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Kamis, 22 Januari 2009

Korea's Economy Shrinks 5.6%, Biggest in 11 Years

South Korea's economy shrank a seasonally adjusted 5.6 percent in the fourth quarter from the previous three months, far more than expected and the biggest fall in nearly 11 years, the central bank said on Thursday.

The quarterly decline was the sharpest since a 7.8 percent contraction in the first quarter of 1998, when the nation was hit by the Asian financial crisis, reflecting the local impact of a deepening global recession.

A Reuters poll of 12 economists had forecast gross domestic would contract 2.7 percent during the October-December period from the previous quarter.

The fall compared with a 0.5 percent rise in the third quarter and 0.8 percent growth in the second quarter.

From a year earlier, Asia's fourth-largest economy shrank 3.4 percent, more than the 0.7 percent slump forecast in the poll.

That compared with a 3.8 percent annual rise in the previous quarter and 4.8 percent expansion in the second quarter.

For the full year of 2008, the economy grew 2.5 percent, compared with the central bank's projection in December of 3.7 percent.

Reuters poll showed annual growth is expected to slide rapidly to 1.2 percent this year, which would be the worst annual performance since the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis.

Copyright 2009 Reuters. 

Korea's Economy Shrinks 5.6%, Biggest in 11 Years

South Korea's economy shrank a seasonally adjusted 5.6 percent in the fourth quarter from the previous three months, far more than expected and the biggest fall in nearly 11 years, the central bank said on Thursday.

The quarterly decline was the sharpest since a 7.8 percent contraction in the first quarter of 1998, when the nation was hit by the Asian financial crisis, reflecting the local impact of a deepening global recession.

A Reuters poll of 12 economists had forecast gross domestic would contract 2.7 percent during the October-December period from the previous quarter.

The fall compared with a 0.5 percent rise in the third quarter and 0.8 percent growth in the second quarter.

From a year earlier, Asia's fourth-largest economy shrank 3.4 percent, more than the 0.7 percent slump forecast in the poll.

That compared with a 3.8 percent annual rise in the previous quarter and 4.8 percent expansion in the second quarter.

For the full year of 2008, the economy grew 2.5 percent, compared with the central bank's projection in December of 3.7 percent.

Reuters poll showed annual growth is expected to slide rapidly to 1.2 percent this year, which would be the worst annual performance since the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis.

Copyright 2009 Reuters. 

Record Japan Export Plunge Adds to Recession Gloom

Japanese exports plunged a record 35 percent in December from a year earlier and business sentiment hit a new low, highlighting the severity of the global financial crisis and reinforcing expectations that Japan faces a long and deep recession.

Katsumi Kasahara / AP

As gloom over the outlook persists, the Bank of Japan is expected to emerge from a two-day policy meeting on Thursday with more details of how it will seek to unglue financial markets through buying commercial paper and maybe even other corporate debt, as companies struggle to raise cash.

"With growth in Asia and other emerging economies slowing, there is nothing to support Japanese exports. We'll likely see external demand push down October-December GDP growth quite a bit," said Yoshiki Shinke, senior economist at Dai-ichi Life Research Institute. "The yen's sharp rise is also very damaging and will delay a recovery in Japan's economy."

Rising risk aversion in the face of renewed jitters over the U.S. and European banking sector woes pushed the yen [JPY-TN  88.99    -0.47  (-0.53%)   ] to a 13-year high against the dollar near 87 yen on Wednesday, before regaining some ground.

Boding ill for the economy, Japanese manufacturers' business mood hit a new record low and service sector sentiment worsened to a level not seen in seven years, the Reuters Tankan showed.

To deal with the downturn, many companies are cutting jobs, raising more concerns over domestic consumption. 
     
Sales Slide to Asia, U.S.

The slide in exports has left Japan with a trade deficit for three months in a row, despite recent falls in oil and other commodity prices.

The record 35.0 fall in exports from a year earlier was bigger than an already gloomy median forecast from economists for a 30.1 percent fall.

Shipments to recession-hit United States plunged 36.9 percent on sharp declines in automobile shipments, marking the 16th straight month of decreases.

Exports to Asia tumbled 36.4 percent with those to China down 35.5 percent, as the trade within East Asia collapsed in the wake of the plunge in the global demand for cars and electronics.

Plummeting exports has prompted leading Japanese manufacturers, particularly car makers such as Toyota Motors [TM  67.52    1.64  (+2.49%)   ], to slash production at an unprecedented pace.

The trade data showed imports tumbled 21.5 percent, also more than a 16.5 percent fall economists had forecast, a sign domestic demand may be weakening. 
     
Gummed Up Markets

Worries over the deepening recession and ongoing problems in global financial markets in the past several months have made it more difficult for companies to raise funds.

Though the strain has shown some sign of easing, worries persist about renewed market tensions ahead of the March end of the fiscal year, when fund demand tends to rise as many companies close their books in Japan.

The BOJ last month cut interest rates to 0.10 percent from 0.30 percent as the global downturn sent exports and industrial production into cliff-diving.

At its policy meeting ending on Thursday, the central bank is expected to follow up on the pledge it made last month that it will buy commercial paper outright to help companies' financing.

Also likely to be debated is whether the BOJ should buy not just short-term corporate debt such as commercial paper but longer-term corporate debt such as bonds, although many analysts do not expect the central bank to buy corporate bonds at this stage.

Copyright 2009 Reuters. 

China's Economy Slows Sharply as Crisis Bites

China's economic growth slumped to 6.8 percent last quarter, dragging down the pace of expansion for all of 2008 to a seven-year low of 9.0 percent as the full force of the global financial crisis struck home.

Fourth-quarter gross domestic product growth, measured from a year earlier, dropped from the 9.0 percent clip of the July-September quarter and undershot market expectations of a 7.0 percent reading.

The slowdown snapped a five-year streak of double-digit growth that has turned China into the third-largest economy in the world after the United States and Japan.

"The international financial crisis is deepening and spreading with continuing negative impacts on the domestic economy," the National Bureau of Statistics said in a statement on Thursday accompanying the release of the figures.

Many economists believe the economy will expand by no more than 5-6 percent this year, which would be the weakest performance since 1990.

Others expect the government to hit its target of 8 percent growth as a 4 trillion yuan ($585 billion) stimulus package and much easier monetary policy kick in.

The figures were consistent with recent data showing falling power consumption and back-to-back declines in both exports and imports as the bottom fell out of the world economy.


An estimated 10 million migrant workers have already lost their jobs in export industries battered by a collapse in demand in the United States and Europe and the evaporation of trade finance as hard-hit global banks cut off credit lines.

Beijing has made no secret of its concern that rising unemployment poses a threat to social stability and the legitimacy of the ruling Communist Party and has vowed to do whatever it takes to crank up growth and jobs.

The statistics office stressed the need to promote steady and rapid economic growth in order to maintain a "harmonious and stable social climate".

Copyright 2009 Reuters

Sony Warns of $2.9 Billion Loss, Steps Up Restructuring

Sony warned it would post a record $2.9 billion annual operating loss due to sliding demand and a stronger yen, and unveiled fresh restructuring steps to revive its ailing electronics operations.

The operating loss will be Sony's first in 14 years, underscoring deepening troubles for a company that has fallen behind Apple's [AAPL  82.83    4.63  (+5.92%)   ] iPod in portable music,Nintendo in videogames, and is losing money on flat TVs.

"Sony needs further restructuring, not just cost-cutting but a revamping of its business operations," said Naoki Fujiwara, a fund manager at Shinkin Asset Management.

Sony [SNE  22.58    1.05  (+4.88%)   ] said it now expects an operating loss of 260 billion yen ($2.9 billion) for the year to March, down from an earlier projection for a 200 billion yen profit and far worse than earlier media estimates of a loss of 100 billion yen.

The maker of Bravia LCD TVs and PlayStation game consoles said it would respond by accelerating restructuring, more than doubling a cost-cutting target for the year to March 2010 to 250 billion yen.

Sony said it would end TV production and design operations at one plant in Japan and consolidate those operations into another factory in the country.

It plans to cut headcount by 30 percent in operations related to TV design worldwide.

Other measures include consolidation of resources for batteries and small and mid-size liquid crystal display (LCD) panels, and pay cuts for directors and managers.

It expects restructuring charges to total 170 billion yen through the year to March 2010.

Sony 46" BRAVIA® XBR® series LCD Flat Panel HDTV
Sony 46" BRAVIA® XBR® series LCD Flat Panel HDTV

Last month Sony outlined a restructuring plan that included curbing investment, closing five to six plants and cutting a total of 16,000 regular and contract jobs globally to save 100 billion yen a year in costs.

But Sony's management, led by Chief Executive Howard Stringer, faced criticism from analysts and investors who said more drastic measures were needed to streamline a sprawling empire that includes semiconductors, movies and insurance.

"Sony has to consider ways to lower fixed costs not only for its TV business but for the whole company. It will have to start cutting development costs in addition to production costs," said Nomura Securities senior analyst Eiichi Katayama.

Sony attributed 340 billion yen of the 460 billion yen swing in its operating forecast to its core electronics division, as the slowing global economy depresses demand for its digital cameras, video recorders and flat TVs.

But it has also been hurt by the slide in the Japanese stock market, which sliced into the value of securities held by its financial unit.

Slower sales in its game and movie divisions have also hit its results.

Illustrating the problems Sony faces, Japanese exports plunged 35 percent in December from a year earlier, with electronics sales to China and other parts of Asia among the worst affected as Western orders to Asian assembly plants dry up.

More From CNBC

Jakarta - Memilih perusahaan sekuritas atau perusahaan perantara perdagangan efek alias broker bukan perkara mudah. Apalagi, belakangan ini muncul ket

Jakarta - Memilih perusahaan sekuritas atau perusahaan perantara perdagangan efek alias broker bukan perkara mudah. Apalagi, belakangan ini muncul ketakutan dari investor maupun calon investor lantaran munculnya beberapa masalah keamanan investasi dari beberapa broker.

"Sebetulnya investor maupun calon investor tidak perlu takut. Kasus 2-3 broker jangan digeneralisir bahwa semua broker berpotensi bermasalah," ujar Direktur Perdagagan Fix Income dan Derivatif, Keanggotaan dan Partisipan Bursa Efek Indonesia, Guntur Pasaribu saat dihubungi detikFinance, Selasa (20/1/2009).

Menurut Guntur, masalah beberapa broker tersebut saat ini sedang ditangani intensif oleh BEI maupun Badan Pengawas Pasar Modal & Lembaga Keuangan (Bapepam-LK). BEI bersama Bapepam sedang berupaya mengentaskan masalah ini secepatnya.

"Jadi investor tidak perlu khawatir. Industri ini masih bagus kok. Hanya 2-3 broker saja yang bermasalah. Sisanya yang 100 lebih itu masih bagus kok," ujar Guntur.

Namun bagi investor maupun calon investor yang masih ragu, Guntur memberikan beberapa tips-tips dalam memilih broker untuk berinvestasi di pasar modal.

"Hal yang perlu diperhatikan dalam memilih broker terutama adalah struktur permodalan broker tersebut. Kedua, manajemen broker. Ketiga, divisi-divisi yang ada di broker tersebut seperti riset dan sebagainya. Terakhir, nilai MKBD broker juga bisa dijadikan acuan memilih broker," papar Guntur.

Kendati demikian, Guntur mengembalikan pada masing-masing investor untuk memilih broker sesuai keinginannya. "Tips-tips tadi bisa digunakan untuk memilih broker. Tapi tentunya, pilihan tetap di tangan investor untuk memilih broker mana yang nyaman bagi mereka," ujar Guntur.

Pengamat pasar modal Dandossi Matram ketika dihubungi detikFinance juga mengungkapkan hal senada dengan Guntur. Dandossi dengan tegas mengatakan bahwa kasus beberapa broker jangan dijadikan acuan untuk menilai broker secara keseluruhan.

"Jangan digeneralisir dong. Broker-broker lainnya masih bagus kok," ujar Dandossi.

Senada dengan Guntur, Dandossi juga menekankan, bahwa struktur permodalan broker
merupakan faktor yag paling harus diperhatikan dalam memiih broker. Kendati tidak secara tersurat, Dandossi mengatakan bahwa di tengah kondisi pasar modal dan krisis keuangan global seperti ini, broker-broker pelat merah boleh dikatakan termasuk dalam kategori broker yang aman secara permodalan.

"Saat ini, mungkin broker-broker pelat merah bisa dikatakan termasuk yang paling aman untuk investasi, karena permodalan mereka kuat karena didukung pemerintah," ujarnya.

Jika mengacu pada nilai MKBD, maka urut-urutannya adalah PT Bahana Securities Rp 387,248 miliar, PT Mandiri Sekuritas Rp 106,439 miliar, PT Danareksa Sekuritas Rp 70,681 miliar dan PT BNI Securities Rp 34,332 miliar.

Tiga perusahaan yang disebut pertama di atas juga menduduki peringkat 5 besar sebagai penjamin emisi obligasi di tahun 2008. Mandiri Sekuritas menduduki peringkat teratas dengan nilai emisi sebesar Rp 7,133 triliun, dilanjutkan oleh Danareksa Sekuritas dengan nilai emisi Rp 1,792 triliun.

PT Indo Premier Securities menduduki peringkat ketiga dengan nilai emisi Rp 1,217 triliun, kemudian dilanjutkan PT CIMB-GK Securities Indonesia dengan nilai emisi Rp 1,050 triliun. Sementara Bahana menduduki peringkat kelima dengan nilai emisi Rp 892 miliar.

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