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Euro zone Oct inflation at 4-yr lows, Sept jobless at record high

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 31 Oktober 2013 | 18.12

Thu Oct 31, 2013 6:19am EDT

  * Euro zone joblessness at 12.2 pct for two months in a row      * 60,000 Europeans lose jobs in September compared with Aug      * Inflation hits 4-yr lows, drops below 1 percent        BRUSSELS, Oct 31 (Reuters) - Euro zone inflation  unexpectedly dropped to a nearly four-year lows in October and  unemployment stood at a record high in September, increasing  pressure on the European Central Bank to further cut interest  rates.      Inflation in euro zone fell to 0.7 percent year-on-year in  October as energy costs fell 1.7 percent on the year, the lowest  reading since November 2009.       The inflation rate dropped below 1 percent for the first  time since February 2010, a flash estimate from the European  Union's Statistics Office showed.      Analysts expected the inflation rate to be flat at 1.1  percent in October.      The very low inflation rate increases the chances that the  ECB might consider another interest rate cut and the euro fell  on the news to 1.3665 against the dollar from 1.3690.      Costs of food, alcohol and tobacco products rose by 1.9  percent. Core inflation, which excludes prices of energy, food  alcohol and tobacco slowed to 1.1 percent year-on-year from 1.4  percent in September.      The jobless rate in 17 countries sharing the euro was flat  at 12.2 percent against an upwardly revised August figure, but  60,000 more Europeans were unemployed on the month, Eurostat  said.      The global financial crisis, followed by European sovereign  debt crisis wiped out hundreds of thousands of jobs over the  past four years and no swift turnaround is in sight as job  problems in Europe are of structural and long-term nature.      Young Europeans, aged 15-24, are the ones most affected with  youth jobless rates in European Unions countries like Spain,  Greece and Croatia above 50 percent. They are below 10 percent  only in Germany and Austria.      The unemployment rate in Germany inched down to 5.2 percent  after being flat for three consecutive months, while the second  largest economy France and third largest Italy registered a  modest increase in their jobless rates in September.      European leaders made fight against high unemployment one of  key priorities.      The European Central Bank (ECB) considers the unemployment  rate unacceptably high as Europe risks losing a generation of  young workers it fails to address the problem and revive growth.  
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IMF team visits Egypt for first time since June

CAIRO | Thu Oct 31, 2013 6:29am EDT

CAIRO Oct 31 (Reuters) - An International Monetary Fund delegation is visiting Egypt this week, the Finance Ministry said on Thursday, only days after the Central Bank governor Hisham Ramez was quoted as saying a senior IMF official had behaved in a "totally unacceptable way".

He had been criticising the manner in which Egypt was invited to the institution's annual meeting in Washington.

The Finance Ministry said in a statement that it had invited the IMF delegation to discuss technical aid for a VAT system.

"(The minister) praised the swift response from the fund's management by sending a high-level technical team as soon as the government requested it which points to a real desire from the fund to help Egypt through the current phase," it said.

It was the first IMF visit to Egypt since June when a team came to discuss a long delayed $4.8 billion IMF loan to Cairo.

The Finance Ministry statement did not mention the stalled talks on the loan, widely seen as necessary to convince foreign donors and investors that the economy, hit by political turmoil since Hosni Mubarak's overthrow in 2011, is on the right track.

Months of talks between President Mohamed Mursi's government and the IMF failed to produce an agreement over the loan before the army toppled the freely elected Islamist leader on July 3.

Since then the army-backed interim government, promised more than $12 billion in aid from Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates to avert a balance of payments crisis and overcome fuel shortages, has said it is in no hurry for the IMF loan.

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UPDATE 1-Britain mulls tax on foreign property investors - Sky

Thu Oct 31, 2013 6:33am EDT

LONDON Oct 31 (Reuters) - Britain is considering imposing capital gains tax on foreign property investors in an effort to tackle soaring house prices in the capital, Sky News reported on Thursday citing unidentified sources.

It said the Treasury had provisionally costed the measure and was awaiting a final decision from finance minister George Osborne ahead of his budget update, known as the "Autumn Statement", on Dec. 4.

The Treasury said Sky's story was "pre-Autumn Statement speculation" and declined to comment further.

House prices in London are rising at an annual pace of more than 10 percent, according to property website Rightmove, buoyed by strong demand from overseas buyers.

Britons have to pay capital gains tax - typically at 28 percent - if they make a profit when reselling any property that is not considered their primary residence. But foreign property investors have hitherto been exempt, unlike in many other European countries.

The plight of first-time homebuyers has moved up the political agenda in Britain where property prices nationally are rising at around 6 percent - more than 8 times faster than average incomes.


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Spain's public deficit to August reaches 4.8 pct of GDP

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 29 Oktober 2013 | 18.12

MADRID | Tue Oct 29, 2013 5:31am EDT

MADRID Oct 29 (Reuters) - Spain's public deficit to August, not counting city governments, came to 4.8 percent of economic output, the Treasury Ministry said on Tuesday, closing in on the year-end target of 6.5 percent.

The deficit to July was a revised 4.52 percent of gross domestic product.


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RPT-Correct: Fitch Rates FdT del Deficit del Sistema Electrico FTA's Series Tap Final 'BBB'

Tue Oct 29, 2013 6:13am EDT

(Repeat for additional subscribers)

Oct 29 (Reuters) - (The following statement was released by the rating agency)

This announcement corrects the version published on 18 October 2013, which incorrectly stated the total issued amount of the FADE programme.

Fitch Ratings has assigned Fondo de Titulizacion del Deficit del Sistema Electrico FTA's (FADE) Series tap issuance final 'BBB' ratings with Negative Outlook as follows:

EUR400m Series 4 Tap 6 (ISIN ES0378641031): 'BBB'; Negative Outlook

EUR250m Series 16 Tap 2 (ISIN ES0378641155): 'BBB'; Negative Outlook

EUR300m Series 17 Tap 1 (ISIN ES0378641163): 'BBB'; Negative Outlook

FADE bonds are backed by the Spanish electricity tariff deficits (TDs) it purchases, which are repaid by the electricity system as an annuity over 15 years in monthly instalments. TDs are reflected within the access tolls collected by the Comision Nacional de los Mercados y la Competencia (CNMC), the Spanish energy regulator (formerly CNE, Comision Nacional de Energia) who in turn pays into FADE's bank account held at Instituto de Credito Oficial (ICO, BBB/Negative/F2).

KEY RATING DRIVERS

All FADE bonds' ratings are credit-linked to the Kingdom of Spain's Long-term Issuer Default Rating (IDR) because of the guarantee provided by the Spanish government (BBB/Negative).

We consider FADE bonds to be exposed to excessive counterparty risk, as FADE's monies are accumulated at the issuer's bank account until the bullet maturity date of each bond. Moreover, the FADE programme is exposed to refinancing risk as the proceeds of some its issuance have been allocated to refinance other outstanding series. However, if there are refinancing difficulties or if ICO defaults the Spanish government guarantee would meet the payments due on the bonds.

All FADE series are exposed to the administrative capabilities of Titulizacion de Activos SGFT SA (TdA, the management company) as issuer trustee. TdA is responsible for formalising draw-downs under the guarantee if necessary. Any operational delay in making such drawings could cause a delay in payments to FADE bonds. Fitch is comfortable with this operational risk based on the broad experience of TdA. The government body Comision Interministerial created to oversee the whole process has the power to replace the management company if it fails to perform its duties. The transaction documents detail the procedures and the roles of both the management company and the Spanish treasury.

RATING SENSITIVITIES

Any change to the sovereign IDR is likely to lead to a change in the bonds' ratings. Changes to the terms of the full and unconditional guarantee from the Spanish government could also impact the bonds' ratings.

The Series 4 Tap 6, Series 16 Tap 2 and Series 17 Tap 1 issuance have no rating impact on the outstanding series 1, 2, 3, 4, 10, 13, 14, 16, 17 and 18 FADE bonds rated by Fitch as the terms of the guarantee remain unaltered.

The FADE programme can issue bonds up to the current programme limit of EUR26bn, subject to certain conditions in the programme documents. Each series can have different terms, such as different maturity dates and interest rates. However, it is a condition under the programme documentation that all the bonds issued are fully guaranteed by the Spanish government.

While the total issued amount of FADE bonds since its creation is EUR23.72bn, the outstanding amount of FADE bonds is EUR21.65bn, including the Series 4 Tap 6, Series 16 Tap 2 and Series 17 Tap 1 issuance, which took place on 18 October 2013.

Series 4, 16 and 17 maturity dates are September 2018, March 2018 and September 2016 and pay an annual fixed interest rate of 5.6%, 3.875% and 2.875%, respectively.

The agency understands that the Series 4 Tap 6, Series 16 Tap 2 and Series 17 Tap 1 issuance proceeds have been used for the acquisition of new TDs.

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GLOBAL MARKETS-Share rally pauses, dollar firms ahead of Fed

Tue Oct 29, 2013 6:21am EDT

* Fed expected to maintain stimulus programme on Wednesday

* World share rally stalls, European investors refocus on earnings

* Dollar index edges up as sellers retreat

* Gold stalls near 5-week high, oil slips

By Richard Hubbard

LONDON, Oct 29 (Reuters) - A rally in world equities and gold paused on Tuesday while the dollar inched up as investors positioned for widely expected confirmation from the U.S. Federal Reserve that it is sticking with its monetary stimulus.

Although markets are wary of potential surprises when the Fed presents the outcome of a two-day meeting on Wednesday, a rally in riskier assets over the past week and a dollar selloff is seen as having largely factored in an unchanged policy.

The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 index hit a 5-year high last week as investors welcomed the expected delay in Fed tapering. The index edged down 0.1 percent on Tuesday as attention turned to what has so far been a mixed earnings season in Europe.

Markets expect the Fed to extend its $85 billion monthly bond buying scheme into next year while it assesses the impact of this month's government shutdown on growth.

"People are more sanguine about the event risk from the Fed, and I think quite a few investors are comfortable with the fact that a Fed move could be delayed until March," Dennis Jose, European equity strategist at Barclays Capital, said.

The European share market dip followed a softer session in Asia where MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan lost about 0.3 percent and Japan's Nikkei stock average gave up 0.5 percent.

MSCI's world equity index, tracking shares in 45 countries, ended four days of gains to trade virtually.

EARNINGS CONCERNS

Among third quarter earnings reported so far in Europe, 53 percent of companies on the pan-European STOXX 600 index have either beaten or met market forecasts while 47 percent have missed them.

That pattern continued on Tuesday, with German industrial gases maker Linde and French tyre firm Michelin cutting earnings targets.

Deutsche Bank posted a 98 percent drop in quarterly pretax profit.

"Across the board, results have been a mixed bag. It doesn't look too great," said Terry Torrison, managing director at Monaco-based McLaren Securities.

NARROW RANGES

Currency, fixed income and commodity markets mostly moved in narrow ranges ahead of the Fed announcement.

The dollar had gained slightly against a basket of currencies as bets on a Fed tapering delay petered out and many players withdrew from the market.

"There is a lightening of positions before the Fed, but volumes are low - at least 20-30 percent lower than usual," said Alvin Tan, currency strategist at Societe Generale.

The euro, which has benefited from the dollar's recent decline and hit a two-year high of $1.3833 on Friday, was flat on the day at $1.3780.

Dealers said investors were wary of pushing the single currency any higher given concerns that the European Central Bank may express unease at the currency's strength.

German Bund futures were flat at 141.15, staying near a two-month high of 141.23 hit on Monday. Cash 10-year German yields were unchanged at 1.75 percent.

Gold, which has risen 8 percent since mid-October to close to a five-week high, shed about 0.5 percent to trade at around $1,345.50 as its rally ran out steam.

"We think the (Fed) expectations have already been priced in and gold is due for a correction," said Songwut Apirakkhit, managing director of Globlex Holding Management.

Brent crude edged down toward $109 a barrel, though it held onto most of the previous day's gains made when reports of a sharp drop in Libyan oil exports rekindled worries over supply.

Libya's crude oil exports have dropped to less than 10 percent of capacity due to the worst disruption in its oil industry since the 2011 civil war.

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Kuwait bourse to launch derivatives trading next year

Written By Unknown on Senin, 28 Oktober 2013 | 18.12

KUWAIT | Mon Oct 28, 2013 5:41am EDT

KUWAIT Oct 28 (Reuters) - Kuwait's stock exchange plans to launch derivatives trading in the first half of 2014 using its new Nasdaq-backed trading system, a senior stock exchange official told Reuters.

Kuwait's bourse, one of the oldest in the Gulf region, launched the "X-stream" trading system in May last year at a cost of around 18.3 million Kuwaiti dinars ($65 million), part of its biggest technical overhaul in nearly two decades.

The main aims of the Nasdaq OMX Group Inc. system were to launch the trading of financial instruments and to clamp down on dubious market activity.

The exchange hopes to launch derivatives trading in the first six months of next year "if things proceed as expected," Stock Exchange Projects Manager Issam Alusaimi told Reuters in an interview.

"By the end of this year we will have finished everything related to I.T. infrastructure...the next step is to take advantage of the technology."

A Kuwaiti investment firm has already expressed interest in trading options, Alusaimi said, saying that the company's request had now been sent to the financial market watchdog. He declined to give the name of the firm.

The system will also be ready for trading futures, exchange-traded funds and Islamic bonds if similar requests are made, he said. Local and international investors will be able to use the system, he added.

The stock market suffered heavy losses during the global financial crisis but has seen a surge in activity since the start of this year, thanks to renewed optimism about government infrastructure plans that may benefit Kuwait companies.

Kuwait is home to some of the largest investment groups in the Gulf region such as Kuwait Projects Co (KIPCO) and Global Investment House.

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GLOBAL MARKETS-Views on Fed lift world shares, push down dollar

Mon Oct 28, 2013 6:00am EDT

* World stocks up on talk of Fed taper delay

* European shares eye five-year peaks

* Dollar index weakens, euro near two-year high

* Gold, copper firm, Brent oil rebounds

By Richard Hubbard

LONDON, Oct 28 (Reuters) - European shares rose towards five-year highs on Monday and the dollar was under pressure on a growing conviction that the U.S. Federal Reserve will keep monetary policy loose this week, and for some time to come.

The Fed's rate-setting committee ends a two-day gathering on Wednesday. The chances it will trim its $85 billion monthly bond buying are seen as miniscule given the uncertainty created by this month's government shutdown in Washington.

A run of upbeat news on corporate earnings on both sides of the Atlantic was also supporting the positive sentiment in global equity markets, where the widely tracked S&P 500 index set another record high at the end of last week.

"Monday has started off with a follow-through from Friday with a small 'risk on' bias," said Greg Matwejev, director of FX Hedge Fund Sales and Trading at Newedge.

Most market participants expect the U.S. central bank to delay tapering its stimulus until at least March next year and are looking for the Fed to confirm this at end of its meeting.

"It's the first Fed meeting since the government shutdown in the U.S. so any clues on when they may potentially taper will be welcomed by the market," Matwejev said.

In European trading, the broad FTSEurofirst 300 index was up 0.2 percent, building on a rise of 0.6 percent last week when it registered a third straight week of gains. It climbed to a five-year high last week.

Earlier in Asia Japan's Nikkei climbed 2.2 percent, clawing back most of Friday's 2.7 percent drop, while Australian shares put on 1.0 percent to end at a five-year high.

China's main share index, the CSI300, bucked the trend to post a fifth straight loss as concerns about the government's efforts to cool inflation and a runaway property market with higher short-term rates weighed on sentiment.

However, the MSCI world equity index, which share moves in 45 countries, was up 0.3 percent for a fourth day of gains as it heads toward highs last seen in 2008.

DOLLAR SAGS

In the currency markets the dollar remained under pressure as expectations of a shift in Fed policy get pushed back further into 2014, when the bank is due to be led by a new governor, Janet Yellen, who is seen as unlikely to seek any early tightening.

Against a basket of major currencies, the greenback was trading near its lowest levels of the year at 79.18, with the euro edging higher to reach $1.3810.

The longer the Fed keeps its policy loose, the more U.S. yields stay low, which makes the dollar less attractive.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury bond did edge higher on Monday, though at 2.52 percent it is well below a peak of 3.0 percent recorded on Sept. 5, when markets still believed the Fed was about to change its policy.

"The FOMC should be a non-event... the Washington debates cloud the growth outlook, so forget about tapering," analysts at JPMorgan wrote in a client note, adding the April 2014 meeting looked like the soonest any tapering would be announced.

German government bonds were largely unchanged though did see some slight selling pressure as the region's equity market tracked higher.

The German Bund futures contract was 6 ticks lower at 141.00, not far from the two-month peak of 141.22 hit last week , while 10-year cash bond yields were 0.7 basis point up at 1.76 percent.

Among lower-rated euro zone bonds, Italian 10-year yields were 1.1 basis points up at 4.23 percent ahead of sales in Rome this week of 9 billon euros of debt. Equivalent Spanish yields were up by a similar amount at 4.16 percent.

The likelihood that Fed cash will keep flowing into the financial system for longer than many had anticipated also supported gold and other metal markets, but after strong gains last week most markets were wary of pushing higher.

Spot gold was unchanged at $1,351.50 an ounce, still not far off a five-week high of $1,355.20 set on Friday. Copper was 0.4 percent up at $7,220 a tonne.

In the oil market, the positive sentiment flowing from other risk assets encouraged a slight rebound on Monday, with the global oil benchmark rising 91 cents to $107.86 a barrel.

Fears of a slowdown in China's economy had led to sharp falls last week, with Brent crude dropping 2.7 percent for its biggest weekly loss in a month.

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TABLE-Economists trim Brazil 2014 GDP, inflation view

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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Czech left leads vote count, new party second - partial results

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 27 Oktober 2013 | 18.12

PRAGUE | Sat Oct 26, 2013 10:28am EDT

PRAGUE Oct 26 (Reuters) - The centre-left Social Democrats held onto their lead in the Czech republic's parliamentary election, partial results showed on Saturday.

The party led with 21.3 percent of the vote after 80 percent of polling stations had reported. The new centrist protest movement ANO had 18.7 percent and the Communists were third with 15.7 percent.


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Italy's right could split after Berlusconi move -lawmakers

ROME | Sat Oct 26, 2013 1:23pm EDT

ROME Oct 26 (Reuters) - Italy's political centre-right could split, lawmakers said on Saturday, after Silvio Berlusconi resurrected his old Forza Italia party and suspended the People of Freedom (PDL), part of the wobbly left-right coalition government.

Several parliamentarians allied to the former prime minister were critical of Berlusconi's move, and five senior PDL members boycotted Friday's meeting where the decision was made.

Forza Italia (Go Italy!) was Berlusconi's party when he first entered politics in 1994, and although he said it would support the government of Prime Minister Enrico Letta, just as the PDL has done, it has caused a rift among his followers.

"My absence at the president's office was motivated by my total opposition to the proposal to dissolve the PDL... to return to a Forza Italia which I have never been a part of," Senator Carlo Giovanardi said on his website.

Giovanardi added that the centre-right could split into two allied groups: Forza Italia led by Berlusconi and a PDL led by its current secretary Angelino Alfano.

Alfano led an internal party revolt earlier this month that thwarted Berlusconi's attempt to bring down Letta's coalition.

Prominent PDL official Fabrizio Cicchitto told La Repubblica newspaper he saw the centre right becoming a "two-pole system", and said the decision to wind down the PDL was not valid until ratified by a vote at a Dec. 8 party conference.

In emailed statements, some lawmakers continued to sign off as members of "People of Freedom" while others switched to use "Forza Italia".

Despite signs of strain, many party officials played down divisions and tried to present a common front.

"The return of Forza Italia will signal a new season of success for the centre right, Berlusconi will know how to find unity!" former PDL Education Minister Mariastella Gelmini said on Twitter.

Those allied with Alfano are known as "doves", seen as moderate and more reluctant to undermine the government.

Berlusconi loyalists are described as more hardline "hawks", who frequently threaten to bring down the government unless it cuts taxes.

Estimates by Italian newspapers said Alfano's faction would be big enough to keep Letta from losing his government majority should Berlusconi's group withdraw its support.

But the turmoil could further hamper efforts by the coalition to force through reforms and spur growth in the euro zone's largest economy, stuck in its longest post-war recession.

Berlusconi, 77, who has dominated the political right for two decades, faces expulsion from parliament following a tax fraud conviction.

The media tycoon is also embroiled in other cases on charges including corruption and paying for sex with a minor. He maintains the trials against him are attempts by biased judges to destroy a political opponent.

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Ecuador sees GDP growth of 4.5 pct to 5.1 pct next year

By Alexandra Valencia

QUITO | Sat Oct 26, 2013 2:17pm EDT

QUITO Oct 26 (Reuters) - Ecuador's economic growth will accelerate to as high as 5.1 percent next year, despite less revenue from the oil industry, and inflation is expected to slow to 3.2 percent, President Rafael Correa said on Saturday.

Correa's government expects to end this year with growth of between 3.7 percent and 4.0 percent, and on his weekly TV show the president said the 2014 forecast was for between 4.5 percent and 5.1 percent.

"Hopefully we'll manage to reach the higher end, 5.0 percent GDP growth," said the South American country's socialist leader, who is also a U.S.-trained economist.

Ecuador's annual inflation rate eased to 1.71 percent in September, and the government says it is confident of beating its overall target of 3.93 percent for this year.

Correa said the forecasts for economic performance in 2014 would have been stronger, were it not for ongoing maintenance work that has stopped the OPEC nation's biggest oil refinery.

A $750 million overhaul of the 110,000 barrel per day (bpd) Esmeraldas refinery began in September and is expected to take several months.

"Oil income fell again because of the stoppage of the refinery which we're modernizing," Correa said. "They had to stop it for several months, and that cut domestic fuel sales."

The president said next year's budget deficit was expected to be around $5.275 billion, higher than the $5.050 billion deficit forecast for this year, and that it was fully funded.

Those finances, he added, were destined for infrastructure, education and health projects. He did not elaborate on next year's spending plans, nor did he say how the deficit would be funded.

The government has said it plans to issue sovereign debt - perhaps this year or in the first quarter of 2014 - marking a return to international debt markets five years after defaulting on $3.2 billion of sovereign bonds despite being able to pay.

Correa said on Saturday that Ecuador's current level of indebtedness as a proportion of gross domestic product - 24 percent - was one of the lowest rates in the country's history.

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Obama says shutdown shows contrast of parties' visions

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 26 Oktober 2013 | 18.12

By Mark Felsenthal

NEW YORK | Fri Oct 25, 2013 9:11pm EDT

NEW YORK Oct 25 (Reuters) - With an eye to 2014 elections, President Barack Obama held up the government shutdown this month as an emblem of fundamental differences between Democrats and Republicans on Friday in an appeal to wealthy donors.

"The shutdown was about more than just healthcare, it was about, sort of, a contrast in visions about what our obligations are to our fellow citizens," the president said at a fundraiser at the home of Karen Mehiel on New York's posh Upper East Side.

Republicans made defunding the president's signature healthcare program a condition for continuing to fund government operations, leading to a partial shutdown for 16 days and bringing the country to the brink of debt default.

The president must work with Republicans who control the House of Representatives if he hopes to pass budget, immigration reform or farm legislation this year, as he has said he hopes to do.

But his comments point to an effort to take advantage of the shutdown, which hurt Republicans' in public opinion polls, to help Democrats make inroads and perhaps reverse the Republicans' majority in the House.

Serious snags marring the rollout this month of the healthcare program could hurt Democrats, but Obama made no mention of those difficulties in brief public remarks at other fundraisers.

Instead, the president focused on his hopes to boost spending on things like education and repairing roads and bridges, which he said were part of the vision for the country that Democrats share.

"We believe that government has a role to play," he said. "Part of the debate and battle over the last several years has been what role do we have as a country collectively to create the platform and the tools for people to succeed."

The president has embarked on a series of fundraising events that began this week in Washington.

In New York, he raised money for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee at a reception followed by a dinner. It was the fourth fundraiser he has held for the DCCC in the 2014 cycle.

At another event across town in Manhattan, Obama appeared at an event attended by 20 people who paid up to $32,400, a Democratic National Committee official said.

Obama is due to travel to Boston for fundraisers next week.

In November, he is expected to raise funds in Miami, Philadelphia, Seattle, San Francisco and Los Angeles.

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U.S. judge narrows Dubai bank claims versus ING over investment losses

By Joseph Ax

NEW YORK | Fri Oct 25, 2013 7:55pm EDT

NEW YORK Oct 25 (Reuters) - A U.S. judge on Friday narrowed Mashreq PSC's claims in a lawsuit that alleged ING Groep NV lost more than $40 million of the Dubai bank's money by investing it in "toxic" securities.

U.S. District Judge Lorna Schofield denied ING's bid to dismiss the complaint in its entirety, ruling that Mashreq's breach of contract claim should stand.

However, she dismissed the bank's breach of fiduciary duty and fraud claims as duplicative of the contract claim. As a result, she said, Mashreq cannot pursue punitive damages in addition to the $43 million it claims it is owed, as New York law does not generally allow for punitive damages on a breach of contract claim.

"Mashreq's claim for breach of contract is plausible based on the facts alleged, and there is nothing in the plain language of the agreement or the revised guidelines that negates this plausibility as a matter of law," Schofield wrote.

A spokesman and a lawyer for Netherlands-based ING did not immediately respond to a call for comment on Friday evening.

Mashreq's attorney, Azra Mehdi, said the bank was pleased that its "primary claim" was preserved.

"We're very happy that Judge Schofield felt that our claims were timely and meritorious," she said. "We're looking forward to continuing on."

The lawsuit alleged that ING put more than two-thirds of a $108 million investment into "toxic, illiquid structured securities" in 2007 and hid the move in part by mixing the loans in reports with more reputable securities.

Mashreq said it had lost at least $60 million at one point before recouping some of it through its own efforts.

The case is MashreqBank PSC v. ING Group NV, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, No. 13-2318.

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Argentina urges U.S. court to not lift stay in bondholder case

By Nate Raymond

NEW YORK | Sat Oct 26, 2013 1:14am EDT

NEW YORK Oct 26 (Reuters) - Argentina urged a U.S. appeals court on Friday not to lift a hold on an order requiring it to pay $1.33 billion to bondholders who are suing for repayment following the country's historic default in 2002.

In a late-night filing, the South American country asked the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New York to leave a stay in place pending a U.S. Supreme Court review of a court ruling in favour of holdout bondholders.

"Vacating the stay now will expose the Republic and innocent third parties to a potential court-ordered default on over $24 billion," Argentina's lawyers wrote.

The case flows out of Argentina's $100 billion sovereign debt default in 2002.

Two restructurings in 2005 and 2010 saw creditors holding around 93 percent of Argentina's debt agree to swap their bonds in deals giving them 25 cents to 29 cents on the dollar.

But bondholders who did not participate in the swaps, led by hedge funds Elliott Management Corp's NML Capital Ltd and Aurelius Capital Management LP, went to court in New York to seek full payment.

Argentine President Cristina Fernandez has pledged to keep paying the restructured debt but has vowed to never to pay more than other creditors received. That has created investor concern that the country could enter into a new technical default in order to avoid paying the holdouts.

The case was filed in New York under the terms of the bond documents.

In 2012, U.S. District Judge Thomas Griesa found that Argentina violated a clause in the bond documents requiring the equal treatment of creditors.

The 2nd Circuit largely upheld that decision in October 2012, in a ruling the U.S. Supreme Court this October declined to review. But the appeals court sent the case back to Griesa to determine how an injunction he had issued would work.

In November 2012, Griesa ordered Argentina to pay $1.33 billion into a court-controlled escrow account in favor of the holdout bondholders. The 2nd Circuit affirmed that holding in August.

In September, Argentina asked for a so-called en banc rehearing before the full 2nd Circuit, setting the stage for what is expected to be another appeal to the Supreme Court.

As part of its August decision, the 2nd Circuit stayed its impact pending review of the Supreme Court, giving Argentina and nervous investors some relief.

Following the August ruling, Fernandez proposed a voluntary swap of foreign debt in exchange for bonds governed by local law. But Griesa on Oct. 3 issued an order declaring the proposal would violate an injunction he issued previously in the case.

After Griesa's order, NML and Aurelius asked the 2nd Circuit to lift its stay, saying the "equitable calculus has fundamentally changed."

But Argentina in its brief on Friday said the holdouts "are wrong to claim that there is a 'plan to evade,' or that the Republic has been deficient in responding to disclosure requirements of the district court concerning any alleged plans."

Argentina's lawyers added that the holdout's efforts were not only directed at avoiding Supreme Court review but, "to be blunt, their effort to profit from side bets on market uncertainty and a risk of default."

Representatives for NML and Aurelius did not immediately respond to requests for comment after normal business hours.

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

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Spanish, Italian yields rise on euro zone recovery worries

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 25 Oktober 2013 | 18.12

Fri Oct 25, 2013 6:35am EDT

* Below-forecast Ifo raises concerns over euro zone recovery

* Spanish, Italian yields rise; Bunds near 2-month highs

* Speculation of more central bank easing increases

By Marius Zaharia

LONDON, Oct 25 (Reuters) - Spanish and Italian yields rose on Friday, drifting further away from this week's five-month lows, after Germany's below-forecast Ifo business sentiment survey raised concern about the euro zone economic recovery.

The business morale index unexpectedly fell for the first time in six months in October.

The report follows weaker-than-expected manufacturing and services sector surveys in the euro zone and the United States on Thursday.

Spanish 10-year yields rose 4 basis points on the day to 4.18 percent, having hit a five-month low of 4.107 percent early on Thursday, according to Reuters data. Equivalent Italian yields were up 6 bps at 4.20 percent, off Wednesday's five-month lows of 4.085 percent.

"If Germany's economy is weaker it is not good news for the rest of them (in the euro zone)," said Merrion Stockbrokers chief economist Alan McQuaid, who expected, however, the bloc's recovery to continue at a modest pace.

German Bund futures rose 10 ticks to 140.97, keeping Thursday's two-month high of 141.22 in sight.

The reaction to the weaker recent data was muted as investors also weighed the possibility of central bank action.

The Federal Reserve is expected to delay trimming its bond-buying stimulus programme until early next year to lessen the economic impact of a two-week government shutdown.

Some market participants also expect the European Central Bank to introduce a new round of cheap long-term loans to keep a lid on money market rates, which could rise further as liquidity in the banking system shrinks.

The strength of the euro, trading around two-year highs versus the dollar is an additional worry for the currency bloc, which needs to boost exports to foster the growth that could bring debt levels down to more sustainable levels.

Ultra-easy monetary policies are likely to support both top- and lower-rated assets in the near term, some analysts said.

"Similar to equity markets, what we have is different types of assets driven by liquidity," said Bayerische Landesbank chief strategist Marius Daheim. He did not expect the ECB to ease policy further, but he has pushed back his forecast for when the Fed would start trimming its stimulus to March from December.

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Obama to chide Republicans on spending cuts at school event

By Mark Felsenthal

WASHINGTON | Fri Oct 25, 2013 5:59am EDT

WASHINGTON Oct 25 (Reuters) - Democratic President Barack Obama will take a swipe at austerity-minded Republicans on Friday ahead of a looming budget rematch, urging against the backdrop of a model school that spending, rather than belt-tightening, is key to economic growth.

Lawmakers are girding for a conference starting Wednesday aimed at reconciling vastly different spending plans put forward by the Democratic-controlled Senate and the Republican-led House of Representatives.

Obama will use a speech at the Pathways in Technology Early College High School in Brooklyn, New York, whose technology curriculum he has praised as a beacon for the future, to contrast his budget priorities with Republicans.

"The president believes that the upcoming budget conference is an opportunity for Washington to focus on building a strong, secure middle class," a White House official said. "The president will continue to insist that Congress invest in our economy and create good jobs with good wages because we can't just cut our way to prosperity."

The president's renewed focus on the budget comes just over a week after the end of a stalemate that resulted in a 16-day government shutdown and a near U.S. debt default. Since then, Obama has been back on the defensive over the seriously flawed online gateway to health insurance that is central to his signature health care law, often called Obamacare.

White House aides say the president is looking ahead to the next round of the budget debate and wants to use the speech to contrast his goals of boosting government spending on things like schools and infrastructure with those of Republicans, who are focused on reining in the nation's debt and deficit and shrinking the role of government.

Obama is due to remind the audience that the deficit is projected to shrink this year to about half of what it was in 2009. He will say he is open to further deficit reduction, and to trimming benefits to be paid out over the long term under Social Security and Medicare, but only if they are accompanied by ending tax breaks and increasing revenues to the government.

Those lofty goals contrast with the more modest expectations expressed by some lawmakers taking part in the budget negotiations.

House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan said on Thursday a new round of budget negotiations starting next week should focus more narrowly on replacing automatic spending cuts rather than an elusive "grand bargain." Ryan will lead Republicans on the 29-member panel that is trying to reach a deal before Dec. 15.

Both parties want to minimize the impact of the across-the-board sequester cuts that went into effect in March and avoid a further $109 billion round of reductions due to bite on Jan. 15.

Obama is due to speak at the high school and then take part in two fundraisers, one for the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, which aims to get Democrats elected in the House, and the other for the Democratic National Committee, which coordinates Democratic party activity.

The Pathways in Technology high school earned praise from the president during his State of the Union speech earlier this year for a six-year program that allows students to earn a community college degree as well as a chance to work with the partner company of the school, IBM.

The school, which also collaborates with the City University of New York, allows students to get an associate of arts degree in computers or engineering.

Obama praised the school as a model for efforts to compete with the education systems of countries like Germany, which he said was preparing students for technical jobs immediately after high school.

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UPDATE 1-Barclays found liable in $300 mln Black Diamond dispute

Fri Oct 25, 2013 6:40am EDT

By Joseph Ax

NEW YORK/LONDON Oct 25 (Reuters) - British bank Barclays Plc breached a derivative agreement with a Black Diamond Capital Management unit and must return an estimated $297 million in collateral to the hedge fund, a divided New York state appeals court ruled on Thursday.

Barclays said on Friday it disagreed with the decision and was considering an appeal against it.

The Connecticut-based fund's BDC Finance LLC filed a lawsuit against Barclays in 2008, claiming it had defaulted on a $40 million collateral call made at the height of the financial crisis.

Barclays disagreed with that amount, asserting it owed only $5 million, which it remitted to Black Diamond two days after the call was made. Black Diamond then declared Barclays in default.

Last year, Justice Eileen Bransten in state Supreme Court in Manhattan dismissed Black Diamond's breach of contract claim. However, the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court, a midlevel appeals court, reversed that ruling in a 3-2 decision on Thursday.

The court found Barclays breached the contract both by not making the $5 million payment on time and by failing to follow the contract's procedures for disputing a collateral call, which required the bank to pay the full $40 million amount before disputing it.

"The evidence in the record undeniably shows that Barclays failed to pay the undisputed amount by the deadline, and establishes as a matter of law that Barclays did not comply with the (contract's) dispute resolution process," the three-judge majority wrote.

With Barclays in default, Black Diamond had the right to terminate the agreement and demand a return of its entire collateral, which the fund has estimated at $297 million, the court said.

Two judges, however, dissented from the court's opinion, arguing that there were questions of fact over whether Barclays disputed the $40 million call in a timely fashion.

"We are disappointed with and disagree with the court's decision. We are evaluating our options with respect to an appeal," a spokesman for Barclays said.

An appeal would be to New York's highest court, the Court of Appeals.

Craig Newman, a lawyer for Black Diamond, declined to comment.

Barclays Chief Executive Antony Jenkins is trying to repair the bank's image after a string of scandals, but is being dogged by legacy issues as his bank remains embroiled in several legal disputes or regulatory investigations.

It was the first bank to be fined for attempted manipulation of Libor interest rates, and Britain's financial regulator and fraud office are investigating the circumstances around a controversial fundraising from Qatari investors in 2008.

The bank is also fighting a $453 million fine imposed by U.S. energy regulator FERC in July, relating to power trading in the western United States from 2006 to 2008.

The Black Diamond deal was signed in 2005. The total return swap transferred the benefits and risks of an investment in a Barclays-held portfolio of corporate debt instruments to Black Diamond in exchange for financing fees paid to the bank.

The contract allowed each side to make collateral demands on the other based on changes to the value of the underlying loans.

The case is BDC Finance v. Barclays Bank, New York State Supreme Court, Appellate Division, First Department, No. 9906.

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UPDATE 2-Rejuvenated Daimler beats expectations

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 24 Oktober 2013 | 18.12

Thu Oct 24, 2013 5:59am EDT

* Daimler Q3 adj EBIT 2.23 bln eur vs Rtrs poll 2.12 bln

* Mercedes Q3 EBIT margin 7.3 pct vs Rtrs poll 6.9 pct

* 2013 adj EBIT to fall 8 pct vs last year's 8.13 bln eur

* Shares up 3.2 pct

By Christiaan Hetzner

FRANKFURT, Oct 24 (Reuters) - German automotive group Daimler lifted its fourth-quarter profit forecast after a rejuvenated model range and cost-cuts in the core luxury car business helped it to post better than expected results on Thursday.

While earnings growth is being driven primarily by the new Mercedes-branded cars that lift sales volumes and reduce harmful price discounts, the company is also improving profitability through the elimination of waste.

Finance chief Bodo Uebber said that the two-year programme aimed at cutting a combined 3.1 billion euros ($4.3 billion) in costs at its luxury cars and commercial trucks divisions is on schedule and would provide it with a good start for next year.

"We anticipate further earnings improvements in the future," the Daimler CFO said, adding that it has achieved 70 percent of the 600 million euros in savings planned for Mercedes this year, up from 30 percent at the end of the second quarter.

Shares in Daimler rose 3.2 percent in early trading, putting them among the top performers on Germany's blue chip DAX index and beating its European auto peers.

"Reported earnings exceeded market expectations in every division," wrote LBBW analyst Frank Biller in a research note.

Third-quarter group earnings before interest and tax (EBIT) and excluding one-off items rose 15 percent to 2.23 billion euros ($3.07 billion), beating an estimated 2.12 billion in a Reuters poll of 12 banks and brokerages.

IMPROVING MARGIN

Daimler's Mercedes luxury car business expanded its EBIT margin, a benchmark for comparing profitability with rival BMW , by nearly a full percentage point to 7.3 percent, surpassing expectations of 6.9 percent.

Worried that the recent improvement is solely down to Daimler's product cycle, some analysts argued that it could struggle to close the gap on BMW and Volkswagen's Audi. BMW and Audi had margins of 9.8 percent and 10.5 percent respectively in the first half, against 4.9 percent at Mercedes.

"There's no reason to think that Mercedes - after this catch-up phase with new models - can outgrow BMW and Audi, especially given brand, cost and productivity issues," wrote Bernstein analyst Max Warburton after the results announcement.

The 14 percent gain in third-quarter car sales, the 420 million euros in Mercedes cost cuts already achieved this year and a stronger final three months would not be enough to offset a disastrous start to 2013, the company conceded.

Daimler reaffirmed that underlying profit would drop this year, indicating a fall of about 8 percent to around 7.5 billion euros, in line with the Reuters poll.

Explosive growth in premium car sales in China has helped Mercedes, BMW and Audi to escape the worst of the misery in their home European market, where demand has plunged to 20-year lows.

By comparison, volume brands such as Ford are bleeding red ink in Europe and are now eyeing the upmarket segment as a solution to their troubles. U.S. carmaker Ford, which plans to launch a new Vignale premium sub-brand, will give an update on its 2013 forecast for a $1.8 billion pretax loss in Europe when it publishes quarterly results later on Thursday.

NEW MODELS

While Mercedes remains more profitable than most volume carmakers, its earnings strength has fallen short of both BMW and Audi because of internal problems including, until recently, a dearth of compact and high-end luxury models.

But Mercedes is finally starting to hit the sweet spot of its model cycle after relaunching its A-Class compact late in 2012 and unveiling the newest version of its flagship S-Class limousine in July. Unlike consumer electronics companies, carmakers can only afford to revamp their products every seven years or so.

Mercedes is also adding all-new models to its range, such as the CLA compact four-door coupe, which made its debut this year. That will be followed by next year's entry into the booming compact SUV segment with the GLA. Even its Smart brand is due to overhaul its ForTwo microcar next year and launch a four-seater based on the Renault Twingo..

Daimler's progress has lifted its shares by more than 40 percent this year, making it the third-best performer among German blue-chip companies. The shares are now valued at 10.7 times forward earnings, against a sector average of 9.1 percent, according to Thomson Reuters data.

Daimler is the first major European carmaker to publish quarterly profits. Results from Fiat as well as Volkswagen and its stable of brands are due on Oct. 30, with BMW is scheduled to report on Nov. 5.

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RPT-UPDATE 2-Rejuvenated Daimler beats expectations

Thu Oct 24, 2013 6:24am EDT

* Daimler Q3 adj EBIT 2.23 bln eur vs Rtrs poll 2.12 bln

* Mercedes Q3 EBIT margin 7.3 pct vs Rtrs poll 6.9 pct

* 2013 adj EBIT to fall 8 pct vs last year's 8.13 bln eur

* Shares up 3.2 pct

By Christiaan Hetzner

FRANKFURT, Oct 24 (Reuters) - German automotive group Daimler lifted its fourth-quarter profit forecast after a rejuvenated model range and cost cuts in the core luxury car business helped it to post better than expected results on Thursday.

While earnings growth is being driven primarily by the new Mercedes-branded cars that lift sales volumes and reduce harmful price discounts, the company is also improving profitability through the elimination of waste.

Finance chief Bodo Uebber said that the two-year programme aimed at cutting a combined 3.1 billion euros ($4.3 billion) in costs at its luxury cars and commercial trucks divisions is on schedule and would provide it with a good start for next year.

"We anticipate further earnings improvements in the future," the Daimler CFO said, adding that it has achieved 70 percent of the 600 million euros in savings planned for Mercedes this year, up from 30 percent at the end of the second quarter.

Shares in Daimler rose 3.2 percent in early trading, putting them among the top performers on Germany's blue chip DAX index and beating its European auto peers.

"Reported earnings exceeded market expectations in every division," wrote LBBW analyst Frank Biller in a research note.

Third-quarter group earnings before interest and tax (EBIT) and excluding one-off items rose 15 percent to 2.23 billion euros ($3.07 billion), beating an estimated 2.12 billion in a Reuters poll of 12 banks and brokerages.

IMPROVING MARGIN

Daimler's Mercedes luxury car business expanded its EBIT margin, a benchmark for comparing profitability with rival BMW , by nearly a full percentage point to 7.3 percent, surpassing expectations of 6.9 percent.

Worried that the recent improvement is solely down to Daimler's product cycle, some analysts argued that it could struggle to close the gap on BMW and Volkswagen's Audi. BMW and Audi had margins of 9.8 percent and 10.5 percent respectively in the first half, against 4.9 percent at Mercedes.

"There's no reason to think that Mercedes - after this catch-up phase with new models - can outgrow BMW and Audi, especially given brand, cost and productivity issues," wrote Bernstein analyst Max Warburton after the results announcement.

The 14 percent gain in third-quarter car sales, the 420 million euros in Mercedes cost cuts already achieved this year and a stronger final three months would not be enough to offset a disastrous start to 2013, the company conceded.

Daimler reaffirmed that underlying profit would drop this year, indicating a fall of about 8 percent to around 7.5 billion euros, in line with the Reuters poll.

Explosive growth in premium car sales in China has helped Mercedes, BMW and Audi to escape the worst of the misery in their home European market, where demand has plunged to 20-year lows.

By comparison, volume brands such as Ford are bleeding red ink in Europe and are now eyeing the upmarket segment as a solution to their troubles. U.S. carmaker Ford, which plans to launch a new Vignale premium sub-brand, will give an update on its 2013 forecast for a $1.8 billion pretax loss in Europe when it publishes quarterly results later on Thursday.

NEW MODELS

While Mercedes remains more profitable than most volume carmakers, its earnings strength has fallen short of both BMW and Audi because of internal problems including, until recently, a dearth of compact and high-end luxury models.

But Mercedes is finally starting to hit the sweet spot of its model cycle after relaunching its A-Class compact late in 2012 and unveiling the newest version of its flagship S-Class limousine in July. Unlike consumer electronics companies, carmakers can only afford to revamp their products every seven years or so.

Mercedes is also adding all-new models to its range, such as the CLA compact four-door coupe, which made its debut this year. That will be followed by next year's entry into the booming compact SUV segment with the GLA. Even its Smart brand is due to overhaul its ForTwo microcar next year and launch a four-seater based on the Renault Twingo..

Daimler's progress has lifted its shares by more than 40 percent this year, making it the third-best performer among German blue-chip companies. The shares are now valued at 10.7 times forward earnings, against a sector average of 9.1 percent, according to Thomson Reuters data.

Daimler is the first major European carmaker to publish quarterly profits. Results from Fiat as well as Volkswagen and its stable of brands are due on Oct. 30, with BMW is scheduled to report on Nov. 5.

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RPT-Fitch: South Africa's Medium-Term Budget Shows Fiscal Challenge

Thu Oct 24, 2013 6:34am EDT

(Repeat for additional subscribers)

Oct 24 (Reuters) - (The following statement was released by the rating agency)

Further downward revisions to growth forecasts highlight the increasingly difficult environment the South African fiscal authorities face in balancing fiscal prudence against counter-cyclical policy, and the economic and social challenges the authorities will face if growth remains weak, says Fitch Ratings.

The Medium-Term-Budget Policy Statement (MTBPS) maintains the tight expenditure ceilings set out in the 2013 Budget so that the budget deficit for 2013/14 is estimated at 4.2% of GDP. This is little changed from the target announced in the February 2013 budget on a like for like basis, despite revenue underperformance. Technical changes to the budget accounting in line with the IMF's GFS Manual 2001, which bring "extraordinary receipts and payments" above the line, result in a lower deficit compared with the headline figure of 4.6% of GDP announced in February.

In contrast, medium-term deficit projections were revised up, largely due to weaker revenues. This underscores the pressures on the South African budget and the risks to medium-term deficit-reduction targets, which depend on a recovery in economic growth and tight expenditure control. The budget deficit for 2015/16 was revised up to 3.8% from 3.1% in February 2013 on a like for like basis. The medium-term deficit target of 3% was pushed back a further year to 2016/17, despite the authorities committing to maintaining expenditure ceilings until 2016/17.

The deterioration in the medium-term budget outlook will see total gross national government debt as a percentage of GDP rising faster than previously predicted, increasing from an estimated 44.8% of GDP in 2013/14 to 47.3% in 2015/16, against a projection of 44.6% in February. Debt is now only expected to peak beyond the MTBPS framework. The MTBPS paints an even weaker picture for economic growth and provides little comfort that the economy will revive sufficiently to support robust job creation. GDP growth was revised down to 2.1% for 2013 (compared with 2.7% at the time of the budget and 3% in the 2012 MTBPS). Growth forecasts for 2014 and 2015 have also been revised down to 3% and 3.2% respectively from 3.8% and 4.1% at last year's MTBPS.

The MTBPS provides a realistically sober assessment of the challenges South Africa faces. As in recent years, it highlights the need to boost job creation, invest in infrastructure and improve the efficiency of government spending. Despite the National Development Plan again having a prominent place in the speech, few of the plans announced under the auspices of the NDP are new. Timely and successful implementation will be required for it to deliver on its goals.

As we have stated previously, failure to generate faster GDP growth or material slippages against MTBPS fiscal consolidation plans would add to downward pressure on the rating.

In January 2013 we downgraded South Africa's Long-Term Foreign Currency IDR to 'BBB'/Stable from 'BBB+' and the Long-Term Local Currency IDR to 'BBB+'/Stable from 'A'.

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UPDATE 3-ECB, on new mission, sets out tougher bank health tests

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 23 Oktober 2013 | 18.12

Wed Oct 23, 2013 6:38am EDT

* ECB to conclude assessment in Oct 2014

* Aims to improve transparency, boost confidence in sector

* Banks with capital shortfalls must fix them

* Backstops required, all asset classes to be tested

* Euro zone bank stocks fall after ECB announcement

By Eva Taylor and Jonathan Gould

FRANKFURT, Oct 23 (Reuters) - The European Central Bank promised on Wednesday to put top euro zone banks through rigorous tests next year, staking its credibility on a review that aims to build confidence in the sector.

The ECB wants to unearth any risks hidden in balance sheets before supervision comes under its roof as part of a banking union designed to avoid a repeat of the euro debt crisis, which was exacerbated by massive bad property loans in countries such as Ireland and Spain.

However, some analysts say that if the review is too strict and reveals unexpectedly large problems at some banks, it could backfire by undermining the very confidence it aims to bolster. Euro zone bank shares fell sharply after the ECB announcement.

Setting out its plans to scrutinise 128 top euro zone lenders, the ECB said it would use tougher new measures set out by Europe's regulator - the European Banking Authority (EBA) - in the asset quality review it will conduct next year.

"A single comprehensive assessment, uniformly applied to all significant banks, accounting for about 85 percent of the euro area banking system, is an important step forward for Europe and for the future of the euro area economy," ECB President Mario Draghi said.

"We expect that this assessment will strengthen private sector confidence in the soundness of euro area banks and in the quality of their balance sheets," he said.

The ECB said it would conclude its assessment in October 2014 before assuming its supervisory role in November, although some policymakers have suggested that timing could slip.

If capital shortfalls are identified, banks will be required to make up for them, the ECB said. Draghi has said a "public backstop" must also be available.

A provisional list of banks to be reviewed includes 24 German lenders, 16 in Spain, 15 in Italy, 13 in France, seven in the Netherlands, five in Ireland and four each in Greece, Cyprus and Portugal.

"The scope of the Comprehensive Assessment is more extensive than we expected," analysts at Citi said.

Shares in euro zone banks fell 2.5 percent on concerns the tests could put them under pressure to plug capital holes, with Spanish lenders down 4 percent on average and Italian bank stocks 3 percent weaker. Spain's Bankia led the decline, falling over 5 percent while Germany's Commerzbank, the only bank from the euro zone core to feature among the top 10 fallers, was down over 3 percent.

The Bundesbank and financial watchdog Bafin, which in Germany share banking supervision, said the country's banks were "already intensively preparing for the comprehensive assessment".

Detailing the measures in its review, the ECB said it would use the EBA's definition which classifies bank loans that are more than 90 days overdue as non-performing.

It will ask banks in its balance sheet review for an 8 percent capital buffer. That could have been higher but may still prove a challenge to some banks as they attempt to become crisis-proof.

The asset quality review will look across the piece at "sovereign and institutional holdings and corporate and retail exposures, and both the banking and trading books".

The EBA classifies sovereign debt as risk free, meaning banks do not have to hold extra capital to back these holdings.

However, following the euro zone crisis which led to a huge restructuring of Greek debt, the Bundesbank has been pushing for the varying degrees of risk attached to bonds issued by governments to be recognised eventually, although not necessarily in the forthcoming ECB assessment.

"We are all waiting to see whether Germany has got on top of its rumoured problems in the banking sector," said Sharon Bowles, who chairs the influential committee in the European Parliament that shapes economic and financial policy.

"It seems clear that banking union has not disconnected banks from sovereigns. Bank disclosures over sovereign holdings will make that even clearer," she told Reuters.

Much of the precise detail about the tests remains to be sketched in. Bafin head Elke Koenig said she did not expect much need for more capital in German banks.

BACKSTOPS

The ECB wants a tough review so that it does not face surprises once it has taken charge, and to avoid repeating the mistakes of two earlier European-wide stress tests that failed to spot risks that led to the Irish and Spanish banking crises.

Wary of a lopsided banking union that could see it supervise euro zone banks without a common backstop in place, it has urged governments to agree on a strong single resolution mechanism (SRM) to salvage or wind down banks in trouble.

However, this second stage of the planned union is incomplete as politicians discuss how much of the costs should be shouldered by taxpayers. Plans for a third stage, a common deposit insurance scheme, have completely stalled.

"First of all, the private sector has to intervene," Ignazio Angeloni, director general for financial stability at the ECB, told a news conference. "Once markets know more and once risks are priced better, then investors are more ready to come in. We cannot rule out the possibility ... that that may not be sufficient immediately."

A Morgan Stanley survey of investors showed between five and 10 of the banks to be tested by the ECB are expected to fail the tests and could be forced to raise up to 50 billion euros ($69 billion) to bolster their capital.

However, some banks may be unable to raise capital on their own and the euro zone crisis has shown that sometimes even national governments cannot afford to stage rescues. In addition to Ireland, Spain - the bloc's fourth biggest economy - had to take international help to tackle its banking problems.

Some ECB policymakers feel uncomfortable taking on the extra responsibility and have suggested spinning off bank supervision into a separate institution over the long term. But such a step would require a change of the EU treaty, which might take years.

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UPDATE 2-Exports pull Spain out of recession in third quarter

Wed Oct 23, 2013 6:29am EDT

* Central bank says economy grew 0.1 percent from second quarter

* First growth in nine quarters, driven by strong exports

* Domestic demand still a drag on economy

* Statistics agency's third quarter GDP data due on Oct. 30

By Paul Day

MADRID, Oct 23 (Reuters) - Spain's economy exited a two-year recession in the third quarter thanks to strong exports, though with demand at home still depressed, sustainable growth that creates jobs may remain elusive for years.

Gross domestic product grew 0.1 percent in the third quarter from the second, the Bank of Spain said on Wednesday, marking the economy's first expansion in nine quarters.

Spain's economy has shrunk or has been stagnant every year since 2008, when a property market collapse left millions out of work, forced a deep financial sector overhaul and drove thousands of companies in bankruptcy.

One of the euro zone's highest public deficits, nervous debt markets and a paralysed construction sector has since then forced the government to pass tough austerity measures and structural reforms in an effort to clean up the country's finances and nurse it back to economic health.

That process, which pushed the country close to requesting sovereign aid last year, is now starting to bear fruit, at least for many businesses with a presence abroad.

"After recently implemented reforms, Spain has become an export powerhouse, and it will fully leave the recession behind in 2014 with private investment and consumption growth turning positive after three years of decline and credit levels stabilising," economist and partner at financial advisory firm Arcano, Ignacio del Torre said.

"Though Spain still faces clear risks, it presents a strong potential upside in the years 2015 to 2020, and this upside is still not measured by many investors."

The central bank said exports contributed 0.4 percentage points to third quarter growth while internal demand had a negative impact of 0.3 points.

Its GDP numbers, which it presents as estimates rather than firm data, are traditionally released a week or so before statistics agency INE's official preliminary figures, which are due this quarter on Oct. 30. The two sets of data rarely differ.

INCREASINGLY COMPETITIVE

Spain's economy has shrunk by 7.5 percent since the beginning of 2008.

But over the same period, the export sector has grown by 14.6 percent and is now worth over a third of total output compared to around a fifth five years ago.

Exports grew 6.6 percent from January to August from a year earlier to a record 155.8 billion euros ($214.6 billion), the Economy Ministry said on Wednesday, while retail sales fell for the 38th month running in August.

Spain's success beyond its shores has been supported by a by-product of the economic crisis - increased competitiveness.

In recent months, Markit's Purchasing Manager's Index (PMI) has shown Spain's services and manufacturing companies, which have laid off employees and cut prices since the crisis began, have started to claw back customers.

The country's stubbornly high jobless rate may also have peaked.

Third quarter unemployment data is due on Thursday, with analysts polled by Reuters expecting the rate to have fallen to 26.1 percent from 26.3 percent at the end of June.

As companies fight for survival, Spanish workers have become cheaper to hire, making them more productive compared with many of their European counterparts.

In public, the government is hailing a tentative end to the economic malaise that has plagued Spain. But some in the ruling People's Party (PP) are concerned the export-led recovery won't drive down the jobless rate or boost state coffers soon enough to influence voters in the next national election due in 2015.

"I believe we're likely to see growth of as much as 1.3 percent in 2014. That will be through investment and exports, but it's consumption which boosts the economy and brings more state income," said a high-level politician within the PP who declined to be named.

Official government forecasts see economic output expanding by 0.7 percent year on year in 2014 after a contraction of 1.3 percent this year.

But with that expansion again likely to be dominated by the export sector, which enjoys tax breaks and registers much of its profits outside Spain, the government make have to rely on more austerity to close a 35 billion euro budget gap by 2016.

Compared to labour-heavy sectors such as construction or services, exports produce few jobs at home and with more than one in four still unemployed, the recovery will ring hollow for many.

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RPT-UPDATE 1-JPMorgan close to $6 bln settlement with investors: source

Wed Oct 23, 2013 6:30am EDT

By Karen Freifeld

NEW YORK Oct 22 (Reuters) - JPMorgan Chase & Co is nearing an agreement worth close to $6 billion with a group of institutional investors to settle claims over shoddy mortgage-backed securities issued in the run-up to the financial crisis, a source familiar with the talks said.

Representatives of JPMorgan and the investors met on Friday to discuss the settlement, though the two sides have not yet agreed to formal terms, the source said.

The potential deal is separate from the preliminary $13 billion settlement JPMorgan has reached with the U.S. government that would resolve a raft of civil actions brought by several enforcement agencies.

The group of more than a dozen bondholders includes BlackRock Inc, Allianz SE's Pacific Investment Management Co and Neuberger Berman Inc, the source said.

Kathy Patrick, a lawyer for the investors group, did not immediately respond to requests for comment. JPMorgan also was not immediately available outside regular U.S. business hours.

Patrick and her Houston-based firm, Gibbs & Bruns, also represent a group of investors that struck an $8.5 billion settlement with Bank of America Corp in 2011 over similar allegations stemming from the bank's Countrywide unit. A New York state judge is weighing whether to approve that deal after American International Group Inc and others objected, arguing that it was too small.

In 2011, the law firm said its investor clients had instructed trustees overseeing $95 billion of securities issued by JPMorgan's affiliates during the housing boom to investigate whether the bonds were backed by ineligible mortgages.

The firm said its clients represented holders of more than 25 percent of the voting rights in the securities, which included bonds from Bear Stearns and Washington Mutual, two firms that JPMorgan took over during the financial crisis.

JPMorgan reported a third-quarter loss earlier this month, the first under CEO Jamie Dimon, after recording a $7.2 billion after-tax expense to add money to its legal reserves in anticipation of settling the U.S. government's mortgage claims.

The company had $23 billion in its legal reserves as of the end of the quarter.

Two sources familiar with the matter told Reuters that JPMorgan's tentative $13 billion settlement with the U.S. government could end up costing the bank closer to $9 billion after taxes, because the majority of the deal was expected to be tax deductible.

The settlement talks were reported earlier by The Financial Times and The Wall Street Journal.

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UPDATE 1-Shares in Spain's FCC soar after Bill Gates takes 6 pct stake

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 22 Oktober 2013 | 18.12

Tue Oct 22, 2013 6:06am EDT

* Shares at 18-month high

* Gates becomes second shareholder after chairwoman

* Concerns over debt restructuring remain

By Sonya Dowsett

MADRID, Oct 22 (Reuters) - Shares in Spanish builder FCC surged 13 percent to an 18-month high on Tuesday after the company announced late on Monday that Bill Gates, co-founder of Microsoft, had become its second largest shareholder.

The debt-laden construction company said after market close on Monday that Gates had bought 6 percent of the firm for 113.5 million euros ($155 million) at Friday's closing price of 14.9 euros per share.

The purchase is welcome news for the firm, which is fighting to overhaul its business and return to profit after a construction and property crash that slashed its share price by around 80 percent.

Gates's FCC share purchase was splashed across the front pages of national newspapers on Tuesday and was hailed by some as a resurgence of interest in Spain, which is expected to emerge from recession this quarter.

The purchase makes Gates the second biggest shareholder after chairwoman Esther Koplowitz, one of Spain's wealthiest individuals and a philanthropist, like Gates.

The shares had jumped 5 percent on Monday before the announcement, which came after the market closed, and were leading Spain's blue-chip index in morning trade, up 10 percent at 17.30 euros at 0950 GMT, off an earlier high at 17.75, while the IBEX 35 index was largely flat.

"A long-term investment by an investor of the calibre of Bill Gates is much more important than the short-term effect it may have upon the shares," chief executive Juan Bejar said in an interview with Cadena Ser radio.

Analysts cautioned that, although the purchase was positive for FCC, itsmost pressing issue was negotiations with creditor banks to refinance around 5 billion euros of debt that falls due this year and next.

"We continue to be worried about the likely terms of the refinancing, not only the cost of debt but also for the guarantees, covenants and debt reduction calendar, as we fear that banks will leave management little flexibility to create value for shareholders," said broker Espirito Santo in a research note.

FCC has cut staff, put assets on the block and made heavy writedowns on bad investments in renewable energy and Austria in an attempt to turn around its business.

Meanwhile, it has turned its focus onto big construction concessions, especially abroad, and won a multibillion euro contract in July to build a metro in the Saudi Arabian capital, Riyadh.

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Lender CIT posts profit as interest expense falls

Tue Oct 22, 2013 6:45am EDT

Oct 22 (Reuters) - Small-business lender CIT Group Inc reported its third straight quarterly profit due to lower interest payments on its long-term debt.

Net income was $199.6 million, or 99 cents per share, for the third quarter ended Sept. 30 compared with a loss of $299.2 million, or $1.49 per share, a year earlier.

The New York-based lender's interest expense on long-term debt fell 70 percent to $233.8 million.

CIT is led by former Merrill Lynch Chief Executive John Thain, who became CEO in 2010 following its bankruptcy the previous year due to losses on subprime mortgage assets.


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UPDATE 1-Euro zone debt yields slip before U.S. jobs data

Tue Oct 22, 2013 6:47am EDT

* Market seen rangebound before delayed payrolls report

* Market reaction could be muted as focus turns to Oct. data

By Emelia Sithole-Matarise

LONDON, Oct 22 (Reuters) - Euro zone bond yields slipped on Tuesday but held within their recent ranges before delayed U.S. jobs data that could shape expectations on when the Federal Reserve will start trimming its bond purchases.

Investors were wary of trading aggressively before the employment report, postponed from its original Oct. 4 release date by the 16-day U.S. government shutdown.

Analysts polled by Reuters expect U.S. nonfarm payrolls to have increased by 180,000 in September, with the jobless rate steady at 7.3 percent.

Many analysts expect the U.S. central bank to maintain its bond purchases at current levels given the as-yet unknown economic impact of the shutdown and the possibility of another bitter budget fight early next year. But a strong employment report could challenge that thinking.

Market reaction to the jobs report may be limited because of the delay in release and the fact that it covers a period before the government shutdown. That may make the October figure - now due on Nov. 8 instead of Nov. 1 - more important for markets.

"I don't think there will be a strong movement on the back of this data," said Patrick Jacq, a strategist at BNP Paribas in Paris. "The market is positioned for signs of economic recovery with limited increase in jobs and a Fed which remains very accommodative."

The prospect of delayed Fed tapering of its monetary stimulus is supporting both safe-haven and riskier assets such as lower-rated euro zone bonds.

Spanish 10-year yields were last down 5 basis points at 4.22 percent, with traders citing some buying from domestic investors but saying volumes were thin. Italian equivalents were 2 bps lower at 4.17 percent.

Yields on higher-rated bonds were also slightly lower while German 10-year yields were unchanged on the day at 1.85 percent, reflecting investor caution before the U.S. data which kicks off a slew of backlogged numbers this week.

RBS strategists said the Bund yields could push back towards a 1.70-1.80 percent range given the supportive backdrop of prolonged Fed monetary stimulus.

The yields fell to their lowest in a week on Friday on concerns the stop-gap deal to raise the U.S. debt ceiling and reopen the government may hurt longer-term prospects economic and deter the Fed from trimming its bond purchases until 2014.

"Investors are unwilling to take outright short positions in core bonds at this stage while they expect a delay of tapering by the Federal Reserve so this is keeping pressure for lower core yields," said ING strategist Alessandro Giansanti.

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TABLE-Economists raise Brazil 2014 interest rate view

Written By Unknown on Senin, 21 Oktober 2013 | 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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Douglas in exclusive talks to buy French perfume chain Nocibe

FRANKFURT | Mon Oct 21, 2013 5:16am EDT

FRANKFURT Oct 21 (Reuters) - German books to cosmetics retailer Douglas said on Monday it is in exclusive talks to buy French perfumery chain Nocibe, in a deal that would leapfrog it to the number two spot in France.

The transaction is part of plans by Douglas to expand its perfumeries business, which it sees as having the strongest growth prospects within its portfolio of perfumery, confectionary, jewellery and book stores.

With a combined 625 stores and 4,000 employees, the deal would make Douglas, owned by private equity firm Advent, the second largest perfumery chain in France behind LVMH's Sephora in terms of revenue.

It did not provide a price for the deal. Media reports last week had suggested a valuation of between 500 million euro and 550 million euros ($685-$753 million) for Nocibe.

Nocibe is owned by private equity firm Charterhouse Capital Partners. Buyout firm LBO France was also reportedly interested in Nocibe.


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COMMENT: FICC's not dead yet

By Keith Mullin

Mon Oct 21, 2013 6:47am EDT

LONDON, Oct 21 (IFR) - I've always been a bit of a contrarian. I guess it's just in my nature. So I'm going against the flow by saying I'm getting a little tired of everyone writing off the fixed income, commodities and currencies trading businesses as if they're ready to be read their last rites.

I also continue to be bemused by the general over-reaction of shock and horror at the lower quarterly FICC numbers coming out of the banks. For reasons that are pretty clear, client trading volumes have been much lower in the current cycle and have invariably been non-existent in the run-up to and amid all of the political nonsense in the US (which is far from over) and around the will-they-won't-they quantitative easing saga, global growth concerns, EM wobbles, peripheral eurozone woes, bank stability issues, war in Syria and other stories. There's an unbreakable link between news flow and the urge to trade.

People say volatility is the trader's friend, but the reality is that most people play event-risk from the sidelines sitting firmly on their hands. If volatility is the trader's friend, uncertainty is his sworn enemy. Price volatility has invariably been on the screens only and not underpinned by order flow. I've heard countless times of late that if you try to deal on a screen price, it mysteriously vanishes. It's like walking into a shop to be told you can't buy anything.

Client and counterparty reluctance to trade around the fundamentals is exacerbated by very poor liquidity, which creates an eternal negative feedback loop. The days of free dealer liquidity are well and truly over as competition and market issues as well as capital and other regulatory constraints are brought to bear - the virtual disappearance of prop trading in size among sell-side shops; lower trading velocity among hedge funds and real-money accounts; derivatives and market infrastructure reforms; capital cost of holding inventory; margin compression; declining bank balance sheets and less leverage. And let's not forget the notion of trading a risk-free asset has gone out of the window, which has had a significant impact.

Having said I'm not writing off FICC as a business, it's clearly undergoing something of a makeover. Transformational industry issues bumping into multi-dimensional event-risk factors will make for a poor trading environment all day long. But my point is that while the latter will always be present in one form or another, the former will at some point settle. Reported FICC numbers shouldn't be looked at microscopically on a quarter-to-quarter basis. They need to be looked at strategically and on a cyclical basis.

It's worth pointing out that FICC has always been a highly volatile business from a net revenue perspective. I plotted Goldman Sachs's FICC number - as a proxy for the industry - for the past 34 quarters, which is far back enough to have preceded the run-up to the global financial crisis. I added FICC revenues from the institutional client services group to the debt securities and loans line in the investing and lending division to better match the combined number formerly reported as FICC in the old trading and principal investments division.

This exercise certainly put the 44% FICC reversal in the Q313 numbers into perspective. The dispersion of the net revenue results over my chosen period has been notable, but that's the nature of trading. In the pre-crisis period of 2005 through Q107, Goldman's FICC number jumped wildly but averaged 35% of the firm's overall net revenue. The average taken over the past nine quarters (when event-risk was rife and regulatory issues pressing) was 31%. The reversion line doesn't look that dramatic. The average reported numbers for the two periods are only 10% apart. JP Morgan's FICC to combined CIB/Asset Management net revenue ratio is about the same.

Over time, we'll see FICC capacity freed up as dealers (slowly) tailor their offerings to highest perceived value-add, client fit, cost of capital and perhaps more realistic capital allocation. Market-share gains will benefit the scale players and the world will increasingly split into a small bulge-bracket and a cabal of specialists.

But as derivative trading morphs into the SEF world and vanilla cash volumes go increasingly electronic, and the buy-side and sell-side reach an accommodation in the new world, increased transparency will drive better price discovery and as the economic cycle improves and banks get through deleveraging, I think it's fair to suggest volumes will rise in lock-step. Don't write FICC off; it's simply entering a new chapter in its volatile life-cycle.

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