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Hong Kong brokers' long lunch in the firing line

Indian PM backs 'practical' solution to China border rows
New Delhi (AFP) Oct 31, 2010 - India and China would look for "practical, pragmatic" measures to end border disputes which took the two countries to war in 1962, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said. Singh, who met his Chinese counterpart Wen Jiabao on Friday at a regional summit in Hanoi, also said the two Asian giants must ensure "peace and tranquillity" on their militarised border. "We reaffirmed the two countries' resolve to find a practical, pragmatic and mutually satisfactory solution to the border problem," Singh told reporters late Saturday on his way back from a tour of Japan, Malaysia and Vietnam.

The two neighbours have disputed territory in Kashmir and along the border between Indian state of Arunachal Pradesh and Tibet. Improved economic ties and many rounds of talks have left the border disputes unresolved since the brief but bloody 1962 war. In Hanoi, Wen told Singh that the two nations should "steadily ensure friendship" and "increase mutual trust in politics", according to China's foreign ministry website. India remains wary of China's growing presence in South Asia, including investments in ports in Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Pakistan. The two fast-developing economies are also in a race to strengthen their presence in Africa with joint ventures, investments and oil projects.
by Staff Writers
Hong Kong (AFP) Oct 31, 2010
Hong Kong's stockbrokers may soon have to wave farewell to three-course lunches at Michelin-starred restaurants and instead settle for a cold sandwich at their desks.

The city's bourse wants to cut its two-hour midday break -- the longest among the world's 20 major stock exchanges -- to bring trading hours in line with other Chinese financial markets.

But cutting a cherished lunch break in half has some in the financial hub steaming over what they see as an affront to their long-held eating habits.

"It's a Chinese tradition to fill our stomachs with hot things for lunch -- I could not stomach a sandwich," said Peter Lai, a sales director at DBS Vickers Securities, who dismissed the proposal as "crazy."

The 30-year industry veteran said he often spends lunch entertaining clients and briefing them on the market at some of the former British colony's private clubs -- impossible on a one-hour break.

That sentiment appears to be shared by many in the city's influential investment community: a recent survey by the Hong Kong Securities Professionals Association interviewed over 700 of its members and found that seven out of 10 opposed the proposal.

But advocates of change including Charles Li, chief executive of Hong Kong's exchange operator, have said the move is crucial as Hong Kong looks to become an offshore trading centre for China's currency, the yuan.

More than 70 percent of trading volume on the city's exchange -- the second-largest in Asia -- also comes from mainland China-based securities.

"Over 500 mainland firms are currently listed in Hong Kong. (The city) is also trying to position itself as an offshore yuan trading centre, which means we need to match the mainland market," said Jojo Choy, chairman of the Institute of Securities Dealers of Hong Kong.

Choy doubted whether longer hours would mean higher trading volumes.

"There are lots of markets that have longer trading hours but few have a higher turnover," he told AFP.

"I don't think extending trading hours will increase the turnover volume."

Lunchtime trading breaks are almost unheard of outside of Asia.

The London Stock exchange has not had a lunchtime hiatus since 1950, while New York scrapped lunch breaks in 1887.

London, Paris and Frankfurt trade for more than eight hours per day, while New York and Singapore are open for six and a half hours.

If the proposal is adopted, Hong Kong's trading hours would start half an hour earlier, at 9.30am, end at noon and then restart at 1:00 pm or 1:30 pm, instead of 2:30 pm. Trading would still end at 4:00 pm.

This would shorten the lunch break by up to an hour and increase daily trading by as much as 90 minutes. Trading hours now run for a total of four hours daily.

Despite the wave of opposition, some argue that the measures aren't drastic enough and call for lunchtime to be abolished completely.

"In order for it to be a meaningful reform, we should open half an hour earlier, and cancel lunch hours completely, like in Europe and America," said Francis Lun, general manager at Hong Kong's Fulbright Securities.

In 2001, the exchange proposed extending Hong Kong's trading day to as long as 11 hours and ditching lunch, but the idea was shot down by the city's brokerage community.



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