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ASE launches new index on Tuesday

By - Sep 29,2019 - Last updated at Sep 29,2019

AMMAN — The Amman Stock Exchange (ASE) will launch its new index the ASE20 index at the beginning of next month, according to a statement from the ASE website. 

In the statement, ASE’s Chief Executive Officer, Mazen Al Wathaifi, said the ASE20 index is a weighted index, based on the market capitalisation for the free float shares available for trading. 

It is composed of 20 listed companies that are most active and reliable in terms of market capitalisation, which are the leading companies in the ASE, he added. 

The full market capitalisation of the index constituents represents 77.6 per cent of the total market capitalisation of the companies listed by the ASE while the free float market capitalisation of these companies is 82.2 per cent of the total free float market capitalisation of the ASE-listed companies, he noted. A base value of 1000 points at the end of 2014 was stipulated for the ASE20 index.

Moreover, the sample of the ASE20 index will be reviewed quarterly, at the end of March, June, September and December of each year. This review also includes the calculation of the free float of all listed companies, based on the data received by the Securities Depository Center (SDC). In addition, the factor value is reduced for any company that weighs more than 10 per cent of the market capitalisation of index, according to the statement.

Al Wathaifi underscored the importance of the diversity of indices in the markets to give a more accurate picture of the prices’ movements for different categories of stocks and the market’s direction. 

Japan hikes consumption tax, despite recession fears

By - Sep 29,2019 - Last updated at Sep 29,2019

TOKYO — From October 1, Japan will implement a much-delayed consumption tax hike, raising the rate from eight per cent to 10 per cent, despite fears the move could cause a recession.

The worries have receded somewhat in recent months, and the government insists the increase is necessary to fund key policy priorities.

Here are some questions and answers on key aspects of the move:

 

What does the hike cover? 

 

The increase covers almost all purchases, from electronics and alcohol to books and cars. The government has, however, made a few exceptions. Magazines and newspapers that publish more than twice a week will stay at 8 per cent, along with food items purchased for consumption off-site.

That means groceries will stay at the old rate, along with food purchased for takeout. But it puts some food retailers, including bakeries and the country’s ubiquitous convenience stores in a bind because customers can choose to eat their purchases in store or outside, requiring two different rates.

 

Why was the hike delayed? 

 

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s government has twice delayed implementing the hike over fears it could hit the country’s fragile economic growth.

Growth in the second quarter was a revised 0.3 per cent, compared to the previous quarter’s 0.5 per cent, with exports hit by the global economic slowdown.

Historically, tax hikes have hit Japan’s economy hard.

Both of the most recent increases — from three per cent to five per cent in 1997 and then to eight per cent in 2014 — have been followed by recessions.

“Japanese wages haven’t been going up for 20 years,” said Martin Schulz, an economist at the Fujitsu Research Institute.

“That means that the consumption tax hike directly induces a reduction of purchasing power,” he told AFP.

Japanese consumers already face sticker shock thanks to various additional indirect taxes, including tariffs on imported goods.

Retailers display prices before tax, putting the full price only in smaller print below.

“It’s as if to say ‘It’s not us, it’s the mean government!’” Schulz said.

 

How will 

consumers react? 

 

The hike has caused anxiety, with some consumers deciding to make big-ticket purchases before the increase comes into effect.

“The tax increase worries me because I’m going to retire at the end of the month and my pension isn’t very large,” Mayumi Susami, 65, told AFP at a large electronics store in Tokyo.

But experts say there are signs that many consumers have simply resigned themselves to the increase and are unlikely to adjust their spending.

“Contrary to expectations, there are minimal signs of a significant increase in consumer spending ahead of the tax hike next month,” Shahana Mukherjee, an economist at Moody’s Analytics told AFP.

“This situation lends further support to the notion that the tax hike is already priced into consumer expectations, and implies that spending is less likely to be dramatically altered post the increase.”

 

Why is the hike needed? 

 

VAT in Japan is among the lowest in the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, where the average rate in 2018 was 19.3 per cent.

But the country has the world’s highest national debt among developed nations, a whopping 226 per cent of GDP, and is struggling with the ballooning costs associated with its ageing population.

The government is taking measures to soften the blow for consumers and retailers, including a massive package to fund incentives for car and home purchases, and help low-income households and those with small children.

The measures mean it will be some time before the government sees much of an impact from the tax on its coffers. It eventually plans to use the increased revenue to improve the social security system as well as offer free preschool education from the age of three.

Saudi Arabia offers tourist visas for first time

By - Sep 28,2019 - Last updated at Sep 28,2019

Participants attend the launch of the new tourism visa in Ad Diriyah, a Unesco-listed heritage site, outside Riyadh, on Friday (AFP photo)

RIYADH — Saudi Arabia said on Friday it was offering tourist visas for the first time, opening up the country to holidaymakers as part of a push to diversify its economy away from oil.

The kingdom also eased its strict dress code for foreign women, allowing them to go without the body-shrouding abaya robe that is still mandatory public wear for Saudi women, as authorities open up one of the last frontiers of global tourism.

The push comes just under two weeks after devastating attacks on Saudi Arabia's oil infrastructure — blamed by Washington on Iran — which roiled global energy markets and raised fears of a wider regional conflict.

"We make history" today, tourism chief Ahmed Al Khateeb said in a statement.

"For the first time, we are opening our country to tourists from all over the world."

Citizens from 49 countries are eligible for online e-visas or visas on arrival, including the United States, Australia and several European nations, the statement said.

Kickstarting tourism is one of the centrepieces of Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman's Vision 2030 reform programme to prepare the biggest Arab economy for a post-oil era.

But the conservative country is seen as an unlikely destination for global tourists aside from Muslim pilgrims visiting holy sites in Mecca and Medina.

But Khateeb said there will be no restrictions on unaccompanied foreign women, who will also not be obliged to publicly wear an abaya, even as they are expected to dress modestly.
Riyadh last year began issuing temporary visas to visitors to attend sporting and cultural events.

"Saudi Arabia is opening. We are opening our economy. We are opening our society," Khateeb said.

The government, reeling from low oil prices, says it hopes tourism will contribute up to 10 per cent of gross domestic product by 2030 — compared to three per cent currently — thanks to a targeted 100 million annual visits by both Saudi and foreign tourists.

But the kingdom currently lacks the infrastructure to accommodate visitors in such high numbers, with officials estimating 500,000 new hotel rooms will be required nationwide over the coming decade.

The sector is expected to create up to one million tourism jobs, the government says, as it battles high youth unemployment.

Saudi Arabia has splurged billions in an attempt to build a tourism industry from scratch.

In 2017, the kingdom announced a multibillion dollar project to turn 50 islands and other pristine sites on the Red Sea into luxury resorts.

Last year, construction of Qiddiya "entertainment city" was launched near Riyadh, which would include high-end theme parks, motor sport facilities and a safari area.

The country is also developing historic sites such as the centuries-old Mada'in Saleh, home to sandstone tombs of the same civilisation which built the Jordanian city of Petra.

Lebanon gas stations to abandon dollar payments, suspend strike

By - Sep 28,2019 - Last updated at Sep 28,2019

BEIRUT — Petrol station owners in Lebanon on Friday suspended a strike and said they reached a deal with the government allowing them to pay suppliers in Lebanese pounds, following complaints over a shortage in dollars.

The Syndicate of Gas Station Owners on Thursday had announced an open-ended strike, saying banks were not supplying them with the dollars needed to pay importers and suppliers because of a shortage in reserves.

The strike was suspended pending a meeting with lebanon’s Prime Minister Saad Hariri.

"We have reached a solution with regards to the strike," said Sami Brax, head of the syndicate, after the meeting, quoted by the state-run National News Agency.

"We have agreed that... fuel distributors will be paid in Lebanese pounds," he said.

Owners of petrol stations in Lebanon are paid by clients in Lebanese pounds, but have to pay importers and suppliers in US dollars. 

This had caused a dilemma for gas station owners who said they had to purchase dollars on the black market or from money exchange offices at higher rates because of a shortage in dollar reserves.

Lebanese media this week reported that banks and money exchange houses were rationing their dollar sales over a feared shortage in reserves. 

Lebanese officials, including President Michel Aoun and central bank Governor Riad Salameh, have tried to play down the risk of an economic collapse.

When asked about a feared shortage in dollar reserves, Aoun on Friday said: "Lebanon is not in danger."

"I will not let Lebanon collapse," he told reporters.

Foreign Minister Gebran Bassil acknowledged "external pressure on the economy and the Lebanese pound", but said that local parties were exploiting the situation to undermine the government, the state-run National News Agency reported.

"There are local actors who are conspiring against the country and its economy," he said. 

They are "fabricating" the situation "to incite citizens against the state", he added. 

Salameh on Monday denied that Lebanon was facing a dollar crisis.

"Dollars are available in Lebanon," the central bank governor said in a news conference, calling reports of a shortage an "exaggeration".

Economic growth in Lebanon has plummeted in the wake of repeated political deadlocks in recent years, compounded by the impact of eight years of war in neighbouring Syria.

Lebanon's public debt stands at around $86 billion — higher than 150 per cent of GDP — according to the finance ministry.

Eighty per cent of that figure is owed to Lebanon's central bank and local banks.

Last month, ratings agency Fitch bumped the country down to "CCC" over what it called "intensifying pressure on Lebanon's financing model".

Airbus hit by series of cyber-attacks — security sources

By - Sep 26,2019 - Last updated at Sep 26,2019

In this file photo taken on February 8, an Airbus A350-1000 conducts a test flight over Chateauroux Airport, central France (AFP photo)

PARIS — European aerospace giant Airbus has been hit by a series of attacks by hackers who have targeted its suppliers in their search for technical secrets, security sources told AFP, adding they suspected a China link.

There have been four major attacks on Airbus in the last 12 months, according to two security sources involved in investigating the hacking.

The group has long been considered a tempting target because of the cutting-edge technologies that have made it one of the world's biggest commercial plane manufacturers, as well as a strategic military supplier.

In January, it admitted to a security incident that had "resulted in unauthorised access to data", but people with knowledge of the attacks outlined a concerted and far bigger operation over the last year.

Hackers have targeted British enginemaker Rolls-Royce and the French technology consultancy and supplier Expleo, as well as two other French contractors working for Airbus that AFP was unable to identify.

Romain Bottan of the aerospace security specialist BoostAerospace said the attacks showed that hackers were seeking out weak links in the chain to compromise Airbus's systems.

"Very large companies are very well protected, it's hard to pirate them, so smaller companies are a better target," he said.

 

VPN entry point 

 

The attack against Expleo was discovered at the end of last year but the group's system had been compromised long before, one of the sources told AFP on condition of anonymity.

"It was very sophisticated and targeted the VPN which connected the company to Airbus," the source said.

A VPN, or virtual private network, is an encrypted network that enables employees to access company systems remotely. 

Airbus suppliers sometimes operate in a VPN linking them with colleagues at the plane-maker.

The other attacks used the same methods, with the first of them detected at a British subsidiary of Expleo, formerly known as Assystem, as well as Rolls-Royce, which provides engines for Airbus planes.

According to several of the sources, the hackers appeared to be interested in technical documents linked to the certification process for different parts of Airbus aircraft.

They also said that several stolen documents were related to the engines of the Airbus military transport plane A400M, which has some of the most powerful propeller engines in the world.

One of the sources said the hackers were also interested in the propulsion systems for the Airbus A350 passenger jet, as well as its avionics systems controlling the plane.

None of the sources who spoke to AFP could formally identify the perpetrators of the attacks, pointing to the extreme difficulty in obtaining evidence and identification in any cyber attack.

Google will not pay media firms to display content

By - Sep 25,2019 - Last updated at Sep 25,2019

This photo, taken on February 5, 2014, shows a Google logo on a wall at the entrance of the Google offices in Brussels (AFP file photo)

PARIS — Google will not pay French news companies to show excerpts of their articles, pictures or videos in search results, a top executive said on Wednesday, although it will not display the excerpts without their approval.

The move comes after France became in July the first EU country to adopt the bloc’s wide-ranging copyright reform, aimed at ensuring media firms are paid for original content offered online by Google, Facebook and other technology giants.

The new rules create a “neighbouring right” to ensure copyright protection — and compensation — for media firms using their content.

Richard Gingras, Google’s vice president for news, told journalists in Paris that a Europe-based news publisher would now have to decide if it would allow Google to show “snippets” of content or thumbnail images alongside search results in France.

If they accept, publishers will not receive any compensation from Google, he said.

But if they do not, only a headline and link to their content will appear in the results.

That could sharply reduce online audiences for some publishers, since Internet users are more likely to click on results containing excerpts and images.

The new EU directive was passed last March amid fierce resistance from tech companies which generate huge profits from advertising shown alongside search results and other content they host.

Google had warned after the European Parliament vote that it “will lead to legal uncertainty and will hurt Europe’s creative and digital economies”.

Critics also said the reform would effectively create a “link tax” that would restrict Internet discourse, and did not strike the best balance between free circulation of information and copyright protection.

News publishers, however, said the changes were urgently needed to help them cope with plummeting revenues as their readers migrated online from traditional media outlets.

AFP was among the media organisations that lobbied for the creation of neighbouring rights.

Trade balance deficit down by 10%

By - Sep 25,2019 - Last updated at Sep 25,2019

AMMAN — Jordan’s trade balance deficit for the first seven months of 2019 dropped by10 per cent compared to the figure recorded at the end of the same period last year, according to the Jordan News Agency, Petra.

The drop resulted from a 5.5 per cent increase in national exports, the new agency explained. According to the Department of Statistics figures, national exports were valued at JD2.749 billion during the January through July period of 2019, posting a 5.5 per increase compared to the figure recorded in the same period of the previous year. As for imports, they were valued at JD7.892 billion, registering a 4.4 per cent decrease.

Pound bounces as UK parliament suspension ruled illegal

Sep 24,2019 - Last updated at Sep 24,2019

A black London taxi cab is driven past the Houses of Parliament in central London on Tuesday, as the clock ticks down to Britain's October 31 EU exit date (AFP photo)

LONDON — Sterling bounced briefly on Tuesday after Britain's Supreme Court ruled "unlawful" a decision by Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suspend parliament in the run-up to Brexit.

The pound rallied to $1.2489 as traders mulled the prospect that Britain could avoid a no-deal departure from the European Union on October 31, analysts said. The euro also slid versus sterling.

House of Commons Speaker John Bercow said parliament must "convene without delay", adding that he will consult party leaders as a matter of urgency.

Johnson had insisted that the extended parliamentary recess was designed to allow time to bring forward a new legislative programme — but critics accused him of trying to avoid lawmakers' scrutiny ahead of Brexit.

"Sterling bounced higher following the judgement, as pound traders once again reassess the probability of a no-deal Brexit being avoided," City Index Fiona Cincotta told AFP.

"With ministers heading back to parliament imminently, still five weeks ahead of 31st October, there is time to prevent a damaging disorderly Brexit."

The 11 judges of the country's highest court were unanimous in their verdict, which they said meant parliament could now immediately reconvene.

Johnson, who took office on July 24, had advised Queen Elizabeth II as head of state to prorogue parliament.

Most members of the house of commons oppose Johnson's threat to leave the European Union next month even if he has not agreed exit terms with Brussels.

The pound later handed back some of its gains to stand at about $1.2440, up 0.1 per cent from late Monday.

"Sterling is bouncing around as traders are wondering: 'What is next for UK politics?'" said CMC Markets analyst David Madden.

"A general election seems like the next move."

London's stock market bobbed into negative territory in late Tuesday morning deals, reversing earlier losses, but Frankfurt and Paris held onto gains.

"It's hard to see how this gets the UK and EU any closer to a deal that will be approved by MPs, but it does really deliver a massive blow to Boris Johnson," added Market.com analyst Neil Wilson.

"It's perhaps not fatal, but it's not going to make life any easier and we are now faced with significant uncertainty of a different hue.”

"I would simply suggest that the uncertainty is the norm now — we just have a different vector of uncertainty to contend with," Wilson added.

In Asia meanwhile, equities crept higher Tuesday but dealers remained on edge following contrasting global economic data as investors await developments in the China-US trade stand-off.

Top-level negotiations are due to start in Washington next month.

Oil rallies on Mideast tensions, stocks weighted by trade remark

By - Sep 23,2019 - Last updated at Sep 23,2019

A destroyed installation in Saudi Arabia's Abqaiq oil processing plant is pictured, on Friday (AFP photo)

HONG KONG — Oil prices rallied on Monday after Iran warned the presence of US forces in the Gulf was causing instability in the region, while equities were mixed as US President Donald Trump said he did not want a partial trade deal with China.

While a loosening of monetary policy by central banks is providing support to investors, they remain on edge following last week's attack on Saudi oil facilities that was claimed by Houthi rebels in Yemen but blamed by the US on Iran.

Iran's President Hassan Rouhani on Sunday hit out at a US move to increase troop numbers in Saudi Arabia, saying: "Foreign forces can cause problems and insecurity for our people and for our region."

He called on outside powers to "stay away" and added Tehran would present a peace plan to the United Nations within days.

Investors are concerned about a possible conflict in the oil-rich Middle East after last week's attacks — which hammered Saudi Arabia's biggest crude plant — though both sides have said they do not want a war.

The US has ramped up sanctions on Tehran, targeting its central bank.

Both main oil contracts saw prices rise more than 1 per cent on Monday and traders are keeping tabs on Riyadh's progress in repairing the facilities.

"You can never say never, but with an Iranian delegation apparently due to attend the UN session opening week in New York, it is hard to imagine too many fireworks in the gulf this week," said OANDA senior markets analyst Jeffrey Halley.

Airbnb announces plans to go public in 2020

By - Sep 22,2019 - Last updated at Sep 22,2019

NEW YORK — Airbnb, the Internet home stay company which disrupted the hotel and travel industry, said on Thursday it plans to make its stock market debut next year but offered few details. 

Launched in 2008, the company is considered a "unicorn", a startup valued at more than $1 billion even before its initial public offering.

The stock launch comes in the wake of other highly anticipated Wall Street launches for companies in the "gig" economy, which have not been resounding successes.

Ride-hailing service Uber is down about 24 per cent since the start of trading, and office sharing firm WeWork this week delayed its IPO as its valuation tumbled.

Investors have begun to question the business models for these startups, with many burning through capital and struggling to convince markets they can turn the corner. 

The San Francisco-based Airbnb offers lodging at more than six million unique locations in nearly 100,000 cities and 191 countries, according to its website.

The company has sought to diversify in recent years, attempting to branch out into restaurant reservations and "experiences", in which third-parties can offer local activities in addition to lodging.

The company's rise has provoked stern opposition in some places where activists and municipalities say it undermines the hotel industry and squeezes supplies on rental and real estate markets, driving up costs and making cities less affordable.

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