Showing posts with label inflation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label inflation. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

- Inflation at highest level

INFLATION in Singapore rose to its highest level in 20 months last month as housing, transport and food continued to become more expensive.

Last month's consumer price index (CPI) rose 3.7 per cent from the same month a year earlier. It follows a move earlier this month by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) to tighten monetary conditions, owing to its concerns over rising costs.

The CPI came in slightly above a 3.6 per cent rise estimated by 13 economists in a survey by Bloomberg News. Inflation rose 0.2 per cent month-on-month from August, after adjusting for seasonal factors, according to the Department of Statistics on Monday.

DBS economist Irvin Seah said: 'With overall inflation grinding steadily northward, risks are certainly tilting towards inflation rather than growth.'

Transport and housing were the main factors as higher car prices contributed a 9.1 per cent rise in transportation costs from a year ago, while housing costs rose 4.7 per cent. There were signs that car prices are easing, as they fell 0.2 per cent from August.

Food is a growing concern with prices of vegetables, fresh seafood, rice and cereal and dairy products contributing to a 1.7 per cent rise from 12 months ago.

Friday, August 29, 2008

India, Malaysia, Philippines, Thailand: Asia Local Bond Preview

By Wes Goodman

Aug. 28 (Bloomberg) -- The following events and economic reports may influence trading in Asian local-currency bonds today. Yields are from the previous session.

China: China Mobile Ltd., the world's biggest phone company by market value, said second-quarter profit increased 51 percent, more than analysts estimated, after cutting prices to attract users. The central bank said yesterday it would sell 3 billion yuan ($438.6 million) of six-month bills today.

The yield on the 3.92 percent bond due July 2011 fell 2 basis points to 3.78 percent, according to the China Interbank Bond Market. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point.

India: Inflation probably accelerated to 12.81 percent in the week ended Aug. 16, the fastest pace since June 1992, according to the median estimate of a Bloomberg News survey of economists. The government will release the figure at about 5 p.m. today in New Delhi.

The yield on the 8.24 percent bond due April 2018 was little changed at 8.89 percent, according to the central bank's trading system.

Indonesia: The government is marketing 6.23 trillion rupiah ($680.1 million) of five-year debt to individual investors. The offer will close tomorrow, according to Bhimantara Widyajala, a director at the Ministry of Finance. Indonesia yesterday sold 28-, 91-and 182-day bills and 28-day Islamic bills.

The yield on the 9 percent bond due in September 2018 rose 5 basis points to 12.11 percent, according to the Inter Dealer Market Association.

Malaysia: The economy grew 6 percent in the second quarter, versus 7.1 percent in the previous three months, according to the median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. Bank Negara Malaysia will report the figure at 6 p.m. in Kuala Lumpur tomorrow.

The yield on the 4.24 percent bond due February 2018 rose 2 basis points to 4.70 percent, according to Bursa Malaysia Bhd.

Philippines: The central bank will increase its benchmark interest rate by 0.25 percentage point to 6 percent today, according to 13 of 15 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News. Two predict a half-point jump to 6.25 percent. Gross domestic product growth probably slowed to 5 percent in the second quarter from a year earlier, from 5.2 percent in the previous three months, a separate survey showed before the government reports the figure today.

The yield on the 5.875 percent note due January 2018 fell 9 basis points to 8.29 percent, according to the Philippine Dealing & Exchange Corp.

Singapore: Lim Hwee Hua, senior minister of state with the Ministry of Finance and Ministry of Transport, said yesterday that investors handling the city-state's money ``had actually taken some precautionary measures early in the downturn'' in the global economy. ``The downturns also offer opportunities for our agencies to invest in good quality assets at prices that are attractive.''

The yield on the 4 percent bond maturing September 2018 rose 1 basis point to 3.11 percent, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

South Korea: The Finance Ministry is scheduled to announce its debt sales for September today. The government yesterday vowed to stem losses in the won amid concern its slump to the weakest in almost four years against the dollar will further fan inflation. ``The government cannot but worry about the recent won decline,'' said Choi Jong Ku, the finance ministry's key currency official.

The yield on the 5.25 percent bond due March 2013 fell 2 basis points to 5.91 percent, according to Korea Securities Dealers Association.

Sri Lanka: The central bank will sell a combined 2 billion rupees ($18.5 million) of debt due in 2010, 2011 and 2012 today.

The yield on the 16 percent bond due in April 2009 was little changed at 18.25 percent, according to Ceylinco Shriram Securities Ltd.

Taiwan: The index of leading indicators, a gauge of economic conditions three months ahead, fell 0.6 percent in July from the previous month, compared with a 0.4 percent decline in June, the government's Council for Economic Planning and Development said yesterday.

The yield on the 2.375 percent bond maturing in March 2018 was little changed at 2.53 percent, according to Gretai Securities Market.

Thailand: The central bank raised its benchmark interest rate for a second straight month yesterday to tame the fastest inflation in a decade. The Bank of Thailand increased its one- day bond repurchase rate by a quarter point to 3.75 percent, the central bank said in Bangkok.

The yield on the 5.125 percent bond due in March 2018 fell 11 basis points to 4.57 percent, according to the Thai Bond Market Association.

To contact the reporter on this story: Wes Goodman in Singapore at wgoodman@bloomberg.net.

Last Updated: August 27, 2008 15:01 EDT

source:
India, Malaysia, Philippines, Thailand: Asia Local Bond Preview
Bloomberg -

Thursday, August 28, 2008

News Analysis: Chinese economy where to go post-Olympics

Special Report: 2008 Olympic Games

BEIJING, Aug. 28 (Xinhua) -- As the 2008 Beijing Olympics ended in a splendor of fireworks, concerns over a post-Games downturn for the Chinese economy re-emerged.

History shows that some host countries had experienced post-Olympic declines because investment dropped, such as Tokyo and Seoul.

Japan witnessed a drastic fall in growth the year after the 1964 Games, down to 5.2 percent from the year-earlier 13.1 percent. The Republic of Korea saw the rate slip from 10.6 percent to 6.7 percent in 1989.

Will China follow the same pattern? The world ponders.

WORRY OVER POST-GAMES ECONOMY JUSTIFIED OR NOT?

The capital's gross domestic product (GDP) was expected to register an average annualized 11.8 percent growth between 2005 and 2008, when the city was investing for the Games, said Chen Jian, the Beijing Olympic Economy Research Association deputy head.

The expected growth was, on average, 0.8 percentage points higher than the average rate for the five-year period from 2001 to2005.

Chen said investment for the Games had driven the city's growth by the biggest margin in 2007 -- 1.14 percent.

Official statistics showed organizers had spent 13 billion yuan (1.90 billion U.S. dollars) on construction of venues and another 280 billion yuan on urban infrastructure, such as to upgrade transport and improve the environment.

About 1.5 million new job opportunities were created between 2005 and 2008 along with the investment.

Other host cities, including neighboring Tianjin and Qingdao, also reported higher growth as they geared up for the Games. The sailing events in Qingdao helped boost regional economic growth by0.8 percent annually.

The positive impact of hosting the Games was there, but its leverage among the huge national economy was limited.

Beijing's gross domestic product (GDP) only accounted for less than 4 percent of the country's total, and Olympic-related factors were not major forces behind the growth in host cities to make a difference after the Games.

The annual investment of Beijing for the Olympics took up only 1 percent of the country's total between 2002 and 2007, according to statistics. About 718,300 square meters of Games-related construction was completed in 2007, 0.0139 percent of the total.

Zhang Xiaode, a China National School of Administration professor, depicted the situation in a vivid way. "If the Chinese economy is measured at a scale equal to the sea, the impact of a frog into the sea can almost be ignored."

A J.P. Morgan Chase report said the Chinese economy was not likely to slow in the post-Games period. It argued host countries of large economies that enjoyed fast growth were not vulnerable to such impact.

Justin Yifu Lin, the chief economist and vice president of the World Bank, had long held China would face no post-Olympic recession.

The size of the economy dwarfed the investment on building venues and infrastructure for the 2008 Beijing Olympics, he said in May.

The country had plenty of investment prospects as it was to host the World Expo in Shanghai and the Asian Games in Guangzhou in 2010, among other international events.

President Hu Jintao also openly endorsed the view in a joint interview with overseas journalists a week ahead of the Games.

"Preparations for the Games have undoubtedly boosted Beijing's economic and social development. However, the city's GDP accounts for a tiny part of China's total, so people should not overestimate the impact."

  CHALLENGES REMAIN

However, economists were still concerned of the "post-Games effect," because investment would inevitably drop and consumption that had come along with domestic and overseas tourists would decrease or even come to zero after the Games.

The impact could combine with other uncertainties such as the global slowdown and slack export demands to complicate the prospects of the economy; it was already under huge pressure of slower growth and economic restructuring, said Wang Yiming, a National Development and Reform Commission economist.

In the first half, the national economy expanded 10.4 percent -- 10.6 percent in the first quarter and 10.1 percent in the second. The world's fourth largest economy was on a track of slowing since the third quarter of last year registered 11.5 percent.

Meanwhile, the country's inflation rate eased to 6.3 percent in July from 7.1 percent in June, 7.7 percent in May and a peak of 8.7 percent in February. This was due to a series of measures including tightening monetary policies to rein in runaway prices.

But the country's decision makers are now in a dilemma of trying to seek a balance between fighting inflation and boosting economic growth in the rest of the year to ensure a steady and fast economic development.

Individual investors, who looked to stock and real estate markets to feel the pulse of the economy, were discouraged during the Olympics.

The country's stock market failed to live up to wide expectations of a bullish run, and reported a more than 15 percent decline in nearly a month before and after the Olympics.

Wang said the performance of the market was not directly linked to the Olympics. He believed share prices would go towards a more reasonable range as investor confidence returned on the back of a strong economy and steady profits revealed in the half-year reports of listed companies.

Property prices, which had been soaring since early 2001, seemed to have had come to a standstill since the end of last year. Many feared there could be a drastic fall in prices post-Olympics.

Olympic researcher Chen said the property market was affected by the Games as it had boosted Beijing housing prices.

He also believed the national market enjoyed good prospects in the long run. "More people will move into cities and create new demands, as the country's urbanization is below the world average."

STEADY GROWTH ANTICIPATED

Despite the challenges, economists agreed on the future prospects of the Chinese economy.

It would maintain a steady growth this year, economist Wang said. "The overheating risks that once threatened the Chinese economy had been pared following the country's macro-control measures; three major drivers of growth -- investment, consumption and exports -- would maintain a good momentum."

"The national economy is now on a normal track as overheating risks recede," said Fan Gang, a member of the Monetary Policy Committee under the People's Bank of China, the country's central bank.

"Risks of a sudden and drastic fall-off on the stock and real estate markets had already been largely reduced and energy prices had been adjusted. There is not much to worry about (in) the economy after the Games."

Analysts said China was expected to maintain a seven to eight percent growth, or even higher, for at least 15 to 20 years. They made the prediction on robust investment, great potential for further development and proper macro controls.

source: News Analysis: Chinese economy where to go post-Olympics Xinhua, China -

Malpass: Russia Gains at Our Expense

David Malpass, the former chief economist of Bear Stearns, says that the dollar, not high oil prices, is the real problem with the U.S. economy.

Malpass blames former Federal Reserve Board Chairman Alan Greenspan for starting the current easy money policy in Washington that Malpass says is responsible for the problems that companies and consumers are facing today.

"Banks lost a lot of money, but that hasn't stopped the global community. And I don't think it will," says Malpass, now senior economist at Encima Global.

"The dollar is strengthening, that's good news. But, 1 percent interest rates didn't make sense. We built a bubble," said Malpass, referring to unusually low interest rates under Greenspan.

"The problem is that the dollar has been flat on its back. That causes inflation and oil prices to be high, and makes Russia a strong global power. They keep gaining profits and wealth at our expense."

Malpass told Bloomberg Television that the Fed still hasn't completely changed its "dovish" policy. As a consequence, "we face significant hurdles" in the coming months.

Malpass says he, and other economists, have learned many lessons during the last year.

"I've not been shaken in the idea that the global economy is a pretty stable system. It was faced with a strong shock to the system. A hurricane if you will, a financial hurricane."

He is worried, however, that the interventions that Washington made in the economy, propping up Bear Stearns, for example, when it "got caught up in a violent run," will continue.

"Washington is constantly expanding. It has one of the fastest growing residential communities in the U.S. because they (the government) expand their powers in all areas," he says.

"The Fed is just one of the agencies. The Constitution did not set up checks and balances to check the Fed. The Fed is newer than that. It's hard to know where they will stop."


source: Malpass: Russia Gains at Our Expense
NewsMax.com, FL

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

SHAHRIR: Trial runs for supply system

BANGI: Several trial runs will be carried out to help the Domestic Trade and Consumer Affairs Ministry find the best way to supply essential items at low cost to the public.

Minister Datuk Shahrir Abdul Samad, who said this, added that the first study would be in Seberang Prai Utara this month, and two more were planned for an urban and a rural location later on.

The direct distribution mechanism would be implemented nationwide by next year if the tests proved it to be effective, he told reporters after opening the Malaysian Consumer and Family Economics Association’s 12th national conference at Universiti Tenaga Nasional yesterday.

Shahrir said the results from the trial runs would enable the Government to find out the most efficient way to distribute price-controlled essential items and food supplies to the public, especially low-income consumers in the rural areas.

Among subsidised items that would be included in the study were ST15 Super Tempatan 15% broken rice, flour, cooking oil and bread, he said.

Shahrir said a bread company has been asked to help transport the items from the manufacturers to the shops.

“My theory is that the bread-distribution method is the most efficient supply system for both the urban and rural areas,” he added.

“If distribution costs can be reduced, consumers will be able to purchase subsidised goods at controlled prices, and have adequate supply.

“The new system will help address the problems of uneven supply and price fluctuation of such items, especially in the rural areas.”

On fuel prices, Shahrir welcomed a suggestion to implement a fortnightly review.

However, he said, the Government would allow the monthly review of the pump prices to go on first before implementing other measures.

“The monthly review is the first mechanism to keep up with price fluctuations in the oil market,” he said. “If we can resolve technical problems or fine-tune the system, maybe we may use the fortnightly system after that.”

Shahrir was commenting on the call by Gerakan acting president Tan Sri Dr Koh Tsu Koon on Monday for a more frequent fuel price review.


CLICK HERE: Trial runs for supply system
Malaysia Star, Malaysia

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Asian Currencies Slump as Slowing Growth May Damp Asset Demand

Asian currencies slumped this week, led by Singapore's dollar, on concern slowing global growth will curb demand for the region's assets.

Singapore's currency posted its biggest weekly loss in a decade after the Straits Times newspaper yesterday cited Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam as saying the economy is moving toward a slowdown and growth is unlikely to rebound ``anytime soon.'' Nine of the 10 most-active Asian currencies outside of Japan fell this week.

``Tharman's dovish comments confirm expectations that the central bank won't be seeking any further policy tightening,'' said Emmanuel Ng, economist at Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp. in Singapore. ``Second-quarter GDP and the full-year growth numbers also run the risk of being revised downwards at Prime Minister Lee's speech later today.''

The local dollar weakened as much as 2.3 percent this week to S$1.4014 against the U.S. currency in Singapore, the biggest loss since the five days ended June 26, 1998, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The Philippine peso lost 0.3 percent this week to 44.335, Indonesia's rupiah dropped 0.8 percent to 9,170 and Thailand's baht declined 0.5 percent to 33.70. Vietnam's dong advanced 1.2 percent this week to 16,550.

Shipments Slow

Taiwan's dollar had its biggest weekly loss in more than two years on speculation slowing global economic growth will curb demand for consumer electronics produced by the island's exporters.

The currency fell for a ninth day, the longest losing streak since July 2005, after a government report Aug. 7 showed shipments grew last month at less than half the pace forecast by economists. Taiwan's gross domestic product may expand 4.78 percent this year, the slowest since 2005, according to a statistics bureau forecast released in May.

``The Taiwan dollar is finding it difficult to fight the strong U.S. dollar trend that's happening in the whole region,'' said Philip Wee, a currency strategist at DBS Group Holdings Ltd. in Singapore. ``Europe and Japan are all showing negative growth numbers, and the Asian region is seeing declining GDP.''

Taiwan's dollar fell 1.5 percent this week to NT$31.090 against the U.S. currency, according to Taipei Forex Inc.

Political Risks

Taiwan's export growth slowed to 8 percent in July from 21.3 percent the previous month, the government reported. Economists in a Bloomberg News survey forecast overseas sales, which account for about half of the island's GDP, would increase 17.1 percent.

Malaysia's ringgit fell for a sixth day, paring most of this year's advance, on concern that investors are selling local assets on heightened political risks and as the price of commodities the nation exports declined.

The currency finished its worst week in almost nine months as a decline in the nation's foreign-exchange reserves indicated global funds are taking their money out of the country.

Police this week charged opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim for engaging in ``unnatural sex,'' a crime in Muslim-majority Malaysia. Anwar pleaded not guilty, saying it was a ploy to derail his political comeback.

`No Surprise'

``It's no surprise if capital is flowing out especially from the equity market,'' said Carol Chan, a currency analyst in Hong Kong at CFC Seymour Ltd. ``Political unrest is also compounding the situation. For sure, commodity prices are trending down and that also will have an impact on exports.''

The ringgit fell 1.2 percent this week to 3.3015 against the U.S. dollar, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The currency, which started the year at 3.3070, has declined for a sixth straight day, the longest run since October 2006.

South Korea's won posted a second weekly decline as global funds sold local stocks and refiners imported oil, increasing demand for the dollar.

Losses in the currency were limited after the Bank of Korea raised its key interest rate to an eight-year high of 5.25 percent on Aug. 7 to curb inflation. Global investors have sold more local shares than they bought every day except five since June 1, according to stock exchange data.

``There's pent-up demand for the dollar from foreign stock sales and importers' deals,'' said Lee Yoon Jin, a currency dealer with state-run Korea Development Bank in Seoul.

Korea's currency fell 1.3 percent this week to 1,027.90 against the dollar, according to Seoul Money Brokerage Services Ltd. The decline widened this year's loss to 9.3 percent, the second-worst performance among the 10 most-active currencies outside of Japan.

click here: Asian Currencies Slump as Slowing Growth May Damp Asset Demand Bloomberg

Oil and inflation to set the trend

Mumbai: Oil and inflation will be the twin factors that will set the trend for Indian shares this week, with any further decline in energy prices bound to spur a rally and raise expectations for foreign portfolio inflows.

Momentum indicators on the charts point to strong short-term upswings, supported by rising volume and improving sentiment. But lingering concerns about growth, both domestic and global, and the prospect for slowing corporate earnings should keep gains on a tight leash.

"We have had an unexpected boost from falling oil prices, but the jury is undecided on the outlook," said equity trader Anmol Mehta.

Huge relief

India, which imports 70 per cent of its oil, has been grappling with 13-year high inflation for months as crude prices climbed to record highs. So the drop in oil prices to below $115 a barrel from highs of nearly $148 last month was a huge relief for the market.

"If you think the oil price is going down, then that's a great positive thing for India in the context of Asia, and I think we have seen the worst," Mark Matthews, chief Asia equity strategist at Merrill Lynch, said in Mumbai earlier this month.

He forecast oil prices to drop to $110 by the end of the year.

Stock trader Deepak Patel said if the fall in energy prices was maintained, it would cool inflation concerns and help set the stage for lower interest rates in the coming months.

"Any sign of inflation losing momentum will be a signal for the bulls to get their tails up," he said. "Battered financials and auto stocks should breathe easy."

However, inflation, which topped 12 per cent in late July for the first time since 1995, is unlikely to come down in a hurry and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) may not be over with its iron-fisted monetary policy.

"I think inflation could moderate to 8-9 per cent by March-end," C. Rangarajan, a former RBI governor who headed the prime minister's economic advisory panel, said last week, adding softening global crude prices would help ease domestic prices.

But he cautioned the tight policy stance of the central bank would continue unless there was a significant change in the price situation.

The Sensex rose 3.5 per cent last week to 15,167.82, led by financials such as ICICI Bank, carmaker Maruti Suzuki and engineering conglomerate Larsen & Toubro. It was the highest close in nearly two months, and the stretch of gains for five consecutive weeks was the best this year.

"The market is well poised to extend the rally (this) week," said Patel. "I expect foreign interest to start kicking in."

Foreign funds have been sellers of about $6.7 billion of stocks this year, but in one day last week they bought more than $400 million of equities indicating money managers would grab opportunities when they come by.

However, worries the global credit problem could spread to more countries and the US economic downturn could persist longer pose a threat to equity markets. Growth in India will be lower than earlier estimates, said Rangarajan, just before he stepped down as the head of the prime minister's panel last week.

"We are looking at a growth rate between 7.5-8.0 per cent this fiscal," he said. Last month, the RBI cut its growth forecast to 8 per cent from 8-8.5 per cent previously, but its prediction was above many private banks' outlook for the Indian economy.

- The writer is a journalist based in India.

Bourse plan: Investment shelved

Bombay's stock exchange scrapped a plan to buy a 26 per cent stake in the National Multi Commodity Exchange, the Hindu Business Line said, without saying where it got the information. The exchange's board made the decision on Friday after previously agreeing to buy the stake in the Ahmedabad-based bourse for Rs1 billion ($24 million), the newspaper said on Saturday.

click here: Oil and inflation to set the trend
GulfNews, United Arab Emirates

Saturday, August 09, 2008

Inflation breaches 12 per cent barrier

NEW DELHI, Aug. 7: Inflation breached the 12 per cent mark to hit a 13-year high of 12.01 per cent for the week ended 26 July, up from 11.98 per cent the previous week, as prices of food articles and manufactured products rose steeply.

The inflation rate stood at 4.70 per cent in the corresponding week last year. The government, meanwhile, revised the inflation rate for the week ended 31 May to 9.32 per cent as against 8.75 per cent as reported earlier.

Inflation, as measured by the wholesale price index (WPI), continued to stubbornly rise despite monetary and fiscal measures adopted by the government and the Reserve Bank of India.
The RBI had on 29 July hiked its key lending rate for the third time in two months, taking it to its highest in seven years to quell price pressures, dampen demand and keep inflation expectations in check. This move, analysts said, would have its impact two weeks from now.
The apex bank hiked the benchmark short-term rate by 50 basis points, about 25 bps more than what the market had expected, and the cash reserve ratio, the amount of funds banks must keep on deposit with it, by 25 basis points to nine per cent to absorb surplus cash in the banking system.

While some quarters fear the moves by government as well as the RBI would impact the growth figures in the next fiscal, Planning Commision deputy chairman, Mr Montek Singh Ahluwalia, maintained that inflation was a short-term challenge and would be able to slowdown the pace of the economy’s growth to eight per cent or marginally less in the current fiscal.
He said on the sidelines of a Ficci conference today, that the softening of crude prices in the international market was a “welcome development”, and hoped that the domestic price situation would stabilise in due course. He also expected inflation to fall below the 10 per cent mark by the end of this financial year.

click here:
Inflation breaches 12 per cent barrier
The Statesman, India

Friday, August 08, 2008

South Africa: High Food Prices Has Left Rural Communities Vulnerable

POOR people, especially in the rural areas, are finding it difficult to cope with the rocketing high food prices on their thin wages or social grants.

Higher food prices are leading poor people to shift to unbalanced diets, leaving them vulnerable to disease.

In the recent past months, food-price inflation has seen the price of basic foodstuffs increasing by 14 percent in South Africa, mostly due to increased prices of commodities such as fuel.

Chief Executive Officer National Agricultural Marketing Council, Ronald Ramabulana said this had lead poor people to shift to unbalanced diets leading them vulnerable to diseases and infections.

According to Mr Ramabulana, impoverished households are spending up to 50 to 60 percent of their overall budget on food.

Their earnings go firstly towards food then non-alcoholic beverages, followed by housing, water, electricity, gas, fuel and transport.

Government has noted with concern the plight of the poor in this regard and has changed its focus on strengthening the agriculture industry and giving more support to emerging farmers.

Government Spokesperson Themba Maseko said on Thursday the current situation was presenting an opportunity to develop a vibrant and sustainable agricultural programme to meet the country's food requirements and to make South Africa a net exporter of food.

Government will implement medium to long term strategies to deal with rising food prices.

These include measures to increase the country's food production capabilities through support and strengthening of small and emerging farmers and cooperatives; the development of agricultural trade and tariff policies; enhancing freight rail infrastructure to support the movement of agricultural products; implementation of the Llima/Letsema campaign and the creation of food gardens by communities and households.

These are some of the measures needed to increase food production and strengthening the value chain with a view to reducing reliance on food imports.

The national chairperson of the National Emergent Red Meat Producer's Organisation (NERPO), Wilson Muvhulawa said investment in agricultural infrastructure as part of local economic development could also assist in supporting farmers.

"Rural and agricultural development is crucial to combat national unemployment and poverty since the majority of people live in remote areas," he said.

Mr Muvhulawa said there was a need for investment in skills within the commercial agricultural sector, to improve management and entrepreneurial skills both of farm workers and managers in the primary sector and develop skills related to global food safety and quality standards.

A large percentage of employees are semi-literate and a need exists for Adult Based Education and Training programmes to improve their educational base as a platform for further learning. Courses currently exist, but are under funded and a sustainable funding model for providing such courses needs to be found, according to Mr Muvhulawa.

Agriculture and Land Affairs Minister, Lulu Xingwana, said recently that rising input costs globally seriously threatens the sustainability and the ability of the sector to supply enough food at affordable prices.

According to the minister, there are many reasons why input prices soared over the past year, but she singled out three factors.

"These are the ongoing hikes in oil and natural gas prices, high demand for fertiliser due to increased production for food and bio-fuel and high demand for food across the world," she said.

Between January 2006 and May 2008, maize and wheat grain prices rose by 114.1 and 107.1 percent, meanwhile, soybean and rice prices increased by 114.7 and 218.4 percent respectively.

Last week, the department held a three-day national agricultural consultative conference in Limpopo focusing on the increased productivity, optimum utilisation of agricultural, food security and rising food prices.

It was an opportunity for the agriculture sector to get together to thrash out ideas on how to further support farmers and fight the high food prices.

The proposed National Food Control Agency announced by President Thabo Mbeki in July, following the Cabinet Lekgotla will deal with issues such as strengthening the agro-processing industry, food safety, sanitary and phyto-sanitary certification and promote industry exports.

The agency will not regulate food prices, however, and the legislative framework will be finalised by the end of March 2009, after consultation with the relevant stakeholders.

The agency will not regulate food prices, however, and the legislative framework will be finalised by the end of March 2009, after consultation with the relevant stakeholders

High Food Prices Has Left Rural Communities Vulnerable
AllAfrica.com, Washington

Aviation Industry: Fuel Costs Force Airlines to Close Operations

From Aloha in Hawaii to Alpi Eagles in Italy, from promising upstarts like Silverjet to legends like Aeropostal of Venezuela, more than two dozen airlines have fallen off the international radar screen this year.

Some filed for bankruptcy protection. Others have sharply reduced operations or limp along as charters.

While each struggled with its own set of circumstances, the toll of 25 airlines - three to four times the number that the International Air Transport Association normally registers in a year - has mounted as oil price shocks roiled the industry. Among them, 17 have ceased operations altogether.

"Each region has its own challenges but the common denominator in the last six months is the price of oil," said Anthony Concil, a spokesman for the association.

"If the business is not doing well, the price of oil is the critical factor in pushing these carriers out of business."

Even airlines on firm financial footing are running into problems. Soaring fuel costs have driven Cathay Pacific Airways, based in Hong Kong, to a first-half loss, and the two main Japanese carriers are considering cutting routes.

Last month, the Australian flag carrier Qantas announced plans to shrink its workforce by 4 percent and canceled growth plans in what amounts to its fifth effort to rein in costs in three months. It has already increased fares and reduced capacity twice.

The second-biggest Australian airline, Virgin Blue, has also announced plans to cut capacity by about 3 percent, on top of a 6 percent reduction already planned for its 2008-9 financial year as rising fuel costs hurt business.

Among the severely devastated carriers is Aeropostal, a South American airline with a nearly 80-year history of surviving everything from a hijacking, fatal accidents, a three-month strike and the Depression.

But this year, Aeropostal, the Venezuelan airline whose predecessor's daring flights over the Andes inspired a 1939 movie by the American director Howard Hawks, ran into severe financial difficulties, a casualty of business regulations that tied its hands while fuel and other costs inexorably rose. It now operates a handful of domestic flights.

Descended from the airline founded by the French in 1929 to carry mail across the Atlantic, Aeropostal this year became one of 25 carriers that International Air Transport Association, or IATA, said could not pay their bills to an IATA clearing system have ceased scheduled operations since January.

The IATA financial system clears ticket sales for 450 carriers - most of the world's major scheduled airlines. About half of the global aviation industry's $480 billion turnover passes through the settlement system. Most of the rest is managed directly between airlines and passengers.

When an airline ceases payments or discontinues operations, it is removed from the IATA network, giving the association the best overview of the industry's health.

The IATA list does not include airlines like Oasis, a long- distance budget carrier that sold tickets directly to the public without IATA's involvement. Oasis, based in Hong Kong, went into bankruptcy in April. Such examples suggest that the roll call of grounded airlines could be longer still.

As for Aeropostal, "we just couldn't get out of the hole quickly enough," Nelson Ramiz, the former chief executive and a leading shareholder of Aeropostal, said by telephone from Caracas.

After cutting its fleet from 28 planes to 5, and halting all international flights except to Miami and a trio of Caribbean destinations, Ramiz gave up.

In January, 12 years after his family bought the airline from the Venezuelan government, he negotiated its conditional sale to new managers for $23 million.

Ramiz said that the airline - made famous by the French aviator Antoine de Saint Exupery, author of "The Little Prince," and immortalized in Hawks's movie "Only Angels Have Wings" - had been hamstrung by currency controls and was not making enough in dollars to cover the cost of refueling in Miami when he made the decision to sell.

While Air France-KLM has raised fares more than 17 times since 2004, fares on Aeropostal's domestic routes have not increased since 2005 even though landing fees, navigational charges and fuel and labor costs have climbed.

Carriers in an oil-rich country like Venezuela, where fuel prices paid by consumers and some businesses are controlled by the government, Ramiz said, are no more immune to the effect of the global oil price surge than other airlines.

"The price of fuel," he said, " goes up here every week based on the price of Brent," a standard oil price benchmark.

Oil prices that reached a peak of $147 a barrel in mid-July have recently fallen below $120, but are still about 60 percent above levels from last year. This, plus a credit crunch that is slowing economic growth and demand for aviation, particularly in the United States and Europe, has produced a whole new operating environment for airlines and put fragile balance sheets under enormous strain.

No region or type of airline has been spared. Trans-Atlantic business class-only operators like EOS, MAXjet and Silverjet have gone under alongside national flag-carriers like Cameroon Airlines in Africa.

Giovanni Bisignani, the IATA chief executive, warned this week that the aviation industry could lose $6.1 billion this year, compared to the $5.6 billion profit it made in 2007.

"Falling demand and rising costs," he said, "are reshaping the industry."

Originally published by The New York Times Media Group.

(c) 2008 International Herald Tribune. Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning. All rights Reserved.

Fuel Costs Force Airlines to Close Operations
RedOrbit, TX

Wednesday, August 06, 2008

Majlis Ekonomi ditubuh -- Badan penasihat bagi menangani masalah inflasi, kelembapan ekonomi – PM

PUTRAJAYA
5 Ogos
– Kerajaan hari ini menubuhkan Majlis Ekonomi yang berperanan sebagai badan penasihat bagi menangani masalah inflasi dan kelembapan ekonomi dunia yang memberi kesan kepada negara.... Berita Penuh


Keanggotaan 40

Prime Minister Dato Seri Abdullah Badawi
Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak,
International Trade and Industry Minister Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin,
Second Finance Minister Tan Sri Nor Mohamed Yakcop
Transport Minister Datuk Ong Tee Keat
Bank Negara governor Tan Sri Dr Zeti Akhtar Aziz,
Economic Planning Unit director-general Tan Sri Dr Sulaiman Mahbob,
CIMB chief executive Datuk Nazir Razak,
Cuepacs president Omar Osman,
Fomca president Datuk N. Marimuthu,
Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia vice chancellor Datuk Sharifah Hapsah Syed Hassan Shahabuddin.

Agriculture and Agro-Based Industry Minister Datuk Mustapa Mohamed
Entrepreneur and Cooperative DevelopmentMinister Datuk Noh Omar,
Human Resources Minister Datuk Dr S. Subramaniam
Information Minister Datuk Ahmad Shabery Cheek
Domestic Trade and Consumer Affairs Datuk Shahrir Abdul Samad
Prime Minister's Department Minister Tan Sri Amirsham A. Aziz
Chief Secretary to the Government Tan Sri Mohd Sidek Hassan,
Treasury secretary-general Tan Sri Dr Wan Abdul Aziz Abdullah,
Sabah state secretary Datuk Sukarti Wakiman and
Sarawak state secretary Datuk Amar Wilson Baya Dandot are also in it.

Representatives from the private sector and government-linked companies include
Public Bank chairman Tan Sri Thong Yaw Hong,
Lin Associates chairman and chief executive Tan Sri Dr Lin See Yan,
Institute of Strategic and International Studies chairman and chief executive Tan Sri Mohamed Jawhar Hassan,
Royal Selangor managing director Tan Sri Yong Poh Kon,
Khazanah Nasional Berhad managing director Tan Sri Azman Mokhtar and
RAM Consultancy Services executive chairman Tan Sri C. Rajandram.

Others include
Securities Commission chairman Datuk Zarinah Anwar,
Federal Flour Mills Berhad executive chairman Datuk Oh Siew Nam,
Universiti Malaya economic and administration faculty's Datuk Seri Panglima Andrew L.T. Sheng,
Felda Group managing director Datuk Mohd Bakke Salleh,
NadiCorp Holding Sdn Bhd executive chairman Datuk Mohd Nadzmi Salleh,
Kumpulan Symphony Bhd chief executive Datuk Azman Yahya,
Bernama chairman Datuk Seri Mohd Annuar Zaini,
Pan Malaysia Bus Operators Association president Datuk Mohamad Ashfar Mohamad Ali,


MRCB Group managing director Sharil Ridza Ridzuan and
Ethos & Company managing director Omar Mustapa.

Council secretariat head is Datuk Dr K. Govindan while Datuk
Dr Zainal Aznam Yusof and
Datuk Dr R. Thillainathan have been named as council working group members.

Sunday, August 03, 2008

A Green New Deal for our times

Banks wobbling, massive fuel price rises, the vulnerability of the food supply chain... it looks like a long, uncomfortable and shaky summer. Then there is an even more threatening problem: a biosphere threatened by potentially irreversible global warming.

Britain faces a 'triple crunch,' a combination of a credit-fuelled financial crisis, accelerating climate change and soaring energy prices underpinned by an encroaching peak in oil production. These threaten to develop into a perfect storm, the like of which has not been seen since Great Depression.

To help prevent this, a group of specialists in finance, energy and the environment has been meeting since early 2007. Something along the lines of our Green New Deal can, we believe, begin to stabilise the crisis. And we can also lay the foundations for low-carbon economies, rich in jobs and more based on independent sources of energy.

With food and energy insecurity set to rise, this will create a more stable economic environment in which there is likely to be a lot more local production and distribution, but will fit a pattern of global reform, where the goals of international poverty reduction and 'one-planet living' become more viable.

The deal combines economic stabilisation in the short term with longer-term restructuring of the financial, taxation and energy systems. It is a massive environmental transformation whose economic boost will insulate us against recession, while delivering the rapid transition needed if we are to play our role in averting runaway climate change.

First is a focus on the specific needs of the UK. This includes a vision for a low-carbon energy system that will include making 'every building a power station'. Involving tens of millions of properties, their energy efficiency will be maximised, as will the use of renewables to generate electricity. This will require a £50bn-plus a year crash programme.

Linked to this is the creation of an 'carbon army' of workers. The plan envisions hundreds of thousands of high- and lower-skilled jobs created in the UK. This will be part of a wider shift from an economy narrowly focused on financial services and shopping to one that is an engine of environmental transformation. Germany is already employing 250,000 in renewable energy alone.

Next, we need to ensure more realistic fossil fuel prices that include the cost to the environment, and are high enough to tackle climate change by creating the economic incentive to drive efficiency and bring alternative fuels to market.

At $10 a barrel, oil companies were in profit; at around $130, they are rolling in unearned cash. We advocate a version of the Norwegian approach, establishing an Oil Legacy Fund, paid for by a windfall tax on the profits of energy companies. The monies raised would help deal with the effects of climate change and smooth the transition to a low-carbon economy. Norway built up its oil surpluses to weave a safety net that at the last count was worth around £198bn.

But we need wide-ranging financial innovations and incentives if we are to assemble the billions that need to be spent. The focus should be on investments and regulations that not only finance the development of efficient energy infrastructure but also help to reduce demand for energy.

Vitally, we need much tighter controls on lending and the generation of credit. Very large banks make very large mistakes. Instead of institutions that are 'too big to fail', we need those small enough to fail without creating problems for depositors and the wider public.

Because of the banking system's growing inherent instability, we need to break up discredited financial institutions that have relied on huge amounts of public money to prop them up in the credit crunch. The Green New Deal calls for the forced demerger of large banking and finance groups. We need to return finance to its role as servant, not master, of the global economy. This means, in part, the restoration of policy autonomy to democratic government, and implies the reintroduction of capital controls.

Recent months have revealed how thin is the ice upon which our economic livelihoods depend. Highly abstract and complex derivative products and other exotic financial instruments have finally divorced the finance sector not just from the productive and social, core economies, but from any recognisable reality.

Behind collateralised debt obligations, is only thin air, wishful thinking and greed. All such exotic instruments should be subject to official inspection. Only those approved should be permitted to be traded.

Our proposal is a first word, not the last. If you can enhance the Green New Deal's response, please tell us.

· Andrew Simms is policy director and head of the climate change programme at the new economics foundation. This article is adapted from the report 'A Green New Deal: joined-up policies to solve the triple crunch of the credit crisis, climate change and high oil prices' available at www.neweconomics.org


A Green New Deal for our times
guardian.co.uk, UK

Food Supply: Ice cream floats sink under food and fuel costs

IT'S a sound that over the decades has set the pulses of millions of children racing. The unmistakeable jingle of an ice cream van inevitably results in pestered parents, a fevered hunt for purses and wallets, followed by a reckless dash into the street.
But a potentially lethal combination of rising food prices, the soaring cost of petrol and a liberal dose of summer showers means the ice cream van could shortly join milk floats on the endangered list.

Many of the biggest names in ice cream making north of the border say they have cut back on the ice cream van business and some are even predicting its extinction.
The typical price of a cone has recently increased by around 10p in a bid to cover costs but as the credit crunch worsens, and with little prospect of decent weather, customers are thin on the ground.

Reno Di Rollo, managing director of Di Rollo of Musselburgh, said: "We used to supply 11 or 12 vans every summer, but now there are only four or five regular vans and they are the ones that do it all year round.

"The good ones are steady enough if they have got a good established run, but it's the ones who just do it for the summer that are disappearing. They think they are going to make a fortune and it's just not true any more."

Di Rollo said big increases in the cost of powdered milk, an essential ingredient of Scottish ice cream, was a factor.

He said: "Skimmed powder was around £1,400 a ton last year and now it's £2,200 a ton. Some of the suppliers were up to £3,000 at one point.

"It's steadied off now but I don't see it coming down again. Also, sugar is fairly dear as well."

The other big ice cream firm in Musselburgh, Luca's, owns a fleet of vans. Director Michael Luca said: "A long time ago there used to be about 35 vans around East Lothian but it's probably less than 10 vans now.

"I have three vans but I'm lucky I have also got the café – it accounts for 60% of my sales now. Without it I would struggle to survive on just the ice cream.

"Ice cream vans are the last dinosaurs of the vans that used to go around the houses, and they are about to become extinct."

Scottish director of industry organisation the Ice Cream Alliance, Andrew Caldwell, said: "It's general talk amongst the traders. Everyone's complaining about prices. All we can do is try to find cheaper suppliers. Everyone has got to buckle down and take the hit."

Peter Crolla, managing director of the Crolla Ice Cream Company Ltd in Glasgow, said the weather was also hitting business. He said: "We had a terrible start to this month and that hit everyone's sales after a difficult summer last year. The last two weeks have been great and that's been a big bonus.

"But we could do with another six weeks of sun and it's looking mixed. Without the weather we will see more people struggling to get by."

Philip Smith, who operates an ice cream van round in the Borders, is one of hundreds of people selling the treats from vans this summer.

He said: "I'm carrying on in the business but my son has given up so I'm getting rid of his van.

"If I wasn't so passionate about ice cream I would give up too, but I've been in it since I was 15 years old and I love the work.

"I could name so many people that have been and gone with their ice cream vans in my immediate vicinity.

"There must be hundreds of people across the country that can't keep it going because they've come so close to the wire.

"There will come a time we will have to draw the line when the bills don't get paid. It's very much a matter of not sinking below that line."

Ice cream floats sink under food and fuel costs
Scotsman, United Kingdom

Equity funds records net outflows in July

MUMBAI: Emerging market equity funds clocked net outflows during the last week of July— the seventh time in eight weeks, according to the latest report by Emerging markets Portfolio Funds Research (EPFR).

Fund flows into Asia (excluding Japan) equity funds were robust, but this was offset by outflows from Europe Middle East Africa (EMEA), Latin America and the diversified Global Emerging Markets (GEM) equity funds.

Appetite for exposure to the bigger individual markets was again the main driver of flows into Asia (ex-Japan) equity funds, with China equity funds absorbing a net $476 mn for the week ending July 30 and India equity funds accounting for another $117 mn.

At the same time, investor sentiment towards Taiwan has cooled, the EPFR report says. Taiwan Country Funds have recorded six straight weeks of outflows as investors are worried about slowing export orders.

Latin America equity funds recorded their eighth successive week of net outflows, and EMEA equity funds their fifth successive week. Investors are fretting about the impact of slowing global growth on the demand for the commodities these regions export, the EPFR report said.

Those concerns also hit fund groups geared to individual markets: outflows from Russia Country Funds hit their highest level, in percentage terms, since early March 2007. US equity funds posted net inflows for the fifth time in seven weeks while Europe equity funds posted their first two week winning streak since April on the back of strong flows into exchange traded funds (ETFs). Japan equity funds, however, suffered net redemptions for the second time in three weeks as Japanese consumer confidence slipped to a 26-year low, the EPFR report said.

Flows into US equity funds, which totalled a net $5.1 bn, were once again driven by Large and Small Cap Blend ETFs. Consumer confidence in Japan is also at odds with the cautious optimism displayed in recent weeks by foreign portfolio investors.

“Energy-driven inflation, while it may drive some of the country’s vast pool of savings out of low yielding bonds, savings accounts and futons into Japan’s equity markets, has banished the last traces of the fragile rebound in domestic consumption we saw last year,” notes EPFR Global senior analyst Cameron Brandt.

A combination of short covering and another bout of anxiety about bank balance sheets hit Financial Sector Funds in late July, with investors removing a net $933 mn from these funds. Investors also pulled $279 mn out of the best performing sector fund group, Energy Sector Funds, after a month that saw the average price of crude oil and natural gas drop 9.6% and 32% respectively.

Fresh doubts about US, Europe and Asian growth prospects kept the pressure on Commodity Sector Funds, although they did post modest inflows, and spurred fresh outflows from Real Estate Sector Funds.

Equity funds records net outflows in July
Economic Times, India

Saturday, August 02, 2008

Malaysia to give new growth forecast at budget-report

KUALA LUMPUR, Aug 2 (Reuters) - Malaysia will register positive economic growth this year and it will be reflected in the forecast due to be unveiled during the tabling of the 2009 budget this month, state Bernama news agency said on Saturday.

Bernama, quoting Second Finance Minister Nor Mohamed Yakcop, said the Southeast Asian nation will not undergo a recession for the next two years despite the global slowdown as it was well diversified.

"We will announce the new growth target (for this year) officially on August 29 in the presentation of the Budget 2009," Nor Mohamed said. "Growth will be positive and significantly so."

The government has said that economic growth for 2008 will be closer to 5 percent, compared with its earlier forecast range of 5-6 percent due to a possible dip in consumption. Growth was 6.3 percent last year.

Inflation, at a 27-year high of 7.7 percent in June when the government cut petrol subsidies, could hover between 6 and 7 percent in July and possibly August before tapering off, Nor Mohamed said.

"This inflation we're having is a one-off inflation and it is a cost-push inflation, not demand-pull. So these are one-off. And for next year, the numbers won't be repeated," he said, adding that 2008 inflation should not go beyond 6 percent.

Nor Mohamed's comments come after Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi announced plans to implement a new petrol price formula from Sept. 1 and said he would put a cap on prices of 2.70 ringgit a litre and cut prices in line with falling crude oil prices. [ID:nKLR326420]

The country's target to cut the budget deficit to 3.1 percent may be difficult to achieve due to still-high global oil prices, rising government expenditure and soaring costs of infrastructure projects, Nor Mohamed said.

Malaysia to give new growth forecast at budget-report
Reuters India, India -

Sunday, July 27, 2008

Review only when oil price drops further or stabilises, says Shahrir

KUALA LUMPUR: Oil prices must stabilise or drop further before the Government can consider reducing pump prices, Domestic Trade and Consumer Affairs Minister Datuk Shahrir Abdul Samad said.

Shahrir said a review of domestic fuel prices depended on how consistent the price reduction remained despite the global crude oil price falling from a high of US$147 (RM470.40) to below US$125 (RM400) per barrel.

The dipping price was welcome news for the Government because it could save on fuel subsidy if the price fell further, he said.

“When the latest fuel price rise was announced in June, the market price of oil was at US$125 per barrel. The Cabinet is waiting to see whether the level can be maintained for long or even better, go down further,” he told reporters yesterday after launching the Consumers Day 2008 at the Putra World Trade Centre.

On whether Malaysia would allow the domestic fuel prices to float according to market prices, he said the Government was against this because a rapid upward trend of the global crude oil price would see a drastic increase of fuel sold at the pumps.

Shahrir added the Government’s early decision was to review fuel prices at year-end but this would again depend on the situation.

On the inflation rate, which more than doubled to 7.7% in June, Shahrir said the Government had expected this to occur due to the rising cost of two important components in the consumer price index – food and transport.

He said inflation was expected to increase for this month but would decrease after that.

He added that the rate was still under control because of subsidies and price control.

“Otherwise, it could go as much as two digits like in some countries,” he said.

On his meeting with petrol station operators on the two-tier pricing system for petrol at border towns, he said technical problems needed to be ironed out.

He also said petrol station owners were only allowed to take in more workers if the workers were local.

He added that the limit on two foreign workers working at the pump area remained.

Sunday July 27, 2008. The Star online.

BERITADARIGUNUNG: Shahrir is so concerned with government coffer. People do have coffers too, small but meaningful. Can he be more people sensitive? But he has drawn a line. "I am the government, you are the people or the rakyat". Huh? Shahrir looks at drop of crude oil price as saving to government He could have send the same message with more rakyat friendly. He must have forgotten for being much older albeit w.......r.

Shahrir turning into an Old Man?.. Creativity diminishing...

Be moderate in spending, consumption: Shahrir

KUALA LUMPUR: The Consumer Day celebration this year was a scaled down affair in keeping with the Domestic Trade and Consumer Affairs Ministry's message to the people to be moderate in their spending and consumption in bracing for the higher cost of living.

Minister Datuk Shahrir Abdul Samad said the theme Moderation for a Better Life (Kesederhanaan Menjamin Kesejahteraan) with the tagline Practice Sustainable Consumption (Amalkan Penggunaan Lestari) was timely and he wanted Malaysians to adopt moderation in their lifestyle.

To lead the way, he chose to scale down the event including reducing the number of exhibition booths instead of having sales carnivals and exhibitions. Emphasis was given to seminar and forums participated by consumer advocates.

The launch of the two-day celebration was also kept simple with an address by the minister.

"We should be moderate not only because of higher expenses but to me it is not the appearance and style that matter but the message we want to send at the events," he said.

The message was that moderation in spending, consumption and production was based on needs and was related to sustainable consumption and production.

Shahrir said he wanted the celebration's theme maintained for the whole of his tenure, saying that the message was good enough. "We only need to change the way we celebrate the event," he said.

With that he called on consumer groups and school consumer clubs to give inputs on how they want the celebrated to be held next time.

He also presented the Sustainable Consumer Award to social and environment activist Gurmit Singh, the Sustainable NGO Award to the Consumer Association of Malaysia and Sustainable School Consumer Club Award to SMK Sultan Abdul Jalil in Johor.

By JANE RITIKOS, Saturday July 26, 2008 MYT 8:12:51 PM.

BERITADARIGUNUNG: Of course, be moderate has been peoples choice. No doubt, otherwise everyone will live in deficit. Now Shahrir is becoming an old man, talking to sons and daughters and granchildren too. I dearly miss the sit-com when he poke fun at everything except ECM-Libra thing ...... But of course, politics is a career, therefore one must toe the line. Now it is too late to pick "kunci" or "kepala lembu" for a little by election in Johor Baru. Yea, everyone is getting older but not necessarily wiser.

Saturday, July 26, 2008

Bursa Malaysia Likely To See Volatile Trading Next Week

KUALA LUMPUR, July 26 (Bernama) -- Bursa Malaysia is expected to be rangebound next week as investors are likely to remain cautious in the earlier part of the week on concern of crude oil prices regaining strength, analysts said.

Phua Kwee Hock, technical analyst at SJ Scurities, said oil prices are likely to rebound up to US$140 per barrel in about two weeks' time, as the market has corrected a large part of it.

"The downside of oil should be limited as market has corrected a large part of it," Phua said, adding that it would lead to a rise in crude palm oil (CPO) related stocks.

"CPO futures for September is hovering around RM3,000. I think it is due for a rebound as well, maybe up to RM3,500," he said.

Phua said the benchmark Kuala Lumpur Composite Index (KLCI) is set to move between 1,120 and 1,154 points next week unless new leads emerged.

Bursa Malaysia Likely To See Volatile Trading Next Week
Bernama, Malaysia -


On Friday, share prices on Bursa Malaysia closed firmer on last-minute buying of select heavyweights, with the benchmark KLCI edging up 0.16 of a point to 1,141.75.

Throughout the week, the market rejoiced over falling crude oil prices. However, this led to a decline in CPO prices which affected the plantation stocks.

The market also saw investors took profit and remained on the sidelines ahead of the central bank's monetary policy committee meeting to look into interest rates as the inflation rate for June peaked at 7.7 percent, doubled May's 3.8 percent and above most expectations.

However, Bank Negara Malaysia announced on Friday that it would not be revising the overnight policy rate, even after inflation rates touched a 27-year high.

"They will probably have to increase interest rates at the next meeting," Phua said.

According to him, Malaysia's economy is in a slowing phase and sectors like construction may be hit by rising prices of raw materials.

On a Friday-to-Friday basis, the KLCI gained 36.71 points to 1,141.75 from 1,105.4 last Friday.

The Industrial Index rose 86.81 points to 2,431.89 from 2,345.08 and the Finance Index increased 389.27 points to 8,822.25 from 8,432.98 while the Plantation Index lost 133.91 points to 6,222.0 from 6,355.91.

In the Financial Times Stock Exchange-Bursa Malaysia (FTSE-BM) Index series, the FBMEmas went up 220.16 points to 7,566.77 from 7,346.61, the FBM30 advanced 237.31 points to 7,354.1 from 7,116.79, the FBM2BRD gained 120.75 points to 5,387.26 from 5,266.51 and the FBMMdq added 76.93 points to 4,230.42 from 4,153.49.

Turnover rose to 2.228 billion shares valued at RM4.937 billion from 1.631 billion shares valued at RM4.138 billion last week.

The Main Board volume increased to 1.972 billion units worth RM4.858 billion from 1.361 billion units worth RM3.491 billion previously.

Volume on the Second Board was higher at 117.767 million shares worth RM67.97 million from 92.315 million shares worth RM67.278 million last Friday.

On the Mesdaq Market, volume went up to 111.686 million units valued at RM20.957 million from 18.785 million units valued at RM18.419 million previously.

Call warrants rose to 126.393 million shares worth RM28.585 million from 97.195 million shares worth RM2.51 million previously.

Direct business deals increased to 284.158 million units valued at RM677.029 million from 161.691 million units valued at RM175.78 million last Friday.

-- BERNAMA

Malaysia's central bank raises 2008 inflation forecast but keeps interest rates steady

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia: Malaysia's central bank hiked its annual inflation forecast to at least 5.5 percent for this year, but it held back on raising interest rates amid worries about shrinking financial growth.

Bank Negara Malaysia said the country's economy performed well in the first half of 2008 but faces sterner challenges in the next 12 months because "both the risks to higher inflation and slower growth have increased tremendously."

Average inflation is projected to range between 5.5 percent and 6 percent for this year, the bank said in a statement late Friday after a monetary policy meeting. Its previous prediction was 4.2 percent.

The new forecast came two days after the government announced consumer prices spiked by 7.7 percent in June compared with the same month last year. It was the steepest climb in 27 years, spurred by the government's move to increase retail gasoline prices by 41 percent in June.

The central bank noted that higher fuel prices have pushed up costs of food and transport, but it stressed that its immediate concern "is to avoid a fundamental economic slowdown that would involve higher unemployment."

for full, click here: Malaysia's central bank raises 2008 inflation forecast but keeps ...
International Herald Tribune, France

Monday, July 21, 2008

Malaysia experiencing 7 percent inflation

by Peter Charalambous

Malaysia’s inflation is estimated to reach up to 7 percent in June and July, although Finance Minister Nor Mohamed Yakcop has said today that the rate should not exceed 5 percent for the whole of 2008, as the June-July rate will be higher, but he expects it will be contained through the rest of the year.

Nor Mohamed did not reveal the central bank’s likelihood of any further changes in interest rates even though the central bank said annual inflation probably topped 6.0 percent in June, as the government’s policy on interest rates is biased towards accommodative growth promotion.

In contrast, neighbouring countries Thailand and Indonesia have had to increase borrowing costs to counter the affect of increasing fuel and food prices.

Malaysia, which has shown similar signs of inflation, was pushed by a 41 percent increase in the price of oil but despite these gains, interest rates have remained unchanged since 2006.

The central bank will discuss the risks to growth at its policy meeting on July 25 and a monetary response to the near record inflationary pressure may be implemented in order to curb what is a 26-year high, as inflation touched 6.1 percent back in May 1982.

Despite this, the government is still optimistic that Malaysia’s economic growth for 2008 will still be around 5 percent and remains within the range given by the central bank back in March.

full here: Malaysia experiencing 7 percent inflation Daily Investment Market News from London

and read these too

1. Minister Says Malaysia's Inflation To Reach 7% In June, July
RTT News, NY

2.
TFN NEWS BRIEFING: Macroeconomics highlights to 10:10 BST
Hemscott, UK

3.
Hong Kong Inflation Accelerates to 6.1% on Food Costs (Update1)
Bloomberg

and one may want to read this too :-

...XXX Sex, lies, murder and Malaysian politics
United Press International, Asia, China