TimeLine Layout

March, 2017

  • 20 March

    Singapore’s looming debt wall fuels concern as Ezra stumbles

      Bloomberg Default fears are resurfacing in Singapore ahead of a wall of maturing corporate debt, as a US bankruptcy filing by a firm from the city flags lingering pain despite economic recovery. Pressure to pay down obligations has been unrelenting. Companies excluding banks must repay S$38 billion ($27 billion) of local bonds over the next four years. The maturities ...

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  • 20 March

    Australia housing market may face more lending restrictions

      Bloomberg Australia is facing a period of “heightened risk” in the housing market, the nation’s top banking regulator said, amid rising speculation further lending curbs may be imposed to cool runaway housing prices. Australian Prudential Regulation Authority Chairman Wayne Byres said that while he refused to ever use the “B-word” — referring to a bubble — “if everyone isn’t ...

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  • 20 March

    India woos PE investors to meet $11bn asset sale target

      Bloomberg India is asking private equity funds to invest in profit making state-controlled companies as Asia’s third biggest economy seeks to meet its asset sale target of 725 billion rupees ($11 billion) for next financial year. The government is inviting buyout firms to “look into the opportunity of picking up strategic stakes in state assets, whether as a technology ...

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  • 20 March

    Rupee jump may push India Central Bank to use rare cash tool

      Bloomberg The rupee’s surge and a banking system awash with funds will shift focus to a little-used tool in the Indian central bank’s arsenal before next month’s policy review. The Reserve Bank of India may consider raising the cash reserve ratio for the first time since 2010 if deposits accumulated due to November’s cash ban don’t flee over the ...

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  • 20 March

    Insurance, petchems dampen Saudi, Qatar rises

      Reuters Stock markets in the Middle East were mixed on Monday with petrochemicals and the insurance sector weighing on Saudi Arabia while Qatar rose as it completed its upgrade by index compiler FTSE Russell to secondary emerging market status. The Saudi index fell 0.5 percent with the main drag coming from the petrochemical sector as Brent oil futures fell ...

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  • 20 March

    Modi magic seen lasting in Indian stocks amid foreign flows

      Bloomberg Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s election-win magic looks to be casting a spell on the Indian stock market. The S&P BSE Sensex index will climb to 32,000 by the end of December, up more than 8 percent from its close of 29,518.74 on Monday, according to a median estimate of eight traders and investors surveyed by Bloomberg News on ...

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  • 20 March

    Global stocks weighed down by G20 statement

      LONDON / AP Global stock markets were trading lower on Monday after finance ministers from the world’s major economies dropped a pledge to oppose trade protectionism from a weekend statement due to resistance by the Trump administration. In Europe, France’s CAC-40 fell 0.3 percent to 5,015 while Britain’s FTSE 100 declined 0.1 percent to 7,417. Germany’s DAX declined 0.3 ...

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  • 20 March

    Tesla’s fundraising is just an appetizer

      Tesla Inc. clearly understands the best appetizers leave you hungry for more. After months of playing coy about whether or not it would raise more money, Elon Musk’s electric-vehicle-cum-renewable-energy company announced it was seeking up to $1.15 billion in new money, three quarters of it from a convertible bond and the rest from selling new stock. Bit of a ...

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  • 20 March

    India needs private equity to create corporate losers

      Private equity in India is beset by a trinity of predicaments. The first is what managers get paid for: finding businesses that can deliver 20% returns in an economy where asset valuations, at least in public markets, are already the most expensive in Asia. A bigger problem is the frustration of knowing where the winners are hidden in the ...

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  • 20 March

    UK bankers need to come clean on Brexit costs

      It’s a sad state of affairs when European unity is splintering before the UK has even officially triggered the process of leaving the EU. It’s worse for the City of London that banks and insurers can’t easily exploit that to their advantage. Regulators, officials and ministers across Europe have spent the past week throwing rocks at each other about ...

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