Japan Industrial Production Falls at Fastest Pace Since 2011 Earthquake


Japan factory output

A man walks inside a factory at Keihin industrial zone in Kawasaki, south of Tokyo



Japan's industrial production declined 3.3% on month in June, as the country's sales tax hike prompted consumers to cut spending, leading to lower domestic consumption.


Japan's ministry of economy, trade and industry said industrial production in June declined 3.3% from the previous month and 3.2% from the previous year.


The monthly decline is the biggest for the economy since the 2011 earthquake and tsunami.


Transport equipment, general-purpose, production and business oriented machinery, information and communication electronics equipment industries contributed largely to the decline, according to the ministry.


Shipments declined for the sixth consecutive month, falling 1.9% on month in June. Meanwhile, inventories in June increased 1.9% from the previous month, showing an increase for the second consecutive month.


Sales Tax


Japan increased its sales tax from 5% to 8% in April in order to generate more revenues and pare its huge public debt. As a result, goods became more expensive in the country and consumers started to reduce their spending.


On 29 July, the country reported a 0.6% year-on-year decline in June retail sales. In addition, household spending figures also declined in recent months.


Ahead of the tax hike, businesses and individuals boosted their spending, resulting in weaker demand in recent months.


"The pent-up demand ahead of the sales tax hike was bigger than expected so the consequent downturn is pretty steep, which is probably why output fell so much in June," said Junko Nishioka, chief Japan economist at RBS Securities.


"We don't expect output to keep falling in the current quarter as the tax hike effect is fading. Still, the slow pace of recovery in exports may weigh on output."


Manufacturers surveyed by the ministry expect output to rise 2.5% in July and 1.1% in August.



Israel Bombs UN School in Gaza Killing 20 as UN Arm Finds Fresh Weapons Stockpile


Israel-Gaza crisis

Light streak trail is seen as a rocket is launched from the northern Gaza Strip towards IsraelReuters



An Israeli attack on a UN school in Gaza is believed to have killed at least 20 people even as the international body's relief agency has found fresh weapon stockpile reportedly stashed by Hamas.


The Israeli Defence Forces (IDF) has said it is still looking into the incident while the local media reports have confirmed the school attack.


A UN official who spoke to AFP on condition of anonymity has said at least one shell hit two classrooms in the school run by the United Nations Relief and Works Agency.


The shelling is thought to have taken place in the Jabaliya refugee camp.


Meanwhile, the relief agency has confirmed the discovery of rockets piled up in a UN-run school for the third time within a week.


"We condemn the group or groups who endangered civilians by placing these munitions in our school. This is yet another flagrant violation of the neutrality of our premises. We call on all the warring parties to respect the inviolability of UN property," said agency spokesperson Chris Gunness.


Without saying who the relevant parties are, Gunness said the involved sides have been notified. The UN had not named the group responsible for hoarding arms inside its shelter on previous occasions as well.


Meanwhile, a senior Hamas figure has released an audio recording vowing more attacks on Israel, potentially disrupting the yet-elusive ceasefire.


According to the Associated Press, reclusive Hamas leader Mohammad Deif said: "We don't accept any condition of ceasefire. There is no ceasefire without the stop of the aggression and the end of the siege," adding that the Hamas fighters are "eager for death".


He said: "What the air force and your artillery shelling have failed to accomplish, will not be accomplished by ground forces. You are sending your soldiers to a definite slaughterhouse, God willing. The Zionist entity will not know security unless the Palestinian people live in peace."



Gaza Crisis: Five Palestinian Militants Killed Infiltrating Israel after Hamas Reject Ceasefire


Gaza

A Palestinian firefighter works during efforts to extinguish a fire at Gaza's main power plant(Reuters)



Five Palestinian militants have been killed by Israeli forces after attempting to infiltrate Israel via a Gaza tunnel.


A Givati infantry battalion opened fire on the five militants when they were spotted emerging from a tunnel in the southern Gaza Strip, according to newspaper Haaretz.


The Israeli military confirmed that no Israeli soliders were hurt in the incident and that a large arms cache was found in the tunnel after the infiltration attempt.


The sophisticated tunnel network, which runs from deep inside the Gaza Strip into both Israel and Egypt, has been used by Hamas militants to circumvent the Israeli blockade, smuggle a variety of goods into Gaza and attack IDF soldiers.


This week, five IDF troops were killed when four Gaza militants entered Israel via a tunnel and fired on an anti-tank missile at an IDF guard post.


Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said the Gaza ground and air offensive will continue until the threat from the tunnel network is stopped altogether.


The infiltration attempt came after Hamas rejected a Palestinian call from the West Bank for a 24-hour ceasefire in the Gaza Strip.


The secretary-general of the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO), Yasser Abed Rabbo, had earlier said the idea held both Hamas and Islamic Jihad support.


But Sami Abu Zuhri, a Hamas spokesman in Gaza, said the claim was false and "not related to the resistance" which "speaks for itself" in Gaza.


"When we get guarantees from the Zionists for an international mediation regarding a humanitarian pause, then we can consider it," he said.


According to Palestinian officials, 1,156 Palestinians have been killed in Israel's offensive so far. A further 6,700 have been wounded, with more than 215,000 displaced in the territory - most have fled to UN shelters.


The Israeli military has confirmed the loss of 53 soldiers while three civilians, one a foreign national, have been killed in the fighting.


Israel refused to comment on the Palestinian ceasefire proposal, despite reports that they had rejected the offer.



Rolls Royce hit with £351m Loss after Skymark Cancels Airbus Order


Rolls Royce hit with £351m Loss after Skymark Cancels Airbus Order

Rolls Royce hit with £351m loss after Skymark cancels Airbus order.Reuters



Rolls Royce is set to lose out on £351m after Japan's Skymark Airlines cancelled an order for six Airbus A380 aircraft.


The Airbus planes were to be fitted with Rolls-Royce Trent 900 engines and the airline had also booked Rolls-Royce's follow-up servicing package – TotalCare – for the engines.


Rolls-Royce, in a statement, said that the cancellation has reduced its order book by £351m ($595m, €443m), or about 0.5% of its £71.4bn order book as of 31 December, 2013.


In early June 2014, the British engine maker lost out on £2.6bn after Gulf-based Emirates cancelled an order for 70 Airbus A350s.


The Dubai-based airline made the decision after reviewing their fleet requirements.


Rolls Royce said that the move will take 3.5% from its order book, but added it was confident of filling the gap.


The aviation sector has enjoyed something of a renaissance over the past couple of years, with huge orders coming in from the Middle East and East Asia.


Earlier this year, VietJetAir (VJA)'s agreed to pay $9bn for 63 Airbus craft, inking a deal first thrashed-out in Paris last September.


The package included $6.4bn of purchases as well as seven leased family aircraft worth $2.6bn.


Previously, the boom in demand had been driven by orders placed at Dubai Airshows editions, as regional airlines expanded their operations to accommodate Dubai's growing status as a transport hub and growing passenger volume.



Gay Conversion Therapy Challenged in Chinese Courts by LGBT Activists


Shanghai pride

The Shanghai Gay Pride annual summer event is the first of its kind in mainland China.Reuters



China could welcome in a new era for gay rights this week as activists launch legal proceedings against a clinic that advertises gay-to-straight conversion therapy.


If the case, which will be heard in a Chinese court on Thursday, is successful, it could become a legal milestone in the fight to stop homosexuality being treated as an illness.


Homosexuality was officially declassified as a mental disorder in China in 2001, but conversion clinics like the Nanjing Urban Psychiatric Consultancy Centre, which will have to face campaigners this week, still exist around the country.


Dr Zhou Zhengyou claims to have successfully "cured" 70% of gay patients at the Nanjing centre. He charges £120 (£70) per session.


Zhou says he uses counselling alone to treat his patients and does not use the aversion therapy techniques offered by clinics elsewhere in China, though he defended the use of such methods.


He told BBC World Tonight: "One common method is electric shock. When the patient has a gay thought, we electrocute them or inject them with drugs that make them sick."


That the Chinese government is allowing LGBT activists to challenge gay conversion therapy in the courts is a landmark move for the typically conservative country.


Gay relationships were made legal in China in 1997 and attitudes towards gay and transgender people have been slow to evolve, though there are signs progress is being made, such as Shanghai's burgeoning gay district and annual Gay Pride event.



Argentina Careers Towards Default and Uncertain Future


Argentina football fan

An Argentina supporter reacts as she watches a screening after Argentina lost to Germany in the 2014 World Cup FinalReuters



When Argentina reached the World Cup Final on July 13, the country's significant woes were temporarily forgotten. From Santa Fe to Buenos Aires football fans drank, danced and dreamed about a date with destiny.


Millions had flooded the country's streets throughout the tournament, cheering Lionel Messi and co all the way to Rio de Janiero. The sweetest glory, lifting the World Cup in arch-rival Brazil's flagship stadium, the Maracana felt inevitable.


Argentina's improbable victory was cruelly snatched away at the last minute, of course, leaving players and fans to reflect on multiple wasted chances.


While the superstars in white and blue have left, destined for beaches in remote corners of the globe, Argentina has had to sober up to its economic predicament.


The Vulture Fund Dispute


Argentina's latest date with destiny falls on Wednesday July 30.


Buenos Aires has careered to the brink of defaulting on its debts. In June, the United States Supreme Court threw out Argentina's case against a fund that bought a large (and cheap) chunk of its debt after Argentina's 2001 default.


The Cayman Island-based fund, NML Capital, has been holding out for full payment of principal and outstanding interest, according to the terms agreed in 2001.


The vast majority of Argentina's 2001 creditors restructured the debts, first in 2005 and again in 2010, accepting around $0.30 on the dollar. Among others, NML did not.


Argentina appealed to the Supreme Court against a previous judgement that prevented it paying off its creditors who had restructured their debt if it did not also pay the holdouts.


The Supreme Court decision means that Argentina must either reach a deal with the hold-outs or pay it off in full by 30 July. If a deal is not reached, it will default on its debts.


Argentina has to find $1.3bn to pay off the holdouts. It also needs to find $539m in interest payments on restructured debts by the same deadline.


Argentina has a track record of pushing things to the last minute and the possibility of a deal remains.


Yet, the likelihood that the country will default for the eighth time in its history, and the second time this century, is growing with every hour.


Second Default in 13 Years


NML has lambasted Argentina's government throughout proceedings, accusing Buenos Aires of stubbornness as it marches towards default.


"Today, Argentina's government made clear that it will be choosing to default next week," the fund said in a 24 July statement.


While NML professed as "willing to be flexible in forging a solution. Argentina again refused to negotiate any aspect of the dispute".


"Instead, its representatives simply stated that no solution was possible," it added.


Economists and analysts have come around to the idea that Argentina is willing to default.


"The only possibility to avoid default now is for the hold-outs to request the judge to put the ruling on hold," said IHS Latin America Analyst Carlos Caicedo in a note.


"If the judge does that, Argentina would be able to pay the exchange bondholders what is due to them on July 30, avoiding default. Argentina is adamant that only under these circumstances – a stay on the ruling – would it consider negotiations with the holdouts."


CFK Unapologetic


Since the Supreme Court decision on 30 June, Argentina's President Cristina Fernandez Kirchner has embarked on a media offensive, targeting the holdouts and the US legal system.


Argentina's government ran advertisements demonising the holdouts as 'vulture funds' during the country's World Cup matches. It also published full page ads in US newspapers, attacking the 'vulture funds', and one of the American judges that ruled against Argentina.


The aggressive nature of the public campaign leaves the impression that CFK is preparing the ground for a default.


Default the Least-Worst Option for Argentina?


Mired in recession, Argentina's economy already suffers from runaway inflation and a worrying shortage of foreign exchange reserves.


The Latin American country's leaders have said the default would have no negative effect on ordinary Argentinians, or the economy at large.


"There's no link to the economic activity. It's independent to the evolution of these restructuring processes," said Jorge Capitanich, head of the cabinet. Analysts tend to agree, pointing out the differences between 2014 and 2001.


For starters, Argentina's positive trade balance means the country has a guaranteed flow of cash. It has also fostered economic ties with China, signing a number of investment agreements with Beijing.


"Argentine authorities seem to have reached the conclusion that to default now and renegotiate later would be the less costly option," said IHS's Caicedo.


"If Argentina does not choose to default and opts to pay the holdout creditors, this carries the risk that those bondholders that agreed to restructure defaulted debt in 2005 and 2010 would demand a similar treatment."


However, a default would only serve to further isolate Argentina from international markets.


It could usher in a new period of inflated borrowing costs, for public and private ventures, while the long-running disputes would need to be revisited and resolved in the future anyway.



India Bangalore Six-Year-Old Rape: Two Arrested as Main Accused Found Not Guilty


Indian school girl rape in Bangalore

Activists from student organisation Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP) shout slogans during a protest against the alleged sexual assault of a 6-year-old girl in the southern Indian city of BangaloreReuters



Two men have been arrested in connection with the rape of a six-year-old schoolgirl in the southern Indian city of Bangalore while the main accused, who was initially thought to have committed the crime, was found to be not guilty, police said.


The alleged perpetrators of the sexual assault, aged 21 and 28, are working as gym instructors with school, where the rape reportedly took place.


"A complaint of rape has turned out to be a case of gang-rape after the arrest of two more persons in the Vibgyor High school case," Bangalore Police Commissioner M N Reddi told reporters.


The incident is said to have taken place on 3 July but came to light only two weeks later. Since then, widespread protests have taken place demanding speedy action from police officials.


Mustafa, a skating instructor at the school, was arrested after days of protests following which the chief of the chain of schools was also detained for alleged negligence.


"Mustafa was not present there at the time of crime. He was arrested because of circumstantial evidence but he has now been booked for gross misconduct in another school," said Reddi.


While further investigation is under way, one of the accused is believed to have confessed to the crime.


Another senior police official at the press conference, Abhishek Goyal, said: "The case has been solved in terms of identifying culprits. Two persons, Lalgiri and Wasim Pasha, both gym teachers, have been arrested."


"The child was not in the dark room as suspected earlier when the crime happened but it happened in the premises."



China-Hong Kong Data Mismatch Persists Despite Crackdown on Fake Invoicing


China-Hong Kong Data Mismatch Exits Despite Crackdown on Fake Invoices

China and Hong Kong Data Mismatch Exits Despite Crackdown on Fake InvoicesReuters



A divergence between Chinese and Hong Kong bilateral trade figures remains even after a crackdown in 2013 on Chinese firms' use of fraudulent export-invoicing to dodge limits on foreign currency.


China recorded $1.31 of exports to Hong Kong in June 2014 for every $1 in imports of Hong Kong from China, resulting in a $6.4bn difference, government data compiled by Bloomberg News showed.


Pursued by the news agency, the General Administration of Customs in Beijing, which puts out the trade data, did not respond.


Hong Kong's Census and Statistics Department said the data sets cannot be directly compared because the city's computation method and law on trade declarations are different from China's -- goods in transit through Hong Kong are not included in the city's statistics, the department said.


Analysts have offered various likely explanations for the discrepancy.


"Sporadic fake exports certainly still exist," said Hu Yifan, chief economist at Haitong International Securities in Hong Kong.


The longer the data gap remains at this level, the more likely it is a permanent fixture. "If the ratio stays at 1.3 throughout the year, I think that's consistent," Hu told Bloomberg.


"You can't exclude the possibility that capital flows are being disguised as exports" in the China-Hong Kong figures, sad Yao Wei, China economist at Societe Generale in Paris.


"As the capital account becomes more open, the flows will show up in the places they should."


While there isn't a "big problem with the quality of trade data" any more, more time is needed to judge if the gap between China and Hong Kong figures is structural, Yao added. "Usually it's good enough if the year-on-year growth data are in the same direction."


Another possible explanation is the different methods of pricing shipping costs, according to Yao and Xu Gao, chief economist at Everbright Securities in Beijing. "A lot of things can explain" the disparity, Xu added.



Cryptocurrency Round-Up: Blockchain Returns to App Store and Coinapult Tackles Bitcoin Volatility


Tech Talk: Bitcoin Breaks into the Offline World

Apple welcomes back Blockchain's wallet app to its App Store, while Coinapult takes aim at bitcoin's volatility.



A brief period of stability has settled over bitcoin after a few bad days of tumbling prices, marked by two separate and sudden drops.


Both litecoin and peercoin also enjoyed a moment of calm, each shifting in value by less than 1% since yesterday.


The biggest mover across all markets was rainbowcoin, which jumped by more than 850% over the last 24 hours. Despite the massive leap, the cryptocurrency geared towards the LGBT community still only has a relatively modest market capitalisation of around $50,000 (£30,000).




Bitcoin and Apple make peace




Blockchain has returned to iOS after Apple reinstated its bitcoin wallet app to the App Store yesterday.


The move comes more than five months after Blockchain and other bitcoin-related apps were banned by Apple.


"We're very excited to continue investing in iOS again and working with Apple to reimagine how the world transacts," said Nicolas Cary, CEO of Blockchain.


Following the February ban, Cary labelled Apple "anticompetitive" and "capricious" and warned that its treatment of bitcoin was a strategic mistake that would result in Android taking the early lead in fintech and bitcoin software.




Coinapult takes aim at bitcoin volatility




Bitcoin wallet provider Coinapult has introduced Locks, a new service that hopes to address the issue of bitcoin's price volatility.


Locks allows users to attach the value of their bitcoin to US dollars, British pounds, euros, gold and silver. In doing so, Coinapult hopes to break down what is seen as one of the biggest barriers to mainstream consumer adoption.


"If you exercise (locking or unlocking the funds), we're guaranteeing that we'll provide you a certain number of coins at that price," Ira Miller, CEO of Coinapult, told CoinDesk.


"If I lock 0.0085 bitcoin to the price of the US dollar, I will always have $5 worth of bitcoin to spend. What that specific amount is at the time is dependent on the market, but it will always be the same."



US Marshals Ordered To Seize Disputed Kurdish Oil Cargo Off Texas


Kurdish Security Forces Iraq

A member of the Kurdish security forces guards a section of an oil refinery, being brought on a truck to Kalak refinery in the outskirts of Arbil, in Iraq's Kurdistan region, on 14 July.Reuters



US Marshals have been ordered to seize a cargo of oil from Iraqi Kurdistan on a tanker off the coast of Texas, according to court filings.


A judge signed the order after the Iraqi central government laid claim to the oil on board the United Kalavrvta tanker.


The tanker, which left the Turkish port of Ceyhan in June, is too large to enter the port at Galveston. It had been preparing to unload its cargo on to smaller boats that would transport the oil to the US mainland, after receiving clearance from the US Coast Guard.


The tanker is thought to be carrying around 1 million barrels of oil, worth about $100m.


Iraqi Kurdistan and the central government in Baghdad have been locked in a dispute over the autonomous region's right to sell oil independently.


Both sides claim that the Iraqi constitution permits them the rights to sell the oil.


Since a new pipeline linking Iraqi Kurdistan with Turkey was completed in 2013, Kurdish oil has begun to flow in greater volumes.


While the Kurds have successfully loaded a number of oil tankers, they have struggled to find buyers on international markets amid fierce opposition from Baghdad.


Iraq's central government has launched legal proceedings against Turkey for its role in aiding the Kurds to transport the oil. However, one tanker successfully unloaded at the Israeli port of Ashkelon in June, although the buyer remains unknown.


Baghdad insists it has sole right to export oil from all of its regions and that the Kurds' attempt to sell oil independently amounts to smuggling.



Asian Stocks Scale Three-Year Peak on China Optimism


Asian Stocks Scale Three-Year Peak on China Optimism

Asian stocks scale three-year peak on China optimism.Reuters



Asian shares hit fresh three-year highs, with Hong Kong's Hang Seng share average striking a three-and-a-half-year high, on expectations that growth in China, the world's second largest economy, had stabilised.


However Asian indices failed to log major gains as market players exercised caution, ahead of the US Federal Reserve's monetary policy decision, and key US data expected later in the week.


Hong Kong's Hang Seng was trading 0.81%, or 198.69 points, higher to 24,627.32


The Shanghai Composite finished 0.24%, or 5.24 points, higher at 2,183.19.


The Japanese Nikkei finished 0.57%, or 88.67 points, higher at 15,618.07.


Australia's S&P/ASX finished 0.20%, or 11.00 points, higher at 5,588.40.


South Korea's Kospi finished 0.64%, or 13.16 points, higher at 2,061.97.


Markets in Malaysia, Indonesia and India were closed for Eid celebrations.


The US Fed, the world's most powerful central bank, is widely expected to cut its monthly asset buys by another $10bn as it looks to wrap up the scheme later in 2014.


Investors will also track the Fed decision for clues as to the timing of the first interest rate hike in the world's leading economy – higher US interest rates could trigger a capital outflow in Asia.


Standard Chartered said in a note to clients: "The proximity of the congressional testimony and the absence of a press conference after the FOMC meeting are further reasons to expect little news from this week's meeting. Overall, we are more cautious than consensus on US growth prospects.


"We expect 2.4% next year, versus the 3.0% consensus. Still, we think the Fed may hike the policy rate in June 2015. But we see the rate-hiking cycle remaining very gradual (100bps per year) and expect a tightening-cycle high of 3.0%."


Company Stock Movements


In Hong Kong, the charge was led by Chinese banks after a Reuters report said the country's fifth-biggest bank by assets, Bank of Communications, planned to sell a stake to private investors.


Bank of Communications shot up 6.2%, China Minsheng Banking jumped 3.6% and Agricultural Bank of China (ABC) gained 3%.


Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing, the city's only exchange operator, jumped 3.5%.


Chinese internet major Tencent Holdings jumped 3.2% on news that China's top banking regulator had approved the creation of three private banks, including WeBank, in which Tencent has a 30% stake.


In Tokyo, automaker Nissan Motor added 2%, a day after reporting a 37% annual profit increase for the April-June quarter.


US Markets


Most US indices finished marginally higher on 28 July, ahead of the Fed's two-day policy meeting.


The Dow finished 22.02 points, or 0.1%, higher at 16,982.59.


The S&P 500 ended half a point, or 0.03%, higher at 1,978.91.


The Nasdaq closed 4.65 points, or 0.1%, lower to 4,444.91.



Iran's Khamenei Calls Israel a 'Rabid Dog and Rapacious Wolf' Committing 'Genocide' in Gaza


Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei

Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei dubs Israel as 'rabid dog and rapacious wolf' committing 'gGenocide' in GazaAFP file photo



Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has called Israel a "rabid dog and rapacious wolf".


In his Eid al-Fitr address, the Iranian Supreme Leader said: "This rabid dog, this rapacious wolf, has attacked innocent people and humanity must show a reaction. This is genocide, a catastrophe of historical scale."


Khamenei also condemned the Western world for failing to act in order to save the lives of hundreds of Palestinian civilians in the ongoing Israel-Gaza conflict.


Khamenei, who wields the ultimate authority in Iranian political affairs, exhorted the Muslim world to unite in supporting the Palestinian cause and arm them.


"Everyone, whoever has the means, especially in the Islamic world, they should do what they can to arm the Palestinian nation ... the Zionist regime deeply regrets starting this (war) but has no way out."


"They [Israeli forces] have been pounding innocent people day and night and these men women and children are defending themselves with minimum means, and now Americans and Europeans want to take even that away ... so that those merciless beasts could pound without qualm."


Reaffirming Iran's support for Hamas, Iranian President Hasssan Rohani in his message criticised Israel for its continuing offensive in Gaza.


Sayed Hassan Nasrallah, the leader of the Lebanon-based Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah, hailed Iran for defending Palestinian rights.