.S. counterparts. The minimum prices for Kindle Fire HDX 7”, Kindle Fire HDX 8.9” and Kindle Fire HD is 1.699 yuan($278.75), 2,999 yuan and 1,099 yuan, respectively.
Amazon also buddied up with leading Chinese music and video apps, including Baidu Music, Douban FM, iQiyi and Sohu Video to optimize video and music functions of their products.
image credit: Amazon

WSJ, Macro Horizons: China Housing Price Slowdown Unnerves Investors; Eyes on Ukraine

          The Wall Street Journal reports,"shares weakened in Asia and Europe as news of slowing house price growth in China raised concerns about the health of home lenders in the world’s second-biggest economy. Meanwhile, the bond market is looking optimistically at the remarkable developments in the Ukraine, which are already prompting a 180-degree shift in the country’s geopolitical orientation away from Russia and toward the European Union.
The market response to the developments in China’s property market demonstrates the bind that the government is in. Their policies of restraining credit appear to be having some success, but that success is precisely what everyone fears. The global response is perhaps a mark of how investors believe there’s a bubble in China that needs to deflate and that this poses risks to its banking sector". 
UKRAINE: Former President Viktor Yanukovich’s fall from power and flight from Kiev has handed victory to the protesters as an acting government takes power. Calm has settled on the country for now and hopes have risen for a civil resolution to Ukraine’s complex political and financial situation. The acting Interior Minister declared Mr. Yanukovich a fugitive and said it was opening a criminal case into the mass murder of civilians.  Meanwhile, attention turned to the Ukraine’s desperate financial situation, with the acting Finance Minister saying the country would seek a loan from the U.S. and Poland and that it would call a donor conference with the IMF and E.U. The E.U. said that an aid package that had been part of a trade agreement abandoned by Mr.  Yanukovich could be revived if that agreement was put back on track.
The immediate actions of the new government amount to a quick reversal the Mr. Yanukovich regime geopolitical orientation, which looked to Russia over the E.U. That will satisfy Brussels and the U.S., but it won’t guarantee that the country avoids financial collapse. It needs around $35 billion in foreign assistance during the coming couple of years and it remains unclear how Russia, whose control over natural gas supplies lends it significant influence over Kiev, will respond. For now, Ukrainian sovereign bonds have rallied, but there remains considerable uncertainty.
CHINA: Chinese new-home price growth slowed in January for the first time in a year, according to new government data, in the strongest sign yet that lending limits and an oversupply of housing in some cities are reining surging prices. Average new home prices in 70 Chinese cities rose about 9% in January compared with a year earlier, according to Wall Street Journal calculations based on data released on Monday by the National Bureau of Statistics. While that figure shows China’s housing market remains frothy, it also marks a drop from December’s 9.2% rise as well as November’s 9.1% rise.
Beijing’s efforts to cool real-estate prices are finally paying off but the government still has to walk a fine line between cooling prices and crushing the sector, which remains an important driver of economic growth. All eyes are now on the annual National People’s Congress in early March for details on further property-sector policies. The government has said it would speed up property-related tax legislation, but hasn’t revealed the extent of the changes for property taxes or capital gains taxes. 

Chinese incomes grew 8.1 pct last year

Per capita disposable income in China reached 18,311 yuan (2,993 U.S. dollars) in 2013, growing 8.1 percent in real terms, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) announced on Monday.
Wang Pingping, in charge of NBS household surveys, told Xinhua that rural and urban data were collected separately before 2013. "Such data helped policy making, but did not show the whole income landscape across the whole nation," Wang said.
Authorities are working to coordinate urban and rural development and improve income distribution. This demands unified data and greater statistical rigor, Wang said.
Apart from the general figure, per capita urban disposable income expanded 7 percent in real terms to 26,955 yuan in 2013, while the rural figure rose 9.3 percent in real terms to 8,896 yuan.
With China's poverty line drawn at 2,300 yuan of annual net income last year, a rural population of 82.49 million were officially poor, a fall of 16.5 million compared to 2012.
SOURCE; XINHUA

Ukraine, the bailout Europe cannot shirk

The European Union brokered the deal that triggered the end of the Yanukovich regime. With Russia angry and the United States absent, it must now lead the rescue of Ukraine’s bankrupt economy - and first decide when to act, and how.

The situation in Kiev is dire. Foreign reserves are melting away and the hryvnia, the Ukrainian currency, is in free fall in spite of a theoretical peg to the dollar. The economy is heading to a recession, with wide and widening budget and current account deficits.

The public sector alone will need $13 billion to service its foreign debt this year, according to S&P. Russia already lent Ukraine $3 billion of the $15 billion promised to lure the former regime away from a deal with the EU. But the rest may not materialise, if Vladimir Putin doesn’t like the next government in Kiev.

The EU cannot provide all the $20-odd billion that Ukraine would require to put the economy on a firmer footing. But it can provide political cover for a deal with the International Monetary Fund. A few months ago Kiev balked at the IMF aid programme’s conditions: the end of gas subsidies, a free-floating currency and a crack-down on corruption.

This plan will have to be implemented at some point, but now is not the moment for foreign lenders to push measures that will hurt consumers and businesses. Talks about serious reforms require a legitimate government in Kiev. That will have to wait until after the May 25 elections.

Can Ukraine teeter another three months? A decision on the currency cannot be delayed that long. The most reasonable option

- dropping the peg - could lead to a disruptive instant devaluation of more than 30 percent. The EU and the IMF may have to provide an emergency bridge loan. And some form of debt restructuring looks unavoidable at a later stage.

A bailout will only be worth it if it is framed in a broader political context. The EU must both state clearly that Ukraine can envision joining in the long run, and make sure that Russia stays involved. For years those two objectives seemed incompatible. The Maidan protests may have changed that.

- European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton is travelling on Feb. 27 to Ukraine. She is expected to discuss measures to shore up the ailing economy, which the finance ministry said requires $35 billion in foreign aid over the next two years, with the first tranche needed within two weeks.

- About $13 billion of Ukraine’s $73 billion of external and domestic debt must be serviced this year. The country must redeem a $1 billion eurobond in early June, and the government has also guaranteed a $1.6 billion eurobond issued by state energy company Naftogaz, which falls due in September.‬

Source: Reuters

WSJ: US Stocks Climb to New Highs, Again.

       The WALL Street Journal reports,''U.S. stocks jumped back into record territory Monday morning, erasing all of last month’s pullback despite a recent batch of disappointing economic data.
The S&P 500 rose 15 points, or 0.8%, to 1851, topping the previous all-time closing high of 1848.38. The index has risen more than 6% since falling to a three-month low in early February.
Should the stock index close above 1848.48, it would mark the 47th record high over the past 12 months''.
The latest rally comes even as several sluggish economic readings in recent weeks have stirred worries about the state of the economic recovery. The Citigroup U.S. Economic Surprise Index–which reflects whether economic reports are coming in better or worse than economists’ expectations–fell to negative 7.7 on Friday, the lowest level since July 23.
Economists expect more weak data ahead, with readings on manufacturing, housing and durable goods due this week.
Still, the S&P 500′s latest march to new heights is the latest example of how markets have largely given the economy a pass due to the winter’s brutal weather conditions.

Copper falls to more than 2-week low on China demand worries

Copper fell on Monday to its lowest in more than two weeks as data showed growth in new housing prices in China slowed in January and worries about credit restrictions in the country's huge property sector hurt the demand outlook for metals.
China accounts for more than 40 percent of global consumption of copper, which is used extensively in construction and power cables. Any curbs to financing and property development is likely to erode that demand.
Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange was $7,061.50 a tonne in official rings, off an intraday low of $7,055, its lowest since Feb. 6. It closed at $7,155 on Friday.

New housing prices in China rose 9.6 percent in January from a year earlier, but decelerated month-on-month for the first time in a year.

"That was the main reason why we saw weakness in copper but also across the board in base metals," Vicky Sanders, head of analytics sales at Marex Spectron, said. "It was only a small change month on month but it's really about momentum."

Furthermore, she said, local news reports suggested that banks had started to tighten lending to the property sector and related industries.

The official Shanghai Securities News reported on Monday that Industrial Bank <601166.SS> and other banks may have stopped extending some loans to property developers and tightened lending to other property-related sectors such as steel, cement and construction.

Local media reported that several banks had issued denials.

The most-traded May copper contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange slid to a more-than-three-month low before trading at 49,900 yuan ($8,200), a drop of 1.2 percent.

Copper prices have traded in a narrow range just above $7,000 per tonne since August, and traded in a $200 range for most of February.

"Base metals have been relatively tepid since August last year. So volatility will attract activity and it's good to see some response in base metals," Sanders said.

"In copper, we're still at the lower range of what we've been in, but if we were to break through $7,000 then we might see volumes pick up within days."

Tighter monetary policies in China and the United States have fanned concerns there will be less cheap liquidity on hand for industry and investors, compounding worries that stuttering growth in the world's top two economies could derail a global recovery.

In the United States, severe cold weather and a shortage of houses on the market pushed home resales to an 18-month low in January, the latest indication economic activity has hit a soft patch.

Metals prices could still climb, driven by technical buying, Barclays said in a research note.

"Sizeable short positions have built in copper, zinc and nickel, leaving the market vulnerable to short-covering rallies and raising the prospect of big rises in reported inventories if metal is attracted on-warrant by tightening in time spreads," the bank said in the note.

Selling spilled across to other metals.

LME benchmark three-month tin was $23,095 per tonne in rings, down from $23,140 at the close on Friday, lead was $2,121.50 from $2,150, nickel was $14,190 from $14,365 and aluminium was $1,742 from a last bid on Friday of $1,770.

Zinc , untraded in rings, was bid at $2,032 from a close of $2,040 on Friday.


Source:  Reuters

WSJ: Red Flag for Gold: Is Fear Fading? A bearish look for Gold

        The Wall Street Journal reports, ''gold rose on basic economic fears in the 2000s but fell back starting in 2011 as those fears abated. Now, with fears spreading again about the withdrawal of Federal Reserve stimulus and about global growth, gold has rebounded 11% since mid-December''.
Experienced gold analysts are warning clients to be careful: If the fears subside, the price of gold could do the same.
“Gold goes up as an insurance policy and then it is sold at a loss when people no longer want insurance,” said Rhona O’Connell, head of metals research and forecasts at Thomson Reuters GFMS, a research firm known for its work on gold.
Gold could move higher in the short run, but Ms. O’Connell says its price is likely to have trouble making significant gains before 2016 at least, because basic economic confidence has improved.
Sameer Samana, senior international strategist at brokerage firm Wells Fargo Advisors, is urging clients to treat gold’s rebound as an opportunity to sell anything they still have.
“What we have found in our work is that a broad basket of commodities is a better hedge against inflation, a greater diversification and a better hedge against the dollar,” Mr. Samana said.
Gold does well “when you are very nervous about the world,” he said.
He thinks metals like copper, aluminum and zinc, which unlike gold are used primarily in industry, are a better bet in a time of economic recovery.
Gold differs from almost every other investment in an important way: In practical terms, gold isn’t very useful. A small amount is used for rings, necklaces, watches, dental implants and electronic connectors. But the vast majority is hoarded in the form of bars, coins or, in the developing world, heavy jewelry that is treated more as a protection against disaster than an adornment.
Unlike stock, gold doesn’t offer a share in a business’s results. It doesn’t pay dividends or interest. It doesn’t grow things like farmland, provide shelter like a building or have industrial uses like most commodities. The one time it is useful is when people are fearful and flee to it.
Gold soared in the 1970s amid oil crises, the seizure of the U.S. embassy in Tehran, runaway inflation and a volatile stock market. After that, gold’s price collapsed as the world economy recovered.
Gold rebounded in the 2000s as stocks and the U.S. economy endured disastrous troubles. But gold peaked in 2011, the year Standard & Poor’s downgraded U.S. sovereign debt and stocks nearly went into a bear market, defined as a 20% fall from a high. Economic stability since then has put a lid on gold.
The Permanent Portfolio, a San Francisco-based mutual fund that offers a mix of bonds, gold, stocks and foreign investments, saw its size balloon to $17 billion a year ago from just $57 million at the start of 2000. Now it is back to $9 billion.
Michael Cuggino, president of Permanent Portfolio Family of Funds Inc., says gold wasn’t the only reason for redemptions; investors have fled bonds and other conservative investments. Some have returned to his fund since gold began recovering in December.
Still, “when people got concerned about gold in the second quarter of last year, there were more redemptions than previously,” he said.
Mr. Cuggino thinks gold prices probably will edge upward in the future, but he sees the market mentality shifting.
“People talk about diversification but they don’t always live it,” he said. Right now, investors seem to him more concerned about returns than protection.
One reason for gold’s rebound is demand in China and India. Worries about developing-world economies helped fuel that demand. As Western investment funds sold gold, Swiss refineries worked overtime to recast big bars favored by Western banks into smaller ones preferred in Asia.
But Asian hoarders are sophisticated. They buy when gold is down and sell when it is up. Asian demand isn’t strong enough to offset continued Western selling, according to Ms. O’Connell of Thomson Reuters GFMS.
“Physical demand puts a cushion under price. It isn’t enough to turn prices higher in the face of weakness in investment demand,” she said.
What would sustain gold’s rebound is more fear. Without that, gold could have trouble getting back to 2011 or 2012 levels.

Eramet delays Indonesia mine, backs ban to help nickel

 French mining and metals company Eramet postponed its flagship nickel mine project in Indonesia on Friday citing depressed prices which it said would find support from the country's ban on unrefined mineral exports.

Benchmark prices of nickel , mainly used in stainless steel, languished at four-year lows for much of 2013 due to global oversupply, leaving many producers operating at a loss.

Indonesia, the world's largest exporter of nickel ore, last month went ahead with a ban on shipments of unrefined metals, including the ore, boosting international prices on prospects that the global surplus would be curbed.

"We hope that this ban is going to be kept firmly in place," chairman and chief executive Patrick Buffet said at a presentation of Eramet's 2013 results.

"This is the factor that could bring a recovery in the nickel market within a reasonable period."

Uncertainty over policy ahead of parliamentary and presidential elections this year had contributed to Eramet's decision to delay a final investment decision on the Weda Bay mining project, Buffet said.

Eramet, which had been due to take an investment decision this year after already putting back the deadline, booked a 224 million euro ($307 million) impairment charge for the delay.

Eramet has a majority stake in the project alongside Japan's Mitsubishi Corp. <7280.T> and Indonesia's PT Antam.

In addition to low nickel prices, protracted negotiations with the Indonesian government on tax and ownership issues had also held up the project, Buffet said.

The postponement will involve closing an engineering support office in Malaysia at the end of March with about 50 expatriate staff to be redeployed while personnel in Indonesia to be reduced to about 250 from 450, said Bertrand Madelin, head of Eramet's nickel unit.

Eramet posted a 2013 current operating loss of 45 million euros versus profit of 153 million a year earlier.

It said market conditions at the start of 2014 were in line with those at the end of 2013.

The company said it would pursue 110 million euros in cost savings, up from 85 million in 2013.

It aims to keep capital expenditure below 400 million euros in both 2014 and 2015, down about 40 percent on the 2012-2013 average.

Its nickel division, which posted a 222 million euro operating loss, will aim to reduce production costs by $0.4 a pound this year and a further $0.3 a pound in 2015, officials said.

"One dollar is equivalent to 90 million euros in current operating profit for the group," Buffet said of nickel costs.

Eramet reported a net loss after impairments of 370 million euros and said it would not pay a dividend.

The company had forecast that current operating profit in the second half of 2013 would be "significantly lower" than in the first half, when it reported a 9 million euro loss.

Group losses were limited by a 218 million euro operating profit for the manganese division, against 240 million in 2012, and a return to profit at the smaller alloys branch.

Shares in Eramet were 1.6 percent lower at 70 euros by 1353 GMT, among the top fallers on the broad French SBF 120 index.


Source: Reuters

Oil holds around $110, supported by Libyan output drop

 Brent crude oil steadied around $110 a barrel on Monday, resisting sharp declines in some other risk assets on news of further supply losses in Africa and expectations of revived oil demand growth.

Libyan oil output plunged further over the weekend, falling to 230,000 barrels per day (bpd) on Sunday after a new protest shut the El Sharara field.

Before nationwide protests started in the middle of last year, Libyan oil production was closer to 1.4 million bpd. 

"As long as the Libyan security situation is unstable, global oil prices will be buoyed," said Michael Poulsen, analyst at Danish consultancy Global Risk Management.

Brent crude was down 5 cents at $109.80 a barrel by 1330 GMT, after settling higher for a second straight week. U.S. oil was up 20 cents to $102.40, after climbing for the sixth week in its longest winning streak in more than a year.

Oil markets also found support from a fairly upbeat meeting of the world's top economies in Sydney, which announced a target of generating more than $2 trillion in additional output over five years while creating millions of new jobs.

Oil demand tracks global economic growth closely.

Investors also kept an eye on global political tensions and the potential for further disruption to oil exports.

"One of the reasons for the price staying up around $110 is the geopolitical risk, with reduced exports coming out of Libya, negotiations over lifting sanctions on Iran going very slowly, Syria remaining in the background and maybe Ukraine as well as South Sudan," said Christopher Bellew, oil futures broker at Jefferies Bache.

In South Sudan, the capital of the main oil-producing Upper Nile region, Malakal, remains divided between the army and rebels, government officials say.

On Saturday, the national government over-ruled Upper Nile state's plan to partially shut down oil production and evacuate foreign workers after the rebel offensive.

A petroleum ministry official said South Sudan's oil production had fallen to about 170,000 bpd even before the rebel strike on Malakal, a drop of around a third since the fighting erupted in December.

With Brent crude at the upper end of its range of recent months, some investors expect prices to fall in the medium term.

"Correction potential has built up which should cause prices to fall as soon as the support lent by the cold winter weather in the United States fades away. We expect oil prices to drop in the spring," Commerzbank senior oil analyst Carsten Fritsch said.


Souce: Reuters

WSJ; EUROPE EQUITY MARKET BRIEF

LASTCHANGE% CHG1 DAY

Europe

Europe Dow2085.030.200.01%
Stoxx Europe 600336.520.430.13%
France: CAC 404394.4913.430.31%
Germany: DAX9660.843.890.04%
Italy: FTSE MIB20350.44-41.46-0.20%
Spain: IBEX 3510142.9071.900.71%
UK: FTSE 1006833.49-4.57-0.07%
Source; WSJ

Asian Equity Indexes for February 24th,2014.

Country: IndexLastChange% Chg
Asia Dow2955.84-5.82-0.20
DJ Asia-Pacific TSM1413.13-2.78-0.20
Australia: All Ordinaries*5450.100.700.01
Australia: S&P/ASX*5440.201.500.03
China: DJ Shanghai*273.02-4.63-1.67
China: Shanghai Composite*2076.69-37.01-1.75
China: Shenzhen Composite*1134.19-0.82-0.07
China: Shanghai 50*1468.06-37.27-2.48
Hong Kong: Hang Seng*22388.56-179.68-0.80
India: S&P BSE Sensex*20811.44110.690.53
India: S&P CNX Nifty*6186.1030.650.50
Indonesia: JSX Index*4623.57-22.58-0.49
Indonesia: JSX BISNIS 27*396.73-2.87-0.72
Indonesia: JSX Islamic*621.94-5.02-0.80
Indonesia: JSX LQ-45*779.70-5.20-0.66
Indonesia: PEFINDO-25*418.05-1.04-0.25
Indonesia: SRI-KEHATI*257.70-2.03-0.78
Japan: DJ Japan TSM*760.08-1.91-0.25
Japan: Nikkei 225*14837.68-27.99-0.19
Japan: TOPIX Index*1219.07-3.24-0.27
Malaysia: DJ Malaysia TSM*3452.01-4.88-0.14
Malaysia: FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI*1828.68-2.06-0.11
New Zealand: NZX 50*4969.6442.010.85
S. Korea: KOSPI*1949.05-8.78-0.45
S. Korea: KOSPI 50*1656.52-8.80-0.53
S. Korea: KOSPI 100*1921.32-9.10-0.47
S. Korea: KOSPI 200 Composite*254.01-1.21-0.47
Singapore: FTSE Straits Times*3105.845.910.19
Taiwan: TAIEX*8560.61-41.25-0.48
Thailand: SET*1301.38-2.83-0.22

Source; WSJ

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