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Friday 7 March 2014

Russia Urged to Ease Crimea Crisis Under Sanctions Threat

The U.S. and European Union put Russian President Vladimir Putin on notice that they will be united on imposing sanctions if he’s unwilling to defuse the Ukraine crisis and pursue a negotiated solution.
As Crimean separatists backed by Russian forces pushed to split from Ukraine, the U.S. banned visas for Russian officials and others it said were complicit in violating the sovereignty of the ex-Soviet state of 45 million. U.S. President Barack Obama signed an order authorizing financial sanctions, while EU leaders halted trade and visa talks with Russia and threatened punitive economic measures in what’s become the worst rift between Russia and the West since the Cold War era.
Despite signs of divisions among EU leaders, Obama said today he’s confident that “we are moving forward together” to press Russia toward the “path of de-escalation.”
The U.S. and its allies will keep increasing pressure “to impose a cost on Russia and those responsible for the situation in Crimea,” he said at the White House. Implementation will be flexible “based on Russia’s actions,” he said.
Obama told Putin in an hour-long phone call today that Russia’s actions have violated Ukraine’s territorial integrity and brought on the penalties unveiled by the U.S. and EU, according to a White House statement. The standoff can be resolved diplomatically, through talks between Russia and Ukraine’s government, Obama told Putin, the White House said.
Putin and Obama hold differing views on the crisis, though U.S.-Russia relations shouldn’t be sacrificed, the Kremlin said in an e-mailed statement on the leaders’ conversation.

‘Political Will’

“This is a matter of political will, but there’s also a matter of diplomatic strategy,” said Juan Zarate, senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a Washington policy group, and author of “Treasury’s War: The Unleashing of a New Era of Financial Warfare.” The U.S. doesn’t want to be “too out in front in a way that not only presents a division in the West, but also that ultimately hurts European interests.”
Tensions in Ukraine have “increased risks” to Russia’s economy, already suffering from currency depreciation and capital flight, Fitch Ratings Ltd. said. The crisis threatens to derail $8 billion of international loans sought by at least 10 Russian companies, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
At a summit in Brussels, eastern EU states urging a tough line on the Kremlin clashed with some western counterparts that wanted to offer Putin more time to pull back. The mood shifted after a speech by Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk told reporters in Brussels.

Freezing Assets

The EU leaders agreed to make preparations for sanctions, as well as accelerate the timetable to draw Ukraine closer to the 28-nation bloc, EU President Herman Van Rompuy said. If Russia doesn’t doesn’t back down, European nations “will decide on additional measures, such as travel bans, asset freezes and the cancellation of the EU-Russia summit,” he told reporters.
Obama, in the executive order, authorized Treasury Secretary Jacob J. Lew to take steps that could include freezing assets or blocking American companies or individuals from doing business with Russians, Ukrainians or others deemed a threat to Ukraine’s security.
The Treasury Department is redoubling efforts to prevent illegally acquired Ukrainian assets from leaving the country, concerned that such transfers might destabilize the global financial system, said a department official who spoke by phone today under the condition of not being further identified.

Holding Fire

The U.S. wants to prevent misappropriated state assets, or proceeds of bribery or corruption, from entering the financial system. The Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network released a list of 18 people, including former President Viktor Yanukovych, subject to a Feb. 26 advisory for banks to monitor suspicious asset transfers. It hasn’t yet compiled a list of people and entities that might be targeted by the sanctions announced today, the official said.
The U.S. has held back on implementing such sanctions to give Putin time to consider a western proposal, Secretary of State John Kerry said. His remarks reflect uncertainty about how Putin will respond to such threats.
“Even as we will keep faith with what we have said we would do, we want to be able to have the dialogue that leads to the de-escalation,” Kerry said in Rome, where he met with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov at an international meeting on Libya.

Economic Leverage

Anders Aslund, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington, said the Europeans have greater economic leverage than the U.S. does -- and greater financial stakes given their own trade ties to Russia.
“Economic pressure essentially depends on Europeans taking strong actions, because Europe receives nearly half of Russia’s exports, while the United States only takes 3 percent of Russia’s exports,” he said in an e-mail.
The crisis already is having an economic impact. The ruble slid 0.9 percent against the central bank’s dollar-euro basket by 9:52 p.m. in Moscow. Russia’s Micex Index dropped 1 percent, extending this week’s decline to 7.4 percent. About $55 billion was erased from the value of the nation’s equities March 3 after Russian lawmakers approved troop deployments to Ukraine.
“So far, we’ve seen a major impact on the Russian economy and on the Ukrainian economy,” and some financial impact on bordering countries, European Central Bank President Mario Draghi told reporters in Frankfurt today. “It’s very, very difficult to foresee what is going to be the impact over a horizon of two, three years” if the crisis were to continue.

Energy Market

“For example, the impact on the energy market, what could this be on Europe?” Draghi said. “If we look at the next six months, the answer is going to be very mild. If we look at a year-and-a-half, it could be very serious.”
Europe depends on Russia for almost a third of its natural gas needs, including gas sent via pipelines through Ukraine.
With Ukraine’s problems magnified by the threat of default, the U.S. and Europeans also are taking steps to aid the new government.
The U.S. House of Representatives voted 385-23 for a bill to allow $1 billion in loan guarantees for Ukraine sought by the Obama administration. Further aid is being developed by Representative Ed Royce, a California Republican who leads the House Foreign Affairs Committee, and his Senate counterparts, Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Robert Menendez, a New Jersey Democrat, and Bob Corker, a Tennessee Republican.

Aid Package

Arizona Republican John McCain, one of four senators working on measures to help Ukraine, said in an interview the package will include a loan-guarantee authorization, direct aid and language authorizing sanctions against Russia, including banking and travel restrictions.
The European Commission, the EU’s executive arm, yesterday outlined a wide-ranging Ukraine aid package worth 11 billion euros (about $15 billion) in loans and grants over the next couple of years, tied to the Kiev government striking a deal with the International Monetary Fund.
Western powers moved to deploy their economic weapons against Russia, as Ukraine’s new leader said on a visit to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization’s headquarters that “no military option is on the table.”
NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen called the Crimea crisis “the gravest threat to European security since the end of the Cold War,” while offering political support to Ukraine, which is not a member of the Western military alliance. Asked if Ukraine wants to join NATO, a move that would further rile Russia, Yatsenyuk said, “It’s not on our radars.”

Unmarked Uniforms

Controlled by pro-Kremlin local leaders, Crimea, part of Russia until 1954 and home to its Black Sea Fleet, has been rocked by threats from Moscow to “protect rights and freedoms” of the region’s Russian-speaking community since Moscow-backed Yanukovych was ousted from Ukraine’s presidency last month. Russian-speaking troops wearing unmarked uniforms have surrounded Ukrainian bases in Crimea, demanding that their forces surrender.
Kerry told reporters in Rome that he had discussed a path for lowering tensions, which Lavrov said he would convey to Putin. The top U.S. diplomat called for talks between Russia and the Ukrainian government with international participation, and sending monitors into Ukraine, including Crimea. Kerry said under that path, Russia could “maintain its basing rights in Crimea, provided that it abides by its agreements and respects Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.”

Rejoining Russia

In contrast, lawmakers in Crimea voted in a non-binding measure to become part of Russia if voters agree in a referendum March 16. They also asked Putin and the parliament in Moscow to begin crafting procedures to make the province part of the Russian Federation, the state-run Crimean Information Agency reported.
Western leaders, including Obama and British Prime Minister David Cameron, said today that such a referendum would be unconstitutional and illegal.
Former Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko, who was jailed under Yanukovych, rejected a referendum as illegal and said Russian withdrawal is the “point of departure” for any negotiations.

Wednesday 5 March 2014

High and persistent inflation makes Indians buy more Gold

 High and persistent inflation is one of the reasons for shifting preference towards investing in gold.
"Gold imports are highly correlated with households' inflation expectations. Indeed, in recent times high and persistent inflation has been one of the reasons for households preferring to put their saving in non-financial assets including gold, given relatively low real interest rates on deposits and financial instruments such as small savings and volatile capital markets."

There has been conflicting data releases on gold import quantities and value and so far nobody has a clue to the extent of the metal being smuggled into the country through airports, sea and land. Although official data shows India's gold appetite has fallen, actual imports could be higher than reported, Macquarie said.
"The data released by Ministry of Commerce, gold imports slowed to US$39bn in 2013 from US$53bn registered in 2012. Specifically, on a monthly basis, gold imports to India have shrunk to an average of US$1.3bn since June 2013, registering a decline of 74% over US$5.1bn (average) recorded in the previous 12 months. Government measures including increases in customs duty, measures to disincentivise gold imports and rupee depreciation all helped moderate Indians’ demand for gold. While there is no doubt that gold demand in India has slowed over the past few months, such a significant moderation seen over the past 6 months based on official data looks unlikely, in our view – we suspect actual imports would be somewhat higher than official data suggesst." 
According to the latest data released by WGC, Indians’ demand for gold (including jewellery and net retail investment) in volume terms stood at 975 tonnes in 2013, up 13% YoY. While gold demand in 1H of 2013 was up 59% YoY as Indians took advantage of
lower gold prices globally, the demand in the 2H of 2013 declined 24%YoY. Even in US$ terms, the slowdown in gold demand in India in 2013 was quite modest. As WGC mentioned in its report, the Indian gold market is fed by a number of alternative sources, including recycled gold, domestic production and unofficial imports. According to WGC,recycled gold helped to fill the gap left by the sharp drop in official imports.

Tuesday 4 March 2014

Ukraine crisis: Most impact likely in Crude Oil, natural gas markets

Commodities play an important part in Ukrainian economy and hence the present crisis has created a new event risk for commodity markets, according to a special report by Deutsche Bank.
"The country’s commodity exports include agriculture, chemicals, metals and timber products. However, the country’s strategic position when it comes to natural gas flows is, in our view, the most relevant," Deutsche Bank said.
Europe is dependent on Russia for 30% of its gas supply, of which about 50% of these imports, or 15% of EU gas supply, arrive via Ukraine. The completion of the Nord Stream pipeline route under the Baltic Sea in 2012 reduced this
dependence from 80% (to 50%), but a complete halt would still be very disruptive. At the moment there are no signs of any reduction in flows.

Moreover, factors which will moderate the potential impact are the fact that gas storage levels across Europe are at unusually high levels owing to a mild European winter, and we are past the peak winter demand period.
Ukraine is also a major agricultural producer and consequently any disruptions to the country’s exports could have a meaningful impact on global balances. For example, it is not only forecast to be the world’s third largest exporter of corn in 2013-14 after the US and Brazil, but, Ukraine is also the world’s sixth largest exporter of wheat.
Ukraine crisis would have more impact on crude oil and natural gas as they constitute around 13% of commodity net imports as a share of GDP. The threat of an interruption of European gas suppllies imported from Russia via Ukraine has emerged for the first time since 2009, when gas shipments were halted as a result of disputes over import prices, transit fees and delayed payment.
This time around, the situation is different as a result of two factors: (i) the new pipeline route called Nord Stream, and (ii) the seasonally high level of gas inventories in Europe. While a complete halt of natural gas imports from Russia would still be an extremely disruptive event for the European gas network, the halt of Ukraine gas transit alone would have to last longer than in the past to be of equal importance.
Agriculture and metals
Ukraine's agriculture exports account for less than 5% of GDP while metal exports comprised less than 2% of net exports between 2010 and 2012. Hence impact on metals and agriculture sector would be weak,Deutsche Bank said.

Airborne Spy technology to revolutionise Oil exploration

The future of oil exploration lies in new technology--from massive data-processing supercomputers to 4D seismic to early-phase airborne spy technology that can pinpoint prospective reservoirs.
Oil and gas is getting bigger, deeper, faster and more efficient, with new technology chipping away at 'peak oil' concerns. Hydraulic fracturing has caught mainstream attention, other high-tech developments in exploration and discovery have kept this ball rolling.
Oil majors are second only to the US Defense Department in terms of the use of supercomputing systems, which find sweet spots for drilling based on analog geology. These supercomputing systems analyze vast amounts of seismic imaging data collected by geologists using sound waves.
What's changed most recently is the dimension: When the oil and gas industry first caught on to seismic data collection for exploration efforts, the capabilities were limited to 2-dimensional imaging. The next step was 3D, which gives a much more accurate picture of what's down there.
The latest is the 4th dimension: Time, which allows explorers not only to determine the geological characteristics of a potential play, but also tells them how a reservoir is changing in real time. But all this is very expensive. And oilmen are zealous cost-cutters.
The next step in technology takes us off the ground and airborne at a much cheaper cost according to Jen Alic, a global intelligence and energy expert for OP Tactical.
The newest advancement in oil exploration is an early-phase aerial technology that can see what no other technology—including the latest 3D seismic imagery—can see, allowing explorers to pinpoint untapped reservoirs and unlock new profits, cheaper and faster.
-We've watched supercomputing and seismic improve for years. Our research into new airborne reservoir-pinpointing technology tells us that this is the next step in improving the bottom line in terms of exploration, Alic said.
-In particular, we see how explorers could reduce expensive 3D seismic spending because they would have a much smaller area pinpointed for potential. Companies could save tens of millions of dollars.
The new technology, developed by Calgary's NXT Energy Solutions, has the ability to pinpoint prospective oil and gas reservoirs and to determine exactly what's still there from a plane moving at 500 kilometers an hour at an altitude of 3,000 meters.
The Stress Field Detection (SFD) technology uses gravity to gather its oil and gas intelligence—it can tell different frequencies in the gravitational field deep underground.
Just like a stream is deflected by a big rock, SFD detects gravity disturbances due to subsurface stress and density variations. Porous rock filled with fluids has a very different density than surrounding solid rocks. Remember, gravity measurement is based on the density of materials. SFD detects subtle changes in earth's gravitational field.
According to its developers, the SFD could save oil and gas companies up to 90% of their exploration cost by reducing the time spent searching for a reservoir and drilling into to it to determine whether there's actually any oil and gas still there.
-Because it's all done from the air, SFD doesn't need on-the-ground permitting, and it covers vast acreage very quickly. It tells explorers exactly where to do their very expensive 3D seismic, greatly reducing the time and cost of getting accurate drilling information," NXT Energy Solutions President and CEO George Liszicasz, told Oilprice.com in a recent interview.
Mexico's state-owned oil company Pemex has already put the new technology to the test both onshore and offshore in the Gulf of Mexico, and was a repeat customer in 2012. They co-authored with NXT a white paper on their initial blind-test used of the survey technology.
At first, management targeted the technology to frontier areas where little seismic or well data existed. As an example, Pacific Rubiales Energy is using SFD technology in Colombia, where the terrain, and environmental concerns, make it difficult to obtain permits and determine where best to drill.

India General elections results may influence Gold, equity markets

Gold prices in India may increase beyond Rs 32,000 per ten grams in the coming few months in case the voters throw up a highly fractured mandate leading to an unstable government at the centre, it cautioned.

 It is not only the sensex but also the gold prices which will largely be influenced by outcome of the general elections and stability of the new government along with global concerns over China and the US, an ASSOCHAM recent study on Gold has pointed out.
Gold prices in India may increase beyond Rs 32,000 per ten grams in the coming few months in case the voters throw up a highly fractured mandate leading to an unstable government at the centre, it cautioned.
On the other hand, in case India gets a decisive government after elections even within a coalition framework, the investor bias will return towards equity and real estate and the gold may lose in the bargain of portfolio shuffling, the study: Golden Connect of Indian Elections projected.
“At the moment, three important factors are driving the global gold market: Concerns over Chinese economy, uncertainty over the pace of the US economic recovery and the anxiety around the Indian general elections. India and China are competing with each other for retaining the slot of being the number one consumer of the yellow metal. The demand in these two markets is going to increase should the two economies witness political or economic uncertainties,” the paper said.
The trend of the investors shifting again to gold as a safe haven is already being witnessed. Gold has risen by over 10 percent so far this year largely because of these reasons and the investor interest in bullion-backed exchange traded funds has returned.
"In the case of a stable government, the sensex will zoom and the overall investor confidence about economic activities such as real estate, finance, consumer goods, two-wheelers and passenger cars will pick up immediately. This will see money moving away from gold which can then see further easing trend. However, reverse trend will be seen should there is a highly fractured mandate," the study noted. "
ASSOCHAM Secretary General Mr D S Rawat said, 'while the global factors will certainly weigh on gold prices, the Indian market as a consumer of the yellow metal and for the equities would be surely affected by the unfolding developments".
Mr. Rawat said the gold may still see increase in prices even if there is a stable government in India, should the situation in the Chinese economy worsens and the US economy does not pick up. In that case too, the global money will find haven in the yellow metal. But then, at least in India the alternate avenues for investment other than the gold will be clear.
The spot gold is hovering between USD 1330 and 1345 an ounce which has dropped by about 29 per cent in 2013. The trend may again look positive, although there is an opinion which indicates a further drop in the yellow metal right to USD 1,000 an ounce…, highlighted the study.
"Whatever is the case, India would matter since even despite severe restrictions and imposition of customs duty of 10 per cent, the imports would exceed 500 tonnes this year….After a fall in the previous few months, reports indicate that gold imports rose again to 38 tonnes in January,"