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

BACK TO THE FUTURE: Historical Data in High-Frequency Trading – Paper June 2009

Download new 12-page white paper from the London Stock Exchange and A-Team Group

The adoption of algorithmic trading by the mainstream has created a requirement for high-quality historical data for development, testing and maintenance of trading strategies.

Until recently the exclusive remit of Tier 1 investment banks, algorithmic trading is becoming democratized as smaller brokerages and boutiques implement increasingly affordable high-performance trading platforms. This gives them the opportunity to differentiate their offerings to buy-side clients.

Key to success here is the quality of data. Nowhere is the adage ‘bad data in, bad data out’ more true than in the area of algorithmic and quantitative trading, where the use of highly granular tick and order book data is crucial to producing trading strategies that perform.

Furthermore, increased regulatory scrutiny means firms need to recreate market conditions current during their trading activities, so as to demonstrate due process in meeting their best execution obligations. This all points to the need for a considered approach to sourcing and managing historical data in support of high-performance trading activities.

Source: A-TEAM, 11.06.2009 Sponsorship LSE London Stock Exchange

Download:Historica Data in High-Frequency Trading Paper June 2009

Filed under: Data Management, Data Vendor, Exchanges, Market Data, News, Reference Data, Risk Management, Trading Technology, , , , , , ,

SWIFT’s securities matching solution goes live

Top prime and executing brokers are using Accord for Securities to reduce operational risk and cost of hedge fund trades, and will drive its evolution into other pre-settlement areas

Hong Kong, 12 June 2009 – SWIFT’s new global solution for central trade-date matching of equity and fixed income trades went live on schedule on 18 May 2009. The pre-settlement matching solution automatically identifies discrepancies in trade details that could cause trades to fail. As a result, problems can be resolved much earlier, preventing trade failures, and enabling brokers to reduce operational risks and costs and improve service levels.

Based on SWIFT’s established FX, money market and OTC derivatives matching platform Accord, the solution was developed to meet the requirements of a group of major prime and executing brokers for central matching of securities trades originating from hedge funds. The brokers are Citi, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs and Bank of America Merrill Lynch.

SWIFT has delivered the Accord for Securities solution within a year of being chosen by these brokers in a competitive selection process. Following a successful pilot, several of the brokers are now live on the solution as both prime (on behalf of hedge funds) and executing brokers, with the remaining brokers scheduled to go live in the coming weeks. A further wave of executing brokers is expected to join towards the end of the year.

Today, Accord for Securities, which matches trade and settlement information using the widely-adopted MT515 trade confirmation message, can be used not only for automated trade-date matching between prime and executing brokers for hedge fund trades, but also for matching between executing brokers (for over-the-counter securities trades) and between prime brokers (for transition management).

The early adopter brokers will continue to drive the development of Accord for Securities to ensure it evolves to address other areas of operational risk in the post-trade process. This could include extending the solution to match confirmations for additional asset classes, such as securities financing and commodities trades.

Chris Church, Global Head of Securities at SWIFT, said: “Accord for Securities is helping our customers reduce operational risks and costs at a time when this is absolutely crucial, and we are proud to have fulfilled our commitment to deliver a securities matching solution fully adapted to the needs of our community in a very tight timeframe.”

Filed under: Data Management, Hong Kong, News, Risk Management, Trading Technology, , , , , , ,

BANORTE buys IXE’s Afore (Pension Fund) business and lists ADR’s as part of it’s Global Expansion startegy

BANORTE (the only remaining 100% Mexican owned bank) is continuing with it’s global expansion strategy. After listing it’s shares on the Spanish / Latin American stock exchange LATIBEX on June 9th and ADR listing in the US Pinksheet OTC market, it acquired the pension fund (Afores) portfolio of IXE bank extending it’s Afore portfolio to 3.5 million accounts. In February 2009 it signed an cooperation agreement with China Development Bank,giving both banks access to bank payment and transfer service in México, China and the USA. (Note by FiNETIK, 11.06.2009)

MEXICO CITY, June 10 (Reuters) – Banorte, one of Mexico’s top banks, said on Wednesday it has agreed to buy a pension fund business from a smaller rival and that it listed its stock on the U.S. over-the-counter market.

Banorte’s (GFNORTEO.MX: Quote, Profile, Research) Generali unit will absorb Ixe’s (IXEGFO.MX: Quote, Profile, Research) 312,489 pension clients, whose combined accounts are worth 5.45 billion pesos ($399 million).The transaction is subject to approval from Mexico’s competition agency. In Mexico, workers in the private sector save for their retirements in pension funds known as Afores.

With this acquisition Banorte will be ranked 4th in Mexico’s Afores account holding, managing a total 3.2 million pension account. (El Universal, 11.06.2009)

In a separate announcement, Banorte said it had listed its stock through pink sheets (GBOOY.PK: Quote, Profile, Research) in the U.S. over-the-counter market. Companies sometimes tap this less-regulated market before leaping into a larger exchange.

Banorte sees the over-the-counter market as a possible prelude to listing its ADRS on the New York Stock Exchange, a bank source told Reuters.

Only a handful of Mexican companies, like tycoon Carlos Slim’s telecom giants America Movil (AMX.N: Quote, Profile, Research) or Telefonos de Mexico (TMX.N: Quote, Profile, Research), trade their American Depositary Receipts on big U.S. markets with healthy liquidity.

Some Mexican corporations have withdrawn their shares from U.S. markets in recent years to avoid tighter scrutiny from U.S. securities regulators.

Source: Reuters, 10.06.2009, Banking News (ADR Depository), 11.06.2009

Filed under: Banking, Latin America, Mexico, News, Services, , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Asia calls for own Rating Agency

Asia needs to establish an Asian-owned and managed rating agency as years of Western domination of finance has created an inherent systemic bias impeding the progress of Asian banks.

CIMB group chief executive Datuk Seri Nazir Razak said this was necessary, especially since Asia was the main supplier of investment funds.

“It seems that even when Asians look at one another, we tend to use Western spectacles. The clearest evidence is our reliance on global credit rating agencies,” he said in his keynote address at the Third Euromoney Thailand Investment Forum in Bangkok, Thailand, yesterday.

Nazir said he could not understand the basis of China, the world’s biggest lender, being accredited “A1″ by Moody’s compared with “AAA” for the UK and “AA2″ for Italy.

“Fitch is no different: China at ‘A+’, UK at ‘AAA’ and Italy ‘AA-’. The story is not too different for bank ratings: Asia’s lowly leveraged banks versus US and European banks with ‘intoxicated’ balance sheets.”.

Nazir said ratings affected how banks allocated capital and influenced the level of transactions conducted between banks, adding that sovereign ratings also defined the ceiling for national bank and corporate ratings, amplifying ramifications of the problem.

“As if that isn’t enough, the introduction of Basel II would compound the problem as loans would also be subjected to ratings, trapping the entire credit system in this biased web.”

He also said that the current crisis, which started in the US, provided a unique window of opportunity for Asian banks to decisively alter the share of global banking in their favour.

“Once Asians have a greater share of global finance, I think that we will also see a more balanced and equitable world where Western perspectives give way to global perspectives, where a new financial architecture is designed without prejudices and where intra-Asian trade and investment flows grow exponentially.”

Source:  Intellasia.net, Busines Times Malaysia 11.06.2009

Filed under: Asia, China, Data Vendor, India, Malaysia, News, Risk Management, Thailand, , , , , , , ,

TOKYO AIM Approves First J-Nomads

TOKYO AIM Inc., (“TOKYO AIM”) today approved six securities firms to operate as ‘Japanese Nominated Advisers’ (J-Nomads) on the new market:

Daiwa Securities SMBC Co. Ltd.
Mitsubishi UFJ Securities Co., Ltd.
Mizuho Investors Securities Co., Ltd.
Mizuho Securities Co., Ltd.
Nikko Citigroup Limited
Nomura Securities Co., Ltd.
(alphabetical order)

Tetsutaro Muraki, President and CEO of TOKYO AIM, said: “We are delighted to announce the first group of J-NOMADs based on the formal applications we have received. Reaching this crucial milestone means that companies can now start to prepare listing applications for the new market. J-NOMADs will be an integral part of the effective operation of TOKYO AIM, and we will build this exciting new stock exchange in partnership with them. We look forward to working closely with the J-NOMADs to welcome companies from Japan and the region with strong growth potential, providing them with a venue to raise much needed capital from professional investors.”

David Shrimpton, Chairman of Tokyo AIM, said: “The J-Nomads announced today include some of Japan’s leading securities houses. We are grateful for their close involvement and support throughout the development of TOKYO AIM and believe it provides a strong indication of their confidence in the potential of the market model. This market represents a unique opportunity in the region for issuers and advisers. As the market continues to develop, we expect to see the network of international participants expand further.”

J-Nomads are corporate finance advisers approved by TOKYO AIM. Their role is integral to the TOKYO AIM regulatory model and central to preserving the reputation and integrity of the market. Any company wishing to list on TOKYO AIM must appoint a J-Nomad who will manage the admission process. The J-Nomad will also confirm the overall appropriateness and suitability of the company to list on the market. Companies are obliged to retain a J-Nomad at all times while on TOKYO AIM, and to work closely with the J-Nomad who will provide the company and its directors with advice and guidance in respect of ongoing compliance with the TOKYO AIM rules.

Source:MondoVision, 11.06.2009

Filed under: Asia, Exchanges, Japan, News, Services, , , , , , , , ,

BM&F Bovespa challenges global exchanges

Open outcry trading on the BM&F, the Brazilian derivatives exchange, will end on June 30. The move completes a migration to electronic trading that began in 1990 on the Bovespa, the São Paulo stock exchange with which the BM&F merged a year ago.

If BM&FBovespa has been slow to complete a change made years ago by many of the world’s better-known exchanges, it is moving quickly to challenge them for world leadership.

It is already bigger by market value than NYSE Euronext, Nasdaq OMX and the London Stock Exchange. Technology being introduced this year should keep it growing quickly.

The exchange also has its own clearing house, an added benefit at a time when clearing has become central to the clean-up of the financial system.

Bernardo Mariano of Equity Research Desk, a New York research company specialising in exchanges, says: “Brazil has a very interesting macro story, and this is a commodities-based exchange, which makes it a great hedge against global inflation,”

“Add to that that they are just implementing direct market access and co-location, and this will help it expand very significantly.”

In fact, direct market access – or DMA, by which traders can directly access an exchange’s trading system – has been operating on the equities side since 1999.

But change at BM&FBovespa is increasingly being driven by traders’ demands for “multi-asset” trading of equities, futures and options on one exchange. This factor has driven similar mergers, such as the combination of the Australian Stock Exchange and Sydney Futures Exchange in 2006.

While the equities side took its time to adapt to electronic trading, recent changes have happened much more quickly. In interest-rate futures contracts, one of the BM&F’s highest-volume products, it took only two months for the shift to electronic trading to occur. This compares with about nine months when the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) underwent the same process with its flagship interest rate contract in 2004.

BM&FBovespa is also upgrading on the equities side. Until last month, its electronic system limited the number of “messages” received from equities traders – offers to buy or sell that may or may not become trades – to about 770,000 a day. This fell far short of demand, especially from overseas traders, who typically send nine messages for every completed trade.

BM&FBovespa has been charging extra fees to traders with high ratios of messages to trades, adding a considerable cost to their activity.

The system is being upgraded to take 1.5m messages a day: enough, says Paulo Oliveira, director for new business, to ensure traders will be able to operate freely.

But the pressure is on BM&FBovespa to keep advancing. Frank Piasecki, president of ACTIV Financial, a global market data provider, says: “It needs to continue targeting sophisticated traders who capitalise on algorithmic and automated trading strategies and produce high trade volumes”.

BM&FBovespa is moving to address this and will open an office next month in London, home to a huge concentration of algorithmic traders. The group already has offices in Shanghai and New York.

The biggest step it has taken overseas was a deal with the CME in February last year, when the CME swapped 2 per cent of its own shares for 10 per cent of the BM&F. Customers of the two exchanges can trade directly on both.

More technology will be introduced next week, when the exchange joins the global trend to “co-location,” in which big customers can install computer servers inside the exchange’s data centres to enact high-speed automated trades that seek out opportunities between different asset classes.

Source: Financial Times, 08.06.2009 by Jonathan Wheatley and Jeremy Grant

Record monthly inflow

Assets traded on the BM&FBovespa have been among the best performers in the world this year as investors have resumed the search for yield interrupted during the acute phase of the global economic crisis in the last quarter of 2008.

The widespread belief that Brazil is much better placed than many other countries to emerge relatively unscathed from the crisis has added to global demand for its assets.

The main Bovespa equities index is trading at about 53,000 points, some 20,000 below its peak last May but 24,000 above its low point in March.

As the BM&FBovespa invests in new technology to broaden its international appeal, foreign investors already represent a big part of its business.

They accounted for about 35 per cent of volume traded on the Bovespa equities market last year, up from 24 per cent in 1994, the year Brazil conquered runaway inflation and embarked on a new era of relative macro-economic stability.

Brazilian individuals and institutional investors account for about 27 per cent each, with the rest coming from other Brazilian companies and financial institutions.

On the BM&F derivatives exchange, foreigners are less dominant. They make up about 20 per cent of trades, compared with about 47 per cent for local financial institutions and about 22 per cent for local institutional investors.

May was a record month for trading on the equities side, with total volume of more than R$108bn ($54.6bn). Average daily volume is running at about R$3bn – down from a peak of more than R$4bn in May last year, but up from less than R$200m a day in 2002, when investors were much less sanguine about Brazil. Foreign investors delivered a net inflow of R$6.08bn in May – the biggest monthly inflow ever.

The currency, which slumped to R$2.50 to the US dollar in December from a peak of R$1.57 in August, has since recovered to about R$1.98.

Filed under: News, Library, Exchanges, Latin America, Brazil, BM&FBOVESPA, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Tokyo Commodity Exchange Endorses Equinix as a Preferred data Centre Co-Lo Provider

Equinix is to offer high performance colocation and low-latency connectivity solutions to Tokyo Commodity Exchange (TOCOM) market participants through Equinix’s two Tokyo International Business Exchange (IBX) data centres. TOCOM market participants will be able to colocate their electronic trading data infrastructure in close proximity to the vibrant financial community within Equinix’s network-neutral centres.

Equinix’s TY1 and TY2 IBX centres, located in Heiwajima and Shinagawa respectively, offer premium data centre infrastructure for achieving the security and resilience demanded by high-availability execution venues. Within both centres, TOCOM will have a direct connection to Equinix Financial eXchange service’s established community of execution venues, buy and sell side firms, market data providers and technology utilities, that have located at Equinix’s high performance data centres to access the widest choice of low-latency networks and to directly exchange data with strategic partners and customers in close proximity. The high quality, advanced design of the TY1 and TY2 centres offers financial customers a full range of scalable services, including colocation, interconnection, support and monitoring.

“We are delighted to welcome Equinix as one of TOCOM’s preferred colocation providers,” said Masaaki Nangaku, president and CEO of TOCOM. “As one of the world’s leading commodity exchanges, TOCOM recognizes the needs of our international trading community. Equinix’s leading expertise with the global financial marketplace ideally complements our goal of providing world-class trading functionality to the international marketplace. Equinix’s global footprint, commitment to the Asia-Pacific region, and relentless pursuit of the best network providers for the financial industry, offers a new choice for our market participants who are seeking a reliable, low-latency and network rich environment with close proximity to strategic partners.”

Source: A-Team 11.06.2009

“TOCOM is transforming into an international commodity market by expanding trading services,” said David Wilkinson, Representative Director of Equinix in Japan. “With presence in all of the top ten world financial centres, the global reach of Equinix Financial eXchange affirms such view with reliable, fast and seamless access via low-cost connectivity to execution venues around the world. Featuring industry-leading uptime, best-in-breed connectivity capabilities and ultra low-latency, we help pioneers like TOCOM achieve and build a lasting competitive advantage.”

Filed under: Asia, Exchanges, FIX Connectivity, Japan, Trading Technology, , , , , , , , , , , ,

Surprising Green Energy Investment Trends Found Worldwide

Science Daily 07.06.2009 - Some $155 billion was invested in 2008 in clean energy companies and projects worldwide, not including large hydro, a new report says. Of this $13.5 billion of new private investment went into companies developing and scaling-up new technologies alongside $117 billion of investment in renewable energy projects from geothermal and wind to solar and biofuels.

The 2008 investment is more than a four-fold increase since 2004 according to Global Trends in Sustainable Energy Investment 2009, prepared for the UN Environment Programme’s (UNEP) Sustainable Energy Finance Initiative by global information provider New Energy Finance.

Extremely difficult financial market conditions prevailed during 2008 as a result of the global economic crisis. Nevertheless investment in clean energy topped 2007′s record investments by 5% in large part as a result of China, Brazil and other emerging economies.

Of the $155 billion, $105 billion was spent directly developing 40 GW of power generating capacity from wind, solar, small-hydro, biomass and geothermal sources. A further $35 billion was spent on developing 25 GW of large hydropower, according to the report.

This $140 billion investment in 65 GW of low carbon electricity generation compares with the estimated $250 billion spent globally in 2008 constructing 157GW of new power generating capacity from all sources. It means that renewables currently account for the majority of investment and over 40% of actual power generation capacity additions last year.

Achim Steiner, UN Under-Secretary General and UNEP Executive Director, said: “Without doubt the economic crisis has taken its toll on investments in clean energy when set against the record-breaking growth of recent years. Investment in the United States fell by two per cent and in Europe growth was very much muted. However, there were also some bright points in 2008 especially in developing economies—China became the world’s second largest wind market in terms of new capacity and the world’s biggest photovoltaic manufacturer and a rise in geothermal energy may be getting underway in countries from Australia to Japan and Kenya”.

“Meanwhile other developing economies such as Brazil, Chile, Peru and the Philippines have brought in, or are poised to introduce policies and laws fostering clean energy as part of a Green Economy. Mexico for example, the Global host of World Environment Day on 5 June, is expected to double its target for energy from renewables to 16 per cent as part of a new national energy policy,” he added.

Overall Highlights from the Report

Wind attracted the highest new investment ($51.8 billion, 1% growth on 2007), although solar made the largest gains ($33.5 billion, 49% growth) while biofuels dropped somewhat ($16.9 billion, 9% decrease).

Total transaction value in the sustainable energy sector during 2008 – including corporate acquisitions, asset re-financings and private equity buy-outs – was $223 billion, an increase of 7% over 2007. But capital raised via the public stock markets fell 51% to $11.4 billion as clean energy share prices lost 61% of their value during 2008.

Investment in the second half of 2008 was down 17% on the first half, and down 23% on the final six months of 2007, a trend that has continued into 2009.

One response to the global economic crisis has been announcements of stimulus packages with specific, multi-billion dollar provisions for energy efficiency up to boosts to renewable energies.

“These ‘green new deals’ lined up by some economies, including China, Japan, the Republic of Korea, European countries and the United States contain some serious clean energy provisions. These will help support the market,” said Mr. Steiner.

“However, the biggest renewables stimulus package of them all can come at the UN climate convention meeting in Copenhagen in just over 180 days time. This is where governments need to Seal the Deal on a new climate agreement-one that can bring certainty to the carbon markets, one that can unleash transformative investments in lean and clean green tech,” he added.

Green Energy Costs Coming Down — Solar Costs Set to Fall 43%

The investment surge of recent years and softened commodity markets have started to ease supply chain bottlenecks, especially in the wind and solar sectors, which will cause prices to fall towards marginal costs and several players to consolidate. The price of solar PV modules, for example, is predicted to fall by over 43% in 2009.

Carbon Markets Continue Upward

Despite the turmoil in the world’s financial markets, transaction value in the global carbon market grew 87% during 2008, reaching a total of $120 billion. Following the lead of the EU and Kyoto compliance markets, several countries are now putting in place a system of interlinked carbon markets and working towards a global scheme under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).

Growth Shifts to the Developing World

On a regional basis, investment in Europe in 2008 was $49.7 billion, a rise of 2%, and in North America was $30.1 billion, a fall of 8%.

These regions experienced a slow-down in the financing of new renewable energy projects due to the lack of project finance and the fact that tax credit-driven markets are mostly ineffective in a downturn. With developed country market growth stalled (down 1.7%), developing countries surged forward 27% over 2007 to $36.6 billion, accounting for nearly one third of global investments.

China led new investment in Asia, with an 18% increase over 2007 to $15.6 billion, mostly in new wind projects, and some biomass plants. Investment in India grew 12% to $4.1 billion in 2008. Brazil accounted for almost all renewable energy investment in Latin America in 2008, with ethanol receiving $10.8 billion, up 76% from 2007. Africa achieved a modest increase by comparison, with investments up 10% to approximately $1.1 billion.

The Greening of Economic Stimulus Packages

Not surprisingly given market conditions, private sector investment was stalling in late 2008 but government investment looks ready to take up some of the slack in 2009. Sustainable energy investments are a core part of key government fiscal stimulus packages announced in recent months, accounting for an estimated $183 billion of commitments to date.

Countries vary significantly in terms of investment and the clarity of their measures. The US and China remain the leaders, each devoting roughly $67 billion, but South Korea’s package is the “greenest” with 20% devoted to clean energy. This green stimuli illustrates the political will of an increasing number of governments for securing future growth through greener economic development.

According to Michael Liebreich, Chairman & CEO of New Energy Finance, “There is a strong case for further measures, such as requiring state-supported banks to raise lending to the sector, providing capital gains tax exemptions on investments in clean technology, creating a framework for Green Bonds and so on, all targeted at getting investment flowing”.

“What’s most important is that stimulus funds start flowing immediately, not in a year or so. Many of the policies to achieve growth over the medium term are already in place, including feed-in tariff regimes, mandatory renewable energy targets and tax incentives. There is too much emphasis amongst some policy-makers on support mechanisms, and not enough on the urgent needs of investors right now.”

Between 2009 and 2011 UNEP estimates that a minimum of $750 billion – or 37% of current economic stimulus packages and 1% of global GDP – is needed to finance a sustainable economic recovery by investing in the greening of five key sectors of the global economy: buildings, energy, transport, agriculture and water.

2009 and beyond: Climate change, energy security and green jobs

New investments in the first quarter of 2009 fell by 53% to $13.3 billion compared to the same period in 2008, reflecting the depth of the global financial crisis, according to the report, which notes “‘green-shoots’ of recovery during the second quarter of 2009, but the sector has a long way to go this year to reach the investment levels of late 2007 and early 2008.”

Climate change, economic recovery and energy security will spur far greater investments in coming years.

In particular, the growing understanding that global carbon emissions (CO2) must peakaround 2015 to avoid dangerous climate change (based on the 4th assessment of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change– UNEP/World Meteorological Organisation) will make clean energy investments national priorities.

Annual investments in renewable energy, energy efficiency and carbon capture and storage need to reach half a trillion dollars by 2020, representing an average investment of 0.44% of GDP.

These levels of investment are not impossible to achieve, especially in view of the recent four year growth from $35 billion to $155 billion. However, reaching them will require a further scale-up of societal commitments to a more sustainable, low-carbon energy paradigm.

With the current stimulus packages now in play and a hoped-for Copenhagen climate deal in December, the opportunity to meet this challenge is greater than ever, even seen from the depths of an economic downturn.

Says Michael Ahearn, President of US-based First Solar: “This report highlights the continuing importance of government leadership to ensure that renewable energies, including solar, achieve their potential in weaning us off fossil fuels and addressing climate change.”

See also: Investment in Clean Energy Exceeded Fossil Fuel Investment in 2008

Global Trends in Sustainable Energy Investment 2009 — Sector Hi-lites

Wind

Wind attracted the highest new investment ($51.8 billion, 1% growth on 2007), confirming its status as the most mature and best-established sustainable generation technology. Wind’s leading position continues to be driven by asset finance, as new generation capacity is added worldwide, particularly in China and the US.

Solar

Solar continues to be the fastest-growing sector for new investment ($33.5 billion, 49% growth on 2007), with compound annual growth of 70% between 2006 and 2008. Solar’s growth reflects the easing of the silicon bottleneck and falling costs, which are expected to decline 43% in 2009. Solar project financing underwent the most dramatic growth in 2008, rising 71% to $22.1 billion.

Biofuels

Investment in biofuels fell 9% in 2008 down to $16.9 billion. Although the technology is well established, particularly in Brazil, it has suffered for the past two years from over-investment in early 2007, followed by a fall from grace caused by a combination of high wheat prices, lower oil prices and an increasingly heated food-versus-fuel controversy. Biofuels technology investment is now focused on finding second-generation / non-food biofuels (such as algae, crop technologies and jatropha): the second half of 2008 saw next-generation technology investment exceed first-generation for the first time.

Geothermal

Geothermal was the highest growth sector for investment in 2008, with investment up 149% and 1.3 GW of new capacity installed. The competitive cost of electricity from geothermal sources and long output lifetimes have made this an attractive investment despite the high initial capital cost.

Energy Efficiency

New private investment in energy efficiency was $1.8 billion – a fall of 33% on 2007 – although this figure doesn’t capture the investments made by corporates, governments and public financing institutions.

The energy efficiency sector recorded the second highest levels of venture capital and private equity investment (after solar), which will help companies develop the next generation of sustainable energy technologies for areas such as the smart grid. Energy efficiency also attracted more than 33% of the estimated $180 billion in green stimulus measures.

Global Trends in Sustainable Energy Investment 2009 — Regional Hi-lites

Europe

Europe continues to dominate sustainable energy new investment with $49.7 billion in 2008, an increase of 2% on 2007 (37% CAGR from 2006-2008).This investment is underpinned by government policies supporting new sustainable energy projects, particularly in countries such as Spain, which saw $17.4 billion of asset finance investment in 2008.

North America

New investment in sustainable energy in North America was $30.1 billion in 2008, a fall of 8% compared to 2007 (15% CAGR from 2006-2008). The US saw a slow-down in asset financing following the glut of investment in corn based ethanol in 2007. Also, the number of tax equity providers fell for wind and solar projects due to the financial crisis.

Africa

South Africa — Feed-in Tariffs Kick Start Green Investment

On 31 March 2009, South Africa announced ‘feed-in’ tariffs that guarantee a stable rate-of-return for renewable energy projects. South Africa is hoping to spur the sort of investment spurred in Germany and Denmark through feed-in tariff schemes.

Sub-Saharan Africa — Geothermal Kenya & Sweet Sorghum Ethanol

Elsewhere in Sub-Saharan Africa, lack of finance is the principal barrier to sustainable energy roll-out. However, some notable progress was made in 2008.

In Kenya, a number of investments are underway; including the continents first privately financed geothermal plant and a 300MW wind farm planned for construction near Lake Turkana.

In Ethiopia, French wind turbine manufacturer Vergnet signed a EUR 210 million supply contract in October 2008 with the Ethiopian Electric Power Corporation for the supply and installation of 120 one MW turbines.

In Angola, Brazilian industrial conglomerate Odebrecht set up an Angolan sugar cane processing plant and plans to steer its production from ethanol to sugar when it comes online late next year. UK-based Cams Group announced plans for a 240 million liter per year sweet sorghum ethanol facility in Tanzania.

North Africa — Sun and Wind

Renewable energy in North Africa remains focused on Morroco, Tunisia and Egypt, particularly in solar and wind. Egypt recently announced its expectation that wind farms in the Saidi area will produce 20% of the country’s energy needs by 2020. Morocco’s government has also outlined plans to meet 10% of its power needs with renewable energy sources.

Asia

China – Asia’s Green Energy Giant

By 2008, China was the world’s second largest wind market by newly installed capacity and the fourth largest by overall installed capacity. Between 5GW and 6.5GW of new capacity was installed and commissioned in 2008, bringing total capacity to 11GW to 12.5GW.

China became the world’s largest PV manufacturer in 2008, with 95% of its production for the export market.

Some 800MW of biomass power was added in 2008, bringing the total installed capacity for agriculture waste-fired power plants up to 2.88GW. Development of biofuels has all but ground to a halt, mostly due to high feedstock costs.

India – Pressing Need for Grid Improvements and Clean Power Generation

In 2008 the largest portion of new investment in India went to the wind sector, growing 17% — from $2.2 billion to $2.6. Thanks to a supportive policy environment, solar investment grew from $18 million in 2007 to $347 million in 2008, most of which went to setting up module and cell manufacturing facilities.

Small hydro investment in India grew nearly fourfold to $543 million in 2008, while biofuels investment stalled and fell from $251 million in 2007 to only $49 million in 2008.

Japan – A New Push for Sustainable Energy

In December 2008, Japan unveiled a new $9 billion subsidy package for solar roofs, granting JPY 70,000 ($785)/kW for rooftop PV installation. For the first time in three years, domestic shipments of solar cells rose between April to September (up 6%), indicating a fundamental change in domestic solar demand.

Geothermal also seems to be reawakening in Japan, after a twenty-year lull. In January 2009, plans for a 60MW geothermal plant were announced.

Australia – Geothermal and Wind Gaining Support

The Australian government has set up a A$500m ($436 million) Renewable Energy Fund to accelerate the roll-out of sustainable energy in the country. A$50 million has already been committed to helping geothermal developers meet the high up-front costs of exploration and drilling.

Geothermal is expected to provide about 7% of the country’s baseload power by 2030.

Wind will also benefit from Australia’s new push for sustainable energy, and is expected to provide most of the 20% renewable energy by 2020 target.

Other Asian Countries — Philippines, Thailand, Malaysia

In late 2008, the Philippine government signed a new Renewable Energy Law, offering specific incentives (mainly tax breaks) for renewable generation — a first for Southeast Asia and perhaps a model for other countries. Thailand and Malaysia have been talking about introducing renewable energy legislation for some time; and other countries are planning biofuel blending mandates, similar to those introduced by the Philippines in 2007 and subsequently by Thailand.

Latin America

Brazil – World’s Largest Renewable Energy Market

About 46% of Brazil’s energy comes from renewable sources, and 85% of its power generation capacity thanks to its enormous hydropower resources and long-established bioethanol industry.

Some 90% of Brazil’s new cars run on both ethanol and petrol (all of which is blended with around 25% ethanol). By the end of 2008, ethanol accounted for more than 52% of fuel consumption by light vehicles.

Brazil is now moving into wind. The government has announced a wind-specific auction to take place in mid-2009, for the sale of approximately 1GW of wind energy per year.

Brazil also has a global leader in renewable energy financing. In 2008 the Brazilian Development Bank (BNDES) was the largest provider globally of project finance to renewable energy projects.

Chile, Peru, Mexico and the rest of Latin America

Brazil accounted for more than 90% of new investment in Latin American, but several other countries are looking to implement regulatory frameworks supportive of renewable energy.

Chile’s recently approved Renewable Energy Legislation is responsible for regulating the country’s renewable energy sector, where small hydro, wind and geothermal projects have become increasingly attractive for investors. It requires electricity generators of more than 200MW to source 10% of their energy mix from renewables.

In 2008 Peru introduced legislation that requires 5% of electricity produced in the country to be derived from renewable sources over the next five years, including financial incentives such as preferential feed-in-tariffs and 20-year PPAs for project developers.

Mexico has a non-mandatory target to source 8% of its energy consumption from renewable sources by 2012. However a new national energy plan expected at the end of June 2009 is expected to double that target.

For original article click here.

Source: ScienceDaily 07.06.2009

Filed under: Asia, Australia, Brazil, China, Colombia, Energy & Environment, India, Japan, Latin America, Library, Malaysia, Mexico, News, Peru, Risk Management, Thailand, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Fidessa LatentZero Extends Asset Class Coverage For Derivatives

Hong Kong, 8th June 2009 – Fidessa LatentZero™, one of the world’s leading providers of front-office solutions to the buy-side, has further expanded derivative instrument coverage in the Capstone™ suite of solutions.  Capstone now handles nearly 30 different types of derivative contracts, having added equity OTC derivatives to its existing range of fixed income and FX contract types.

As a result of the recent developments, users of Capstone can now model and manage OTC equity options, equity swaps, total return equity swaps and dynamic equity baskets alongside more traditional asset classes in a single integrated environment.  This offers users greater choice and flexibility over the strategies they use, including the popular 130/30s which can be traded using dynamic equity baskets.  Together with the existing exchange-traded functionality in Capstone Minerva™, Fidessa LatentZero’s order and execution management system (OEMS), the latest developments in OTC derivatives gives Capstone users complete coverage of fixed income, foreign exchange, equities, commodities and commodity indices.

Derivatives users can choose from a number of derivatives pricing sources. Derivatives are tightly integrated with Sentinel, Fidessa LatentZero’s pre-and post-trade compliance solution, to aid compliance with UCITS III and other relevant regulations.  Users can also drill down into their exposures, which are displayed in Tesseract, Capstone’s portfolio modelling and decision support tool, to enhance counterparty and credit risk management.

Peter John, Derivatives Product Manager at Fidessa LatentZero, says: “We have worked very closely with our clients to enhance our derivatives trading capabilities and give them the greatest possible coverage across all asset classes, currencies and strategies.  Derivatives are integrated across our entire product suite, and, in particular, closer integration with Tesseract and our compliance engine Sentinel have enhanced their functionality even further.”

John continues, “We were the first buy-side vendor to market with a dedicated derivatives solution, and the new dynamic basket functionality in particular will help us to maintain a healthy lead over our competitors.  Naturally, we will continue to enhance the product in response to client demand and support new asset classes as they hit the market.”

Source: FIDESSA, 08.06.2009

About Fidessa group
Fidessa group is a leading supplier of multi-asset trading, portfolio analysis, decision support, investment compliance, market data and global connectivity solutions for the buy-side and sell-side globally. Available as a simple workstation or as an integrated application suite, the Fidessa products and services are built on the clear vision of providing the richest functionality, coverage and distribution to the financial markets community.

The Fidessa suite is used by 85% of tier-one, global equity brokers as well as niche regional players, providing powerful multi-asset trading, order management, compliance and middle-office  capabilities, along with  sophisticated algorithmic trading and smart order routing services, to all tiers of the sell-side.

The Fidessa LatentZero suite is used by the world’s largest asset management firms through to smaller specialist hedge funds, and provides comprehensive portfolio analysis, real-time P&L, what-if analysis, investment compliance, order and execution management, and post trade processing tools, across all asset classes, to all tiers of the buy-side.

Fidessa’s global  network carries  over  180 million  messages a month covering DMA, Care and  Algorithmic  orders, Indications  of  Interest  and  FIX  Allocations  between over 2,200 buy-sides and 360 brokers across 115 markets worldwide.
www.fidessa.com
www.latentzero.com

Filed under: Asia, Exchanges, FIX Connectivity, Hong Kong, News, Trading Technology, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

GF Banorte to list shares on Latibex exchange in June 9th, 2009

The shares of Mexican company Grupo Financiero Banorte will start trading on LATIBEX tomorrow, the company having received the authorisations necessary to list on the market.

Grupo Financiero Banorte is the fifth largest financial group by total assets in Mexico. Its main subsidiary, Banco Mercantil de Norte, better known as Banorte, is one of the most profitable large Mexican banks and the most important one in terms of total volume of loans.

With this incorporation LATIBEX adds a new company from the Mexican financial sector and comprises now 39 stocks from 6 Latin American countries (Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Mexico, Peru and Puerto Rico) consolidating its position as the second largest market in Latin American securities by market capitalisation.

Grupo Financiero Banorte will be included in the FTSE LATIBEX All Share, the calculation and dissemination of which is carried out in collaboration with the index company FTSE. The stock’s eligibility for its inclusion in the LATIBEX Top will also be assessed.

Alejandro Valenzuela will tomorrow present the company to the media at 10h. Afterwards, at 11:30 the company’s common stock will start trading on LATIBEX.

BBVA will act as specialist for the stock, which will be listed in trading units of 10 shares under the code XNOR.

Source: MondoVisione, 09.06.2009

Mexico’s Grupo Financiero Banorte will list its shares on Madrid’s Latin American Stock Exchange LATIBEX. LATIBEX currently has 39 listed companies from six Latin American countries with a combined market capitalization of €316 billion.

Source:FMX Exchange, 28.05.2009

Filed under: Exchanges, Mexico, News, , , , , , ,

Asia’s first cleantech funds now raising capital

Preqin shows private-equity managers in Asia are beginning to participate in the worldwide boom of cleantech funds.

Perhaps the biggest trend in private equity right now is investing in cleantech, a term that refers to products or services that improve operational performance, productivity or efficiency, while reducing energy consumption, waste and pollution. And PE managers in Asia are introducing the region’s first dedicated cleantech funds, says Preqin, a London-based consultancy specialising in private equity and infrastructure. Click here for original article.

See also: Investment in Clean Energy Exceeded Fossil Fuel Investment in 2008

According to Preqin, there are now four Asia-based PE funds trying to raise capital for dedicated cleantech funds (see table below). The two largest are from Hong Kong-based First Vanguard, which is raising $500 million for the China and Pacific Rim Water Infrastructure Fund; and Singapore-based Middle East & Asia Capital Partners, which is raising $400 million for its MAP Clean Energy Fund.

There are two more players raising $250 million funds: in Singapore, Ant Global Partners is financing its Ant Global Partners Cleantech Fund; and in Malaysia, Abundance Venture Capital seeks capital for its AVC Abundance Energy Fund.

The first private-equity or venture-capital fund to include a cleantech focus, within a diversified portfolio, emerged in 2005 in India, where IDFC closed a $440 million infrastructure fund. Then in 2006, China’s Prax Capital closed a $153 million fund that included cleantech themes, as did China’s Northern Light Venture Capital, which closed a $350 million fund.

Since then activity has picked up: in 2008, funds in India, China and Hong Kong closed over $5 billion worth of diversified funds that included cleantech plays, while earlier this year, Singapore’s SEAVI Advent closed a $178 million diversified buyout fund.

Preqin says there are now at least 10 PE funds trying to raise capital towards themes that include cleantech, of which four are dedicated, as mentioned above. Together these 10 seek to raise up to $3.6 billion, with the four dedicated funds accounting for $1.4 billion of that.

Preqin has released a report on cleantech funds that shows huge interest among institutional investors and funds of funds. Despite the global financial crisis, overall cleantech fundraising remained steady in 2008, with 29 funds raising a total of $6 billion worldwide, roughly the same as was raised in 2007. The majority has gone to VC funds, with infrastructure funds also playing a big role.

In North America, funds this year seek to raise up to $9 billion, making this the biggest market, followed by European funds, which want to raise over $7 billion, Preqin says.

The consultants also find more than half of cleantech-focused VC firms prefer to take minority stakes, while buyout and infrastructure firms mostly prefer controlling stakes. For institutional investors, these funds represent the preferred means of accessing cleantech themes, as opposed to via the public markets, because the sector is too new to be well represented in the listed space.

Preqin’s 10 largest funds with a cleantech focus raised by Asian fund managers

Fund Fund Type Size (Mn) Vintage Fund Cleantech Focus Fund Manager Fund Manager Location
Baring Asia Private Equity Fund IV Balanced 1,515.0 USD 2008 Diversified Baring Private Equity Asia Hong Kong
IDFC Private Equity Fund III Infrastructure 700.0 USD 2008 Diversified IDFCPrivate Equity India
IDFC Private Equity Fund II Infrastructure 440.0 USD 2005 Diversified IDFCPrivate Equity India
LC Fund IV Venture (General) 400.0 USD 2008 Diversified Legend Capital Management China
Northern Light II Venture (General) 350.0 USD 2007 Diversified Northern Light Venture Capital China
Qiming Venture Partners II Venture (General) 320.0 USD 2008 Diversified Qiming Venture Partners China
Softbank China Venture Capital III Venture (General) 2,000.0 CNY 2008 Diversified SB China Venture Capital China
Nexus India Capital II Early Stage 220.0 USD 2008 Diversified Nexus India Capital India
SEAVI Advent Equity V Buyout 178.0 USD 2009 Diversified SEAVI Advent Singapore
Prax Capital II Expansion 153.0 USD 2006 Diversified Prax Capital China

Preqin’s 10 largest funds with a cleantech focus currently raising by Asian fund managers

Fund Fund Type Target Size (Mn) Fund Status Vintage Fund Cleantech Focus Fund Manager Fund Manager Location
ORYX-STIC Fund II Buyout 500.0 USD Raising 2009 Diversified STIC Investments South Korea
China and Pacific Rim Water Infrastructure Fund Infrastructure 500.0 USD Raising 2009 Pure Cleantech First Vanguard Hong Kong
Sandalwood Capital Partners II Early Stage 350.0 EUR Raising 2009 Diversified Sandalwood Capital Partners India
Ascent India Fund III Expansion 450.0 USD Raising 2009 Diversified UTI Venture Funds India
MAP Clean Energy Fund Infrastructure 400.0 USD Raising 2009 Pure Cleantech Middle East & Asia Capital Partners Singapore
AmKonzen Asia Water Fund Infrastructure 320.0 USD Raising 2009 Diversified AmKonzen Water Investments Management Singapore
Asia Strategic Capital Fund Mezzanine 300.0 USD First Close 2008 Diversified Asia Mezzanine Capital Group Hong Kong
Tripod Capital II Buyout 300.0 USD Raising 2009 Diversified Tripod Capital China
Ant Global Partners Cleantech Fund Venture (General) 250.0 USD Raising 2009 Pure Cleantech Ant Global Partners Singapore
AVC Abundance Energy Fund Natural Resources 250.0 USD Raising 2009 Pure Cleantech Abundance Venture Capital Malaysia

Source: AsianInvestor.net, 08.06.2009 by Jame DiBiasio

Filed under: Asia, China, Energy & Environment, Hong Kong, India, Korea, Malaysia, News, Services, Singapore, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

VAM: Vietnam Monthly Market Analysis May 2009

An estimated trade deficit of US$1.5 billion in May combined with a revised April deficit of US$1.2 billion sees Vietnam in deficit to the tune of US$1.1 billion through the first 5 months of 2009. While this is a modest 9.8% of where the trade deficit stood last year, if monthly levels continue to surpass US$1 billion it could be cause for future instability.

Inflation data meanwhile continues to be encouraging; having dropped to 5.58% YoY in May. The peak of 28.3% in August 2008 seems a distant memory. Food prices continue to be the greatest moderating factor, being now up only 6.5% YoY after peaking at 45.55% YoY in June 2008.

Further resilience on the macroeconomic front is demonstrated by industrial output growth which is up 6.8% YoY in May and retail sales which are holding steady at up 21% when compared to the same period last year. The Government this month came out and announced that they were revising the GDP forecast down to 5% from 6.5% for 2009, more in line with outside analysts.

The VN-Index had another impressive month closing at 411.64, up 28% month on month. On 6 May the Index showed new highs in both trading volume (78.9 million units) and value (roughly US$129 million).

For full article and stats:  Download: VAM Monthly Newsletter May 2009

Source: VAM Vietnam Asset Management, 08.06.2009

Filed under: Asia, News, Services, Vietnam, , , , , , , , , , ,

Investment in Clean Energy Exceeded Fossil Fuel Investment in 2008

In a sign of the growing importance of renewable sources of energy, global investment in wind power, solar power, and other alternative forms of energy last year exceeded investments in coal, oil, and carbon-based energy for the first time. The United Nations Environmental Program (UNEP) reported that in 2008, 56 percent of all money invested in the energy sector went to green sources of power, with $140 billion in investments in renewable energy compared to $110 billion in fossil fuel technologies.

Wind power attracted the most investment, with $51.8 billion worldwide, while investments in solar power rose 49 percent to $33.5 billion, UNEP reported. Investment in geothermal energy rose most rapidly, increasing 149 percent over 2007, to $2.2 billion. China drove much of the growth in investment in renewable sources, particularly in wind power. Despite booming investment in green energy, the renewable sector still only accounts for 6.2 percent of total power generating capacity.

Source:Yale Environment 360, 03.06.2009,     New York Times, 05.06.2009

Filed under: Energy & Environment, News, , , , , , , , , , ,

Worldbank: State and Trends of the Carbon Market 2009

Over the past year, the global economy has cooled significantly, a far cry from the boom just a year ago in various countries and across markets. At the same time, the scientific community communicated the heightened urgency of taking action on climate change. Policymakers at national, regional and international levels have put forward proposals to respond to the climate challenge.

The most concrete of these is the adopted EU Climate & Energy package (20% below 1990 levels by 2020), which guarantees a level of carbon market continuity beyond 2012. The EU package, along with proposals from the U.S. and Australia, tries to address the key issues of ambition, flexibility, scope and competitiveness. Taken together, the proposals tabled by the major industrialized countries do not match the aggregate level of Annex I ambition called for by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, or IPCC (25-40% reductions below 1990). Setting targets in line with the science will send the right market signal to stimulate greater cooperation with developing countries to scale up mitigation.

Download: Trends of the Carbon Market May 2009 Worldbank

Overall Market Grows
The overall carbon market continued to grow in 2008, reaching a total value transacted of about US$126 billion (€86 billion) at the end of the year, double its 2007 value (Table 1). ApproximatelyUS$92 billion (€63 billion) of this overall value is accounted for by transactions of allowances and derivatives under the EU Emissions Trading Scheme (EU ETS) for compliance, risk management, arbitrage, raising cash and profit-taking purposes. The second largest segment of the carbon market was the secondary market for Certified Emission Reductions (sCERs), which is a financial market
with spot, futures and options transactions in excess of US$26 billion, or €18 billion, representing a five-fold increase in both value and volume over 2007. These trades do not directly give rise to emission reductions unlike transactions in the primary market.

See also: Investment in Clean Energy Exceeded Fossil Fuel Investment in 2008

Source: Worldbank, 26.05.2009

Filed under: Australia, Brazil, China, Energy & Environment, India, Japan, Latin America, Library, Mexico, News, Risk Management, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Market Data Challenges Loom for Firms

With decreasing market capitalizations, high volatility and volumes continuing to skyrocket, financial firms are dealing with significant challenges around managing their market data.

In a Webinar sponsored by Interactive Brokers, Larry Tabb, founder and CEO of Tabb Group, was joined by panelists Martin Kullman, senior product manager for market data services at Raymond James, and Claus Thorball head of global market data at Saxo Bank, to discuss the ongoing market data challenges firms are facing.

Tabb pointed out that with decreased IT spending projected for the 2008/2009 year and cost cutting across the board, many firms are taking a serious look at their market data usage and expenditures.

Tabb set forth three distinct levels that firms can look to analyze and ultimately make decisions to more effectively manage market data in this difficult environment.

First off Tabb suggested evaluating the “easy initiatives” such as managing provisioning better and evaluating who within the firm should have data and who doesn’t necessarily need certain data sets. Rationalizing users to ensure the right data is with the right person is also key and eliminates the costs associated with “nice to have data.”

The second level would be the “medium initiatives” where Tabb said evaluating of appropriate data for appropriate functions within the firm. This would also include determining and rationalizing data redundancies.

Tabb said it’s key to ask questions such as, “do you have the appropriate dual providers and do you need both for each product, category and service level?” At this point it would also be good to evaluate what would happen if one provider went down as well as the possibility of switching out more expensive data providers for less expensive ones.

The third level is the hard initiatives that firms must decide on. This would be additional cuts to market data services in more creative ways and would require top level management buy in as most likely users won’t be too happy, said Tabb.

Kullman described how Raymond James instituted a cost-cutting strategy around market data during the past nine months to a year. “We spent a significant amount of time looking at our contracts, evaluating how we wanted to trim some costs out of those contracts, negotiating and renewals,” said Kullman.

“We had to look internally at how exactly we were using the market data and validate how we were using that data,” he added.

While the cost savings didn’t happen overnight, Kullman said the firm has already seen savings of about 10 percent on total market data spend.

Thorball said that his firm has also undergone significant review and cost cutting around market data. “We started with the low hanging fruit and have been working our way down,” he said. “Now we’re at the ‘hard initiatives’ stage and have to asses the value of each data item and decided whether we want it or not.”

He explained that last year Saxo Bank consolidated its market data cost view across the firm at all levels into one budget. “It came out as the third biggest spending area within the company following the HR budget and the IT budget,” said Thorball. “Naturally that drew a lot of attention to market data.”

Thorball said that Saxo Bank has seen between five and 15 percent cost savings over the last year. But the firm is also investing in certain areas around market data, particularly the infrastructure. “When it comes to service, connectivity lines and distribution lines there will be investment—we don’t want to compromise data quality,” he said.

According to Thorball, and a poll of participants during the Webinar, eliminating redundant providers is the area where most cost reductions are made.

“At Saxo Bank we’re providing multiple markets and using multiple markets internally and had up to three market data providers in each market,” he explained. “We have challenged that and segmented the markets into three tiers. So the top tier, or most traded markets, get full coverage and three providers. The middle tier gets two providers and the least traded markets get one provider.”

The result? “It was a difficult change from the business side but successful from a cost and redundancy perspective. And they haven’t missed the providers,” said Thorball.

Source:Advanced Trading, 03.06.2009, by Cristina McEachern

Filed under: Data Management, Data Vendor, Market Data, News, Reference Data, Risk Management, , , , , , , , , , , ,

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