Tag Archives: green
Stocks Mixed As Syria Worries Weigh
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/78a30882-15dc-11e3-b519-00144feabdc0.html#ixzz2e0jj0PQn By Jamie Chisholm Thursday 10:35 BST. Optimism on the global economy is helping nudge many growth-focused assets higher, but the bullishness is contained by worrying over the potential geopolitical fallout of the Syria crisis and some monetary policy uncertainty. Stronger European financials but weaker energy stocks leaves the Stoxx 600 index barely changed after the FTSE Asia-Pacific index rose 0.2 per cent. US index futures point to the S&P 500 on Wall Street opening flat at 1,653. The dollar index is up 0.1 per cent to flirt with one-month highs, while gold is up $1 to $1,392 an ounce. Underpinning investor sentiment is a recent rash of fairly upbeat economic data. Well-received manufacturing and service sector surveys from China and Europe this week have joined with better US figures – such as buoyant car sales in August – to raise hopes of a broadening global recovery. That has lifted industrial commodities of late, and many are mildly firmer again on Thursday, with copper up 0.3 per cent to $3.25 a pound and Brent crude adding 48 cents to $115.39 a barrel. However, oil is also getting support from wariness about the chances of supply disruption should the US attack Syria. The potential for broader political fallout following any such action will be in focus as the G20 meets in Russia, which supports the Damascus government; and fretting over this issue is likely to be suppressing the broader market’s confident tone. China’s vice finance minister has warned that a military strike on Syria would hurt the global economy, and Turkey’s lira, which has been buffeted of late by Syria-linked and emerging market tensions, is 1.3 per cent weaker to trade at a record low of TL2.075 per dollar. Also causing some reticence is possible monetary policy “headline risk”. The session sees strategy announcements from the central banks of Japan, Sweden, the UK and the eurozone – a lot for traders to absorb. Labour market data from the US – in the form of the weekly initial unemployment claims and the ADP private sector jobs survey – will set the scene for Friday’s non-farm payrolls numbers, a report considered crucial in formulating the Federal Reserve’s decision on when to start reducing its bond buying programme. “We expect this Friday’s employment report to seal the deal on a September tapering announcement,” said analysts at Société Générale. US implied borrowing costs are consequently moving up, pulling other highly-rated sovereigns along in their wake. The 10-year Treasury yield is up 4 basis points to 2.93 per cent, flirting with two-year highs, while equivalent duration Bunds are advancing 6bp to show 2.0 per cent for the first time since March 2012. Japanese benchmark bonds are up 1bp at 0.79 per cent after the Bank of Japan concluded its two-day meeting, leaving rates and its asset purchase programme unchanged. In an upbeat statement, the BoJ lifted its assessment of Japan’s economy, which it said appeared to be “recovering moderately”. The yen briefly moved above Y100 versus the dollar, but is now changing hands at Y99.85, just 10 pips weaker on the day. After gaining 5 per cent so far this week, the Nikkei 225 has similarly decided to take time for consolidation, closing up just 0.1 per cent. In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng index was up 1.2 per cent, but on the mainland the Shanghai Composite was down 0.2 per cent, highlighting a mixed session for the region. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 index lost 0.4 per cent after figures showing a greater than expected trade deficit for July. On the back of below-forecast mineral exports, the deficit reached A$765m after a modest surplus of A$243m in June. “There is nothing here to challenge the growing view that mining investment has already peaked, with little signs of a pick-up in other sectors so far,” said economists with TD Securities. Australia holds its federal election on Saturday, where the opposition Liberal Party candidate is expected to win. The Aussie dollar is seeing some profit taking after bouncing 3 per cent in the past three sessions on reduced expectations for easier monetary policy following stronger than forecast second-quarter GDP data. The Aussie is weaker by 33 pips to US$0.9133. The Indian rupee is moving further away from record lows as the market perceives greater credibility in the Reserve Bank of India’s new chief. Confidence in Raghuram Rajan’s measures to support the currency sees the dollar fall 1.4 per cent to Rs66.14, nudges bond yields lower and has helped boost the Sensex equity gauge by 2.3 per cent. Additional reporting by Sarah Mishkin in Hong Kong Continue reading
Unhappy Ending For Indonesia Growth Story
http://www.ft.com/cm…l#ixzz2e0gkByv7 Indonesia’s decision to follow Brazil’s lead by raising interest rates at an extraordinary central bank meeting on Thursday temporarily took the sting out of the recent market slide, with the rupiah appreciating against the dollar and the stock market closing in the black. But the global emerging market turbulence , which has also hit Brazil, India, South Africa and Turkey, is unlikely to abate until the US Federal Reserve clarifies its plans to curb its quantitative easing programme. Over the next three months, many emerging market investors will be focused on how quickly the Fed withdraws liquidity from global markets, says Melvin Boey, southeast Asia strategist for Bank of America Merrill Lynch. On a longer-term view, investors and companies in Indonesia are starting to adjust to the fact that, as and when the dust settles, they are unlikely to see a return to the heady economic growth of the past five years, which was pumped up by the US liquidity surge and high prices for Indonesian commodities such as coal, palm oil and rubber. For companies, this “new normal” will mean lower profit margins and higher borrowing costs. For investors, the key question is: how much will growth slow and at what level will asset prices start to look attractive again? “A year ago, we still had high expectations for Indonesia but not now,” says one trader at a London investment bank. “Companies earnings are topping out and the country is moving into a slower cycle, with an election coming up next year as well. But there is a price level at which we’d come back in.” Until earlier this year, Indonesia was seen as one of the world’s hottest emerging markets, with a decade of robust economic growth, a large and fast-growing middle class and plentiful natural resources. The euphoria surrounding southeast Asia’s biggest economy sent the prices of Indonesian assets soaring to record levels. But since the value of the rupiah started falling rapidly in May, subsequently losing 10 per cent of its value relative to the dollar, the equity and debt markets have suffered a major sell-off. The benchmark Jakarta Composite index of shares has fallen by more than 20 per cent since May, when it hit an all-time high, having increased in value by 4.5 times since its global financial crisis nadir in November 2008. The yield on Indonesia’s rupiah-denominated, 10-year government bonds has jumped to well over 8 per cent from a record low of 5.2 per cent at the start of this year. “The central bank should have started tightening monetary policy earlier but the debt looks interesting at these levels,” says a fixed income fund manager in New York. The bank increased its main benchmark lending rate by 50 basis points to 7 per cent on Thursday. After such an extended boom, a correction is hardly surprising. But most analysts believe the fundamentals in Indonesia and other emerging markets are changing. Regardless of when the Fed starts “tapering” its stimulus programme, the economy is likely to slow in Indonesia, says Taimur Baig, chief southeast Asia and India economist at Deutsche Bank. He predicts annual GDP growth could ease to “around 5 per cent” rather than “around 6 per cent” in the next few years. Some Indonesian companies such as Mitra Adiperkasa , a large retail group that has been popular with foreign investors, have already warned their profit margins are being squeezed and are scaling back their expansion plans, for the first time since the global financial crisis. And valuations are not obviously cheap. The Indonesian stock market’s 12-month forward price/earnings ratio of 11.9 makes it more expensive than China (8.5), South Korea (8.2) and Thailand (10.6), but cheaper than India (12.5), Singapore (13.1) and Malaysia (14.4). However, operating profit margins in Indonesia remain among the highest in the region, averaging about 20 per cent, compared with 15 per cent in India and 10 per cent in China, according to Herald van der Linde, HSBC’s chief equity strategist for Asia. “Across the region, all countries are seeing margin pressure but in Indonesia, the margins are higher than elsewhere and the speed at which they come down will be slower,” he says. In any further sell-off, Indonesia could also be cushioned relative to other Asian markets by the fact that many international fund managers have already turned underweight on the country, says Mr van der Linde. By contrast, many still have an overweight portfolio position on India, which is suffering from a deeper macroeconomic malaise than Indonesia. Mr Boey of BofA believes some investors are waiting for the right time to start buying stocks that have been sold off unfairly. “The telecommunications and media sectors stand out from a short term perspective because they have seen a big sell-down, despite the fact that their fundamentals will be immune to what is happening right now as they are not affected by the fluctuating rupiah,” he says. But while there are some brave stock pickers, most international investors want to see more concrete action from emerging market governments before they pile back in. “For me to pound my fist on the table about Indonesia, I’d like to see a turning point in the data, like the current account deficit starting to narrow,” says Mr Boey. Continue reading
Brazil’s Booming Farms Reap Benefit Of Weak Currency
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/aab8e412-0dae-11e3-9fbb-00144feabdc0.html#ixzz2e0fynxYQ By Joe Leahy in São Paulo Carlos Piassi remembers the reaction from other farmers when he started planting a second annual crop at his farm near Uberlândia, in Brazil’s grain belt. No one believed it could be done given the semi-arid region’s relatively short rainy season and long dry winter. “If you had said you were going to plant a safrinha [the small harvest] here five years ago you were called crazy,” he says at his farm, Fazenda Campo Alegre. The naysayers were wrong. “The safrinha between last year and this has about tripled,” he said. That Brazil has risen in recent decades to become an agricultural power is no secret. It dominates the sugar, coffee and orange juice markets and competes with the US to be the world’s biggest soyabean exporter. What is less understood is that the transformation is not only continuing, it is gaining pace. Indeed, Brazil’s robust agricultural sector is promising to help Latin America’s largest country weather one of its toughest economic periods in a decade as a consumer-driven boom slows. And a recent 15 per cent plunge in the value of its currency, the real, against the dollar is set to give further impetus to the sector by reducing rising costs that were making its exports uncompetitive. “The devaluation of the real has been a complete game-changer,” said Giovana Araújo, an agribusiness analyst at Brazil’s Itaú BBA bank. Using new varieties of seeds that have allowed them to shorten soya and corn crop cycles, Brazilian farmers in the country’s centre-west savannah areas have moved from planting one crop to incorporating the second, the safrinha. In some areas where irrigation is available they are even contemplating a third harvest. The corn crop has benefited most from the safrinha. In the 2012-13 year, corn output is expected to total nearly 80m tonnes, up from about 56mt in 2011. Soyabeans, meanwhile, are estimated at more than 80mt compared with about 75mt in 2011. Brazilian agriculture output Agroconsult, a Brazilian consultancy, expects the safrinha to account for 56 per cent of total corn production in the 2012-13 season, and 58 per cent in 2013-14 – leading farmers to joke that the second crop should now be called a “safrão”, or “big harvest”. “The safrinha’s share of total production should continue to grow in the long term,” said Marcos Rubin, an analyst at Agroconsult. The new seed varieties mean that the first crop, typically soyabeans, can be planted and harvested in 90-95 days to make way for the second harvest, typically corn, before the summer rains end. After the rains, during the long dry period, some farmers are starting to experiment with a third crop using irrigation. “Brazil has the conditions to quickly double its production of corn, which today is about 80m tonnes to 160m tonnes,” said Roberto de Rissi, business director of Dupont Pioneer, one of the multinationals fighting for Brazil’s increasingly lucrative seed business. If you had said you were going to plant a safrinha [the small harvest] here five years ago you were called crazy – Carlos Piassi, Brazilian farmer Dupont, which is strong in Brazilian corn, has recently also invested in a new facility in the region near Mr Piassi’s farm with the capacity to produce 80,000 tonnes of soya seeds a year. It is fighting Monsanto, Dow AgroSciences and Syngenta for the country’s corn and soya markets. The companies have names for their products that range from Intrasect to Powercorn to Smartstax, a genetically modified insect-resistant variety. The dominance of the multinationals has turned Brazil into a stronghold for genetically modified crops, which account for 90 per cent of its soya-planted area and 76 per cent of corn, according to Jefferson Carvalho, an analyst at Rabobank International. “This year Monsanto launched the first soyabean that was developed specifically for another country, not the US,” he said. Challenging the rapid growth of Brazilian agriculture are the country’s poor logistics, which lead to bottlenecks at roads and ports and higher costs. In addition, recent falls in international prices for grains are squeezing farmers’ margins, though the weaker currency will be a big help. Brazil’s strong economy in recent years has also made it hard to find workers willing to toil in the fields when they could be doing a cushy service job in a city. “Today it’s hard to find anyone who wants to work. I can’t find a driver for the truck,” says Mr Piassi. “I’ve got two corn harvesters sitting idle because I can’t rustle up anyone to operate them.” Continue reading