Monday, 24 June 2013

Fed fears and China credit crunch concerns send jitters through markets

FTSE 100 falls to just above 6000 from all-time highs last month, while Dow Jones index opens 200 points down in New York
Fears that the Federal Reserve is preparing to remove its stimulus from the US economy coupled with anxiety that China is being gripped by its own credit crunch have sent jitters through global stock and bond markets.
The rout hit yields on UK government bonds which hit their highest level since October 2011 in what analysts said was one of the most rapid moves ever witnessed on the market. Yields, which move inversely to price, on 10-year gilts have now risen a full percentage point to edge towards 2.6% in just two months, a rapid pace of change in the potential cost of government borrowing that could in turn increase the price at which companies and households borrow.
The FTSE 100, which last month was testing all-time highs, lost another 70 points to sit just above 6000 – a key level it only moved through at the start of 2013 – while the Dow Jones Industrial Average in the US suffered a 200-point loss in the first half hour of trading. Commodity prices, such as copper, were also lower.
Yields on US government bonds, known as Treasuries, also hit two-year highs as investors digested recent remarks by the Fed chairman, Ben Bernanke, that he might begin to slow down the central bank's $85bn (£55.1bn) monthly purchases of bonds which are being used to simulate the economy.
Governments in the eurozone, particularly the fragile economies of Spain and Italy, also faced their highest borrowing costs since May as yields rose.
Chinese stock markets dropped more than 5%, the biggest fall in three years to reach their lowest close in more than four years, after the People's Bank of China (PBoC) – the central bank – appeared to suggest it would not step in to prevent a rise in the rates at which banks borrow from each other.
Analysts at Nomura said that "investors remain concerned over tight liquidity conditions in the banking system" in China after the PBoC said it would "contain financial risks with more solid actions" and "fine-tune policy when necessary".
The rates which banks borrow from each other in China have jumped to close to 10% and to as much as 25% for some banks – from just 3% a month ago – raising concerns about the impact of lending by non-banks in China, known as shadow banks.
Traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange
Michael Hewson, senior market analyst at CMC Markets, said: "Fears of a continued cash squeeze in the Chinese banking system has seen European markets continue their soft tone on fears that a dislocation in the banking system will cause further downward revisions in forward expectations for growth over the coming months".
Hewson noted that the warning at the weekend by the Bank for International Settlements, the international central bank organisation, that more stimulus could actually harm fragile economies had also ratted markets. Stephen Cecchetti, head of the BIS monetary and economic department, warned on Sunday: "Unfortunately, central banks cannot do more without compounding the risks they have already created. Monetary stimulus alone cannot put economies on a path to robust, self-sustaining growth, because the roots of the problem preventing such growth are not monetary."
But a senior US central banker attempted to fight back against the market reaction saying that the Fed could not be broken in its resolve in easing back from monetary stimulus in the way that the UK had been forced out of the exchange rate mechanism in 1992 by speculative attacks by George Soros. "But I do believe that big money does organise itself somewhat like feral hogs. If they detect a weakness or a bad scent, they'll go after it," Richard Fisher, president of the Dallas Fed, told the Financial Times. The Fed had not even started to cut back its purchases of bonds, Fisher said. "I don't want to go from Wild Turkey to 'Cold Turkey' overnight," said Fisher.
John Higgins, chief markets economist at Capital Economics, said the potential removal for stimulus by the Fed was the main cause of the upheaval in bond markets but said, though, that a "bloodbath" should be averted. Even if US Treasury bond yields rose to 3.5% by the end of the year – from around 2.5% now – it would be low by historical standards, Higgins said.
In China, concerns about a rapid expansion in lending have dogged Beijing's economic management as consumers seek to maintain their living standards by borrowing cash from these local finance companies rather than main stream banks, although much of the lending can ultimately be traced back to the banking sector. Deutsche Bank has estimated that the among credit extended by non-banks could account for as much as 40% of Chinese GDP.
Capital Economics' China analyst, Mark Williams, said investors were factoring in lower growth as the credit squeeze takes effect while the Nomura analysts said the liquidity squeeze was the first real test for China's new leaders, in office for just three months.
"If the new leaders maintain their current approach, we believe it will add downside risk to growth in 2013 but in our opinion this would help reduce systemic financial risks, supporting long-term sustainable growth," the Nomura analysts said.
China's economy has already slowed in recent months: manufacturing contracted and property construction weakened in May, leading most analysts to say that hopes earlier this year of a bounce in growth have proved misplaced.
Article Source : http://www.guardian.co.uk
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UK alcohol and tobacco prices among highest in EU

EU survey shows Denmark and Norway most expensive, with Macedonia cheapest – but Britain places well above average
Britain has some of the highest prices for alcohol and tobacco in the European Union and shoppers pay more than average for milk, cheese and eggs, according to official figures from the EU statistical office, Eurostat.
Booze prices in Britain are 43% above the EU average, while cigarettes cost 94% more and are the third highest in the EU, only just behind Ireland and Norway.
Inside the EU, Denmark has the highest overall price level but Eurostat, which surveyed an additional 10 non-EU members in Europe, found that Norway is worst for costs, while Macedonia is cheapest.
General food and non-alcoholic beverage prices in Britain are 4% above the EU average, and milk, cheese and eggs are 7% more. However bread prices are 11% below the average for Europe.
The average figures for the EU include prices in the newer members such as Romania and Bulgaria. Compared with the major western European countries, such as France and Germany, the UK's price level (apart from alcohol and tobacco) is favourable.
For example, average food prices in Italy are significantly higher than in Britain, while in France meat costs 23% more than in the UK, and in Germany 28% more.
Among the major economies, Spain is best value. In almost every category, its prices are about one-tenth lower than the EU average, and nearly a quarter below the price level in France. For example, meat in Spain costs one-third less than in France.
But other countries that went through a boom and bust following their entry into the euro still have very high price levels. In Cyprus, milk, cheese and eggs are 41% above the EU average, while in Greece, bread and milk are significantly pricier than average. In Ireland, despite a steep rise in unemployment and wage cuts, prices remain among the highest in Europe. The average Irish food price is 18% higher than the rest of the EU, and its alcohol prices are the highest in the EU barring Finland.
Norway remains the country where prices for almost everything are the highest in Europe and possibly the world. Average food prices are 86% higher than across the EU; milk, cheese and eggs are 114% more and alcohol is 188% higher.
In the former Yugoslav republic of Macedonia, home to Europe's lowest prices, alcohol is half the price of the UK, while food is 70% cheaper than Norway. Turkey has surprisingly high food prices despite having much lower average earnings than European countries. Average food prices in the country are 88% of the EU average, with milk, cheese and eggs 22% more.
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Article Source : http://www.guardian.co.uk

ENRC founders submit lower bid for their Kazakhstan mining company

Billionaires reduce offer already rejected by troubled company's independent directors as 'undervaluing' the business
The three billionaire founders of controversial Kazakh mining company Eurasian Natural Resources Corporation are poised to unveil a final but reduced £3bn bid before a deadline on Monday.
The oligarchs, Alexander Machkevitch, Alijan Ibragimov and Patokh Chodiev, made a tentative proposal in May worth around £3.3bn, which was rejected by ENRC's independent directors.
The offer involved a mixture of cash plus shares from the Kazakh government's stake in rival London-listed mining group Kazakhmys. Under the new proposal, the structure remains the same but the total price is lower following a fall in Kazakhmys shares since May. To complicate matters further, Kazakhmys itself holds a 26% stake in ENRC.
In a statement on Sunday the oligarchs said: "In response to the recent press speculation, the consortium confirms that it is in the advanced stages of preparation of a possible offer to be made for the entire issued and to be issued share capital of ENRC. It is a pre-condition that Kazakhmys delivers an irrevocable undertaking to accept the offer (subject to Kazakhmys shareholder approval) in respect of [its stake in ENRC."
Ferroalloys at an ENRC site in Kazakhstan. The company, troubled by corruption allegations, is the subject of a reduced bid by its founders.The consortium is offering 172.3p in cash plus 0.23 Kazakhmys shares. Based on Friday's price of 269.4p for Kazakhmys shares, it values each ENRC share at around 234.3p compared to its latest market price of 216.9p.
But the original proposal was worth 260p for every ENRC share, which ENRC's independent directors had already rejected as "materially undervaluing" the business.
However, there is little they can do if Kazakhmys decides to put its 26% shareholding behind the bidders, which it is reportedly minded to do. Between them, the oligarchs and the Kazakh government already own 53.9% so any deal with Kazakhmys would see the offer go unconditional.
The ENRC founders decided to take the company private amid investigations by the Serious Fraud Office over fraud, bribery and corruption allegations, boardroom rows and an acquisition spree which left it with around $5bn (£3.24bn) of debt.
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Article Source : http://www.guardian.co.uk