>>> Julius Baer would consider acquiring candidates with managed assets of CHF 3

Julius Baer would consider acquiring candidates with managed assets of CHF 30bn to CHF 70bn - Neue Zuercher Zeitung

Julius Baer, the Swiss bank, would consider acquiring candidates with managed assets of CHF 30bn (USD 29.4bn) to CHF 70bn, Swiss daily Neue Zuercher Zeitung reported, citing Julius Baer Chief Executive Boris Collardi.

The report went on to say should a bank such as Barclays indicate an interest in selling its asset management business, Julius Baer would be interested.

Neue Zuercher Zeitung

>>> Asian Update

Asian Market Update: RBA maintains easing bias but with a move upbeat view of economy

***Economic Data***
- (JP) JAPAN NOV MONETARY BASE Y/Y: 28.9% v 29.5% PRIOR; MONETARY BASE END OF PERIOD: ¥358.8T v ¥356.1T PRIOR
- (KR) SOUTH KOREA JAN CPI M/M: 0.0% V 0.4%E; Y/Y: 0.8% V 1.1%E; CPI CORE Y/Y: 1.7% V 1.8%E
- (NZ) NEW ZEALAND JAN ANZ COMMODITY PRICE M/M: -2.3% V -1.8% PRIOR (3rd consecutive decline)
- (AU) Australia ANZ Roy Morgan Weekly Consumer Confidence Index: 111.2 v 112.2 prior

***Index Snapshot (as of 04:30 GMT)***
- Nikkei225 -0.6%, S&P/ASX -0.9%, Kospi -0.7%, Shanghai Composite +2.4%, Hang Seng -0.8%, Mar S&P500 -0.6% at 1,920

***Commodities/Fixed Income***
- Apr gold -0.2% at $1,125/oz, Mar crude oil -2.3% at $30.90/brl, Mar copper -0.1% at $2.05/lb
- GLD: SPDR Gold Trust ETF daily holdings rise 12.2 tonnes to 681.4 tonnes; biggest increase since Dec 18th; highest since Nov 3rd
- (CN) PBOC SETS YUAN MID POINT AT 6.5510 V 6.5539 PRIOR; strongest Yuan setting since Jan 6th, 17th straight firmer setting relative to Close
- (CN) PBoC to inject CNY50B in 14-day reverse repos and CNY50B in 28-day reverse repos
- JGB: (JP) Japan MoF sells ¥2.20T in 10-yr 1.3% JGBs; Avg yield: 0.078% v 0.254% prior; bid to cover: 3.14x v 3.25x prior
- (KR) South Korea Finance Ministry sells 30-yr bonds at 2.065%
- (NZ) New Zealand sells NZ$100M in 6-month bills; avg yield 2.4067%

***Market Focal Points/FX***
- Asian equity markets are mixed as modest losses in Japan, Australia, and Korea paled relative to Shanghai Composite jump of over 2%. Liquidity injection by the PBoC and also resumed weaker Yuan settings are lifting the mainland in the final week of trade before the week-long Lunar New Year break. PBoC's open market operations shifted to 14-day and 28-day reverse repos, and the offering yield on the former was set lower by 30bps at 2.40%. Risk aversion is prevailing elsewhere however, with S&P's down 11pts or 0.6% at 1,920. In FX, USD/JPY was down over 60pips below 120.40, AUD/USD pared post-RBA gain to fall 60pips from the highs below 0.7070, and NZD/USD is down 40pips below 0.6520.

- Reserve Bank of Australia left rates on hold at 2.00% as widely expected, noting reasonable prospects for continued growth in the economy, with inflation close to target. RBA retained its view that "low inflation may provide scope for easier policy" but was also more upbeat on domestic economy, "stating expansion in the non-mining parts of the economy strengthened during 2015." RBA also pointed to pace of business lending and improving employment, while writing off soft inflation to low energy prices. AUD/USD initially rose 20pips above 0.7120 after the RBA decision, but then sold off to 0.7070s in afternoon trade.

- Among notable speakers, China Stats Bureau official attributed overnight decline in PMIs to 3 1/2 lows to soft demand ahead of the holidays, stating "some factories have taken the initiative of reducing production to respond to the countrys campaign to resolve excessive capacity and accelerate economic restructuring." Separately, a researcher with CASS warned the pressure from Yuan depreciation may lead to decline in China property market, with most impact in lower tier cities. In Japan, Econ Min Ishihara said monetary policy is BOJ's responsibility and also signaled comfort with lower long-term rates as they boost capex and housing. Ishihara said he would monitor the impact on banks, just as several regional smaller financials announced plans to cut deposit rates in response to income lost from negative rates on reserves with BOJ.

***Equities***
US equities / ADRs:
- LOJN: To be acquired by CalAmp at $6.45/shr in cash; valued at $134M; CAMP sees accretion in first 12 months; +18.3% afterhours
- PVH: Guides FY15 at or above high end of prior guidance at 7.00 v $6.93e ($6.90-7.00 prior); +6.4% afterhours
- MAT: Reports Q4 $0.63 v $0.60e, R$2.00B v $1.92Be; +5.8% afterhours
- GOOGL: Reports Q4 $8.67 v $8.17e, R$17.3B v $16.9Be; +4.2% afterhours
- APC: Reports Q4 -$0.57 (adj) v -$1.05e, R$2.05B v $1.97Be; To reduce CapEx by nearly 50%; +2.8% afterhours
- AFL: Reports Q4 $1.56 v $1.48e, R$5.3B v $5.24Be; +1.5% afterhours
- TSO: Reports Q4 $1.83 adj v $2.07e, R$6.27B v $8.44B y/y; -2.0% afterhours
- RCII: Reports Q4 $0.54 v $0.56e, R$794M v $812Me; cuts dividend by 67% to $0.08 from $0.24 (2.4% implied yield); -11.9% afterhours
- IDTI: Reports Q3 $0.35 v $0.35e, R$178M v $178Me; -14.7% afterhours

Notable movers by sector:
- Consumer discretionary: Navitas NVT.AU +4.7% (H1 result); Ricoh Co 7752.JP +1.4% (9-month result)
- Consumer staples: NH Foods 2282.JP +6.0% (9-month result)
- Financials: Evergrande Real Estate Group 3333.HK +1.0% (Jan result); China Minsheng Banking Corp 1988.HK -1.5% (update on Ag Bank notes case); Bank of Yokohama 8332.JP -0.6%, Resona Holdings 8308.JP -2.9% (cut deposit rates); Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group 8306.JP +1.9% (9-month result)
- Industrials: China Railway Group 601390.CN +4.1%(agreement); Samsung Heavy Industries 010140.KR -1.9% (FY15 result); Hyundai Motor Co 005380.KR -1.5% (Jan result); Toyota Motor Corp 7203.JP -0.6% (may cut production)
- Technology: Altium ALU.AU +11.6% (partnership); MediaTek 2454.TW -0.5% (Q4 result, guidance)
- Materials: Mitsubishi Corp 8058.JP -1.2% (9-month result)
- Telecom: SK Telecom 017670.KR -0.7% (Q4 result)
- Utilities: Mitsubishi Electric Corp 6503.JP +3.7% (9-month result)

>>> After Hours Summary: LMNX +9.7%, FN +9.6%, PVH +6.2%, MA


After Hours Summary: LMNX +9.7%, FN +9.6%, PVH +6.2%, MAT +5.9%, GOOG +5.6%, IDTI -16.1%, RCII -9.6% following earnings/guidance; LOJN +18.2% following M&A news

After Hours Gainers:

Companies trading higher in after hours in reaction to earnings/guidance:  LMNX +9.7%, FN +9.6%, PVH +6.2%, MAT +5.9%, GOOG +5.6%, CACC +3.1%, HAIN +1.8%

Companies trading higher in after hours in reaction to news:  LOJN +18.2% (to be acquired by CalAmp (CAMP) for $6.45/share in cash, or ~$134 mln), CHRS +1.8% (CHS-1701, a proposed biosimilar of Neulasta (pegfilgrastim), met both primary endpoints), EVH +1.6% (forms new strategic alliance with Passport Health Plan, acquires certain assets and capabilities).

After Hours Losers:

Companies trading lower in after hours in reaction to earnings/guidance:  IDTI -16.1%, RCII -9.6%, RYAM -5.8%, PXLW -5.6%

Companies trading lower in after hours in reaction to news:  CBYL -46.2% (announced top-line results from COR1.1 for the treatment of pain associated with osteoarthritis of the knee), PDLI -14.2% (reduces quarterly dividend to $0.05/share from $0.15/share with shift to quarterly assessment of dividends to capitalize on long-term growth opportunities, ACC -2.9% (plans to sell 13 mln shares of its common stock).

>>> US Close Dow-0.10% S&P-0.04% Nasdaq+0.14% Russell-0.29%

Closing Market Summary: Indices Climb Off Lows

The major averages were able to end their first session of the week on a mixed note despite starting this morning under some selling pressure. Today's session saw a divergence with the recent tradition of equities trading in lockstep with the direction of oil, as the major indices staged a rally off their lows despite a larger loss in crude. The tech-heavy Nasdaq (+0.1%) was able to end ahead of the S&P 500 (UNCH) and the Dow Jones Industrial Average (-0.1%).

Equities charged back to their flat lines during afternoon action with the move stemming in part from an understanding that the coming week has a number of potential catalysts that could move the market. Conversely, a number of negative announcements were likely not bad enough to elicit a defensive response. Factors that contributed to today's action included:

  • Fed Vice Chairman Fischer's speech which provided little additional insight on last week's policy statement
  • The final member of F.A.N.G., Alphabet (GOOGL 770.77, +9.42) rallying ahead of its earnings report
  • Non-farm payroll data is set to be released on Friday; and
  • Weak economic data internationally and domestically which may delay additional rate hikes

China released two weak manufacturing figures overnight with Manufacturing PMI coming in at 49.4 (expected 49.6) and the Caixin PMI survey hitting 48.4 (expected 48.0). Both data points showed further contractions in China's manufacturing sector but were anticipated to be weaker. This data worked to depress global equity markets, U.S. futures, and oil prices. To be fair though, growing skepticism of potential production cuts from OPEC and non-OPEC states may have worked to further depress prices. WTI crude ended its pits session lower by 6.2% at $31.65/bbl.

Seven of ten sectors were able to finish their trading day in positive territory with countercyclical telecom services (+0.9%) and utilities (+1.0%) leading the pack. Meanwhile, energy (-1.9%) financials, (-0.6%), and industrials (-0.3%) were unable to move into positive territory.

The energy space underperformed during today's session as commodity prices continued to weigh on the group. While independent oil and gas companies like Anadarko Petroleum (APC 38.25, -0.84) faced larger headwinds, even large-cap Exxon Mobil (XOM 76.29, -1.56) felt pressure ahead of its earnings release tomorrow morning. Meanwhile, pipeline company Kinder Morgan (KMI 15.19, -1.26) declined 7.7% in the wake of oil's rout and a 6.5% decline in natural gas ($2.15/MMbtu).

Financials continued their decline from January as they underperformed on the possible inability for the broader market to support a rate hike. Money center banks underperformed in response, with Bank of America (BAC 13.96, -0.18) and JPMorgan Chase (JPM 58.86, -0.64) sliding 1.3% and 1.1%, respectively.

In the heavily-weighted technology space, Facebook (FB 115.09, +2.88) continued to outperform after disclosing its fourth quarter beat last week. Meanwhile, Alphabet showed relative strength as it climbed 1.2%. 

On the merger and acquisition front, Alere (ALR 54.11, +16.91) climbed 45.5% on news that the company will be acquired by Abbott Laboratories (ABT 38.45, +0.60) for $56.00 a share. Elsewhere, Dominion (D 70.18, -1.99) agreed to acquire Questar (STR 24.99, +4.60) for $25 per share.

Today's participation was slightly below recent averages with less than a billion shares changing hands at the NYSE floor.

Treasuries ended their day near their lows as equities rallied. The yield on the benchmark note ended higher by three basis points at 1.95%.

Today's economic data has included PCE Prices for December, Construction Spending for December, and the January ISM Index.

  • Personal income rose 0.3% in December (consensus +0.2%)
  • Personal spending was unchanged (consensus +0.2%).
    • Personal consumption expenditures decreased $0.7 billion, or less than 0.1%, so with rounding it gets logged in the report as 0.0 for the month-over-month change.
    • The personal savings rate jumped to 5.5% from 5.3% in November and stands at its highest level in three years.
  • PCE Price Index declined 0.1% month-over-month while the core PCE Price Index, which excludes food and energy, was unchanged (consensus +0.1%) after a 0.2% increase in November.
    • December readings, the PCE Price Index is up 0.6% year-over-year versus 0.4% in November and the core PCE Price Index is up 1.4%, holding steady with the year-over-year reading for November.
  • The January ISM Index, edged up to 48.2 for January (consensus 48.3)from a downwardly revised reading of 48.0 (from 48.2) for December.
    • January marked the fourth straight month that the ISM Index has been below 50.0. (The dividing line between expansion and contraction). the manufacturing sector has been hurt by the dollar's strength, weak global demand, and falling commodity prices that have crimped investment spending.
    • New orders and production indexes reached expansion territory. The new orders index increased to 51.5 from 48.8 while the production index rose to 50.2 from 49.9.
    • The imports index also logged a notable increase, rising to 51.0 from 45.5. Conversely, the employment index fell to 45.9 from 48.0, and the export index dropped to 47.0 from 51.0.
  • Construction spending increased just 0.1% in December (consensus +0.5%)
    • Construction spending for November was revised down to a decline of 0.6% from a previously reported decline of 0.4%.
    • Private construction spending was the big drag in December. It declined 0.6% month-over-month due to a 2.1% drop in nonresidential construction. Residential construction was up 0.9% month-over-month.
    • Public construction spending, which accounted for 27% of total construction spending in December, increased 0.9% on the back of a 2.2% uptick in nonresidential spending.

There will be no economic data of note tomorrow. 

  • Russell 2000 -9.0%
  • Nasdaq -7.7%
  • Dow Jones -5.6%
  • S&P 500 -5.1%

FT : Investor calls for big pharma to slim down grow louder

Investor calls for big pharma to slim down grow louder

Sprawling business models of the largest groups come under the microscope

Some of the world’s biggest pharmaceuticals groups are facing calls to break up their diversified businesses in favour of greater focus as shareholders push for higher returns on investment.
In recent days, Johnson & Johnson has been urged to review its sprawling portfolio that ranges from baby oil to cancer drugs, and there were questions for Novartis over the future of its struggling eyecare business. This week, Pfizer will update shareholders on plans for a potential break-up, while GlaxoSmithKline is likely to be pressed on whether it is considering a similar move.

All four cases are part of a wider debate: should companies hedge the risks of drug development by diversifying into adjacent markets such as contact lenses (Novartis), toothpaste (GSK) and knee implants (J&J)? Or is it better to focus resources on the higher-margin business of making medicines?
Disposals of non-core assets by several big pharma groups in recent years has put the latter approach firmly in the ascendancy. Merck of the US, for example, jettisoned its consumer healthcare business — with brands including Coppertone sunscreen and Dr Scholl’s footcare — to sharpen its competitive edge against “pure-play” drugmakers such as Bristol-Myers Squibb, AstraZeneca and Gilead Sciences.
Meanwhile, Abbott and Baxter, two diversified US healthcare groups, spun off AbbVie and Baxalta, respectively, as standalone pharma companies.
Even drugmakers which remain relatively diversified have taken steps to slim down. Novartis (animal health and vaccines), Bayer (plastics), Sanofi (animal health) and Pfizer (animal health) have relinquished unwanted businesses or are in the process of doing so. Pfizer is planning to go further with the likely separation of its “established products” portfolio of older drugs by 2019.
“We will continue to see pharma companies shrink to grow,” says David Butts, head of international life sciences mergers and acquisitions at CMS, a law firm. “You could say this is a move towards . . . pure play, as companies unlock value in non-core businesses, then use cash to shore up the core business.”
This trend has left the most diversified drugmaker, J&J, looking increasingly out of step. Pharma is the US group’s largest business but accounts for less than half of total sales; the rest comes from medical devices and consumer products including Tylenol painkillers and Listerine mouthwash.
Critics say this model leads to muddled management as businesses with different growth rates and capital needs vie for resources. In an open letter last week, Artisan Partners, an investment manager with a $480m J&J holding, called for a spin off of the consumer and medical devices units “so that new, focused and accountable management teams can lead them into the future”.
However, there has so far been little sign of other investors rushing to back a break-up. Alex Gorsky, J&J’s chief executive, said last week that the conglomerate model had been “a significant driver [of growth] in the past and we expect it will be more important in the future”.
J&J says it benefits from research and development collaboration between different parts of the group; it also touts the ability to jointly market drugs and devices to hospitals — giving it greater bargaining power at a time when US health systems are clamping down on costs.
Matt Miksic, a healthcare analyst at UBS, says there will always be worries about J&J’s conglomerate structure “making them slower and harder to manoeuvre”. He agrees, however, that its breadth of products promises to be an advantage in an era when President Barack Obama’s Affordable Care Act has created greater incentives for hospitals to bulk-buy.
J&J executives argue that the company would not have weathered the financial crisis nor its big patent cliff — the loss of market exclusivity on branded drugs — were it not for the stability of its medical devices unit.
“The management view is that the device business is a kind of anchor and cash generator, with slower, but less volatile growth that can support the pharma division,” says Mr Miksic. However, he adds: “The rationale for keeping a consumer division is a little more frayed.”
GSK is likely to face similar questions when Sir Andrew Witty, chief executive, delivers full-year results on Wednesday. About 45 per cent of its revenues come from vaccines and consumer healthcare, including Sensodyne toothpaste and Panadol painkillers.
Like Mr Gorsky, Sir Andrew argues that these businesses create a healthy buffer for the risks and volatility of the pharma market, where a failed clinical trial or loss of patent protection can upend a pure-play drugmaker overnight.
Moreover, GSK executives point to synergies from manufacturing and selling prescription drugs, vaccines and over-the-counter products through shared supply chains. “If you split the businesses up you would end up duplicating a lot of things that are currently done efficiently together,” says one executive.
However, GSK is under pressure from some investors for a shake-up after a long period of weak performance. Neil Woodford, the high-profile UK fund manager and big GSK shareholder, told the BBC this month that the group was “like four FTSE 100 companies bolted together” and did not “do a particularly good job of managing all of the constituent parts”.
Like at J&J, there has so far been no groundswell of investor support for Mr Woodford’s view. But Sir Andrew has become increasingly open in acknowledging the possibility of a break-up even though he says he does not believe it makes sense today. He told Bloomberg TV this month: “The consumer division is so big in scale, it could one day have a life of its own.”
Joe Jimenez, chief executive of Novartis, told the Financial Times there were still benefits from diversification provided the components were all “leading businesses with global scale and innovative power”. Analysts say the jury is out on whether the Swiss group’s Alcon eyecare unit fits that criteria after disappointing financial results last week.
Until recently, the attitude of investors seemed clear. Shares in Bristol-Myers Squibb, a pure-play pharma company among the leaders of a new generation of high-value cancer drugs, have almost doubled since the start of 2013, compared with rise of just 3 per cent in GSK.
However, in the year-to-date, Bristol-Myers Squibb is down 11 per cent and GSK is up nearly 5 per cent. J&J is also up since the start of the year. This could reflect rising hopes of restructuring ahead. But it might also be a sign that, as the global economic outlook dims, investors are reconsidering the merits of a business model designed to reduce volatility and spread risks.

FT : EU to probe €500 notes’ links to terrorism

EU to probe €500 notes’ links to terrorism

The €500 note, beloved by gangsters and Greek savers, is now being investigated for ties to terrorism.
The EU Commission on Tuesday will pledge to investigate the suspiciously high number of the notes in circulation in the eurozone as part of a plan to choke-off financing for terrorists in the wake of November’s attacks in Paris.

“The use of high-denomination notes, in particular the €500 note, is a problem reported by law enforcement authorities,” according to a draft of the plans seen by the Financial Times. “These notes are in high demand among criminal elements . . . due to their high value and low volume.”
The commission will work with Europol, the EU’s police agency, on the problem but while the commission can consider options for curtailing the use of €500 notes by terrorists and other criminals, it is the European Central Bank that has exclusive control over the denominations of euro notes and coins in circulation.
According to one person briefed on the ECB’s thinking, the problems around misuse of the €500 bank note have been under consideration for some time and technical work is under way more generally to look at high-denomination bills. The last review was in 2005, when the ECB’s governing council decided to keep large-value bills in circulation.
Mario Draghi, European Central Bank president, told the European Parliament on Monday that the matter was being studied by the central bank and that no decisions had been taken yet. “We want to make changes,” he said, adding that “we are determined not to make seigniorage a comfort for criminals.”
According to a study published by Europol last year, shops often refuse to accept €500 bills but nevertheless they account for one-third of the value of all euro banknotes in circulation. ECB data suggest the number of €500 notes has grown disproportionately compared with most other denominations since single currency notes and coins entered circulation in 2002.
The distinctive purple note is one of the highest-value pieces of currency in the world, equivalent to around £380 or $540. It was intended to replicate some of the large denomination notes available in currencies that predated the euro, such as the old 1,000 Deutschmark bill in Germany, and similar bills in Austria, Belgium, Italy, Luxembourg and Netherlands.
The bulk of Tuesday’s proposal from Brussels, however, will focus on changes demanded by François Hollande, France’s president, who has sought to galvanise the EU’s efforts to combat terrorism in the wake of the attacks on Paris in November which left 130 dead and hundreds injured.
Much like earlier proposals from Paris in the days after the attacks, the commission blueprint will include plans for tighter supervision of bitcoin and other virtual currencies by law enforcement authorities and steps to make asset freezes more watertight.
Financial transfers in virtual currencies are currently not regulated by the EU, heightening the risk that they “may be used by terrorist organisations to conceal transfers”. according to the action plan. One problem is that, although bitcoin transactions are recorded “there is no reporting mechanism equivalent to that found in the mainstream banking system to identify suspicious activity”.
As a first step, the commission will propose bringing “anonymous currency exchanges” within the scope of existing European anti-money laundering regulations. Brussels will also study whether to apply other “licensing and supervision rules” to the sector.
Other plans include requiring all EU nations to have centralised registers of bank accounts and giving customs officials greater powers to seize historical artefacts if it is suspected they are being sold to finance terrorism.
The commission also plans to accelerate work on a blacklist of non-EU countries with “strategic deficiencies in the area of anti-money-laundering or countering terrorist financing.” It will come forward with the list by June.

>>> GSK value lies in consumer health; needs time to deliver – investors

GSK value lies in consumer health; needs time to deliver – investors

- Consumer health JV and vaccines unit can benefit from pharma division
- Needs time for 2014/15 Novartis asset swap to shine through
- Split can then be explored in three to five years - shareholder

GSK’s [LON:GSK] value-creation ability lies with the consumer health joint venture it has with Novartis [VTX:NOVN], two minority shareholders said. GSK can boost the JV through links with its pharmaceutical division and bolt-on buys, the long-only investors said amid calls to break up the company.

GSK should keep an open mind about how best to realise value from its operations and could entertain a split in three to five years, one of the shareholders said. It should first be allowed time to deliver on its strategy after completing a reorganisation and asset swap with Novartis last year, he said.

There have been renewed GSK shake-up calls in 2016. Hedge fund Och-Ziff has reportedly asked for a board reshuffle and new strategic plan by 3Q16. Fund manager Neil Woodford has called for a break-up, saying GSK resembles four different FTSE 100 companies banded together.

GSK trades at 7.01x earnings, compared to an 18.25x average of European peers Reckitt Benckiser [LON:RB], Bayer [ETR:BAYN] and Sanofi [EPA:SAN], according to Dealreporter analytics. UK-based Reckitt Benckiser trades at 13.88x, while Bayer and Sanofi trade at 22.66x and 18.20x, respectively.

The focus should first be on delivering results from the 2014/15 Novartis asset swap, said the second shareholder. Once the swap has been fully integrated and brought to global scale, GSK will be in a position to consider possible different corporate structures, CEO Andrew Witty told investors in January.

The swap saw GSK receive Novartis’ vaccines unit to make it the leading vaccines player in the world, while Novartis took on GSK’s oncology operations. The companies pooled their consumer healthcare products into a joint venture, with GSK taking 63.5% and Novartis 36.5%.

The JV is one of the largest consumer health business in the world, the second shareholder noted. The unit is also undervalued compared to its peers, which trade at over 20x earnings, said the first shareholder.

Pharmaceutical unit research can be translated to products for the consumer health JV and GSK’s vaccines unit, the second shareholder said. GSK should be allowed the time to build on these opportunities, the shareholders said.

Bolt-on acquisitions for the units could also make the units more attractive prior to any split, the first shareholder said. GSK has no need to make larger transactions so soon after closing the Novartis asset swap, said the two shareholders.

GSK could look to buy Novartis out of the JV, the shareholders suggested. Novartis has an option to sell its stake in the JV to GSK after three years. Similarly, GSK could look to take full ownership of ViiV, its HIV treatment business that it owns with Pfizer [NYSE:PFE] and Shionogi [TYO:4507] (13.5% and 10%, respectively), they said.

GSK did not reply to requests for comment.

>>> FED : Vice Chairman Stanley Fischer - full speech

Vice Chairman Stanley Fischer
At the C. Peter McColough Series on International Economics, Council on Foreign Relations, New York, New York
February 1, 2016
Recent Monetary Policy

I would like to thank the Council on Foreign Relations for the kind invitation to come meet with all of you this morning. I am looking forward to a lively discussion. To get things started, I thought I could provide some background on recent monetary policy decisions.1

As you all know, at our December meeting my colleagues and I on the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) decided to raise the target range for the federal funds rate by 1/4 percentage point, to 1/4 to 1/2 percent.2 This increase came after seven years during which we kept the federal funds rate at what we call the ELB--the effective lower bound. This ultra-low rate was in keeping with our congressional mandate to pursue a monetary policy that fosters maximum employment and price stability, which we define as 2 percent inflation. Our decision in December was based on the substantial improvement in the labor market and the Committee's confidence that inflation would return to our 2 percent goal over the medium term. Employment growth last year averaged a solid 220,000 per month, and the unemployment rate declined from 5.6 percent to 5.0 percent over the course of 2015. Inflation ran well below our target last year, held down by the transitory effects of declines in crude oil prices and also in the prices of non-oil imports. Prices for these goods have fallen further and for longer than expected. Once these oil and import prices stop falling and level out, their effects on inflation will dissipate, which is why we expect that inflation will rise to 2 percent over the medium term, supported by a further strengthening in labor market conditions.

I would note that our monetary policy remains accommodative after the small increase in the federal funds rate adopted in December. And my colleagues and I anticipate that economic conditions will evolve in a manner that will warrant only gradual increases in the federal funds rate, and that the federal funds rate is likely to remain, for some time, below the levels that we expect to prevail in the longer run.

Given the large size of the Federal Reserve's balance sheet, the FOMC is employing new tools to implement monetary policy. In particular, to raise the federal funds rate we increased the interest rate we pay on reserve balances that depository institutions hold at the Federal Reserve. We also employed an overnight reverse repurchase facility, through which we interact with a broad range of firms to help provide a soft floor for the federal funds rate consistent with our target range.3 These new tools have worked well, and the federal funds rate and other short-term interest rates have increased slightly, as expected. We will continue to monitor financial market developments closely, and we can make adjustments to our tools if necessary to maintain control over money market rates.

At our meeting last week, we left our target for the federal funds rate unchanged. Economic data over the intermeeting period suggested that improvement in labor market conditions continued even as economic growth slowed late last year. But further declines in oil prices and increases in the foreign exchange value of the dollar suggested that inflation would likely remain low for somewhat longer than had been previously expected before moving back to 2 percent. In addition, increased concern about the global outlook, particularly the ongoing structural adjustments in China and the effects of the declines in the prices of oil and other commodities on commodity exporting nations, appeared early this year to have triggered volatility in global asset markets. At this point, it is difficult to judge the likely implications of this volatility. If these developments lead to a persistent tightening of financial conditions, they could signal a slowing in the global economy that could affect growth and inflation in the United States. But we have seen similar periods of volatility in recent years that have left little permanent imprint on the economy. As the FOMC said in its statement last week, we are closely monitoring global economic and financial developments and assessing their implications for the labor market and inflation, and for the balance of risks to the outlook.4

Now, I expect that in a few minutes one of you will ask not about what we did at our last meeting, but rather what we are going to do at the next one. I can't answer that question because, as I have emphasized in the past, we simply do not know. The world is an uncertain place, and all monetary policymakers can really be sure of is that what will happen is often different from what we currently expect. That is why the Committee has indicated that its policy decisions will be data dependent. That is, we will adjust policy appropriately in light of economic and financial events to best foster conditions consistent with the attainment of our employment and inflation objectives.

As you know, in making our policy decisions, my FOMC colleagues and I spend considerable time assessing the incoming economic and financial information and its implications for the economic outlook. But we also must consider some other issues, two of which I would like to mention briefly today.

First, should we be concerned about the possibility of the unemployment rate falling somewhat below its longer-run normal level, as the most recent FOMC projections suggest? In my view, a modest overshoot of this sort would be appropriate in current circumstances for two reasons. First, other measures of labor market conditions--such as the fraction of workers with part-time employment who would prefer to work full time and the number of people out of the labor force who would like to work--indicate that more slack may remain in labor market than the unemployment rate alone would suggest. Second, with inflation currently well below 2 percent, a modest overshoot actually could be helpful in moving inflation back to 2 percent more rapidly. Nonetheless, a persistent large overshoot of our employment mandate would risk an undesirable rise in inflation that might require a relatively abrupt policy tightening, which could inadvertently push the economy into recession. Monetary policy should aim to avoid such risks and keep the expansion on a sustainable track.

In this context, I would point out that at our January meeting, we reaffirmed our Statement on Longer-Run Goals and Monetary Policy Strategy with an adjustment to clarify that our inflation goal is symmetric.5 That is, the Committee would be concerned if inflation were running persistently above or below our objective. In my view, even if inflation was expected to return to 2 percent over time, persistent deviations from our goal in either direction could cause economic harm and could ultimately unmoor longer-term inflation expectations. Of course, whether the Committee would take action to address a persistent deviation from its inflation objective would depend on the circumstances--and, in particular, on the outlook for employment and inflation and an assessment of the likely lags in the effects of monetary policy.

My second topic is how best to integrate balance sheet policy with interest rate policy. The Committee has indicated that the Federal Reserve will, in the longer run, hold no more securities than necessary to implement monetary policy efficiently and effectively. But that statement leaves open the question of when we should begin to reduce the size of our balance sheet. Because the tools I mentioned earlier--the payment of interest on reserve balances and the overnight reverse repurchase facility--can be used to raise the federal funds rate independent of the size of the balance sheet, we have the flexibility to adjust the size of our balance sheet at the appropriate time. With the federal funds rate still quite low and expected to rise only gradually, I think there is some benefit to maintaining a larger balance sheet for a time. Doing so should help support accommodative financial conditions and so reduce the downside risks to the economic outlook in the event of a future adverse shock to the economy. Consistent with this view, the Committee has decided to continue to reinvest principal payments from its securities portfolio until normalization of the federal funds rate is well under way. The decision about when to cease or begin phasing out reinvestment will depend on how economic and financial conditions and the economic outlook evolve.6

Thank you. I would be happy to respond to some questions, starting with those from our moderator today, Tom Keene.