You are here

Business

Business section

Russia's Sberbank posts 10% drop in 2020 net profit

By - Mar 04,2021 - Last updated at Mar 04,2021

This file photo taken on September 25, 2020 shows the new logo of Russian bank Sberbank (reading "Sber") on its headquarters in Moscow (AFP photo)

MOSCOW — Russia's giant state-owned bank Sberbank said on Thursday it recorded a 10 per cent drop in net profit last year as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.

But it was spared additional damage, thanks to Russia not re-introducing a nationwide lockdown when it was struck by a second wave of infections.

After a difficult start to 2020, Sberbank rebounded in the second half to generate a net profit of 760.3 billion rubles (8.5 billion euros, $10.3 billion). 

Sberbank Chief Herman Gref attributed the rebound to the absence of a further lockdown, saying the bank "managed to quickly restore business once restrictions were lifted".

Overall loans grew by 15 per cent as small- and medium-sized businesses, plus individuals borrowed more money to cope with the economic fallout from the health crisis.

Working "with the government and businesses, we became an important player in the collective fight against the consequences of the pandemic," Gref said.

He said Sberbank had "started offering support to individuals and businesses from the beginning of the turmoil."

Sberbank has nearly 100 million customers, mostly in Russia but also in several former Soviet and eastern European countries.

Last year, the group embarked on a major transformation, rebranding itself as a tech company.

It changed its logo and brand, renaming itself as Sber, and presented a range of new products including a virtual voice assistant and an audio-streaming service. 

Gref said the group aims to create an "integrated ecosystem around the client" by 2023.

Last year was also marked by the divorce after 10 years with partner Yandex, ending a joint project with the tech giant to develop a so-called Russian Amazon.

The break-up was accompanied by Sberbank acquiring a major stake in Mail.ru, Yandex's main competitor.

Tepid stock gains in Europe, US slips

By - Mar 03,2021 - Last updated at Mar 03,2021

LONDON — European stock markets made tepid gains on Wednesday as investors snapped up bargain shares following sharp losses last week, but Wall Street opened lower.

London's benchmark FTSE 1 index was 0.4 per cent higher in afternoon, having been up 1 per cent before the government unveiled its latest budget.

The pound, which sat just underneath $1.40 before the budget announcement, pulled back after the government cut back its 2021 growth forecast to 4 per cent from 5.5 per cent.

Frankfurt and Paris stocks both won around 0.1 per cent in afternoon trading.

Wall Street opened lower, with the Dow shedding 0.1 per cent.

Oil prices advanced strongly on the eve of a key OPEC+ producers' meeting.

"The stock market is struggling to figure out which way is up and which way is down; hence, it has been moving mostly sideways," said market analyst Patrick J. O'Hare at Briefing.com.

Stock markets suffered a sharp sell-off last week on the back of rising US Treasury yields, an indication of rising interest rates.

While the bond market has steadied this week, traders remain cautious, with US markets slipping on Tuesday despite a drop in bond yields.

Investors remain on guard over concerns about asset bubbles — and a potential surge in inflation that could herald interest rate hikes in the long run.

 

Progress in virus fight 

 

Asian equities rose strongly on Wednesday following losses the previous day, as investors track global progress in fighting the deadly pandemic.

Sentiment was buoyed after the White House said on Tuesday that it would have enough shots to immunise every adult by the end of May, two months earlier than first thought.

Upbeat news on vaccines, the expected passage of US President Joe Biden's stimulus package, slowing infection rates and easing lockdowns are contributing to the narrative that the global economy will see a burst of activity from the second half of the year.

Google vows to stop tracking individual browsing for ads

By - Mar 03,2021 - Last updated at Mar 03,2021

This file photo shows a journalist looking at the Google logo at his work station in Washington, DC on September 1, 2015 (AFP photo)

SAN FRANCISCO — Google on Wednesday pledged to steer clear of tracking individual online activity when it begins implementing a new system for targeting ads without the use of so-called "cookies".

The Internet group widely used Chrome browser this month will begin testing an alternative to the tracking practice that it believes could improve online privacy while still enabling advertisers to serve up relevant messages.

"We're making explicit that once third-party cookies are phased out, we will not build alternate identifiers to track individuals as they browse across the web, nor will we use them in our products," Ads Privacy and Trust Product Management Director David Temkin said in a blog post.

"Advances in aggregation, anonymisation, and on-device process and other privacy-preserving technologies offer a clear path to replacing individual identifiers."

The move comes with Google hammered by critics over user privacy, and increased scrutiny of privacy and protecting people's data rights.

Growing fear of cookie-tracking has prompted support for Internet rights legislation such as GDPR in Europe.

Temkin described the new Google system as "privacy-preserving... while still delivering results for advertisers and publishers". 

Safari and Firefox browsers have already done away with third-party cookies, but they are still used at the world's most popular browser, Chrome.

Chrome accounted for 63 per cent of the global browser market last year, according to StatCounter.

Last month, Google unveiled the results of tests showing an alternative to cookies called Federated Learning of Cohorts which identifies groups of people with common interests without individualised tracking.

Some businesses have objected to the Google plan claiming it will force more advertisers into its "walled garden".

Austrian FFP2 mask producer probed for fraud

By - Mar 03,2021 - Last updated at Mar 03,2021

VIENNA — An Austrian manufacturer that produced more than 12 million FFP2 masks a month is being investigated for repackaging Chinese masks and labelling them as made in Austria, prosecutors said on Wednesday.

The company, Hygiene Austria, ramped up production to 350,000 medical grade masks per day when Chancellor Sebastian Kurz made FFP2 masks mandatory in public transport, schools and stores in January.

The anti-graft prosecutors' office raided two locations on Tuesday after an investigation into illegal hiring practices turned up evidence that "FFP2 masks produced abroad were repackaged at one of the company's locations in Austria and then sold at a higher price as masks produced in Austria”, a statement said. 

The general manager of Hygiene Austria, founded in April 2020, is the brother-in-law of Kurz's office manager.

The company has already delivered millions of masks to Austria's largest grocery store chains, an operation for which it said it hired 100 additional staff.

The anti-graft prosecutors suspect that many were never registered for social security, making the hires illegal. 

Hygiene Austria "strongly rejected" the accusations in a statement sent to Austrian media. 

During the production site's inauguration in April, Kurz thanked Hygiene Austria for its contribution to making the small nation of nine million people independent of foreign mask manufacturers.

On Wednesday, opposition lawmakers pressed for details about the procurement process, while supermarket chains said they were looking into whether any of the millions of masks they sold should be recalled, Austrian media reported. 

Kurz is already under pressure as an anti-graft investigation into allegedly illegal donations to his conservative party by gambling behemoth Novomatic resulted in a raid of his finance minister's home in February. 

Britain slashes 2021 growth in virus-fighting budget

By - Mar 03,2021 - Last updated at Mar 03,2021

A video grab shows Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson (left) watching as Britain's Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak delivers his Budget statement to the House of Commons in London on Wednesday (AFP photo)

LONDON — Britain on Wednesday sharply cut the growth forecast of its virus-ravaged economy, warning the pandemic was still causing "profound damage" in an annual budget centred on safeguarding businesses and jobs.

Finance minister Rishi Sunak said the economy would expand by 4 per cent this year, down from the Conservative government's previous estimate of 5.5 per cent growth but still better than the double-digit contraction of 2020.

Sunak warned parliament that the "coronavirus has done and is still doing profound damage".

"Our economy has shrunk by 10 per cent — the largest fall in over 300 years," he said.

"Our borrowing is the highest it has been outside of wartime."

Sunak said tax on company profits would be hiked to 25 per cent in 2023 from 19 per cent currently.

It comes as the state's emergency support package totals £407 billion ($568 billion, 471 billion euros), resulting in surging government debt.

Britain is the worst-hit country in Europe with more than 120,000 COVID deaths and four million cases.

But its economic recovery hopes have been boosted by its rapid vaccination programme that has seen millions of adults receive a jab.

 

'We will recover' 

 

England's third lockdown will start to be lifted from Monday, with the reopening of schools, followed by non-essential shops and hospitality in the coming months.

"It's going to take this country — and the whole world — a long time to recover from this extraordinary economic situation. But we will recover," Sunak said.

He said gross domestic product was expected to expand by 7.3 per cent next year, which marked an upgrade from the prior guidance of 6.6 per cent.

Sunak said that even after tax on company profits is hiked significantly, "the UK will still have the lowest corporation tax rate in the G-7 bloc of wealthy nations. 

"Lower than the United States, Canada, Italy, Japan, Germany and France," he insisted.

 

Furlough scheme 

 

On the eve of the budget, Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced that it would extend its furlough scheme paying the bulk of wages for millions of private-sector workers.

The multibillion-pound furlough extension is until the end of September, five months longer than planned.

The budget also confirmed the launch of an Infrastructure Bank with £12 billion in capital.

The lender will be formed to finance projects in the green economy, focusing on areas such as carbon capture and renewable energy.

The economy tanked in 2020 because of the impact of the pandemic, with activity also hampered by turmoil ahead of Britain's eventual exit from the European Union.

Reflecting the problems, UK unemployment has shot up to a five-year high of 5.1 per cent.

European stocks push higher, US and Asia retreat

By - Mar 02,2021 - Last updated at Mar 02,2021

Pedestrians walk in front of an electronic quotation board displaying the numbers of share prices on the Tokyo Stock Exchange in Tokyo on Monday (AFP photo)

LONDON — European stock markets extended gains on Tuesday despite Asian and US losses as investors assessed the outlook for global interest rates, dealers said.

Equities rebounded on Monday from last week's heavy selloff on easing US money market rates as inflation fears faded and investors were encouraged by progress on coronavirus vaccine rollouts and President Joe Biden's $1.9-trillion stimulus package advanced towards passage.

But the rally did not carry over into Asian trading, and Wall Street also fell prey to profit-taking soon after the opening bell.

"Today's session has far been mixed for risk assets, as investors try to weigh the impact of rising yields against the prospects of a strong economic rebound with the ongoing COVID vaccine rollouts," said market analyst Fawad Razaqzada at ThinkMarkets.

The rise in yields on government bonds in the US and other key economies last week sparked a market meltdown which was exacerbated by profit-taking.

Higher yields had prompted worries about a sudden shift in monetary policy toward higher interest rates.

However, a stabilisation in the bond market on Friday and Monday appears to have staunched the bleeding for now and analysts said worries over a surge in inflation and rate hikes have been overdone.

 

Euro ducks under $1.20

 

News of steady eurozone inflation sent the European single currency briefly below $1.20 for the first time in three weeks as it too dampened speculation about higher interest rates. 

The Eurostat agency said inflation in the 19 countries that use the euro ran at 0.9 per cent last month, the same as in January.

In Asia, equities sank after a top Chinese regulator raised concerns that bubbles were forming in the financial markets.

US and European markets were not reflective of their underlying economies and would face corrections "sooner or later", said China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission chairman and central bank member Guo Shuqing.

Guo's comments come after several observers warned equities were due a retreat following a year-long advance from their March 2020 nadir.

"Asia markets have slipped back today after Chinese regulators warned on the prospect of asset bubbles in overseas markets," said analyst Michael Hewson at CMC Markets UK.

"This is hardly a new phenomenon; there's been talk about bubbles in US markets for months and China's property market isn't immune to these sorts of concerns either."

In commodities, oil prices wobbled ahead of a key OPEC+ producer meeting on Thursday, with the markets watching by how much it will step up output as the global economy appears set to shift up a gear as vaccination campaigns roll out.

"The energy market is bracing for more supply to come into the market, but continued vaccine optimism and global reopening hopes will likely limit most of the downward pressure with oil prices," said Edward Moya at Oanda currency trading platform.

Lebanon pound plummets to all-time low

By - Mar 02,2021 - Last updated at Mar 02,2021

BEIRUT — The Lebanese pound hit an all-time low against the dollar on Tuesday amid a deepening economic crisis that has thrown more than half of the population into poverty.

The Lebanese pound had been pegged to the dollar at 1,500 since 1997 but the country's worst economic crisis since the 1975-1990 civil war has seen its value plummet.

On Tuesday, it was trading at nearly 10,000 pounds to the dollar on the black market, money exchangers said.

"It's crazy what's happening," one money exchanger said on condition of anonymity.

Before the latest hit, the pound had briefly stabilised at 8,000-8,500 to the greenback in recent weeks.

In July, it had reached 9,800 to the dollar.

The dizzying depreciation came as Lebanon's central bank started reviewing the country's banks under international pressure for banking sector reform.

Lebanese banks had been given until Sunday to increase their capital by 20 per cent, among a series of demands from the central bank.

On Monday, a central bank committee "agreed on a roadmap with deadlines for the Bank of Lebanon to take appropriate measures" if these requirements were not met, it said in a statement.

Lebanon's Al Akhbar newspaper said on Tuesday that the currency plunge was partly the result of commercial banks sucking dollars out of the market to meet the capital demands of the central bank.

The slide in the value of the pound has led to soaring food prices in a country where more than half of the population now lives below the poverty line. 

Lebanon has been without a fully functioning government since outgoing premier Hassan Diab resigned in the wake of a devastating explosion in Beirut port last year.

The blast killed more than 200 people and piled new misery on a country already brought to its knees by the economic crisis.

The hashtags #dollar and #blackmarket were trending in Lebanese Twitter circles Tuesday.

"The exchange rate reached 10,000 LBP and still no government," said one Twitter user.

Mahya Yahya of Carnegie's Middle East Centre echoed the sentiment.

"Meanwhile #Lebanon's Lira collapses further — political deadlock continues and no policies to stem the collapse!" she said. 

 

Italy debt soars on virus impact

By - Mar 01,2021 - Last updated at Mar 01,2021

ROME — Italy's public debt soared last year, rising more than 20 percentage points as the coronavirus pandemic savaged the economy, official data showed on Monday.

Total accumulated national debt jumped to 155.6 per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) last year from 134.6 per cent in 2019.

Italy had by the end of 2020 accumulated a colossal debt of 2.57 trillion euros, up from 2.41 trillion euros in 2019, according to national statistics agency Istat.

GDP in the eurozone's third-largest economy fell 8.9 per cent last year, mainly due to restrictions imposed by the government to stem a devastating coronavirus outbreak that has killed almost 100,000 people.

Italy is banking on a windfall of more than 200 billion euros from the European Union's post-virus recovery fund to help get back on its feet.

Istat also published figures on provisional inflation data on Monday, showing consumer prices in February rising by 0.1 per cent compared to the previous month, and 0.6 per cent year-on-year.

Facebook News to launch in Germany in May

By - Mar 01,2021 - Last updated at Mar 01,2021

BERLIN — Facebook will roll out its news platform in Germany from May, providing articles from around 100 existing German media outlets, the US-based tech giant said on Monday. 

"Facebook News, a place dedicated to journalistic content will launch in German in May 2021," the social media giant said in a statement, adding that it would offer content from a "strong and diverse range" of German titles.

The platform, launched in the US in 2019 and in the UK in January, delivers users of the world's leading social network curated news content bought from traditional publishers.

Facebook will pay publishers for their content, with the list of German partners ranging from prestigious national weeklies such as Die Zeit and Der Spiegel to regional dailies like the Rheinische Post.

In total, Facebook claims the German platform will host "more than 100 media brands", including major groups such as Funke and Conde Nast.

Yet, it will not include German media giant Axel Springer, which owns top national titles such as Die Welt and the country's most widely read Bild daily. 

"We consider it problematic that some platforms are on the one hand trying to become news media themselves, while at the same time fobbing off publishers with disproportionately low payments," an Axel Springer spokesman told AFP. 

"We advocate for a European copyright which allows all media companies to receive reasonable remuneration."

Facebook claims its platform will help German media companies "win new readers, monetise content and expand business model in a sustainable and long term way". 

Global markets bounce back from last week's slump

By - Mar 01,2021 - Last updated at Mar 01,2021

LONDON — World stock markets rebounded on Monday from last week's heavy selloff, as falling US Treasury yields soothed inflation concerns, dealers said.

Wall Street stocks snapped higher at the open, with the Dow gaining 1.4 per cent. The broader S&P 500 climbed 1.5 per cent and tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite shot 1.7 per cent higher.

London equities jumped 1.2 per cent in afternoon trade, while Frankfurt was up 1 per cent and Paris added 1.3 per cent.

Asian stocks rose strongly on bargain-buying as the passage of President Joe Biden's $1.9 trillion COVID relief stimulus through Congress provided additional cheer.

Oil prices climbed before this week's output meeting of the cartel of the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and their allies, while the dollar advanced versus the euro and yen.

"Equity markets are showing strong gains as bond yields cool," said analyst David Madden at online trading firm CMC Markets UK.

"Stocks came under pressure last week as a spike in government bond yields encouraged traders to trim their exposure to equity markets. 

"The prospect of higher inflation on the horizon has not disappeared but the fear of a higher cost of living is not having the same impact that it once had."

Markets tumbled last week on fears that the recovering global economy, in tandem with vast US stimulus, could fuel inflationary pressures and spark interest rate hikes in the long run.

In a bid to calm markets, several central banks — including in Japan, South Korea and the European Union — sought over the weekend to reiterate their pledges to maintain their ultra-loose monetary policies for as long as needed.

Australia's led the way by ramping up its asset purchases to keep rates low.

"It's a cookie-cutter rally effort in many respects," said analyst Patrick O'Hare at Briefing.com, with stocks having slumped last week as investors headed for the exits as yields shot higher.

"This week, then, will start with an act of contrition as investors are feeling penitent for leaving the stock market," he added.

News that Johnson & Johnson's one-shot vaccine had been given the green light by US regulators — paving the way for a quicker rollout of vaccinations — added to the positive sentiment on Monday.

Oil prices also rebounded with focus on the key meeting of the OPEC+ group of major producers on Thursday, when they will discuss the huge output cuts that have provided much-needed support to prices.

Russia is said to be keen to turn on the taps again but Saudi Arabia prefers to keep the status quo.

Pages

Pages



Newsletter

Get top stories and blog posts emailed to you each day.

PDF