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PRESS DIGEST-Canada-Dec 31

Written By Unknown on Senin, 31 Desember 2012 | 18.12

Mon Dec 31, 2012 5:20am EST

Dec 31 (Reuters) - The following are the top stories from selected Canadian newspapers. Reuters has not verified these stories and does not vouch for their accuracy.

* Defense Minister Peter MacKay has opened the door to sending Canadian Forces personnel into the troubled west African nation of Mali, citing the contribution of Canadian military trainers in Afghanistan. ()

* Dazed passengers were being cared for in a convention center in Pendleton, Oregon, after a bus crash that killed nine people and injured more than 20 others. ()

* After a flood of new hires in November, December's national employment numbers are expected to show only a small increase, weighed down by declines in the service sector. ()

* French President Francois Hollande was described as an "amateur" and compared to the emperor with no clothes Sunday as members of his party began to turn on him after his flagship 75 percent tax rate for France's richest was ruled unconstitutional. ()

* Penny stock promoter Bobby Genovese cashed in a big profit on shares of Liberty Silver Corp before they were halted by regulators in October, a filing shows. ()


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UPDATE 2-Iberdrola to sell French wind parks to cut debt

Mon Dec 31, 2012 5:27am EST

* Deal is part of debt-cutting drive

* Strategy aimed at keeping investment credit rating

* Polish, U.S. asset sales could follow - sources

By Sarah Morris

MADRID, Dec 31 (Reuters) - Spanish utility Iberdrola is selling its French wind park unit to a consortium including General Electric for about 400 million euros ($529 million) in its drive to cut debt and keep an investment grade credit rating.

The world's largest operator of wind farms said in October it would sell some of its operations, slash investment and cut its workforce over the next two years in order to reduce debt by 6 billion euros to 26 billion by 2014.

Iberdrola is one of several Spanish firms, including Telefonica and Repsol, battling to avoid the big credit downgrades that have hit the cash-strapped Spanish government and which make borrowing harder, and more costly.

In a statement to the stock exchange regulator on Monday, Iberdrola said Iberdrola Renovables France (IBRF), which directly or indirectly controls 32 wind parks, would be sold to a consortium. The unit's offshore assets will be transferred to a separate entity before the sale.

Once the deal is completed, General Electric will own 40 percent of the unit and MEAG, the asset manager of German insurer Munich Re, another 40 percent. EDF Energies Nouvelles, the renewable unit of France's EDF, will own the remaining 20 percent.

The total installed capacity of the French onshore wind farms is 321.4 megawatts.

Iberdrola said the deal involved an initial payment of 350 million euros and an additional payment of 50 million euros subject to conditions.

At 0956 GMT Iberdrola shares were down 1.3 percent at 4.08 euros.

Some analysts think Iberdrola could cut its dividend to preserve its coveted investment credit rating if the Spanish government fails to pay it back in full for years of selling power at regulated prices..

S&P left Iberdrola's rating at just one notch above junk in November, citing concerns the government could delay repaying power companies the deficit of up to 24 billion euros they have racked up from selling electricity at a loss.

The French deal comes after the utility announced on Friday the sale of 20 percent of its stake in the Medgaz pipeline, running between Algeria and Spain, for 146 million euros.

A source with knowledge of the matter told Reuters earlier this month Iberdrola was close to a deal to sell renewable energy assets in Poland for about 200 million euros .

It had also received offers for 10 wind parks in the United States, said another source with knowledge of the matter.

On Saturday Bolivia nationalised two electricity distribution companies owned by Iberdrola. The companies contribute less than 1 percent of profit to the utility.

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UPDATE 1-BG gets $1.8 bln loan from U.S. Export-Import Bank

Mon Dec 31, 2012 5:28am EST

LONDON Dec 31 (Reuters) - Britain's BG Group said on Monday it had secured a $1.8 billion loan from the Export-Import Bank of the United States, as part of a wider push to diversify its funding options to support major projects.

BG, which announced Chris Finlayson as its new chief executive earlier this month, recently agreed a new syndicated facility, reached an agreement with the Japan Bank for International Cooperation and raised money via capital markets.

It said it now had undrawn committed bank borrowing facilities of $5.2 billion.

It has also reached an initial agreement with Brazilian Development Bank for up to $1.8 billion of new funding and signed a $500 million credit agreement with Export Development Canada.

The new loan from the United States will support the export of U.S. services and also help fund equipment for the Queensland Curtis LNG project in Australia which is on schedule for first gas in 2014.


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UPDATE 2-U.S. Senate leaders work to avoid New Year's 'fiscal cliff'

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 30 Desember 2012 | 18.12

Sat Dec 29, 2012 7:19pm EST

* Reid, McConnell and aides in last-ditch effort

* Negotiators described as "still very far apart"

* Taxes set to rise Tuesday, spending cuts due Wednesday

* Temporary "fiscal cliff" patches being discussed

By Richard Cowan and Rachelle Younglai

WASHINGTON, Dec 29 (Reuters) - Congressional negotiators burrowed into their offices on Saturday to see if they could stop the U.S. economy from falling off of a "fiscal cliff" in just three days when the biggest tax increases ever to hit Americans in one shot are scheduled to begin.

Aides to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, a Democrat, and Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell worked through the day on a possible compromise that would set aside $600 billion in tax increases and across-the-board government spending cuts that are set to kick in next week.

A variety of lower taxes are scheduled to expire at the end of Monday, the last day of the year. If allowed to rise, the approximately $500 billion value of the revenue increases would represent a historic hike when taken together.

The combined punch of the tax increases and spending cuts could push the U.S. economy back into recession.

"We're now at the point where, in just a couple days, the law says that every American's tax rates are going up. Every American's paycheck will get a lot smaller. And that would be the wrong thing to do for our economy," President Barack Obama said in his weekly radio and Internet address, which was broadcast on Saturday.

McConnell left the U.S. Capitol after spending seven hours in his office. "We've been trading paper all day and talks continue into the evening," he told reporters on his way out.

A source with knowledge of the talks, speaking on condition of anonymity, said: "We are still very far apart with almost no time left on the clock."

TEMPORARY PATCHES One congressional aide close to the talks said that most of what was being discussed late on Saturday would provide temporary patches to the "fiscal cliff" dilemma. The negotiations, the aide said, likely could extend into Sunday.

"They continue to go round and round," the aide said of the negotiations, with ideas constantly in flux.

The aide, who asked not to be identified, said negotiators were discussing the possibility of putting off for a few months the $109 billion in automatic spending cuts due to start on Wednesday. Those cuts would be divided equally between military and non-military programs. It is feared that they could cause severe disruptions inside federal agencies if allowed to occur.

Earlier this week, talk of a temporary delay in the spending cuts was met with derision by some congressional aides.

The extension of the low income tax rates first put in place under Republican former President George W. Bush would also be on a temporary basis, probably one year, the aide said.

No deal had been reached on the most difficult question: Democrats' demand that upper-income earners - families making more than $250,000 a year - see their tax rates go up.

Republicans had been opposed to any rate increase, but lately have signaled a willingness to go along with a higher threshold - and a $400,000 figure has been floating around for days.

Under proposals being discussed, top earners could see their income tax rate rise to 39.6 percent, from the current 35 percent, in order to help tame budget deficits.

The aide added that Republicans still had not agreed to Obama's call for extending long-term unemployment benefits, but that they were demanding some spending cuts to be included in a stop-gap deal.

Disagreements over what to do about low estate taxes that are expiring also had not been worked out, the aide said.

Unless Congress acts, the tax is set to jump on Tuesday - the first day of 2013 - to 55 percent with the first $1 million exempted for individuals. Currently, there is a 35 percent tax and a $5 million exemption.

A Senate Republican leadership aide said that it might not be known until sometime on Sunday whether these talks bear fruit. That is when the leaders are expected to brief their rank-and-file members.

The Senate is scheduled to hold a rare Sunday session beginning at 1 p.m. EST (1800 GMT), but it was not clear whether the chamber would have "fiscal cliff" legislation to act upon.

One Democratic aide was pessimistic that McConnell would come up with a counteroffer that Reid would find acceptable. Such a counteroffer would have to be calibrated in a way that also could attract votes from conservative House of Representatives Republicans, many of whom have balked at tax rate increases on anyone.

'HARD TO SEE'

A senior House Republican aide on Saturday voiced pessimism about prospects for a deal.

"It's hard to see Reid agreeing to anything that can get the votes of the majority of the (Republican) majority in the House, thereby allowing a bipartisan accomplishment," the aide said. A "majority of the majority" refers to the 241 Republicans who are in the 435-member House.

The Republican aide placed the blame squarely on Democrats, as many Republican members have done publicly, saying that going off the "fiscal cliff" is a "policy upside" for them. "Higher taxes, devastating defense cuts. The polls tell them they can win the PR (publican relations) war in January. From their perspective, why stop the cliff dive?"

Democrats, in turn, have publicly accused House Speaker John Boehner, the top Republican in Congress, of preferring to put off any tough "fiscal cliff" votes until after a Jan. 3 House election in which he is expected to win another two-year term as speaker.

If McConnell and Reid can manage to reach a deal on inheritance taxes and raising income tax rates on the wealthiest Americans, they likely would throw into the compromise some other "fiscal cliff" solutions.

Those could include extending an array of other expiring tax breaks such as one that encourages companies to conduct research and development. Also, Congress wants to prevent a steep pay-cut in January for doctors who treat elderly patients under the Medicare health insurance program.

Lawmakers also want to prevent middle-class taxpayers from inadvertently creeping into a higher t ax bracket, known as the alternative minimum tax, intended for the wealthiest.

If the Reid-McConnell effort fails, Obama has asked the Senate to hold a vote on Monday on a "basic package" that would stop taxes from going up on the middle class and would extend long-term unemployment benefits that are about to expire. If it passes the Senate, its fate would be in the hands of the Republican-controlled House.

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UPDATE 1-U.S. Senate leaders work to avoid New Year's 'fiscal cliff'

Sat Dec 29, 2012 6:49pm EST

* Reid, McConnell and aides in last-ditch effort

* Negotiators described as "still very far apart"

* Taxes set to rise Tuesday, spending cuts due Wednesday

* Temporary "fiscal cliff" patches being discussed

By Richard Cowan and Rachelle Younglai

WASHINGTON, Dec 29 (Reuters) - Congressional negotiators burrowed into their offices on Saturday to see if they could stop the U.S. economy from falling off of a "fiscal cliff" in just three days when the biggest tax increases ever to hit Americans in one shot are scheduled to begin.

Aides to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, a Democrat, and Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell worked through the day on a possible compromise that would set aside $600 billion in tax increases and across-the-board government spending cuts that are set to kick in next week.

A variety of lower taxes are scheduled to expire at the end of Monday, the last day of the year. If allowed to rise, the approximately $500 billion value of the revenue increases would represent a historic hike when taken together.

The combined punch of the tax increases and spending cuts could push the U.S. economy back into recession.

"We're now at the point where, in just a couple days, the law says that every American's tax rates are going up. Every American's paycheck will get a lot smaller. And that would be the wrong thing to do for our economy," President Barack Obama said in his weekly radio and Internet address, which was broadcast on Saturday.

At midday, McConnell walked into his office on the second floor of the U.S. Capitol. A sked by journalists if he thought his efforts would succeed, McConnell responded: "I hope so."

A source with knowledge of the talks, speaking on condition of anonymity, said: "We are still very far apart with almost no time left on the clock."

TEMPORARY PATCHES One congressional aide close to the talks said that most of what was being discussed late on Saturday would provide temporary patches to the "f i scal cliff" d ilemma. The negotiations, the aide said, likely could extend into Sunday.

"They continue to go round and round," the aide said of the negotiations, with ideas constantly in flux. The aide, who asked not to be identified, said negotiators were discussing the possibility of putting off for a few months the $109 billion in automatic spending cuts due to start on Wed nesday. T hose cuts would be divided equally between military and non-military programs. It is feared that they could cause severe disruptions inside federal agencies if allowed to occur.

Earlier this week, talk of a temporary delay in the spending cuts was met with derision by some congressional aides.

The extension of the low income tax rates first put in place under Republican former President George W. Bush w ould also be on a temporary basis, probably one year, the aide said.

But no deal had been reached on the most difficult question: Democrats' demand that upper- i ncome earners - families making more than $250,000 a year - w ould see their tax rates go up.

Republicans had been opposed to any rate increase, but lately have signaled a willingness to go along with a higher threshold - an d a $400,000 figure has been floating around for days.

Under proposals being discussed, top earners could see their i ncome tax rate rise to 39.6 percent, from the current 35 percent, in order to help tame budget deficits. The aide added that Republicans still had not agreed to Obama's call for extending long-term unemployment benefits, but that they were demanding some spending cuts to be included in a stop-gap deal.

Disagreements over what to do about low estate taxes that are expiring also had not been worked out, the aide said.

Unless Congress acts, the tax is set to jump on Tuesday - the first day of 2013 - t o 55 percent with the first $1 million exempted for individuals. Currently, there is a 35 percent tax and a $5 million exemption.

A Senate Republican leadership aide said that it might not be known until sometime on Sunday whether these talks bear fruit. That is when the leaders are expected to brief their rank-and-file members.

The Senate is scheduled to hold a rare Sunday session beginning at 1 p.m. EST (1800 GMT), but it was not clear whether the chamber would have "fiscal cliff" legislation to act upon.

One Democratic aide was pessimistic that McConnell would come up with a counteroffer that Reid would find acceptable. Such a counteroffer would have to be calibrated in a way that also could attract votes from conservative House of Representatives Republicans, many of whom have balked at tax rate increases on anyone.

'HARD TO SEE'

A senior House Republican aide on Saturday voiced pessimism about prospects for a deal.

"It's hard to see Reid agreeing to anything that can get the votes of the majority of the majority in the House, thereby allowing a bipartisan accomplishment," the aide said. A "majority of the majority" refers to the 241 Republicans who are in the 435-member House.

The Republican aide placed the blame squarely on Democrats, as many Republican members have done publicly, saying that going off the "fiscal cliff" is a "policy upside" for them. "Higher taxes, devastating defense cuts. The polls tell them they can win the PR (publican relations) war in January. From their perspective, why stop the cliff dive?"

Democrats, in turn, have publicly accused House Speaker John Boehner, the top Republican in Congress, of preferring to put off any tough "fiscal cliff" votes until after a Jan. 3 House election in which he is expected to win another two-year term as speaker.

If McConnell and Reid can manage to reach a deal on inheritance taxes and raising income tax rates on the wealthiest Americans, they likely would throw into the compromise some other "fiscal cliff" solutions.

Those could include extending an array of other expiring tax breaks such as one that encourages companies to conduct research and development. Also, Congress wants to prevent a steep pay-cut in January for doctors who treat elderly patients under the Medicare health insurance program.

Lawmakers also want to prevent middle-class taxpayers from inadvertently creeping into a higher t ax bracket, known as the alternative minimum tax, intended for the wealthiest.

If the Reid-McConnell effort fails, Obama has asked the Senate to hold a vote on Monday on a "basic package" that would stop taxes from going up on the middle class and would extend long-term unemployment benefits that are about to expire. If it passes the Senate, its fate would be in the hands of the Republican-controlled House.

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Stung Bankia investors look to courts for justice

Sun Dec 30, 2012 5:47am EST

* Official inquiry into Bankia debacle unlikely

* Small savers say they were swindled

* Judge in legal probe has yet to open formal lawsuit

By Sonya Dowsett

MADRID, Dec 30 (Reuters) - Spanish savers and pensioners who have seen their money wiped out by investing in state-rescued lender Bankia are likely to seek redress in court rather than wait for any official inquiry, which looks increasingly unlikely.

About 350,000 stockholders will share the pain of the bank's European bailout, many of them bank clients who were sold the shares through an aggressive marketing campaign for its stock market flotation in 2011.

Shares in the lender, rescued by the state in May in Spain's biggest ever bank bailout, fell to record lows on Friday, tumbling over 40 percent from the start of the week after it emerged losses on bad loans were worse than expected. The stock has fallen 85 percent since its IPO.

"Going to the courts and seeing if a judge can bring us justice is the only path left to us," said Maricarmen Olivares, whose parents lost 600,000 euros ($793,300) they made from selling her father's car workshop by investing in Bankia preference shares.

Neither of the two main political parties want to push for a full investigation into Bankia's demise, which could draw attention to their own role in a debacle that has driven Spain to the brink of an international rescue, commentators say.

"Investigations work when a political party has something to gain over another. In this case, no-one has anything to gain," said Juan Carlos Rodriguez, of consultancy Analistas Socio Politicos.

"I don't see the big parties investigating this because if there have been errors committed, they have been committed by both sides."

The Socialist Party was in power when Bankia was formed in 2010 from an ill-matched combination of seven regional savings banks, a union that concentrated an unsustainable exposure to Spain's collapsed property sector.

Immense political pressure from the then government forced Bankia executives to push ahead with an initial public offering in July 2011 as Spain sought to bring private capital into its banking system and avoid a European bailout.

Then chairman, Rodrigo Rato, a former chief of the International Monetary Fund, had strong links to the centre-right Popular Party (PP) and was finance minister in a previous PP administration.

A small political party, UPyD, forced the High Court in July to open an investigation into whether Rato, ousted when the bank was nationalised in May, and 32 other former board members are guilty of fraud, price-fixing or falsifying accounts.

Investigating magistrate Fernando Andreu has so far not brought charges against anyone and could still drop the case.

"WE WON'T SEE OUR MONEY AGAIN"

Rato appeared in a private session before the judge on Dec. 20 where he denied any blame for what happened.

Rato, who cannot legally speak to the press because he is the subject of a court investigation, has kept a low profile since the bank rescue in May. Protesters gathered outside the court on the day of his declaration wearing masks of his face.

The probe centres around Bankia's stock market listing, the formation of the lender from the seven savings banks and the gaping capital shortfall revealed at the bank after the state takeover in May.

Rato and 23 others including bank executives and cabinet ministers were called to testify before a parliamentary committee in July this year where Rato said he had a clear conscience and had done things properly.

"That was just window-dressing by the PP following the outcry over the Bankia disaster," said a Socialist Party source.

The opposition Socialists called for a full parliamentary investigation in May, but the ruling PP blocked it, the Socialist Party source said. A PP spokeswoman said any investigation of Bankia should be carried out through the courts, not the government.

A government source said any investigative process would not fall to the government, but to the courts.

Bankia, alongside other Spanish banks, sold billions of euros of preference shares and subordinated debt to high street clients, many of whom say they were tricked into parting with their savings and are seeking compensation.

The investigating magistrate is not including the mis-selling of preference shares - hybrid instruments that fall between a share and a bond - in the probe.

Holders of preference shares at Bankia will incur losses of up to 46 percent as part of the European bailout, receiving shares rather than cash in exchange.

"We won't see our money again, that's for sure. They'll give us shares, but shares with no value or credibility in a nationalised bank," said Olivares, who said she had heard nothing from the bank as to how much their losses would be.

The losses each investor will have to take has yet to be decided, a Bankia spokesman said, adding that hybrid debtholders at all rescued banks had to take losses, not just at Bankia.

A source close to the court investigation said there would certainly be scope for a separate wider probe into the mis-selling of preference shares, not just at Bankia, but throughout Spain's savings banks.

Olivares, like many other small savers at Spain's state-rescued banks, claims her parents were sold the preference shares as a kind of high-interest savings account and that the bank staff did not explain the risks attached.

The government is in the process of setting up an arbitration process to compensate Bankia clients who can prove that they were duped into buying preference shares, Economy Minister Luis de Guindos said last week.

But many ordinary Spaniards who lost their life savings through the Bankia rescue say this is not enough and they want answers as to what happened to their money.

"We want justice, at least some kind of recognition that we were swindled," said Raimundo Guillen, a 50-year-old electricity station worker who put 30,000 euros in preference shares with Bankia under the impression they were a form of savings account.

"It's as if they've stolen your wallet - blatantly, with their face uncovered."

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Argentina asks U.S. court to block payouts for debt holdouts

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 29 Desember 2012 | 18.12

Sat Dec 29, 2012 12:27am EST

* Appeal challenges ruling for holdout creditors

* Argentina says order would harm future debt swaps

* Federal appeals court in NY to consider Argentina case

By Nate Raymond and Jonathan Stempel

NEW YORK, Dec 29 (Reuters) - Argentina is urging a U.S. appeals court to reverse an order requiring the country to pay $1.33 billion to creditors who did not participate in its two debt restructurings, a legal case that could have huge ramifications for global debt markets.

Lawyers for Argentina's government said in court papers filed late on Friday that a trial judge was "wrong to ignore the chorus of voices" who opposed his November order on payments to so-called "holdout" creditors.

Those payments, to a court-controlled escrow account, would threaten the service of $24 billion in restructured debt, Argentina's lawyers wrote in papers filed in the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New York.

"There is no authority permitting a U.S. court to order a sovereign to bring its immune assets into the United States in order to 'turn over' or distribute them to its creditors," lawyers for the Argentine government said in the 69-page filing.

The appeals court is expected to decide next year whether to force Argentina to pay the $1.33 billion to investors in the defaulted debt. The decision could have broad impact on the ability of governments to raise money by selling bonds and on strained countries' response to economic crises.

The case stems from Argentina's $100 billion sovereign debt default 11 years ago. Argentina is trying to avoid paying the holdout creditors, who refused to take part in massive debt restructurings in 2005 and 2010.

About 92 percent of the bonds were restructured, giving holders between 25 cents and 29 cents on the dollar.

But the holdouts, led by Elliot Management Corp affiliate NML Capital Ltd and the Aurelius Capital Management funds, demanded to be paid in full. Argentina calls the holdouts "vultures" and has resisted.

The case has run for years in U.S. courts. Oral arguments before the 2nd Circuit on the appeal are set for Feb. 27, 2013.

A decision against Argentina would deal a setback to President Cristina Fernandez, who is trying to avert the fallout of a potential technical default on tens of billions of dollars of debt.

In a statement late on Friday, an NML spokesman said Argentina was well placed to compensate the holdouts, citing its "more than $43 billion in foreign currency reserves" and billions more in other resources.

"Today's filing by the Republic once again demonstrates Argentina's irrational persistence in evading its contractual obligations and the orders of U.S. courts," said Peter Truell, a spokesman for NML.

Also on Friday, the U.S. government filed a friend-of-the-court brief in support of Argentina's bid for the appeals court to reconsider its October ruling that found Argentina had improperly discriminated against bondholders who did not participate in the debt swaps.

The U.S. government said countries needed leverage to garner broad creditor support for a restructuring. It cited the recent debt exchange in Greece as an example of a situation in which holdouts can threaten orderly bond restructurings.

JUDICIAL REPRIEVE

Following the appeals court's October decision, U.S. District Judge Thomas Griesa in Manhattan on Nov. 21 commanded Argentina to put the payments for the holdouts into escrow by Dec. 15.

But on Nov. 28, the 2nd Circuit gave Argentina a reprieve, saying it did not need to make the escrow payment for now.

The battle has even extended to the 2-1/2 month seizure of the Argentine naval vessel ARA Libertad in Ghana at the request of NML. The boat was freed on Dec. 19 following a ruling by an international admiralty tribunal.

In its court papers, Argentina said that if Griesa's orders were allowed to stand, "we may very well see the end of such restructurings and enter an era where debt crises are unresolvable. This will increase litigation, not reduce it."

At the same time, the country's lawyers said Argentina understood the appeals court's desire to resolve the litigation, and "is prepared to do what it can to end it."

Argentina's lawyers said Fernandez was "prepared once again" to ask Argentina's Congress to end the litigation by treating the holdout bondholders the same as those who participated in the 2010 debt swap.

In a separate court filing, lawyers for holders of restructured bonds said that holdouts should not be treated better than "innocent" bondholders who took part in the swaps. The restructured bondholders include funds managed by Gramercy Financial Group LLC and BlackRock Inc, according to the court papers from the group.

The case is NML Capital Ltd et al v. Argentina, 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, No. 12-105.

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Top French court overturns 75 pct upper tax rate

PARIS | Sat Dec 29, 2012 5:08am EST

PARIS Dec 29 (Reuters) - France's Constitutional Council said on Saturday it was overturning a 75 percent upper tax rate on income above 1 million euros ($1.32 million) due to be introduced in 2013 by the seven-month-old Socialist government.

The 75 percent rate, which has infuriated high earners, was the flagship tax proposal of President Francois Hollande's campaign for the May election as he sought to make the wealthy be seen to contribute more towards reducing the public deficit.


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UPDATE 1-Top French court overturns 75 pct upper tax rate

Sat Dec 29, 2012 5:38am EST

PARIS Dec 29 (Reuters) - France's Constitutional Council overturned on Saturday a 75 percent upper tax rate on income above 1 million euros ($1.32 million) due to be introduced in 2013 by the seven-month-old Socialist government.

The decision, in response to a motion by opposition conservatives, is a huge blow to Socialist President Francois Hollande who had made the 75 percent rate his flagship tax measure as he sought to make the rich be seen to contribute more towards reducing the budget deficit.

While the planned upper tax band was mainly symbolic and would only have affected a few thousand people, it shocked foreign investors and infuriated high earners in France, prompting some such as actor Gerard Depardieu to flee abroad.

The government had estimated the 75 percent tax rate could raise around 300 million euros a year as it battles to bring down the public deficit to below a European Union ceiling of 3 percent next year in the face of stalled growth.

The Constitutional Council, which rules on whether laws are constitutional, said in a statement that the way the upper rate was set to be imposed was unfair in the way it would affect different households.


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WRAPUP 1-Japan finmin reassures on bond issuance, adviser prods BOJ

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 27 Desember 2012 | 18.12

Thu Dec 27, 2012 4:55am EST

* JGB yields rising in anticipation of new govt's policies

* LDP returns to power with promises of big fiscal spending

* PM Abe adviser wants to curb BOJ's independence

* Stimulus package, next FY budget immediate policy hurdles

By Tetsushi Kajimoto and Kaori Kaneko

TOKYO, Dec 27 (Reuters) - Japan's new finance minister on Thursday sought to quell concern about the country's weak finances, saying the government will not rely solely on debt to fund economic stimulus and will try to limit new debt issuance next fiscal year.

The government will compile spending requests for a stimulus package on Jan. 7 and finalise the proposal shortly thereafter as Prime Minister Shinzo Abe tries to quickly enact his agenda of increased public works spending to boost the economy.

The Bank of Japan's independence should be limited to ensure it buys enough government debt to spur inflation, an adviser to Abe told Reuters in an interview, echoing Abe's repeated calls for "unlimited" monetary easing to end almost 15 years of deflation.

Abe, sworn in as prime minister on Wednesday, led his Liberal Democratic Party to a landslide election victory this month with pledges to spend more and to get the central bank to purchase more debt, but this has fuelled worries the new government will delay reducing public debt.

"We will curb government bond issuance as much as possible to ensure confidence in JGBs," Finance Minister Taro Aso told reporters, referring to the budget for the next fiscal year beginning in April.

"We need to make public finances sustainable in the medium to long term."

Japan's previous government limited new bond issuance each fiscal year to 44 trillion yen ($514 billion) as a first step to prevent Japan's debt burden, the worst among major economies, from worsening further.

The new premier instructed the finance ministry to draft economic stimulus measures without worrying about adhering to this cap, Aso told reporters in a post-midnight news conference after the government was installed.

The government has not decided the size of the stimulus package, but Abe has repeatedly said he wants "big" spending to help narrow the output gap and ease deflation.

The government could tap reserves and frontload some public works spending in rural areas to limit new debt needed to fund a stimulus package.

It may be necessary to spend around 10 trillion yen, but the government needs to collect spending requests before it can decide, said Kozo Yamamoto, an LDP lawmaker who is working with other politicians to compile the party's stimulus package.

FISCAL SPENDING, MONETARY EASING, INVESTMENT

Abe's grand plan to boost the economy and end deflation is to combine fiscal spending and monetary easing with steps to encourage private-sector investment.

The BOJ should buy more long-dated government bonds and a wider variety of risk asset types, including foreign bonds, to achieve 2 to 3 percent inflation, said Koichi Hamada, a special economic adviser to Abe.

The government should revise the BOJ Law that guarantees the central bank's independence, to make it more accountable to the government, said Hamada, professor emeritus of economics at Yale University.

The Nikkei 225 stock average hit a 21-month high on Thursday and the yen hit a two-year low on expectations that the LDP's business-friendly stance and desire to weaken the yen would shake the world's third-largest economy out of its protracted funk.

"I believe expectations are high. We will work hard so that expectations will not remain just expectations, and that market expectations are realised," Economics Minister Akira Amari told reporters.

Yields on JGBs have also been rising, with the benchmark 10-year yield reaching the highest in more than two months. Should gains in yields continue, that could contribute to unease about Abe's fiscal policy.

Japan's public debt burden, more than twice the size of its $5 trillion economy, piled up during the LDP's more than half a century of almost unbroken rule in Japan.

Now that the LDP is back in power after three years in opposition, investors are looking for signs of how far the LDP will increase spending.

Japan's economy is in a mild recession due to a big slump in exports but is likely to escape next year, economists say.

Crafting bills for fiscal spending to ensure economic recovery is likely to take priority over revising the law to limit the BOJ's independence, but other political parties are also interested in changing the BOJ's mandate.

A small party called Your Party submitted on Thursday a bill to make the BOJ responsible for achieving stable employment and allow it to buy foreign debt, which could draw more attention in the regular session of parliament next year.

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PRESS DIGEST-Canada-Dec 27

Thu Dec 27, 2012 5:29am EST

Dec 27 (Reuters) - The following are the top stories from selected Canadian newspapers. Reuters has not verified these stories and does not vouch for their accuracy.

* U.S. President Barack Obama cut short his Hawaiian vacation and flew back to Washington to help break the congressional stalemate in "fiscal cliff" talks, as anxiety mounts over the looming combination of tax hikes and spending cuts that threaten to push the U.S. back into recession. ()

* An Ontario board that oversees mentally ill offenders has criticized Toronto's Center for Addiction and Mental Health for not providing notification that it had isolated a troublesome patient in a seclusion cell for two months. ()

* The Iranian government has fired back at Canada for removing an exiled Iranian opposition group from its terrorist blacklist while simultaneously affixing terrorist status to a branch of the Iranian military, a move the Central Asian regime said was "a dangerous move that can weaken international peace and security." ()

* Toronto and much of southern and eastern Ontario braced Wednesday for a dangerous winter storm that left six people dead and forced the cancellation of hundreds of flights across the United States. ()

* Boxing Day retail sales across Canada did not appear to lose steam this year despite a dramatic rise in the number of retailers that adopted the earlier U.S. shopping events Black Friday and Cyber Monday. ()


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UPDATE 1-Italy hits target amount at first debt auction of 2013

Thu Dec 27, 2012 5:53am EST

By Francesca Landini

MILAN Dec 27 (Reuters) - Italy sold all the bills and bonds it aimed to at an auction on Thursday, a few days after outgoing Prime Minister Mario Monti announced he may join the election race to lead a reform-minded centrist alliance.

Borrowing costs edged up slightly on the short-dated paper while they fell on the two-year bonds as heavy redemptions helped Rome raise the top-targeted 11.75 billion euros ($15.54 billion) at the first debt sale to be settled in 2013.

"The outcome of the sale is positive as the yield rise seen on bills was really limited," said Luca Cazzulani, fixed-income strategist at UniCredit.

The treasury issued the targeted 8.5 billion euros of six-month bills, paying a yield of 0.949 percent, slightly up from 0.919 percent at a similar auction one month ago.

Rome also sold 3.25 billion euros of two-year zero-coupon bonds at a yield of 1.884 percent, down from 1.923 percent in November.

Italian political uncertainty has shown no sign of feeding through into the country's borrowing costs yet.

Mario Monti, appointed to lead an unelected government of experts to save Italy from financial crisis a year ago, resigned on Friday but has faced growing calls to seek a second term at a parliamentary election on Feb. 24-25.

The former European commissioner said on Sunday he would consider doing so if approached by allies committed to backing his austere brand of reforms.

A twitter message from Monti on Wednesday about his intentions to "rise to politics" provoked harsh comments by centre-right supporters of former premier Silvio Berlusconi, hinting to a bitter election campaign ahead.

On Friday, Rome will offer up to 6 billion euros of five- and 10-year bonds in its debut on longer-dated paper sale for 2013.

Analysts estimate Italy will have to borrow around 420 billion euros in 2013 to fund its 2 trillion euros debt.

That represents a 10 percent lower total than in 2012 but uncertainty surrounding February elections and their aftermath could cause jitters, making it difficult for Italy to get ahead of the game in terms of meeting its financing needs for the year.

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Moody's affirms A2/Prime-1 ratings of Mizuho Securities

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 26 Desember 2012 | 18.12

Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests.

NYSE and AMEX quotes delayed by at least 20 minutes. Nasdaq delayed by at least 15 minutes. For a complete list of exchanges and delays, please click here.


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PRESS DIGEST-Canada-Dec 26

Wed Dec 26, 2012 5:02am EST

Dec 26 (Reuters) - The following are the top stories from selected Canadian newspapers. Reuters has not verified these stories and does not vouch for their accuracy.

* Two firemen shot dead in western New York were killed by a gunman who set his house alight as "a trap," police said Tuesday, and then lay in wait with three guns, including the type of assault rifle used by Adam Lanza in the Sandy Hook school massacre. ()

* Mid-size Canadian universities are starting a new kind of cost-cutting exercise as they face the prospect of prolonged austerity and sustained pressure to show their graduates are succeeding. ()

* A struggling natural gas export project on the British Columbia coast is on the cusp of being built after Chevron Corp agreed to take over as operator of Kitimat LNG. ()

* The official approval of Egypt's disputed, islamist-backed constitution on Tuesday held out little hope of stabilizing the country after two years of turmoil and islamist President Mohammed Morsi may now face a more immediate crisis with the economy falling deeper into distress. ()

* Police have found human remains in the burned out home of the Webster, N.Y., ex-con who killed two firefighters and believe the victim is the gunman's sister. ()

* Sears Canada Inc is on the hunt for a new chief financial officer after the unexpected resignation of Sharon Driscoll. ()


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TEXT-S&P summary: Chartis Singapore Insurance Pte. Ltd.

Wed Dec 26, 2012 5:13am EST

Dec 26 -

===============================================================================

Summary analysis -- Chartis Singapore Insurance Pte. Ltd. --------- 26-Dec-2012

===============================================================================

CREDIT RATING: Country: Singapore

Local currency A/Stable/--

===============================================================================

Credit Rating History:

Local currency Foreign currency

28-Feb-2011 A/-- --/--

22-Dec-2010 A+/-- --/--

===============================================================================

Rationale

The ratings on Chartis Singapore Insurance Pte. Ltd. reflect the company's core status to the Chartis group (we rate the Chartis group's core operating companies A/Stable/--). Chartis Singapore is a regional hub for the group's Asia-Pacific (excluding Japan) operations and the company's operations in Singapore are substantial and profitable. Chartis Singapore has strong integration with, and support from, the group. Chartis Singapore's exposure to increased competition and softening rates in its domestic market partly offsets these strengths.

We view Chartis Singapore's stand-alone credit profile as strong, reflecting the company's strong business position in the local non-life insurance market (with a 13% share) and conservative investment portfolio.

Chartis Singapore is an indirect subsidiary of Chartis Inc., which is ultimately owned by American International Group Inc. (AIG; A-/Negative/A-2). Chartis Singapore benefits from access to its group's resources, expertise, and extensive reinsurance support. As part of the Chartis group's efforts to simplify its legal and organizational structure, Chartis has established three geographic segments, of which one covers the Asia-Pacific region. The majority of branch operations in Asia-Pacific have converted to locally domiciled subsidiaries, with regional oversight by Chartis Singapore.

We view Chartis Singapore's capitalization as strong. Moreover the Chartis group provides strong reinsurance support to the company. As part of the group's capital management strategy, risk from volatile lines of business, such as energy, financial lines, and commercial property, are ceded to the Chartis group. The local entity retains the risk on less volatile business lines, such as accident and health, and motor. Chartis Singapore's conservative investment portfolio supports its capital position. About 94% of invested assets are in cash, deposits, and bonds.

Continued softening in premium rates and continued pursuit of multinational business by competitors have added to the challenges for Chartis Singapore. In addition, the increasing cost of vehicle ownership has dampened growth opportunities in motor insurance, where the company has a significant market share. Chartis Singapore's operating performance has been good in the past few years, although its underwriting performance has moderated somewhat in 2011-2012. We expect Chartis Singapore's remediation efforts on unprofitable business and continued efforts to leverage its distribution capabilities to improve its operating performance.

Enterprise risk management

In our view, Chartis Singapore's risk controls over factors such as insurance, investment, and operations are adequate relative to the nature of the company's overall risk as well as local standards.

Our view of Chartis Singapore's enterprise risk management reflects our assessment of the risk characteristics of its ultimate parent, AIG.

Outlook

The stable outlook on Chartis Singapore is in line with the outlook on the Chartis group.

The outlook on the Chartis group in turn reflects the stable outlook on its ultimate parent, AIG. We view the Chartis group as strategically important to AIG. We could lower our ratings on AIG and Chartis if the group's performance were to fall short of our expectations, particularly with regard to earnings, capitalization (currently strong), liquidity, or leverage. On the other hand, we could raise the ratings if the consolidated group were to improve its operating performance, particularly at the Chartis level, to above the industry average while continuing to improve AIG's risk profile.

The ratings on Chartis Singapore are at the same level as that on the Chartis group. If we upgrade Chartis group, we could upgrade Chartis Singapore if our view of Chartis Singapore's status within the group remains unchanged.

We could raise Chartis Singapore's stand-alone credit profile if the company improves its business position while maintaining its financial profile. We could lower the stand-alone credit profile if the company's operating performance deteriorates, thereby affecting its capital position.

Related Criteria And Research

-- Refined Methodology And Assumptions For Analyzing Insurer Capital Adequacy Using The Risk-Based Insurance Capital Model, June 7, 2010

-- Interactive Ratings Methodology, April 22, 2009

-- General: Group Methodology, April 22, 2009

-- Summary Of Standard & Poor's Enterprise Risk Management Evaluation Process For Insurers, Nov. 26, 2007

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Benchmark JGBs steady despite Nikkei rally

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 25 Desember 2012 | 18.12

Tue Dec 25, 2012 1:15am EST

* Trading volume on 10-year JGB futures hit lowest this year

* Yields on benchmark 10-year unchanged at 0.760 pct

TOKYO Dec 25 (Reuters) - Benchmark 10-year Japanese government bond yields were unchanged on Tuesday, supported by month-end demand and expectations of more monetary easing by the central bank, though investors' strong risk appetite pushed the Nikkei sharply higher.

Yields on 10-year JGBs were unmoved at 0.760 percent, while the Nikkei share average climbed 1.4 percent, led by exporters as the yen hit a 20-month low against the dollar after Japan's incoming prime minister stepped up pressure on the BOJ to ease monetary policy.

Ten-year JGB futures slipped 12 ticks to 143.92 in thin trade, with 10,426 contracts changing hands, their lowest this year.

"Given the Nikkei's sharp rise, the JGB market is well supported," said Naomi Muguruma, senior fixed income strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities.

"The reason is that we are approaching the end of the month. Usually some index-based investors need to purchase long-term JGBs to match their asset duration to the index," he said.

"Plus, continuous expectations of BOJ monetary easing are also supportive of the short- to medium-term sectors."

Incoming Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and his coalition partner agreed on Tuesday to set an inflation target of 2 percent and compile a large stimulus budget to help the economy return to growth and overcome deflation, the head of the coalition partner said.

Yields on 30-year bonds dipped 0.5 basis point to 1.925 percent, while those on 20-year bonds added 0.5 basis point to 1.175 percent.

Benchmark JGBs have lost 4.9 percent in 2012 in dollar-based terms, according to Reuters data.

"Supply/demand factors are likely to weigh down JGB markets until mid-January, when the details of the supplementary budget will be known, but we do not expect any genuine shift in the yield range given monetary easing expectations," Barclays Securities said in a note. "We believe the defense line will remain 0.7 percent for 10-year bonds through the beginning of the new year."

It expected yields on the benchmark 10-year bonds to trade within a range of 0.70 to 0.80 percent for the next few months, as global economic growth would not accelerate in the first half of 2013 given the fiscal austerity in major economies, it said.

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Public works in Japan extra budget unlikely to top 5 trln yen -source

TOKYO | Tue Dec 25, 2012 1:56am EST

TOKYO Dec 25 (Reuters) - Public works spending in a Japanese extra budget for the current fiscal year to March is unlikely to exceed 5 trillion yen ($59 billion), a source close to incoming Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said on Tuesday.

Abe, who formally takes office on Wednesday following his Liberal Democratic Party's stunning victory in a Dec. 16 election, is expected to draft the budget by mid-January with markets looking for 10 trillion yen in new spending, part of which would need to be covered by new borrowing.

"The extra budget will be presented to parliament towards the end of January. We cannot find 10 trillion yen worth of public works projects by then," the source told Reuters, adding that the 10 trillion yen total figure was not set in stone.

"The scale will be 10 trillion yen but it will not be limited to public works spending. The most we could manage on public works would be 5 trillion."

The remainder could include such steps as tax breaks for purchases of fuel-efficient cars and government funding for basic pension payouts, he added.

The source also said he thought Abe's new government was unlikely to have to revise a law guaranteeing the Bank of Japan's independence, since the BOJ was likely to agree to Abe's proposal for a 2 percent inflation target.

"I don't think it will go so far as revising the BOJ law," the source said. "The BOJ has compromised quite a bit ... and I think it will adopt a 2 percent inflation target. In that case, it will not be necessary to revise the BOJ law."

Abe on Tuesday reiterated his calls for the BOJ to conduct drastic monetary easing to beat deflation by setting a 2 percent inflation target but added that once he became premier, he would leave it up to the central bank to decide on specific measures on monetary policy.

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UPDATE 2-Japan's incoming PM keeps up pressure on BOJ to attack deflation

Tue Dec 25, 2012 3:53am EST

* Abe calls on BOJ to set 2 pct inflation target

* Adds will leave policy means to BOJ once he's PM

* Abe unveils party executive line-up, readies cabinet

By Tetsushi Kajimoto and Stanley White

TOKYO, Dec 25 (Reuters) - Incoming Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe kept up his calls on Tuesday for the Bank of Japan to drastically ease monetary policy by setting an inflation target of 2 percent, and repeated that he wants to tame the strong yen to help revive the economy.

Abe, a security hardliner who will be sworn in as premier on Wednesday, when he is also expected to appoint his cabinet, is prescribing a mix of aggressive monetary policy easing and big fiscal spending to beat deflation and rein in the strong yen.

"The economy, diplomacy, education and rebuilding in the northeast (hit by the 2011 tsunami, quake and nuclear disaster) are in a critical situation. I want to create a cabinet which can overcome this crisis," Abe told a news conference.

"We have advocated beating deflation, correcting the strong yen and achieving economic growth during the election, so we must restore a strong economy," he said, adding that the stagnant economy was also undermining Japan's diplomatic clout.

Abe - who quit abruptly as prime minister in 2007 after a troubled year in office - repeated that his new government hopes to sign an accord with the BOJ to aim for 2 percent inflation, double the central bank's current target.

"Once I become prime minister, I will leave it up to the BOJ to decide on specific measures on monetary policy," Abe told a meeting with officials from major business lobby, Keidanren.

"I hope the BOJ pursues unconventional measures, including bold monetary easing," he added, maintaining pressure on the central bank to expand monetary stimulus more forcefully in order to tackle the deflation that has dogged Japan for more than a decade.

Abe's opposition Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) won by a landslide in this month's lower house election just three years after suffering a crushing defeat.

The party has threatened to revise a law guaranteeing the BOJ's independence unless the central bank sets a 2 percent inflation target. The BOJ, which eased monetary policy in December, has promised to debate setting a new price target at its next policy-setting meeting on Jan. 21-22.

A source close to Abe said that revising the BOJ law was unlikely to be necessary since the central bank would probably give in to Abe's pressure to adopt the 2 percent target.

"I don't think it will go so far as revising the BOJ law," the source said. "The BOJ has compromised quite a bit ... and I think it will adopt a 2 percent inflation target. In that case, it will not be necessary to revise the BOJ law."

SPENDING PLANS

Abe and his coalition partner, the head of the small New Komeito party, agreed on Tuesday to set the inflation target and compile a big stimulus budget, New Komeito leader Natsuo Yamaguchi told reporters after the two met.

Abe is expected to draft an extra budget by mid-January with markets looking for 10 trillion yen ($117.93 billion) in new spending, part of which would need to be covered by additional borrowing.

Critics have suggested that the LDP, which ruled Japan almost non-stop for more than 50 years until it suffered a huge election defeat in 2009, was returning to the wasteful spending that characterised much of its past reign.

The source close to Abe said, however, that public works spending in that budget was unlikely to exceed 5 trillion yen.

"The extra budget will be presented to parliament towards the end of January. We cannot find 10 trillion yen worth of public works projects by then," the source told Reuters, adding that the 10 trillion yen total figure was not set in stone.

"The scale will be 10 trillion yen but it will not be limited to public works spending. The most we could manage on public works would be 5 trillion." The remainder could include such steps as tax breaks for purchases of fuel-efficient cars, and government funding for basic pension payouts, he added.

Also on Tuesday, Abe unveiled a new party line-up that includes women in key posts in an effort to show that the long-dominant party was turning over a new leaf.

Seiko Noda, 52, a former consumer affairs minister who went public with her struggle to have a child and gave birth at the age of 50 through artificial insemination, was appointed head of the party's general council. Sanae Takaichi, 51, who served as minister for gender equality in Abe's first 2006-2007 cabinet, was appointed LDP policy chief.

The cabinet looks set to include a heavy dose of Abe's close allies who share his views on the economy and his tough security stance.

As Abe put finishing touches to his cabinet, the defeated Democratic Party of Japan elected former Trade Minister Banri Kaeda as its leader to replace outgoing Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda, who quit to take responsibility for the election debacle.

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Greece not doing enough against rich tax dodgers, say EU/IMF

Written By Unknown on Senin, 24 Desember 2012 | 18.12

By Harry Papachristou

ATHENS | Mon Dec 24, 2012 5:39am EST

ATHENS Dec 24 (Reuters) - Greece's drive to crack down on flagrant tax evaders such as doctors and lawyers is flagging and must be reinvigorated, a report by the European Union and International Monetary Fund said on Monday.

Athens has collected just half the tax debts and conducted less than half the audits it was supposed to under the targets set by its lenders, according to a survey by the country's international lenders which was compiled in November.

"The mission expresses concern that authorities are falling idle and that the drive to fight tax evasion by the very wealthy and the free professions is at risk of weakening," it said.

By the end of September authorities had conducted 440 checks on suspected wealthy tax evaders, compared with a full-year target of 1,300. About 1.1 billion euros in overdue taxes have been collected so far, less than the 2 billion euros targeted.

The lenders urged Greece to improve tax collection and focus on the cases most likely to produce results. "Doctors and lawyers are a good place to start," they said.

Tax evasion is endemic in Greece, making it more difficult for the government to shore up its finances under its 240-billion-euro international bailout.

With revenues falling short and the austerity-hit country obliged to meet its fiscal targets when its economy is shrinking for a fifth year, Athens is hiking taxes on middle-class wage earners who can't hide their income.

After a Christmas recess, parliament is expected to pass a new tax law which aims to raise about 2.5 billion euros over the next two years as part of a 13.5 billion euro austerity package.

A second piece of long-delayed legislation to crack down on tax evasion will follow later in the year, the government said.

Perceived tax injustice has dented the popularity of Greece's pro-bailout ruling coalition. The radical leftist Syriza party, which opposes austerity and advocates a big and immediate debt writedown, has taken the lead in almost all the opinion polls published since a June election.

Improving Greece's slow tax administration and justice is a key objective of the bailout. According to the report, individuals and companies have racked up 53 billion euros of tax debts to the government, a figure that corresponds to about a quarter of the country's gross domestic product.

But just 15-20 percent of that amount can be collected, the EU/IMF said, given that a large number of these tax cases are old and the debtors have already defaulted. According to a list of tax sinners published last year, Greece's biggest tax debtor was state-run railway company OSE.

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UPDATE 2-Ukraine central banker named first deputy PM

Mon Dec 24, 2012 5:40am EST

* Arbuzov is member of president's inner circle

* PM Azarov and his new deputy face tough IMF talks

KIEV Dec 24 (Reuters) - Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich on Monday named Serhiy Arbuzov - who has until now run the central bank - first deputy prime minister in the new government, making him an important player in upcoming talks with the IMF.

The appointment to the No.2 government position also makes Arbuzov, who is a member of Yanukovich's inner circle, a likely successor to Prime Minister Mykola Azarov.

Ukraine's government resigned on Dec. 3 after October's parliamentary election and its members have since served in an interim capacity, apart from Azarov who was reappointed on Dec. 13.

The first major task of the new cabinet will be to secure a new bailout programme from the International Monetary Fund.

An IMF mission is due to visit Ukraine late in January for what are expected to be tough talks on nailing down a new stand-by arrangement to help Ukraine repay, or refinance, more than $9 billion debt falling due to foreign creditors in 2013.

This includes $6.4 billion already owed to the IMF which Ukraine says it hopes to refinance.

The IMF has urged Kiev to cut subsidies on household gas and heating prices but Azarov has so far refused to take the unpopular step. However, Kiev may have to become more flexible.

Arbuzov, 36, will take over as first deputy prime minister from Valery Khoroshkovsky who quit the cabinet this month in protest at Azarov's re-appointment.

According to a separate decree issued by Yanukovich on Monday, Arbuzov will be in charge of economy, trade, state finances, agriculture and social policy.

Yanukovich's office also announced that Yuri Kolobov, Arbuzov's former deputy at the central bank, would keep his job as finance minister.

The president named former Energy Minister Yuri Boiko and former regional governor Olexander Vilkul as deputy prime ministers.

It was not clear who would succeed Arbuzov at the central bank but last week Boris Pryhodko, head of treasury at state-run Oshchadny Bank, was named its new first deputy chairman.

FAMILY TIES

Arbuzov emerged from relative obscurity to become a major figure in Kiev in September 2010 when he was named first deputy chairman of the central bank in a surprise reshuffle.

Less than four months later, Yanukovich named him central bank head, a position he has held since.

Before joining the central bank, Arbuzov, who was born and educated in Donetsk - Yanukovich's home region and power base - spent four months working at the state-owned Ukreximbank and his earlier career as a financier was in the private sector.

In particular, Arbuzov had worked at the Ukrainian Business Bank, a Donetsk-based lender which according to Ukrainian media is linked to Yanukovich's elder son Oleksandr.

Arbuzov's mother Valentina Arbuzova is the chief executive of the All-Ukrainian Development Bank, another private bank owned by Oleksandr Yanukovich.

Upon taking over the central bank, Arbuzov reshuffled its senior management but largely continued the policies of the previous administration such as maintaining the hryvnia's peg to the dollar.

Although Arbuzov comes across as media-shy and avoided open arguments with the government, official statements and leaked documents from the central bank indicated his opinions on economic matters sometimes differed from those of Azarov.

In June 2011, for example, UNIAN news agency published a leaked letter in which Arbuzov told Azarov his government was losing credibility after refusing to carry out reforms advised by the IMF.

More often than not, though, the government and the central bank worked together smoothly and Azarov has avoided public criticism of Arbuzov's policies.

The two will need to work hard to revive Ukraine's economy which shrank by 1.3 percent year-on-year in the third quarter as global demand for steel, the main Ukrainian export, fell.

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UPDATE 1-Turkey's Borusan invests in U.S. to tap shale gas boom

Mon Dec 24, 2012 6:05am EST

* US energy market targeted with investment

* Long-term financing eyed

* Investment to double Borusan Mannesmann EBITDA

ISTANBUL, Dec 24 (Reuters) - Borusan Mannesmann, Turkey's leading steel pipe manufacturer, said it would invest $150 million in building a plant in the United States to tap the shale gas boom.

"This will be an investment to benefit from the advantages of shale gas production. It is an investment totally targeting the American energy sector, which uses smaller pipes or pipes mainly for drilling," said Agah Ugur, chief executive of parent company Borusan Holding.

A shale gas revolution has swept the United States, lowering gas prices and helping to displace more polluting coal. The country is one of the largest and most advanced of shale gas producers, with almost a third of its gas coming from shale.

Fracking, or hydraulic fracturing, involves pumping water containing chemicals into shale rock formations at high pressure but critics say it risks contaminating aquifers as well as potentially causing earth tremors.

Ugur said Borusan planned to meet a third of the investment through its equity capital and the remaining two thirds via long-term financing.

"Our first target regarding financing will be to obtain a long maturity project loan from the United States, we also plan to partially finance it through incentives," Ugur said.

"The investment will double Borusan Mannesman's EBITDA (earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, and amortisation) and will boost its annual sales by 60 percent," he said.

The facility, which is seen starting operation in the second half of 2014 and which will have an annual capacity of 300,000 tones, is expected to yield an annual revenue of $500-600 million depending on steel prices, the company said.

Shares in Borusan traded 2.99 percent higher at 27.60 lira by 1027 GMT.

Borusan is the parent company of Borusan Mannesmann and Borusan Yatirim.

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Florida governor asks Obama to block possible ports strike

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 23 Desember 2012 | 18.12

MIAMI | Sat Dec 22, 2012 5:53pm EST

MIAMI Dec 22 (Reuters) - Florida's Republican governor wants President Barack Obama to invoke federal law and order a cooling-off period if nearly 15,000 longshoremen walk off the job in a looming strike that would be a big blow to the state's economy, according to a letter he sent the president this week.

The International Longshoremen's Association union and the U.S. Maritime Alliance grouping of shippers and ports have been bargaining since March but reportedly remain far from a deal covering cargo handling at 15 ports on the U.S. Gulf and eastern coasts.

In October, when a previous contract expired, the sides agreed to a 90-day extension of terms that runs out on Dec. 29.

Florida ports in Miami and Fort Lauderdale would be directly hit by a strike or lockout but a stoppage would also rattle overall transport and trade, which accounts for 550,000 jobs in the state and $66 billion in economic activity, Florida Governor Rick Scott said in a letter dated Thursday.

"The threat to national safety and security that would result from mass closure of ports cannot be overstated," Scott told Obama.

Scott said Obama had the power under 1947's Taft-Hartley Act to prevent or interrupt a work stoppage at the ports. Presidents Richard Nixon and George W. Bush both used Taft-Hartley, which calls for 80-day cooling-off periods and mediation, Scott said.

"The Taft-Hartley Act provides your administration with tools that can help avoid this threat," Scott said. "On behalf of the State of Florida, I respectfully request that you invoke the act when the contract ... expires at the end of the month."

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Monti set to declare intentions as Italy election race begins

Sat Dec 22, 2012 6:10pm EST

* Monti to hold news conference at 1000 GMT

* Expected to present memorandum of reforms Italy needs

* Seems doubtful over taking more active role in Feb. 24 election

By Gavin Jones and James Mackenzie

ROME, Dec 23 (Reuters) - Italian caretaker Prime Minister Mario Monti is expected to end weeks of speculation about his political future on Sunday when he reveals the role he plans to play in February's national election.

The former European commissioner, appointed to lead an unelected government to save Italy from financial crisis a year ago, has faced calls to seek a second term at the election on Feb. 24-25, but his doubts appear to be growing.

Monti, aware of both the potential risks as well as the opportunities of running in what is likely to be a bitter and messy campaign, will hold a news conference at 1000 GMT.

He could either announce his candidacy directly, endorse a centrist alliance to run in his name, or simply set out a policy agenda in the hope that one or more of the coalitions running in the election will adopt it as their own.

Earlier this week, Italian media were reporting that one of the first two options was probable. But political sources say Monti has been put off by discouraging opinion polls and may not take a front-line role, at least for now.

"On Sunday he will probably only present a policy memorandum, there is unlikely to be any decision on any more direct involvement in the campaign until after Christmas," said one person familiar with the discussions that have been going on between Monti and centrist groups.

While numerous European leaders and Italy's business elite have called for his economic agenda to continue, ordinary Italians, weary of tax hikes and spending cuts, are less enthusiastic.

A centrist group headed by him would probably come a distant third or even fourth in the Feb. 24 election, expected to be won by Pier Luigi Bersani's centre-left Democratic party (PD). One survey published this week showed 61 percent saying he should not stand.

Both the PD and former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's centre-right People of Freedom party (PDL) insist Monti should stay out of the race, and if he runs he would face attacks from both sides of the political divide.

If Monti merely sets out policies, then it would then be up to the parties to sign up to them or reject them, and he would still be free to step into the fray later on, depending on opinion polls.

During his 13 months in office the former economics professor repaired Italy's international standing after the discredited Berlusconi, and passed reforms of the pension system, the labour market and parts of the service sector.

However, many analysts said his reform efforts were too timid to significantly improve the outlook of a chronically sluggish economy, and Monti himself said on Thursday that Italy was "only at the beginning of the structural reforms" required.

Italy, the euro zone's third-largest economy, has been in recession since the middle of last year, consumer spending is falling at its fastest rate since World War Two and unemployment has risen to a record high above 11 percent.

Output is set to contract by more than 2 percent this year and post another, smaller fall in 2013. Despite Monti's austerity the public debt topped 2 trillion euros for the first time in October and is forecast to keep climbing through 2013.

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UPDATE 1-Monti says minded not to run in election, talks reform

Sun Dec 23, 2012 3:51am EST

* Monti to hold news conference at 1000 GMT

* He is expected to present a list of suggested reforms

* He criticises Berlusconi over Italy's economy, credibility

* Monti frets a centre-left coalition would be too leftwing

By Gavin Jones

ROME, Dec 23 (Reuters) - Italian caretaker Prime Minister Mario Monti indicated in a newspaper interview published on Sunday he would probably not stand in a February election but would try to convince the winner to complete the reforms his government has begun.

Monti, who is expected to end weeks of speculation about his political future when he holds a news conference at 1000 GMT, told La Repubblica daily he would use it to present a list of reforms that the next government should urgently enact.

Asked if he would run as the candidate for prime minister for a centrist alliance, as has been widely speculated, he replied: "I still don't know, but something inside me says no".

The interview was conducted on Saturday.

The former European Commissioner said he was aware that President Giorgio Napolitano, who appointed him to lead an unelected government to save Italy from financial crisis a year ago, would prefer if he did not run in the Feb. 24-25 election.

Monti also expressed doubts about the electoral appeal of the centrist parties that hope to use his name, and said he was worried about the likely policy platform of the centre-left coalition that is expected to win the vote, because it may veer too far to the left.

Talking about the centre-right, Monti said he would "never" ally himself with Silvio Berlusconi, his predecessor as prime minister.

He said he believed Berlusconi's share of the vote would rise to around 20 percent from its current level of about 16 percent, despite "the damage he did to the Italian economy and the credibility of the country".

While Monti did not clarify his own role in the election, saying he planned to "sleep on it", he confirmed on Saturday night that he would "propose a programme that I believe should be carried out in the first 100 days of the next government" at Sunday's news conference.

Much of his proposed programme will include proposals to complete reforms that he himself tried to adopt, but which were watered down or killed off by the broad left-right coalition that backed him in parliament.

The programme will call for better legislation against corruption, deregulation to enhance competition, a downsizing of the bloated political apparatus, welfare reform, and "above all" investment in education and research, Monti said.

PRESSURE NOT TO STAND

While numerous European leaders and Italy's business elite have called for his economic agenda to continue, polls show ordinary Italians - weary of tax hikes and spending cuts - are less enthusiastic.

A centrist group headed by him would probably come a distant third or even fourth in the election, which is expected to be won by Pier Luigi Bersani's centre-left Democratic party (PD). One survey published this week had 61 percent of its respondents saying he should not stand.

Both the PD and Berlusconi's centre-right People of Freedom party (PDL) also insist Monti should stay out of the race. If he were to run he would therefore face attacks from both sides of the political spectrum.

If Monti merely sets out policies he favours, it would be up to the parties to either sign up to them or reject them, and he would still be free to step into the fray later on, depending on opinion polls, if he chose to do so.

During his 13 months in office the former economics professor did much to repair Italy's international reputation and pushed through reforms of the pension system, the labour market, and of parts of the service sector.

However, many analysts said his reform efforts were too timid to significantly improve the prospects of a chronically sluggish economy.

Italy, the euro zone's third-largest economy, has been in recession since the middle of last year, consumer spending is falling at its fastest rate since World War Two, and unemployment has risen to a record high above 11 percent.

Output is set to contract by more than 2 percent this year and post another, smaller fall in 2013. Despite Monti's austerity, the public debt topped 2 trillion euros for the first time in October and is forecast to keep climbing through 2013.

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CORRECTED-UPDATE 2-U.S. judge rules against Calpers on San Bernardino

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 22 Desember 2012 | 18.12

Fri Dec 21, 2012 7:15pm EST

(Corrects 19th paragraph to show Lubic represents Calpbers, not San Bernardino)

* First step in a complex legal proceeding

* Lifting protection would leave the city without cash flow- judge

* $2 million cashout paid to employees "preferential" - Calpers

By Jonathan Weber and Tim Reid

RIVERSIDE, Calif., Dec 21 (Reuters) - A U.S. bankruptcy judge ruled on Friday against an attempt by the California Public Employees Retirement System to bypass the bankruptcy court and collect overdue pension payments from the bankrupt city of San Bernardino.

The decision, while only one step in a highly complex legal proceeding, was a blow to Calpers' argument that pension payments and California law should take precedence in a bankruptcy.

Calpers, the largest U.S. pension fund with $241 billion in assets, had been seeking to lift the automatic bar on payment collections that comes with a bankruptcy filing.

Calpers is concerned that if San Bernardino - a city of 210,000 east of Los Angeles - continues to withhold payments it could encourage other debt-strapped California cities to follow suit.

Calpers has long argued that under California state law the contract between Calpers and debtor cities is inviolate and the pension fund should be paid in full, even in a bankruptcy.

Two other California cities - Vallejo, which emerged from bankruptcy last year, and Stockton, which filed for bankruptcy protection this year - continued to make payments in full to Calpers. San Bernardino is the first city to halt payments to the pension fund and thus the first to potentially challenge Calpers' historic primacy as a creditor.

The motion by Calpers was denied without prejudice, Judge Meredith Jury said. While Jury said the bankruptcy court clearly had jurisdiction, a Calpers attorney said the pension fund may nonetheless ask a state court to intervene in the matter.

San Bernardino has not made its $1.2 million twice monthly payments to Calpers since it filed for bankruptcy in August. It now owes at least $8 million to the pension system in addition to a long term debt that the city pegs at $143 million.

"Unless I have been misled the city has limited funds on a daily and monthly basis, it is using the limited funds to pay salaries," Jury said in her opening remarks. She based her ruling largely on the potentially disastrous impact a state collection action could have on the struggling city.

Lifting the protection would leave the city without the cash flow to run daily operations, she said.

Calpers has also made a broader argument that San Bernardino should not be eligible for bankruptcy and that state law should prevail when it comes to pension payments.

Calpers officials have said that they are willing to argue a wider Constitutional point - the state law defending their right to be paid versus the federal municipal bankruptcy law - all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court.

GOOD FAITH?

The court decision may favor bondholders who sided with the city against Calpers.

Ralph Taylor, an attorney representing the holders of $50 million pension bond holders said they agreed with the judges' comments and "it was in the best interests of the city for the stay to remain in place."

If Calpers were allowed to sue the city and collect its payments, it would likely be "devastating on the city, its workforce...and other creditors because Calpers will take it all" he said.

San Bernardino has issued $50 million of pension obligation bonds to pay down part of its debt with Calpers.

At the Friday hearing, attorneys also argued about whether Calpers and other creditors should be entitled to extensive discovery as part the proceeding to determine whether the city is eligible for bankruptcy.

One reason for denying bankruptcy protection would be a finding that the city had not acted in good faith --and Calpers attorneys said the lack of information from the city and other factors suggested a lack of good faith.

Michael Lubic, an attorney with K&L Gates representing Calpers, cited a Reuters article about $2 million in cash-outs of sick and vacation time to employees that were paid immediately prior to the bankruptcy filing.

Calling those payments "clearly preferential" and thus improper in a bankruptcy, Lubic argued that they showed the city was not acting in good faith in claiming that it had no money to pay its bills.

City lawyers said the city was required to make the payments, and chided union representatives for objecting to the cash-outs at the hearing even though many employees had demanded the payments. Jury expressed great surprise that the parties would learn about such payments from a news article.

Jury ultimately agreed that in light of the many unanswered questions about the current state of the city's finances, some discovery would be warranted. She had initially said she hoped to avoid a time-consuming and expensive discovery process. (Reporting by Jonathan Weber and Tim Reid; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Tiziana Barghini)

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WRAPUP 5-Obama seeks to rescue fiscal talks for post-Christmas deal

Fri Dec 21, 2012 7:27pm EST

* Obama seeks short-term deal to avoid worst fiscal effects

* "God only knows" way forward, House Speaker Boehner says

* Big tax hikes, automatic spending cuts loom in January

* Obama, lawmakers leaving Washington for Christmas

By David Lawder and Roberta Rampton

WASHINGTON, Dec 21 (Reuters) - The White House on Friday tried to rescue stalled talks on a fiscal crisis after a Republican plan imploded in Congress, but there was little headway as lawmakers and President Barack Obama abandoned Washington for Christmas.

In remarks before flying to Hawaii for a break, Obama suggested reaching a short-term deal on taxes and extending unemployment insurance to avoid the worst effects of the "fiscal cliff" on ordinary Americans at the start of the New Year.

"We've only got 10 days to do it. So I hope that every member of Congress is thinking about that. Nobody can get 100 percent of what they want," said Obama.

Obama said he wanted to sign legislation extending Bush-era tax cuts for 98 percent of Americans in the coming days.

The Democrat appeared to be offering bickering lawmakers a way to fix the most pressing challenge - tax cuts that expire soon - while leaving thorny topics such as automatic spending cuts or extending the debt ceiling for later.

Obama called on lawmakers to use the holiday break to cool off frayed nerves, "drink some eggnog, have some Christmas cookies, sing some Christmas carols," and come back next week ready to make a deal.

Negotiations were thrown into disarray on Thursday when House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner failed to convince his fellow Republicans to accept tax cuts for even the wealthiest of Americans as part of a possible agreement with Obama.

"How we get there, God only knows," Boehner told reporters on Friday when asked about a possible comprehensive fiscal cliff solution.

If there is no agreement, taxes would go up on all Americans and hundreds of billions of dollars in automatic government spending cuts would kick in next month - actions that could plunge the U.S. economy back into recession.

Obama spoke to Boehner on Friday and held a face-to-face White House meeting with the top Democrat in Congress, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid.

Before his defeat in Congress, Boehner had extracted a compromise from Obama to raise taxes on Americans making more than $400,000 a year, instead of the president's preference of those with income of $250,000 a year.

But with talks stalled on the level of spending cuts to which Obama would agree, Boehner attempted a backup plan to raise taxes only on those making more than $1 million a year - amounting to just 0.18 percent of Americans.

BAD DEFEAT FOR BOEHNER

Boehner's reverse in the House was worse than first thought. A key Republican lawmaker said Boehner scrapped the vote when he realized that between 40 and 50 of the 241 Republicans in the House would not back him.

Obama and his fellow Democrats in Congress are insisting that the wealthiest Americans pay more in taxes in order to help reduce federal budget deficits and avoid deep spending cuts. Republicans control the House and Democrats control the Senate.

Stocks dropped sharply early Friday on fears that the United States could go fall back into recession if politicians do not prevent it.

But major indexes lost less than 1 percent, suggesting investors still held out hope that an agreement will be brokered in Washington.

"I think if you get into mid-January and (the talks) keep going like this, you get worried, but I don't think we're going to get there," said Mark Lehmann, president of JMP Securities, in San Francisco.

Boehner, joined by his No. 2, Eric Cantor, at a Capitol Hill news conference, said the ultimate fault rests with Obama for refusing to agree to more spending reductions that would bring down America's $1 trillion annual deficit and rising $16 trillion debt.

"What the president has proposed so far simply won't do anything to solve our spending problem. He wants more spending and more tax hikes that will hurt our economy," Boehner said.

Democrats responded with incredulity.

House members, heading to their home states for the holidays, were instructed to be available on 48 hours notice if necessary.

"They went from 'Plan B' to 'plan see-you-later,'" Obama adviser David Axelrod said on MSNBC on Friday morning.

The crumbling of Boehner's plan highlights his struggle to lead some House Republicans who flatly reject any deal that would increase taxes on anyone.

Republican Representative Tim Huelskamp criticized Boehner's handling of the negotiations, saying the speaker had "caved" to Obama opening the door to tax hikes. Huelskamp, a dissident first-term congressman from Kansas, said he was not willing to compromise on taxes even if they are coupled with cuts to government spending sought by conservatives.

Fiscal conservatives "are so frustrated that the leader in the House right now, the speaker, has been talking about tax increases. That's all he's been talking about," Huelskamp said on MSNBC on Friday morning.

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