Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Businesses to pass on savings from stronger ringgit by cutting prices




PETALING JAYA: Consumers can expect prices of goods to drop by the year-end, bringing a bit more cheer during the festive season as a stronger ringgit makes it less costly for businesses to stock up on inventories.

Several trade associations said the savings would be passed through to consumers at the earliest by the end of the year but prices would definitely be lower by Chinese New Year.

The ringgit has been strengthening throughout the year in tandem with other currencies in the region and was at the highest level this year when it settled at 3.08 to the US dollar last Friday.

While it has weakened recently, currency strategists expect the ringgit to trade at between 3.10 and 3.15 to the greenback for the rest of the year.

An economist with a local investment bank pointed out that the ringgit could have strengthened even further if there had been no interventions over the past few months.

Malaysian Retailer-Chains Association president Datuk Tay Sim Kim told StarBiz that with the ringgit’s current strength, consumers could expect prices to drop in two to three months.

“This is assuming that most businesses have an average 60 days’ worth of stock, which will mean that by the end of the year or latest by Chinese New Year, prices will be lower,” he said.

The Association of the Computer and Multimedia Industry president Shaifubahrim Saleh said there could be a price advantage as inventories depleted and businesses stocked up with cheaper imported products.

“We may see over the next few months some lowering in the prices but this will really depend on the market and how aggressive retailers are,” he said, adding that margins in the industry were already low.

Shaifubahrim said the other factor determining whether business could meet consumer expectations of lower prices was in the inventory cycle.

“There may be a disconnect between the strengthening ringgit and when businesses order their stocks, so there may not be any savings passed through so soon,” he said.

Saturday, October 16, 2010

More affordable mobile phones for all





PETALING JAYA: The removal of the 10% sales tax on ordinary mobile phones should make the phones more affordable especially to first-time buyers, but don’t expect a huge drop, experts say.

The idea is to streamline the tax treatment for ordinary phones since there is no sales tax for smartphones and those with Internet applications. Hence, there will be no more taxes on mobile phones.

Yesterday Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak announced that ordinary phones would be exempted from the 10% sales tax.

The mere mention of the abolishment of the 10% sales tax got a lot of people excited and those providers that were selling the iPhone were inundated with enquiries. Some people were eager to book the iPhone for they thought the prices would come down.

This is not what the players have in mind as the prices of smartphones are not likely to come down; only the ordinary mobile phone pricing will come down.

The abolishment allows first-time users to buy a phone and since cellular coverage is being extended to a wider portion of the population, the potential of more people, especially students and those in the rural areas getting connected is there.

It also allowed the players to bundle the phones since there was no sales tax, said an analyst.

“It creates a level playing field for mobile operators. Currently the market for mobile phones is dominated by independent merchants, or what we call small shops. The suspicion is that they do not pay taxes and under declare. That has been cited as a key disadvantage for big mobile phone operators to do bundling. So this development is positive for mobile operators,’’ said the analyst.

Nokia Singapore/Malaysia & Brunei general manager Vlasta Berka said that as ‘‘more mobile devices are able to access the Internet, including the more affordable models, the dividing line between “ordinary” phones and feature phones is getting smaller. “Furthermore, in today’s era of connectivity and with the continued rise in social media, we have always viewed mobile technology as a staple and a must-own, rather than a luxury,’’ he said.

UEM, EPF offer RM23b for PLUS


The deal could be Malaysia's largest merger and acquisition since Sime Darby's RM31.4 billion mega-merger in late 2007.



TWO state-owned companies, UEM Group Bhd and pension fund Employees Provident Fund (EPF), announced a RM23 billion takeover offer for highway operator PLUS Expressways Bhd (5052) late yesterday.

The deal, which works out to RM4.60 a share, could be the country's largest merger and acquisition since Sime Darby Bhd's RM31.4 billion mega-merger in late 2007.

The offer was made for PLUS' asset and liabilities, UEM and the EPF said in a joint statement.

The announcement came after Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak disclosed in his Budget 2011 speech yesterday that there would be no toll rate hikes on four highways owned by PLUS for the next five years.
The four highways are the NSE, Elite, Linkedua and Butterworth-Kulim Expressway.

Analysts said the offer price is fair and believe that minority shareholders will go for it.

"It's actually quite fair and close to our fair value price of RM4.70. We don't think there'll be any strong objection from minority shareholders," said Wong Chew Hann, an analyst that tracks PLUS' shares at Maybank Investment Bank Research.

PLUS is the concessionaire for most of the highways in the country, including the heavily-used North-South Expressway (NSE) and the North Klang Valley Expressway.

A co-investment vehicle will be set up to take over PLUS' business, with UEM holding a 51 per cent stake in it and EPF, the remaining 49 per cent.

After the buyout, a special dividend will be paid out to minority shareholders and PLUS will be delisted.

PLUS, in a statement to the stock exchange, said its board would appoint relevant advisers and decide on the next course of action.

Other parties that had been vying for PLUS included privately-owned Asas Serba Sdn Bhd. MMC Corp Bhd, owned by tycoon Tan Sri Syed Mokhtar Al-Bukhary, had also put in a proposal for UEM Group.

The deal yesterday is seen to be motivated by the government's need to balance "a reduction in toll subsidies against public dissent on toll rate hikes", said an analyst from ECM Libra Investment Research.

"We believe an exercise to acquire PLUS would involve more manageable toll rates post-takeover," the analyst wrote in a report yesterday.

Under the present concession agreement, toll operators are allowed scheduled rate hikes. If the government decides against a rate hike whenever one is scheduled in a particular year, it has to compensate the toll operator.

UEM and EPF said their takeover offer is subject to a successful restructuring of the concession agreement.

UEM Group managing director Datuk Izzaddin Idris said if the bid is successful, PLUS would continue to be run by the same group of professionals.

Meanwhile, the EPF deputy chief executive officer for investments Shahril Ridza Ridzuan said ownership by EPF and UEM will allow PLUS to improve its financial performance.


Read more: UEM, EPF offer RM23b for PLUS http://www.btimes.com.my/Current_News/BTIMES/articles/eeepf-2/Article/index_html#ixzz12VvcC898

Highlights of Budget 2010/2011 Malaysia



Resource: http://www.theedgemalaysia.com/highlights/175432-highlights-of-budget-20102011.html

* Government will not raise toll rates for PLUS-owned highways for next 5 years with immediate effect.

* To review existing service tax rates and to generate additional tax revenue for national development, the government proposed the rate on all taxable services to be increased from 5% to 6%, effective Jan 1, 2011

* To widen the tax base, then government proposed that service tax of 6% be imposed on paid television broadcasting services. This service tax is charged on the monthly subscription fees on paid TV broadcasting services with effect from Jan 1, 2011.

* The government has proposed to scrap the sales tax of 10% sales tax on all types of mobile phones, effective Oct 15, 2010, including personal digital assistants (PDAs).

* Mass Rapid Transit in Greater KL to be implemented in 2011, estimated private sector investment is RM40 billion and to be completed by 2020. Upon completion, the utilization rate of public transport is expected to increase to at least 40%.

* Proposed stamp duty exemption of 50% be given on instruments of transfer of residential properties, not exceeding RM350,000 from Jan 1, 2011. S&P must be executed between Jan 1, 2011 to Dec 31, 2012. Residential property includes terrace houses, condominiums, apartments or flats.

* Stamp duty exemption of 50% be given on loan agreements for residential property priced not exceeding RM350,000.

* Permodalan Nasional Bhd to undertake integrated development of the Warisan Merdeka which will include a 100-storey tower costing RM5 billion. The tower will be completed in 2015. The project will retain Merdeka Stadium and Stadium Negara.

* The EPF to undertake development of the RM10 billion Sungai Buloh project at the current Malaysian Rubber Board land covering an area of 2,680 acres.

* Government to launch private pension fund in 2011 which will benefit private sector employees and the self employed.

* Government is allocating RM857 million for local companies to invest in high value-added activities, particularly in Penang and the Kulim High-tech Park in Kedah.

* GLICs be allowed to increase their investments overseas. EPF will be allowed to increase the investments from 7% now to 20%.

* Securities Commission to offer 3 new stockbroking licences to eligible local, foreign, or JV companies

* Government to allocate RM146 million to support oil, gas energy sector, expand downstream.

* Proposed private investment of RM6 billion in oilfield services, equipment centre in Johor.

* Petronas plans a RM3 billion regasification project in Malacca, to be operational by 2012.

* Government allocates RM150 million to provide rebates on monthly electricity bills below RM20.

Read more on our coverage of the 2010/2011 Budget:

1 Budget 2010/2011: Comments by banks, Bursa Malaysia

2 Budget 2010/2011: Major infrastructure boost

3 Budget 2010/2011 Muhyiddin: Budget for the people, not election

4 Budget 2010/2011: PR asks what next after appeasing budget

5 Budget 2010/2011: Reactions from the industry

6 Budget 2010/2011: Reaction from CIMB Economic Research, RAM, MDeC

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Palm oil stocks grease up FBM KLCI



KUALA LUMPUR: The FTSE Bursa Malaysia KL Composite Index (FBM KLCI) climbed on Wednesday, led by plantation stocks on higher palm oil prices and optimism that the upcoming Budget 2011 to be tabled this Friday may contain additional incentives to lure new investment and boost the economy.

At 9.35am, the benchmark index advanced 5.77 points, or 0.4% to 1,492.34 points. Rising stocks led losers 273 to 88, while 163 counters were unchanged.

“Essentially, amid signs of resilience and with market momentum still on the upside, we reckon the FBM KLCI could be on its way to test the immediate resistance target of 1,495 ahead,’ HwangDBS Vickers said in its morning note.

Palm oil planter Kuala Lumpur-Kepong climbed 14 sen, or 0.8% to RM18.02 - the stock’s highest in more than two years. Rivals IOI Corp rose 9 sen, or 1.6%, while diversified group Sime Darby gained 7 sen, or 0.8% to RM8.83.

Crude palm oil (CPO) futures on Bursa Derivatives settled at RM2,900 a tonne yesterday, a pull back following 6% surged on Tuesday that lifted the benchmark contract to its highest in 26-month high on Tuesday.

Meanwhile, shares in Star Publications was up 24 sen, or 6.4% to RM3.96 after the newspaper publisher announced a special dividend payout of 52.6 sen yesterday.

Overseas, Japan’s Nikkei 225 index surged 1% to 9,486 points, while key indices in Korea, Singapore and Australia were up by 0.6% each.

On Wall Street. the Dow Jones Industrial was up 10 points, or 0.1% to 11,020 points, but the broader S&P 500 Index gained 0.4% to 1,169 points.

Saturday, October 9, 2010

Soros: China must fix the global currency crisis




Comments by George Soros, which appeared in the Financial Times, Oct 8, 2010

I share the growing concern about the misalignment of currencies. Brazil's finance minister speaks of a latent currency war, and he is not far off the mark. It is in the currency markets where different economic policies and different economic and political systems interact and clash.

The prevailing exchange rate system is lopsided. China has essentially pegged its currency to the dollar while most other currencies fluctuate more or less freely. China has a two-tier system in which the capital account is strictly controlled; most other currencies don't distinguish between current and capital accounts. This makes the Chinese currency chronically undervalued and assures China of a persistent large trade surplus.

Most importantly, this arrangement allows the Chinese government to skim off a significant slice from the value of Chinese exports without interfering with the incentives that make people work so hard and make their labor so productive. It has the same effect as taxation but it works much better.

This has been the secret of China's success. It gives China the upper hand in its dealings with other countries because the government has discretion over the use of the surplus. And it protected China from the financial crisis, which shook the developed world to its core. For China the crisis was an extraneous event that was experienced mainly as a temporary decline in exports.

It is no exaggeration to say that since the financial crisis, China has been in the driver's seat. Its currency moves have had a decisive influence on exchange rates. Earlier this year when the euro got into trouble, China adopted a wait-and-see policy. Its absence as a buyer contributed to the euro's decline. When the euro hit 120 against the dollar China stepped in to preserve the euro as an international currency. Chinese buying reversed the euro's decline.

More recently, when Congressional legislation against Chinese currency manipulation emerged as a real threat, China allowed its currency to appreciate against the dollar by a couple of percentage points. Yet the rise in the euro, yen and other currencies compensated for the fall in the dollar, preserving China's advantage.

China's dominant position is now endangered by both external and internal factors. The impending global slowdown has intensified protectionist pressures. Countries such as Japan, Korea and Brazil are intervening unilaterally in currency markets.

If they started imitating China by imposing restrictions on capital transfers, China would lose some of its current advantages. Moreover, global currency markets would be disrupted and the global economy would deteriorate.

Internally, consumption as a percentage of GDP has fallen from an already low 46 per cent in 2000 to 35.6 per cent in 2009, as China expert Michael Pettis has shown. Additional investments in capital goods offer very low returns. From now on, consumption must grow much faster than GDP.

Thus both internal and external considerations cry out for allowing the renminbi to appreciate. But currency adjustments must be part of an internationally coordinated plan to reduce global imbalances.

The imbalances in the US are the mirror image of China. China is threatened by inflation, the US by deflation. At nearly 70 per cent of GDP, consumption in the US is too high. The US needs fiscal stimulus enhancing competitiveness rather than quantitative easing that puts upward pressure on all currencies other than the renminbi.

The US also needs the renminbi to rise in order to reduce the trade deficit and alleviate the burden of accumulated debt. China, in turn, could accept a higher renminbi and a lower overall growth rate as long as the share of consumption is rising and the improvement in living standards continues.

The public in China would be satisfied, only exporters would suffer and the currency surplus accruing to the Chinese government would diminish. A large rise would be disastrous, as Premier Wen says, but 10 percent a year should be tolerable.

Since the Chinese government is the direct beneficiary of the currency surplus, it would need to have remarkable foresight to accept this diminution in its power and recognize the advantages of coordinating its economic policies with the rest of the world. It needs to recognize that China cannot continue rising without paying more attention to the interests of its trading partners.

Only China is in a position to initiate a process of international cooperation because it can offer the enticement of renminbi appreciation. China has already developed an elaborate mechanism for consensus building at home. Now it must go a step further and engage in consensus building internationally. This would be rewarded by the rest of the world accepting the rise of China.

Whether it realises it or not, China has emerged as a leader of the world. If it fails to live up to the responsibilities of leadership, the global currency system is liable to break down and take the global economy with it. Either way, the Chinese trade surplus is bound to shrink but it would be much better for China if that happened as a result of rising living standards rather than a global economic decline.

The chances of a positive outcome are not good, yet we must strive for it because in the absence of international cooperation the world is heading for a period of great turbulence and disruptions.

The writer is chairman of Soros Fund Management LLC

CIMB eyes double-digit growth in SME loans




CIMB Group Holdings Bhd, which is implementing a transformation programme in its small and medium enterprise (SME) segment, is targeting double-digit growth in SME loans next year, a reverse from the yearly contraction in the past four years.

The bank, which currently has about 9 per cent market share in SME loans, expects to grow the share to "low- to mid-teens in the next couple of years".

Group chief executive Datuk Seri Nazir Razak said in the first phase of the transformation, the bank focused more on repairing asset quality than growing the asset.

He said CIMB used to have high non-performing loans (NPLs) in the SME sector, of almost 20 per cent.
"Now, it is no longer a problem because the NPL ratio has dropped sharply, we have also strengthened the credit process (and) now we are ready for Phase Two of the transformation.

"I think in 2011, we will be looking at a double-digit loan growth in the SME sector, from the contraction of 5 to 6 per cent over the last four years," Nazir told a news conference after the launch of SME Solutions Expo 2010 by Deputy Domestic Trade, Cooperatives and Consumerism Minister Datuk Rohani Abdul Karim in Kuala Lumpur.

SME loans account for about 15 per cent of CIMB's loan book. Nazir said the NPLs for its SME segment has dropped to 3 per cent.
In the first half of this year, CIMB Bank registered slower contraction in SME loans and a turnaround is anticipated by year-end.

The second phase of the bank's transformation includes better customer engagement, strengthening of the product suite, specialised lending programmes and decentralisation that allows small businesses to apply loans from CIMB branches.

"So, through various initiatives, we are quite confident that in 2011, our SME loans can grow quite rapidly," he said.

Nazir said CIMB, which has presence in eight out of 10 Asean countries, had established regional desks.

He said since the desk was launched six months ago, more customers from Thailand have sought the service as they are interested to set up businesses in Indonesia.

Nazir called on local SMEs to take advantage of the economic growth potential in Indonesia by utilising CIMB's expertise in the regional markets.

Meanwhile, Rohani said in the coming one year, the ministry will be organising a series of roadshows to promote Made-in-Malaysia products.

The roadshows are aimed at bridging the supply by thousands of SMEs in the country and the untapped demand from neighbouring countries.

She urged SMEs to participate in the programmes organised by the ministry, including franchise, direct-selling and SME initiatives.

Source: Business Times