SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Gold/Mining/Energy : Gold Price Monitor -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Bobby Yellin who wrote (13906)6/28/1998 8:17:00 PM
From: goldsnow  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116770
 
Rubin backs China's resolve to hold firm on yuan
05:17 a.m. Jun 28, 1998 Eastern
By Knut Engelmann

KUALA LUMPUR, June 28 (Reuters) - U.S. Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin
left China on Sunday to embark on a whirlwind tour of crisis-torn Asia,
convinced that Beijing has the resolve to live up to its new image as an
island of stability in the battered region.

During his three-day stay in Beijing on the sidelines of U.S. President
Bill Clinton's state visit, Rubin received his strongest assurances yet
that China will keep its yuan currency stable to help prevent a renewed
Asian financial thunderstorm.

China's ''unambiguous'' promise not to devalue its currency came as an
obvious relief to Rubin since bolstering Beijing's resolve to hold the
line on the yuan has become a top priority on Washington's agenda in
Asia.

Both Clinton and Rubin heaped praise on China for resisting the pressure
to devalue in the face of financial turmoil, lauding Beijing's
''statemanship'' and forward-looking economic policies -- even as they
admitted it was in China's own interest to do so.

A devaluation would cut the price of Chinese products in terms of
foreign currency, making it easier for the country's exporters -- the
backbone of China's economy -- to compete with other nations whose
currencies have been weakened.

But China, in the midst of a historic economic transformation that has
already brought about profound changes in the every day lives of China's
1.2 billion people, knows there is no such thing as a free lunch.

Not only could a devaluation in China set off a chain-reaction of
similar moves by other Asian countries, thereby neutralising the effect
of Beijing's move, China would also have to pay a steep political price,
effectively gambling the respect it has gained in the West for resisting
the temptation of a quick-fix devaluation.

''One continues to be impressed by the vision expressed by their leaders
and by the understanding they express of the issues they face,'' Rubin
told reporters accompanying him aboard an Air Force jetliner en route to
Malaysia.

The U.S. Treasury chief last visited China nine months ago.

Asked to compare his impressions now to what he had heard back then,
Rubin said Beijing's commitment to overhauling its creaking economy and
slowly opening it up to the outside world appeared to remain strong.

''They continue to express a determination to move along at a good
pace,'' he said.

Still, the summit brought no breakthrough on Beijing's 10-year long
effort to join the World Trade Organisation, which the United States
continues to stall because it believes China needs to do more to its
vast domestic market to foreign competition.

The ringing endorsement of Beijing's monetary stance was in stark
contrast to the continued pleading with the region's erstwhile
powerhouse, Japan, to finally do something -- anything -- to get its
sickly economy back on its feet.

Japan is mired in a deep recession and its currency, the yen, has fallen
drastically against the dollar, making it harder for the rest of Asia to
recover from its own difficulties. But years of urging Tokyo to finally
tackle its economic weakness so far have fallen on deaf ears.

The imminent threat of a Chinese devaluation aimed at catching up with
the plunging yen was a key factor behind the surprise U.S.-Japan move to
bolster the yen by jointly intervening in the foreign exchange market
two weeks ago.

Even though the move had only a short-lived effect on the yen, which
previously had hit its lowest level against the dollar in eight years,
China's central bank governor Dai Xianglong made a point of thanking
Rubin for the intervention.

''Clearly, we have a fair bit of discourse with the Chinese about the
region,'' Rubin said on Sunday. ''The role of Japan is enormously
important. It's integrally related to what's happening in Asia.''

Rubin, who on Friday also met Finance Minister Xian Huaicheng and Prime
Minister Zhu Rongji, the architect of China's reforms, has not ruled out
the possibility of further intervention to help the yen.

But Clinton on Sunday lamented the lack of a magic ''wand'' to make Asia
's crisis go away, and agreed with Rubin that the key to the yen's
stability was Japan's own economic policies.

''We can be supportive, but they have to make the right decisions,'' he
said.

After a series of high-level meetings in Kuala Lumpur, Rubin was due to
travel to Bangkok on Monday and continue on to Seoul on Tuesday in a
whistlestop tour of the region designed to take Asia's economic pulse
almost a year after its financial woes began.

Thailand and South Korea are among the hardest-hit of the former Asian
tiger economies. Together with Indonesia, they are at the receiving end
of bail-out deals totalling more than $120 billion, drawn up by the
International Monetary Fund and conditional on harsh economic reform
programmes.

Copyright 1998 Reuters Limited.



To: Bobby Yellin who wrote (13906)6/28/1998 9:01:00 PM
From: goldsnow  Respond to of 116770
 
WEEK AHEAD-Japan stocks to focus on yen-dollar(RPT
12:07 a.m. Jun 28, 1998 Eastern
By Andrew Morse

TOKYO, June 28 (Reuters) - Tokyo share traders will keep one eye on the
volatile yen-dollar rate and the other on government plans to
rehabilitate the country's crumbling banking sector this week, dealers
said on Sunday.

Discussion of a merger between Long-Term Credit Bank of Japan and
Sumitomo Trust & Banking, which emerged late on Friday, will also be
watched.

Traders said the falling yen -- it slipped to about 143 to the dollar in
Tokyo last week -- would further erode the shine of Japanese shares,
particularly for foreign investors.

''When the yen falls, it underscores the troubles in Japan's financial
system,'' said Masayuki Nishina, a trader at New Japan Securities. ''It
undercuts confidence.''

Nishina said if the yen fell to 145 per dollar, the benchmark Nikkei 225
average would likely fall to around 14,800 points.

The Nikkei closed the week 57.94 points lower at 15,210.04.

Little help is expected on Monday, when the Bank of Japan releases its
widely watched ''tankan'' survey of business sentiment. The survey is
released on Monday at 8:50 a.m. (2350 GMT on Sunday).

The diffusion index for major manufacturers, which subtracts the number
of companies seeing business conditions worsening from those seeing an
improvement, will fall to minus 42, according to a Reuters survey of
economists.

More importantly, traders say, is the sector-by-sector breakdown,
released on Tuesday at the same time of the day. Those statistics will
offer clues as to which industries have been hardest hit by Japan's
recession, they say.

The market will also focus on developments in Japan's debate on the
creation of a ''bridge bank'' which would extend credit to healthy
borrowers of failed financial institutions.

It would also take responsibility for problem loans at those
institutions.

Japan's financial system is choked with as much as 77 trillion yen ($546
billion) in problem loans, prompting banks to curtail their lending.

While decisive action to deal with the staggering loans problem will put
some banks out of business, traders say fixing the situation will
restore confidence to the market.

''I'm still of the opinion they're going to come up with something
substantial,'' said Michael Wilkins, a dealer at Credit Lyonnais.
''Because that's such a significant event, this is going to remain a
market focus.''

On Sunday, Japan signalled it may have heard the message for urgent
action by advancing by up to a week a July 8 deadline for coming up with
the plan.

Speaking on NHK national television, Masakuni Murakami,
secretary-general of (LDP) upper house members said: ''At first, the
prime minister said by July 8, but the day before yesterday he told us
to come up with a final decision by July 2.''

The decision to merge LTCB and Sumitomo Trust, if realised, could also
help further progress in dealing with the system's weaknesses, traders
said.

''This is an example of things to come,'' said a trader at a foreign
brokerage. ''Things are progressing and that is good news.''

Other factors which may influence Tokyo stocks this week are as follows:

+The Bank of Japan releases minutes of Policy Board's May 19 Monetary
Policy Meeting, which left policy unchanged, on Tuesday.

+Japan government and ruling Liberal Democratic Party bad loans panel to
meet on Thursday.

((Tokyo Equity Des MESSAGE TERMINATED

Copyright 1998 Reuters Limited.



To: Bobby Yellin who wrote (13906)6/29/1998 6:53:00 PM
From: goldsnow  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116770
 
Telstra puts its Y2K bill at $500m

By David Crowe

Telstra yesterday confirmed the mammoth nature of its millennium bug
challenge in a filing to the Australian Stock Exchange, putting a $500
million cost estimate on the carrier's year 2000 compliance.

The Telstra filing was just one of scores as companies including Boral,
Amcor, Davids Ltd and Country Road outlined the impact of Y2K on their
businesses.

The likely cost of the Y2K problem varied enormously, illustrated by the
$2 million cost estimate of Telstra competitor AAP Telecommunications.

A series of filings from small mining, investment and manufacturing
companies revealed the cost of the bug to be as low as $10,000 at
companies with only personal computer systems to be upgraded and no
other exposure to date-change problems in electronic systems.

But in the rush to file Y2K statements to the Australian Stock Exchange
by the close of business today, some companies, such as the Seven
Network, declined to give a cost estimate.

Telstra told the ASX its Y2K risks included not being able to bill
customers, legal action from customers or trading partners for loss of
service, or fines from regulators for any failures. "Telstra's
expenditure on year 2000 for the financial year 1997-1998 will be lower
than initially anticipated," it said, attributing this to lower than
expected remediation work on some of its biggest information systems
such as the Flexcab billing system.

It also said it had deferred the installation of some Y2K-compliant
systems to later this year due to changes by some suppliers.

AAPT separated the $2 million cost of its Y2K program from the ongoing
upgrade of its network.

"In the course of ongoing business and anticipated capital investments,
AAPT will ensure that the switches will be compliant by June 1999," it
said.

Industrial companies such as Boral and George Weston Foods drew
distinctions between the installation of new financial systems and year
2000 remediation.

"Boral estimates the cost of the year 2000 Project will be of the order
of $40 million. This includes the cost of new hardware and software,
re-programming costs testing, project management and contingencies," it
said.

This included internal costs and the costs of external suppliers and
consultants but not the pre-implementation costs of Boral's Finance 2000
Project.

While some tried to pinpoint the final cost of the bug, George Weston
said it could not break out the costs of the millennium bug from the
costs associated with its SAP R/3 software project.

"Because of the wide-ranging objectives and rationale behind adoption of
the SAP project, it is not possible to allocate with any degree of
accuracy the proportion of the cost applicable to year 2000 compliance
per se, and therefore, the total year 2000 project cost," the company
said.

"It is considered that any arbitrary cost-allocation could be
misleading. However, it is acknowledged that the total cost impact of
the year 2000 project in both direct cost and dedicated human resources
in the period 1997-2000 will be significant and material to the group's
financial performance."



To: Bobby Yellin who wrote (13906)7/1/1998 8:00:00 PM
From: goldsnow  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116770
 
South Africa threatened by slide in rand's value
By Christopher Munnion in Johannesburg

FEARS of an economic recession in South Africa, which could thwart the
government's plans to narrow the wide gap between the country's rich and
poor, have been raised by the latest fall in the value of the rand.

International currency speculators were blamed for targeting the rand
which this week reached record lows of six to the US dollar and more
than 10 to the pound. The rand has lost 7.5 per cent of its value in a
week and 22 per cent so far this year.

Johannesburg's stock exchange and the bond markets were also hammered as
a result of the weakening currency. The situation steadied slightly
yesterday after major banks increased their prime overdraft rates to
22.25 per cent.

The Reserve Bank also moved to protect the rand by increasing its repo
rate, the rate at which the central bank lends to commercial banks, to
20.78 per cent from 18.31 per cent last week. Economists said the high
interest rates, if prolonged, would almost halt economic growth this
year and seriously affect next year's growth rate which was expected to
be robust.

The rising rates were also a bitter blow to the government's economic
plans to provide a better life for the impoverished, largely black,
majority in the run-up to next year's second democratic general
election. Increased lending rates will effectively smother borrowing and
growth.

Maria Ramos, South Africa's director-general of finance, acknowledged
that the government's estimate of a three per cent growth rate was under
threat. Some analysts tried to put a favourable spin on the currency
crash, saying that it would make South Africa an even more attractive
place for foreign tourists and slow the "brain drain" of professionals
by making it too expensive for them to move to other countries.

The weaker rand is already pushing up the rand price of gold and this,
the optimists say, will halt the closure of gold mines.

Nico Czypionka, the Standard Bank's economist, said the rand crisis was
not all bad news. He said: "Currency depreciation is actually a
stimulatory step. The profitability of the gold mining industry and
other export industries will improve significantly."

telegraph.co.uk



To: Bobby Yellin who wrote (13906)7/5/1998 7:28:00 PM
From: goldsnow  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116770
 
FEATURE - Chip industry a case study in deflation effects
02:02 a.m. Jul 03, 1998 Eastern
By Richard Melville

NEW YORK, July 3 (Reuters) - Years of sliding prices in the
semiconductor industry offer a case study of the dramatic changes
deflation force on business.

Semiconductors, particularly memory chips, represent the closest
equivalent to a commodity the technology industry has to offer. As with
many other commodities, pricing trends over recent years have pointed
steadily, often steeply, downward.

Some positive contributors to the phenomenon include technological
advances and increased manufacturing efficiencies.

Sluggish personal computer sales, serious economic problems in Asia and
years of over supply have also contributed to the falling price picture.

The news has been great for customers who reap obvious benefits from
lower costs. In some cases, firms have realigned, modified purchasing
plans and dropped the practice of stockpiling components to extract even
more gains from the price environment.

But for the chip producers, the impact has been low or non-existent
profits despite rapid efficiency and productivity gains and a
consolidation that has squeezed out the weak.

Several analysts believe the worst is yet to come.

''In our view, the steepest part of the semiconductor slow down has
begun and is trending downward,'' said Thomas Kurlak, an influential
analyst at Merrill Lynch in a report on Tuesday. ''End demand is slower
in Asia and the U.S. and is beginning to slow in Europe.''

MAJOR COMPANIES BOW OUT

Texas Instruments in June arranged its own exit from the dynamic random
access memory (DRAM) business, selling its money-losing unit to Micron
Technology. In the United States, only Micron and International Business
Machines Corp remain major producers of DRAM.

The Texas Instruments-Micron deal worried analysts in Japan, given the
potential for Micron to boost production after it assumed control of
TI's plan capacity, despite the fact that more production would
exacerbate an already abysmal market.

While producers in countries like South Korea may cut production,
''Micron will step in and fill the void,'' said Yoshiharu Izumi of SBC
Warburg Japan after news of the Micron deal. ''The hoped-for recovery in
1999 is jeopardised.''

Japanese electronics maker Fujitsu Ltd said last month that it may
consider withdrawing completely Acer Inc from making DRAM chips for
computers and Taiwan's has also shown signs of moving in that direction.

Hitachi Ltd and Toshiba Corp have seen DRAM losses slash their overall
group profits.

CUSTOMERS CHANGING PURCHASING AND INVENTORY BEHAVIOUR

While the news been nearly all bad for chip makers, the climate has
meant profound change for companies that purchase and use semiconductors
like personal computer makers.

For those companies, the downward spiral in prices for memory chips --
and some other components such as hard disk drives -- has prompted a
feverish push to pare down parts inventories and delay purchases.

''You definitely have seen a behaviour change in those who use chips,''
said Pierre Ellis, managing director and senior international economist
at Primark Decision Economics. ''Rather than buy now, you can wait and
perhaps buy cheaper and maker more money later.''

That behaviour tends to feed back on itself, as slower purchasing
exacerbates over supply until production tapers.

But economists do not view the narrow kind of price deflation occurring
in the chip industry as a threat to economic growth. Rather, most see it
as the natural outgrowth of years of over production.

''This is not the kind of deflation the Fed, for example, is worried
about,'' Ellis said.

PRICE DECLINES SEEN CONTINUING, ACCELERATING

Far from abating, internal figures supplied by one PC maker show memory
prices are actually expected to continue their slide for the rest of the
year, as much of Asia works through a severe economic downturn.

The data, which were supplied on condition that the company not be
identified, call for prices of 32 megabyte DIMMs (a commonly-used
configuration for DRAM, the letters stand for dual inline memory module)
to fall by 18 percent in the second quarter from the first quarter.

The decline is expected to accelerate in the second half of the year,
with declines of more than 20 percent in both the third and fourth
quarter, according to the company outlook.

Prices of 64 megabyte versions -- somewhat scarcer because they have
been available for a relatively short period of time -- are expected to
fall even faster, closing a price gap that exists for now with 32
megabyte products.

The deflationary phenomenon rewards companies that have built their
business around last-minute parts purchases and system assemblies, a
method raised to an art form by direct marketer Dell Computer Corp.

Other companies have fought furiously to alter their manufacturing
processes to win the same kind of pricing benefits, including IBM,
Compaq Computer Corp and Hewlett-Packard Co.

Some have argued that such models do not account for the possibility
that prices will eventually, inevitably, reverse course.

Even so, Dell Computer chairman Michael Dell has said he would not
abandon the company's model of sales and assembly even in an
inflationary environment, arguing that the savings from a nearly
inventory-free business model would continue to make sense even in a
climate of rising prices.

The falling chip prices have not proved a cure for earnings at PC
makers, many of which are suffering a round of something like deflation
of their own.

Compaq has managed only marginal profits this year, while IBM's PC
business is widely believed to be losing money. Dell has continued to
post strong profit gains, however.

((-- Wall Street desk, 212-859-1730))

Copyright 1998 Reuters Limited.