Thursday, 28 June 2012

Emirates Launches New "Trans-Thames Airline"

A New Cable Car Across the River Thames Sponsored by Emirates Took Flight Today

The cable car will allow pedestrians, wheelchair users and cyclists to cross the river Thames within five minutes, from terminals at Emirates Greenwich Peninsula and Emirates Royal Docks.

To sample the new "flight" view Transport for London's video impression of the ride across the Thames.   http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y0ZL06low8c&feature=player_embedded

Following the maiden flight Mayor Boris Johnson told newspaper The Independent: ‘Get on this cable car immediately. It’s beautiful, worth every penny and a stunning piece of engineering.’

More than 2,500 people will be able to use the Emirates Air Line every hour, which will operate every day between 7am and 9pm, staying open for an extra hour on Saturdays and opening two hours later on Sundays.

Using the cable car will cost £3.20 for Oyster card users, while 'frequent flyer' tickets can also be purchased.


Read more: http://www.metro.co.uk/news/903523-boris-johnson-launches-emirates-air-line-cable-car-above-river-thames#ixzz1z5NUFCGF

Wednesday, 27 June 2012

OMG - George Is Being Practical Again! Petrol Duty Frozen



When is a U-Turn Not a U-Turn?

I know I have only mentioned forecourt petrol prices in the context of Brent Crude prices falling and the effect that has on jet fuel prices.  However UK motoring and haulage  firmly costs are absolutely linked to the Brent price which today is just over $92 per barrel.  The near 30% drop in Brent prices recently has seen forecourt prices (mercifully) falling  to £ 129.9 pence per litre in my local garage which equates to £5.91 a gallon in the old pre-litre prices.

Today the UK's Daily Mail front page  trumpeted another U-turn by the Chencellor.  His last budget did produced some real howlers which he has since had to cancel to the media's delight e.g. VAT on hot pasties.......Only a Treasury accountant/economist could dream that one up!! 

However back to the "U-turn" today - Only it wasn't really a u-turn at all.  It was a cancellation of a budget  increase in petrol duty inherited from the last Government.  Mr Osborne apparently did not  even tell the PM about dropping the planned 3p per litre rise - the good news though is it will now be cheaper for the PM to go to his local pub with his family - maybe the savings can be put to use getting a tracker for his young daughter!.  Mr Osborne said today that including the cancelled January rise- also inherited from the previous Government motorist are now 10p a litre better off than under the Labout plans. 

Given the short notice of the announcement perhaps Ed Balls, Labour's shadow Chancellor, can be forgiven for calling today's duty freeze "...the fastest u-turn in history" conveniently forgetting it was the Labour Government who had introduced the duty rises in the first place - not the Chancellor. 

Given that we are in an austerity period the loss of revenue will not now help reduce the UK's deficit.  However the Chancellor claimed that the loss of revenue would be recovered from savings at the Treasury (Maybe from the Treasury Canteen no longer having to pay 20% VAT on pasties and hot pies....?)

Whilst the subject is topical it would be good to recall that drivers conribute a huge chunck of revenue to the Exchequer each year.  Last October the City firm of Wood Mackenzie published research which showed the breakdown of the pum price for petrol. Of an average price per litre of 134.1p SIXTY percent goes to the Treasury:-

Cost of the oil         45.2p
Refining Cost            1.5p
Fuel Duty                58.0p
VAT                        22.4p
That leaves 7.1p for the retailer.  Earlier in the week Transport Secretary Justine Greening, apparently unaware of the forthcoming announcement, said that the oil compaines should reduce prices rather than the Government forgoe Labour's planned 3p rise .  With 61 % of the price of a litre going to the Treasury and just under 2.5% to the oil companies perhaps the fairest option was George Osborne's decision not to add another 3p per litre.  I am all for U-Turns that make my cost of living cheaper!!! Bring 'em on!!

Monday, 25 June 2012

Heathrow - A "Practical Politician" Proposes Mixed Mode at Heathrow


'Mixed Mode' May Now Be A La Mode


The Times and the Daily Telegraph reported this week-end  that George Osborne has been championing plans to increase drastically the number of flights at Heathrow – without building a third runway. The Chancellor has secretly been pushing ‘mixed mode’ proposals that would see more than 1,000 extra flights a week and as many as 20m more passengers each year.  The aviation industry supports a third Heathrow runway because it will allow for 240,000 more flights a year but 'mixed mode' will only allow for a quarter of that number. 
What is ‘Mixed Mode’?  At present Heathrow confines arrivals to one runway at a time, and BA analysts have found that strong headwinds frequently lead to reductions in the optimum arrival rate set by air traffic controllers.  For example, Heathrow was subject to air traffic control restrictions on arrivals on 276 days in 2006 compared with just 52 days at Gatwick.
Gatwick with its single runway, however, uses a ‘mixed mode’ operation where landings and take-offs are sequenced on the same runway. This means arrivals can be maintained at a consistent rate in windy conditions because separation between arrivals is greater to allow for intervening  departures. Typically this means that Gatwick can generate more take-offs and landings per runway per hour - typically 48 - while Heathrow averages 42. A change to Mixed Mode at Heathrow would bring immediate relief to the 99% capacity situation there which has led to calls for a third runway. 
In another statement reported in the media this week-end, Gatwick's chief executive, Stewart Wingate says that Gatwick intends to resurrect proposals for a second runway this summer.  It already has an ambition to be London's leading/favourite airport.  A second runway, for which land has already been set aside, would allow it to exploit the growing number of Far East destinations which has been one of the reasons for proposals by Heathrow for a third runway.   However, Gatwick is not allowed to have a second runway until 2019 and it will be interesting to see what Gatwick's new owners since 2009, Global Infrastucture Partners, are going to propose.

Friday, 22 June 2012

Banks and the Eurozone & International Economic Crisis


Bring Back Old Fashioned High Street Banking -  Why Should Ordinary Customers Funds or Sureties Be Exposed to Speculative  Markets and Trades?

With Moody's downgrading yesterday of 15 of the worlds biggest banks, thus making it more expensive for them to borrow, the banking world staggers on in an apparent downward slope which no one seems to know how to reverse.

I am not an economist.  Far from it.  However like most of us I am blessed with a certain amount of 'common sense'.  Also, having worked in the City as a commodity & financial futures broker/analyst and then as a Financial PR consultant  for well over 25 years, I have seen a number of economic cycles.  During that time I also witnessed the convergence of  various parts of the financial and business sectors. Stockbrokers and banks as well as so-called secondary and tertiary banks all wanted a piece of the commodity futures action when the stock market went into the doldrums.   Inflation was rampant and commodity trading was percieved to be the way to make money.  It wasn't just individuals that got the commodity futures fever but stockbrokers and banks as well.  Having got a taste for it Banks then looked for other opportunities outside their traditional areas of operation.  Trouble was 90% of senior management did not understand the mechanisms of these arcane arts. Consequently they had not a clue how to manage (control) the trading activities of the young traders who seemed to be able to produce huge amounts of money.  The demise of Barings Bank was a tragic consequence of that ignorance.

In the 1970s a young professor of economics named Rich Sandor designed the first financial futures product which was launched on the Chicago Board Of Trade futures market.   He also coined the word "Derivatives" .  The contract allowed the financial sector to hedge interest rates as it was based on securitising (bundling) numbers of mortgages on homes  - thus the "GinnieMae" and "FannyMae" contracts were born.  Given that these were underwritten by the US Government i.e. respectively Government and Federal backed mortgages they were a great way to manage fluctuating interest rate risk.  However the inventiveness and "Gordon Gekko" greed of the financial sector resulted in an ever growing mountain of several times rebundled derivatives of all sorts.  The eventual collapse of this inverted triangle of multi layered derivatives we now know to have triggered the current banking crisis in the US.   The  knock-on effect of which we are now all suffering from.

So we should ask the question? - Should high street banks be involved with the high risk business of trading high risk financial instruments just because they are there?  When Mr & Mrs Average put their money into a current or saving account forty years ago that generally meant that the bank was not exposing their money to the vagaries of market trading.  That was the business of the old "merchant banks" - and Barings became a victim of the markets.   It's recently been clearly demonstrated that even the largest banks e.g. in the US, can fail when they are over-exposed to market risk.  Now, several of the largest that have survived have just been stripped of their AAA credit ratings because of the consequences of that exposure.  There is also the element of an all too prevalent "Gordon Gekko" management mentality amongst banls on both sides of the Atlantic.

As I said I am not an economist but it seems to me that if the High Street banks were now to be restricted to their traditional role of lending to businesses and individuals (entrepreneurs and Joe Public) the economy might have a chance of mending itself.  SMEs (small and medium enterprises) are the usual regenerators of the economy.  At present, despite a Base Rate of 0.5% they are apparently being starved of funds because the banks are involved with other areas of high risk banking which require significant reserves.  That might make for great bonus opportunities for bank executives but it also begs the question, why should our banks' business and private customers be exposed to the risks involved with the trading of derivatives and other exotic financial instruments.  

There has been talk of ring-fencing high street banking from its more glamourous and risky trading side 'opportunities'.  Perhaps now is a good time to introduce it as part of the mix being proposed by those celestial financial bodies and Governments currently proposing solutions to the Eurozone crisis.

Thursday, 21 June 2012

G20 Leaders Flag International Tourism As a Driver of Jobs & Growth




Cabo San Lucas Mexico
Los Cabos - G20 Try to Chart a Way Past Economic Rocks
The G20 summit leaders have for the first time flagged up tourism as a positive force for economic growth and job creation

The Leaders’ Declaration from the annual meeting, this year held in Mexico at Los Cabos, stated: “We recognise the role of travel and tourism as a vehicle for job creation, economic growth and development, and, while recognising the sovereign right of States to control the entry of foreign nationals, we will work towards developing travel facilitation initiatives in support of job creation, quality work, poverty reduction and global growth.” 
Whilst the global tourism and travel industries have known about the positive aspects about tourism mentioned in the statement, very often national governments have only seen it as a useful revenue raising asset rather than an industry to be encouraged.  The WTTC (World Travel & Tourism Council) says the industry will directly contribute $2 trillion in GDP and 100 million jobs to the global economy in 2012. When the wider economic impacts of the industry are taken into account, tourism is forecast to contribute some $6.5 trillion to the global economy and generate 260 million jobs - or one in 12 of all jobs on the planet.

I hope George Osborne was a party to the G20 statement! The UK's Air Passenger Duty is not only a barrier to tourism and business but is also a regressive tax that hurts the people most of all that can ill-afford it .  It also hurts developing countries by reducing the number of Brit tourists visiting their countries.  Today the Caribbean Tourist body again renewed its calls to the Chancellor to cut the tax.  A delegation came last year to London to plead that the 4000 - 6000 mile Band which the region is in (Barbados by only 250 miles) is grossly unfair when flying to Hawaii is in the 2000-4000 band even though it on the other side of the world....

Another UK tax which must hurt inbound tourism is VAT at 20% on hotel accommodation.  The French recognise that Hotels are a vital element in tourism - they charge VAT at 5.5% and allow their cities to charge a local tax on a per person per night basis which is usually a modest  Euros 0.5 to 1.5.  Despite the UK Hospitality industry calling for a reduction in Hotel VAT, no UK Chancellor has yet to act.  Plenty of noise about promoting the UK but nothing to make visiting and staying here cheaper, which is what every tourist looks for. 

Some MPs in Westminster obviously do recognise that the effect of APD on the UK economy should be properly investigated as 25 all-party MPs have just called for an independent study to assess the actual effect of APD to be presented before the 2013 Budget.    It's an idea which has been proposed by the industry before (by IAG's Willie Walsh when he was head of BA I think I recall).    Of course anything quite so radical and also something that might just prove the damage APD is doing overall to the UK was ignored in case it might do so.   One might hope that the oft quoted fact that the Dutch dropped their version of APD after a year might serve as a warning to the Treasury here.  However the siren call of the estimated £2.2 billion or more that APD is bringing into the treasury coffers has deafened the Government to that fact and the widespread public and industry antipathy to APD. The Dutch tax raised a fraction of what the tax actually cost the country overall as a direct result of bringing it in.  I guess as a Chancellor you can actually count the revenue coming in but only estimate what might have been gained for the economy as a whole without APD.  Lets hope the 25 Westminster MP's get their way and that the debate about APD finally gets an independent study to throw an unbiased light on it.

Brent Oil Price Continues Decline - US Oil Inventories Hit 21 year High

US Oil Inventories UP
Just a month ago when Stowawae spotted a "double-top" on the Brent Crude Oil price chart Brent Crude was at US$110 a barrel.  Today it is $29 lower.  One reason is that US oil inventories are at 21 year highs due to a sluggish US economy.   Market opinion seems to be that there may be another $5 to go on the downside (in fact the day after posting this it is now $89) -  However anything below $90 is going to get OPEC very concerned and there will be calls by most members for the Saudis and the few other members with spare capacity to cut production. 

One unlikely scenario at present is that sanctions against Iran will be lifted allowing exports of their oil to the West.  Sanctions will remain whilst Iran and the West are deadlocked about Iran's nuclear programme which the West believes is aimed at producing nuclear weapons rather than energy production as Iran claims.   Opec would like to see oil in a price range of $100 to £110 and by tweaking production could probably achieve this as long as world demand does not fall further from its present level. 

It would certainly be nice if the price of petrol could come down further.  One forecourt I saw (but avoided!) last week was charging £1.43 a litre!!!!! Not far down the road the price was the more usual £1.33.   Guess which one I went to?   With the benchmark Brent Crude price now well under US$100,  hopefully the fuel surcharge that air passengers now pay will be reviewed and reduced by airlines.  Having said that, the first quarter accounts of IAG, parent company of both BA and Spain's Iberia, showed that it made a Q1 loss of $189 million which it attributed to high fuel and other costs.  It's therefore possible that a prolonged period of  lower fuel prices will be needed before airlines respond on their fuel surcharges.

Tuesday, 19 June 2012

Support A Fair Tax on Flying Campaign - Please participate!

The Government raised the already sky high Air Passenger Duty last April by another 8%.  This tax on flying is not just paid by Brits but also by returning overseas tourists and business people as they depart from a UK airport. Then when they stay here they face 20% VAT on their Hotel or accommodation bills!   So much for the Government encouraging inbound tourism and business to come to the UK!  An alliance of Travel business and airlines "A Fair Tax on Flying" has called for the public to email their MP's to reduce the taxIt is very simple to do taking only a couple of minutes to send a pre-written letter to your local MP.  By entering your household Post Code the letter pops up addressed to your local MP.  Enter yr home address and email details - submit and its done !

Seemples! 

I do not have specific research to hand to prove this but I believe it is a well accepted principle of successful marketing that your brand should attract a loyal and saitisfied customer base.  They will then return regularly for your product.  The UK's short term strategy of extracting every penny possible from overseas visitors through APD and VAT looks to me like an excellent one for discouraging the return of tourists and other visitors - everyone likes value for money after all.  

It is not just the UK that suffers from APD...  It has already seriously affected Caribbean resorts who fall into the third (out of four) most expensive APD mileage Bands (Barbados by a mere 250 miles).
The CTO has just (21 June) repeated its calls to change or dismantle the tax.. http://news.cheapflights.co.uk/caribbean-joins-calls-for-axing-of-air-passenger-duty/ .
Clearly the world economic downturn has an affect, but as an example my Favourite B&B in Barbados told me that this year they are 60% down on Bookings compared to last year!  (http://www.bayfieldbarbados.com/) - Jet Fuel prices have not helped either as  trans Atlantic and long distance flights carry  significant fuel fuel surcharges.  For example  my wife and I were given airmiles by our son-in-law who flies regularly - we paid APD and other fees including the fuel surcharge on two premium economy seats to Barbados.  These came to over £800.  By the time we had paid BA £120 to reserve outbound and return seat numbers it was close to £1000 for the flights despite them being "free".

There is a point where if you raise taxes to an unsustainable level your revenue will actually fall rather than increase.  This has happened in the UK when years ago the Government at the time put huge tax increases on alcohol and tobacco.  It will be interesting to see the revenue generated by APD when the stats for last year are released eventually. (Always assuming that these are not doctored in any way!  Perish the thought of course!)