Friday, October 8, 2010

Fitch Upgrades Sri Lanka's Dialog to 'AAA(lka)', Outlook Stable

Rating Action & Commentary by Fitchratings
Fitch Ratings-Colombo/Mumbai/Singapore-08 October 2010: Fitch Ratings has today upgraded Sri Lanka's Dialog Axiata PLC's (Dialog) National Long-term rating to 'AAA(lka)' from 'AA(lka)', and simultaneously revised the Outlook to Stable from Negative. The agency has also upgraded the National Long-term rating on Dialog's outstanding LKR2.5bn redeemable preference shares to 'AA+(lka)' from 'AA-(lka)'.While Dialog's ratings factor in support from its parent - Axiata Group Berhad (Axiata, 83%
ownership) in arriving at the final rating, the upgrade reflects the company's improved stand-alone credit profile, and liquidity position. This is in turn a result of Dialog's successful cost rationalisation exercise, reduced tariff pressure within the local mobile industry at present (which is likely to allow further balance sheet improvements over the short-term), strong market share within the mobile industry amid improving economic conditions, and its improved operating cash flows.




Fitch assesses Dialog's standalone rating at 'AA(lka)'. A downgrade of the ratings could be precipitated by unfavourable developments within the local regulatory or competitive environment that would result in a sustained increase in Dialog's leverage (net
adjusted debt/EBITDAR) of above 2.5x, or by the weakening of Axiata's financial profile. Conversely, an upgrade of Dialog's standalone rating may result if the company is able to sustain leverage of below 1.5x, while maintaining an evenly spread out debt maturity profile.


 
Dialog's profitability as measured by EBITDAR margin improved to 41% at 30 June 2010 (end-H110), from 26% at end-2008 (FYE08), largely due to the 'right sizing' of its operations since early-2009. This included the centralisation of key administrative functions, better utilisation of network and office infrastructure, staff reductions, and network modernisation. The stronger operating cash flow generation that resulted, combined with lower levels of incremental capex, reduced group leverage to 1.7x in end-H110 (FYE08: 3.8x). 




"We expect Dialog's healthy EBITDAR margin, combined with modest revenue growth and relatively low incremental capex, to generate strong pre-dividend free cash
flow over the medium term" says Hasira De Silva, Associate Director with Fitch's Asia Pacific Corporates team. This, along with the management's commitment towards maintaining relatively low leverage levels, is likely to improve Dialog's ability to absorb competitive pressures over the mediumterm. 


 
Over 67% of Dialog's group revenue and 77% of EBITDA were derived from the mobile segment at end-H110 (December 2007: 84% and 94% respectively), which is prone to competitive pressures barring regulatory intervention at present. In Fitch's view, Dialog's alternative revenue sources are unlikely to eclipse cash flow generation from its mobile segment over the long-term.


 
The recently implemented regulatory tariff floor has curbed the erstwhile aggressive price competition within the mobile space, and may allow larger operators to de-leverage to an extent, or preserve balance sheet quality. 




"In our view, the local mobile industry is overcrowded, and therefore we believe that a
renewed price war cannot be ruled out should the floor be removed. This could continue to be a key risk to Dialog's operations over the medium-term" adds Mr. De Silva.
Dialog's liquidity position was sound at end-H110, with around LKR7.4bn of committed un-drawn credit lines (in USD) and LKR3.6bn of cash available, against LKR5.1bn of current maturities including preference share repayments. 




At end-H110, 65% of group debt was denominated in USD. Dialog has expressed its intention to maintain a sinking fund from its annual net USD receipts (H110 net receipts: USD17m), to help mitigate potential currency risk on the scheduled repayments of its USD debt, which fall due between 2011 and 2015.
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Apparel exports to EU rise as Colombo loses tariff benefit

Bangladesh  is enjoying the benefits of the EU decision to withdraw zero-tariff from Sri Lanka, among other factors now boosting garment exports. Sri Lanka was supposed to enjoy the Generalised System of Preferences Plus (GSP+) status from the European Union, but it was withdrawn for the country's poor human rights record after its crushing of Tamil resistance.

The EU intends to make the formal move at the end of this month.



The GSP+ status gives 16 poor nations preferential access to the EU in return for strict commitments on a wide variety of social and rights issues.



Exports of readymade garments (RMG) blew past the state's target in the first two months of the current fiscal year, according to the latest data from the state-owned Export Promotion Bureau (EPB).



Bangladesh exported knitwear worth $1.6 billion against the $1.21 billion target in July and August, 31 percent up over the same period a year earlier.



During the same period, the country exported woven garments worth $1.31 billion against a target of $1.12 billion, up 17 percent from last year.



Ahsan Kabir Khan, managing director of Interfab Shirt Manufacturing Ltd, cited two reasons for the strong orders coming to Bangladesh, including recovery from the global recession.



"In the last year, buyers followed a conservative strategy in purchasing RMG products, and this year the actual business is returning," Khan said.



Second is the ongoing shift of orders from Sri Lanka, Pakistan and China to Bangladesh, he added. Orders, which were supposed to go to Sri Lanka, are now coming to Bangladesh, he said.



China has been suffering from shortages of low-wage workers, and Pakistan has faced widespread flooding, Khan said.



Part of the rise reflects the competitive level of RMG here.



"We're now taking shipments against orders which were placed earlier. This might be a cause for exceeding the target," said a Spanish buyer requesting anonymity.



But it is also true that many more international buyers are now placing orders in Bangladesh for its cheap prices, he added.



Source : The Daily Star - Bangladesh




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Lanka’s official reserves exceed US dollars 7 bn

The gross official reserves of the country surpassed the US dollars 7 billion level on 4th October 2010, a press communication by the Central Bank said.
This level of reserves is equivalent to over 6.8 months of imports and is the highest ever reserves level of Sri Lanka.
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Thursday, October 7, 2010

People’s Bank gets new CEO/Gen. Manager

People’s Bank today announced that former CEO/General Manager Mr. P. V. Pathirana has retired from his position and Mr. H. S. Dharmasiri has been appointed as the new CEO/GM of the bank according to the board's decision.
Mr. H. S. Dharmasiri, a student of Hokandara Vidyaraja College and Vidylankara Pirivena – Pannipitiya, joined People’s Bank as a Management Trainee, after having obtained both a first class B. A. Hons degree in Economics as well as a B. Phil degree with a first class from the University of Colombo. He has served the Bank in various capacities varying from the Branch Manager, to Asst. Regional Manager and Chief Manager etc. before serving as one of the Senior Deputy General Managers of the bank prior to this promotion. 


During his tenure he has acquired many professional qualifications including an AIB and also a diploma in Bank Management from the Institute of Bankers of Sri Lanka (IBSL). At present he is a Fellow of the Institute of Bankers (FIB) of Sri Lanka.


As a practical banker with experience in operational activities, credit, recoveries and even human resources, Mr. Dharmasiri has been serving in the governing board of the IBSL for many years now and is also a Director of Lanka Clear Co. Ltd.






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Things happening reverse?

Zimbabwean man drugged, raped by gang of women
A Zimbabwean man has accused a gang of three women of kidnapping, drugging and raping him in the fifth sexual attack targeting male victims in under a year, a police spokesman said on Wednesday.



The 26-year-old man told police he was offered a lift in the southern city of Bulawayo but passed out in the vehicle after he was grabbed from behind and his face covered with a cloth.


He said he fell unconscious again after being given a substance that tasted like alcohol.
"After he woke up he was naked and the ladies took turns to rape him and abused him," police spokesman Wayne Bvudzijena told AFP.
The man told police he passed out after the assault but was later dumped by the women.
"The ladies also took his money, 300 US dollars, and cell phone," said Bvudzijena.
"The intentions by the three women are not clear but we suspect it could for ritual purposes," he said.
The incident Friday was the fifth such attack reported in several parts of the country, carried out by groups of women of varying size.
"It could be one or more gangs involved which is doing this. In all cases the victims are caught unaware and they are given drugs which makes them dizzy," said Bvudzijena.
"A docket for aggravated assault has since been opened in these cases."
The first attack happened last November when three women kidnapped an 18-year-old man, the state-run Herald newspaper reported.
In February, a group of four women forced a 25-year-old to have sex with them at gun-point.
Last month, a 44-year-old man, who was ordered to wear a condom, was targeted by two women while a man stood guard.
A 30-year-old man was also drugged by three women, two of whom had guns, and sexually assaulted.
Under Zimbabwean law, the charge of rape only applies to women victims. (AFP)


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Fitch upgrades Sri Lanka rating, sees GDP at 7 % in 2010-2012

Fitch Ratings said on Wednesday it has affirmed Sri Lanka’s Long‐Term Issuer Default Ratings (IDRs) at ‘B+’ and has revised the Outlooks on both ratings to Positive from Stable, saying it see GDP growth reaching 7.2% in 2010-2012.
This, it said in a statement, is largely to reflect the economic benefits of post‐war transformation and IMF support. Both Outlooks were changed to Stable from Negative in October 2009 on account of the end of the 26‐year civil war and the approval of a $2.6 billion IMF Stand‐By Arrangement (SBA).




“In particular, the authorities have made headway in integrating the war‐torn Northern and Eastern Provinces into the rest of the economy, which will boost Sri Lanka’s productive capacity. Fitch is forecasting real GDP growth to average 7.2% in 2010‐2012 compared with an average of 5.1% in the previous 20 years,” it said.

Fitch said IMF support has lifted investor confidence that Sri Lanka’s macroeconomic policy framework will be tightened up. This has led to a pick‐up in private capital inflows into the country and, in turn, a rise in foreign exchange reserves. Fitch said it sees more evidence that the Central Bank has shifted the focus of monetary policy to fighting inflation from supporting growth.




“The authorities also appear ready to tackle the sovereign’s biggest ratings constraint, weak public finances. The country’s poor record of fiscal discipline is highlighted by both the budget deficit of 9.9% of GDP in 2009 and public debt of 86.2% of GDP, both well above the medians for the ‘B’ rating peer group. The end of the war provides the authorities flexibility to cut defence spending, which has typically accounted for over 15% of government expenditure. Equally vital, the formation of the Presidential Commission on Taxation last year signals that the authorities intend to reform tax policy. The government revenue/GDP ratio stood at 15% of GDP in 2009, which is well below the ‘B’ median,” it said.



Fitch said the Presidential Commission on Taxation is set to release its final recommendations before November 2010 and points out that though this is too late to help address the 2010 budget deficit target of 8.0% of GDP, new tax measures will be crucial in determining whether the authorities can ultimately meet their budget deficit targets of 6.8% of GDP for 2011 and 5.2% for 2012.
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Sri Lanka to buy out Shell gas for US$63mn

The Government of Sri Lanka is to purchase the balance 51 percent stake of Shell Gas Lanka from Royal Dutch Shell plc (RDS) for 63 million US dollars, the government's information office said.

The balance 49 percent of the firm is also owned by Sri Lanka's government.
Following the move, RDS or commonly known as Shell - a global oil and gas company headquartered in The Hague, Netherlands will be exiting all of its Asian oil operations.
Shell had originally acquired the firm as part of a privatization drive. 
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Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Sri Lanka imports more vehicles

Car imports to Sri Lanka have risen sharply in the last 3 months, with some 500 vehicles being cleared daily through customs.
Since 2008 there have been very high import duties on new and used cars, most of which come in from Japan.

In October 2009, only 370 vehicles were customs cleared, representing a sharp drop compared with October 2008, when new tariffs were imposed.

The tariffs were brought down in June this year, drastically changing the dynamic for car buyers.

Sri Lanka's government agreed to lower tariffs and instead expanded the country's tax base after International Monetary Fund intervention.
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Sri Lanka’s Exports to Rise 12 Percent This Year, Official Says

Oct. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Sri Lanka’s exports are likely to rise as much as 12 percent in 2010, a central bank official said, allaying concerns growth is slowing after the island in July reported the smallest increase in shipments this year.Overseas sales rose for a sixth month in July, boosted by higher tea and rubber prices. Still, shipments grew only 0.6 percent that month from a year earlier, versus 23 percent in June, as sales of textiles and garments dropped 11 percent, data from the Central Bank of Sri Lanka show.

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Tuesday, October 5, 2010

Laugfs Gas IPO to raise Rs. 2.5 bn

Sri Lankan liquid petroleum gas supplier Laugfs Gas is seeking to raise 2.5 billion rupees in an initial public offer opening on November 04, 2010, a stock exchange filing said.


Laugfs Gas will offer for subscription 75 million ordinary voting shares at 23 rupees a share, to raise 1,725 million rupees, and 52 million ordinary non-voting shares at 15 rupees each to raise 780 million rupees. 


State-owned Merchant Bank of Sri Lanka is managing the issue with brokers Capital Alliance and Asha Phillip Securities being joint placement agents. 

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Insurance boost....

Amana Takaful unveils Sri Lanka’s first insurance web portal



Amana Takaful recently made history in the Sri Lankan insurance industry by launching a web portal that is meant to empower its customers and prospective clientele. The launch event took place in the presence of a select number of Amana Takaful Life clients who registered their accounts symbolising the launch of the portal.

 “Amana Takaful Online Services is a one-of-a-kind eportal that enables multiple stakeholders of Amana Takaful to be able to access their details online. If it’s a policy holder, he can log in and view his policy payment history and current information, intimate a claim, upload claim documents and endorsement information as well as make payment. In case of hospitalisation covers, he can also view the claims history and past endorsements etc. Meanwhile, agents can view their personal information, policies managed by them and messages sent to them by their managers. Basically, the web portal offers an interactive secure environment with real time capabilities and offline functions” said M.S.M. Muhajir, Senior Manager Information Technology, Amana Takaful PLC adding that registrations are now possible through the company website, www.takaful.lk

Amana Takaful Online Services is presently operational to service the Life portfolio and will be further expanded. “For the time being, this solution has been implemented for Amana Takaful Life customers. We hope to develop this technology further to service our discerning General Takaful clientele, he added.

Another key feature of the portal is its ability to link business partners such as agents. ”The portal provides Agents a way to do business anywhere, anytime. Agents can login and use their portal to upload and download information, exchange data, and view reports. This Insurance Portal also enhances the agent experience and gives them a convenient means of quoting, reporting, and customer documentation, says Muhajir.

Aashiq Aminuddin, Manager Marketing of Amana Takaful says “The demands of customers have increased greatly and more have access to the internet not only on PC’s but also on mobiles as well. We believe the development of the web portal at this juncture is opportune as it prepares us adequately to serve the future generation that will be more internet savvy. Moreover, we have many clients who are working or resident overseas, who will be greatly enabled by this service. “

Amana Takaful in its endeavour to be ethical and environmentally friendly has been following a path of conversion to use less paper as much as possible. As such the aid of SMS and email based receipting, reminders and communication is sought to move towards being paperless. The Web Portal is another step towards this goal.

Amana Takaful insurance is the Sri Lankan pioneer and flag bearer of the Takaful way of insurance that redefines how insurance is carried out. Takaful is a refreshingly unique concept of risk management that is based on mutual and collective efforts of customers to safeguard their individual and combined risks. As such they become joint owners of the fund and the beneficiaries of any underwriting profit/ surplus that is made. Amana Takaful has been operating for more than 10 years and has a licensed full-fledged operation in the Maldives.
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Sri Lanka In A Sweet Spot - Prakriti Sofat



Watch the CNBC interview with Pakriti Sofat right at the BOTTOM of this page.


Prakriti Sofat, regional economist at Barclays Capital, speaks to CNBC's Oriel Morrison about the country's bond market and ratings outlook.

Sri Lanka is Asia's best performing equity market year-to-date. 





Alternatively, you can also watch the interview by clicking this link

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Flying back..

Gulf Air flies again to Sri Lanka




Gulf Air is to fly again to Sri Lanka following many internatinal airlines who re-commenced their operations in Sri Lanka with the end of the war that plagued the country for 25 years.

 
Gulf Air is relaunching its operations to Sri Lanka thorugh Mack Air Private Limitd, a subsidiary company of John Keells Holdings. The official announcement of the relaunch would be made tomorrow (October 6th).



Gulf Air is the principal flag carrier of the Kingdom of Bahrain.
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Expect gold to cross $2,000/ounce in next 5-10 years: Jim Rogers

Jim Rogers, chairman, Rogers Holdings, spoke with ET Now on a range of issues including the global economy, emerging markets, equities and his current contrarian bets Excerpts:






Q: How do you think currently the global economy or especially emerging markets are stacked up?

Some people are getting better, some sectors are getting better. Governments have been pouring gigantic amounts of money into the market and the people who get that money are obviously better off and they think that things are better and they are better. But overall, the situation continues to deteriorate, unemployment goes higher, the debts are staggering in the West anyway. So the whole world is going to have more and more horrible problems in the future.


Q: Talking about the sugar space, stocks in India have started moving up as the government has been trying to allow partial exports in surplus sugar. Do you think there is a medium-term trade in sugar? Where do you see the global prices of sugar heading in the coming few months?


 
Sugar is going to go much higher over the next few years. I have no idea whether this is a short-term trade or not. I am terrible at it, terrible at short term trading. I am ecstatic to hear that your government is loosening up. Indian government is one of the most restrictive and controlling governments in the world. They should let sugar farmers finally make some money. So I hope that they continue to expand. I hope that the sugar farmers continue to make money and yes the price of sugar is going to be much higher over the next five to 10 years. So there is lots of money to be made in sugar unless your government does something foolish again.


Q: You have always had a contrarian approach. You were buying airline stocks in 2003-2004 when global fund managers were dumping them. You were buying and commodity stocks in 2002 when global fund managers were dumping them. Which is your current big contrarian bet for the year 2010 and beyond?


 
The way I see the world, there is going to be a lot more currency turmoil in the next few years. So I am mainly playing currencies and commodities going forward. I have a few shorts. I have sold a few things short mainly in the United States, but I do not see a lot of great opportunities in the stock market.

Let’s put it this way: If there are great opportunities in the stock market, the opportunities will be better in commodities because the shortages are worse in commodities. If the world does not get better, which it may not, then you should be better off owning commodities because after all, governments will continue to print money and throughout history when government has printed a lot of money, it has led the higher prices for commodities.

So either way, my way to play this is through commodities. Buy yourself some rice or some natural gas, look at the things that are very cheap and maybe you will do well - no matter what happens to the world economy.


Q: What is the call on then because prices there have been going through the roof? They have already crossed $1300 per ounce mark. What is the way forward for the next five to 10 years and what kind of a trade would you initiate on the precious metal right now?


 
I just got to say that if I were to go to about precious metals, I would rather look at silver than gold. I own gold and I own silver, but silver is still 60% below its all time high. Gold is making all time highs. So it is usually better to buy low and sell high. I am not selling my gold. Gold will go over $2000 an ounce certainly in the next five to 10 years. But silver - on a percentage basis - will probably go up even more during that period of time.


Q: Gold currently is at about 1,300. If you are talking about a target of about 2,000. It means you automatically expect an upside of about 20%+ in less than 24 months. Is not that sizable?


 
No, I did not say in 24 months, you said in 24 months. I said in the next five or 10 years. Over the next five or 10 years, gold will go over $2,000 an ounce.


Q: Can you talk about one idea where you think a bubble formation is there or something which you would like to avoid?

 
I know a bubble is forming in the US Government bonds, long-term bonds. If not there yet, we do not have the end of the bubble yet. That is certainly one of the few bubbles I see forming. We have a bubble forming in Australian real estate and Chinese urban coastal real estate. There are certainly some bubbles forming in the world. I am not short on Australian real estate or nor am I short on Chinese urban real estate, but these are definitely bubbles. It looks like there is always some bubble forming somewhere.


Q: What’s the call in oil prices then? Where do you see the prices heading in the next six-12 months?


 
The surprise in oil is going to be how high the price of oil stays over the next decade and how high it ultimately goes. Oil reserves around the world are declining at a relatively steady rate and nobody is discovering gigantic reserves to replace them. The IEA is going around begging people to listen. Known oil reserves are going down at a steady rate. Again, I am not buying oil right now, but if I were going to buy energy, I would be looking for something like and some other things that are still depressed.


Q: Talking about alternate energy and things like shale gas, could they be potential threat for long-term oil bulls or long-term oil watchers?


 
There is enormous potential in alternate energy. The world needs new energy sources. Some day I will come to Mumbai and I am going to see windmills on all the roofs or solar panels on all the roofs, but some day is a long way from now. But if you can find good companies in the shale gas or in the windmill business or in the solar panel business, you will probably make a lot of money because it has a great future. Oil reserves are declining, energy usage is rising. Find somebody who can produce relatively cheaply alternate energy and you will make a fortune.


Q: 2008 was about capital preservation, 2009 was about capital appreciation. 2010 and beyond, do you think you need to sit on some cash, take some chips off the table because all asset classes, equities, commodities, real estate have rallied back?

 
Not everything has rallied back, rise is still very depressed. Natural gas is still depressed, there are still things that are depressed, but the way to preserve capital is to make money. Sitting around saying I am going to be defensive is not a way to preserve capital.

I know a lot of people who owned Icelandic Krona two years ago. They were all in the cash, it was all in Icelandic Krona. You know the rest of that story. They got wiped out because the Icelandic Krona collapsed. You must always try to make money if you are going to preserve capital because even going into cash can be very destructive. Figure out where the best place is to make money, put your money there and that’s how you will preserve capital.


Q: What is the call on Indian equities at this point of time? We have run up pretty hard valuation-wise in the entire emerging market pack. We are looking slightly rich. Does it seem like this gush of liquidity that we are seeing into the Indian equities would continue for a while to come?


 
Your government and your central bank are going to tighten things up or they are going to stop having this great gush of liquidity. Several central banks have said that - I wish the Indian Central Bank could be running the American Central Bank. This is a case where your central bank has done a much better job than the Americans or the British or some of the other Central Banks. But you are not the only one. I mean the Australians and Norwegians, many central banks see the problems that are developing and are trying to tighten things up.

 
Let us hope that your central bank continues to do so. If they do and if others do, then we are going to have much less liquidity in the world and now will slow things down. But remember, starting in the summer - starting in July - the American Central Bank started pumping money out and the Japanese - two weeks ago or three weeks ago - said oh! we are going to do the same thing. So when you got the Japanese Central Bank and the American central bank flooding the world with money - those are two pretty big players - I hope India continues its policy. You have the other two - and perhaps three - pumping money out, but your central bank is doing better.


Q: Exactly one year ago, you had identified Sri Lanka stocks and that trade actually has worked like a charm for you. Do you still like Sri Lankan stocks or Sri Lankan stock market?


 
Sometimes I get it right, sometimes even I get it wrong. If I were going to invest anywhere in the world, I would rather invest in Asia than in the West for many-many reasons. Sri Lankan stocks have gone through the roof. I do not like to jump on a moving train - certainly a fast moving train.

 
But if you are going to own shares in the world, I would certainly look at Asia. The largest creditor nations in the world are now in Asia. This is where the assets are, this is where the dynamic is, this is where things are happening, this is where a lot of raw materials are. Great things will continue to happen in Asia or let us put it this way: Less bad things will happen in Asia than in the West.


Q: Would it be a country-specific trade and if so, which one?


 
I cannot think of any country I would buy right now - any country that has a stock market. Stocks everywhere have run up. You have mentioned before that emerging markets have been going through the roof. I cannot think of any place where I would be buying stocks right now.


Q: What about your favourite country Jim - China?

 
I would not be buying shares in China right now under any circumstances. I only like to buy in any stock market when it is collapsing. Chinese stock markets are down over the last year or so, but the year before that it was one of the strongest - if not the strongest - stock markets in the world. China has got a horrible inflation problem. They are not handling it very well; they are handling it better than some countries, but now they have got plenty of problems with their inflation. They have been cutting back in the bank reserves and in the housing industry. I would hope they continue to do so. I am not buying shares in China right now.


Q: You like commodities, you like precious metals. But if you really have to keep one trade open for the next 5 years or 10 years, which will be that golden trade?


I would have to say that for five or 10 years, it would probably be rice. I would probably put my money in rice for the next five or 10 years, rice or silver. Buy yourself some silver chopsticks or some silver cutlery, and buy yourself some rice, stock up with rice and you will be very rich in five or 10 years.
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Cargills eyes beer biz?

By Indika Sakalasooriya

Speculation is rife that Cargills Ceylon PLC (CARG) is eyeing the soft liquor business through the acquisition of McCallum Breweries, the manufacturers of niche market beers, 3 Coins and Irish Dark Riva, The Bottom Line reliably learns.
According to market analysts, the entry of Cargills into the beer market makes real sense as the company already has the distribution channel through its super market chain, ‘Cargills Food City’.

 
As they pointed out, the lack of a proper and a wider distribution network has always been the problem for McCallum in taking their beers to consumers.

 
In contrast, Cargills owns a super market chain which has close to 200 stores island-wide, most of them having liquor counters within the premises. Yet some are of the view that Cargills going into soft liquor could tarnish its corporate image as ‘Cargills Food City’ has become a household name in Sri Lanka.


 
It is also believed that McCallum Breweries has been in a web of debt since almost its inception as the company had sought financial assistance from several banks including People’s Bank, DFCC Bank and Seylan Bank.

“If Cargills is looking at McCallum Brewery, then they will have to restructure the debts and organise the finance. We believe the brewery is inflicted with a heavy debt burden”, a market source, who did not want to be named said.


 
In our attempts to contact the head of McCallum Breweries, Chandana Ukwatte, The Bottom Line learnt that McCallum Breweries has closed down its head office in Union Place, and the attempst to contact their factory in Meegoda too was fruitless.

When contacted, Cargills chairman Ranjit Page told The Bottom Line that he is not aware of such a move and refused to comment further.
 


Founded in 1963 by the well known entrepreneur U K Edmund, McCallum Breweries is one the oldest brewers in Sri Lanka. It is a part of the McCallum Group which owns Mount Lavinia Hotel, McCallums Nurseries, McCallums Cargo Pvt Limited, McCallums Shipping Pvt Ltd, McCallums Exports Pvt Ltd, Rusirimal Pvt Ltd, and McCallums Books Pvt Ltd & McCallums Press Ltd.

 
According to a recent report from Asia Securities on the beer market in Sri Lanka, Lion is the undisputed leader of the soft alcohol/beer market in Sri Lanka and commands a composite 82% share of the market.


 
The second largest producer, Asia Pacific Brewery, has only a 15% share, whilst McCallum Brewery holds approximately 2%. Imports account for a very minute portion of the market.
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A bubble building?

Super-rich investors buying gold in tonne to dodge economic worries

GENEVA: The world's wealthiest people have responded to economic worries by buying bars of gold, sometimes by the tonne, and moving assets out of the financial system , bankers catering to the very rich said on Monday. 


Fears of a double-dip downturn had boosted the appetite for physical bullion as well as mining company shares and exchange-traded funds, UBS executive Josef Stadler told the Reuters Global Private Banking Summit.
 

"They don't only buy ETFs or futures, they buy physical gold," said Stadler, who runs the Swiss bank's services for clients with assets of at least $50 million to invest.
 

UBS is recommending top-tier clients hold 7-10 percent of their assets in precious metals like gold, which is on course for its tenth consecutive yearly gain and traded at around $1,317 an ounce on Monday, near the record level reached last week.
 

In a sign of the uncertain times, some clients go further.
 

"We had a clear example of a couple buying over a tonne of gold ... and carrying it to another place," Stadler said. At today's prices, that shipment would be worth about $42 million.
 

Julius Baer's chief investment officer for Asia is also recommending that wealthy investors park some of their assets in gold as a defensive stance following a string of lacklustre U.S. data and amid concerns about currency weakness.
 

"I see gold as an insurance," Van Anantha-Nageswaran said. "I recommend 10 percent as minimum in portfolios and anything more than that to be used for trading purposes, to respond to short-term over-bought or over-sold signals."
 

ULTIMATE BUBBLE?
 

Billionaire financier George Soros, echoing comments from investment guru Warren Buffett, last month described gold as the "ultimate bubble" because it is costly to dig up and has no real value except its market price.
 (ET)


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Racing ahead

India's auto exports to escalate 



Automobile exports from India are expected to shoot up to $12 billion by 2014 from $4.5 billion in the last fiscal, according to a news report. 


Firms are witnessing an increase in demand for cheap small cars and two-wheelers from the UK, European Union, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Nepal and South Africa.



Exports have been growing at the rate of 25 per cent over the last five years.



“Domestic automobile exports are expected to grow 20-22 per cent over the next few years with demand coming from emerging markets and European countries,” Vaishali Jajoo, auto analyst with Angel Broking, told The Telegraph.



While Maruti Suzuki India is phasing out its M800 model in the domestic market, its export jumped 91.5 per cent to 4,435 units in the April-August period against 2,316 in the same period last year, Siam data showed.



The company exports the M800 to neighbouring countries and other nations such as Algeria, Chile and Egypt.



“Britain has emerged as India’s largest automobile export market where the industry sold cars worth $481 million in 2009-10,” said the Ficci study.



Italy is the second largest market with sales of $433.77 million, followed by Germany, the Netherlands and South Africa.


Source : Telegraph India
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Monday, October 4, 2010

Casino entry..

Indian magnate plans casinos in Sri Lanka

 

Billionaire Rakesh Jhunjhunwala- backed Delta Corp. plans to open casinos in Sri Lanka in the next six months  to tap a surge in tourist arrivals to the island nation after the end of a 26-year civil war, Bloomberg wire reported.



Casino operator-Delta, which also develops property and runs an aircraft charter service, will spend 10 billion rupees ($225 million) in the next three years in opening casinos in the region as well as at home in Sikkim, Daman, and Goa, Chief Financial Officer Hardik Dhebar said in an interview in Mumbai. Gambling is not allowed in most Indian states.



Delta wants to benefit from a revival in Sri Lanka’s tourist arrivals, which surged 47 percent in the first eight months of the year, according to the nation’s tourism agency. Shares of companies including John Keells Holdings Plc and Aitken Spence & Co. have more than doubled as tourist incomes boosts earnings at their hotels and resorts.



“We have not even scratched the surface yet” for casino opportunities in the region, Dhebar said. “Sri Lanka is in a hurry to start speed up the process of development and is taking steps to ensure investment flows into the country.”



Delta shares, which have risen 84 percent this year, rose 2 percent to a record 83.8 rupees in Mumbai at 11:08 a.m.



Faster economic growth in India and Sri Lanka is helping boost salaries in the region increasing demand for leisure spending, Dhebar said.



India’s economy grew 8.8 percent in the quarter ended June 30, the fastest pace in two-and-a-half years. Sri Lanka’s $42 billion economy may grow as much as 8 percent in 2010, the central bank said on Sept. 21. The nation’s troops defeated the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam in May last year, ending their 26-year quest for a separate homeland helping attract tourists and investors to the nation.


Billionaire Jhunjhunwala and investor Radhakrishna Damani bought an 11 percent stake in the company last month. Jhunjhunwala, with $1.15 billion in assets is India’s 57th richest man, according to Forbes magazine.


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Games bid no-show 'unbelievable'

Gold Coast Mayor Ron Clarke says Sri Lanka's failure to present its bid to the Commonwealth Games Federation over the weekend raises questions about its commitment to hosting the 2018 Games.
The Sri Lankan city of Hambantota is the Gold Coast's only rival for hosting rights.
Queensland Premier Anna Bligh and the Gold Coast bid team outlined the Australian city's advantages to members of the Games federation in New Delhi but there was no presentation from Hambantota.


Councillor Clarke says that is a huge surprise.


"It almost seems as if they are not going on with it but there was no official word about that," he said.


"It is almost unbelievable that they would be still serious and not go across and make a presentation - they have a shorter presentation that what we have."


Meanwhile, Queensland Opposition Leader John-Paul Langbroek wants the Gold Coast Commonwealth Games Board to clarify plans for an athletes village at Parklands near Southport.


Mr Langbroek, who is also the Member for Surfers Paradise, says he has offered bipartisan support for the Gold Coast bid but he has reservations about moving the Gold Coast show to another venue.
"The Gold Coast Show Society, of which I am a member, just being told they are going to be evicted from the site," he said.


"I have not been happy with the lack of consultation from Anna Bligh, Labor and Stirling Hinchliffe the Minister.


"Although I have provided bipartisan support, it is not support for the Government to just evict long-term tenants and the people of the Gold Coast from publicly owned land."
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Enthiran fever grips Lanka

Sri Lanka is in the grip of Enthiran fever, with the Rajnikanth-Aishwarya starrer running to packed houses in Tamil-speaking parts of the nation, including Colombo and northern and eastern provinces.


“So far, 12,000 people have seen the film in our complex,” said an administrator of Cinecity multiplex here, which has four theatres, each running four shows a day. The management was finding it difficult to cope with the heavy demand, he added. The film carries sub-titles in English to attract non-Tamil speakers.


Chellam theatre in Chengaladi, Batticaloa, is running a continuous show and the house is always full, according to a theatre official. “Even the heavy rain on Saturday night did not deter fans,” he said.


On the opening day (October 1), the first ticket was bought by eastern province Chief Minister S Chandrakanthan alias Pillayan.


The film has received a similar response in Jaffna. The scene is slightly different in Trincomalee, where a Nelson theatre spokesman said the fight scene at the end of the film did not go down well with the audience.
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Kingdom slaps ban on recruitment from Lanka

The National Recruitment Committee has called upon all private recruitment offices in the Kingdom to sign no further contracts for the employment of Sri Lankan nationals from abroad.


The “extremely urgent” call followed disputes between the Sri Lankan Labor Union (ALFIA) and the Sri Lankan Labor Office, which could lead to delays in the arrival of workers to the Kingdom. 


It is also a response to the Sri Lankan media’s negative portrayal of the memorandum of understanding (MoU) between the National Recruitment Committee and ALFIA which was due to come into effect on Sep.10.


The MoU signed with ALFIA set recruitment charges at a maximum of SR5,500 for housemaids.
The Sri Lankan Ministry of Labor reportedly backtracked on the pretext that the MoU will deprive the Lankan economy of an additional income of over $50 million.


Recruitment offices in the Eastern Province said Sunday that most of them had already put the suspension into effect, and that with the situation currently “unclear” it would remain in force.


“Most offices are now turning to Indonesia as a viable alternative,” said one office representative. “Indonesia remains committed to the MoU it signed and which came into effect early Ramadan.”
The MoU with Indonesia sets recruitment costs at SR6,000, with visa fees on top.


– Okaz/Saudi Gazette __
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Tata Comm to acquire Sri Lanka's Suntel

NEW DELHI: Tata Communications (TCL) is set to acquire Sri Lanka’s second-largest land-based telephone company Suntel. TCL (formerly VSNL), which was acquired by the Tatas following the government’s divestment in 2002, has received the approval of the government, which still owns 26% stake in the company, for the proposed acquisition.

The Indian firm had submitted the bid last month and is in advanced negotiations with Suntel, a senior government official familiar with the development said. According to documents available with ET, the acquisition will be routed through the company’s wholly-owned subsidiary Tata Communications Lanka. “TCL intends to acquire 100% of Suntel, Sri Lanka, with a view to providing domestic data services wireless network and to access local customer business,” says the company’s business plan.

One of the key reasons for the proposed acquisition is the change in the business plan by TCL. The company, which has till now been in inbound voice business, plans to enter the outbound voice traffic and data business. The Indian company is also looking for enterprise businesses, said a person familiar with TCL’s business plan. TCL also has long-distance and internet service provider licences in Sri Lanka.

In 2008, TCL attempted to buy for $90 million, but it was outbid by other players. State-owned Mahanagar Telephone Nigam Ltd (MTNL), which had submitted an aggressive bid (around $180 million), withdrew it in 2009 due to pending legal issues and high liabilities.

Although the exact valuation is not known, a senior official familiar with the development said this time, the bid would be smaller than the previous one since the company’s performance has not been in line with growth projections in the last couple of years.

“This time, the deal size is likely to be much lower than the previous bid amount as the Sri Lankan company has not grown according to the projection in the last two years,” a person familiar with the transaction said. TCL spokesperson declined to comment. Suntel is the second-largest fixed-line telecom provider in Sri Lanka with about 20 % market share, an MTNL official, who was involved in the process last time, said. Suntel, which caters to nearly 550,000 homes and offices in Sri Lanka, is the largest land-based telephone competitor to incumbent Sri Lanka Telecom (42% market share). Its services include a range of voice, data, ISDN, dedicated packet solutions and internet services.

Suntel is currently owned by a joint venture between Swedish telecom giant , Metrocorp, Townsend of Hong Kong, National Development Bank, and International Finance Corporation (IFC), a member of the World Bank Group. (ET)



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