WRAPUP 3-China’s new yuan regime to look a lot like old one

BEIJING, June 20 (Reuters) – China will keep the yuan’s exchange rate at a basically stable level, the central bank said on Sunday, suggesting that the country’s new currency regime will look a lot like the old one.

China announced on Saturday that it would resume making the yuan more flexible, signalling that it was ready to break a 23-month-old peg to the dollar that had come under intense international criticism.

But in a lengthy statement about how reform would proceed, the central bank explicitly ruled out a one-off revaluation, repeatedly said there was no basis for any big appreciation and added that the currency’s value was not far off its fair level.

Lack of a real rise in the exchange rate would provide ammunition for critics, especially hawks in the U.S. Congress, who say Beijing’s actions will speak louder than its words and that penalties should be imposed if it keeps the yuan artificially cheap.

Leaders of the United States, the European Union, Japan and the International Monetary Fund, among others, welcomed its vow to deepen yuan reform as a hopeful contribution to the balancing of the world economy.

All eyes on Monday will be on the daily reference rate set by the Chinese central bank to manage the yuan’s value. Many economists believe that Beijing will nudge the exchange rate higher in increments, not leaps.

Global equity markets may rally as the news, coming a week before a Group of 20 meeting in Canada, eases fears of a trade row between the United States and China at a delicate time for the world economy.

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Text of China central bank statement [ID:nTOE65I017]

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Graphic r.reuters.com/sut87k

New Tone, Same Old Yuan link.reuters.com/cad92m

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The central bank on Sunday promised to implement “dynamic management and adjustment”, which could lead to the yuan falling, not just rising, against the dollar depending on how other currencies perform.

But the crux of the exchange rate system would be the same as it had been previously, meaning that the yuan is likely at most to return to the path of gradual gains against the dollar seen for three years until mid-2008.

“Keeping the yuan basically stable at a reasonable and balanced level is an important part of further promoting reform of yuan exchange rate formation mechanism,” the People’s Bank of China said, adding that gradual adjustment was needed in order to give firms time to adjust.

Chinese economists said the move was justified economically and, above all, had a political aim.

“This important declaration by the Chinese government coming before the G20 summit is a big concession to prevent the yuan’s exchange rate from being politicised by Western countries,” said Gao Shanwen, chief economist at Essence Securities in Beijing.

China said that freezing the yuan to the dollar since July 2008 had helped mitigate the impact of the global financial crisis and spur the world’s recovery.

With the economy on a more solid footing, it was time to enhance the exchange rate’s flexibility, though there were no grounds for “large-scale appreciation”, it said.

SURPRISE AND CONTROVERSY

The European Central Bank (ECB) and Jean-Claude Juncker, who heads the Eurogroup of euro zone finance ministers, welcomed in a joint statement China’s decision on the yuan, which is also known as the renminbi (RMB). [ID:nLDE65J03Z]

“Given China’s important role in the global economy, we encourage the authorities to allow for greater flexibility of the RMB effective exchange rate as a means of promoting balanced growth in China and in the world economy,” they said on Sunday.

European leaders have generally been less strident than those in the United States as the euro has fallen sharply against the Chinese currency, buying only 8.45 yuan EURCNY=R now compared with almost 11 in July 2008.

This helped euro zone exporters through the financial crisis. Last year exports from the bloc to China grew 4 percent while those to the U.S. fell close to 20 percent.

Markets have long been waiting for China to break the yuan’s peg to the dollar, but the timing still came as something of a surprise. One day earlier, senior officials had stressed that China would not be bullied into resuming yuan appreciation.

The country’s major newspapers carried no real reports of the policy about-face, just reprinting the central bank’s statement verbatim.

The lack of articles and commentaries for the time being likely reflected a push by the government to get everyone on message about what could be a controversial policy change.

On a few websites, readers still made their views heard.

“This is such worrying news! China, you have surrendered!” wrote one online reader of the Global Times, a popular tabloid.

“We’re so well-behaved, doing whatever the United States asks of us,” wondered another, sarcastically.

Whether U.S. critics of China’s currency regime will agree remains to be seen.

INTENSE CRITICISM

Beijing has faced a barrage of complaints from abroad for keeping the yuan artificially cheap even as the country’s export juggernaut roared back to life.

Much of the rest of the global economy remains sluggish and beset by unemployment in the wake of the financial crisis, and China’s policy is seen as stealing jobs from foreign markets.

U.S. patience with Beijing over the yuan has worn thin and lawmakers threaten to penalise it for a strategy they say is unfair and breaks rules of global trade.

Democratic U.S. Senator Charles Schumer, a leading critic, said China’s statement was too vague and pledged to press ahead with legal action to raise trade barriers.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, who has delayed publication of a potentially embarrassing report that could cite China as a currency manipulator, stressed that China’s actions would speak louder than words.

“This is an important step but the test is how far and how fast they let the currency appreciate,” he said. (Additional reporting by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Benjamin Kang Lim, David Stamp and Jon Loades-Carter)

Ratings agencies concerned about Hungary

(Reuters) – Warnings from Hungarian officials last week about a potential sovereign debt default raise questions about the country’s fiscal outlook and could be negative for its credit rating, rating agencies said on Monday.

Moody’s said comments made by officials in Hungary’s new center-right Fidesz government suggesting the country was close to a Greek-style economic meltdown were “inflammatory” and came at “a delicate time” for global markets.

“The statements are a credit negative because they bring renewed attention to Hungary’s high public and external debts, which, by threatening to drive up interest rates and push down the exchange rate, endanger Hungary’s economic recovery,” Moody’s analyst Dietmar Hornung said in Moody’s weekly credit outlook.

David Heslam, director of Fitch Ratings’ emerging Europe sovereigns, said the comments would not affect Hungary’s funding options but ultimately played into a “key ratings driver” — its fiscal path.

“We are concerned about the fiscal outlook post-elections… Given the high level of debt, there is little room for policy slippage,” he told Reuters.

Noting that Hungary still had a multilateral financing program with the International Monetary Fund that has yet to be drawn this year, Heslam said Fitch would wait to see further details of the government’s new fiscal measures before moving on its credit rating.

Moody’s Hornung said the new government displayed an “apparent willingness to adopt unorthodox measures to stimulate economic growth” which was also sparking concerns.

“In our view, these uncertainties threaten to further impair Hungary’s creditworthiness,” Hornung added.

Moody’s has Hungary’s Baa1-rated government bonds on negative outlook. Fitch has Hungary’s ratings at BBB with a negative outlook.

Standard & Poor’s, which has Hungary’s ratings at BBB- with a stable outlook, said in a statement:

“We will review the government’s report on public finances and the government’s action plan before we would comment further.”

(Reporting by Sebastian Tong and Carolyn Cohn; editing by )

UPDATE 1-Ratings agencies concerned about Hungary

LONDON, June 7 (Reuters) – Warnings from Hungarian officials last week about a potential sovereign debt default raise questions about the country’s fiscal outlook and could be negative for its credit rating, rating agencies said on Monday.

Moody’s said comments made by officials in Hungary’s new centre-right Fidesz government suggesting the country was close to a Greek-style economic meltdown were “inflammatory” and came at “a delicate time” for global markets. [ID:nLDE6550I7]

“The statements are a credit negative because they bring renewed attention to Hungary’s high public and external debts, which, by threatening to drive up interest rates and push down the exchange rate, endanger Hungary’s economic recovery,” Moody’s analyst Dietmar Hornung said in Moody’s weekly credit outlook.

David Heslam, director of Fitch Ratings’ emerging Europe sovereigns, said the comments would not affect Hungary’s funding options but ultimately played into a “key ratings driver” — its fiscal path.

“We are concerned about the fiscal outlook post-elections… Given the high level of debt, there is little room for policy slippage,” he told Reuters.

Noting that Hungary still had a multilateral financing programme with the International Monetary Fund that has yet to be drawn this year, Heslam said Fitch would wait to see further details of the government’s new fiscal measures before moving on its credit rating.

Moody’s Hornung said the new government displayed an “apparent willingness to adopt unorthodox measures to stimulate economic growth” which was also sparking concerns.

“In our view, these uncertainties threaten to further impair Hungary’s creditworthiness,” Hornung added.

Moody’s has Hungary’s Baa1-rated government bonds on negative outlook. Fitch has Hungary’s ratings at BBB with a negative outlook.

Standard & Poor’s, which has Hungary’s ratings at BBB- with a stable outlook, said in a statement:

“We will review the government’s report on public finances and the government’s action plan before we would comment further.” (Reporting by Sebastian Tong and Carolyn Cohn; editing by )

North Korea denies it sank South’s navy ship

North Korea on Saturday denied that it sank a South Korean naval vessel near their disputed sea border late last month.

There has been growing speculation in the South that the ship had been hit by a North Korean torpedo, killing 46 sailors and raising fears it could trigger conflict on the divided peninsula.

The North’s KCNA news agency accused the conservative government in Seoul of trying to foist blame on its reclusive neighbour to boost sagging support ahead of local elections in the South in June.

“The puppet military warmongers, right-wing conservative politicians and the group of other traitors in South Korea are now foolishly seeking to link the accident with the north at any cost,” the North’s KCNA news agency quoted an unnamed military commentator as saying.

“Another sinister aim sought by the puppet regime in floating the … story is to justify the persistent and anachronistic policy towards the DPRK (North Korea) and shirk the blame for having driven the inter-Korean relations to the worst crisis.”

South Korea, which has already brought some of the wreck to the surface, has said the blast that sank the vessel was caused by an external explosion.

Investigators from several countries, including the United States, are trying to determine what caused the 1,200-tonne Cheonan to split in half and plunge some 45 metres (148 feet).

South Korea’s defence minister said this month it may have been hit by a torpedo, immediately thrusting suspicion on the North.

Local media has pinned the blame on North Korea in the absence of any other likely reasons, though official statements have been far more circumspect.

Few expect the South, worried about hurting its own economy in the midst of recovery, to risk taking military action against the North if investigations show Pyongyang sank the ship.

It is a delicate time for President Lee Myung-bak, whose relatively high ratings in opinion polls have dipped slightly following the sinking.

His defence minister and the military have come under some criticism for being slow over their handling of the issue.

Lee wants a strong showing in the June elections to give him the political muscle he needs to push through more reforms, which have been floundering in an unruly parliament, even though it is dominated by his ruling party.

Relations between the two Koreas have been chilly since Lee took office early in 2008, ending years of generous aid which had helped prop up the North’s broken economy.

South Korea raised the stern of the ship on Friday and expects to bring the rest to the surface in the next few days, as it searches for clues to one if its deadliest naval disasters since the 1950-53 Korean War ended in a ceasefire.

The sinking could also complicate the resumption of stalled international talks on ending North Korea’s atomic arms programme in return for aid to prop up its broken economy, experts said.

(Additional reporting by Suh Kyungmin; Writing by Jonathan Thatcher; Editing by Bill Tarrant)

IOC executive to meet amid Olympics money-sharing row

Denver, Colorado – The International Olympic Committee’s executive board convenes in Denver Wednesday amid fresh controversy over a revenue-sharing agreement with the US Olympic Committee.

Senior IOC members are insisting the agreement gives the US an unfair share of television-contract and sponsorship money in a row which comes at a delicate time for Chicago’s bid to stage the 2016 summer Games.

On Tuesday, the Association of Summer Olympic International Federations (ASOIF) urged the IOC to terminate its long-standing contract with the USOC and start negotiating a new one.

“The greed of this organization is unlimited. Totally unlimited,” Hein Verbruggen, former head of the International Cycling Union, said of the USOC. “It infuriates everybody and especially me.”

The present agreement, first signed in the late 1980s, allocates 12.75 per cent of the IOC’s US TV revenues to the USOC, and 20 per cent of revenues from the IOC’s top sponsorship programme.

The USOC has in the past argued that it is entitled to a larger share since US TV rights and sponsors provide the IOC with more than half of its revenues.

However in the run-up to the three-day IOC executive board meeting and SportAccord convention, key IOC members have made it clear they are running out of patience.

Denis Oswald, head of the International Rowing Federation, who was Tuesday re-elected president of the powerful ASOIF, accused the USOF of dragging its feet and not responding to proposals.

“I hope the IOC follows what we have recommended,” he said. “We are angry because we have been working on this for four years and there has been absolutely no progress. We want to be treated with more respect.”

More than 1,000 delegates are expected at the conference, which will feature key public presentations by the four candidates for the 2016 Olympics – Chicago, Madrid, Rio de Janeiro and Tokyo.

Chicago bid organizers have moved to distance themselves from the revenue issue, although some US media reports have said the controversy could hurt the city’s 2016 chances.

Chicago 2016 chief executive CEO Pat Ryan has invited President Barack Obama to be in Copenhagen for its final presentation before the IOC general assembly in October in what would be a major boost for its chances.

The IOC will select the host city by secret ballot on October 2.

Meanwhile Bob Ctvrtlik, USOC vice-chairman for international relations, called for a “calm reasoned dialogue” and “a solution that benefits all members of the Olympic movement” on the revenues debate.

“We’re looking for a long-term solution and it’s probably not best to do it in an emotional or pressure environment,” he said.

“It’s not easy, it is complicated and I think we all need to do that in a nice calm manner.” (dpa)

U.S. downed Iranian drone over Iraq in February

Baghdad, Mar.17 (ANI): American warplanes shot down an unmanned Iranian aircraft last month as it flew over Iraq, U.S. and Iraqi officials said Monday.
The U.S. military said it had tracked the drone for about an hour and 10 minutes before shooting it down February 25 about 60 miles northeast of the capital, Baghdad, the Washington Post reports.

“This was not an accident on the part of the Iranians,” the military said.

U.S. military officials in Washington, speaking on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the subject, said they could not recall the United States ever before publicly acknowledging the downing of an unmanned Iranian aircraft.

The incident comes at a delicate time in Iranian-U.S. relations, which have grown strained at times over allegations that Iran has supported groups fighting American troops here.

In a departure from Bush administration policy, President Obama has said he would be open to engaging Iran, which borders both Iraq and Afghanistan.

Officials at Iraq’s Defense and Interior ministries confirmed the U.S. military report. An official at the Interior Ministry, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said the drone was downed about 12 miles inside Iraqi territory near the town of Balad Ruz in Diyala province.

He said the U.S. military had suggested to Iraqi officials that the drone was trying to scout routes to smuggle Iranian weapons into the country.

Iranian officials have not commented on the downing of the aircraft, which the Pentagon identified as an Ababil 3. (ANI)