Singapore

China Mining International appoints Li Bin as CEO

He will be in charge of overall management, development and financial performance of the Group.

China Mining International appoints Li Bin as CEO

He will be in charge of overall management, development and financial performance of the Group.

GfK Asia appoints Lawrence Yeow as Regional Retail Director

Retail Specialist expected to further enhance collaborative efforts with retailers in the region.

Meet Manulife's newest senior appointments

Leo Ng, Carolyn Pritchard, and Nicola Vincent will now be holding new positions.

Attune Technologies' HealthKernel to be distributed by Questronix

The agreement covers sales and marketing, as well as managed services for product and technical support.

Singapore ranked 8th most expensive office location globally

Annual net rents of CBD Grade A office space in Singapore fell 4.9% to US$65.81 per sq ft.

What recession? Luxury brands reveal soaring profits

Consumers seem to take comfort in those LV and Hermes bags amid economic volatilities.

What about Facebook's IPO?

You would have to be living on another planet if you haven’t heard about the Facebook IPO by now. Deemed as one of the largest public offerings in the world, it has been a roller-coaster ride for what was once a college social network.

Singapore office market succumbs to economic woes

The annual growth rate for 2011 was only 13% which is a sharp contraction from 2010's recorded growth rate of 24.5%.

Singapore covered bonds plan positive, supply may be low

The Monetary Authority of Singapore's proposal to introduce rules for covered bond issuance would be positive for Singaporean banks if enacted, as issuing covered bonds would allow them to potentially diversify their funding base and lengthen their debt maturity profile, Fitch Ratings says. We expect Singaporean banks to take advantage of this opportunity if a formal issuance framework is adopted. However, we think they would take an opportunistic approach to funding through the covered bond market, since they have predominantly deposit-funded balance sheets and this mitigates their wholesale funding needs. This could limit initial issuance compared with other jurisdictions that have introduced covered bond legislation, such as Australia, which saw heavy supply in early 2012 after introducing legislation the previous November. For this reason, Singaporean banks may not start hitting MAS's proposed cap on the value of the assets in the cover pool at 2% of the value of the total assets of the bank any time soon. The proposed 2% cap is strikingly low - it compares with 4% in Canada, 8% in Australia and 10% in New Zealand, for example. But as a starting point in MAS's consultation, it is consistent with the regulator's focus on potential risks to depositors, which in turn reflects their important role in funding Singaporean banks, whose loan-to-deposit ratios averaged 87% at end-2011. We think there is scope for MAS to review the cap if it were comfortable that a higher number was consistent with depositor protection. And while issuing covered bonds should be cheaper than funding via the senior unsecured bond market all other things being equal, the initial costs of setting up a covered bond programme, such as legal and documentation costs, plus the potential premium that investors would demand to buy covered bonds from a new jurisdiction, could be a disincentive for potential covered bond issuers. MAS recently issued a consultation paper outlining its proposed rules for covered bond issuance by banks incorporated in Singapore. As well as the 2% cap, the paper suggests limiting mortgage loans that can be funded through covered bonds to an 80% loan-to-value threshold, and suggests a 3% minimum overcollateralisation between the cover pool and the covered bonds. Under MAS's proposals, only residential mortgages and derivatives held for the purpose of hedging risks arising from covered bond issuance can be included in the cover pool. Fitch will review and submit its views and comments on the covered bond consultation paper in the coming weeks. Our rating outlook for Singaporean banks is stable. Their strong, liquid balance sheets, reasonably diversified loan books, satisfactory risk management, and domestic deposit franchises all help support the banks' high investment grade ratings. Alfred Chan, Director - Financial Institutions, Fitch Ratings Helen Wong, Director - Structured Finance, Fitch Ratings Mark Brown, Senior Director, Fitch Wire

Naumi opens second hotel in Singapore

The former Saff Hotel will be rebranded as Naumi Liora.

Take a sneak peek of Scoot’s first aircraft

Second aircraft will come by the end of March.

2012 Outlook for downstream oil & gas cloudy

Competition is stiff within Singapore and project margins are low, says OCBC.

Visitor arrivals grew 13.4% YoY in Jan 2012

Arrivals from China spiked up 52.8% YoY to 201.7k.

Olam to invest US$183m in Gabon

Olam intends to develop 28,000 hectares of rubber plantations in partnership with the Government of the Republic of Gabon.

High-end hotels outperform in Jan

Its RevPAR grew  ~11.7%  while that of budget hotels  decline ~5.0%, thus proves that travelers from developing Asia are not budget travelers, says OCBC.

Currency Briefing - what you need to know for Mon March 19, 2012

Last week the Singapore dollar traded as high as $1.27, and the US dollar has slipped against the local currency.