Tuesday 7 December 2010

Le Bouchons in Singapore and Wagyu Beef in Roppongi

Like eating beef?

Let me show you some places you'll never forget.






This is a Shabu Shabu restaurant in Roppongi, Tokyo. I can't read the sign but it was recommended by an Australian bouncer outside a Roppongi nightclub. Notice the price of Wagyu beef, about SGD15 for 2 boxes. The beef is beautifully marbelled. When I dip it in the broth for 1 minute and put it in my mouth, it just melts! The entire meal cost us less than SGD35 per pax.


Next, closer to home:

Les Bouchons


7 Ann Siang Road S(69689), Club Street

Tel: 6423 0737

Les Bouchons


Categories: Restaurant, French

7 Ann Siang Road S(69689), Club Street

Tel: 6423 0737

Monday, March 31, 2008


Les Bouchons @ Ann Siang Road



One of my favourite places to go for steaks is Les Bouchons @ Ann Siang Road. It's a small restaurant located within a quaint conservation shophouse. The red walls, warm lighting and cosy arrangement of the tables (read: set very close to each other) reminds me of a typical bistro in Paris. The above picture was taken from my seat next to the window. Yes, this is how small the place is. The capacity of the restaurant must be about 20. Reservations are highly recommended to avoid disappointment and a wasted trip.



I love the posters that they have on the walls. This restaurant is owned by the same people who own L'Angelus (my favourite rustic French restaurant). Their restaurants have a way of hitting the sweet spot for the Francophile in me. The menu is rather limited but the main focus for this place is Steak Frites (Steak and French Fries) so you should definitely order this when you visit. Joyce and I were there for our Plats (read: dishes) of Steak Frites (@ SGD28.80++).

After we'd placed our orders, we were served a basket of warm bread rolls and unsalted butter. I absolutely love unsalted butter as it allows me to savour the rich, creamy unadulterated subtle sweetness of fresh butter. Unsalted butter doesn't contain any preservatives unlike the salted versions (the salt levels are pretty high in some brands). Some food for thought in considering a switch from salted to unsalted butter. They serve Président Gastronomique here which I think tastes pretty close to the fresh farm-made butter that I enjoyed while travelling in Provence.




We were served bowls of salad (part of the set) which was a decent portion and was a refreshing mix of crisp salad greens with walnuts and rocket, drizzled with a tangy mustard vinaigrette dressing.




Here's a picture of the condiment platter which consists of mayonnaise, Dijon mustard, wholegrain mustard, horseradish and Maille's Bearnaise Sauce. I love mustard, especially with my fries! Man, I love this place!



Here's a picture of my Rib Eye (done medium rare) topped with a slab of herb butter and served with French fries. I love the steaks here as they're always cooked to perfection with fragrantly seared sides and juicy in the centre. The melted butter adds moisture and flavour to a deliciously tasty steak. The fries are not to be outdone either for they are consistently cooked to perfection. The exterior of the fries are crisp and the interior is fluffy, a perfect French Fry. Apparently the fries here are twice-cooked to achieve this result. I was told some years back that the fries are parboiled first then fried. Fries fans with hearty appetites will be happy to know that you can have unlimited servings of fries. I've not met a person who can go for seconds as we usually are unable to finish the portions on our plates. I'm usually too full after my steak and fries to go for desserts so I cannot comment on the quality of the desserts served here.

This place is definitely a MUST-TRY for steaks and fries!

Forget QE2, Bernanke Says Lookout for QE3

Money is dropping from the sky... catch as much as you can while the window is open...

Forget QE2, Bernanke Says Lookout for QE3


December 6, 2010 7:55 AM EST

Federal ReserveChairman Ben Bernanke said Sunday in an interview with CBS Corp.'s (NYSE: CBS) 60 Minutes that the U.S. economyis barely expanding and that the Fed may need to extend bond purchases past the $600 billion included in QE2 to push growth. Quantitative

“We’re not very far from the level where the economy is not self-sustaining,” Bernanke said. “It’s very close to the border. It takes about 2.5 percent growth just to keep unemployment stable and that’s about what we’re getting.”

The comments from the Fed Chairman come just days after it was announced by the Labor Department that the U.S. economy added just 39,000 jobs in November and that the unemployment rate rose to 9.8 percent, the highest level since April.

“At the rate we’re going, it could be four, five years before we are back to a more normal unemployment rate,” Bernanke said.

He also reiterated that policy in China of limiting gains in its exchange rate is damaging the U.S. economy.

“Keeping the Chinese currency too low is bad for the American economy because it hurts our trade,” the chairman said. “It’s bad for other emerging market economies. It’s bad for China because among other things it means China can’t have its own independent monetary policy.”

Bernanke said that the a double-dip recession is not likely due to sectors of the economy not capable of becoming much more depressed.

China Outstrips Fed with Liquidity Risking 2011 Inflation Spike

The Chinese government is behind the curve. They have to raise short term rates repeatedly. Right now, 3mths SHIBOR is around 3.5% and 10yr Govt Bond Yield around 3.89%. Their yield curve may actually invert! Now an inverted yield curve usually predicts a recession one-year ahead so I am very cautious on Chinese equities now. The 10y yield is so low probably because of foreign investors pouring money into China in search of currency gains. It could also be a sign of weakening of economy in 2012.

Chinese equities will probably be choppy for the next 6 months before resuming its uptrend while the government embarks on a series of rate hikes to catch up with the curve.


China Outstrips Fed With Liquidity Risking 2011 Inflation Spike


By Bloomberg News - Dec 7, 2010 11:01 AM GMT+0800

Business ExchangeBuzz up!DiggPrint Email . The People’s Bank of China will raise rates “gradually” as a more aggressive policy would risk unsettling the stock and property markets, PBOC adviser Li Daokui said.

Play VideoDec. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Andy Xie, an independent economist, discusses China's economy and monetary policy. Xie speaks from Shanghai with Deirdre Bolton on Bloomberg Television's "InsideTrack." (Source: Bloomberg)

China’s reluctance to allow a stronger exchange rate has hamstrung its efforts to rein in inflation and endangered a campaign to shift the economy toward domestic demand.

The central bank continues to add liquidity, with money supply rising 19 percent in November from a year ago, according to the median estimate of 29 analysts in a Bloomberg News survey before a government release this month. That needs to be curbed to 15 percent to 16 percent to rein in inflation, said Fred Hu, the former Goldman Sachs Group Inc. chief China economist who has founded financial advisory firm Primavera Capital Group.

China has held off executing a series of interest-rate increases in part because that would put pressure on a currency officials have kept down to shelter exports. The strategy will leave inflation accelerating past 4 percent for 2011, a three- year high, according to a separate survey. The cost: diminished consumer spending and narrower margins for domestic industries.

“China is behind the curve” on reining in the monetary measures adopted during the global financial crisis, said Hu, 47, who is based in Beijing and gives talks to Communist Party members on the economy. “Policy makers have been complacent and failed to anticipate the inflationary consequences of the massive stimulus program.”

2011 Forecasts

Economists anticipate a 1 percentage point rise in the benchmark one-year lending and deposit rates by the end of next year, according to the medians of 13 forecasts in the Bloomberg survey taken last week. Gross domestic product will rise 9.2 percent in 2011, the median projection shows, compared with the 10 percent gain estimated by the World Bank for 2010.

The PBOC boosted the rates by a quarter point each in October, to 5.56 percent and 2.5 percent, leaving it lagging behind counterparts from Malaysia to Thailand, Taiwan and South Korea in boosting borrowing costs this year.

Inflation will average 4.2 percent in 2011, the survey indicated, little changed from the two-year high of 4.4 percent reached in October. That would leave a negative so-called real rate for deposits, meaning households’ purchasing power is eroded by the increases in consumer prices.

“This is like adding fuel to the fire,” said Hu, referring to negative real interest rates.

Politburo’s Shift

The Communist Party’s Politburo, meeting Dec. 3, signaled it plans to tighten monetary policy in the coming year while sustaining a fiscal boost to growth. Officials “will adopt proactive fiscal policies and prudent monetary policies,” the state-run Xinhua News Agency said. Policy makers had previously used the term “moderately loose” for the central bank’s stance.

A candidate to succeed Premier Wen Jiabao, Li Keqiang, viewed Chinese GDP figures as unreliable, the Telegraph reported, citing a 2007 diplomatic cable that was published by Wikileaks. Li, then leader in Liaoning province, told the U.S. ambassador at the time that he relied instead on electricity consumption, rail cargo volume and loan disbursement tallies to gauge the local economy, the newspaper reported.

Electricity and new-loan figures have indicated a slowing in China’s expansion this quarter, with electricity-production growth moderating to an 8.9 percent pace in October from 13.4 percent in September, according to China Economic Information Net. Credit growth probably eased to 500 billion yuan in November from 587.7 billion in October, according to the median estimate ahead of a release this month.

Move ‘Gradually’

The People’s Bank of China will raise rates “gradually” as a more aggressive policy would risk unsettling the stock and property markets, PBOC adviser Li Daokui said in a Dec. 3 interview.

While China’s officials have faulted the U.S. Federal Reserve’s plan to purchase $600 billion of Treasury securities for the risk of a wave of capital flooding into emerging markets and pushing up asset prices, there’s little sign yet of a jump in American liquidity.

The U.S. M2 measure rose 3.2 percent in October from a year before. Consumer prices in the U.S., excluding food and fuel, gained 0.6 percent in October from a year before, the least in records going back to 1958 (The US banks are not lending, that's why M2 is not rising. Where did they all go? Out of the country into Emerging Markets/ AXJ stocks and commodities!).

“If anyone is printing money it is China’s central bank, not the U.S.,” said Stephen Green, head of research for Greater China at Standard Chartered Plc. in Shanghai. Actual price increases faced by Chinese consumers and businesses are probably even higher than official reports, and pushing up rates now “is the wisest course of action,” he said.

Equities Strategy

Slowing growth may itself help damp price pressures, along with diminished credit expansion, said Qu Hongbin, co-head of economic research at HSBC Holdings Plc in Hong Kong. Qu sees just one quarter-point move before the PBOC finishes its job for the duration through 2011.

HSBC analysts said last month investors should sell stocks likely to be more affected by a rate rise, such as banks and developers, and instead buy stocks of higher value-added manufacturers such as makers of precision machinery.

Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and Carrefour SA are among the international companies that may be affected as the government threatens price controls in an effort to rein in food inflation that reached 10 percent in October.

Wal-Mart, Carrefour

The southwestern city of Kunming, has asked five retailers including Bentonville, Arkansas-based Wal-Mart and Paris-based Carrefour to give reasons for planned price increases two days in advance of any alterations, the National Development and Reform Commission’s local branch said on its website Dec. 3.

China’s non-manufacturing industry, incorporating services, saw input costs outpace prices charged in November, shrinking profit margins, the Federation of Logistics and Purchasing said last week. Consumer confidence is also weakening, with a sentiment index falling for the first time in six quarters, a survey by Nielsen Co. and the Chinese statistics bureau’s Economic Monitoring and Analysis Center showed last month.

President Hu Jintao’s five-year plan, starting in 2011, is aimed in part at buttressing domestic demand and reducing reliance on exports, which tumbled during the contraction in global trade because of the financial crisis. Domestic consumption has shrunk to about 35 percent of GDP from 45 percent a decade ago, Societe Generale SA has calculated (wow, that's even lower than Singapore's 45%. So like Singaporeans, the country statistically is rich but citizens feel normal).

Trade Tension

Little of such rebalancing is evident in economists’ 2011 forecasts, with China’s trade surplus seen at $183 billion next year, according to the median projection. The surplus was $148 billion in the first 10 months of 2010, fueling charges China’s currency policy provides a subsidy to its exporters. President Barack Obama said last month that “China spends enormous amounts of money” keeping the yuan undervalued. The nation’s foreign-exchange reserves were a record $2.6 trillion in September.

“China can’t have its own independent monetary policy” as long as it manages the exchange rate, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said in a excerpts of an interview released by CBS Corp.’s “60 minutes” program Dec. 5.

Authorities have let the yuan rise less than 3 percent against the dollar since allowing greater flexibility in June, with the currency at 6.6488 at 10:55 a.m. in Shanghai. It will reach 6.25 by Dec. 31, 2011, the Bloomberg survey indicates.

Investors should bet on yuan gains through six-month non- deliverable forwards because officials will recognize the need for a stronger currency to fight inflation, said Mitul Kotecha, head of global foreign exchange strategy at Credit Agricole CIB in Hong Kong. Forwards are pricing in a yuan rise to about 6.58 against the dollar in six months. Kotecha estimates the currency will rise to 6.43 by the end of June.



--Kevin Hamlin. With assistance from Jay Wang and Sophie Leung. Editors: Chris Anstey, Paul Panckhurst.



To contact the Bloomberg News staff on this story: Kevin Hamlin in Beijing on khamlin@bloomberg.net



To contact the editor responsible for this story: Chris Anstey at canstey@bloomberg.net

.

Euro's Worst Ahead as Analyst See Crisis Spreading

Imagine if you belong to this society where you own 30% of it. The society said that they will give you free money, on condition that it is all used to lend money to other members that will pay you very low interest rates. You're not even sure if you'll be paid back at maturity. All you know is the society will keep issuing new bonds, making you buy those bonds to pay back those that have matured. In other words, you're given free money, but chances are, you won't get it for another decade or more.

Since it's free, you'd probably be ok with it. As long as inflation in your own backyard doesn't go up. After all, if the society prints more money, it will devalue your currency and your exporters benefit. Politically, you'll be popular. More jobs will be created.

But at some point, inflation is likely to rise. Maybe end of next year, maybe in 2012. If you accept that "free money" again, you know you'll face a revolt back home because workers will ask for massive wage rises. Once inflation is above 4%, it sets up a vicious cycle and is very hard to tame. Will you accept that free money?

The little PIIGS + Belgium better learn to balance their books while Germany / France / UK can tolerate this. Because if inflation spikes up in these 3 countries, they will say "no thanks". That's where the trouble starts.

But wait, there're greater problems ahead. In order to balance their books, they have to raise taxes and cut spending. There may be political instability. Spanish air traffic controllers paid USD450k per annum? Ridiculous. In Singapore, the same worker with the same experience gets paid USD75k if they are lucky. Now you know why OECD hates globalisation. Because the same worker from Singapore, India, China can work harder and be paid 4x less. Globalisation will mean an abrupt end to the Europeans' lifestyle as they know it. Either way, this equalisation will happen. Already Polish plumbers/builders in UK are bringing down the wages of UK plumbers/builders.

PIIGS + Belgium will plunge into a very deep recession for the next 2 - 3 years, even up to 5 years due to their race to balance their books. Real wages will fall. Time to visit Europe and the US next year!
Bloomberg News


Euro’s Worst Ahead as Analysts See Crisis Spreading

Dec. 6 (Bloomberg) -- The most accurate foreign-exchange strategists say the euro’s worst annual performance since 2005 will extend into next year as the region’s sovereign-debt crisis saps economic growth.

Standard Chartered Plc, the top overall forecaster in the six quarters ended Sept. 30 based on data compiled by Bloomberg, predicted the euro may weaken to less than $1.20 by mid-2011 from about $1.33 today. Westpac Banking Corp., the second most accurate, is “bearish in the short term,” and No. 3 Wells Fargo & Co. cut its outlook at the end of last week.

The 16-nation currency’s first weekly gain against the dollar since Nov. 5 may prove short-lived amid mounting concern that more nations will need rescues. European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet delayed the end of emergency stimulus measures last week and stepped up government-debt purchases as “acute” market tensions drove yields on Spanish and Italian bonds to the highest levels relative to German bunds since the euro started in 1999.

“We’re going to get a continuation of the problems that Ireland, Portugal, Spain and others are suffering,” said Callum Henderson, Standard Chartered’s global head of foreign-exchange research in Singapore. “The fundamental issue is these are countries that have relatively large debts, large budget deficits, large current-account deficits, they don’t have their own currency and they can’t cut interest rates. The only way they can get out of this is to have significant recessions.”

Sentiment Reverses

Ireland’s budget deficit will rise to more than 32 percent of gross domestic product this year, including the cost of bailing out the nation’s banks, European Commission data from Nov. 29 showed. Spain’s deficit will be 9.3 percent in 2010. Portugal’s total debt will reach almost 83 percent of GDP this year from about 76 percent in 2009, according to the commission.

Just a month ago the euro reached $1.4282, the strongest level since January, as traders sold the dollar on speculation the Federal Reserve would debase the greenback by printing more cash to purchase $600 billion of Treasuries in so-called quantitative easing.

Now, those concerns are being overshadowed by the possibility that Europe’s economy slows next year as governments impose austerity measures to reduce budget deficits, while officials drive bond investors away with talk of forcing them to take losses as part of future bailouts (would you buy the bonds if there isn't a 100% backstop guarantee by ECB??? Makes things worse).

Risk Reversals

Demand for options granting the right to sell the euro over the next three months relative to those allowing for purchases reached the highest level since June last week. The so-called 25-delta risk reversal rate fell to negative 2.5225 percentage points from negative 0.5725 in October.

European banks paid the biggest premium to borrow in dollars through the swaps market since May last week, a signal the outlook for the euro may deteriorate. The price of two-year cross-currency basis swaps between euros and dollars reached minus 51.8 basis points on Dec. 1, from minus 20.9 on Nov. 4.

“We have a lot of time to go” before the situation in Europe is resolved, John Taylor chairman of FX Concepts LLC, the world’s biggest currency hedge fund, said Dec. 2 at the Hedge Funds New York Conference hosted by Bloomberg Link. “That means the market is going to be twitching.”

Taylor predicted some nations may leave the common currency. Stronger members “have to say ‘enough, you guys, get out of the euro,’” he said. “The risk that Spain and Italy will get into trouble is going to cause the euro to get quite weak.”

The region’s economy may expand 1.4 percent next year, compared with 2.5 percent in the U.S., according to the median estimate of more than 20 economists in Bloomberg surveys.

Market ‘Tensions’

“Uncertainty is elevated,” Trichet told reporters after the ECB left its benchmark interest rate at 1 percent on Dec. 2. “We have tensions and we have to take them into account.”

The ECB will keep offering banks as much cash as they want through the first quarter over periods of as long as three months at a fixed interest rate, Trichet said. That marks a shift from last month, when he said that the ECB could start limiting access to its funds.

The euro declined 0.9 percent against the dollar to $1.3294 as of 12:51 p.m. in New York. While the euro rose 1.3 percent against the dollar last week, it’s down 6.4 percent from Nov. 4. For the year, it has fallen 7.2 percent, following a gain of 2.51 percent in 2009.

Westpac predicts the euro may weaken to $1.2650-$1.2670 in one month, said Lauren Rosborough, a senior strategist in London. The bank then expects the Fed’s bond-purchase plan to weigh on the dollar, according to Robert Rennie, head of currency research at Westpac in Sydney.

‘Source of Negativity’

“As we progress through next year, we see quantitative easing in the U.S. as an ongoing source of negativity for the U.S. dollar,” Rennie said. “We’ve got the euro up to $1.35 by March and $1.38 by June.”

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said yesterday the economy is barely expanding at a sustainable pace and that it’s possible the Fed may expand bond purchases beyond the $600 billion announced last month to spur growth.

Unlike the Fed, the ECB isn’t conducting quantitative easing. That helped keep the euro from matching this year’s low of $1.1877 reached on June 7.

Outside of the most accurate forecasters, strategists are hesitant to reduce their estimates. Even as the euro slumped 6.9 percent last month, the median mid-2011 estimate of 41 strategists surveyed by Bloomberg rose to $1.36 from $1.35.

Trichet’s Signal

Germany is making up for some of the weakness in the economies of Greece, Ireland, Portugal and Spain. Last week the Nuremberg-based Federal Labor Agency said the number of Germans out of work declined a seasonally adjusted 9,000 to 3.14 million, the lowest level since December 1992. German business confidence surged to a record in November as domestic spending increased, the Ifo institute in Munich said on Nov. 24.

Trichet signaled on Nov. 30 that investors are underestimating policy makers’ determination to shore up the region’s stability. He said in Paris on Dec. 3 that euro-area governments need a “quasi” fiscal union (See, I told you so).

“There will be sufficient political will to find measures that will bind the system together,” said Jane Foley, a London- based senior currency strategist at Rabobank International, one of the most bullish on the euro among the most accurate forecasters. “The euro will come out of this stronger.”

Foley said the euro will strengthen to $1.40 in the first quarter and to $1.45 by the end of June.

Traders are anticipating more declines as the U.S. economy picks up speed.

Diverging Economies

The U.S. created jobs in November for a second month, data from the Labor Department in Washington showed Dec. 3. Two days earlier, the Institute for Supply Management’s factory index showed manufacturing expanded for a 16th month. By contrast, growth in Europe’s GDP slowed to 0.4 percent in the third quarter from 1 percent in the three months ended June 30, according to EU figures on Dec. 2.

As the euro region’s most-indebted nations cut spending to bring their deficits under control, a weaker euro will be needed to cushion their economies, said Ian Stannard, a senior currency strategist in London at BNP Paribas SA, the fifth most accurate forecaster. The bank says the euro will trade at $1.25 by the end of June and $1.20 in the third quarter.

Declines in the bonds of euro-region members including Ireland and Spain have accelerated after EU leaders agreed on Oct. 29 to consider German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s proposal to force bondholders to share the cost of future bailouts.

Wells Cuts

The crisis prompted Wells Fargo to lower its first-quarter target for the euro to $1.37-$1.38 from a November forecast of $1.41, said Nick Bennenbroek, head of foreign-exchange strategy in New York. He sees the currency at $1.25 by late next year.

The debt crisis “will remain with us for longer, which is why we lowered our targets,” he said. “The move in the euro has been particularly rapid and you can say the currency markets have been panic driven, so we feel like it’s overdone. We do expect the euro to fall over time but we expect the decline to be more orderly than has been the case recently.”

Companies participating in the ranking were compared based on seven criteria: six forecasts at the end of each quarter for the close of the next, starting in March 2009, plus one annual estimate, which was made at the end of September 2009 for currency rates as of Sept. 30, 2010.

Only firms with at least four forecasts for a particular currency pair were ranked for it, and only those that qualified in at least five of eight pairs were included in the ranking of best overall predictors.

To contact the reporters on this story: Anchalee Worrachate in London at aworrachate@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Daniel Tilles at dtilles@bloomberg.net