1
6,000 unfinished flats certified for pre-sale
Year II
Number 304
Thursday June 13, 2013
Editor-in-chief Tiago Azevedo
Deputy editor-in-chief
Vitor Quintã
MOP 6.00
April 19, 2013
Philippines’ AirAsia cuts regional timetable
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HK cruise terminal to boost regional tours Page 7
Waste management contract challenged U
rbaser SA, one of the losing bidders for the city’s solid waste management contract, is challenging the contract awarded to Macau Waste Systems Co Ltd (CSR). Madrid-based Urbaser is seeking a court injunction here to suspend the granting of the contract. The injunction papers seen by Business Daily say Urbaser will appeal to overturn the Chief Executive’s decision approving the deal. But until that appeal process is concluded, “which will, most probably, take several months or even years”, the signing of the contract should be suspended to avoid any “harm to public interest,” the company argues. CSR – the incumbent – got the new contract with an offer of 2.07 billion patacas (US$258.8 million), the lowest price among five bidders. A tender jury also awarded CSR a total score of 80.90 percent, but only 79.44 percent to Urbaser’s proposal, according to tender documents. More on page 3 I SSN 2226-8294
www.macaubusinessdaily.com
Maids face long hours to pay agency fees Domestic helpers worked more hours in the first quarter than in any quarter in the past five years, official data show. A workers’ representative says many maids are skipping days off to make some extra money. Besides paying their daily bills and sending some money back home, domestic workers are also burdened by huge deductions to employment agencies, says ‘Indarti’ from the Indonesian workers group ATKI-Macau.
Hang Seng Index 21610
21554
21498
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Residents try luck on one-bedroom flats
June 11
There were five times more applicants than available onebedroom flats in a Coloane subsidised development, the Housing Bureau revealed. A member of Public Housing Affairs Committee and a real estate expert believe residents are trying their luck with affordable public homes as they fear private flats will remain beyond their budget. Demand could be even higher for two- and three-bedroom subisdised flats. Page 2
Taxi tender winners give up licences
HSI - Movers Name
%Day
CHINA RES POWER
0.64
CHINA UNICOM HON
0.58
AIA GROUP LTD
0.30
CHINA MOBILE
-0.06
HUTCHISON WHAMPO
-0.13
HANG LUNG PROPER
-3.80
HENDERSON LAND D
-3.98
BELLE INTERNATIO
-4.03
SINO LAND CO
-4.17
NEW WORLD DEV
-5.03
Source: Bloomberg
The winning bidders for nine of the 200 new taxis handed out a year ago have given up on the licences, the Transport Bureau admitted. The eight-year permits will be re-distributed to other bidders on a standby list. While 191 of the new taxis started operation before the end-March, the bureau expects the nine remaining taxis to follow suit ‘within three months’. Page 5
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June 13, 2013
Macau opinion
Fuzzy signal
Demand for one-bed flats outweighs supply Residents try for subsidised homes as squeezed supply, rising prices hit private sector Stephanie Lai
sw.lai@macaubusinessdaily.com
José I. Duarte Economist
T
he Court of Second Instance has reached a decision that would see the public antenna companies, which illegally relay cable television transmissions, taken off the air. The government now has 90 days to enforce the ruling that would cease illegal television transmissions. The judgement orders the government, after many years of litigation, to enforce the existing and applicable laws, and to comply with the terms of a contract to which it is a party. If this sounds extraordinary, it should. Since 1999, Macau Cable Television Company Ltd has been the sole operator allowed by law to relay television signals by cable. Those are the terms of a contract the company signed with the government. But that monopoly right was never effectively asserted as the public antenna companies continued to provide services to many, if not most, of the buildings in Macau. The company’s complaints bore no results and the losses kept pilling up. After a while the overseas investors in the venture sold their share to a Macau company at what many said was a sale price. Nothing changed out in the field or, more appropriately, on the rooftops. The new owner, Kong Seng Paging Ltd, is itself a public antenna company – an irony many were eager to underline. It turned up the heat by suing the government. The court case is ongoing. So far, nothing seems to have changed and the concession contract ends next year. Even if the latest court ruling is fully enforced within three months, which remains to be seen, the company would have operated for 14 years of its 15-year contract without being able to assert its rights or have its rights enforced by the authorities.
‘Lawless land’ The Bureau of Telecommunications Regulation oversees this industry. Several years ago, belatedly, the bureau issued an ultimatum to the public antenna companies: either reach an agreement with the cable company and the unwilling providers of content or stop broadcasting. In the days after the announcement, the government publicly undercut the regulator. Yes, there are legal problems, it said, but the issue is complex. There are many interests at stake, the public has the right to watch television, it said. We need to take it easy. We should strive to achieve a harmonious solution. As a policy issue, the topic was dead. As a legal issue, well, we had to wait until recently for an answer. Many frame the issue as one of the public’s interest, based on a presumed and vaguely defined right to have access to television broadcasts. There are a couple of extraordinary pieces of reasoning implicit in their argument. First, that to capture and, in some cases, steal television signals and provide them for a fee to consumers constitutes a public service. And that once the phrase “public service” is invoked, these companies are either exempted from meeting the applicable laws or they deserve compensation for doing so if “forced” to comply. That the government seems to condone this behaviour, even by its inaction, is somewhat perplexing. The city is left with a number of companies, which are seldom identified or have their operations scrutinised, having operated for the past 14 years in a way that is a very public and visible breach of applicable regulations. None of the people involved has ever denied that fact or claimed to be unaware of the situation. The government has neither enforced the laws nor respected the terms of a contract to which it was a party – not even when it has been expressly asked to act. The Court of Second Instance defined this state of affairs as one of “abuse without limits” and concluded that it gave Macau the image of a “lawless land”. Who could disagree?
Over 1,500 one-bedroom flats are up for grabs at Seac Pai Van
O
n average five applicants are chasing each of the onebedroom flats in a Coloane subsidised development, the Housing Bureau revealed. From March 27 to the end of last month, the bureau received 8,483 applications for 1,544 onebedroom units at the Ip Heng building in Seac Pai Van. Two experts told Business Daily the demand for the one-bedroom units isn’t the result of a “panic buy” mentality, but simply a rational attempt to join the home ownership ladder. “For those individuals that cannot afford private housing nor expect to be able to buy one in the future, at least this tender provides a chance for them to secure a flat,” said Leong Kuai Peng. “It is like trying to win a lucky draw,” the member of Public Housing Affairs Committee said. According to the subsidised housing law introduced in 2011, the Housing Bureau will group applicants in three categories before drawing lots. Priority is given to “core [immediate] family”, followed by “non-core family”. “Individuals”, which made up 6,513 of the applications, go to the bottom of the list. “You cannot rule out [the possibility of] cases where applicants just want to secure a flat anyhow and may not urgently need it,” University of Macau associate professor of finance Rose Lai Neng told Business Daily. “So in that sense the number of applicants might not reflect the actual demand,” she said.
Bigger demand “There are some individuals that are not earning much, like those with a monthly salary of 12,000 patacas [US$1,500] or less from a small company, but show the will to have their own place as they are afraid
they cannot afford a home in [the] near future,” said Leong Kuai Peng. “Even living in this kind of housing means that it cannot be resold within 16 years,” she recalled. Mainland Chinese immigrants who recently became Macau permanent residents and “have moderate income are also keen applicants for one-bedroom flats,” Ms Leong added. The application period is open until June 26. The Ip Heng one-bedroom flats are small, with a floor area ranging from 32.2 square metres to 33.7 square metres. They will cost between 524,400 patacas and 701,800 patacas. “The real explosive demand will happen over the subsidised two- and three-bedroom flats,” said Ms Leong.
“Many families would like to at least get a 400 square feet home with a more affordable price,” she commented. Ms Leong, who is also a representative of the Macau General Union of Neighbourhood Associations, believes demand for two- and three-bedroom flats will be proportionately greater than the demand for the single bedroom variety. Housing Bureau director Tam Kuong Man told the media in March that applications for subsidised twoand three-bedroom flats could be open by the fourth quarter of 2013. But he said first the bureau would have to analyse the applications for one-bedroom flats to understand the remaining demand for subsidised homes in the city.
Nearly 6,000 unfinished flats up for sale: govt
T
here are 5,986 incomplete flats that already meet the new requirements and are available for sale, the Land, Public Works and Transport Bureau said yesterday. In a statement the bureau said it has finished reviewing the application for sales of 2,204 unfinished flats in six housing projects so far this month. The sales permits will be issued within this week and details on the units in these six projects will be updated on the bureau’s website. Most of the unfinished flats – 1,579 – now cleared are in four Coloane projects. Shun Tak Holdings Ltd, the
developer of Nova Park in Taipa, also got the green light to sell 620 unfinished flats. Meanwhile Macau peninsula saw a low-rise project with just 5 unfinished units approved for pre-sales. Until the end of last month, 3,782 unfinished flats had been cleared for pre-sales, accounting for more than half of the residential units currently under construction. Since the new housing pre-sales law came into effect on June 1, a developer selling unfinished units without a permit could face a fine of 10 percent of the transaction value. The sales contract could also be considered invalid. S.L.
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June April 13, 19, 2013 2013
Macau
Losing bidder asks court to stop waste contract Spanish firm Urbaser wants the Chief Executive’s decision suspended by the Court of Second Instance Tiago Azevedo
tiago.azevedo@macaubusinessdaily.com
favour of the Spanish company, but the contract had been granted to CSR, “it wouldn’t be possible to restore it to legality,” it argues. During the first year of the new contract, CSR plans to revamp infrastructure and buy new equipment, including trucks. The proposed contract says CSR will be paid 38.4 million patacas (US$4.8 million) this year and 224 million patacas next year to run the service. The company will be paid about 200 million patacas each year for the remaining eight years of the deal. “It wouldn’t be reasonable or even viable, for practical reasons but also from an economic and financial stand” to go back to square one, says the injunction, arguing that to allow the process to continue “would harm the public interest”.
Assessment criteria
CSR has collected Macau’s rubbish since before 1999 (Photo: Manuel Cardoso)
O
ne of the companies in the running for the city’s solid waste management contract has sought an injunction to prevent the contract from being awarded to Macau Waste Systems Co Ltd. Documents seen by Business Daily show that Madrid-based Urbaser SA plans to file an appeal against Chief Executive Fernando Chui Sai On’s decision. In April, Mr Chui approved Macau Waste Systems, also known as CSR, the acronym of its name in Portuguese, to continue running the contract. CSR is a joint venture of Hong Kong’s Swire SITA Waste Services Ltd and Macau’s H. Nolasco Group. The tender to collect the city’s waste was managed by the Environmental Protection Bureau. CSR’s contract was to end in March. It was extended for a third time until the end of October after the government said it would take more time than expected to review the tender bids. The new 10-year contract is to begin on November 1 but in the injunction filed with the Court of Second Instance last week Urbaser says the process should be suspended. Urbaser will appeal to the court to reject the Chief Executive’s decision and says the adjudication should be halted until the judges reach a decision. Business Daily asked for a comment from the losing bidder through one of its subsidiaries, Portugal-based SUMA Group, but had not received a reply before going to press yesterday. From its review of the tender
KEY POINTS Waste management contract awarded to CSR CSR scored 1.46 percentage points above next-best bid Urbaser seeks immediate court injunction Company says awarding contract could harm public interest
MOP2.07 billion The value of the 10-year contract won by CSR
documents and the decision to award the contract to CSR, Urbaser says “it is undeniable that the adjudication [to CSR] is illegal and invalid”. “The law and the terms of the contract required the contract to be awarded to Urbaser,” the company claims, adding that the appeal will be filed to protect its “interests and rights”. Urbaser offers no other justification for its claims but they may be revealed during the appeal. Until then, the company says the injunction is the “only way” to protect its rights while the court decides if it will overturn Mr Chui’s decision. The government can make its case against the injunction. Business Daily asked for a comment from the relevant government departments but had not received a response.
‘Public interest’ In its appeal, Urbaser says the contract should not be awarded but CSR should be offered an extension until the court reaches its decision. Any decision to uphold its appeal may come too late if CSR is already operating under the new contract, it says. “An appeal to overturn this decision will, most probably, take several months or even years,” Urbaser says. “If the decision is not suspended, the contract may be awarded and be in operation during all this time, with CSR implementing its operation system and methodology and being paid.” Urbaser says CSR’s solutions differ significantly from its bid. If the judges were to rule in
CSR won the contract with a bid of 2.07 billion patacas (US$258.8 million), the lowest of the five bids. The tender programme estimated a cost of 2 billion patacas. Urbaser’s bid came at 2.39 billion patacas. The bureau said last month CSR “scored the highest in the overall assessment, particularly in the areas like employee protection and environmental protection”. Documents seen by Business Daily give CSR a total score of 80.90 percent. The tender jury gave 79.44 percent to Urbaser’s proposal. The mainland’s Guangzhou Standard Environmental Property Management Co Ltd had an overall score of 67.73 percent, followed by Portugal’s Recolte – Recolha, Tratamento e Eliminação de Resíduos SA, with 65.87 percent. A fifth bid, from Guangzhou Wan Sheng Cleaning Services Ltd, was omitted. But the tender procedures and criteria have raised concerns. Some criteria that are typically included in big tenders to reduce the risk of corruption were absent from the rules for this tender. The bureau included the anti-graft criteria in the rules for its previous two big tenders, including the 2010 process for the contract to run the hazardous waste treatment plant. In some tenders, compliance with this provision has contributed between 12 percent and 15 percent to a final score. Former CSR directors were sentenced for corruption as part of the bribery scandal surrounding the former Secretary for Transport and Public Works Ao Man Long. And earlier this year, legislator José Pereira Coutinho accused the government of favouring CSR in a written inquiry tabled in the Legislative Assembly. Public Utilities Concern Association vice-president Johnny Chan Veng Un is also worried. “There should be criteria to measure… the bidders’ ethics, such as whether they were involved in any corruption case, have hired illegal workers or owe outstanding tax,” he told Business Daily in January. Requests for comment from CSR went unanswered yesterday, a public holiday in Macau. The company said in February they did “not see the tender as specifically tailored for anybody”. The Environmental Protection Bureau had said all bidders had to promise to abide by rules on honesty and integrity during the bid process and after the contract was awarded. The government can terminate the contract if the operator breaches integrity standards.
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June 13, 2013
Macau China State gets nod on MGM Cotai works China State Construction International Holdings Ltd has been confirmed as main contractor on MGM Cotai, a new casino resort planned for Cotai. MGM China Holdings Ltd, the developer, said in a filing on May 13 it had agreed a deal worth HK$10.5 billion (US$1.35 billion) for the work. But on May 31 MGM China said it needed “additional time” to prepare the formal notification to the Hong Kong Stock Exchange. CSCI says it is the largest wholly conducted contract in its history. The firm conducts business outside the mainland for stateowned China State Construction Engineering Corporation.
Long hours never end for city’s maids High agency charges are driving domestic helpers into working seven days a week Vítor Quintã
vitorquinta@macaubusinessdaily.com
A median week of 50.8 hours was worked by domestic helpers in the first quarter of this year
D
omestic helpers are working more hours a week than in any other quarter in the past five years, official data show. And a workers’ representative blames fees charged by employment agencies. Domestic helpers worked a median of 50.8 hours a week in the first quarter of this year, the Statistics and Census Service said on Tuesday. It was the first time in five years that the weekly workload of domestic helpers has exceeded 50 hours. In the second quarter of 2008, maids worked a median of 55.7 hours a week.
Indarti, a representative from the Indonesian workers group ATKIMacau, told Business Daily the increase was due to many domestic helpers agreeing to work seven days a week. “Sometimes they have to work on their day-off on Sunday because they want to get some extra money to support themselves,” she said. After paying service charges to employment agencies, Indonesian domestic helpers are left with little money to send to the family back home, Ms Indarti said. “If our salary is 2,500 patacas
[US$313] every month, the agency gets almost all of it, 2,200 patacas, in deductions during the first eight to 10 months.” According to a survey released by the Consumer Council in November, employment agencies also charge employers anywhere from 500 patacas to 2,800 patacas for recruiting domestic help. ATKI-Macau believes the wage deduction “is a form of worker abuse by the agencies”. “But whenever we complain to the Macau government they say there is
no law allowing agencies to deduct any amount from employees,” Ms Indarti said. “So it seems this is a rule linked to the workers’ recruitment back in Indonesia. But how can this be applied in Macau? We have asked the government for help but so far there is no solution.”
Working poor About 9.4 percent of all workers in Macau, about 33,000 people, worked more than 60 hours a week in the January-March period. About 8,700 people in this category were domestic helpers. Domestic workers saw their median monthly wage increase by 6.3 percent from the previous quarter to 3,400 patacas. Despite the pay hike, most maids are still earning less than the government’s minimum subsistence index of 3,450 patacas, which indicates the amount of income it estimates is necessary to maintain a minimum standard of living. The maids’ median wage is also just one-third of the citywide median salary, which reached 12,000 patacas in the last quarter. Maids “don’t just provide service to families and take care of the children, we are helping the Macau economy by allowing the residents to leave the house and go to work,” Ms Indarti said. “We deserve more respect.” She criticised the lack of a minimum wage or a standard contract for domestic workers in Macau. However the Human Resources Office will approve the hiring of non-resident domestic helpers only if they are paid 2,500 patacas or more a month. Of the city’s 19,500 domestic helpers, 18,494 are non-resident workers from the Philippines, Vietnam and Indonesia. Secretary for Economy and Finance Francis Tam Pak Yuen said domestic helpers that will soon be hired from mainland China would probably be paid more, at least 3,000 patacas a month. The pro-government Macao Jiangmen Communal Society said in February that a monthly salary could be as high as 5,000 patacas. An experienced domestic helper in Guangzhou typically earns about 4,000 yuan (5,214 patacas) a month, the Guangzhou Home Service Association said in January. Non-resident workers’ unions and the Macau Overseas Employment Agency Association have called for a minimum wage for all domestic helpers, irrespective of their nationality.
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June 13, 2013
Macau
Winners surrender rare taxi licences Government says all new cabs should be on the streets within three months Vítor Quintã
vitorquinta@macaubusinessdaily.com
O
ne year after the government awarded 200 new taxi licences, a handful of those cars have not hit the streets and the sought-after licences have lapsed. There were 1,171 taxis operating at the end of April, the Statistics and Census Service said last week. That figure is short of the original target of 1,180 taxis. When the government decided to issue the licences last year, the city had 980 taxis, including 100 radiocall “yellow” taxis. The Transport Bureau told Business Daily that 191 of the 200 new taxis had “started providing service before the end of March this year”. The remaining nine licences “were given up by their successful bidders,” the bureau said. The bureau did not say why the winning bidders had relinquished the licences or whether they would lose their deposit, 30 percent of the bidding price. Just days after the results of the tender were announced in June last year, Macau Taxi Driver Mutual Association chairman Tony Kuok Leong Son predicted that at least 10 percent of successful bidders would
it’s impossible to recover that much money in just eight years”. The company operates the city’s “yellow” taxis. The Transport Bureau said the nine remaining licences would be “distributed to other bidders according to their order on the list of standbys”. These bidders have already been required to pay for 30 percent of the bidding price, and have three months to pay for the remaining 70 percent, the bureau said. “It is expected that the nine taxis will successively start operation within three months,” the bureau said. The government issued 200 new licences last year to add to the city’s existing fleet of 980 taxis (Photo: Manuel Cardoso)
give up their licence. He said the return on investment for the new licences would be lower than for most existing taxis because they would be valid for only eight years. Many older taxis licences have no expiry date. Mr Kuok said anyone bidding more than 1 million patacas (US$125,000)
Corporate TDM installs automated cameras for live TV Teledifusão de Macau SA, the city’s public broadcaster, has installed an automated television camera system in a studio it uses for live production. Telemetrics Inc., a company based in New Jersey in the United States, supplied the Telemetrics camera robotics and control system. Chinabased broadcast equipment specialist NDT Group performed the installation. It will “provide an immediate and additional contribution towards the goal of providing cost-efficient and creative production of local news programming,” said Anthony E. Cuomo, president of Telemetrics. The firm was a pioneer in developing pitch side camera equipment for live sports broadcasts in the U.S. and in 1991 won an Emmy Award for one of its camera control systems. TDM was formed in 1984 and offers analogue programming in Chinese, Portuguese and English. It also has digital channels featuring sports, lifestyle programming, high definition broadcasts. TDM also re-broadcasts China Central Television news and has 24-hour radio services.
MGM China names new joint company secretary MGM China Holdings Ltd – a developer and operator of Macau casino resorts – has appointed Lam Wai Yan as new joint company secretary with effect from June 11. She replaces Yeung Yee Har, who has resigned. A company filing with the Hong Kong Stock Exchange said there were no disagreements between Ms Yeung and the MGM China board, and no issues that needed to be brought to the attention of the board. Ms Lam will assist lawyer António José Ferreira de Castro dos Santos Menano, the other joint company secretary of the company. The new appointee is a solicitor in Hong Kong. Ms Lam holds a Bachelor of Business Administration (Law) degree, a Bachelor of Laws Degree and a Postgraduate Certificate in Laws from the University of Hong Kong. She’s also a member of the Law Society of Hong Kong and has experience in corporate finance and compliance matters for listed companies in Hong Kong.
would be more likely to drop out. The government set the minimum asking price at 200,000 patacas. The manager of the Vang Iek Radio-Taxi Company, Mário Ferreira Sin, said in March last year the previous tender in 2007 saw “people bid 1 million patacas for a licence but in the end they gave up because
1,171
The size of the taxi fleet at the end of April
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June 13, 2013 April 19, 2013
Macau Pachinko firm Macau casinos benefit seeks dry run from regional spats for Japan casino As Philippines’ AirAsia cuts back regional timetable, research house says harder for ethnic Chinese tourists licence Gaming tax rates key to overseas investor interest in Land of Rising Sun, says Morgan Stanley
to visit rival gaming hub Michael Grimes
michael.grimes@macaubusinessdaily.com
J
apanese pachinko companies have long shown an appetite for investment in Macau and in some cases of gaining operational experience in the city’s casino industry. Pachinko arcade operator Dynam Japan Holdings Co Ltd is the latest to join that list. Its unit Dynam Hong Kong Co is to inject US$35 million (280 million patacas) as a ‘cornerstone investor’ in the US$787 million Hong Kong initial public offering of casino developer Macau Legend Ltd it emerged late last week. Business Daily reported on May 31 that the Dynam parent firm’s chairman Yoji Sato has an interest in pursuing a casino licence in Japan if the government there decides to offer one or more for tender. Independent brokerage CLSA Asia-Pacific Markets said in a report last year a Japan casino market based on two resorts similar to Singapore’s could “comfortably exceed” US$10 billion per year in gaming revenue. It’s by no means certain that will happen soon however. Takeshi Iwaya, a Liberal Democratic Party politician in Japan’s House of Representatives told Agence FrancePresse in a story published this week that Japan was “sprinting to the finish line” in its bid to get an enabling bill for casino legalisation passed by the Diet – Japan’s two-tier parliament – before the end of the year. But the revolving door of Japan’s coalitionbased politics – with seven prime ministers in as many years since 2006 – has many times derailed or delayed the process. Praveen Choudhary, managing director of Morgan Stanley in Hong Kong, suggested during a keynote conference session at the Global Gaming Expo Asia in Macau last month that the level of gaming tax levied in Japan could be a key element in deciding investor interest. “What I don’t know, and what everybody should worry about a lot, is the tax,” said Mr Choudhary. “If Japan has to ask some new entrant to spend US$10 billion to build a casino resort, and put a 50 percent tax – more than Macau does – then it’s ‘game over’. You can’t be so excited about it any more,” he stated. M.G.
Reduced demand – Philippines’ AirAsia cutting back timetable
C
ontinuing disputes between the Philippines and authorities in Greater China could harm the efforts of the island nation to compete with Macau and other regional casino destinations says a research house. Union Gaming Group in Las Vegas issued a note saying the announcement by budget carrier Philippines’ AirAsia that from June 15 it will cut back flights between Clark International Airport in the Philippines and Hong Kong; Taipei in Taiwan; Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia; and Singapore, was probably due in part to depressed demand linked to regional politics. “We believe the reduction of some (but not all) of these flights is likely due to declining demand in the face of ongoing tensions and travel warnings,” said Union Gaming. In October last year Business Daily reported that Philippines’ AirAsia was suspending its Clark-Macau service from December 1, 2012, after only six months of operations. Philippines’ AirAsia said then its daily flights were only 30 percent to 40 percent full – far below the load factor of 75 percent needed to make the service profitable. At the time an airport spokesman told Business Daily the carrier “had been concerned about this for a long time now”, in part because of simmering tensions between Beijing and Manila over disputed territory in the South China Sea. It’s not the only concern for the Philippines tourism sector.
Hong Kong’s Security Bureau has maintained a ‘black’ Outbound Travel Alert warning on the Philippines since the August 2010 killing of eight Hong Kong residents aboard a tour bus in Manila. It followed the vehicle’s hijacking by a disaffected former police officer. Hong Kong’s travel warning indicates ‘severe threat’ and citizens are warned to avoid all travel. The only other country for which there is such a warning is Syria. On May 15 Taiwan issued a ‘red’ – inappropriate to travel – warning regarding the Philippines. It followed the shooting dead on May 9 of a Taiwanese fisherman by one or more crew members of a Philippine Coast Guard vessel.
Facing fines The English-language Taipei Times reported Taiwan’s Tourism Bureau saying that travel agents could face fines of between NT$10,000 (US$335) and NT$50,000 for continuing to organise tours to the Philippines. “We believe regional disputes like this could hamper mass market visitation to the Philippines from countries like China, Taiwan and Hong Kong, which are primary customer targets for Manila’s new and future casinos,” said Union Gaming in its note. In August 2011, a year after the Manila hijacking incident, visitor numbers from Hong Kong were down 29.2 percent year-on-year according to figures from the Philippines
Department of Tourism. Clark – a former United States Air Force base – is only 40 miles northwest of the Metro Manila area. Its lower fees and landing charges compared to Manila International Airport make it a low-cost alternative for the short-haul, mass-market Asian tourists that the Philippines hopes to attract to its under development US$6 billion (48 billion patacas) casino strip at Entertainment City, Manila Bay. Michael French is chief operating officer for Solaire Resort & Casino, the first of the four properties to open at Manila Bay. He told our sister publication Macau Business magazine in April that Solaire was aimed at Asian and other international tourists looking for a more Las Vegas-style experience – in terms of gaming, shows, dining and party events – than is on offer in Macau. Philippines’ AirAsia is a 60-40 joint venture between a group of Filipino investors and Malaysian entrepreneur Tony Fernandes’ AirAsia International Ltd. It started flying in March 2012. Under the reduced timetable, services between Clark and Kuala Lumpur will be cut to three times a week from 10 times a week, while Clark to Hong Kong flights will be reduced to seven times a week (i.e., daily) from 10 times a week. The Clark to Taipei and Clark to Singapore routes will be reduced from daily to four times per week and three times per week respectively.
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June April 13, 19, 2013 2013
Macau
HK’s old airport reopens as cruise ship terminal
class rises, Mr Liu added. Royal Caribbean, the world’s second-largest cruise operator, owns a 20 percent stake in the consortium that operates the terminal. Another 20 percent stake is held by Shun Tak Holdings Ltd. The conglomerate founded by Macau gambling tycoon Stanley Ho Hung Sun also owns the major ferry operator linking the city to Hong Kong, TurboJET Ltd. Last week the company led by Pansy Ho Chiu King bought a 33.3 percent stake in low-fare carrier Jetstar Hong Kong. Royal Caribbean’s ocean liner Mariner of the Seas was due to dock yesterday at one of the two berths built for the terminal. The second one will be completed next year. While visiting Macau last month, Hong Kong Tourism Board chairman Peter Lam Kin Ngok said the opening of the cruise terminal could be a new tool for multi-destination tours packages covering the two regions. Last year Secretary for Social Affairs and Culture Cheong U also said the Macau was happy to see the opening of the terminal, which is expected to attract more highspending tourists. The venture’s benefits for the Pearl River Delta region are expected to increase with Royal Caribbean planning to set up home port in Hong Kong later this year, Mr Liu said. The company already has home ports in the Chinese cities of Shanghai and Tianjin, as well as Singapore. “Shanghai, Tianjin, Singapore and Hong Kong all have their own unique appeal to travelers,” Mr Liu said. “The cruise market in this region is going to be so big, and they don’t necessarily need to compete for guests.”
Terminal expected to boost Macau, Guangdong multi-destination tours and attract high-spending visitors Vítor Quintã
vitorquinta@macaubusinessdaily.com
Royal Caribbean is planning to set up home port in Hong Kong later this year
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ong Kong has turned a former airport into an HK$8.2 billion (US$1.1 billion) cruise terminal as the city seeks to woo wealthy Chinese travellers to help it become Asia’s hub for luxury liners. The terminal, built at the city’s former Kai Tak Airport, opened yesterday. Macau and Hong Kong
officials have said they expect it to attract more affluent tourists to the Pearl River Delta region. Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd, one of the operators, expects to draw mostly Chinese tourists to travel from the iconic Victoria Harbour, said Zinan Liu, regional vice president for the Miami-based company. “China is quite small compared to
the U.S. [United States] and Europe in terms of market size, as the cruise market is still in its infancy,” Mr Liu said. “But it is certainly taking off, as its growth rate is doubling every year.” China will overtake the United Kingdom in two to three years as Royal Caribbean’s second-largest market after the United States, as demand from the Chinese middle
NO
MIN
With Bloomberg News
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88
June 13, 2013 April 19, 2013
Greater China
Coal import ban may boost Qinhuangdao price Electricity producers fear proposal could trigger higher costs
B
eijing’s proposed ban on lowerquality coal imports is likely to boost domestic benchmark prices by as much as 8 percent as supplies drop, according to Fenwei Energy Consulting Corp. Spot cargoes at the port of Qinhuangdao, a benchmark for the nation’s power station coal, may increase by as much as 50 yuan (US$8) per metric ton, Luther
We have talked with several buyers who said if the ban was in force, it will make their [China’s] industry uncompetitive Aris Munandar, vice president, Permata Energy Resources
Lu, a chief market analyst at the consultancy in Taiyuan, said. Domestic power plants may buy more coal from Newcastle in Australia or South Africa if prices rise, he said. China is considering a ban on imports of some lower-quality thermal coal grades, the Economic Information Daily reported May 16, citing an announcement at a conference held by the National Development and Reform Commission and the NEA last month. Roughly one-fifth of China’s coal imports – or 50m tonnes per year – would be banned under the current proposal, which has yet to be formally adopted. “Such draft regulation, if carried out, will ban China from getting at least 60 million to 70 million tons of coal imports, mostly lignite,” said Mr Lu. Two of China’s most powerful energy lobbies, however, are at odds over the controversial proposal. At stake, claims the coal mining industry, are thousands of jobs and the future of one of the country’s largest industries which has already seen at least 10 percent of its coal mines shut down in the last year. Mainland’s power producers, which generate more than 70 percent of their electricity from burning coal, are lobbying hard to get the proposal
Coal import ban sparks industry battle
scrapped out of fears it would raise their costs. “Right now the voice of the opposition is very loud,” said one executive at a large state-owned coal company. “They say, you shouldn’t help the coal companies, you should let the market force these miners to control their costs and raise their productivity.”
Unlikely enforced Among the biggest potential losers is Indonesia, the world’s biggest exporter of coal for power stations.
As much as a third of its exports could be blocked under the proposed Chinese regulations, according to analysts’ estimates. On the other side of the debate stand Chinese coal companies that employ millions of miners across the country – and are starting to warn that it won’t be long before they are unable to pay their workers’ salaries. China’s electricity sector has been particularly hard hit by the slowdown in economic growth, with electricity demand rising only 5.5 percent last year. The country’s energy sector is
Smithfield shows record hunger for farms Chinese purchases in agriculture close to US$7.8 bln this year
C
China – scouring the world for farm assets
hina is headed to spend a record this year on food assets and farms after a US$32.7 billion splurge in the past five years and just US$4.2 billion in the prior half-decade, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The drive for assets from Brazil to the U.S. and Australia has ignited concern by lawmakers only heightened by Shuanghui International Holdings Ltd’s US$4.7 billion deal to buy Smithfield Foods Inc. of the U.S., the biggest hog producer. “There is immense interest and exploration by Chinese investors right across the agriculture sector,” said Michael Whitehead, agribusiness research director at Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. “We know of Chinese companies which are fairly well down the track in their due diligence of a whole range of things, whether it’s dairy, wine, protein, or grain.” China’s announced purchases in
agriculture including pastoral land, farm chemicals, processors and food companies, have already reached about US$7.8 billion this year, compared with the record US$8.1 billion in all of 2010, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. In the mining and steel industries, deals are headed for the lowest since 2003, with China’s acquisitions at US$2 billion so far this year. During a tour in Brazil led by the Netherlands’ Rabobank Groep, officials from five Chinese state-owned companies, including heads of mergers and acquisitions, visited a soybean-crushing plant and a biodiesel plant. They met with large-scale farmers in Mato Grosso, the biggest soybean producing region, said Oswaldo Junqueira, head of trade commodity finance at the Utrechtbased lender’s São Paulo unit. “The trip provided opportunities for M&A discussions,” said
99
June April 13, 19, 2013 2013
Greater China tightly controlled by the state, which has vowed to liberalise energy prices but in practice often finds it difficult to do so because of the powerful vested interests involved. Stalling demand in China has helped send global coal prices down one-third from the levels reached at the end of 2011 – posing huge problems for Chinese coal miners, who account for nearly half of global coal production and include some of the highest-cost coal mines in the world. The mine closures have been the result of falling prices, and several of the country’s oldest coal mining companies are on the verge of going out of business as they haemorrhage money. The mining companies say restricting imports is essential if they are to stay afloat. “The old miners have a lot of employees, if they make losses for a long time it will influence social stability,” said one employee of a mining company. But Beijing is unlikely to implement the proposed ban, according to three mining companies in Indonesia. The National Energy Administration’s plan probably won’t happen, officials from PT Harum Energy (HRUM), PT Permata Energy Resources and PT Adimitra Baratama Nusantara said. The officials cited conversations with unidentified customers in China, saying they’re concerned their costs will increase. “We have talked with several buyers who said if the ban was in force, it will make their industry uncompetitive,” Aris Munandar, vice president of Permata Energy, which operates two coal mines on Sumatra island. “I don’t think the ban will be implemented because the coal industry is still in consolidation. It’ll be very difficult if there’s such a limitation.” Bloomberg News
Emerging economies oil use top OECD China the biggest consumer among non-OECD members
C
hinese and Brazilian oil demand climbed in April, helping push fuel use by emerging economies above the combined consumption from developed nations such as the U.S. and Japan for the first time, a U.S. report showed. Countries that aren’t members of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development consumed 44.5 million barrels per day (bpd) in April, exceeding the 44.3 million from the most industrialised nations, the Energy Information Administration reported yesterday. The pattern held in May, when the emerging economies used 180,000 barrels a day more than the OECD. “It’s a confirmation that the future of oil demand is not in OECD countries,” said Michael Lynch, president of Strategic Energy & Economic Research in Winchester, Massachusetts. Global fuel-consumption growth
Yum’s store sales decline eases in May Y
Mr Junqueira, who accompanied the Chinese delegation on part of the tour. Shuanghui’s bid for Smithfield, which owns 460 farms and has contracts with 2,100 others across 12 U.S. states, would be the largest Chinese acquisition of a U.S. company and follows a string of global food and agriculturalrelated purchases. In August, Australia approved the sale of Cubbie Station, the nation’s biggest cotton farm and water rights holder, to a Chinese-led group for US$235 million. Bright Food Group Co., China’s second-largest food company, agreed in May last year to buy a 60 percent stake in British cereal manufacturer Weetabix Ltd, valuing the maker of Ready Brek and Alpen cereals at about 1.2 billion pounds (US$1.9 billion). China’s acquisitions are being driven by the desire to secure volumes of safe produce for import and, in the longer- term, access to the transfer of technology, Craig Armitage, Advisory Global Leader for Food and Agriculture at PricewaterhouseCoopers New Zealand, said. “This is just a start of China’s food entities identifying strategic partners and acquisition targets,” PwC’s Mr Armitage said in an interview. For target countries, “it’s a balancing act between attracting foreign capital and balancing the need for local production,” he said. Bloomberg News
will come from emerging economies as demand from industrialised nations slips amid increased fuel efficiency, forecasters including the EIA, OPEC and the International Energy Agency have said. The IEA, the Paris-based adviser to the 28 nations in the OECD, said on May 14 that demand from emerging and developing economies would surpass the OECD this quarter. Fuel use grew by 0.7 percent in April in both China and Brazil, the EIA, the Energy Department’s statistical arm, reported in its monthly Short-Term Energy Outlook. Consumption dropped 1.1 percent in the U.S. that month and 11 percent in Japan. The U.S., China, Japan and Brazil were the world’s four largest oil-consuming countries in 2011, according to EIA data. OECD members will use 45.5 million barrels of oil this year, compared with 44.5 million from emerging markets, the EIA
um! Brands Inc., which gets more than 50 percent of its revenue from China, said same-store sales in the mainland last month fell more slowly than in April as cases of avian flu subsided. Sales at stores open at least a year dropped 19 percent in May, the Louisville, Kentucky-based company said in a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. That followed a 29 percent decline in April and matched analysts’ estimates for a 19 percent decline, the average of eight projections compiled by Consensus Metrix. Chief executive David Novak has been trying to reassure Chinese consumers that the company’s chicken is safe to eat after a deadly outbreak of bird flu and a former supplier was probed for selling chicken with too much antibiotics. The 25 percent drop for KFC stores is an improvement from April’s
Yum has more than 5,400 KFC and Pizza Hut stores in China
11.1 million bpd Estimated China’s consumption in 2014
forecast. In 2014, demand from the developing economies will rise to 45.9 million barrels a day, while OECD consumption will drop to 45.3 million, according to the estimates from the EIA. China’s consumption will rise to 11.1 million barrels a day next year, up 4 percent from this year’s 10.7 million, the EIA said. India will use 3.67 million barrels a day, up 3.7 percent from this year’s 3.54 million. Brazilian consumption will jump 4.8 percent to 3.03 million in 2014, while Russian usage will gain 3.3 percent to 3.48 million. Reuters
GSK fires China research head B
Second-quarter sales at units open at least 12 months in China may decline 20 percent, including a drop of about 26 percent at KFC, the company said in the filing. The fried-chicken chain’s comparablestore sales in China will be positive in the fourth quarter, it said. The fast-food chain earlier this year forecast a “mid-single digit” decline for 2013 profit excluding certain items. Yum, which is planning to open 700 new locations in China this year, has said that the negative sales affect from avian flu will be short-lived. “We do expect a strong bounceback in 2014,” chief financial officer Patrick Grismer said during an investor conference on June 3. McDonald’s Corp, the world’s largest restaurant chain, on June 10 said May same-store sales fell in China. The chain cited avian flu as the reason for the decline. Yum, which also owns Taco Bell, has more than 39,000 restaurants globally.
ritish drugmaker GlaxoSmithKline Plc has fired its head of research and development in China after discovering that a study by some of its Chinese scientists contained misrepresentation of data. A company spokesman said that Jiangwu Zang had been dismissed and three other individuals had been placed on administrative leave, while a further employee had resigned. The decision follows an investigation into concerns about a scientific paper published in the journal Nature Medicine in 2010 involving pre-clinical research into multiple sclerosis. Mr Zang was one of the authors of the paper. “Regretfully, our investigation has established that certain data in the paper were indeed misrepresented,” Britain’s biggest drugs group said in a statement. “We’ve shared our conclusion that the paper should be retracted and are in the process of asking all of the authors to sign a statement to that effect, according to Nature Medicine’s procedure.” The study, which looked at the role of a protein in multiple sclerosis, involved early-stage research and did not directly involve patients, although some blood samples were used. However, the work did inform GSK’s development of an experimental medicine for multiple sclerosis, known as GSK2618960, which has reached the stage of initial testing in healthy volunteers. The early clinical tests of the product have now been suspended as a precaution, although there is no signal of a safety issue with the medicine, the spokesman added. GSK, like many other large Western drug companies, is increasing its research presence in China.
Reuters
Reuters
decline of 36 percent. “We did see some moderation in the decline from April to May, which is good,” Jack Russo, a St. Louisbased analyst at Edward Jones & Co., said in an interview. News about avian flu “seems to be slowing down a little bit,” said Mr Russo, who advises holding Yum shares. Yum, which has more than 5,400 KFC and Pizza Hut stores in China, fell 1.3 percent to US$70.80 on Tuesday in New York. The shares gained 8.1 percent this year through the close of regular trading, while the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index advanced 14 percent.
‘Single digit’
10 10
June 13, 2013 April 19, 2013
Asia
High-level Korean talks on hold Pyongyang won’t pick up phone after talks rift, Seoul says
North Korea scrapped talks on industrial complex
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orth Korea “unilaterally” called off the highest-level talks since Kim Jong-un took power in protest over the rank of South Korea’s proposed delegate, the South’s Unification Ministry said. The North insisted that South Korea’s Unification Minister meet its “much lower-ranking” official and rejected the South’s revised proposal for vice minister-level discussions, Unification Ministry spokesman Kim Hyung-suk said in a televised briefing. The two-day talks were
due to begin yesterday in Seoul and focus on the reopening of a joint factory park. North Korea’s willingness to meet was seen as a sign Mr Kim was seeking to re-establish economic ties after months of heightened tensions on the Korean peninsula. The agreedupon agenda didn’t officially include North Korea’s nuclear weapons programme, which the regime in Pyongyang has vowed to maintain in defiance of international sanctions. North Korea tried to gain
an advantage over South Korea “through this irrational insistence that a top official face a workinglevel bureaucrat,” said Yoo Ho-yeol, a professor of North Korean studies at Korea University in Seoul. South Korea regrets the North’s decision and hopes it will agree to return to talks, the Unification Ministry said. North Korea didn’t answer a call via a communication hotline at the Panmunjom border village, the ministry said. South Korean defence-related
shares rose, with naval ship equipment maker Speco Co. gaining 6.1 percent, electronic warfare equipment maker Victek Co. rising 5.9 percent and armoured vehicle maker Firstec Co. adding 2.5 percent in Seoul. The benchmark Kospi stock index fell 0.3 percent. The won rose 0.5 percent to 1,128.8 against the dollar. Delegations from both sides were to meet at the Grand Hilton Hotel to discuss reopening the jointlyrun Kaeseong industrial zone and a luxury resort aimed at luring South Korean tourists to the North. Marathon working-level meetings on June 9 laid the ground work for the talks, which would have been the first since Mr Kim took over in December 2011. The chances of a breakthrough in any future North-South talks are slim because the “fundamental” dispute over North Korea’s nuclear weapons development remains unchanged, the International Crisis Group’s Seoul-based analyst Daniel Pinkston said yesterday. Mr Kim earlier this year threatened pre-emptive nuclear strikes after the United Nations tightened sanctions for North Korea’s rocket launch in December and an atomic bomb test in February. North Korea on April 3 started blocking South Korean managers and workers from entering Kaeseong, disturbing operations which generate about US$100 million in annual profits for the impoverished regime. It recalled all of its 50,000 workers five days later, shuttering the zone for the first time since it opened in 2005. Bloomberg News
Economists cut Singapore growth GDP growth seen at 2.3 percent this year, survey shows
S
ingapore’s inflation for 2013 is expected to come in below the central bank’s forecast of 3 percent to 4 percent, a survey of economists by the central bank showed, in a sign rising prices have become less of a concern after two years of elevated cost pressures.
Even though inflation will be lower than last year’s average, it’s still on the high side relative to historical trends so there shouldn’t be any changes in the October policy Francis Tan, economist, United Overseas Bank
The Monetary Authority of Singapore’s (MAS) latest quarterly Survey of Professional Forecasters found that economists now expect the city-state’s consumer price index (CPI) to rise by 2.8 percent this year, a full percentage point below the median estimate of a 3.8 percent gain in the previous poll. But inflation is expected to pick up again in 2014 to 3.1 percent, the survey released yesterday showed. Thus many forecasters believe the central bank will continue to keep monetary policy tight when it publishes its next half yearly policy statement in October. “Even though inflation will be lower than last year’s average, it’s still on the high side relative to historical trends so there shouldn’t be any changes in the October policy,” said Francis Tan, an economist at Singapore’s United Overseas Bank Ltd. Mr Tan said the MAS has indicated core inflation will pick up later this year, and he noted that car prices have begun edging higher after falling in March and April as a result of tougher financing rules. The MAS’ core inflation measure, which excludes housing and private car prices that are more influenced by government policy, will likely come in at 1.8 percent this year, down from the previous median estimate of 2.0
percent. But the survey also showed economists expect core inflation will edge up to 2.0 percent next year. The inflation outlook has improved with the CPI rising by just 1.5 percent in April from a year earlier – the lowest gain in more than three years – as falling car prices and government rebates kept a lid on prices. Singapore’s inflation was 4.6 percent last year and 5.2 percent in 2011. Although Singapore’s first quarter
gross domestic product came in much better than expected, partly due to a surge in financial services as trading in stocks and foreign exchange soared, economists have become less optimistic about growth for the full year. The MAS survey shows economists now expect GDP growth of 2.3 percent for 2013, slower than the median estimate of 2.8 percent in March. Reuters
11 11
June April 13, 19, 2013 2013
Asia
Myanmar takes a seat at its oil and gas feast
Pakistan targets 4.4 pct growth Pakistan targeted 4.4 percent economic growth next fiscal year as Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif’s recently elected government prepares a budget that may intensify efforts to tackle an unprecedented energy crisis. The government plans to narrow the fiscal deficit to 4.5 percent of gross domestic product in three years by curbing tax evasion, Finance Minister Mohammad Ishaq Dar said, adding the gap may be about 8.5 percent in the year ending June 30.
Country still lacks infrastructure to make much use of it
I
n a few months, Myanmar plans to start pumping roughly US$45 million worth of oil and gas a day from the Bay of Bengal to China by pipeline. The vital fuel for China’s growing economy will bypass the Malacca Straits and U.S. ally Singapore. It will mostly also bypass Myanmar. Though rich in natural resources, Myanmar has little capacity to use them for its own development. For decades, its leaders valued gas for the hard currency it could earn rather than the economic development it could fuel. Today, only one in four of Myanmar’s citizens have electricity. Now, two years after sweeping aside six decades of self-imposed isolation in favour of democratic reforms, Myanmar’s leaders face pressure to deliver tangible results, to appease voters ahead of 2015 elections and to quell sectarian unrest. “We’re now entering the third year of the reforms,” said opposition leader and Nobel price laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, who used her appearance at the World Economic Forum’s East Asia summit in Myanmar last week to underline her ambition to run for president. “What we really want to see now are results in the form of a real change in the lives of our people.” That, experts say, means giving Myanmar energy. “Electricity is definitely numberone,” said Hans Vriens, a Singaporebased consultant who advises companies on investing in Myanmar. “No electricity, no factories.” Making the switch from seller to consumer, however, could change Myanmar’s attitude toward its resources in a way that may smack of “resource nationalism”. Multinationals vying to drill for gas and oil off Myanmar will have to negotiate with the nation as a customer instead of as a partner. And Myanmar’s own customers, China and Thailand, already find themselves re-drawing old purchase agreements. “We’re renegotiating already,” said Pailin Chuchottaworn, CEO of Thai oil company PTT Exploration &
ANA scraps 787 flight as engine fails to start Japanese carrier has the world’s biggest fleet of Dreamliners
A
NA Holdings Inc. scrapped a service with the Dreamliner yesterday, the third cancellation for the aircraft in Japan this week after a four-month grounding. ANA couldn’t use the 787 for the flight from Ube, western Japan, to Tokyo’s Haneda airport as the right engine failed to start, said Megumi
Mongolia to cut mortgage rates
Production Pcl, which imports US$2 billion of gas a year from Myanmar. Last year, Myanmar approached PTT with a proposal to retain a fifth of the gas its sells to Thailand. Myanmar produces gas equivalent to 10.2 million tons of oil a year, according to a report prepared for the forum by Accenture and the Asian Development Bank (ADB). All but about 15 percent of it is sold to Thailand. “Myanmar has a supply deficit,” said Stephen P. Groff, ADB vicepresident for East Asia, Southeast Asia and the Pacific. “You’ve already set aside a fairly substantial amount of your resources for export.”
In the dark As a result, Myanmar only counts on gas for about 12 percent of the power it generates. Most power comes instead from hydroelectric plants whose water supply varies so widely between the monsoon and dry season that they run at roughly 60 percent of generating capacity. Even in the commercial capital, Yangon, residents can only count on power for roughly a third of any given day, according to the report prepared for the forum. A new offshore gas field near Myanmar’s maritime border with Bangladesh will boost output by 75 percent. The gas is bound for China,
Tezuka, a spokeswoman at the company. The airline is looking into the cause and said it was separate from the battery issues that had plagued the Dreamliner earlier. Japan Airlines Co., the world’s second-largest Dreamliner operator, also cancelled a service with the 787 on Tuesday after an indicator on a flight bound for Singapore showed problem with the engine anti-icing system. ANA and Japan Air both restarted flights with the plane on June 1 after battery malfunctions kept their Dreamliner fleet grounded for more than four months. On June 10, ANA scrapped a 787 flight to Tokyo from Fukuoka after a sensor next to an engine indicated a possible problem. ANA had a reliability of 98.9 percent on domestic flights in April, Ms Tezuka said. That means 1.1 percent of the airline’s 812 domestic flights were cancelled for reasons ranging from weather delays to maintenance, or roughly eight to nine
earning state-owned Myanmar Oil and Gas Enterprise (MOGE) another US$1.8 billion annually, the report estimates. Though at least a portion of the gas has been reserved for domestic use, Myanmar lacks the onshore infrastructure to make much use of it. Where MOGE has been putting its money is a mystery, experts say. Myanmar’s government budget accounting remains murky, the result of antiquated record-keeping and widespread corruption. As part of its plan to streamline national energy policy, Myanmar in January put MOGE along with the Ministry of Energy and the 10 other government institutions involved in energy development under a single National Energy Management Committee.
Mongolia’s central bank plans to cut interest rates on mortgages by almost half to 8 percent from around 15 percent this month, following a new policy approved by the government to ease financial burdens on the middle class. The new mortgages require a down payment of 10 percent to 30 percent and must be paid back in 20 years, the Bank of Mongolia’s chief economist Sandagdorj Bold said. The policy goes into effect on June 17.
Japan eyes failing financial firms Japan’s parliament endorsed changes in legislation dealing with failed financial institutions as part of efforts by regulators to avoid a repeat of the financial crisis. The amendments allow brokerages and insurers to join banks in being eligible for emergency capital from the state-run deposit insurance agency. The Upper House also approved bail-in rules that impose losses on investors of failing financial institutions to reduce taxpayers’ burden.
Reuters
US$45 mln
Worth of oil and gas a day is to be exported to China
a day, she said. The carriers, which have a total of 27 Dreamliners, are flying the fuel-efficient aircraft to cities such as Boston and San Jose, California, that wouldn’t be profitable with larger planes. The four-month suspension of 787 services would affect sales this year, ANA and JAL have said, after melting batteries on two jets spurred regulators to park all the planes in January. Japan has been the biggest market so far for Boeing’s plane, the first jetliner made chiefly of composite plastic materials. That meant ANA and JAL had the broadest disruptions while the aircraft were grounded and Boeing was rushing to find a fix for the lithium-ion batteries. The groundings may have reduced ANA sales by about 16 billion yen (US$166 million), according to figures from the company. JAL’s probably lost 6.5 billion yen in sales due to the groundings, it has said. Bloomberg News
S.Korea jobless rate edges up in May South Korea’s unemployment rate inched up in May, government data showed yesterday. The seasonally adjusted jobless rate stood at 3.2 percent in May, up from 3.1 percent the previous month, according to Statistics Korea. It was the first monthon-month increase since February. The statistics agency said the number of social-welfare jobs increased while job gains in the manufacturing sector slowed down.
Samsung Heavy wins order from Statoil South Korean shipbuilder Samsung Heavy Industries Co Ltd said it had won a US$1.3 billion order to build two offshore drilling platforms for the Norwegian oil firm Statoil ASA. Under the deal, Samsung will deliver two jack-up rig units used as exploratory drilling platforms for oil in the North Sea by October 2016, the company said in a statement. The giant rigs are capable of exploring 150 metres below the sea surface.
12
June 13, 2013
Markets Hang Seng Index NAME
PRICE
DAY %
VOLUME
PRICE
DAY %
VOLUME
AIA GROUP LTD
30.2
1.003344
16574881
CHINA UNICOM HON
13.68
1.333333
22775492
ALUMINUM CORP-H
3.61
0
15433022
CITIC PACIFIC
10.12
0.1980198
6468988
BANK OF CHINA-H
3.15
1.286174
329406866
BANK OF COMMUN-H
5.87
0.8591065
37793438
29
0.1727116
14.5
BANK EAST ASIA BELLE INTERNATIO BOC HONG KONG HO
NAME
CLP HLDGS LTD
NAME
PRICE
DAY %
64.4
0.625
2568679
SANDS CHINA LTD
28.75
-0.1736111
6213954
SINO LAND CO
14.28
0.990099
7686664
SUN HUNG KAI PRO
109.1
1.018519
8616634
93
-0.4815409
2456828
265.6
1.45149
2048509
23.9
0
2206357
10
0.8064516
5926157
52.75
1.05364
3208615
POWER ASSETS HOL
65.6
0
1561243
CNOOC LTD
16.32
0.4926108
46287676
1260442
COSCO PAC LTD
11.76
0
3138217
SWIRE PACIFIC-A
0
7192500
ESPRIT HLDGS
12.44
-0.48
4211743
TENCENT HOLDINGS
24
0.2087683
10140777
HANG LUNG PROPER
26.55
-0.1879699
7812341
TINGYI HLDG CO
CATHAY PAC AIR
13.78
0.2911208
3140232
HANG SENG BK
119.7
0.167364
1690249
WANT WANT CHINA
CHEUNG KONG
114.9
1.23348
3918568
HENDERSON LAND D
57
2.059087
5880582
WHARF HLDG
75.55
0.1325381
701703
20
1.112235
6329376
125.6
3.54493
9625332
76.5 -0.06531679
9291476
CHINA COAL ENE-H
7.7
-0.1297017
40174849
CHINA CONST BA-H
5.87
1.206897
202072100
CHINA LIFE INS-H
22.9
0.4385965
30126882
CHINA MERCHANT
25.6
0.3921569
4209584
CHINA MOBILE
HENGAN INTL HONG KG CHINA GS HONG KONG EXCHNG HSBC HLDGS PLC
MOVERS
85.45
1.064459
16569813
HUTCHISON WHAMPO
20.2
-0.2469136
19374736
IND & COMM BK-H
CHINA PETROLEU-H
8.36
0.9661836
101198904
CHINA RES ENTERP
25.2
0.8
4219717
MTR CORP
29.85
1.530612
4880670
CHINA RES LAND
17.16
1.179245
6849146
NEW WORLD DEV
12.98
1.564945
12528960
52W (H) 23944.74
CHINA RES POWER
16.08
-0.618047
7490964
PETROCHINA CO-H
10.94
-1.263538
64234127
(L) 18708.26
CHINA SHENHUA-H
33.35
-0.1497006
11160228
PING AN INSURA-H
63.35
1.198083
8338502
PRICE
DAY %
VOLUME
25
-1.185771
11294826
LI & FUNG LTD
1.243455
6697663
5.17
1.372549
317570965
12.84
-0.9259259
17517410
47
0 21770
INDEX 21354.66
CHINA OVERSEAS
77.35
3
VOLUME
HIGH
21768.24
LOW
21339.04 21330
7-June
11-June
Hang Seng China Enterprise Index NAME
PRICE
DAY %
VOLUME
AGRICULTURAL-H
3.45
-1.709402
95966836
CHINA PACIFIC-H
AIR CHINA LTD-H
5.8
1.754386
26635140
CHINA PETROLEU-H
5.66
-0.5272408
108223659
2.85
-2.061856
13745735
CHINA RAIL CN-H
7.11
-1.659751
ANHUI CONCH-H
22.85
-3.382664
15038655
CHINA RAIL GR-H
3.75
BANK OF CHINA-H
3.26
-2.97619
567349283
CHINA SHENHUA-H
BANK OF COMMUN-H
5.64
-1.74216
37521523
CHINA TELECOM-H
BYD CO LTD-H
31.4
-0.4754358
2690535
DONGFENG MOTOR-H
CHINA CITIC BK-H
3.91
-2.005013
35427128
GUANGZHOU AUTO-H
CHINA COAL ENE-H
4.82
-3.212851
34726321
CHINA COM CONS-H
6.87
-0.5788712
CHINA CONST BA-H
6.05
CHINA COSCO HO-H
3.16
PRICE
DAY %
VOLUME
YANZHOU COAL-H
7.59
-1.811125
20534736
ZIJIN MINING-H
1.82
-4.712042
56184348
4056602
ZOOMLION HEAVY-H
6.41
-0.311042
19268902
-0.2659574
8191224
ZTE CORP-H
12.3
-1.6
1302937
24.6
-2.186879
16566665
3.67
0.5479452
46211144
10.98
-5.017301
13512202
7.52
-4.930468
10284273
HUANENG POWER-H
7.24
-4.10596
43399813
12079040
IND & COMM BK-H
5.17
-1.335878
353699251
-1.305057
401702230
JIANGXI COPPER-H
15.14
-1.560468
11475822
-2.469136
6341873
PETROCHINA CO-H
8.64
-1.706485
63285943
19.34
-0.2063983
32073489
PICC PROPERTY &
8.7
-1.916573
34477268
CHINA LONGYUAN-H
8.24
0.6105006
13778198
PING AN INSURA-H
56.4
-0.3533569
11449226
CHINA MERCH BK-H
14.12
-2.080444
19088192
SHANDONG WEIG-H
9.46
-5.02008
13337260
CHINA MINSHENG-H
8.85
-1.775805
39389501
SINOPHARM-H
CHINA NATL BDG-H
7.56
-3.201024
63380795
TSINGTAO BREW-H
15.52
-2.878598
4563050
WEICHAI POWER-H
ALUMINUM CORP-H
CHINA LIFE INS-H
CHINA OILFIELD-H
NAME
19.9
-1.728395
5911974
54.25
-1.363636
873660
25.5
-3.225806
NAME
MOVERS
3
37
0 10300
INDEX 9959.74 HIGH
10298
LOW
9947.77
52W (H) 12354.22 9940
(L) 8987.76 7-June
2476212
11-June
Shanghai Shenzhen CSI 300 PRICE
DAY %
VOLUME
PRICE
DAY %
VOLUME
PRICE
DAY %
VOLUME
AGRICULTURAL-A
2.7
-0.7352941
73833499
CHONGQING CHAN-A
9.95
-3.398058
32798290
POLY REAL ESTA-A
11.52
-2.040816
58642419
AIR CHINA LTD-A
5.11
-2.10728
10750833
CHONGQING WATE-A
6.15
-2.535658
7664968
QINGDAO HAIER-A
11.99
-2.599513
9675714
ALUMINUM CORP-A
3.91
-2.005013
10997299
CITIC SECURITI-A
12.12
-4.716981
160307948
QINGHAI SALT-A
22.09
-1.559715
5417885
ANHUI CONCH-A
15.8
-2.948403
28231627
CSR CORP LTD -A
4.13
-2.364066
23526018
SAIC MOTOR-A
15.06
-1.310616
27892144
AVIC AIRCRAFT-A
11.38
0.08795075
23731115
DAQIN RAILWAY -A
6.6
-0.3021148
19143888
SANAN OPTOELEC-A
20.5
0.2935421
22713373
4.56
-1.298701
9838215
SANY HEAVY INDUS
8.84
-2.212389
53279858
NAME
NAME
NAME
BANK OF BEIJIN-A
8.66
-1.141553
20380019
DATANG INTL PO-A
BANK OF CHINA-A
2.91
-0.6825939
24941321
EVERBRIG SEC -A
13.53
-0.5147059
32816897
SHANG PHARM -A
11.95
-1.483924
10182677
BANK OF COMMUN-A
4.59
-0.6493506
50292375
GD MIDEA HOLDI-A
13.07
-0.3051106
16739439
SHANG PUDONG-A
9.35
-1.058201
72344081
BANK OF NINGBO-A
10.1
-1.463415
10443984
GD POWER DEVEL-A
2.6
-1.515152
32178050
SHANGHAI ELECT-A
3.91
-2.005013
6361212
BAOSHAN IRON & S
4.66
-1.061571
14869354
GEMDALE CORP-A
7.06
-3.945578
62365970
SHANXI LU'AN -A
15.52
-2.756892
13929027
BEIJING TONGRE-A
22.33
-3.583765
7527406
GF SECURITIES-A
13.04
-2.759135
42871376
SHANXI XISHAN-A
10.11
-1.653696
13575559
32.9
-1.497006
7791811
GREE ELECTRIC
25.46
-2.601377
17095389
SHENZEN OVERSE-A
6.11
-1.292407
30127960
CHINA AVIC ELE-A
23.89
-3.746978
5860003
GUANGHUI ENERG-A
20.04
0.3505258
18135653
SUNING COMMERC-A
5.78
-4.777595
87999544
CHINA CITIC BK-A
4.1
-2.612827
29094638
HAINAN AIRLINE-A
2.41
-2.03252
24421983
TASLY PHARMAC-A
38.64
-0.6428388
3949158
CHINA CNR CORP-A
4.36
-2.242152
26636909
HAITONG SECURI-A
11.56
-1.196581
174956775
TSINGTAO BREW-A
38.28
-1.187403
1689241
CHINA COAL ENE-A
6.32
-1.557632
7939089
HANGZHOU HIKVI-A
36.92
-1.677763
4503194
WANHUA CHEMIC-A
16.84
-0.7660577
8148409
CHINA CONST BA-A
4.74
-0.2105263
24415152
HENAN SHUAN-A
39.99
-2.344322
4818511
WEICHAI POWER-A
21.85
-2.975133
6283793
CHINA COSCO HO-A
3.27
-1.208459
8223979
HONG YUAN SEC-A
22.37
-10.01609
47528606
WULIANGYE YIBIN
22.22
-5.807546
17561869
CHINA EAST AIR-A
2.99
-0.9933775
9524288
HUATAI SECURIT-A
9.95
-1.970443
50082516
YANZHOU COAL-A
13.61
-3.269367
5186000
10.26
-1.251203
18708737
YUNNAN BAIYAO-A
84
-3.314917
2387818
BYD CO LTD -A
2.98
-0.6666667
63204083
HUAXIA BANK CO
CHINA LIFE INS-A
15.88
-2.03578
14551973
IND & COMM BK-A
4.17
0.4819277
57682406
ZHONGJIN GOLD
11.69
-0.9322034
11764290
CHINA MERCH BK-A
13.17
-0.07587253
68048619
INDUSTRIAL BAN-A
17.04
-1.730104
75305387
ZIJIN MINING-A
3.02
-0.330033
35265181
CHINA MERCHANT-A
12.21
-4.235294
35936529
INNER MONG BAO-A
26.5
-1.960784
17059644
ZOOMLION HEAVY-A
7.07
-1.256983
66111532
CHINA MERCHANT-A
26.88
-2.890173
14093180
INNER MONG YIL-A
27.77
-2.83415
14319950
ZTE CORP-A
12.09
-3.357314
27914039
CHINA MINSHENG-A
9.99
-0.1
120666061
INNER MONGOLIA-A
4.56
-2.978723
33555104
CHINA NATIONAL-A
10.45
-2.881041
33508057
JIANGSU HENGRU-A
27.94
0.4378429
5418376
CHINA OILFIELD-A
15.79
-1.065163
4194983
JIANGSU YANGHE-A
59.38
-7.189747
4372045
CHINA PACIFIC-A
17.93
-2.128821
18689311
JIANGXI COPPER-A
20.14
-2.042802
9695832
10.02
-2.052786
6281240 19249238
CHINA EVERBRIG-A
CHINA PETROLEU-A
6.6
-1.639344
26481187
JINDUICHENG -A
CHINA RAILWAY-A
4.88
-1.810865
16297017
KANGMEI PHARMA-A
18.05
-0.8241758
KWEICHOW MOUTA-A
196.26
-2.677774
2547838
25.05
-2.033633
8170256
CHINA RAILWAY-A
2.74
-1.792115
23980419
CHINA SHENHUA-A
20.19
-0.8349705
8924987
LUZHOU LAOJIAO-A
CHINA SHIPBUIL-A
4.52
0
59982923
METALLURGICAL-A
1.95
-1.515152
46890379
15.74
-3.965833
18764742
2.39
-0.8298755
11400413
CHINA SOUTHERN-A
3.37
-0.8823529
13746017
NARI TECHNOLOG-A
CHINA STATE -A
3.62
-1.362398
96454076
NINGBO PORT CO-A
3.6
-1.639344
75067684
PETROCHINA CO-A
8.28
-1.075269
14924306
CHINA VANKE CO-A
11.21
-2.436902
87652503
PING AN BANK-A
19.53
-2.980626
40200095
CHINA YANGTZE-A
7.37
-1.073826
14381163
PING AN INSURA-A
PRICE DAY %
Volume
CHINA UNITED-A
37.8
-2.148589
23726804
MOVERS
28
271
1 2570
INDEX 2484.16 HIGH
2565.87
LOW
2479.61
52W (H) 2791.303 (L) 2102.135
2470
5-June
7-June
FTSE Taiwan 50 Index NAME
PRICE DAY %
Volume
ACER INC
23.05
-1.495726
11572168
FORMOSA PLASTIC
69.5 -0.7142857
8956018
TAIWAN MOBILE CO
ADVANCED SEMICON
25.25
1.202405
13123434
FOXCONN TECHNOLO
78.5
-1.133501
2510081
TPK HOLDING CO L
582
0.6920415
2100136
36.7
-1.740295
4327047
FUBON FINANCIAL
40.05
0.5018821
17452557
TSMC
108 -0.4608295
34819875
UNI-PRESIDENT
57.3
-2.385009
7972497
UNITED MICROELEC
13.5
-1.098901
49149548
ASIA CEMENT CORP ASUSTEK COMPUTER
NAME
NAME
PRICE DAY %
Volume
110.5 -0.4504505
6660144
314
-2.635659
5600717
HON HAI PRECISIO
75
-1.574803
39892021
AU OPTRONICS COR
12.85
1.581028
54042804
HOTAI MOTOR CO
312
-1.421801
394599
CATCHER TECH
271.5 -0.7312614
5784167
WISTRON CORP
30.55 -0.6504065
12749464
17 -0.5847953
4446101
YUANTA FINANCIAL
15.8 -0.3154574
14101067
YULON MOTOR CO
49.2 -0.7063572
3617548
155.5
-0.955414
2787084
CATHAY FINANCIAL
40.2
1.772152
41121327
HUA NAN FINANCIA
CHANG HWA BANK
16.6 -0.5988024
8667322
LARGAN PRECISION
1000
-3.381643
1633221
CHENG SHIN RUBBE
92.3
0.6543075
6070685
LITE-ON TECHNOLO
50.1
-1.764706
6813206
CHIMEI INNOLUX C
19.2
3.504043
46320598
MEDIATEK INC
366.5
-2.526596
8390647
CHINA DEVELOPMEN
8.67
1.048951
53954307
MEGA FINANCIAL H
23.2 -0.8547009
18158106
CHINA STEEL CORP
24.7
-1.002004
14760289
NAN YA PLASTICS
60.4 -0.9836066
9310978
CHINATRUST FINAN
18.85
0.802139
30824866
PRESIDENT CHAIN
184
HTC CORP
1.657459
951582
CHUNGHWA TELECOM
95.2
0
8338351
QUANTA COMPUTER
61.3
-1.288245
3799956
COMPAL ELECTRON
17.6
-1.123596
8979742
SILICONWARE PREC
35.5
0.1410437
11911188
DELTA ELECT INC
144
0.3484321
5749355
SINOPAC FINANCIA
14.6
0
13146663
FAR EASTERN NEW
31.25
0
3551806
SYNNEX TECH INTL
43.6
0.4608295
5613049
FAR EASTONE TELE
72
-1.098901
3847294
TAIWAN CEMENT
38.1 -0.9102731
6504317
FIRST FINANCIAL
17.8
-0.280112
7508517
TAIWAN COOPERATI
FORMOSA CHEM & F
71
0
3442910
TAIWAN FERTILIZE
FORMOSA PETROCHE
77.2
-1.656051
1846901
TAIWAN GLASS IND
16.95
0
8609616
76.4
0.5263158
2108503
28.65
-1.036269
535459
MOVERS
14
31
5 5680
INDEX 5621.75 HIGH
5679.81
LOW
5597.59
52W (H) 5896.71 5590
(L) 4719.96 7-June
11-June
13
June 13, 2013
Markets Gaming Stocks - Daily Performance (Hong Kong Stock Exchange)
Max 42.3
Average 41.629
Min 41.05
Last 41.6
42.40
62.8
42.05
62.1
41.70
61.4
41.35
60.7
41.00
21.1
Max 62.8
Average 62.156
Min 60.5
60.0
Last 61.8
39.60
PRICE
DAY %
Max 20.8
YTD %
WTI CRUDE FUTURE Jul13
95.49
-0.29236713
Average 20.11
BRENT CRUDE FUTR Jul13
103.48
GASOLINE RBOB FUT Jul13
283.7
(H) 52W
Min 19.94
Last 19.98
(L) 52W
1.910352188
100.4000015
81.5
-0.452140452
-3.6588772
115.9300003
96.04000092
-0.389733507
0.467455202
318.0399895
235.0999832
866.25
-0.230348402
-4.833836858
987.5
814
3.796
-0.105263158
6.569343066
4.499000072
3.256000042
287.88
-0.173382343
-4.094346537
322.0499992
259.5000029
Gold Spot $/Oz
1372.64
-0.6162
-17.5324
1796.08
1322.06
Silver Spot $/Oz
21.7409
0.2911
-27.7951
35.365
20.3395
Platinum Spot $/Oz
1493.8
-0.3569
-1.578
1742.8
1374.55
Palladium Spot $/Oz
764.3
1.1273
9.2388
786.5
553.75
LME ALUMINUM 3MO ($)
1923
-0.87628866
-7.235890014
2200.199951
1809 6762.25
GAS OIL FUT (ICE) Jul13 NATURAL GAS FUTR Jul13 NY Harb ULSD Fut Jul13
ASIA PACIFIC
CROSSES
AUD GBP CHF EUR JPY MOP HKD CNY INR THB SGD TWD PHP IDR AUDJPY EURCHF EURGBP EURCNY EURMOP EURJPY HKDMOP
LME COPPER 3MO ($)
7162
-0.940525588
-9.696129114
8422
1889
-0.761754662
-9.182692308
2230
1745
14895
-1.029900332
-12.6905041
18920
14561
16.1
0.625
2.254684027
17.07500076
14.79500103
546
0
-8.962067528
665
512
WHEAT FUTURE(CBT) Jul13
688
-0.253715114
-13.32283465
900
664.75
SOYBEAN FUTURE Nov13
1320.5
0.113722517
1.362502399
1409.75
1177.5
COFFEE 'C' FUTURE Jul13
128.65
-0.077669903
-13.97525911
202.1999969
125.0499954
NAME
16.31999969
ARISTOCRAT LEISU
72.62999725
CROWN LTD
3MO ($)
LME NICKEL 3MO ($) AGRICULTURE ROUGH RICE (CBOT) Jul13 Dec13
SUGAR #11 (WORLD) Jul13
16.4
COTTON NO.2 FUTR Dec13
85.84
0.122100122
-16.91995947
-0.046576619
9.017018034
23.05999947 89.19999695
World Stock Markets - Indices NAME
19.8
COUNTRY MAJOR
LME ZINC
CORN FUTURE
23.6 23.3 23.0 22.7 Max 23.6
Average 22.677
Min 22.45
Last 22.65
22.4
PRICE
DAY %
YTD %
(H) 52W
(L) 52W
0.9366 1.5559 0.9314 1.3282 97.76 7.996 7.7635 6.1335 58.505 30.94 1.2595 29.933 43.085 9833 91.563 1.23708 0.8536 8.1447 10.6193 129.85 1.03
-0.6997 0.1223 0.6335 0.469 1.0229 -0.0063 -0.0013 -0.0049 -0.6282 -0.4202 -0.0635 -0.2238 -0.5338 2.5831 1.7267 0.1576 -0.3409 -0.593 -0.484 0.5468 -0.0097
-9.7514 -3.8143 -1.7178 0.6975 -11.9272 -0.1601 -0.1662 1.5831 -5.9995 -1.1635 -3.025 -3.0067 -4.8277 -0.4068 -2.442 -2.3927 -4.4728 0.8938 -0.8372 -12.5375 -0.0097
1.0625 1.6381 0.9972 1.3711 103.74 8.0111 7.7664 6.3964 58.985 32 1.2869 30.203 43.259 10174 105.433 1.265 0.88151 8.4957 10.9254 133.8 1.032
0.9338 1.4832 0.9022 1.2043 77.13 7.9824 7.7498 6.1203 51.3863 28.56 1.2152 28.913 40.54 9338 78.093 1.20054 0.77553 7.7018 9.6245 94.12 1.0289
Macau Related Stocks PRICE
DAY %
YTD %
(H) 52W
(L) 52W
4.1
3.797468
30.15873
4.49
2.29
VOLUME CRNCY 3966433
12.37
1.8107
15.93252
13.75
8.13
1426403
AMAX HOLDINGS LT
1.21
0.8333333
-13.57143
1.72
0.75
19016175
BOC HONG KONG HO
24.7
-1.2
2.489625
28
21.6
12328770 200000
CENTURY LEGEND
0.31
0
16.98114
0.42
0.215
CHEUK NANG HLDGS
5.53
-3.490401
-7.679462
6.74
2.8
11000
CHINA OVERSEAS
21.25
-2.298851
-8.00866
25.6
16.362
22665209
CHINESE ESTATES
13.42
0.7507508
10.64009
14.12
7.975
589000
CHOW TAI FOOK JE
8.93
-0.9977827
-28.21543
13.4
8.4
8411700
EMPEROR ENTERTAI
2.81
-0.3546099
48.67725
3.05
1.14
1080000
FUTURE BRIGHT
2.41
-1.632653
98.8406
2.76
0.795
1230000
GALAXY ENTERTAIN
41.6
0.3618818
37.06754
42.4
16.98
11039490 2329439
COUNTRY
PRICE
DAY %
YTD %
(H) 52W
(L) 52W
DOW JONES INDUS. AVG
US
15238.59
-0.06249951
16.28837
15542.4
12398.48047
NASDAQ COMPOSITE INDEX
US
3473.766
0.1311824
15.04389
3532.038
2802.38
FTSE 100 INDEX
GB
6354.18
-0.7229179
7.737959
6875.62
5414.64
HANG SENG BK
117
-1.515152
-1.432179
132.8
100.6
DAX INDEX
GE
8239.94
-0.8155095
8.243801
8557.86
6078.22
HOPEWELL HLDGS
25.05
-3.281853
-24.66165
35.3
19.523
2691666
HSBC HLDGS PLC
83.6
-1.065089
2.829024
90.7
61.1
15116755
NIKKEI 225
JN
13317.62
-1.454618
28.11342
15942.6
8328.019531
HANG SENG INDEX
HK
21354.66
-1.204853
-5.747735
23944.74
18708.26
CSI 300 INDEX
CH
2484.16
-1.728152
-1.537564
2791.303
2102.135
TAIWAN TAIEX INDEX
TA
8116.15
-0.544081
5.411389
8439.15
KOSPI INDEX
SK
1920.68
-0.6219279
-3.82414
S&P/ASX 200 INDEX
AU
4757.06
0.4085735
ID
4583.931
FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI
MA
NZX ALL INDEX PHILIPPINES ALL SHARE IX
JAKARTA COMPOSITE INDEX
20.1
Currency Exchange Rates
NAME
METALS
Last 20.15
20.0
Commodities ENERGY
Min 20.1
20.2
39.95
Last 39.75
Average 20.566
20.4
40.30
Min 39.65
Max 21.6
20.6
40.65
Average 40.079
20.6
20.8
41.00
Max 40.95
21.6
4
-2.200489
12.35955
4.66
2.98
2385571
LUK FOOK HLDGS I
HUTCHISON TELE H
18.02
-3.013994
-26.14754
30.05
14.7
1081000
MELCO INTL DEVEL
15.84
-2.941176
75.80466
18.18
5.12
2849000
6922.73
MGM CHINA HOLDIN
20.15
-6.712963
51.75159
21.6
9.509
5640932
2042.48
1758.99
MIDLAND HOLDINGS
3.02
-4.731861
-18.37838
5
3
3870000
2.325468
5249.6
3993.8
NEPTUNE GROUP
0.196
-4.390244
28.94737
0.23
0.084
42120000
-4.048968
6.190955
5251.296
3774.693
NEW WORLD DEV
10.94
-5.034722
-8.985028
15.12
8.5
38839484
1782.88
-0.2751986
5.561447
1826.22
1570.94
SANDS CHINA LTD
39.75
-1.730532
17.08394
43.7
20.65
8021526
SHUN HO RESOURCE
1.5
-1.315789
7.142859
1.67
1.03
20000
NZ
955.882
-0.1713797
8.370136
998.487
755.149
SHUN TAK HOLDING
3.9
-0.128041
-6.921242
4.65
2.56
8997625
PH
4063.71
-3.922347
9.860286
4571.4
3295.86
SJM HOLDINGS LTD
19.98
-2.298289
12.57824
22.382
12.995
4391262
SMARTONE TELECOM
13.28
-1.775148
-5.681818
17.38
12.5
3016077
WYNN MACAU LTD
22.65
-4.025424
8.114555
26.5
14.62
3777332
ASIA ENTERTAINME
3.87
0.5194805
37.49328
4.7647
2.2076
217131
57.25
0.6151142
28.04742
57.49
41.74
232783 25922
HSBC Dragon 300 Index Singapor
SI
612.35
-0.64
-1.41
NA
NA
STOCK EXCH OF THAI INDEX
TH
1460.86
-4.42838
4.952112
1649.77
1143.17
HO CHI MINH STOCK INDEX
VN
521.95
-0.4975599
26.15716
533.15
372.39
BALLY TECHNOLOGI
Laos Composite Index
LO
1338.82
0
10.2118
1455.82
980.83
BOC HONG KONG HO
3.26
-0.6097561
6.188927
3.6
2.8
GALAXY ENTERTAIN
5.368
0.5243446
35.2141
5.43
2.25
3215
INTL GAME TECH
17.65
1.146132
24.55893
18.81
10.92
3277393
JONES LANG LASAL
90.81
-0.2964427
8.184414
101.46
61.39
279751
LAS VEGAS SANDS
57.44
0.2968395
24.43674
60.54
32.6127
5425108
MELCO CROWN-ADR
24.04
-1.191944
42.75534
25.15
9.13
3314327
MGM CHINA HOLDIN
2.57
0
38.91892
2.71
1.36
3000
MGM RESORTS INTE
15.18
1.538462
30.41237
15.95
8.83
7432471
SHFL ENTERTAINME
18.28
2.812148
26.06897
18.57
12.35
489282
SJM HOLDINGS LTD
2.66
3.100775
16.78878
2.9481
1.7255
1460
138.96
1.061818
23.53098
144.99
84.4902
1325083
Shanghai Shenzhen Composite index is listing the biggest companies by market capitalisation. All data supplied by Bloomberg unless otherwise indicated.
WYNN RESORTS LTD
AUD HKD
USD
14 14
June 13, 2013 April 19, 2013
Opinion
All quiet on the currency front Jeffrey Frankel
Professor of Capital Formation and Growth at Harvard University
T
he term “currency wars” is a catchy way of saying “competitive devaluation”. In the wake of the sharp fall in the value of the yen over the last six months, owing to the monetary component of Japan’s efforts to jump-start its economy, the issue is expected to feature prominently on the agenda at the G-8’s upcoming summit in Northern Ireland. But should it? According to the International Monetary Fund, competitive devaluation occurs when countries are “manipulating exchange rates…to gain an unfair competitive advantage over other members…” But a key point is often missed when the term “currency wars” has been applied to monetary expansion by the Federal Reserve, the Bank of Japan, and other central banks in recent years. The impact of monetary stimulus on a country’s trade balance – and hence on demand for trading partners’ goods – is ambiguous: the expenditure-switching effect when the exchange rate responds is counteracted by the expenditure-increasing effect of expansion. Restored income growth means more imports from other countries. “Currency wars” is a more apt description when countries intervene to push down their currencies in deliberate attempts to help their trade balances. But national authorities will and should pursue economic policies that are primarily in their own countries’ interests. International cooperation can be fruitful; but there is little point attempting it if the nature of the spillover effects is not relatively clear to all. Everyone agrees, for example, that spillovers from pollution or tariffs are negative, not positive, externalities. But the case is not as obvious in the case of monetary policy. For example, if unemployment is high and inflation low in the United States, the Fed will naturally ease monetary policy, particularly via low interest rates. If Brazil is in danger of overheating, its central bank will naturally tighten policy, particularly via high interest rates. It is also natural that capital will flow from north to south as a result, causing the
Brazilian real to appreciate against the dollar. That is the beauty of floating exchange rates: both countries can choose their own appropriate policies.
Capital controls Given that the two countries’ are in different cyclical positions, such exchange-rate movements signal that the international economic system is working properly. Although the stronger real will help U.S. exporters (other things being equal) and hurt those in Brazil, such “casualties of war” are not even collateral damage; rather, they are precisely the point. If the goal is to stimulate demand for U.S. goods and dampen demand for Brazilian goods, why shouldn’t exporters in both countries share in that process, alongside construction and other sectors that are sensitive to interest rates via domestic demand? A more serious dilemma arises if one of the countries is targeting or even fixing the exchange rate, as many Latin American governments did to kill off high inflation in the late 1980’s and early 1990’s. Such a country will not necessarily want to abandon a proven exchange-rate regime at the first sign of trouble. Capital controls and sterilisation of reserve flows might help to delay the adjustment, but a persistent one-directional capital flow
will eventually force the fixedexchange-rate country to allow either its exchange rate or its money supply to adjust. True, in recent years, a wide array of countries has indicated a preference for weaker currencies as a means of improving their trade balances. It is also true, by definition, that not everyone can depreciate or improve their trade balance at the same time. But that does not necessarily mean that depreciators are guilty of violating any agreements or norms, especially if they have merely maintained a preexisting exchange-rate regime.
The world has enough serious disputes as it is. We do not need to invent new ones
Uncoordinated monetary expansion does not even necessarily leave the world in a worse equilibrium. Barry Eichengreen and Jeffrey Sachs have persuasively
argued this for the 1930’s (the opposite of the conventional wisdom regarding beggarthy-neighbour competitive devaluations). Although all countries could not improve their trade balances simultaneously, when they devalued against gold, they succeeded in raising the price of gold, thereby increasing the real value of the global money supply – exactly what a world in depression needed.
Currency warrior The same applies today. Brazil’s finance minister, Guido Mantega, coined the term “currency wars” in response to American efforts to enlist Brazil and other competitors of China in a campaign for a stronger renminbi. But the accusation against the U.S. is especially misplaced. U.S. monetary expansion contributed to global monetary expansion at a time when, on average, it was needed. U.S. authorities have not intervened in the foreign-exchange market or talked down the dollar, and currency depreciation was not the Fed’s goal when deciding to implement its quantitativeeasing policy. Japan comes a little closer to qualifying as a currency warrior, because members of Shinzo Abe’s government were initially foolish enough to mention yen depreciation as an explicit goal. China qualifies in one
important respect: the renminbi was substantially undervalued by most measures from 2004 to 2009 (less so now). But countries have a right to opt for fixed exchange rates. Continuing an existing regime, as China was doing, does not sound very much like “manipulation”. True, renminbi appreciation was probably in China’s interest. It would have been reasonable, beginning in 2004, for those worried about current-account imbalances to propose that China voluntarily allow some appreciation in exchange for, say, the U.S. putting its fiscal house in order. But this is different from accusing Beijing of violating international norms or rules and threatening retaliation (for example, by imposing tariffs, which is a violation of international rules). Few countries accused of participating in a currency war have undertaken discrete devaluations in recent years or acted to weaken their currencies by switching their exchange-rate regimes. These are the sorts of deliberate policy changes connoted by a term like “manipulation”. Switzerland perhaps comes the closest. But the franc was so strong, even at the new rate set in September 2011, that no one can accuse the Swiss National Bank of unfair undervaluation. The world has enough serious disputes as it is. We do not need to invent new ones. © Project Syndicate
editorial council Paulo A. Azevedo, Tiago Azevedo, José I. Duarte, Emanuel Graça, Mandy Kuok Founder & Publisher Paulo A. Azevedo | pazevedo@macaubusinessdaily.com Editor-in-Chief Tiago Azevedo DEputy Editor-in-Chief Vitor Quintã Associate editor Michael Grimes GROUP SENIOR ANALYST José I. Duarte Newsdesk Luciana Leitão, Stephanie Lai, Tony Lai EDITOR AT LARGE Alex Lee Creative Director José Manuel Cardoso WEB & IT Janne Louhikari Contributors James Chu, João Francisco Pinto, Larry So, Pedro Cortés, Ricardo Siu, Rose N. Lai, Zen Udani Photography Carmo Correia, Manuel Cardoso Assistant to the publisher Laurentina da Silva | ltinas@macaubusinessdaily.com office manager Elsa Vong | elsav@macaubusinessdaily.com Agencies Bloomberg, Reuters, AFP, Xinhua, Lusa, Project Syndicate Printed in Macau by Welfare Ltd.
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15 15
June April 13, 19, 2013 2013
Opinion Business
wires
Central banking’s new face
Leading reports from Asia’s best business newspapers Paola Subacchi
Research Director of International Economics at Chatham House
Asahi Shimbun Japan’s Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said he is planning to cut taxes on corporate capital outlays after investors disappointed by his growth strategy dumped shares last week. “We want to put together a second part of the growth strategy in autumn,” Mr Abe said at a meeting of government and ruling coalition officials. “We want to include drastic tax cuts on investments in plant and equipment.” Investors were disappointed by the lack of bold economic reforms, including the absence of tax cuts for businesses.
Taipei Times Taiwan’s Democratic Progressive Party caucus is expected to initiate several anti-tax-evasion and anti-nuclear amendment proposals in the provisional legislative session, despite being unable to ensure their passage, convener Ker Chienming said. “We are going to ask the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) to clearly express its position on these issues. We will also demand that the Executive Yuan refrain from signing the cross-strait service trade agreement until the Legislative Yuan has comprehensively discussed it,” he added.
The Star AirAsia Bhd has urged Malaysia Airports Holdings Bhd to issue a definite delayed opening date for the KLIA2, the country’s new low-cost airport. AirAsia chairman Datuk Aziz Bakar said the regulator, as the airport operator, had the responsibility of notifying the airlines using KLIA2 of a definite opening date, to enable them to be ready to move their operations to the new airport. “The operations cannot be shifted in one night. We need to be prepared on our side also,” he said.
China Daily China’s yacht industry is expected to experience fullspeed growth in the coming years, a sector association said. The number of yachts in the country will increase to about 100,000 in 2020 from about 3,000 last year, with the value of China’s yacht business estimated to be 50 billion yuan (US$8.16 billion) by then, the China Cruise and Yacht Industry Association said in its annual report. The government’s support for marine tourism is also a positive signal for the industry, said Zheng Weihang, secretary-general of the association.
A
changing of the guard is underway at many of the world’s leading central banks. Haruhiko Kuroda is now installed as the governor of the Bank of Japan (BoJ), faced with the daunting task of ending two decades of stagnation. Mark Carney, the Bank of Canada’s current governor, who is set to take over as the governor of the Bank of England (BoE) in July, is already making his presence felt in British monetary-policy debates. And in the United States, the expected conclusion of Ben Bernanke’s term as chairman of the Federal Reserve Board in January is already inviting speculation about his successor. The only holdouts among the world’s leading economies are the euro zone and China. But that does not necessarily imply constancy. Mario Draghi has been the president of the European Central Bank for barely a year, and the governor of the People’s Bank of China, Zhou Xiaochuan, was almost replaced when he reached retirement age in February. Twenty years ago, such developments would have interested mostly bankers and businesspeople. But, since the global financial crisis, the need to revive and sustain economic growth in the U.S., the United Kingdom, and Japan – and to avoid financial collapse in the euro zone – has prompted major central banks to be more outspoken and pursue more aggressive monetary policies, including unconventional measures like quantitative easing (QE). As a result, many central bankers have become household names; some even have tabloid nicknames, like “super Mario” Draghi.
Bold move This new prominence has also forced some central bankers to reassess their decision-making processes. In Japan, outsiders recently got a rare glimpse into the BoJ’s activities when minutes of a policy meeting were leaked. Likewise, the accidental release a day early of the minutes from the Fed’s March rate-setting meeting to more than 100 people, including banking executives, congressional aides, and bank lobbyists, raised questions about how the bank controls the disclosure of privileged information. In fact, the Fed has been under increasing scrutiny since 2008, when near-zero nominal interest rates drove it to become the first central bank to adopt QE. In a push to reduce the cost of borrowing, the Fed purchased longterm assets in the market, injecting liquidity into the
Mark Carney, next Bank of England chief
financial system. The BoE and the ECB have since adopted similar measures. In early April, the BoJ announced plans to unleash the most aggressive bondbuying programme of all, promising to inject US$1.4 trillion into the economy over the next two years in order to meet an inflation target of 2 percent.
As long as politicians observe the rule of noninterference – at least publicly – central banks will be perceived as unconstrained by political interests
Unconventional measures are part of a broader transformation of monetary policymaking. In addition to becoming bolder and more expansive, it has become increasingly intertwined with fiscal policy. This is most explicit in Japan, where monetary policy is a central component of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s economic strategy, dubbed “Abenomics,” implying collaboration between the government and the central bank. Does this undermine central-bank independence by amounting to a de facto subordination of unelected technocrats to elected politicians? Arguably, Japan is an exceptional case, with the constraint of the zero bound on nominal interest rates demanding, at long last, a deviation from conventional measures. In Europe, however, Bundesbank President Jens Weidmann has criticised the ECB for overstepping its mandate with its “outright monetary transactions” programme, through which Draghi aims to fulfil his pledge to guarantee the euro’s survival.
New era
This is monetary policy on steroids, and, to opponents of inflation-inducing money creation, it amounts to playing with fire. But, for Japan, which has been struggling with deflation for a generation, it is a risk worth taking. Whether Kuroda’s assault will bolster domestic consumption and investment remains to be seen.
As a result, questions about the role of monetary policy and the independence and accountability of central banks, once confined to rarefied academic discussions, are fixtures of broad policy debate. But, rather than try to define a single approach, central bankers should aim to develop individualised approaches within the orthodox monetarypolicy framework, which revolves around price stability and independence. For example, the Fed’s
mandate dictates that price stability can be explicitly linked to active support for GDP growth and employment; for the BoE and the ECB, it can be a condition for achieving the broader goal of sustainable growth and employment. As long as politicians observe the rule of noninterference – at least publicly – central banks will be perceived as unconstrained by political interests. The BoJ, by demonstrating that aggressive money creation is a legitimate approach to fighting deflation, has broken previously sacrosanct conventions. At the same time, it has taken the unprecedented step of incorporating monetary policy into a comprehensive economic strategy based on coordination among different policy areas and their associated institutions. This integrated approach could prove effective in countries where the real economy and the financial sector are closely linked, ensuring the timely, orderly implementation of policies, while preventing adverse spillovers. Such coordination would infringe on centralbank independence no more than multilateral cooperation undermines the sovereignty of the countries involved. While the impact of Abenomics on Japan’s economy remains to be seen, its impact on debates about monetary policy and the relationship between central banks and governments is already becoming apparent. One hopes that Carney will follow this trend of challenging conventional wisdom at the BoE. A new era of active and varied monetary policy may have begun, with potential benefits for all. © Project Syndicate
16
June 13, 2013
Closing Vietnam to extend stock trading hours
Euro zone industrial output up in April
Vietnam’s two main stock exchanges will extend trading hours to help boost liquidity and lure investors to a market that’s 13 times smaller than Singapore’s. The Ho Chi Minh City Stock Exchange, the country’s main bourse, will extend afternoon trading hours by 45 minutes to end at 3 pm local time, chairman Tran Dac Sinh told Bloomberg. Trading hours for the Hanoi Stock Exchange will also be extended by 45 minutes for the afternoon session, deputy general director Nguyen Thi Hoang Lan said. The VN Index has rallied 27 percent this year, the best performer among benchmark gauges in Southeast Asia.
Euro-area industrial output unexpectedly increased in April, led by France, adding to signs the currency bloc’s economy is beginning to emerge from a recordlong recession. Factory production in the 17-nation euro area rose 0.4 percent from March, when it increased a revised 0.9 percent, the European Union’s statistics office in Luxembourg said yesterday. Production fell 0.6 percent from April 2012. Industrial output in Germany, Europe’s largest economy, expanded 1.2 percent in April after a 1.8 percent increase a month earlier. French output rebounded with 2.3 percent growth after a 0.6 percent contraction. Production in Italy and Spain decreased.
Greece first developed market cut to emerging Government announces state’s tv closure calling it ‘haven of waste’
Thousands of people held a protest outside the state television’s headquarters
G
reece became the first developed nation to be cut to emerging-market status by MSCI Inc. after the local stock index plunged 83 percent since 2007. Greece failed to meet criteria regarding securities borrowing and lending facilities, short selling and transferability, said MSCI, whose equity indexes are tracked by investors with about US$7 trillion in assets. Qatar and the United Arab Emirates were raised to emerging markets, while Morocco was cut to a frontier market. New York-based MSCI will keep South Korea and Taiwan as emerging markets, and
placed Chinese shares traded on local exchanges on review for inclusion in the emerging category, according to a statement yesterday. Greece’s ASE Index has dropped 9.9 percent this week as the government failed to win any bids in a sale of the country’s gas monopoly. The unsuccessful attempt to sell Depa SA dented Greece’s state-asset sales programme, which underpins 240 billion euros (US$318 billion) of bailout loans from the euro area and International Monetary Fund. “It is unclear yet what the weight of the MSCI Greece will be on
emerging markets, but in any case it will be significantly higher than that it has on developed markets,” Constantinos Zouzoulas, an analyst at Axia Ventures Group, a brokerage in Athens, wrote in a note. “This could be positive news for the Greek market as it could attract more interest, although there could be a pressure in the short term.” Locked out of bond markets since April 2010, Greece accepted two European Union-led bailout packages as public opposition to pension and wage cuts derailed the pace of promised economic reforms. The ASE was the world’s
U.K. territories won’t sign tax deal before G8 But ready to agree on wider sharing of information, says Bermudan premier
B
ritain’s overseas territories will not sign up to an international convention aimed at tackling tax evasion ahead of the G8 summit in Northern Ireland next week, the premier of Bermuda said yesterday. British Prime Minister David Cameron has invited the mainly Caribbean territories to London ahead of hosting the annual gathering of the G8 group of leading economies, at which he has put tax avoidance and evasion high on the agenda. Though they share Britain’s monarch as head of state, the U.K.
government’s writ doesn’t run in the self-governing territories, so Mr Cameron must rely on persuasion to secure an agreement. A deal could give Mr Cameron a coup against tax campaigners who question Britain’s commitment to the issue, given the prominent role played by U.K. territories in facilitating tax evasion, avoidance and the hiding of stolen assets. Bermudan Premier Craig Cannonier said the territories were ready to agree that wider sharing of information with international
tax authorities was required but Mr Cameron’s aim of having the territories all commit to signing the convention was unlikely. “My understanding is that we are not here to sign something, but simply to agree that everyone needs to get on par,” he told Reuters. He said the territories had held conference calls ahead of their meeting with U.K. ministers in London this week and none had expressed a willingness to commit to signing the convention when they gather with Cameron at Downing
second-worst performer since October 2007.
Broadcaster shutdown The government yesterday shut down the public broadcaster ERT, calling it a “haven of waste”. Viewers watching the news on the main TV channel saw the screens go to black late on Tuesday evening. The government move affects 2,700 jobs at ERT and is part of sweeping austerity cutbacks demanded by the debt-laden country’s international lenders. “ERT is a case of an exceptional lack of transparency and incredible extravagance. This ends now,” government spokesman Simos Kedikoglou said earlier. While all employees are to be sacked, he added they would be paid compensation and would be able to apply for work when the corporation re-launches as a smaller, independent public broadcaster. “A bill for a new Greek, radio, Internet and television company was submitted today” for review by the government and parliament, the government said yesterday. Riot police have been deployed in Athens as thousands of people have gathered outside ERT’s headquarters to protest against the decision. The Athens Journalists’ Union has called a 48-hour strike to protest against the closure. ERT, which began broadcasting in 1938, is funded by a direct payment of 4.30 euros (US$6) added monthly to electricity bills. It ran three domestic TV channels, four national radio stations, as well regional radio stations and an external service, Voice of Greece. Bloomberg News/AFP
Street on Saturday. Mr Cannonier said Bermuda already met most of the standards in the Multilateral Convention on Mutual Administrative Assistance in Tax Matters, including having a register of beneficial owners of companies that other tax authorities can check. However, he said the convention, drafted by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, a body of mainly rich nations, had potentially damaging elements for Bermuda. “There’s some clauses in there that we need to look at, that may need to be adjusted, and … our finance ministry is going over it with a finetooth comb,” he said. In May, the territories, which also include the Cayman Islands, the British Virgin Islands and the Turks and Caicos Islands, agreed to share taxpayer information with the U.K., France, Germany, Italy and Spain, but the convention will include many more countries and more information. Reuters