Saturday, 25 June 2016

Sri Lanka Govt. faces economic Armageddon

* Shocked Supreme Court cancels Rs. 60 billion coal tender

* Credit ratings downgrade by Moody’s despite IMF programme
* Traders countrywide in open revolt against VAT
* World turned topsy-turvy by Brexit vote



In a landmark judgment delivered by the Supreme Court last Friday, the country’s highest court shot down a disputed coal tender with it being said in open court that the ‘conscience of the court was shocked’ by the conduct displayed by certain individuals involved in the process. The Norochcholai power plant requires 2.25 million tonnes of coal per annum and the practice is to award tenders for a three year’s supply - the biggest tender in the country worth over Rs. 60 billion. A dispute arose about a tender floated June 2014 to procure 6.75 million tonnes of coal with one of the bidders saying that the criteria had been changed after the bids had been opened. They went to the procurements Appeal Board which held that the criteria had indeed been changed after the bids had been opened and they recommended that the tender be cancelled and fresh bids called. (A detailed description of this dispute and accusations and counter accusations made appeared in The Sunday Island of Nov 7, 2015 and in the daily Island of 10 May 2016.)


However, instead of calling for fresh bids, a cabinet paper was presented in September 2015 by the Minister of Power and Renewable Energy recommending that cabinet award the contract to a certain party overriding the ruling of the Procurements Appeal Board. One of the bidders Messrs Nobel Resources of Singapore petitioned the Supreme Court saying that its rights had been infringed. The government of Sri Lanka argued that the petitioner had no standing (locus standi) to petition the Supreme Court because it was a Singapore based company which was not incorporated in Sri Lanka. The three member bench comprising Chief Justice K Sripavan, and Justices Priyasath Dep and Upali Abeyratne wanted the petitioner and the respondents to make written submissions as to whether the court can ignore wrongdoing by a public authority due to objections raised on the basis of the locus standi of the petitioner and if there is a misuse of public funds, whether the law requires the court to protect the public interest or to ignore all that on an argument of locus standi? It was after considering these two questions that the Supreme Court gave their landmark judgment last Friday.

Traditional UNP constituency turns militant


As this columnist has been saying all along, what will decide the fate of this government will not be politics but economics. The most significant event taking place at the moment in this regard are the waves of hartals spreading from town to town all over the country. Last week, hartals were held in the Gampaha town and in all towns in the Matara district. This started first only in individual towns. The Matara hartal was a new development where all towns in the district put down their shutters on the same day. This is an unprecedented protest movement that no one has ever seen before. Our generation has read about the 1953 hartal, but that was a protest movement launched by the public over the slashing of the rice subsidy. But what we are seeing now are hartals by the small and medium business community.


The VAT increase has obviously hit certain people harder than anyone expected. The drawing in of all retail and wholesale businesses grossing over Rs 33,000 a day has affected virtually every business in the towns. The finance minister’s explanation that it won’t be every business that makes over Rs. 33,000 a day that will have to pay the VAT but only those businesses that sell Rs. 33,000 worth of VAT liable goods per day that will have to pay the tax is little cause for relief. Certain items like rice, vegetables and pharmaceuticals are exempt from VAT. But most retail establishments in the towns will be selling both VAT exempt as well as VAT liable goods. The supermarkets may have detailed electronic billing systems which will enable differentiation of VAT liable and VAT exempt goods, but ordinary retail businesses don’t operate like that.


An ordinary grocery rarely gives the customer anything more than a hastily scribbled chit with the goods bought and the prices which is for the customer. Small retail businesses rarely retain records of what comes in and what goes out – everything is most often only in the owner’s head. Such business may end up paying VAT on VAT exempt goods as well, as very few of them have the ability to differentiate. Though all pharmaceuticals are exempt from VAT most pharmacies sell a range of non-medicinal products which are liable to VAT. Besides, the tax authorities are not known for their friendly approach either. The tax authorities raid business establishments the way the police raid kasippu joints. A pharmacy owner told this writer that when the tax authorities raided his establishment one day, all the employees had been told to empty their pockets onto the counter and once official who had sat on the cashiers chair had told the frightened manageress: "We’re going to nail your boss this time!"


That’s the way the tax authorities collect money from the small businessmen. The paperwork is no less daunting. A young man barely out of his teens started a small boutique in a town in Gampaha selling rice, curd, treacle and the like transported from the south. A couple of weeks after he commenced operations, he got a letter from the Inland Revenue Department asking him to declare his profits failing which the department will file action against him under such and such laws. The young man was frightened out of his wits. It will be a daunting task for small retailers to maintain separate accounts for VAT liable and VAT exempt goods in a manner that will satisfy the tax authorities. The government may have to move fast to defuse the situation building up in the towns.


The towns in most districts have been bastions of the UNP. It does not augur well for the UNP that this wave of hartals is taking place in their traditional constituency. This is not just a protest against the VAT. It is also a protest against the increase in vehicle prices making it that much more difficult for this class of small businessman to buy a vehicle. This class has been hit hard by the policies adopted by this government and it would be politically wise not to allow the situation to continue. All this while the local government elections are being postponed because of the anxieties of the Sirisena faction of the SLFP. But after this revolt in the towns, even the UNP will be having second thoughts about going in for an election. This is their traditional constituency that is in open revolt. How inclined would this small business class be to vote for this government after things have been made harder for them than it was before?


At least a part of the vehemence of the reaction is obviously due to the fact that that many of the protestors feel that they brought all this upon themselves by voting this government into power. This government has even more horrors in store for this particular class of people in the form of the capital gains tax which will seriously affect the provincial businessman class as they do quite a lot of buying and selling of property. The UNP should watch out lest this should result in a permanent change in the voting patterns. Before 1977, the left movement had a very significant presence in Colombo. This is why Bernard Soysa and Peiter Keunaman kept winning in the Colombo city electorates and why Kusala Abeywardene won the Borella electorate in 1970. But the government of 1970-77 caused a permanent shift in voting patterns with the left parties wiped out from the urban areas and the UNP establishing an overwhelming dominance in Colombo that has lasted to this day. The UNP should take care lest this process should be reversed.


It is not easy for the government to roll back the tax increases. It claims to have already exempted parts of the private medical care service from VAT when it comes to specialist consultations and medical tests and the like. Now if they are forced to abolish the VAT on the retail sector, the worries expressed by the credit ratings agencies about the IMF targets not being met will come true. Adding to the woes of the government, the Supreme Court has given leave to proceed in a fundamental rights case filed challenging the legality of the VAT increase because the government has not yet passed the sanctioning legislation. As of now it is being implemented administratively.


If the government keeps retreating on the VAT by issuing more and more exemptions, the IMF programme revenue targets will not be met and we may get shut out of the programme anyway. Then again, if the government tries to compensate for the retreat on VAT by increasing direct taxes such as income taxes and a new capital gains tax, once again they will be antagonising a community that has traditionally been UNP - talk of being in between a rock and a hard place!

Moody’s gives SL a negative outlook


This column has been closely following the unfolding economic situation in the country. In February the credit rating agency Moody’s gave Sri Lanka a B1 rating and a stable outlook categorisation. In doing so they explained that Sri Lanka had applied for an IMF loan and they expected the conditions in the IMF programme to restore financial stability to Sri Lanka. Thereafter Fitch ratings published their ratings for Sri Lanka, and gave Sri Lanka a negative outlook categorisation. They noted that even though Sri Lanka was to enter into a programme with the IMF, the foreign debts the government had taken on which were coming due before the end of this year would place an unbearable strain on foreign reserves. Standard and Poor’s was the last to publish their ratings for Sri Lanka and they too followed the lead set by Fitch.


Several weeks after that the IMF confirmed that they would be giving Sri Lanka a loan. Fitch and Moody’s responded immediately saying that they were not changing their rating because they were sceptical about the IMF’s programme for Sri Lanka given the ‘patchy’ implementation record of the government. Sometime laster, the IMF’s executive board approved the loan to Sri Lanka and the first tranche of 168 million USD came in. After all this happened, Moody’s which had been holding back, gave Sri Lanka a negative outlook categorisation. An experienced banker who wishes to remain anonymous told this writer that he had never heard of an instance where a country was given a negative outlook categorisation after entering into an IMF programme.


The reasons cited by Moody’s for giving SL an outlook negative categorisation, was firstly the expectation that the government's debt burden will increase further. Following close upon this was the fear that the revenue collection measures of the government may not produce the expected income. Furthermore, Moody’s did not expect the IMF programme to go according to plan and they were convinced that the targets set by the IMF to reduce the Budget deficit would not be met. The government’s anti-Rajapaksa rhetoric has also done its part to earn this result. The yahapalana leaders’ oft-repeated claim that the Rajapaksas had concealed a mountain of liabilities running into billions and trillions has obviously frightened even the ratings agencies. Among hidden liabilities mentioned was 3.5 billion USD relating to Sri Lankan Airlines.


An industry expert told this writer that there was absolutely no way that the total liabilities of Sri:ankan Airlines even came close to 3.5 billion USD. However Moody’s has to go by the information available from Sri Lanka and when the Prime Minister of the country says that Srilankan Airlines has liabilities amounting to 3.5 billion USD, Moody’s has taken into account the serious situation where the liabilities of one state owned enterprise alone amount to 4% of the GDP! Moody’s has also observed that with economic growth expected to slow down, the persistent budget deficits would raise the government’s debt burden. In the circumstances they expected the government’s debt to GDP ratio to rise to 80% in a situation where the Central Bank report said that the debt to GDP ratio had risen from 71% at the end of 2014 to 76% by the end of 2015.


Moody’s has also warned that unsettled global economic conditions could further queer the pitch for Sri Lanka. Another very significant warning issued by the ratings agency is that foreign reserves only partially covers external debt due over the rest of the year and that funding from the IMF and other international agencies will not fully meet the needs of the country. They have also warned that foreign exchange reserves could fall further and balance of payment pressures would heighten. Furthermore Moody’s did not envisage any prospect of meeting the revenue collection targets set by the IMF. They are particularly concerned about the government’s constant wavering on the issue of taxes. They warned that if foreign reserves fell further and the markets became nervous, a further downgrade was possible.


The Moody’s negative outlook categorisation comes at a very inconvenient moment for the government just when they were trying to capitalise on the IMF programme and raise a huge syndicated loan. Now, that becomes that much more difficult and expensive with the negative outlook given by Moody’s.

Ranjan’s suggestion


It is very difficult for any intelligent individual to relate to a person like Ranjan Ramanayake. We have had other actors like Vijaya Kumaratunga, who also made it to the silver screen due to his good looks, but Vijaya had far greater depth than his kinsman Ranjan. In the early days before he entered politics, Vijaya had been like Ranjan, clad in tight-fitting T-shirts and sunglasses – there being little difference in appearance between the on-screen and off-screen Vijaya. But after he came into politics, Vijaya became a different person and he could convince even people like Colvin R. De Silva and Bernard Soysa to select him as the de facto leader of the left alliance which was in its incipient stages when he was assassinated. Ranjan never evolved and appears quite incapable of utilising the advantage of being a film star to do something constructive in politics. His antics since the yahapalana government came into power have been an embarrassment even to his own party. Though it is difficult to relate to an individual like Ramanayake, he has to be commended for being one of the few ministers who has not been using taxpayers money to led an ostentatious life. Though a showman by profession, he has not used public money to lead a showy life.


A very creditworthy suggestion made by Ranjan in a letter to the President and Prime Minister is to import identical vehicles for all ministers and MPs so that this race to outdo one another by ordering the most expensive and impressive looking limousine at taxpayers’ expense will cease. That is how it used to be in the old days. After the 1977 election, the newly elected MPs were all given the same red and white Mitsubishi jeep. A fleet of identical vehicles is much easier to maintain than a whole lot of different models. Ranjan’s suggestion was that the yahapalana government should follow the example of the newly elected Philippine president by getting down a fleet of reasonably priced vehicles for the use of people’s representatives. This is a suggestion that should be taken up if not by the present government, then by anyone who has any idea of forming a government in the future.


The people’s tolerance for the profligacy of people’s representatives has just about reached its limit. This writer feels that the present wave of hartals spreading from town to town countrywide was motivated at least in part by the sight of ministers getting supplementary estimates passed in parliament to buy super luxury vehicles for themselves while increasing the tax burden on the people. In fact in the anti-VAT demonstrations during the hartal in the Matara district, one of the shogans shouted by the shopkeepers was "Sepa wahana pasuwa ganna." That ill-timed supplementary estimate and the flippant Marie Anotoinette like justifications trotted out by the ministers of this government have definitely touched a raw nerve among the public.


Politicians using taxpayers money for ostentatious transport not only makes for an ugly spectacle but also creates a mindset among people’s representatives that public money can be spent on living the high life. From there it is only one step forward to actually putting their hands into the till to enable them to live the same kind of life when they are no longer in politics.

Brexit: A new beginning for Britain


Britain has voted to exit the EU. Though the campaign to leave was clearly in the lead in the final weeks of the campaign, what gave the remain campaign a fillip at the eleventh hour was the murder of a pro-EU Labour Party MP Jo Cox by a man who is said to be a mentally deranged nationalist. This gave a nasty flavour to the leave campaign and precipitated a swing to the remain campaign. However when the results came in, the Brexit camp had won convincingly. The leaders of the two main political parties in Britain, the Conservatives and Labour have had their snouts rubbed on the ground as has Nick Clegg the leader of the third party the Social Democrats. Nigel Farage the leader of the UK Independence Party which has only one seat in parliament but which got over three million votes, is undoubtedly the man of the match.


The vote to leave does not mean that there will be an automatic divorce. The British government now has to start the process of leaving the EU which will take some time. But the concerns that motivated the British public to vote to leave Britain resonates well with the Sri Lankan public as well. Just as the British public wanted freedom from Brussels, our people seek freedom from certain foreign powers that dictate terms to our government. Just as the British public wants more control over their borders and immigration we too want to prevent our country being overrun by Indians under a comprehensive economic partnership style agreement which allows the movement of natural persons. To the British these were more important issues than the fears of an economic setback which was the main argument of all those who wanted to remain within the EU.


The economic argument may not have gained much traction because each Briton would have felt that if this marriage with the EU continued he would have been out of a job anyway due to uncontrolled immigration. People feared most for the futures of their children if these trends continued. The other parallel with Sri Lanka is of course that the Conservative Party, the Labour Party and the Social Democrats where all shown up to be quite out of sync with the mood of the British public. In Sri Lanka too the UNP, the Sirisena-controlled SLFP and the JVP are losing support while an opposition force that does not even have a name yet, is gaining ground. A silent revolution is sweeping the world.
www.island.lk

Laxapana drives profit with penlite batteries, CFL bulbs and rechargeable torches

article_image

Laxapana Batteries PLC, a subsidiary of E.B Creasy and Company PLC and the Colombo Fort Land and Buildings Group, has in the year ended March 31, 2016 been able to record what its chairman, Mr. S.D.R. Arudpragasam called "a satisfactory growth in terms of both revenue and profitability," in its recently released annual report.

He noted that revenue had grown to Rs 417 million during the year under review, up more than double from the previous year’s Rs. 190 million. The pre-tax profit had grown 108% to Rs. 40.5 million from Rs. 19.5 million achieved the previous year.

The company, previously Elephant Lite Corporation manufacturing torch batteries under the Laxapana brand name, is now into penlite batteries, CFL bulbs and rechargeable torches that constitute its core trading operations.

Arudpragasam said that sales had been very satisfactory during the current year against previous year’s achievements with their marketing divisions taking advantage of a vacuum in the market.

He said that in line with their policy of diversifying their range of products and manufacturing activities to achieve a more dominant presence in the lighting market, they had commenced a CFL bulb assembly operation in mid-2014.

"This new manufacturing initiative enabled the company to increase sales by twofolds in this sector," Arudpragasam said. "The CFL bulbs were targeted as a growth area for the company and accordingly strategies both in pricing and distribution were set in motion to achieve this objective. The company pursued a policy of producing high quality, cost effective products."

He said that to carry out this strategy efficiently, investments have been made in a new product quality testing facility. Opportunities for embarking on new product lines are being aggressively pursued to sustain the growth of the company’s business.

To take advantage of strategic locations of their Homagama factory site and the fast dwindling commercial space close to the city, investigations are underway to examine the financial feasibility of developing a logistic centre there, he reported.

The directors have proposed a declaration of a dividend of 55 cents per share for the year ended March 31, 2016, up 30 cents per share from the previous year’s dividend.

Arudpragasam expressed the confidence of his board that the management’s initiatives would continue to grow profits and improve performance in ensuing years.

Laxapana has a stated capital of Rs. 138 million with total assets running at Rs. 324.3 million and total liabilities at Rs. 128.9 million. Earnings per share were up to Rs. 1.14 from 37 cents the previous year with net assets per share up to Rs. 5.01 from Rs. 4.12. The market price per share at Rs. 7 at the close of the year was up from Rs. 4.60 a year earlier.

E.B Creasy and Company with 51.58% is the controlling share holder followed by Mr. S.D.R. Arudpragasam with 11.79%.

The Directors of the Company are Messrs S.D.R. Arudpragasam (Chairman), K.D. Sumanasekera, (Director/CEO) R.M Bopearatchi, S. Rajaratnam, R.C.A Welikala, P.M.A Sirimane, A.R Rasiah, S.M.P. Palihena, A.M Mubarak and S.W. Gunawardena.
www.island.lk

Guardian Acuity Money Market Funds offers option to take advantage of current interest rates outlook

The Guardian Acuity Money Market fund which is more than four years old has returned 48.44% to its investors. This is an annualized return of 11.37%. The fund invests in government securities, fixed deposits and commercial papers and provides for easy withdrawals with no penalties for withdrawals, a news release from the Fund said.

The Money Market Gilt fund which was launched in March 2015 has returned 7.94% since inception for its investors and invests purely in government securities and related products. Both funds are tax free for investors.

Guardian Acuity Asset Management is a joint venture between Acuity Partners Ltd and the Ceylon Guardian Investment Trust PLC. Acuity Partners is a joint venture between Hatton National Bank and DFCC Bank. Ceylon Guardian Investment Trust is the fund manager of the Carson Cumberbatch group managing over Rs.35 billion in both public and private wealth.

Guardian Acuity Money Market Funds offers investors the opportunity to take advantage of the current high interest rates environment. Says Sashika Wickramaratne, Fund Manager for Guardian Acuity Money Market Fund and the Money Market Gilt Fund: "The interest rates have elevated and will remain at prevailing levels if the government can attract foreign funds into the planned bond issues.

"The IMF has approved US$1.5 billion under its Extended Funding Facility (EFF), which will provide temporary relief for the foreign debt repayments falling due in the next few months. As the IMF funds will come in tranches, the government will be compelled to go for a sovereign debt issue."

Currently the government has a plan to go for a sovereign debt issue for US$ 3.0 bn. with four banks selected as lead managers. The issue should be successful given the global market conditions. In this case the government can safely meet the foreign debt repayment obligations due for the rest of 2016. Also, the pressure on rupee will ease off, given the expected dollar inflows and import tariff increases, Guardian Acuity projects.

According to Wickramaratne, even though the government could meet the debt repayments with further foreign borrowings and manage the fiscal pressure with recent tax increases, there is a lower probability for rates to trend down if inflation picks up in next couple of months given the recent tax increases and rupee depreciation.

"In this context we are of the view that interest rates will remain at these levels in the next 12 months and have realigned our portfolio by investing in money market instruments of longer tenure, thus locking in funds so that the fund yields remain attractive for current as well as new investors. The current yield of the Money Market Fund is 9.8%, while that of the Money Market Gilt Fund is 8.7%" said Wickramaratne

General Manager of Guardian Acuity Asset Management Limited, Mohandas Thangarajah, reiterated the fact that this was the best time for investors to enter the money market fund. "The fund is locked on longer term money market instruments such as Treasury Bills, Fixed Deposits, Securitizations and Commercial Papers. Ordinary investors don’t always have access to some of these instruments and the fund will provide them with access to markets that are not easily accessible but higher yielding".

He went on to say that with interest rates being elevated presently, clients can either lock in their liquid money in FD’s or place them in savings accounts. "In the case of locking in FD’s the client loses easy access to their cash and will have to incur penalties in case they wish to pull out. If they wish to take out only part of their money, they face both a penalty and will also be compelled to reinvest the balance at rates prevailing at the time. If that money was in a Money Market Fund, they will have easy access to it, whilst being able to withdraw part of their monies without having incur any penalties or take the risk of having to reinvest at low rates".  So it is ideal for money people keep for contingencies and security purposes.

*Return information are as of 31st May 2016

Asian Hotels dividend up despite marginal dip in revenue and profits

Partial closure of Cinnamon Lakeside for seven months affects performance

 

article_image
Cinnamon Grand Lobby

Mr. Susantha Ratnayake, Chairman

Asian Hotels and Properties PLC, the JKH subsidiary owning the Cinnamon Grand and Cinnamon Lakeside Hotels as well as the Crescat Boulevard has seen a slight dip in both revenue and profitability in the year ended March 31, 2016, primarily due to the partial closure of Cinnamon Lakeside for essential enhancements and upgrades during the first seven months of the year under review.

The Company’s Chairman, Mr. Susantha Ratnayake, has told shareholders in the annual report that the Group is looking at a future "that will undoubtedly be competitive, but one which also promises to be exciting."

"With tourism continuing to retain its title as the fastest growing industry in the world, Sri Lanka continues to retain its status as an emerging hot spot for the global traveler," he said in the company’s recently released annual report.

Sri Lanka Tourism has targeted 2.2. million visitors this year with an annual growth of 22% and an increase in average daily expenditure of a tourist to USD 200 which is expected to drive total tourism revenue to USD 2.75 billion.

The year under review saw Asian Hotels post total revenue of Rs. 8.07 billion, down 2 % from a year earlier, with profit after tax at Rs. 2.2 billion, down 3% from the previous year. However, the Company has pushed up its dividend payment for the year to Rs. 5.50 per share from Rs. 4 per share the previous year.



Ratnayake said that both the Cinnamon Grand and Cinnamon Lakeside Hotels had continued to maintain their pre-eminent position among the city hotels with their signature restaurants and banquet spaces.

Reporting 1.79 million tourist arrivals in the calendar year 2015, up 17.8 % from the previous calendar year, he said that Western Europe was the largest regional contributor of traffic with arrivals up 15.3 % year-on-year to 552, 442. India continues to be the largest single-source market with 316, 247 arrivals.

"The Chinese market continued to be a key thrust market, with initiatives being rolled out at a national policy level," Ratnayake said. "These efforts and continuing increase in flight connectivity resulted in the aforesaid increase in arrivals from China, which accounted for 12% of total arrivals to Sri Lanka in 2015."

Asian Hotels with a stated capital of Rs. 3.34 billion has total assets of Rs. 29.1 billion and total liabilities of Rs.2.56 billion.

JKH with 78.56% of Asian Hotels is the controlling shareholder followed by the EPF (9.84%), Sri Lanka Insurance Corporation Life Fund (2.27%) and the Ceybank Unit Trust with 2.19 % with Dr. S. Yaddihage who owns 0.77% .

The Directors of the Company are Messrs Susantha Ratnayake, Chairman, Ajit Gunewardene, MD, Ronnie Peiris, Rohan Karunarajah, Suresh Rajendran, Sanjiva Senanayake, Shirani Jayasekera, C.J.L. Pinto and Krishan Balendra.
www.island.lk

'My resignation would have amounted to accepting guilt' says Arjuna Mahendran

Abandoning ship on frivolous charges is dereliction of duties

 

article_image
Lakshman Arjuna Mahendran ,Central Bank Governor

by Saman Indrajith



Central Bank Governor, Lakshman Arjuna Mahendran is in the center of a controversy with not only opposition politicians but some elements within the government also demanding his resignation. 

He gave up a lucrative career in international banking when he was asked to take charge of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka. After assuming duties on January 27, 2015 as the 13th Governor of the Central Bank, he embarked on the Herculean task of clearing the financial mess and steering the economy towards prosperity.

But the Oxford trained economist and banker has come severe flak over a range of issues. His term ends on June 30. Last Friday, he announced that he would not seek a service extension until the parliamentary watchdog COPE clears his name.

During an interview with The Sunday Island, Mahendran responded to allegations against him. The following are excerpts of the interview:

Q: In the backdrop of a series of allegations against you, do you think that you will be sacked or not be given an extension? Why didn't you opt to resign?

A: It is in the hands of the President to give the extension to me or not. In any case, I have decided not to seek an extension of my term until COPE clears my name. The COPE is the best forum I could prove my innocence. I am waiting for the COPE report.  It is very important for my reputation. I came to serve my motherland. So the President would decide whether I would continue to serve or not.

My resignation would have amounted to accepting guilt. I took up this job to performing certain tasks, and for me to abandon ship just on frivolous charges would have been dereliction of duties.

Q: You are accused of living an extravagant life on public funds. One accusation is that you live in a JAIC Hilton suite, while there is an official residence allocated to the Governor.

A: (Laughs) I simply do not know why I am accused of such matters. Since I was appointed to the position of Central Bank Governor on my return to Sri Lanka, I lived in my own house. I visit the official residence at Bauddhaloka Mawatha only when I have official functions there. I neither live at JAIC Hilton or any other place paid for by government funds. I cannot understand the meaning of these allegations.

Q: You have gone abroad 38 times after assuming office and is said to have spent Rs.14.5 million out of public funds in 11 months for your personal indulgences. You have been accused of spending over Rs 450,000 per single meal and buying luxury clothes paying from a credit card issued to you by the Central Bank.

A: These allegations are baseless. I use a credit card issued by my private bank and pocket out all my personal expenses. Had I been abroad on expenses from the Central Bank, that was only for official purposes. As the Central Bank Governor I may need to host diplomats and foreign officials. Such dining would cost little bit more than our usual meals. In such occasions, I am not expected to treat them in a boutique and have to abide by guidelines of decorum and hospitality which are trademarks of our culture.

Except for such official occasions, I have not lived extravagantly spending millions of rupees of public funds. Now my suit is known as the most expensive one in the country. I do not need to spend millions from Central Bank funds to buy clothes. I simply cannot understand why I have been accused of such matters.

Q: Then for what you have spent millions out of the credit card given to you by the bank?

A: As I have already told you, I make payments from the credit card given to me by the bank during official functions. It is the purpose of giving me that card. The Central Bank pays for official functions. Except for that, I have never used that card for my personal expenses.

Q: Why did you not comply with the Auditor General’s request to submit necessary information and details to prepare a report on all Central Bank transactions, including bond issues during the recent past to be sent to COPE?

A: The Central Bank has some sensitive information that cannot be divulged to the public. There are procedures to be followed and with regard to releasing sensitive information because such actions would lead to financial sector instability. The data requested had been market-sensitive and their release would have threatened the smooth functioning of financial markets.

We have to abide by the provisions of the Monetary Law Act. The Chief Justice too confirmed that. The Central Bank has to make an assessment before releasing certain information. We followed those rules and guidelines set out by the Chief Justice and after the assessment, we provided all information the Auditor General had asked for. Some parties with vested interests interpreted this in various ways.

Q: How would you respond to the accusation by MP Bandula Gunawardena that you manipulated computer data in the Central Bank and printed money exceeding limits?

A: That is complete nonsense. There is a separate department and a staff to work with the IT system in the Central Bank. State-of-the-art standards and protection are provided to the computer system of the Central Bank for such systems face the constant threat of being hacked. You cannot erase data from a Central Bank system in the manner you would erase files from a laptop computer. Anyone could make such wild allegations. It is not the truth and I do not think that people could be fooled by such stories.

Q: It is said that you left a lucrative job Singapore which paid you more than what you receive now to accept the post of Central Bank Governor. MP Wimal Weerawansa too has questioned why you took all the trouble to make such sacrifices and suffer a personal financial loss to gain nothing. What do you expect to gain?

A: It is true that I earned more abroad. But it is an honour to hold the position of Governor of the Central Bank of one’s motherland. Apart from that, I worked there earlier in a junior position. It is a rare honour. That was why I accepted the invitation. I had to live abroad due to unavoidable reasons but I am truly Sri Lankan and proud to be called a Sri Lankan. The other factor that motivated me to accept this was the desire to become a part of the process of reawakening the country after the decades-long war.

Q: But the Opposition says you were just a Singaporean handpicked by Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe and got this job not because of qualifications, but thanks to friendship.

A: My parents are Sri Lankan. I was born in the US because they were there at that time. I grew up in Sri Lanka. I was at Royal Junior School and then at Royal College. Then from Royal, I directly went to Oxford in the UK. I completed my Advanced Level in 1977 and got admission to Oxford in 1978. I did my degree in Philosophy, Politics and Economics and graduated in 1981. Then I came to Sri Lanka, and on January 1, 1983, I joined the Central Bank.

In the meantime, I also worked as an economist at the Mahaweli Authority for about a year. I was appointed the Head of the Money and Banking Unit. I worked there till about 1993. When the UNP government was formed in 2001, Ranil Wickremesinghe invited me to take over as Chairman of the Board of Investment (BoI). I was the Chairman from December 2001 to May 2004 until the Parliament was dissolved.

At that time, it was difficult to find a job after being the Chairman of the BoI. I was looking around and went to Singapore and since I could not find anything, I joined the Credit Suisse Bank in Singapore in July 2004.

In Singapore, they have a scheme where after working there until a point, they invite you to become their citizen. As part of their national policy, they encourage people to migrate there. I accepted that invitation since it was difficult to say no. That’s why in 2006, I accepted citizenship.

When President Maithripala Sirisena formed the new government after January 8, 2015 I was invited to accept the Governor's post and I did so. It’s like coming back home. It was my first formal job, and it was very heartwarming for me to come back. I have postgraduate qualifications from Oxford and professional qualifications and I do not understand how and why am I accused of not having qualifications.

Q: However, whatever your qualifications may be, you are accused of paving the way for loss of more than Rs 500,000 million through Treasury bond sales.

A: The COPE is conducting an investigation. I hope that investigation would clear my name. This baseless allegation went before the Supreme Court, which vindicated me in the fundamental rights petition that was filed by Chandra Jayaratne and two others on the same issue.

The Supreme Court dismissed the case as I was absolutely not at fault and had not violated statutory provisions. I do not need to talk of it more than that as the COPE investigation is in progress.
www.island.lk

World’s 400 Richest People Lose $127 Billion on Brexit

Robert Lafranco



The world’s 400 richest people lost $127.4 billion Friday as global equity markets reeled from the news that British voters elected to leave the European Union. The billionaires lost 3.2 percent of their total net worth, bringing the combined sum to $3.9 trillion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. The biggest decline belonged to Europe’s richest person, Amancio Ortega, who lost more than $6 billion, while nine others dropped more than $1 billion, including Bill Gates, Jeff Bezos and Gerald Cavendish Grosvenor, the wealthiest person in the U.K. 
www.bloomberg.com/

TVS Lanka records over Rs. 12 billion in revenue in FY2015/16

TVS Lanka recorded an impressive financial performance for the year ended 31st March 2016 by posting Rs.5.67 billion in revenues which reflects 79% growth over the previous year. Profit before tax grew by 91% over the corresponding year, reflecting a major turnaround for the company. TVS Lanka specializes in the Motor cycles, scooters, three-wheelers, spare parts and the lubricant business.

Commenting on the company’s outstanding financial performance, Ravi Liyanage – Chief Executive Officer of TVS Lanka, said, "We are proud to achieve this strong financial growth as a result of focused strategic initiatives deployed during the year. The strategies undertaken included repositioning and rationalization of product portfolio, identifying and targeting high potential market segments, re-launching three new models with customer-engaging, new value propositions, and above all, expansion of customer touch points to reach over 1,000, which includes 401 Sales Dealerships and 789 Service and Spares
outlets."

Liyanage went on to add, "TVS’ two-wheeler business has outperformed the industry by recording a growth of 58% as against retail industry growth of 28%. Against the backdrop of the fragmented and competitive market, this is a commendable achievement. The continued performance of the two-wheeler category is mainly due to network correction undertaken by the company in both sales, spares and distribution mapping coupled with leveraging on geographic potential. Further, associations created via value propositions of ‘Warranty Leader’ and ‘Mileage Leader’ also contributed to the performance."
- TVS Lanka