Friday, 19 September 2014

Australian dollar could fall to 73 US cents: analysts

Economists at one of the major investment banks say the Australian dollar could fall as low as 73 US cents.
UBS economists Scott Haslem and George Tharenou say their application of a range of models suggests the dollar could correct lower to between 73 and 83 US cents.
That is below their own forecast, which is for the dollar to be worth 85 US cents by the middle of next year.
UBS says based on iron ore prices, the dollar would be worth around 73 US cents, while a broader commodity prices basket would put a reasonable value around 82 cents.
Using their own replica of the Reserve Bank's fair value model, the analysts say the dollar should fall to 83 US cents.
A large part of the Australian dollar's weakness is expected to be due to increasing US dollar strength.
Yesterday the Australian dollar broke convincingly below 90 US cents after the conclusion of the September US Federal Reserve meeting, which saw committee members lift their forecasts of where US rates would be by the end of next year.
The UBS economists say the story of rising US interest rates is likely to dominate currency trade in 2015.
"Most leading indicators suggest the US economy is strengthening relative to other countries, while diverging rates policies ought to be US-dollar supportive," they noted.
"Finally, the starting position of USD valuation is also favourable, with the real effective exchange rate close to a 40-year low."
China weakness weighs on iron ore outlook
While that US economic strength pushes the greenback up, slowing Chinese economic growth is likely to weigh on the Australian dollar.
Many analysts are now forecasting Chinese growth in the low 7 per cent range this year, falling below 7 per cent next.
Shanghai steel futures fell more than 2 per cent to a record low, and iron ore futures are down around 3 per cent in China today, both of which bode ill for the future prices of Australia's major export.
With slowing economic growth and a declining property market, many analysts are negative about the prospects of a sustained iron ore price rebound.
"There is no sign that demand for steel can improve in the short term," China-based Cao Bo from Jinrui Futures told Reuters.
"I don't think we've seen the worst for the iron ore and steel markets."
Such weakness in iron ore prices is likely to heighten pressure on the Australian dollar to fall.
Interest rate implications
Saul Eslake says the recent drop in the local currency from the mid-90s to below 90 US cents shows the potential for a sustained drop in the currency to happen sooner rather than later.
That would implications for the timing of the first Reserve Bank interest rate increase.
"If this were to be the case, we would likely bring forward our current forecast for the RBA to begin tightening policy from early 2016," the Bank of America Merrill Lynch Australian chief economist wrote in a research note.
"We also note that, although any exchange rate depreciation is a net positive for the economy, it would not benefit all sectors equally.
While export-exposed services sectors would be key beneficiaries, the retail sector would be among the big losers."

Stocks Rise as Investors Await Alibaba to Begin Trading

U.S. stocks rose for a fourth day following a rally in Europe after Scotland rejected independence and as corporate takeovers boosted shares. Investors also watched the first day of trading of Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.
Dresser-Rand Group Inc. rallied 13 percent as Siemens AG prepared to offer more than $6.5 billion for the company, according to people familiar with the plan. Concur Technologies Inc. jumped 18 percent as SAP SE agreed to buy the company for $7.4 billion to boost its cloud-computing business. Oracle Corp. slid 2.4 percent after Larry Ellison stepped down as chief executive officer.
The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index advanced 0.2 percent to 2,014.42 at 9:30 a.m. in New York. TheDow Jones Industrial Average added 35 points, or 0.2 percent, to 17,300.99.
“The Scottish ‘no’ vote gave some tailwind to the European markets, and we’re just trading in sympathy off of that to start the day,” Michael James, a Los Angeles-based managing director of equity trading at Wedbush Securities Inc., said in a phone interview.
Trading may be subject to unexpected swings today because of a quarterly event known as quadruple witching, when futures and options contracts on indexes and individual stocks expire.
S&P Dow Jones Indices is also scheduled to rebalance the S&P 500 in a quarterly move to adjust stock weightings. About $25 billion of shares in trades will be done as investors buy and sell to mimic the changes, according to a Sept. 7 estimate by Howard Silverblatt, an index analyst at the New York-based company.

Alibaba IPO

Alibaba, the e-commerce company started in 1999 with $60,000 cobbled together by Jack Ma, cemented its status as a symbol of China’s economic emergence by raising $21.8 billion in a U.S. initial public offering. The company and shareholders including Yahoo! Inc. sold 320.1 million shares for $68 each, according to a statement, after offering them for $66 to $68.
The sale, which values Alibaba at $167.6 billion, is already the largest by any company in the U.S., and has the potential to break the global record -- currently held by Agricultural Bank of China Ltd.’s $22 billion IPO in 2010 -- if underwriters issue more shares.
European shares rose, sending the Stoxx Europe 600 Index up 0.5 percent. Scotland’s First MinisterAlex Salmond conceded defeat after the anti-independence “No” camp garnered 55 percent of the votes.
A report at 10 a.m. in Washington may show that a gauge of the U.S. outlook for the next three to six months rose at a slower pace in August. The Conference Board’s index of leading indicators climbed 0.4 percent, following a 0.9 percent increase in July, according to the median forecast of economists in a Bloomberg survey.
To contact the reporters on this story: Joseph Ciolli in New York at jciolli@bloomberg.net; Lu Wang in New York at lwang8@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Lynn Thomasson at lthomasson@bloomberg.netJeremy Herron

Friday, 5 September 2014

Dollar falls after disappointing U.S. payrolls figure

(Reuters) - The dollar fell early Friday after government data showed U.S. employers added the fewest jobs in eight months, eroding some confidence in the U.S. economy and reviving bets the Federal Reserve might leave interest rates near zero for a longer period than earlier anticipated.
The U.S. Labor Department said non-farm payrolls grew by 142,000 last month, far below the 225,000 increase among analysts polled by Reuters USNFAR=ECI. The July figure was upwardly revised to 209,000.
The greenback hit a session low of 104.71 yen after rising to a near six-year high of 105.71 yen on the EBS trading system JPY=EBS. It was last down 0.2 percent at 105.05 yen.
The euro strengthened against the dollar EUR=EBS, last up 0.14 percent at $1.2961 after hitting a 14-month low of $1.2920 earlier in the session.

(Reporting by Richard Leong Editing by W Simon)

Paper Planes | Mitch Cator

Power of Positive Doing | Mitch Cator


Mitch Cator | Power of Positive Doing from Mitch Cator on Vimeo.

U.S. Stocks Fluctuate as Jobs Data Fuel Fed Speculation

U.S. stocks fluctuated as investors weighed weaker-than-estimated jobs growth for clues on the economy’s strength and the timing of any Federal Reserve interest-rate increase.
The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index rose less than 0.1 percent to 1,998.19 at 9:32 a.m. in New York, poised for its first weekly decline in a month. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 5.27 points, or less than 0.1 percent, to 17,064.31.
“There has been an accumulation of positive surprises coming out of macro data so the jobs report runs counter to that,” Gary Pzegeo, who helps oversee $25.4 billion at Atlantic Trust in Boston, said in a phone interview. “The underlying direction of monetary policy in different parts of the world is shifting. That could be a source of volatility and uncertainty.”
Employers added the fewest jobs this year in August, representing a pause in the recent momentum of the U.S. labor market as companies assess the prospects for demand. Weak growth in Europeprompted the region’s central bank to step up stimulus measures yesterday. Ukraine’s government and separatists in the country’s easternmost regions agreed on a cease-fire that will start today.
The 142,000 advance in U.S. payrolls was weaker than the lowest estimate in a Bloomberg survey and followed a revised 212,000 gain in July, figures from the Labor Department showed today in Washington. The unemployment rate fell to 6.1 percent from 6.2 percent in July, reflecting a drop in joblessness among teenagers.

Fed Timing

The Fed is gauging the strength of the labor market as it winds down a bond-buying program and considers the timing of raising interest rates. Policy officials led by Janet Yellen next meet Sept. 16-17.
Increasing evidence that the economy is strengthening had fueled speculation the Fed may raise rates sooner than investors anticipate. Yellen has said the central bank will keep rates near record lows for a “considerable time” after bond purchases end.
“Today’s report somewhat contradicts the other data that says that the economy is getting stronger.”Alan Gayle, who helps oversee $49.5 billion as director of asset allocation for RidgeWorth Investments in Atlanta, said by phone. “It promotes the argument of keeping rates lower for longer. It supports Yellen’s more measured moving away from tightening.”
The S&P 500 slipped 0.3 percent in the three days through yesterday after ending last month at a record. The index gained 3.8 percent in August, the biggest increase since February, and topped 2,000 for the first time. The equities benchmark trades at 16.7 times its members’ projected earnings, near a 16.8 multiple reached last week that was its highest valuation since the end of 2009.
To contact the reporters on this story: Callie Bost in New York at cbost2@bloomberg.net; Lu Wang in New York at lwang8@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Lynn Thomasson at lthomasson@bloomberg.netJeremy Herron

Tuesday, 2 September 2014

Australian Market Flat at Noon | Mitch Cator


2014-09-03


The share market is flat as gains by the big four banks offset weakness in the resources sector.


Morgans private client adviser Alistair McCorquodale said the market was holding up well given a weak lead from Wall Street.


The mining sector's weakness came as BHP Billiton traded ex-dividend, meaning new buyers are no longer entitled to its latest dividend.


Iron ore prices have also fallen further.


"It's probably a reasonable day, given the weak overseas leads and that its being held back a bit by some key companies trading ex-dividend," Mr McCorquodale said.


BHP Billiton had lost 59 cents to $36.31, Rio Tinto was down 56 cents at $62.47 and Fortescue Metals was five cents weaker at $4.05.


The big four banks were among the strongest performers, with National Australia Bank up 29 cents at $35.38, ANZ up 13 cents at $33.74, Commonwealth Bank up 28 cents at $81.78 and Westpac 10 cents higher at $35.08.


Telstra continues to rise, adding four cents to $5.70.


The owner of the Priceline pharmacies brand, API, was six cents richer at 64.5 cents after it lifted its full year underlying profit guidance, due to stronger than expected sales growth.


KEY FACTS


* At 1200 AEST on Wednesday, the benchmark S&P/ASX200 index was up 4.1 points, or 0.07 per cent, at 5,662.6 points.


* The broader All Ordinaries index was up four points, or 0.07 per cent, at 5,660.9 points.


* The September share price index futures contract was 13 points higher at 5,659 points, with 13,156 contracts traded.


* National turnover was 924 million securities worth $1.7 billion.

Here’s Why Morgan Stanley Says S&P 500 May Near 3,000 | Mitch Cator

The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index rally isn’t over and the gauge could jump 50 percent more by 2020 as the U.S. economic recovery heads for a record winning streak, according to Morgan Stanley.
A slower though sustained period of growth could help the equity benchmark gauge peak near 3,000, according to a report dated today. The U.S. economy, which began recovering in July 2009, may continue growing for five years or more, making it the longest period of expansion, Morgan Stanley said. The S&P 500 fell 0.1 percent to 2,001.87 at 10:03 a.m. in New York.
Three rounds of stimulus have helped spur growth in the world’s largest economy. The S&P 500 almost tripled from its low in March 2009, sending the value of U.S. shares to a record $23.9 trillion on Aug. 26. A report showed last week that gross domestic product rose in the second quarter more than forecast, pushed by the biggest gain in U.S. business investment in more than two years.
“Equities should benefit from a scenario where the probability of a cycle peak remains low for some time,” Adam Parker, chief U.S. equity strategist at Morgan Stanley, and economist Ellen Zentnerwrote in the note. “As the prolonged expansion becomes more visible, we’d expect a materially higher U.S. stock market.”

August Jump

The S&P 500 rallied 3.8 percent in August, the most since February, as investors bet central banks will continue to underpin global economies. Minutes from the Federal Reserve’s July meeting released last month reinforced the central bank’s commitment to supporting the recovery even as some policy makers indicated a willingness to raise rates sooner than anticipated.
The U.S. economy will grow 2 percent this year and 3 percent next, which would be the most since 2005, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey.
As major economies across the world -- from China and Japan to Europe and Mexico -- are at different stages of growth, central banks are likely to keep interest rates lower for longer, according to the report. This will keep the cost of corporate financing low and help extend the economic expansion.
And, amid lower levels of household and corporate debt, and brighter confidence on the part of American consumers, the economy may be just half way through a period of sustained growth, with company profits following, Morgan Stanley said.
If earnings for S&P 500 companies increase about 6 percent every year from 2015 to 2020, profits will be close to $170 a share, Morgan Stanley said. Should the equity index trade at 17 times its companies’ reported earnings, its peak level could near 3,000, the bank said. The gauge currently trades at a multiple of 18 times, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
Earnings for S&P 500 companies will climb 8.1 percent in 2014, according to the average analyst estimate compiled by Bloomberg as of Aug. 29. Profits will grow 11 percent in both 2015 and 2016, the projections show.
To contact the reporter on this story: Sofia Horta e Costa in London atshortaecosta@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Cecile Vannucci at cvannucci1@bloomberg.netAlan Soughley

Identity Crisis in S&P 500 as Range of Valuations Narrows | Mitch Cator

The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index (SPX), one of the most diverse benchmarks for stocks in America, is starting to resemble a collection of clones.
Three years of virtually uninterrupted gains for the U.S. gauge have resulted in 77record closes since 2012 and a valuation quirk that some see as a sign of indiscriminate buying. A measure of how much price-earnings ratios among the 50 biggest companies vary has fallen to almost the lowest on record, data compiled by Bloomberg show.
Gaps between stocks shrunk after investors shifted money out of higher-valued technology and Internet companies and bought defensive industries such as consumer staples and utilities. Such rotations, which can be done with a click of a button using exchange-traded funds, show buyers are making too few distinctions among good and bad companies and could exacerbate selling once it begins, said Eric Schoenstein, co-manager of the $5.2 billion Jensen Quality Growth Fund.
“There is less interest in trying to actually pick stocks versus just investing in markets,” Schoenstein, who is based in Portland,Oregon, said in a phone interview on Aug. 28. “If there were another 2008 somewhere on the time horizon, the fact that everything moves in lockstep up means they’d probably drop in lockstep down. That’s going to be very painful if that were to happen.”

Photographer: Jin Lee/Bloomberg
Traders at the New York Stock Exchange in New York.

Valuations for companies from Merck (MRK) & Co. to PepsiCo Inc., whose steady earnings have traditionally made them defensive havens when the economy slows, are converging with those with at least twice the profit growth, such as Qualcomm Inc. and Apple (AAPL)Inc.

Not Normal

Price-earnings ratios among the 50 largest companies in the S&P 500 deviate from the mean by an average of about 22 percent, nearly the narrowest on record, according to data since 1990 compiled by Bloomberg. The study includes companies with a valuation multiple above zero and strips out the two highest each year.
“In theory, stocks shouldn’t be valued as similarly as they are,”Hayes Miller, the Boston-based head of multi-asset allocation who helps oversee $57 billion for Baring Asset Management Inc., said in an Aug. 27 phone interview. “It’s not a normal or sustainable situation.”
The last bull market ended with multiples in a cluster. In 2007, the deviation in price-earnings ratios for the 50 largest companies in the S&P 500 was about 25 percent from the mean. That’s the lowest level since at least 1990, the beginning of a decade when the average deviation was 37 percent. The index lost more than half its value in the next two years.
The S&P 500 fell 0.1 percent at 4 p.m. in New York.

Lacking Distinction

Valuations were the most spread out near the peak of the Internet bubble, when technology sharescommanded a premium. The deviation from the mean was 57 percent in 1999. The S&P 500 peaked the next year and plunged 49 percent through October 2002.
“The same kind of lack of distinction being made in the late 1990s occurred in only one area of the market, the dot-com boom,” Scott Clemons, the chief investment strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman Private Banking in New York, said by phone on Aug. 27. The firm oversees $28 billion. “People are buying stocks for the sake of buying stocks.”
The proliferation of ETFs, which invest in a basket of shares, makes it easy to accumulate large positions without regard to the individual companies. The ETF industry has exploded in recent years, with assets tied to American equities reaching $1.1 trillion.

Cash Churn

Cash churning in and out of the funds will narrow valuations in the stock market over time as investors choose to transact in swaths of shares, rather than evaluate details such as company earnings, according to Brent Schutte, senior investment strategist at BMO Global Asset Management. The firm has over $240 billion.
In March, technology ETFs absorbed $970 million and investors pulled cash out of safe-haven groups. That trend reversed in the next two months, with cash coming out of computer funds and into utilities and consumer staples.
“In the 90s, everyone was a stock picker,” Schutte said in a phone interview from Chicago on Aug. 28. “Fast forward to today, what’s everyone’s calling card? They do strategic asset allocations and they buy index funds.”
In this bull market, unlike the dot-com boom, stocks from almost all industries are climbing. An average of 380 companies in the S&P 500 rose in each of the last five years, compared with 307 in the 1990s, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

Better Balance

“There are lots of companies and industries doing very well, so the market doesn’t feel the need to price one group much higher than everything else,” Doug Foreman, Los Angeles-based chief investment officer at Kayne Anderson Rudnick Investment Management, said by phone on Aug. 27. The firm oversees about $9 billion. “It’s much better balance.”
Morgan Stanley forecast continued appreciation for the S&P 500. A slower though sustained period of growth could help the equity benchmark peak near 3,000 by 2020 amid continued economic strength in the U.S., the bank wrote in a report today.
Merck, the second-largest U.S. drugmaker, trades at 17.2 times profit and analysts forecast profit will be little changed in 2014, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The valuation matches Qualcomm, a company with estimated earnings growth of 32 percent.
Apple’s faster growth isn’t being rewarded either. The iPhone maker has a price-earnings ratio of 16.6, compared with 20.8 for PepsiCo. Analysts predict Apple will boost income by 14 percent this year, versus a 5 percent pace for the maker of soda and Frito-Lay snacks.
“There’s a whole group of stocks in growth purgatory,” Todd Lowenstein, who helps manage $16 billion at Highmark Capital Management in Los Angeles, said in an Aug. 27 phone interview. “Your returns from here are going to be less about multiple expansion and more about the fundamentals.”
To contact the reporters on this story: Lu Wang in New York at lwang8@bloomberg.net; Joseph Ciolli in New York at jciolli@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Lynn Thomasson at lthomasson@bloomberg.netJeremy Herron

Asian Stocks Gain, Led by China, as Yen Drops With Bonds | Mitch Cator

Asian stocks climbed, the yen slid to an almost eight-month low and bonds in the region tracked Treasuries lower amid signs of strength in the U.S. economy. Chinese shares jumped after gauges of services activity rebounded, while crude oil rallied.
The MSCI Asia Pacific Index rose 0.6 percent by 12:37 p.m. in Tokyo, as Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index advanced 1.1 percent. Standard & Poor’s 500 Indexfutures were little changed after the benchmark U.S. index slipped 0.1 percent from a record. The yen dropped to as low as 105.27 per dollar, boosting Japanese shares. Yields on 10-year Australian debtadded nine basis points. Oil in New York rebounded 0.3 percent and gold climbed from the lowest level since June.
U.S. factory output grew in August at the fastest pace in three years, underlining the economy’s divergence with Europe and China, where gauges of manufacturing this week dropped more than analysts projected. A private gauge of non-manufacturing activity in China jumped the most on record after its lowest-ever reading last month. Japan and the euro area see service-industry data today, before the European Central Bank and the Bank of Japan update monetary policy tomorrow amid speculation over the outlook for stimulus.
“A strong U.S. economy is good for Asia, particularly the exporters,” Timothy Radford, a strategist at Rivkin Securities in Sydney, said by phone. “The rally in Japanese equities can be sustained as the the yen continues to weaken. There are still concerns about the Chinese economy as recent data have been disappointing. If we do see further weakness, we’d expect the government to implement more stimulus.”

Japan Gains

The Hang Seng Index climbed back above 25,000 and a measure of Chinese companies listed in the city advanced 1.8 percent. The Shanghai Composite Index added 0.6 percent and is heading for itshighest close since June last year.
An official non-manufacturing purchasing managers’ index for China’s services sector rose to 54.4 for August today, from 54.2 in July, while a similar gauge from HSBC Holdings Plc and Markit Economics jumped to 54.1 from 50. Factory gauges released Sept. 1 indicated Chinese manufacturing growth is slowing.
Japan’s Topix Index increased 0.8 percent, heading for its highest close since January, led by export-related companies. The Nikkei 225 Stock Average (NKY) added 1 percent in a third day of gains. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index was little changed with the Kospi index in Seoul.

Dollar Index

The yen depreciated as much as 0.2 percent to touch its weakest level since Jan. 10, and was trading down 0.1 percent at 105.2 per dollar. Regarded along with gold and U.S. Treasuries as a haven investment, the yen lost more than 1 percent in each of the past two months amid a resurgence in the U.S. dollar. Indonesia’s rupiah, Malaysia’s ringgit and the New Zealand dollar all weakened at least 0.2 percent.
The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index, which tracks the greenback against 10 major peers, was little changed after jumping 0.4 percent in New York to its highest close in almost a year. The Institute for Supply Management’s index of U.S. manufacturing unexpectedly climbed to 59 last month, the highest level since March 2011 and up from 57.1 in July. The result exceeded all forecasts in a Bloomberg survey of economists.
“The trend upwards in the U.S. dollar should keep the yen under pressure,” Janu Chan, an economist in Sydney at St George Bank Ltd., said by phone. Japan’s “economy is just struggling now with the sales-tax hike and the recovery from that is taking longer than what the Bank of Japan probably expected.”

Services PMIs

Japan’s services sector contracted in August, according to data from Markit today, with the BOJ to issue its monetary policy statement tomorrow. Markit’s euro-zone services PMI is expected to hold at 53.5 today, while retail sales may contract on a month-on-month basis for the first time since March.
Of the 57 economists surveyed by Bloomberg before the ECB’s policy review tomorrow, six are predicting the main refinancing rate will be reduced to 0.05 percent from the current 0.15 percent. ECB President Mario Draghi ignited speculation over a potential quantitative-easing program at theFederal Reserve of Kansas City’s annual symposium in Jackson Hole, Wyoming Aug. 22, saying policy makers will use “all the available instruments needed to ensure price stability.”
European money markets are pricing in about a 50 percent probability that the ECB will cut interest rates by 10 basis points this week, according to BNP Paribas SA.

Bond Markets

Australian bonds due in a decade yielded 3.44 percent, up for a third day after rates slid 19 basis points last week. Yields on similar-maturity New Zealand debt rose for the first time since Aug. 21, adding eight basis points, or 0.08 percentage point, to 4.14 percent. Japanese 10-year notes paid 0.54 percent, the highest since the end of July.
Gross domestic product in Australia expanded 0.5 percent in the second quarter from the previous three months, when it grew 1.1 percent. That compares with a median of 0.4 percent growth predicted by economists surveyed by Bloomberg. Central bank Governor Glenn Stevens will speak in Adelaide today.
Yields on 10-year U.S. Treasuries added one basis point to 2.43 percent after rising eight basis points in New York as trading resumed following the Labor Day holiday. It was the biggest increase in more than a month and came after 10-year yields slid 21 basis points in August, the most since January.

Rate Outlook

The U.S. manufacturing data bolstered speculation that the Fed may bring forward its timeline for higher U.S. interest rates. Reports last week showed U.S. GDP expanded more than previously forecast in the second quarter, propelled by the biggest gain in business investment in more than two years. A Labor Department report Sept. 5 will show the number of workers added to payrolls rose by more than 200,000 in August for a seventh straight month, according to a Bloomberg survey of economists.
West Texas Intermediate oil rose to $93.19 a barrel after sinking 3.2 percent last session from the Aug. 29 close to the lowest settlement price since Jan. 14. Brent crude rose 0.3 percent to $100.66 a barrel after tumbling 2.4 percent yesterday amid concern slowing manufacturing from Europe to China will crimp demand for fuel.
Gold climbed to $1,266.81 an ounce on the spot market, after slipping 1.6 percent yesterday to the lowest level since June amid the stronger dollar.
Russia, engaged in a conflict with Ukraine over its support for separatists in the former Soviet republic’s east, is the world’s No. 1 producer of palladium and the biggest energy exporter globally.
U.S. President Barack Obama is heading to eastern Europe to reassure NATO members of their security amid criticism from Russia over the U.S. approach to the tensions in Ukraine. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Ukraine’s allies were stoking the five-month-old tussle and should back peace talks, while President Vladimir Putin sought to quell concern over remarks that his army could “take Kiev” in a matter of weeks. Ukraine has been strengthening its defenses.
To contact the reporters on this story: Jonathan Burgos in Singapore atjburgos4@bloomberg.net; Nick Gentle in Hong Kong at ngentle2@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this story: Emma O’Brien at eobrien6@bloomberg.net; Nick Gentle at ngentle2@bloomberg.net Nick Gentle

Mitch Cator Motivational Videos | One Choice | Simple Truths


Mitch Cator Motivational Videos | One Choice by Simple Truths from Mitch Cator on Vimeo.