700 Billion Yen Lost in a Rough Market! Nikko AM Spring Competition Winners Announced!

TOKYO–(Business Wire)–
Nikko Asset Management Co., Ltd. (Nikko AM) has announced the winners of the
Spring Competition in Country Pick, Nikko AM’s online investment simulation
game. The Spring Competition, finishing in June, was the second three-month
competition held by Nikko AM. In contrast to the Winter Competition,
participants in the Spring Competition faced serious difficulties due to
turbulent stock markets worldwide.

Participants in Country Pick use a virtual investment fund to build a portfolio
by choosing from the equity markets of 31 countries and regions. They then
compete in terms of investment performance. A total of 5,470 participants from
Japan, China and the U.S. competed in the Spring Competition.

As the stock markets worldwide fell significantly during the competition due to,
among other things, financial problems in Europe, participants suffered large
negative returns. As the data on returns by country and region show , even Peru,
the best performer, only recorded a -0.2% return for the period, while Spain,
the worst performer, had a return of -26.2%.

The participant rankings also changed dramatically, as the top performers in the
Winter Competition were completely replaced by new faces during the spring . It
seems that many participants improved their ranking by incorporating into their
portfolios countries from South America and Asia, regions that were less
affected by the European financial problems. On the other hand, participants who
mainly incorporated eurozone stocks into their portfolios saw their rankings
fall significantly. While all of the top performers in the Winter Competition
were from Japan, participants from China ranked highly in the Spring
Competition, with a Chinese resident finishing in fourth place. We may yet see a
Chinese champion in the upcoming Summer competition!

None of the participants finished the Spring Competition with positive returns.
The average return was -13.0%, which demonstrates the difficult markets that
confronted participants. Participants cumulatively lost more than 700 billion
yen from their initial virtual funds, which totaled 5.6 trillion yen, within a
period of only three months.

The all-new Country Pick Student Competition, in which top performers may be
considered as candidates for a Nikko AM internship, started in July
simultaneously with the three-month Summer competition. And Country Pick will
continue even after these competitions finish. The registration deadline for the
Fall competition, which starts in October, and for the Student competition is
2:00 a.m., EDT, on Wednesday, September 29, 2010. In order to compete in either
of these competitions, you will need to register and construct your portfolio by
that time. With 31 countries and regions to choose from, there’s no limit to
what participants can do. Why not try out your ideas in Country Pick?

Country Pick website (Japanese version, U.S. version and Chinese version)

http://sekaino.toshinou.jp/

*The Japanese, U.S. and Chinese versions are, respectively, for those living in
Japan, those living in the United States and those living in Mainland China.
Participants in the U.S. version are requested to register for entry in English
and participants in the Chinese version in Chinese.

Nikko Asset Management Co., Ltd.
Naho Yohda/ Akiko Tsuboi / Shingo Murooka, +81-3-6447-6426
Corporate Communications Department
corpcom@nikkoam.com
FAX: +81-3-6447-6813

Copyright Business Wire 2010

FACTBOX-Asia’s solar energy market potential

June 17 (Reuters) – Asia could account for a quarter of global solar capacity in five years, possibly overtaking the United States, if the region’s policy makers continue to enact measures supporting solar use.

Stocks | Global Markets

In 2009, the region’s biggest solar markets installed nearly 1,000 Megawatts (MW) of solar facilities, with Japan accounting for half that total, according to the European Photovoltaic Industry Association (EPIA).

The EPIA expects that market to grow 9-fold to 7,500 MW by 2014. That is possible if Asian governments implement policies supporting solar use such as giving preferential rates for solar energy or offering cash subsidies to builders of huge ground-mounted solar facilities.

Until recently, Japan and Australia were the only markets for solar energy in Asia, with solar cells and panels being manufactured Japan, China, South Korea and Taiwan.

The main drivers for the industry are commitments from around the region to slash emissions and a global push to boost renewable energy’s share of total electricity production.

China, India, Japan and South Korea are expected to account for over 90 percent of the Asian solar market by 2014.

(For an ANALYSIS on India’s solar program; [ID:nTOE65902M]

JAPAN:

- was the world’s third-largest market for solar energy, helped by subsidies to households installing photovoltaic (PV) systems.

- EPIA expects Japan to become a 1,000 MW market this year.

- has pledged to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions by 25 percent in 2020 and is expanding the use of solar and other renewable energy sources to achieve this target.

- PV technology is well established and widely used in buildings and some residential areas, and would complement plans to establish future large solar projects.

- plans to install 28 Gigawatt (GW) of solar energy by 2020, rising to 53 GW by 2030.

CHINA:

- is among the world’s largest suppliers of solar panels, but uses little of what it produces domestically. With more than 12 GW of large projects in the pipeline, China could rapidly become a major market, according to EPIA.

- the government announced a solar program in March 2009 followed by a second, larger program in July for ground-mounted PV systems.

- installed 160 MW of solar capacity last year.

- unofficial solar target is 20 GW by 2020, and industry experts believe it could top targets if it implements a feed-in tariff or sets a preferential rate per kilowatt-hour of solar energy. Timing on this is unclear.

INDIA:

- has followed China and set an ambitious target of 20 GW of installed capacity by 2022, though it does not have same manufacturing capability. Chinese solar firms are expected to be the main beneficiaries of increased solar demand in India.

- last year set a goal for slowing emissions growth, saying it will rein in its carbon intensity — the amount of carbon dioxide emitted per unit of economic output — by 20-25 percent by 2020, from 2005 levels.

- plans to achieve this by developing solar and other sources of renewable energy. Rising electricity demand and high solar irradiation levels suggest a potentially huge market for solar equipment.

SOUTH KOREA:

- as with Japan, South Korea is leveraging its expertise in electronics and high-end manufacturing to enter the solar market, but it is a relative latecomer and will need to differentiate itself from Japanese and Chinese competitors.

- solar installation dropped to 168 MW in 2009 as a surprise surge in 2008 prompted an easing of subsidies in the sector.

- still keen, however, to develop its solar market and requires power utilities to generate at least 2 percent of their total capacity from renewable energy sources.

OTHERS:

- Australia installed 66 MW of solar capacity in 2009, bringing it closer to its target of generating a fifth of its electricity from renewable energy by 2020.

- a government grant scheme has been the main driver behind off-grid solar PV systems. It also implements a feed-in tariff at the state level to promote solar installation.

- Taiwan has a growing manufacturing base for solar cells, while its installed solar capacity remains small. It has leveraged its capability in electronic chip aking to become a leading Asian supplier of solar cells.

Sources: Reuters Asia Clean Tech Handbook, EPIA (Compiled by Leonora Walet, Editing by Ian Geoghegan)

Taobao and Yahoo! JAPAN Open E-Commerce Platforms to Allow Japanese and Chinese Merchants to Engage in Cross-Border Sales

Yahoo! JAPAN merchants to sell goods in China via TaoJapan (taojapan.com)

Taobao Chinese merchants to sell goods in Japan via Yahoo! JAPAN China Mall
(chinamall.yahoo.co.jp)
TOKYO–(Business Wire)–
Taobao, the largest online shopping website in China and a subsidiary of global
e-commerce leader Alibaba Group, and Yahoo! JAPAN Corp. today began operating
complementary online shopping services that connect Japanese consumers with
Chinese merchants and Chinese consumers with Japanese merchants.

Japanese consumers can now buy goods from Taobao merchants in China through
Yahoo! JAPAN China Mall (chinamall.yahoo.co.jp), a new website opened within
Yahoo! JAPAN. Chinese consumers can buy Yahoo! JAPAN Shopping goods through the
new TaoJapan (taojapan.com) website opened as part of Taobao. Consumers of both
countries will be able to buy products available in the other country exactly in
the same way as they normally shop from e-commerce platforms in their own
country, bypassing the usual barriers such as language, laws, delivery
logistics, and payment issues.

The initial service includes tens of millions of items on Yahoo! JAPAN China
Mall and about 8 million on Taobao`s TaoJapan. Both companies intend to expand
the number of products over time.

Taobao and Alibaba.com Japan Co., Ltd. will jointly operate TaoJapan.
Alibaba.com Japan will serve as fulfillment service provider for Yahoo! JAPAN
China Mall.

Alibaba.com Japan is a joint venture between Alibaba.com (HKSE: 1688, 1688.HK),
the world`s largest business-to-business e-commerce platform, and SoftBank Corp.
Alibaba Cloud Computing, a subsidiary of Alibaba Group and developer of an
advanced data-centric cloud computing service platform, will provide support to
both parties in this new initiative. Alibaba Cloud Computing serves an important
role in the e-commerce ecosystem by providing a comprehensive suite of
Internet-based computing services, which include e-commerce data mining,
high-speed massive e-commerce data processing, and data customization. Alipay,
an e-commerce payment platform and subsidiary of Alibaba Group, will underpin
the cross-border payment system for merchants on both sides of the border.

About Yahoo! JAPAN

Yahoo! JAPAN is operated by Yahoo Japan Corporation (Listed on 1st Section of
Tokyo Stock Exchange/JASDAQ; stock code 4689; headquartered in Minato-ku, Tokyo;
established on January 31, 1996; President & CEO Masahiro Inoue). A
comprehensive information site, it boasts approximately 52.11 million unique
users monthly* and about 2.03 billion page views daily. It includes search,
content, community, e-commerce, and mobile services among its many services.

*Nielsen Online`s NetView JP, March 2010, access from home or office, excluding
Internet application.

About Taobao

Launched in 2003, Taobao (www.taobao.com) is the largest Internet retail website
in China. It provides the most comprehensive product offering and serves more
than 190 million registered users as of April 28, 2010. Transaction volume on
Taobao (gross merchandise volume or GMV) exceeded RMB200 billion (US$29 billion)
in 2009. According to government statistics, online retail equaled approximately
1.98 percent of China’s total retail trade in 2009. Taobao is the primary online
shopping destination for the largest online population in the world.*

Taobao is wholly owned by Alibaba Group.

*According to China Internet Network Information Center (CNNIC), China had 384
million Internet users as of December 31, 2009.

About Alibaba Group

Alibaba Group makes it easy for anyone to buy or sell online anywhere in the
world. We are a family of Internet-based businesses that includes
business-to-business international trade, online retail and payment platforms
and data-centric cloud computing services. The Group was founded in 1999 by Jack
Ma, a pioneer who has aspired to help make the Internet accessible, trustworthy
and beneficial for everyone. The privately held Alibaba Group reaches Internet
users in more than 240 countries and regions, and employs 17,000 people in more
than 60 cities in Greater China, Japan, Korea, the United Kingdom and the United
States.

About Alipay

Alipay is China’s leading online payment solution, enabling individuals and
businesses to execute payments online in an easy, safe and secure manner. Alipay
had a registered user base of over 300 million as of March 2010. Alipay partners
with banks to provide an escrow service for payments, which reduces the
settlement risks faced by Alipay’s customers in their e-commerce transactions.
Alipay, headquartered in Hangzhou, was founded by Alibaba Group in 2004.

Alipay is wholly owned by Alibaba Group.

About Alibaba Cloud Computing

Alibaba Cloud Computing was established in September 2009 with the mission of
building an advanced data-centric cloud computing service platform. The company
is committed to supporting the growth of Alibaba Group and the whole e-commerce
ecosystem by providing a comprehensive suite of Internet-based computing
services, which include e-commerce data mining, high-speed massive e-commerce
data processing, and data customization.

Alibaba Cloud Computing is wholly owned by Alibaba Group.

Alibaba Group
John W. Spelich
+852 9017 7444
johnspelich@hk.alibaba-inc.com
or
Justine Chao
+852 9720 3118 / +86 159 2075 1261
justinechao@hk.alibaba-inc.com

Copyright Business Wire 2010

U.S. out to make China feel awkward, says North Korea

North Korea said the United States was blaming it for sinking a South Korean warship in order to keep a U.S. Marine base in Japan and make China, the North’s only major ally, feel “awkward”.

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao, South Korean President Lee Myung-bak and Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama are meeting on South Korea’s Jeju island on Saturday and escalating tension on the Korean peninsula will certainly be high on the agenda.

The United States and South Korea have accused North Korea of the March 26 sinking of the Cheonan, in which 46 South Korean sailors die. But China, eager not to upset stability on the Korean peninsula, has not apportioned blame.

The mounting antagonism between the two Koreas has unnerved investors, worried the confrontation could erupt into conflict. Many analysts say that neither side is ready to go to war but warn more skirmishes may lie ahead, especially along their disputed sea border off the west coast.

“The U.S. secretary of state (Hillary Clinton) let loose a spate of sheer lies to brand the DPRK as the chief culprit of the warship sinking during her junkets to Japan, China and south Korea,” the KCNA news agency quoted the North Korean Foreign Ministry as saying.

DPRK stands for North Korea’s official name, the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. In English, KCNA refers to “south” Korea, with no capital “S”, as it considers it part of the DPRK, not a separate country.

KCNA said the Obama administration was using the episode to appear strong ahead of mid-term elections, to scare Japan into keeping U.S. troops on Okinawa and to justify its policy of “strategic patience” designed to “degrade the environment for international investment” in North Korea.

“Fourthly, it became possible for the U.S. to put China into an awkward position and keep hold on Japan and south Korea as its servants,” it said.

WALKING DELICATE LINE

Hatoyama has abandoned a pledge to move a U.S. Marine base of the island of Okinawa, saying it was essential for security.

Japan is also toughening sanctions against North Korea, the top government spokesman, Chief Cabinet Secretary Hirofumi Hirano, said on Friday.

South Korea, the United States and Japan have urged China, host of on-again, off-again talks aimed at dismantling North Korea’s nuclear programme, to take a stand on the Cheonan incident. Beijing has resisted turning publicly on North Korea, whose leader Kim Jong-il visited China this month.

Wen is walking a delicate line between shielding North Korea in an effort to maintain stability in the region and assuaging the deepening worries about China’s perceived neutrality in South Korea and Japan, two of its largest trading partners.

Wen told the South Korean president on Friday that Beijing would not “harbour” anyone responsible once China had made its own “fair and objective judgment on who’s at fault”, a South Korean official told reporters.

North Korea has denounced the investigation as biased.

It says it will rip up military agreements with the South guaranteeing safety of cross-border exchanges, and has reportedly put its military on combat readiness, after Seoul said it would ban trade with the North and stop the North’s commercial ships from using South Korean waters.

(Editing by Bill Tarrant)

India a great and emerging global power: US

Ahead of Indo-US Strategic Dialogue, an Obama Administration official termed India as a “great and emerging global power” and said the talks, next week, will take the relationship between the two nations to a new level.

“I think the strategic dialogue speaks for itself. India is a great and emerging global power. Our range of interests are significant in terms of the environment, in terms of regional security, in terms of counterterrorism, economic issues,” State Department spokesman P J Crowley told reporters here.

Leading a high-power delegation of several Cabinet Ministers, External Affairs Minister S M Krishna is scheduled to arrive in Washington in the next couple of days for the first Indo-US Strategic Dialogue from June 1 to June 4.

While the names of the Indian delegation has not been announced yet, it is expected that it would include Human Resources Development Minister Kapil Sibal; Deputy Chairman of Planning Commission Montek Singh Ahluwalia; Minister for Science and Technology Prithvitaj Chauhan; and Foreign Secretary, Nirupama Rao.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton – who returned from her week-long three-nation Asia trip from Japan, China and Seoul — would lead the American delegation.

During Clinton’s visit to India, last year, it was decided that the strategic dialogue should be launched between the two countries.

“We have very strong cultural ties to India, so we look forward to the strategic dialogue. It’s something that the Secretary and the President (of the US) felt important to elevate the level of our coordination and cooperation. So we look forward to the dialogue,” Crowley said in response to a question.

“I think our relations with India have never been stronger. We are talking about the relations between the largest and oldest democracies in the world. We have a great deal in common and we look forward to the meetings next week,” Crowley said.

Japan Kan: told China to make wise decision on yuan

BEIJING, April 3 (Reuters) – Japanese Finance Minister Naoto Kan said on Saturday he told Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao he expects China to make a wise decision on the issue of its yuan currency.

Bonds

“The issue of the yuan, currencies and excess liquidity are related to each other. I told him that I expect China to make a wise decision ,” Kan, who is also deputy prime minister, told reporters after meeting Wen in Beijing.

Kan said he made no specific request about the yuan.

“With regard to Japan-China trade, Japan has no major problems concerning the yuan,” Kan added.

In Washington on Friday, U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said the Obama administration wants to “maximise the chances” that China will quickly lift the value of the yuan and expressed confidence Beijing would decide doing so was in its interest.

His comments, which come as the Treasury Department prepares a hotly anticipated report that could brand China a currency manipulator, suggested the Obama administration was wary of applying too much pressure on China.

Beijing has kept the yuan steady since July 2008, when the global financial crisis significantly worsened, after allowing it to gradually rise for the previous three years.

Saturday’s meeting between Kan and Wen was held ahead of regular bilateral talks, the third in a series, aimed at deepening financial dialogue between Asia’s two economic giants. (Reporting by Tetsushi Kajimoto)

South Korea condemns North Korea’s latest nuclear test

South Korea condemns North Korea's latest nuclear test Seoul – South Korea Monday condemned North Korea’s second nuclear test.

The test was a “serious threat” to peace on the Korean Peninsula and in north-east Asia the government said in a statement after an emergency meeting between South Korea’s President Lee Myung Bak and leading security officials.

The test posed “a serious challenge to the international regime on nuclear non-proliferation,” the statement added.

Seoul said it will work with other participants in the six-party talks – the US, Japan, China and Russia – concerning an end to North Korea’s nuclear weapons programme so that the United Nations Security Council takes “appropriate steps” against North Korea.

In April, North Korea withdrew from the six-party talks after the UN Security Council condemned its April five rocket launch, which was regarded by the West as a cover for a ballistic missile test. (dpa)

China economy improves but deflation haunts Japan

* China economy better than expected, March output up – Wen

* Japan wholesale prices fall, deflation looms again

* Asian stocks stall near 3-mth high, Shanghai copper jumps

* Stock rally hinges on U.S. bank results this week (For full crisis coverage, double click on [nCRISIS])

By Jason Subler and Yuzo Saeki

BEIJING/TOKYO, April 13 (Reuters) – China’s economy is in better shape than expected, the country’s premier said, but a big fall in wholesale prices in Japan showed the world’s second-largest economy was sliding back towards deflation.

A jump in China’s industrial output last month, along with a record rise in new lending, gave further credence to the idea that the bottom of the worst global crisis since the Great Depression may not be far away.

“China’s economy has shown some positive signs, but we can all see that our economy still faces some very big difficulties,” Premier Wen Jiabao told reporters on Saturday in Thailand, where East Asian leaders gathered for a summit.

China was planning a new economic stimulus package targeted at boosting consumption, the China Securities Journal reported on Monday, citing a senior official of the State Information Center, which is affiliated with the country’s top planning agency. [ID:nSHA22356]

In the latest sign that Beijing’s efforts to revive the economy were beginning to bear fruit, new loans and money supply growth surged to record highs in March. [ID:nPEK337716]

Wen also said industrial output growth picked up to 8.3 percent in March from a record low of 3.8 percent in the first two months of the year, topping analysts’ expectations.

While things were looking modestly brighter in China, the economic situation in Japan remained bleak.

Wholesale prices are falling at their fastest rate since 2002, March figures showed on Monday, as weakening domestic demand on top of falling commodity prices drives Japan towards its second bout of deflation this decade. [ID:nT344226]

With interest rates already almost at zero, analysts say the Bank of Japan has limited weapons to fight deflation in the country’s worst recession since World War Two.

“The BOJ has reached its limit in terms of conventional monetary policy moves,” said Norihiro Fujito, general manager at Mitsubishi UFJ Securities.

“If prices continue to slide, the BOJ may need to expand its government bond buying, and move toward quantitative easing.”

STOCKS STALLED, COPPER JUMPS

Asian share markets were stalled near three-months highs in holiday-thinned trade, with Japan’s Nikkei average .N225 down 0.3 percent and MSCI’s measure of stocks elsewhere in the Asia-Pacific .MIAPJ0000PUS up by a similar amount. [MKTS/GLOB]

Markets in Hong Kong and Australia remained closed for the Easter break, with London markets also closed on Monday.

Prices for copper in Shanghai SCFc3 jumped by the daily limit of 7 percent, boosted by the Chinese economic data and figures showing a decline in inventories of the industrial metal.

Key to global share markets this week are earnings from top U.S. banks including Goldman Sachs (GS.N), JPMorgan (JPM.N) and Citigroup (C.N).

Hopes that the economic slump may be abating and some stability may be returning to the banking sector have helped underpin a month-long recovery in stocks from 12-year closing lows hit in early March.

“The market is looking like it wants to continue the rally,” said Andre Weisbrod, president and chief executive officer of STAAR Financial Advisors Inc in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

MSCI’s World index has climbed by more than a quarter since sinking to a six-year low early last month, having fallen 60 percent from its November 2007 peak.

U.S. President Barack Obama said on Friday that despite the recession’s heavy toll, the U.S. economy is showing “glimmers of hope.” [ID:nN10327428]

Further evidence as to whether such glimmers are likely to prove more lasting will come this week with U.S. retail, housing and industrial production data, and some see little hope of a meaningful rebound. [ECI/US]

“I’m still very pessimistic about the prospects of any enduring recovery,” said T.J. Marta, chief market strategist at Marta on the Markets, in Scotch Plains, New Jersey. “In spite of the stabilisation, there is no sustainable upward trend in growth.” (Writing by Lincoln Feast;Editing by Tomasz Janowski)

Asian summit to discuss rocket and recession

The global economic crisis and the security threat posed by North Korea’s rocket launch will grab much of the attention this weekend when Asian leaders gather in Thailand for their annual summit.

It will be the first meeting of the leaders of Japan, China and South Korea since Sunday’s launch of what North Korea called a satellite, but which many countries saw as a thinly disguised test of a rocket capable of hitting the United States.

The summit, which gets underway on Friday in the beach resort of Pattaya, also comes barely a week after G-20 members agreed a $1.1 trillion blueprint to revive the global economy.

Other issues, ranging from energy and food security to climate change and world trade, will also be discussed by leaders of a region encompassing three billion people and which accounts for nearly 30 percent of global GDP.

The 10 members of the Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) span the political and economic spectrum: Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.

They will meet first with their counterparts from China, Japan and South Korea — the so-called ASEAN +3 — and India on Saturday. That group will then be joined by Australia and New Zealand on Easter Sunday for the full-blown “East Asia Summit”.

China and Japan are the world’s biggest creditors, holding nearly $3 trillion between them in foreign exchange reserves, which theoretically at least gives them considerable clout over any plans to reform the global financial architecture. Beijing and other emerging market economies such as India certainly want their voices heard.

“Japan is beginning to give up the leading role in Asia to China,” said Hidehiko Mukoyama of the Japan Research Institute. “I don’t think there is any doubt that China will tend to take the leading role at the summit.”

GROWTH HALVED

The export-dependent economies of East Asia have begun feeling the pain of the financial crisis, with the Asia Development Bank forecasting economic growth will nearly halve to 3.6 percent this year.

The agreements reached at the G-20 summit have eased some of the pressure on East Asian leaders to do more — most have already adopted expansionary monetary policies and economic stimulus programmes.

“If there was nothing done at G-20 and the world economy continued to go into freefall, the East Asia members would be forced to think up something on their own,” said Thitinan Pongsudhirak, a foreign affairs lecturer at Bangkok’s Chulalongkorn University.

Japan, South Korea and China will meet on the sidelines of the summit to talk about how to restart stalled nuclear talks with North Korea after the rocket launch, which analysts say may embolden the North to ask for more concessions.

The leaders will likely talk about pushing forward with a vast free trade area that could eventually stretch from Beijing to Sydney and from Manila to New Delhi — even as they watch each other take stealthy steps toward trade protectionism.

“There’s a lot of de-globalisation going on right now; protectionism is increasing,” said Anton Gunawan, chief economist for Indonesia’s Bank Danamon.

Global trade and the financial crisis will be the focus of a “Global Dialogue” in Bangkok featuring U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and the heads of the World Trade Organisation, the World Bank, the IMF and ADB that will be held on Sunday.

In Thailand, which is ASEAN chair this year, the biggest outcome may be just simply concluding the meeting without incident to show the world the country is back to normal.

The meetings were postponed last year after anti-government protesters seized Bangkok’s main airports in a dramatic escalation of Thailand’s long-running political crisis which shows no signs of abating.

The summit is being held in Pattaya, a resort town famed for its racy nightlife about 150 kms from Bangkok, to avoid protesters in the Thai capital, who have surrounded Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva’s offices to force him from power.

Japan, Indonesia agree to double currency swap amount

Tokyo – Japan and Indonesia signed an agreement on bilateral currency swap to increase the amount from 6 billion dollars to 12 billion dollars under an initiative to stabilize the financial state of the South-east Asian region, Japanese Finance Ministry said Monday.

Under the agreement, Indonesia would be able to swap rupiah worth up to 12 billion dollars when short-term liquidity support is needed.

The Chiang Mai Initiative was first introduced in the region in 2000 to allow the members of Association of South-East Asian Nations and Japan, China and South Korea to swap currencies on a bilateral basis among one another.

The scheme was aimed at averting a financial crisis similar to the 1997-98 currency collapses in Asia.

Global meltdown helping Asian powers to rise, says Brit Minister

London, Feb.28 (ANI): British Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s special envoy on the economic crisis has said the global economic meltdown is accelerating Asia’s rise to global power.

Lord Malloch-Brown, the foreign office minister, said the emerging economies were more important than ever in tackling the world’s problems.

Speaking in Thailand as he lobbied a meeting of south east Asian leaders on Brown’s vision for free trade and financial reform, he said:”[Asian countries] want to know that we are not just going to ask Asia to help with the recovery then go back to our bad old transatlantic ways.”

“There has to be a real sense that there’s been a real change to reflect the shifting economic sands,” The Telegraph quoted him, as saying.

Lord Malloch-Brown said there needed to be a “rebalancing of the global economy and rebalancing of the power in it”.

He said that meant giving a greater say in institutions like the International Monetary Fund to Asian countries, many of whom have bitter recent memories of IMF interventions.

According to Lord Malloch-Brown it also meant a greater role for groups such as the G20 leading world economies rather than the more exclusive G8, whose share of the world economy is in decline.

Although Asian economies have been hit hard by the global crisis, the region will continue to grow this year while the economies of the West shrink.

Japan, China and South Korea have announced packages worth hundreds of billions of dollars to fund the IMF and support Asian currencies – taking on a traditional American role.

South East Asian leaders have promised to work together to shield their region from the global economic crisis. (ANI)

Global meltdown helping Asian powers to rise, says Brit Minister

London, Feb.28 (ANI): British Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s special envoy on the economic crisis has said the global economic meltdown is accelerating Asia’s rise to global power.

Lord Malloch-Brown, the foreign office minister, said the emerging economies were more important than ever in tackling the world’s problems.

Speaking in Thailand as he lobbied a meeting of south east Asian leaders on Brown’s vision for free trade and financial reform, he said:”[Asian countries] want to know that we are not just going to ask Asia to help with the recovery then go back to our bad old transatlantic ways.”

“There has to be a real sense that there’s been a real change to reflect the shifting economic sands,” The Telegraph quoted him, as saying.

Lord Malloch-Brown said there needed to be a “rebalancing of the global economy and rebalancing of the power in it”.

He said that meant giving a greater say in institutions like the International Monetary Fund to Asian countries, many of whom have bitter recent memories of IMF interventions.

According to Lord Malloch-Brown it also meant a greater role for groups such as the G20 leading world economies rather than the more exclusive G8, whose share of the world economy is in decline.

Although Asian economies have been hit hard by the global crisis, the region will continue to grow this year while the economies of the West shrink.

Japan, China and South Korea have announced packages worth hundreds of billions of dollars to fund the IMF and support Asian currencies – taking on a traditional American role.

South East Asian leaders have promised to work together to shield their region from the global economic crisis. (ANI)

Global meltdown helping Asian powers to rise, says Brit Minister

London, Feb.28 (ANI): British Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s special envoy on the economic crisis has said the global economic meltdown is accelerating Asia’s rise to global power.

Lord Malloch-Brown, the foreign office minister, said the emerging economies were more important than ever in tackling the world’s problems.

Speaking in Thailand as he lobbied a meeting of south east Asian leaders on Brown’s vision for free trade and financial reform, he said:”[Asian countries] want to know that we are not just going to ask Asia to help with the recovery then go back to our bad old transatlantic ways.”

“There has to be a real sense that there’s been a real change to reflect the shifting economic sands,” The Telegraph quoted him, as saying.

Lord Malloch-Brown said there needed to be a “rebalancing of the global economy and rebalancing of the power in it”.

He said that meant giving a greater say in institutions like the International Monetary Fund to Asian countries, many of whom have bitter recent memories of IMF interventions.

According to Lord Malloch-Brown it also meant a greater role for groups such as the G20 leading world economies rather than the more exclusive G8, whose share of the world economy is in decline.

Although Asian economies have been hit hard by the global crisis, the region will continue to grow this year while the economies of the West shrink.

Japan, China and South Korea have announced packages worth hundreds of billions of dollars to fund the IMF and support Asian currencies – taking on a traditional American role.

South East Asian leaders have promised to work together to shield their region from the global economic crisis. (ANI)