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UPDATE 1-Market Chatter-Corporate finance press digest

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 31 Desember 2014 | 18.12

Wed Dec 31, 2014 3:52am EST

Dec 31 (Reuters) - The following corporate finance-related stories were reported by media:

* Oaktree Capital Management and other lenders are a few weeks from a deal to grab control of Altegrity from private equity powerhouse Providence Equity Partners, only six months after Providence had refinanced the company's $1.75 billion in loans, the New York Post reported, citing sources. (bit.ly/1vryw2B)

* Italy's Benetton family is ready to halve its 50 percent stake in World Duty Free to make the travel retailer more attractive to a potential partner in the industry, two sources close to the matter said.

For the Morning News Call-EMEA newsletter click on (Compiled by Zara Mascarenhas in Bengaluru)


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RPT-Small parties to play outsized role in Greek election

Wed Dec 31, 2014 4:08am EST

(Repeats Tuesday item)

* Neither major party may win a majority on Jan. 25

* Centrist To Potami a possible ally for anti-bailout Syriza

* Once dominant PASOK Socialists expected to split

By Renee Maltezou and Deepa Babington

ATHENS, Dec 30 (Reuters) - Greece's splintered political landscape means small, often relatively new parties may determine whether the winner of elections next month can cobble together a lasting government and avoid a new financial crisis.

The Jan. 25 vote marks a showdown between the conservative New Democracy party of Prime Minister Antonis Samaras, who imposed unpopular budget cuts under Greece's international bailout deal, and the radical leftist Syriza of Alexis Tsipras, who wants to cancel austerity along with a chunk of Greek debt.

Syriza holds a lead over New Democracy in opinion polls, although this has narrowed to only about three percentage points in the run-up to the election, called after parliament failed to elect a new Greek president this week.

But neither may be able to form a government alone, even with a 50 seat-bonus that the constitution automatically awards to the biggest party in the 300-seat chamber, leaving one or more of the smaller groups to shape the final outcome.

Dominated for decades by New Democracy and the Socialist PASOK party, Greek politics have been radically reshaped by the debt crisis that forced the country to accept two bailouts worth 240 billion euros ($292 billion) from the European Union and IMF. In return they demanded harsh measures, which have deepened an anti-establishment mood and anger against the old order.

One of the parties most likely to hold the balance of power is To Potami ("The River"), a recently-created centrist group which has refused to define itself as pro- or anti-bailout. The other is PASOK, which was in Samaras's outgoing coalition despite taking an electoral thrashing in 2012, and is now expected to split.

"Small parties were on the sidelines in the past but now will be the determining factor in the coming election," said a senior official from the PASOK faction that is expected to break away in the coming days.

Two small anti-bailout parties, the Democratic Left and Independent Greeks, are possible allies for Syriza. However, the Democratic Left is not expected to win 3 percent of popular vote, the minimum required to enter parliament, and may be absorbed by Syriza before the election.

The right-wing Independent Greeks would make unusual allies for Syriza, with which they have little in common apart from dislike of the bailout deal.

Polls show a group of parties jockeying for third place behind Syriza, which is now the main force on the Greek left, and New Democracy. They are the far-right Golden Dawn, the KKE Communist party, PASOK and To Potami.

Golden Dawn, which has a swastika-like emblem, denies it is neo-Nazi or that it has been involved in violent attacks. Nevertheless, all other Greek parties refuse to deal with it, while the KKE has ruled itself out of any coalition alliance.

That leaves To Potami in prime position to become kingmaker. Set up this year by a prominent TV journalist, the party made its debut in elections to the European Parliament in May, when it came fifth with 6.6 percent.

TAKING FRIGHT

Financial markets took fright on Monday when Samaras was forced to call the election, worrying that Tspiras will win and tear up the bailout deal that saved Greece from bankruptcy. However, if Tsipras were to win but fail to find a coalition partner, Greece could also face a political crisis.

Political analyst John Loulis expected Syriza and To Potami to team up. "Once Tsipras wins, the most stabilising development will be to cooperate with Potami, but both of them will keep denying it until the right moment," he said.

Polls show 5 to 6 percent support for To Potami, which insists it is firmly pro-euro and pro-reform but opposes certain austerity measures. It also wants Greece's debt to be settled within a broader resolution of Europe's problems.

Party leader Stavros Theodorakis has opened To Potami to a deal with either of the big parties, describing his natural allies as the "reasonable" members of Syriza or "the liberals in New Democracy, not the neoliberals".

The other player will be PASOK, whose support has shriveled from 42 percent of the vote just five years ago to 4 to 6 percent. Its future is in doubt, with former Prime Minister George Papandreou expected to set up his own party with some disgruntled PASOK lawmakers.

"Papandreou's party is a huge question now," said Costas Panagopoulos of ALCO pollsters, saying the new group could steal votes from Syriza, PASOK and even New Democracy.

Some analysts speculate that either faction could prop up Syriza if it toned down its anti-bailout stance.

"If Syriza moderates its programme on key issues like the economy and comes closer to our programme, we can support a Syriza government without necessarily participating in their government," said the PASOK official allied with Papandreou.

"Parties that participated in the government during the crisis took a huge risk - that's why some of them shrank or disappeared. They become unpopular to their voters."

For a story with the latest opinion poll, click on

($1 = 0.8220 euros) (Additional reporting by Lefteris Papadimas and Angeliki Koutantou; editing by David Stamp)

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GLOBAL MARKETS-Chinese stocks, dollar and debt the stars of 2014

Wed Dec 31, 2014 4:29am EST

* Europe stocks edge up, China ending year on a high note

* U.S. dollar runs into modest profit-taking, to yen's benefit

* Euro zone yields at historic lows as deflation looms

* Oil remains under pressure after halving in value

By Marc Jones

LONDON, Dec 31 (Reuters) - Chinese and U.S. stocks headed the list of 2014 top performers while markets elsewhere ended the year on Wednesday on a cautionary note as worries about Greece's future served as an excuse to take profits.

The U.S. dollar lost a little of the recent gains that have made it the year's star major currency, but European bonds yields scored all-time lows following a shockingly sharp fall in Spanish inflation on Tuesday.

European stocks had a steady start as they wrapped up a year that has seen a 3.5 percent rise for the region as a whole but also sharp divergence, with near 30 percent losses for debt-strained Greece and Portugal.

The stand-out global equity performer has been China, where the CSI300 index looked set to end 2014 with gains of nearly 50 percent.

Almost all of China's rise came in the last couple of months, as hopes for more aggressive policy stimulus to counter its economic slowdown boosted banks and brokerages.

Featuring on Wednesday were hefty gains for China's biggest train makers, China CNR and CSR Corp , after they confirmed a $26 billion merger.

"China stocks have done really well this year and the dollar move has also been very interesting," said Alvin Tan, an FX strategist at Societe Generale in London. "It barely moved against the other major currencies in the first of the year and all the big gains came in the second half."

Trade elsewhere was thinned by holidays in Japan, Thailand, South Korea and the Philippines, while many markets in Europe were either shut or finishing early.

Europe's government bond markets all closed on Tuesday after another stellar year that has seen Italian and Spanish borrowing costs hit record lows and unglamorous but ultra-safe German debt enjoy its strongest year in six.

Among the scraps of news in Europe, two polls in Greece published late on Tuesday showed the anti-bailout party Syriza's lead over the ruling conservatives had narrowed.

BUY DOLLARS, WEAR DIAMONDS

The dollar was on track to end 2014 with a gain of 12 percent against a basket of major currencies, its best performance since 2005, and anticipated U.S. interest rate hikes may strengthen its appeal in the new year.

It eased against the safe haven yen to stand at 119.64 from Tuesday's peak of 120.69, as futures prices pointed to small gains for Wall Street when trading resumes following its 13 percent jump to an all-time high this year.

The euro was undermined by sliding European yields amid intense speculation the European Central Bank will have to start buying government bonds to avert deflation.

The single currency was stuck at $1.2154 having touched a 29-month trough of $1.2123.

"If my assessment is that there is a need for further accommodation, and if I were willing to cut rates if that had been possible, then I should not be paralysed by the fact that the only option is to buy sovereign bonds," top ECB policymaker Peter Praet told a German paper.

Data out on Tuesday showed Spanish consumer prices fell in December at their fastest rate since July 2009, largely as a result of cheaper oil.

Crude has slumped 50 percent in the last six months and dropped below $57 a barrel on Wednesday as weak Chinese manufacturing data and demand concerns outweighed supply disruptions in Libya.

China's factory sector shrank for the first time in seven months in December, the HSBC/Markit Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) showed, highlighting the urgency behind a series of surprise easing moves by Beijing in the past two months.

Copper, highly sensitive to global growth and of which China is the biggest consumer, looked set to post its biggest annual decline in three years at 14 percent, while traditional safe-haven gold hovered at $1,200 an ounce to end the year roughly where it started.

Emerging market stocks and bonds were on track for their second straight year in the red at the end of a torrid 2014, especially for Russia.

The rouble was down 4 percent on the day as a 43 percent plunge since January left it heading for its worst year since Russia defaulted in 1998. (Additional reporting by Wayne Cole in Sydney; Editing by Robin Pomeroy)

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UPDATE 3-Kremlin critic Navalny given suspended sentence, brother jailed

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 30 Desember 2014 | 18.12

Tue Dec 30, 2014 5:51am EST

* Case seen as part of Kremlin campaign to stifle dissent

* Navalny led mass protests against Putin in 2011/12

* Navalny accused state institutions of corruption

* Kremlin denies it uses courts to persecute opponents (Adds quotes, details)

By Maria Tsvetkova

MOSCOW, Dec 30 (Reuters) - A Russian court gave Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny a suspended sentence on Tuesday for embezzling money but jailed his brother for three and a half years in a case seen as part of a campaign to stifle dissent.

Navalny led mass protests against President Vladimir Putin three years ago, when tens of thousands took to the streets in Moscow and St Petersburg to protest against corruption in his government and inner circle. Opposition figures say jailing Navalny risked a new wave of protests and so it was decided to punish him by jailing his brother instead.

Navalny's supporters will gather in front of the Kremlin later on Tuesday with some 17,000 people having registered on Facebook to attend although the numbers may be smaller as people prepare to celebrate the New Year. The authorities have not given permission for the rally so it is considered illegal and there maybe arrests.

The Navalny brothers, Alexei and Oleg, were accused of stealing 30 million roubles, around $500,000 at the current exchange rate, from two firms including an affiliate of the French cosmetics company Yves Rocher between 2008 and 2012.

Tuesday's ruling will come as a relief for Navalny's supporters after prosecutors asked that he be imprisoned for 10 years. The Kremlin denies allegations that it uses the courts to persecute opponents.

Officials have taken few steps to investigate Navalny's corruption allegations. He claimed there was mass embezzlement, including in state bank VTB and pipeline monopoly Transneft, run by close allies of Putin.

"Aren't you ashamed of what you are doing?" Navalny told the court and judge Yelena Korobchenko. "Why are you putting him (my brother Oleg) in prison? To punish me even harder?"

Currently under house arrest, Alexei Navalny is serving another suspended five-year jail term for a separate conviction last year, which critics also called a sham.

"The authorities are torturing and destroying relatives of their political opponents. This regime doesn't deserve to exist, it must be destroyed," Navalny told reporters outside the court as he was escorted in a car for prisoners.

Russian state television channels were not covering the sentencing or mentioned it very briefly, while most Russian print media or radio stations had it among their top stories.

Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov declined to comment and said the president would find out about the verdict from media.

Putin's popularity has soared over the past year after Moscow's annexation of Ukraine's Russian-speaking Crimea peninsula and its incursion in east Ukraine, which led to the worst stand-off with the West since the end of the Cold War. This has eroded the popularity of opposition leaders such as Navalny.

However, falling oil prices and Western sanctions on Russia over Ukraine have triggered a deep economic crisis, a rouble devaluation and double-digit inflation, threatening Putin's reputation for safeguarding Russian prosperity.

Former Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin, one of the most respected Russian economists in the West, said this month Russia was facing a full-fledged crisis which could lead to mass protests next year.

"The authorities could have easily put Navalny in jail. But they understand that it would have led to a large wave of protests. So they will torture him through other means," economist and former central banker turned opposition figure, Sergei Aleksashenko, told independent television channel Dozhd.

Lawyers for Oleg Navalny said they didn't know where exactly he would be sent to serve his prison term. Putin's critic and billionaire Mikhail Khodorkovsky served his 10-year jail term in penal colonies from northern Russia to east Siberia. (Writing by Dmitry Zhdannikov; Editing by Dominic Evans and Anna Willard)

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Fitch: Snap Greek Elections Add to Credit Risk

Tue Dec 30, 2014 5:21am EST

(The following statement was released by the rating agency) LONDON, December 30 (Fitch) Early elections following the Greek parliament's failure to appoint a new president increase the risks to Greece's creditworthiness, Fitch Ratings says. Negotiations with official creditors, and any potential reopening of market access, will be put on hold until after the elections. Following the elections, which are likely to take place on 25 January, political and policy uncertainty will probably remain high for some months. If the left-wing opposition Syriza party wins the largest share of the vote, it will receive a 50-seat bonus and will therefore be part of any government that is formed. Syriza has maintained a lead in the opinion polls over the incumbent centre-right New Democracy party since coming top in May's European elections. However, this lead has narrowed in recent weeks making the election a close call and an overall Syriza majority unlikely. If the formation of a new coalition is not possible, Greece ('B'/Stable) will return to the polls, which would further prolong the political uncertainty. There are two main channels through which political risk could put pressure on Greece's credit profile. Firstly, prolonged deadlock with the Troika combined with a lack of market access would strain the government's cash-flow by the summer, even assuming the budget was kept under tight control. Secondly, depending on the reaction of bank depositors to developments, the wider Greek economy could come under pressure from renewed capital outflows. Both of those factors would also put pressure on the new Greek government and its foreign creditors to reach an agreement. There is scope for compromise between the Troika and a new Greek government. This holds true for a Syriza-led government, although the negotiations would be much more fraught. Syriza's leader, Alexis Tsipras, has moderated his party's stance since 2012 and has committed to maintaining a budgetary primary surplus and to honouring Greece's obligations to IMF and private creditors. However, the privatisation programme would most likely stall completely under a Syriza-led government and there would be upward pressure on the public sector wage bill. The property tax may also be targeted for removal and overall fiscal risk would increase. Contact: Douglas Renwick Senior Director Sovereigns +44 20 3530 1045 Fitch Ratings Limited 30 North Colonnade London E14 5GN Paul Rawkins Senior Director Sovereigns +44 20 3530 1046 Simon Kennedy Director Fitch Wire +44 20 3530 1387 Media Relations: Elaine Bailey, London, Tel: +44 203 530 1153, Email: elaine.bailey@fitchratings.com; Peter Fitzpatrick, London, Tel: +44 20 3530 1103, Email: peter.fitzpatrick@fitchratings.com. The above article originally appeared as a post on the Fitch Wire credit market commentary page. The original article can be accessed at www.fitchratings.com. All opinions expressed are those of Fitch Ratings. ALL FITCH CREDIT RATINGS ARE SUBJECT TO CERTAIN LIMITATIONS AND DISCLAIMERS. PLEASE READ THESE LIMITATIONS AND DISCLAIMERS BY FOLLOWING THIS LINK: here. IN ADDITION, RATING DEFINITIONS AND THE TERMS OF USE OF SUCH RATINGS ARE AVAILABLE ON THE AGENCY'S PUBLIC WEBSITE 'WWW.FITCHRATINGS.COM'. PUBLISHED RATINGS, CRITERIA AND METHODOLOGIES ARE AVAILABLE FROM THIS SITE AT ALL TIMES. FITCH'S CODE OF CONDUCT, CONFIDENTIALITY, CONFLICTS OF INTEREST, AFFILIATE FIREWALL, COMPLIANCE AND OTHER RELEVANT POLICIES AND PROCEDURES ARE ALSO AVAILABLE FROM THE 'CODE OF CONDUCT' SECTION OF THIS SITE. FITCH MAY HAVE PROVIDED ANOTHER PERMISSIBLE SERVICE TO THE RATED ENTITY OR ITS RELATED THIRD PARTIES. DETAILS OF THIS SERVICE FOR RATINGS FOR WHICH THE LEAD ANALYST IS BASED IN AN EU-REGISTERED ENTITY CAN BE FOUND ON THE ENTITY SUMMARY PAGE FOR THIS ISSUER ON THE FITCH WEBSITE.

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GLOBAL MARKETS-Year-end caution subdues shares, lifts yen

Tue Dec 30, 2014 5:09am EST

  * European stocks open down, euro at near 2-1/2 year low      * Oil, copper drop; dollar index hovers near April 2006 high      * Yen rallies, Nikkei drops as year-end risk aversion takes  hold        By Marc Jones      LONDON, Dec 30 (Reuters) - A wave of risk aversion swept  through global markets on Tuesday as worries about Greece's  future in the euro and general end-of-year caution subdued  shares and lifted the safe-haven yen and gold.      There was also a new 5-1/2 year low for oil prices    as persistent worries about a global supply glut  amplified the downward pressure of its pricing currency, the  dollar, as it hovered near an 8-1/2 year high.       Europe's stock markets opened with Britain's FTSE 100  , Germany's DAX and France's CAC 40 down  0.5, 0.6 and 0.8 percent respectively after a 1.6 percent drop  for Tokyo's Nikkei had also seen Asia wilt overnight.      Bond markets were slightly brighter though, as Greece's bond  yields, a proxy of the government's borrowing  costs, steadied after spiking on Monday when it became clear the  country would hold snap elections.      The left-wing Syriza party, which opposes Greece's EU/IMF  bailout and which is leading in opinion polls,  has said it wants to abandon the many of the drastic spending  cuts that are central to Greece's rehabilitation programme.         "The developments in Greece have prompted some concerns  among global investors, at least in the near-term, which is  boosting safe-haven demand for the yen," said Lee Hardman a FX  strategist at Bank of Tokyo Mitsubishi.      "It's probably fair to say Greece could leave the euro and  it would have less of an impact than in 2012, but it would be    dangerous," he said.      The euro was holding just above a 2-1/2 year low  against the dollar at $1.2171. Underscoring the euro zone's  economic troubles, European Central Bank data showed banks had  slowed lending to firms and households again in November.                     OIL SLUMP      Oil prices, the other big focus for world markets at  present, extended their sharp recent falls in early European  trading as they dropped below $57 per barrel for the first time  since May 2009.      Brent for February delivery fell 98 cents to $56.90  after hitting $56.74 earlier in the session, while U.S. crude   fell 77 cents to $52.84 a barrel. Both have fallen  roughly 50 percent in the last six months.      An industry group, the American Petroleum Institute, is  scheduled to release its inventory report later in the day ahead  of U.S. Department of Energy data on Wednesday.       In the currency market, the cautious mood saw the yen   make sharp gains against both the dollar and euro as investors  sought the traditional safety of the Japanese currency.      It was up just over one percent at 119.45 yen to the dollar  as the dollar itself held just below an 8-1/2 year high against  six of the world's main currencies.       Europe's benchmark safe haven, the 10-year German Bund  , meanwhile was heading for its biggest annual fall  in yields since 2008 as it hovered at 0.55 percent in early  trading.       Gold also nudged higher but the dollar's broad-based  strength meant more pain for other commodities. Copper   edged down to $6,280.25 a tonne, after falling to its lowest  level in four-and-a-half years this week.      Worries about China's economy added downward pressure.  Growth in China's manufacturing sector likely slowed to a  18-month low in December, a Reuters poll showed earlier.              (Additional Reporting by Lisa Twaronite in Tokyo; Editing by  Jon Boyle)  
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UPDATE 2-Russian economy suffers first major contraction since 2009

Written By Unknown on Senin, 29 Desember 2014 | 18.12

Mon Dec 29, 2014 5:02am EST

* Economists expect contraction to worsen

* Government forecasts GDP will drop four pct in 2015

* Rouble falls again in thin trade (Adds analyst, details, background)

By Elena Fabrichnaya and Alexander Winning

MOSCOW, Dec 29 (Reuters) - Russia's economy shrank sharply in November and the rouble resumed its slide on Monday as Western sanctions and a slump in oil prices combined to inflict the first contraction in GDP since the global financial crisis.

The Economy Ministry said gross domestic product shrank 0.5 percent last month, the first drop since October 2009. With oil exports forming the backbone of the economy, analysts said the contraction is likely to worsen.

The slide on the oil market accelerated this month after the exporters' group OPEC refused to cut output, and prices are down almost 50 percent from a peak in June. On top of this, the sanctions imposed over Moscow's role in the Ukraine crisis have deterred foreign investment and led to over $100 billion flooding out of the Russian economy this year.

"With the current oil price we expect things to get worse. There is no cause for optimism," said Dmitry Polevoy, chief economist for Russia and CIS at ING Bank in Moscow. "This is linked to sanctions first of all, oil and the panic we saw on the market in December. The damage to the banking system and consumer sentiment will take a long time to repair."

The sanctions have severely reduced the ability of Russian companies to borrow abroad, triggering the worst currency crisis since Russia defaulted on its debt in 1998.

The rouble, which had strengthened on Friday, slumped over 6 percent against the dollar in early trade on Monday in thin trade, although it later regained some of the losses.

Overall the rouble's weakness will inevitably lead to higher inflation next year by pushing up the cost of imports, threatening President Vladimir Putin's reputation for ensuring Russia's prosperity.

Government ministries forecast the slump in oil prices will lead to a 4 percent contraction of the economy next year and that inflation could exceed 10 percent.

FALLING ROUBLE

The rouble had lost more than half of its value at one stage in December, although it has recovered since then after the government introduced informal capital controls and raised interest rates steeply.

The government issued orders to large state-controlled oil and gas exporters Gazprom and Rosneft to sell some of their dollar revenues to shore up the rouble.

Russians have kept a wary eye on the exchange rate since the collapse of the Soviet Union. Hyper-inflation wiped out their savings over several years in the early 1990s and the rouble collapsed again in 1998.

At 0944 GMT, the rouble was trading at 55.25 , much weaker than the 30-35 seen in the first half of the year but well up from an all-time low of around 80 per dollar in mid-December.

The falling rouble has prompted huge buying of foreign currency in Russia and heavy withdrawals of bank deposits, heaping pressure on a vulnerable banking sector whose access to Western capital markets is restricted by the sanctions.

On Friday, Russian authorities also significantly scaled up rescue funds for Trust Bank, saying they would provide up to $2.4 billion in loans to bail out the mid-sized lender, the first bank to fall victim to the crisis.

GRAPHIC: Falling oil price weighs on Russian economy and the rouble:

link.reuters.com/nep63w (Writing by Dmitry Zhdannikov; editing by David Stamp)

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IMF mission to visit Ukraine from Jan 8

KIEV Mon Dec 29, 2014 5:12am EST

KIEV Dec 29 (Reuters) - An International Monetary Fund mission will visit Ukraine in early January for more discussions over implementation of an economic reform programme, the IMF said on Monday.

"The International Monetary Fund is moving expeditiously to continue discussions with the Ukrainian authorities on the IMF-supported economic reform program aiming to stabilize the Ukrainian economy and restore sustainable growth," it said in a statement.

The IMF, which had previously flagged a visit for sometime in January, said the mission would begin work in Kiev on Jan. 8 and could conclude before the end of the month.

Ukraine has so far received two tranches of aid worth a combined $4.6 billion under a $17 billion IMF-led bailout package agreed in April to support the economy and shore up its foreign currency reserves.

This month, Kiev said it needed the IMF to expand its bailout programme because of a deterioration in the country's economic outlook. The IMF and Ukraine's other Western backers have made clear that any further financial assistance will hinge on Kiev's ability to implement long-promised reforms.

A senior Ukrainian presidential official said last week that Kiev expected the IMF to reach a decision on the disbursement of its next multi-billion dollar instalment of aid by late January. (Reporting by Pavel Polityuk; Editing by Alexander Winning and John Stonestreet)


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Credit Suisse vows to fight New York mortgage securities case

ZURICH Mon Dec 29, 2014 5:22am EST

ZURICH Dec 29 (Reuters) - Credit Suisse Group AG said on Monday it would fight a U.S. lawsuit which accuses the Swiss bank of deceiving investors in mortgage-backed securities it had issued.

The Zurich-based bank said a New York State Supreme Court justice had last week rejected its request to dismiss the case, in which New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman accuses the bank of misrepresenting the quality of loans underlying residential mortgage-backed securities sponsored and underwritten by Credit Suisse in 2006 and 2007.

Investors suffered $11.2 billion in losses on the securities, according to Schneiderman's lawsuit, which stems from a joint federal-state working group created by President Barack Obama to go after wrongdoing that led to the 2008 financial crisis.

"We will appeal this particular decision and continue to defend ourselves in this case," a spokeswoman for Credit Suisse in Zurich said on Monday.

The U.S. government's examination of financial crisis-era mortgage abuses is now Credit Suisse's biggest legal worry, after it in May set aside a years-long U.S. probe into its dealings with Americans evading taxes by pleading guilty to a criminal charge and agreeing to pay more than $2.5 billion in penalties.

U.S.-based rivals including Bank of America Corp, JPMorgan Chase & Co and Citigroup Inc have in recent months reached settlements with the U.S. government over charges they misled investors into buying troubled mortgage-backed securities.

In October, Credit Suisse said it added a net 390 million Swiss francs ($395 million) to its litigation provisions in the third quarter, without saying what the provision was for. ($1 = 0.9867 Swiss francs) (Reporting by Katharina Bart; Editing by David Holmes)

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Saudi finance minister says no need to create sovereign wealth fund

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 26 Desember 2014 | 18.12

RIYADH Fri Dec 26, 2014 2:19am EST

RIYADH Dec 26 (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia's finance minister said there was no need for the kingdom to create a sovereign wealth fund to manage its oil wealth, rebuffing suggestions by prominent officials and businessmen.

At present, the surplus petrodollars of the world's top oil exporter are mostly invested abroad by the Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency (SAMA), its central bank, which had net foreign assets worth 2.75 trillion riyals ($733 billion) in October.

Most of that money is believed to be in low-risk U.S. dollar assets such as U.S. Treasury bonds and bank accounts, which tend to earn low returns compared to the more aggressive, higher-risk investments favoured by some other rich oil exporters.

So as oil prices have plunged this year, there have been calls for Saudi Arabia to create a sovereign wealth fund that would invest its money more actively, making up for the reduction in oil revenues.

The kingdom's Shura Council, an advisory body to the government, has discussed a proposal for a sovereign fund this year, but without reaching a conclusion.

Saudi billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, one of the kingdom's leading international investors, urged the government last month to establish such a fund, saying its annual earnings would cover a large part of the budget deficits which the state might now run because of cheaper oil.

But Finance Minister Ibrahim Alassaf, speaking to Saudi television late on Thursday after projecting a budget deficit of 145 billion riyals for 2015, said he saw no need for such a change.

"I believe the kingdom's policy is the most suitable for its circumstances," he said, adding that Saudi Arabia had ridden out the global financial crisis in 2008 with relatively little damage.

SAMA's international reserves are managed professionally by Saudis as well as by international fund managers, and the return from investing the reserves is similar to - and in some years higher than - the returns of Norway's sovereign fund, he said.

Over the past five years the total return on SAMA's reserves was around 11 percent and over the past 10 years, including the period of the financial crisis, it was 7 to 8 percent, he added.

"Even the funds that were believed untouchable were hit by the financial crisis and incurred huge losses, and were forced to shift their strategies to more secure investments."

Alassaf also noted that Saudi Arabia already had a large, domestic state fund, the Public Investment Fund, which unlike a foreign-focused fund was helping to develop the local economy by investing in local companies in areas from technology to agriculture. (Reporting by Marwa Rashad; Writing by Andrew Torchia)

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Russian cbank to lend $1.9 bln to rescue Trust Bank

MOSCOW Fri Dec 26, 2014 3:04am EST

MOSCOW Dec 26 (Reuters) - Russia's central bank will provide a 99 billion roubles ($1.9 billion) 10-year loan to mid-sized Trust Bank to help it avert bankruptcy, in Russia's first bailout this year amid a steep devaluation of the rouble.

The central bank said in a statement it will also provide a 28 billion roubles, 6-year loan to bank Otkritie which will oversee the rescue mission for Trust. (Reporting by Vladimir Soldatkin)


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UPDATE 4-Brent crude prices steady above $60 in thin Christmas trading

Fri Dec 26, 2014 3:21am EST

* Building supply glut caps prices

* Japanese Nov. crude imports down 17.3 pct y/y

* But strong U.S. data supports oil prices (Updates prices, tweaks lead)

By Henning Gloystein

SINGAPORE, Dec 26 (Reuters) - Brent crude oil futures traded steadily above $60 on Friday as a building supply glut and weak Japanese import data weighed on the market while strong U.S. economic data published over Christmas provided support.

On the supply side, data suggested an increasing glut as a U.S. report showed crude inventories unexpectedly rose by 7.3 million barrels last week to their highest December level on record. Analysts had expected a seasonal draw.

The demand picture was mixed, with price supporting data from the United States where jobless claims fell and third-quarter economic growth indicated the quickest pace in over a decade.

However, in Japan, crude imports in November dropped 17.3 percent from a year earlier to 14.68 million kilolitres (3.08 million barrels per day), data from the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry showed.

Front-month Brent crude prices were trading at $60.68 at 0812 GMT, up 44 cents, while U.S. WTI's front-month contract was up 47 cents at $56.30 a barrel in thin trading as many countries were still on Christmas holiday.

"Prices seem adamant on staying above support levels, and it seems they will hold for this festive season," Singapore-based Phillip Futures said in a note.

"Normally, positive stockpile data of this magnitude would surely have broken support levels. However, it seems there is not enough downward pressure to keep prices down," it said.

"We continue to attribute this to the short-covering at the end of the year as oil bears close out positions to celebrate the New Year," Phillip Futures added.

Uncertainty around whether Brent can hold above $60 or not and lower liquidity toward the end of the year meant that price volatility has risen to levels this month last seen in 2012.

Brent is down 1.8 percent for the week, while U.S. crude was heading for a 1 percent drop.

(Editing by Himani Sarkar and Sunil Nair)

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Russian FinMin working to ensure VTB gets state support by year-end - minister

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 25 Desember 2014 | 18.12

MOSCOW Thu Dec 25, 2014 3:17am EST

MOSCOW Dec 25 (Reuters) - Russia's Finance Minister Anton Siluanov said on Thursday that his ministry was doing everything possible to ensure that state bank VTB gets money from the National Wealth Fund by the end of the year.

VTB shares were up around 5 percent from the previous close on the Moscow Exchange on Thursday. (Reporting by Elena Fabrichnaya; Writing by Alexander Winning; Editing by Polina Devitt)


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Russian presidential aide sees 11 pct inflation at end-2014 - RIA

MOSCOW Thu Dec 25, 2014 4:15am EST

MOSCOW Dec 25 (Reuters) - An economic aide to Russian President Vladimir Putin told journalists on Thursday that annual inflation would reach around 11 percent by the end of the year.

"We've already reached 10.4 percent, (it will be) around 11," Andrei Belousov said, RIA Novosti news agency reported. Finance Minister Anton Siluanov said on Thursday that inflation by the end of the year could be around 11.5 percent. (Reporting by Alexander Winning; Editing by Polina Devitt)


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Saudi plans to raise spending 0.6 pct in 2015 budget, run deficit

DUBAI Thu Dec 25, 2014 4:50am EST

DUBAI Dec 25 (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia plans to raise government spending by 0.6 percent to a record high next year while covering a large budget deficit due to plunging oil prices with its huge fiscal reserves, the Ministry of Finance said on Thursday.

Spending in the kingdom's 2015 state budget is projected at 860 billion riyals ($229 billion), up from 855 billion in the 2014 budget plan - the smallest increase in more than a decade.

Projected 2015 revenues would drop to 715 billion riyals from 855 billion in the 2014 plan, leaving a deficit of 145 billion.

Saudi Arabia will continue spending actively on economic development projects, social welfare and security despite the oil price slide and challenging conditions in the global economy, the ministry said. (Reporting by Andrew Torchia; Editing by Louise Ireland)


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UPDATE 2-Russia to help large borrowers as S&P mulls junk rating

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 24 Desember 2014 | 18.12

Wed Dec 24, 2014 3:58am EST

* Central bank to take firms' foreign debts as collateral

* Moody's sees Russian GDP contracting by 5.5 pct in 2015

* S&P could downgrade Russia to junk (Adds quotes and context)

By Lidia Kelly and Dmitry Zhdannikov

MOSCOW, Dec 24 (Reuters) - Russia's central bank offered on Wednesday to help top exporters refinance heavy foreign debts next year, expected to be one of the toughest of President Vladimir Putin's 15-year rule for the economy due to Western sanctions and a plunge in oil prices.

The bank said it would help major Russian companies to refinance foreign debts by lending dollars and euros to those who were willing to put up their foreign borrowings as collateral.

The move means that the state will in effect take on credit risk for the companies, whose foreign debt obligations have shot up in rouble terms because of the currency's sharp slide this year.

Even before the move, Standard and Poors put Russia's sovereign credit outlook on "creditwatch negative", meaning it could downgrade it to junk as soon as January due to a "rapid deterioration of Russia's monetary flexibility".

While Russia has minimal sovereign foreign debts, Russian state and private companies and banks have accumulated a total of $600 billion in foreign debts, of which around $100 billion are due next year.

The ability to repay the loans or roll them over was severely reduced this year by Western sanctions, imposed on Russia for its actions in Ukraine, which effectively shut its companies and banks out of Western debt markets.

But the economic crisis in Russia's heavily oil-dependent economy goes wider. Moody's ratings agency said late on Tuesday that it expected Russia's GDP to contract by 5.5 percent in 2015 and 3 percent in 2016, under the effect of the plunge in oil prices and the rouble's slide.

"These developments will likely lead to a severe deterioration in the operating environment for Russian corporates, namely higher inflation, unemployment and debt-servicing costs as well as lower domestic demand, resulting in a deeper and more protracted decline in domestic economic activity than previously anticipated," Moody's said.

Russia has around $414 billion in foreign exchange and gold reserves, down from around $510 billion at the start of the year, after spending heavily to prop up the rouble as oil prices almost halved from this year's peaks in June.

The central bank said Wednesday's move was aimed at "helping to refinance foreign credits by Russian exporters in foreign currencies maturing in the near future at a time of their restricted abilities to access international capital markets".

It said these lending operations would also help to bring the rouble exchange rate into line with fundamentals and reduce volatility. Loans are to be provided for up to one year at auctions at a minimal rate of Libor plus 0.75 percent.

Oleg Kouzmin, an economist at Renaissance Capital, said the amount allocated to the instrument was small enough not to undermine the central bank's ability to support the rouble.

"Russian banks and Russian corporates will have more ability now to get dollars from the central bank to cope with external debt redemptions," he said. (Additional reporting by Katya Golubkova and Tom Grove; Writing by Dmitry Zhdannikov; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

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RPT-Stock swings may signal bull run is in its last throes

Wed Dec 24, 2014 3:35am EST

(Repeats Tuesday item)

* Dive in oil and rouble plus Fed policy drive price swings

* Dow gains 1,000 points in a week

* Markets were volatile before Black Monday, global crisis

* Others say investors should look through short-term moves

By Jamie McGeever

LONDON, Dec 23 (Reuters) - Stocks are showing the kind of volatility that preceded major falls in the past, suggesting to some that one of the most blistering U.S. rallies on record may be nearing its end.

The market is undergoing big swings under the influence of plunging oil prices and resulting turmoil in Russia, as well as the Federal Reserve's only gradual shift away from ultra-low interest rates and - on Tuesday - data showing a sharp acceleration of the U.S. economy.

The series of short-term rallies and selloffs has revived memories of events before the "Black Monday" crash of October, 1987, and more recently the global crisis of the past decade.

The S&P 500 has more than trebled from its post-crisis low of 666 points in March 2009. The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed above 18,000 for the first time after Tuesday's data showed GDP grew at an annualised 5 percent in the third quarter, the fastest rate in 11 years. That means the Dow has gained 1,000 points in just one week.

Larry McDonald, senior director and head of U.S. strategy at Newedge in New York, noted wide price swings before deeper and longer-term declines as previous bull markets ran their course.

"You had a lot of this in the summer of 2007 and the summer of 1987," he said. "Our systemic risk indicators are showing a very high scoring in terms of risk. I think we are anywhere from two to eight weeks away from the big one - a fall of 10 percent or more."

A 10 percent reversal in markets is often termed a "correction".

Already on Monday the S&P and Dow had both notched up yet another record closing high. For the S&P it was the 50th this year, the most in any year since 1995.

Other examples of the high volatility abound. The Dow jumped 421 points last Thursday, marking its biggest daily rise this year. That took gains over the Wednesday and Thursday to more than 700 points, its sixth biggest two-day rally in history.

This surge was fuelled by the Fed, which said last Wednesday it would remain "patient" in keeping interest rates ultra-low, and followed a stomach-churning fall the week before.

Russia's currency hit a new all-time low, due partly to the drop in the price of oil, its major export. The rouble's 12 percent fall on Dec. 15 alone was its biggest daily loss since the 1998 crisis. And oil's slide accelerated, taking Brent crude down almost 50 percent since June to a fresh five-year low.

In the week ending Dec. 12, the S&P fell 3.5 percent, breaking a run of seven weekly gains and recording its biggest weekly loss since May 2012.

"It's very unsettling. The market shouldn't be doing this. It's almost got an air of 2007-2008 about it," said Mark Ward, head of execution at Sanlam Securities in London. "The Dow shouldn't be rallying 400 points, the biggest rally in years. The news isn't good enough to see the rallies we're having and the news isn't bad enough to see the sell-offs we're getting."

VOLATILITY HERE TO STAY

The roller-coaster ride of the last few weeks may be an indication of what's to come if similar periods of volatility in recent history are any guide, said Ashraf Laidi, head of global strategy at City Index in London.

Before the bull runs in the S&P from 1995 to 1999 and from 2003 to 2007 ended, investors also faced wrenching price moves, as the following graphic shows:

link.reuters.com/sac73w

Laidi noted that the S&P has risen for seven consecutive weeks on nine previous occasions, but never in those cases did the index fall more than 2 percent in the week that ended the winning streak. The S&P's 3.5 percent fall in the week ending Dec. 12 "shows an unprecedented departure in sentiment from greed to fear", he said.

That fear, however, should not prevent the rally continuing as long as economic growth and easy monetary policy around the world underpins corporate earnings and profitability.

Investors have been through this before. In the past strategists, worried about the longevity of the rally and global economic signals, have said it's time stocks took a break, only to see them rocket higher in the months that followed.

Investors wary of missing out on what could be a late-stage bull market have been jumping in, quickly seeking bargains after two near-corrections in the last three months.

However, with valuations stretched and wages starting to rise, particularly in the United States, corporate results will have to be stronger to maintain stock-price gains. Otherwise, the squeeze in margins is likely to yield meagre price appreciation in 2015.

The most recent Reuters quarterly poll of equity strategists suggests a 6 percent rise in the S&P in 2015 and a 9 percent and 10 percent gain in Germany and France, respectively.

While further gains may be harder to come by, it may be too early to call the end of the bull market.

"Volatility is a fact of life in financial markets and next year looks set to be more unsettled than this one," said David Stubbs, global market strategist at JPMorgan Asset Management in London.

"But investors should consider looking through short-term market swings and stay invested to benefit from the uptrend in corporate earnings we are expecting to see on both sides of the Atlantic." (Reporting by Jamie McGeever; Additional reporting by Lionel Laurent and Mike Dolan in London, David Gaffen in New York, graphic by Nigel Stephenson; editing by David Stamp)

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GLOBAL MARKETS-Stocks rise, dollar strong as US growth lifts holiday mood

Wed Dec 24, 2014 5:02am EST

* Robust U.S. GDP enhances risk appetite, lifts shares

* Dollar/yen edges back towards 7-1/2 year high

* Markets bring forward timing of Fed rate hike

* Rouble dips after S&P puts Russia on junk downgrade warning

By Marc Jones

LONDON, Dec 24 (Reuters) - The strongest growth for the world's largest economy in over a decade meant there was plenty of pre-Christmas cheer in global markets on Wednesday, as stocks continued their strong run and the dollar hovered at an 8-1/2 year high.

Risk appetite was boosted after data on Tuesday showed the U.S. economy grew at a stellar 5.0 percent in the third quarter, the quickest pace in 11 years and the strongest sign yet that growth has decisively shifted into higher gear.

The data drove both the Dow Jones and the S&P 500 benchmark U.S. indexes to record closing highs, and Asia and Europe saw their stock markets edge up in synchrony in largely quiet pre-holiday trading.

It was the dollar, though, that remained the main channel of traders' optimism. Having reached an 8-1/2 year high against a basket of major currencies, it was trading around 120.44 yen and 1.2188 to the euro.

With economists pencilling in a slightly earlier date for the first post-financial crisis rise in U.S interest rates, the two-year U.S. Treasury (government bond) yield also rose to a high not seen in almost four years.

"As is to be expected at this time of year trading volumes have really plummeted, but pretty much what we see is the stronger dollar trend continuing," said Alvin Tan, an FX Strategist at Societe Generale.

Focus also remained on oil as it hovered just above $61 a barrel following an almost 50 percent fall over the last six months.

It was also on Russia after Standard and Poor's warned it could downgrade the country's credit rating to 'junk' early next year, and as Moscow kept up the confrontational rhetoric with the West and NATO over Ukraine.

The Russian rouble plunged to an all-time low in mid-December on the back of lower oil prices and Western sanctions, which make it almost impossible for Russian firms to borrow on open markets.

It has since regained some ground, shored up by informal capital control measures, but was a shade lower at 54.6 to the dollar after a morning spent in and out of positive territory.

"The creditwatch placement stems from what we view as a rapid deterioration of Russia's monetary flexibility and the impact of the weakening economy on its financial system," S&P said following its downgrade warning.

FINE CHINA

With markets in Germany and Italy already shut for Christmas, the FTSEurofirst 300 index of top European shares inched up 0.1 percent to 1,375.46 points as it looked to extend its rally into a seventh straight day.

Asia's overnight gains had been led by Tokyo's Nikkei as it rose 1.2 percent, while MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares ex-Japan gained 0.2 percent.

Shanghai had bucked the trend, dropping 2.6 percent as investors locked in some of their potential 40 percent profits this year on 2014's top performing major market.

In comparison, world stocks overall are up a more modest 3 percent. That's despite a near 13 percent jump in benchmark U.S. markets such as the S&P 500, and mainly down to plunges in oil-linked markets such as Russia, and as sentiment has soured again in parts of the euro zone.

German government bonds, traditionally seen as ultra-safe but unglamorous in Europe, have returned 16 percent, more than triple the region's best performing stock market, Spain, at just over 5 percent.

Commodities have been the other major headache. Not only has oil halved in price but growth-sensitive copper and gold are also down for the year. (Editing by Mark Potter)

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UPDATE 2-Austria sells Hypo Balkans network to private equity firm Advent

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 23 Desember 2014 | 18.12

Tue Dec 23, 2014 4:56am EST

* Advent/EBRD consortium signs deal after weeks of negotiations

* Closing expected by mid-2015, ahead of EU deadline

* Advent group beats out two other bidders (Adds comments from Advent, Heta, source)

By Michael Shields

VIENNA, Dec 23 (Reuters) - Austria has agreed to sell nationalised bank Hypo Alpe Adria's Balkans network to private equity firm Advent and Europe's development bank for up to 200 million euros ($245 million), as it pushes ahead with winding down the defunct lender.

The sale, announced by the finance ministry and Advent after weeks of complex negotiations, is expected to close by the second quarter of 2015, pending regulatory approval.

Under the deal Advent gets an 80 percent stake, while the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) will get 20 percent. They will pay 50 million euros when the deal closes, with the rest depending on how the bank fares in 2014 and 2015.

"We would like to develop the bank group into a strong and profitable service provider for retail and mid-sized corporate clients in the region," Advent director Christian Stoffel said.

Hypo, which Austria had to take over in 2009 after a decade of unbridled expansion, agreed in October to sell the asset to Advent and the EBRD before Austria changed course last month and reopened the sale.

That let a group of Bulgarian investors and Russian investor Igor Kim's Expobank back into the race.

The ministry said Austria got "significantly improved" terms for the sale after reopening the deal. State guarantees for the network's portfolio were cut to 1.7 billion euros from more than 2 billion, and the state gets to share profits from divestments.

Financing for Hypo's Balkan units worth 2.2 billion euros remains in place, however, and will be repaid over coming years.

The European Commission had set a deadline of mid-2015 for signing a sale of the Balkans network, last valued by Hypo at 89 million euros. It includes banks and leasing companies in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro, Serbia and Slovenia.

It has a balance sheet of around 8.4 billion euros, 245 branches and 1.15 million customers.

Austria in March decided not to let Hypo go bust, opting instead to split off the Balkans unit and an Italian business and put the rest into a "bad bank", Heta Asset Resolution, to wind down remaining assets over years.

Local media have speculated that the sale of the Balkans network could trigger insolvency proceedings for Heta, a vehicle not guaranteed by the state. That could drag down Hypo's home province of Carinthia as well, given its debt guarantees.

But a source close to the situation said the government was not planning such a step. "This is not an issue. It is not being discussed," the source said on condition of anonymity.

Deutsche Bank and law firms Schoenherr and Gleiss Lutz advised the sellers. Citi advised Advent.

($1 = 0.8175 euros) (Additional reporting by Alexandra Schwarz-Goerlich,; Editing by Louise Heavens and Clara Ferreira Marques)

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UPDATE 4-Oil steady around $60 on hopes of strong U.S. data

Tue Dec 23, 2014 5:04am EST

* Outlook remains weak as OPEC says won't cut production

* Brent could drop below $60, WTI to $50, says BofAML

* U.S. crude rises over $1 to $56.85 before dipping back (Updates throughout, changes dateline, previous SINGAPORE)

By Christopher Johnson

LONDON, Dec 23 (Reuters) - Brent crude steadied around $60 a barrel on Tuesday, under pressure from a supply glut but supported by forecasts of stronger economic data from the United States, the world's biggest oil consumer.

Figures from the U.S. Commerce Department later in the day are expected to show a buoyant economy with third-quarter growth likely revised up to 4.3 percent from 3.9 percent, despite slowing growth in other parts of the world.

Expectations of robust U.S. data pushed prices higher in thin trading. Tuesday is a public holiday in Japan and many Western markets have slowed ahead of the long year-end break.

North Sea Brent crude has almost halved in price over the last six months and reached a five-and-a-half-year low of $58.50 last week. It has struggled since then to move far above $60.

Brent for February was up 15 cents at $60.26 by 0930 GMT. U.S. light crude rose more than a dollar to a session high of $56.85 a barrel in early trade before retreating to around $55.70.

"With the U.S. economy picking up, we expect the figures to be favorable," brokerage Phillip Futures said in a note.

"Durable goods orders depict a strong manufacturing sector which implies a higher industrial use of crude oil."

As new sources of crude come on stream in North America, oil markets are exceptionally well supplied with inventories brimming in many countries.

But the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, which pumps around a third of the world's oil, has said it will not reduce production. Officials say OPEC producers are worried they will simply lose market share if they cut output.

Saudi Arabia's powerful oil minister, Ali al-Naimi, has argued it is not in the group's interest to cut oil output however far prices may fall.

"Whether it goes down to $20, $40, $50, $60, it is irrelevant," Naimi was quoted by the Middle East Economic Survey as saying in an interview.

Arab OPEC producers expect oil to rebound to between $70 and $80 by the end of next year as a global economic recovery revives demand, OPEC delegates told Reuters this week.

"Brent could drop below $60 per barrel over the next six months, and WTI could fall to $50, as global oil inventories build sharply from here," Bank of America Merrill Lynch said in a research note.

"Oil could rebound sharply by the end of 2015," it added. (Additional reporting by Henning Gloystein in Singapore; Editing by Dale Hudson)

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GLOBAL MARKETS-Christmas rally enters sixth day in Europe

Tue Dec 23, 2014 5:18am EST

(Recasts after European markets open, changes dateline from previous SYDNEY)

* Santa rally extends in Europe in thinning trade

* Greece, China worries in background

* Asian markets thin and sluggish as Tokyo on holiday

By Patrick Graham

LONDON, Dec 23 (Reuters) - The year-end rally on Europe's major stock exchanges edged into its sixth day on Tuesday, just managing to ride out growing concerns over Greece and the pace of growth in China, in markets thinned out by the Christmas holiday season.

Britain's FTSE 100 index was up 0.3 percent, Germany's DAX index up 0.1 percent and France's CAC 40 up 0.3 percent.

But Greek shares fell almost 2 percent as investors looked nervously at a presidential election that may spark a snap election and eventually threaten the country's commitment to its international bailout.

Shanghai shares also fell the most in two weeks as investors took some profit on infrastructure stocks and a fall in prices of iron for construction - an indicator that property investment in China is weakening - spooked the Australian dollar.

But the tone overall has been steadier for the past few days, thanks largely to a stabilisation of oil prices - and a resulting quietening of Russia's currency problems. A pre-Christmas rush of U.S. data due later may also underline the improvement in the world's biggest economy.

"We are likely to see some impressive U.S. data on Tuesday. This would be the first time since 2003 we have seen two consecutive quarters of GDP growth above 4.0 percent," analysts at BNP Paribas wrote in a note to clients.

Trading was light in Asia with Japan on holiday and markets moved only marginally. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan eased 0.3 percent.

Trade was also thin in Europe.

"Most investors have closed their books for the year. There's not a lot of volume, and indexes are mostly in a neutral zone for now," said Jean-Louis Cussac, head of Paris-based firm Perceval Finance.

There was a brief blip lower for sterling on the back of a shockingly large current account deficit and downward revisions of gross domestic product.

Olivier Blanchard, chief economist at the IMF, and Rabah Arezki, head of the commodities research team, talked up the impact of lower oil prices on economic growth forecasts in a blog on Monday.

They estimated the boost to world growth would be between 0.3 and 0.7 percentage points above the Fund's baseline forecast of 3.8 percent in 2015, with the gain to China ranging from 0.4 to 0.7 percentage points.

Greek bond yields rose before the second round of the presidential vote. There have been some positive signs, but local media calculate Prime Minister Antonis Samaras is still 11 votes short of the parliamentary support he needs in a final vote next week to elect a new president and avoid an election.

"Any number that's coming closer to 180 would lead to higher expectations of a remaining chance for the current government staying in charge," DZ Bank strategist Christian Lenk said.

"But it's like a poker game. MPs will not show their hand in the second round." (Editing by Hugh Lawson)

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UPDATE 1-Top Russian oil firm Rosneft repays around $7 bln in debt

Written By Unknown on Senin, 22 Desember 2014 | 18.12

Mon Dec 22, 2014 5:16am EST

(Adds background, detail)

By Lidia Kelly and Polina Devitt

MOSCOW Dec 22 (Reuters) - Russia's top oil producer Rosneft said on Monday it had met a $7 billion loan repayment, partially easing fears among investors that Western sanctions banning major Russian firms from access to European and U.S. capital could prompt mass defaults.

Shares in the company rose 2.5 percent in morning trade after Rosneft confirmed it had made the payment - part of a two-year $12.7 billion loan it used to buy oil firm TNK-BP - from its own cash reserves.

Rosneft, which produces more oil than Iraq or Iran, has asked for 2.5 trillion roubles ($44.07 billion) from the government to help it weather sanctions and refinance its debts.

But the government is yet to decide how much money to give from the National Wealth Fund, resulting in speculation last week - denied by Rosneft - that it was buying foreign currency on the domestic forex market.

Rosneft Chief Executive Igor Sechin said on Monday: "To service its debt the company does not need to enter the currency market, because it generates enough foreign currency earnings. Surplus balances are used on the market, in such a manner."

Analysts say Rosneft is too big for the state to allow it to fail and point to its successful sale earlier this month of 625 billion roubles worth of domestic bonds -- the bulk of the company's current planned debt refinancing.

"As for other companies, there is still concern, but I do not expect large-scale defaults on the public debt market," said an analyst at a major Russian bank who declined to be named.

The company continues to face a severe squeeze from a collapse in oil prices and the rapid devaluation of the rouble, which has lost 45 percent of its value against the dollar as a result of the sanctions, an approaching economic recession and a the dramatic fall in the value of oil, upon which the state budget depends.

Rosneft must make a second loan repayment of $6.9 billion in February.

Its bridge loan providers were BNP Paribas, Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ, Barclays Bank, Citi, Credit Agricole CIB, ING Bank, Intesa Sanpaolo, JP Morgan, Mizuho Corporate Bank, Natixis, Societe Generale and UniCredit, according to Thomson Reuters LPC data.

($1 = 56.7279 roubles) (Additional reporting by Katya Golubkova; Writing by Lidia Kelly; Editing by Sophie Walker)

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Greek parliament vote in balance after Samaras election offer

Mon Dec 22, 2014 5:59am EST

(Fixes typo in lead paragraph)

* Greek PM plea for support to complete bailout talks

* Opposition parties reject offer but some independents swayed

* Second round in presidential vote at 1000 GMT Tuesday

By Angeliki Koutantou

ATHENS, Dec 22 (Reuters) - Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras' surprise offer to lawmakers to go to the polls late next year in exchange for a vote for his presidential nominee has injected fresh momentum into his fight against the anti-austerity left.

However, as parliament prepares for a second round of voting on Tuesday to elect a successor to 85 year-old President Karolos Papoulias, the outcome still appears open with only a handful of independents pledging firm support to the government

If a new president is not elected by a third round on Dec. 29, elections will have to be held by early February, potentially handing power to Syriza, the main leftwing opposition party, which wants to renegotiate the international bailout agreement that Greece still needs to keep its battered finances afloat.

Such an outcome could rock the euro zone, which is only just emerging from its debt crisis.

Greek media reported on Monday that Samaras' candidate, Stavros Dimas, could get 169 votes in the second round, still 11 short of the 180 vote threshold required in the decisive third vote, leaving the race still too close to call. The second vote needs 200.

"There are already a few additional positive votes but I think that the chances of electing a president are extremely slim," said Costas Panagopoulos, the head of Athens-based polling institute ALCO.

With financial markets and Greece's European partners all watching closely, voting on Tuesday will begin at midday (1000 GMT), with the result likely around an hour later.

Dimas is not expected to be elected on Tuesday, but the result will offer a pointer to the final result. Only five independents backed Dimas in the first round, giving the government 160 votes.

Samaras, whose normal term ends in mid-2016, called on parliament for support on Sunday, promising to bring pro-European independents into the government and hold new elections by the end of 2015 in exchange for voting in Dimas.

Syriza and the small Democratic Left and Independent Greeks parties have all rejected the offer.

The main Athens index rose 2 percent at first on hopes of a deal that could avert snap elections. However it fell back later to trade flat.

The already uncertain outlook was complicated on Friday by claims of an attempt to bribe an Independent Greeks lawmaker to vote with the government.

The allegations, which are being investigated by prosecutors, prompted angry denials and counterclaims by the government that they were stage-managed to force new elections but they have intensified the tension ahead of the vote.

Syriza has seen its advantage narrow over the past few weeks but it still leads the ruling coalition by 3.4 points according to an opinion poll on Saturday. (Additional reporting by Lefteris Papadimas and Renee Maltezou; Writing by James Mackenzie Editing by Jeremy Gaunt)

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EMERGING MARKETS-Bourses bounce and Russia rallies as oil climbs

By Chris Vellacott

LONDON Mon Dec 22, 2014 5:26am EST

LONDON Dec 22 (Reuters) - Emerging market stocks jumped on Monday following a buoyant session in Asia, while Russia's dollar-denominated index surged as investors cheered a rebound in the oil price and a debt payment by Rosneft.

The MSCI emerging stocks benchmark was trading up more than 1 percent at a 10-day high following a 1.25 percent gain for the Asia excluding Japan index.

In Russia, the RTS index of dollar-denominated shares surged over 4 percent, as Brent crude started the week with a 2 percent gain, trading comfortably above the $62 per barrel level.

Russia's top oil company Rosneft was up over 2.5 percent after announcing it had repaid around $7 billion as part of a bridge loan that matured on Sunday.

The loan is part of a larger $12.7 billion, two-year loan signed in December 2012 with a syndicate of international banks that backed Rosneft's acquisition of oil rival TNK-BP.

Other Russian assets also rallied, with the rouble 2 percent stronger against the dollar. Russian dollar bond yield spreads - the premium investors demand to hold bonds over safe-haven U.S. Treasuries - narrowed 17 basis points to 529 bps.

Spreads had reached 700 bps last week as the country teetered on the edge of a currency crisis.

"Everybody is basically happy to get the year behind them," said Simon Quijano-Evans, analyst at Commerzbank. "A very positive development is the calming of the rouble and the central bank seems to be on top of things again. However, this is not done and dusted and we could see a challenging January."

Meanwhile, Ukrainian dollar bonds were trading lower, with a bond maturing in 2017 off by 1 cent to 70.5 cents in the dollar.

Late on Friday, ratings agency Standard & Poor's cut Ukraine's credit rating to "CCC-" saying it was worried about a default after the IMF delayed the next tranche of money from its bailout package set up earlier in the year.

Central European assets were also rebounding on Monday having come under pressure last week as market turmoil in Russia rippled out to near neighbours.

Poland's Zloty was 0.4 percent higher against the dollar, easing back from 15 month lows reached on Friday. Warsaw shares were also higher.

In the Middle East, Saudi Arabia's stock market fell 0.4 percent, breaking two days of big advances, blamed by analysts on profit taking. However, a stabilising oil price buoyed petrochemical stocks such as Saudi Kayan, which gained 7 percent.

Nigeria's currency, the naira, was also steady below its recent long-term low.

For GRAPHIC on emerging market FX performance 2014, see link.reuters.com/jus35t

For GRAPHIC on MSCI emerging index performance 2014, see link.reuters.com/weh36s

For GRAPHIC on MSCI emerging Europe performance 2014, see link.reuters.com/jun28s

For GRAPHIC on MSCI frontier index performance 2014, see link.reuters.com/zyh97s

For CENTRAL EUROPE market report, see

For TURKISH market report, see

For RUSSIAN market report, see ) (Editing by Toby Chopra)

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Italy's Renzi wins confidence vote to pass budget in Senate

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 21 Desember 2014 | 18.12

Sat Dec 20, 2014 3:35am EST

* Budget moves on to lower house, must pass by end of year

* Includes tax cuts for low earners, businesses

* EU may demand more spending cuts in March

By Steve Scherer

ROME, Dec 20 (Reuters) - Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi won a confidence vote to get his tax-cutting 2015 budget through the Senate on Saturday and it is expected to be definitively approved by the lower house of parliament next week.

In a session that ended shortly before dawn, the Senate voted 162-37 to pass a financial package that includes tax cuts for low earners worth almost 10 billion euros ($12.3 billion), and a reduction in labour taxes for businesses.

Italian governments often resort to votes of confidence to truncate debate and speed legislation. The government must resign if it loses such a vote. By law, the budget must be passed by parliament by the end of the year.

Renzi has been pushing for the European Union to allow more spending he says is needed to help Italy, the euro zone's third-biggest economy, emerge from recession and reduce record unemployment. In exchange, he is promising liberalisation in areas such as the labour market and the education system.

He was forced to ditch some tax cuts in his original budget draft to meet European Commission demands that Italy do more to reduce its structural fiscal deficit, which is adjusted for swings in the business cycle.

Further belt-tightening measures may yet be needed. The Commission has said that Italy, France and Belgium risk breaching its rules on running sound public finances and it will issue a final verdict on the budgets of all three countries in March.

A Commission technical document seen by Reuters last month said Italy needed to find new deficit cuts worth up to 4.8 billion euros because the extra measures proposed by Renzi, such as cracking down on tax evasion, may not be effective.

The budget aims to keep Italy's deficit at 2.9 percent of gross domestic product, just below the EU's 3 percent ceiling and down marginally for this year's target, which is bang on 3.0 percent. (Editing by Mark Heinrich)

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UPDATE 2-ECB's Constancio sees negative inflation rate in months ahead-magazine

Sat Dec 20, 2014 7:33am EST

(Adds ECB's Hansson and context)

BERLIN Dec 20 (Reuters) - European Central Bank Vice President Vitor Constancio said in a magazine interview he expected the euro zone inflation rate to turn negative in the coming months but that if this was just a temporary phenomenon, he did not see a risk of deflation.

Annual inflation in the euro zone slowed to 0.3 percent in November as energy prices fell, putting it well below the ECB's target for inflation close to but just below 2 percent.

In early December the ECB had forecast 0.7 percent inflation for 2015 but Constancio told Germany's WirtschaftsWoche oil prices had fallen by an extra 15 percent since then and that, while this should support growth and so drive up inflation in the longer term, it created a tricky situation in the short-term.

"We now expect a negative inflation rate in the coming months and that is something that every central bank has to look at very closely," Constancio was quoted as saying in an interview due to be published on Monday.

But he said that several months of negative inflation would not translate into deflation: "You'd need negative inflation rates over a longer period for that. If it's just a temporary phenomenon, I don't see a danger."

Constancio said the euro zone was not in deflation and there was also not a risk of this for every country in the single currency bloc. He added that rising productivity in countries like Ireland and Spain could, for example, create scope for wage rises, which would counter deflation dangers.

He said forecasts from the International Monetary Fund, the European Commission and OECD that the euro zone's economic weakness would continue until 2018 meant there would be downward pressure on inflation until then.

By buying asset-backed securities (ABS), or bundled loans, which the ECB began doing on Nov. 21, as well as purchasing covered bonds and offering new loans to banks, the ECB aims to increase the size of its balance sheet back to levels seen in early 2012.

Constancio said there had been no decision on what extra measures the ECB would take to bring about monetary easing next year, adding that the bank would, in early 2015, assess the effectiveness of measures it had taken this year.

He said the ECB needed to employ all monetary policy tools at its disposal, adding that the bank must act if inflation was too low to maintain its credibility and so would need to use channels it had not touched before.

He said quantitative easing was "totally legal" and the ECB did not rule out what was legal. There is currently a stand off between the ECB and Germany's Bundesbank over ECB preparations to buy sovereign bonds to prop up the weak euro zone economy.

On Friday Reuters reported that ECB officials were considering ways to ensure weak countries that stand to gain most from a fresh round of money printing bear more of the risk and cost.

German newspaper Sueddeutsche Zeitung on Saturday said the ECB was discussing how to avoid or reduce possible collective losses for the bank from its planned government bond purchases.

"That is an issue," the newspaper cited ECB policymaker Ardo Hansson as saying. "It is a question of how much of the risk should be shouldered by individual countries in the euro zone."

Constancio told WirtschaftsWoche the ECB did not have an exchange rate target and did not measure the success of its monetary policy measures on the basis of their impact on the euro. (Reporting by Michelle Martin, editing by Angus MacSwan)

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Capital hike, asset sales to fill gap at Monte Paschi -chairman

VIENNA Sun Dec 21, 2014 3:00am EST

VIENNA Dec 21 (Reuters) - Italian lender Monte dei Paschi di Siena expects to complete its planned capital increase by July and can use divestments to help plug a hole in its balance sheet, Chairman Alessandro Profumo told an Austrian newspaper.

Monte Paschi needs to shore up its capital base following this year's euro zone health check of European banks. It plans a cash call of up to 2.5 billion euros ($3.06 billion) next year.

Asked by Der Standard in an interview in its weekend edition what the plan was to fill the gap, he said this had not been officially announced but added: "It consists of the capital increase but also the sale of assets."

A consortium comprised of UBS, Citibank, Mediobanca, Goldman Sachs and other foreign institutions is getting the standard 3 percent fee for handling the capital increase, he said, adding it "should be completed by July 2015 at the latest".

Profumo said the bank was not seeking to extend to 2017 the repayment of the last 1 billion euros of state aid it has yet to pay back. He said this would happen after the capital increase.

Asked about talk a Chinese investor was ready to buy into Monte dei Paschi, he said: "If there is something to report, we will do that. We are not currently conducting any negotiations."

He said bad loans would weigh on the bank again next year.

"The volume of non-performing loans is still quite high, the provisions for these as well. Since we are the bank of small and mid-sized companies in Italy, which are suffering most from the crisis, non-performing loans will hit us also in 2015," he said.

($1 = 0.8179 euros) (Reporting by Michael Shields; editing by Jason Neely)

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ECB's Constancio sees negative inflation rate in months ahead-magazine

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 20 Desember 2014 | 18.12

BERLIN Sat Dec 20, 2014 2:19am EST

BERLIN Dec 20 (Reuters) - ECB Vice President Vitor Constancio said in a German magazine interview that he expected the inflation rate to turn negative in the coming months but added that if this was just a temporary phenomenon, he did not see a risk of deflation.

"Our experts forecast just 0.7 percent inflation for 2015 but since this projection was made, oil prices have fallen by a further 15 percent. We now expect a negative inflation rate in the coming months," he said in an interview with German magazine WirtschaftsWoche due to be published on Monday.

Annual inflation in the euro zone slowed to 0.3 percent in November as energy prices fell.

Constancio also said that quantitative easing was legal and the ECB did not rule out measures that were legal. (Reporting by Michelle Martin, editing by William Hardy)


18.12 | 0 komentar | Read More

UPDATE 1-ECB's Constancio sees negative inflation rate in months ahead-magazine

BERLIN Sat Dec 20, 2014 3:29am EST

BERLIN Dec 20 (Reuters) - European Central Bank Vice President Vitor Constancio said in a magazine interview he expected the euro zone inflation rate to turn negative in the coming months but added that if this was just a temporary phenomenon, he did not see a risk of deflation.

Annual inflation in the euro zone slowed to 0.3 percent in November as energy prices fell, putting it well below the ECB's target for inflation close to but just below 2 percent.

In early December the ECB had forecast 0.7 percent inflation for 2015 but Constancio told Germany's WirtschaftsWoche oil prices had fallen by an extra 15 percent since then and that, while that should support growth and so drive up inflation in the longer term, it created a tricky situation in the short-term.

"We now expect a negative inflation rate in the coming months and that is something that every central bank has to look at very closely," Constancio was quoted as saying in an interview due to be published on Monday.

But he said that several months of negative inflation would not translate into deflation: "You'd need negative inflation rates over a longer period for that. If it's just a temporary phenomenon, I don't see a danger."

Constancio said the euro zone was not in deflation and there was also not a risk of this for every country in the single currency bloc. He added that rising productivity in countries like Ireland and Spain could, for example, create scope for wage rises, which would counter deflation dangers.

He said forecasts from the International Monetary Fund, the European Commission and OECD that the euro zone's economic weakness would continue until 2018 meant there would be downward pressure on inflation until then.

By buying asset-backed securities (ABS), or bundled loans, which the ECB began doing on Nov. 21, as well as purchasing covered bonds and offering new loans to banks, the ECB aims to increase the size of its balance sheet back to levels seen in early 2012.

Constancio said there had been no decision on what extra measures the ECB would take to bring about monetary easing next year, adding that the bank would, in early 2015, assess the effectiveness of measures it had taken this year.

He said the ECB needed to employ all monetary policy tools at its disposal, adding that the bank needed to act if inflation was too low to maintain its credibility and so would need to use channels it had not touched before.

He said quantitative easing was "totally legal" and the ECB did not rule out what was legal.

Constancio also said the ECB did not have an exchange rate target and did not measure the success of its monetary policy measures on the basis of their impact on the euro. (Reporting by Michelle Martin, editing by William Hardy)

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Italy's Renzi wins confidence vote to pass budget in Senate

Sat Dec 20, 2014 3:35am EST

* Budget moves on to lower house, must pass by end of year

* Includes tax cuts for low earners, businesses

* EU may demand more spending cuts in March

By Steve Scherer

ROME, Dec 20 (Reuters) - Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi won a confidence vote to get his tax-cutting 2015 budget through the Senate on Saturday and it is expected to be definitively approved by the lower house of parliament next week.

In a session that ended shortly before dawn, the Senate voted 162-37 to pass a financial package that includes tax cuts for low earners worth almost 10 billion euros ($12.3 billion), and a reduction in labour taxes for businesses.

Italian governments often resort to votes of confidence to truncate debate and speed legislation. The government must resign if it loses such a vote. By law, the budget must be passed by parliament by the end of the year.

Renzi has been pushing for the European Union to allow more spending he says is needed to help Italy, the euro zone's third-biggest economy, emerge from recession and reduce record unemployment. In exchange, he is promising liberalisation in areas such as the labour market and the education system.

He was forced to ditch some tax cuts in his original budget draft to meet European Commission demands that Italy do more to reduce its structural fiscal deficit, which is adjusted for swings in the business cycle.

Further belt-tightening measures may yet be needed. The Commission has said that Italy, France and Belgium risk breaching its rules on running sound public finances and it will issue a final verdict on the budgets of all three countries in March.

A Commission technical document seen by Reuters last month said Italy needed to find new deficit cuts worth up to 4.8 billion euros because the extra measures proposed by Renzi, such as cracking down on tax evasion, may not be effective.

The budget aims to keep Italy's deficit at 2.9 percent of gross domestic product, just below the EU's 3 percent ceiling and down marginally for this year's target, which is bang on 3.0 percent. (Editing by Mark Heinrich)

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