Sunday, 9 June 2019

Likely facets of forthcoming Bangladesh Budget


Finance Minister of Bangladesh, Mustafa Kamal is scheduled to announce the budget for financial year 2019-20 in parliament on 13th June 2019, a few days after the announcement of Pakistan's Budget for the next financial. I have just picked up news from a leading Bangladesh newspaper, which may give Pakistanis a chance to see what is being done there. 
Aiming to invigorate the promising export sector, an ailing stock market and cooling property markets, the upcoming budget is likely to announce a number of incentives to rekindle the business and investment environment, said sources involved in preparing this year’s national budget for parliamentary approval.
The incentives include enhanced subsidies, tax cuts and fiscal stimulus to take the economy to an 8.5% growth rate in financial year 2019-20.
Realtors and land developers have long been demanding a reduction of registration fees, including the Value Added Tax (VAT) and other taxes on the sale and transfer of property, like apartments or land, so as to stimulate the slowing real estate market. According to sources, the upcoming budget is likely to almost halve the current aforementioned costs.
Currently, total fees for flat registration are 14% to 16%, and 17% for land registration. The fee is imposed on the deed value of property.
A budgetary measure is also likely to be announced for the first time for the resale of existing (not new) flats.
National Board of Revenue (NBR) officials think a secondary property market boom would stimulate the economy further if registration fees for used flats were rationalized.
Presently, registration costs remain the same for both new and used flats.
The proposed budget is set to raise the tax-free income ceiling for cash dividend income from stocks to Tk50,000, up from the current ceiling of Tk25,000.
“The Finance Minister is serious about reviving the morale of stock investors in the upcoming budget. A number of budget incentives are in the offing to streamline capital markets,” said a top NBR official. “The market (capital market) will act positively after the announcement in the proposed budget,” he hoped.
Officials concerned at the finance division under the Ministry of Finance said the subsidy outlay in the budget would be around Tk45,000 crore for the next fiscal year, up from Tk38,500 crore earmarked for the current fiscal year.
The highest subsidy amount of Tk9,000 crore is likely to be allocated for the agricultural sector, with some allocation expected to be earmarked for farm mechanization.
The budget is also likely to announce a one percent export subsidy for the apparel sector, in addition to the 4% now applicable for receipts coming from non-traditional markets. The amount to be earmarked is likely to be Tk9,000 crore, which is now around Tk3,500 crore. Presently, 26 export-bound items, including apparel goods, get export subsidies of anywhere between 2% and 20%.
In the current budget, export sector subsidies amount to Tk5,000 crore. Of the total, Tk500 crore is allocated for jute and jute goods.
The power sector subsidy is likely to be earmarked at Tk10,000 crore, and the energy (including LNG) sector is likely to get Tk9,000 crore.
The proposed budget is reportedly set to announce an incentive for foreign exchange remitters, as the government is desperate for more remittances to handle the foreign exchange demand to manage rising import payments.
A subsidy of 2-3% is likely to be offered in the budget for remitters. Under the planned scheme, recipients of remittance will get 2-3% extra local currency on the remitted amount. For this purpose, an amount of Tk3,000 crore will be allocated in the budget.


Thursday, 6 June 2019

Why Trump wants talks with Iran without any preconditions?


Decades ago I had heard, “Thugs have a common interest ‘make money’. They cooperate, facilitate and protect each other, though they may appear to the world, the deadliest enemies”. This was confirmed after the US President; Donald Trump announced, “We are ready to talk to Iran without any preconditions”.
I was curious about this change of heart and probed a little deeper. I instantly found a reason, “trillions of US dollars invested in financial derivatives”. The Bank for International Settlements said last year that the “notional amount outstanding for derivatives contracts” was US$542 trillion, although the gross market value was put at just US$12.7 trillion. Others suggested it was US$1.2 quadrillion or more. A person with ordinary wit may ask, what derivatives have got to do with US-Iran animosity?
The reply is simple, bulk of the derivatives are based on energy products, mainly crude oil. Therefore, it all has to do with the Strait of Hormuz. Blocking the Strait could cut off oil and gas from Iraq, Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar and Iran – 20% of the world’s oil. There has been some debate on whether this could occur – whether the US Fifth Fleet, which is stationed nearby, could stop Tehran doing this and if Iran, which has anti-ship missiles on its territory along the northern border of the Persian Gulf, would go that far.
According to those privy to information, a series of studies hit President Trump’s desk and caused panic in Washington. These showed that in the case of the Strait of Hormuz being shut down, whatever the reason, Iran has the power to hammer the world financial system, by causing global trade in derivatives to be blown apart. The information was duly circulated to France, Britain and Germany, the EU-3 members of the Iran nuclear deal (or Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action), also caused a panic.
Oil derivative specialists know well that if the flow of energy in the Gulf is blocked it could lead to the price of oil reaching US$200 a barrel, or much higher over an extended period. Crashing the derivatives market would create an unprecedented global depression. Trump’s former Goldman Sachs Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin knows it better than any other person.
And Trump himself seems to have given the game away. He’s now on the record essentially saying that Iran has no strategic value to the US. He really wants a face-saving way to get out of the problem his advisers Bolton and Pompeo got him into. Washington now needs a face-saving, Iran is not asking for meetings, but it is the sole surviving super power, United States.
They also link it to non-scheduled stop of US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo in Switzerland, just because he’s a “big cheese and chocolate fan”, in his own words. Yet any well-informed also say, “He badly needed to ease the fears of the trans-Atlantic elites, apart from his behind-closed-doors meetings with the Swiss, who are representing Iran in communications with Washington. After weeks of ominous threats to Iran, the US said “no preconditions” would be set on talks with Tehran, and this was issued from Swiss soil.

Wednesday, 5 June 2019

Buying oil from other sources can cause a big dent to Indian economy


In India, top ministers of Narendra Modi government held talks on the issue of investment in petroleum and gas sector a month after the US waiver for India to import oil from Iran came to an end. The meeting chaired by Home Minister Amit Shah was attended by Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar, Petroleum and Natural Gas Minister Dharmendra Pradhan and Railways and Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal.
The meeting gained significance as US President, Trump’s administration told India, China, Turkey and a few other oil customers of Iran that no waiver on sanctions would be granted to them after 1st May 2019, ending six months of exception to the sanctions.
The US had granted exemptions to India, China, Japan, South Korea and Turkey “to ensure a well-supplied oil market” in November last year for six months after it re-imposed sanctions on the Persian nation in view of its controversial nuclear program.
India is said to be in touch with the US to seek further extension of the waiver on oil imports from Iran, pointed out that it has been gradually reducing its energy purchases from the Islamic country.
Two weeks after the US decision came into force, Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif travelled to India and met the then External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj. After her meeting with Zarif, she had said a decision on India’s oil imports will be taken after the elections keeping in mind India’s commercial considerations, energy security and economic interests.
Following the withdrawal of the US waiver, India has stopped contracting oil shipments from Iran. With 80 per cent of India’s requirements being met through imports, higher-priced oil from non-Iranian sources can make a big dent in the country’s current account deficit and foreign exchange reserves.
Oil imports from Iran in the past fiscal year ended March 2019 amounted to about US$9 billion. Official sources have said that getting oil from alternative sources would have financial implications and lead to further pressure when crude prices touch US$75-80 per barrel in the near-term, putting pressure on India’s import bill.
Iran used to offer India a longer credit period of 60 days compared to other crude suppliers, while the cargo insurance was free.
Imports from Iraq, UAE and Saudi Arabia will now be on the higher side, without some of the benefits that Iran was giving, India has been Iran’s second largest customer of oil, after China.

Tuesday, 4 June 2019

Chinese President says US pressure on Iran worrying


A rise in tensions in the Middle East owing to the US pressure on Iran is worrying and all parties need to exercise restraint, Chinese President Xi Jinping told Russian media ahead of a visit to the country.
Tension between Iran and the US has escalated over the past months, after the United States pulled out of a deal between Iran and global powers to curb Tehran’s nuclear program in return for lifting sanctions.
Washington re-imposed sanctions last year and tightened them sharply at the start of last month, ordering all countries to halt imports of Iranian oil. It has also hinted at military confrontation, sending extra forces to the region to counter what it describes as Iranian threats.
Chinese President told TASS news agency and Rossiyskaya Gazeta newspaper that because of the “extreme pressure” Washington has put on Tehran and the unilateral sanctions, tensions have continued to rise in the Middle East.
He reiterated, “The development of the situation is worrying.”
The Iran nuclear deal should be fully implemented and respected, as it is of crucial importance for peace and stability in the Middle East and non-proliferation, Xi added.
 “China and Russia’s views and positions on the Iran nuclear issue are highly aligned, and both hope that all relevant parties remain rational and exercise restraint, step up dialogue and consultations and lower the temperature on the present tense situation,” he said.
China has been angered by U.S. threats against countries and companies that violate U.S. sanctions by importing Iranian oil. China and Iran have close energy ties.
Xi did not directly address the oil sanctions issue, but appeared to allude to them by saying: “China will continue to firmly safeguard its own legitimate and lawful rights and interests”.

Saturday, 1 June 2019

Iranians told not to take Trump’s bait and stay calm


A number of former Obama administration officials have quietly urged Iranian government officials to keep their heads cool in the face of the Trump administration’s maximum pressure policy against Tehran.
US officials have reached out to their contacts in the Iranian government, including Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif to tell them, “Don’t take Trump’s bait and stay calm”.
Conversations between former Obama officials and Iranian government officials have been ongoing since November 2016. But the recent round of conversations, which took place over the phone and in person over the last two months, came as lines of communication between the US and Iran, through intermediaries in Europe and elsewhere.
Tensions between Iran and the U.S. have grown in recent weeks, especially after the latter deployed an aircraft carrier strike group, B-52 bombers, and 1,500 more American troops in the region, citing unidentified Iranian “threats”. Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi said, “We are aware that evident elements are trying to put America into a war with Iran for their own goals.” He said US National Security Adviser John Bolton and “other warmongers” are plotting against Iran.
“War would be a disaster for everybody in the region. We hope that wisdom will prevail in Washington, that they do not make this biggest mistake in the region ever. But we are fully prepared for that scenario,” Araqchi said.


Friday, 31 May 2019

United States to end preferential trade treatment for India on 5th June 2019


President Donald Trump announced on Friday that the United States would end its preferential trade treatment for India on 5th June 2019. Earlier, in March this year he had announced the intention to remove India from the Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) program.
Trump declared, “I have determined that India has not assured the United States that India will provide equitable and reasonable access to its markets.”
India is the biggest beneficiary of the GSP, which allows preferential duty-free imports of up to US$5.6 billion from the South Asian nation.
Indian officials have raised the prospect of higher import duties on more than 20 products of US origin, if President Trump drops India from the program.
The biggest point of satisfaction for India is that 24 members of the US Congress have sent a letter to the administration on 3rd May 3 urging it not to terminate India’s access to the GSP.




Thursday, 30 May 2019

India seeking resumption of oil import from Iran


India is planning to resume oil imports from Iran and the new government is going to hold talks with Iran in order to discuss ways of getting around US sanctions like paying in national currencies.
“The Modi government will immediately initiate talks with Iran to discuss steps that will allow it to resume oil imports,” India digital news portal ‘The Print’ has reported quoting government sources.
According to the sources, Iran’s Pasargad Bank and India’s Reserve Bank could be used to arrange the payments.
“Payments can be deposited in the Iranian bank and then Iranian authorities can decide how to utilize the money,” a senior government official who didn’t wish to be identified said.
“These talks have been held earlier too but got stalled due to elections. Talks will be revived soon and this will be one of the first focus areas of the government.” the official said.
India stopped oil imports from Iran after the six-month sanction waiver from the US ended on 2nd May 2019.
The US administration re-imposed sanctions on Iran after withdrawing from the Iran nuclear deal, which was signed in 2015, along with European countries. .
The US had instructed India and other countries to cut oil imports from Iran to "zero" by 4th November 2018 or face sanctions. However, Washington granted a six-month waiver to India and seven other countries to buy oil from Iran. The waivers expired in May this year.
India, which is the second biggest purchaser of Iranian oil after China, has since then restricted its monthly purchase to 15 million tons in a year or 300,000 barrels per day, down from 22.6 million tons or 452,000 barrels per day, bought in 2017-18 financial year.
India is world's third biggest oil consumer that meets more than 80% of its oil needs through imports.