Showing posts with label News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label News. Show all posts

Friday, September 17, 2010

Our Best Minds Are Failing Us

Our Best Minds Are Failing Us

With America in deep trouble, our economists are AWOL, and our scientists are still off ‘financial engineering.



The most terrifying moment in modern economic history occurred two years ago this month. For several long days after the fall of Lehman Brothers on Sept. 15, 2008, the financial system was in danger of total collapse, and the United States seemed on the precipice of another Great Depression in that “Black September.” Just as bad, our economists and senior policymakers had barely any idea why this was happening. The assumptions of an entire era had been proved wrong. The “Great Moderation”—the period of post–Cold War prosperity in which capitalism was said to have been tamed and risk mastered—was revealed to be an illusion. Alan Greenspan professed his “shocked disbelief” that the Wall Street institutions he had trusted in were so reckless as to blow themselves up.............. SEE MORE HERE >>>

Friday, September 3, 2010

China fears depreciation of $2.45 trillion of reserves still heavy in dollars

China fears depreciation of $2.45 trillion of reserves still heavy in dollars

By Angela Monaghan, Economics Correspondent
Published: 6:00PM BST 03 Sep 2010 


China offered a rare insight into its foreign exchange reserves with confirmation that the vast majority are held in dollars.

The Chinese Government holds the largest stockpile of currency reserves at $2.45 trillion , with 65pc held in dollars, 26pc in euros, 5pc in pounds, and 3pc in yen. 

The report was published in official newspaper the China Securities Journal and confirmed analysts' estimates that about two-thirds of the reserves are invested in dollars. Until now the allocation of China's foreign exchange reserves was considered a state secret. 


Separately Hu Xiaolian, a vice governor with the People's Bank of China, warned that depreciation was a risk for the foreign exchange reserves held by developing countries. 

"Once a reserve currency's value becomes unstable, there will be quite large depreciation risks for assets," she wrote in an article that appeared in the latest issue of China Finance, a central bank magazine. 

"The outbreak and spread of the global financial crisis has highlighted the inherent deficiencies and systemic risks in the current international currency system," she said. 

"A diversified international currency system will be more conducive to international economic and financial stability," she added, calling for greater cross-border use of the yuan.
....  >>>>>>>>

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Yen Falls From 15-Year High on Speculation Japan Will Intervene

Yen Falls From 15-Year High on Speculation Japan Will Intervene

The yen retreated from a 15-year high versus the dollar on speculation Japanese authorities will act to stem gains that risk derailing the nation’s recovery. 

The yen also fell from the strongest in nine years against the euro after Japanese Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda pledged “appropriate action” on the currency and the Nikkei newspaper said the Bank of Japan is considering further monetary easing. The euro rebounded from a six-week low against the dollar after a report showed German business confidence unexpectedly increased to a three-year high in August.....>>>>>>>>

Sunday, August 22, 2010

Western profits wilt on China's surging wages

By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
Published: 9:14PM BST 18 Aug 2010

Rising wage and production costs in China are eating into the profits of Western companies and may soon set off an exodus of multinational companies to cheaper locations. 
A report by Credit Suisse said the vast majority of US and European companies in China are expecting a "margin hit" over the next 12 months and fear they will not be able to pass on the costs to consumers, with the biggest worrries in electronics, clothing, and retail. 

The bank said Footlocker, Liz Claiborne, and Office Depot would tip into outright loss in a worst-case scenario, defined as a 20pc rise in costs without any pass-through to customers.

Earnings per share would fall 72pc for Jones Apparel, 50pc for Maidenform Brands and Dollar Tree, 42pc for Macy's, 39pc for Target, and 20pc for Polo Ralph Lauren. Reliance on Chinese plants is suddenly proving double-edged. "We conclude that labour and transportation cost pressures are a major concern for executives that may be under-appreciated by investors," it said. 

The US industrial giant General Electric raised eyebrows in May with plans to shift production of its hybrid water heater from China back to Kentucky next year after securing lower wages from US workers. The company cited the narrowing pay gap, lower transport costs, and shorter delivery times. 

China's manufacturing wages have vaulted from around $1,000 annually 10 years ago, to $3,900 last year. Pay in the industrial hubs of the Pearl River and Yangtze River deltas are much higher and likely to rise further after a wave of industrial disputes at Foxconn, Honda, Toyota, and Omron. 

Bruce Rockowitz, head of the pan-Asian logistics group Li & Fung, said cost pressures are rippling through the region. "It's not just China going up: its everywhere," he said. 

It is unclear whether this will drive up inflation for imported goods in the West, reversing the benign phase of globalisation seen over the last fifteen years, or whether multinationals will adjust to constrained demand in the US, Europe, and Japan by slashing margins, or a mixture of the two. 

Credit Suisse's survey of executives found that 55pc of foreign firms in China could relocate plant to Bangladesh, Vietnam, Indonesia or other low-cost regions relatively easily, though it would be costly. There are winners too, such as Yum Brands poised to reap the harvest from rising Chinese consumption. 

The changing landscape has major implications for Chinese exporters, with an average profit margin of just 3pc. High-tech companies in wind power, solar, and transmission equipment that have recently broken into world markets will face stiffer headwinds. The Shanghai Composite Index of Chinese equities has been lagging all year on fears of a profit squeeze. The bourse is down 20pc since last November. 

The erosion of export margins may explain why Beijing is still dragging its feet on a revaluation of the yuan, despite ever louder calls for retaliatory sanctions in Washington. China's currency has fallen slightly on a trade weighted-basis since the dollar-peg was replaced in May by a crawling band, a clear sign that the authorities are worried that the economy is cooling too fast. Beijing has tried cool the property boom with credit curbs but it is hard to use such tools in a surgical fashion without collateral damage. The growth of factory output ground to a halt in July, on a month-on-month basis. 

China's foreign investment body SAFE has bought record amounts of bonds from Japan, Korea and other Asian countries over the last three months. While this is part of a normal shift away from the US and Europe, it is also a way for Beijing to hold down its currency against these competitors. It is difficult to separate motives in such a policy. 

Higher wages are bringing about the outcome that would have occurred by other means if the currency had been allowed to rise over the years, properly reflecting China's growing trade surplus.

........

see more here >>>>