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US Federal Reserve raises interest rates

By - Dec 16,2015 - Last updated at Dec 17,2015

In this September 5 photo, a pump jack pumps oil on a hill above Alexander, North Dakota, and the town's school (AP photo)

WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve (Fed) hiked interest rates for the first time in nearly a decade on Wednesday, signalling faith that the US economy had largely overcome the wounds of the 2007-2009 financial crisis.

The US central bank's policy-setting committee raised the range of its benchmark interest rate by a quarter of a percentage point to between 0.25 per cent and 0.5 per cent, ending a lengthy debate about whether the economy was strong enough to withstand higher borrowing costs.

"The committee judges that there has been considerable improvement in labour market conditions this year, and it is reasonably confident that inflation will rise over the medium term to its 2 per cent objective," the Fed said in its policy statement, which was adopted unanimously.

The Fed made clear that the rate hike was a tentative beginning to a "gradual" tightening cycle, and that in deciding its next move it would put a premium on monitoring inflation, which remains mired below target.

"In light of the current shortfall of inflation from 2 per cent, the committee will carefully monitor actual and expected progress towards its inflation goal. The committee expects that economic conditions will evolve in a manner that will warrant only gradual increases in the federal funds rate," the Fed added.

New economic projections from Fed policy makers were largely unchanged from September, with unemployment anticipated to fall to 4.7 per cent next year and economic growth at 2.4 per cent.

The statement and its promise of a gradual path represents a compromise between those who have been ready to raise rates for months and those who feel the economy is still at risk.

The median projected target interest rate for 2016 remained 1.375 per cent, implying four quarter-point rate hikes next year.

To edge that rate from its current near-zero level to between 0.25 per cent and 0.5 per cent, the Fed said it would set the interest it pays banks on excess reserves at 0.5 per cent, and said it would offer up to $2 trillion in reverse repurchase agreements, an aggressive figure that shows its resolve to pull rates higher.

Financial markets had expected the rate hike, bolstered by recent US data showing job growth continuing at a strong pace.

A December 9 Reuters poll showed the likelihood of a hike on Wednesday was 90 per cent, with economists forecasting the federal funds rate to be 1 per cent to 1.25 per cent by the end of 2016 and 2.25 per cent by the end of 2017.

The rate hike sets off an immediate test of new financial tools designed by the New York Fed for just this occasion, as well as a likely reshuffling of global capital as the reality of rising US rates sets in.

The impact on business and household borrowing costs is unclear. 

One of the issues policy makers will watch closely in coming days is how long-term mortgage rates, consumer loans and other forms of credit react to a rate hike meant not to slow an economic recovery but nurse monetary policy back to a more normal footing.

The Fed emphasised it would move gingerly into its tightening cycle. That was enough to produce a unanimous vote on the policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee, as even members who had argued publicly for delaying a rate hike delay went along with Fed Chair Janet Yellen and other policy makers.

Separately, the United States appears on the brink of ending a four-decade ban on most exports of crude oil, which would end a years-long fight brought about by a boom in domestic shale output that contributed to a supply glut and depressed prices.

The measure is part of a sprawling deal wrapped up by congressional leaders late on Tuesday to keep the US government open through September. 

The $1.15 trillion spending bill, negotiated in secret talks over the last two weeks, would be difficult for President Barack Obama to veto despite his opposition to ending the oil export ban.

In a partial victory to Obama and other Democrats, the spending bill also includes granting tax incentives to boost wind and solar development, according to lawmakers involved in the talks. Shares of solar companies rose sharply.

Republican and Democratic lawmakers will meet separately on Wednesday and Thursday to discuss the bill and hope to vote on it as soon as Friday.

Allowing oil exports would be a win for the US oil industry and Republicans, who had argued the ban was a relic of the 1970s Arab oil embargo.

Exploration and production companies, many saddled with billions in debt and struggling to avoid bankruptcy after a 60 per cent slide in oil prices forced them to halt most new drilling, had viewed exports as a lifeline of sorts.

But with US output now falling as oil prices slump to seven-year lows, traders say foreign buyers may not materialise in a glutted global market.

Some Democrats in the Senate say lifting the ban would put oil refining jobs at risk and that more drilling would harm the environment, though Democratic Senator Heidi Heitkamp, from the No. 2 oil state North Dakota, has supported its repeal.

The drop in oil prices, now below $40 a barrel, has helped ease worries about higher gasoline prices for consumers.

Producers say eliminating the ban would help revive a US drilling boom by closing the years-long gap between cheaper domestic crude prices and higher global rates. 

The move would also give US allies alternatives to Russia and the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries for their supplies.

"Lifting the oil export ban is very important to our industry to enable them to compete on a global basis," said Senator John Hoeven. The Republican from North Dakota has pressured Congress to axe the trade restriction.

Chief executive officers of US oil producers, from integrated global majors ExxonMobil Corp. to frackers like Continental Resources Inc., had urged the ban be lifted.

Gregory Hill, president of US oil independent Hess Corp., said this month that ending the prohibition would boost domestic crude prices by about $3 a barrel, or about 8 per cent, from around $36.

Refiners have been divided on the issue, as exports of crude would increase their costs after a bounty of cheap domestic oil brought several years of surging profits.

Four US independent refiners, three of which operate on the East Coast, have opposed exporting domestic crude. Their so-called CRUDE Coalition says lifting the ban will lead to higher pump prices when once-landlocked domestic crude commands higher prices in global markets.

PBF Energy Inc., Philadelphia Energy Solutions LLC, Alon USA Energy Inc. and Delta Air Lines unit Monroe Energy also say the ban protects national security and supports economic growth by keeping energy prices low for manufacturers.

Other refiners, including Valero Energy Corp., Marathon Petroleum Corp. and Phillips 66, have expressed support for free markets or said they would not oppose the ban's repeal.

Some pipeline and terminal companies have already started adding infrastructure along the US Gulf Coast to handle potential crude exports, augmenting systems geared towards imports.

Republicans made lifting the ban a priority and swapped it for measures Democrats wanted to reduce carbon emissions and protect the environment.

For the solar industry, the deal marks its second big recent victory since a global agreement to curb carbon emissions and encourage investment in renewable energy, reached in Paris on Saturday.

SolarCity Corp., First Solar Inc., Abengoa SA, SunEdison Inc. and Sunrun, as well as the industry's trade group, have spent more than $2 million lobbying Congress this year, according to public records compiled by the Centre for Responsive Politics.

They pushed hard this month to safeguard the Investment Tax Credit for the industry, which they say has underpinned an annual growth rate of 76 per cent in solar installations over the last decade.

SolarCity shares jumped 26 per cent, First Solar rose 9 per cent, SunEdison was up 19 per cent, and Sunrun gained 21 per cent.

 

The bill, posted early on Wednesday morning, allows the US president to stop oil exports for one year if he or she declares a national emergency, or if the administration decides the exports are causing a domestic oil shortage or raising prices.

ADB urges Bangladesh to develop capital market to spur economy

By - Dec 13,2015 - Last updated at Dec 14,2015

In this December 8 photo, Bangladeshi street vendors stand on a busy road and wait for customers in Dhaka (AP photo)

DHAKA — The Asian Development Bank (ADB) encouraged Bangladesh on Saturday to use the more than $553 million it has provided so far in loans to develop a capital market and attract private investors.

Bangladesh aims to become a middle-income country (MIC) by 2021.

"A well-functioning capital market can catalyse private sector investment in infrastructure and other sectors creating employment and economic growth," Kazuhiko Higuchi, the ADB's country director in Bangladesh, told Reuters in an interview.

The ADB has been supporting government efforts to develop the capital market in Bangladesh for more than two decades and has recently signed agreements with the government for the third such programme, he said, meaning funding is likely to continue.

This will support policy actions to strengthen the capital market regulator, boost institutional investor demand, broaden the supply of financial instruments, and promote a more liquid government bond market, Higuchi added, supporting the drive for middle-income status.

Last month, 28 representatives of Bangladesh's development partners, meeting in Dhaka, said the government should raise spending on infrastructure to $12 billion annually, particularly for energy, transport and ports, and aim to attract private sector investors rather than depending on aid.

During this meeting, the ADB promised $5 billion in loans to Bangladesh from 2016 to 2018, mainly to improve infrastructure.

"A strong and well-functioning capital market can help to boost the funds dedicated for the infrastructure development sector," Higuchi said.

The government has outlined measures to improve the transparency and efficiency of the capital market and encourage private sector financing in a five-year plan to June 2020.

Higuchi acknowledged that Bangladesh has made some progress in developing its capital market but needs to do more to strengthen its regulation.

"The market participants need to adopt information and communication technology for enhanced effectiveness, efficiency and transparency," he said.

He suggested ways to broaden and deepen the capital market, including bringing in international strategic investors as shareholders, which would help to improve governance and technology, and more institutional investors, such as insurance companies. It could also tap into demand for Islamic financial instruments.

"The capital market lacks the desired depth and breadth because of an absence of alternative financial instruments, such as derivatives and sukuks, a Sharia-compliant bond," Higuchi indicated.

He said demand for securities is also hampered by unreliable accounting and auditing of listed companies, and the ADB has been working closely with the government to raise reporting standards. 

Separately, the Japanese embassy in Dhaka announced its largest loan package to Bangladesh since 1974.

The embassy said Bangladesh will receive $1.11 billion in loans from Japan for infrastructure, investment and health projects.

The projects include a foreign direct investment promotion project, the strengthening of the Dhaka-Chittagong main power grid, bridge improvements in western Bangladesh, maternal, neonatal and child health projects, support for local governance and an urban building safety project.

For all these projects, interest rates are 0.01 per cent and repayment periods are 40 years with 10 years' grace, indicated a statement from the Japanese embassy.

Last month, donors told Bangladesh it should raise spending on infrastructure to $12 billion annually, particularly in energy, transport and ports.

Bangladesh currently spends just 3 per cent of the gross domestic product in this sector.

At a meeting in November, donors including the World Bank, International Monetary Fund and USAID also told Bangladesh to reduce its dependence on foreign aid and to work more closely with the private sector on major projects.

Japan's ambassador to Bangladesh and a senior official of the ministry of finance signed an agreement on the official development assistance  on Sunday.

 

During a visit by Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to Japan in May 2014, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe pledged to provide up to $5.1 billion of additional assistance to Bangladesh over the next four to five years.

Saudi Arabia looking at raising domestic energy prices — Naimi

By - Oct 27,2015 - Last updated at Oct 29,2015

Saudi Arabia's Oil Minister Ali Al Naimi cuts the ribbon during the opening ceremony of Mining & Minerals Exhibition & Conference in Riyadh on Tuesday (Reuters photo)

RIYADH — Saudi Arabia is looking at raising domestic energy prices, Oil Minister Ali Al Naimi said on Tuesday, confirming that the kingdom could cut a lavish system of subsidies blamed for waste and surging fuel consumption.

Asked on the sidelines of a mining conference whether he expected domestic energy prices to increase in the near term, Naimi told reporters: "What you are asking is: is it under study? And the answer is yes."

Naimi gave no details of the possible changes. In the past, officials have spoken privately of the reforms, but Naimi's remarks were the first public confirmation by such a senior official that they were under study.

Domestic prices of gasoline, other fuels and the gas feedstock used by Saudi petrochemical producers are heavily subsidised by the government and among the lowest in the world; gasoline costs about 15 US cents a litre.

Letting prices rise would be one of the biggest economic changes in Saudi Arabia for many years and, because of the large number of low-income Saudis who rely on cheap fuel, politically sensitive.

But pressure to consider such measures has increased this year as low oil prices have slashed the revenues of the world's top crude-exporting country, saddling it with a state budget deficit that is expected to be well over $100 billion this year.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) warned last week that if the kingdom did not take steps to reduce state spending and increase revenues, its huge financial reserves would run out in under five years.

 

Savings

 

Cutting energy subsidies could make a big dent in the budget deficit; the IMF estimates Saudi Arabia spends $107 billion annually on the subsidies, including $86 billion on petroleum and $10 billion on natural gas.

The reform could also hold back burgeoning consumption, which threatens eventually to erode the amount of Saudi oil available for export. Domestic oil product demand rose 5.1 per cent year-on-year to a record 2.98 million barrels per day in June, according to the Joint Oil Data Initiative.

However, any action would require approval at the highest levels of government, including the king, and industry sources in the kingdom told Reuters that if changes happened, they would be gradual and cautious.

Saudi officials have approached the government of the United Arab Emirates, which raised domestic gasoline prices in August, asking for advice on how to conduct such reform, said a Gulf industry source, declining to be named because of the sensitivity of the matter.

"I hear it from the highest level, they will do it soon and I think they will have to do it before the budget announcement," the chief executive of a major Saudi company told Reuters, speaking of gasoline price rises.

The state budget for next year, which may include other steps to reduce the budget gap such as major cuts in spending on infrastructure projects, is expected to be released by late December.

 

Analysts at NBK Capital said this month that they believed Saudi natural gas prices would be hiked to $2 per million British thermal units next year from $0.75, where they have been fixed since 1999.

Sinking currencies reflect grim financial prospects for Africa

By - Sep 11,2015 - Last updated at Sep 12,2015

Coal is loaded onto a truck at the Woestalleen colliery near Middleburg in Mpumalanga province, this week. Glencore will provide financial support for its South African mining unit for a coal deal with power utility Eskom as the mine restarts supplying the commodity, the unit’s business rescue practitioners said (Reuters phot)

JOHANNESBURG — A slump in commodity prices and flight by global investors from risky “frontier” markets has hammered currencies and state budgets across Africa, increasing dollar borrowing costs and raising the prospect of political instability.

From Nigeria and Ghana in the west to Kenya in the east and South Africa and Zambia in the south, currencies have all fallen against the dollar, and in many cases crashed through historic lows plumbed in the 2008-09 financial crisis.

Things took a turn for the worse in mid-2014 when prices of oil and other commodities, the export mainstay of many African economies, dived largely due to a sharp slowdown in one of the biggest consuming countries, China.

This accelerated a flow of funds out of frontier markets, a less developed set of emerging markets, as investors anticipated a rise in US interest rates which has yet to happen.

Although the decline in prices and prospects has been less precipitous than during the global crisis, the fallout from China could be even worse for Africa since state finances have failed to recover from the last upheaval.

African budgets were broadly in balance before the crisis but this year governments are on track for an average fiscal deficit of 4.2 per cent of the gross domestic product (GDP), almost twice the shortfall in 2010, according to Barclays Africa.

As such, they have no scope to boost spending to counteract slowing growth. 

“The economic fundamentals of the region are much weaker than back in 2008, which makes riding this current storm so much more challenging,” indicated Barclays Africa regional economist Ridle Markus.

Africa’s growth era of the 2000s, fuelled by high commodity prices, improved governance and the spread of technology such as the mobile phones, is fading fast. 

The international Monetary Fund (IMF) now predicts average sub-Saharan economic growth of 4.4 per cent for 2015, down from the 5.8 per cent forecast a year ago.

South Africa’s rand, Zambia’s kwacha, Uganda’s shilling, Tanzania’s shilling and Ghana’s cedi have all set record lows in the last three months.

Nigeria, Africa’s biggest economy and top oil producer, has limited the naira’s losses only by freezing its foreign exchange market, a move that cost it inclusion this week in an influential JP Morgan bond index

 

Rising debt

 

More worryingly, government debt is climbing steeply, threatening another driver of growth: the debt forgiveness a decade ago which freed up funds for social and infrastructure investment, rather than interest payments.

Although domestic capital markets have been slowly deepening, much of the growth in borrowing has been in dollars as African governments tapped Eurobond markets awash with cash printed by the US and European central banks.

Ghana, a Eurobond trailblazer in 2007, has issued two more dollar bonds since then. It has plans for another $1.5-billion issue this year, putting its public debt at around two-thirds of annual GDP, well above levels before Nelson Mandela and anti-poverty activists Bono and Bob Geldof persuaded the rich world to forgive Africa’s crushing debts.

Zambia, until recently Africa’s top copper producer, has also been piling into the Eurobond market, most recently in July when it had to pay a hefty 9.375 per cent for a $1.25-billion bond earmarked to finance a yawning deficit.

With the kwacha down more than 20 per cent since the bond was issued, the effective local cost of servicing that debt is now over 30 per cent, squeezing out other spending in a budget already under pressure from the collapse in copper prices.

 

Bad habits

 

Elections are due in both Zambia and Ghana next year, raising suspicions that some African countries are slipping back into the bad old habits of borrowing to fund vanity projects and political ambition rather than long-term growth.

“There is a concern with a lot of the African dollar debt market,” said Anders Faergemann, senior sovereign portfolio manager at PineBridge Investments. “We have this return of original sin with potential for sharp devaluation in local currencies and the governments still having to pay back in dollars.”

With African populations growing faster than their economies can create jobs, analysts expect the squeeze on state spending to spill over into political unrest at some point.

New York-based DaMina Advisors has even developed an African “Commodity Price Collapse Instability Index”, nicknamed Hades, based on its estimate that 87 per cent of African government revenues are directly or indirectly linked to commodities.

 

DaMina lists three states, South Sudan, Libya and Central African Republic, as being at “extremely” or “very” high risk of collapse, and a further five, Equatorial Guinea, Chad, Democratic Republic of Congo, Lesotho and Guinea, as high risk.

EU strikes initial deal to scrap roaming fees in 2017

By - Jun 30,2015 - Last updated at Jul 06,2015

A man speaks on his cellphone in front of a giant globe in Copenhagen (AP file photo)

BRUSSELS — The European Union (EU) reached a preliminary deal on Tuesday to abolish mobile roaming charges across the 28-country bloc by June 2017 and to require telecom operators to treat all Internet traffic equally.

The draft agreement for the end of roaming surcharges on June 15, 2017, marks an important step in the EU's plan to overhaul the continent's digital market to boost growth and catch up with the United States and Asia.

However, consumer groups gave the news a lukewarm reception, saying network operators would be able to limit the amount of surcharge-free roaming due to a "fair use" clause designed to stop users permanently roaming with a cheaper foreign contract.

The deal, struck between EU lawmakers and Latvia, which holds the rotating EU presidency, will require approval from the European Parliament and EU member states, some of whom have not wanted roaming charges abolished until December 2018.

In an interim move, roaming charges will drop in April 2016, with maximum surcharges of 0.05 euros per minute of a call or megabyte of data and 0.02 euros per text sent.

That will make the maximum roaming charge about 75 per cent cheaper than under current tariff caps, the commission indicated.

The commission has been setting caps on roaming prices since 2007 and says retail prices for cross-border calls, texts and data have fallen by more than 80 per cent and for data by up to 91 per cent.

EU consumer group BEUC said ending roaming surcharges was reliant on increased mobile competition, which would require an overhaul of wholesale prices paid between operators. This would be a tough task.

Built-in exceptions, such as for "fair use", were also a problem as was the risk that network operators might be inclined to raise domestic prices or trim telecom packages to compensate.

On the issue of net neutrality, the EU plans to order telecom operators to treat all Internet traffic equally and that blocking would only be allowed for clear reasons, such as counter cyberattacks or child pornography.

Companies such as Deutsche Telekom, Orange  and Telecom Italia had lobbied to have more leeway to tap into a potentially lucrative source of revenue, but Internet activists say this could create a two-speed Internet that benefits companies with deep pockets.

The rules could benefit start-ups that showcase their business or sell on the Internet and need to be able to compete on an equal footing with larger players. The latter would not be able to pay for privileged access to end-users.

"The access to a start-up's website will not be unfairly slowed down to make way for bigger companies. No service will be stuck because it does not pay an additional fee to Internet service providers. There won't be gatekeepers to decide what you can and cannot access," the commission said.

 

The common EU-wide Internet rules are to enter force in all 28 members on April 30, 2016.

Egypt to open New Suez Canal on August 6, eyes economic boost

By - Jun 13,2015 - Last updated at Jun 14,2015

Dredgers work on a new section of the Suez Canal during a media tour in Ismailia, Egypt, Saturday (AP photo)

ISMAILIA, Egypt — Egypt's New Suez Canal will open on August 6, its overseer said on Saturday, a project President Abdul Fattah Al Sisi sees as a potent symbol of national pride and a major chance to stimulate an economy suffering double-digit unemployment.

The army began work 10 months ago on the $8 billion canal, flanking the existing, historic 145-year-old waterway and part of a larger undertaking to expand trade along the fastest shipping route between Europe and Asia.

The Suez Canal is a vital source of hard currency for Egypt, particularly since the 2011 uprising that scared off tourists and foreign investment.

"The digging and dredging works will conclude on July 15. The opening of the New Suez Canal will be on August 6, according to the orders of the Egyptian people and the Egyptian president," Mohab Mameesh, chairman and managing director of the Suez Canal Authority, told a news conference in Ismailia.

"Once President Sisi orders the start of navigation on August 6, ships will be able to go through the canal," he said.

Mameesh indicated that the new canal would reduce navigation time for ships to 11 hours from about 22 hours, making it the fastest such waterway in the world. The new and old canals are connected by four small channels.

Eighty five per cent of dredging works have been completed, with 219.3 million cubic metres of sand excavated from a total of 258 million cubic metres, Mameesh said, adding that the new waterway would be fully secured.

"They are not only digging or dredging works, but also  preparing the maritime path to be valid and secure for global navigation. We will not allow any ship to pass unless it has navigational security," he stressed.

The existing canal earns Egypt around $5 billion per year, a vital source of hard currency. The new canal, which will allow two-way traffic of larger ships, is supposed to increase revenues by 2023 to $15 billion, Mameesh pointed out.

The government also plans to build an international industrial and logistics hub near the Suez Canal that it expects will eventually make up about a third of the Egyptian economy. 

 

Mameesh expresssed hope that a law designed to ease red tape for investors in the new Suez industrial hub will be enacted this week, adding that the new canal and the hub projects could help Egypt to realise an extra $100 billion in revenue per year.

Israel applies hi-tech methods to increase dairy yields

By - May 19,2015 - Last updated at May 19,2015

TEL AVIV — Decades ago Israeli dairy farmers confronted a quandary: how could they provide milk to a fast-growing population in a country that is two-thirds desert, with little grazing land?

They turned to technology, developing equipment that boosted output, from cooling systems to milk metres and biometrics, and have made Israeli cows the most productive in the world.

Science rules today, with cows' health, output, genetics and fertility closely monitored by management systems. 

In kibbutzes, or communal farms, across the country, they line up by the dozens to enter climate-controlled sheds, awaiting the latest innovations in robotic milking that drive up efficiency.

This has put the country's agricultural tech, and the companies that provide it, in demand around the world as, with populations and dairy consumption on the rise, traditional farming methods are no longer cutting it.

Smallholder and grazing farms are, for the most part, not competitive. Large, mechanised farms that intensely monitor production and maximise yields are the order of the day.

In the United States, for example, milk production has risen by almost half since 1970, even though the number of cows has declined by about a quarter.

Developing countries, particularly in Asia, want to upgrade their outdated dairy industries and are looking to Israel for products and expertise. So are foreign investors hoping to stay ahead of the curve.

India is the biggest milk producer in the world, but most of it comes from farmers with few resources. Average production levels per cow are low, to the frustration of policymakers.

We're missing a huge export opportunity to Europe and other countries," said Devendra Fadnavis, chief minister of Maharashtra state, who came to Israel to find a solution.

"I think with Israeli technology we can take our farms to the next level," he added.

In Vietnam, a group of Israeli companies led by systems developer Afimilk is building a $200 million dairy farm, one of the largest projects of its kind in the world. It will eventually supply half the milk in Vietnam.

Israeli agriculture has benefited from a boom in the country's wider hi-tech industry, which has become a major growth engine and investment magnet. 

The country leads the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) when it comes to research and development, spending 4.3 per cent of the gross domestic product (GDP) on it, nearly twice the OECD average, according to Ernst & Young.

Companies often tap into the skills of workers trained in the military or intelligence sectors and start-ups benefit from tax breaks and government funding. 

Milk cloud 

The global market for dairy farming technologies is worth about $850 million a year, industry sources pointed out.

Israel exports in the sector totalled $110 million in 2014, up 7 per cent rise from a year earlier, according to the country's export institute.

Software company Akol runs a database that monitors the output, health, genetics and fertility of every cow in Israel. The database helped lift productivity to a world record of 12,083 kilogrammes per cow in 2014. 

By comparison, in the United States the average was 10,097 kilogrammes.

Akol has partnered with Microsoft in a joint venture to bring the technology to the developing world.

"We understood that to reach the world we need a strong cloud computing system that analyses every component of the quality of the milk. Microsoft saw this could be a breakthrough," said Akol Chief Executive Ron Shani.

He would not disclose how much the software giant invested in the venture, but Akol has put in more than $10 million.

Start-up miRobot wants to take milking to the next level and says it has developed a prototype of an inexpensive, lightweight robotic arm that can clean, stimulate and attach the milking pump to the cow's udder entirely on its own. 

It can be added on to existing systems, cutting the need for extra manpower.

Such Israeli technologies have not gone unnoticed.

France-based Allflex, a designer of animal identification systems with factories in the United States, Brazil, New Zealand and China, bought Israeli milking technology company SCR in December for $250 million.

In another vote of confidence, China's vast Bright Food conglomerate bought Tnuva, Israel's largest dairy firm, for $1.1 billion earlier this year.

"The macro-conditions, are very favourable for Israel's dairy tech industry," said Arama Kukutai, managing director of California-based Finistere Ventures that has a $150 million agtech fund. 

"The country's high-tech pedigree extends into agriculture, and we've been looking at opportunities to invest," he added.

Germany urges Greece to undertake reforms to unlock funds

By - May 17,2015 - Last updated at May 17,2015

BERLIN — German politicians kept up the pressure on Greece over the weekend to implement reforms, with Economy Minister Sigmar Gabriel warning Athens in an interview that a third aid package would not be on the cards unless the Greeks made some changes.

Greece is fast running out of cash and talks with its lenders have been deadlocked over their demands for Greece to implement reforms, including pension cuts and labour market liberalisation.

Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble suggested last week that Greece might need a referendum to approve painful economic reforms on which its creditors are insisting, and Gabriel said such a vote might speed up decisions.

Athens has said it had no plans for a referendum at the moment.

Gabriel, head of the Social Democrats Party (SPD), Chancellor Angela Merkel's junior coalition partner, stressed that the Greek government needed to take action in any case.

"A third aid package for Athens is only possible if the reforms are implemented. We can't simply send money there," he told the paper.

German conservative lawmaker Markus Ferber told German news magazine Der Spiegel that there was no majority in Germany for a third aid package for Greece.

Athens has depended on money from its 240 billion euros bailout by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to pays its bills since 2010. It has not received any loan tranches since last August.

On Friday, Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras said Athens had found some common ground with its foreign lenders but the government would not back down from its red lines, such as no cuts to wages and pensions.

Volker Kauder, parliamentary leader of Merkel's conservatives, told Germany's Welt am Sonntag newspaper that the situation was "very difficult" and "the Greeks must show that they are continuing down the agreed path".

He said people should not be talking about a third aid package for Athens when the final aid tranche from the second bailout had yet to be paid out.

Gabriel warned about the consequences of Greece quitting the single currency bloc, saying: "A Greek exit would not only be highly dangerous economically but also politically."

"Nobody would have any confidence in Europe anymore if we break up in our first big crisis. We shouldn't talk ourselves into a Grexit," he said.

But Hans-Peter Friedrich, deputy head of the conservative parliamentary group, told Der Spiegel: "If we don't insist on the reform commitments we'll really damage the currency union and this damage would be bigger than if Greece ultimately left."

Separately, Greek newspapers said Sunday that Tsipras had warned foreign officials that Athens would not be able to pay the 750 million euros ($845 million) due this month to the IMF.

The reports came less than a week after Athens admitted that it tapped into an emergency account to pay back the loan, in order to avoid crashing out of the eurozone.

On May 8, Tsipras wrote to European Commission, IMF and European Central Bank (ECB) officials to warn them that Greece would be unable to meet its May 12 deadline, unless its creditors agreed to release a final 7.2 billion euros ($8.2 billion) tranche of its bailout, Kathimerini daily said, citing European officials.

The newspaper also said Tsipras contacted US Treasury Secretary Jack Lew.

But Kathimerini said Greece's creditors saw the warning as a "possible bluff".

Greece won some support in the latest round of debt talks as it battles to keep itself solvent, but eurozone finance ministers have demanded more key reforms before they agree to release the funds.

Scrambling to pay its debt, the Greek government ended up drawing 660 million euros ($750 million) from a special account held at the IMF, and scraping together the rest of the sum just in time.

Tsipras also wanted 1.9 billion euros ($2.2 billion) in profits made by the ECB from Greek bonds purchased in 2010, and 1.2 billion euros ($1.4 billion) Athens claims it unduly paid to the European Financial Stability Facility.

Confirming the reports, Vima weekly said the Greek government warned it did not have the money to pay the IMF back.

The prime minister's office did not comment on the reports.

Billions more in loan repayments are due over the next three months.

Elsewhere, ratings firm Fitch kept Greece's high-risk credit rating unchanged Friday, saying the risk that the eurozone country would default on its debt was a "real possibility”.

Fitch Ratings affirmed the "CCC" rating it gave the debt-riddled eurozone country in late March in a two-notch downgrade from "B".

"Lack of market access, uncertain prospects of timely disbursement from official institutions, and tight liquidity conditions in the domestic banking sector are putting extreme pressure on Greek government funding," Fitch said in a statement.

"We expect that the government will survive the current liquidity squeeze without running arrears on privately held bonds, but default is a real possibility," it added.

"The damage to investor, consumer and depositor confidence has derailed Greece's economic recovery," Fitch indicated. "The damage will take time to repair even if prospects for a successful programme completion improve over the coming days or weeks."

The ratings firm forecast zero growth in the economy this year, with risks "heavily tilted" towards a contraction, as the country runs out of cash and faces debt payments to its creditors.

Still, Fitch said it was likely that Greece will reach a compromise deal with its official creditors.

"As a minimum requirement, we expect that the Eurogroup [eurozone finance ministers] will want the Greek government to demonstrate that it has taken some legislative action on structural reform before funds are disbursed. However, as yet, the reforms themselves have not yet been agreed. Time is therefore running short," it concluded.

Northvolt CEO and co-founder Peter Carlsson resigns

By - Nov 23,2024 - Last updated at Nov 23,2024

Northvolt's CEO and co-founder Peter Carlsson announces his resignation during a press conference in Stockholm on Friday. -Sweden OUT. (AFP photo/ TT news agency)

STOCKHOLM — Sweden's financially-strained electric car battery maker Northvolt announced recently the resignation of its CEO Peter Carlsson, hours after the company sought bankruptcy protection in the US while it reorganises its business.

Carlsson, who co-founded Northvolt and has led it since its inception in 2016, will "step aside from his role as CEO", the company said in a statement, adding that the search for a new chief executive was under way.

Northvolt announced late Thursday that it had applied for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in the United States to enable it to restructure its debt and reorganise its business.

The filing gave it access to "approximately $145 million in cash collateral", it said, while Swedish truckmaker Scania, a customer, pledged $100 million in new financing.

Swedish media reported the company had debts of $5.84 billion and just $30 million in available cash.

Northvolt said its operations would continue as normal during the reorganisation.

The company said in September it was slashing 1,600 jobs — a quarter of its staff — and suspending the expansion of its site as it struggled with strained finances and a slowdown in demand.

Northvolt has been seen as a cornerstone of European attempts to catch up with China and the United States in the production of battery cells, a crucial component of lower-emission cars.

Europe accounts for just three percent of global battery cell production, but has set its sights on 25 per cent of the market by the end of the decade.

The battery maker has also been plagued by production delays, which in May led car manufacturer BMW to drop an order worth 2 billion euros ($2.2 billion).

Bitcoin tops $95,000 for the first time

By - Nov 21,2024 - Last updated at Nov 21,2024

Bitcoin breached the $60,000 mark for the first time since April, on Friday (AFP file photo)

TOKYO — Bitcoin hit a record Thursday, topping $95,000 for the first time as it benefits from expectations that president-elect Donald Trump will push through measures to ease regulation of the unit.

The digital currency reached $95,004.50 in early Asian trade, with observers expecting it to soon reach $100,000.

Traders have been piling into the unit since Trump was elected at the start of the month, pushing it up almost 40 per cent since the vote.

The tycoon pledged on the campaign trail to make the United States the "bitcoin and cryptocurrency capital of the world," and to put tech billionaire and right-wing conspiracy theorist Elon Musk in charge of a wide-ranging audit of governmental waste.

Stephen Innes at SPI Asset Management said the surge has been "driven by mounting confidence that President-elect Donald Trump's administration will usher in a crypto-friendly era. Speculators rally behind the narrative, fueling a frenzy as the digital asset edges toward an unprecedented valuation".

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