Qatar manufacturing sector remains buoyant in March

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A robust month-on-month double-digit jump – particularly in printing as well as in the production of food, beverages and cement – led Qatar’s manufacturing sector to expand in March 2021, according to the Planning and Statistics Authority (PSA).
The country’s Industrial Production Index (IPI) saw a 1.4% monthly increase this March despite the reintroduction of certain Covid-19 related restrictions. However, on a yearly basis, the index was down 0.1%.
“The month-on-month increase in industrial production is rather reflective of the rebound in the non-oil manufacturing activities, as the vaccination drive is on the full swing,” said a market analyst with a leading investment house.
The PSA introduced IPI, a short-term quantitative index that measures the changes in the volume of production of a selected basket of industrial products over a given period with respect to a base period 2013.
The mining and quarrying index, which has a relative weight of 83.6%, saw a 0.5% increase month-on-month owing to a 0.5% expansion in the extraction of crude petroleum and natural gas and 3.6% in other mining and quarrying sectors.
On a yearly basis, the index showed 0.3% jump owing to a 0.3% increase in the extraction of crude petroleum and natural gas and 12.5% in other mining and quarrying sectors.
The manufacturing index, with a relative weight of 15.2%, grew 4.5% on a monthly basis in March 2021 on a 23.8% surge in printing and reproduction of recorded media, 13.4% in the production of food products, 10.9% in beverages, 10.3% in cement and other non-metallic mineral products, 8.2% in chemicals and chemical products, 2.4% in basic metals and 0.7% in rubber and plastics products; even as there was a 11.6% decline in the production of refined petroleum products.
On a yearly basis, the manufacturing index shrank 1.4% in March this year owing to a 66.2% fall in printing and reproduction of recorded media, 23.9% in the production of refined petroleum products, 11.9% in beverages, 11.5% in food products and 0.9% in chemicals and chemical products.
However, there was a 28.1% surge in the production of cement and other non-metallic mineral products, 24.4% in basic metals and 12.5% in rubber and plastics products.
Electricity, which has 0.7% weight in the IPI basket, saw its index soar 41.4% and 9.1% on a monthly and yearly basis respectively this March.
In the case of water, which has a 0.5% weight, there was a 9.9% increase month-on-month but registered a 21% shrinkage year-on-year in March 2021.

Source:https://www.gulf-times.com/story/692515/Qatar-manufacturing-sector-remains-buoyant-in-Marc

Newly awarded projects during Q3 total QR2.9bn: Ministry of Finance

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The outlay provided for various projects in the third quarter are: infrastructure and roads (QR2.62bn), sewer and drainage (QR166.9mn), parks and green areas (QR71.7mn) and miscellaneous (QR84.7mn).
According to the Ministry of Finance, the projects to be completed this year are Food Security Project, Doha Old Port and Lusail Light Rail Transit.
The work on most of FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 Stadia has been completed, it said.
Total expenditure on major projects increased by 9.1% compared to previous quarter. The increase was anticipated and was mainly due to large installment payments to deliver various projects, the Ministry of Finance said.
According to the Planning and Statistics Authority (PSA), real GDP in Q2,2021 increased by 4% relative to Q2,2020. The non-hydrocarbon sector recorded growth of 6.2% while hydrocarbon growth stood at 0.7% in Q2-2021 compared to the same period last year.
Sectors severely hit by the pandemic in 2020 and the related Covid-19 restrictions are rebounding strongly. Hospitality, transport and storage, and wholesale and retail trade sectors were the highest performing sectors in Q2,2021.
Moreover, the manufacturing sector recorded strong y-o-y growth of 13.4% in Q2,2021 and is now back to pre-pandemic levels.
Real y-o-y growth of the hydrocarbon sector stood at 0.7% in Q2,2021 primarily driven by the completion of scheduled temporary maintenance during 2020, and the operation of the Barzan project.
Real GDP growth in the first half of 2021 was 0.8% compared to the same period in 2020, mostly driven by the nonhydrocarbon sector (+1.9%).
The growth trend is expected to continue in the second half of 2021 due to the recent easing of Covid-19 restrictions and the scheduled sporting and entertainment events. The 2.2% forecast for real GDP growth for 2021 remains unchanged, Ministry of Finance noted.

Source:https://www.gulf-times.com/story/704041/Newly-awarded-projects-during-Q3-total-QR2-9bn-Min#section_191

Saudi Arabia launches national infrastructure fund with BlackRock

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Saudi Arabia, advised by the world’s largest fund manager BlackRock, has launched a national infrastructure fund to support up to 200 billion riyals ($53.32 billion) in projects over the next decade, state news agency SPA said on Monday.

The National Infrastructure Fund will invest in areas such as water, transportation, energy, and health, contributing to Saudi Arabia’s plans to transform the economy and make it less reliant on oil revenue.

The fund is one of the development funds of the National Development Fund (NDF), a body created in 2017 with the aim of supervising and linking together several economic development funds previously spread between various ministries and agencies.

Source:
https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/international/saudi-arabia/saudi-arabia-launches-national-infrastructure-fund-with-blackrock/articleshow/87254112.cms

Bitcoin’s wild weekends turn efficient market theory inside out

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Bitcoin just notched one of its best weeks on record, surging about 40 per cent over the seven days through Friday. Anyone expecting the notoriously volatile digital currency to take a breather this weekend had better buckle up.

It’s on Saturdays and Sundays, when most other assets barely budge, that Bitcoin tends to go particularly nuts. Take the first weekend of 2021. Coming off a 300 per cent gain last year, the world’s largest digital coin rose as much as 14 per cent Jan. 2 and another 10 per cent Jan. 3, a period when most of Wall Street was still in holiday mode. The swings were bigger than on any weekday in the prior two weeks and the biggest intraday moves since the weekend before, when it jumped 10 per cent on Dec. 26, according to Bloomberg data.

Bitcoin’s not alone in trading all day, every day. What sets the coin apart is how big its price swings are outside of established business hours. It’s tough to find pricing for the dollar, for example, with currency-market participants usually in agreement to take weekends off. Bitcoin’s average swing on Saturdays and Sundays during the fourth quarter, on the other hand, was 1.5 per cent.

Why weekend swings?
The cryptocurrency’s weekend volatility spikes owe to a couple of factors. One is that it’s held by relatively few people – about 2 per cent of accounts control 95 per cent of all available Bitcoin supply. If these whales trade when volumes are thin, price swings will be magnified. Another is its market structure, which consists of hundreds of disconnected exchanges that in effect are their own islands of liquidity.

“People always tout Bitcoin as 24/7, 365 liquidity, but what that actually means is you have periods of very thin liquidity,” said Nic Carter, a partner at crypto-focused venture firm Castle Island Ventures. “If you want to deploy $500 million of Bitcoin, you probably want to do it during core banking hours.”

The crypto market is relatively nascent. Bitcoin, the original crypto, brought forth the movement a little more than 10 years ago. According to Greg Bunn, chief strategy officer at digital-asset firm CrossTower, the market remains hugely fragmented from an infrastructure standpoint.

Many platforms operate under different standards and with “different philosophies,” said Bunn, who spent decades with firms including Citadel and Deutsche Bank. Yet it lacks a centralized market structure akin to that of traditional assets, which tend to have common means of custody and settlement, for instance.

“If you think about the structure, that makes it conducive to things that are going to be very volatile and where you’re going to have big moves,” he said. “That’s obviously going to be impacted by when people are trading, when people are awake, when people are watching the markets.”

To Binance.US’s Catherine Coley, Bitcoin’s wild weekend patterns are reminiscent of her time trading currencies in Hong Kong in the early 2010s. Volatility sometimes became subdued during lunchtime lulls and around holidays. Professional traders, she says, tend to keep Monday-through-Friday schedules, so it makes sense that liquidity – or how easily an asset can be traded – would wane on weekends.

Market liquidity factor
What’s seen as liquidity requires a steady supply of both buyers and sellers – an ease in freeing up the value of one asset for another. If there are fewer buyers than sellers – or vice versa – then that makes transactions harder, a situation that usually leads to either a spike or crash in prices. Last weekend, Bitcoin’s price was “absolutely ripping on low liquidity,” said Coley, who is Binance.US’s chief executive officer. “In these periods of illiquid times, you’re going to be getting pricing that is a little bit cushioned.”

That could mean someone with a large sell order can’t as easily unload a position over weekend trading. “To some extent, it’s going to be more difficult for them to offload the risk that they’ve got,” she said. “So that’s where you see these weekend moves of dramatic price spiking.”

No one knows for sure and theories explaining Bitcoin’s weekend action abound. Bitwise Asset Management’s Teddy Fusaro says it’s also possible liquidity providers and market-makers are lightly staffed on weekends, which can lead to volatility.

“It’s a feature of the market that has always been there and we expect that it will be a feature of the market that remains into the future,” Fusaro, the company’s chief operating officer, said. “Efficient market hypothesis people would assume that the market should price in the idea that there could be less liquidity on the weekends.”

Mati Greenspan, founder of Quantum Economics, says that while institutional players have been in the spotlight recently, retail investors could be re-entering the space again, as well. They played a big role in Bitcoin’s notorious 2017 run-up – and many got burned when it crashed the following year.

Source:https://gulfnews.com/business/analysis/bitcoins-wild-weekends-turn-efficient-market-theory-inside-out-1.1610251849100

Turkey’s Industrial Production Growth Slows In October

Turkey’s industrial production grew at a slower pace in October, the Turkish Statistical Institute reported Friday.

Industrial production climbed 7.3 percent year-on-year in October, slower than September’s 10.4 percent increase. Nonetheless, the rate exceeded the expected increase of 5.3 percent.

Within total industry, mining and quarrying grew only 0.5 percent. At the same time, manufacturing advanced 7.7 percent and electricity and gas output gained 7.3 percent.

Energy output logged an annual growth of 6.1 percent in October.

On a monthly basis, industrial output growth held steady at 0.7 percent in October. Production had remained flat in August. Economists had forecast a 0.3 percent increase for October.

Source:http://markets.businessinsider.com/news/interestrates/Turkey-s-Industrial-Production-Growth-Slows-In-October-1010574845

Missed opportunities in Lebanon’s industrial sector

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Economic complexity indicators show export potentials

Lebanon’s productive sectors have been undermined since the end of the civil war in 1990. Like other marginalized sectors, the industrial sector has weakened, becoming a smaller proportion of the economy due in no small part to a history of missed development opportunities. To put this in perspective, the share of the industrial sector out of total GDP has decreased steadily from 24 percent in 1997 to 14 percent in 2016.

Not unrelated to this, Lebanon continues to register the worst trade deficit in the region, primarily due to its dependency on imports and weak export channels. The trade deficit, $15.65 billion by December 2016, has recorded a 3.56 percent yearly increase (according to BLOMINVEST Bank figures). Exports have also fluctuated in recent years from $4.49 billion in 2008, up to $5.11 billion in 2012, and then down to $2.44 billion in 2015. Development in the industrial sector has been restricted by limited development in industrial policy, limited electricity coverage, and the high cost of production, as well as the effects stemming from the conflict in Syria. The latter has had a clear effect, reducing investments in the country and making exports more expensive by curtailing Lebanon’s sole land export route to the region.

Potential for sophistication

Despite this seemingly pessimistic picture, looking at microdata through product space mapping suggests that the situation has not been so dismal. Between 2000 and 2008, the Lebanese industrial sector managed to recover, with exports increasing of industrial products from $742 million in 2000 to $2.58 billion in 2008. This steady increase has been accompanied with an increased level of export sophistication, made clear by observing Lebanon’s improved position on the product space. The total number of exported products increased from 898 in 2000 to 978 in 2008. Equally importantly, comparing the distribution of these products, the number of core products increased by 21 percent (from 307 in 2000 to 370 in 2008), while the number of periphery products increased by only 3 percent (from 591 products in 2000 to 608 in 2008), reflecting an increase in the sophistication of Lebanese exports.

Most stark, however, is that 40 out of the 52 newly produced products in 2008 were a result of “long jumps.” Among these are ceramics, glass pigments, opacifiers, colors, and enamels (HS: 3207), shavers and hair clippers (HS: 8510), and base metal fittings for furniture, doors, and cars (HS: 8302). A long jump suggests that new items were produced despite the lack of prerequisite knowledge or capabilities, given data gathered from the existing export basket. Literature suggests that such phenomena are observed in countries that have undergone structural economic changes. In this respect, Lebanon presents an anomaly to the theory. Despite the absence of a government-led strategy to support industrial growth, the sector managed to improve its industrial standing by producing highly sophisticated products between 2000 and 2008.

Lebanon’s favorable demand shocks

To better understand export diversification in Lebanon, while taking into account highly sophisticated domains of production and an absence of a policy-driven structural change, the literature has attributed changes in sophistication levels in different countries to two key causes: A productivity shock or a demand shock. As Lebanese firms continue to suffer burdensome costs of production and a lack of adequate skills, the increase in Lebanese export sophistication has been largely driven by demand shocks, i.e. the discovery of new markets. The fact that local market capacity is small and saturated impels producers who are aspiring to expand and diversify their production to be outward looking. Lebanese firms, therefore, benefit from their experience, entrepreneurial skills, and connections with foreign markets to overcome demand uncertainties. From 2000 to 2008, for example, several free trade agreements were signed between Lebanon and foreign countries or trade associations such as GAFTA (Greater Arab Free Trade Area). This agreement has instigated a spike in the volume of exports, as exporters were responsive to increased demand opportunities in Arab States.

Sustaining a positive sophistication surge?

Despite the optimistic period from 2000 to 2008 that signaled a positive wave of industrialization in Lebanon, the lack of government support and the absence of a productivity shock to supplement the demand shock made it difficult for industrialists to sustain a comparative advantage. Additionally, Lebanon’s position on the product space worsened with a drop in total products exported from 978 in 2008 to 896 in 2015. From 2008 to 2015, Lebanon discontinued the production of 82 products previously conquered in 2008. These are interpreted as missed opportunities that warrant special attention, as they might hint to the presence of market failures.

The surge in sophistication from 2000 to 2008 is comparable to the status of the sector pre-war period. In the 1960s and 1970s, the industry faced a similar boom, but had also failed to further develop, namely due to a lack of adequate supportive policies. For example, in 1975, the Lebanese industrial sector had conquered five out of the ten densest products. Accordingly, the level of capabilities in the economy, measured by the Economic Complexity Index (ECI), was highest in 1968. Lebanon’s rank peaked in 1975, when it was ranked 21st in the world. After that, the country’s economic complexity followed an overall declining trend, where it reached a low level of 44th in the world in 1998. By 2008, the country’s rank again improved to 31st worldwide.

Sector-specific industrial strategy

With a history of missed development opportunities, Lebanon needs a supportive industrial policy that is capable of optimizing on industrialization opportunities. This strategy is key to the development of the country in order to produce highly sophisticated jobs and avoid brain drain. Using the product space as a compass, policy makers should tailor specific initiatives that usher in the production of sophisticated products where Lebanon has a clear comparative advantage. One avenue to formulate and implement such policies is through a sustainable mechanism of public-private dialogue (PPD) that increases accountability and transparency of those efforts and processes aimed at enhancing Lebanese industry.

To this end, the Lebanese Center for Policy Studies (LCPS) is convening roundtables to facilitate public-private dialogue between the Ministry of Industry and the Association of Lebanese Industrialists (ALI). LCPS uses evidence-based research to encourage industrialists and policy makers to move beyond narrow transactional concerns to broader issues and opportunities for policy change, export-oriented growth, and institutional reform. This has and continues to allow dialogue participants to better understand which and what mix of specific legal frameworks, regulatory rules, labor training services, market access rules, and infrastructure can significantly promote economic diversification within highly sophistication domains of production.

Source:http://www.executive-magazine.com/economics-policy/missed-opportunities-in-lebanons-industrial-sector