Showing posts with label free trade zone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label free trade zone. Show all posts

Monday, August 19, 2013

NEWS,19.08.2013



Rare diamond to go under the hammer


A rare round blue diamond will go under the hammer in Hong Kong in October, with auctioneers hoping the sale will fetch a record-breaking $19m despite fears over the slowing Chinese economy.

Auction house Sotheby's expect the 7.59-carat fancy vivid blue diamond, which is about the size of a shirt button, to set a new record for price-per-carat.

Quek Chin Yeow, Sotheby Asia's deputy chairperson, said Hong Kong was the natural venue to sell the gem, known as "The Premier Blue", with collectors expected to fly in from all over the world.

"While there is a slowdown (in Chinese economy), the number of top-level collectors are still there," he told AFP.

"We have been selling very well in
Hong Kong."

Jewellery auctions

Hong Kong has become a centre for jewellery auctions thanks to growing wealth in China and other parts of the region, as well as the region's increasing taste for art.

But there are fears for the future of the Chinese economy, the world's second largest, where growth fell to 7.8% in 2012 - its slowest pace in 13 years.

Blue diamonds seldom hit the market and have been coveted by royals and celebrities for centuries, while a round cut is rarely used in coloured stones because of the high wastage.

The most famous example of a blue diamond is the "Hope Diamond", which was bought by King Louis XIV of
France in the 17th Century.

The term "fancy" is used to describe a diamond of intense colour, while a gem's saturation grading ranges from light to vivid for coloured diamonds.

The Premier Blue will go up for auction on October 7. Quek said the owner wanted to remain anonymous.

In April, a rare 5.3-carat fancy deep-blue diamond was sold for £6.2m ($9.5m) at a
London auction, then setting a record for price-per-carat at $1.8m.

China bans more dairy products


More New Zealand milk products sold to China have been banned after elevated levels of nitrates were found, raising further concerns over quality and testing in the world's largest dairy exporter in the wake of a contamination scare earlier this month.
New Zealand's agricultural regulator said on Monday it has revoked export certificates for four China bound consignments of lactoferrin manufactured by Westland Milk Products after higher  than acceptable nitrate levels were found by tests in China.
Two of the four consignments had been shipped to China but had not reached consumers, New Zealand's Ministry of Primary Industries (MPI) said.
"Any food safety risk to Chinese consumers is negligible because the quantities of lactoferrin used in consumer products was very small, meaning the nitrate levels in those products would easily be within acceptable levels", Scott Gallacher, the acting director-general of the MPI, said in a statement.
The announcement comes just weeks after Westland's much bigger competitor, Fonterra, said some of its dairy ingredients were contaminated with a botulism-causing bacteria. This prompted a recall of infant formula products, sports drinks and other products in China, New Zealand and other Asia-Pacific nations.
"All of the product has been located, none of it has entered the retail food chain," Westland Chief Executive Rod Quin told . "We're well aware of the wider context of the issue and related concerns, so we've acted to make sure the product doesn't go any further."
China's top quality watchdog said it had halted all imports of the product from Westland and asked other New Zealand dairy companies exporting lactoferrin to provide nitrate test reports.
The General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine of China urged the New Zealand government to thoroughly scrutinise its dairy companies as well as their products to ensure the safety of exports to China, New Zealand's top dairy market.
Affected batches
The four consignments were derived from two affected batches of lactoferrin, a naturally occurring protein found in milk, manufactured by Westland at its Hokitika factory on the country's South Island.
Initial investigations pointed to contamination by cleaning products which contain nitrates that were not property flushed from the plant, Quin said.
Privately owned Westland makes about 120 000 tonnes of dairy product each year, exporting the majority. Its production pales in comparison with that of Fonterra, which exports 2.5 million tonnes of product.
ANZ agricultural economist Con Williams said that the 390 kg of affected Westland product was much smaller than the 38 tonnes of contaminated product produced by Fonterra. As a result, he expected it would have limited impact on global demand for New Zealand dairy products.
"The timing isn't ideal. There's heightened concern around food safety issues at the moment especially in the dairy sector in light of the Fonterra issue two weeks ago," Williams said.
"But in terms of the actual issues, it doesn't seem to be substantial ... It looks like only a very small amount of product was affected and it doesn't seem to be a food safety issue."
The two batches of lactoferrin showed nitrate levels of 610 and 2 198 parts per million, respectively, above the New Zealand maximum limit of 150 parts per million.
Westland exported one batch directly to a Chinese distributor, which sold the product on as an ingredient for other dairy products. The second batch was supplied to New Zealand's Tatua Co-operative Dairy Company, and also exported to China.
"MPI, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade and the companies concerned are working closely with the Chinese authorities on this issue," Gallacher said.
There was no affected lactoferrin used in products in New Zealand or exported elsewhere.
New Zealand relies on diary exports for about a quarter of its NZ$46bn ($37bn) in annual export earnings.

New Zealand plans tainted dairy probe


New Zealand on Monday announced plans for a government inquiry into how ingredients made by dairy giant Fonterra became contaminated with a botulism-causing bacteria, as the country tries to salvage its reputation as an exporter of safe agricultural products.
The inquiry, to be held alongside two internal Fonterra investigations and another by the country's agricultural regulator, will examine how the potentially contaminated products entered the international market and whether adequate regulatory practices were in place to deal with the issue.
"This will provide the answers needed to the questions that have been raised about this incident, both domestically and internationally," said Primary Industries Minister Nathan Guy, who is leading the inquiry along with Food Safety Minister Nikki Kaye.
"It is also an important step in reassuring our trading partners that we take these issues seriously," he said in a statement.
The contamination announced earlier this month has led to product recalls in countries from China to Saudi Arabia.
Fonterra, the world's largest dairy exporter, has come under attack at home and abroad for dragging its feet in disclosing the discovery of the bacteria.
Fonterra chief executive Theo Spierings welcomed the inquiry, saying in the statement that the company would provide all necessary information.
The inquiry will be expected to provide an interim report in around three months.
New Zealand depends on the dairy industry for a quarter of its total exports. China is a major export market for New Zealand's dairy products.
Foreign Affairs Minister Murray McCully is visiting Beijing this week in to smooth relations with the country's biggest milk powder customer, and Prime Minister John Key has said he plans to visit China later this year to discuss the contamination issue after the inquiry results are complete.

Greece sacks privatisation agency chief


Greece dismissed the chairperson of its privatisation agency on Sunday after a newspaper reported that he travelled on the private plane of a businessman who just bought a state company.
Stelios Stavridis is the second head of HRADF to leave in less than six months, reigniting controversy around Greece's ailing privatisation programme which is a key part of its international bailout.
Delays and privatisation receipt shortfalls are a constant headache for the European Union and the International Monetary Fund, which bankroll Greece's €240bn rescue.
The lenders said last month that they would review the way HRADF was operating, after it emerged that the agency would miss its 2013 revenue target by about €1bn.
"Finance Minister Yannis Stournaras asked today for the resignation of HRADF chairperson Stelios Stavridis," the finance ministry said in a brief statement.
A finance ministry official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told that Stavridis's resignation was effective immediately.
The official said the dismissal followed a report in Proto Thema on Saturday that Stavridis travelled last week on the private plane of shipowner Dimitris Melissanidis, a major shareholder of a Greek-Czech consortium which in May agreed to buy a 33% stake in state gambling firm OPAP.
Stavridis was not immediately available for comment.
According to the newspaper report, he admitted he used Melissanidis's plane to travel to his holiday home.
"Melissanidis, who was travelling to France, offered to take me with him to accommodate me," he was quoted as saying by the newspaper.
Stavridis took the flight immediately the signing of an agreement to finalise the €652m OPAP deal, Proto Thema said.
HRADF chief executive Yannis Emiris told he was keeping his post and that Greece's ailing privatisation programme would not suffer from Stavridis's resignation.
"There will be absolutely no delays to the programme," he said, rejecting the idea that the OPAP deal might be reversed as a result of Stavridis's resignation.
The finance ministry official confirmed the OPAP deal would not be affected and the Stavridis's resignation was for "ethical reasons".
Stavridis's predecessor Takis Athanasopoulos stepped down after he was charged by a prosecutor with breach of duty over his former role as chairman of a state utility.

China wants fewer free trade zone curbs


China hopes to suspend its laws governing foreign investment in proposed free trade zones, the cabinet said, in a sign the world's second-biggest economy could open further to foreign competition.
The State Council, China's cabinet, will ask senior members of the National People's Congress, or parliament, for the power to suspend laws and regulations governing both foreign-owned companies and joint ventures between Chinese and foreign companies in free trade zones, including Shanghai, the cabinet said on its website.
The move is aimed at "accelerating transformation of the government's role ... and innovating ways of (further) opening up (to foreign investment)," according to the statement, seen on Sunday. It set no timetable, and gave no further details.
Foreign direct investment in China slowed in 2012 but reversed its decline in the first quarter of this year as confidence improved.
China attracted $38.3 billion in foreign direct investment in the first four months of 2013, up 1.2 percent from the same period in 2012.
China's financial centre, Shanghai, will test yuan convertibility and cross-border capital flows in the free trade zone pilot programme.
The country's new leaders have signalled they want to speed the process of making the yuan fully convertible over the next few years, as part of efforts to boost the currency's use in trade and support wider financial reforms.
Shanghai officials are keen to experiment with freeing up the capital account and yuan convertibility, fearing the city could be left behind as rival centres, such as Hong Kong and Taiwan, move to develop cross-border yuan financial services.
Shanghai stepped up lobbying efforts after the 2012 creation of a special trade zone in Qianhai, near the southern boomtown of Shenzhen and across from Hong Kong, where yuan convertibility is being trialled.
The Qianhai zone, administered by the central bank, the People's Bank of China, lets banks from Hong Kong offer cross-border yuan-denominated loans to mainland firms.
Other initiatives announced in 2013 include trial programmes to smooth the way for foreign firms to move funds in and out of China, cutting the need for approvals and easing bank procedure.

Investors dump India as crisis deepens


Indian policymakers are looking increasingly panicky as they battle the worst currency crisis in more than two decades, and more worryingly there is no sign their remedies are working.
The rupee lurched to a new lifetime low of 62.03 to the dollar on Friday while the benchmark share index posted its biggest one-day fall since September 2011.
"None of the policymakers' Band-Aid measures (from capital controls to tightening liquidity) seems to be working. They have not been able to turn the tide," Rajeev Malik, economist at investment house CLSA, told AFP.
"The government and the Reserve Bank of India are taking fire-fighting measures."
The rupee has lost 57% of its value against the US currency since it peaked at 39.40 rupees to the dollar in February 2008.
The currency's strength began unravelling when Lehman Brothers collapsed later that year, triggering the global financial crisis.
But pressure on the rupee has mounted in the past two years as investor alarm over a slowing economy and a ballooning current account deficit - the widest measure of trade - has grown.
Part of the reason for the currency's most recent slide - it has fallen 13% this year against the greenback - lies outside Indian policymakers' remit.
The currencies of emerging markets globally have fallen on expectations that an increasingly buoyant United States will soon roll back stimulus responsible for funnelling big investments overseas in quest of high yields.
But other reasons for the rupee's drop are home-made - failure to move fast enough on economic reform, a series of government corruption scandals, perceptions of policy paralysis and the record current account deficit, analysts say.
Since June 1, overseas funds have pulled out $11.58bn from India's stock and debt markets.
Investors worry that despite the long-term growth potential of the country of 1.2 billion people, "things are not in shape in the interim period", said investment house IDBI research head Sonam Udasi.
As the rupee's woes have deepened, authorities have responded with a clutch of measures to try to stem its decline and avert a balance-of-payments crisis.
India has painful memories of its 1991 balance of payments crisis when it failed to attract enough foreign currency and was forced to fly 47 tonnes of gold as collateral for an International Monetary Fund loan in what was seen as a national humiliation.
Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, who was finance minister at the time, was moved Saturday to rule out a repeat, saying: "There is no question of going back to the 1991 crisis."
In the past few weeks, Indian policymakers have hiked short-term interest rates, announced plans to allow state firms to raise foreign funds abroad and curbed gold imports.
They have also threatened to imposed higher duties on imported electronic appliances such as fridges, which are made locally.
But it is their most recent step - stealthily announced late Wednesday on the eve of a national holiday - that has fanned the deepest consternation.
The central bank sharply tightened controls on the amount of money firms and individuals can send abroad.
The move looked to observers like a disturbing throwback to the days before India unleashed its economic liberalisation drive in the early 1990s when Indians' access to foreign exchange was strictly limited.
Confederation of Indian Industry president Kris Gopalakrishnan criticised the move as "retrograde".
While the capital controls only apply to local individuals and firms, the restrictions may raise worries among overseas investors that they could be extended to foreign companies operating in India, analysts say.
Under the new policy, Indian individuals can send just $75,000 out of the country annually, down from $200 000 - making it tougher to pay children's overseas university fees, for example.
Companies can invest abroad only 100% of their net worth, down from 400% - though the central bank says firms can ship out more money if they give authorities a good reason for doing so.
"While the authorities aim to reduce foreign-exchange volatility, we fear they may end up sending a panic signal," Nomura economist Sonal Varma said.
There have been no signs so far of domestic capital flight but analysts say the controls may have been tightened to avert one in the face of India's troubles.
The economy expanded last year at a decade-low of five percent and indicators this year have been grim with economists warning about "stagflation" - a combination of high inflation and low growth.
With an election to be held by May 2014 and pro-market reforms divisive, there is no way the Congress government can undertake root-and-branch reforms needed to put the economy back on track, economists say.
"There is a complete lack of faith in the markets" about India's outlook, said Param Sarma, chief executive at consultancy firm NSP Forex.

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

NEWS,27.03.2013



Russian authorities search NGOs' offices


Russian authorities searched the Moscow offices of Human Rights Watch and three other prominent advocacy groups on Wednesday, part of a wave of hundreds of inspections that activists say is a campaign to silence criticism of President Vladimir Putin. Since returning to the Kremlin in May, Putin has tightened controls on non-governmental organisations (NGOs), requiring those with foreign funding to register as "foreign agents" a term echoing, for some, Stalin-era political repressions and Cold War spying.The Kremlin says it is working to prevent foreign governments meddling in Russian politics, but activists see the visits by prosecutors and other authorities ranging from tax officials to fire inspectors as harassment."This is part of a massive, unprecedented in its scale wave of inspections of NGOs throughout Russia... covering hundreds and hundreds of groups," said Rachel Denber, deputy director of the Europe and Central Asia Division of Human Rights Watch."Most immediately it is an effort to intimidate. More broadly it's part of an effort to discredit ideas about human rights and civil society, to somehow tar them as foreign and suspect," she said by telephone from New York, where Human Rights Watch is based.The US has said it is very concerned about the inspections and European Union Foreign Policy chief Catherine Ashton on Tuesday described what she called the "raids" on NGOs as part of a trend that was deeply troubling.Germany complained to Russia on Tuesday about the inspections, including visits to two German think-tanks, saying the action could harm bilateral ties already strained by the Cyprus crisis.Federal migration officials visited the offices on Wednesday of a rights group run by Svetlana Gannushkina, one of Russia's most prominent campaigners to help refugees and migrants, Gannushkina said."I am a member of the state commission for migration politics. We are not working against our government I'm afraid that our government is working against our people," Gannushkina.Gannushkina said tax and migration service officers showed up unannounced and demanded passports of employees and visitors who did not look Russian."This is undoubtedly done to apply pressure, it's undoubtedly done to put pressure on civil society."Denber said a tax officer and three prosecutorial officials were polite but spent hours in the Human Rights Watch office in an unannounced inspection, demanding copies of registration papers and a slew of other documents. They were unarmed.'Foreign agents'Authorities on Wednesday also visited offices of anti-corruption group Transparency International Russia and Agora, a human rights organisation.On Monday, the Moscow offices Amnesty International were searched in checks the human rights advocacy group said showed "the menacing atmosphere for civil society" in Russia.The Kremlin denies cracking down on critics, but Putin's own advisory council on human rights has asked Prosecutor General Yuri Chaika to explain the wave of searches.Pavel Chikhov, the head of Agora, said the searches are aimed at gathering evidence of activities that would oblige them to register as "foreign agents" under the law.Russia's leading rights organisations, including the country's oldest rights group Memorial, election-monitoring body Golos and the Moscow Helsinki Group, have refused to register in defiance of the law.The penalties for failing to comply include six months' suspension without a court order and, for individuals, up to three years in jail.Putin, facing the biggest protests of his 13-year rule last year, accused foreign governments, including the United States, of meddling in Russia's domestic politics, and pro-Kremlin media said anti-Putin demonstrators were paid by foreigners to take to the streets.Last autumn, Moscow expelled the US Agency for International Development (USAid), saying it had tried to influence elections.

Kerry proposes US-EU free trade zone


US Secretary of State John Kerry said on Wednesday a proposed US-EU free trade zone could help Europe emerge from the economic crisis and played down fears it would hit the farm sector."What is important is that ... we move rapidly to have a profound impact on the rest of the world," Kerry told French business leaders, including the heads of Air Liquide, Thales and GE France, at a meeting at the US ambassador's Paris residence."The EU and the United States together represent one-third of the total of all the goods and services sold in the world and we represent more than 50% of the total global economic output of the world," he said.US President Barack Obama last week notified Congress that the government would launch trade talks with the European Union aimed at forging the world's largest free-trade area.The Obama administration said it intends to launch negotiations with the EU "no earlier than 90 days" after the notification.13 million jobsKerry said the proposed free trade area could help Europe emerge from the current economic crisis."I believe as does President Obama that this may be one the best ways of helping Europe to break out of this cycle, have growth," Kerry said.The trade and investment ties support 13 million jobs on both sides of the Atlantic, according to the US Trade Representative.Kerry referred to concerns over agricultural products, saying: "I know the fears in some places. I believe personally than we can work through the differences."I understand the geographical components of certain products that are produced in France ... and I value that. Roquefort is Roquefort for a reason and Champagne is Champagne for a reason. We get it. There are to be ways to protect things that are geographically identified".

N Korea cuts military hotline with South


North Korea severed its military hotline with South Korea on Wednesday, breaking the last direct communication link between the two countries at a time of heightened military tensions.The decision coincided with an announcement that the North's top political leadership would meet in the next few days to discuss an unspecified "important issue" and make a "drastic turn".The hotline move was relayed by a senior North Korean military official to his South Korean counterpart just before the link was severed."Under the situation where a war may break out any moment, there is no need to keep up North-South military communications," the official was quoted as saying by the official Korean Central News Agency."From now, the North-South military communications will be cut off," he said.Several weeks ago North Korea severed the Red Cross hotline that had been used for government-to-government communications in the absence of diplomatic relations.Unleashing ‘all-out war’Severing the military hotline could affect operations at the Seoul-funded Kaesong industrial complex just north of the border because it was used to organise movements of people and vehicles in and out.The industrial estate established in 2004 as a symbol of cross-border co-operation has remained operational despite repeated crises in relations."We are negotiating with the North to prevent any operational issues," an official from the Kaesong management committee said, adding the North has yet to block movements of people to and from Kaesong.The South's unification ministry urged the North to retract its action, saying it's not good for "stable operation" of the complex where more than 50 000 North Koreans work at small labour-intensive South Korean plants.Cutting the hotline was the latest in a series of threats and actions that have raised tensions on the Korean peninsula since the North's long-range rocket launch in December and its nuclear test last month.Both events triggered UN sanctions that infuriated Pyongyang, which has spent the past month issuing increasingly bellicose statements about unleashing an "all-out war".Current situation volatileEarlier on Wednesday the North announced an imminent meeting of its ruling party politburo and launched a scathing attack on South Korea's new president, Park Geun-Hye.A North Korean state committee accused Park of slander and provocation after she made a speech warning the North that failure to abandon its nuclear weapons programme would result in its collapse."If she keeps to the road of confrontation... she will meet a miserable ruin," it said.In Seoul, some analysts suggested the North was fast running out of threats and targets for its invective as it sought to bully the international community into negotiating on Pyongyang's terms."They are upping the rhetorical ante in every possible way, but the international community is not reacting as it had hoped," said Cho Han-Bum, an analyst at the Korea Institute for National Unification.Cho said the coming politburo meeting would probably seek to keep "the momentum going" through some symbolic gesture."I envisage a resolution that further raises the alarm, like declaring a top alert for the entire nation beyond the military," he said.Although North Korea is a past master of brinkmanship, there are concerns in South Korea and beyond that the current situation is so volatile that one accidental step could escalate into serious conflict.On Tuesday the North's military put its "strategic" rocket units on combat alert, with a fresh threat to strike targets on the US mainland, Hawaii and Guam, as well as South Korea.Pentagon spokesperson George Little said US forces were ready to respond to "any contingency". Japan, which hosts a number of US bases, said its government was "on full alert".The US and South Korean militaries signed a new pact last week, providing for a joint military response to even low-level provocation by the North.