• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

Chitchat SCMP Creating Panic - "Is Singapore heading for recession?"

Pinkieslut

Alfrescian
Loyal
scmp.com

Is Singapore’s economy losing steam? Photo: AFP

When Wendy Ting splashed out S$4,000 (HK$23,000) renting a pushcart to sell Japanese cuddly toys in a busy suburban mall in Singapore, her hope was simply to eke out a small profit.

Despite being parked in the middle of AMK Hub, a mall linked to the subway in one of the city’s most densely populated housing estates, Ting sold just S$1,000 worth of toys over two months.

“Lots of kids were interested but the parents kept saying, ‘so expensive, no money to buy’,” said Ting, 22, who eventually closed the stall and lost S$5,000.

Belt-tightening is just one of many signs that not all is well with the Singapore economy.

On paper, it is chugging along as is expected of a mature and developed economy.

It grew 2.2 per cent from April to June, according to flash estimates by the Singapore government, faster than the 2.1 per cent recorded over the same period last year. And manufacturing expanded 0.8 per cent in the second quarter, reversing six successive quarters of declines.

But dig deeper and there are signs of an economy fast losing steam in the face of an uncertain global outlook, said Mizhuo Bank economist Vishnu Varathan.

Baby or bust: Why Singapore needs to get procreating, and fast

A large chunk of the uptick in manufacturing was due to a sudden surge in the volatile biomedical sector, which produces drugs in Singapore, he noted. “The manufacturing sector, stripping out biomedicals, is pretty much in a recession,” Varathan said.

Last week’s purchasing manager’s index, a survey of factory owners, confirmed the sputter in manufacturing. It was 49.3, down from 49.6 in June, and readings below 50 indicate contraction. This was the 13th straight month of contraction.

Oil and gas, which typically service the offshore marine sectors, have been among the worst performers.

And while Singapore giants such as Keppel Corp and SembCorp Marine have held up, the smaller oil and gas firms have struggled to stay afloat, with at least one going under. Last month, listed oil and gas company Swiber Holdings filed a judicial management order, collapsing under US$1.43 billion dollars of debt, with assets of just US$1.99 billion.

[A market vendor in the Commonwealth area of Singapore. Photo: Bloomberg]

The bad news turned worse when Singapore’s largest bank, DBS, said it had S$700 million in exposure to Swiber, raising questions about the financial sector’s strength and its ability to keep bad debts under control.

A report by stockbroking house UOB Kay Hian warned that without banks’ support, offshore and marine companies were likely to run into cash-flow concerns, leading to more defaults.

More worryingly, the services sector, which makes up about two-thirds of Singapore’s economy, is showing signs of strain, growing by just 1.7 per cent, the slowest pace since the 2008 financial crisis.

“This is particularly worrying as the services sector contributes 68 per cent of Singapore’s GDP and accounts for nearly 72 per cent of total employment,” said UOB economists.

Singapore official urges Asean members to aim for economic and financial union

Financial services have been hit hard by growing levels of volatility in recent months, arising from the shock decision by Britain to leave the European Union.

And the uncertainty is likely to persist, according to Singapore’s central bank’s managing director Ravi Menon. “Uncertainty prevails over exactly when and how Brexit will take place; we can expect recurrent bouts of market volatility in the months ahead,” he said at the bank’s annual report briefing.

Even the job market, which has been tight for years, is starting to wobble, with rising job losses and unemployment rates. Unemployment for citizens rose to 3.1 per cent in June, up from 2.6 per cent in March. Layoffs crept up to 5,500 between March and June, higher than the 3,250 in the same period last year.

“We now see emerging signs of softening seeping into the job market, known to be a lag indicator of the economy,” said Varathan.

But it may be too early to say if the city state is headed for a recession.

Varathan did not rule out a full-blown recession, though much will depend on outside factors, such as the Brexit negotiations and whether China has a soft landing.

OCBC economist Selena Ling was more optimistic on Singapore’s short-term prospects. She said while growth is stagnating, domestic sectors such as construction and parts of services, including food and beverage and accommodation, remain resilient.

Bank of Singapore eyes entry into China via onshore partnership model

“Our 2016 GDP growth forecast stands at 1.8 per cent as cyclical headwinds to the external-oriented sectors remain strong but domestic oriented sectors should continue to remain supportive for growth,” she said.

With a slowdown, questions about Singapore workers’ need to jostle with foreign talent, and the availability of solid white-collar jobs that have receded are likely to resurface, eroding some of the feel-good effects of the city’s 50th anniversary celebrations. Independent Singapore turns 51 on August 9.

Aldon Goh, 38, an engineer who was made redundant from an oil and gas company, is among those growing wary. After 10 years in the sector he has sent out 50 applications without a single reply in three months.

“I thought it would be easy to find another job with a mechanical engineering degree but it’s been a slog so far,” he said.

“Maybe I’ll look at teaching, or become an Uber driver. Or maybe set up a small shop selling mobile phone covers. At least, I can make some money.”

Sue-Ann Chia is a Singapore-based journalist and runs a writing and communications consultancy.
 

yahoo55

Alfrescian
Loyal
All the O&G bondholders and lenders jialat.


http://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...t-risk-of-cascading-oil-service-bond-defaults

Singapore Faces Risk of More Oil Bond Defaults

August 8, 2016 — 12:00 AM HKT


Singapore bondholders and lenders, already stung by Swiber Holdings Ltd.’s woes, face mounting pain as a drop in oil leaves more companies in the industry starved for cash.

Investment bank UOB Kay Hian Pte warned last week that the sector may suffer a "cascade" of defaults. Bank of Singapore Ltd. said sustained weakness in crude prices could increase risks. Oil-related firms face S$1.4 billion ($1 billion) of Singapore dollar bonds maturing through 2018, with S$325 million due by the year end, according to Bloomberg-compiled data.

The borrowing that helped build one of Singapore’s biggest export industries is showing signs of strain as crude has tumbled about 19 percent from its high for the year in June. The pain is part of a broader global trend in which smaller, independent oil and gas companies have stumbled. U.S. firms Halcon Resources Corp. and Atlas Resource Partners LP filed for bankruptcy at the end of July.

"We wouldn’t be particularly surprised if there were further defaults coming from the oil and gas industry, particularly if oil stays below $40 per barrel for a prolonged period of time,” said Todd Schubert, head of fixed-income research at Bank of Singapore, the private banking unit of Oversea-Chinese Bank Corp. "Some bonds are trading at levels that indicate a not insignificant probability of a restructuring.”


Debts Due

Bank of Singapore and UOB Kay Hian were commenting on the industry overall, and not on specific companies.

Oil dropped below $40 a barrel last week for the first time since April amid renewed concerns over a supply glut, before trading around $42 on Friday.

The nearest-term bond repayment among oil- and gas-related firms that have outstanding Singapore dollar bonds is on Perisai Petroleum Teknologi Bhd’s S$125 million notes that mature in October. The Malaysia-listed offshore drilling and construction firm had 36 million Malaysia ringgit ($8.9 million) of cash and bank balances as of March 31, according to company results.

“Based on their current cash balance, it will be very difficult for them to repay 546 million Malaysian ringgit of short-term obligations due in October, which includes their S$125 million bond and other loans,” said Kong Ho Meng, Kuala Lumpur-based senior analyst at UOB Kay Hian Securities (M) Sdn Bhd.


Perisai Notes

A Perisai spokesman said the company has been keeping in close discussions with its bankers and financiers to address the bonds, and is confident it will be able to reach an amicable solution for all stakeholders.

The firm’s S$125 million 6.875 percent notes due 2016 were quoted at a bid of 75 cents, according to DBS Bank prices on Friday.

Ezra Holdings Ltd., whose services for the oil industry include making wellhead platforms, had $1.2 billion of total group borrowings and debt securities as of May 31, according to its financial statements. The group had $43.6 million in cash and cash equivalents.

Ezra’s S$150 million 4.875 percent bonds due 2018 fell to about 70 cents on the dollar Friday, the lowest since at least November 2014, according to Bloomberg-compiled data.
 

PinkaChung

Alfrescian
Loyal
Falling oil prices you hear of retrenchments and salary cut.

Still no recession? MSM is hiding something from you.

This is what you get when PaP grassroots are running SG INC.

Sub par performance.
 

ckmpd

Alfrescian
Loyal
scmp.com

Is Singapore’s economy losing steam? Photo: AFP

When Wendy Ting splashed out S$4,000 (HK$23,000) renting a pushcart to sell Japanese cuddly toys in a busy suburban mall in Singapore, her hope was simply to eke out a small profit.

Despite being parked in the middle of AMK Hub, a mall linked to the subway in one of the city’s most densely populated housing estates, Ting sold just S$1,000 worth of toys over two months.

“Lots of kids were interested but the parents kept saying, ‘so expensive, no money to buy’,” said Ting, 22, who eventually closed the stall and lost S$5,000.

Belt-tightening is just one of many signs that not all is well with the Singapore economy.

On paper, it is chugging along as is expected of a mature and developed economy.

It grew 2.2 per cent from April to June, according to flash estimates by the Singapore government, faster than the 2.1 per cent recorded over the same period last year. And manufacturing expanded 0.8 per cent in the second quarter, reversing six successive quarters of declines.

But dig deeper and there are signs of an economy fast losing steam in the face of an uncertain global outlook, said Mizhuo Bank economist Vishnu Varathan.

Baby or bust: Why Singapore needs to get procreating, and fast

A large chunk of the uptick in manufacturing was due to a sudden surge in the volatile biomedical sector, which produces drugs in Singapore, he noted. “The manufacturing sector, stripping out biomedicals, is pretty much in a recession,” Varathan said.

Last week’s purchasing manager’s index, a survey of factory owners, confirmed the sputter in manufacturing. It was 49.3, down from 49.6 in June, and readings below 50 indicate contraction. This was the 13th straight month of contraction.

Oil and gas, which typically service the offshore marine sectors, have been among the worst performers.

And while Singapore giants such as Keppel Corp and SembCorp Marine have held up, the smaller oil and gas firms have struggled to stay afloat, with at least one going under. Last month, listed oil and gas company Swiber Holdings filed a judicial management order, collapsing under US$1.43 billion dollars of debt, with assets of just US$1.99 billion.

[A market vendor in the Commonwealth area of Singapore. Photo: Bloomberg]

The bad news turned worse when Singapore’s largest bank, DBS, said it had S$700 million in exposure to Swiber, raising questions about the financial sector’s strength and its ability to keep bad debts under control.

A report by stockbroking house UOB Kay Hian warned that without banks’ support, offshore and marine companies were likely to run into cash-flow concerns, leading to more defaults.

More worryingly, the services sector, which makes up about two-thirds of Singapore’s economy, is showing signs of strain, growing by just 1.7 per cent, the slowest pace since the 2008 financial crisis.

“This is particularly worrying as the services sector contributes 68 per cent of Singapore’s GDP and accounts for nearly 72 per cent of total employment,” said UOB economists.

Singapore official urges Asean members to aim for economic and financial union

Financial services have been hit hard by growing levels of volatility in recent months, arising from the shock decision by Britain to leave the European Union.

And the uncertainty is likely to persist, according to Singapore’s central bank’s managing director Ravi Menon. “Uncertainty prevails over exactly when and how Brexit will take place; we can expect recurrent bouts of market volatility in the months ahead,” he said at the bank’s annual report briefing.

Even the job market, which has been tight for years, is starting to wobble, with rising job losses and unemployment rates. Unemployment for citizens rose to 3.1 per cent in June, up from 2.6 per cent in March. Layoffs crept up to 5,500 between March and June, higher than the 3,250 in the same period last year.

“We now see emerging signs of softening seeping into the job market, known to be a lag indicator of the economy,” said Varathan.

But it may be too early to say if the city state is headed for a recession.

Varathan did not rule out a full-blown recession, though much will depend on outside factors, such as the Brexit negotiations and whether China has a soft landing.

OCBC economist Selena Ling was more optimistic on Singapore’s short-term prospects. She said while growth is stagnating, domestic sectors such as construction and parts of services, including food and beverage and accommodation, remain resilient.

Bank of Singapore eyes entry into China via onshore partnership model

“Our 2016 GDP growth forecast stands at 1.8 per cent as cyclical headwinds to the external-oriented sectors remain strong but domestic oriented sectors should continue to remain supportive for growth,” she said.

With a slowdown, questions about Singapore workers’ need to jostle with foreign talent, and the availability of solid white-collar jobs that have receded are likely to resurface, eroding some of the feel-good effects of the city’s 50th anniversary celebrations. Independent Singapore turns 51 on August 9.

Aldon Goh, 38, an engineer who was made redundant from an oil and gas company, is among those growing wary. After 10 years in the sector he has sent out 50 applications without a single reply in three months.

“I thought it would be easy to find another job with a mechanical engineering degree but it’s been a slog so far,” he said.

“Maybe I’ll look at teaching, or become an Uber driver. Or maybe set up a small shop selling mobile phone covers. At least, I can make some money.”

Sue-Ann Chia is a Singapore-based journalist and runs a writing and communications consultancy.

SG is already in recession. It is just that pap tries to fudge the real situation in SG
 

congo9

Alfrescian
Loyal
I hope sinkieland falls into depression.

Who the hell will want to fork out $4000 per month for a push cart store? It does not make business sense at all.

Precisely this is the kind of Singkie brain that make the landlord rich. What kind of product you sell that can make so much Margin to sustain this kind of crazy rental.
 
Top