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Unhappy Ending For Indonesia Growth Story

http://www.ft.com/cm…l#ixzz2e0gkByv7 Indonesia’s decision to follow Brazil’s lead by raising interest rates at an extraordinary central bank meeting on Thursday temporarily took the sting out of the recent market slide, with the rupiah appreciating against the dollar and the stock market closing in the black. But the global emerging market turbulence , which has also hit Brazil, India, South Africa and Turkey, is unlikely to abate until the US Federal Reserve clarifies its plans to curb its quantitative easing programme. Over the next three months, many emerging market investors will be focused on how quickly the Fed withdraws liquidity from global markets, says Melvin Boey, southeast Asia strategist for Bank of America Merrill Lynch. On a longer-term view, investors and companies in Indonesia are starting to adjust to the fact that, as and when the dust settles, they are unlikely to see a return to the heady economic growth of the past five years, which was pumped up by the US liquidity surge and high prices for Indonesian commodities such as coal, palm oil and rubber. For companies, this “new normal” will mean lower profit margins and higher borrowing costs. For investors, the key question is: how much will growth slow and at what level will asset prices start to look attractive again? “A year ago, we still had high expectations for Indonesia but not now,” says one trader at a London investment bank. “Companies earnings are topping out and the country is moving into a slower cycle, with an election coming up next year as well. But there is a price level at which we’d come back in.” Until earlier this year, Indonesia was seen as one of the world’s hottest emerging markets, with a decade of robust economic growth, a large and fast-growing middle class and plentiful natural resources. The euphoria surrounding southeast Asia’s biggest economy sent the prices of Indonesian assets soaring to record levels. But since the value of the rupiah started falling rapidly in May, subsequently losing 10 per cent of its value relative to the dollar, the equity and debt markets have suffered a major sell-off. The benchmark Jakarta Composite index of shares has fallen by more than 20 per cent since May, when it hit an all-time high, having increased in value by 4.5 times since its global financial crisis nadir in November 2008. The yield on Indonesia’s rupiah-denominated, 10-year government bonds has jumped to well over 8 per cent from a record low of 5.2 per cent at the start of this year. “The central bank should have started tightening monetary policy earlier but the debt looks interesting at these levels,” says a fixed income fund manager in New York. The bank increased its main benchmark lending rate by 50 basis points to 7 per cent on Thursday. After such an extended boom, a correction is hardly surprising. But most analysts believe the fundamentals in Indonesia and other emerging markets are changing. Regardless of when the Fed starts “tapering” its stimulus programme, the economy is likely to slow in Indonesia, says Taimur Baig, chief southeast Asia and India economist at Deutsche Bank. He predicts annual GDP growth could ease to “around 5 per cent” rather than “around 6 per cent” in the next few years. Some Indonesian companies such as Mitra Adiperkasa , a large retail group that has been popular with foreign investors, have already warned their profit margins are being squeezed and are scaling back their expansion plans, for the first time since the global financial crisis. And valuations are not obviously cheap. The Indonesian stock market’s 12-month forward price/earnings ratio of 11.9 makes it more expensive than China (8.5), South Korea (8.2) and Thailand (10.6), but cheaper than India (12.5), Singapore (13.1) and Malaysia (14.4). However, operating profit margins in Indonesia remain among the highest in the region, averaging about 20 per cent, compared with 15 per cent in India and 10 per cent in China, according to Herald van der Linde, HSBC’s chief equity strategist for Asia. “Across the region, all countries are seeing margin pressure but in Indonesia, the margins are higher than elsewhere and the speed at which they come down will be slower,” he says. In any further sell-off, Indonesia could also be cushioned relative to other Asian markets by the fact that many international fund managers have already turned underweight on the country, says Mr van der Linde. By contrast, many still have an overweight portfolio position on India, which is suffering from a deeper macroeconomic malaise than Indonesia. Mr Boey of BofA believes some investors are waiting for the right time to start buying stocks that have been sold off unfairly. “The telecommunications and media sectors stand out from a short term perspective because they have seen a big sell-down, despite the fact that their fundamentals will be immune to what is happening right now as they are not affected by the fluctuating rupiah,” he says. But while there are some brave stock pickers, most international investors want to see more concrete action from emerging market governments before they pile back in. “For me to pound my fist on the table about Indonesia, I’d like to see a turning point in the data, like the current account deficit starting to narrow,” says Mr Boey. Continue reading

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New Market Study, "Forestry in Russia: Industrial Report", Has Been Published

Boston, MA — ( SBWIRE ) — 08/07/2013 — Euromonitor International’s Industrial reports provide a 360 degree view of an industry. The Industrial market report offers a comprehensive guide to the size and shape of the Forestry market at a national level. It provides the latest retail sales data, allowing you to identify the sectors driving growth. It identifies the leading companies, the leading brands and offers strategic analysis of key factors influencing the market – be they new product developments, packaging innovations, economic/lifestyle influences, distribution or pricing issues. Forecasts illustrate how the market is set to change. Product coverage: Forestry and Logging, Forestry Services. View Full Report Details and Table of Contents Data coverage: market sizes (historic and forecasts), company shares, brand shares and distribution data. Reasons to Get This Report – Get a detailed picture of the Forestry market; – Pinpoint growth sectors and identify factors driving change; – Understand the competitive environment, the market’s major players and leading brands; – Use five-year forecasts to assess how the market is predicted to develop. About Fast Market Research Fast Market Research is an online aggregator and distributor of market research and business information. Representing the world’s top research publishers and analysts, we provide quick and easy access to the best competitive intelligence available. Our unbiased, expert staff will help you find the right research to fit your requirements and your budget. For more information about these or related research reports, please visit our website at http://www.fastmr.com or call us at 1.800.844.8156. Browse all Materials research reports at Fast Market Research You may also be interested in these related reports: – Agricultural and Forestry Machinery in Mexico: Industrial Report – Forestry in Mexico: Industrial Report – Forestry in Italy: Industrial Report – Forestry in Turkey: Industry Report – Forestry in Indonesia: Industry Report – Forestry in South Korea: Industy Report – Agricultural and Forestry Machinery in South Korea: Industy Report – Forest Products – North America (NAFTA) Industry Guide – Forest Products: Global Industry Guide – Agricultural and Forestry Machinery in Russia: Industrial Report Media Relations Contact Bill Thompson Director of Marketing 800-844-8156 Email | Web Source: Fast Market Research Posted Wednesday, August 07, 2013 Continue reading

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Feeding The Planet: Beyond The £250,000 Hamburger

The creation of the world’s most expensive fast food is proving to be a distraction from the real problem facing global menus Share 17 Email Editorial The Guardian , Sunday 11 August 2013 By creating the world’s most expensive hamburger last week , Professor Mark Post and his team also engineered a savoury distraction from the real problem on the planetary menu: how to feed a population fast closing in on 10 billion. It is an issue that gets ever more serious. Consider: Britain, France and Germany produce 12% of the world’s wheat harvest, yet yields per hectare, which have almost trebled in one human lifetime, are no longer rising . These three countries are blessed with rich soil, good rainfall, long summer days, sophisticated agricultural science and all the fertiliser they need, so if yields are no longer increasing, then crops may be reaching their biological limit. In Japan and South Korea, rice yields may also be reaching a plateau. In the Middle East, where agriculture and civilisation began in symbiosis 10,000 years ago, grain yields have started to fall because water supplies have begun to dwindle: Iraq, Syria, Yemen and Saudi Arabia have all seen wells dry, and aquifers depleted. India, China and the United States rely on irrigation to sustain high crop yields but may be depleting groundwater faster than it can be replenished. Altogether, 18 countries may not have enough water to go on growing more and more grain: around 3.6 billion people live in these countries. That is about half the population of the planet . By 2050, the number of mouths to feed will have increased by 2 billion. As food supplies dwindle, and demand increases, food prices will rise: that is how markets work. But 2 billion people already survive on an income of less than $2 a day: almost a billion people go to bed hungry each night right now; 2 billion are, according to UN calculations, in some way malnourished. As food prices rise, so will political discontent. The Arab spring began with unprecedented rises in food prices; riots followed in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya . It is this chronology that enables some to argue that citizens can bear governmental incompetence, corruption and even oppression, as long as they can be sure of their supper. Add to this several other ominous trends. One is climate change: analysts who looked at 21 studies of civil war, ethnic conflict and street violence in modern societies found a consistent link with drought and high temperature in all 21 cases . Since many climate change projections forecast a 2C rise in average global temperatures some time near mid-century, and since crop yields tend to fall with extremes of temperature, this is not good news, for food security or for civilisation. There are other problems. One is waste. About 2m tons of food are lost every year: the crop never gets to the market in the poorest countries, or it is scraped off the plate and into the bins in the richest nations . Another is the switch from food crops to biofuel: in 2011 as gasoline prices rose, 127m tons – a third of the US grain harvest – were diverted to the production of ethanol. For the US farmers, it looked like a bargain: a $2 bushel of corn could be turned into 2.8 gallons of ethanol at $3 a gallon . But the grain to fill the tank of an American sports car just once would be enough to feed someone for a whole year: this is the market economy at its most grotesque. As incomes rise for the middle classes in the developing nations, so does global demand for meat and milk . The switch from staple crops to cheeseburgers signals both a soaring obesity epidemic and higher prices for grain: two disasters for the price of one, three if you chuck in the burning of the tropical forests, the settlement of the savannahs and the extinction of wild species to make new space for livestock. There is a clear need for concerted political action at an international level: to change the direction of agriculture, produce more food more sustainably and distribute it more fairly. That way, everybody is better off. Governments know this, because they see food security as one of the grand challenges of the century. Yet what, actually, are they doing about it? And are they doing enough? Sadly, we already know the answer. Continue reading

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