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Clock ticking for Egypt’s finances

The Media Line Staff

Cairo, Egypt (The Media Line) – Egypt faces a risk-laden game of Beat the Clock as it tries to get its political house in order before its foreign currency reserves sink much more.

Reserves fell to $16.4 billion in January from about $36 million a year earlier, a drop that economists all agree imperils the economy and requires Egypt to seek support from external sources and make difficult decisions to cut back government spending and subsidies. But that will be difficult given the political situation.

Presidential elections are now scheduled for late May, preceded by a six-week election season. Meanwhile, a parliament dominated by Islamists is tussling over who will control the government with the interim military council. A dispute with the United States over foreign human rights activists detained in Egypt is threatening vital American aid to the country. In the meantime, no U.S. assistance is being transferred to the country.

The timetable looks even more challenging when the role of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) is factored in. Egypt’s Ministry of Finance is reportedly counting on the IMF’s executive board to approve a $3.2 billion facility towards mid-March, which will then go to parliament for approval about the time the presidential campaign is getting under way.

“Time is not on Egypt’s side and politics could be the prime suspect to derail or delay an IMF program or exacerbate dollarization and [foreign currency] outflows,” Bank of America Merrill Lynch analyst Jean-Michel Saliba said in a note to investors last week.

Concerns that Egypt’s political trajectory looks to be on a collision course with its financial needs came in the form a downgrade in its bond rating by Standard & Poor’s (S&P) on Feb. 10. S&P lowered its ratings to B from B+ on Friday, five notches into junk territory, and said further downgrades could be on the way.

“The negative outlook reflects our view that a further downgrade is possible if the government fails to stem the decline in reserves, or an uncertain policy environment and weak institutions emerge from the ongoing political transition,” S&P said. Moody’s and Fitch, two other bond-rating agencies, cut their ratings on Egypt earlier.

Diminishing foreign reserves may be the most immediate threat to Egypt’s economy, but it is not the only one. More than a year after the revolution that brought down Hosni Mubarak, economic growth has stalled, the number of visiting tourists has plummeted and foreign investment has evaporated, all of which is exerting huge economic pressure on the government at a time of political flux.

Bank of America Merrill Lynch estimated that Egypt’s drawdown of its foreign currency would slow to what it called a “more manageable” $500 million a month because the foreign capital that has been responsible for much of the decline has been nearly drained out of the country.

On the other hand, Egypt could also get a boost from a rare instance of foreign investment if France Telecom goes ahead with the purchase of a $2 billion stake in the Egyptian Company for Mobile Service, popularly known as Mobinil, which it agreed to buy from Egyptian entrepreneur Naguib Sawiris last week. If the transaction goes through, that money might be transferred to Egypt in March.

But Merrill also noted that Egypt’s finances look more precarious than the headline foreign reserves figures show. Taking out Egypt’s holdings of gold, reserves fall to $13.6 billion, which are equal to just 2.8 months of imports, Saliba wrote in the Feb. 16 note. Meanwhile, Egypt’s external financing needs could reach some $11 billion through June 2013, Finance Minister Momtaz el-Saieed said Feb. 10.

But accepting aid is politically problematic because the public looks askance at foreign assistance, especially from the U.S. Only 26 percent favor accepting American aid, according to a Gallup poll taken in December. The proportion willing to accept international aid rises to 50 percent (with 42 percent opposing) and those willing to accept it from fellow Arabs reaches 68 percent (28 percent opposing), Gallup found.

Egyptians don’t like aid because it usual comes with strings attached, such as unpopular economic reforms in the case of the IMF and maintaining the 1979 peace treaty with Israel, in the case of American assistance. Political opposition to foreign assistance caused the interim military government to reject the original offer of an IMF credit last spring, a decision many economists say has exacerbated the financial troubles in which Egypt now finds itself.

Parliament must approve an IMF loan, but Essam el-Erian, a leader of the Muslim Brotherhood’s Freedom and Justice Party, which dominates parliament, said his group may vote against it because it might impinge on Egyptian sovereignty. “Look at Greece,” el-Erian said in an interview with Bloomberg News this week. “Everybody is telling it what to do.”

Above and beyond accepting foreign financial assistance, the other remedies for Egypt’s foreign reserves ailment are all painful for politicians and the public alike.

One is bringing down the budget deficit. As the economy has shrunk and the government boosted handouts in the early days of the revolution to try and palliate the population, Egypt’s fiscal deficit has ballooned. Officials recently revised upward their forecast for the budget deficit for the fiscal year ending June 30 to 9.4 percent of gross domestic product.

The solution would be to cut spending, particularly costly and wasteful subsidies on food and energy. Indeed, the military government recently announced plans for $4 billion in spending cuts and the IMF and others providing aid will have their own list of fiscal measures. But political analysts suggest that will inevitably mean cuts to popular energy and food subsidies of the kind that have set off riots in the past.

Another remedy is devaluing the Egyptian pound. In spite of Egypt’s mountain of economic woes, the pound had shed only about 1 percent of its value over the past year as the central bank acted to shore up its value by raising interest rates and drawing down on reserves. But the bank’s options are narrowing as it is forced to devalue the pound, which will almost certainly lead to higher inflation.

Analysts see some positive elements in the Egyptian political scene. Saliba notes that the decision to move up the presidential vote to May reduces the length of the campaign season and the opportunity for grandstanding by candidates. Ahmed Galal, managing director of the Economic Research Forum in Cairo, maintains that the Muslim Brotherhood has taken a pragmatic line on subsidiary reform and supports free markets.

©2012. The Media Line. All Rights Reserved.

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Diane Alter – AHN News Reporter

New York, NY, United States (AHN) – U.S. stocks opened mixed to higher Thursday fueled by lower than expected jobless claims and impressive earnings from General Motors.

Just after the open on Wall Street, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 15 points. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index and the NASDAQ were both nearly unchanged.

Investors were buoyed by the a report from the Labor Department that showed initial jobless claims fell to a near four-year low.

Also giving stocks momentum was an earnings report from General Motors. GM reported the largest annual profit in its history on Thursday, even as losses in Europe were a drag on fourth quarter earnings.

The auto maker said it earned a quarterly profit of $472 million, or 28 cents a share. It was the eight consecutive quarterly profit for the car maker, which strategically cleared up much of its debt in bankruptcy a few years ago. For all of 2011, GM earned $7.6 billion, most of it from North America.

In early morning trading, shares of GM climbed almost 5 percent, and were last changing hands at $26.15 per share.

Holding stocks back were continued worries over Greece’s ability to secure a second bailout. Investor sentiment was further dampened after rating agency Moody’s put 17 global banks and 114 European financial institutions on review for possible downgrades.

Gold fell as Greece’s woes hurt the euro. The precious metal tumbled $16.40 to $1,711.80 a troy ounce. Oil was flat at $101.67 a barrel.

Ringing the opening bell on the NYSE was Westminster’s Best in Show, Malachy, a petite, composed and well manicured Pekinese.

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Windsor Genova – AHN News News Writer

George Town, Cayman Islands (AHN) – Hedge fund manager MR Capital Management said on Tuesday that the current mispricing on Chinese reverse takeover (RTO) companies still offer opportunity to investors but due diligence must be conducted before investing in such firms.

“It is not a normal mispricing situation. It is a mispricing in value of growth and quality companies. This could be a great opportunity,” says Mohannad ALRashoudi, founder and fund director of MR Capital Management, which is managed by the Cayman Islands-based Global Consumer Loyalty Fund Ltd.

ALRashoudi’s advice comes as American companies avoid Chinese RTO companies in reaction to a regulation prohibiting U.S. accounting firms from opening their own auditing offices in mainland China. Instead, American companies are required to hire the services of local auditing firms.

He says that such market reaction is justified, especially when the subject is accounting fraud.

RTO, also called reverse merger, allows private companies to become publicly traded without undergoing an initial public offering (IPO) by buying sufficient shares, which are then exchanged for shares in the public company. This type of merger enables a private company to avoid paying expensive fees associated with an IPO. However, no additional funds are acquired through such merger and the private company must have enough funds to complete the transaction on its own.

Reverse mergers allow companies to immediately start trading without undergoing the usual underwriting process as required by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Many companies that took this route used unknown American audit firms that did very little due diligence.

The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and Chinese regulators are currently involved in an impasse about auditing procedures for U.S.-listed Chinese companies believed to be involved in fraud. These Chinese firms are able to fend off U.S. accountants from conducting audits, hiding from a Chinese law that forbids disclosure of “state secrets.”

According to ALRashoudi, this stalemate should be resolved quickly and added that no company should cover anomalous trading and use sovereignty to hide their insufficient financial transparency.

The alleged fraud has completely damaged some of these U.S. traded Chinese firms. But the MR Capital executive insisted that all that are needed are transparency and more compliance aside from conducting extensive due diligence.

“The problem here is that diversification in those companies isn’t a solution to participate, as diversification may well increase the risk. In our views, proper and extensive due diligence is the only solution. Then, you may and may not end with a single holding. As of today, no fund manager would like to be associated with Chinese reverse mergers, especially on the long side. But we prefer to do our due diligence,” says ALRashoudi.

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Tejinder Singh – AHN News Correspondent

Washington, D.C., United States (AHN) – Chances of getting a work-related visa to the United States are slimmer for anyone with an Indian passport, according to a recent report that found immigration authorities increased the denial rate in the last four years.

The increase resulted in many employers being unable to transfer their employees into the U.S. to work on research projects or serve customers, the National Foundation for American Policy (NFAP) said in its report entitled “Data Reveal High Denial Rates for L-1 and H-1 Petitions at USCIS.”

The denial rate for India-born applicants for new L-1B petitions rose from 2.8 percent in fiscal year 2008 to 22.5 percent in FY 2009, the report said.

“USCIS [United States Citizens and Immigration Services] adjudicators have demonstrated a capacity to keep skilled foreign nationals out of the U.S. by significantly increasing denials, along with often time-consuming Requests for Evidence, despite no change in the law or relevant regulations,” said Stuart Anderson, NFAP’s executive director and former head of policy and counselor to the commissioner of the Immigration and Naturalization Service.

According to the report, denial rates for L-1B petitions filed with USCIS, which are used to transfer employees with “specialized knowledge” into the U.S., rose from 7 percent in 2007 to 22 percent in 2008, despite no change in the law or relevant regulation.

Immigration authorities denied more L-1B petitions for new petitions for Indians in FY 2009 (1,640) than in the previous nine fiscal years combined (1,341 denials between FY 2000 and FY 2008), the report found.

The report noted, “If one considers that in FY 2011 63 percent of all L-1B petitions received a Request for Evidence and 27 percent were issued a denial, that means U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services adjudicators denied or delayed between 63 percent to 90 percent of all L-1B petitions in 2011.”

Denial rates for H-1B petitions, which are similar to L-1B visas, increased from 11 percent in 2007 to 29 percent in 2009, and remained higher than in the past for H-1Bs at 21 percent in 2010 and 17 percent in 2011, it noted.

“The dramatic increase in denial rates and Requests for Evidence for employment petitions without any change in the law or regulations raises questions about the training, supervision and procedures of the career bureaucracy that adjudicates petitions and the U.S. government’s commitment to maintaining a stable business climate for companies competing in the global economy,” the report said.

NFAP, an Arlington, VA-based policy research group, noted that its report used official data from USCIS.

“The data indicate much of the increase in denials involves Indian-born professionals and researchers,” the report said.

Anderson added, “The high denial rates belie the notion adjudications have become more lenient.”

The U.S. State Department, which controls the visa process, commented that the report “only covers adjudications made via USCIS,” and did not use “any State Department data.”

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U.S. stock futures rose, signaling the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index may rebound from its first weekly drop of 2012, as Greek Prime Minister Lucas Papademos won approval for austerity measures needed to secure rescue funds.

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Diane Alter – AHN News Reporter

Washington, D.C., United States (AHN) – The struggling U.S. Postal Service posted a $3.3 billion loss on Thursday and projected it would run out of cash in October as its fiscal woes continued to widen.

The $3.3 billion loss in the last quarter of 2011 included a $3.1 billion charge for mandated health care prefunding payments.

An overhaul that would cut $20 billion in annual costs by 2015 was proposed by Postmaster General Patrick Donahoe, but the move would require congressional approval to implement the majority of the proposed changes.

The post office will most certainly hit its $15 billion debt ceiling in 2012, and may no longer be able to borrow from the Treasury, the agency’s chief financial officer, Joe Corbett, noted.

If the Postal Service hits its borrowing limit and does not find other sources of revenue or cost savings, it could be forced to delay payments to vendors and workers.

The Postal Service, a government agency, cannot write off it debts by filing bankruptcy. Ultimately U.S. taxpayers are on the hook for the agency’s losses.

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Windsor Genova – AHN News News Writer

Washington, D.C., United States (AHN) – President Barack Obama has issued an executive order freezing all assets of the Iranian government and financial institutions being held in the U.S.

In the order, which takes effect Monday, Obama declared that all property and interests in property of the Government of Iran, including the Central Bank of Iran, that are in the United States are blocked and may not be transferred, paid, exported, withdrawn, or otherwise dealt in. Iranian property that comes to the U.S. or taken possession by any U.S. person were also ordered frozen.

Obama directed the Secretary of the Treasury, Secretary of State and other U.S. government agencies to implement the order.

The President cited attempts by Iran’s central bank and other banks’ to conceal transactions of sanctioned parties and the weakness of the Islamic country’s anti-money laundering regulations as reason for issuing the order.

But the main aim of the latest sanction is to cripple Iran’s nuclear program that Washington believes is intended to make weapons of mass destruction. Tehran has repeatedly denied that it is building a nuclear bomb saying the nuclear program is for peaceful purposes.

The United Nations and the European Union had also imposed arms and economic embargo against Iran in an attempt to force Tehran to stop enriching uranium.

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Tejinder Singh – AHN News Correspondent

Washington, D.C., United States (AHN) – The United States this week expanded cooperation with India on labor and employment issues with the signing of a memorandum of understanding (MoU) that was hailed by both as a tool to enhance strong bonds between the two democracies.

Calling the MoU “an essential part of our bilateral relationship,” Mark Toner, the State Department spokesman, told journalists on Friday, “When you look at our relationship and the strategic dialogue that we have with India, there’s many baskets of issues that fall under that rubric, and certainly labor laws are one of those.”

Earlier on Thursday, Mallikarjun Kharge, visiting Indian minister for labor and employment, and U.S. Labor Secretary Hilda Solis inked a bilateral MoU for cooperation in the areas of skill development, youth employment, occupational safety and health and mines safety and health.

Kharge emphasized that, “the road map laid down in the Memorandum of Understanding will facilitate very close cooperation and interaction between our two countries and bring about improvements in the life of workers and their working conditions.”

Welcoming the structured bilateral engagement, Solis said, “Our governments share a firm commitment to workers and their rights. Today marks the launch of a new program to share valuable information that will ensure that workers’ rights are respected.”

Kharge said that India was interested in increasing its know-how in the areas of accreditation systems, self-regulation and auditing through collaboration, exchange and sharing of ideas, among other initiatives with the U.S.

During a press conference with Washington-based Indian media, the minister said, “This is the first time India and the U.S. is signing such an important document and naturally it is going to help both of us–more to us and they will be also very anxious to help us.”

Citing a vision by Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh of teaching skills to 500 million persons by 2022, the visiting minister stated that collaboration with U.S. would “enrich us in the areas of training delivery methods, certification, preparation of instructional material, curriculum development and expanding outreach.”

The latest cooperation move would help in further developing “an appropriate employment strategy for inclusive growth in India and strong bonds between the people of our two great nations,” Kharge emphasized.

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The Media Line Staff

Beijing, China Arieh O’Sullivan / The Me – The capture of Chinese construction workers by rebels in Sudan has presented China with an opportunity to flex its muscles and show it not so shy to use military force to protect its citizens abroad.

With literally millions of citizens abroad, the capture of some two dozen road workers in the Sudanese frontier seems hardly significant. But the Chinese government is taking it very seriously and Beijing immediately dispatched a “task force” to Sudan to “assist the rescue work,” a Chinese Foreign Ministry statement said.

Rebels in southern Sudan have taken hostage 29 Chinese workers building a highway. Conflicting reports said that some had been freed and that another 18 had evaded capture, but some may have been wounded in a firefight on Saturday between government troops and the rebel Sudan People’s Liberation Movement-North (SPLM-N) in South Kordofan.

The Chinese media, which are giving the affair wide coverage, have highlighted the fast-rising superpower’s shyness about protecting its citizens and investments abroad. Juxtaposed with the United States’ dramatic commando raid last week to free hostages held by pirates in nearby Somalia, the crisis puts Beijing in an uneasy position.

“The United States will not tolerate the abduction of our people,” U.S. President Barack Obama said succinctly after the raid by U.S. Navy seals.

China is in the midst of establishing its own version of protecting its citizens. The rethink over its traditional policy of non-interference emerged last year when it dispatched military aircraft and warships to rescue 30,000 of its citizens trapped in Libya’s civil war. So far, it has reacted to the current hostage crisis by calling on the relevant parties “to keep calm and exercise restraint, ensure the safety of the Chinese nationals and release them as soon as possible on the basis of humanitarianism,” in the words of the Foreign Ministry.

But it has also exerted enormous diplomatic pressure on Sudan to free the workers of the state-owned Power Construction Corp. of China, affiliated with Sinohydro Corp. In Beijing, Vice Foreign Minister Xie Hangsheng summoned a senior diplomat at Sudan’s embassy to deliver the message, the official Xinhua news agency said in a brief bulletin.

A statement from the workers’ employers, Sinohydro, said that it and the Chinese Embassy would “spare no effort in ensuring the personal safety of those abducted and rescuing them.”

“It is important for them not to lose credit. Something will happen,” Mirza David, chief executive officer of International Security Academy, which trains body guards to work in the Arab world, told The Media Line.

“They have the forces right there in the Gulf of Aden. Something will happen, not because they care about their citizens, but it’s an attempt to show force,” David said.

China has more than 100 companies and 10,000 personnel working in both north and south Sudan, according to Xinhua. Not showing concern for their lives would not go well back home.

Further, the evacuation of Chinese citizens out of Libya set a precedent for the Chinese government that it will take bigger steps to rescue its citizens from harmful situations. The Chinese have special forces available right there in the Gulf of Aden with its 10th naval task force with over 700 commandos aboard. They are there performing anti-piracy patrols and ship escorts.

David of the ISA said he has seen an increase in risk assessment by Chinese firms working abroad. Some of his graduates have opened personal protection schools in China where there has been surge in demand from the private sector for bodyguards, he said.

“Their attitude toward life is different than in the West. The fate of some two dozen Chinese being held hostage doesn’t move them so much. In Somalia there are lots of Chinese who have been held by pirates but the Chinese haven’t been so inclined to take any action there,” David said. “But now there could be some operation because their image might be shaken.”

David, a former Israeli commando, said this could prove to be an opportunity for China to shine since the forces holding the hostages were not likely professionals.

“An operation would probably be easy. They aren’t ‘big cannons’ there, and a raid would likely be successful. This is a chance to show that they are a superpower and they could do something for the image that you shouldn’t mess with the Chinese,” David said.

China is Sudan’s major trading partner, the largest buyer of Sudanese oil, and a key military supplier to the regime in Khartoum.

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Weak U.S. dollar keeps gold glistening

Diane Alter – AHN News Reporter

New York, NY, United States (AHN) – Gold prices rallied for a third straight day, spurred higher by a weak U.S. dollar and the Fed’s comments on interest rates made earlier in the week.

In mid-afternoon trading on Friday, the most actively traded gold contract, for February delivery, gained $10.50 to $1734.40 a troy ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Giving gold prices a boost were comments from Fed officials on Wednesday in which they said in a statement they expected short-term interest rates to remain near zero until late 2014, citing a slow recovery in the labor market, high unemployment, the ailing housing market and moderating inflation.

Over the past three days, gold futures have gained more than $70 a troy ounce. Gold bugs have embraced, and taken comfort in, the forecast from the Federal Reserve.

The record low, near zero rate outlook for U.S. interest rates cut the so-called “opportunity cost” of holding gold. Over the past several days, market participants have opted to hold gold over low-yielding U.S. Treasuries. The worry of missing out on paltry interest payments has been replaced by the anticipated gains in value from the yellow metal.

A weaker dollar also stoked demand for the precious metal among buyers who purchase gold in foreign currencies. Gold, priced in U.S. dollars, appears cheaper to foreign buyers who purchase the metal in their own home currency.

Silver, poor man’s gold, has been rising in concert. The gray metal was up 17 cents in afternoon trading Friday, last quoted at $33.82.

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