FiNETIK – Asia and Latin America – Market News Network

Asia and Latin America News Network focusing on Financial Markets, Energy, Environment, Commodity and Risk, Trading and Data Management

Nomura revives Lehman’s Indian equity trading unit

Japanese investment bank Nomura has launched onshore equity sales and trading in India, leveraging the local assets of investment bank Lehman Brothers that it purchased in 2008. A new entity offering a range of investment banking services, Nomura India, will be staffed by both Nomura and former Lehman Brothers employees.

“India is one of the most important regions for Nomura’s global expansion. Under the leadership of Vikas Sharma, President and CEO of Nomura India, I am confident that our footprint in India will significantly expand,” said Takumi Shibata, COO of Nomura Holdings, in a statement.

In October last year, Nomura acquired the majority of Lehman Brothers’ employees in India, including the equities sales and trading, equity research, fixed income liquid markets sales and trading and investment banking teams. The firm also obtained Lehman’s merchant banking licence and memberships to India’s two bourses – the National Stock Exchange and the Bombay Stock Exchange – which have allowed it to launch the equity sales and trading business.

Nomura India will initially focus on sales and trading of Indian equities, futures and options, but is seeking regulatory approval to offer direct market access (DMA) for institutional clients in Q2 this year. The firm said Lehman was among the first firms in India to launch algorithmic DMA and had market-leading capabilities in listed derivatives.

Nomura also intends to launch a fixed income business in India, pending regulatory approval.

Lehman Brothers’ entire equities and fixed income liquid markets team joined Nomura India. The combined group is led by Pankaj Vaish.

Source: The New Trader, 05.02.2009

Filed under: Asia, Exchanges, India, Trading Technology, , , , , , , ,

Korea Exchange To Launch Next-Generation Trading System Offering A World Class, Efficient Platform For Integrated IT Solutions

The new system is more advanced and faster, and will accommodate a wider range of financial products expected to come after the introduction of the Capital Market Consolidation Act.

The Korea Exchange (KRX), considered the world’s second largest derivatives exchange, has completed an upgrade of its trading system that creates an advanced platform for the benefit of investors in the local market.

The new system is expected to go live on March 23, but is already available for testing by KRX members.

The upgrade, which involves aligning the trading, settlement and information distribution systems, establishes a more efficient platform for obtaining product information, according to KRX.

The next-generation system includes: the KIND (KRX E-Disclosure) and data warehouse systems, which have both been operating since August 2008; a market surveillance system operating since October 2008; and the trading and settlement systems, which will commence operation in March.

Kim Jeong-woo, CIO of KRX, says the next-generation system maximises efficiency, flexibility and stability of trading.

“With its integrated functionality we are confident the system will prove to be the best, and most modern, of its kind,” Kim says. “Within the new system, all functions including order submissions, trading execution, price information delivery and client account management have been integrated and standardised as a single process.”

KRX’s capacity following the introduction of the new system will increase to 40 million quotes per day, twice the current volume. Trade executions or latency time, once the system comes into effect, will decrease to less than 0.08 seconds or 80 milliseconds per transaction, making the system one of the fastest in the world.

Singapore’s is still much faster, though, and remains a leader in Asia as the Singapore Exchange is able to provide access to its trading engines in one to 20 milliseconds.

The existing Main Frame environment has been converted to an Open Unix environment to maximize operating efficiency. In case of failure, the dual system allows for back-up equipment to automatically convert/restore the system on a real-time basis.

To cope with disasters such as fire, flooding, and earthquake, Disaster Recovery (DR) systems have been constructed in Seoul (for systems related to derivatives) and in Busan (for systems related to equities), so if one computer center collapses, the other area’s DR takes over.

The new trading system is also timely because it will allow the KRX to accommodate a wider range of financial products that are expected to follow with the implementation of Korea’s new Capital Market Consolidation Act, which became effective yesterday. The Act lifts restrictions that have so far limited Korean financial institutions to a strictly defined range of services. Previously, Korean companies were not allowed to provide multiple products, spanning equities and derivatives trading, asset management and investment banking.

Member companies will be able to test the new system any time from now until March 23.

Source: KRX and AsianInvestor

Filed under: Data Management, Exchanges, Korea, Market Data, News, Trading Technology, , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Fidessa LatentZero offers cross-asset connectivity to all major trading destinations

Hong Kong, 3rd February 2009 – Fidessa LatentZero, one of the world’s leading providers of front-office software to the buy-side, has today announced that users of its Minerva Order and Execution Management System (OEMS) and the LatentZero Trading Network (LTN) now have access to all major ATSs, crossing networks and ECNs direct from the blotter using both FIX and proprietary (non-FIX) message types.

A fully managed, multi-asset class trading network, LTN offers secure, robust, low- latency connectivity from Minerva OEMS to LiquidNet, ITG Channel, BIDS Trading, Pipeline, NYFIX Euro Millennium and Aqua for equities; Tradeweb, Bloomberg AllQ, MarketAxess and BondVision for fixed income; and FXall, FXConnect and BAXTER for foreign exchange.

In addition, LTN offers connectivity to more than 200 brokers globally for the transmission and receipt of FIX IOIs, orders, executions and allocations as well as full support for algorithmic trading and DMA.

Chris Gregory, Head of Connectivity at Fidessa LatentZero said: “In today’s complex market environment it is imperative that buy-side traders enjoy seamless, low-latency connectivity to multiple liquidity pools in order to deliver best execution across a diverse portfolio.  Having integrated interfaces from a series of major liquidity destinations into Minerva OEMS through our trading network, we are able to offer our clients the ability to respond to the best execution challenges presented by the requirements of MiFID and RegNMS, and fulfil their desire for intelligent liquidity access.”

Minerva OEMS provides a complete full asset buy-side order management and trading environment.  It includes real-time position keeping and P&L, portfolio analysis and drill down, order management workflows, and pre and post trade investment compliance, and meets the demands of global regulators and directives.  Support is provided for equities, fixed income, money markets, foreign exchange and listed and OTC (credit and equity) derivatives.

Source: Fidessa LatendZero, 03.02.2009

Press Release: fidessa-latentzero-major-trading-destinations-round-up-final

Filed under: FIX Connectivity, News, Trading Technology, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Thai bourse to launch Islamic index in Q2

The Stock Exchange of Thailand plans to launch an Islamic Index in the second quarter of this year, the bourse’s Group Head of Market Development Santi Kiranand said Monday.

The index, to be called the FTSE SET Shariah Index, will comprise 55 stocks with a combined market capitalisation of around THB1.7 trillion (US$49 billion), equivalent to 47% of the total stock market, Santi told reporters.

The bourse is scheduled to meet investors in the United Arab Emirates and Abu Dhabi in the second half of this year to promote the Islamic index, he added.

The exchange also plans to launch a social responsibility index in the third quarter. Stocks under this index would account for 10% to 20% of total market capitalisation, Santi said.

Source: Intellasia | Dow Jones, 04.02.2009

Filed under: Exchanges, Islamic Finance, News, Thailand, , , , , , , ,

Latin Stocks May Rise 40% in 2009, Citigroup Says

Latin American stocks may gain 40 percent in 2009, rebounding from their worst annual decline in two decades, on the prospect the U.S. recession ends by the middle of the year, said Citigroup Inc.

Latin America may grow 1.3 percent this year even as the global economy shrinks 0.7 percent, strategist Geoffrey Dennis wrote in a note. Risk aversion has started to ease and stock valuations are “very attractive,” he wrote.

“We expect the regional trading range to hold for 2-3 more months as further poor macro news is digested, before a major upside breakout occurs, generating dollar returns of 40 percent by end-2009,” Dennis wrote. “Our view is based, above all, on the U.S. recession ending in mid-year.”

The MSCI Latin America Index tumbled 53 percent last year, the steepest since Bloomberg records began in 1988, while the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index lost 38 percent. The Latin measure has recovered about a quarter of its value since last year’s low, spurred by rallies for Brazilian and Chilean stocks last month.

Citigroup recommends an “overweight” equity position in Chile and Brazil, predicting the latter’s economy will grow 2.2 percent this year.

Brazil’s Bovespa index has gained 3 percent this year, while Chile’s Ipsa has surged 7.4 percent. Central banks in both nations cut interest rates by a full percentage point last month to boost their economies. The U.S., which entered recession at the end of 2007, is Brazil’s biggest trading partner and a major buyer of its commodities.

Latin America equity funds posted inflows for a fourth straight week in late January, EPFR Global said. Brazil was the “driver” behind flows into Latin America funds, the funds tracker said.

The MSCI Latin America Index has dropped 0.5 percent this year, compared with an 8.4 percent decline for the MSCI Emerging Markets benchmark and an 8.6 percent drop for the S&P 500 Index.

Source: Bloomberg, 03.02.2009,  by James Attwood in Santiago at jattwood3@bloomberg.net

Filed under: Banking, Exchanges, Latin America, News, , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Tokyo Stock Exchange Will Develop A Remote Trading Participant System

Tokyo Stock Exchange, Inc. (TSE) announces that it has revised the outline of Remote Trading Participant System rules and regulations which were originally published in September 2008.

This system will enable overseas financial firms without branches, etc. in Japan to directly participate in the TSE market as trading participants. The system is scheduled for implementation in February 2009.

TSE Development of remote trading participants_29012009 (Revised parts are underlined)

Source: Tokyo Stock Exchange, 03.02.2009

Filed under: Exchanges, Japan, News, Trading Technology, , , , , ,

Global Megatrends 2009: Ernest & Young Analysis

Download report Global Megatrends 2009 EY

Each year, the EY Global Strategy Team conducts an analysis of external trends to inform the Global Executive’s discussion about priorities and initiatives for the coming year.

The report provides a good overview of important external influences affecting all organizations.

While the EY megatrends document was previously for limited distribution, this year the report is shared more broadly since the issues it addresses are no doubt also on the top of mind for many.

Source: Ernest & Young, 29.01.2009

Filed under: Asia, Banking, Energy & Environment, Islamic Finance, Latin America, Library, News, Wealth Management, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Malaysia gives out more Islamic fund licenses

The country steps up efforts to become a global hub for Islamic investments by awarding licenses to Aberdeen, BNP Paribas and Nomura.

Malaysia’s Securities Commission has awarded three new foreign Islamic fund management licenses to Aberdeen Islamic Asset Management, BNP Paribas Islamic Asset Management and Nomura Islamic Asset Management. That brings to eight the total number of fund houses allowed to operate Islamic fund operations in the country.

The three fund houses already have a presence in the traditional asset management industry in Malaysia, as part of the five licenses issued under a special scheme announced in 2005 that allowed foreigners to gain access to the local market after eight years of strict capital controls.

The securities commission believes that the growing interest among foreign fund houses in the Islamic licenses up for grabs in Malaysia reflects their confidence that the country can be a global hub for Islamic fund and wealth management activities. Malaysia has an equities market that is more than 85% sharia-compliant, is the world’s largest issuer of Islamic bonds, and has more than 13 Islamic unit trust funds. Sharia principles generally preclude investment in businesses such as conventional financial services, alcohol, pork-related products, gambling, leisure and entertainment. Sharia principles also preclude interest-bearing investments and investments in companies with unacceptable levels of debt.

“Despite the global slowdown, the coming on board of these three international players reflects the strong growth potential in niche areas like Islamic fund management,” says securities commission chairman Dato’ Sri Zarinah Anwar. “This will help add depth and breadth to the Islamic finance industry, of which Malaysia commands a leadership role.”

The Malaysia government allows 100% foreign ownership of Islamic fund management companies, in line with its bid to attract more key fund players to the country. The incentive is part of ongoing liberalisation measures in Malaysia’s capital market as well as being aimed at complementing the broader Malaysian International Islamic Finance Centre (MIFC) initiatives of positioning the country as a hub.

Islamic fund management companies are allowed to invest all their assets overseas and will be given income tax exemption on fees received until 2016. They will also be able to tap into M$7 billion ($2.1 billion) in seed money from the Employees Provident Fund, the national pension fund for the private sector in Malaysia. Tax incentives are also being offered to existing stockbrokers that set up Islamic subsidiaries.

Fund management companies are hungry for a portion of the wealth of the Islamic community – especially those communities in the oil-rich Middle East – and Malaysia is creating the platform for them to be able to do just that. The opportunities are vast. The world’s Muslim population is estimated at around 1.5 billion, that’s around 22% of the world’s 6.7 billion population.

There are more than $202 billion in Islamic bank deposits worldwide growing by around 10% to 20% annually and around 300 Islamic financial institutions with assets of more than $560 billion, according to modest industry estimates. Boston-based financial services research firm Cerulli Associates notes that there are around $65 billion in sharia-compliant investments worldwide. Around 53% of those assets, or $35 billion, are held in mutual funds. Specifically, $33.6 billion is managed by local fund managers, while $1.4 billion is managed by foreign fund managers.

Islamic fund management is expected to sustain the growth of Malaysia’s asset management industry. Other countries in Asia are attempting to be an Islamic hub of sorts, either in banking or asset management. Malaysia is ahead of the pack in Asia and other markets in terms of manufacturing Islamic funds and this is among its main attraction for fund houses that want to set up shop there. The industry is still growing at a considerable pace and demand for unit trust products continues to be strong.

In granting the approval to the three fund houses, the securities commission considered, among other things, the scope of operations that will be established by each of the firms in Malaysia, their fund management experience, brand value, expertise in various markets, geographical presence, and compliance and risk management capabilities.

Atsushi Yoshikawa, president and CEO of Tokyo-based Nomura Asset Management says Islamic fund management is one of the fund house’s “most important strategies”.

Vincent Camerlynck, global head of business development and member of the executive committee at BNP Paribas Investment Partners in Paris, confirms that Malaysia will serve as a strategic hub for the fund house’s Islamic business and complements its Europe and Middle East centres.

The launch of BNP Paribas Islamic Asset Management Malaysia complements the fund house’s overall exposure to the Islamic fund industry through partnerships such as the SAIB BNP Paribas Asset Management in Saudi Arabia; products such as the BNP Paribas Islamic Equity Optimiser Funds, Easy ETF DJ Islamic Market Titans 100; advisory services such as the i-VCap’s listing of the MyETF Dow Jones Islamic market Malaysia Titans 25, Asia’s first Islamic ETF; and developments in setting up sukuk (Islamic bonds) and murabaha (Islamic financing) private placement funds.

BNP Paribas Islamic Asset Management Malaysia will be led by executive director Hisham Abdul Rahim, who has 12 years of experience in the financial services industry, including Islamic finance and asset management.

Gerald Ambrose, managing director of Aberdeen Asset Management in Malaysia, says the Islamic fund license is key to the firm’s expansion in the country. Aberdeen Asset Management was the first foreign fund house to set up operations in Kuala Lumpur to manage portfolios for institutional clients in 2005. That made Aberdeen, through its Aberdeen Asset Management Sendirian Berhad entity in Malaysia, the first foreign fund manager to have a presence in Malaysia in eight years.

Having an Islamic fund management license will allow Aberdeen to tap the retail market in Malaysia. Aberdeen manages an ‘Amanah’ or an Asia ex-Japan equity fund that is sharia-compliant, which has around $100 million in assets, for a client. The client has a set of advisors and sends Aberdeen a list of stocks that it can’t invest in. It is a unit trust with Middle Eastern subscribers, run by a bank there that has given Aberdeen the mandate to manage the fund from its Singapore office.

Islamic fund management licenses were previously granted to Kuwait Finance House (Malaysia), DBS Asset Management, CIMB-Principal Asset Management, Global Investment House and Reliance Asset Management.

See here for full article from Asian Investors

Source:AsianInvestor

Filed under: Banking, Islamic Finance, Malaysia, News, , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Asia: Green investments get pruned

A generation of alternative-energy investors faces the ugly reality that pollution pays.

advertisement

Investment in environmental technology and clean energy was a headline maker just a few months ago, on the back of high fossil fuel prices, climate change and wars in the Middle East. Since then the credit crisis has pushed the quest for environmental alpha into the background.

Whilst folk may be concentrating less on saving the planet in preference to saving their own personal environment, investment in green themes and clean energy was always based on hard money-making objectives in the line of producing sustainable returns.

Investors are looking up the wrong end of 30% falls to the value of green portfolios this year. That is because the environment sector is capital intensive and in the crunch it got hit. Liquidity has dried up for environmental projects, which tend to be enormously expensive to build.

Many clean-energy companies are at early stages of development and have found it hard to find funds. Venture capital and private equity investment in the space totaled $4.4 billion in the third quarter of 2008, a fall of 24% from the second quarter. The credit crisis has played havoc with the debt-laden and subsidy-driven renewable energy sector.

“Most environmental infrastructure plays are leveraged 70:30. It costs a massive amount to build these things,” says Glenn Fung, the portfolio manager of the Verde Fund in Hong Kong. The Verde Fund is 5% long and goes 10% long or short maximum net exposure, but the fund is down double digits for 2008. “There are lots of value plays, at 15 year lows in terms of value. Those entering now can get into deals at very good price levels.”

The second big black hole has been the fall in the oil price. As the oil price has tumbled to less than half of its peak levels it has meant that people are less interested in buying clean energy, which was meant to serve as a substitute. The propensity to invest in new energy sources has started to erode.

The China Growth Opportunities Fund allocates 70% to energy and clean technology, so it has not been as badly impacted as many funds. The main hit been from listed water stocks, because as project finance dries up these struggle to expand, and their valuations have tanked in line with the general stock market.

“When people are losing their jobs, companies are going bankrupt and asset prices are falling, the environment tends to get pushed to the sidelines, especially when the cost of oil more than halves,” says Simon Littlewood, who runs the China Growth Opportunities Fund. “The interesting angle is how the clean-tech sector is now being heralded by politicians like Barack Obama and Gordon Brown as the big job creator, the next wave of growth for Western economies. The question is where the funding will come from?”

President-elect Obama is promising emissions cuts of 80% by 2050, but offers no goals for 2020. He and similarly minded politicians such as Australian prime minister Kevin Rudd are motivated by energy security as well as more altruistic environmental concerns. However, given the state of the financial sector and the huge amount of distressed assets available to anyone looking to invest money, it is going to take a lot of government and state involvement to drive the sector forward, nudging the investors towards key specific environmental sub-sectors.

“Governments and politicians need to take the lead in driving green investments through regulation,” says Joost Bergsma, the head of clean energy at Fortis Investments. “This is both a national as well as a local responsibility. Local governments can be somewhat slow in approving investments and this bottleneck needs resolution.”

It is already the case that governments have acted as by far the main promoter of environmental investment. Ethanol and petrol substitute investment remain driven by governments, and as an experimental business, subsidies are still vital.

The gloomy atmosphere doesn’t mean that entrepreneurs are not pressing ahead with their green projects. PT FirstFruits is an Indonesian firm planning to produce green bio-ethanol from the nipah palm, which is grown in plantations in Papua, Indonesia. The feedstock for ethanol production varies from sugar cane, sugar beet and other agricultural products. Producing the sugar-rich Nipah Palm sap is price-competitive compared to the cost of using, say, sugar cane, palm oil, Jatropha or Arenga palm to create ethanol. Costs of production equate to approximately $0.10 per litre, with a sale price of $0.71 per litre.
With this level of margin, it means that ethanol production is less affected by the lower crude oil price, as would be the case with oil sands, a field in which operating costs are a lot higher, making that investment decision more marginal.

“For investors in our project, we have been looking to high-net-worth individuals in Brunei, Hong Kong, and Japan, plus we’ve been talking to private-equity houses,” says Yan Mandari, majority owner of PT FirstFruits. “We chose this route rather than Indonesian commercial banks, which don’t have a lot of credibility in this area. Right now it is incredibly difficult to get funding from an Indonesian bank for a project such as this.”

On the private-equity side there is a full spectrum of investment opportunities ranging from risky new technology venture capital, through to more solid infrastructure such as power stations.

On the listed side there are very large companies, for example Shell, BP, and Veolia Environment, which are active in clean technologies, but as that accounts for just a small part of their revenues; these are not pure clean-energy investments. Purer plays include solar panel manufacturers such as Suntech, Suzlon Energy (which makes wind turbines), or China High Speed Transmission (a maker of gears for wind transmission equipment). These companies tend to be smaller and subject to far more volatility. To short that end of the sector is difficult because of a dearth of liquid borrowable stocks, so hedge funds have found it hard to profit from their stock price falls.

Capital funding is drying up, but also the dislocation of markets is affecting firms in other ways, even those companies with solid order books. The shares of China High Speed Transmission fell 50% in two days during October when it ran into trouble on its convertible bond-hedging program, having offered the bonds with put protection that proved to be out of the money.

So where are the clean energy funds looking for the future?

“Converting waste to energy via incineration has additional potential as an environmental investment theme,” says Andrew Pidden, CIO of Clean Resources Asia, which runs long only and long/short clean energy and water funds. “Forestry also looks interesting, as and when subsidies are forthcoming for leaving forests intact instead of cutting them down.”
He also cites hybrid technology as benefiting as electricity or biofuels replace oil in transport, as well as the cutting edge of generating fuel from algae.

The green investment space has come to an impasse. Take cars. Gas guzzlers like sports utility vehicles (known in Britain as ‘Chelsea tractors’) continue to sell below cost. The death of the Humvee may yet be premature as oil prices tumble. Investment into alternative energy has abated. Yet the long-term trend for oil prices must be upward, once China gets its growth story back on track. In China, coal is trading at $130 per ton, down from the peak of $154 per ton but well above the long-term average price of $70.

This means the old methods and fuel sources are proving more lucrative to investors than the new alternatives.

Utilities and power used to be regarded in investment circles as a ‘defensive’ area of the market. To the extent that clean energy has tried to affix itself to that sector, then given the performance of 2008, it can hardly be defined as defensive. In the Asian market, investors simply perceived alternative-energy stocks them as China-related mid caps and sold them off.

Here’s the rub: in spite of all the green initiatives, investment dollars, subsidies and carbon-credit change incentives, the world’s population is still belching out more carbon into the skies every year. None of the good intentions have paid off.

“Sadly, the credit incentives might seem good, and be well intentioned,” says Hong Kong-based scientist Dr Martin Williams, “but they are clearly woefully inadequate when it comes to tackling climate change, as are all other measures adopted so far.”

There’s still a mountain to climb, and whether you’re an investor, or just a person inhaling the pollution, the message is that dirty energy still rules.

Full article click here

Source: Asian Investor, December 2008  by

Filed under: Asia, Australia, Energy & Environment, Latin America, News, , , , , , , , , , , ,

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.