Thursday, 8 May 2014

WSJ: Alibaba's Magic Fades on SoftBank

       The WSJ reports,"Alibaba's less-than-revealing IPO filing failed to deliver the validation SoftBank investors needed to justify their high valuation on the Chinese business. A disclosure that SoftBank has signed over much of its voting rights to Alibaba insiders likely didn't help.
Even after this week's slide, a sum-of-the-parts analysis shows a rosy view of Alibaba in SoftBank's market capitalization of $87.5 billion. Adding on net debt of $69 billion gives an enterprise value for SoftBank of $156.5 billion.
Of that, attribute $54 billion to SoftBank's Japanese telecommunications business, assuming it is worth 4.7 times earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, the average multiple of two Japanese competitors. Another $39 billion can be accounted for by SoftBank's stakes in listed companies Sprint,  Yahoo Japan  and Japanese mobile game provider GungHo Online Entertainment.  A stake in Finnish mobile-game company Supercell accounts for another $1.5 billion at its acquisition cost.
The $62 billion that is left gives a rough estimate of what investors think SoftBank's stake in Alibaba is worth. Since SoftBank owns 34% in Alibaba, that implies a $182 billion value for Alibaba as a whole. That puts it around the midpoint of analyst estimates of Alibaba's worth, though it doesn't factor in any tax or conglomerate discounts, which would significantly increase the implied value of Alibaba".
"SoftBank investors have more to keep in mind than just Alibaba's valuation. The company posted a 28% on-year decline in net profit for the three months ended in March, weighed down by costs from serial acquisitions and a telecom price war in Japan. And SoftBank still appears keen for its Sprint unit to make a bid for T-Mobile, despite regulator skepticism. The deal has strategic logic as it would help consolidate Sprint's position in the U.S., but it would also expand SoftBank's net debt, which already is at six times Ebitda, much higher than telecom peers.
SoftBank's shares are down 20% this year, which could tempt investors to jump back in. With so many moving parts, however, it will take a stellar Alibaba IPO to make such a plunge worth it".

WSJ: Alibaba IPO Knocks Yahoo Off Track

            The WSJ reports, "Alibaba Group Holding filed for an initial public offering late Tuesday. Shares of Yahoo, which owns a 22.6% stake in the Chinese e-commerce giant and has been the primary way for U.S. investors to participate in its growth, slid the following day.
Alibaba's filing showed it had 231 million active buyers and sales of $248 billion across its three retail sites in 2013. It also disclosed that last month, the company valued itself at $121 billion, including stock-based compensation and the conversion of certain preferred shares. Analyst estimates for its valuation range from $136 billion to $250 billion. Beyond that, though, the filing was scant on details investors crave, such as a breakdown of Alibaba's individual business units and more information about affiliate Alipay.
That is actually underwhelming for Yahoo's investors because Alibaba has already juiced the U.S. company's shares. These are up 122% over the past two years, against 38% for the Nasdaq Composite. Alibaba's growth explains most of this given that Yahoo's core Internet advertising business has faced declining revenues.
Granted, Yahoo only has to part with about 9% of Alibaba in the IPO. It can retain the rest of its stake, the value of which could continue to bolster its stock.
Alibaba's filing merely confirmed the excitement already baked into Yahoo's valuation. It has also brought home the reality that Yahoo's days as a Chinese e-commerce tracking stock are numbered.

Marc Faber: I'm worried about a crisis bigger than 2008

"As a percentage of the advanced economies, total credit—including corporate, government and consumer debt—is 30 percent higher than it was in 2007, Faber said. "I don't think the economy is recovering at all. We have in the American economy a slowdown."
Under that scenario, "stocks in the advanced economies are basically fully priced," he argued, and said government bonds are expensive, given their low yields".
"The most under-appreciated asset is cash," even though investors won't earn any money and will actually lose money in the long-term because of Federal Reserve-induced dollar depreciation, Faber said.
"For the next six months, maybe cash is the most attractive." He also cited the crisis in Ukraine among the geopolitical problems that serve as a negative for the financial markets.
Source: CNBC

WSJ: Asian Shares Mixed After China Inflation Data

         The WSJ reports,"Asian stocks were mixed on Friday, with gains in Japan offsetting declines in Australia, at the end of a broadly negative week for the region's stocks.
In China, Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index gained 0.4% and the Shanghai Composite rose 0.1%, though Chinese consumer prices rose slightly less in April than expected. Consumer prices rose 1.8% compared with a year earlier, while economists forecast a 2% gain. April's measure is somewhat lower the 2.4% gain seen in March".
The inflation numbers came out one day after a set of strong Chinese trade data boosted regional sentiment, with a surprise increase in exports.
Australia's S&P/ASX 200 was down 0.6% in trading, as the index retreated from a 0.8% gain on Thursday—its biggest rise in a month. Elsewhere in Asia, South Korea's Kospi rose 0.1% and Singapore's Straits Times Index was flat.
Japan's Nikkei added 0.6%, as the market recovered from weak trading earlier in the week. Tokyo was digesting Thursday's earnings from bellwether Toyota Motor Corp.7203.TO +0.76% , which gained 0.6%, as a surge in profit over the last 12 months offset the company's forecast of flat revenue and operating profit in the coming year.
In currencies, the yen was unmoved against the U.S. dollar and was last trading at ¥101.74 to the dollar.

China consumer prices up 1.8% in April

China's consumer price index (CPI), a main gauge of inflation, increased 1.8 percent year on year in April, down from 2.4 percent in the previous month, official data showed on Friday.

Source: Xinhua

China's PPI drops 2 percent in April

 China's producer price index (PPI) contracted 2 percent year on year in April, following a 2.3-percent decline in March, data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) showed on Friday.
The index, which measures inflation at wholesale level, edged down 0.2 percent in April from the previous month, said the NBS.
Source: Xinhua

China has world's 3 largest companies: Forbes

China became home for the first time to the world's three biggest public companies and five of the top 10, according to the Forbes Global 2000 List released on Thursday.
Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) held onto its No.1 spot for a second year, followed by China Construction Bank and Agricultural Bank of China.
The other two were Bank of China -- another of the "Big Four" Chinese banks -- and PetroChina, ranking ninth and tenth, respectively.
Chinese mainland and Hong Kong added 25 to the 2014 list, more than any other country, for a total of 207.
The United States accounted for the other half of the top 10 spots, and held onto its crown with 564 companies on the list. Japan trailed the U.S. with 225 companies in aggregate, despite losing 26 members this year.
The magazine said its Global 2000 is a comprehensive list of the world's largest and most powerful public companies in terms of revenues, profits, assets and market value.
The 2014 list hailed companies from 62 countries, up from 46 in its inaugural 2003 ranking. In total, these companies raked in revenues of 38 trillion U.S. dollars and profits of three trillion with a market value of 44 trillion.
"The list presents an annual snapshot of the ever-changing global business landscape," the magazine wrote.
Source: Xinhua

China's banks face rising financial risks

 China's banks are faced with increasing risks born out of shadow banking, local government debt, bad loans in industries with overcapacity, and looming house price declines, an economist warned on Thursday.
The alarm bell was sounded by Xiang Songzuo, chief economist at the Agricultural Bank of China, when speaking to Shanghai Securities News which is owned by Xinhua.
Xiang expects 2014 to be a year of risk on a large scale, led by default risks. About 40 percent of shadow banking business and 30 percent of local government debts fall due this year.
The danger stems from non-performing loans in sectors with overcapacity and the possibility of a fall in housing prices.
Overcapacity is more serious in some sectors than others. Where the rate of capital flow has decreased and accounts receivable and payable increased, the demand for short-term loans or working capital will rise, he said.
"All these problems will be manifested in more bad loans, and that's why the banks will have an increasingly difficult time," Xiang said.
For the property market, Xiang sees a high possibility of price declines resulting from excessive supply, but did not foresee a collapse in the whole housing market.
Source: Xinhua

Xinhua Insight: Correction in property market weighs on China's growth

The meteoric rise of the Chinese property sector has shown signs of abating since the beginning of this year, and economists say such a downturn could weigh on growth.
The property sector accounts for at least 16 percent of China's economic output, according to brokerage firm Nomura Securities. Slowing investment growth and tightening credit conditions in the property sector during the first quarter of this year have already taken a toll on growth, which dipped to 7.4 percent in the first quarter, the lowest rate since the second quarter of 2012.
"We are convinced that the property sector has passed a turning point and that there is a rising risk of a sharp correction," said Zhang Zhiwei, an economist with Nomura Securities in a research note earlier this week.
Wang Tao, an economist with UBS, said in a research note this week that a sharper and more persistent downturn in the property sector is the biggest risk for China's economy in the next couple of years.
Analysts say correction has already taken place in the property market and is set to continue throughout the rest of this year. Nomura noted that the downward trend, without intervention through policy easing, will drag economic growth below seven percent this year.
Behind Nomura's correction verdict is a fall in property investment. Growth of new housing starts, a leading indicator for property investment, fell 25.2 percent year-on-year in the first quarter.
In addition to new housing starts, developers acquired less land in the same period than they did a year ago, though sales prices were higher. Nearly 60 million square meters of land were sold in the first quarter, down 2.3 percent year-on-year, while sales growth also slowed 11.4 percent from a year ago to 155.6 billion yuan, according to China's National Bureau of Statistics.
Developers have also come under pressure from home sales. Home price inflation in 70 cities surveyed by authorities weakened in the first quarter while sales were down 5.2 percent to 1.3 trillion yuan.
"We believe that the weak sales growth mainly reflects a genuine slowdown in demand rather than an unfavorable base effect," Zhang said.
Nomura said the correction in the property market was triggered by monetary policy tightening that started in mid-2013.
"For property developers, increased difficulties in getting bank loans, reliance on shadow bank financing and the rise in overall funding costs could lead to a sharper and quicker adjustment in property construction," Wang said in UBS's research note.
China's property market started to regain traction after authorities moved to stabilize growth in mid-2012. As a result, pent-up demand unleashed by the rebound has pushed up housing prices by more than 20 percent in first-tier cities while those in second- and third-tier cities grew more moderately, according to UBS.
While overall growth in home prices remains resilient, divergence has become more pronounced this year between first-tier cities, such as Beijing and Shanghai, and the rest of the country. Some developers have been forced to slash prices to reduce inventories in second- and third-tier cities.
Some second-tier cities have already responded with moves to prop up local property markets.
The eastern Chinese city of Wuxi in Jiangsu Province announced in April that it will grant urban residential permits to non-residents who purchase homes larger than 60 square meters. Three days later, Nanning, the capital of south China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, also eased restrictions on home purchases for both residents in the city and those from five other cities in the province.
Even in Beijing, potential first-time home buyers also found the Beijing Rural Commercial Bank offered preferential loan interest rates of 5 to 10 percent off, a rare practice in the city following government efforts in previous years to cool the property market and banks' cancellations of interest rate discounts.
Though policy easing is already under way, analysts say the measures so far are meant to tackle issues in specific sectors, such as boosting railway construction and shanty town renovation. Bucking the downward trend in the property market will take more aggressive easing, which many economists say is still unlikely.
"The important point is that the slowdown in the property sector is not constrained to merely a small number of cities or provinces, it is systemic," Zhang said, adding that previous easing measures are not enough to halt, let alone reverse, the downward momentum in the property sector and the economy.
Meanwhile, UBS's Wang said authorities "have the willingness" to roll out additional measures to stabilize the property sector given its importance to the economy. One way to do that is to speed up social housing construction. At the March parliamentary session, the government made a target to start construction of 7 million affordable homes.
She added that some second- and third-tier cities could further relax their household registration system to stimulate demand in the local housing market, saying such a move is also consistent with the country's urbanization drive.
Nomura's Zhang also said the government could consider stimulating demand in the short term, but doing so does not help solve the structural oversupply problem.
"Stimulating demand may put off any correction temporarily, but would likely exacerbate the problem in the long run. Painful adjustments in the sector seem inevitable," he said.
Zhu Zhongyi, deputy head with the China Real Estate Industry Associations, believes the property market in the country is now shifting its gear from high-speed to stable growth.
Following a series of government policies to restrain speculative investment and lowered market demand, potential house buyers have become more rational, he said.
"The real estate policy is being improved, which is necessary for the establishment of a long-term mechanism to ensure the stable development of the sector," he said.

Pacific Rubiales announces first quarter 2014 results: Reports record revenue

Operational Highlights:
  • Total field production for the quarter was 324,938 boe/d, an increase of 6% compared to the same period in 2013.
  • Gross production for the quarter was 178,188 boe/d, an increase of 16% compared to the same period in 2013.
  • Net production for the quarter reached a record 148,827 boe/d, an increase of approximately 16% compared to the same period in 2013.
  • Sales volumes for the quarter were a record 151,847 boe/d, an increase of 6% compared to the prior period and the same period a year ago.
  • Strong increase in total combined operating netback to $63.80/boe in the quarter compared to $59.43/boe in the prior period and $60.88/boe in the same period a year ago, with margins exceeding 68%.
Financial Highlights:
  • Revenues for the quarter were a record $1.3 billion, an increase of 2% compared to the same period in 2013.
  • Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was a record $708 million, an increase of 2% compared to the same period in 2013, representing a 55% margin on total revenues for the period.
  • Cash flow (funds flow from operations) for the quarter was $474 million, compared to $477 million in the fourth quarter and$506 million in the first quarter of 2013.
  • During the quarter, the Company repurchased from the open market approximately 9.1 million common shares, at an average price of C$16.38 per share, under the Company's normal course issuer bid.

BPZ Exploration Plans & Results and current gross Production of 5,750 bopd and Developments

"The CX15-3D development oil well was completed at the end of April 2014 and over the last seven days the well has produced an average of approximately 720 bopd gross, or 367 bopd net to BPZ".
"With the Corvina CX15-3D well recently coming online and the Albacora A-21D well currently being completed, our development drilling program at Block Z-1 is progressing nicely with recent gross production levels of approximately 5,750 bopd, or 2,930 bopd net to BPZ.  In the first quarter, we began to see the positive financial impact from our development drilling with increasing production and cash flow as well as lower unit production costs. This is encouraging as we still have seven additional proved undeveloped locations, or PUDs, to drill this year.  I am also pleased that we have finished drilling the first three onshore exploration wells at Block XXIII, and we secured a workover rig to test these wells.
Looking ahead, we expect to continue drilling at Corvina from the CX-15 platform throughout next year.  As we continue to develop and prove up the boundaries of the Albacora field, additional drilling is also possible.  In terms of other offshore opportunities we expect to begin appraising Delfin first, which has tested oil in the past.  This project is currently in the planning phase with the first well expected to be spud in 2015.  Onshore, we also expect to begin drilling next year at Block XXII, where we are pursuing conventional and unconventional plays." 

Source:  Manolo Zuniga, President and CEO of BPZ Energy

BPZ Q1 Results, Net loss of US$ O.O3 loss per share

First quarter ended March 31, 2014 operating income of $2.1 million, compared with an operating loss of $7.2 million for the same period last year.
·        Net loss of $3.6 million or $0.03 loss per share, compared to $12.8 million or $0.11 loss per share for the same period last year.
·        The Company's 51% share of oil production from the Corvina and Albacora fields at offshore Block Z-1 for first quarter ended March 31, 2014 was 2,566 barrels of oil per day (bopd), compared to 1,491 bopd for the same period in 2013. 
·        Improved first quarter 2014 results, compared to the same period last year, were primarily due to higher revenues from increased production at Block Z-1. 
·        Earnings before interest, income taxes, depletion, depreciation and amortization, exploration expense and non-recurring charges (EBITDAX), was a positive $9.6 million for the first quarter of 2014 compared to a positive $21 thousand for the same period last year.  (EBITDAX is a non-GAAP measure.  Please also see the reconciliation to net income table included at the end of the press release.)

Draghi, worried by strong euro, says ECB poised to act as soon as June

 The European Central Bank is ready to take action next month to boost the euro zone economy if updated inflation forecasts merit it, its president said on Thursday, warning outsiders not to pressure the bank into action.

Stressing that the euro's strength was "a serious concern", ECB chief Mario Draghi said the exchange rate would have to be addressed, adding that the bank's policymakers held a discussion about "all instruments" at their meeting in Brussels.

Euro zone inflation ticked up to 0.7 percent in April from March's 0.5 percent, but remains far below the ECB's target of just under 2 percent, and Draghi said: "There is consensus about being dissatisfied with the projected path of inflation."

"The governing council is comfortable with acting next time but before we want to see the staff projections that will come out in early June," he told a news conference after the ECB left interest rates on hold, as expected. [

Draghi did not specify what policy action the ECB could take beyond saying Thursday's council discussion touched on the policy instruments the central bank has mentioned previously.

These have included interest rate cuts, liquidity measures and even quantitative easing - central-bank speak for money printing to buy assets, a policy already pursued by the U.S. Federal Reserve, the Bank of Japan and the Bank of England. 


Source: Reuters

WSJ: China parked a giant oil rig in disputed waters off Vietnam

         The Wall Street Journal reports,"when China parked a giant oil rig in disputed waters off Vietnam, it confirmed what Washington and regional governments have long feared: Beijing is taking a major leap in the defense of its territorial claims, testing the resolve of rattled neighbors—as well as the U.S.
At the heart of the latest maneuvering for control in the South China Sea is China's most modern oil rig, deployed by a state-owned oil company off the contested Paracel Islands over the objections of Hanoi, whose coast guard has sought to obstruct the rig's work.
The standoff over the rig has built over several days, bursting into open conflict on Wednesday when Vietnamese officials said that about 80 Chinese vessels had moved into disputed areas near it and that six Vietnamese crew members had been injured in scuffles. Rear Adm. Ngo Ngoc Thu, vice commander of the Vietnamese coast guard, said Thursday that the situation at the site remains tense, with many ships still there".
"Officials from both countries allege its vessels have been rammed by the other. A Chinese Foreign Ministry official demanded on Thursday that Vietnam withdraw its ships.
The rig isn't just any piece of equipment; the 138-meter-high (455 feet) platform is China's first deep-water rig, capable of operating in 3,000 meters of water. Launched with great fanfare two years ago, it was billed as a "strategic weapon" for China's oil industry.
The oil rig is a potential game-changer as it makes possible a long-held Chinese goal; more aggressive pursuit of oil development close to home.
But while the dispute centers on the oil platform—and its promise of unlocking the South China Sea's untapped resources—at the heart of the standoff, security analysts say, are much higher stakes around the precedent the standoff may set and whether China's neighbors and the U.S. will allow it to seize control of strategic resources in disputed areas.
China is testing Washington's commitment to aiding regional partners at a time when some in the region fear the Obama administration's focus on Asia is wavering, security experts said.

The Greek government will bring social security costs for workers below the EU average

The Greek government will bring social security costs for workers below the European Union average for the first time in July when it cuts contributions to the pension and health-care systems, Labor Minister Ioannis Vroutsis said.
Social security contributions will fall by 3.9 percent bringing the total reduction since 2012 to 5 percent, Vroutsis said in an interview in Athens yesterday. The move is part of a suite of measures designed to boost Greece’s competitiveness and attract foreign investment as the country emerges from a six-year recession, he said.
“The reduction of social contributions alone will create about 30,000 new jobs in the next two years,” Vroutsis said. “We have done almost everything required to reform the Greek labor market.”
As Ireland, Spain and, this week, Portugal emerge from the strictures of their bailout programs, Greek officials are trying to show they can continue the work of repairing their economy as the financial pressure eases. After easing rules on firing, lowering compensation for dismissals and overhauling collective bargaining rules, the government ended its four-year exile from international markets last month, issuing 3 billion euros ($4.2 billion) of bonds at an auction that was almost seven times oversubscribed.
Source:Bloomberg

Chinese Software Cheetah Mobile rose 13% in their market debut in NY today.



Reuters: Alibaba's IPO filing brings many questions about strategy and latest buying spree



U.S. jobless claims drop 26,000 to 319,000

 The number of people who applied for U.S. unemployment benefits last week fell by 26,000 to 319,000 to mark the lowest level in a month, but the decline likely stemmed from seasonal quirks instead of any major change in hiring trends or layoffs. Economists surveyed by MarketWatch had expected claims to fall to a seasonally adjusted 325,000 in the week ended May 3. Claims often see-saw in April because of the Easter holiday and spring break, when school employees such as bus drivers and cafeteria workers are eligible in some states for temporary benefits. The average of new claims over the past month, meanwhile, rose by 4,500 to 324,750, theLabor Department said Thursday. The monthly figure smooths out the jumpiness in the weekly data and offers a better look at underlying labor-market trends. Also, the government said continuing claims decreased by 76,000 to a seasonally adjusted 2.7 million in the week ended April 26. Continuing claims reflect the number of people already receiving benefits. Initial claims from two weeks ago were revised up slightly to 345,000 from 344,000. 

Source: Marketwatch

The ECB left official interest rates unchanged.

 The European Central Bank on Thursday left officialinterest rates on hold, as expected, keeping its main refinancing rate at a record low 0.25%. The ECB's deposit rate remains at 0%, while the rate on the marginal lending facility stands at 0.75%. ECB President Mario Draghi will hold his monthly news conference at 8:30 a.m. Eastern. 

Source: Marketwatch

Wednesday, 7 May 2014

Asian shares up on Yellen comments, China trade data.

Asian shares got a lift on Thursday from dovish comments by the U.S. Federal Reserve chief and upbeat Chinese trade data that suggested some signs of stabilisation in the world's second-largest economy.
Risk assets were also underpinned by signs of easing tensions in Ukraine after Russian President Vladimir Putin called on pro-Moscow separatists to postpone a secession vote.
Tokyo's Nikkei share average .N225 rose 1.1 percent while MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS rose 0.5 percent, inching away from five-week lows hit on Wednesday.
Chinese exports rose 0.9 percent in April from a year earlier, beating expectations of a 1.7 percent decline, while imports also overshot economists' estimates.
The data supported the case that Beijing's use of targeted policy measures to underpin growth may be starting to stabilise the economy.
The early impetus for markets also came from Fed Chair Janet Yellen's testimony to Congress, which helped U.S. shares reverse earlier losses to end in positive territory.
Yellen repeated her stance that the economy was still in need of lots of support given the "considerable slack" in the labour market.
"Yellen ... put her emphasis on the ways in which the economy and labour market were still falling short of the FOMC's goals. She also emphasized risks to the economy from a potential continuation of the recent 'flattening out' of housing activity," said Barclays analysts in notes to clients.
"The clear implication is that accommodative policy will be needed for a long time."
The Dow Jones industrial average .DJI rose 0.7 percent and the S&P 500 .SPX gained 0.6 percent.
Emerging market shares  also held firm, with Brazilian shares hitting six-month highs  and Mexican stocks at their highest in more than three months.

Yellen's remarks also kept the 10-year U.S. Treasuries yield at 2.590 percent, near Monday's three-month low of 2.572 percent.
Source: Reuters

Weak French output casts doubts on growth, German industry orders slump

 French factories produced much less than expected in March while German industry orders unexpectedly fell the most in 1-1/2 years, data showed on Wednesday, feeding speculation of fresh European Central Bank action to support the euro zone recovery.

France also reported a wider trade deficit, casting doubt on President Francois Hollande's recent predictions that the bloc's second-largest economy is finally turning around.

Coming after a first-quarter drop in consumer spending, the 0.7 percent drop in French industrial output in March underlined the challenges facing the economy. Analysts had forecast a rise of 0.2 percent.

German industry orders also confounded the consensus forecast for a 0.3 percent rise, tumbling 2.8 percent as demand for German capital and consumer goods from the euro zone slumped, partly due to worries about the Ukraine crisis. [ID:nL6N0NT1PJ]

Still, some analysts said the outlook in Germany remained bright despite the surprise drop.

Overall the data could give the ECB, which ends a policy meeting on Thursday, another reason to eventually loosen monetary policy alongside the strong euro, low inflation and recent money-market tensions.

"The market was getting used to the idea that the ECB would stay put this week. This kind of data is mixing the picture," said Jean-Francois Robin, head of strategy at Natixis.

French industrial output shrank for the first quarter overall as a rise in the manufacturing component was cancelled out by lower energy demand due to mild weather. [ID:nP6N0MG001]

Hollande said at the weekend that the 2 trillion euro economy, bogged down by high unemployment and weak domestic demand, was on the way to turning around after stronger-than-expected 0.3 percent growth in the last quarter of 2013.

A solid turnaround is essential if France is going to keep promises to EU partners to bring its public deficit to within an EU-mandated target of 3 percent of output by 2015, down from 4.3 percent last year.

Market participants say there is very little chance of immediate ECB action to support the euro zone economy, but most believe a rate cut or some form of liquidity injection is likely from next month. Some even argue a move to print money by buying assets - so-called quantitative easing - could be on the cards.


'NO FRENCH TURNAROUND NOW'

Some analysts said the slump in German industry orders did not threaten the outlook for Europe's largest economy and was partly due to below-average large orders.

"The continued strong domestic orders show that the pickup in Germany is supported largely by domestic demand and is therefore less sensitive to swings in the global economy than in previous decades," said Stefan Kipar of Bayern LB.

Others were worried by the sharp drop in orders from the rest of the zone, however.

"The West's conflict with Russia may be unsettling companies in Europe more than previously thought," said Thomas Gitzel, chief economist at VP Bank.

"It is quite conceivable that the recovery in Germany and in the euro zone loses momentum in the second half of the year," he said.

After growth of just 0.4 percent last year, the German government predicts an expansion of 1.8 percent this year, driven by domestic demand.

France's weak data reinforced expectations that GDP growth would be smaller there in the first quarter than in the last quarter of 2013, however, and could even come in lower than some initial estimates.

"Industrial output, trade balance, GDP: the turnaround is not for now," Credit Agricole analyst Frederik Ducrozet wrote on Twitter. French first-quarter GDP data is due out on May 15.

France's March industrial output was also dragged down by low energy consumption after a mild winter, which led Barclays analyst Fabrice Montagne to say that first-quarter GDP growth could now come to 0.1 percent, below his earlier 0.2 percent estimate.

"French growth is also likely to contrast with stronger numbers in neighbouring countries such as Germany or Spain. GDP is then expected to rebound in Q2 towards the euro area average," he said.
Source: Reuters

Reuters: Euro zone yields edge higher on Putin comments, poor German auction

 Euro zone bond yields edged up on Wednesday after comments from Russian President Vladimir Putin appeared to open a way to resolving the standoff over Ukraine and as Germany found scarce demand for five-year debt at an auction.
Putin called on separatists in east Ukraine to postpone a referendum on independence for the mostly Russian-speaking region and said Moscow had withdrawn troops from the border with Ukraine.
A NATO official said, however, that there was no indication that Russian military forces were withdrawing. 
Nevertheless, Putin's comments took the shine off German Bunds, which investors see as one of the safest instruments in the world.
They also knocked back lower-rated bonds, which since the start of the Ukraine crisis have been sought as a safer alternative to equities. At the height of the euro zone debt crisis two years ago, peripheral bonds would sell off in periods of increased geopolitical stress.
"It looks like the conflict might be easing off a bit so bonds are suffering," one London-based trader said.
German Bund yields , the benchmark for euro zone borrowing costs, rose 1.5 basis points to 1.475 percent, coming off 11-month lows of 1.44 percent hit earlier in the day. Most other yields in the euro zone were 1-3 bps higher, with Spanish, Irish and Italian yields bouncing off record lows.
Another blow for the bond market was a German auction of five-year debt which drew fewer bids than the amount on offer.
The auction result was taken as a signal that many in the market thought yields had fallen too much, especially ahead of a European Central Bank meeting on Thursday which is unlikely to deliver any new monetary policy easing measures.
Five-year debt has historically been more sensitive to central bank expectations than shorter- or longer-term bonds.
"The auction was a big surprise. It seems that the market is getting pretty tired at these levels," said David Schnautz, rate strategist at Commerzbank in New York.
Although no major ECB moves are expected on Thursday, markets are still pricing in some form of easing later this year, as suggested by longer-term money market rates trading below short-dated ones.
Low inflation, a stubbornly strong euro and some recent volatility in interbank lending markets are all reasons for the ECB to consider further easing. Some in the market even argue a move to print money by buying assets - so-called quantitative easing - could be on the cards.
"The ECB is unlikely to announce QE tomorrow because the meeting comes so close to the European Parliamentary elections. June seems more likely, but the ECB is not finding it easy to agree on a QE programme and may need longer still," said Ben Bennett, a credit strategist at Legal & General.

NBG sets price range for share placement 2-2.6 euros(US$2.74-3.56) shares plunged today in NY to US$3.75 in (-4.82%)

The National Bank of Greece (NBG) has set the price range for a share placement worth up to 2.5 billion euros ($3.5 billion), which bankers said was the latest deal by a Greek lender to see strong demand from investors.

The NBG is seeking to shore up its balance sheet and is the fourth Greek bank in the past six weeks to see strong demand for a share sale, as investors hunt for bargains amid a nascent economic recovery in the bailed out country.

Two sources familiar with the matter said on Wednesday that the NBG placement had been priced at 2-2.6 euros a share, in a deal worth up to 2.5 billion euros.

One of the sources added the books had already been covered by Tuesday night, the day the bookbuilding process was launched, and that demand had been strong.

"We did see some very big orders coming through," the source said.

A banker told Reuters earlier on Wednesday the placement was oversubscribed "by more than one time so far".

Yield-hungry investors have snapped up recent offerings from Greek peers Alpha Bank , Piraeus and Eurobank .

Those three lenders have raised 5.81 billion euros between them through similar equity offerings over the past six weeks, as investor confidence in the recession-battered country improves. Piraeus saw over 3 billion euros of orders for its 1.75 billion-euro placement in March. [ID:nL5N0MN2ZN]

NBG, the country's largest bank by assets, is tapping international markets to plug a 2.18 billion-euro capital hole revealed in a central bank stress test in March.

Banks are busy shoring up their balance sheets in a bid to boost their capital position ahead of the European Central Bank's November health check, when it becomes their supervisor.

NBG's existing shares were trading 3.2 percent lower at 2.72 euros on the Athens bourse at 1421 GMT.

Bookbuilding will end on Thursday, with Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley acting as global coordinators and bookrunners, joined by BofA Merrill Lynch, Citigroup, HSBC, UBS and Mediobanca.

NBG has a current market value of 6.73 billion euros and is 84 percent-owned by Greece's bank bailout fund, the Hellenic Financial Stability Fund (HFSF).

Proceeds from the sale will be used to cover the difference between the identified capital hole in the health check, and planned moves to boost capital by 1.04 billion euros that have been approved by the Bank of Greece.

NBG also plans to buy back 1.35 billion euros of preferred shares from the government. Its equity offering does not include pre-emption rights for existing shareholders, including the HFSF.

Reuters: Alibaba, Shoprunner plan to launch joint China service

 Alibaba Group Holding Ltd has struck one of its largest deals with a U.S. e-commerce company, agreeing to help Amazon.comrival ShopRunner expand into China.

ShopRunner, whose partners include Neiman Marcus and Nine West, will use Alibaba's domestic logistics infrastructure to launch in China later this year, ShopRunner Chief Strategy Officer Fiona Dias told Reuters on Wednesday

The move would offer a new way for U.S. retailers to tap the world's second largest economy, where many have stumbled in the past. It also allows Alibaba to cater to booming Chinese demand for authentic American products, in a market flooded with counterfeits.

"The history of U.S. retailers going to China is one that's fraught with peril," Dias said in an interview. "This is a very low cost way to do it that doesn't require them (U.S. retailers) to go to China to figure it out."

In October, Alibaba paid $202 million for a 39 percent stake in ShopRunner, which launched four years ago and sells products from thousands of brands like American Eagle Outfitters and Calvin Klein. The startup, with over a million members, is still a minnow compared with Amazon or eBay Inc , but a move into China could afford a major boost to its growth.

"Alibaba and ShopRunner now aim to create a "joint brand" in China, Dias said. The venture will be in addition to Alibaba's other Web sites, including the three marketplaces that make up more than 80 percent of the e-commerce giant's revenue, according to the company's IPO filing on Tuesday.

U.S. retailers from Best Buy to Wal-Mart have long tried to crack a Chinese retail market dominated by strong local players. But many have run afoul of China's patchwork of regulations and competing local interests. Some, like Home Depot Inc and eBay, shut their big-box stores or pulled out of the country.

"Everyone would love to have a way to at least test the market," said Richard Last, a former JC Penney executive and now a professor of retail at the University of North Texas. "If you partner with the Alibaba group, you might have a good shot at being successful."


COURTSHIP

Alibaba, which on Tuesday filed for what could eventually become the world's largest technology debut, has been trying to court U.S. retailers for years. Its Tmall marketplace hosts an increasing number of brands like Gap.

The company also has been investing in U.S. technology startups, from ridesharing service Lyft to mobile messaging service Tango.
Dias said not all retailers have been comfortable selling through Alibaba sites because they are perceived to be cluttered with retailers who might be selling competing, counterfeit goods.

She argued that a partnership with Alibaba could make more goods available to Chinese buyers: while the appetite for American brands in China is large, the selection is narrow at present.

"They do want to access Chinese customers and they want to do it on their own terms," Dias said.

ShopRunner offers free two-day shipping within the United States from a variety of stores for $79 a year, similar to Amazon's "Prime" service.

Chinese consumers will get their products 10 days after ordering on the U.S. website, Dias said. But they will have to pay shipping costs from the U.S. market, which Dias said could wind up as high as 20 percent of the product price, or as much as $10 for a $50 item.

Alibaba will offer some customers in China complimentary memberships on ShopRunner. ShopRunner has a similar arrangement with American Express , also an investor in Shoprunner, in the United States".

Some angry Chinese Nationalists vent over "Jack Ma, the traitor" on microblogs

 Angry Chinese nationalists finally woke up on Wednesday to the fact that Japanese and American companies own more than half of e-commerce juggernaut Alibaba, and have done for years.

"Who is Jack Ma working for?" asked some on microblogs, hours after Alibaba Group Holding Ltdfiled a prospectus for an initial public offering of its shares in the United States, which some say could be the biggest listing ever of a technology stock. 
Ma was the lead founder of Alibaba in 1999 and has become something of a cult hero to entrepreneurs and many ordinary Chinese, saying he champions small business against industry giants.

"Jack Ma is a big traitor," wrote another user on Tencent Weibo, a major Twitter-like Chinese microblogging site.

In its IPO prospectus, Alibaba detailed ties with its two principal shareholders - Japanese telecoms firm SoftBank Corp <9984.T>, which owns a 34.4 percent stake, and Yahoo Inc with a 22.6 percent stake.

SoftBank invested in Alibaba 14 years ago, and Yahoo bought a 40 percent stake in 2005. Both holdings have long been public knowledge and have been covered in previous disclosures.

Yet this old information triggered a clamour of dismay and indignation among some anti-Japan Internet users in China on Wednesday, who also noted that Chinese native Ma is only Alibaba's third-biggest shareholder, with an 8.9 percent stake.

Some called for a boycott of Alibaba's popular trading websites - Taobao and Tmall - though that's likely to have little impact on businesses that brought in most of Alibaba's $6.5 billion of revenue in April-December.


TROUBLED TIES

The Asian neighbours - and the world's second- and third-largest economies - have a troubled history.

Japan invaded China in 1937 and ruled it with a brutal hand for eight years. Millions of Chinese were killed and tens of thousands of Chinese men were shipped off to work in Japanese mines and construction. Chinese women were forced to work as so-called comfort women. China last month impounded a ship owned by Japan's Mitsui O.S.K. Lines Ltd <9104.T> over a dispute dating back to the 1930s war. Mitsui later paid about $29 million for the release of the vessel.
In 2012, sales of Japanese-branded cars were badly hit in the fallout from another row between Beijing and Tokyo over disputed islands in the East China Sea.

"Calling someone 'traitor' has been (a custom) since the May Fourth period," said Zhang Ming, a professor of international relations at Beijing's Renmin University, referencing student demonstrations in 1919 against Japan receiving Chinese territory from Germany after the First World War.

"When it comes to why Chinese people make a big fuss, it relates to China's environment: China's officials don't stop this kind of behaviour," said Zhang. "These past couple of years, there's been a massive clamour for populism and nationalism."

As one microblogger wrote of SoftBank's stake in Alibaba:

"Oh my god, Japan's claws reach everywhere!"

Source: Reuters

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