Xi Jinping
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FILE PHOTO: Argentina’s President Mauricio Macri (3rd L) and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping (R) take part in a meeting during the Nuclear Security Summit in Washington April 1, 2016. Argentine Presidency/Handout via Reuters ATTENTION EDITORS – THIS IMAGE WAS PROVIDED BY A THIRD PARTY. NO RESALES. NO ARCHIVE.
March 15, 2019
By Cassandra Garrison
BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) – A delegation from China will visit Argentina this month to discuss the construction of a nuclear power plant, signaling potential progress in a deal that could increase Beijing’s deepening influence in the South American nation.
An Argentine government source told Reuters this week the “technical team” from China would meet with local suppliers about the long-stalled nuclear power plant project, reportedly worth up to $8 billion.
Argentina had hoped to announce an agreement on China-financed construction of Atucha III, as it has been referred to in the past, during a state visit by Chinese President Xi Jinping after November’s G20 summit in Buenos Aires.
But the deal failed to emerge then, and in January Argentina’s nuclear energy undersecretary, Julian Gadano, and the ambassador to China, Diego Guelar, met with officials in Beijing for talks about the project, the government source said.
A second government source, in the foreign ministry, said talks about the nuclear plant with China were ongoing but added that there had been no “concrete progress” toward signing a deal.
If finalized, the nuclear plant would be one of the biggest projects financed in Argentina by China, which has become a key trading partner for Argentina and its biggest non-institutional lender.
The Chinese embassy in Buenos Aires did not respond to requests for comment and China National Nuclear Corporation, a state-owned nuclear firm that has held talks previously about building nuclear plants in Argentina, declined to comment.
A press officer in Argentina’s nuclear affairs department, which operates under the foreign ministry, said he was unaware of the delegation’s visit.
The power plant deal was first negotiated under the administration of former President Cristina Fernandez, a left-wing populist who left office in 2015 after striking a number of deals with China.
When Argentina signed a $56.3 billion financing deal with the International Monetary Fund to rescue its troubled economy last year, U.S. President Donald Trump voiced his support for the plan and the leadership of center-right President Mauricio Macri.
Marci, like right-wing President Jair Bolsonaro in neighboring Brazil, took a tough stance against China on the campaign trail, saying he would review some of the deals Fernandez had made with the country.
But China has emerged as a critical trading partner, investor and financier for the U.S. allies nonetheless, as part of its long-running push into Latin America.
(Reporting by Cassandra Garrison; Editing by Tom Brown)
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Members of the media line up outside the Great Hall of the People before dawn, ahead of the closing session of the National People’s Congress (NPC) in Beijing, China March 15, 2019. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
March 15, 2019
By Ben Blanchard and Tony Munroe
BEIJING (Reuters) – For many journalists, China’s once in a year parliamentary meeting starts with a sharp-elbowed sprint up the stairs.
The 11-day event, which ended on Friday, kicked off with the annual scramble for positions ahead of Premier Li Keqiang’s opening speech. Reporters, photographers and camera crews formed queues overnight on one side of Tiananmen Square outside the Great Hall of the People before doors opened at around 7:30 a.m., unleashing a free-for-all for the best spots.
About 50 photographers and TV cameramen, many laden with heavy equipment, raced up the stairs at the Great Hall to battle for roughly 10 prime spots to view President Xi Jinping and the rest of his leadership team as they trooped in, and to watch the speeches.
For text correspondents, the sprint was to be among the first at a baize-covered table on the second floor where key documents, including the budget, are handed out at around 8 a.m.
Tom Daly, a Reuters correspondent whose task was to be among the first to get the reports and hand them to colleagues ready to phone in headlines, made sure he wasn’t carrying anything that might slow his way through the metal detectors, having handed his phone to a colleague further back in the queue.
“You have nothing in your pockets, you don’t have your belt,” said Daly, who like many of the hundreds of reporters in the first wave was wearing athletic shoes and was casually dressed, in contrast to the business-attired delegates arriving at the same time.
Reports in hand, the journalists sprawled out on the carpeting and phoned in key details to their editors. Using a laptop was inadvisable because there is no wifi in the Great Hall of the People and wireless data coverage is spotty.
Reuters’ Beijing bureau, several blocks east of the Great Hall, published nearly 100 headlines, or “alerts”, phoned in by colleagues in the first 34 minutes after the reports were made available this year.
They included the year’s GDP target for the world’s second-biggest economy, as well as the defense budget, the budget deficit target and government bond issuance quotas.
LABOR-INTENSIVE, FEW SURPRISES
The annual session of China’s National People’s Congress is labor-intensive to cover, generates few surprises and is thick with ponderous speeches and scripted answers, but with access to officials so scarce in China, it is the closest Beijing gets to a media feeding frenzy.
About 3,000 members of the news media were accredited – roughly one per delegate – including 48 from Reuters.
On Friday, Premier Li Keqiang gave his annual press conference at the end of parliament and it was unusually long at 155 minutes, compared with about 120 minutes in previous years. A collective murmur was audible among the journalists present when after two hours the host called for yet another question.
The biggest news from Li’s press conference was, arguably, the timing of planned corporate tax cuts.
Despite occasional pledges from officials to make parliament and its largely ceremonial advisory body that meets in parallel more open to foreign media and their questions, there is little spontaneity.
Chinese reporters from state media, always under the tight control of the ruling Communist Party, generally stick to safe and uncontroversial questions. During lulls during parliament, local journalists often try to interview foreign members of the media.
With so much stage management, moments of candor become newsworthy on their own.
At a news conference last week with the delegation from Tibet, regional Communist Party boss Wu Yingjie surprised many journalists in attendance when he fielded several questions from foreign news outlets, including Reuters, on sensitive topics such as exiled spiritual leader the Dalai Lama.
Last year, a Chinese reporter was caught on live television theatrically rolling her eyes at a long-winded question asked at the parliament session by another Chinese journalist about China’s state asset management.
The clip went viral before being scrubbed by China’s internet censors.
(Additional reporting by Ryan Woo, Kevin Yao, Thomas Suen; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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Chinese President Xi Jinping arrives for the closing session of the National People’s Congress (NPC) at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, China March 15, 2019. REUTERS/Thomas Peter
March 15, 2019
BEIJING (Reuters) – China’s parliament voted on Friday to approve a new foreign investment law.
The law will replace existing regulations for joint ventures and wholly foreign-owned enterprises and is designed to ease foreign concerns about China’s investment environment, especially as China and the United States work to try to end a trade war.The law will come into effect on Jan. 1, 2020, the state news agency said.
(Reporting by Lusha Zhang, Gao Liangping and Ben Blanchard)
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British five pound banknotes are seen in this picture illustration taken November 14, 2017. REUTERS/ Benoit Tessier/Illustration
March 15, 2019
By Hideyuki Sano
TOKYO (Reuters) – The British pound paused for breath on Friday after the UK parliament voted overwhelmingly to seek a delay in Britain’s exit from the European Union while the yen looked to the Bank of Japan’s guidance on its policy later in the day.
Sterling fetched $1.3253, having slipped further from Wednesday’s nine-month high of $1.3380, with its fall of 0.76 percent on Thursday.
Against the euro, the pound retreated to 85.25 pence from Wednesday’s 22-month peak at 84.725.
British lawmakers approved a motion setting out the option to ask the EU for a short delay if parliament can agree on a Brexit deal by March 20, or a longer delay if no deal can be agreed in time.
The pound was mostly steady after the motion was passed late on Thursday.
“There has been a soft consensus in the market that the Brexit will be delayed. Things have been moving in line with that,” said Kyosuke Suzuki, director of forex at Societe Generale.
“But tail risk has not completely disappeared yet. The next week’s EU summit will probably be the climax,” he said, noting the fact that all 27 EU members must approve any extension.
Before UK Prime Minister Theresa May meets EU leaders on Wednesday and Thursday, a new vote on her twice-rejected deal is likely next week.
Lawmakers must now decide whether to back a deal they feel does not offer a clean break from the EU, or reject it and accept that Brexit could be watered down or even thwarted by a long delay.
The yen slipped to a one-week low of 111.83 per dollar on Thursday partly on speculation that the BOJ could make a stronger show of its readiness to ease policy further at its review ending later on Friday.
Still, most market players expect the BOJ to refrain from any drastic changes to its policy framework. The yen last stood at 111.77.
The euro eased to $1.1307 from Wednesday’s one-week high of $1.1339, in tandem with sterling.
The Australian dollar traded at $0.7064, off this week’s high of $0.7098 as its recent rebound was dented by reports that a possible summit meeting the United States and China to hammer out a trade deal will be delayed.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said on Thursday that a trade summit between President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping would not happen at the end of March as had been previously suggested because there was still more work to do in trade negotiations.
Trump said whether a trade deal can be reached with China would probably be known in the next three or four weeks.
U.S. data on Thursday underscored growing pressure on the U.S. economy and kept the dollar in check.
The number of Americans filing applications for unemployment benefits increased more than expected last week while new home sales fell more than expected in January.
(Editing by Shri Navaratnam)
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FILE PHOTO: Pedestrians are reflected on an electronic board showing stock prices outside a brokerage in Tokyo, Japan December 27, 2018. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon
March 15, 2019
By Shinichi Saoshiro
TOKYO (Reuters) – Asian stocks made modest gains on Friday, tracking improved global sentiment after UK lawmakers voted to delay Brexit and as a weaker yen supported Japanese shares, but a fresh flare up in U.S.-China trade concerns is expected to cap gains.
MSCI broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan inched up 0.06 percent.
Japan’s Nikkei climbed 0.9 percent and South Korea’s KOSPI rose 0.45 percent.
Global markets drew some relief overnight with European stocks rising to a five-month high, boosted by strength in the banking sector after Britain’s parliament voted to reject a disorderly Brexit. [.EU]
But the S&P 500 dipped 0.1 percent, snapping a three-day winning run, and the Nasdaq shed 0.2 percent on Thursday in the wake of uncertainty over when a U.S.-China trade deal would be reached. [.N]
A summit to seal a trade deal between U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping will not happen at the end of March as previously discussed because more work is needed in negotiations, U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said on Thursday.
“Initial expectations were for the trade talks to wrap up in March. So any delay causes the markets to automatically assume that the negotiations are not going well, and this is a negative factor for equities,” said Masahiro Ichikawa, senior strategist at Sumitomo Mitsui Asset Management in Tokyo.
In the currency market, the pound was 0.1 percent higher at $1.3256, trimming some of the heavy losses suffered overnight.
Sterling retreated 0.75 percent on Thursday as investors geared up for British Prime Minister Theresa May to try again to win approval for her Brexit deal. [GBP/]
British lawmakers voted on Thursday to seek a delay in Britain’s exit from the European Union, setting the stage for Prime Minister May to renew efforts to get her divorce deal approved by parliament next week.
The dollar held gains having snapped its four-day losing streak to a group of six major peers.
The dollar index was little changed at 96.717 after rising 0.25 percent on Thursday to bounce back from a nine-day trough of 96.385.
The greenback rose as U.S. Treasury yields climbed from two-month lows marked earlier in the week, driven by corporate supply. [US/]
The dollar was steady at 111.76 yen after climbing 0.5 percent the previous day.
The yen traded in a narrow range ahead of the Bank of Japan’s policy decision due later on Friday, with the central bank widely expected to keep interest rates unchanged.
The euro edged up 0.05 percent to $1.1309 after slipping 0.2 percent overnight.
U.S. crude oil futures declined 0.1 percent to $58.54 per barrel, losing some steam after a recent surge but holding close to a four-month peak of $58.74 brushed on Thursday.
Oil prices soared to the four-month high as investors focused on global production cuts and supply disruptions in Venezuela. [O/R]
(Editing by Sam Holmes)
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A man works to load a container on a truck at an industrial port in Tokyo, Japan, February 22, 2019. Picture taken on February 22, 2019. To match Insight JAPAN-COMPANIES/CHINA. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-hoon
March 14, 2019
By Tetsushi Kajimoto
JOETSU, Japan (Reuters) – In snow country along Japan’s northern coast, a small manufacturer of precision moulds is feeling the pain of China’s economic slowdown.
Orders have slowed to a trickle at Nagumo Seisakusho Co, which supplies big auto-parts makers such as Denso Corp and Aisin Seiki Co, and the company may keep salaries flat or even reduce them in the coming fiscal year.
Manufacturers across Japan depend heavily on customers in China, the world’s second-biggest economy, to buy their products, especially the parts and equipment that reach China’s factory floor and fuel its domestic and export growth.
Automotive chipmaker Renesas Electronics Corp last week said it would suspend production at some plants for up to two months as it braces for China’s growth to slow further. In recent months, other big companies such as factory-robot makers Yaskawa Electric Corp and Fanuc Corp; Mitsubishi Electric Corp, trading house Mitsui & Co and toilet giant Toto Ltd have blamed China as they cut profit forecasts.
But the impact of China’s wobble is worse for manufacturers nearer the start of the supply chain, like tiny Nagumo. It employs 100 people to create precision press moulds other Japanese manufacturers use to make car parts and other products for the China market.
On the nondescript 4,000-square-metre (43,000-square-foot) factory floor in Nagumo’s main Sanwa plant, grey-clad workers, some wearing blue surgical masks, busied themselves during a recent day designing moulds by computer, then milling, stamping and assembling dies.
But the normalcy belies tough times for Nagumo, which makes all of its products on demand.
“Orders have stalled suddenly since January. Many of our clients are car-parts makers, and they have slammed on the brakes for orders recently,” at least through March, said president Hiroshi Komemasu.
“It is said that when China sneezes, Japan catches a cold,” Komemasu told Reuters recently on the factory floor. “I strongly feel that the trade war is affecting even small firms like us.”
RIPPLE EFFECTS
The emptiest section of the facility was the busiest. Nagumo’s five sales staff were often out of the office hunting new customers to make up for the drop-off in orders.
The company, founded as a fiber-processing company in the immediate aftermath of World War Two, is based in Joetsu, a quiet city of about 200,000 people 225 kilometers (140 miles) northwest of Tokyo.
Far from the bustle of Japan’s biggest cities, Joetsu is known for a festival, a museum and a mascot celebrating an Austro-Hungarian general who taught cross-country skiing to Japan’s Imperial Army in the early 1900s.
Sharp slowdowns for upstream manufacturers like Nagumo bode ill for Japan as a whole, as smaller companies employ seven in 10 Japanese workers, and weak demand points to smaller shipments by bigger firms down the road.
Komemasu would not discuss Nagumo’s specific customers, but said one had slashed its orders by half.
Unlisted Nagumo managed to stay in the black for the 2018 calendar year, but probably lost money in the fiscal year, which ends this month, Komemasu said. Declining orders threaten its forecast of sales edging up 6 percent this year to 1.9 billion yen ($17 million).
Nagumo executives, worried about sales, have become reluctant to raise wages. After increasing base pay for three years, the company hopes to keep overall pay flat in the coming fiscal year, which starts in April, Komemasu said.
Such constriction could ripple through to other Japanese manufacturers – now in annual wage negotiations – reinforcing concerns that trade friction will hurt salaries and consumer spending nationwide.
Japanese giants such as Toyota Motor Corp and Panasonic Corp offered smaller pay increases at annual wage talks on Wednesday, tempering hopes that domestic consumption will offset external risks to growth.
TRADE WAR
Despite signs that U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping may be nearing a truce in the U.S.-China trade war, the collateral damage for Japan may persist.
“The U.S.-China trade war won’t be resolved entirely. Both sides may reach a vague compromise, but that doesn’t mean everything will be rosy for China’s external demand,” said Toru Nishihama, emerging-market economist at Dai-ichi Life Research Institute.
“Downward pressure will mount on Japanese exporters and manufacturers as the global economy slows further,” Nishihama said, adding that as Beijing focuses on supporting the domestic economy, the authorities will tolerate slower demand.
Atsushi Takeda, chief economist at Itochu Research Institute, sees the China slowdown’s impact on Japanese companies lasting for months, countering an expected rebound in car demand late in the year from Beijing’s stimulus measures.
“But we need to bear in mind that the effects of trade friction will play out fully in Japanese exports and output in January-March and the following quarter, after the rush in shipments of Chinese goods to the United States seen late last year,” Takeda said.
“Semiconductors and cars will take a hit in the first half of this year, and other goods related to trade friction will follow suit in the second and third quarters, so the worst will come around April-June for Japanese exporters and manufacturers.”
Last year, about 38 percent of Japan’s exports were electronic parts, semiconductor-manufacturing equipment and heavy machinery used to make other goods, while the auto industry accounted for 23 percent, Finance Ministry data show.
Japan’s manufacturing supply chain, linking small firms like Nagumo to Japan’s industrial giants and consumers worldwide, is the China-reliant core of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s plan to lift Japan out of decades of deflation and fitful growth.
A much cheaper yen, driven by unprecedented money-printing from the Bank of Japan, has made the country’s exports more competitive globally. This has spurred a long export boom and record corporate profits, promoting hiring, creating the tightest labor market since the 1970s and delivering modest pay raises.
But domestic consumption has remained tepid and export demand – especially from China – has slumped, threatening to derail what could be Japan’s longest postwar expansion.
This year has seen the biggest monthly export drop in two years, with a plunge in China-bound shipments, a big drop in machinery orders signaling weaker capital spending ahead, a weak wage outlook and dampening business sentiment in the Reuters Tankan survey.
The government last month cut its assessment of factory output and profits, and indicators this month suggest the expansion may have halted.
In Joetsu, Kenichi Watabe, head of Nagumo’s general-affairs division, says the company has “managed to make ends meet as our sales staff dashed here and there trying to attract new customers and secure new orders.”
Nagumo’s workforce is now half its peak due to past layoffs, Watabe said.
But company president Komemasu said squeezing too hard would cause lasting damage.
“We, like everyone else, tell employees to turn off the lights and refrain from purchasing unnecessary things in a downturn,” he said. “But we won’t curb investment in human capital and R&D.”
(Reporting by Tetsushi Kajimoto; Editing by William Mallard)
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FILE PHOTO: U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin testifies at U.S. House Ways and Means Committee hearing on President Donald Trump’s proposed budget in Washington, U.S., March 14, 2019. REUTERS/Mary F. Calvert
March 14, 2019
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said on Thursday that a trade summit between President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping would not happen at the end of March as had been previously suggested because there was still more work to do in U.S.-China trade negotiations.
Speaking to reporters after a U.S. Senate hearing, Mnuchin also said he was not concerned about U.S. banks’ exposure to Britain’s banking sector amid uncertainty over the country’s looming exit from the European Union because institutions on both sides of the Atlantic were healthy.
(Reporting by David Lawder; Editing by James Dalgleish)
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FILE PHOTO: U.S. President Donald Trump speaks on U.S. and China trade negotiations at the Governors’ Ball, in the State Dining Room of the White House, in Washington, U.S., February 24, 2019. REUTERS/Al Drago
March 14, 2019
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – President Donald Trump said on Thursday the United States was doing very well in trade talks with China, but that he could not say whether a final deal would be reached.
“We’re doing very well with China talks,” Trump told reporters at the White House as he sat down to meet Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar. “We’re getting what we have to get, and I think we’re getting it relatively quickly.”
“As to whether or not we’ll strike a final deal, that I would never want to say,” he added. “If it’s not a deal that’s a great deal for us, we’re not going to make it.”
Trump decided last month not to increase tariffs on Chinese goods at the beginning of March, giving a nod to the success of negotiations so far. But hurdles remain.
He and Chinese President Xi Jinping had been expected to hold a summit at the president’s Mar-a-Lago property in Florida later this month, but no date has been set and no in-person talks between their trade teams have been held in more than two weeks.
Bloomberg, citing unnamed sources, reported on Thursday that a meeting between the two was more likely to take place in April at the earliest, while a person familiar with the matter told Reuters there “were rumblings” about a possible meeting late next month.
(Reporting by Jeff Mason; writing by Tim Ahmann)
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FILE PHOTO: A logo of Airbus is seen on a flag at Airbus headquarters in Blagnac, near Toulouse, France, February 14, 2019. REUTERS/Regis Duvignau
March 14, 2019
By John Irish
NAIROBI (Reuters) – There are encouraging signs that European planemaker Airbus is closing in on a long-negotiated deal with China for dozens of new narrow-body jets, an aide to French President Emmanuel Macron said on Thursday.
The official said there were hopes Airbus would nail down the multibillion-dollar order when President Xi Jinping visits Europe later this month, but acknowledged there would unlikely be confirmation until the eleventh hour.
“The talks are ongoing,” the official said. “It will be difficult to know for sure until the day before, but the signs are positive.”
China has become a key hunting ground for Airbus and its leading rival Boeing, thanks to surging travel demand, but the outlook has been complicated by Beijing’s desire to grow its own industrial champions and, more recently for Boeing, the U.S.-China trade war.
Macron unexpectedly failed to clinch the Airbus order during a trip to China in early 2018 and the French government and Airbus have been working since to salvage it.
Macron said at the time that China would buy 184 A320 narrow-body jets, an order worth $18 billion at list prices.
The Elysee Palace official also said Airbus was discussing a new order with Ethiopian Airlines. The official gave no details on the size of the potential new Ethiopian order but cited the long-range A350, a model which Ethiopian already operates, and the single-aisle A320 jet as aircraft of interest to the airline.
Macron and Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed discussed the negotiations during Macron’s visit to Addis Ababa on Tuesday, two days after an Ethiopian Airlines Boeing 737 MAX 8 crashed after taking off, killing all 157 people on board.
Industry analysts played down a possible link between any current negotiations and Sunday’s crash. Ethiopian has been undertaking a major fleet expansion and regularly talks to the market, they said, adding that order talks take time.
(Reporting by John Irish; Writing by Richard Lough; Editing by Mark Potter)
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