Treasury Releases Iran Central Bank Sanctions Guidance

iran sanctions

The Department of the Treasury released much-anticipated guidance Tuesday on new economic sanctions against Iran’s financial institutions.

The sanctions, signed into law by President Barack Obama on Dec. 31 and implemented via executive order, penalize foreign banks and companies that do business with Iranian financial institutions and the country’s central bank, Bank Markazi. The law forces anyone that does business with Bank Markazi and other Iranian institutions to choose between ending those relationships or being blocked from the U.S. economy.

The new actions are designed to curb Iran’s contested nuclear program. After they were enacted, the administration had 60 days to release guidance before some of the provisions kicked in.

To review the complete text of the sanctions visit the U.S. Department of Treasury Resource Center.
 

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Bank of Japan Data Shows Weakness

boj

Slowing global trade, a strong currency and disruption from severe floods in Thailand all took their toll on the Japanese economy during the final quarter of 2011, data showed Monday, setting off a contraction that is likely to increase pressure on the central bank to step up efforts to bolster the economy at its policy meeting this week.

The Japanese economy, the third-biggest in the world after those of the United States and China, shrank 0.6 percent in the October-December quarter compared with the previous three months, according to data released by the Japanese Cabinet Office. On an annualized basis, the contraction was 2.3 percent, a sharp turnaround from the 7 percent increase recorded three months earlier, and markedly worse than analysts had expected.

The BOJ eased its policy on Tuesday by boosting asset purchases and defined 1 percent inflation as a near-term goal, signalling its resolve to take further action to beat deflation in the face of growing political pressure to support a fragile economic recovery.

In a move that surprised markets, the central bank added 10 trillion yen ($130 billion) to its 20 trillion yen pool of funds set aside for asset purchases, with the increase earmarked entirely for long-term government bonds.

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Is The ECB Playing With Fire?

ECB

In a few days, European Banks will be given the opportunity to borrow an unlimited amount of money from the European Central Bank (ECB). The maturity of the loans is 3 years and the rate of interest is... 1 percent while banks borrow above the Euribor rate close to 2 percent for three years. A similar transaction was launched in December and allowed banks to collect $650 billion at those below market rates (assuming there is a market for three year loans). According to the Financial Times, European banks are expected to borrow twice that amount.

Serious observers expressed concerns on the actual size of the balance sheet of the ECB after that transaction. Assuming that the new transaction adds $1.3 trillion to the ECB balance sheet as announced, it would reach $5 trillion, while the current Federal Reserve size is at $2.9 trillion.

The transaction is far from having been unanimously approved by the European Central Bank Board and Germany is deadly against it. The ECB President has encouraged the banks to borrow while Deutsche Banks' President, Joseph Ackermann, rightly expressed some concerns that banks who will rely on this borrowing will be stigmatized. As a "lender of last resort" the ECB should only act in... last resort and not facilitate the liabilities management of European banks.

Read the rest of what Georges Ugeux has to say...
 

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Chinese Currency At 18-Year High

Yuan

Beijing: Chinese currency yuan rose to an 18-year-high on Friday, as its Vice-President Xi Jinping, expected to take over as President next year, geared up for a trip to the United States next week.


The People's Bank of China set the yuan's central parity rate against the US dollar at 6.29 after the rate rose for two consecutive trading days, according to the China Foreign Exchange Trading System.

"The exchange rate will see more fluctuations, although the positive outlook for the Chinese economy has sparked expectations of a strengthening of the currency," said Zhuang Jian, senior economist with the Asian Development Bank.

He predicted that yuan may rise about 3 percent this year. However, that would be slower than the 6 percent against the dollar in real terms last year.

Deputy Foreign Minister Cui Tiankai said on Thursday that Xi's visit is an important opportunity to enhance mutual trust between China and the US.

He also hoped that the visit would help remove hurdles from Sino-US trade, including restrictions on US exports of certain high-tech products and obstacles to Chinese investment in the US.

Xi is scheduled to meet US President Barack Obama and other high-level leaders during his visit.

Appreciation of Chinese currency against the dollar is the key demand of US, which accuses China of keeping its currency value low to cash on exports.

"The rise largely reflects market supply and demand," China Daily quoted Zhang Jianping, senior economist at the Institute for International Economics Research as saying.

He said the market expects the Chinese currency to rise because the economy remains positive and the government has adopted a rather tight monetary policy.

Houng Lee, senior resident representative at the Beijing office of the International Monetary Fund, said the currency will go forward over the medium term but in the short term it will see more ups and downs.

A report by IMF's Beijing office on Monday said upward pressures on the currency have diminished recently.

However, as the current account still has a sizable surplus of US dollars, and foreign direct investment remains strong, China is supposed to resume the strong pace of accumulation of foreign-exchange reserves, the report said.

The country's foreign-exchange reserves increased by USD 11.7 billion between October and December, regardless of changes in the exchange rate and asset prices, the State Administration of Foreign Exchange said on Friday.

China has over USD 3.20 trillion forex reserves. Its capital and financial account suffered a deficit of USD 47.4 billion in the fourth quarter of 2011, from a surplus of USD 66.2 billion in the third, indicating net capital outflows.

Analysts said the exchange-rate fluctuations are closely connected with the crisis-affected economic scenario overseas and with speculative activities. 
 

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Major Reversal: ECB May Help Ease Greek Debt

Papademos and Draghi
Lucas Papademos, Prime Minister of the Hellenic Republic, and Mario Draghi, President of the ECB

 BERLIN, Germany — With Greece on the cusp of a deal to secure a bailout, the European Central Bank is reportedly prepared to play a crucial role in reducing the country’s crippling debt burden. The ECB's move is a significant reversal, given that officials had rejected any such assistance in the past.

The news comes as the coalition parties in Athens finally prepare to discuss the draft plan for tough reforms, following days of delays.

The three parties were handed the 50-page text on Wednesday morning after Prime Minister Lucas Papademos and officials from the troika of international lenders, the ECB, the European Union and the International Monetary Fund, agreed on the final details late Tuesday night.

Papademos, the technocrat ushered in to help rescue Greece’s economy, needs to get the green light from the party leaders for the reform package before he can access the new 130 billion euro ($172 billion) rescue package to avoid bankruptcy.

Read full article at GlobalPost.
 

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