Showing posts with label world economy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label world economy. Show all posts

Mar 31, 2018

Chinese Dragon Yawns At Trump On Trade War Front


    China to import $8tn of goods in next five years: foreign minister
    China will import $8 trillion of goods and attract $600 billion of foreign investment in        the next five years, Foreign Minister Wang Yi said on Friday.
China’s overseas investment will reach $750 billion in the next five years, the foreign ministry said in a statement on its website, citing Wang at a conference in Vietnam.
Wang said China would widen market access and open up its financial sector.
The practices of unilateralism and protectionism would be a form of regression, and not only would they lead to a dead end, they would damage one’s own interests, he said.

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Jul 20, 2017

ADB upgrades emerging Asia’s growth outlook to 5.9%

The Asian Development Bank on Thursday upgraded its outlook for emerging Asia’s growth rate of gross domestic product for this year to 5.9% from the previous figure of 5.7%, citing better-than-estimated Chinese economic growth.

The GDP growth rates in 2015 and 2016 were 6.0% and 5.8%, respectively.

The key driver for the upgrade is China, up 0.2 points to 6.7%, backed by increased domestic consumption and exports. The Chinese government earlier announced that January-June GDP growth was 6.9%.

The previous outlook was published in April. On Thursday, the ADB also upgraded the growth outlook for 2018 to 5.8% from 5.7%.

The ADB’s outlook covers 45 countries and regions in the Asia-Pacific region, and excludes developed nations.


Jul 27, 2015

The Future Of Currency Trading I Interesting Figures In World Forex Markets I What You Must Know About Global Currency Markets

The Future Of Currency Trading I Interesting Figures In World Forex Markets I What You Must Know About Global Currency Markets

The foreign exchange market of the future is likely to be bigger, more tightly regulated and more diverse—in terms of currencies traded, the range of market participants, and the technology and strategies applied.

Larger volumes will reflect not only continuing economic growth and greater interconnectedness, but also forex's increasing importance as an asset class. The big banks and hedge funds will become less dominant, as new entrants with different aims and trading strategies enter the market.
Indeed, there are many reasons to believe that the era of the big, high-risk position trader will end. One is the relentless rise of algorithmic, or automated, trading: in 2004, these accounted for just 2% of all trades; this year, for the first time, they surpassed 50%.
Then there are the new types of trader. "The globalization of investment, with insurance and pension funds now major investors in international capital markets, has led to the diversification of entities that regularly turn to the forex market," says Professor Mark Taylor, dean of Warwick Business School in the U.K

"The market is becoming more fragmented with new players coming in, sometimes from unexpected sectors," says Michael Kitson, an economist at the University of Cambridge Judge Business School in the U.K. These include forex-focused mutuals and exchange-traded funds, which may be the vanguard of a host of alternative mass-market investment products. There is also a growing army of independent retail investors, especially in Asia and the Far East. Mr. Kitson believes that greater competition and market fragmentation will help create a more level playing field.
However, the greatest impact on forex markets may be new legislation, such as Dodd-Frank, EMIR and Basel III. Dodd-Frank's so-called Volker Clause, for example, aims to separate high-risk activities, such as derivatives trading, from retail and commercial banking, effectively restricting proprietary trading by banks (i.e. banks trading with their own money). "A fundamental reason for the volatility is the diminished role of the banks as 'market makers' due to the ban on proprietary trading," comments Patrick Teng, founder and chief dealer of Six Capital. He notes that "banks have started to play broker and the role of proprietary trading is now being taken over by independent entrepreneurial firms (such as Six Capital), banks spinning off independent units or even by hedge funds."
"Clearly, dealers are cutting down on proprietary trading," says Chiara Banti, lecturer in finance at the University of Essex in the U.K., although this may also be because Basel III exacerbates banks' funding constraints. And while dire predictions of disruptive new regulations have not yet materialized, the most likely impact of greater transparency will be narrower spreads. "Restrictions on proprietary trading must have reduced liquidity, so the banks are offloading their orders elsewhere in the market," Prof. Taylor says.
Tighter regulation to prevent rate rigging—for which more than $9 billion of fines have so far been imposed—will make it easier to press charges against individual traders and their managers. However, some regulators are moving faster than others. "The plethora of new financial regulations are not being internationally coordinated," says Mr. Kitson.
Another major effect of new regulation is that banks will execute client orders at the daily fix electronically, eliminating the human element and reinforcing the trend towards algorithmic or automated trading.  
Dr. Banti notes that "regulation makes trading more expensive, while low bid-ask spreads renders market-making less profitable. As a result, there is less proprietary trading and a decline in the liquidity provided by dealers."
As to what will be traded, Mr. Kitson expects, "a more diverse pool of currencies, including the yuan and the rupee, to eventually join the main currency pairs traded, as these economies are large and growing faster than the U.S. or Europe."
The very structure of the market is changing. Prof. Taylor foresees a shift from the present "oligopoly" of banks, whose market makers and trading platforms are widely used by other players, towards a multilateral forex market. "The emergence of new players will depend very much on developments in technology and trading platforms," he says.
"Thinking small and looking for ways to aggregate success consistently is the way to create substantial profits and regenerate liquidity," Mr. Teng says.

Apr 20, 2010

Excerpts from IMF Global Financial Stability Report

The IMF recently released on 20th Global Financial Stability Report. Few comments and excerpts from the reports:
                    IMF put stress on the need for the countries to take steps to revive credit growth. It expressed concerns over potential rising seriousness of Sovereign debts than the private sector sluggishness. It also mentioned that the global economy is on a revival path. It expressed further concerns by stating that the government balance sheets are becoming vulnerable and the risk and further vulnerabilities to the global economy is coming from this side. It acknowledged the deterioration of fiscal balances of countries. This is especially true when recently USA is already and was always in deep debt, it brought the subprime crisis while the ghosts of Greece crisis are not fading still and the countries are in queue like those of Spain, Poland, Italy, UK, France, Japan etc to bring up their debt problems when the time permits. All of these countries have their debt level around more than or equal to 90% of their GDP.
The IMF also commented that the Longer-run solvency concerns could translate into short-term strains in funding markets as investors require higher yields to compensate for future risks.
While the cost of insuring Greek sovereign debt against default surged to a record on 19th April since the debut of Euro currency in 1999.
The IMF report also said the main sources of sovereign risk in the 16-country euro region have shifted to reflect market concerns about fiscal sustainability. At the same time IMF mentioned that the US and European banks are safer than they were last year.
The IMF official said that the Government lenders also face problems and the reason is the debt-to-GDP ratio of the world’s advanced economies which is nearing the highest levels since World War-2.
The IMF report notably focused on the recent problems faced for short term financing for banks and governments alike.
One of the strongest writing of the report was the mention of IMF that the emerging markets such as Asia, and Latin America. This attraction is due to strong growth prospects, appreciating currencies, and rising asset prices, lower interest rates are attracting capital flows in competition to developed economies.
The other noticeable point of the IMF report was the concern about excesses in real estate markets especially China.