Thursday 13 October 2011

Reliance Capital says completes stake sale in insurance biz


 Reliance Capital said on Sunday it has received $680 million from Nippon Life after its deal to sell 26 percent stake in its insurance business was completed.
In March, Reliance Life Insurance -- valued at $2.6 billion after the deal -- agreed to sell a 26 percent stake to Japan 's Nippon Life Insurance.
On Sept 30, Reliance Capital got approval from the Reserve Bank of India for the transaction, paving the way for the completion of the deal.

HSBC approaches Japan insurers on sale of non-life unit - sources


 HSBC Holdings has approached the top three property-and-casualty insurers in Japan about the sale of its non-life insurance business, which could fetch more than $1 billion, sources close to the matter said on Thursday.
Japanese insurers have been aggressively pursuing acquisition opportunities overseas as they look to expand beyond their shrinking home market and diversify the risks in their insurance portfolios.
The companies, MS&AD Insurance, Tokio Marine and NKSJ Holdings, are studying the offer to determine whether they will participate in bidding, said the sources, who were not authorised to discuss the matter publicly. The first round of the bidding is expected in mid-October.
European insurers Allianz and AXA SA are also among the potential bidders for HSBC's general insurance business.
HSBC is selling its non-life insurance operations in Hong Kong , Singapore, some Latin American countries and France. The company has already divested its non-life business in Britain.
The non-life insurance businesses earned profit before tax of about $1 billion in 2010, up from about $750 million in 2009, according to a company presentation in June.
Non-life insurance premiums totalled $1.3 billion in 2010, according to HSBC's balance sheet.

IMF mulls bonds, borrowing to pump up war chest


Facing the prospect of a deeper crisis in Europe, the International Monetary Fund is weighing whether it could expand its rescue lending capacity through debt issuance or bilateral borrowing.
The options are being considered as part of a review of the IMF's crisis-fighting resources mandated by the lender's managing director, Christine Lagarde.
The idea is to prepare for the worst.
Should a country the size of Italy or Spain need rescue, the IMF's funds could be severely strained.
Experts say IMF bonds could easily attract some of the liquidity now sloshing into safe-haven U.S. Treasury debt.
But the IMF's dominant shareholders, including the United States, Japan , Germany and China, would likely be wary of a new independent funding source that could dilute their influence.
An easier and more straightforward path -- especially if the IMF needs to raise rescue funds in a hurry -- may be to borrow bilaterally from these wealthy IMF member countries.
"It is an intriguing idea for the IMF to issue debt to shore up its financial base," said Eswar Prasad, a former IMF official who is now a professor of international trade policy at Cornell University, in Ithaca, New York.
"Emerging markets are likely to welcome this move as it would provide an alternative safe asset for them and reduce their reliance on increasingly risky sovereign debt of the reserve currency economies," Prasad said.
However, the United States, which would see increased competition for Treasuries in international capital markets, has shown little enthusiasm.
A U.S. Treasury official declined comment on the prospects for IMF debt issuance, saying only that Washington believes the IMF's current lending capacity of $400 billion "is more than adequate to meet currently anticipated needs."
INFLUENCE AND INDEPENDENCE
A new market-based source of funding could boost a sense of independence at the IMF, which gets its money from its member countries.
"The key members clearly aim to exercise political clout over the Fund's decisions," said Domenico Lombardi, a former IMF executive board member who is now a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution in Washington. "They fear that if IMF turned to the markets, the IMF would somehow lose that tie to the membership."
Debt issuance also could take some time because of internal policy approvals and the need for the IMF to acquire a credit rating and comply with securities disclosure laws.
But the IMF's sister institution, the World Bank, has been issuing debt since 1947 and has had a triple-A credit rating for more than 50 years. It has issued around $30 billion in debt this year to investors ranging from central banks to insurance companies, pension funds and asset managers.
Some worry that the IMF could become more conservative in its lending programs because it would have to protect its own credit rating if it were selling bonds.
THINKING OUTSIDE THE BOX
Lagarde and the IMF staff have said the Fund's existing resources could prove woefully inadequate if Europe's crisis gets worse.
A staff study obtained by Reuters suggested that the IMF may face demands for $840 billion in a "worst-case" scenario.
IMF officials are clearly thinking outside the box on how to deal with the crisis. IMF Europe chief Antonio Borges on Wednesday floated the idea of setting up a special-purpose vehicle to buy Spanish or Italian bonds alongside a euro-zone bailout fund, but he quickly backed away from the suggestion.
Such a move would require a change in the fund's legal structure -- and alternative funding sources -- and nothing has been discussed with members, Borges said. Still, the IMF has used special purpose vehicles in the past.
IMF officials have yet to focus on a specific target for expanded resources, but some simple math indicates that it would probably be well north of $1 trillion.
Full approval of previously agreed increases in quotas -- the contributions that determine IMF voting rights -- would boost the IMF's lending capacity to around $755 billion.
If the IMF were to permanently activate a separate $581 billion crisis lending fund -- the New Arrangements to Borrow -- this could boost resources to around $1.3 trillion.
But fewer than 20 of the IMF's 187 members have approved the quota increase.
"The quickest option is to activate bilateral lines of credit," Lombardi said. "That is the most immediate and fiscally feasible way for the IMF to increase its war chest."
BRAZIL, BRICs AND A BLUNT 'NYET'
Brazil, eager to increase the influence of emerging markets in the IMF, last month proposed that the BRICs group of countries offer new funds to the IMF to battle the European crisis.
But at a news conference just before the IMF's annual meeting late last month, however, fellow BRICs partners China and India gave a lukewarm response to the idea.
With $3.2 trillion in reserves, China is the most obvious source of ready financing. But any new funds would likely come with strings attached and would be widely viewed as a prelude to a demand for increased voting rights. Beijing may need to be able to trumpet more clout within the IMF to overcome domestic opposition to aiding wealthy democracies in fiscal trouble.
"The question is, 'What sort of bargain would have to be struck that would allow China to get enough of a benefit from providing funds to the IMF?'" Prasad said.
Russia 's deputy finance minister Sergei Storchak called BRICs' joint aid for Europe "impossible."
There are still some other options available under the IMF's structure that could be considered, but these are similar to issuing debt and borrowing from members, and have never been tried. The IMF could borrow from private-sector lenders and it could issue notes to the central banks or other official arms of sovereign members

RBI: rupee slide pushes up import costs


The rupee has depreciated "quite significantly" in the last one month and this has pushed up import costs, RBI Governor Duvvuri Subbarao said on Thursday.
He was speaking after the Reserve Bank of India's board meeting in Jaipur.
The rupee had fallen 5.9 percent in September .
The RBI, which has raised rates a dozen times since mid-March 2010, is set to review policy on Oct. 25.

RBI: "significant" rupee weakness has raised import costs


The Reserve Bank of India's (RBI) chief said that the rupee has depreciated "quite significantly" in the last few months pushing up import costs, in comments that suggest the central bank’s growing discomfort with its recent slide.
In a departure from the RBI's usual comments that the foreign exchange rate is influenced by market forces and it intervenes to cool volatility, Duvvuri Subbarao said that the rupee fall "certainly has had an adverse impact on the cost of our imports especially the cost of oil, so that comes at a particularly difficult time when inflation is also high."
The rupee had fallen 5.9 percent in September and is down more than 10.5 percent since a 2011 high of 43.855 reached in late July, making it the worst performer in Asia.
Traders have suspected some RBI intervention in the past month to stem the rupee's fall, but it was more to keep the losses in check rather than reverse the direction of the move.
At 3 p.m., the partially convertible unit was trading at 49.15 per dollar, versus 48.95 on Wednesday.
Bankers have also been vocal about a global shortage in dollar liquidity.
"We are reviewing the situation and will take appropriate measures," Subbarao said after the RBI board meeting in the north-western city of Jaipur On Thursday.
The RBI's stated stance has been it does not intervene to determine the direction of the currency but only to smoothen volatility, but the falling rupee has pushed up oil import costs, negating the impact of the crude price fall.
U.S. crude futures fell $1 to $84.57 a barrel on Thursday ahead of the weekly oil figures from the U.S. government and as trade data from China pointed to slower demand in the world's second-largest oil consumer.
Data earlier in the day, showed India's fuel price index rose 15.10 percent in the year to Oct. 1, higher than the previous week's rise of 14.69 percent.
The monthly inflation data on Friday would now be crucial for firming views about the central bank's likely monetary policy stance.
Wholesale price index probably rose 9.70 percent in September from a year earlier, easing slightly from 9.78 percent in August, a Reuters poll showed.
The RBI, which has raised rates a dozen times since mid-March 2010, is set to review policy on Oct. 25 with majority of analysts expecting a 25 basis points increase in key rates.
INFLATION TO REMAIN KEY FOCUS
The governor reiterated the Reserve Bank of India's stance of trying to contain inflation even at the cost of some short-term economic growth.
"We are sensitive to the de-acceleration of growth and we are equally sensitive to the persistence of inflation. So we have to weigh growth and inflation concerns," Subbarao said.
"When inflation runs as high as 9.8 percent, it is difficult to bring it down without compromising on growth. So we are trying to trade-off at this time on bringing down inflation even if it means bringing down growth," he added.
The RBI has been among the most aggressive central bank's across the globe. In recent times, that has put it in conflict with the government which now wants the central bank to press the pause button to protect growth.
"We are aware that some central banks in Asia and some outside Asia have reversed...Those circumstances are quite different from ours," Subbarao said.

Rupee to open down on oil payments, shares


The rupee is expected to edge lower early on Friday, weighed by likely equity outflows and demand for dollars from oil importers.
* Inflation data due around noon (0630 GMT) will be watched for cues on the likely stance of the central bank, which reviews policy on Oct. 25. Most people have been expecting a 25 basis points increase in key rates.
* The wholesale price index probably rose 9.70 percent in September from a year earlier, easing slightly from 9.78 percent in August, a Reuters poll showed.
* Traders forecast the rupee to trade in a 49.10 to 49.50 band against the dollar for the day.
* The partially convertible currency had ended 0.3 percent weaker on Thursday at 49.12/13, a day after it posted its biggest single session rise in 10 months.
* At 0245 GMT, the MSCI index of Asian stocks ex-Japan was down 0.8 percent while the Nifty India stock futures traded in Singapore were 0.1 percent lower, suggesting a flat to weaker open for the local market.
* The euro edged lower in Asia on Friday after S&P cut Spain's ratings, but it still remained on track for the biggest weekly rally since January.
* The euro was trading at $1.3753, compared with $1.3737 when the rupee closed on Thursday. The index of the dollar against six major currencies was at 77.135 points, below 77.204 points on Thursday.

Rupee see-saws tracking choppy shares; data watched


The rupee seesawed on Monday, tracking choppy domestic shares ahead of crucial September inflation data, with mild gains in the euro preventing a sharp fall.
At 11:06 a.m. (0536 GMT), the partially convertible rupee was at 49.09/10 per dollar, from Thursday's close of 49.12/13 after moving in a 49.0650 to 49.22 range so far.
"The unit recovered from the day's lows tailing a bounce back in stocks which seems to lack conviction. A retracement in the euro is also supporting the local unit," said Ashtosh Raina, head of foreign exchange trade at HDFC Bank.
Raina expects rupee to trade in a 49.00-49.30 range in the day.
Indian shares pulled higher after a sluggish start as investors awaited monthly inflation due around noon (0630 GMT), which would set the tone for the central bank's monetary stance at its policy review on Oct. 25.
The wholesale price index probably rose 9.70 percent in September from a year earlier, easing slightly from 9.78 percent in August, a Reuters poll showed.
The euro was trading at $1.3790, compared with $1.3737 when the rupee closed on Thursday. The index of the dollar against six major currencies was at 76.987 points, below 77.204 points on Thursday.
G20 finance chiefs and central bank heads from the world's biggest economies meet in Paris on Friday needing to find a solution to a deepening euro zone debt crisis that has fanned fears of a global recession.
However, markets should not expect anything concrete from the talks this week on the design of a plan to deal with Greek and European debt, a senior Canadian finance official said on Thursday.
Earlier, Fitch cut the ratings of UBS AG and placed several other European banks on credit watch negative.
Investors, however, pared their overtly bearish bets as they did not see the flurry of ratings actions as having a lasting negative impact on the euro.
The one-month onshore forward premium on the rupee was at 22.25 points from 21.50 on Thursday, the three-month premium was at 60.25 points from 57.50 points and the one-year premium was 137.25 points, from 126.00.
The one-month offshore non-deliverable forward contracts were quoted at 49.07, steady with the spot rupee rate.
In the currency futures market the most traded near-month dollar-rupee contracts on the National Stock Exchange, the MCX-SX and the United Stock Exchange were at 49.2075, 49.2100 and 49.2200 respectively. The total traded volume on the three exchanges was $976 million.