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(MENAFN) Singapore Airlines Ltd (SIA) said that due to ongoing weak demand and high fuel prices, the carrier reduced its cargo capacity by 20 percent, reported Reuters. The company added that the …

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Singapore Airlines reduces cargo capacity by 20%

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(MENAFN) Singapore’s Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister, Tharman Shanmugaratnam, said that the country’s budget surplus for the 2012 fiscal year is forecasted to reach USD1.01 billion, or …

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Singapore’s 2012 budget surplus to reach 0.4% of GDP

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Singapore’s SingTel reports USD717m profit in Q4

February 13, 2012

(MENAFN) Singapore Telecommunications Ltd. (SingTel) reported 9.6 percent decline in fourth quarter profits over higher costs and a lesser income from its regional units, AP reported. The telecom …

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Video: Nabarro Says No Periphery Nations in Europe Will Default

May 27, 2011

May 27 (Bloomberg) — Willem-Mark Nabarro, head of European equities at Exane BNP Paribas, talks about the possibility of a Greek debt default and the outlook for stocks. He speaks from Singapore with Linzie Janis on Bloomberg Television’s “First Look.”

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The Next Generation Retail Summit APAC 2011 To Be Held On 18-20 October In Singapore

May 17, 2011

The Next Generation Retail Summit APAC 2011 To Be Held On 18-20 October In Singapore

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Video: Vaidya Says Toyota in Danger of Slipping Behind GM, VW

May 4, 2011

May 4 (Bloomberg) — Vivek Vaidya, automotive and transportation director at research company Frost & Sullivan, talks about the global auto industry. General Motors Co., less than two years after declaring bankruptcy, is poised to reclaim the global auto sales lead this year from Toyota Motor Corp., Japan’s automaker rattled by natural disasters and reports of slipping quality. Vaidya speaks from Singapore with Rishaad Salamat on Bloomberg Television’s “On the Move Asia.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Gunaratna Says Revenge Attacks `Likely’ After Bin Laden

May 4, 2011

May 4 (Bloomberg) — Rohan Gunaratna, head of the International Center for Political Violence and Terrorism Research in Singapore, talks about the possibility of retaliation by al-Qaeda’s followers in the aftermath of the U.S. raid that killed Osama bin Laden, leader of the terrorist group. Gunaratna speaks with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television’s “First Up.” (Excerpt. Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Gunaratna Says Revenge Attacks `Likely’ After Bin Laden

May 4, 2011

May 4 (Bloomberg) — Rohan Gunaratna, head of the International Center for Political Violence and Terrorism Research in Singapore, talks about the possibility of retaliation by al-Qaeda’s followers in the aftermath of the U.S. raid that killed Osama bin Laden, leader of the terrorist group. Gunaratna speaks with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television’s “First Up.” (Excerpt. Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Preiss Expects Higher Dollar to Weigh on Equity Markets

April 20, 2011

April 20 (Bloomberg) — Michael Preiss, chief equities strategist at Standard Chartered Plc, discusses the outlook for equities. He talks with Linzie Janis from Singapore on Bloomberg Television’s “Global Connection.”

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Mövenpick opens heritage hotel in Singapore

April 17, 2011

Mövenpick opens heritage hotel in Singapore

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Video: ING’s Condon Says G-20 `Too Large’ to Solve Imbalances

February 18, 2011

Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) — Tim Condon, the head of Asian research at ING Groep NV, talks about the outlook for this weekend’s Group of 20 finance ministers meeting in Paris and inflation levels in Asia. He speaks from Singapore with Linzie Janis on Bloomberg Television’s “Global Connection.”

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Michael J. Critelli: Why We Love Sports and Don’t Like Business and Government

February 15, 2011

Every sport imparts certain unique implicit values. For example, as we portray in From the Rough , in golf, a competitor plays with integrity and with what he’s got. However, there are certain values associated with all sports. Those values help sports succeed for participants, spectators and investors. When we think of great leaders and teams today, we do not think of great political figures, but of legendary coaches like John Wooden of UCLA, Vince Lombardi, Eddie Robinson of Grambling, or Joe Paterno of Penn State, and their teams. Why do government, health care, education, and most other businesses fail to measure up to the performance excellence, the economic performance and entertainment value of sports? Professional and college sports are true competitive meritocracies. We demand excellence from sports, and the owners of sports franchises feel pressured to deliver excellence. As a result, most sports franchises take decisive action when their team loses consistently. Teams fire non-performing managers and coaches. They create highly competitive processes to source and test talent, and get rid of even beloved underperforming players. Athletes do not promote a seniority system, because they recognize that performance excellence makes the overall product viable. Unfortunately, the common thread running through government, health care, education, and many businesses is that they function to enable employees to stay employed, not to deliver excellence, In government, health care, and education, collective bargaining agreements make reducing non-performers extremely difficult. Closing poor quality, high cost organizations is very difficult because politicians, business leaders, and labor unions lobby to preserve jobs even bad ones deliver. Sports is data driven and transparent. As a child, I collected and traded baseball cards, and have always been a sports statistics junkie. Baseball embraced publicly available statistics almost from the beginning, as Alan Schwartz’s pointed out in The Numbers Game . Bill James revolutionized baseball’s statistical reporting systems with his Baseball Abstract series. Michael Lewis transformed baseball as a business with Moneyball . Beyond periodic statistical reporting, daily sports team performance is reported everywhere. Moreover, statistical reporting keeps improving to insure accuracy. In government, education, and health care, there is ferocious resistance to any data analysis or reporting that would tell the public how service is being delivered. Governments are in deep financial trouble because the true retirement benefits costs were hidden for so long. Teachers unions strongly oppose any actionable performance reporting. Our health care system’s best kept secrets is that over 200,000 people die unnecessarily in hospitals annually. Business performance reporting is better, but the average person has an easier time figuring out how a favorite team is performing than figuring what’s going on with even a public company. Misguided government regulation, accounting-driven reporting diverging from economic reality, and business executives who, for competitive reasons, try not to be transparent, have made individual investing riskier than necessary. We understand sports better than other sectors. Most of us have played sports and understand how athletes, coaches, and general managers do their jobs. What we do not learn as a participant, we learn in 24×7 media discussions. Few of us had granular exposure to business when growing up. We pay a lot of attention to health care, education, and local government, but their complexity makes understanding challenging, a complexity driven by government laws and regulations. Federal government school bus regulations span 300 pages. While driving a school bus is simpler than hitting a golf ball, running a school bus service is exceptionally and probably unnecessarily complex. Sports have transcended local, regional, and national barriers to become global. The market for sports talent sourcing and for marketing outreach is global. Every sport has sourced talent outside its borders, and every major sport originating in one country has exported its entertainment to many others. Baseball, basketball and ice hockey have broadened their reach far beyond their regions of origin since 1975. Sports know no boundaries in improving. Governments, health care systems, and school systems are highly localized and isolated. Some innovation occurs because small units of government experiment, but our governments, health care systems, and educational establishments are often untouched by global marketplaces and competitive standards. We do not know enough to demand that our schools be as good as those in Singapore, or that health and life expectancy should be comparable to Norway’s, or that governments should complete big projects as efficiently as China does. I long for the time when we demand as much of service sectors that matter deeply for global competitiveness as we do of our athletes and sports franchises.

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Video: Ofon Says Farmers Must Boost Planting to Stem Volatility

February 11, 2011

Feb. 11 (Bloomberg) — Abah Ofon, a soft commodities analyst at Standard Chartered Plc, talks about efforts to stem volatility in food prices. He speaks from Singapore with Mark Barton on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown.”

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Top Chinese Exec: We Have Little Choice But To Buy The U.S. Dollar

January 16, 2011

BEIJING: China should not worry about being too heavily invested in the dollar and U.S. government debt, because its dependence is not unique in a world with few alternatives, a senior official at China’s sovereign fund said. Wang Jianxi, the chief risk officer at China Investment Corporation (CIC) which manages $300 billion, said on Saturday the market for U.S. Treasuries is the world’s most liquid and the U.S. government is a credible borrower. He said these qualities render dollar-denominated assets relatively stable and that there are few investment alternatives in the world with similar benefits. “We don’t have to complain about the risk of buying U.S. dollars and Treasuries and the need to invest in other countries,” Wang told an investment forum, adding that the views were his own. “Investing in other countries does not necessarily make our investment less risky,” he said. China is the world’s biggest foreign holder of U.S. Treasuries, with a third of its $2.85 trillion in foreign exchange reserves invested in U.S. government debt. But Wang argued that China is not the only country reliant on the dollar, listing sovereign wealth funds in Abu Dhabi, Norway and Singapore as other big buyers of dollar-denominated assets. His remarks come as China President Hu Jintao gets ready for a visit to Washington next week, when the two world powers will try to find common ground in bilateral ties, which are complicated by a sensitive creditor-debtor relationship. In a bid to limit China’s vulnerability to a sharply weaker dollar, senior Chinese officials have campaigned for years for a an alternative reserve currency. Wang said the attention China drew last year for buying Japanese and South Korean sovereign debt underscored the difficulties in investing in other smaller government debt markets. It is also practical for China to invest the bulk of its reserves in the U.S. currency because global trade in commodities, energy and metals are settled in dollars, he said. “There is little choice but to invest a large portion of foreign reserves in U.S. dollars and Treasuries,” Wang said. (Reporting by Koh Gui Qing, editing by Jane Baird) a> Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Oil prices stable in Singapore

January 4, 2011

Oil prices stable in Singapore

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Colombia, Singapore launch FTA talks

November 24, 2010

Colombia, Singapore launch FTA talks

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Video: Kumada Says China’s Yuan Stance Shows Lack of Confidence

November 19, 2010

Nov. 19 (Bloomberg) — Mikio Kumada, a senior market analyst at LGT Capital Management, talks about the outlook for currencies and economic growth. He speaks from Singapore with Maryam Nemazee on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown.”

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Robert Lenzner: New Global Currency Is Gold Sell Signal

November 11, 2010

QE2 will be followed by QE3 until we see “the end of the U.S. dollar standard,” a leading gold enthusiast and emerging markets expert, declared yesterday. No one can predict the timing, but the signal to sell all your gold will be an emergency economic meeting to create a new global currency, says Asia-based investment analyst Christopher Wood, who has been recommending gold as an investment since 2002. Wood is on record as predicting that gold will sell over $3,000 an ounce some day. His portfolio allocation for U.S. pension funds includes 25% gold bullion and 15% gold mining shares. Another signal that gold is in danger of big price slippage is when Ben Bernanke raises interest rates by 1/4 of 1%, but he sees no reasonable chance that would happen anytime in the near future- and certainly not unless there is inflationary growth in the U.S. economy. “The biggest beneficiary of QE2 will be the Asian emerging markets,” says Christopher Wood, emerging markets analyst at CLSA. “Investors must be overweight these Asian markets,” because that’s where Bernanke’s buying of Treasuries will end up. Or investors can buy U.S. multinationals with major operations in the emerging markets.” Wood says the stock market in China sells at the same market multiple as the U.S., and he believes Chinese banks and insurance stocks are especially cheap right now and due for a move. His biggest weighting is in India. Wood’s Asian portfolio of 25 stocks has gained 671% in value since late 2002, compared to the MSCI index, which has risen 217%. Wood’s portfolio picks have turned in an annual return rate of 28.9%. Wood told a small group of journalists he did not believe that QE2 would work and that it will lead on to QE3, just as QE1 led to QE2. Because of expected weakness in the dollar, Wood recommended buying strong Asian currencies like the Singapore dollar, his favorite. He flatly predicted the Singapore dollar would rise in relationship to the dollar. One way to play Singapore is to own high dividend yielding stocks there, or to get a slice via the iShares MSCI Singapore ETF that trades under “EWS.” He believes the economy will continue to be soft because of the foreclosure troubles facing the housing industry. Housing can’t recover until there is a clearing of all the homes in trouble, and this possibility is being held up by all the legal snafus and litigation. He also predicted that Portugal “would blow up” and believes the French banking industry faces an enormous problem in the $495 billion of loans they have outstanding with Greece, Ireland, Portugal and Spain.

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Video: Zoellick Says Some Concerns Over Fed QE Is `Overstated’: Video

November 10, 2010

Nov. 10 (Bloomberg) — World Bank President Robert Zoellick talks about the U.S. Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing and its implications for global financial markets. The Fed last week announced plans to buy $600 billion of long-term government bonds in its second effort at so-called quantitative easing, or QE2, aiming to stoke U.S. economic growth. Policy makers from Asia to South America responded by warning it could depress the dollar and spark capital flight to emerging markets. Zoellick speaks in Singapore with Phillip Yin for Bloomberg Television. Bloomberg’s Linzie Janis also speaks. (This report is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

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Singapore’s house price rises slowing, as government measures bite

November 10, 2010

Residential real estate prices in Singapore continue to rise in the 3rd quarter of 2010, but at a slightly slower rate, especially for non-landed properties.

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Lawrence G. McDonald: 3 Reasons Why the Fed Might Be Done

November 6, 2010

QE2, QE3, and QE4? Not so fast. The official FOMC announcement of QE2 has already been greeted by new speculation on the possibility of additional quantitative easing measure. This has raised concerns across the ideological spectrum. Key questions for investors are: o Are financial markets putting the cart before the horse given the limits of QE2′s impact and the lack of underlying consensus within the FOMC? o When will markets begin to digest the possibility of negative fallout from QE2? · The FOMC statement again noted the importance of carefully monitoring and responding to economic performance in the weeks ahead, stating “The Committee will regularly review the pace of its securities purchases and the overall size of the asset-purchase program in light of incoming information and will adjust the program as needed to best foster maximum employment and price stability.” · QE proponents read this comment as opening the door to QE3 and beyond. Opponents, or those concerned with the Fed’s choice, can just as easily read this statement as the FOMC taking a measured approach to implementing QE2, particularly if commodity prices continue to rise and payroll numbers move beyond those necessary to maintain stable employment (today’s announcement was better than expected). · According to www.DCTripwire.com , former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker said while speaking in Singapore on November 2, before the FOMC announcement, the Fed’s debt buying in itself isn’t a concern as the U.S. jobless rate, 9.6 percent in September, has little chance of going down soon and the nation’s economic problems can’t all be cured in the short run. Mr. Volcker also noted that monetary policy in the US is close to the limits of what it can do and that if money is “too easy” for “too long,” asset bubbles are a distinct possibility. This should be sobering news, since the U.S. economy has not yet fully recovered from the bursting of the housing bubble. · Another critical perspective comes from Joseph Stiglitz, who argues that the flood of liquidity from QE and now QE2, is adding to foreign-exchange instability. Expect the issue of “hot money” and instability abroad to receive increasing attention. Stiglitz also points out that the small and medium-size businesses that are being starved of credit are unlikely to benefit from QE2, particularly as a number of the community banks who typically lend to these types of businesses remain on the FDIC problem bank list. · Chairman Bernanke’s unusual Washington Post opinion piece included a subtle call for action on the part of other policymakers as well, making clear that the Federal Reserve cannot solve economic problems on its own. Bernanke cited the need for the combined efforts of many parties, including the central bank, Congress, the administration, regulators and the private sector. While Chairman Bernanke has long been loath to adopt the more aggressive posture of former Chairman Greenspan, that may change as the Federal Reserve continues to face criticism over its efforts and if the Fed determines that low economic growth and high unemployment are unable to be fully solved through Fed action. What to Watch in the Weeks Ahead · Backlash from Overseas: The G-20 Summit in Seoul on November 11-12 will provide a forum for major world economic powers to express their views on the FOMC’s QE2 strategy, as well as Secretary Geithner’s proposal to establish a new accord on current account imbalances. · QE2′s effect on the U.S. dollar and the release of FOMC Minutes on November 24: More details on the internal debate during the November 2-3 FOMC meeting will provide a better sense of the degree of unity behind the QE2 announcement. While the vote drew only one dissenter (Hoenig), a nearly unanimous FOMC vote may disguise more unease amongst the members. That unease may grow as economic data comes in over the weeks ahead and international reaction continues. · FOMC Meeting December 19: This will be the final meeting of the FOMC with its current membership. As we have previously noted, the Federal Reserve Bank presidents (Fischer of Dallas, Plosser of Philadelphia, and Kocherlakota of Minneapolis) joining the Committee in January 2011 may bring more dissenting views. Maintaining the appearance of consensus on the FOMC will likely get trickier, which could undermine efforts to implement QE2 fully, let alone further QE measures. For more updates on Federal Reserve policy, go to my website www.lawrencegmcdonald.com

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Brett King: The death of retail banking is here

October 27, 2010

The concept that banking is necessary, but banks are not has often been debated. The question of whether technology advances and new business model results in disintermediation is often dismissed as hype. While the Internet is undoubtedly the most significant technological advanced of the modern age, most retail bankers would argue that this only produced an incremental change in banking with yet another channel to access the existing bank infrastructure. However, that’s only partially accurate as an assessment. If you look at the broader world, there are actually tons of new businesses eating away at the retail banking client experience: Independent Financial Advisors While banks proclaim platform, global experience, asset management capability, etc the fact is that the advisory space is not owned solely by banks. In fact, if you really want a dedicated Relationship Manager who is going to not just sell you a product you really only have two choices – IFA or Private Bank. The mass affluent HNWI space just doesn’t deliver… Contactless Mass Transit Payments Octopus in Hong Kong, Oyster in the United Kingdom, EZLink in Singapore and other such stored value smart cards are actually debit cards. Octopus has a limited banking license in Hong Kong for the purpose of deposit-taking, but let’s not kid about here – all of these are acting like banks, but aren’t banks. As banks we can justify the fact that these are minimal impact and argue that ultimately the payments come from the banks to “recharge” these cards, but the fact is we’re not in the mix. Mobile Payments In some ways the big hit of SIBOS this year has been mobile payments arriving on the scene. The only problem with this is that M-PESA launched in Kenya in 2006 and now ‘owns’ between 5-10% of Kenya’s GDP, GCASH launched in Philippines in October 2004 and now has 28,000 outlets supporting their services across the country. There are other examples too – Nokia is set to dominate the mobile payments space in India as they turn their stores into cash-in/cash-out points across the sub-continent. Where are the banks? Some banks are now offering withdrawal through ATM networks for mobile cash users, but the fact is banks are still arguing about interoperability, platform, security and alliances to be productive – so again banks are missing out. Peer-to-Peer lending Zopa now represents close to 1.5% of the UK lending market with monthly lending of GBP 10-15m. With a reported NPL of 0.7% they are also the industry leader in the UK for credit management. Bankers would find this counterintuitive – how can a non-bank have a better performing loan book than a bank? The answer is better value to the consumer, and social lending as the foundation. Prosper, Lending Club and others are also taking their fair share of the lending markets in places like the US. Average loan sizes for Lending Club and Zopa are not microfinance size either, being around US$2-3k. This is direct competition for the retail banking sector. Peer-to-Peer and alternative Payments networks PayPal is clearly the leader in online payments today, and while PayPal utilizes existing card networks and payments infrastructure, the fact is that in the area of capturing transactional revenue and in respect to ownership of consumer mindshare, PayPal reigns supreme. On eBay, for example, between 50-75% of payments are processed via PayPal. Banks like HSBC are proud of the fact that they process much of the back-end payments for PayPal – but surely being in the front-end is the sweet spot here. Merchant onboarding Square, from Jack Dorsey (Twitter founder), has recently gone live. All you need is an existing bank account and an Android or iPhone and you can start accepting credit card payments. Currently Square is deployed in the USA where there are more than 20 million small business owners who don’t have a merchant account with a bank. The merchant on-boarding process is just too complex for most businesses, and Square recognized that. What would you rather do? Download an App and sign up for Square, or negotiate the 150 pages of different legal contracts and forms from your bank to set up a merchant account? Banks don’t offer value here – in fact, the opposite. Disintermediation abounds and is speeding up This morning at SIBOS we just heard Karen Fawcett of Standard Chartered  proclaim “Transaction banking is now front and centre. Flow businesses that we support are the lifeblood of commerce.” The problem is this view of the world. Bankers are simply used to owning the pipes, the network, the wires and perceiving that their exclusivity on ‘banking’, their ‘lock on customers’ comes from having a banking license. Clearly, however, disintermediation of the retail front-end of banks is rife. Banks are becoming wholesalers, networks and product manufacturers, but clearly with the lack of innovative capability, the rapidly growing gap between customer behavior and retail banks as poor service companies, the question of whether we need banks has been answered… We don’t need retail banks – we do need the back-end networks that process payments, we need organizations that are prepared to take on the risk of lending (social lending is unlikely to scale up to mortgage level), and we need mechanisms that give us access to trading systems and markets. But retail banks, their physical distribution real-estate, their products and services are fast becoming redundant. Sure, it will take a couple of decades, but in many ways it’s already too late. The ‘things’ that were uniquely “banking” 20 years ago, today have all been replicated by a transport department, an internet start-up, a social network and a telecommunications company. Banking at the front-end is no longer unique, it’s a commodity. When such interactions become commoditized, then the concept banks leverage of paying for the privilege of banking make them easy targets for disintermediation.

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Corrupt Nation Rankings Released

October 26, 2010

Transparency international released their 2010 Corruption Perception Index , which compiles data on public sector corruption and perceptions of corruption around the world. A three-way tie between Denmark, New Zealand and Singapore topped the list, while Somalia, Myanmar, Uzbekistan and Sudan were at the bottom. While some of the listings may seem obvious, others could surprise you. Check out the list below to see if your corruption perceptions match reality, and check out the full list here .

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Anoop Singh: Investing in a Rebalancing of Growth in Asia

October 25, 2010

Continuing my travels through Asia for the launch of our October 2010 Regional Economic Outlook: Asia and Pacific , I am writing to you today from Singapore. In my last post , I focused on the near-term outlook and challenges for Asia. Today, I turn to the key medium-term challenge–the need to rebalance economies in the region away from heavy reliance on exports by strengthening domestic sources of growth. This is against a backdrop of the need to rebalance global growth that was emphasized over the weekend by the ministers of the Group of Twenty industrialized and emerging market countries. Heavy reliance, arguably over-reliance, on exports is a common challenge across Asia. Yet, the policies to address it will differ among the countries in the region. Much of the public discussion focuses on ways to increase consumption, and this is something the IMF has written about extensively in the past. But the role of investment in rebalancing growth is equally important and something that should not be overlooked. Current gaps in investment Across the region, investment could play a bigger role in driving growth in three respects. Overall investment appears low in some parts, but not all, of Asia. This tends to be more of an issue for the leading economies of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). Elsewhere in the region, such as the newly industrialized economies (Hong Kong SAR, Korea, Singapore, and Taiwan Province of China) and Japan, aggregate investment is in line with comparable countries outside the region. But, the composition of investment is skewed toward exporters and capital-intensive firms, which crowds out domestically-oriented and labor-intensive enterprises. In addition, rapid growth across the region has stretched existing infrastructure close to the point where it severely constrains activity. Boosting investment What are the main reasons for this situation, and what can be done about it? Two important factors seem to be at play. First, investment in many regional economies has been subdued over the past decade or so. This reflects lower returns, greater uncertainty and mixed perceptions about the ease of doing business particularly since the Asian financial crisis in the late 1990s. However, financial constraints also played a role. In particular, small and medium enterprises, as well as firms operating in the services sector, appear to have limited access to financing, including in Japan and Korea. In these cases, modernizing the ways banks extend credit (including more risk-based financing) or make it easier to restructure the finances of small and medium enterprises, can help reduce the impediments to investing in the services sector. The second important factor concerns shortfalls in infrastructure, which also suppress private investment spending. This is most pronounced in the ASEAN region and low-income economies. With most infrastructure in the region provided by governments, greater private participation through public-private partnerships may help address critical bottlenecks while also reducing pressures on public coffers. Policy actions under way The good news is that several countries are already taking steps in the right direction. Japan and Korea are improving the financial infrastructure for smaller and more service-oriented firms through reforms in collateral laws and creating a market for distressed corporate assets. Indonesia and Malaysia have taken steps to improve the business environment by easing restrictions on foreign investment in the services sector and creating ‘one-stop shops’ for investors to reduce administrative delays. And many countries, including low-income ones, are making greater use of public-private partnerships to promote critical investment in infrastructure. Clearly, it will take time and steadfast implementation of reforms to boost investment and, in turn, rebalance Asia’s growth. But the strength with which shock waves from the financial crisis hit markets across Asia–from India to Japan–also remind us that Asia’s economies will be the primary beneficiaries of strengthening their domestic engines of growth. The time has come to invest in a rebalancing of growth in Asia. From iMFdirect blog

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Video: UBS’s Tay Sees Dollar Falling Against Asian Currencies

October 25, 2010

Oct. 25 (Bloomberg) — Kelvin Tay, chief investment strategist at UBS Wealth Management in Singapore, talks about his investment strategy for Asian stocks and currencies. He speaks with Mark Barton on Bloomberg Television’s “Global Connection.”

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Video: De Mello Sees Yuan Appreciating Over `Next Couple Weeks’: Video

October 18, 2010

Oct. 18 (Bloomberg) — Rajeev De Mello, the Singapore-based head of Asian investment at Western Asset Management Co., talks about U.S. calls for a faster appreciation of China’s yuan. The U.S. Treasury Department said on Oct. 15 it will delay a report on international currencies, including China’s, citing progress in the acceleration of the yuan’s rise. De Mello also discusses the outlook for the dollar, and concerns about a potential “currency war.” He speaks with Rishaad Salamat on Bloomberg Television’s “On the Move Asia.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Emergent BioSolutions launches Singapore ops

October 11, 2010

Emergent BioSolutions launches Singapore ops

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STB: Singapore visitor arrivals in Aug

September 28, 2010

STB: Singapore visitor arrivals in Aug

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Video: Singapore Bets on Formula 1 to Become Global Leisure Hub

September 24, 2010

Sept. 24 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Haslinda Amin reports from Singapore on the country’s tourism aspirations ahead of this weekend’s third annual Formula One Grand Prix.

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Video: Nabarro Sees Value in LVMH Moet Hennessy, Volkswagen: Video

September 20, 2010

Sept. 21 (Bloomberg) — Willem-Mark Nabarro, head of European equities at Exane BNP Paribas Ltd., talks about his investment strategy for European stocks. Nabarro also discusses debt concerns in Portugal and Ireland. He talks from Singapore with Linzie Janis on Bloomberg Television’s “Global Connection.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Nabarro Sees Value in LVMH Moet Hennessy, Volkswagen: Video

September 20, 2010

Sept. 21 (Bloomberg) — Willem-Mark Nabarro, head of European equities at Exane BNP Paribas Ltd., talks about his investment strategy for European stocks. Nabarro also discusses debt concerns in Portugal and Ireland. He talks from Singapore with Linzie Janis on Bloomberg Television’s “Global Connection.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Quane Says Air Pollution Hurts H.K.’s Competiveness: Video

September 19, 2010

Sept. 20 (Bloomberg) — Lee Quane, regional director for Asia at human resources company ECA International Ltd., talks about Hong Kong’s air pollution. The city’s roadside air pollution may reach record levels during the third quarter, according to calculations by Bloomberg News, as the local government comes under increasing pressure to bolster its cleanup measures. Quane talks from Singapore with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television’s “First Up.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Jason Rogers Says Korea, Japan’s Bank Bonds Offer Value: Video

September 13, 2010

Sept. 14 (Bloomberg) — Jason Rogers, director of credit research and financial institutions at Barclays Plc, talks about the new capital requirements issued by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, and his investment strategy for Asian bank bonds. Regulators looking to rein in the sort of risk-taking that caused the last financial crisis reached a compromise in Switzerland on Sept. 12 that more than doubles capital requirements for the world’s banks while giving them as long as eight years to comply. Rogers talks from Singapore with Susan Li on Bloomberg Television. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Barclays’s Sofat Says Indonesia to Raise Rates by 2011: Video

September 2, 2010

Sept. 3 (Bloomberg) — Prakriti Sofat, an economist at Barclays Capital in Singapore, talks about the outlook for Indonesia’s economy and central bank monetary policy.¶ Bank Indonesia may keep its benchmark interest rate at 6.5 percent when policy makers meet today, according to all but one of 17 economists surveyed by Bloomberg. Sofat, who also discusses Indonesia’s bond market, talks with Rishaad Salamat on Bloomberg Television. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Tay Says Obama Must Keep Constant Engagement With Asia: Video

September 1, 2010

Sept. 2 (Bloomberg) — Simon Tay, chairman of the Singapore Institute of International Affairs and author of “Asia Alone: The Dangerous Post-Crisis Divide from America,” talks about U.S.-Asia relations. Tay speaks in Hong Kong with Rishaad Salamat on Bloomberg Television. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Panama reaches economic deal with Singapore

September 1, 2010

Panama reaches economic deal with Singapore

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Video: BNP’s Thio Says `Hard To Expect’ Yen Strength to Unwind

August 31, 2010

Aug. 31 (Bloomberg) — Thio Chin Loo, a senior currency analyst at BNP Paribas SA, talks about the options available to Japanese policymakers to curb the advance of the yen. She speaks from Singapore wiith Mark Barton on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown.”

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Video: Barclays’s Sofat Says Asia Inflation Will Rise Gradually: Video

August 24, 2010

Aug. 25 (Bloomberg) — Prakriti Sofat, a regional economist at Barclays Capital in Singapore, talks about the outlook for Asia’s economies. Thailand’s economy expanded more than estimated last quarter as surging exports countered the impact of political turmoil, supporting gains in the nation’s currency and stocks. The Philippines reports second-quarter gross domestic product figures tomorrow. Sofat speaks with Bloomberg’s Rishaad Salamat. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Forrester Sees Australian Dollar Edging Lower After Poll

August 19, 2010

Aug. 20 (Bloomberg) — David Forrester, a currency economist at Barclays Capital, talks about the outlook for the Australian dollar ahead of this weekend’s federal election. He speaks from Singapore with Linzie Janis on Bloomberg Television’s “Global Connection.”

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Crossing Automation Announces New Vice President and General Manager of Asia Pacific Operations

August 18, 2010

FREMONT, CA–(Marketwire – August 18, 2010) –  Crossing Automation, Inc. ( www.crossinginc.com ), a leading supplier of efficient, cost-effective front-end and back-end automation solutions and engineering services to high volume semiconductor equipment manufacturers, today announced the addition of Gerald Li as vice president (VP) and general manager of Asia Pacific Operations. This role covers Taiwan, China, Singapore, Malaysia and Korea. His responsibilities include sales, customer satisfaction, finance and human resources for these regions in semiconductor and emerging markets.

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Khazanah’s debut foray into Singapore market

August 9, 2010

Khazanah’s debut foray into Singapore market

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Video: LGT’s Kumada Says U.S. Economic Recovery ‘Still Intact’

August 6, 2010

Aug. 6 (Bloomberg) — Mikio Kumada, a senior market analyst at LGT Capital Management, talks about the outlook for the U.S. economy and unemployment. He speaks from Singapore with Linzie Janis on Bloomberg Television’s “Global Connection.”

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Video: Cohen Says Economic Boost From Inventory Growth Is Over

August 6, 2010

Aug. 6 (Bloomberg) — David Cohen, director of Asian economic forecasting at Action Economics LLC, talks about the outlook for Chinese exports and the effect of the economic slowdown in Europe and the U.S. on Asian growth. He speaks from Singapore with Linzie Janis on Bloomberg Television’s “Global Connection.”

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Video: Barclays’ Forrester Sees Futher Downside Risks for Euro: Video

July 25, 2010

July 26 (Bloomberg) — David Forrester, a currency economist at Barclays Capital in Singapore, talks with Bloomberg’s Linzie Janis about the outlook for the euro. ¶ After tracking the euro’s slide from about $1.45 at the beginning of 2010, the median forecast of currency strategists has stayed within two cents of $1.20 since the start of June, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Forrester, speaking from Singapore, also discusses the results of stress tests on European banks released last week. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Lee Says Osim on Track to Meet China Expansion Target: Video

July 25, 2010

July 26 (Bloomberg) — Peter Lee, chief financial officer of Osim International Ltd., Asia’s biggest maker of massage chairs outside of Japan, talks with Bloomberg’s Susan Li from Singapore about the company’s business strategy. Osim said July 20 second-quarter net income more than doubled to S$12.1 million. Sales in the three months rose 12 percent to S$131 million. The company said March 9 it will add as many as 80 stores annually in China in the next three-to-five years to tap growing demand in the world’s most populous country. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Offshore Tax ‘Shenanigans’: How Multinationals Are Saving Billions

July 23, 2010

A U.S. tech company identified only by the pseudonym “Delta” generated as much as 55 percent of its revenue domestically while reporting to shareholders that only 10 percent of its pretax income came from U.S. operations, according to a report presented to the House Ways and Means Committee. By attributing more earnings to countries with lower tax rates, including the Netherlands and Singapore, “Delta” cut its worldwide average tax rate to less than half the 35 percent rate in the U.S., said the report by the Joint Committee on Taxation, presented yesterday.

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Susan Segal: Hope for Obama’s "Summer of Jobs"

July 21, 2010

To make good on the Obama administration’s pledge that this will be the “Summer of Jobs,” the U.S. needs to step up and follow through on its stalled free trade agreements. President Obama unveiled plans to double U.S. exports over the next five years when he announced his National Export Initiative, promising to push pending free trade deals though Congress. With our unemployment reaching 9.5 percent , concrete steps need to be taken–and political muscle exerted–to ensure that the Colombia, Panama, and South Korea agreements win congressional approval. While Washington hesitates, U.S. businesses are losing their competitive edge in Latin America as Europe, Canada, and Asia sign free trade agreements with our neighbors. The economic crisis presents the opportunity to increase exports, which in turn create and save jobs. Instead, free trade agreements have collected dust for fear that they stifle job growth while other countries take advantage of Latin America’s explosive growth and demand for goods. Since November 2006, the U.S.-Colombia Free Trade Agreement has languished on the desks of U.S. policymakers. Colombia’s Congress approved it in 2007. What is taking us so long? The agreement would open up markets in agriculture, building products, infrastructure and machinery, and textiles, just to name a few. Ohio, where the unemployment rate hovers around 10.5 percent, would benefit from the pact providing access to its agricultural sector. Illinois, with an unemployment rate of 10.4 percent, would see an increase in manufacturing jobs if Caterpillar (whose headquarters are in Peoria, IL) could export their construction supplies without paying the average 11 percent Colombian tariff on infrastructure and machinery products. Michigan, with an unemployment rate of 13.2 percent, would benefit from the elimination of the average 12.7 percent tariff on transportation equipment. This includes railway and tramway cars, which are in strong demand as Colombia expands its infrastructure development projects. Colombia is not the only country eager to sign an FTA with us. Panama has been waiting for over three years for passage of its own pact. An FTA with Panama would create manufacturing jobs for Americans and expand trade in agriculture and textiles industries. As Panama signs agreements with Singapore, Taiwan, and Chile, the U.S. will lose its competitive edge there and elsewhere. We’ve seen positive results for U.S. exporters when we sign trade agreements. The U.S.-Peru FTA was signed in 2006 and, that year, U.S. exports to Peru rose 88%. A large portion of those exports were manufactured goods produced in Texas and Florida. Other states that directly benefited from expanding exports to Peru include Louisiana, Illinois, California, Georgia, and Ohio. On top of that, the Commerce Department reported that 81 percent of the companies exporting goods to Peru were small and medium-sized enterprises with fewer than 500 employees. This is especially relevant as small businesses are the engine of job growth. While I was in Panama in March and Colombia last month for the AS/COA Latin America Cities Conference series, the message was loud and clear: we are moving forward on trade deals with or without the U.S. As Latin America experiences some of the highest global growth rates, we simply cannot afford to miss these opportunities. There are political implications with any trade agreement–there will always be another presidential or congressional race and election cycles are increasingly longer. But, frankly, the rest of the world does not operate on our election calendar and we are quickly losing market access to Canada, China and the European Union, not just in Latin America, but in Asia as well. So I ask: why are labor groups, decision makers, and Congress stalling on trade agreements that would put Americans back to work, boost our exports, and increase our competitiveness in Latin America and Asia? It doesn’t make sense, and I fear the U.S. will be left playing catch up.

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Video: FT’s Lex Columnist McLannahan on Singapore’s Economy: Video

July 14, 2010

July 14 (Bloomberg) — Ben McLannahan of the Financial Times’ Lex commentary team discusses Singapore’s economic growth. Singapore’s growth accelerated to a record 18.1 percent pace in the first half of 2010, spurring the currency and putting the island on course to overtake China as Asia’s fastest-growing economy this year. McLannahan speaks with Deirdre Bolton on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: FT’s Lex Columnist McLannahan on Singapore’s Economy: Video

July 14, 2010

July 14 (Bloomberg) — Ben McLannahan of the Financial Times’ Lex commentary team discusses Singapore’s economic growth. Singapore’s growth accelerated to a record 18.1 percent pace in the first half of 2010, spurring the currency and putting the island on course to overtake China as Asia’s fastest-growing economy this year. McLannahan speaks with Deirdre Bolton on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

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