.... es waere schoen, wenn solche Meldungen auch bei den Rothemden ankaemen.berndgrimm hat geschrieben: Ich wünschte in Thailand gäbe es wirkliche Rothemden....
...
.... und dort auch gelesen und verstanden werden.
.... es waere schoen, wenn solche Meldungen auch bei den Rothemden ankaemen.berndgrimm hat geschrieben: Ich wünschte in Thailand gäbe es wirkliche Rothemden....
...
Milliardendeal: niederländischer Grosshändler in Thailand geschluckt
23.04.2013 13:43
BANGKOK (awp international) - Der in Thailand tätige niederländische Grosshändler Siam Makro wechselt in der grössten Übernahme der thailändischen Geschichte den Besitzer. CP All übernimmt den Cash&Carry-Anbieter für umgerechnet fünf Milliarden Euro, wie das Unternehmen, das unter anderem die 7-Eleven-Supermarkte betreibt, am Dienstag mitteilte. Es hatte Siam Makro 1988 als Joint Venture mit der SHV Holdings aus den Niederlanden gegründet. Als die Asienkrise 1997 begann, verkaufte es seine Anteile an den Partner. CP All gehört zur Charoen Pokphand Gruppe, dem grössten agroindustriellen Konglomerat Thailands. Die Aktionäre müssen am 12. Juni noch zustimmen./oe/DP/jha
>>> http://www.cash.ch/news/boersenticker/r ... 054921-450
Das freut uns, denn in den naechsten Jahren werden wir vielleicht etwas auf unser Grundstueck in Hua Hin bauen lassen.BANGKOK, May 8 – Thailand’s property market remains secure without any sign of a bubble or oversupply, according to the executive vice president of Kasikorn Bank.
>>> http://www.mcot.net/site/content?id=518 ... Ype70Okecx
BREAKINGVIEWS-Thai slowdown will give banks a bad hangover
4:49 am -- (The author is a Reuters Breakingviews columnist. The opinions expressed are his own)
By Andy Mukherjee
SINGAPORE, May 20 (Reuters Breakingviews) - Thailand's banks should brace themselves for a bad hangover. The economy is slowing faster than expected, increasing the political pressure on the central bank. If it cuts interest rates on May 29, local depositors will feel more foolish keeping their money in the bank, while borrowing will be stimulated. Frothy Bangkok property will become pricier, and banks' reliance on foreign funding will grow.
Thailand's GDP was down a worse-than-expected 2.2 percent in the first quarter compared to the previous three months. Finance Minister Kittirat Na Ranong blamed the strong currency - the baht has surged a sixth against the U.S. dollar in the past four years - and said the central bank should cut rates.
But rate cuts will be futile and misguided in a country with an unemployment rate of just 0.6 percent. Lopping 25 basis points off the Bank of Thailand's 2.75 percent policy rate will buy the economy little additional protection from the $150 billion in new money that the U.S. Federal Reserve and the Bank of Japan are printing every month.
Meanwhile, lower rates mean increased risks for the country's banks. Last quarter, loans reached 102 percent of GDP - their highest level in 13 years. This was partly funded by borrowing $2 billion overseas.
For now, investors are happy that Thai lenders, which Nomura expects to report the strongest earnings growth in two decades over the next three years, are making the most of the credit binge. Shares in Bangkok Bank, the nation's largest lender, have risen 26 percent since November. Shares of smaller rivals Krung Thai Bank and Kasikornbank are up 39 percent and 23 percent, respectively.
But slower growth is bound to lead to an increase in bad loans. And in the absence of deposit growth, lenders will increasingly depend on foreign investors to finance consumer credit growth - putting them at risk of a sudden hot money outflows.
It's time the government of Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra, which for the last two years has stuffed money into people's pockets by purchasing rice from farmers at inflated prices and offering generous subsidies to first-time car buyers, got serious about financial stability. To start with, that means easing up on the central bank.
CONTEXT NEWS
- Thailand's economy shrank a worse-than-expected 2.2 percent in the first three months of 2013, compared with the previous quarter, the government said on May 20.
- Economists polled by Reuters had expected a 0.8 percent decline. The National Economic and Social Development Board, which compiles GDP data, cut its 2013 export growth estimate to 7.6 percent from 11 percent earlier.
- Shares of Bangkok Bank, the country's biggest lender, were down 0.45 percent at 1.30 p.m. (10:30 GMT), while those of smaller rival Krung Thai Bank and Kasikornbank were up 0.42 percent and 0.93 percent, respectively.
>>> http://www.ubs.wallst.com/ubs/mkt_story ... -1&first=0
Das übliche Spiel der Erpressung mit Arbeitsplätzen und Umzugsdrohungen.DELTA ELECTRONICS (Thailand) may have to consider moving out of Thailand if the government does not agree to waive the corporate income tax on income from overseas operations, a top company official said.
Executive director Anusorn Muttaraid told The Nation last week that the Bt77-billion power supply and electronic components company, whose earnings come mostly from abroad, should not be subjected to Thai corporate income tax.
The company has raised this issue with many governments in the past and the current one. Its message is that Thailand should amend its tax regulations to match the laws in Malaysia and Singapore, as it is encouraging local companies to venture abroad.
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