Showing posts with label Japan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Japan. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Japan ODA to help fund Hai Phong port expansion

Vietnam will use ODA funds Japan will provide under an agreement to be signed next month to develop Hai Phong into an international port.

Vuong Dinh Lam, director of the Vietnam Maritime Administration, said the cost of the upgrade could top US$ 800 million, of which 75 percent will come from Vietnam’s own resources.

The work, to begin in 2012, will involve dredging and building breakwaters, signaling marine buoys, and others.

It will be done under a public-private partnership, with the state-owned Vietnam National Shipping Lines forming a joint venture with Japanese corporations Itochu, NYK, and Mitsui for the purpose.

Once it is completed in 2014, the port will become large enough to berth 100,000 DWT vessels.

Japan, which is Vietnam’s biggest donor, has committed ODA worth $1.64 billion this year, slightly down from last year’s $2.2 billion.

The major projects that have been undertaken using Japanese ODA include the Ben Thanh – Suoi Tien Metro route, East-West Highway, and Thu Thiem Tunnel in Ho Chi Minh City and the Can Tho Bridge.

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Saturday, February 5, 2011

Toyota may end Corolla exports from Japan due to yen

TOKYO - Toyota Motor Corp is considering halting exports from Japan of the Corolla sedan from around 2013 and shifting that output overseas due to the yen's strength, the Tokyo Shimbun daily reported on Thursday.

The yen's rise to a 15-year high against the dollar is threatening the competitiveness of Japanese exports and prompting manufacturers to consider shifting more output outside Japan.

The Corolla is one of Toyota's best-selling models and is built in 15 countries. In 2009, Toyota made about 235,000 Corollas in Japan -- nearly 60 percent of those exported -- and 815,000 abroad. Toyota is due to start producing the Corolla at its new Mississippi plant from autumn 2011 after the closure of a California factory formerly owned with General Motors Co.

Toyota spokesman Paul Nolasco said the company was constantly looking to optimize its global production structure, but that no decision had been made regarding the shift of export-bound Corollas outside Japan.

"At the current exchange rate, the more Corollas Toyota ships overseas, the more money it loses," Advanced Research analyst Koji Endo said. He added that to make money on the compact Corolla model, Toyota would have to shift production overseas or drastically reduce costs, or both.

Tokyo Shimbun reported that the world's largest car maker was also considering shifting production of all Corolla cars sold in Japan to one of its subsidiaries. Toyota currently builds the model at its own Takaoka factory, and at two units, Kanto Auto Works and Central Motor Co.

In a similar move aimed at making its domestic operations more competitive, Nissan Motor Co said this month it may turn one of its Japanese factories into a new subsidiary, allowing it to broach wage negotiations with labor unions and seek lower prices from suppliers.

Most automakers have vowed not to close any assembly plants in Japan but executives have warned that suppliers may be forced to shift production abroad in a threat to jobs in Japan's fragile economy.

"Maybe they don't realize just how much damage poses on companies," Mitsubishi Motors Corp President Osamu Masuko told reporters on Thursday.

"I guess we have to speed up our efforts to deal with the strong yen. Shifting production overseas takes time, but for example we can vastly increase purchases of auto components from abroad. That can be done in the near term."

Toyota is aiming to make its domestic factory lines more flexible and introduce other changes to be able to break even at a dollar rate of 90 yen and capacity utilization of 70 percent, equivalent to daily production of 12,000 units.

The dollar was trading near 81 yen on Thursday.

A production shift away from Japan would mean even more capacity in Japan would go unused unless Toyota is able to fill the hole with other cars.

Overall production of vehicles in Japan plunged 31.5 percent in 2009 to 7.93 million units, below 10 million for the first time in eight years. Exports fell by a much sharper 46 percent as automakers sought to limit foreign exchange losses.

Shares of Toyota closed up 3 percent at 2,930 yen, while the benchmark Nikkei average gained 1.9 percent.

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Saturday, January 22, 2011

Japan stands firm on FX, China lets yuan rise

TOKYO - Japan said it will continue to intervene to curb a strong yen if necessary, just hours before G7 and IMF officials meet to discuss escalating tension over currency policies, and Thailand is also poised to act.

China, which has rebuffed calls from the West to let its currency rise faster, allowed the yuan to firm on Friday to its highest against the dollar since a revaluation in July 2005.

Traders said Beijing may be making some concessions ahead of International Monetary Fund and World Bank meetings this weekend. But they said any further rise would be limited so as not to harm its exports.

With positions entrenched, expectations for any meaningful agreement in Washington are low although fears of a global currency war have jumped to the top of the agenda.

"We are approaching a G7 meeting, but regardless of this, Japan will take firm measures, including intervention, when needed," Japanese Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda told reporters when asked about the yen's rise to another 15-year high on Thursday. "This is Japan's basic stance."

Japan, worried a strong yen would hit its vital export sector, intervened in the market for the first time in six years last month, drawing criticism from its peers.

Prime Minister Naoto Kan sounded a little more conciliatory, saying Tokyo wanted to cooperate with its Group of Seven peers on currencies, but in the same breath reiterated the message that the authorities would take "decisive steps" if needed.

G7 leaders hold a closed-doors dinner on Friday.

Emerging anger

Global policymakers have been clashing over the dollar's broad-based decline, with emerging economies stepping up efforts to cap their currencies, actions which developed nations argue could derail economic recovery.

Thailand's finance minister will propose measures to handle the baht's strength at a cabinet meeting next week, Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva said on Friday.

The baht, which has risen about 11 percent against the dollar this year, the second-best performer in Asia after the yen, slipped after the comments.

Russian Deputy Finance Minister Dmitry Pankin said Brazil, China, India and Russia -- the so-called BRICs -- see the current moves in emerging markets currencies as a deeper problem that cannot be solved through a free float.

"Free float is not an exit prescription, it's not a prescription for all illnesses," he told reporters after a meeting of deputy finance ministers in Washington on Thursday.

Chinese premier Wen Jiabao, in Europe this week, politely rejected calls to let the yuan appreciate faster and Brazil on Monday doubled a tax on foreign investors buying local bonds, trying to curb a currency rally.

Yi Gang, a deputy governor of the People's Bank of China (PBOC), was quoted as saying on Friday that while China would continue to reform its exchange rate regime a sharp rise in the yuan would harm its economy.

Entrenched positions

Despite low expectations for the weekend talks in Washington, moves are afoot to create a more effective forum to tackle currency issues.

France will start talks on overhauling the global monetary system during its forthcoming G20 presidency to improve policy coordination and stem capital flows distorting exchange rates, Economy Minister Christine Lagarde said.

"If you look ... at the latest moves that are taking place, whether from Brazil or from Japan for instance, let alone from China, you really wonder what kind of coordination there is," she said.

German newspaper Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung reported that IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn plans to present the lender's members with a "systemic stability initiative" which will bring together the world's leading economic powers in a regular forum aimed at resolving currency issues.

Participants would include the United States, large European countries, Japan, China and other emerging market countries that are important for the global financial system, the newspaper said without citing sources.

Officials from developing markets say ultra-low interest rates in rich countries are fueling massive fund flows into their markets, pushing up their currencies and inflating prices of stocks, property and other assets.

Japan cut interest rates to zero this week and the US Federal Reserve is also expected to ease policy further.

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Sunday, January 16, 2011

Japan mulls Asia-Pacific free trade talks

TOKYO - Japan is considering joining negotiations for a free trade partnership among Asia-Pacific nations in a bid to bolster its ailing economy, the foreign minister said Thursday.

Foreign Minister Seiji Maehara said the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) concept, including Japan's key ally United States, may help boost Japan's efforts to conclude free trade deals to increase exports.

"The Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement stands as our promising framework for economic integration in the Asia-Pacific region," Maehara said in an address to a Japan-US business conference in Tokyo.

"I'm fully committed to making the greatest possible efforts to promote Japan's (free trade agreement) and (economic partnership agreement) policies, including looking into Japan's participation in TPP negotiations," he said.

Washington has said it would enter TPP talks, viewing such a deal as a means to advance US economic interests with fast-growing Asia.

Australia, Brunei, Chile, New Zealand, Malaysia, Peru, Singapore, and Vietnam have also said they will join the talks.

Japan has lagged behind other Asian countries -- such as South Korea which Wednesday agreed a pact with the European Union -- in sealing free trade deals.

Former Japanese prime minister Yukio Hatoyama proposed building an East Asian community similar to the EU through economic integration, but the idea evaporated after his resignation in May.

Maehara, who has argued for a stronger Japan-US security alliance, welcomed further American involvement in Asia through forums such as the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC), which Japan hosts this year.

"I believe the active engagement of the United States in this region is an indispensable element for the peace and prosperity in the region," he said.

"I'm greatly encouraged by these signs of increased US commitment to the region," Maehara said.

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Monday, January 10, 2011

Time right for Vietnam to woo Japan: economist

A Japanese economist who advises the Vietnamese Ministry of Planning and Investment has said Vietnam should take advantage of the current economic and political situation to boost exports to Japan and attract Japanese investment.

With the yen’s relentless rise taking it to a 15-year high against the dollar last month, Vietnam’s exports to Japan are cheaper while Japanese investors are doing business more aggressively overseas, Kyoshiro Ichikawa told Tuoi Tre in an exclusive interview.

The recent territorial tension between China and Japan will surely make Japanese investors think twice about pouring more money in China and they are likely to partially or wholly relocate their investments and production facilities to Vietnam, he said.

The yen is likely to rise further in the short term since US economic recovery is slower than expected, he said.

But he allayed the fears that the appreciating yen will mean Vietnam’s official development assistance debt to Japan will rise since the appreciation is a short-term phenomenon.

Japan ODA commitments to Vietnam are worth over 1.394 trillion yen.

It used to be the equivalent of $14 billion but has risen to nearly $16.3 billion. In terms of the depreciating dong, it has risen from VND251 trillion to VND304.5 trillion.

Projects funded by ODA loans and yen-denominated commercial loans will be affected adversely by the currency appreciation, the ministry had said earlier.

Japan is one of Vietnam’s largest trading partners.

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Time right for Vietnam to woo Japan: economist

A Japanese economist who advises the Vietnamese Ministry of Planning and Investment has said Vietnam should take advantage of the current economic and political situation to boost exports to Japan and attract Japanese investment.

With the yen’s relentless rise taking it to a 15-year high against the dollar last month, Vietnam’s exports to Japan are cheaper while Japanese investors are doing business more aggressively overseas, Kyoshiro Ichikawa told Tuoi Tre in an exclusive interview.

The recent territorial tension between China and Japan will surely make Japanese investors think twice about pouring more money in China and they are likely to partially or wholly relocate their investments and production facilities to Vietnam, he said.

The yen is likely to rise further in the short term since US economic recovery is slower than expected, he said.

But he allayed the fears that the appreciating yen will mean Vietnam’s official development assistance debt to Japan will rise since the appreciation is a short-term phenomenon.

Japan ODA commitments to Vietnam are worth over 1.394 trillion yen.

It used to be the equivalent of $14 billion but has risen to nearly $16.3 billion. In terms of the depreciating dong, it has risen from VND251 trillion to VND304.5 trillion.

Projects funded by ODA loans and yen-denominated commercial loans will be affected adversely by the currency appreciation, the ministry had said earlier.

Japan is one of Vietnam’s largest trading partners.

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Monday, January 3, 2011

HCMC-based company signs Japan partner deal

The Japan Pile Corp has entered a strategic partnership with local firm Phan Vu Investment Corp, concluding its contract in Ho Chi Minh City.

The deal value, however, was not disclosed.

Under the contract, the Japanese company, which is listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange, will become a shareholder in Phan Vu (PVI) with a 5-percent stake. It will be the first foreign institutional investor of PVI.

According to PVI's deputy general director Vo Thi Hien, her company has a charter capital of VND150 billion (US$75.5 million).

Last year it earned a net profit of almost VND60 billion from a turnover of VND690 billion.

As PVI's operations also include the pile foundation business, the Japanese partner will cooperate to create new pile products for the Vietnam market, including those with an anti-earthquake feature.

It will also assist in the management of the holding company model.

In the fourth quarter, Japan Pile Corp will organize training courses for PVI staff in Vietnam and receive trainees in Japan as well.

The Phan Vu Investment Corp is expected to list in the HCM Stock Exchange in the fourth quarter this year.

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Wednesday, December 29, 2010

City company signs Japan partner deal

The Japan Pile Corporation has entered a strategic partnership with
local firm Phan Vu Investment Corporation, concluding its contract on
Sept. 30 in HCM City.


Under the contract, the
Japanese company, which is listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange, will
become a shareholder in Phan Vu. (PVI) with a 5-per- cent stake. It will
be the first foreign institutional investor of PVI.


The deal value, however, was not disclosed.


According to PVI's deputy general director Vo Thi Hien, her company
has a charter capital of 150 billion VND (75.5 million USD).


Last year it earned a net profit of almost 60 billion VND from a turnover of 690 billion VND.


As PVI's operations also include the pile foundation business, the
Japanese partner will cooperate to create new pile products for the
Vietnam market, including those with an anti-earthquake feature.


It will also assist in the management of the holding company model.


In the fourth quarter, Japan Pile Corp will organise training courses
for PVI staff in Vietnam and receive trainees in Japan as well.


The Phan Vu Investman Corp is expected to list in the HCM City bourse in the fourth quarter this year./.

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Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Japan business confidence rises, but doubts remain

TOKYO - Japanese business confidence has improved for a sixth straight quarter but companies are expecting a gloomy end of the year amid increased global economic uncertainty, the Bank of Japan said Wednesday.

Sentiment among major manufacturers rose to a higher-than-expected reading of 8 in September from 1 in June, according to the central bank's closely watched Tankan survey of more than 11,000 firms.

The latest figure shows that optimists still outweigh pessimists among major manufacturers in terms of their view of Japan's economic climate, in only the second positive reading since June 2008.

But the forecast for the December survey is for a reading of minus 1, suggesting that companies expect conditions to sharply worsen in the months ahead as Japan remains beset by deflation and the effects of a strong yen.

"Companies are very cautious about the economy towards the year-end," noted Naoki Murakami, chief economist at Monex Securities.

In particular there was "increasing uncertainty about the world economy and the (Japanese) government's dull responses to the chain reaction of the yen's rise and stock price falls."

The strong yen has hurt exporters, making their goods more expensive and eroding companies' overseas profits when repatriated. Videogame giant Nintendo on Wednesday more than halved earlier profit forecasts, citing yen strength.

Exports, a crucial driver for Japan's growth, expanded at their slowest pace this year in August, as the impact of the yen's strength and softening overseas demand illustrated the risks threatening a fragile recovery.

A strong domestic currency also makes imports cheaper, helping prolong a damaging deflationary cycle where consumers hold off on purchases in the hope of further price drops, clouding future corporate investment.

The reading was made with companies expecting an exchange rate of 89.44 yen to the dollar, higher than in the previous survey but much lower than current levels, which if sustained will further erode confidence.

Japan stepped into the currency markets in September for the first time since 2004 in a bid to stem the yen's strength after it hit a 15-year high against the dollar, and has repeatedly warned it is ready to do so again.

"Many (negative) factors are piling up," said Takeshi Minami, economist at Norinchukin Research Institute. "Considering exports and consumer spending are unlikely to be a strong driving force, the economy will be at a standstill."

Japan's economy expanded by an annualized 1.5 percent in the April-June period, sharply lower than the previous quarter's 5.0 percent.

Prime Minister Naoto Kan Monday ordered a supplementary budget for fresh stimulus measures be put together to shore up the flagging economy, after he recently announced 915 billion yen package to add jobs and boost growth.

The Tankan figures are looked at closely by the central bank when formulating monetary policy, and it has come under heavy government pressure recently to do more to help boost the economy.

"The outcome of the latest Tankan will prompt the BoJ to go for additional monetary easing," said Murakami.

The upbeat September reading among big firms was helped by higher automobile demand ahead of the expiration of government stimulus incentives for green car purchases, said Minami.

But including all industries such as medium and small-sized manufacturers and non-manufacturers, the outlook was gloomy at a reading of minus 10.

The index, which measures the percentage of firms that think business conditions are good minus those that believe they are bad, hit a record low of minus 58 in March 2009.

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Friday, December 17, 2010

Japan ICT companies back to Vietnam for business

Kenji Ogawa (L), vice chairman of the Information Technology Promotion Agency (IPA-Japan), and Pham Tan Cong (R), general secretary of Vinasa, congratulate each other on the signing of the MOU on development of the human resource valuation system applicable to Vietnam ICT enterprises - Photo: Hien Nguyen
HCMC – Japanese information and communication technology enterprises are coming back to Vietnam to grasp business opportunities after an interruption caused by the financial crisis since end-2008, heard the Vietnam Japan IT Day in the city on Monday.

The event, organized by the Vietnam Software Association (Vinasa) and Vinasa Japan IT Cooperation Club, is attended by about 50 Japanese enterprises like NEC, GDS and Cybozu, Pham Tan Cong, general secretary of Vinasa, told the Daily on the sidelines of the event.

Many Japanese ICT firms shut down their Vietnam branches in the aftermath of the crisis, Cong said, and 2009 was a tough year for the Japanese ICT industry although Japan was a huge market with annual turnover of US$130 billion.

Vietnam’s software outsourcing sector also felt the impact of the Japanese ICT sector’s woes since it is recognized as the third largest partner of Japanese firms.

FPT, the country’s biggest ICT enterprise, was hurt when ICT companies of Japan left Vietnam; about 56% of its revenue came from Japan’s market.

“A tough period seems to be over. On Tuesday Japan ICT companies are back to Vietnam and they are searching for new partners and new business opportunities,” Cong noted.

Since early this year, he added, Vietnamese and Japanese ICT companies have exchanged many business matching trips and clinched a lot of high-value deals. “It’s a good sign for the Vietnam software outsourcing sector.”

Hiromi Sugiyama, vice chairman of the Japan Information Technology Service Industry Association, said the worst for Japan’s ICT industry was over and that it was time for it to explore new partners and business deals.

Vietnam’s software outsourcing segment is recognized as a key partner of Japan, Sugiyama said, adding embedded software development, business application software development and data entry were in need of Vietnamese firms.

He said Japan’s offshore outsourcing volume grew rapidly, from US$1.37 billion in 2004 to US$4.33 billion in 2008. Vietnam ICT enterprises are mostly likely to gain slice of this huge pie.

“Japan is a serious market. To win a contract from the market, Vietnam ICT companies should enhance the quality of IT developers’ skills and of services,” he noted.

On Monday saw Vinasa signing a memorandum of understanding with the Information- Technology Promotion Agency (IPA-Japan) to promote the human resource valuation system in Vietnam ICT enterprises.

IPA will provide technical support for Vinasa to build up the system and deploy it by early 2011.

In a related development, the Taiwan External Trade Development Council (TAITRA) in Vietnam on Monday launched a campaign to promote its information technology products here in the local market.

The Taiwan Excellence campaign is organized by TAITRA and supported by 17 selective Taiwan information technology brands including ASUS, MSI, D-link, BenQ, Genius and Optoma.

TAITRA said it would organize a Taiwan information technology expo in HCMC next month to promote its products locally.

The Ministry of Information and Communications reported that between 2000 and 2009, Vietnam’s IT industry grew at double digits, 20-25% a year.

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Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Japan says further yen gains should be stopped

TOKYO - Further gains in the yen should be stopped and Japan will maintain close coordination with the US and UN if it intervenes in the foreign exchange market to curb its currency's rise, Japan's foreign minister was quoted as saying.

In an interview with the Wall Street Journal on the sidelines of a U.N. General Assembly meeting in New York, Foreign Minister Seiji Maehara said he did not expect joint intervention involving other countries.

Japan intervened in the foreign exchange market on Sept. 15 to curb the rising yen, which was at 15-year highs against the dollar. It was the first time Tokyo had stepped into the currency market in six years.

Maehara, in excerpts of the interview also published online late on Friday, said the yen had strengthened more than indicated by the actual strength of the Japanese economy.

"So with a very strong determination on the part of the Japanese government, any further appreciation of the yen should be stopped," Maehara, who has no direct responsibility for currency policy, was quoted as saying.

"Going forward, there may be a possibility for the Japanese government to show its very determined intent" to keep the currency from strengthening, Maehara was quoted as saying.

Tokyo would keep its economic partners informed of its actions, he was quoted as saying.

The dollar is trading at about 84.20 yen after falling to a 15-year low of 82.87 yen on Sept. 15, shortly before Japanese authorities intervened to stop yen strength from damaging a fragile economic recovery.

A sudden slide in the yen against the dollar on Friday stirred suspicions Japan had intervened for a second time this month.

But the yen later recovered and Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan said on Friday he was unaware of any new market intervention by Tokyo.

Kan, just re-elected as leader of the ruling party, faces a weak economy and a divided parliament, so is keen to be seen as proactive in efforts to curb the strength in the yen, which has hurt Japan's stock market and sparked the ire of exporters.

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Sunday, November 28, 2010

Machine tools expo to open next month

The 2010 International Machine Tools and Metal Working Technology Exhibition (Metalex Viet Nam 2010) will be held at the Saigon Exhibition and Convention Center from October 7-9.

The event will feature 500 brands of high-tech metalworking, machinery, technologies and electronic products from 25 countries and territories worldwide, including Japan, Thailand, Singapore and China among others.

For the first time, this event is organized along the fourth exhibition on supporting industry. The two exhibitions are jointly held by the Thai Reed Tradex Co, Japan External Trade Organization (JETRO) and the Ho Chi Minh City Investment and Trade Promotion Center (ITPC).

Nguyen Khac Duy, director of the ITPC said the combination of the two large exhibitions was a significant for the machinery industry. Traders will have opportunity to share experiences, discover new technologies and expand their business networks.

The supporting industry exhibition will display spare parts, accessories, components and supporting services from Japanese and Vietnamese suppliers.

Nattha Chaowawanich, deputy managing director of Reed Tradex, said Vietnamese manufacturers and enterprises should not miss this important opportunity to meet Japanese firms as well as promote business activities and raise the competition among Vietnamese enterprises.

During the exhibition, organizers will also hold conferences "Producing and Manufacturing Management of Japan", "The gap between partnering Japanese and Vietnamese firms", "The success of Thai companies in supplying commodities to Japan", and "Factory management of Japanese enterprises".

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Machine tools expo to open next month

The 2010 International Machine Tools and Metal Working Technology Exhibition (Metalex Viet Nam 2010) will be held at the Saigon Exhibition and Convention Center from October 7-9.

The event will feature 500 brands of high-tech metalworking, machinery, technologies and electronic products from 25 countries and territories worldwide, including Japan, Thailand, Singapore and China among others.

For the first time, this event is organized along the fourth exhibition on supporting industry. The two exhibitions are jointly held by the Thai Reed Tradex Co, Japan External Trade Organization (JETRO) and the Ho Chi Minh City Investment and Trade Promotion Center (ITPC).

Nguyen Khac Duy, director of the ITPC said the combination of the two large exhibitions was a significant for the machinery industry. Traders will have opportunity to share experiences, discover new technologies and expand their business networks.

The supporting industry exhibition will display spare parts, accessories, components and supporting services from Japanese and Vietnamese suppliers.

Nattha Chaowawanich, deputy managing director of Reed Tradex, said Vietnamese manufacturers and enterprises should not miss this important opportunity to meet Japanese firms as well as promote business activities and raise the competition among Vietnamese enterprises.

During the exhibition, organizers will also hold conferences "Producing and Manufacturing Management of Japan", "The gap between partnering Japanese and Vietnamese firms", "The success of Thai companies in supplying commodities to Japan", and "Factory management of Japanese enterprises".

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Saturday, November 27, 2010

Japan PM warns of more action vs yen

TOKYO - Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan said Tokyo was ready to act again if the yen moved sharply, keeping traders on guard against further intervention as expectations of US monetary easing weighed on the dollar.

Japan intervened in the currency market last week by selling yen for the first time in more than six years as its surge to a 15-year high against the dollar threatened to derail Japan's slowing economy and worsen deflation.

In an interview with the Financial Times published on Wednesday, Kan said currency intervention would be unavoidable if there were a drastic change in the yen exchange rate.

The comments coincided with the dollar's drop below 85 yen to its weakest level since last week's intervention, after the Federal Reserve signaled it was ready to stimulate the US economy more.

Traders said the yen was still below levels that would trigger another intervention, but more yen selling could not be ruled out.

"I don't think markets are bracing for imminent intervention with the dollar still above 84.00 yen. But if the dollar falls further to test 82 yen, markets will focus on whether authorities will step in again to defend that level," said Ayako Sera, market strategist at Sumitomo Trust & Banking.

"Japanese authorities will intervene in the event of sharp market moves, regardless of whether Kan will be away from Japan or not."

Kan, who is traveling to New York this week for a U.N. General Assembly meeting, said there was an agreement among G20 nations that overly rapid currency movements were undesirable, and that he would seek to defend Japan's action.

Bank of Japan Governor Masaaki Shirakawa declared further support for the country's economy, saying in a newspaper interview the central bank would provide ample funds to the market.

That would include liquidity supplied through intervention, Shirakawa said, suggesting that the BOJ would continue to refrain from draining funds released into the market when authorities sell the yen.

The BOJ also stands ready to ease policy further at its next rate review on October 4-5, although there is a debate within the bank on what exactly it should do next with its policy options limited, sources familiar with the bank's thinking said.

BOJ's options

Those options include increasing government bond purchases, buying private sector assets or expanding a cheap fund-supply scheme targeting growth industries, sources say.

Shirakawa told the Yomiuri newspaper that greater uncertainty about the global economy meant increased risks to Japan's recovery, a warning echoed by BOJ board member Ryuzo Miyao.

Miyao, who joined the board in March, told business leaders in western Japan that a possible extended spell of sluggish US economic growth could force the BOJ to alter its forecast of a sustained moderate recovery in Japan's economy.

He also said the BOJ was not ruling out any policy option, including increasing its government bond buying from the current 21.6 trillion yen per year.

With its hands tied by public debt double the size of Japan's $5 trillion economy, the government has mainly counted on the BOJ to come up with ways of revving up the sagging economy.

But Kan said Tokyo planned a comprehensive package of measures that would stimulate domestic demand and help to weaken the currency.

While he did not elaborate on measures to boost domestic demand, he said one option was to use the yen's strength to invest in natural resources overseas.

"I think it is necessary to combine economic policy and monetary policies that will be conducive to ... slightly lower than the current level," he added.

Kan has instructed his cabinet to compile an extra budget for the current fiscal year to March, although the size of spending will likely be too small to significantly boost the economy.

Unsterilized interventions are a departure from the usual central bank practice of absorbing the extra funds through issuance of government bills, effectively making intervention a part of a monetary loosening mix.

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Machine tools expo to open next month

The 2010 International Machine Tools and Metal working Technology
Exhibition (Metalex Viet Nam 2010) will be held at the Sai Gon
Exhibition and Convention Centre from October 7-9.


The
event will feature 500 brands of high-tech metalworking, machinery,
technologies and electronic products from 25 countries and territories
worldwide, including Japan , Thailand , Singapore and China
among others.


For the first time, this event is organised
along the fourth exhibition on supporting industry. The two exhibitions
are jointly held by the Thai Reed Tradex Company, Japan External Trade
Organisation (JETRO) and the HCM City Investment and Trade Promotion
Centre (ITPC).


Nguyen Khac Duy, director of the ITPC said
the combination of the two large exhibitions was a significant for the
machinery industry. Traders will have opportunity to share experiences,
discover new technologies and expand their business networks.


The supporting industry exhibition woull display spare parts,
accessories, components and supporting services from Japanese and
Vietnamese suppliers.


Nattha Chaowawanich, deputy managing
director of Reed Tradex, said Vietnamese manufacturers and enterprises
should not miss this important opportunity to meet Japanese firms as
well as promote business activities and raise the competition among
Vietnamese enterprises.


During the exhibition, organisers
will also hold conferences "Producing and Manufacturing Management of
Japan", "The gap between partnering Japanese and Vietnamese firms", "The
success of Thai companies in supplying commodities to Japan", and
"Factory management of Japanese enterprises"./.

Related Articles

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Japan bank lobby says new capital rules "harsh"

TOKYO - The new Basel III bank regulations requiring higher capital levels are "harsh", although Japan's banks have no need now to strengthen their capital further, said Masayuki Oku, chairman of the Japanese Bankers Association.

Global regulators, aiming to prevent any repeat of the international credit crisis, earlier this month agreed to force banks to more than triple to 7 percent the amount of top quality capital they must hold to withstand future shocks.

"That's very harsh for Japanese banks," Oku, who is also president of the core commercial unit of Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group, told a regular news conference on Tuesday.

Still, Japan's three biggest banks -- Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Mizuho Financial Group and Sumitomo Mitsui -- have already boosted their capital levels through a round of capital-raising in anticipation of the tougher new rules.

"We don't expect any capital-raising plans from individual banks in the near future," Oku said.

"Banks will try to expand their business and limit capital raising which could cause share dilution. That is going to be a trend in the industry," he said.

Oku also said that Japan's intervention in currency markets last week to curb a rise in the yen was effective but that the government had waited too long to take action.

"If intervention is done too late it takes a lot of energy and money to adjust the currency level, and I think there could have been better timing for the intervention," he said.

The yen surged to a 15-year high against the dollar last week of 82.87 yen -- much stronger than many Japanese firms' forecasts for around 90 yen -- threatening the outlook for Japan's export-reliant economy.

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Friday, November 19, 2010

Japan ready to weaken yen again despite criticism

TOKYO - Japan's finance minister on Friday repeated his threat to intervene in currency markets if necessary to weaken the yen, illustrating government resolve in the face of overseas criticism.

"As we have been saying, our basic stance is that we will take decisive steps, including intervention, if necessary, and I'd like to maintain this stance," Yoshihiko Noda said at a news conference after a cabinet meeting.

Noda was retained in Prime Minister Naoto Kan's cabinet reshuffle Friday, following the premier's victory in a bruising leadership challenge this week from Ichiro Ozawa, his pro-intervention rival.

Kan likewise suggested Japan would take further action if necessary, saying at a press conference: "We cannot take our guard down when it comes to the economy."

"So far, the interventions have worked to a certain degree," he added.

Japan on Wednesday carried out its first global currency market intervention since 2004 in an estimated two trillion yen (US$23 billion) move to help safeguard an export-driven recovery.

The decision surprised markets as Kan sought to silence those accusing him of inaction and win over supporters of Ozawa.

A strong yen puts Japanese exporters at a disadvantage because it erodes their repatriated earnings and competitiveness, in turn threatening the nation's fragile growth.

However, any repeat foray into the markets if the yen resumes upward moves may provoke ire from Japan's Group of Seven partners, after its intervention Wednesday was rounded on in Washington and Brussels.

Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker on Thursday hit out at such action on currency markets, saying his eurozone partners "don't like unilateral intervention".

Juncker, who heads the Eurogroup of finance ministers who manage the shared currency, spoke out as US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner bluntly warned China it had to let the yuan rise against the dollar to end trade distortions.

Earlier, US Democratic Representative Sander Levin, who chairs the House Ways and Means Committee which has power over taxes and trade policy, called Japan's policy "predatory" and "deeply disturbing".

With a large trade and current account surplus, Japan has a relatively weak case to lower its currency to boost exports, some analysts argue.

And while the yen recently hit 15-year highs on nominal terms, it is still below its 1995 peak when adjusted for price changes and compared with a basket of currencies used by Japan's largest trading partners, say analysts.

Noda said he is "checking" the overseas response to the intervention, adding, "I understand there are various opinions."

The yen was at 85.72 Friday, nearly three yen off a 15-year high of 82.86 reached before the intervention.

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Sunday, November 14, 2010

Japan PM says ready to step into forex markets again

TOKYO - Japan's prime minister signaled on Thursday authorities would keep intervening to curb yen strength as sagging manufacturing confidence underscored the threat the currency poses to the fragile economic recovery.

A Reuters monthly poll that tracks the Bank of Japan tankan report showed manufacturing confidence dropped in September from August for the first time in nearly a year as firms struggled with the yen's rise to a 15-year high against the dollar.

Responding to the concerns about the yen's rise, authorities intervened in markets on Wednesday for the first time in six years to knock the currency lower by selling an estimated 2 trillion yen.

Prime Minister Naoto Kan, who fended off a leadership challenge from a ruling party powerbroker this week, pointed on Thursday to more yen selling if needed.

"If rapid fluctuations in the yen harm Japanese firms' appetite for investing at home and push them to shift their factories overseas, that could further worsen job conditions and affect to overcome deflation," Kan said.

"I will take decisive steps if needed from now on as well," he told a business group.

Some currency traders see the likelihood of another round of intervention would increase if the dollar slipped back below 85 yen. Its now trading at 85.4 yen, having strengthened from around 83 yen before the intervention.

Pressure on BOJ?

Kan, struggling to unify his party and facing a divided parliament, wants to be proactive in tackling the yen after winning the ruling party leadership race on Tuesday.

He is expected to reshuffle his cabinet soon but retain Yoshihiko Noda as finance minister.

"He is trying to send a message of his party's solidarity. He is showing the strong intention of Japan to take decisive action through intervention," said Ayako Sera, market strategist at Sumitomo Trust & Banking.

A panel of junior lawmakers in the ruling Democratic Party of Japan urged the Bank of Japan to call an extraordinary meeting to ease policy and so support the government's efforts.

Central bank sources have said the authority has no plan to call an emergency meeting but it is ready to act at its next scheduled meeting in early October if the economic recovery remains under threat.

The panel suggested the BOJ increases its buying of Japanese government bonds, although BOJ Governor Masaaki Shirakawa reiterated his opposition to the idea.

"We hardly observe the fact that massive expansions in central bank balance sheets result in an increase in inflation in advanced economies," Shirakawa said in a conference speech.

Shirakawa told a securities dealers' gathering later on Thursday that the BOJ would take timely action as needed and keep providing ample funds to money markets.

In addition, sources familiar with the matter said on Wednesday the BOJ will not drain the money flowing into the economy as a result of the selling, indicating it plans to use the sold yen as a monetary tool to boost liquidity in the economy.

Yen threat to exports

The intervention pushed the dollar more than 3 percent higher on Wednesday, a big move for a currency.

Japan faced some international criticism for its solo intervention. Since most advanced economies are grappling with slow growth at home, making exports an economic imperative, Japan's move heightened concerns countries would launch a round of competitive devaluations to support their own exports.

US lawmaker Sander Levin, who chairs a congressional committee examining China's currency policy, blamed Beijing for Japan's "deeply disturbing" intervention.

But Kan faces domestic pressure for more action on the yen.

"The dollar has recovered to about 85 yen now after the government and Bank of Japan intervened yesterday, and we want them to continue taking strong action to reverse the yen's strength," Toshiyuki Shiga, chairman of the Japan Automobile Manufacturers Association, told a news conference.

"A dollar of 85 or 90 yen is not a level at which job losses can be prevented in Japan," he added.

Japan's economic recovery from the global crisis has faltered with export growth slowing down. Signs the US recovery is also stuttering has added to Tokyo's concerns.

Underlining those concerns, the Reuters Tankan survey, which has a 95 percent correlation with the BOJ's closely watched quarterly tankan business sentiment survey, showed the manufacturers' sentiment index fell 5 points from August to plus 17, down for the first time since October 2009.

Still, the Reuters index has risen during the July-September quarter, suggesting the BOJ data due on out on September 29 will also show a rise.

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Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Japan intervenes to weaken yen for 1st time in 6 years

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Foreign exchange broker stand in front of a television screen showing Japan's Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda speaking to the media in Tokyo September 15, 2010.
Photo: Reuters

TOKYO - Japan sold the yen in the market on Wednesday for the first time in six years, trying to stop the currency's relentless climb from hurting exporters and threatening a fragile economic recovery.

Fresh after a victory in party leadership contest, Japan's Prime Minister Naoto Kan appeared to be stepping up efforts to wrench the country out of deflation by targeting yen strength, which has weighed on stock prices and corporate profits.

Estimates vary on how much Japan has spent so far in its first intervention in the foreign exchange market since spending 35 trillion yen in 2003-2004. Dealers talk about 300-500 billion yen though some reports put it closer to 100 billion yen.

The US dollar extended its gains against the yen after an official at Japan's Ministry of Finance said intervention was not finished, climbing more than 2 percent on the day above 85 yen and nearly two yen above a 15-year low.

Wednesday's action pleased its target audience: major Japanese exporters.

"We applaud the move by the government and the Bank of Japan to correct the yen's strength." Japan's No. 2 automaker Honda Motor Co. said in a statement. Honda has penciled in the yen at 87 to the dollar in its financial estimates for the 2010/2011 business year.

The Bank of Japan will not drain the money flowing into the economy as a result of the yen selling, sources familiar with the matter said, indicating coordinated efforts with the government to support the economy.

The central bank may follow up with additional steps, such as buying more government debt, economists said.

Analysts doubt other countries would help Japan tamp down the yen since they also need weaker currencies to boost exports and growth. Intense pressure from Washington on China to let its currency strengthen also makes any attempts by major economies to weaken their currencies particularly sensitive.

Sympathy

Japan's Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda indicated that Tokyo acted alone, but said he was in contact with overseas authorities and analysts said Japan would probably be spared international criticism.

"Japan will be seen as a special case. Obviously its economy has been in significant trouble for a while, stocks have been depressed for some time, export performance relative to the Asian peer group has been very weak," Simon Flint, global head of foreign exchange research with Nomura in Singapore, said.

"To some degree there will be some sympathy in the rest of the world for Japan's predicament."

US officials at the Federal Reserve and the Treasury declined to comment immediately about Tokyo's action.

Analysts doubted whether Kan's government was ready for another protracted battle similar to the 15-month yen selling spree earlier this decade given lingering questions about the effectiveness of the last campaign.

"The amount of intervention isn't likely to be as much as Japan was spending the last time it intervened, so it won't be enough to stop dollar/yen from falling. It is also unlikely that other countries will cooperate," said Junya Tanase, currency strategist at JP Morgan in Tokyo.

Noda would not say whether the authorities were buying dollars, but two traders said the Bank of Japan appeared to have bought dollars around 83 yen at the start of the action.

The Bank of Japan acts on behalf of the Ministry of Finance in currency intervention.

"We will take decisive steps if necessary, including intervention, while continuing to closely watch currency market moves from now on," Noda told reporters at a hastily arranged news conference.

The dollar had hit a 15-year-low at 82.87 yen earlier in the day but was at 85.12 yen by midday.

Will the yen stop rising?

Kan's government has been trying to talk down the yen as it kept moving away from the 90 yen per dollar level most exporters had assumed in their financial plans. Until Wednesday, however, it had stopped short of intervening, apparently worried that acting without Group of Seven partners would not achieve much.

Kan was re-elected ruling party leader on Tuesday, decisively fending off a challenge from powerbroker Ichiro Ozawa, an outspoken advocate of intervention.

"There were views in the market that Kan was more tolerant of a higher yen and the yen rose after he won the ruling party leadership vote yesterday," said Yasuo Yamamoto, senior economist at Mizuho Research Institute.

"The government probably wanted to stamp out those views. But the question is: Will the yen stop rising from here? It's not clear."

The yen had surged to its highest against the dollar since 1995, as low US interest rates have made the dollar cheap to borrow and swap for higher-yielding assets and as talk has resurfaced that the Fed might loosen its policy further.

The Japanese currency's rise has brought it closer and closer to its record peak of 79.75 per dollar set in 1995 and has weighed on the Tokyo stock market's Nikkei average, which climbed 1.8 percent on the day as news of the intervention spread.

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Saturday, November 6, 2010

S&P says Japan govt credit quality is "slowly sinking"

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Photo: AFP

HONG KONG - Japan's credit quality is slowly sinking but not to an extent that could trigger an immediate downgrade, credit rating agency Standard and Poor's said on Tuesday.

"Japan's rating of AA is still valid but the Japanese government credit is slowly sinking," Takahira Ogawa, S&P director for sovereign and international public finance ratings told Reuters Insider in an interview.

"The risk of default is slowly increasing but not to the extent which will change anything at this point in time," he said.

Japan's outstanding public debt is the largest among industrial nations, approaching twice the size of its gross domestic product, although most of it is held by domestic investors.

Ogawa said Prime Minister Naoto Kan's win in a ruling party leadership race indicates a continuation of the government's fiscal and macroeconomic policies, which is not necessarily beneficial to ratings.

"There is no reason to be optimistic simply because of the continuation of the policy of the previous government because the DPJ government has the tendency to take populist measures," he said.

Rival rating agency Fitch Ratings warned in July that a delay in a credible plan before year-end for fiscal consolidation would increase the risk of a rating downgrade.

Ogawa sounded a similar warning note.

"We see some more degrading of the government's credit quality in the next year or two," he said.

Standard & Poor's has a negative outlook on Japan's rating which indicates the potential direction of the rating in the intermediate term which is typically six months to 2 years.

Prime Kan will keep his job after an unexpectedly strong victory in a ruling party leadership vote but must now strive to unify his party and forge deals with the opposition to pass laws in a divided parliament.

"I don't see the ballot result as a key near-term credit rating driver," Andrew Colquhoun, the Fitch ratings sovereign analyst told Reuters.

But he added: "If the DPJ splits, then there would be more political uncertainty which would make it more difficult to see a fiscal plan happening in the medium term -- which would tend to be negative."

Fitch rates Japan's foreign currency debt AA and its local currency debt at AA-minus, with a stable outlook.

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