Tag: Asia

Japan Post plans to deliver trust sales boost

Japan Post, the world’s biggest financial institution and the traditional safe haven for the country’s millions of highly conservative savers, has outlined ambitious plans to double sales of higher-risk investment trusts.
The company’s announcement highlights the key role it plays in changing households from savers – who put their money in conventional bank or post office accounts, where it earns a tiny rate of interest – to fully fledged investors, who put money into securities to win a higher return.
As Japan Post customers shift more of their money from post office accounts and into investment trusts, they are also likely to contribute to the continuing large flow of money out of the yen and into other currencies.
This is because many investment trusts put money into foreign as well as Japanese assets. This large outflow has been a big driver in pushing down the yen in recent years, enabling the carry trade to prosper.
The Expansion of Japan Post’s investment trust business ties in with the reformist political legacy of Junichiro Koizumi, Japanese prime minister until last year.
Mr Koizumi was determined to reduce the share of the economy controlled by the public sector.
The launch of the investment trusts has the same purpose as the planned privatisation of Japan Post, which is due in October.
Both will switch assets away from the inefficient public sector to the wealth-generating private sector.
This is because money resting in Japan Post’s conventional savings products is primarily used to buy bonds issued by the Japanese government and its various agencies.
By boosting sales of investment trusts and pocketing the fees from selling them, Japan Post hopes to increase profitability at a time when it wants to establish viable financial independence ahead of privatisation.
The company plans to double its sales target of investment trusts to Y1,100bn (USD9.3bn) in the year to March 2008, after reaching its annual 2006-7 target of Y540bn a month early in February, a spokesman told the Financial Times.
Japan Post will also increase the number of post offices selling investment trusts by about 400 to 1,155, although this is still a fraction of the more than 20,000 branches in its network.
From June, the company will add two more investment trusts to its current line-up of nine, said the spokesman. One will con-centrate on high-dividend shares, and the other will change its asset mix as the investor ages.
Japan Post launched investment trusts in October 2005, with offerings from Nomura, Daiwa and Goldman Sachs that inves-ted in bonds, equities and property.

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Singapore Post announces Senior Appointments

Singapore Post Limited (SingPost) today announced the appointment of Mr Dennis Quek Hong Kai as Chief Operating Officer (COO) for its Logistics and eBusiness divisions, to further drive growth in these two businesses.

Mr Quek, 44, will join SingPost on 1 April 2007. He has held various key management positions in both local and regional logistics companies including Flextronics International (Singapore) Pte Ltd and PTC Logistics (Singapore) Pte Ltd.

SingPost’s International Mail and Mail businesses will continue to be led by Mr Teo Yew Hwa and Mr Woo Keng Leong respectively. Mr Teo Yew Hwa will be promoted to Executive Vice President (International Mail) and Mr Woo Keng Leong will be promoted to Executive Vice President (Mail), with immediate effect.

These latest appointments further strengthen SingPost’s senior management team, which is poised to meet the challenges of the impending liberalisation of the Basic Mail Services market and to take the Group on its next phase of growth.

These three executives report to the Group Chief Executive Officer, Mr Lau Boon Tuan.

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Postal center opens at Incheon Airport

The opening of a new U.S. mail terminal in Incheon International Airport on Friday means fewer missent items and, in some cases, shorter delivery time, military postal officials said.
The USD6 million Joint Military Mail Terminal was funded by the South Korean government under the “In-Kind Program,” in which they build the facility to replace an older one: in this case, the one that had operated at Gimpo Airport.
And 8th Army Chief of Postal Operatinos Gregory Mackessy said the new facility — manned by both Army and Air Force personnel — will greatly streamline the mail-handling process for the U.S. military.
Under the old system, mail coming into the country would be sent by truck from Incheon to Gimpo, sorted there, and in many cases, brought back to Incheon for further distribution. Giving the workers direct access to incoming shipments will mean less handling of the mail, which in turn should result in fewer delivery issues, Mackessy said.
And the military will save about USD500,000 a year since it will no longer contract truck drivers to transport the mail between the two airports, he said.

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Indian Postal Dept launches instant MO service

The Indian Postal Department has launched instant money order (IMO) service in the City after a successful trial on Thursday.
The new system offers twin benefits in that the fund transfer is faster and the upper limit of the amount has been raised manifold. The service has been initially started in two main post offices of the City – the GPO and town post office – and will soon be launched in 22 other post offices of the division, said department officials.
Under the new system, a person needs to fill up a form with details and addresses. Sums between Rs 1,000 and Rs 50,000 can be sent, and the charges range from Rs 150 to Rs 330. After collecting the cash, the post office issues a unique 16-digit IMO number known only to the sender. There are also 16 standardised messages that can be sent with the money.
At the other end, the recipient can furnish identification and collect the money either at his house or from a designated post office after filling up a form. This service is currently available in select cities of the country.

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