China May Continue Monetary Easing Throughout This Year: Capital Economics

China May Continue Monetary Easing Throughout This Year: Capital Economics

(RTTNews.com) – Chinas central bank is likely to continue its monetary easing program throughout this year, after reducing the reserve requirement ratio (RRR) by 50 basis points last week, Mark Williams, chief Asia economist at Capital Economics, said in a note Monday.

The firm expects the Peoples Bank of China to engage in a further four RRR cuts before year-end, and the first reduction is expected to come in the second quarter. Though the bank may keep the rate of easing slow in the beginning, it is likely to speed up the process later in the year, given the downbeat outlook on Europe, Chinas major export market, the economist noted.

But, Williams warned that if the Eurozone starts disintegrating, as being expected widely, the central bank will be prompted to slash its benchmark interest rates too.

The Chinese central bank last week lowered its reserve requirement ratio (RRR) by half a percent to 20.5 percent for large banks, marking the second reduction in the current cycle. The three-month gap between the latest two cuts is seen as an indication of the central banks confidence in the growth outlook.

The economist observed that Januarys inflation and trade figures failed to provide a clear picture as data were distorted by seasonal variations due to the Chinese New Year. However, even after considering the seasonal effects, Chinas credit growth fell 46 percent year-on-year in January as a drop in formal bank lending was compounded by the weakness of banks off-balance-sheet activity.

The fact that this year is the leadership-transition year, and threats of a global slowdown and a property market slump at home give the central bank, which may still be concerned about inflation, enough reasons to extend the loosening cycle further, Williams added.

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Yen Tumbles After Bank of Japan Monetary Easing; Euro Falls Before Summit

The yen fell against all its most-
traded counterparts after the Bank of Japan said it would
increase the size of its asset-purchase fund.

Japan’s currency fell to a six-month low versus the dollar
in its biggest weekly loss against the dollar since November as
better-than-expected economic data damped expectations of
further monetary easing in the US The euro fell versus the
dollar after Moody’s downgraded the debt ratings of six European
nations and said more may follow. Euro-area finance ministers
meet Feb. 20 meeting to decide the fate of a Greek financial
bailout.

“You have the policy easing in Japan, which is pushing the
yen lower,” said Omer Esiner, chief market analyst in
Washington at Commonwealth Foreign Exchange Inc., a currency
brokerage. “There are some structural issues in Japan we’re
keeping an eye on that the long-time pillars of yen strength are
starting to deteriorate.”

The yen fell 2.5 percent to 79.55 versus the dollar, the
biggest weekly loss since Nov. 4. It touched 79.62 the weakest
since Aug. 4. The Japanese currency declined 2.1 percent to
104.54 against the euro. On Feb. 17, it reached 104.67, the
weakest since Dec. 5. The euro fell 0.4 percent to $1.3140 after
touching $1.2974, the lowest since Jan. 25.

Bank of Japan

Japan’s central bank increased its asset-purchase fund to
30 trillion yen, expanding economic stimulus measures for the
first time since October. The BOJ also said it will target 1
percent inflation “for the time being.”

The dollar was supported against the yen as the New York-
based Conference Board’s gauge of the US outlook for the next
three to six months increased, manufacturing in the Philadelphia
area expanded by the fastest in four months and initial jobless
claims fell to the lowest in four years.

The euro weakened after Moody’s downgraded Italy, Spain and
Portugal and said it may strip France, the UK and Austria of
their top Aaa ratings, citing the debt crisis.

Euro-region finance ministers will meet to determine
whether to award Greece a second aid package worth 130 billion
euros ($171 billion.) The shared currency fell after the meeting
was rescheduled from Feb. 15 when Luxembourg Prime Minister
Jean-Claude Juncker, head of the euro-region finance chiefs,
said Greece needed to work on details of the agreement.

‘Agreement on Greece’

The euro’s weekly loss against the dollar was limited as
Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti, German Chancellor Angela
Merkel and Greek Prime Minister Lucas Papademos expressed
optimism that an “agreement on Greece” can be reached and the
European Central Bank participated in a bond swap for Greek
debt.

“The bond swap implies that the second bailout is likely
to happen,” said Jack Spitz, managing director of foreign
exchange at National Bank of Canada in Toronto said on Feb. 16.

Futures traders added 8,048 more bets the common currency
will fall against the dollar than bets it will gain in the five
days ended Feb. 14. The so-called net shorts totaled 148,641,
compared to a record 171,347 reached Jan. 27.

New Zealand’s dollar was the best performing currency
against the dollar gaining 0.7 percent to 83.23 US cents and
rallying 3.2 percent to 66.21 yen after Reserve Bank Governor
Alan Bollard said the country’s economic performance may be
understated.

Traders (CS1YRBNZ) are betting New Zealand’s central bank will raise
rates by 0.15 percentage point over the next 12 months,
according to a Credit Suisse Group AG index based on swaps. On
Feb. 6, wagers went from a projected cut to an increase. The
Reserve Bank of New Zealand has kept the official cash rate at a
record-low 2.5 percent since March.

Norway, Sweden

Norway’s krone rallied 0.5 percent to 5.714 per dollar and
1 percent to 7.51 versus the euro. Policy makers in the nation
are renewing their efforts to talk down the currency to support
exports. The nation’s central bank is monitoring the krone after
its recent gains, Governor Oeystein Olsen said. Crude oil
futures rose 5 percent to $103.99 a barrel in New York, its
biggest weekly advance since Dec. 23.

Sweden’s krona weakened against all its major counterparts
excluding the yen after the central bank unexpectedly cut
interest rates by 0.25 percent, citing a drag on exports from
Europe’s debt crisis.

The krona fell 1 percent to 6.728 per dollar and declined
0.5 percent to 8.8394 versus the euro.

Yen, Dollar Drop

The yen has tumbled 6.5 percent over the past month and the
dollar dropped 3.2 percent, the worst performers among 10
developed-market currencies according to Bloomberg Correlation-
Weighted Indexes. The euro gained 0.6 percent over the period.

Japan’s Finance Minister Jun Azumi reiterated at a
parliamentary budget committee session in Tokyo on Feb. 13 that
he’ll act on excessive and speculative moves in the currency.
Japan spent 14.3 trillion yen ($185 billion) in intervention
operations last year to stem gains in the currency as it rose to
postwar records against the dollar, hurting the nation’s
exporters.

“The 10 trillion yen the Bank of Japan pumped in to the
economy is still a fairly modest amount in the big scheme of
things,” said Joe Manimbo, a market analyst in Washington at
Western Union Business Solutions, a unit of Western Union Co.
“The yen may have further room to the downside, particularly if
the Fed holds off from embarking on a third round of monetary
easing this year.”

To contact the reporter on this story:
Allison Bennett in New York at
abennett23@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story:
Dave Liedtka at
dliedtka@bloomberg.net

International Monetary Systems Ltd. Retains DME Capital LLC to Implement …

NEW BERLIN, Wis., Feb. 21, 2012 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ –
International Monetary Systems Ltd.

/quotes/zigman/560968 ITNM
0.00%



announced that the company has retained DME Capital LLC, a New York-based Investor Relations firm, to expand the Company’s strategic investor relations program.

John Strabley, CEO of International Monetary Systems Ltd. stated, “As we continue to grow and diversify our interests, I believe this is the right time to send our message to the investment community. After careful consideration, DME Capital, with their established relationships among institutional investors, combined with their extensive databases and proactive IR program, is the perfect partner for International Monetary Systems.”

DME Capital LLC is a full service investor relations firm, representing growth-oriented companies to the investment community. Investor Relations services include financial and media relations, editorial services and interactive communications, as well as administrative, consulting and advisory services. DME Capital ensures money, fund, and portfolio managers, financial analysts; brokers and individual investors receive a constant flow of information and updates about ITNM. To learn more about DME Capital, go to
www.dmecapital.com .

About International Monetary Systems Founded in 1985, International Monetary Systems (IMS) serves 23,000 cardholders in 52 North American markets. Based in New Berlin, Wisconsin, and managed by seasoned industry veterans, IMS is one of the largest publicly traded barter companies in the world. The company’s proprietary transaction clearing software enables businesses and individuals to trade goods and services online using an electronic currency known as trade dollars. The IMS network allows companies to create cost savings and connect to new customers by incorporating barter opportunities in their business models. Further information can be obtained at the company’s Web site at:
www.imsbarter.com .

FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS

This press release contains certain “forward-looking” statements, as defined in the United States Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 that involve a number of risks and uncertainties. Statements, which are not historical facts, are forward-looking statements. The Company, through its management, makes forward-looking public statements concerning its expected future operations, performance and other developments. Such forward-looking statements are necessarily estimates reflecting the Company’s best judgment based upon current information and involve a number of risks and uncertainties, and there can be no factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those estimated by the Company. They include, but are not limited to, the Company’s ability to develop operations, the Company’s ability to consummate and complete the acquisition, the Company’s access to future capital, the successful integration of acquired companies, government regulation, managing and maintaining growth, the effect of adverse publicity, litigation, competition, sales and other factors that may be identified from time to time in the Company’s public announcements.

Contact:Investor Relations:DME Capital, LLCSteven Marcus917-648-0663 or Steven@dmecapital.com

SOURCE International Monetary Systems Ltd.

Copyright (C) 2012 PR Newswire. All rights reserved

/quotes/zigman/560968

Add ITNM to portfolio

ITNM

International Monetary Systems Ltd.


$
2.90

0.00
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Volume: 100.00
March 5, 2012 9:37a

China Will Participate in Europe Rescue Plan, IMF’s Syed Says

China Will Participate in Europe Rescue Plan, IMF’s Syed Says
February 22, 2012, 5:04 AM EST

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By Bloomberg News

Feb. 22 (Bloomberg) — Murtaza Syed, the International Monetary Fund’s resident representative in Beijing, comments on China’s participation in solving Europe’s sovereign-debt crisis, the value of the yuan and the increasing global use of the Chinese currency. He spoke to reporters in Beijing today.

On China’s participation in solving Europe’s debt crisis:

“I think the Chinese have been very clear that they want to help, but they want to help through the IMF and they want to be seen to be helping if other countries also step up. They don’t want to be the only ones. That’s a pretty sensible approach.

“There is a lot going on behind the scenes, there’s a lot of negotiations happening and I think the Chinese do share the view that we have that a big shock in Europe would have meaningful implications for China’s growth and they would have to respond. And therefore they want to try to avoid that scenario.

“Obviously if the IMF resources are to be bolstered, one of the main sources of that financing could be China because China has a lot of reserves, China has the kind of space that we would need to make a meaningful contribution.

“There’s a lot happening and I think it’s just a matter now of getting countries to agree, getting this core set of countries to agree. I don’t think any country wants to take the first step and to be the only one.

“You also have to put this against the domestic backdrop in China. There’s still a lot of poor people in China and explaining it to your domestic constituency is always difficult in any environment for a politician to say we are helping others while there are so many poor people in China. So the domestic messaging also has to be thought about and I think that’s part of what is causing this seeming delay or this long time in agreeing what needs to be done.

“In terms of addressing the European debt problem, the Chinese position has been quite clear from day one – which is that they will do it through the IMF and they will do it as long as other countries also contribute.

“China has been quite adamant that the bulk of the resources that it could provide would have to come through the IMF because it wants the IMF involved, it wants the IMF conditionalities, it wants to be able to demonstrate to its population that this is a good idea.”

On whether the yuan is undervalued:

“Taking the last six to eight months, appreciation has been quite dramatic. The current account has come down very sharply as a percent of GDP. If that continues, if that happens for another two or three years, once the global economy recovers and China’s current account is still in the region of 3 to 4 percent of GDP, it becomes much harder to argue that the exchange rate is substantially undervalued.

“Our view at the IMF has always been that the exchange rate is one part of China’s rebalancing but it’s not the only part. There are a whole host of other issues China can deal with that would help bring the current account down and rebalance its economy. The international community also is increasingly coming to that view. It’s an election year in the U.S., things could happen, the discussion could become again very volatile, very excitable, but I think cooler heads will prevail.”

On the yuan, also known as the renminbi, becoming a global currency:

The government is “quite keen now on pushing the RMB as a global currency. In order to do that you need domestic financial reform, it can’t be done without it. If you don’t allow the RMB that’s accumulating abroad to flow back into China, to be able to invest in assets here, you will never fulfill the potential of the RMB as a global currency. To do that with confidence, you need to reform the domestic financial system, make it much more market oriented.

“Unless you allow RMB that’s accumulating abroad to flow back into China, the only reason why people would want to hold it is if they think the RMB is going to appreciate. To the extent that RMB appreciation is no longer the prime motivation for holding the RMB at some point in the future, people will no longer want to hold the RMB unless they can use it to invest in assets on the mainland.

“To be able to do that you need to free up the capital account a lot more, there are a lot of capital controls particularly on inflows. They are now broadening out those channels, they are trying to get more portfolio investment into China through ETFs and things like that.

“Once you start playing this game, once you start punching holes in your capital account to allow more RMB to come in, it’s not hard to imagine that you would reach a situation where it’s very hard for you to control it. You really need to make sure your domestic financial system is able to absorb those kind of flows without creating asset bubbles, a credit splurge.”

–Nerys Avery in Beijing. Editors: Rina Chandran

To contact Bloomberg news staff for this story: Nerys Avery in Beijing at navery2@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Paul Panckhurst at ppanckhurst@bloomberg.net

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READER DISCUSSION

Tight monetary policy, global factors impacting growth rate: FM

New Delhi: Attributing economic slowdown to Reserve Banks tight money policy and global financial problems, Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee today said the country needs to target a double-digit growth rate.

India has to target a double-digit or near double-digit growth in the not too distant future. We must learn to sustain high growth over extended period of time, he said while addressing a conference of the industry chamber Assocham.

The economic growth during 2011-12 is estimated to slip to three-year low of 6.9 per cent from 8.4 per cent a year ago.

This slowdown, Mukherjee hoped, would be temporary and the country would be able to revert to high growth trajectory in the years to come.

The Minister is expected to announce steps to boost growth in the budget for 2012-13 to be presented in the Lok Sabha on March 16.

India was growing at over 9 per cent before the global financial crisis of 2008 pulled down countrys growth rate to 6.7 per cent in 2008-09.

Pointing out that global factors and tight monetary policy of the RBI slowed down growth, Mukherjee said, I expect this slowdown to be temporary and economy would soon revert to the high growth trajectory.

The Minister further said that the policy measures taken in recent months to ease the capital control would make available additional resources for the infrastructure sector.

The Reserve Bank has increased the interest rates for 13 times since March 2010 to tame rising inflation. However, the central bank has lately indicated that it would lower the interest rates to boost growth.

The central bank is scheduled to announce mid-quarterly review of monetary policy on March 15.

PTI

Battle over EU financial firewall threatens to derail Greek bailout

Battle over EU financial firewall threatens to derail Greek bailout

A battle over an increased eurozone bail-out fund and International Monetary
Fund support for the European Unions single currency threatens to derail
the latest Greek bailout.

S.Africa’s c.bank changes monetary operations

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) – The South African Reserve Bank on Wednesday said it would change some its monetary operations procedures including issuing more debentures from March 1, but these changes did not reflect a change in its monetary stance.

The bank said it would issue SARB debentures and reverse repos with seven- and fourteen-day maturities, in addition to the existing 28- and 56- day maturities.

Debentures and repurchase transactions are used by banks and money-market dealers as collateral when they borrow money from the central bank and when they invest.

The refinements mentioned above are operational in nature and do not in any way reflect a change in the monetary policy stance of the Bank, it said in a statement.

The bank said it would also conduct two- and five-day main repurchase transactions during the week of the Monetary Policy Committee meetings, which are held six times a year.

kovitz)

Korea Won Gains, Bonds Fall on China Monetary Easing, Greek Aid

Korea Won Gains, Bonds Fall on China Monetary Easing, Greek Aid
February 20, 2012, 4:30 AM EST

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By Jiyeun Lee

Feb. 20 (Bloomberg) — South Korea’s won rose to a one-week high and government bonds fell after China cut banks’ reserve requirements to support growth in Asia’s biggest economy, spurring demand for higher-yielding assets.

The proportion of cash that lenders must set aside will fall half a percentage point from Feb. 24, the People’s Bank of China said on its website over the weekend. The won was also supported by optimism that Europe’s finance ministers will agree to a second bailout for Greece when they meet today. South Korea held live-fire naval drills from around 10 a.m. today for about two hours despite North Korea’s threat of retaliation.

“Optimism about Greece receiving aid and China’s reserve- requirements cut is supporting risk appetite, but investors may refrain from taking strong positions ahead of a big European event,” said Byeon Ji Young, a currency analyst at Woori Futures Co. in Seoul.

The won rose for a second day, strengthening 0.2 percent to 1,123.40 per dollar at its close in Seoul, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. It touched 1,120.48 earlier, the strongest since Feb. 10. The won’s gains were limited by geopolitical risks on the Korean peninsula, which discouraged investors from selling dollars aggressively, according to Ryoo Hyun Jung, a Seoul-based chief currency dealer at Citibank Inc.

The Kospi Index of shares gained less than 0.1 percent as overseas investors bought more of the nation’s shares than they sold today, building on net purchases of $8.2 billion this year through Feb. 17.

The yield on South Korea’s 3.25 percent bonds due December 2014 climbed three basis points, or 0.03 percentage point, to 3.48 percent, Korea Exchange Inc. prices show. That’s the highest rate since the note began trading in December. Three- year futures declined 0.07 percent to 104.12. The one-year interest-swap rate was little changed at 3.49 percent.

–Editors: James Regan, Brett Miller

To contact the reporter on this story: Jiyeun Lee in Seoul at jlee1029@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Simon Harvey at sharvey6@bloomberg.net

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READER DISCUSSION

Modern Monetary Theory’s Big Weekend: The Problem with Surpluses

The Washington Post ran a long and well-wrought article on Modern Monetary Theory over the weekend.

The piece, by Dylan Matthews, starts with Jamie Galbraith’s experience trying to explain to a large audience of economists in the Clinton White House that the budget surpluses the federal government was running was immensely destructive. Or, rather, it starts with those economists laughing at Galbraith’s attempt to explain this.

It was obvious to me way back before I had ever heard of MMT that governments should probably never run a budget surplus–or should do so only in dire emergencies. When the government runs a surplus, that means it is taking more money out of the economy than it is spending back into the economy. It is making us poorer.

Anyone who worries about wasteful government spending should be all the more concerned about government surpluses. When corporations accumulate too much cash, investors rightly worry that management will lose discipline and engage in wasteful acquisitions or expansions. Better to pay it out in a dividend.

Likewise, excess cash flow for the government is an open invitation to waste. It tempts the would-be world improvers to devise new projects through which benevolence can be expressed. Almost always, these new projects will simply be a waste. If they were worth doing, they would have been worth doing without the surplus. Typically, a surplus just turns into an excuse to permanently expand the size of the government, which then adds to budget deficits when tax revenues fall due to economic slumps.

More importantly, even when it isn’t wasted on stupid government projects, the surplus itself is a waste. If it bothers you that the government spends tax money on bridges to nowhere, you should apoplectic when the government takes tax money and spends it on nothing at all. That, of course, is exactly what happens when our federal government taxes more than it spends. The financial assets of the people are simply confiscated.

The only people who I had encountered until recently who understood this last point were libertarians. In “The Mystery of Banking,” Murray Rothbard had written about the stock of money declining “if government retires money out of a budget surplus” and the possibility of a “a budget surplus where the government burned the paper money returning to it in taxes.”

Of course, at the time I assumed that I must be some sort of maniac. Everyone was celebrating the Clinton surpluses as a great economic and political triumph while I was in the stacks of my college library reading dusty books that were leading me to decide the surpluses were unjust and economically destructive. Fortunately, I was young and overconfident and perfectly comfortable with being a maniac.

Another oddity that grew up in my economic thinking at the time–late 1990s–was one that I’ve explored a few times here at NetNet: the bias against debt. For me, it made no sense that many people assumed it was better to fund government spending through taxes rather than debt issuance. Taxes were necessarily coercive; debt purchase was voluntary. It was obvious to me that debt financing was preferable to tax financing.

The idea that taxes counted as the government “living within its means” was as absurd to me as claiming that a burglar lived within his means when spending cash he got from fencing stolen goods. It seemed to me that money that could be borrowed was more “within our means” than money that had to be taken by threat of force and imprisonment.

What’s more, many of the arguments marshaled against government programs seemed wrong-headed to me. The so-called “budget hawks” or “deficit hawks” always built their critiques of government programs on the premise that we couldn’t “afford” them. But this was largely absurd. The real problem with most government programs is that they are socially destructive and diminish our happiness and prosperity. The problem with the government programs wasnt what they cost; it was what they did.

There was one other idea I encountered during that period. Reading the works of Ludwig von Mises, I discovered that when he used the phrase “deficit spending” he was not talking about spending financed by borrowing. He was typically talking about government spending more than it either taxed or borrowed–that is, spending financed by the creation of fiat money. This was the really problematic type of “deficit spending” because of the inflationary consequences it could bring.

Years later I encountered the work of Galbraith and other MMTers. Much of this was thanks to Cullen Roche’s excellent website, Pragmatic Capitalism. Most importantly, probably, I read Warren Mosler’s “Seven Deadly Innocent Frauds of Economic Policy.”

Mosler, who is a former hedge fund manager turned MMT guru and financial backer, argued in his book that we should not grow the size of the government during an economic downturn. We should just have the right size of government to begin with. Government spending might be able to end a recession but it would be preferable to reduce taxes and just run a budget deficit, Mosler argues.

“Even worse is increasing the size of government just because the government might find itself with a surplus. Again, government finances tell us nothing about how large the government should be,” Mosler writes.

This is the type of stuff I can work with, I thought.

Since my first encounters with MMT, I’ve discovered that its adherents tend to be much more optimistic than I am about government programs. In particular, they believe the government could guarantee a job to everyone willing to work without deleterious consequences. Where I suspect that most government spending is socially destructive and economically malfeasant, and nearly all discretionary government spending is thoroughly corrupt, this seems to bother them less. My “right size” of government is far smaller–almost vanishingly small–than theirs. (Here’s Randall Wray, on of the leading MMT academics, arguing that government should spend 30 percent of GDP! Saints preserve us!)

But at least they recognize the destruction wrought by a government that confiscates more money than it needs to spend.

I’ll likely have more to say about the Washington Post piece later today or tomorrow.

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China promises prudent monetary policy

Beijing: The Peoples Bank of China will maintain a prudent monetary stance to ensure policy remains stable in 2012 and improve its management of foreign-exchange, Governor Zhou Xiaochuan said.

The central bank will deepen financial reform, accelerate the development of financial markets, and strengthen and improve foreign-exchange management, Zhou said in a New Year message on the PBOCs website. Also yesterday, Caixin magazine quoted Zhou as saying that while the yuan is near equilibrium, the currencys trading band may widen to more than its current 0.5 per cent on either side of the central bank rate.

Expansion of the worlds second-biggest economy is slowing as global growth falters and the government maintains curbs on the property market to cool speculation and price gains.

The central bank may cut banks reserve requirements this month as a week-long Chinese New Year holiday increases demand for cash and Premier Wen Jiabao tilts his focus toward sustaining growth.