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CORRECTED-New Jersey's Christie vetoes Medicaid expansion bill

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 30 Juni 2013 | 18.12

Fri Jun 28, 2013 9:46pm EDT

(Corrects to show Christie vetoed bill trying to make Medicaid expansion permanent, but did not veto Medicaid expansion for this year)

June 28 (Reuters) - New Jersey Governor Chris Christie on Friday vetoed a bill that attempted to make the state's expansion of Medicaid eligibility permanent under the healthcare law known as Obamacare, his office said on Friday.

Christie's office announced he vetoed eight bills that "would add potentially hundreds of millions of dollars to state and local budgets." He also signed a $32.9 billion budget and three other bills, his office said in a statement.

Among the bills he vetoed was one dealing with Medicaid expansion under the U.S. Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, President Barack Obama's signature healthcare law known as Obamacare.

Christie, a critic of Obamacare, said in February he would accept federal money to expand Medicaid in New Jersey, and the state budget he signed on Friday included $227 million in such funds.

Democrats in the state Senate and Assembly had passed a bill seeking to make that Medicaid expansion permanent, but Christie vetoed it, a spokesman for the governor said.

The vetoed bill would have removed the flexibility to opt out of the Medicaid expansion if the federal government changed the terms of the current favorable matching rate, the spokesman said. The governor had discussed publicly his intention to maintain this flexibility when he signed onto the expansion, the spokesman said. (Reporting by Daniel Trotta; Editing by Eric Walsh)

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Stockton taxpayers want bigger role in California city's bankruptcy case

By Jim Christie

SAN FRANCISCO, June 28 | Fri Jun 28, 2013 9:55pm EDT

SAN FRANCISCO, June 28 (Reuters) - A group of California taxpayers went to court on Friday to demand a greater role in how the city of Stockton would raise taxes to exit the bankruptcy it filed a year ago.

The group asked the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Sacramento for official committee status so its members could see details on Stockton's plan for increasing its sales tax. If granted this status, the group could also participate in talks about the city's plan to adjust its debts.

Stockton officials aim to file their debt-adjustment plan with the bankruptcy court in September following a vote by the city council on a sales tax increase.

Stockton's city manager wants the council to hold a vote next month on putting a ballot measure to voters in November that would ask them to raise the city's sales tax to 9.0 percent from 8.25 percent.

If approved by voters, the increase would go into effect next April and raise revenue to help Stockton exit bankruptcy, put more money into public safety programs and hire more police officers to help tackle crime in a city that ranks among the 10 most dangerous U.S. cities.

According to a draft of the tax plan, the increase would raise about $219 million over 10 years for public safety spending.

Over the same time, about $112 million in proceeds would fund the city's exit from bankruptcy. The effort would get a larger share of revenue initially as police staffing ramps up.

The taxpayers group wants more details on how the revenue would be allocated and it is concerned Stockton's creditors could press for a bigger share, which would set back plans for hiring more police officers.

"Creditors will no doubt seek as large a recovery as possible leaving taxpayers with significantly reduced health, safety and welfare services," according to an exhibit attached to the taxpayers group's court filing.

A city of about 300,000 residents in California's Central Valley, Stockton is the biggest U.S. city to have filed for bankruptcy and is trying to impose steep losses on its bond insurers and bondholders to restructure it finances.

The U.S. municipal debt market is watching to see if the Stockton prevails or its so-called capital markets creditors can convince the bankruptcy court to have the city cut its pension spending as part of a plan to exit bankruptcy.

Stockton has refused to cut pensions, saying it is prohibited by state law, and that its employees have suffered several years of pay and job cuts while its retired workers are losing subsidized medical coverage.

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Obama to unveil broad African electrical power initiative

Sun Jun 30, 2013 12:00am EDT

* Two-thirds of Africans lack access to electricity

* Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya among first countries in program

* Will include financial support for U.S. exporters

By Mark Felsenthal

JOHANNESBURG, June 30 (Reuters) - Pointing to Africa's crippling lack of electrical power, President Barack Obama is due to announce on Sunday a $7 billion initiative over five years to double access to power in sub-Saharan Africa.

"We see this as the next phase in our development strategy and a real focal point in the president's agenda going forward," deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes told reporters traveling with the president.

Obama is midway through a three-country tour of Africa and is due to give what aides bill as his fullest description of his vision for the U.S. relationship with the continent on Sunday.

The president has chosen historically resonant locations for the address, and is due to speak at the University of Cape Town after touring the prison on Robben Island. Robert F. Kennedy's 1966 speech at the university linked the struggles against apartheid and the U.S. civil rights movement and was seen as giving encouragement to the movement, while Robben Island is where anti-apartheid icon Nelson Mandela was imprisoned for 18 of his 27 years in jail.

The president will cite South Africa's long struggle to defeat apartheid and the U.S. civil rights movement's success in overcoming racial inequality as models of movements that brought about change in the face of daunting obstacles, aides said. He will call on young Africans to summon similar energy to complete the work of those movements and to firmly establish economic growth, democratic government, and stable societies across the continent.

SIGNATURE PROGRAM

Obama has been faulted for lacking a grand program to benefit Africa like the HIV/AIDS initiative launched by President George W. Bush or the broad reductions of trade barriers achieved by President Bill Clinton.

Many Africans have been disappointed at what they see as Obama's hands-off approach to the continent, noting that his first extended trip the continent has not come until his second term in office despite his African ancestry. Obama's father was a native of Kenya.

The president's aides say he has been held back by the need to wind down two wars and to right the U.S. economy after the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression.

Despite severe U.S. budget constraints, the power initiative could provide Obama with just such a signature program.

DARKNESS BY NIGHT

Experts agree that the lack of electricity is a tremendous hindrance to Africa's advancement.

"Africa is largely a continent of darkness by night," said an official at a multilateral agency who spoke on condition of anonymity. "Every which way you look at this, Africa is behind the curve and pays more."

Roughly two-thirds of sub-Saharan Africa lacks power, a level that rises as high as 85 percent in rural areas, White House aide Gayle Smith said.

Lack of power inhibits business investment, prevents children from studying after dark, and makes it harder to keep vaccines from spoiling in rural areas, she said.

The United States will initially work with Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Liberia, Nigeria and Tanzania to develop electric power generation, officials said. It will also cooperate with Uganda and Mozambique on oil and gas management.

The program will draw on a range of U.S. government agencies to achieve its goals. For example, the U.S. Overseas Private Investment Corp will commit as much as $1.5 billion in finance and insurance to help U.S. companies manage the risks associated with the projects.

Similarly, the U.S. Export-Import Bank will make up to $5 billion available to support U.S. exports to develop power projects, the officials said.

The private sector will also be involved. Officials said General Electric Co has committed to power generation projects in Tanzania and Ghana, officials added.

The president's trip has taken him to Senegal and South Africa and will wind up in Tanzania on Monday and Tuesday. Although concerns over the ailing health of anti-apartheid hero Mandela have overshadowed much of the trip, the president has sounded the theme of Africa's economic potential at every stop.

In keeping with that emphasis, Obama will also announce that he plans to hold a summit of sub-Saharan African leaders in Washington next year.

"It's something other countries have done," Rhodes said. "What we want to do is continue the kind of high-level engagement we've had on this trip."

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Reader's Digest publisher expects to emerge from bankruptcy by end-July

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 29 Juni 2013 | 18.12

June 28 | Fri Jun 28, 2013 8:31pm EDT

June 28 (Reuters) - The publisher of the Reader's Digest magazine said it expects to emerge from bankruptcy by the end of July after the bankruptcy court for the Southern District of New York approved its reorganization plan.

The Reader's Digest Association Inc and its affiliates filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection for the second time in less than four years in February, citing a greater-than-expected decline in the media industry.

"The court's confirmation of our restructuring plan is an important step for our company and sets the stage for our future as a much more focused company," Chief Executive Robert Guth said in a statement.

The publisher, which had earlier filed for bankruptcy in 2009, will see its debt reduced by more than 80 percent to about $100 million under the restructuring plan, the company said.

It will also convert about $465 million of secured notes to equity.


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CORRECTED-New Jersey's Christie vetoes Medicaid expansion bill

Fri Jun 28, 2013 9:46pm EDT

(Corrects to show Christie vetoed bill trying to make Medicaid expansion permanent, but did not veto Medicaid expansion for this year)

June 28 (Reuters) - New Jersey Governor Chris Christie on Friday vetoed a bill that attempted to make the state's expansion of Medicaid eligibility permanent under the healthcare law known as Obamacare, his office said on Friday.

Christie's office announced he vetoed eight bills that "would add potentially hundreds of millions of dollars to state and local budgets." He also signed a $32.9 billion budget and three other bills, his office said in a statement.

Among the bills he vetoed was one dealing with Medicaid expansion under the U.S. Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, President Barack Obama's signature healthcare law known as Obamacare.

Christie, a critic of Obamacare, said in February he would accept federal money to expand Medicaid in New Jersey, and the state budget he signed on Friday included $227 million in such funds.

Democrats in the state Senate and Assembly had passed a bill seeking to make that Medicaid expansion permanent, but Christie vetoed it, a spokesman for the governor said.

The vetoed bill would have removed the flexibility to opt out of the Medicaid expansion if the federal government changed the terms of the current favorable matching rate, the spokesman said. The governor had discussed publicly his intention to maintain this flexibility when he signed onto the expansion, the spokesman said. (Reporting by Daniel Trotta; Editing by Eric Walsh)

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Stockton taxpayers want bigger role in California city's bankruptcy case

By Jim Christie

SAN FRANCISCO, June 28 | Fri Jun 28, 2013 9:55pm EDT

SAN FRANCISCO, June 28 (Reuters) - A group of California taxpayers went to court on Friday to demand a greater role in how the city of Stockton would raise taxes to exit the bankruptcy it filed a year ago.

The group asked the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Sacramento for official committee status so its members could see details on Stockton's plan for increasing its sales tax. If granted this status, the group could also participate in talks about the city's plan to adjust its debts.

Stockton officials aim to file their debt-adjustment plan with the bankruptcy court in September following a vote by the city council on a sales tax increase.

Stockton's city manager wants the council to hold a vote next month on putting a ballot measure to voters in November that would ask them to raise the city's sales tax to 9.0 percent from 8.25 percent.

If approved by voters, the increase would go into effect next April and raise revenue to help Stockton exit bankruptcy, put more money into public safety programs and hire more police officers to help tackle crime in a city that ranks among the 10 most dangerous U.S. cities.

According to a draft of the tax plan, the increase would raise about $219 million over 10 years for public safety spending.

Over the same time, about $112 million in proceeds would fund the city's exit from bankruptcy. The effort would get a larger share of revenue initially as police staffing ramps up.

The taxpayers group wants more details on how the revenue would be allocated and it is concerned Stockton's creditors could press for a bigger share, which would set back plans for hiring more police officers.

"Creditors will no doubt seek as large a recovery as possible leaving taxpayers with significantly reduced health, safety and welfare services," according to an exhibit attached to the taxpayers group's court filing.

A city of about 300,000 residents in California's Central Valley, Stockton is the biggest U.S. city to have filed for bankruptcy and is trying to impose steep losses on its bond insurers and bondholders to restructure it finances.

The U.S. municipal debt market is watching to see if the Stockton prevails or its so-called capital markets creditors can convince the bankruptcy court to have the city cut its pension spending as part of a plan to exit bankruptcy.

Stockton has refused to cut pensions, saying it is prohibited by state law, and that its employees have suffered several years of pay and job cuts while its retired workers are losing subsidized medical coverage.

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German inflation set to move towards ECB's 2 pct target

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 28 Juni 2013 | 18.12

BERLIN, June 28 | Fri Jun 28, 2013 6:15am EDT

BERLIN, June 28 (Reuters) - German annual inflation probably accelerated in June, moving towards the European Central Bank's target of close to but just below 2 percent for the whole euro zone and possibly even exceeding it, data from four federal states suggested on Friday.

Inflation in Germany has remained below the ECB's target this year after spending much of last year above it.

In North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW), Germany's most populous state and a bellwether for the national data, annual inflation picked up to 2.1 percent on the year in June, largely due to higher food and education costs.

That is much higher than the 1.7 percent mid-range forecast in a Reuters poll for the pan-German figure, which is due out at 1200 GMT and is based on data from the federal states.

Christian Schulz, senior economist at Berenberg Bank, said the 0.2 percent monthly rise in consumer prices in NRW pointed to German annual inflation accelerating to 1.9 percent.

It also suggested the figure harmonised to compare with other European Union countries - the measure closely watched by the ECB - would pick up to 2 or 2.1 percent, he said.

"Core inflation in Germany, outside very volatile components like food and energy, is likely to have a very gradual tendency to rise because wages are rising so strongly and unemployment is so low," he said, adding that cheaper imports from euro zone states would however exert downward pressure.

German workers have secured hefty wage raises of up to 6.6 percent this year and the jobless rate remains close to its lowest since Germany reunited more than two decades ago.

A Reuters poll expected consumer prices to remain unchanged on the month. The poll showed consumer prices harmonised to compare with other EU countries were likely to remain unchanged on the month and to accelerate to 1.8 percent on the year.

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EMERGING MARKETS-Shares eye 3rd day of gains after 5-week dive

LONDON, June 28 | Fri Jun 28, 2013 6:40am EDT

LONDON, June 28 (Reuters) - Emerging stock markets looked set to gain more than 1 percent for the third day running on Friday, helped by more lenient credit conditions in China after a sell-off on the prospect of reduced U.S. monetary stimulus.

A month ago, the MSCI emerging shares index was just about flat for the year, having recovered from a rocky start to 2013.

But the signals from the U.S. Federal Reserve that it is on course to cut back its bond-buying programme this year drove a 17 percent dive in the index from mid-May. Even with an almost 2 percent gain on Friday, it is down 13.3 percent on the year.

The relief this week has come from China's promise to take a more lenient attitude to struggling banks after authorities allowed short-term interbank rates to surge to more than 28 percent in an effort to curb high-risk lending.

That has eased concerns that China could face some form of financial crisis but leaves analysts still worried about the pace of growth.

"The real test will come when it becomes obvious to investors there are severe structural problems in China," said John-Paul Smith, head of emerging equity strategy at Deutsche Bank.

Weaker-than-expected gross domestic product data from the United States this week has also dented the argument for a swift reining in of its own programme of monetary easing.

Turkish, Russian, Indian and Chinese shares all gained more than 1.2 percent. Russia had its rating affirmed by rating agency Standard & Poor's at BBB.

The South African market was helped by Aspen Pharmacare , which unveiled the latest in a string of acquisitions on Thursday, buying medicines from U.S. firm Merck.

Emerging market sovereign 10-year spreads compared to U.S. 10-year treasury bonds have widened as much as 100 basis points in the past month, since Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke signalled an exit from quantitative easing on May 22.

Spreads have narrowed more than 30 bps this week, however, edging in 3 bps on Friday to 357 bps. Emerging market fixed income funds recorded their highest weekly outflow in the week ending June 26, banks quoting EPFR said.

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Air Canada terminates debt buyback plan as markets turn

By Euan Rocha

TORONTO, June 28 | Fri Jun 28, 2013 6:53am EDT

TORONTO, June 28 (Reuters) - Air Canada said it would terminate a tender offer to buy back certain bonds due to the recent volatility in debt and capital markets.

Canada's largest airline said in a statement late on Thursday that the market volatility had made refinancing terms unattractive.

Investors pulled $7.97 billion out of U.S.-based bond funds in the week ended June 19 in the first three-week streak of outflows since August 2011, according to data released this week.

Most of the outflows came after U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's comments last week that the bank might reduce its $85 billion in monthly bond purchases later this year if the economy is strong enough. Bernanke also said the Fed might end the program in mid-2014.

Bernanke's comments triggered a selloff in bond and stock markets, catapulting U.S. Treasury yields to 22-month highs.

This in turn has raised financing costs for companies, including Air Canada, seeking to tap debt markets.

Montreal-based Air Canada said it would not accept any of the notes that have been tendered into its offer. The company will promptly return or credit all notes previously tendered and not withdrawn.

The debt Air Canada had been intending to buy back included its 9.25 percent senior secured notes due 2015, its 10.125 percent senior secured notes due 2015, and its 12 percent senior second lien notes due 2016.

"The strength of our balance sheet and our business overall, and the fact that the notes do not mature until August 2015 and February 2016, provides us flexibility to take advantage of a more opportune time to refinance the notes," Chief Financial Officer Michael Rousseau said in the company's statement.

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Italy says no risk to stability from derivatives contracts

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 26 Juni 2013 | 18.12

ROME, June 26 | Wed Jun 26, 2013 6:12am EDT

ROME, June 26 (Reuters) - The Italian Treasury denied on Wednesday that derivatives dating from the 1990s posed any risk to the stability of public finances following newspaper reports that Rome faced 8 billion euros in losses from one set of contracts.

The Treasury statement came after the Financial Times and the La Repubblica daily reported that Italy faced potential losses of billions of euros on derivatives contracts that were restructured at the height of the euro zone crisis.

The Treasury said derivatives were used as a standard means of hedging against foreign exchange and interest rate risks and that there was always a cost of such insurance, which was justified by the protection provided against more serious potential losses.

It said suggestions that Italy had used derivatives contracts to enable it to meet the criteria to join the euro in 1999 were "absolutely baseless".


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UPDATE 1-Italy 6-mth yields almost double on fears triggered by Fed

Wed Jun 26, 2013 6:18am EDT

By Francesca Landini

MILAN, June 26 (Reuters) - Italy's short-term debt costs almost doubled at an auction on Wednesday as expectations of a reduction of U.S. monetary stimulus continued to weigh on riskier assets.

The treasury sold 8 billion euros ($10.5 billion) of six-month bills, paying a return of 1.05 percent, compared with 0.54 percent it paid at a similar auction one month ago.

The yield, the highest since February, came in line with the secondary market, while demand was 1.36 times the offer, down from a bid-to-cover ratio of 1.58 one month ago.

"The rise in the rate and the fall in the bid-to-cover ratio reflect the tensions triggered in recent days by fears the central banks will withdraw some liquidity from the markets," said Alessandro Giansanti, fixed-income analyst at ING.

"The market seemed to have calmed down a bit today thanks to the reassurance by the European Central Bank that its monetary policy will remain accommodative for long."

Some of the world's top central bankers sought on Tuesday to calm markets that have reacted strongly to the U.S. Federal Reserve's plan to slow its bond-buying stimulus.  "In terms of monetary policy, price stability is assured, and the overall economic outlook still warrants an accommodative stance, the exit from which by the way is still distant," ECB President Mario Draghi said in Berlin. Draghi confirmed his dovish tone on Wednesday in Paris.

Investors shrugged off for now doubts over Italy's exposure to derivative contracts which, according to media reports, could cause a loss of 8 billion euros for the country, traders said.

"The news on derivative contracts is not having an impact on the market which has been choppy and nervous since last week," said a trader at an Italian bank.

Italy risks losses potentially running into billions of euros on derivatives contracts it restructured at the height of the euro zone debt crisis, the Financial Times and Italian daily La Repubblica reported on Wednesday, quoting a Italian treasury document.

In response to the reports, the treasury said there was no danger to state finances.

Italy will face a tougher market test on Thursday when it offers up to 5 billion euros of five- and 10-year bonds.

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GLOBAL MARKETS-Share, bonds rebound after soothing c.bank talk, gold slumps

Wed Jun 26, 2013 6:26am EDT

  * Gold hits near 3-year low on U.S. stimulus pullback      * European shares, bonds rebound for second day      * U.S. data supports recovery view, Fed tapering plan      * Euro hits three-week low on dovish Draghi        By Marc Jones      LONDON, June 26 (Reuters) - World stocks and bonds had a  second day of big gains on Wednesday, lifted by healthy U.S.  data, moves by China to calm banking sector fears and supportive  signals from Europe's central banks.      All combined to soothe nerves about plans for a reduction in  U.S. stimulus that have prompted large sell offs over the past  few weeks.      Gold and silver, however, both slumped to near three-year  lows as investors continued to dump assets used as a safety net  in case central bank money printing went wrong or fuelled a  spike in inflation.      Markets from safe-haven U.S. Treasuries to riskier stocks  and emerging market assets have dropped on worries about the  impact of an end to the U.S. Federal Reserve's support  programme, and as signs emerged of a credit crunch in China.      After both the U.S. and Asia's main share and bond markets  had risen overnight, Europe's investors shook off a shaky start  to send the FTSEurofirst 300 index of top shares up  more than 1 percent for a second day running.      Bond markets also continued to claw back ground although  investors remained wary that the rebound could give way as  markets take time to get used to the new environment.      "At this point in time, having seen a incredibly violent  selloff in the treasury markets that took everything with it,  there is a certain amount of settling back going on," said Kit  Juckes, a market strategist at Societe Generale in London.      "I'm not sure we are done with position adjustment yet  though. We are not even done with month-end (adjustments)  properly, so I wouldn't declare this as anything more than  things are looking a little bit quieter."      Precious metals were not looking quieter, however. Gold fell  2.3 percent to $1,229 an ounce and silver dropped 4 percent to  leave both at their lowest levels since September 2010.      Data on Tuesday showed U.S. consumer confidence jumped in  June to its highest level in more than five years, supporting  the view that the Fed will press ahead with plans to reduce its  $85 billion a month support programme later this year.      "It seems as though the momentum is increasing in the  selloff (in gold)," said Viktor Nossek, head of research at  Boost ETP, an exchange traded products provider.      "The case for safe havens assets simply isn't there" he  added. "The stock market has recovered, indicating people see  further stability ahead especially after the signals from the  Chinese authorities that they won't allow a complete meltdown in  the money markets."            SOOTHING SOUNDS      After more than a year of steady gains in stocks and bonds,  the Fed's shift of position last week has sparked heavy  volatility across asset classes.          As new data showed Europe's economy remains in the doldrums,  the region's policymakers were again out in force to try and  calm any market jitters.       Both the European Central Bank and Bank of England said on  Tuesday that, unlike the Fed, they remained in full support  mode.      ECB head Mario Draghi reiterated the message again in Paris  on Wednesday adding he and his colleagues would look "with great  attention to the potential volatility consequences that  financial markets have undergone in the past few weeks."        Bank for International Settlements General Manager Jaime  Caruana also told Reuters in an interview the BIS was not  demanding immediate action on global exiting and that the timing  of an exit had to be determined by each central bank  individually.       The annual report from the BIS - known as "the central  banks' central bank" - provoked a storm of response at the  weekend after saying an exit from accommodative policies would  only become harder over time.       Draghi's comments helped pushed the euro to a  three-week low of $1.3035 against a broadly stronger dollar   and helped trim yields on the peripheral-economy euro  zone bonds which have jumped by more than half a percent over  recent weeks.      Spanish 10-year yields dropped 16 basis points  to 4.88 percent while equivalent Italian yields were 14 bps  lower at 4.74 percent. "The ECB is pretty dovish"  a trader said.      As the plunges in gold and silver grabbed most of the  attention in the commodities market, oil also remained under  pressure at just over $101 a barrel and growth-attuned copper  fell 1.6 near a three-year low.      "The market is still concerned about the Chinese growth  outlook," said economist Alexandra Knight at National Australia  Bank in Melbourne in reference to the slide in copper.      GRAPHICS   Markets since Fed tapering hint:TAKE A LOOK-China's cash squeeze:    Asset returns in 2013:Currencies v dollar in 2013  
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Greek PM says avoiding more austerity is govt's priority

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 25 Juni 2013 | 18.12

ATHENS, June 25 | Tue Jun 25, 2013 6:44am EDT

ATHENS, June 25 (Reuters) - Greece's Prime Minister Antonis Samaras said on Tuesday avoiding new austerity measures to fulfill targets in the country's international bailout was a priority of his two-party coalition government.

"Our immediate priority is to return to recovery ahead of time, defeat unemployment, bring in investment, avoid new measures and create jobs for the youth," Samaras told ministers at their first cabinet meeting. "We have no choice but to succeed and we are determined to succeed."

Samaras reshuffled his cabinet on Monday, aiming to bolster his government days after the smallest party in the ruling coalition quit over the closure of state TV, leaving him with a tiny majority in parliament.


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EURO GOVT-German Bunds rebound before U.S. data steer

Tue Jun 25, 2013 6:50am EDT

* Bund futures bounce off eight-month lows

* Investors wary of U.S. data, ECB policymakers

* Other euro zone bonds stable, but Italy underperforms

By Marius Zaharia

LONDON, June 25 (Reuters) - German bond prices rose on Tuesday, with uncertainty before U.S. data prompting investors to buy back some of the debt sold in anticipation of a reduction in Federal Reserve stimulus.

The Fed said last week its monetary policy outlook would depend on how the economy performs, making investors extra cautious before U.S. data releases. Durable goods, consumer confidence and housing data are all due later in the day.

Bund futures were up 53 ticks at 140.84, having fallen by almost three points in the previous four sessions to hit an eight-month low of 139.90 on Monday. Cash 10-year German yields were down 5 basis points at 1.77 percent, off Monday's 14-month highs of 1.85 percent.

"We have a lot of headline risk ... so you could argue that we may hit 1.70 (percent in German 10-year yields) before we move towards 2.40 (percent)," one trader said.

The 2.40 percent level is just above the roughly one percentage point range set by safe-haven Bunds since late 2011, at the height of the euro zone crisis when Italian and Spanish yields traded at unsustainable levels.

The trader said Bund yields could hit that in the next few months if U.S. data reinforces the Fed's stance.

A different outlook for the euro zone economy may, however, cap yields at lower levels, analysts said.

European Central Bank policymaker Benoit Coeure said the bank was far from exiting accommodative monetary policy and will keep an open mind about new easing measures.

The Frenchman also said that the ECB needs to make sure that the Fed's plans do not hit euro zone bonds. His stance posed questions about the recent selloff in euro zone debt markets.

"We've had an almost similar pass-through from U.S. Treasuries to European bonds. If you look at the fundamentals, perhaps there shouldn't be such a high pass-through. At some point you would expect a counter reaction from the ECB," Rabobank market economist Elwin de Groot said,

A trader said Coeure's "dovish" comments supported Bunds, but the market has already prepared for a soft tone from the ECB at the start of the session so Bund gains after his speech were limited. ECB President Mario Draghi speaks later in the day.

In Italy, 10-year yields were 4 bps higher on the day, reversing a fall at the start of the session after a debt auction saw the country's two-year borrowing costs hitting their highest level since September.

Equivalent Spanish yields were 2 bps lower at 5.03 percent,

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MOVES- ANZ, Amundi, Thomas Miller Investment, U.S. Bank Wealth Management

June 25 | Tue Jun 25, 2013 7:00am EDT

June 25 (Reuters) - The following financial services industry appointments were announced on Tuesday. To inform us of other job changes, email to moves@thomsonreuters.com.

The largest retail bank in New Zealand appointed Graeme Liebelt to the bank's board of directors. Liebelt was earlier chief executive director at mining services company Orica Ltd.

The asset management company appointed Mark Miller as head of UK Institutional and Jerry Devlin as head of UK distribution. Miller joins Amundi from Blackstone Alternative Asset Management, while Devlin joins from Macquarie.

The asset management company appointed Matthew Lonsdale as head of intermediary business development. Prior to this, Lonsdale was head of business development at Psigma Investment Management Ltd.

U.S. BANK WEALTH MANAGEMENT

The wealth management company appointed Andrea Kaempf as personal trust managing director for The Private Client Reserve of U.S. Bank, a part of U.S. Bank Wealth Management. Prior to this, Kaempf worked with the Bank of America.


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EMERGING MARKETS-China, Fed weigh on stocks; lira off record low

Written By Unknown on Senin, 24 Juni 2013 | 18.12

LONDON, June 24 | Mon Jun 24, 2013 5:57am EDT

LONDON, June 24 (Reuters) - Emerging stocks fell for a fifth straight day to one-year lows on Monday, led by a drop in Chinese stocks on worries about tight monetary policy, and the Turkish lira hovered above record lows.

Risky emerging markets have been under pressure from indications the Federal Reserve will withdraw the bond-buying stimulus which has propelled yield-seeking investors overseas, and from concern about a slowdown in Chinese growth.

China's central bank has engineered a tightening of cash in money markets as it tries to rein in excessive credit growth, especially in the lightly regulated "shadow banking" sector, seeing interest rates spike to 25 percent or higher for some deals late last week.

"The China story is something that people are aware of and keeping an eye on, but broadly people are still digesting the comments of the Fed," RBS emerging markets analyst Mohammed Kazmi said.

"When there is a broad emerging markets sell-off, investors will be looking at stories which are looking negative. At the moment it is Turkey, where we still have protests, and possible strikes in South Africa."

The MSCI emerging stocks index fell 1 percent to its lowest since June 2012, after dropping 6 percent last week, its biggest weekly loss in over a year.

China shares fell more than 5 percent on Monday to record their biggest daily loss since August 2009, driven by financial stocks, after the central bank said liquidity in the country's financial system was "reasonable".

The Turkish lira held above record lows after the central bank said it would sell at least $150 million on days when funding is provided from the policy rate.

Anti-government protests have dented the appeal of Turkey, which is heavily dependent on foreign investor flows.

Turkey's five-year credit default swaps rose nine basis points to 230 bps, according to Markit, fresh 11-month highs. Turkish CDS have risen a steep 100 bps this month.

The rand fell more than 1 percent and South Africa's CDS rose 6 bps to 252 bps, fresh four-year highs. South Africa has suffered from strikes in the mining sector in recent months.

South African president Nelson Mandela's health was described as "critical" late on Sunday.

The shekel, which the central bank has attempted to weaken in recent weeks, dipped 0.25 percent to 13-day lows ahead of a central bank rate decision. A minority of analysts see a quarter-point cut.

"We are leaning towards a cut," analysts at Societe Generale said in a note.

"An unchanged decision would send a message to the market that the central bank's commitment to weakening the shekel is not set in stone."

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Tenet Healthcare to buy Vanguard Health for $4.3 bln

June 24 | Mon Jun 24, 2013 6:25am EDT

June 24 (Reuters) - U.S. hospital operator Tenet Healthcare Corp will buy smaller rival Vanguard Health Systems Inc for $4.3 billion including debt to expand into new geographies.

The offer of $21 per share represents a premium of 70 percent to Vanguard's Friday close.

The companies said the deal includes the assumption of $2.5 billion of debt.


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UPDATE 2-Spain resists pressure for swift moves on nationalised banks

Mon Jun 24, 2013 6:51am EDT

By JesĂşs Aguado and Sarah White

MADRID, June 24 (Reuters) - Spain's economy minister said on Monday he would not be pushed into selling two nationalised banks too quickly or too cheaply as bankers press the government to act to resolve the lingering problems of its financial system.

Bankers say that Spain must pump more funds into some of the lenders it bailed out last year using EU aid and its own money if it hopes to sell them soon, with the government's options for recovering some of the investment narrowing.

A recent government-commissioned report on the sector by investment bank Nomura and consultancy McKinsey suggested quickly selling Catalunya Banc and NCG Banco before their assets deteriorate further, two banking sources said.

Economy Minister Luis de Guindos said on Monday that the government was exploring all options for the sale of the two banks, although he said there was no rush.

"The buyers always try to give the impression that things are worth less than what they are... We are convinced that these entities have value," de Guindos told COPE radio on Monday.

"We have to do it at the right moment and the process must be competitive... We have five years to do it, there's no need to rush. I know there are some that want it to go quickly."

Barcelona-based Catalunya Banc and NCG Banco, from the northern region of Galicia, together worth less than 10 percent of the Spanish market, were among the biggest recipients of the 41 billion euros ($55 billion) Madrid took from Brussels in aid last year.

Fernando Restoy, deputy head of Spain's central bank, opened the door on Friday to an asset protection scheme to speed up the sale of the banks, although he repeated the government's view that they do not need more capital.

Bankers say potential bidders are demanding guarantees against losses, or more capital, even though the banks are now mostly cleansed of the soured property assets that nearly felled them.

But pumping extra funds into the banks would hinder Spain's attempts to slash its deficit in a prolonged recession, as it faces public anger over deep public spending cuts.

It would also bring the money spent on saving Catalunya Banc closer to its cost of liquidation. Under the terms of the European bailout, Spain cannot spend more on capitalising a bank than it would on winding it down.

"There is interest in these banks," one senior Madrid investment banker said. "But that interest is at a price which is very different to where the government's price is. Buyers essentially want to get money to buy them, as bank acquisitions in Spain have been more sour than sweet as norms keep changing and provisioning needs keep rising."

No formal process to sell the banks is yet underway, several bankers familiar with their situation said, although informal conversations with investors are taking place.

EXTRA

Spain has spent over 75 billion euros to help 14 banks in the past four years. With many still facing big hurdles as they recover from 2008's domestic property crash, it has the option to draw down more of a 100 billion euro aid line from Europe.

While Bankia, the biggest lender in state hands, became a symbol of Spain's financial turmoil when it needed a 22.5 billion euro rescue barely a year after listing, Catalunya Banc has turned into the government's most immediate problem.

Spain aborted its last attempt to sell Catalunya Banc in March when those interested - some of Spain's healthier lenders - requested government-funded schemes to protect them against future losses, or other types of aid.

Two financial sources familiar with the lender's accounts said bidders have identified additional losses of between 3 billion and 4 billion euros at the bank due to souring loans to households and companies.

A spokeswoman for the bank denied it faced a 3 to 4 billion euro hole but said it had not conducted analysis of projected losses under new provisioning rules.

For comparison, liquidating Catalunya would have cost 17.8 billion euros, the bank disclosed in a stock market filing this month. It has received 12 billion euros in state aid so far.

The bank made a loss of 18.5 million euros in the first quarter of 2013 and its loans in arrears rose to 9.91 percent of outstanding loans at the end of March from 9.39 percent at end December. The average for the whole Spanish sector was 10.5 percent - compared to less than 7 percent in the euro zone.

NCG Banco returned to profit in the same period, but its bad debt ratio grew to 14.4 percent at the end of March from 13.5 percent in December.

It has made some progress shedding assets, however, and is close to clinching the sale of parts of its branch networks outside Galicia, a source close to the bank said.

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Greek PM Samaras says country on track to meet bailout goals-paper

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 23 Juni 2013 | 18.12

ATHENS, June 22 | Sat Jun 22, 2013 11:38am EDT

ATHENS, June 22 (Reuters) - Greece is on track to meet reform and budget goals set under its international bailout despite struggling to meet some of its targets, the country's Prime Minister Antonis Samaras told a Greek newspaper on Saturday.

Asked in newspaper To Vima to comment if his government was considering imposing new austerity measures to compensate the failure of a key privatisation earlier this month, Samaras was quoted as saying:

"I don't think there will be any problems... We are ahead of the (bailout plan's) overall targets. There are some partial problems with partial targets. But these are addressed and will be dealt with."


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UPDATE 1-Political crisis, privatisation gap won't derail bailout-Greek PM

Sat Jun 22, 2013 12:54pm EDT

* Greece will have no problem in talks with lenders -Samaras

* New, reduced government "will be more coherent"

* Reshuffle and updated coalition agreement promised soon

By Angeliki Koutantou and Harry Papachristou

ATHENS, June 22 (Reuters) - Greece's recent government crisis and failure to meet privatisation targets will not derail an international bailout, Prime Minister Antonis Samaras said on Saturday.

Samaras's government saw its parliamentary majority sharply reduced on Friday after the small Democratic Left party left the ruling coalition to protest against an abrupt shutdown of the state broadcaster ERT.

Samaras told the newspaper To Vima that his new, two-party government with the Socialist PASOK party would be more coherent, adding that he expected no problems in talks with lenders who are inspecting Greece's austerity and economic reform programme.

"The government went through a rough patch over the last few days but it stood on its feet and continues with renewed determination and much better cooperation," To Vima quoted him as saying.

Samaras's conservative New Democracy party and PASOK together control only 153 of the 300 seats in parliament. A few independents may also back the government, and the Democratic Left has signalled it could support some reforms on a case-by-case basis to keep Greece in the euro.

Samaras and PASOK leader Evangelos Venizelos are expected to meet as soon as Sunday to update their coalition agreement and arrange a cabinet reshuffle. According to Greek media reports, Yannis Stournaras is expected to remain finance minister.

The new government will have to conclude talks with the so-called "troika" of international lenders - the European Union, the International Monetary Fund and the European Central Bank - who return to Athens later this month for a regular review of Greece's compliance with the terms of their bailout.

Athens will have to acknowledge that it is likely to miss its privatisation targets after its failure to sell off the natural gas company DEPA blew a 1 billion euro hole in the bailout plan, raising the prospect of fresh austerity measures to make up the shortfall. [ID: nL5N0EM1U5]

"I don't think there will be any problems (in the troika talks)," Samaras said in the interview, pointing to mid-year deficit figures that are below interim targets.

"We are beating the (bailout plan's) overall targets ... everybody agrees that in terms of fiscal adjustment we are ahead of targets. There are some partial problems with partial targets but these are addressed and will be dealt with," Samaras said.

Greece needs to plug a funding gap and clinch a positive review to allow the IMF to keep bankrolling the 240-billion-euro bailout.

In their updated coalition agreement, PASOK and Samaras's conservative New Democracy party are expected to reiterate their pledge to meet Greece's fiscal goals, while rejecting new austerity measures and agreeing to pushing the lenders gradually to allow tax cuts to help soften a deep, six-year-old recession.

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Amid China market stand off, calls for a more transparent central bank

By Jason Subler

BEIJING, June 23 | Sun Jun 23, 2013 4:47am EDT

BEIJING, June 23 (Reuters) - China's central bank rarely explains its actions in public and keeps markets guessing on policy, but the angst created by its stand off with banks in the money markets is prompting calls for it to change tack.

The People's Bank of China (PBOC) let short-term interest rates spike to extraordinary levels this past week as it refused to inject funds into money markets.

Some observers saw it as an attempt to force banks to stop channelling money into the informal banking sector, known as "shadow banking", which authorities worry is creating significant credit risks.

For years, the central bank has made stability its watchword, which for the money markets meant it would always provide liquidity when cash conditions tightened. As the central bank is now standing back while banks scramble for cash, markets are left uncertain as to whether there has been a fundamental change in policy.

In effect, there seems to be a competing policy objective, said Fitch Ratings Senior Director Charlene Chu.

"The real uncertainty in the market comes down to people not really knowing which of those is more important at which point in time," she said on the sidelines of a conference in Sydney.

Traders blame the absence of a clear and public signal from the central bank for panic at some smaller banks, as the cost of borrowing overnight funds spiked to as high as 25 percent for some institutions.

Those jitters spread more broadly late last week, as rumours - passed on by Chinese media outlets - that two major banks had received emergency funds from the PBOC circulated in financial markets in London and New York on Thursday.

The lenders denied the rumours, after which money markets calmed somewhat on Friday.

The panic in the otherwise arcane marketplace even sparked a flurry of activity on social media as the Twitter-like service Weibo lit up with comments from Chinese worried that a financial crisis was unfolding.

Throughout, the central bank has remained silent. Several telephone calls from Reuters to the PBOC for comment went unanswered.

To many market players, the episode highlights that it is time for the PBOC to shift away from its penchant for opacity in conducting its business. In the past that has included carrying out special market operations behind the scenes and announcing changes in policy interest rates out of the blue and with a minimum of explanation - often at odd hours of the day and at weekends.

"There should be a lesson to be drawn from this," said Zhao Qingming, an economist at China Construction Bank.

The information asymmetry between the central bank and market participants led to confusion and exacerbated the cash crunch, traders said. Some banks dared not lend out money to other banks even though they had cash at hand due to the uncertainty, Zhao said.

"I think the central bank should improve its communication with the market. At least, it should tell the market clearly what its intention is at the very beginning," he said.

Several money market traders reached by Reuters also expressed a similar wish for greater clarity from the PBOC.

CONTRAST

Unlike the central banks of most major economies, such as the U.S. Federal Reserve or the European Central Bank, the PBOC does not hold regular interest rate-setting meetings or release detailed minutes of meetings.

The heads of the Fed and the ECB hold question and answer sessions with the media immediately following their policy meetings to further explain the thinking behind decisions and to try to avoid the potential for markets misreading their intentions.

However, unlike many central banks of other leading economies, the PBOC is not independent of the government. Major decisions on policy need the approval of the cabinet.

Banking sources told Reuters on Friday that the PBOC did hold a meeting earlier in the week in which it told senior bankers not to expect liquidity to be as plentiful as it had been and that they would have to manage their own affairs better. But that message did not necessarily make it to the trading floor, at least not by Friday.

"We don't know what the central bank thinks. Maybe some senior officials of our bank know, but we are trading blind," said a trader at a state-owned bank, who declined to be identified in the absence of authorisation to speak to the media.

Fitch Ratings said in a statement on Friday that the PBOC's efforts to constrain the cash available to banks for "shadow banking" activities could be more effective than the other steps it has taken in the past.

But it also raised the potential for "a policy misstep and/or unintended consequences", it said.

Fitch did not single out the PBOC's communication strategy, but a flurry of worried comments on Weibo suggested the central bank might need to think not only about the response of the market, but to the public more broadly.

"The central bank's open market operations are so opaque and the entire banking system is not transparent! Nobody knows what is going on, which has been the major reason behind the market panic," said one Weibo user.

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Bond insurer hires new lawyers in California bankruptcy cases

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 22 Juni 2013 | 18.12

SAN FRANCISCO, June 21 | Fri Jun 21, 2013 8:08pm EDT

SAN FRANCISCO, June 21 (Reuters) - Bond insurer National Public Finance Guarantee has hired a new law firm to represent it in the California municipal bankruptcy cases of San Bernardino and Stockton after a judge found its original firm had created a conflict for itself.

National spokesman Kevin Brown said on Friday that Weil, Gotshal & Manges will replace Winston & Strawn in the cases.

The unusual switch in law firms follows a decision last week by U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Meredith Jury in the San Bernardino case to disqualify Winston & Strawn at the behest of the California Public Employees' Retirement System.

The pension fund, known as Calpers, had complained that Winston & Strawn had recently hired attorneys away from K&L Gates, the law firm for Calpers in both bankruptcy cases.

The pension fund also demanded Winston & Strawn's disqualification from the Stockton case. A response to that was due this week but will not be filed with the bankruptcy court hearing the city's case as Winston & Strawn is stepping aside, Brown said.

"We're not objecting," Brown said.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Christopher Klein in April approved Stockton's eligibility for bankruptcy, allowing the city to draft a plan for adjusting its debts. Stockton aims to file that plan with Klein in September.

Hearings next month and in August could determine San Bernardino's eligibility for bankruptcy.

The U.S. municipal debt market is closely watching both cases as they may test who absorbs most of the financial pain when local governments go broke: bondholders or current and retired city employees.

Calpers manages the pension plans of the two cities and has fiercely resisted any cuts in pension payments.

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Brazil's President Rousseff pledges to maintain order

SAO PAULO, June 21 | Fri Jun 21, 2013 8:20pm EDT

SAO PAULO, June 21 (Reuters) - Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff pledged on Friday to maintain order on the streets, condemning the acts of violence and vandalism that have marred the country's largest protest in 20 years and promising security forces would defend public property.

In a televised address, Rousseff reiterated her government's support for social change and said she had an obligation to listen to the voices on the street and conduct a dialogue with all sides.


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Europe unable to break impasse on who pays when banks fail

Fri Jun 21, 2013 11:23pm EDT

* EU talks end with no deal on rules to shut banks

* New law could impose losses on big savers, bondholders

* Germany's Schaeuble argues against flexibility in rules

* France's Moscovici, EU's Barnier say deal within reach

By John O'Donnell, Robin Emmott and Ingrid Melander

LUXEMBOURG, June 22 (Reuters) - Europe failed to agree on how to share the cost of bank collapses on Saturday, as Germany resisted attempts by France to water down rules designed to spare taxpayers in future crises.

Almost 20 hours of talks late into the night could not forge a way for countries to set up an EU-wide regime that would first impose losses on shareholders and bondholders when a bank fails, followed by depositors with more than 100,000 euros ($132,000).

Ministers will make a fresh attempt to break the impasse at a meeting on Wednesday, on the eve of an EU leaders summit, and resolve one of the most difficult questions posed by Europe's banking crisis - how to shut failed banks without sowing panic or burdening taxpayers.

"I think we can reach a deal if we take a few more days," said Michel Barnier, the European commissioner in charge of regulation. "We are not far off now from a political agreement."

The European Union spent the equivalent of a third of its economic output on saving its banks between 2008 and 2011, using taxpayer cash but struggling to contain the crisis and - in the case of Ireland - almost bankrupting the country.

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble blamed the complexity of the issue and conflicting interests for not being able to reach a final result on Saturday. One EU official, who asked not to be named, described the meeting as chaotic.

At the heart of the disagreement, chiefly between Germany and France, was how much leeway countries should have when imposing losses on bondholders or large savers, a procedure known as "bail-in."

Such an approach was first tested out in Cyprus' bailout in March, but making it the EU norm would mark a radical departure from the bloc's crisis management in which taxpayers have footed the bill for a string of rescue programmes.

Britain, Sweden and France worry that forcing losses on depositors could cause a bank run or rattle confidence, and want countries to have wide-ranging freedom in deciding whether to take such bold steps.

Spain's Economy Minister Luis de Guindos underscored the sensitivity of the issue. "What's fundamental is there is agreement over the bail-in hierarchy and the protection of small depositors," he said.

Germany, however, wants strict norms. Schaeuble said the new rules should not vary across the 27-nation European Union because that could put some banks at a competitive disadvantage.

"There's clear disagreement between France and Germany. That's why the meeting broke up," said one EU diplomat.

France's Finance Minister Pierre Moscovici tried to play down any divisions and said a deal was possible next week.

'DANGEROUS'

While there is no immediate deadline for an agreement, indecision could hurt confidence in the ability of Europe's politicians to repair the financial system, encourage banks to lend and help the continent emerge from economic stagnation.

An agreement on European rules for closing banks is also a step required by Germany before it will sign off on a scheme for the 17-nation euro zone's bailout fund to help banks in trouble, potentially important in helping Ireland.

"The fact that the euro zone countries are trying to push a solution is very dangerous for the rest of us," Sweden's Finance Minister Anders Borg told reporters.

The regime to ensure that troubled banks are closed in an orderly way sets an important precedent for the euro zone, which is pursuing a project called banking union to supervise, control and support banks to rebuild confidence in the currency.

This scheme aims to form a common front across the single currency area when tackling failed banks, rather than leaving it to countries to manage alone.

At the wider EU level, the so-called resolution rules are needed so that the euro zone can mould its own regime and decide how the bloc's rescue fund helps banks.

Its rules, for example, on pushing losses on large savers, could be made stricter, in particular for banks seeking help from the fund, the European Stability Mechanism.

Euro zone finance ministers agreed late on Thursday to set aside 60 billion euros for banks via the fund.

If agreed, the rules would take effect at the start of 2015 with the provisions to impose losses coming as late as 2018.

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Greece's Democratic Left set to withdraw from government-party source

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 21 Juni 2013 | 18.12

ATHENS, June 21 | Fri Jun 21, 2013 6:37am EDT

ATHENS, June 21 (Reuters) - A majority of lawmakers from Greece's Democratic Left party, a junior partner in the ruling coalition, are in favour of withdrawing from the government, a party official told reporters on Friday.

"A strong majority of the parliamentary group and the executive committee are backing (leader Fotis) Kouvelis's proposal to withdraw ministers from the government," the official said on condition of anonymity.

The leftist party's lawmakers were holding an emergency meeting to decide whether they should stay in the three-party coalition of conservative Prime Minister Antonis Samaras.


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Update-Moody's continues review for downgrade of Liberty Global (CFR at Ba3) and its wholly-owned subsidiaries; downgrades Virgin Media

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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RPT-INSIGHT-Losses loom for investors enmeshed in U.S. mortgage chaos

Fri Jun 21, 2013 6:59am EDT

By Michelle Conlin

June 21 (Reuters) - Since the financial crash, banks have been accused of wrongfully foreclosing on homeowners because they failed to create and maintain proper mortgage paperwork. Now, there are signs that chaotic document management is harming investors in mortgage bonds, too.

A review of loan documents, property records and the monthly reports made available to investors show that mortgage servicers are reporting individual houses are still in foreclosure long after they have been sold to new buyers or the underlying mortgages have been paid off.

These delays enable banks and other mortgage servicers to continue to charge monthly fees to investors in these mortgage-backed securities, the banks' investor reports show. It means that investors are buying mortgage bonds that may have billions of dollars of undisclosed losses that will become apparent only at a later stage. It could also lead to a new round of litigation for banks just when some appeared to have been putting their mortgage problems behind them.

The review, conducted by foreclosure investigator Lisa Epstein, found hundreds of instances across the United States where information about the status of individual home loans was incorrect. The information about the mortgages is sent from the mortgage servicer, which handles tasks such as collecting monthly mortgage payments and handling foreclosures, to the trustee of the mortgage bonds, which administers monthly reports and makes sure investors get paid.

In 2009, Epstein helped uncover the robo signing scandal, in which she discovered that banks had hired low-level workers to pose as executives, signing hundreds of legal affidavits a day without verifying a single word, as is required by law. The reporting lag issues she identified in mortgage bonds involved many of the same mortgage servicers who engaged in robo signing.

"This is all part and parcel of having servicers who are unable to keep the documentation straight," said Linda Allen, a banking professor at Baruch College, who specializes in mortgage servicing. She said Epstein's methodology was sound.

Mortgage experts estimate these reporting delays could mean that billions of dollars in losses may still be hidden in these bonds. Mortgage servicers may have also been charging late fees, property inspection fees, legal fees and other penalties against these loans long after they have been paid off, inflating the losses, they said.

"The losses are building up inside these deals, and this is going to happen all over the place," said William Frey, founder of Greenwich Financial Services, which specializes in securitization.

Frey said his team analyzed about 500 mortgage-backed securities originated by every major bank and that he has yet to find a single bond where the accounting adds up as it should.

In one case, Reuters found that Bank of America Corp had been collecting a monthly servicing fee of $50.73 from investors on a loan that had been paid off nearly two years ago, investor reports show.

Bank of America filed a document at a local county office on July 22, 2011 showing that the $162,400 loan on a cream-colored duplex in Greenacres, Florida, owned by a drywall hanger named Roman Pino, had been satisfied and "cancelled." But investors in Pino's loan and more than 6,700 other similar mortgages that are bundled together in a subprime mortgage bond still have not been informed that the loan no longer exists, according to the last investor report in May.

Bank of America spokesman Lawrence Grayson said reporting lags are not typical, and can occur because a sale or mortgage insurance proceeds may not be finalized. Loans can sometimes be subject to litigation, which could explain the ongoing charging of fees, he said.

The bank declined to comment on the specifics of Pino's loan. According to Fitch Ratings, the loan did not have mortgage insurance.

Bank of New York Mellon Corp, the trustee, said that in keeping with industry practice, it relies on the information provided by the mortgage servicer.

Some of these latent losses are beginning to surface. Earlier this month, for example, investors learned of $1 billion in losses on dozens of subprime bonds, containing more than 75,000 home loans that were created during the housing boom. Many of the losses were not reported for a year or more.

"For whatever reason, these losses were basically pending out there for a while, and the reporting mechanism finally caught up and hit the bonds in the trust," said Roger Ashworth, an analyst with mortgage advisory firm Amherst Securities.

The bonds' trustee, Wells Fargo & Co, said that it relied upon the servicer, Ocwen Financial Corp, for the reclassification.

Ocwen said it stands by its monthly reporting. It added that it has helped tens of thousands of struggling families save their homes from foreclosure and significantly lowered investor losses, benefiting investors in mortgage bonds.

SIDE DEALS

Latent losses could play a role in some of the settlements that investors have already reached with banks over other mortgage misrepresentations.

For example, many of the mortgage bonds with reporting lags that Epstein identified are the same securities that are at issue in ongoing litigation between Bank of America and investors in those securities.

Bank of America settled with 22 large investors, including two of the biggest - Pacific Investment Management Co and Blackrock Inc - agreeing to pay $8.5 billion to end legal liability for more than one million Countrywide Financial mortgages whose borrower histories and credit quality were allegedly misrepresented by the bank.

Some other investors in the bonds, including American International Group Inc and Grand Rapids Police and Fire Retirement System, have objected to the settlement. They project the losses to be more than $100 billion.

An AIG spokesman said no one had reviewed the individual loans to analyze the merits of the settlement, which was originally over what the bank had told investors about the quality of the loans.

If opponents to the settlement prevail, the reporting lag issues could crop up in the discovery phase of the case.

BlackRock and Bank of America declined to comment on the case. PIMCO did not respond to a request for comment.

Estimates of latent losses in mortgage bonds vary. In a report on Monday, Fitch Ratings said that it had talked to major servicers and more such losses were possible, though it was unable to quantify the amount.

In June last year, independent credit rating agency R&R Consulting analyzed $1.4 trillion worth of residential mortgage-backed securities that were not guaranteed by a government-sponsored entity like Fannie Mae.

It found an estimated $300 billion in total expected future losses, meaning borrowers who were either in foreclosure, bankruptcy or 90 days delinquent. But of those, the firm says there are $175 billion that investors haven't learned about.

"There is such a thing as gravity, and sooner or later you have to do something with these numbers," said R&R founder Ann Rutledge.

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IMF sees Spain banks' non performing loans increasing further

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 19 Juni 2013 | 18.12

MADRID, June 19 | Wed Jun 19, 2013 6:16am EDT

MADRID, June 19 (Reuters) - Non performing loans at Spanish banks are set to increase further in the coming months as a difficult economic outlook weighs on the capacity of households and companies to repay debts, the International Monetary Fund said on Wednesday.

"NPLs typically are lagging indicators. I wouldn't be surprised if they would continue to increase in the medium term," James Daniel, the head of the IMF mission in Spain, said at a news conference following the release of the fund's annual assessment of the Spanish economy.

Spanish banks' bad loans as a percentage of total credit rose to 10.9 percent in April from 10.5 percent in March, Bank of Spain data showed on Tuesday.


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Cyprus aid programme must be implemented without delay - Germany

BERLIN, June 19 | Wed Jun 19, 2013 6:52am EDT

BERLIN, June 19 (Reuters) - Cyprus should implement its aid programme agreed with international lenders without further delay and there is no reason "at first sight" to change the deal, a spokesman for the German finance ministry told Reuters on Wednesday.

"At first sight there is no reason why the programme... should be changed," finance ministry spokesman Martin Kotthaus said in a statement to Reuters.

"Rather it must be about implementing the programme consistently and without further delay. That is mostly down to Cyprus."

In a letter to euro zone leaders, Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades indicated the Cypriot economy could not cope unless the terms of the rescue package are altered but did not explicitly ask for more money.


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EURO GOVT-Bunds rangebound as investors await Fed

Wed Jun 19, 2013 6:56am EDT

* German Bunds rise in tight ranges before Fed

* Lower-rated euro debt also little changed

* Fed seen leaving door open for data-dependent tapering

By Ana Nicolaci da Costa

LONDON, June 19 (Reuters) - German Bund futures rose in thin trade on Wednesday but kept to narrow ranges with investors reluctant to take big bets before the outcome of a two-day U.S. monetary policy meeting.

Comments by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke last month fired up speculation the U.S. central bank could soon curb its asset buying, hurting equity and bond markets.

He is expected to announce later on Wednesday the Fed will keep buying bonds at a monthly pace of $85 billion while holding their options open to scale back the programme later this year if the U.S. labour market continues to improve..

"Everyone is a bit cautious given there is not only uncertainty to what Bernanke is going to say... but also how the market will interpret any comments," Michael Leister, senior interest rate strategist, at Commerzbank said.

German Bund futures rose 34 ticks on the day to 143.55, having seen their biggest daily loss since late May in the previous session.

A 4 billion euro sale of 10-year German debt had little market impact. It attracted bids worth 1.5 times the amount on offer, slightly less than 1.6 at an auction in May.

Peter Schaffrik, head of European rates strategy at RBC Capital Markets, said there was scope for German yields to rise if the Fed only reiterated what he said on May 22.

Ten-year German bonds last yielded 1.55 percent, up around 40 basis points since the beginning of May, mirroring an above 50 bps rise in equivalent U.S. Treasury yields over the same period.

Lower-rated euro zone debt was also rangebound. Ten-year Spanish yields were flat at 4.56 percent and the Italian equivalent was 1.8 bps higher at 4.31 percent.

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Turkey has seen $1.35 bln exit stock market since late May -minister

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 18 Juni 2013 | 18.12

ISTANBUL, June 18 | Tue Jun 18, 2013 5:15am EDT

ISTANBUL, June 18 (Reuters) - Turkey has seen $1.35 billion of capital outflows from its equity markets since May 26 due partly to global market conditions and two weeks of domestic political unrest, Deputy Prime Minister Ali Babacan said on Tuesday.

Central Bank Governor Erdem Basci said on June 12 that outflows from Turkish markets since the beginning of May had amounted to $7.9-8.0 billion, mainly due to global factors.


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AIRSHOW-High returns and demand lure investors to funding planes

Tue Jun 18, 2013 5:30am EDT

* Major shift in sources of financing ongoing

* Private equity, Asian banks becoming more active

* Some insurers "in the starting blocks" - Fitch

* Move driven by high returns, strong demand outlook

By Andreas Kröner and Maria Sheahan

PARIS, June 18 (Reuters) - The only way to make a small fortune in the airline industry is to start with a big fortune, so the joke goes.

But in a low interest rate world, the returns on offer for taking a bit more risk are exactly what's driving new players such as private equity firms and Asian banks into the $100 billion market for aircraft financing.

The extra competition is helping to keep financing costs at record lows, welcome news for airlines as they spend billions of euros on new aircraft to replace ageing jets with more fuel-efficient, modern planes.

"With interest rates low, everyone is looking for investments with relatively high returns. Airlines offer that because the industry is seen as a bit more risky than others," Michael Nosbuesch, global head of aviation and rail at German state development bank KfW, told Reuters.

Sector bankers said interest rates on secured aircraft loans were now between 2.5 percent and 3.5 percent, and for unsecured loans, rates may approach 10 percent. While lower than in the past, that is still above returns on staple investments such as 10-year German government bonds, which yield about 1.5 percent.

Airlines are highly sensitive to economic swings, but the order books of planemakers like Airbus and Boeing remain filled on hopes for future demand from emerging markets.

Traditionally, the money for new planes has come from commercial banks, capital markets, aircraft leasing companies and government-backed export credit agencies (ECAs).

But with investors looking for ways to put an abundance of cash to work, and European banks slimming down their balance sheets to comply with new regulation, the aviation sector is drawing a more diverse crowd.

"There is a massive shift going on in the aircraft financing market right now," said Kostya Zolotusky, managing director of Capital Markets Development for Boeing Capital Corporation (BCC).

ONLY JUST IN KINDERGARTEN

Airlines are relying less on ECAs because they have become too expensive, and as commercial banks in Europe and the United States retrench, other providers of finance have stepped in to fill the gap.

These include Japanese banks like Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group and Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, private equity companies and more capital markets investors, and the reshuffle is still ongoing.

"We are entering a golden age of aviation finance," Denis Nayden, a managing partner at private equity firm Oak Hill Capital Partners, said.

Oak Hill is involved in the aviation sector via aircraft leasing company Avolon, which it owns jointly with Cinven, CVC Capital Partners and Singaporean sovereign wealth fund GIC. Some financial investors also offer aircraft financing loans directly, via special funds.

Fitch analyst Craig Fraser said some insurers were already active in aviation, while others were "in the starting blocks".

Leasing company Doric Lease Corp, which made a splash at the Paris Airshow on Monday by announcing plans to order 20 Airbus A380 superjumbos, has raised money from insurers and pension funds by placing some aircraft in two new companies that it listed on the London Stock Exchange .

Doric has also issued enhanced equipment trust certificates (EETCs) and closed-ended funds to finance aircraft purchases, and its chief executive, Mark Lapidus, told Reuters there was a wide range of options for financing the new A380s.

"As far as raising equity, that would come from institutional investors who are looking for the sort of profile that we have been achieving with past transactions," he said.

According to specialist aviation think-tank Ascend, aircraft leasing has defied volatility to show remarkably stable returns, helped by the fact that, in tougher times, airlines are more likely to lease planes than buy them outright.

BCC has forecast Japanese banks will account for a greater share of financing in the future, as will capital markets.

"We are in kindergarten in terms of what is possible with capital markets," said BCC's Zolotusky, whose unit arranges financing to support the sale of Boeing products and services.

"We are anticipating a lot of new products coming to market until we settle into a form that is more common to the market."

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Moody's downgrades Britain's ailing Co-op

LONDON, June 18 | Tue Jun 18, 2013 5:45am EDT

LONDON, June 18 (Reuters) - Ratings agency Moody's on Tuesday said it had downgraded the senior debt and deposit ratings of the UK's Co-operative Bank, a day after the bank announced a 1.5 billion pound ($2.36 billion) recapitalisation plan.

The ratings of the Co-op's senior unsecured debt and deposits were both lowered to Caa1 from Ba3l the bank's financial strength rating was cut to E from E+. Moody's noted the 'material risk' that the bank would impose burden sharing on bondholders. Junior bondholders are already being asked to accept losses as part of the recapitalisation.


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