June 09, 2009

The Genting Shadow Play

This was announced today (10 June 2009).

Gaming group Genting has paid US$100 million (RM350 million) for a 3.2 per cent stake in US casino operator MGM Mirage, an official from the US company said today.

The stake was offered under a US$1 billion equity placement by MGM Mirage last month.

"We take this as a sign of great confidence in our company," Alan Feldman, senior vice-president of public affairs for MGM Mirage told Reuters.

Last month, Kuala Lumpur-based Genting and its unit Resorts World had subscribed for a combined US$100 million worth of notes issued by MGM Mirage. The notes were part of MGM's US$1.5 billion fund-raising exercise to help settle its outstanding debts and for general corporate purposes.

Malaysian analysts had said the investments could pave the way for Genting to acquire a stake in MGM or take over the US casino operator's investment in MGM Grand Macau.

Genting, founded by the late tycoon Lim Goh Tong, is particularly keen to explore opportunities in Macao, where MGM Mirage has a 50-50 joint venture with Pansy Ho, the daughter of Stanley Ho, the Hong Kong gaming magnate.

MGM Mirage and Las Vegas Sands, which operate the world’s two largest casinos in Macao, have been struggling to reduce their debt burdens, inviting speculation that they could be tempted to raise cash by selling stakes.

Justin Leong, head of strategic investments and corporate affairs for Genting, said: “We are constantly looking to broaden our portfolio of strategic investments and strengthen partnerships around the world.”

Genting had been interested in potentially taking a stake in Pansy Ho’s US$1.25 billion joint-venture casino with MGM Mirage, the MGM Grand Macau.

And so the MGM notes are finally converted into shares of the MGM Mirage, putting Genting's shadow play once more into the lime-light. Will the main theatre of action be in Macau?

And what magic will they spin from now on for its shareholders since the AGMs of both Genting Berhad and Genting Malaysia are on 16th and 17th June?

Are the shares of all three Genting units (including Genting Singapore) on the way up again?

Back with a Vengeance?

This latest report seems to signal the return of the construction sector to prime time.

Malaysia’s construction sector is coming back with a vengeance as the government accelerates spending to counter the downturn.

According to Jon Oh, an analyst with CLSA here, the sector could have outperformed the broader market index by as much as 30 per cent over the last three months.

There are other reasons for the rekindled interest including the fact that construction firms have returned to the black: infrastructure builder IJM, for example, posted RM290 million in net profit for its 2008 financial year from a loss of RM421 million the year earlier. In addition, falling materials’ prices also imply larger margins.

But the key driver is the accelerated spending which seems to be driven by Prime Minister and Finance Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak. In late May, for example, the government awarded a RM1.3 billion tunnelling project to a Japanese-Malaysian consortium of companies, including IJM, to kick-start the Pahang-Selangor interstate water transfer project that was first announced five years ago.

The RM5-8 billion project is an ambitious, and environmentally contentious, project to transfer water from a newly created dam in Pahang through a tunnel in the Main Range of mountains and piped from a newly created water treatment plant to end-users in Selangor.

It was deemed necessary in 2004 after studies showed that the demand for water in the Klang Valley, Malaysia’s most industrialised hub, would outstrip supply by 2014.

Malaysia’s poor fiscal situation put the project on ice but the downturn and the ascendancy of Najib, who is from Pahang, seems to have given the project a new urgency.

The new emphasis on accelerated spending is partly driven by the need to prevent a hard economic landing for Malaysia which entered recession in its first quarter.

But it’s also political: the ruling Barisan Nasional is under severe pressure from the opposition and needs to shore up public support by demonstrating a firm hand on the economy ahead of general elections in 2013.

On the water project, the construction industry is interested because only the tunnelling works have been awarded.

The Pahang portion of the contract — the dam, piping and the tunnelling — are likely to be dominated by Japanese contractors as it is being funded by a US$1 billion (RM3.51 billion) loan from the Japan Bank for International Cooperation.

Even so, AMMB Banking Group picked Loh and Loh (a Malaysian dams’ specialist) and JAKS Resources (a pipes supplier) as likely beneficiaries for sub-contract work.

There is an estimated RM2.3 billion worth of contracts still to be handed out on the Pahang portion of the works.

Around RM4-5 billion worth of work is up for grabs on the Selangor side, which will have to be awarded soon, so that both sides can meet the 2014 deadline seamlessly.

This portion, however, is to be government-funded so all the work will go to local contractors.

For this, AMMB picks infrastructure specialist IJM, Gamuda, Loh and Loh and, once again JAKS as the major beneficiaries.

But water isn’t the only thing Malaysian construction firms are eyeing. Under government plans to improve urban transport, state agency Prasarana has been tasked with spending RM35 billion to improve public transport in the Kuala Lumpur area by extending Light Rail Transit and bus networks.

So far it is still in the design state but Prasarana has announced that it will go to the market to raise an initial RM4 billion to kick things off.

Pump-priming is working for the construction sector. So when is the ripple effect going to reach the common man in the street?

Right Brain;Left Brain

So which are you?

Right-brained or left-brained?

The left hand side of your brain (the hemisphere) controls the right hand side of your body and the right hand hemisphere-the left side of your body.

According the the theorist, Roger Sperry who won the Nobel Prize for this discovery, those who are left brained have the following skills and capacities. These are

analytical
logical
sequential
linear
speech
lists
number skills

Those who are governed by the right hemisphere are good in the following:

visual
imagination
spatial perception
rhythmic
holistic(over-viewing)
colour perception

According to scientists, the greatest thinkers such as Einstein and Darwin use both sides of the brain efficiently.

So don't be blindsided. Use all of your brain if possible.

The US Job Scenario

The Bureau of Labour Statistics monthly report released on Friday (5 June 2009) has indicated that the brutal pace of job losses on Wall Street may be slowing, but experts remain cautious about whether this means a quick turnaround is on the way.

Finance and real estate jobs fell again in May, but at a much slower pace than in previous months.

The financial services sector lost 30,000 jobs in May, less than the 50,000 jobs some analysts were expecting would be lost. The number was also much lower than the prior six-month average monthly job loss of 46,000.

Half the jobs lost in May were in credit-related areas, including credit cards and sales financing. Another 10,800 jobs were lost in securities brokerage, followed by 3,500 jobs in insurance.

On a positive note, 600 jobs were gained in the mortgage brokerage and processing sub-sectors, reflecting the recent surge in mortgage refinancings, though that gain may be short-lived if the higher mortgage rates of recent weeks choke off interest in refinancing.

The real estate sector also showed some signs that the worst might be over, losing a net 11,000 jobs in May, compared with 13,000 in April.

News of the slowing trend has been welcomed but is not surprising to economists who have been seeing signs of improvement in key indicators for some time.

In the latest sign of recovery, the US government said yesterday it had agreed to allow 10 of the nation's biggest banks to pay back a combined US$68 billion (RM238 billion) of taxpayer money pumped into them last year to combat the financial crisis.

"We think firms have effectively reduced jobs through rapid job cuts over the past several months already," said Michelle Meyer, an economist at Barclays Capital. "Broadly speaking, the pace of job cuts should continue to slow, reaching a bottom some time in the third quarter."

And financial recruiters have also seen some light at the end of the tunnel. "We've already seen selective hiring particularly at boutique investment banking firms," said Skiddy von Stade, chairman of OneWire.com, a finance industry hiring and career management tool.

From Evercore Partners and Greenhill & Co, to Moelis & Co, Nomura Securities, and Perella Weinberg, boutiques have been poaching high profile names from larger banks, including Bank of America, JP Morgan Chase, and Morgan Stanley, for months.

Still, further job cuts loom, but it is unclear where these cuts stand because some banks are being less than forthcoming about numbers.

For example, Bank of America announced in December that it was slashing as many as 35,000 positions by 2011, but a spokesman declined to provide any updated figures when asked yesterday about how many of those staff have already gone.

Citigroup has cut 63,000 jobs since the end of 2007, including 13,000 by March 31, but a spokesman declined to comment further on what has happened since.

Some economists are not overly optimistic about hiring on Wall Street until the economy and lending picks up again.

"These types of economic events work in a U shape where there's a slow bottoming out, rather than a V shape where there's a sharp turnaround," said Larry White, a professor of Economics at New York University's Stern School of Business. "We still have some ways to go."

However, few expect the heyday for jobs and bonuses on Wall Street to return anytime soon and some doubt it will at all.

In an interview on Sunday, the head of the world's second-biggest bank by market value, China Construction Bank, said that he still sees the US and Europe as overbanked. "The financial sector is overdeveloped," he said, forecasting that it would play a significantly smaller role in the economy in the future, said CCB chairman Guo Shuqing in an interview with Reuters.

Real estate agents are also less confident, expecting job losses to continue well beyond the end of the year, as there are still too many brokers given the lower level of home sales and as the decline in prices also hits commissions.

"I expect another loss of 100,000 jobs to the industry," said Dave Liniger, co-founder and chairman of RE/MAX International, a global realty company. "The vast majority will be inexperienced professionals who came in towards the end of the boom."

Further deterioration in the commercial real estate markets, caused by seized credit markets and vacancies, will fuel cuts in brokerage and support areas.

"Commercial real estate tends to lag residential," said Bob Toothaker, chair of the National Association of Realtors' Commercial Alliance Committee. "If things continue this way, it's entirely possible that more strip malls and whole office buildings could go dark."

When real estate and finance jobs do return, the level of qualifications of applicants will be much higher than in recent years, realtors and recruiters say.

"In the past, companies wanted 10 requirements from candidates and would accept six," said Craig Termotto, a recruiter for financial services recruiting firm Michael Page International. "Today, they want 10 and are taking candidates with 12."

New York City has lost 26,000 finance sector jobs since August 2007, according to Frank Braconi, the New York City comptroller's chief economist. "We estimate 50,000 will be lost in New York by the end of the recession" he said.

So, is this a balanced prospective report on the foreseeable future for the US economy?

Is the USA Still in Pole Position?

Irrespective of the global backwash effects emanating from the toxic sub-prime fall-out, Lee Kuan Yew (LKY) still believes the US continue to be the sun of the world's political economy and other economies including China will still have to gyrate in its orbit.

Agreeing that the road to global recovery may come from Asia, LKY believes that the US continues to hold the key to a firm, solid global recovery. According to LKY, the US will still be the top superpower for the next 80 years and although China persists in its economic expansion path, it knows that it is in “no position to currently challenge American supremacy.”

He says that with China and India looking to achieve 8 and 6 per cent growth respectively in 2009 despite the downturn, the world’s economy was certainly shifting from “the Atlantic to the Pacific” for the time-being. As such, these two economies should play their roles meaningfully, in consonance with others particularly the US,to expedite global economic recovery.

LKY also cited China’s “deep pockets” and determination to capture a larger market share despite incurring losses on the way as the reason why it would continue to become stronger.

Lee added that China, with a population of 1.3 billion, learns quickly from others like Singapore. He concedes that it is indeed “scary” for any economy to compete with China.

According to LKY, military-wise,the US would continue to be the most powerful nation in the world for the rest of the 21st century and he opines that East Asian nations would need American military support and protection to maintain law and order so as to be able to progress.

He added for the moment, China has little choice but to cooperate with the US on the road to economic recovery, as it had over US$800 billion (RM2.8 trillion)in US Treasury bonds in reserve. As such, it pays for China to support any or all US efforts to bring about an earlier global economic recovery.

LKY also saw President Barack Obama as a capable leader that can confidently lead the US on the road to recovery. Adding that since Obama has a strong team around him, the US president should “concentrate on the economy, the economy and the economy”.

So much for the insights of a man that brought Singapore into the ranks of one of the most developed economies of the world.

We hope he is right.

Good News for Credit Card Holders

Wonderful news for credit card holders.

Today in KL (9 June 2009), the High Court ruled the maximum that can be charged to a credit cardholder who has lost his/her credit card is RM200.

The gist of the case.

Diana Chee Vun Hsia discovered her credit cards were missing a day after they were stolen. She then reported it to the issuing banks.

However, Citibank informed her that RM1,851 had been charged the day it was stolen and that, according to company policy, she was deemed liable for the full amount because she did not report the card stolen within one hour.

She took Citibank to court to challenge this policy late last year.

Today, the High Court found in her favour when it said that, according to Bank Negara guidelines, the maximum that can be charged to the cardholder by credit card companies after a card is stolen is RM200, regardless of any company policies regarding elapsed time or amount.

Justice Datuk Mohamed Apandi Ali said that the Bank Negara guidelines “have the force of law.” – Bernama.

This caveat of RM200 as the maximum liability for loss of cards has apparently been on Bank Negara's website for a long time but credit card companies ignored it and preferred to stick to their own inhouse policies.

So, credit card companies-please play fair from now on!

Bottoming out in Japan?

All this is certainly great;even uplifting.

News of 'bottoming out' was flashed out in Tokyo today (9 June 2009) and this has buoyed the Nikkei and feelings are good all round for the world's second biggest economy.

What has caused this optimism?

Indices.Two key Japanese economic indicator indexes rose in April. As such the government is of the view that recessionary pressures are abating. They are confident that the signs of the economy bottoming out is in the offing, adding that the worst is past.

The indexes of coincident and leading economic indicators each rose 1.0 point in April from March, and this has caused the Cabinet Office to raise its assessment — based on the coincident index — to say that while the economy was worsening, there were signs of it bottoming out.

"What's important is the improvement in the leading index as it shows we'll see an even clearer recovery in the coincident index," said Susumu Kato, chief economist at Calyon Capital Markets Japan.

"Judging from the coincident index, there is a chance that March was the bottom for Japan's economy."

But Finance and Economics Minister Kaoru Yosano was cautious about the outlook for the world's No. 2 economy, warning that despite a recent rally in stock prices, the government needs to be ready to act promptly in the face of downside economic risks.

Revised data is expected to show Japan's economy contracted 4.0 per cent in the first three months of this year, but economists expect it to grow 0.5 per cent in the current quarter after four straight quarters of contraction. — Reuters