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UPDATE 1-Argentina to appeal U.S. judge's order on bond payment

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 30 Agustus 2014 | 18.12

Fri Aug 29, 2014 7:36pm EDT

NEW YORK Aug 29 (Reuters) - Argentina said on Friday it would appeal a U.S. judge's decision declaring illegal a $539 million payment the country deposited with Bank of New York Mellon Corp for its restructured bondholders.

BNY Mellon in June obeyed a U.S. court ruling to block the $539 million interest payment on debt that was restructured following Argentina's record 2002 debt default, paving the way for the country's second default in 12 years in July.

Argentina said on Tuesday it had stripped Bank of New York Mellon's authorization to operate in the South American country.

In another court filing, Argentina said it would also appeal a separate order by U.S. District Judge Thomas Griesa in New York that enjoined payments on U.S. dollar-denominated bonds governed by Argentine law. (Reporting by Nate Raymond in New York. Additional reporting by Megan Davies.; Editing by Chris Reese and Andre Grenon)


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UPDATE 1-Carlyle Group to pay $115 mln to settle collusion suit -source

Fri Aug 29, 2014 7:54pm EDT

(Adds details on settlement and background on case)

By Greg Roumeliotis

Aug 29 (Reuters) - Carlyle Group LP has agreed to pay $115 million to settle a lawsuit accusing it of conspiring with other buyout firms not to outbid each other on some takeovers that occurred prior to the financial crisis, a person familiar with the matter said on Friday.

Carlyle was the only private equity firm among those still facing trial not to have settled. It brings the total amount buyout firms have agreed to pay to settle the leveraged buyout collusion charges to $590.5 million.

Like its peers, Carlyle did not admit to any wrongdoing as part of the settlement, the person said, asking not to be identified ahead of any official announcement.

Washington, D.C.-based Carlyle declined to comment.

The money will go to some shareholders of companies that were acquisition targets for private equity during the leveraged buyout boom that predated the 2008 financial crisis.

In a December 2007 lawsuit, private equity firms were accused of conspiring to drive down takeover prices and reduce competition by following "club rules," often teaming up on buyouts and providing quid pro quos to influence each other's behavior.

The lawsuit covers eight buyouts in which the firms allegedly agreed not to "jump," or outbid, each other after buyouts were announced.

Carlyle was one of 11 private equity firms originally sued. Earlier this month, Blackstone Group LP, KKR & Co LP and TPG Capital LP disclosed in a court filing they agreed to pay $325 million to settle the lawsuit.

Last month, Silver Lake Partners LP settled with the plaintiffs for $29.5 million. In June, Goldman Sachs Group Inc and Bain Capital Partners LLC settled for $67 million and $54 million, respectively.

U.S. District Judge William Young in Boston will consider preliminary approval of the accords at a Sept. 4 hearing. Carlyle's challenge to the class action status of the lawsuit had been scheduled to be heard on the same date.

Apollo Global Management LLC, Providence Equity Partners Inc, JPMorgan Chase & Co and Thomas H. Lee Partners LP all won bids to be dismissed as defendants in the case.

In one case, soon after a KKR-led group in July 2006 agreed to buy hospital chain HCA Inc, a Blackstone executive allegedly wrote that the $32.1 billion price "represents good value and is a shame we let KKR get away with highway robbery."

In another case, after a Blackstone-led group in September 2006 beat out KKR to buy Freescale Semiconductor Ltd for $17.5 billion, Blackstone President Hamilton James emailed KKR co-founder George Roberts that he would "much rather" work together, and that "in opposition we can cost each other a lot of money." (Reporting by Greg Roumeliotis in New York; Editing by Lisa Shumaker and Leslie Adler)

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EU to prepare "next level" of Russia sanctions - Germany's Gabriel

PARIS Sat Aug 30, 2014 6:36am EDT

PARIS Aug 30 (Reuters) - European Union leaders have agreed to prepare "the next level of sanctions" against Russia in response to its intervention in Ukraine, German Vice-Chancellor Sigmar Gabriel said on Saturday.

"It is clear that after this intervention by Russia in Ukraine ... EU leaders will certainly task the European Commission with preparing the next level of sanctions," Gabriel told journalists in Paris before an EU summit in Brussels. (Reporting by Mark John; Writing by Natalie Huet; Editing by Andrew Heavens)


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Ukraine in critical need of second IMF aid tranche - PM

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 29 Agustus 2014 | 18.12

KIEV Fri Aug 29, 2014 6:33am EDT

KIEV Aug 29 (Reuters) - Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseny Yatseniuk urged the International Monetary Fund on Friday to release the next tranche of a $17 billion loan and bemoaned the heavy cost of fighting a pro-Russian rebellion in the east.

Ukraine has complied with conditions for the two-year aid package, which is intended to shore up depleted foreign currency reserves and support the state budget, but the country faces risks due to the eastern conflict, the IMF has said.

Ukrainian troops and pro-Russian rebels have been fighting since April in the heavily industrialised regions of Donetsk and Luhansk, which together contributed nearly 17 percent of Ukrainian gross domestic product in 2013.

"The (revenue) that we haven't been receiving from Donetsk and Luhansk is miniscule compared with the billions we are spending on war," Yatseniuk said at a government meeting.

"For us it is critically important to get a positive decision from the IMF and we've done everything (to achieve) this," he said.

The ex-Soviet republic received a first tranche of slightly more than $3 billion in May and the IMF board will meet later on Friday to decide whether to approve the next disbursement, likely to total $1.4 billion.

Analysts have said the Ukrainian economy will slide deeper into recession this year, despite the IMF aid deal, as the rebellion cripples activity in the industrial east and scares off foreign investors.

During its last visit to Kiev in July, the IMF downgraded its growth forecast for this year to a 6.5 percent contraction, from 5 percent previously. (Reporting by Pavel Polityuk; Writing by Alessandra Prentice; Editing by Crispian Balmer)

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GLOBAL MARKETS-Euro lifts, shares drift as ECB easing bets wane

Fri Aug 29, 2014 6:53am EDT

  * Euro edges off lows as inflation data cools ECB bets      * Dollar edges up against yen after weak Japanese data      * Shares head for 3rd week of gains amid Ukraine tensions      * German Bunds near record lows, money mkt rates sub-zero        By Marc Jones      LONDON, Aug 29 (Reuters) - The euro lifted off its lows and  the region's shares sagged on Friday as a new five-year low in  euro zone inflation was viewed as not extreme enough to force  the European Central Bank back into its increasingly bare policy  cupboard.      Consumer prices in the 18 countries using the euro rose by  just 0.3 percent year-on-year in August, the lowest since  October 2009 and well below the ECB's preferred 2 percent, but  also right in line with economists' prior expectations.       It helped cool fevered speculation that ECB is rapidly  moving towards U.S., UK and Japanese-style quantitative easing -  printing money by buying bonds - following strongly-worded  comments from ECB President Mario Draghi last week.      The euro rose to the day's high of $1.3195 against  the dollar, yields on core euro zone bonds inched away from  their record lows as the region's share markets   also lost some of their early momentum.       "Although Draghi has waved the flag I don't thank there is  enough there (in the inflation data) to instigate another round  of easing," said Bank of Tokyo Mitsubishi currency strategist  Derek Halpenny.      "In terms of another rate cut, I think they will want to  wait until they can be more certain that inflation expectations  have become unanchored."           But together with updated projections from ECB staff, the  inflation data is likely to lead to a lively discussion next  Thursday about whether the bank should accelerate existing  policy measures because of the danger of deflation.      Overnight, euro zone money market rates dropped  into negative territory for the first time ever on Thursday.  That essentially means banks are now paying to lend to each  other, and it reflects expectations for a long period of cheap  ECB money.        German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble warned on Friday,  however, that the ECB has run out of tools to fight deflation,  having earlier backed French President Francois Hollande's calls  for greater government investment to boost growth.      Front-running the euro inflation figures, French data showed  producer prices fell 0.3 percent month-on-month in July and 0.6  percent year-on-year. It has a host of reform measures planned  for September likely to push inflation even lower.      "What is more important for the ECB is inflation  expectations and what is worrying for them is that they have  been going down," said Philippe Gudin de Vallerin head of  European research at Barclays.      "They are clearly more nervous now," he added, though he  doubted major changes would come at next week's ECB meeting.            RUSSIAN BEARS      Worries that persistent tensions between Russia and Ukraine  could damage Europe's already-weak recovery remained a concern  for markets.      The rouble was a new all-time low versus the dollar  in Moscow as Russian stocks  steadied after a 3.5  percent fall this week. Earlier Asian shares had also felt the  strains as they pulled back from a six-year high.      Pro-Russia rebels fighting in Ukraine said on Friday they  would comply with a request from the Kremlin and open up a  'humanitarian corridor' to allow the withdrawal of Ukrainian  troops they have encircled.      It was not clear how the government in Kiev would react to  the offer, but the first word from the Ukrainian military was  negative. It said in a statement that the offer showed that  "these people (the separatists) are led and controlled directly  from the Kremlin".      MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan   dipped about 0.2 percent and Japan's Nikkei  stock average shed 0.2 percent after a spate of weak  Japan data, bringing its monthly loss to about 1.3 percent.                        RISKY BUSINESS       Overall, however, global share markets remain on a hot  streak. Investors are wagering that new stimulus from the ECB,  and possibly also the Bank of Japan before the end of the year,  is likely to keep cheap global funding flowing.      MSCI's 45-country world share index was on  course for its third straight week of gains after another run of  record highs on Wall Street this week and moves up in Europe and  emerging markets.       The high-flying dollar also edged up to 103.91 yen,  as it headed for a seventh straight week of gains versus the   basket of six major currencies.       Among commodities, gold was steady on the day at  $1,285 an ounce after rising for the third straight session  against a backdrop of Ukraine tension and ECB easing bets. It  was on track for its first monthly gain since June.        Brent crude added about 0.3 percent to $102.74 a  barrel, but was on track for its second monthly loss. Global  growth-sensitive metal copper, meanwhile, was set for  its biggest monthly loss since March.     (Reporting by Marc Jones, editing by John Stonestreet and Toby  Chopra)  
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EU energy chief expects gas talks with Russia, Ukraine by mid-Sept

MOSCOW Fri Aug 29, 2014 6:55am EDT

MOSCOW Aug 29 (Reuters) - European Energy Commissioner Guenther Oettinger told Reuters on Friday he expects the trilateral talks between Russia and Ukraine, brokered by the EU, to resume by mid-September.

Oettinger has been in Moscow where he met Russian Energy Minister Alexander Novak.

Russia stopped supplying Ukraine with gas in June after the former Soviet republics failed to agree on gas price and debt. Around half of Russian gas exports to Europe flow via Ukraine. (Reporting by Denis Pinchuk; writing by Vladimir Soldatkin; Editing by Polina Devitt)


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UPDATE 2-Turkey's Erdogan says new cabinet to be announced on Friday

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 27 Agustus 2014 | 18.12

Wed Aug 27, 2014 5:40am EDT

(Adds analyst comment, details, background)

By Gulsen Solaker and Orhan Coskun

ANKARA Aug 27 (Reuters) - Turkish president-elect Tayyip Erdogan said on Wednesday he would ask incoming prime minister Ahmet Davutoglu to form a new government on Thursday, and a new cabinet of ministers would be announced the following day.

Erdogan was speaking outside a congress meeting of the ruling AKP in Ankara, where tens of thousands of people had thronged to hear his final address as party leader after more than a decade at the helm, before he ascends to the presidency.

"God willing, we will give Davutoglu the mandate to form the government tomorrow, and the new cabinet will be announced on Friday," Erdogan told a crowd of his ruling AK Party supporters before entering the meeting hall.

The AK Party was set to elect current Foreign Minister Davutoglu as its leader at the congress in an Ankara sports hall later in the day, and Erdogan will appoint him prime minister on Thursday after his inauguration.

AKP members waved Turkish and party flags and cheered as Erdogan arrived at the hall. He greeted them and threw red carnations to the crowd as a song dedicated to him boomed out around the arena.

The heavily choreographed event - complete with films recounting Erdogan's political career - demonstrated the slick party machinery that has helped the AK Party dominate Turkish politics since it first came to power in 2002.

LOYALTY AND UNITY

Erdogan will cement his position as modern Turkey's most powerful leader when he is sworn in as president, enabling him to complete a transformation of the country which critics fear will deepen divisions in society.

He has made it clear he wants his party to remain loyal and unified after he hands over the reins as required by the constitution, particularly with parliamentary elections due next year.

Davutoglu's role will be to continue many of Erdogan's policies, including the Kurdish peace process and the fight against the so-called "parallel structure," whilst delivering electoral success, according to Hatem Ete, director of the Ankara based think-tank, SETA.

"The most important item on his agenda will be to ensure that AK Party does not lose votes in this time, or better yet, increases its votes," Ete said.

The government has been fighting a months-long battle against supporters of the U.S. based Muslim cleric Fethullah Gulen, whom they accuse of infiltrating and trying to unseat the government by stirring up allegations of corruption.

The appointment of close ally Davutoglu as prime minister is viewed as a sign that Erdogan has little intention of loosening his grip on the day-to-day running of the country as president.

Senior AK Party officials told Reuters they expected the core of the government to remain the same as the party focuses on winning a large enough electoral majority to amend the constitution in the new parliament, likely seeing power handed back to Erdogan as president.

"The main priority is of course to maintain the fundamenatal structures, but this government will be stronger with some new additions and it will contest the 2015 polls," one senior official said. (Additional reporting by Tulay Karadeniz; Writing by Daren Butler and Jonny Hogg; Editing by Angus MacSwan)

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Ukraine's PM says Russia has plans to block gas flows to Europe

KIEV Wed Aug 27, 2014 5:58am EDT

KIEV Aug 27 (Reuters) - Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseny Yatseniuk said on Wednesday that Kiev knew of plans by Russia to halt gas flows this winter to Europe.

"The situation in (Ukraine's) energy sector is difficult. We know of Russia's plans to block (gas) transit even to European Union countries this winter," he told a government meeting.

Last year, half of Russian gas exports to the EU were shipped via Ukraine. Russian gas exporter Gazprom and the Energy Ministry were not immediately available for comments. (Reporting by Natalia Zinets; writing by Vladimir Soldatkin)


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UPDATE 1-Ukraine's PM says Russia plans to block gas flows to Europe

Wed Aug 27, 2014 6:44am EDT

(Adds details, quote, background on conflict)

KIEV Aug 27 (Reuters) - Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseny Yatseniuk said on Wednesday that Kiev knew of plans by Russia to halt gas flows this winter to Europe, in comments which are likely to escalate the standoff between Moscow and the West.

Russia halted gas supplies to Ukraine in June over a gas pricing dispute, but it has continued supplies to Europe, its largest market.

"The situation in (Ukraine's) energy sector is difficult. We know of Russia's plans to block (gas) transit even to European Union countries this winter," he told a government meeting.

Yatseniuk did not say how he knew about the Russian plans.

Last year, half of Russian gas exports to the EU were shipped via Ukraine. Russian gas exporter Gazprom declined immediate comment and the Energy Ministry was not immediately available to comment.

Russian gas supplies via Ukraine to Europe were disrupted in the winters of 2006 and 2009 because of pricing disagreements between Russia and Ukraine.

The latest gas pricing dispute is closely intertwined with a bigger standoff between Moscow and Kiev.

Ukraine's Moscow-leaning president Viktor Yanukovich fled his country following weeks of street clashes by people angry that he had rejected an association agreement with the European Union.

Moscow subsequently annexed Ukraine's Crimea peninsula in March, while pro-Moscow separatists have staged an insurgency in the east of the country.

The area where the fighting is concentrated, known as the Donbass, is a major source of coal for Ukraine.

Yatseniuk said the government has been trying to diversify coal supplies as "Russia and their mercenaries are bombing and destroying mines". Russia has denied any involvement in the conflict. (Reporting by Natalia Zinets; writing by Vladimir Soldatkin; editing by Louise Heavens)

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German anti-euro party set for gains in eastern votes

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 26 Agustus 2014 | 18.12

Tue Aug 26, 2014 4:07am EDT

* Eastern states of Saxony, Thuringia and Brandenburg to vote

* Merkel's CDU needs coalition partners, rules out eurosceptics

* Neo-conservative AfD and former communist Left may make gains

By Stephen Brown

FREITAL, Germany, Aug 26 (Reuters) - The Alternative for Germany (AfD) looks set to win its first seats in a German state parliament as it evolves from a single-issue eurosceptic party into a law-and-order movement that could chip away at Chancellor Angela Merkel's conservative hegemony.

Three eastern regions, still struggling to catch up with the richer west nearly 25 years after unification, hold elections in the coming weeks - Saxony on Aug. 31, Thuringia and Brandenburg on Sept. 14. The AfD has a chance of winning seats in all three.

Not yet two-years-old, the party won entry into the European Parliament in May and is now on the brink of establishing itself as a force in domestic politics, despite attempts by Merkel's Christian Democrats (CDU) to demonise it as a fringe movement that flirts with the far-right.

"In Germany that's the killer argument - when you want to silence someone, all you have to do is call them far-right or populist," said Frauke Petry, the 39-year-old businesswoman who is spearheading the AfD's campaign in Saxony.

Voters in Saxony, nestled in an eastern corner of Germany, next to Poland and the Czech Republic, have been unsettled by cross-border theft of agricultural equipment and trafficking in the drug crystal methamphetamine.

Along with education, boosting the state police force has emerged as one of the hottest campaign issues, and one the AfD has been quick to exploit.

Merkel's CDU has ruled Saxony ever since unification in 1990 and its hold on power there is not at risk in the vote. Polls put support for the party on 40-42 percent, double that of the next closest party, the far-left "Linke".

But CDU state premier Stanislaw Tillich is likely to need a coalition partner to keep his job and chances are slim that he can rely on his current partner, the sliding Free Democrats (FDP), again.

The most likely scenario is that he teams up with the centre-left Social Democrats (SPD), mirroring Merkel's "grand coalition" in Berlin. But that has not stopped speculation that the CDU may be tempted to link up with the AfD, forcing the chancellor herself to counter that talk over the weekend.

"For us the AfD is not a possible coalition partner," Merkel told public broadcaster ARD on Sunday.

Regardless, if the AfD makes it into the state parliament in Saxony and the other eastern states, it could start a broader debate within the CDU about future cooperation.

LEFT-LED GOVERNMENT

In contrast to Saxony, Merkel's party faces a legitimate risk of being booted out of office in Thuringia, even though polls put them in the lead. In what would be a first at state level, the far-left Linke, or Left party, could end up seizing control of the government there with the SPD as junior partners.

That result would fuel speculation that the SPD may consider breaking its taboo on teaming up with the Left at the federal level in 2017, in the hopes of ejecting Merkel and her CDU from power. In the third state, Brandenburg, the SPD is expected to keep power in partnership with the Left.

Back in Saxony, AfD candidate Petry spoke to about 50 supporters in Freital, a coal and steel town near the state capital Dresden. Being frank on issues like crime, immigration or discipline in schools "puts you on the right of the CDU, whether you like it or not", she said.

She estimates that one in 10 AfD members has joined from Merkel's party. One of these defectors is Hartmut Roth, a lawyer in a purple bow tie who has switched allegiance after 36 years in the CDU.

"When I joined the CDU I was a wild young thing, but by the time I left I was on the conservative wing, because the party had moved from right to left around me," he said in Freital.

Saxony, Thuringia and Brandenburg are among the country's poorest regions, along with the other former German Democratic Republic (GDR) states Saxony-Anhalt and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern.

Some areas, especially the business hubs around Dresden and Leipzig in Saxony, buck the trend and Tillich is praised, even by people who do not intend to vote for him, for spending on infrastructure that attracts investment and jobs.

Roland Woeller, who represents Freital for the CDU in the Saxony state assembly, says there has been economic progress in the state but that people now compare their lot to friends in booming western cities like Duesseldorf, Stuttgart or Munich.

"The gap between east and west has been reduced but the gap remains," he said. (Additional reporting by Hans-Edzard Busemann and Reuters Television; Editing by Noah Barkin and Angus MacSwan)

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GLOBAL MARKETS-Euro, bond yields dip as looser ECB policy eyed

Tue Aug 26, 2014 4:21am EDT

* Draghi comments still resonate in global markets

* Euro hits lowest level since September vs dollar

* European shares pause after Monday's gains

By Nigel Stephenson

LONDON, Aug 26 (Reuters) - The euro hit its lowest level in nearly a year against the dollar and euro zone government bond yields fell on Tuesday on growing expectations the European Central Bank could ease monetary policy as soon as next week.

The single currency fell as low as $1.3178 in Asian trade, its weakest since Sept. 9, before recovering slightly, with ECB chief Mario Draghi's comment last week that he was prepared to use all available tools if euro zone inflation fell further still resonating in markets.

Draghi also called for fiscal policy to play a greater role alongside monetary policy to revive the economy.

The ECB holds its next policy meeting on Sept. 4. Euro zone data due on Friday is forecast to show consumer prices rose just 0.3 percent this month, down from a 0.4 percent increase in July, well below the ECB's target of just less than 2 percent.

European shares were barely changed in early trade. The FTSEurofirst 300 index was flat at 1,366.57.

"Stocks are taking a breather following yesterday's acceleration. The mood remains quite positive after Draghi's comments, which confirmed that the ECB is determined to fight deflation," Saxo Bank trader Pierre Martin said.

The prospect of looser ECB policy and possibly further stimulus helped lift shares in Asia and on Wall Street, where the S&P 500 topped 2,000 for the first time.

MSCI's dollar-denominated index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan gave up its gains late in the day to trade flat.

In New York, the S&P 500 hit a record closing high, up 0.48 percent at 1,997.92, supported by gains in financial shares, which were seen as the main beneficiary of any cheap money from the ECB just as the U.S. Federal Reserve is preparing to end its bond-buying drive.

The dollar index, which measures the greenback against a currency basket, hit a one-year high in New York before falling back to trade 0.1 percent lower.

The euro was last at $1.3209, up 0.1 percent on the day, and the yen rose a similar amount at 103.90 to the dollar.

FIRMER YEN

The firmer yen took a toll on shares in Japanese exporters. The Nikkei index closed down 0.6 percent.

German government bond yields, which hit a record low of 0.926 percent on Monday before pulling back, fell 1.4 basis points on Tuesday to 0.94 percent. Two-year yields rose slightly but remained negative at -0.04 percent.

"Euro/dollar is vulnerable to testing new lows. A downtrend is easily formed given the opposite directions Fed and ECB monetary policies are seemingly headed," said Kyosuke Suzuki, director of forex at Societe Generale in Tokyo.

French President Francois Hollande's call on Monday for a cabinet reshuffle after leftist rebel ministers argued for a U-turn on economic policy, had also helped push yields and the euro lower. A new government was expected to be unveiled on Tuesday.

Yields on peripheral euro zone debt, which the ECB could buy to pump money into the bloc's lacklustre economy as part of an asset-purchase scheme known as quantitative easing, also fell.

U.S. Treasury yields fell in line with euro zone debt. Ten-year bonds dropped 1.4 bps to 2.38 percent.

Brent crude oil futures edged up towards $103 a barrel, although a glut of supply and weak economic data in major consumer countries curbed gains.

Gold picked up some strength, rising further from two-month lows. Spot gold last traded at $1,289.01 an ounce. (Additonal reporting by Hideyuki Sano in Tokyo; Editing by Crispian Balmer)

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UPDATE 2-Austrian finance minister quits in tax reform row

Tue Aug 26, 2014 5:27am EDT

* Spindelegger cites lack of party solidarity

* Resigns all offices with immediate effect

* Next conservative leader still to be decided (Adds quotes and analyst reaction)

By Michael Shields and Angelika Gruber

VIENNA, Aug 26 (Reuters) - Austrian Vice-Chancellor and Finance Minister Michael Spindelegger unexpectedly resigned from all his posts on Tuesday, citing lack of support from his conservative People's Party (OVP) in a row over tax reform.

But Social Democrat Chancellor Werner Faymann said he expected his coalition with the OVP to last until the next national elections in 2018.

The OVP has been at loggerheads with its senior coalition partner over how to finance income tax cuts to boost the flagging economy.

Spindelegger, who became finance minister last year after the coalition partners barely maintained a majority in elections, has also faced an internal revolt over his refusal to cut taxes unless that can be financed without new levies.

"There has to be cohesion in a party. If the cohesion is no longer there, then the moment has come to hand over the tiller," he told a snap news conference to announce his resignation, showing no emotion and taking no questions from reporters.

Clashes over economic policy also forced a government reshuffle in France this week as a political battle raged in Europe over whether belt-tightening had gone too far at the expense of economic growth.

"What is surprising is the timing," political analyst Peter Filzmaier said. "No one could imagine that he would be the top candidate in the next parliamentary elections with chances to become chancellor. But...you don't do this at the start of provincial elections in Vorarlberg in four weeks."

The OVP may lose its absolute majority in that western province, with four more state elections due next year.

Spindelegger, a 54-year-old lawyer from Lower Austria, filled an OVP leadership vacuum in 2011 when his predecessor had to step down for health reasons.

Now the party, whose popularity has fallen below 20 percent in opinion polls as the far-right Freedom Party gains, faces another leadership contest.

WHO'S NEXT?

Chancellor Faymann, responding to questions at a news conference about the durability of the government coalition after Spindelegger's resignation, said: "I expect it will hold until 2018."

The OVP's most popular member by far is Foreign Minister Sebastian Kurz, but analysts say he may be too inexperienced - he turns 28 on Wednesday - to take the party helm. Economy Minister Reinhold Mitterlehner is also mentioned as a potential OVP leader.

Spindelegger was foreign minister before taking over the finance ministry portfolio.

Regional OVP leaders have been grumbling aloud about Spindelegger's leadership for weeks, and the rebellion broke into the open on Tuesday when OVP member and Tyrol Chamber of Labour head Erwin Zangerl called for Spindelegger to go.

"The OVP needs someone who represents the people, not the lobbyists," Zangerl told the Oesterreich tabloid. "He has given enough proof that he no longer understands the people. He is deaf in both ears."

Spindelegger to the last refused to go along with calls for immediate tax cuts at a time of record high state debt.

"Now a situation has arisen where a clear signal is coming from my own party. People who say we have to jump on the populist bandwagon are winning the upper hand," he said.

Wolfgang Bachmayer, managing director of market research institute OGM, said Spindelegger threw in the towel when party bigwigs failed to back him publicly.

"The attacks from his own party got on his nerves. He said he didn't need it. I don't see a political calculation there. The intervention (for him to resign) was from someone no one knows and isn't in the media, but the Chamber of Labour is important," Bachmayer said.

He thought prospects for a deal on stimulus measures had improved with the departure of Spindelegger.

"Faymann will have a few fewer problems now. The governing coalition will be strengthened because consensus will be found on these issues," he said. (Additional reporting by Georgina Prodhan, Alexandra Schwarz-Goerlich and Shadia Nasralla)

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Ifo may slash German 2014 GDP forecast to 1.5 pct - Wohlrabe

Written By Unknown on Senin, 25 Agustus 2014 | 18.12

MUNICH, Germany Mon Aug 25, 2014 4:28am EDT

MUNICH, Germany Aug 25 (Reuters) - The Ifo Institute will likely cut its gross domestic product (GDP) growth forecast for Germany in 2014 to 1.5 percent from the current target of 2.0 percent and third quarter growth will be nearly flat, Ifo economist Klaus Wohlrabe said on Monday.

Wohlrabe told Reuters the Ukraine crisis was most definitely a burden on the German economy though it was hard to quantify its impact on Europe's largest economy. Companies with business ties to Russia are generally more pessimistic, he said.

The Ifo economist said Germany is nevertheless far from a recession with the car and chemical sectors proving to be bright spots recently and the construction industry still in solid shape. Domestic consumption also remained strong, he said. (Reporting by Jens Hack; Writing by Erik Kirschbaum and Stephen Brown)


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GLOBAL MARKETS-Euro falls, stocks rise on ECB stimulus bet

Mon Aug 25, 2014 4:55am EDT

* Euro falls to near 1-year low as ECB opens door to stimulus

* Euro zone stocks, bonds rise

* Yen also weakens on dovish Kuroda

By Francesco Canepa

LONDON, Aug 25 (Reuters) - The euro fell to a near one-year low against the dollar and euro zone stocks and bonds rallied on Monday as investors positioned for rising chances of further policy easing by the European Central Bank.

ECB President Mario Draghi said late on Friday that the bank was prepared to respond with all its available tools should inflation in the euro zone drop further.

Investors speculated this meant the ECB was more likely to embark on an asset purchase programme, or quantitative easing, or adopt other stimulus measures in coming months which would weigh on the euro and boost assets such as stocks and bonds.

"The key message is that Draghi stands ready for more action if needed," Franz Wenzel, chief strategist at AXA Investment Managers in Paris, said.

"Whether they're going to do quantitative easing remains to be seen but we're fairly confident that the financial engineers at the ECB will find other tools. At this juncture, we don't exclude quantitative easing at the end of this year."

A weak German business sentiment index, Ifo, also added pressure on the euro in European trade, as it reinforced concerns about Germany, the euro zone's biggest economy.

The euro skidded to $1.3185 in early Asian trade, its lowest since September 2013, from around $1.3246 late in New York on Friday. It was last trading at $1.3190, down about 0.3 percent on the day, amid lower than usual volumes due to a holiday in London.

The euro zone's blue-chip Euro STOXX 50 index was up 1.2 percent to 3,135.38 points after climbing to a three-week high in early deals. Both Germany's DAX and France's CAC 40 gained 1.2 percent.

The MSCI All-Country World index was up 0.1 percent at 429.03 points.

Spanish and Italian 10-year yields fell 8 bps to 2.31 percent and 2.51 percent, respectively, while Portuguese yields fell 14 bps to 3.12 percent.

"The ... market has interpreted Draghi's statement as meaning that broad-based asset purchases, or quantitative easing, has now become more likely," said Lutz Karpowitz, currency strategist at Commerzbank.

The Ifo business climate index dropped for a fourth straight month in August and the Ifo Institute said it was likely to cut its 2014 growth forecast for Germany to 1.5 percent from 2 percent.

Also sounding dovish was Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda who vowed over the weekend to press ahead with aggressive monetary easing for as long as needed to convince the public that deflation was dead and buried.

Kuroda's pledges of policy stimulus weighed on the yen , which was down 0.1 percent against the dollar.

US RATES SEEN RISING EARLIER

In contrast, U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen on Friday gave a nod to the concerns of some Fed officials about the sustained level of monetary policy stimulus, even as she stressed the need to move cautiously on raising rates.

As a result, Fed funds futures fell back <0#FF:> as the market priced in the risk of an earlier rise in interest rates, while the dollar index rose to 82.563, its highest since September last year.

U.S. T-note futures were flat at 125-57/64, with cash 10-year yields trading at 2.41 percent.

In commodities markets, the rising dollar pressured prices with spot gold hovering near its lowest in two months at $1,277.00.

Brent crude dipped towards $102 a barrel on Monday as ample supply and a stronger U.S. dollar continued to pressure oil markets. (Additional reporting by Anirban Nag and Marius Zaharia in London; Wayne Cole in Sydney; Editing by Susan Fenton)

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Merkel says Germany will back Spain's De Guindos as Eurogroup head

SANTIAGO DE COMPOSTELA, Spain Mon Aug 25, 2014 6:15am EDT

SANTIAGO DE COMPOSTELA, Spain Aug 25 (Reuters) - German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Monday said Germany would back Spanish Economy Minister Luis de Guindos to head up the Eurogroup of euro zone finance ministers.

"Luis de Guindos has been an excellent economy minister in difficult times," Merkel told a joint news conference with Spanish Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy in the northern Spanish city of Santiago de Compostela, at the end of a two-day visit.

(Reporting by Anna Valderrama, Writing by Sarah White, Editing by Andres Gonzalez)


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All vehicles in Russia aid convoy have left Ukraine: OSCE

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 24 Agustus 2014 | 18.12

MOSCOW Sat Aug 23, 2014 9:55am EDT

MOSCOW Aug 23 (Reuters) - All 227 vehicles that entered Ukraine as part of a Russian aid convoy have now returned to Russian soil, security watchdog the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) said on Saturday.

The Vienna-based OSCE said in a statement the vehicles were counted back in to Russia from Ukraine by its observer mission deployed at a border crossing. (Reporting by Christian Lowe; Editing by Vladimir Soldatkin)


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WRAPUP 6-Merkel says tightening Ukraine-Russian border is key to peace deal

Sat Aug 23, 2014 11:25am EDT

* German Chancellor, in Ukraine capital, says peace is possible

* Merkel proposes observer mission to control frontier

* NATO says Russia sent troops into Ukraine, Moscow denies it

* Russian truck convoy leaves Ukrainian territory

* In rebel-held city of Donetsk, shelling destroys homes (Adds more quotes)

By Natalia Zinets and Richard Balmforth

KIEV, Aug 23 (Reuters) - - German Chancellor Angela Merkel said on Saturday the standoff over Ukraine could be solved but only if control was tightened over the Ukraine-Russia border across which, the West alleges, Russia has been funnelling arms to help a separatist rebellion.

Merkel was visiting Kiev as a prelude to a meeting next week between the Russian and Ukrainian leaders that diplomats say is the best chance in months of a peace deal in eastern Ukraine, where government forces are fighting pro-Moscow rebels.

She arrived as tensions flared up again. NATO has alleged Russia's military is active inside Ukraine helping the rebels, and Moscow angered Kiev and its Western allies by sending an aid convoy into Ukraine against Kiev's wishes.

"There must be two sides to be successful. You cannot achieve peace on your own. I hope the talks with Russia will lead to success," Merkel said, looking ahead to the meeting on Tuesday involving Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Ukrainian counterpart Petro Poroshenko.

"The plans are on the table, about how you can achieve peace and good cooperation between the countries. Now actions must follow," she told a news briefing.

She said the main obstacle was the lack of controls along the nearly 2,000 km (1,300 mile) border. She proposed a deal between Kiev and Moscow on monitoring of the frontier by the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).

"Now we need a two-sided ceasefire linked to a clear controlling of the Russian-Ukrainian border, otherwise peace won't be achieved," Merkel said.

Diplomats say Merkel came to Kiev with two objectives: primarily to show support for Kiev but also to urge Poroshenko to be open to peace proposals when he meets Putin next week in the Belarus capital, Minsk.

Poroshenko, whose forces have been forcing the rebels to retreat, said Kiev had offered ceasefires before and they were flouted. He said no peace deal was worth sacrificing Ukraine's territorial integrity, and placed the blame at Russia's door.

"Ukraine is ready and capable of guaranteeing a peaceful settlement," Poroshenko said. "What is stopping us are the foreign mercenaries. Take the people with guns out of our territory....and peace in Ukraine will be quickly restored."

Hours before Merkel's plane landed in Kiev, there was heavy artillery bombardment in Donetsk, the main separatist stronghold on the east of Ukraine, near the border with Russia. Reuters reporters saw apartments destroyed and puddles of blood, where, according to residents, two civilians were killed.

Reuters photographer saw three dead bodies of civilians in the eastern part of Donetsk 7 km (about 4 miles) from the centre after shelling in the afternoon.

Witnesses said the bodies belonged to a family which had run out of their home to take cover in a bomb shelter.

The unusually intense shelling may be part of a drive by government forces to achieve a breakthrough against the rebels in time for Ukrainian Independence Day, which falls on Sunday.

TRUCK CONVOY

The conflict in Ukraine has dragged Russian-Western relations to their lowest point since the Cold War and drawn trade sanctions that are hurting already-fragile economies in European and Russia.

A convoy of about 220 white-painted trucks rolled into Ukraine on Friday through a border crossing controlled by the rebels after days waiting for clearance.

Moscow said the trucks moved in without Kiev's consent because civilians in areas under siege from Ukrainian government troops were in urgent need of food, water and other supplies. Kiev called the convoy a direct invasion, a stance echoed by NATO, the United States, and European leaders.

The OSCE said its monitors on the border had counted all 227 vehicles that entered Ukraine in the convoy coming back out again into Russian territory.

A Ukrainian military spokesman said however that some of the trucks had been loading up production equipment from military plants in Ukraine. The spokesman, Andriy Lysenko, said the equipment was taken from the Topaz plant which makes Kolchuga, a type of radar system, and from a factory in Luhansk which produces firearms' magazines.

In Brussels, NATO said it had reports of Russian troops engaging Kiev's forces inside Ukraine - fuelling Western allegations that the Kremlin is behind the conflict in an effort undermine the Western-leaning leadership in Kiev.

"Russian artillery support - both cross border and from within Ukraine - is being employed against the Ukrainian armed forces," said NATO spokeswoman Oana Lungescu.

A Ukrainian military spokesman in Kiev, Andriy Lysenko, said Ukrainian government forces were now coming under cross-border fire from Russia, using Grad and Uragan missiles, over a 400 km (250 mile) length of the border.

The Russian foreign ministry called the allegations "groundless." Russia accuses Kiev, with the backing of the West, of waging a war against innocent civilians in eastern Ukraine, a mainly Russian-speaking region.

HOMES DESTROYED

The crisis over Ukraine started when mass protests in Kiev ousted a president who was close to Moscow, and installed leaders viewed with suspicion by the Kremlin because of their pro-Europe policies.

Soon after that, Russia annexed the Ukrainian region of Crimea, and a separatist rebellion broke out in eastern Ukraine. In the past weeks, the momentum has shifted towards Ukraine's forces, who have been pushing back the rebels.

The separatists are now encircled in their two strongholds, Luhansk and Donetsk.

Reuters reporters in Donetsk said that most of the shelling was taking place in the outskirts, but explosions were also audible in the centre of the city.

In Donetsk's Leninsky district, a man who gave his name as Grigory, said he was in the toilet on Saturday morning when he heard the whistling sound of incoming artillery. "Then it hit. I came out and half the building was gone."

The roof of the building had collapsed into a heap of debris. Grigory said his 27-year-old daughter was taken to hospital with injuries to her head. He picked up a picture of a baby from the rubble. "This is my grandson," he said.

In another residential area, about 5 km north of the city centre, a shop and several houses had been hit. Residents said two men, civilians, were killed.

Praskoviya Grigoreva, 84, pointed to two puddles of blood on the pavement near a bus stop that was destroyed in the same attack. "He's dead. Death took him on this spot," she said. (Additional reporting by Maria Tsvetkova and Tom Grove in Donetsk, Ukraine Alessandra Prentice in Kiev, Madeline Chambers in Berlin, Adrian Croft in Brussels, Dmitry Madorsky at Donetsk border crossing, Russia, and Vladimir Soldatkin in Moscow, Writing by Christian Lowe; Editing by Angus MacSwan)

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GLOBAL ECONOMY WEEKAHEAD-Europe fears deflation as Ukraine stays centre-stage

By Gavin Jones

ROME Sun Aug 24, 2014 5:00am EDT

ROME Aug 24 (Reuters) - The euro zone's growing fears of deflation will be stirred again on Friday when preliminary consumer price data for August is issued, with signs the European Central Bank could be looking at bolder steps to help the region's stagnant economy.

Analyst polled by Reuters forecast the annual inflation rate to slip to 0.3 percent from 0.4 percent in July, falling even further below the ECB's target of below but close to 2 percent and mired deep in what the bank calls the "danger zone".

The ECB cut interest rates in June and promised banks cheap long-term loans starting in September, and any new measures before those loans kick in had been considered unlikely.

However, in remarks that opened the door to possible policy action at the bank's next meeting in September, ECB President Mario Draghi said on Friday that the bank is prepared to respond with all its "available" tools should inflation drop further.

Speaking at a global central banking conference in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, Draghi said he is confident that the steps already announced, helped by a weaker euro, would boost demand in the ailing economic bloc.

But in stronger language than he has used in the past, he stressed the central bank stands ready to do more.

"The (ECB's) governing council will acknowledge these (economic) developments and within its mandate will use all the available instruments needed to ensure price stability over the medium term," he said.

The main weapon at the bank's disposal, printing money to buy bonds, known as quantitative easing (QE), is still opposed by Germany's Bundesbank which plays down the danger of deflation.

In his remarks on Friday Draghi did not mention the policy specifically, but a growing number of analysts believe it is only a matter of time before the ECB follows the path already trodden by the Federal Reserve and the Bank of England.

"The ECB will ultimately move to QE unless the euro weakens appreciably," said Riccardo Barbieri, chief European economist at Mizuho, adding that "in the near term stagnation and near-zero inflation in the euro zone are almost a certainty."

Developments in Ukraine will continue to be a major focus for markets, with the negative headlines of recent weeks having pushed German bond yields to new lows.

Investors will be closely watching the outcome of a meeting scheduled in Minsk on Tuesday between Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Ukrainian counterpart Petro Poroshenko.

The Ukraine crisis has already hurt business sentiment in Germany, which has strong trade links with Russia, and the effect will be scrutinised again on Monday when the closely watched Ifo index for August is released. Analysts polled by Reuters are predicting another fall in morale.

The picture for the northern hemisphere's policymakers slowly returning from their summer breaks looks mixed, with a weaker outlook in Europe and Asia but the United States showing growing signs of economic strength.

European Union leaders meet in Brussels on Saturday and with their agenda dominated by geopolitical crises spanning Ukraine, Iraq, Gaza and the Ebola outbreak in West Africa they may ignore the region's clearly deteriorating economic backdrop.

Purchasing managers' surveys last week showed business growth in China and across Europe slowed in August, with European businesses continuing to cut prices in the face of weak demand and at a faster rate than in July.

Two of China's largest banks, Bank of China and Bank of Communications, last week forecast a rise in bad loans this year as a result of a slowing economy.

The political tensions can only exacerbate the problems, with the euro zone's stagnation in the second quarter coming even before the potential impact from Russia sanctions, disrupted Middle East oil flows or other geopolitical pressure.

U.S. GAINS TRACTION

But while the euro zone looks almost moribund, surprisingly strong data last week from the United States showed buoyant job creation and falling claims for unemployment benefits in the world's largest economy. At the same time the U.S. manufacturing PMI showed factory activity expanding at its fastest pace for more than four years in August.

However, Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen struck a dovish tone in her Jackson Hole speech on Friday, warning U.S. labor markets remain hampered by the effects of the Great Recession.

"Yellen's speech showed she's still unsure about some of the data we're getting, and as a result she could hold off from raising rates," said Central Markets trading analyst Joe Neighbour said. The Fed has held its benchmark interest rate near zero since December 2008.

The latest encouraging signs for the U.S. economy will be tested this week by services PMI data, consumer confidence and orders for durable goods.

The PMI for Japan, meanwhile, showed the world's third largest economy is steadying after a sales tax increase led to an annualised contraction of 6.8 percent in the second quarter, the steepest since 2011.

However, the Reuters Tankan survey indicated that the recovery is likely to be modest.

On Thursday Japan will issue figures on consumer prices and unemployment, while industrial output for July will be an early indicator of economic strength in the third quarter.

China has no significant economic data due this week. (Reporting By Gavin Jones; Editing by Toby Chopra)

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Russian says its aid convoy has left Ukraine:report

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 23 Agustus 2014 | 18.12

MOSCOW Sat Aug 23, 2014 6:37am EDT

MOSCOW Aug 23 (Reuters) - A Russian truck convoy with humanitarian aid has left Ukraine and is now in Russia, RIA news agency cited a spokeswoman for the foreign ministry in Moscow as saying on Saturday.

The convoy of about 220 trucks had started to return to Russia from Ukraine earlier on Saturday. (Reporting by Vladimir Soldatkin; Editing by Christian Lowe)


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WRAPUP 2-Trucks from aid convoy to Ukraine start crossing back into Russia

Sat Aug 23, 2014 5:00am EDT

* Convoy had entered Ukraine without government's permission

* Western states demanded withdrawal of "illegal" convoy

* NATO, White House say Russian artillery used inside Ukraine

* Germany's Merkel due in Kiev later on Saturday

* Shelling destroys homes in rebel-held city of Donetsk (Updates with Ukraine president, more shelling)

By Dmitry Madorsky

DONETSK-IZVARINO BORDER CROSSING, Russia, Aug 23 (Reuters) - T rucks from a Russian aid convoy started crossing back into Russia on Saturday after igniting a storm of anger in Western capitals a day earlier by driving into Ukraine without the permission of the government in Kiev.

The return of the trucks may help ease the tension to some extent in time for the arrival of German Chancellor Angela Merkel in the Ukrainian capital later on Saturday for talks on how to end the crisis over Ukraine.

Western leaders had joined Kiev in calling the Russian convoy -- about 220 white-painted trucks loaded with tinned food and bottle water -- an illegal incursion onto Ukraine's soil, and demanded that they be withdrawn as soon as possible.

A Reuters journalist at the Donetsk-Izvarino border crossing, where the convoy rolled into Ukraine on Friday, said over 100 trucks had passed back into Russia and more could be seen in the distance arriving at the crossing.

Russian state television had earlier broadcast footage of some of the trucks being unloaded at a distribution depot in the city of Luhansk, eastern Ukraine.

The city is held by separatist rebels who are encircled by Ukrainian government forces, and has been cut off from power and water supplies for weeks. International aid agencies have warned of a humanitarian crisis.

NATO said it had evidence that Russian troops had been firing artillery at Kiev's forces inside Ukraine - fuelling Western allegations that the Kremlin is behind the conflict in an effort undermine the Western-leaning leadership in Kiev.

The White House made the same allegation. "We have seen the use of Russian artillery in Ukraine in the past days," said U.S. deputy national security advisor Ben Rhodes.

Russia denies giving any material help to the rebellion in eastern Ukraine, a mainly Russian-speaking region. It accuses Kiev, with the backing of the West, of waging a war against innocent civilians.

The conflict in Ukraine has dragged Russian-Western relations to their lowest ebb since the Cold War and sparked a round of trade sanctions that are hurting already-fragile economies in European and Russia.

HOMES DESTROYED

In the rebels biggest strong hold, the city of Donetsk, there was unusually intense shelling on Saturday. That may be part of a drive by government forces to achieve a breakthrough in time for Ukrainian Independence Day, which falls on Sunday.

The crisis over Ukraine started when mass protests in Kiev ousted a president who was close to Moscow, and instead installed leaders viewed with suspicion by the Kremlin.

Soon after that, Russia annexed the Ukrainian region of Crimea, and a separatist rebellion broke out in eastern Ukraine. In the past weeks, the momentum has shifted towards Ukraine's forces, who have been pushing back the rebels.

The separatist are now encircled in their two strongholds, Luhansk and Donetsk.

Reuters reporters in the city of Donetsk said that most of the shelling was taking place in the outskirts, but explosions were also audible in the centre of the city.

In Donetsk's Leninsky district, a man who gave his name as Grigory, said he was in the toilet on Saturday morning when he heard the whistling sound of incoming artillery. "Then it hit. I came out and half the building was gone."

The roof of the building had collapsed into a heap of debris. Grigory said his 27-year-old daughter was taken to hospital with injuries to her head. He picked up a picture of a baby from the rubble. "This is my grand son," he said.

In another residential area, about 5 km north of the city centre, a shop and several houses had been hit. Residents said two men, civilians, were killed.

Praskoviya Grigoreva, 84, pointed to two puddles of blood on the pavement near a bus stop that was destroyed in the same attack. "He's dead. Death took him on this spot," she said.

RIVAL CELEBRATIONS

In the Ukrainian capital, preparations were under way for Independence Day celebrations, twenty-three years after the collapse of the Russian-dominated Soviet Union. The day, which will include a military parade, has taken on added meaning for Ukrainians because of the fighting in the east.

"We are a peaceful people. But we are ready to pay, and we are paying in blood and sweat, for the right to live under this flag, under this sky and among these fields," Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko said at a ceremony.

Many Ukrainians were buoyed this week when the spire of a landmark Moscow skyscraper was painted, clandestinely, in the blue-and-yellow of the Ukrainian flag.

A Ukrainian extreme sportsman said he had done it as a patriotic piece of performance art.

In Donetsk city centre, the separatist administration had set up an exhibition of captured Ukrainian military hardware. They planned to display it in their own festivities on Sunday intended as a counterpoint to the celebrations in Kiev. (Additional reporting by Maria Tsvetkova and Tom Grove in Donetsk, Ukraine and Vladimir Soldatkin in Moscow; Writing by Christian Lowe; Editing by Ralph Boulton)

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WRAPUP 3-Trucks from aid convoy to Ukraine start crossing back into Russia

Sat Aug 23, 2014 6:37am EDT

* Convoy had entered Ukraine without government's permission

* Western states demanded withdrawal of "illegal" convoy

* NATO, White House say Russian artillery used inside Ukraine

* Germany's Merkel arrives in Kiev for talks

* Shelling destroys homes in rebel-held city of Donetsk (Edits, updates with Merkel arrival, NATO comments)

By Dmitry Madorsky

DONETSK-IZVARYNE BORDER CROSSING, Russia, Aug 23 (Reuters) - T rucks from a Russian aid convoy started crossing back into Russia on Saturday after unleashing a storm of anger in Western capitals a day earlier by driving into Ukraine without the permission of the government in Kiev.

The return of the trucks may help ease the tension to some extent in time for talks in Ukraine's capital on Saturday between visiting German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Ukrainian leaders over how to end the crisis in the ex-Soviet republic.

Western leaders had joined Kiev in calling the Russian convoy -- about 220 white-painted trucks loaded with tinned food and bottle water -- an illegal incursion onto Ukraine's soil, and demanded that they be withdrawn as soon as possible.

A Reuters journalist at the Donetsk-Izvaryne border crossing, where the convoy rolled into Ukraine on Friday, said over 100 trucks had passed back into Russia and more could be seen in the distance arriving at the crossing.

Russian state television had earlier broadcast footage of some of the trucks being unloaded at a distribution depot in the city of Luhansk, eastern Ukraine. The Russian foreign ministry said the aid reached its intended destination.

The city is held by separatist rebels who are encircled by Ukrainian government forces, and has been cut off from power and water supplies for weeks. International aid agencies have warned of a humanitarian crisis.

NATO said it had reports that Russian troops had been firing artillery at Kiev's forces inside Ukraine - fuelling Western allegations that the Kremlin is behind the conflict in an effort undermine the Western-leaning leadership in Kiev.

"Since mid-August we have multiple reports of the direct involvement of Russian forces, including airborne, air defence and special operations forces in Eastern Ukraine," said NATO spokeswoman Oana Lungescu.

"Russian artillery support - both cross border and from within Ukraine - is being employed against the Ukrainian armed forces," she said.

Russia denies giving any material help to the rebellion in eastern Ukraine, a mainly Russian-speaking region. It accuses Kiev, with the backing of the West, of waging a war against innocent civilians.

The conflict in Ukraine has dragged Russian-Western relations to their lowest ebb since the Cold War and sparked a round of trade sanctions that are hurting already-fragile economies in European and Russia.

The German leader landed in Kiev and was scheduled to meet Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko and Prime Minister Arseny Yatseniuk.

Diplomats say she will show support for Kiev, but also urge Poroshenko to be open to peace proposals when he meets Russian President Vladimir Putin for talks next week.

HOMES DESTROYED

In the rebels biggest stronghold, the city of Donetsk, there was unusually intense shelling on Saturday. That may be part of a drive by government forces to achieve a breakthrough in time for Ukrainian Independence Day, which falls on Sunday.

The crisis over Ukraine started when mass protests in Kiev ousted a president who was close to Moscow, and instead installed leaders viewed with suspicion by the Kremlin.

Soon after that, Russia annexed the Ukrainian region of Crimea, and a separatist rebellion broke out in eastern Ukraine. In the past weeks, the momentum has shifted towards Ukraine's forces, who have been pushing back the rebels.

The separatist are now encircled in their two strongholds, Luhansk and Donetsk.

Reuters reporters in the city of Donetsk said that most of the shelling was taking place in the outskirts, but explosions were also audible in the centre of the city.

In Donetsk's Leninsky district, a man who gave his name as Grigory, said he was in the toilet on Saturday morning when he heard the whistling sound of incoming artillery. "Then it hit. I came out and half the building was gone."

The roof of the building had collapsed into a heap of debris. Grigory said his 27-year-old daughter was taken to hospital with injuries to her head. He picked up a picture of a baby from the rubble. "This is my grandson," he said.

In another residential area, about 5 km north of the city centre, a shop and several houses had been hit. Residents said two men, civilians, were killed.

Praskoviya Grigoreva, 84, pointed to two puddles of blood on the pavement near a bus stop that was destroyed in the same attack. "He's dead. Death took him on this spot," she said. (Additional reporting by Maria Tsvetkova and Tom Grove in Donetsk, Ukraine, Adrian Croft in Brussels, Richard Balmforth and Natalia Zinets in Kiev and Vladimir Soldatkin in Moscow; Writing by Christian Lowe; Editing by Ralph Boulton)

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Fighting halts efforts to recover Ukraine refugee convoy bodies-Kiev

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 19 Agustus 2014 | 18.12

KIEV Tue Aug 19, 2014 6:09am EDT

KIEV Aug 19 (Reuters) - Operations to recover more bodies from a refugee convoy in eastern Ukraine that was hit by shelling on Monday have been suspended because of renewed fighting, a Ukrainian military spokesman said on Tuesday.

"Yesterday evening we managed to find 15 bodies. Work (to recover more) has now been suspended because military activity has begun again in the area," the spokesman, Andriy Lysenko, told a news briefing. (Reporting by Natalia Zinets; Writing by Christian Lowe; Editing by Maria Kiselyova)


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Fitch Affirms Korea at 'AA-'; Outlook Stable

Tue Aug 19, 2014 6:12am EDT

(The following statement was released by the rating agency) HONG KONG, August 19 (Fitch) Fitch Ratings has affirmed Korea's Long-Term Foreign- and Local-Currency Issuer Default Ratings (IDRs) at 'AA-' and 'AA' respectively. The issue ratings on Korea's senior unsecured Foreign- and Local-Currency bonds are also affirmed at 'AA-' and 'AA' respectively. The Outlooks on the Long-Term IDRs are Stable. The Country Ceiling is affirmed at 'AA+' and the Short-Term Foreign-Currency IDR at 'F1+'. KEY RATING DRIVERS The affirmation of Korea's IDRs reflects the following key rating drivers:- -Korea's macroeconomic performance is credit-supportive. Growth remains broadly resilient notwithstanding a slowdown in 2Q 2014 following a shock to consumer confidence from the Sewol ferry disaster. Five-year average GDP growth of 3.8% per year (2010-2014) exceeds the 'AA' range median of 3.3% as well as the 'A' median of 3.5%. Growth and inflation are less volatile than peer medians. Fitch expects real GDP growth of 3.7% in 2014, rising to 3.9% in 2015. Growth prospects are supported by the economy's high investment rate (29% in 2013). -Moderate government debt and sustained budget surpluses support the ratings. Korea's consolidated central government (CG) budget has been in surplus each year since 2000, barring only 2009. The government projects the social security system to remain in surplus until 2030. -CG debt was 34.8% of GDP at end-2013. This was not far off the median for general government (GG) debt for 'AA' rated countries of 36.5%. The authorities have released a figure for consolidated GG debt of 36.6% of GDP for end-2012, up from 34.4% at end-2011. The end-2012 figure is not materially different, from a credit perspective, from the CG debt figure of 33.2%. -The authorities have begun to tackle the issue of broader public sector indebtedness, including through the release of additional information since February 2014. Consolidated public sector debt was 59.6% of GDP at end-2012, up from 56.5% at end-2011. (End-2013 data will become available only in December.) The authorities have set out a financial management plan for state-owned enterprises through to 2017 that is supposed to see the sector's debt peak in cash terms in 2015. -Korea's external finances continue to strengthen, underpinned by a run of current account surpluses back to 1998. Korea's net external creditor position is projected to strengthen to 16.8% of GDP by end-2014 from 13.9% at end-2013, driven by a current account surplus of 5.9% of GDP in 2014. The banking sector has significantly reduced its net external indebtedness to USD39.2bn at end-2013, from a peak of USD118.9bn at end-2007. Fitch estimates external debt maturities at about USD82bn in 2014 (of which USD21bn is sovereign), against foreign reserves of USD368bn at end-July 2014. -Relatively high and rising household indebtedness increases Korea's vulnerability to an economic shock and is a weakness in the sovereign credit profile. Household debt reached 84.6% of GDP at end-2013, up from 83.5% at end-2012. The authorities have set a policy goal of reducing the debt by 5 percentage points (pp) as a share of disposable income to 155.7% by end-2017 from 160.7% at end-2013. -Exposure to geopolitical risk is a weakness in Korea's credit profile relative to peers owing to risks associated with North Korea. The (South) Korean government's assessment is that the North Korean economy has strengthened since 2011 and that Kim Jong-un has consolidated his position as leader. This may suggest the risks of a collapse of the North Korean regime have diminished in the near term. However, North Korea is extremely opaque and there is a high degree of uncertainty attached to any assessment of conditions there. -Korea's average income level of USD26,000 in 2013 was the lowest in the 'AA' category. Set against this weakness, the country's broader level of human development and its business environment compare favourably against 'AA' and 'A' range peer medians. RATING SENSITIVITIES The main factors that, individually or collectively, could trigger positive rating action are: -A significant reduction in general government indebtedness -A sustainable decrease over time in the indebtedness of state-linked enterprises -Evidence that the economy can grow over time, thereby narrowing the income gap with rating peers, without an ongoing rise in household indebtedness The main factors that, individually or collectively, could trigger negative rating action are: -A change of policy on the broader public sector's finances leading to tolerance for sustained rises in GG or broader public sector debt -Crystallisation of risks in the financial sector leading to disruption of economic and financial stability, such as a sharp pick-up in defaults among households KEY ASSUMPTIONS The global economy develops broadly in line with the projections contained in Fitch's June "Global Economic Outlook". In particular, the ratings assume China's economic growth does not decelerate into the low single digit range for a sustained period. No significant change in the relationship between North and South Korea, such as a full-scale military conflict, or the sudden collapse of the North leading to large unification costs for the South. Contact: Primary Analyst Andrew Colquhoun Senior Director +852 2263 9938 Fitch Ratings (Hong Kong) Ltd. 2801, Tower Two, Lippo Centre 89 Queensway, Hong Kong Secondary Analyst Thomas Rookmaaker Director +852 2263 9891 Committee Chairperson James McCormack Managing Director +44 20 3530 1286 Media Relations: Wai-Lun Wan, Hong Kong, Tel: +852 2263 9935, Email: wailun.wan@fitchratings.com. Additional information is available on www.fitchratings.com Applicable criteria, 'Sovereign Rating Criteria' dated 12 August 2014 and 'Country Ceilings' dated 09 August 2013, are available at www.fitchratings.com. Applicable Criteria and Related Research: Sovereign Rating Criteria here Country Ceilings here Additional Disclosure Solicitation Status here 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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Fitch: Portugal Court Ruling Fiscally Positive in the Near Term

Tue Aug 19, 2014 6:28am EDT

(The following statement was released by the rating agency) LONDON, August 19 (Fitch) The latest ruling by Portugal's constitutional court partially approving expenditure measures reduces a key near-term risk to consolidation and keeps the sovereign on track to hit its fiscal targets this year, Fitch Ratings says. It limits future fiscal flexibility, although the consequences for debt reduction will partly depend on whether Portugal can sustain its return to economic growth. The court said 14 August that temporary pay cuts for some public sector workers proposed for this year and next year are constitutionally acceptable, but that they should not be extended beyond 2015. It said a levy on some public sector pensions would be unacceptable. Temporary pay cuts have already been used in Portugal to cut expenditure. The ruling reinforces our view that Portugal will hit its 2014 fiscal target of a general government deficit of 4% of GDP, down from 4.5% last year. We forecast a further reduction to 2.7% in 2015, when the government plans another sharp reduction in expenditure. This is marginally above the government's 2.5% target due to more conservative growth assumptions. This view is also supported by Portugal's solid fiscal performance so far in 2014 and by the authorities' track record of finding offsetting measures to previous rulings. (The general government provisional balance adjusted for one-off items to June was in deficit EUR3.9bn, down from a deficit of EUR4.8bn in the same period last year, according to UTAO, the parliamentary technical unit for budget support.) The ruling highlights the capacity of the court to constrain fiscal policy. It concerns provisions in the 2014 supplementary budget that were specifically designed to replace other measures that the court had previously struck down. Indeed, the wage reductions envisaged for 2016-2018 now cannot be implemented. According to its fiscal strategy for 2014-2018, the government plans to cut public expenditure to 43% of GDP in 2018 (from over 48% last year), through employee compensation and headcount reduction measures (the latter may ultimately be more significant given that the planned wage cuts are temporary). Political risk to consolidation remains significant following Portugal's 'clean exit' from its EU-IMF programme in May. The next government - elections are due by October 2015 - may be more reliant on tax increases, which are increasingly politically contentious, if it wants to maintain consolidation consistent with falling public debt ratios. We forecast a gradual reduction from 129% of GDP to 110% by 2023. Continued improvement in macroeconomic performance may make this constraint less burdensome. 2Q14 GDP rose by 0.6% qoq, continuing the return to growth that has improved public debt dynamics. This was a key driver of our Outlook revision on Portugal's 'BB+' sovereign rating to Positive from Negative in April. Nevertheless, risks to growth remain, including deflation (annual inflation was negative 0.7% in July), which could slow corporate balance-sheet adjustment as well as threatening public debt reduction targets. Contact: Michele Napolitano Director Sovereigns +44 20 3530 1536 Fitch Ratings Limited 30 North Colonnade London E14 5GN Mark Brown Senior Director Fitch Wire +44 203 530 1588 Media Relations: 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. Applicable Criteria and Related Research: Portugal here 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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UPDATE 1-Russia says agreement reached on aid to Ukraine but not on ceasefire

Written By Unknown on Senin, 18 Agustus 2014 | 18.12

Mon Aug 18, 2014 4:33am EDT

(Adds quotes context)

BERLIN Aug 18 (Reuters) - Russia on Monday said all objections to it sending a humanitarian convoy to Ukraine had been resolved but said no progress had been made in Berlin talks toward a ceasefire between government and rebel forces in the east of the country.

Following the talks between Russia, Germany, France and Ukraine on Sunday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said "finally, all questions have been resolved ... related to the Russian initiative to send 300 trucks with humanitarian aid."

"Everything has been agreed with Ukraine and the International Committee of the Red Cross," he said at a news conference in Berlin.

Russia and Ukraine have been at loggerheads over a convoy of 280 Russian trucks carrying water, food and medicine.

It has been parked for days in Russia near the border amid objections from Kiev, which believes the convoy could be a Trojan Horse for Russia to get weapons to the rebels - a notion that Moscow has dismissed as absurd.

Lavrov described the situation in east Ukraine as a "humanitarian catastrophe" and said a ceasefire was needed as civilians had been under bombardment from the Ukrainian advance.

"We are not able to report on positive results on reaching a ceasefire and on (a start to) the political process (to resolve the conflict)," he told journalists.

The four-month-old conflict in Ukraine's Russian-speaking east has reached a critical phase, with Kiev and Western governments watching nervously to see if Russia will use troops massed along its border to intervene in support of the increasingly besieged pro-Russian rebels.

Russian has repeatedly said it has no plans to invade and Lavrov again denied Moscow is helping the rebels. He defended the military buildup on Russia's border, saying: "We must be alert ... when several kilometres from our border a real war is underway." (Reporting by Alissa de Carbonnel and Katya Golubkova in MOSCOW and Stephen Brown in BERLIN; Editing by Toby Chopra)

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GLOBAL MARKETS-European stocks rise, core bonds fall as Ukraine fears ease

Mon Aug 18, 2014 4:34am EDT

* Europe stocks rebound from Friday's drop

* Oil drops $1 on reduced tension over Ukraine, Libya supply

* Sterling up after BoE chief says rates can rise before wages

By Nigel Stephenson

LONDON, Aug 18 (Reuters) - European stocks rebounded strongly and prices of top-rated bonds fell on Monday as investors breathed easier over the crisis in Ukraine, which had appeared to escalate dangerously on Friday.

The dollar edged higher versus a basket of currencies. It fell broadly on Friday after the government in Kiev said its artillery had partially destroyed a Russian armoured column, while Russia denied its forces had crossed into Ukraine.

Brent crude oil prices fell more than $1 to trade below $103, erasing a similar rise on Friday blamed on the Ukraine tensions and as Libya, another trouble spot, increased supply.

Fears Friday's clash could have prompted a military response from Moscow proved unfounded, though fighting between Ukrainian forces and pro-Moscow separatists continued.

Kiev said on Sunday its troops had raised the national flag over a police station in the rebel stronghold of Luhansk.

The foreign ministers of Russia, Ukraine, France and Germany met in Berlin. Russia's Sergei Lavrov said no progress had been towards a ceasefire but that all issues related to a Russian humanitarian convoy heading for Ukraine had been resolved.

"There are some hopes that they might be able to make some diplomatic progress ... But the two sides are still far off a diplomatic solution and it shouldn't be a trigger for a Bund sell-off," said Nick Stamenkovic, a bond strategist at RIA Capital Markets.

The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 stock index was 1.3 percent higher, reversing Friday's losses. Germany's Russia-exposed DAX index added 1.7 percent.

Russian shares and the rouble also firmed.

Asian shares traded broadly flat. MSCI's main measure of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan was down 0.03 percent.

Wall Street initially took a hit on Friday after the report of the attack on the Russian column but later pared losses. The Dow Jones Industrial average, which briefly turned negative for the year, and S&P 500 indexes both fell but the tech-heavy Nasdaq rose.

Yields on U.S. Treasury bonds, often sought at times of heightened tension, fell on Friday. Ten-year bonds hit 2.34 percent, their lowest since mid-June 2013, but traded above 2.36 percent on Monday.

Yields on German 10-year debt, the euro zone benchmark, rose 1.9 basis points to 0.994 percent, still close to record lows.

IRISH YIELDS

Irish 10-year yields fell 2.9 bps to 1.97 percent after Fitch upgraded Ireland's credit rating to A-minus on Friday, citing progress on its finances over the last year. It completed an 85 billion euro bailout programme last year.

In currency markets, the euro was less than 0.1 percent down at $1.3388, still close to a nine-month low of $1.3333 hit on Aug. 6. The dollar edged up to 102.47 yen.

Analysts said dollar moves were likely to be restrained by the wait for the annual meeting of central bankers in Jackson Hole, Wyoming at the end of the week.

Adam Myers, head of European FX strategy with Credit Agricole in London, said there were particular risks to the dollar against the euro.

"The euro tried several times to break out higher last week and was stopped each time around $1.34. I think the danger is we may see that (barrier) broken this week."

Sterling, which ended of Friday with it sixth consecutive weekly fall as a lack of wage growth pushed back expectations of when the Bank of England would raise interest rates, rose on Monday after BoE Governor Mark Carney said in a newspaper interview on Sunday a rise in real wages was not a pre-condition for a rate hike.

The pound was last up 0.2 percent at $1.6733, having hit a four-month low of $1.6657 on Thursday.

Brent crude for October delivery was last down 1 percent at $102.52 a barrel, reflecting reduced political tension and the Libyan supply increase.

Gold slipped below $1,300 an ounce in Asia and was last trading at $1,300.85. (Additional reporting by Marius Zaharia in London and Shinichi Saoshiro in Tokyo, editing by John Stonestreet)

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UPDATE 3-China home prices fall for third straight month in July

Mon Aug 18, 2014 5:48am EDT

* July home prices ease from June, third straight monthly fall

* Declines seen continuing in further drag on economy

* Prices still up 2.5 pct on year but slowest gain in 17 months

* New home prices fell in record 64 cities m/m in July

* Developer Vanke says can't be too optimistic on policy easing (Adds comments from China Vanke)

By xiaoyi shao By Xiaoyi Shao and Koh Gui Qing BEIJING, Aug 18 (Reuters) - China's new home prices fell in July for a third straight month with price declines spreading to a record number of cities including Beijing, underlining a worsening property downturn that is increasingly dragging on the broader economy.

Average home prices slipped 0.9 percent in July on a monthly basis, data on Monday showed, as declines spread to the largest number of cities since January 2011, when authorities started releasing the property price data.

"We expect home prices to continue to drop in coming months due to increasingly pessimistic market sentiment," said Yan Yuejin, a property analyst at real estate services firm E-House China in Shanghai.

"The possibility of further moves by the central bank to loosen monetary policy cannot be ruled out. That would put a floor beneath prices," Yan said.

China's once-heated housing market has slowed this year as sales and prices turned south in their biggest pull-back in two years, driven by the cooling economy and the government's five-year-long campaign to keep price rises in check.

The fall in prices adds to concerns about the health of the economy and followed news last week that property investment and property sales cooled in July, while banks appeared more cautious and less eager to lend.

China Vanke , the country's largest residential developer, saw its first-half net profit rise 5.6 percent from a year ago, down sharply from a 22.3 percent annual increase in first half of 2013.

The company told a news conference in Hong Kong on Monday that home prices and sales volume would not rebound quickly even though many cities had eased restrictions on home purchases.

"It took a long while for the government to suppress housing prices in the past. We can't expect transactions to climb once market easing takes effect," said Vanke President Yu Liang. "The market cannot be too optimistic."

Vanke said recently that the "golden era" for China's real estate sector is over and it may take two to four years for the industry to correct.

Most of Vanke's properties are in the biggest cities, which are now starting to show signs of succumbing to the national downturn, though its emphasis on smaller, less expensive homes may offset some of the impact.

Many would-be buyers, meanwhile, appear to be content to sit and wait, anticipating further price declines.

"Uncertainties over the outlook of the property market have kept potential home buyers standing on the sidelines," Liu Jianwei, a senior statistician at the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), said in a statement accompanying the data.

Average new home prices in 70 major cities fell 0.9 percent in July from the previous month, accelerating from June's 0.5 percent monthly drop, according to Reuters calculations based on data issued by the National Bureau of Statistics on Monday.

The softness in the housing market, which accounts for more than 15 percent of China's annual economic output and directly impacts around 40 other business sectors, has become an increasing drag on the broader economy.

BIGGER PRICE FALLS

The NBS data showed new home prices in July fell in 64 of the 70 cities that were surveyed, up from 55 cities in June.

The worst month-on-month performance was in the eastern city of Hangzhou and the southern city of Sanya, where prices sagged 2.4 percent in July.

Price declines on a monthly basis were also seen in smaller cities, including the northern city of Shenyang, the central city of Wuhan and the eastern city of Yangzhou, where home prices all fell 1.7 percent.

The downward trend also spread to the country's wealthiest cities. In Beijing, prices slipped 1 percent from June in their first decrease in over two years, while those in Shanghai eased for the third consecutive month but at a somewhat faster pace.

Compared to a year ago, new home prices were up 2.5 percent in July, slipping from the previous month's 4.2 percent gain and marking the slowest annual growth in 17 months.

Analysts believed the downturn could persist in coming months due to high inventories and sluggish sales.

"Reports of a rising number of cities relaxing home purchase restrictions are encouraging, though with a large inventory overhang, they provide no hope of a quick rebound in prices," Prakash Sakpal, an economist at ING said in note to clients.

A growing number of local governments have eased restrictions on property purchases in recent weeks, while state-controlled banks have also revved up lending to the sector, though some analysts believe banks are increasingly reluctant to lend to some developers as the downturn persists.

At least 30 regional governments, which earn a large part of their revenues from selling state land, have openly or quietly relaxed home purchase restrictions this year, according to data from private consultancies.

Even if the slowdown lasts for more than a year a market collapse is seen as unlikely if local governments continue to relax controls and banks keep credit ample, according to a Reuters analysts poll last month.

While easier access to loans is seen as key to preventing a sharp correction in the property market, a survey by Standard Chartered indicated many developers were finding it tougher to access funding through banks or trust loans.

Respondents said borrowing costs were rising, and most believed banks did not appear more willing to extend loans to first-time home buyers, despite encouragement from the central bank.

Several domestic banks in Shanghai, including Bank of China Ltd, China Construction Bank Corp, Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Ltd and Agricultural Bank of China Ltd, denied that they had lowered interest rates on property loans, the China Securities Journal said on Monday. (Additional reporting by Hou Xiangming and Pete Sweeney, and Clare Jim in HONG KONG,; Editing by Eric Meijer)

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