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Thread: Property price is coming down fast

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    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-1...ts-falter.html


    Global Economy Distress 3.0 Looms as Emerging Markets Falter

    Bloomberg.com
    By Simon Kennedy - Oct 15, 2012 2:19 PM GMT+0800


    The global economy is facing its third major brake on expansion in five years as emerging markets slow from China to Brazil, provoking debate about how much policy makers should respond.

    Three years after industrializing nations led the world out of the U.S. mortgage meltdown-induced recession, the reliability of the power source is waning as Europe’s debt crisis persists. The International Monetary Fund sees them growing an average 5.8 percent in the half-decade through 2016, almost two percentage points less than the five years before the 2009 slump.

    Finance chiefs at the IMF and World Bank annual meetings left Tokyo this weekend at odds over how to address the issue, with South Korea’s central bank chief urging Asia to add stimulus as Russia and Brazil called on rich nations to fix their own challenges. At stake is a world economy Bank of Israel Governor Stanley Fischer calls “awfully close” to recession.

    “There is a concern that in the near term the engine of growth that provided such a great support seems to be slowing,” said Jacob Frenkel, chairman of JPMorgan Chase International and Fischer’s predecessor in Israel. “They still continue to grow, but we’re seeing a slower pace than anticipated all over the world.”

    Europe’s Steps

    The IMF meetings ended yesterday with both expressions of optimism that Europe now has a policy infrastructure to quell its turmoil, and a clash between Germany and the fund over what lies next for cash-strapped nations such as Greece.

    Developed economies including Switzerland and Japan joined Brazil in sounding the alert on excess currency strength, while delegates disagreed over the right degree of budget austerity as they pushed the U.S. to avoid tumbling over its fiscal cliff.

    “Ministers discussed a short-term response for the global economy, but their opinions weren’t harmonized in one direction,” South Korean Finance Minister Bahk Jae Wan told reporters in Tokyo. “The world has a leadership problem.”

    Investors may still not be fully tuned into the risks, said Barry Eichengreen, an economics professor at the University of California, Berkeley. While U.S. stock benchmarks last week fell the most since June, the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index (SPX) is still up 19 percent from a year ago. By contrast, the MSCI Emerging Markets Index has risen less than 6 percent the past 12 months.

    “I’m worried that stock markets in the United States in particular have gotten ahead of economic growth,” Eichengreen said in an interview in Tokyo.

    Euro Slips

    Equities were little changed in Asian trading after the IMF meetings, while the euro retreated amid a lack of clarity on whether Spain will seek a bailout. It fell 0.4 percent to $1.2901 as of 3:15 p.m. in Tokyo.

    The size of the latest shock may be underscored this week, when China will report its economy probably grew 7.4 percent last quarter, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey. Such a pace would be the slowest in three years.

    If unchecked, the fading could deal a blow to already-weak rich nations, warn economists. Slackening Chinese demand led Alcoa Inc. (AA), the largest American aluminum producer, to last week cut its forecast for worldwide consumption of the metal by 1 percentage point. The U.S. last week reported a widening trade gap for August as diminished global demand caused exports to fall to the lowest level since February.

    China Impact

    China, the world’s second-largest economy, alone accounts for 65 percent of seaborne iron ore demand and 40 percent of copper consumption, leaving producers such as Australia, Brazil and Chile vulnerable, Gustavo Reis, a Bank of America Merrill Lynch economist in New York, said in an Oct. 5 report.

    A 1 percentage point drop in China’s growth rate often leads to a 1.5 point decline in commodity prices over a couple of quarters, threatening resource-rich nations such as Canada, while about 80 percent of its imported inputs come from Japan, South Korea and Taiwan, Reis said. Germany may also suffer from weaker demand for its capital goods.

    Emerging markets need to rethink export-reliant growth models and pivot to domestic drivers, Morgan Stanley analysts say. Demographics don’t help, with half the emerging world’s populations, including China’s, getting older, Morgan Stanley’s Manoj Pradhan and Patryk Drozdzik said in a Sept. 24 study.

    A rebalancing may already be under way, yet the transition could mean a period of fragility. India is opening up to foreign investment, and Finance Minister Palaniappan Chidambaram plans to build on that with steps for capital markets, insurance, banking and infrastructure. Brazil is paring payroll taxes and enabling companies to build and operate roads and railways.

    Holding Back

    The debate centers on how much further emerging markets want to spur growth. While South Korea and Brazil both cut interest rates last week, Singapore joined India and China in resisting monetary stimulus as they guard against inflation and asset-price risks.

    China has refrained from lowering borrowing costs since July, seeking to rein in housing costs as it prepares for a once-in-a-decade leadership change next month. The country has “relatively large room” for use of monetary and fiscal policies compared with some nations, said Yi Gang, a deputy governor of China’s central bank who came to Tokyo in lieu of Governor Zhou Xiaochuan, the official Xinhua News Agency reported.

    ‘Too Fast’

    “Some were growing too fast and suffering inflationary pressures so they’ve put the brakes on,” said Mario Blejer, former governor of Argentina’s central bank and now vice chairman of Banco Hipotecario SA. “In a sense that’s a good thing, but they don’t want to overdo it.

    Bank of Korea Governor Kim Choong Soo said there is “ample room for promoting domestic demand-driven growth, especially in Asia.” He said “further fiscal and monetary stimulus should help boost domestic demand and ultimately the world recovery.”

    Requests for expansionary policies in Tokyo still ran into resistance from several emerging-market officials. The views of China were limited by its decision not to send top officials to Japan amid a spat over islands that both nations claim.

    “This call by some of our colleagues that we should go ahead and increase our budget deficits to stimulate economic growth is probably unrealizable,” Russian Finance Minister Anton Siluanov said in an interview, adding that rich countries should focus on addressing their debt challenges.

    Refighting the so-called currency wars of 2010, Brazilian Finance Minister Guido Mantega blamed “selfish” western monetary policies for undermining economies such as his with inflationary hot money. “Brazil, for one, will take whatever measures it deems necessary to avoid the detrimental effects of these spillovers,” he said.

    IMF Voting

    Mantega and Siluanov were among those to signal irritation with the U.S. for failing to ratify a 2010 deal that gave emerging markets more power at the IMF and would make China the third-largest member. Negotiations over a 2014 shift in voting rights are already subject to disagreement over how to calculate the reshuffle.

    Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke sought to refute arguments that the Fed’s record stimulus, including a $40 billion-a-month mortgage-securities purchase program, is causing destabilizing flows to emerging-market economies. “It is not at all clear that accommodative policies in advanced economies impose net costs on emerging market economies,” he said yesterday in prepared remarks for a seminar in Tokyo.

    Fischer’s Take

    So-called QE3, or the third round of quantitative easing, won plaudits from Fischer, who was Bernanke’s thesis adviser. The IMF’s former No. 2 official said tying the program to reducing unemployment “adds to the credibility” of Fed measures.

    Not all data signal gloom. A Chinese release two days ago showed exports grew at the fastest pace in three months in September. Retail sales in Brazil exceeded economists’ estimates in August, and advanced for a third straight month.

    “Perhaps we’re seeing a bottoming out of the slowdown,” said Guillermo Ortiz, a former governor of Mexico’s central bank and now chairman of Grupo Financiero Banorte SAB.

    U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner said improvements in incomes, policy and technology all indicated a “long period of growth in the emerging world on average over time that’s a significant multiple of the average of developed countries.”

    Unlike the U.S. or Europe, monetary policy in the developing world still has potency and there’s scope to use it if needed, said Philip Suttle, chief economist at the Institute of International Finance.

    JPMorgan Chase & Co. economists calculate the average interest across emerging markets to be 5.56 percent compared to 0.51 percent in the developed world. IMF estimates show emerging market budgets to be in deficit by an average 1.9 percent of output, about a third of the shortfall in advanced countries.

    “Keep your fingers crossed,” said Suttle.

    To contact the reporter on this story: Simon Kennedy in Tokyo at [email protected]

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    http://sbr.com.sg/commercial-propert...and-warehouses

    Singapore Business review
    COMMERCIAL PROPERTY | Staff Reporter, Singapore
    Published: 15 Oct 2012

    Chart of the Day: Sales down for strata factories and warehouses


    Notwithstanding the slower sales, industrial prices continued to surge.
    Savills Research reported:

    Weak sentiment and soaring prices continued to rein-in sales this quarter following a 28% YoY dip in the preceding quarter.

    According to the SISV-REALink, 729 caveats for strata factories and warehouses were lodged in Q3, significantly less than the 1,405 caveats registered in the same period last year. The full Q3 number is likely to be similar to that in Q3/2010.

    Notwithstanding the slower sales, industrial prices continued to surge as some industrialists remained undeterred by the hefty price tags amid the current low interest-rate environment.


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    http://sg.finance.yahoo.com/news/cos...hoo--poll.html

    Cost of housing No. 1 concern: Yahoo! poll

    Yahoo! Newsroom – Tue, Sep 25, 2012 3:36 PM SGT


    The cost of housing was voted the most pressing concern for Yahoo! readers, according to a week-long poll on the online portal.

    Last week, as part of the ongoing Singapore Conversation, we listed down 10 issues and asked Yahoo! readers to vote for their chief concerns.

    A total of 21,470 people cast their votes with each reader allowed to vote only once, and on a single issue.

    28% of people voted for the cost of housing. The management of flow and integration of foreigners, which garnered 21% of the votes, came in second while narrowing the income gap came in third with 17% of votes.





    At one stage of the poll, the issue of Singapore's heavy reliance on foreigners dominated the poll.

    But news of million-dollar HDB flats in the last week triggered fresh concerns over the affordability of public housing, which could explain the swing in votes.

    Other issues that were part of the wide range of concerns

    -- Education and competition in schools: 8%
    -- Cost and access to healthcare: 8%
    -- Political/electoral reform: 4%
    -- Social graciousness (online and offline): 4%
    -- Tackling baby woes: 4%
    -- Inclusive society (GLBTs, single parents): 3%
    -- Public transport crunch: 3%

    Education Minister Heng Swee Keat is spearheading a Singapore Conversation to engage the public in over 30 dialogue sessions, each involving 50 to 150 people and to be conducted in different languages and dialects.

    About 3,000 to 4,000 people will be polled by November or December.

    You can take part in “Our Singapore Conversation” through these channels.
    Website: www.oursgconversation.sg
    Facebook: www.facebook.com/OurSGConversation
    Email: [email protected]

  4. #15364
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    After ONE FULL YEAR of chanting and self proclaiming that property prices is coming down FAST and FURIOUS, I think its about time the Ah B living in SELETAR apologise to the rest of the people here about the nonsense.

    Despite the new CMs, showflats are still packed with lotsa buyers.

    Genuine buyers are out there with sufficient liquidity.

    eCo sold more than 500 units already over the last 2 weekends~!

    Quit chanting la!

    I propose to the web master to stop ALL POSTING to this thread and archive it until 2015, then take action against Ah B!

    DKSG

  5. #15365
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    http://sbr.com.sg/residential-proper...s-in-september

    Singapore Business Review
    RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY | Staff Reporter, Singapore
    Published: 34 min 21 sec ago


    Check out the biggest loser among new launches in September


    It has the cheapest price of $849 yet 146 units were unsold.

    This is the table from URA and Knight Frank Research showing data from the new projects launched in September 2012.



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    戴德梁行料明年上半年樓價升5-8%

    香港電台 – 58分前

    戴德梁行香港董事總經理暨北亞區策略發展顧問部主管陶汝鴻預期,至年底本港住宅樓價將升5%,明年上半年樓價則升5-8%。樓價上升,因現時失業率低企,按揭利率亦處於約2厘的低水平,加上受供應量等因素影響。但他認為,現時樓市未有太大泡沫風險。

    他指,目前部分買家因為美國推出QE3而置業保值,以抗通脹。若無QE3,本港樓市成交量及樓價升勢或會稍為放緩。他預期,至年底,平均每月住宅成交宗數為1萬宗,相信仍有不少一手樓供應推出。

    陶汝鴻說,近日預售樓花宗數上升,預期2013-2015年的供應將增加,相信屆時樓價升幅將放緩,並得到控制。而美國聯儲局低息承諾至2015年,他提醒,市民應小心息率風險,不應太樂觀。

    中國投資部董事總經理葉國平預期,第4季工廈樓價將升5-10%。另外,自由行放慢,相信對商鋪租金預期有影響,商鋪業主未必會放盤,或以出租為主。

  7. #15367
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    Too chim, so will the party still continue or not!?

  8. #15368
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    Quote Originally Posted by leesg123
    Too chim, so will the party still continue or not!?
    What ya think? After Kenobi-wan officially surrender today and raise white flag:
    http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stori...231432/1/.html

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    Quote Originally Posted by dtrax
    What ya think? After Kenobi-wan officially surrender today and raise white flag:
    http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stori...231432/1/.html
    He look depress in the TV

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    Quote Originally Posted by seletar
    http://sbr.com.sg/residential-proper...s-in-september

    Singapore Business Review
    RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY | Staff Reporter, Singapore
    Published: 34 min 21 sec ago


    Check out the biggest loser among new launches in September


    It has the cheapest price of $849 yet 146 units were unsold.

    This is the table from URA and Knight Frank Research showing data from the new projects launched in September 2012.


    This is because Singapore is FLOODED with liquidity.
    We sold RECORD number of units in September smashing all records for past 3 years!

    People choose what they want to buy. Cheapest doesnt mean sure sell out before the rest. Guess you not first day in property investment right ?

    Even Office Boy knows that!

    Like I ALWAYS say ... Volume precedes price increase ..

    Good Luck waiting !

    DKSG

  11. #15371
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    Quote Originally Posted by Laguna
    He look depress in the TV
    Yeah I guess no one will feel happy if you raise white flag to surrender

  12. #15372
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    Quote Originally Posted by seletar
    http://sbr.com.sg/residential-proper...s-in-september

    Singapore Business Review
    RESIDENTIAL PROPERTY | Staff Reporter, Singapore
    Published: 34 min 21 sec ago


    Check out the biggest loser among new launches in September


    It has the cheapest price of $849 yet 146 units were unsold.

    This is the table from URA and Knight Frank Research showing data from the new projects launched in September 2012.


    Wow!! Even the most lousy one also $849psf..
    Some more long way to go till TOP..

    Anyway, ppl are talking about technical chart lah.. U suddenly showing ppl bar chart.. ZaBaLang chart for what leh.. YOUNG KOK

  13. #15373
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    Riversail the location is nowhere, some more over 900 units, very difficult lah...

  14. #15374
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    Now, MND did not have a feel of how many singles will buy HDB flats, it all depends on their policies.

    eg...only SC above certain age
    income, etc etc

    why so difficult to estimate, just do a survey....

  15. #15375
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    Significantly more supply on the way, a lot more competition for shrinking rental yield. A significant test of holding power for many property investors looming.


    http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stori...231453/1/.html

    Significantly more housing units to be completed in 2014



    Channel News Asia
    By Hetty Musfirah | Posted: 15 October 2012 1855 hrs


    SINGAPORE: 26,800 Housing and Development Board (HDB) flats and 22,400 non-landed private housing units are projected to be completed in 2014.

    The numbers are significantly higher than those projected for this year -- 11,300 HDB flats and 12,500 non-landed private housing units are expected to be completed in 2012.

    The National Development Ministry revealed these figures in a written response to questions posed by Pasir Ris-Punggol Group Representation Constitutency (GRC) Member of Parliament (MP) Gan Thiam Poh in Parliament on Monday.

    Speaking in Parliament, National Development Minister Khaw Boon Wan said there is a significant supply of housing - both public and private - that will come onto the market over the next two years.

    He said HDB has ramped up its Build-to-Order (BTO) supply significantly, and will keep up the pace of new flat supply into 2013.

    He said this is to provide more options to suit individual housing needs and budgets.

    Holland-Bukit Timah GRC MP Liang Eng Hwa had also asked if there are enough flats to meet unanticipated demand, such as those from singles.

    He asked: "We may not always get the demand and supply right, so is HDB building some surplus to meet those unanticipated demand?"

    Mr Khaw said the ministry is looking into the matter.

    He answered: "We're still mulling over it. (It is) very hard to put a figure on how much should we cater for singles."

    Mr Khaw added that strong demand for residential property in Singapore is likely to persist as interest rates stay low.

    While residential property prices may be stabilising, Mr Khaw said, Singapore is not yet "out of the woods".

    The Resale Price Index has seen an uptick in the third quarter this year, with a two per cent growth from the second quarter of 2012 based on flash estimates.

    "With the recent announcements of further monetary expansion in both US and the eurozone, the current low interest rate environment is likely to persist," said Mr Khaw.

    "This will continue to contribute to the strong demand for residential property, which could cause prices to rise beyond sustainable levels."

    He added the recently-announced new curbs on loan tenures are to encourage greater financial prudence among property purchasers in both the public and private housing markets.

    The new curb is also a calibrated step to prevent excessive speculation.

    According to analysts, the increased number of HDB flats to be completed in 2014 does not come as a surprise, as the government has been ramping up HDB flat supply in the past years.

    Analysts say most of the flats should have been taken up by then, as typically about 70 per cent of units have been booked. Remaining units are also sold under the Sales of Balance Flats programme.

    "Also, the BTO is a scalable programme; the government can always scale down the number of units that's being launched once the needs of the home buyers have been met," added Mr Eugene Lim, key executive officer of ERA Realty.

    The higher number of HDB units is not expected to have a significant impact on the resale market, if the flats are sold after the minimum occupation of five years in 2019.

    Mr Lim said: "It is a bit far ahead to predict the impact on the resale market but I would suspect not all these flats' owners will be selling their flats at the same time. Therefore the impact on the resale market prices will not be significant."

    But it could be a different story for the private housing market.

    According to Mr Lim, an oversupply is possible, and investors renting out units could be affected.

    "We are already reducing foreign manpower and if this were to continue in the years to come, then we'll find that in the year 2014, there may not be as much foreign manpower to take up the rental units," said Mr Lim.

    "And when you have so many new units being completed in the market, then we might have a slight oversupply situation and that would lead to reduced rentals."

    The National Development Ministry says about 39,600 units of private homes from projects in the pipeline remain unsold as of June this year.

    - CNA/xq

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    Singapore's real GDP is already in contraction when adjusted for inflation, Singapore is already in recession in real GDP terms.

    First, the Govt "revised" the Q2 GDP numbers in October to narrowly avoid being the first Asian country in recession and buy some time. Now they are talking up the economy with optimistic statements that may not be realistic with the weak global demand... Seems like the Govt is desperate and they may manipulate Q4 GDP numbers to avoid recession like what they did with the Q2 GDP numbers.


    http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stori...231454/1/.html

    S'pore economy not heading for recession: Lim Hng Kiang


    Channel News Asia
    By Sim Ping Khuan | Posted: 15 October 2012 1913 hrs


    SINGAPORE: Singapore economy is not heading for a recession and is on track for modest economic growth next year. This is according to Minister for Trade and Industry, Lim Hng Kiang.

    Speaking in Parliament on Monday, the minister said the lacklustre economic growth this year is largely due to the challenging global economic conditions.

    Mr Lim said: "On the economic growth side, even though the external environment presents very strong headwinds to Singapore, we expect that we will end the year still within the range that we forecasted, between 1.5 and 2.5 per cent.

    "And that next year, our growth rate will be below our potential, but we will still continue to enjoy modest growth, so we can achieve 1.5 to 2.5 per cent this year, and similar rates next year. So we are not heading to a recession, technical recession notwithstanding."

    Mr Lim also highlighted Singapore's inflationary risks, and supported the Monetary Authority of Singapore's decision to use the stronger Singapore dollar to mitigate the impact of inflation.

    He added that Singapore should not use the exchange rate to cushion the economy and boost the competitiveness of its exports.

    Last week, the MAS unexpectedly kept its Singapore dollar policy unchanged - that is, keeping a modest and gradual appreciation of the Singapore dollar on a trade-weighted basis.

    -CNA/ac

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    http://www.cnbc.com/id/49410960


    Chinese Exporters: Situation 'Already Worse than 2008'

    Chinese Exporters Fear Grim Outlook



    Published: Sunday, 14 Oct 2012 | 8:58 PM ET

    By: Rahul Jacob in Hong Kong, Simon Rabinovitch in Beijing, and Ed Crooks in New York


    China’s exports rose almost 10 percent year-on-year in September, according to data released at the weekend. But speak to Chinese exporters and they say the economic doldrums in Europe mean many are facing more daunting challenges than they were during the 2008 heights of the global financial crisis.

    To Zhou Dewen, head of an industry lobbying group in Wenzhou, the famously entrepreneurial city in eastern China, the situation is “already worse than 2008.” “The difficulties are bigger and they are far more widespread.”

    Groups like Mr. Zhou’s typically petition Beijing for export subsidies or tax rebates and his caution should be taken with a pinch of salt. But the past six months have been unusually difficult for exporters buffeted by sagging demand in western markets and wage and raw material rises at home.

    Timothy Stuart, a Hong Kong-based businessman who supplies schools in the U.S. with classroom furniture from factories in southern China, says orders are smaller and his margins 30 percent lower than they were before the 2008 crisis.

    “Customers are asking for smaller orders to manage their inventories better,” he says. Other sourcing companies like his report that payment terms, meanwhile, are being extended by retailers and buyers in the west to as much as 90 days.

    As China prepares to release growth data this week that is expected to confirm the slowdown in the world’s second-largest economy, companies around the world are registering the impact.

    U.S. companies such as Caterpillar, the earth-moving equipment manufacturer, and Alcoa , the aluminum producer, have warned of the impact on demand. Cummins , the engine manufacturer, last week said it planned to cut up to 1,500 jobs, in part because of the decline in the Chinese market.

    Shannon O’Callaghan, an analyst at Nomura, said: “At the start of the year most U.S. companies were saying they thought China would get better in the second half. But by the summer, it was clear it was not getting better. If anything, it’s getting worse.”

    On the ground in China the situation looks grimmer than the data reflects.

    Economists say the seemingly buoyant trade numbers released on Saturday were skewed by seasonal factors such as the rush to get Christmas shipments out before week-long national holidays in early October.

    David Ou, sales manager of Mr. Big Furniture Co., an office furniture supplier in Foshan, two hours from Hong Kong, says orders from Europe were three to five times higher last year.

    “Lots of clients are asking for prices rather than placing orders. Hundreds of furniture makers in Foshan have closed down this year.”

    The theory used to be that growing domestic demand would offset slowing exports. But the problem now confronting many Chinese factories, says Olivier Levy, who heads Dragonsourcing, a purchasing service provider, is that “internal demand is not quite there yet.”

    David Liu, who has long sold most of his factory’s production of handbags to Europe, diversified to sell to the domestic market last year. Now, he reports that “the Chinese market is also sluggish despite the fact that we added 20 new stores in a dozen cities this year” and online sales are growing.

    The new paradigm of smaller orders and shorter lead times and the resulting slimmer margins is likely to persist across the labor-intensive export sector in China.

    Demand from the large markets of Europe and the U.S. is unlikely to soon bounce back to levels seen before the 2008 crisis. In addition, many retailers in the U.S. and elsewhere have started to source labor-intensive products either from markets closer to home such as Mexico or to countries with lower wage costs such as Cambodia.

    “Looking forward, demand of China’s major markets will probably remain weak or even get weaker in year-on-year terms,” Bank of America/Merrill Lynch economists wrote in a note on September’s export data.

    The way manufacturers are adapting is illustrated by Scovill, which makes zippers and other hardware for jeans and childrenswear manufacturers and has seen the margins on its manufacturing business in Asia recover after it closed a facility in 2009 in a village near the southern Chinese boomtown of Shenzhen.

    The area once had “factories, factories, factories as far as the eye could see,” says Brian Moore, its managing director in the Asia Pacific region. Now, many have closed.

    Mr. Moore’s company has farmed out orders to Chinese-owned factories elsewhere in the country and opened a factory in Cambodia. Gross margins for the business bounced back from 6 percent in 2009 to 35 percent in 2010 “purely because I didn’t have this factory [near Shenzhen] sucking up all my wages,” Mr. Moore says. The move has given Scovill’s Asia business a new flexibility in managing costs.

    But, even as the world faces up to a secular slowing in demand from western consumers, China’s nimble factories and superior infrastructure give it a head start over its competitors, says Michael Bellamy, who heads Passagemaker, a sourcing company in Shenzhen.

    The fastest growing market for his company is the besieged economy of Spain. “In the past three months, we have added six projects for Spanish clients. Last year, we had none,” says Mr. Bellamy. “The rougher the economy is back home, the more important outsourcing becomes.”

    —Additional reporting by Zhou Ping in Hong Kong

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    http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-1...ectronics.html

    Singapore September Exports Unexpectedly Decline on Electronics


    Bloomberg.com
    By Shamim Adam - Oct 17, 2012 8:32 AM GMT+0800


    Singapore’s exports unexpectedly declined for a second month in September as manufacturers sold fewer electronics and pharmaceuticals to customers abroad.

    Non-oil domestic exports slid 3.4 percent from a year earlier, after a revised 10.7 percent drop in August, the trade promotion agency said in a statement today. The median of 16 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey was for a 1.2 percent gain.

    Singapore’s central bank held off from easing monetary policy last week even as the gross domestic product contracted in the third quarter, and the Trade Ministry said growth will be weighed down for the rest of the year by a “subdued” world economy. The International Monetary Fund this month cut its projections for global expansion this year and next, saying it sees “alarmingly high” risks of a steeper slowdown.

    “Continued weakness in leading indicators like the SEMI book-to-bill ratio and global PMIs suggested continued volatility in exports and manufacturing can be expected ahead,”Leslie Tang, an economist at OSK-DMG in Singapore, said before the report, referring to semiconductor orders and shipments and purchasing managers indexes.

    Singapore’s electronics shipments by companies such as Venture Corp. fell 16.4 percent in September from a year earlier, after slipping 11 percent the previous month.

    Non-electronics shipments, which include petrochemicals and pharmaceuticals, rose 4.2 percent. Petrochemicals exports gained 5.5 percent, while pharmaceutical shipments slid 3 percent after dropping 3.2 percent in August.

    Singapore’s non-oil exports rose a seasonally adjusted 1.6 percent last month from August, when they dropped 9.1 percent, today’s report showed.

    To contact the reporter on this story: Shamim Adam in Singapore at [email protected]

  19. #15379
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    http://www.businesstimes.com.sg/brea...y-o-y-20121017

    Business Times
    Published October 17, 2012

    Sept non-oil domestic exports down 3.4% y-o-y


    By Chuang Peck Ming


    Non oil domestic exports (NODX) extended their decline in September to post a 3.4 per cent year-on-year drop, after a 10.7 per cent fall in August.

    Against the month before, the NODX bounced back from a 9.1 per cent decline in August to record a seasonally-adjusted increase of 1.6 per cent in September.

    Non-electronic domestic shipments staged a comeback with a year-on-year growth of 4.2 per cent in September, following a 10.5 per cent plunge in August.

    But it wasn't enough to offset a bigger drop in electronic domestic exports which fell 16.4 per cent year-on-year in September, sharper than the 11.0 per cent plunge in August.

  20. #15380
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    http://sbr.com.sg/economy/asia/malay...e-revised-down

    Singapore Business Review
    ECONOMY | Staff Reporter, Malaysia
    Published: 17 Oct 2012

    Malaysia Q3 GDP outlook to be revised down


    Second Finance Minister Datuk Seri Husni Hanadziah said that this is due to falling trade figure.

    According to OCBC Treasury Outlook, Second Finance Minister Datuk Seri Husni Hanadziah commented that 3Q12 GDP will be lower than 2Q due to falling trade figure. Meanwhile, Minister Datuk Mustapa expressed his confidence that the country’s trade for 2013 to increase up to 5%.

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    Boring.... Yawn.....

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    http://www.cnbc.com/id/49426500

    China Profit Downgrades Signal Worst Yet to Come

    Published: Tuesday, 16 Oct 2012 | 2:20 AM ET
    By: Reuters


    Chinese corporate profits show no sign of a second-half recovery as analysts cut earnings estimates in September by the most in 2 1/2 years, a red flag for investors who expect the world's second biggest economy to start picking up soon.

    China Inc. served as an early warning of the economic slowdown which began in 2011. Back then, slowing sales, swelling inventories, and sluggish bill payments all pointed to declining demand and deteriorating cash flow, hallmarks of an economy that was losing steam.

    Economists polled by Reuters think the third quarter probably marked China's trough — although many had made the same prediction about the first and second quarters, too.

    September trade figures released over the weekend were better than expected, however, raising some hopes that the economists might be right this time.

    China will release its third-quarter gross domestic product data on Thursday.

    Corporate profits still look lackluster at best. Inventories are slowly receding, but shipments remain weak, suggesting underlying demand remains subdued.

    "GDP growth likely troughed in the third quarter but the Chinese economy is struggling to find another engine of growth," said William Fong, senior investment manager at Baring Asset Management in Hong Kong.

    Analysts have cut estimates for Chinese companies in the MSCI China index every month since June 2011, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. September's revisions were the worst in 2 1/2 years after grim first-half report cards.

    The earnings revision ratio for Chinese companies remains negative, indicating there are more reductions than upgrades, a trend that has been in place since the start of 2011, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

    During the last Chinese slowdown, after the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy triggered a global financial crisis, the CSI 300 index of the top Shanghai and Shenzhen listings bottomed out in November 2008, but economic growth did not start to rebound until the June quarter of 2009.

    Last month, the CSI 300 index hit its lowest level since early 2009, and has struggled to regain ground since.

    Infrastructure-linked companies such as steel makers were among the first to recover after the global financial crisis because Beijing responded with a 4 trillion yuan ($638.24 billion) stimulus package.

    The shock-and-awe treatment worked in the short-term causing a sharp recovery in the economy and stock markets, but left China grappling with overcapacity, potential bad loans, and a property bubble.

    That is why economists widely expect that Beijing will go easy on the stimulus this time, though inflation data released on Monday showed the central bank may have some room to ease monetary policy further.

    The Shanghai Composite after doubling between October 2008 and August 2009 has lost three-quarters of those gains in a downward move that has lasted for three years.

    "We have to be careful about comparisons with 2008-09," said Michele Mak, a Greater China portfolio manager at BNP Paribas Investment Partners in Hong Kong.

    "I think there is agreement at the top levels of government that the way the last stimulus was done was a mistake," said Mak, adding that any stimulus this time is likely to be targeted at areas where there is a perceived shortage, such as railways and social housing.

    Mak said petrochemicals and cement are two segments to watch because they are used in the early stages of the production cycle. Neither one was showing a significant pickup in demand, "at least not in a convincing way," Mak said.

    The pace of revisions for construction materials and chemicals stocks within the MSCI China index has slowed, but remains negative.

    Over the past three months expectations for forward earnings for the chemicals sectors were slashed by more than a third, while those for cement stocks were cut by a fifth.


    Profits, Not Policy

    Chinese stocks have been known to rally at the slightest hint that Beijing may be opening the spending taps.

    China's Ministry of Railways showed in its latest bond prospectus that it had raised its 2012 rail spending projection slightly, which according to Jefferies is the fourth increase in this year's budget. Railway stocks have surged.


    China Railway Construction Corp. shares are up 71 percent this year, although they are still some 56 percent below 2009 highs.

    "Our mantra on China is focus on profits not policy," said Adrian Mowat, JPMorgan's chief emerging markets strategist who maintains an "underweight" rating on China stocks.

    According to Mitshubishi UFJ, while inventories at automobiles, construction machinery, and machine tools are being cut aggressively, shipments are still seeing double-digit declines — a factor that has also left companies holding back their capital spending budgets.

    "Usually by (the fourth quarter) you see (capital expenditure) plans," said Baring's Fong." This year is interesting in that none of the companies I've spoken with are giving me details about their spending plans."

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    Quote Originally Posted by leesg123
    Boring.... Yawn.....
    Same feeling as you...

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    Information is knowledge, knowledge is power.

    Appreciate for posting all the information. Your effort may have becoming a routine but certainly informative.

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    http://www.cnbc.com/id/49425299


    Are Job Losses the Next Big Risk for China?

    Published: Monday, 15 Oct 2012 | 11:43 PM ET
    By: Jean Chua
    Writer for CNBC.com


    Recent economic data such as stronger-than-expected exports and benign inflation in September are the latest signs that China’s slowdown may be nearing an end, reducing pressure on the government to implement more stimulus measures to shore up the world’s second-biggest economy.

    However, some observers are now concerned about a less-cited economic indicator — employment — and warn that job losses may be looming if authorities refrain from necessary fiscal policies to protect the workforce.

    As many as 100 million jobs in the export sector, one of the weakest links in the Chinese economy, could be at risk if external demand continues to fall and the government continues to show a tolerance to slightly slower growth, economists at Citi, Shen Minggao and Ding Shuang, said in a report published last week.

    The state has so far stuck to its “go-slow” policy and opted for “selective policy supports,” Shen and Ding said. The result is a rising unemployment rate, with manufacturing — a key source of job creation in the recent decade — the hardest hit. “The export weakness may have already caused job losses,” they said. “Unless the export growth can recover in the near term, which is unlikely, it’s possible that a portion of the 80 to 100 million jobs in the export sector could be at risk.”

    China's exports supported an estimated 200 million jobs and generated 31 percent of gross domestic product in 2011, according to World Bank data. But the job numbers could see a decline as exports growth wane, Citi warns.

    Already, exports growth in the nine months of this year stands at 7.1 percent, compared to a 20 percent expansion in 2011, and 31 percent in 2010. According to Ding and Shuang, 10 percent in exports growth is the magic number needed for stable job growth in China.

    Slowing economic growth is also exacerbating the problem. The government is targeting a full-year growth of 7.5 percent, compared to the actual growth of 9.2 percent in 2011. Citi estimates that every one percentage point drop in nominal GDP growth wipes 0.74 percentage points off jobs growth. (Read More: Is China in Danger of Missing Its 2012 Growth Target?)

    What’s worse, the private sector seeing profit margins being squeezed will need to lay off workers, and it’s a trend happening not just in the export sector but also in the heavy equipment, steel and coal in industries, said Patrick Chovanec, associate professor at the School of Economics and Management, Tsinghua University in Beijing.

    “Companies in these are other sectors are facing a big cash crunch, running up inventories and selling on credit, which they can only do for so long before they have start slashing operating expenses. So it's possible that more job cuts are on the way,” Chovanec told CNBC.

    Indeed, profit growth in the private sector has been falling steadily since 2010, with year-to-date growth in 2012 at 15.1 percent year-on-year, Citi said. The equivalent figure in 2009 was 16.7 percent year-on-year. This could imply that job growth in the private sector is almost flat, Ding and Shuang said.

    “If the current economic downturn cannot be altered, there is a good chance that the unemployment rate could start to rise in coming quarters,” the economists said. “Weak exports, squeezed margin and deflationary risk are the key drivers of job losses. Inevitably, it may take another stimulus for the government to unwind job losses once they occur.”

    By CNBC’s Jean Chua

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    http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stori...231601/1/.html

    MNCs expected to be more prudent in hiring in Q4


    Channel News Asia
    Posted: 16 October 2012 1322 hrs


    SINGAPORE: Companies, in particular multinational corporations (MNCs) with operations here, will be more prudent and more conservative in its hiring of staff in the fourth quarter.

    This according to Singapore-based human resource consultancy, PrimeStaff Management Services Pte Ltd, which released its Employment Outlook for the fourth quarter on Tuesday.

    PrimeStaff said most companies will be implementing hiring freezes.

    However, some companies may even retrench staff, depending on the sector they operate in. This could be due to cost control measures or business restructuring.


    PrimeStaff added that forward-looking small and medium-sized companies could pick up the talent that have been made redundant by the MNCs.

    PrimeStaff noted that Singapore's unemployment rate is likely to remain status quo but it does not rule out the possibility of a slight increase in the unemployment rate for the fourth quarter.

    PrimeStaff said any slowdown in hiring in certain sectors will be balanced out by a pick-up in hiring activities in others.

    For example, the hospitality, retail and food & beverage industries would see a higher demand for frontline and operational staff as these are needed to cope with the year-end festive season.

    The healthcare industry is also expected to experience strong hiring activity, as there is a continued need for qualified healthcare workers in Singapore.

    The sectors that may lay off workers include manufacturing and banking, especially MNCs with headquarters in Europe or the United States. This would be due to the continued economic troubles in the Europe and US markets, and consequent reduction of consumer demand.

    PrimeStaff noted that employers who are facing a shortage of manpower will need to look into how to successfully entice locals and PRs to take on the available roles which are predominantly blue-collar in nature.

    These companies will need to be more innovative in their strategies to attract local or PR candidates. The strategies could include shortening the working hours of a job originally designed for a six-day workweek to a five-day workweek instead.

    - CNA/cc

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    Quote Originally Posted by Leeds
    Information is knowledge, knowledge is power.

    Appreciate for posting all the information. Your effort may have becoming a routine but certainly informative.

    Information is useful if you get balanced representation......not just one-sided.
    Skewed representation usually has hidden agenda.

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    Quote Originally Posted by danntbt
    Information is useful if you get balanced representation......not just one-sided.
    Skewed representation usually has hidden agenda.
    Agree! Your wisdom comes into play. Information is always good to have.

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    http://www.businesstimes.com.sg/prem...mates-20121018

    Business Times
    Published October 18, 2012

    Sharp fall in trade could hit GDP estimates

    Q3 GDP may be revised down after Sept trade numbers fall short of expectations


    [SINGAPORE] Growth in the third quarter could be even worse than feared as September's trade data has turned out to be weaker than expected.

    The key non-oil domestic exports (NODX) for September fell 3.4 per cent from a year ago, when the market had been expecting a 1.2 per cent rise. Against a month earlier, the NODX did increase but the seasonally-adjusted 1.6 per cent growth fell well short of the 2.8 per cent tipped by private-sector economists.

    The weak performance of September's NODX has led Michael Wan of Credit Suisse to conclude that the chances are now higher for the Q3 gross domestic product (GDP) to be revised down.

    Even though last month's NODX showings were better than those in August - when they were down 10.7 per cent year-on-year and 9.1 per cent month-on-month - the economists remain largely unimpressed.

    "The pick-up (month-on-month) was weaker than expected and comes off two straight months of sequential decline and a particularly sharp fall in August," said Kit Wei Zheng of Citigroup. "As such, export levels remain depressed with the September seasonally-adjusted NODX level still 11 per cent below the June peak and the average Q3 level 5.8 per cent below the Q2 average.

    Strip out the lumpy pharmaceuticals and ships exports, Citigroup estimated that the overall "core" NODX fell 5.5 per cent year-on-year in September.

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    http://www.businesstimes.com.sg/prem...onomy-20121018

    Business Times
    Published October 18, 2012

    Eurozone crisis takes its toll on German economy

    Growth is now seen slowing to 0.8% this year and 1% in 2013


    [BERLIN] Two years after expanding at its fastest rate since reunification, Germany's economic growth is seen at just one per cent next year, finally hit by the eurozone crisis that has hammered most of its partners.

    The government chopped its 2013 growth forecast on Wednesday to one per cent, down from a 1.6 per cent forecast in April. For this year, the economy ministry expects growth of 0.8 per cent, up from 0.7 per cent in April.

    Germany's economy powered through the first two years of the eurozone's sovereign debt crisis, posting 4.2 per cent growth in 2010 and 3 per cent last year at a time when some peers were seeking bailouts and others were grinding to a halt.

    Its export strength saved the currency bloc from falling into recession up until the second half of this year. But uncertainty about policymakers' ability to curtail the crisis has resulted in companies postponing investment, and turmoil in Germany's main trading partners could weigh on exports in the second half of the year, the ministry said.

    "The good news is Germany is standing its ground despite all global economic turmoil and remains on track for growth," Economy Minister Philipp Roesler said. "But Germany is navigating stormy waters because of the European sovereign debt crisis and an economic weakening in emerging nations in Asia and Latin America."

    German companies are feeling the pinch. Deutsche Telekom may have to cut more jobs as a slide in revenues in Europe cuts into its profits and truckmaker MAN SE expects third-quarter orders to fall below those in the second quarter. MAN also said it was bracing for a "tough" year in 2013.

    However, after years of wage restraint and job market reforms, Germany is benefiting from a healthy labour market and employees' wallets may not actually shrink. Real wages should rise by 2.8 per cent this year and 2.6 per cent next year, outpacing inflation forecast at 2.0 and 1.9 per cent respectively and Mr Roesler said private consumption, long subdued, would continue to be a main pillar of growth.

    But the crisis looms large. Yesterday, Bertelsmann Foundation forecast a global economic crisis if Greece were to leave the euro. Even though more Germans in a recent poll want Greece to remain in the eurozone than want it out, the willingness of German citizens to give twice bailed-out Greece more credit if it fails to deliver on saving targets is wearing thin. - Reuters

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