Showing posts with label Asia news. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Asia news. Show all posts

Investment banking fees fall 8 percent in weakest first quarter since 2012

(GNN) - Global investment banking fees fell 8 percent to $20 billion in the first quarter, the poorest start to the year since 2012, hurt by weak deal activity in Europe, Asia Pacific and Japan.

Fees for deals done fell 28 percent in Japan, 14 percent in Europe and 18 percent in Asia Pacific, according to data compiled by Thomson Reuters and Freeman Consulting.

The North American investment banking market remained stable, with fees little changed at $11.5 billion.

JPMorgan Chase & Co topped the global investment banking league table in the quarter with $1.49 billion in fees. Goldman Sachs Group Inc was second with $1.48 billion.

Morgan Stanley and Citigroup Inc were the biggest gainers among the top 10 banks in fees earned, while Credit Suisse Group AG's fees dropped 23 percent.

Investment banking activity in the financial, healthcare, and energy and power sectors generated 54 percent of the global fee pool during the quarter.

Fees from deal making in the healthcare sector jumped 24 percent, with Goldman commanding 14 percent of all fees booked in the sector.

Equity capital markets underwriting fees fell 2 percent to $5.3 billion, dragged down by a 36 percent drop in fees from initial public offerings.

Fees from debt capital markets underwriting rose 4 percent to $6.3 billion, while mergers and acquisition advisory fees fell slightly to $5.5 billion.

Investment banking fees generated by financial sponsors and their portfolio companies dropped 30 percent to $2.5 billion. Blackstone Group LP's investment banking fees rose 79 percent to $168 million.

(Reuters)(Reporting by Amrutha Gayathri in Bengaluru; Editing by Saumyadeb Chakrabarty)

Rocket Internet-Backed Car Listings Site Carmudi Raises $25M To Fuel Growth In Asia And Mexico

(GNN) - Carmudi, a car classifieds site that focuses on emerging markets, announced today that it has raised $25 million to gear up its operations in Mexico and several Asian countries. This round, Carmudi’s second, includes Asia Pacific Internet Group (a joint venture between Rocket Internet and Ooredoo), Holtzbrinck Ventures, Tengelmann Ventures, as well as an undisclosed private investor.

This brings the total Carmudi has raised so far to $35 million. Its last funding round was in April 2014. The company, which was founded in 2013 and now operates in 20 countries, will use the funds to expand in seven Asian markets (Bangladesh, Indonesia, Myanmar, Pakistan, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, and Vietnam) as well as Mexico.

The company’s other markets are spread throughout Africa and the Middle East and include Cameroon, Congo, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Nigeria, Qatar, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, Tanzania, the United Arab Emirates, and Zambia.

Carmudi co-founder and global managing director Stefan Haubold says that the company plans to add more countries to its roster, but hasn’t decided which ones yet. Its latest round will be used to invest in product technology, in particular making its mobile app easier to use, and scaling up operations in Asia and Mexico.

The site currently has a total of 300,000 listings for vehicles worldwide, and claims five million users a month. Carmudi’s Android apps were rolled out last year, and it launched a iOS version earlier this month.
Carmudi’s mobile apps have been downloaded 300,000 times so far. In total, mobile visits now account for about 60 percent to 70 percent of its total traffic, which is important because the company is targeting markets where many users access the Internet primarily through smartphones or tablets.

Haubold claims that Carmudi is now the top car classifieds site in the Philippines, Bangladesh, and Myanmar. In Asia, alternatives to Carmudi’s service include local car listings and classifieds sites in each market.

Haubold says his company differentiates through its mobile apps, which let buyers upload photos and descriptions of their cars; services like loan calculators; and inventory sweeps that clear out listings after a certain length of time (60 days for most listings and 45 for ones placed by dealerships) so buyers see fresh inventory.

In some Southeast Asia markets, Carmudi’s rivals include iCar Asia, which grew last year by making acquisitions of smaller car classified sites in Thailand and Indonesia. Haubold does not consider iCar Asia a competitor, however, because Carmudi has newer listings and operates in markets that do not overlap with iCar Asia.

Carmudi monetizes through listing fees, but is currently focused on expansion and growth, says Haubold.
Rocket Internet has been busy building a network of e-commerce services and marketplaces throughout Southeast Asia, including many (real estate classifieds platform Lamudi, price comparison site Pricepanda, and car-calling app Easy Taxi) included in the Asia Pacific Internet Group’s portfolio. This creates online and offline (in the case of logistics) networks that may eventually help each individual startup scale up faster.

Petroleum ministry contradicts Imran Khan’s statement

ISLAMABAD: The spokeperson of Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Resources taking exception to the statement of Imran Khan has said that the statement made by him about petroleum prices in Pakistan is devoid of facts.

In a statement, he said that in fact the present government has substantially decreased the price of petrol already up to 30 rupees, which is based on actual import price in the past five months.

The prevalent per litre petrol price of Rs 78.28 in Pakistan is far cheaper compared to other countries in the region as per litre prices in India, Afghanistan and Sri Lanka are rupees 105, 92 and 97 respectively.

Petroleum prices are expected to be decreased further in February 2015, he added.

APP

Singtel, Sony And Warner’s New Video Streaming Service Beats Netflix To Asia

(AsiaTimes.ga) Telecom giant Singtel is planning to beat Netflix to the punch in Asia after it announced it has partnered with Sony Pictures and Warner Brothers to introduce a video streaming service in the region.

The companies said that HOOQ — which is described as a “joint venture startup” — will offer Hollywood movies and U.S. TV shows alongside domestic content from India, China, Thailand, Philippines, Indonesia, Korea and Japan. In total, HOOQ will begin with an initial catalog of over 10,000 shows and movies.

There’s no specific launch date, but Singtel said the service will go online in the first quarter of 2015, initially in Indonesia, Philippines, India and Thailand. From there, the telecom giant is promising a ‘progressive rollout’ to other countries where it has business — other Singtel markets include Singapore, and Australia.

Also lacking from the initial announcement is an indication of price, but — interestingly — it looks like customers won’t be limited to paying via credit cards, as is the case with Netflix. Singtel said it will use its “billing capabilities” in countries where credit card ownership remains low, so that may mean customers can pay as part of their post-pay contract, and perhaps even using prepaid credit.

The timing of the launch is interesting because Netflix has not arrived in Asia Pacific yet. The U.S. company is preparing to launch in Australia and New Zealand sometime this year, after which it is likely to foray into Asian markets, so HOOQ will almost certainly be first in many parts of the region. You could see that as a first mover advantage, or a move that is good for the industry in general because it raises awareness of OTT video services in nascent markets.

Nonetheless, Peter Bithos, the CEO of HOOQ, believes that there is an immediate demand for Netflix-like video streaming services in Asia.

“We are starting this venture to change the way people across Asia view entertainment. Today, across developing markets, there is limited access to quality entertainment, streamed directly to the screen of one’s choice. It’s either illegal, high cost or difficult to get. We aim to fix that,” he said in a statement.

Piracy and lack of awareness are often cited as major barriers for licensed streaming services in Asia but, with two content companies and one telco on board, HOOQ is no bootstrapped startup. It could use Singtel’s network of operators — which reach a total subscriber base of over 500 million customers — and vast resources to gain traction from the get-go.

No doubt we’ll be hearing more updates from HOOQ very soon.

Featured Image: Marc Bruxelle/Shutterstock

India’s Mad Street Den Raises $1.5M To Bring The Benefits Of AI To Apps And Services

(AsiaTimes.ga) Mad Street Den, a one-year-old artificial intelligence startup based in Chennai, India, has closed a $1.5 million seed round to bring technology developed in the labs to consumers in a useful way.

Reservoir Investments’ Exfinity Fund and GrowX Ventures provided the capital, which Mad Street Den will use for making new hires and working with partners to license and use its AI tech in apps and services.

The startup was founded by husband and wife duo Anand Chandrasekaran, a neuroscientist who graduated from Stanford, and Ashwani Asokan, who was previously with Intel Labs. The couple spent a cumulative 25 years working in the U.S., but returned to their country of birth last year to start the company.

“Relocating was a very deliberate decision,” Mad Street Den CEO Asokan told TechCrunch in an interview. “People in India and Asia are leaping frogging generations of technology, and we thought ‘where better to experiment with this stuff?'”

Location aside, Mad Street Den is different to other AI companies because it is focused on a platform of vertical services that partners can license to use in their products. It offers five different applications of AI, but Asokan explained e-commerce and analytics are proving to be the most popular with its handpicked list of partners.

E-Commerce And Analytics
The e-commerce product is centered around fashion, and offers a range of advanced services such as visual search. That could allow a shopper to take a photo of a bag or top, for example, then select their favorite color and find the nearest match on an e-commerce site.

Mad Street Den timed its arrival perfectly, since India’s e-commerce segment took off last year. Flipkart raised close to $2 billion in funding from VCs in 2014, Jeff Bezos cut Amazon India a $2 billion check for growth, and SoftBank backed Snapdeal with hundreds of millions of dollars too.

Asokan said Mad Street Den is in talks with “several” undisclosed e-commerce companies with a view to introducing its technology in their services in India before the summer. After that, she added, it will look to the wider Asia region.
Beyond e-commerce, Mad Street Den’s potential for analytics is particularly interesting.

Asokan said that its facial recognition technology could, for example, be used to detect a person’s general happiness for a week, their favorite colors, and more just from their Instagram photos. (Sidenote: be careful what you share on social media, kids.)

Right now, Mad Street Den is making money via API calls but in the future it will model its pricing based on the specifics of each vertical. For example, e-commerce partners could pay via affiliate commission or revenue-sharing, while other industries could be billed via licensing fees.

Offering Its Own Services Too

Beyond the platform play, the startup is also looking to release its own services and applications based on its technology. Asokan said that a range of ‘proofs of concept’ have been created — including a “short of staring competition game,” which I think sounds fascinating — but Mad Street Den is waiting until the right time before it launches them.

The startup has six full-time staff at this point and has bootstrapped itself so far. Asohan revealed that the company wasn’t looking for money but it sees this as an opportunity to accelerate its development.

“We weren’t planning to raise but word spread like crazy… and the VCs descended. People are already knocking on the door about our Series A… by the summer, when we should start seeing our services in the market, then we’ll be ready,” she said.

Until then, Mad Street Den plans to use most of the capital to hire “very senior people in the Valley” who its founders are connected with. Asohan expects the startup to at least double its headcount this year, but there are no plans for a U.S. office yet.

Featured Image: vitma/Shutterstock

Anti-Charlie rally in Pakistan draws 5,000

(AsiaTimes.ga) - Around 5,000 people rallied against French magazine Charlie Hebdo in Pakistan's eastern city of Lahore on Sunday, and the founder of a group banned for militant links urged protesters to boycott French products.

Hafiz Saeed, who founded Lashkar-e-Taiba, an organization banned for launching attacks in neighboring India, told protesters: "We will launch a movement against the insulting caricatures of our beloved prophet."

French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo published a picture of the Prophet Muhammad weeping on its cover last week after two gunmen stormed its offices and killed 12 people. The gunmen said their attack was revenge for previous cartoons the magazine had published mocking Islam.

Saeed urged traders to stop importing French products and for Pakistani leaders to try to get an international law against blasphemy passed.

Blasphemy is punishable by death in Pakistan.

On Friday, protesters trying to storm the French consulate in the southern city of Karachi shot and injured a photographer working for French news agency AFP.

Saeed called for more rallies next Friday. He says he has no links to militancy these days and only runs a charity, which is banned by the U.S. government for suspected militant links. The U.S. government has offered $10 million for information leading to Saeed's conviction.

(Writing by Katharine Houreld; Editing by Clelia Oziel)(GA, Reuters, Asia Times)

President, Prime Minister meet business people #pmln

(ATimes) President Mamnoon Hussain and Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif said on Wednesday that every possible facility will be provided to the business community to bolster trade activities in the country. The President and Prime Minister expressed these views in a meeting with a delegation of businessmen and industrialists here at the Aiwan-e-Sadr.

The Prime Minister earlier held a one-on-one meeting with the President. President Mamnoon said the importance of strong economy has increased manifold in the era of globalisation and termed liberal trade policies a vital factor in this regard.

He said the government is sincerely taking steps in the right direction for the improvement of national economy and promotion of business activities. He urged the business community to benefit from the trade policies of the government and mentioned the flexible business policies of the country.

The President said that law and order situation and energy crisis are major impediments towards smooth continuation of business activities in the country, however expressed hope that these issues would be overcome soon.

Prime Minister Sharif said the government is taking steps towards facilitating businesspeople. He mentioned that the country was facing big challenges of terrorism and energy shortages, and added that efforts were afoot to meet these challenges and increase electricity generation. Besides, he said the import of liquefied natural gas (LNG) to meet energy demand.

He said infrastructure development was the government’s major priority and said a motorway would be constructed from Lahore to Karachi.

Sharif said, “We have discouraged lethargy in the government’s decision-making and are bringing an economic turnaround in the country.” He said economic indicators are improving, foreign currency reserves and stock market are high and rupee was stable against dollar. The Prime Minister said a 20-point agenda has been prepared for rooting out terrorism and extremism from the country. He said the 21st Amendment and the amendment to the Army Act are important steps “to clear this mess.”

He said swift justice is key to eradicating terrorism and the people spreading hatred and sectarianism would be tried in military courts. He said the Operation Zarb-e-Azb has played an important role in dismantling terror infrastructure and those terrorising society in the name of religion will be brought to justice.

Under the National Action Plan, another operation was being launched to make the country peaceful, he added. “These decisions have been taken in national interest and should have been taken earlier,” he said. The PM said the government will give incentives to the business community and said steps will be taken to woo overseas Pakistanis to invest in Pakistan.

He asked the Federal Board of Revenue to consider decreasing tax rates to encourage more people pay taxes resulting in larger revenue collection. He directed the Chairman FBR to hold a meeting with members of the business community to sort out their issues and apprise him personally on the outcome.

The Prime Minister also directed the Ministry of Water and Power and Private Power and Infrastructure Board (PPIB) to expedite approvals of pending cases of power plants and immediately remove all hurdles. The businesspeople gave relevant suggestions to the President and the Prime Minister. They regarded the unity displayed by all parties on the issue of terrorism as a good omen.

The meeting was informed that overseas Pakistanis are sending 25 billion dollars annually through different channels, and also Free Trade Agreement 2 is being negotiated with China. It will be independent of FTA 1, signed nine years ago. Minister for Commerce Khurram Dastgir Minister for Water and Power Khwaja Asif, Petroleum Minister Shahid Khaqan Abbasi, Chairman FBR and Secretary Water and Power were present.

APP, Asia Times

PM expresses sorrow over loss of lives in Orakzai mines blast #PMLN

(ATimes) ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Muhammad Nawaz Sharif on Thursday expressed grief over the death of labourers working in a coal mine in Lower Orakzai.

The Prime Minister extended condolences to the bereaved families, a PM’s Office statement said issued here.

He directed the concerned authorities for provision of best medical facilities to the injured.
At least six labourers were killed and six others injured in a blast caused by gas accumulation inside a coal mine in Lower Orakzai Agency on Thursday morning.

APP

PM Nawaz condemns blasphemous sketches by French journal

(ATimes) ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Muhammad Nawaz Sharif on Thursday strongly condemned the publication of blasphemous sketches in a French journal and said international community should discourage it.

Freedom of speech should not be used to hurt religious sentiments of any community, the Prime Minister said in a statement issued by his office.

He said publication of provocative material should be discouraged by the international community.

APP

Lyari grenade attacks claim two cops’ lives

(ATimes/PK)KARACHI: As many as three people lost their lives including two policemen in two separate hand grenade attacks in Baghdadi area of Lyari Town here on Monday.

According to the reports, five others also sustained wounds in the attacks after which shops and businesses were closed down in the neighbourhood.  Meanwhile, the police cordoned off the area.

The deceased and wounded were taken to a nearby hospital.

Japan proposes joint work on Australia sub fleet: report

GNN TOKYO: Japan is proposing jointly building Australia’s new submarines, instead of exporting a new fleet, a report said Monday, after concerns in Canberra over the effect on the domestic ship-building industry.

Under the proposal, Japan’s defense ministry is to cooperate with Australia in developing special steel and other materials for its new submarines, while Tokyo will be in charge of assembling them, the Mainichi Shimbun said.

The Australian side has taken “a positive stance” on the proposal, the daily said, adding that the two countries may strike a deal by the end of 2015.

Australia needs to replace its fleet of diesel and electric-powered subs, which date from the 1990s, and Japan’s high-tech ship-building industry is through to be well-placed to win the contract.

But opposition politicians and industry groups in Australia protest that losing the contract could deal a potentially fatal blow to naval shipbuilding at home, with a knock-on effect for associated industries.

However, critics point out that Japan may be able to supply the fleet for as little as half of the cost of making it at home.

Japan is on a drive to promote its manufacturing industries abroad, with Prime Minister Shinzo Abe touring the world as salesman-in-chief.

Abe has argued that Japan must play a bigger role on the global stage and has pushed to loosen post-World War II restrictions on when its well-equipped armed forces can act.

He has also relaxed a self-imposed ban on weapons exports, paving the way for the possible deal with Australia.

Immediate confirmation of the report was not available.

Source: AFP

Dollar weakens in Asia on mixed US jobs data

GNN - TOKYO- The dollar weakened against the yen in Asia on Monday after surging last week to seven-year highs last week, while a closely watched US jobs report missed expectations.

In midday Tokyo trading, the greenback fetched 114.24 yen, down from 114.62 yen in New York and sharply lower than the 115.39 yen in Tokyo earlier Friday.

The euro was at $1.2476 against two-year lows of $1.2456 in US trade and 142.53 yen, compared with 142.78 yen.

On Friday, the US Labor Department said the world’s number-one economy added 214,000 jobs last month.

While that figure was weaker than the forecast 235,000, the previous two months’ job gains were revised upward and the unemployment rate slipped to a six-year low.

Still, the fresh data did little to boost hopes that the US Federal Reserve would hike interest rates sooner than its mid-2015 timeline, which would support the dollar.

The euro has been under pressure since the head of the European Central Bank (ECB) said last week that he was prepared to unveil more measures to kickstart the struggling eurozone economy.

On Monday, sentiment took a hit as Chinese inflation came in unchanged at 1.6 percent in October, well off the government’s target of 3.5 percent and adding to fears about the strength of the world’s number two economy.

Weekend data also showed growth in Chinese exports and imports slowed last month.

Traders are eyeing US figures, including retail sales, and eurozone factory output figures this week.

“While US data are expected to come in decent, the eurozone will likely continue to display sluggish recovery, which would justify (a) dovish ECB stance,” Credit Agricole said.

SOURCE: AFP, AIP

Oil prices up in Asian trade

GNN - SINGAPORE- Oil prices rose in Asia on Monday as dealers digested mixed US jobs data while anticipating a surge in fuel demand during winter months in the northern hemisphere, analysts said.

US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for December delivery rose 32 cents to $78.97 while Brent crude for December was up 45 cents at $83.84 in afternoon trade.

The US Labor Department said Friday the economy added 214,000 jobs last month, marking the ninth straight month of growth above 200,000 despite missing the 235,000 consensus analyst estimate.

The unemployment rate slipped to a six-year low of 5.9 percent.

Desmond Chua, market analyst at CMC Markets in Singapore, said the data raised investor optimism as it “underlined persistent jobs growth in the United States”.

Singapore’s United Overseas Bank said oil prices were also supported on “expectations that the cold weather could support petroleum products demand” despite a sell-off last week following price cuts by Saudi Arabia.

Dealers are closely monitoring the situation in rebel-held east Ukraine, following reports Sunday of Russian military reinforcements there that has raised fears of a return to all-out fighting in violation of a ceasefire agreement with Kiev.

Russia has denied being involved in the Ukrainian civil strife, but openly gives the pro-Kremlin rebels political and humanitarian backing.

Russia is one of the world’s top oil producers and Ukraine is a major conduit for Russian natural gas exports to Europe.

SOURCE: AIP,AFP

Asian shares wilt, dollar off highs

GNN - Asian shares got off to a lackluster start on Wednesday after a plunge in oil prices dragged down U.S. shares, while the dollar took a breather after this week's rally.

Crude prices steadied after falling to multi-year lows on news top oil exporter Saudi Arabia cut its U.S. sales prices.

Investors warily tracked U.S. election results, in which Republicans were poised to make major gains and possibly capture control of the Senate in a midterm vote that could serve as a public referendum on President Barack Obama's job performance.

The dollar dipped as investors locked in profits after this week's rally, while a Reuters report saying central bankers in the euro zone plan to challenge European Central Bank President Mario Draghi's leadership style underpinned the euro.

Some members intend to raise their concerns with Draghi at the governors' traditional informal working dinner on Wednesday before the ECB's formal monthly rate-setting meeting on Thursday, the sources interviewed by Reuters said.

"We do not expect further easing at Thursday’s ECB meeting but it may give more insight into its new asset purchase programs," strategists at Barclays said.

MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS was down about 0.1 percent in early trade, while Japan's Nikkei stock average .N225 gave up about 0.2 percent.

On Wall Street on Tuesday, the S&P 500 .SPX and Nasdaq Composite .IXIC ended lower after the big drop in oil prices, while the Dow Jones industrial average .DJI eked out a small gain, with energy shares under pressure from low oil prices.

U.S. data on Tuesday revealed a surprise widening of the trade deficit last month, which raised speculation that the initially reported 3.5 percent pace of third-quarter U.S. growth could be revised down. That in turn reduced the likelihood that the U.S. Federal Reserve would hike interest rates in 2015.

The Commerce Department said the trade deficit grew 7.6 percent to $43.03 billion, compared with a forecast of $40.00 billion among analysts polled by Reuters.

The data increased the safe-haven appeal of U.S. Treasury notes, pushing down the benchmark 10-year yield and weighing on the dollar. The yield stood at 2.335 percent in Asia, down from its U.S. close of 2.342 percent on Tuesday, when it fell as low as 2.303 percent.

The dollar index was flat on the day at 87.015 .DXY, after moving away from its four-year high of 87.406 touched on Monday.

The dollar was buying 113.60 yen, down slightly and well below a seven-year peak of 114.21 hit on Monday.

The euro edged up to $1.2550, moving off a two-year low of $1.2439 set on Monday and shrugging off downbeat data after the ECB news.

The European Commission on Tuesday downgraded its forecast for euro zone economic growth over the next few years, leading investors to raise bets the ECB might consider more action to stimulate the region's economy.

In commodities trading, U.S. crude futures CLc1 edged up about 0.1 percent to $77.28 after reaching the lowest intraday price since October 2011 on Tuesday, after the Saudi move.

(GNN,AIP,Reuters,ga)(Editing by Eric Meijer)

Ybrain Raises $3.5M To Fund Trials Of Its Wearable For Alzheimer’s Patients

 #GNN Team - Ybrain, a Korean startup that makes wearables for Alzheimer’s patients, announced today that it has raised $3.5 million in Series A funding led by Stonebridge Capital, bringing its total raised so far to $4.2 million.

Co-founder Seungyeon Kim told TechCrunch that the money will be used for clinical trials and the manufacturing of its wearable devices.

The company was founded in 2013 by Kyongsik Yun, a neuroscientist who trained at the California Institute of Technology, and engineers from Samsung.

Ybrain is currently conducting clinical trials at Samsung Medical Center in Korea.

Kim says that Soterix Medical, another wearable device maker, is Ybrain’s closest direct competitor, while global pharmaceutical companies like Pfizer and Novartis are indirect competitors. He adds that Ybrain is currently the only company carrying out clinical trials for Alzheimer’s disease with a wearable health device.
Ybrain wearable device consists of a headband with two sensors embedded in the front that emit electronic signals at 2-milli-amperes, which stimulate brain activity to counteract the symptoms of Alzheimer’s. The device is supposed to be used for 30 minutes a day, five days a week, and can be worn at home.

The headband is also intended for use by people with “mild cognitive impairment.”

The startup’s clinical trials currently show that its wearable devices are 20 percent to 30 percent more effective than existing oral medication for Alzheimer’s patients. “This was key to our funding,” says Kim.

The devices will be available for purchase online and through hospitals after Ybrain finishes clinical trials and registers with the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in the U.S. as well as the Korean Food and Drug Administration (KFDA).

In a statement, Fortune Sohn, analyst at Stonebridge Capital, said “Most Alzheimer’s disease experts are forecasting that new Alzheimer’s oral medications may not come out until 2025. Ybrain’s global first Alzheimer patient ready wearables will be a great solution.”

[h/t BeTech]

Taiwan-Based Streaming Music Service KKBOX Raises $104M To Expand Overseas

#GNN Tech - KKBOX, a Taiwan-based company that has provided streaming music services in Asia since before Spotify was founded, announced (link in Chinese) that it has raised $104 million from Singapore GIC (formerly known as the Government of Singapore Investment Corporation).

KKBOX co-founder and CEO Chris Lin said that the funds will be used to develop the company’s tech platform and services, as well as continue expanding into overseas markets.

The compnay currently has 10 million users and offers streaming music services in six Asian markets: Taiwan, Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia, and Thailand. Other investors include KDDI, Japan’s second-largest telecommunications company, HTC, and Taiwan’s Chunghwa Telecom.

KKBOX was founded in 2004 and currently has deals with 500 international and local music labels that allow it to stream over 10 million tracks.

In addition to its streaming music services, KKBOX also publishes a montly print magazine about music and holds an annual music awards show in Taiwan.

KKBOX first started expanding overseas in 2009, starting with Hong Kong. Since 2013, however, it has had to compete with Spotify, which launched in Singapore, Hong Kong, and Malaysia that year. It is now also available in the Philippines and Taiwan.

In 2013, KKBOX also began aggressively expanding, launching in Malaysia and Singapore. It has said it also plans to move into Indonesia, Vietnam, and the Philippines this year.

KKBOX previously told TC that its competitive advantage against Western competitors like Spotify is its ability to strike deals with local music labels, which take a 70 percent to 85 percent market share over Western labels, as well as localized features like rolling karaoke-style lyrics and in-app chats and events with artists.

Promise of more keeps investors hooked on Asia's frothy markets

#GNN - Calling the top in financial markets is never easy. Asian stock and bond markets may appear frothy at their near-record levels after a multi-year rally, but global investors are still betting on a mix of healthy returns and history to juice up their profits.
Six years since the global financial crisis spurred a relentless pursuit of yields, Asian stock markets are at record highs, bond yields have tumbled to pre-crisis lows and companies are raising huge amounts of cheap equity and debt.

Brisk corporate earnings growth, fed by a global thirst for the region's exports of cars and electronics goods and robust domestic consumption, has further burnished Asia's appeal and kept funds focused on ripe pickings.

"I would not at all subscribe to the idea that markets are expensive and now's the time to get out," said Julie Dickson, a portfolio manager at Ashmore Investment Management in London, a fund with $75 billion in assets worldwide.

"And if you do that, you are going to be potentially losing out on some very compelling opportunities for growth in the next 3 to 5 years and possibly longer, particularly in China and Korea."

Indeed, triggers for a correction, which seems overdue, have come and gone - ranging from geopolitics such as the Ukraine-Russia tensions or economic ones such as an Argentine debt default or periodic threats of a rise in U.S. yields.

Other regions have cooled off in the past two months. There were outflows from U.S. high-yielding bonds and equity funds, European equities have fallen sharply, and foreign cash has moved away from Latin American and European equity markets.

Asia has remained the exception, almost caught in a virtuous cycle where company earnings are surpassing expectations and bond yields offer a decent cushion for risk.

EARNINGS FLOURISH
Asian stocks .MIAPJ0000PUS are up 137 percent in just under six years. Equity markets in India, Indonesia, Korea, the Philippines and most other countries are well above their 2008 peaks, with some at record levels.

Earnings have spurred much of these heady gains, underwritten by an economic recovery led by domestic consumption and, more recently, exports. Second quarter earnings have so far on average been growing at 25-to-30 percent over the previous year.

And despite a slowing in China's frenetic growth rates, economists on average expect Asia to grow at 3 times the pace of the developed world this year - a big lure for investors grappling with uneven global growth.

The skyrocketing markets have understandably raised the risk of a sudden and sharp reversal, but those putting more money in the game make a persuasive case for staying on.

"You have to look at what earnings growth companies have delivered. And earnings in Asia over the past year or so have been broadly supportive of the move up in the market," said Andrew Gillan, Asia ex-Japan equities head at Henderson Global Investors. Henderson has $4.5 billion in Asia-Pacific equities.

No one's sure what will touch off a correction or even which part of the market will sell off first.

"We know that at some point the party is over but as a portfolio manager you are paid to look for opportunities for your clients," Hans Goetti, head of Asian investments at Banque Internationale a Luxembourg (BIL) in Singapore, told Reuters TV.

One likely trigger would be a spike in U.S. yields, possibly in early 2015 in anticipation of a rate rise by the Federal Reserve, which would cause high-yield Asian bonds to be sold. Even there, the high-yield market in Asia has been holding up well, barring some discrimination among investors on primary issues. For instance, Indonesian firm Berau Coal (BRAU.JK) postponed a dollar bond offering citing adverse market conditions.

RISK PREMIUM
JPMorgan's JACI high yield index .JPMACIGN for Asia is now around 7 percent, and that compares with a 5.71 percent yield on the U.S. high yield benchmark .JPMHYDOM. Yields on such risky Asian debt were below that for the U.S. counterparts in 2008, which means Asian bonds aren't as overvalued now.

According to Citi's Asian strategist Markus Rosgen, emerging Asia market valuations are below historic peaks, with prices on average 16 percent below the October 2007 peak and yet earnings per share now 29 percent higher than the previous peak in mid-2008.

Prices in Latin America and emerging Europe are also significantly below peaks, but the earnings growth is absent there. In the United States, earnings are above the peak but so are prices.

This higher risk premium in Asian equity prices gives investors more wiggle room, should markets turn when interest rates rise, Rosgen wrote recently.

That doesn't stop policymakers from worrying.

In a recent interview with the Central Banking Journal, India's central bank Governor Raghuram Rajan, who had also previously warned of a crisis ahead of the 2008 crash in markets, said investors were living on hope and prayer that markets wouldn't unwind messily.

"They put the trades on even though they know what will happen as everyone attempts to exit positions at the same time."

(GNN)(Reuters)(Additional reporting by Gautam Srinivasan in Singapore; Editing by Shri Navaratnam)

Sankaty to buy JPMorgan debt portfolio for $1 billion: FT

#GNN - Bain Capital's credit arm, Sankaty Advisors, is buying the debt portfolio of JPMorgan's principal investment group for more than $1 billion, the Financial Times reported.
Sankaty won an auction for JPMorgan Chase & Co's Global Special Opportunities Group portfolio, which contains junior loans in North America and Europe as well as securities in Asia and Australia, the newspaper said. (on.ft.com/1AnRNHZ)

The deal is set to be announced on Monday, FT said.

Sankaty, which has $24 billion under management, is likely to hire many of the JPMorgan employees who built the portfolio, the report said.

(GNN,Reuters,AIP)(Reporting by Supriya Kurane in Bangalore; Editing by Gopakumar Warrier)

As U.S. kicks off crude exports, Iran casts a shadow in Asia

#GNN - The United States faces an awkward rival in its first attempts in 40 years to export crude oil - Iran.
Iran, whose economy has been throttled by Western sanctions that have halved its crude shipments, is now selling higher quality and cheaper oil to China that leaves little room for the U.S. crude to enter the world's top energy consumer.

While buyers in Japan and South Korea have been willing to trial a U.S. grade of the super-light crude known as condensate, China has already locked in annual contracts with Tehran and is not expected to take any U.S. oil in the short-term.

With U.S. producers looking to open a trade route to sell surplus condensate from the U.S. shale boom, worries about quality and legal issues have added to doubts about how much of the oil the rest of Asia can take.

"China gets condensate from Iran, which is much cheaper than that from the U.S.," said a Singapore-based trader with a European trading company. "They might get involved at a later stage but they will not be at the forefront."

Condensate won export approval from U.S. officials in June as long as it has been minimally processed, softening a decades-old ban on selling U.S. crude abroad.

The light oil can be cracked in a processing plant called a splitter to make petroleum products and petrochemicals, or blended with heavier crude for use in refineries.

South Korea and Japan have purchased the first condensate from the United States. Mitsui & Co bought a cargo from Enterprise Product Partners for loading this month and has onsold it to South Korean refiner GS Caltex [GSCAL.UL], sources said.

Refiner Cosmo Oil Co has also bought a cargo of U.S. condensate that will load in late August for arrival at the Yokkaichi refinery in Japan in October, a source said.

Japan and South Korea, which together account for just over half of Asia's 1.1 million-barrels-per-day (bpd) in condensate splitter capacity, are seen as more open to trying the United States as an alternative supplier.

Enterprise has also signed a short-term contract with another Japanese trader, Mitsubishi Corp, with a first loading likely in September.

IRAN COMPETITION
Asian buyers have been waiting to see if the U.S. oil is suitable and if exporters can price it competitively given it has to be shipped a further distance than competing grades from the leading regular suppliers Qatar and Australia.

"They are testing the waters so we're not expecting huge volumes this year," said Richard Gorry, managing director of energy consultancy JBC Asia.

Showing the competition U.S. exports face, Iran exports about 55 percent of its roughly 250,000 bpd of South Pars condensate output to two Chinese buyers at deep discounts under annual contracts.

Since U.S. and European Union sanctions were eased late last year in exchange for Iran curbing nuclear activities, Tehran's exports have risen about 30 percent to 1.25 million to 1.3 million bpd, much of this as South Pars shipments to China.

Some of the Iranian condensate could be sold as low as $5 a barrel below Dubai quotes or about $8 a barrel cheaper than Qatari grades.

U.S. condensate would likely have to be priced lower than the similar Qatari grades to attract buyers, traders said.

Qatar is the biggest supplier of condensate to Asia at about 450,000 bpd, followed by Iran. Australia and East Timor together produce nearly 170,000 bpd, with most of the output heading to Asian markets, according to trade sources.

Higher shipping costs compared with the short distance from the Middle East will deter India from buying U.S. condensate, according to sources at Indian refiners.

LEGAL, QUALITY CONCERNS
Another issue is uncertainty over the future of U.S. regulations on condensate exports.

Two U.S. senators have questioned the U.S. Commerce Department's approval, saying exports may violate a ban in place since the Arab oil embargo of the 1970s. Refined products, such as gasoline and diesel, are not restricted.

"What happens if some ruling appears and penalizes the buyers?" asked a trader at a North Asian refiner. "Also, there's not much economics in it so why take the risk?"

Asian users are also concerned that U.S. condensates may vary widely in quality as they will be come from fields scattered across shale formations such as the Eagle Ford in southern Texas, from which Enterprise pulls its oil.

The U.S. oil is expected to be more commonly used as a blend stock by refiners, limiting the amount available for 350,000 bpd of new splitter capacity coming online in Asia this quarter.

(GNN,Reuters,AIP)(Reporting by Florence Tan, Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen and Keith Wallis in SINGAPORE, Meeyoung Cho in SEOUL, Osamu Tsukimori and James Topham in TOKYO, Chen Aizhu in BEIJING, Rania El-Gamal in DUBAI, and Nidhi Verma in NEW DELHI; Editing by Manash Goswami, Richard Pullin and Tom Hogue)

Asia shares extend losses after Wall St slip

(GNN) - HONG KONG: Asian markets sank Wednesday, following a negative lead from Wall Street, while China released data showing inflation eased slightly in June after hitting a four-month high in May.
There is also a nervousness that equities could be in line for a correction following a recent rally over the past few weeks.

Tokyo slipped 0.34 percent, Sydney shed 0.90 percent and Seoul was 0.44 percent lower, while Hong Kong lost 1.16 percent and Shanghai eased 0.18 percent.

Jakarta was closed for presidential elections.

US shares retreated on Tuesday for a second straight session after returning from the long, Independence Day weekend. The S&P 500 and Dow closed Thursday at record highs after a better-than-expected report on US jobs creation.

The Dow slipped 0.69 percent, the S&P 500 fell 0.70 percent and the Nasdaq tumbled 1.35 percent.

Some observers have predicted a pullback after the latest surge across global markets. Among them this week Nobel prizewinning economist Joseph Stiglitz said he was "very uncomfortable" with current prices.

There are also concerns that the Federal Reserve could accelerate its plan to raise interest rates next year in light of recent upbeat economic data out of Washington.

In China the National Bureau of Statistics said in a statement that inflation came in at 2.3 percent last month, down from 2.5 percent in May.

It is also slightly below 2.4 percent forecast by economists for Dow Jones Newswires and well short of the 3.5 percent annual target set by Beijing.

Traders will now be keeping a close eye on Thursday´s trade statistics and the release next week of April-June economic growth data, hoping for an improvement on the previous three months.

On currency markets the dollar´s advances against the yen last week have been all but eliminated.

In early Tokyo trade the greenback was quoted at 101.53 yen, against 101.57 yen in New York and well below the 102.11 level touched on Monday in Japan.

The euro bought $1.3615 and 138.26 yen compared with $1.3611 and 138.24Oil prices were mixed. US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for August delivery rose eight cents to $103.48 while Brent crude eased eight cents to $108.86.Gold fetched $1,319.57 an ounce at 0210 GMT compared with $1,322.43 late Tuesday. (GNN)(AFP)(AIP)