Investor pressure to oust Pru execs waning

The pressure on Prudential chief Tidjane Thiam to quit in the wake of the insurer’s failed bid for Asian rival AIA has eased, with big investors refusing to put their weight behind an attempt to remove him.

Both Thiam and Pru chairman Harvey McGrath faced calls to step down after the insurer’s $35.5bn bid for AIG’s Asian arm hit the rocks in early June, leaving the company to pay out £450m in fees.

Some smaller shareholders have campaigned for Thiam or McGrath to go, but the firm’s biggest investors have not so far taken the bait.

One of the insurer’s top investors told reporters: “I do not think there is any catalyst for (the debate) carrying on because there isn’t an annual general meeting to vote on management for another 10 months.”

“I think it has died down,” the shareholder said. Asked whether he felt the CEO and chairman would be allowed to stay on, the shareholder said: “I think so.”

A second large shareholder said it had taken no action against the senior executives.

A third investor, familiar with moves to remove either Thiam or McGrath, said that while some shareholders would still like a head to roll, they do not have enough support from more influential Pru owners.

“The very largest shareholders are reluctant to participate in anything that would initiate that…(it’s) sort of stuck,” the investor said.

Other large investors declined to comment.

Speculation on possible candidates to replace McGrath has included former city minister Paul Myners.

Shares in Prudential, which is issuing its first-half results on August 12, fell by as much as 20 percent immediately after it announced the deal in early March.

The stock rallied following the failed takeover, but is still down around seven percent compared with the pre-deal price of 602p per share.

Prudential declined to comment.

High-speed rail to benefit China, at a cost

China plans to build 13,000km (8,078 miles) of high-speed rail lines by 2012, more than the rest of the world combined. The Beijing-Shanghai line due to open next year will halve the travel time between the two cities to five hours.

Trains will travel at a maximum speed of 350km an hour on 8,000km of newly built lines and 250km an hour on 5,000km of upgraded track.

By 2020 the network will have expanded to serve more than 90 percent of the population, at a budgeted cost of 2 trillion yuan ($295bn), and include 16,000km of the fastest newly built lines, according to the government’s blueprint.

Li Jun, a senior railway ministry official, told reporters the target for new tracks was likely to rise as the government draws up a more detailed economic plan for the next five years.

The aim is to ensure most provincial capitals – apart from those offshore and furthest west – are no more than an eight hour journey from Beijing, boosting efforts to bring growth and urbanisation to poorer interior areas.

Places covered include far-flung southwestern Kunming, the capital of Yunnan province, some 2,000 km from the capital.

Costs are high
China is building a fleet of state-of-the-art trains for the network with the help of foreign firms including Bombardier Inc, Siemens, Kawasaki Heavy Industries Ltd and Alstom SA.

“This transfer of technology and know-how, together with the experience of building and operating several thousand route-kilometres of high-speed railway, will make China’s one of the most advanced railway industries in the world,” the World Bank said in a report.

“This should position the country to compete internationally when other countries adopt high-speed railways,” the report said, likening the creation of the network to the building of the Interstate highway system, which knitted the US together half a century ago.

But foreign firms hoping for a long-term bonanza are likely to be disappointed, with Beijing keen to focus on using imported designs and skills to complement domestic technology.

“We are targetting the most advanced high-speed rail technologies in the world, with innovation as the backbone,” the railway ministry’s chief engineer, He Huawu, said in notes prepared for a news conference in Beijing.

“On the foundation of imported technologies, a dedicated high-speed rail technology innovation platform has been established, so that China’s railway industry will be able to fully rely on its original innovation in the future,” he said.

He denied, however, that foreign companies were being forced to hand over their technology as the price of market access.

The breakneck expansion will create hundreds of thousands of jobs – for skilled engineers as well as manual labourers – and, apart from shortening passenger travel times, will release much-needed capacity for growing freight traffic, the bank said.

Looking at the lessons to be learned, it said the high population density of eastern China, fast-growing incomes and the prevalence of many big cities fairly close to one another created favourable conditions not found in most developing countries.

Nor could all countries make the vast political and economic commitment that a decades-long programme requires.

And then there are the financial costs.

“Even in China, the sustainability of railway debt arising from the programme as it proceeds will need to be closely monitored and payback periods will not be short, as they cannot be for such ‘lumpy’ and long-lived assets,” the report said.

“Governments contemplating the benefits of a new high-speed railway, whether procured by public or private or combined public-private project structures, should also contemplate the near-certainty of copious and continuing budget support for the debt,” it added.

IMF gives ground on yuan exchange rate debate

The International Monetary Fund has chosen not to call the yuan “substantially” undervalued, a move that recognises China’s efforts to free up its exchange rate and avoids friction with an increasingly influential shareholder.

The summary of an annual review of China’s policies omitted the contentious word, used by IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn as recently as June, which has long riled Beijing.

Several members of the IMF’s 24-member executive board believed the Chinese currency was too cheap, the fund said.

But others said a structural reduction in the balance of payments surplus was already unfolding thanks to past steps to boost consumption, while others took issue with an assessment by IMF staffers that the yuan was substantially undervalued.

“This does reflect a softening in the board’s position about the degree of adjustment that is needed in the Chinese exchange rate regime,” said Eswar Prasad, a senior fellow at the Washington-based Brookings Institution and a former IMF official.

He said this was reflected in statements to the IMF board, that China had already made a big move towards greater currency flexibility and progress in rebalancing demand.

Beijing dropped the yuan’s 23-month-old peg to the dollar and reverted to a managed float on June 19. China’s trade surplus has also shrunk considerably as government efforts to pump up the economy have sucked in imports of commodities and capital goods.

“On both counts this conciliatory tone is a little premature, because despite the announcement there hasn’t been that much movement of the Chinese currency. Any notion that they have in fact successfully started rebalancing their economy is also quite premature,” Prasad said.

Staff still undervalued
The yuan has risen 0.7 percent against the dollar since it was unshackled from the US currency.

Prasad said IMF economists reckoned the yuan was still between five percent and 27 percent undervalued depending on the methodologies used. A diplomat in Beijing confirmed the range.

“Several directors agreed that the exchange rate is undervalued. However, a number of others disagreed with the staff’s assessment of the level of the exchange rate, noting that it is based on uncertain forecasts of the current account surplus,” the IMF said.

Prasad said IMF economists are projecting a big rebound in the current account surplus, which has fallen to around four percent of GDP, whereas China is contending that it will stay at the new, lower level.

People familiar with the board’s deliberations said representatives of the Group of Seven rich nations supported the IMF staff’s conclusions but did not specifically call the yuan “substantially” undervalued.

Reflecting the discussion, the board’s concluding statement omitted the disputed phrase.

China was so angry with the fund’s exchange rate views that it withheld cooperation on the annual review from 2007 to 2009.

Beijing, though, has gradually been gaining clout in the IMF. Last year it bought $50bn worth of notes to beef up the fund’s capital and a deputy governor of China’s central bank, Zhu Min, has started work as a special assistant to Strauss-Kahn.

Resource shift
The IMF’s choice of words is the second qualified recognition in July of the progress China is making in liberalising its exchange rate.

On July 8, the administration of President Obama said the yuan remained undervalued but declined to designate China a currency manipulator.

That finding angered US lawmakers, many of whom argue that China is unfairly holding down its currency to favour its exporters and are threatening punitive action.

But a Chinese academic rejected US criticism and said the yuan, also known as the renminbi, was not too cheap.

“The US trade deficit with China has nothing to do with the yuan’s exchange rate,” He Weiwen, a professor at the University of International Business and Economics, wrote in the People’s Daily.

The IMF said the scrapping of the dollar peg would increase the central bank’s flexibility to tighten monetary conditions.

A stronger yuan rate would also be good for the rebalancing of the domestic and global economies by shifting China’s growth from exports and investment to private consumption, it said.

On other issues, the board supported a gradual phase-out of China’s massive fiscal stimulus in 2011, provided the current trajectory for the economy – the IMF expects continued robust growth with benign inflation – is maintained.

Directors commended the slower pace of money growth that China is targeting this year but urged it to raise interest rates. Unlike many other Asian countries, including India, China has not increased borrowing costs in 2010.

Ex-trader accused of fraud seeks to clear name on TV

Ross Mandell, former head of Sky Capital Holdings, was indicted in July 2009 on charges he and five others defrauded investors in a scheme US prosecutors claim pressured people to buy stock from what they called a “trans-Atlantic boiler room” with operations in London and New York.

Released on $5m bail, the 53-year-old Mandell faces up to 25 years in prison, if found guilty.

Mandell has yet to secure a television deal for his show, but insists he has “serious interest” from TV networks. Eager to prove he’s got a hot story and a cast of intriguing characters, including his wife and his mixed martial arts buddies, Mandell has already begun filming.

“This is not about money for me,” Mandell said in explaining his rationale for the show, tentatively titled “Facing Life.”

“This is about facing the public, clearing my name and the legacy of my wife and children,” he said.

He also wants to humanise himself.

“People think that I’m a beast, that I’m an animal,” he told reporters. “I’m not…I’m a loving human being, I’m a sober man, I’m God-fearing and a member of Alcoholics Anonymous.”

If he gets a TV show, Mandell would be among a growing number of people who have sought redemption on prime-time TV after getting in trouble with the law.

Following his impeachment, former Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich appeared on NBC’s “Celebrity Apprentice.” NFL football star Michael Vick, convicted of animal cruelty, was on the BET network with a show, “The Michael Vick Project,” in an attempt to reveal his softer side that included scenes of him volunteering at an animal shelter.

Mandell, who lives in Boca Raton, Florida, claims he was set up by the US government because of his work helping bring US companies to the London Stock Exchange.

“I took the business from them, that’s why I’m being targeted now,” Mandell said.

And, like the boxer he is in his spare time, Mandell refuses to go down without a fight. “I’d rather die on my feet than live on my knees,” he said.

BP replaces CEO; posts $17bn Q2 loss on spill

BP Plc has named American Bob Dudley as its next CEO, saying Tony Hayward would stand down after his gaffe-prone handling of the worst oil spill in US history that triggered a $17bn quarterly loss.

Dudley, the US executive managing BP’s response to the spill in the Gulf of Mexico, will get the top job on October 1, a move that could soften US criticism of the British oil major.

“I believe that it is not possible for the company to move on in the US with me remaining as the face to BP,” Hayward told reporters on a conference call. “So I think that for the good of BP, and particularly for the good of BP in the United States, it is right for me to… step down.”

BP said it planned to sell assets worth up to $30bn over the next 18 months and would cut its net debt to between $10bn and $15bn in that period.

The company said it would consider its position on future dividend payments at the time of its fourth-quarter results.

Analysts had expected BP to set aside tens of billions of dollars to cover the cost of the April 20 oil rig explosion that killed 11 people, ruined the Gulf’s fishing and tourism industries, and polluted the Gulf shoreline with slimy goo.

BP Chairman Carl-Henric Svanberg said the company would take a “hard look” at itself in the aftermath of the spill: “BP… will be a different company going forward”.

However, Dudley denied BP’s culture, which investors and analysts say encourages greater risk taking than some rivals, contributed to the disaster in the Gulf of Mexico.

Excluding a $32.2bn charge for the oil spill and other non-operating costs, the replacement cost profit was $4.98bn, in line with the average forecast from a poll of 11 analysts and up 77 percent on the same period of 2009.

Replacement cost profit strips out gains or losses related to changes in the value of fuel inventories and as such is comparable with net income under US accounting rules.

“It’s basically a kitchen sink job and we’ve got the way forward,” said Panmure analyst Peter Hitchens.

“They’ve taken all the charges at once and we’re seeing the first way forward – how they’re going to deal with the balance sheet – which is the key thing … I think it’s the board trying to wipe the slate clean.”

“Not be missed”
BP could begin the final procedure to kill its leaking well shortly, the top US spill response official said. That will involve pumping mud and cement through a relief well that has been drilled since May 2 to a spot close to the bottom of the damaged well.

“The next thing that we need to do is get this well in the position where we can make the intercept and kill this well from the bottom,” retired Coast Guard Admiral Thad Allen told reporters in Washington.

More than five million barrels of oil have spilled into the Gulf of Mexico since the undersea leak began, according to US government estimates. Some Gulf Coast residents, seething about damage from the spill and BP’s compensation process, said they would be happy to see Hayward go.

“He will not be missed,” said Larry Hooper of Empire, Louisiana, who runs an offshore fishing charter business.

Hayward, a 53-year-old geologist, has described Dudley as BP’s “secretary of state” for his role overseeing the cleanup.

Dudley, who was raised in Mississippi, would be the first non-Briton to become chief executive of BP. He was previously head of BP’s Russian joint venture, TNK-BP, until he was forced to flee the country amid a spat between BP and its partners.

Hayward will receive one year’s salary or £1.045m and be appointed a non-executive director at TNK-BP as part of his departure deal. He will also keep his pension pot of around £11m.

BP has lost 40 percent of its market value since the spill that has hit about 39 percent of the coast stretching from Brownsville, Texas, to the Florida Keys.

Analysts said Hayward’s exit was good for the stock because he had become an easy target for angry US lawmakers and Gulf residents. Hayward was pilloried in the US for complaining he wanted his “life back” weeks after the deadly rig explosion and start of the spill.

“It is customary that when things don’t go right, you are going to chop heads and usually that starts at the top,” said Steve Goldman, a market strategist with money manager Weeden & Co in Greenwich, Connecticut.

Hayward may still not escape another round of testimony before the U.S. Congress. Senator Robert Menendez said he wants Hayward to testify on whether BP influenced the release of the convicted Lockerbie bomber to aid the firm’s business interests.

“Tony Hayward, regardless of his status whether he is going to be the CEO tomorrow or not, we believe that he was in the midst of the negotiations with the Libyans as it related to this oil deal,” Menendez, a Democrat, said in New York.

Hayward is the third of the last four BP chief executives forced into an early exit. John Browne left after lying in court papers about a gay love affair and Bob Horton was pushed out over strategic disagreements in 1992.

Europe bank test transparency gets cautious thumbs-up

Spain’s smaller regional lenders, or cajas, will start a roadshow aimed at reassuring investors after the test results showed five of their peers among the seven banks that failed, and several more close to failing.

Problems among the cajas have long been flagged, however, and are being remedied.

The euro was little changed in the absence of any real shocks in the test of whether 91 banks in 20 countries could withstand another recession in the next two years.

Critics said the test was too soft – shown by the banks that failed needing just 3.5bn euros ($4.5bn).

However, “most people are going to be absolutely fine,” said Ian Henderson, who runs a global financials fund for JP Morgan. “We’ve already recapitalised most of the European banks anyway with huge amounts of money. Let’s get on with life.”

With so few banks failing, attention was on 17 who only scraped a pass, some of whom may opt to raise cash if the test fails to reduce their funding costs or soothe worries about risks, analysts said.

“Those that are at the margin may as well raise equity to dampen down fears … The sums of money involved are really relatively small,” Henderson said.

German banks, including Deutsche Bank, were criticised for not providing as much information as rivals about their exposure to sovereign debt in the eurozone – the major worry that prompted the tests.

“You have to take these tests with a pinch of salt,” said Jonathan Cavenagh, currency strategist at Westpac, Sydney. “Sovereign debt problems remain, funding constraints for their banks are still there and these have the potential to weigh on the euro.”

Sources familiar with the discussions said Germany fought hard behind closed doors to limit the extent of disclosure.

Even so, investors now have more detail on banks’ holdings of sovereign debt than they had before.

Avoiding double-dip
If the minimum for banks to pass the test had been set at a Tier 1 capital ratio of eight percent, rather than ix percent, an extra 27 billion euros ($35bn) of capital would have been needed, analysts at Morgan Stanley estimated.

About 40 percent of that would have been needed from German and Italian banks, it said.

Some of those banks are already making strides to raise capital, including Italy’s Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena and Banco Popolare, so they are unlikely to need more government aid. Deutsche Postbank, Germany’s largest retail bank by clients, said it will continue with a plan to rebuild capital, included halting dividends.

The subdued response to the tests in Europe was a far cry from early May when global markets feared Greece’s debt crisis might spread like wildfire through Europe and beyond.

Stronger-than-expected economic data suggesting the eurozone will avoid a double-dip recession, despite fiscal austerity measures, have also helped revive investor confidence in Europe.

The details from the tests should enable investors critical of the official results to run their own risk simulations to gauge a counterparty’s solidity.

That should help reopen the interbank lending market, which partially froze at the height of the euro zone debt crisis and has remained tight on fears banks have been hiding exposures.

Credit markets showed a small improvement in banks’ funding costs, but the real test will come when second and third tier banks try to move away from dependency on central bank funding.

Europe is aiming to repeat the boost given to US banks early last year from a health check on that sector, although the European test has been conducted much later in the cycle.

European banks have already raised about 300 billion euros since the start of the crisis – including 34 banks taking 170 billion euros from governments – whereas the US tests kick-started the fundraising.

Investors chastised EU authorities for refusing to test the impact of a debt default by Greece. But European Central Bank governing council member Christian Noyer said eurozone states “have put several hundreds of billions of euros on the table with the support of the IMF to make this hypothesis completely excluded”.

UK economy grew twice as fast as expected in Q2

Britain’s economy grew almost twice as fast as expected in the second
quarter of this year, buoyed by a sharp pick-up in services output and
the fastest rise in construction output in almost 50 years, according to
official data.

The Office for National Statistics said GDP
jumped 1.1 percent on the quarter, the fastest rise in four years, and
rose by 1.6 percent on the year – the highest in two years.

The
figures may raise doubts over how long the Bank of England will keep
interest rates at their record low, particularly with inflation running
so far above target.

Britain’s services sector enjoyed its
fastest growth in three years, expanding by 0.9 percent on the quarter –
three times as fast as in Q1 and contributing 0.7 percentage points to
growth.

Manufacturing grew 1.6 percent, its biggest rise in more than 10 years.

Construction, meanwhile, leapt by 6.6 percent on the quarter – its
fastest rate since 1963. The construction data was based for the first
time on a new monthly survey, rather than estimates which used to be
used at this stage.

The ONS said the rebound in construction
output in Q2 came after a fall of 1.6 percent in Q1 which was due to the
poor weather. Construction output contributed 0.4 percentage points to
growth between April and June.

Champagne makers signal return to growth

Remy Cointreau, which makes Piper-Heidsieck champagne, said sales of champagne rose 23 percent to 16.7 million euros ($21.3m) in its fiscal first quarter to June 30. Vranken-Pommery said sales rose 52 percent to 66 million in the quarter.

“Because of the crisis, consumers temporarily switched to cheaper brands. This phenomenon is now receding. We’re seeing a move back to the major brands and cuvees de prestige,” Vranken-Pommery Chairman Paul-Francois Vranken said.

Vranken-Pommery said it was optimistic about all of its champagne brands for the rest of the year, adding that the first half had seen “an end to the crisis for champagne”.

Remy Cointreau said it was seeing renewed growth in champagne, particularly in its domestic French market and Europe, against the backdrop of an ongoing uncertain economic environment.

Rival champagne maker Laurent-Perrier posted a 17 percent rise in sales to 36.8 million euros for the quarter to June 30 on Tuesday, boosted by exports to the UK, the US, Germany and Asia.

The performance showed demand was picking up, and customers would continue to turn towards more expensive bottles over the coming quarters, the company said.

Remy Cointreau, which has a market value of around 2.2 billion euros, makes about one-tenth of sales from champagne, whilst the majority of revenue comes from cognac.

The company said overall group sales rose 24 percent to 171 million euros in the fiscal first quarter, including a 43 percent rise in cognac sales to 91 million euros, driven in particular by growing demand in China.

“The good growth by Remy Martin (cognac) continued to benefit from the highly positive dynamics in China and in travel retail, as these two markets recorded the strongest growth. The US and Europe also increased,” the company said.

Overall, there was growth in all regions apart from Japan, Remy Cointreau said. The US had modest growth, while Russia and the UK underpinned growth in Europe.

IMF: Low oil price a risk to Gulf region growth

In an updated report on GCC member states the IMF urged countries to prepare exit strategies from the current high spending levels but not to implement them until economic conditions were right.

The IMF revised up its growth forecast for non-oil growth for GCC states to 4.3 percent, higher than the 4.0 percent it forecast in May.

GCC states include Saudi Arabia, UAE, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar and Bahrain.

The IMF said challenges in the financial sector in GCC states may restrain growth in the short-term but those problems remain manageable and should not undermine long-term prospects.

It said banks’ capital adequacy ratios “remain strong and there are strong indications on profitability”.

IMF staff analysis of listed non-financial corporates shows that at the end of 2009 GCC corporates had adequate capacity to service their debt obligations, the report said.

The report said regional spillovers from the Dubai debt crisis were minimal although noted there was persistent uncertainty about Dubai.

Still, the IMF urged the Dubai authorities to complete the planned debt restructuring of debt-laden conglomerate Dubai World and to determine the full breath of potential problems in other government-related entities.

“The impact from financial developments in Dubai and Greece should continue to have limited effect on the GCC countries, and substantial foreign assets are available to mitigate the impact of new shocks,” the IMF added.

It said Greece’s debt crisis had heightened uncertainty over the strength of the global economic recovery, which had caused oil prices to fall and increased volatility on equity markets.

South Africa faces hard choices to solve jobs crisis

But reforming labour markets, one obvious way to help narrow the gap with other emerging economies, will not be easy given the political clout of a union movement that was instrumental in bringing an end to white-minority rule in the 1990s.

“You need a much more flexible labour force but the unions are still very powerful,” Mthuli Ncube, chief economist at the African Development Bank, said.

“How do you tell the unions, ‘Don’t ask for more wages, don’t unionise?’ They’re such a big political and social force. I don’t know how you deal with that.”

Similarly, boosting the export sector by weakening the rand, a proposal endorsed by the OECD, risks stoking inflation and scaring off the foreign capital needed to pay for much-needed infrastructure.

It is a hard choice, but there is a growing realisation in the upper echelons of the African National Congress (ANC) that something has to be done.

Since a spike in employment in the six years that followed the end of apartheid in 1994, the number of jobs in Africa’s biggest economy has plateaued, despite annual growth of around five percent from 2002-2007.

Now, after the first recession in 17 years, the official and narrowly defined rate of unemployment stands at 25 percent, a source of much newspaper comment and ANC hand-wringing.

It is, however, the least worrying set of jobs data.

As a simple percentage of its 17 million-strong workforce, South Africa’s unemployment is actually around 45 percent, and has never been below 40 percent since 2000.

Such stagnation points to its workforce being one of the world’s least productive, and a principle reason the economy struggles to grow faster than between four to five percent a year – speedy when compared to Europe but anaemic alongside Asia or more dynamic African ‘frontier’ markets such as Nigeria, Ghana or Uganda.

Of rich and emerging economies in 2008, only Turkey fared worse in terms of labour usage, with one in two of its workforce idle, according to the OECD.

Brazil and Russia, two ‘BRIC’ economies that South Africa likes to regard as its emerging market peers, have broad unemployment of only 25 percent, the Paris think-tank says.

More exports
So what can be done to drag the millions of jobless South Africans, most of them young, poorly educated and black, into work and, ultimately, tackle crime and yawning inequality?

The ANC is already pumping a whopping 20 percent of its budget into education, and large amounts into job training, to address a shortage of skills, but it also knows the economy must provide jobs for people once they do leave school.

One solution is to refocus the economy on exports, especially in labour intensive sectors like clothes and electronics, rather than the coal and gold shipments that have been South Africa’s staples for decades.

The ANC has also seen the sense of selling to the faster growing economies of Asia, South America and Africa, rather than the traditional markets of Europe and the US that will see only weak growth in the next few years.

“South Africa needs to look for alternative export markets, such as Africa, and other fast-growing emerging economies, where our comparative advantage is good,” Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan told reporters.

To this end, Gordhan wrote of the need to reform “network industries”, basically the underinvested and overstaffed state firms running South Africa’s ports and railways.

But more trade with the likes of, say, China and India, the other two members of the BRIC quartet, means more competition, and in terms of labour costs South Africa fares poorly.

The average monthly salary, including overtime and benefits, is 6,400 rand ($830), according to Statistics SA.

By contrast, this year the official average monthly wage for a city worker in China has been 1,783 yuan ($263) and a menial entry-level factory worker could be on a third of that, albeit with food and dormitory accommodation thrown in.

Weaker rand or lower wages?
Such comparisons throw the spotlight on arguments from South Africa’s unions to boost exports by weakening the rand, whose value has been underpinned in the last year by foreigners buying up local stocks and bonds.

COSATU, the union federation that forms part of an official ANC-led government alliance, wants an end to the rand’s free float in favour of a fixed rate of 10 to the dollar, compared to its current 7.6.

Yet even at this level the improvement in raw labour costs against China would be marginal, and the central bank is wary of the inflation that would inevitably result.

All of which points to the labour market as one of the few avenues left open to reform, essentially by making it easier for employers to hire and fire workers.

Yet it is a brave president who takes on unions who still wield huge social and political clout due to their prominence in the struggle against apartheid, and during his first year in office Jacob Zuma has tended to favour consensus over conflict.

Gordhan avoided the issue of labour reform, but in a major report the OECD made clear its belief that the ANC and unions’ perfectly laudable desire for “decent work” was at the expense of wider job creation.

Such comments, alongside an avalanche of research on South Africa during and after its successful hosting of the World Cup, may yet provide the impetus for long-term and radical change.

The alternative is a South Africa stuck on a “spluttering trajectory” well below emerging market rivals, political analyst Alec Russell wrote recently.

“South Africa’s economy has been utterly outstripped by the ‘southern’ giants of China, India and Brazil,” he said.

IMF should be realistic about Hungary deficit-Kosa

The IMF should be realistic when considering a deficit target for Hungary for 2011, ruling Fidesz party vice chairman Lajos Kosa has told public television m1.

When asked in an interview whether lenders’ expectations for Hungary to cut its deficit to 2.8 percent of GDP next year from a target of 3.8 percent in 2010 was too strict, Kosa said:

“It is obvious that Hungary’s situation is one of the most difficult of all member states in European Union. In such a situation, expecting us to run the lowest deficit …. they can say that, but this will not work.

“The IMF must be mindful to remain grounded in realities.”

A review of Hungary’s Ä20bn IMF/EU funding agreement signed in October 2008 was suspended on July 17 after lenders failed to get sufficient clarity of the new centre-right Fidesz government’s future economic policies.

Prime Minister Kosa told public television that Hungary, which has been under the EU’s excessive deficit procedure since joining the bloc in 2004, would at some point cut its deficit below three percent of GDP but declined to say when it would do so.

“We will achieve this and this is our intention,” Kosa said. “As to what numbers next year’s budget will contain, that will be revealed only when we submit it (to parliament in October).”

Argentina’s import curbs threaten to bite back

The South American nation, which saw exports rise 25 percent year-on-year in May, responded to the global financial crisis by limiting imports of shoes, fresh fruit and other goods that it also produces.

The curbs, designed to protect jobs and boost local production, range from administrative delays at borders and in customs to anti-dumping penalties on goods such as steel products and textiles.

China has stopped buying Argentine soy oil in response to the restrictions.

Separate complaints from the EU at the World Trade Organisation and from Brazil, the top destination for Argentine exports, have raised concerns that Argentina’s protectionist stance could backfire.

“Argentina is creating a certain amount of tension with its informal and formal commercial policies,” said Dante Sica, a trade expert with the Buenos Aires consultancy Abeceb.com. “There are always risks of retaliation.”

Frustrations about the Argentine measures have also soured negotiations to open up new markets for Argentina’s producers, including talks on an EU-Mercosur accord that would create the world’s largest free trade zone.

For the time being, Argentine exports are faring well.

Its soy oil producers have found new customers in India, Bangladesh and Peru and are enjoying a bumper harvest. Argentine exporters of grains, cars and consumer goods also are finding plenty of customers, especially in Brazil.

Enrique Mantilla of the Argentine Chamber of Exporters told reporters that Argentina’s exports were set to increase 17 percent this year from a year ago.

He said it would take a long time for Europe’s complaints to work through WTO mediation, and described the chance that other countries would retaliate, as China did, as slight.

“(Exporters) are mostly preoccupied with the facts. Today it is a problem of imports not exports,” he said of the Argentine border measures.

Protectionist
Argentine Economy Minister Amado Boudou has defended his government’s trade measures as helping “to preserve the quality of life among Argentines” and said: “Europe has farm subsidies, and the countries that champion free trade also have restrictions.”

But with Argentina’s economy recovering well, in part due to the strong sales to Brazil, economists said it was unlikely other countries would continue to accept what they see as unfair treatment of their goods.

“It is difficult to justify, today, with Argentina’s current volume of trade,” Abeceb.com’s Sica said. “Maybe last year there was less criticism from other countries, but today there is less tolerance with protectionist measures.”

Last month, European farm ministers said Argentina’s curbs on imported foods threatened the drive for a EU-Mercosur deal that would link the European bloc with Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay, covering trade valued at 65 billion euros ($82bn) a year.

Roberto Bouzas, an economics professor at Argentina’s San Andres University, said the country’s defensive trade stance would be just one thorn in the side of those negotiations, which restarted in May after a six-year hiatus.

“Without a doubt it complicates things. But the obstacles to an agreement go far beyond that individual problem.”

The long-sought deal has faced strong opposition from environmentalists, lawmakers and farmers in Europe who fear an influx of food imports from South America.

Boris Segura, senior economist for Latin America at RBS Securities, said Argentina needed to “play ball” and be clear about the restrictions it is imposing to avoid losing access to the markets that were key to its exporters.

“The main complaint from these trade partners is the arbitrariness of the (Argentine) barriers,” Segura said.

Companies working to bring goods into Argentina would also prefer clear trade policies to the current makeshift mix, said Miguel Ponce of Argentina’s Chamber of Importers.

“Obviously we support the return as soon as possible to an open trade policy,” Ponce said. “We would like to see everything normalise.”

Africa equity funds end 44-week inflow streak

A 44-week streak of inflows to funds investing in emerging and frontier equities in Africa has ended while inflows to South Africa have risen, fund tracker EPFR Global said.

EPFR Global had recorded net inflows of over $480m to African regional funds in the first half of the year, an indication of investor appetite for the fast-growing continent.

But the fund tracker said that the long stretch of inflows ended in the week ending July 14.

“Flows into (Europe, Middle East and Africa) Equity Funds were, for once, not driven by investor interest in the commodities story of Russia and Africa, with Africa Regional Equity Funds seeing their 44-week inflow streak come to an end,” it said.

“The focus shifted to South Africa and Turkey. South Africa Equity Funds had their best week since early April while Turkey Equity Funds attracted $26m, a 13-week high.”

It gave no figures for net flows to Africa or South Africa.

Philippines may raise taxes

Asia’s largest sovereign issuer of offshore bonds may post its second successive record budget deficit this year, and the key factor that will determine how markets react to the election result will be whether the winning candidate tackles the fiscal situation with sufficient urgency and resolve.

Most analysts say markets should not be too ruffled in the meantime if candidates pledge not to raise taxes or impose new revenue measures. Such promises are highly unlikely to be kept.

“Any candidate who … promises no new taxes is going to eat his words,” said an economist at a large local bank. “It’s going to happen, otherwise we could lose the confidence of investors.”

The four leading presidential candidates in the May polls have all promised measures to boost the tax to GDP ratio, estimated at a five-year low of 12.8 percent last year, but most of them have given scant details on how they will do it.

Of the four, frontrunner Benigno Simeon Aquino III and former President Joseph “Erap” Estrada, ranked third in opinion polls, are the only ones who have declared they would not impose new taxes or raise tax rates and would instead focus on plugging tax leakages that have kept state revenues low.

But Aquino softened his stance in February when he told reporters he would consider raising taxes if the budget gap was not quickly cut by a crackdown on tax evasion.

Aquino was aiming to soothe market worries that he did not grasp the urgency of raising state revenues. Analysts and traders say they largely ignored his first statement on taxes in January because they did not expect him to stick to it if he won power.

But if the next president does try to avoid new taxes, this will be punished with a sell-off of Philippine assets by markets worried about the precarious fiscal position.

Intensive care
“The government is like a patient in an intensive care unit and it needs to raise taxes as the prescribed medicine to recover fast,” Jonathan Ravelas, chief market strategist at Banco de Oro Unibank, told reporters.

Traders say offshore investors would sell out wholesale from the Philippines if there was any sign the next president will introduce drastic changes to economic policy that quickly show positive results via higher state revenues.

“Remember, especially the offshore investors, they don’t care what happens to the country. They only want to make sure that they get paid,” said a treasury official at a foreign bank. “The moment you inject some scepticism on the ability of this country to pay, they will dump you while they can.”

The Philippines’ five year credit default swap spreads are trading at 162 basis points compared to a weighted average of 120 for the Thomson Reuters Emerging Asia Index. Spreads have come down from a peak of 217.5 basis points this year after the official campaign period kicked off on February 9, but traders say they will quickly widen again if the likely election winner does not set out a clear economic plan.

Yields on Philippine sovereign bonds due in 2020 are hovering at three-month lows, suggesting that investors do not expect a fiscal blowout in the near term after the country completed its planned 2010 foreign debt issues of $2.5bn pesos ($54.79m) just two months into the year.

But ratings agencies may downgrade the country’s sovereign credit from the current two notches below investment grade if Manila doesn’t raise revenue collection soon.

The government is likely to incur more foreign and local debt to fund its budget deficit, thus reversing gains made since its 2005 tax reform programme.

But there is minimal risk for now of a Greece-style panic that that Manila would default on its debts. It has reduced its debt-to-GDP ratio to around 57 percent from a peak of 78 percent in 2004.

More tax reforms
All the top candidates also espouse stamping out a deeply entrenched culture of corruption at revenue agencies to improve tax collection, but analysts say such a lofty ambition would take years to implement and major results are unlikely to be seen in the first six months of the new administration.

Finance Secretary Margarito Teves said the low revenue base would make it difficult for the new government to fund higher spending on badly needed infrastructure upgrades and better social services, suggesting more tax reforms might be necessary, especially after the government passed several new laws, with others still pending, seeking to give tax exemptions.

Teves partly blames lost revenues of 49 billion pesos from tax exemptions imposed last year for the record 2009 budget deficit of 298.5 billion pesos, or 3.9 percent of GDP. Manila was hoping to limit its shortfall last year to 250 billion pesos.

Some analysts expect Manila’s budget gap to exceed 300 billion pesos this year, another record high.

Economists say the next government could raise revenues by tweaking excise taxes on alcohol and tobacco. VAT of 12 percent could also be raised to 15 percent, a proposal administration candidate Gilberto Teodoro wants to adopt in exchange for lowering individual income and corporate taxes.

Former Philippine economic ministers have said there is room for substantial cuts in the funding allocation for pet projects of legislators, more widely known as pork barrel, and in the spending subsidies given to local government units.

The Philippines avoided a possible financial crisis in 2005 when President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo raised the VAT rate to 12 percent from 10 percent and expanded its coverage to include electricity and petrol sales.

That helped cut the budget deficit to 68 billion pesos, or 0.9 percent of GDP, in 2008 from a 2002 peak of nearly 211 billion pesos, or 5.3 percent of GDP. But the shortfall ballooned again last year when corporate incomes dropped due to the global economic crisis and as Manila spent more on infrastructure upgrades and social services to pump prime the economy.

Moody’s downgrades Ireland, outlook stable

Moody’s has downgraded Ireland’s sovereign bond rating by one notch to Aa2, citing weaker growth prospects and the high costs of rebuilding the country’s crisis-hit banking system.

The rating agency, which cut Ireland from Aa1, said the outlook was stable.

The move, which put Moody’s on par with rival agency Standard and Poor’s AA rating and still one notch above Fitch, comes a day before Ireland plans to sell bonds worth between Ä1bn and Ä1.5bn at its regular monthly auction.

“Today’s downgrade is primarily driven by the Irish government’s gradual but significant loss of financial strength, as reflected by its deteriorating debt affordability,” Dietmar Hornung, a Moody’s vice president and lead analyst for Ireland, said in a statement.

Moody’s said it expects Irish economic growth to be below historical trend over the next three to five years. It said banking and real estate – engines of growth in the years preceding the country’s crisis – would not contribute meaningfully to overall growth in the coming years.

The IMF recently said Dublin would not meet a European Union-agreed deadline to reduce its budget deficit to three percent of GDP by 2014, a day after a think tank forecast that bank bailouts could expand this year’s budget deficit to almost 20 percent.

“The timing isn’t great, given the bond auction tomorrow and certainly this will add to the premium that will need to be paid to raise money,” Alan McQuaid, chief economist at Bloxham, said.

“While some it may be justified I think some of it is over the top.”

The spread of Irish 10-year bonds against their German equivalent widened on Monday to 300 basis points, their highest since July 2.