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Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 28 Februari 2015 | 18.12

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RPT-India's nominal GDP growth seen at 11-12 pct in 2015/16

Sat Feb 28, 2015 5:01am EST

NEW DELHI Feb 28 (Reuters) - India's nominal economic growth is expected to be between 11-12 percent in the year that begins in April, Junior Finance Minister Jayant Sinha said on Saturday.

Nominal economic growth figures are not adjusted for inflation. New Delhi estimates real, inflation-adjusted growth for the year to be between 8 and 8.5 percent. (Reporting by Rajesh Kumar Singh; Editing by Douglas Busvine)


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Greece seeks negotiations on ECB bond repayment

ATHENS Sat Feb 28, 2015 5:15am EST

ATHENS Feb 28 (Reuters) - Greece called into question on Saturday a major debt repayment it must make to the European Central Bank this summer, after acknowledging it faces problems in meeting its obligations to international creditors.

Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis said Athens should negotiate with the ECB on 6.7 billion euros in Greek government bonds held by the Frankfurt-based bank that mature in July and August.

Varoufakis did not say what he hoped to achieve in any talks, but he accused the ECB of making a mistake in buying the bonds around the time Greece had to take an EU/IMF bailout in 2010.

"Shouldn't we negotiate this? We will fight it," he said in an interview with Skai television. "If we had the money we would pay ... They know we don't have it."

The government of leftist Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras promised to honour all its debt obligations when it struck a deal with the euro zone last week that extended Greece's bailout programme for four months.

But Athens will get no more money until the European Commission, ECB and International Monetary Fund have approved in detail its economic plans during the four-month period.

With tax revenue falling far short of target last month and an economic recovery faltering, the state must repay an IMF loan of around 1.6 billion euros in March and find 800 million in interest payments in April. It then needs about 7.5 billion in July and August to repay the bonds held by the ECB and make other interest payments.

The ECB bought the bonds on the secondary market under its Securities Markets Programme (SMP) which aimed to reduce borrowing costs for troubled southern European governments during the euro zone debt crisis.

However, Greece was frozen out of international debt markets, and more than four years later is still unable to fund itself commercially apart from limited issues of short-term treasury bills.

Varoufakis, who has staged a media blitz in recent days to sell the euro zone deal to the Greek people, singled out former ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet for criticism.

"One part of the negotiations will be on what will happen to these bonds which unfortunately and wrongly Mr Trichet bought," he said. "I see it as a mistake - but the ECB did this with the aim of keeping us in the markets in 2010. They failed."

Varoufakis argued that if the bonds had remained in investors' hands, their value would have been cut by 90 percent under a restructuring of Greece's privately held debt in 2012, reducing the burden on the state.

The ECB bought the bonds at a deep discount and made large profits because their value rose as the euro zone debt crisis eased. Under Greece's second bailout deal, these profits were due to be returned to Athens to help it repay debt.

Athens received a partial payment in 2013 but euro zone countries are withholding a further 1.9 billion euros pending the review of Greece's economic plans. Varoufakis wants this money sent directly to the IMF to meet the March payment. (Reporting by Costas Pitas and Lefteris Papadimas; Writing by David Stamp; Editing by Hugh Lawson)

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UPDATE 1-Thai Union Frozen to raise $400 mln in share issue for Bumble Bee buy

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 27 Februari 2015 | 18.12

Fri Feb 27, 2015 5:23am EST

* To offer 1.2 bln new shares to existing shareholders

* Raise ceiling of bond issue to 40 bln baht

* Bumble Bee deal expected to close by 2015 (Adds details, background, shares)

By Khettiya Jittapong

BANGKOK, Feb 27 (Reuters) - Thai Union Frozen Products Pcl (TUF) said on Friday it aims to raise $400 million by offering new shares to help finance acquisitions, including the purchase of U.S. competitor Bumble Bee Seafoods.

Thai Union, the world's largest producer of canned tuna, plans to move quickly to cut debt after making its largest-ever acquisition with the $1.5 billion move for Bumble Bee in December.

The capital raising, though widely expected by analysts, sent Thai Union shares down as much as 4 percent to a four-week low. The stock closed down 3.2 percent on Friday, while the broader Thai index was down 0.4 percent.

The company plans to offer up to 1.2 billion new shares through a rights issue, it said in a statement on Friday.

It would also seek shareholder permission to raise the ceiling of a new bond issue to 40 billion baht ($1.24 billion) from 25 billion baht, it said in a statement.

Thai Union, which makes Chicken of the Sea, the third-largest tuna brand in the United States, plans to double its revenue through overseas asset purchases.

The acquisition is awaiting clearance by U.S. antitrust authorities. Thai Union expects to complete the deal by the end of 2015, it said on Friday.

Bumble Bee is the largest canned tuna and sardine producer in North America, with brands including Brunswick and Sweet Sue. It is owned by pan-Atlantic private equity firm Lion Capital, which bought the seafood maker from another private equity firm for $980 million in 2010.

The acquisition would be Thai Union's third in an aggressive international expansion drive in 2014. It also bought Norwegian canned fish producer King Oscar and French smoked-salmon supplier MerAlliance.

The company has said it was financing the Bumble Bee purchase with a one-year bridge loan from two local banks.

Thai Union Chief Executive Thiraphong Chansiri told Reuters last month the company's debt-to-equity ratio would rise to 1.7 times after the company took the bridge loan.

At the end of 2014, TUF's net debt-to-equity ratio was at 0.85 times. The company wants to bring down the ratio to a factor of 0.8 to 1.2 times within a year of completing the deal.

Earlier, the company announced a weaker-than-expected 14 percent fall in fourth-quarter net profit and reiterated its $5 billion sales target for 2015. ($1 = 32.40 Baht) (Editing by Simon Webb and Prateek Chatterjee)

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German parliament approves Greek bailout extension

BERLIN Fri Feb 27, 2015 5:32am EST

BERLIN Feb 27 (Reuters) - Germany's parliament approved an extension of Greece's bailout on Friday after Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, who has voiced doubts about whether Athens can be trusted, promised it would not be allowed to "blackmail" its euro zone partners.

Chancellor Angela Merkel's right-left coalition plus the opposition Greens, it was the biggest majority for any euro zone rescue package so far in the 631-seat chamber.

The Bundestag vote was the only major parliamentary hurdle for a four-month extension to the bailout programme for the most heavily-indebted country in the single currency zone. (Reporting by Stephen Brown; Editing by Alexandra Hudson)


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Russia to spend an extra 2.7 trln roubles from Reserve Fund

MOSCOW Fri Feb 27, 2015 5:39am EST

MOSCOW Feb 27 (Reuters) - Russia's government will ask parliament to allow the spending of 2.7 trillion roubles ($44.26 billion) from the budget's Reserve Fund in 2015, in addition to 500 billion roubles already envisaged in the budget, First Deputy Finance Minister Tatiana Nesterenko said on Friday.

Earlier on Friday, Nesterenko said the ministry projected a budget deficit of 3.7 percent of gross domestic product this year - a large increase compared with a 0.6 percent deficit originally planned for 2015. ($1 = 61.0050 roubles) (Reporting by Darya Korsunskaya, writing by Jason Bush, editing by Elizabeth Piper)


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Greek central bank warns fragile economic recovery faces risks

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 26 Februari 2015 | 18.12

ATHENS Thu Feb 26, 2015 5:40am EST

ATHENS Feb 26 (Reuters) - Greece's economy is expected to grow this year but faces risks from the government's ability to fulfill a deal with the euro zone and reform fatigue, central bank governor Yannis Stournaras said in his annual report published on Thursday.

Saying this month's decision by the euro zone to grant Greece a loan extension averted "dire consequences" for the economy, Stournaras urged the government to pursue structural reforms and quickly conclude a final agreement with creditors.

"We must pursue the negotiations in a spirit of cooperation and trust and promptly conclude a mutually beneficial final agreement with our partners," Stournaras said in his speech.

Greek banks were well-capitalised but faced the twin challenges of a high level of bad loans and "considerable strain" on liquidity in the last few months and still have no access to money markets, Stournaras said.

He urged Greece to fulfill its agreement with the euro zone so that the European Central Bank would resume funding access for Greek banks that was cut off earlier this month. (Reporting by Deepa Babington and Karolina Tagaris)


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Ukraine central bank offers to sell dollars for 28.046 hryvnia

KIEV Thu Feb 26, 2015 5:36am EST

KIEV Feb 26 (Reuters) - Ukraine's central bank offered to sell dollars on Thursday at 28.046 hryvnia to the dollar, the rate at which it purchased dollars the previous day.

Ukraine's currency market has been in turmoil this week after the hryvnia fell rapidly.

On Wednesday morning, the central bank announced a ban on nearly all currency trading until the end of the week, only to lift the ban overnight after a rebuke from Prime Minister Arseny Yatseniuk. (Reporting by Natalia Zinets; Writing by Peter Graff; editing by John Stonestreet)


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EMERGING MARKETS-Oil rally lifts rouble to six-week high

By Chris Vellacott

LONDON Thu Feb 26, 2015 5:45am EST

LONDON Feb 26 (Reuters) - Russian shares rose 2 percent and the rouble hit a six-week high against the dollar on Thursday as oil prices rallied, while reduced concerns about an imminent U.S. interest rate hike propped up broader emerging assets.

The rouble was trading more than 1 percent higher on the dollar while the spread on Russian debt over U.S. Treasuries narrowed 16 basis points after Brent Crude prices climbed above $60 per barrel on Wednesday.

Spreads on Ukrainian debt were steady around 4,000 basis points over Treasuries as fighting in the east of the country continued despite new European efforts to ensure a ceasefire takes hold.

The Ukrainian central bank on Wednesday abruptly reversed a ban on most currency trading after less than a day that was put in place to defend the embattled hryvnia.

However, the International Monetary Fund said it was ready to assist Ukraine with its foreign currency issues.

"Clearly the IMF is not going to release moneys if the war in eastern Ukraine continues, in our view, possibly explaining the procrastination in the IMF Board meeting. That uncertainty was highlighted in yesterday's decision by the (central bank) to reverse its decision on FX purchase bans, just one day into the ban, apparently on political pressure," Commerzbank analysts said in a note.

Broader emerging stocks were buoyed by U.S. Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen's indications this week that policymakers are in no hurry to raise rates, with the MSCI emerging equities index rising 0.24 percent.

This easing of U.S. rate rise fears also lifted Turkey's lira 0.3 percent against the dollar, countering market nerves about apparent political meddling in monetary policy. On Wednesday President Tayyip Erdogan questioned whether the central bank was under external influence.

But the lira remains close to record lows reached earlier in the month.

"Further weakness in the lira could clearly begin to unsettle investors due to large foreign currency liability exposures in the country, " Mitsubishi MUFJ said in a note.

A firmer oil price did not prevent a 0.3 percent fall in the Angolan kwanza against the dollar to trade at record lows after lawmakers passed tighter spending in a new budget accounting for oil export revenues.

Key Gulf bourses held onto gains from the previous session, with the Saudi and Dubai markets up 0.1 percent and Abu Dhabi advancing nearly 1 percent.

Brazilian oil group Petrobras' 5-year credit default swaps were quoted 2 bps lower at 612 bps, according to financial data provider Markit, just off the six-year highs hit on Wednesday after Moody's downgraded the state-run company to junk.

For GRAPHIC on emerging market FX performance 2015, see link.reuters.com/jus35t

For GRAPHIC on MSCI emerging index performance 2015, see link.reuters.com/weh36s

For GRAPHIC on MSCI emerging Europe performance 2015, see link.reuters.com/jun28s

For GRAPHIC on MSCI frontier index performance 2015, see link.reuters.com/zyh97s

For CENTRAL EUROPE market report, see

For TURKISH market report, see

For RUSSIAN market report, see ) (Editing by Hugh Lawson)

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Greece will not block Eldorado's mining operations-ministry official

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 25 Februari 2015 | 18.12

ATHENS Wed Feb 25, 2015 5:54am EST

ATHENS Feb 25 (Reuters) - Greece's new left-wing government will not block Canadian firm Eldorado Gold Corp.'s mining operations in the country's north but will review permits for a processing plant at the site, a senior energy ministry official said on Wednesday.

"The mining will not stop," the official told reporters, a day after Greece climbed down from pledges to halt asset sales and roll back obligations under its bailout EU/IMF programme.

The latest comments appeared to be a step back from the sharp comments by the energy minister last month when he told Reuters his government was "absolutely" opposed to the Skouries gold mine run by Eldorado and would review its next moves on it.

The official said the ministry was examining whether permits for the processing plant being built were in line with the law.

"According to our legal advisers, there are some shortcomings related to the site planning," the official said. "As a ministry we have ordered some of the permits to be recalled to re-examine whether the activity of the company is the one described in the approved permits."

(Reporting by Angeliki Koutantou, Writing by Deepa Babington; editing by David Stamp)


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Ukraine central bank reports small hryvnia deals at stronger rate

KIEV Wed Feb 25, 2015 5:52am EST

KIEV Feb 25 (Reuters) - Ukraine's central bank, which on Wednesday banned banks from trading currency on behalf of clients, reported the two first deals of the day at 12:30 pm (1030 GMT) at a rate of 24.00 hryvnia to the dollar, compared with the 31.63 Tuesday close.

The total volume for the officially registered trades was only $170,000. The government has accused the central bank of taking the decision to suspend most trading without consultation and said it would harm the economy. (Reporting by Pavel Polityuk; Editing by Louise Ireland)


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Georgia's central bank says weak lari hurts imports

TBILISI Wed Feb 25, 2015 5:53am EST

TBILISI Feb 25 (Reuters) - A 30-percent weakening in Georgia's currency has already begun to hurt imports but the central bank has enough reserves to secure financial stability, its central bank chief Georgy Kadagidze said on Wednesday.

Kadagidze told reporters the central bank expected the lari to stabilise in the near future. (Reporting by Margarita Antidze; Writing by Polina Devitt, editing by Elizabeth Piper)


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Too early to say if Greek precautionary credit line possible - Dijsselbloem

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 24 Februari 2015 | 18.12

BRUSSELS Tue Feb 24, 2015 5:44am EST

BRUSSELS Feb 24 (Reuters) - It is too early to say if the euro zone's bailout fund could grant a precautionary credit line to Athens later this year, the head of the Eurogroup said on Tuesday, adding that for this to happen, Greece would need to have access to financial markets.

"In our talks with the Greek government we were looking ahead and talking about the possibility of what is called an enhanced conditions credit line... whether that is still feasible is too early to say," Jeroen Dijsselbloem told European Parliament.

"You have to realise, that in order for this credit line to be (granted), a country needs to have market access," said Dijsselbloem who chairs meetings of euro zone finance ministers. (Reporting by Philip Blenkinsop and Jan Strupczewski)


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German econ minister "cautiously optimistic" on Greece

BERLIN Tue Feb 24, 2015 5:35am EST

BERLIN Feb 24 (Reuters) - German Economy Minister Sigmar Gabriel said on Tuesday he was "cautiously optimistic" that progress was being made on talks with Greece about extending its bailout, after Athens submitted reform plans to its European partners.

"I am cautiously optimistic that we are ... moving step-by-step towards a resolution of the conflict," said Gabriel, who as leader of the Social Democrats is also Vice Chancellor in conservative Chancellor Angela Merkel's coalition.

"We want to continue aid for Greece but the condition for that is the continuation of the reform programme," he said at a conference in Berlin. (Reporting by Rene Wagner; Writing by Madeline Chambers; Editing by Stephen Brown)


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Commission chairing Eurogroup not a good idea-Dijsselbloem

BRUSSELS Tue Feb 24, 2015 5:39am EST

BRUSSELS Feb 24 (Reuters) - The informal gathering of euro zone finance ministers, called the Eurogroup, is a format that should not be overseen by the European Commission, Eurogroup President Jeroen Dijsselbloem said on Tuesday.

Euro zone ministerial meetings are now chaired by a euro zone finance minister who presides over the monthly meetings for a term of 2.5 years, in addition to his normal responsibilities as a national finance minister.

Because this is a large additional workload, the euro zone wants to appoint a permanent Eurogroup president for a five-year term, who would not have a national portfolio and devote all his time to euro zone issues.

One of the ideas among policy-makers is that this role could be filled by a European Commission representative. But Dijsselbloem, whose own term ends in June, rejected that.

"For the future, I think that the Eurogroup is an informal, intergovernmental group of ministers and it would be, in my institutional thinking, illogical if the Commission would preside over this meeting," Dijsselbloem told the European Parliament. (Reporting by Robin Emmott, Jan Strupczewski)

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EMERGING MARKETS-Russia bonds, rouble drop after Moody's cuts to junk

Written By Unknown on Senin, 23 Februari 2015 | 18.12

By Chris Vellacott

LONDON Mon Feb 23, 2015 5:29am EST

LONDON Feb 23 (Reuters) - Russian dollar bonds fell as much 2.5 cents on Monday after Moody's became the second agency to cut their credit rating to junk while Ukrainian debt also fell, hitting new record lows.

Russian markets are shut for a holiday but the rouble fell 3.4 percent against the dollar on international markets to a one-week low.

Moody's downgraded Russia to Ba1 from Baa3 late on Friday, citing the impact from the Ukraine crisis as well as the steep fall in oil prices and the rouble. With junk ratings from two agencies, Russia risks an acceleration in outflows from more conservative asset managers.

"The fundamental picture is still complicated and I don't see any improvement. What I see is increasing tensions with the West, so while the Moody's story was well anticipated it just adds to the overall negative backdrop," said Regis Chatellier, credit strategist at Societe Generale.

The 2030 dollar bond fell 1.1 cent in price to 106.5, a one-week low. The 2043 issue fell 2.5 cents . All other bonds also shed around a cent while Russia's yield spreads over Treasuries widened 9 basis points to 524 bps.

Ukrainian dollar bonds traded around 40-42 cents in the dollar on fears an upcoming restructuring would inflict big losses on bondholders.

In other emerging markets, Turkey's lira retreated more than 1 percent against the dollar as investors braced for a 25 basis point interest rate cut expected when the central bank holds a policy meeting on Tuesday.

Investors were also rattled by a military operation to rescue around 40 soldiers guarding a Turkish enclave in Syria, raising international tensions.

Hungary's forint was down 0.3 percent to the euro after the ruling Fidesz party was defeated in a by-election and lost its two-thirds majority in parliament.

Malaysia's ringitt fell 0.5 percent, nearing a six-year low as state development fund 1MDB said it may not be able to service its debt and could require an injection from the finance ministry.

Broader emerging equities fell 0.3 percent, largely due to the impact of a strengthening dollar.

Nigeria's naira, battered by weak oil prices, lost 3 percent against the dollar after data over the weekend showed slowing economic growth.

A sharp drop in the price of oil has hammered the naira which has hit successive record lows against the dollar in the last three months despite the central bank burning through 20 percent of its reserves to prop it up.

For GRAPHIC on emerging market FX performance 2015, see link.reuters.com/jus35t

For GRAPHIC on MSCI emerging index performance 2015, see link.reuters.com/weh36s

For GRAPHIC on MSCI emerging Europe performance 2015, see link.reuters.com/jun28s

For GRAPHIC on MSCI frontier index performance 2015, see link.reuters.com/zyh97s

For CENTRAL EUROPE market report, see

For TURKISH market report, see

For RUSSIAN market report, see ) (Additional reporting by Sujata Rao; Editing by Ruth Pitchford)

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UPDATE 1-Asahi Kasei to buy Polypore's energy storage business for $2.2 bln

Mon Feb 23, 2015 5:36am EST

(Adds details)

TOKYO Feb 23 (Reuters) - Asahi Kasei Corp, a Japanese chemicals maker, said on Monday it would buy Polypore International Inc's energy storage segment for $2.2 billion, as it seeks to expand in the energy and environment business.

Asahi Kasei will acquire all outstanding shares of North Carolina-based Polypore for $60.50 a share, a 14 percent premium to their $52.95 close on Friday, and representing an enterprise value of about $3.2 billion.

Before the acquisition, 3M Co will buy the assets of Polypore's Separations Media segment for about $1 billion and Asahi Kasei will receive the cash proceeds from the asset sale, they said.

The deal value is close to the company's acquisition of Zoll Medical Corp for $2.21 billion in 2012.

Asahi Kasei said it will draw on its cash reserves and new bridge loans. The company will look to "optimise its financial structure", it added without elaborating.

The transactions have been approved by the boards of directors of Asahi Kasei, 3M, and Polypore.

Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities Co was the financial adviser to Asahi Kasei while Bank of America Merrill Lynch advised Polypore.

(Reporting by Chris Gallagher and Ritsuko Ando; Editing by Subhranshu Sahu and Anupama Dwivedi)

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Putin surveys the map as he ponders next move on Ukraine

Mon Feb 23, 2015 5:39am EST

* Putin's decisions hold the key to Ukraine's future

* Rebels have seized key town, Kiev fears new offensive

* Obama under pressure to give Kiev lethal weapons

By Timothy Heritage

MOSCOW, Feb 23 (Reuters) - In Russia, Vladimir Putin likes to portray himself as the saviour of the nation. In Europe and the United States he has come to be seen as a threat to the new world order.

What the Russian president does next in Ukraine is key to the country's future, as well as that of Europe and his own.

Putin looks to have the upper hand at this stage despite Western economic sanctions that are hurting Russia's economy, as Ukraine is rapidly becoming all but ungovernable for its pro-Western leaders, undermining its drive to join mainstream Europe.

With Crimea in Russian hands for almost a year and eastern Ukraine controlled by separatists loyal to him, Putin could allow the rebels to try to seize more territory with what the West says is Russian military support.

Kiev fears a new rebel offensive is imminent on Ukraine's Sea of Azov coast which could open a corridor to Crimea.

Putin's next steps will be determined by what he thinks is best for him, and not necessarily by what Western critics see as expansionist policies or what his admiring electorate sees as the defence of national interests.

"All options are open," said a senior Western diplomat in Moscow. "But ultimately it is all about Putin keeping power and he will do what he has to do to achieve this."

The diplomat, with close knowledge of the negotiations which led to the peace deal reached by the German, French, Ukrainian and Russian leaders in the Belarussian capital Minsk on Feb. 12, saw only a slim chance of a good outcome for Ukraine.

The best possible outcome, he said, was a return to the pre-conflict situation of 2013. Others included a long, intense war, or a "frozen" or low-level conflict in the east that makes Ukraine impossible to govern or tears it apart.

The setbacks to the Minsk deal since the rebels disavowed it by taking a strategic town they said was not covered by the truce have prompted new calls for U.S. President Barack Obama to give Kiev lethal weapons to defend Ukraine.

"Vladimir Putin wants Ukraine not to be part of Europe, and he is succeeding in doing so," Republican Senator John McCain said in a television interview on Sunday.

PUTIN'S MAP

For Putin, who denies sending troops and weapons to east Ukraine, the map of Russia and its "near abroad" is more comforting than a year ago.

Crimea has been reclaimed, and Ukraine's drive to join Europe's mainstream and possibly NATO seems more problematic now that Moscow has shown how far it will go to prevent this. Russian-speaking east Ukraine has not become part of Russia, but is now more in Moscow's sphere of influence than Kiev's.

Russia also dominates South Ossetia and Abkhazia, two breakaway regions of Georgia. Moscow recognised their independence after a five-day war with Tbilisi which Russia won in 2008 and has held sway there ever since.

Moscow signed a border agreement with South Ossetia last week, a move which Tbilisi said moved Russia closer to annexing the territory, and forged a "strategic partnership" agreement with Abkhazia last November.

Further afield, Russian forces have been deployed as "peacekeepers" in the Transdniestria region of Moldova since intervening to back separatists more than 20 years ago.

These may or may not be patterns for Putin to follow although the same Kremlin adviser, Vladislav Surkov, has a role in policy-making for the Georgian regions as well as for Ukraine. Destabilisation of Ukraine, making it impossible to govern and take into NATO, may be preferable to conquering it.

Some Western officials see Putin's ambitions in other parts of the former Soviet Union.

British Defence Secretary Michael Fallon said last week Putin posed a "real and present danger" to Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. Valdis Dombrovskis, vice president of the European Union's executive European Commission, said Russia was redrawing the map of Europe by force.

U.S. State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said Russia was "undermining international diplomacy and multilateral institutions - the foundations of our modern global order."

U.S. HEGEMONY

Putin is challenging what he sees as U.S. hegemony and a world order shaped around Washington's interests, where he believes the United States sets certain standards for others but does not adhere to them itself.

But more is at stake for Putin and Russia in Ukraine than in any other former Soviet republic: he says he sees it as one nation with Russia and the cradle of Russian civilisation.

A report released by the EU Committee of Britain's House of Lords signalled the European Union had not grasped this in the buildup to the crisis, identifying a "catastrophic misreading" of the mood in the Kremlin.

Sergei Karaganov, head of Russia's independent Council for Foreign and Defence Policy think-tank, also believes the West got it wrong after the Cold War ended by failing to understand Russia's concerns over Ukraine, and particularly that it might join NATO.

The consequences, he says, include a turn towards a strong leader in Russia and disenchantment with Western-style democracy and values.

But, like Putin, he says policy changes must come from Europe - not from Russia - to reduce the chances of conflict.

His comments underline that, a year since the overthrow of a Moscow-leaning president in Ukraine that culminated in the separatist rebellions in the east, the gulf between Moscow and the West is as dangerously wide as ever.

"After winning the Cold War, the whole of Europe is losing it now," Karaganov wrote in Rossiiskaya Gazeta newspaper last week. "And it is entering the next phase of international relations disunited, again on the verge of confrontation or even a major war." (Reporting by Timothy Heritage; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)

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GLOBAL ECONOMY WEEKAHEAD-Fed rate rise timing back in the spotlight

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 22 Februari 2015 | 18.12

By Ross Finley

LONDON Sun Feb 22, 2015 4:00am EST

LONDON Feb 22 (Reuters) - Greece's struggles with its euro zone creditors may have grabbed much of the world's attention, but U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen is likely to reclaim the spotlight this week with testimony on a long-anticipated shift in policy.

If the Fed sticks to mid-year for its first interest rate rise in a decade, it will be perceived as a reflection of the world economy's growing resilience.

U.S. core CPI inflation data due next week will also give some idea of just how much the collapse in oil prices which has tamped down inflation globally will work as a counterweight to the Fed's apparent comfort so far with higher rates in June.

But the fretting over Greece -- which makes up less than half of one percent of world GDP -- has underscored the impression that for all of the piles of monetary stimulus over the past few years, much of the troubles remain the same.

While purchasing managers' data for the euro zone in February are pointing in the right direction, Europe is still struggling to create meaningful growth that would generate the kind of strong hiring that might in turn push up wage inflation.

China is grappling with a property market and debt overhang as it tries to rebalance its slowing economy and a purchasing managers' index due on Wednesday is expected to show persistent stagnation in its once-booming manufacturing industry.

Much of Latin America, particularly Brazil, has slipped back even further from a past position of strength and has very little to offer a world economy that the World Bank warns is now running on one engine, made in America.

Minutes to the Fed's latest policy-setting meeting suggested to some analysts that policymakers might be backing off a June rate rise. But the strongest set of jobs data in many years were published after that late January Fed meeting took place.

"If unemployment keeps falling, the laws of supply and demand have not been repealed, we will get inflation out of this," said Jim O'Sullivan, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics in Valhalla, New York.

"In terms of going to the next step, does that mean they're tightening in June? Not necessarily," he said.

O'Sullivan expects Yellen to sound optimistic on the full employment part of the Fed's dual mandate when she delivers her twice-annual testimony to Congress on monetary policy, starting with the Senate Banking Committee on Tuesday.

The majority of forecasters still expect June for lift-off on U.S. rates, and the latest Reuters poll suggested that about two-thirds of them had held to the same conviction over the timing over the course of the past month.

What hasn't been working in the Fed's favour is evidence that inflation is picking up. Core inflation, which strips out food and energy prices, is expected to hold steady at 1.6 percent when data are due Thursday, according to a Reuters poll.

With a few notable exceptions, like Brazil, inflation has been far too low for comfort, and continues to fall, triggering surprise central bank monetary easings from Canada to Sweden to Australia to Indonesia over the past several weeks.

To many, that makes the Fed's continued focus on soon doing the opposite seem out of step. But perhaps not for long.

"The outlook for some large emerging market economies such as Brazil, Mexico and Russia has deteriorated but the meaningful tailwinds of lower energy prices and global policy easing are likely to persist," wrote Gustavo Reis, global economist at BofA-ML.

Much will depend on whether the euro zone, where some signs of economic revival have drawn stock markets to multi-year peaks, can sail through the latest bout of wrangling over its future without too much damage.

The European Central Bank's bond purchase programme announced at its January meeting, worth 60 billion euros ($68 billion) a month, will begin in March, many years behind its peers. But it may have arrived at a particularly good time.

Any risk of investor flight over the outcome of heated negotiations over Greece's debt burden and the future of the euro now will at least have one of the world's largest central banks acting as a backstop scooping up sovereign debt.

And the economic news is not all bad. The German Ifo business climate index, due at the start of the week, is expected to rise for a fourth straight month in February.

German gross domestic product (GDP) is also expected to be confirmed as growing a solid 0.7 percent quarter-on-quarter in the final months of last year.

"Europe's biggest economy is clearly entering 2015 with more momentum than we and the consensus had expected," wrote analysts at Morgan Stanley, who expect first quarter growth of 0.5 percent. ($1 = 0.8789 euros) (Reporting by Ross Finley; Editing by Ruth Pitchford)

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Colombia to delay $2.44 billion in spending due to oil price fall

BOGOTA Sat Feb 21, 2015 7:45pm EST

BOGOTA Feb 21 (Reuters) - Colombia will delay spending 6 trillion pesos ($2.44 billion), some 3 percent of its national budget, due to a sharp fall in oil revenue, the government said on Saturday.

The cutbacks, consisting of 4.8 trillion pesos ($1.95 billion) in investments and 1.2 trillion ($488 million) in administrative costs, were approved by the cabinet, the government said in a statement.

The move takes into account "new macroeconomic and fiscal conditions, associated primarily with the fall in international oil prices," the statement said.

The 4.8 trillion investment cut represents 9.7 percent of the country's allotted budget for general costs, including much-needed infrastructure improvements. The government will now invest a total of 44.7 trillion pesos ($18 billion) in 2015.

The other portion of the cutback, of 1.2 trillion pesos, will affect administrative spending.

Colombia's tax and royalty revenue has been battered by a 60 percent fall in global crude prices since June. Oil is the biggest export and source of foreign exchange for the country.

Congress approved a 216 trillion peso ($88 billion) national budget for 2015 last October.

If fiscal conditions change, the funds may again be made available, the statement added.

The cuts will not affect spending on the country's "most vulnerable" including those displaced or affected by its 50-year war with leftist rebels.

($1 = 2,455.54 Colombian pesos) (Reporting by Julia Symmes Cobb and Luis Jaime Acosta; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)

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Cheap oil cuts Kuwait 9-month budget surplus 26 pct -NBK

DUBAI Sun Feb 22, 2015 12:58am EST

DUBAI Feb 22 (Reuters) - Kuwait's government budget surplus shrank 26 percent in the first nine months of this fiscal year as lower oil prices cut revenue sharply, analysts at National Bank of Kuwait (NBK) calculated, using Ministry of Finance data.

The surplus totalled 10.6 billion dinars ($35.9 billion) between April and December, down from 14.3 billion dinars a year earlier.

The plunge in oil prices since last June has squeezed state finances and if Brent crude stays at its current level of around $60 a barrel in the coming year, some analysts believe Kuwait could run a budget deficit or come close to it.

NBK, the country's largest bank, predicted the surplus for the full fiscal year to the end of March would total 4.1 billion dinars, the smallest surplus in six years, though it would still be large by international standards at 8.7 percent of gross domestic product.

Government spending rose 10 percent to 10.6 billion dinars in the first nine months of the fiscal year. Capital spending surged 31 percent to 900 million dinars, or 39 percent of the budget's annual allocation for capital spending.

Actual expenditure has repeatedly fallen far behind budget plans in recent years as political disputes and bureaucracy have delayed the implementation of economic development projects.

In past years, an average of only 35 percent of budgeted allocations for capital projects were spent by December; the rise of this ratio to 39 percent suggests the government's ability to push through projects is improving, NBK said.

Government revenue in the first nine months of this fiscal year dropped 12 percent to 21.2 billion dinars. Oil revenue, which account for over 90 percent of state revenue, fell 13 percent.

Last month the government released a draft budget for next fiscal year that projected a deficit of 8.23 billion dinars, assuming an average oil price of $45. (Reporting by Andrew Torchia; editing by Matt Smith)

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WRAPUP 9-Greece, euro zone agree four-month loan extension, avert crunch

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 21 Februari 2015 | 18.12

Fri Feb 20, 2015 5:03pm EST

(Adds Schaeuble, Varoufakis, ECB source)

* Euro zone agrees in principle to four-month loan extension

* Contingent on Greek policy plans to be detailed Monday

* Athens forced to climb down and accept strict oversight

* ECB says deal means no need for capital controls

By Jan Strupczewski and Renee Maltezou

BRUSSELS, Feb 20 (Reuters) - Euro zone finance ministers agreed in principle on Friday to extend Greece's financial rescue by four months, averting a potential cash crunch in March that could have forced the country out of the currency area.

The deal, to be ratified once Greece's creditors are satisfied with a list of reforms it will submit next week, ends weeks of uncertainty since the election of a leftist-led government in Athens which pledged to reverse austerity.

"Tonight was a first step in this process of rebuilding trust," Jeroen Dijsselbloem, chairman of the 19-nation Eurogroup, told a news conference. "We have established common ground again to reach agreement on this statement."

The agreement, clinched after the third ministerial meeting in two weeks of acrimonious public exchanges, offers a breathing space for the new Greek government to try to negotiate longer-term debt relief with its official creditors.

But it also forced radical young Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras into a major climbdown since he had vowed to scrap the bailout, end cooperation with the "troika" of international lenders and roll back austerity.

European Union paymaster Germany, Greece's biggest creditor, had demanded "significant improvements" in reform commitments by Athens before it would accept an extension of euro zone funding.

The two main combatants around the table put a radically different gloss on the result.

"Being in government is a date with reality, and reality is often not as nice as a dream," German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble told reporters, stressing Athens would get no aid payments until its bailout programme was properly completed.

"The Greeks certainly will have a difficult time to explain the deal to their voters," the conservative veteran said.

Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis said the talks had shown elections could bring change to Europe. He insisted he had averted "recessionary measures" and said the government still hoped to raise the minimum wage and rehire some public sector workers.

"Nobody is going to ask us to impose upon our economy and society measures that we don't agree with," Varoufakis said.

The euro rebounded against the dollar and global equity markets surged to record closing highs while Greek government bond yields fell on optimism for a debt deal.

REFORM LIST

The accord requires Greece to submit by Monday a letter to the Eurogroup listing all the policy measures it plans to take during the remainder of the bailout period.

If the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund are satisfied, euro zone member states will ratify the extension, where necessary through their parliaments.

Euro finance ministers may sign off on the deal on Tuesday via a teleconference. However, if there are doubts they would reconvene in Brussels, officials said, a conditions insisted upon by Spain, whose government also faces a radical leftist insurgency at an election later this year and is keen that Tsipras gets no special treatment.

Irish Finance Minister Michael Noonan voiced caution, telling reporters: "It's an important first step that we hope will lead to a successful second step on Monday night/Tuesday morning, but then of course there's a third step with ratifications in parliament."

With the 240 billion euro EU/IMF bailout programme due to expire in little more than a week, Tsipras had requested a six-month extension of a loan agreement but Germany and its allies objected to the initial formulation of the request.

Greece's partners insisted on the shorter period and tied further disbursements to a satisfactory review at the end. They also obliged Athens to commit to fully funding any new spending measures and obtaining approval from its lenders.

The ECB said there would be no need for Greece to impose capital controls restricting cash withdrawals after the deal.

An ECB source said the bank's governing council was ready to resume accepting Greek government bonds as collateral for lending once necessary steps were taken for the extension and the bank determined there was a "great likelihood" that Greece would achieve a "positive conclusion" to its rescue programme.

TRUST IN SHORT SUPPLY

The complex document was crafted in preliminary talks among Varoufakis, Schaeuble, Dijsselbloem and IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde.

Finance ministers from other euro zone states insisted on more guarantees that Greece would meet the bailout's strict conditions on budget discipline and economic reforms.

Tsipras had a long telephone call with Germany's Angela Merkel on Thursday and has spoken repeatedly to the leaders of France and Italy in the search for a solution that allows his radical government to fulfil election promises.

Euro zone officials said Greece's track record and the combative behaviour of its new leaders had undermined their confidence in whether Athens would deliver what it agrees to in talks with the other countries sharing the euro.

That drove ministers to make Greece hand over custody of nearly 11 billion euros in aid earmarked for stabilising its banks to the euro zone's rescue fund.

"We wanted to make sure that the ... money for Greek bank recapitalisation is for that purpose, not for recapitalisation of the government," Dijsselbloem said.

Some pointed comments were directed at Varoufakis, an outspoken Marxist economist and blogger, and his casual style. "Even hardliners like us have to give the benefit of the doubt to a communist in a Burberry scarf," an official of one hawkish European country joked.

Adding to pressure to reach a deal, Greek savers have withdrawn their money from the banks at an accelerating pace despite government assurances that there is no plan to introduce capital controls to stem the outflows.

Deposit outflows rose to a total of over 1 billion euros in the past two days, some of the highest daily levels seen this year, three senior banking sources told Reuters.

Greeks were nervous before a three-day weekend, given memories of capital controls imposed in Cyprus in 2013 over a long weekend, a senior banker said. Monday is a public holiday. (Additional reporting by Alastair Macdonald in Brussels, George Georgiopoulos, Angeliki Koutantou and Deepa Babington in Athens, Steve Scherer in Rome, Noah Barkin in Berlin, John O'Donnell and Paul Carrel in Frankfurt. Writing by Paul Taylor and David Stamp. Editing by Giles Elgood and Mike Peacock)

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Illinois Senate president says FY 2015 budget fix not near

CHICAGO Fri Feb 20, 2015 6:25pm EST

CHICAGO Feb 20 (Reuters) - A deal to plug a $1.6 billion hole in Illinois' current budget is not imminent, the president of the state Senate said on Friday, contradicting assertions this week from the governor and House Speaker.

Senate President John Cullerton told Reuters the fiscal year 2016 budget unveiled by Governor Bruce Rauner on Wednesday complicates negotiations over the budget gap in fiscal 2015, which ends June 30. An impasse could potentially threaten cutoff of operating funds for child care, prisons and other state institutions, he added.

The Republican governor's $32 billion general budget for fiscal 2016 beginning July 1, aims to chop $6.6 billion from healthcare, local government revenues, mass transit and other areas. It raises no new revenue and controversial pension changes account for $2.2 billion of the savings.

"Because it's slashing programs and no revenue, I think that's going to make it difficult for us to reach an agreement" on the 2015 budget gap, said Cullerton, a Chicago Democrat.

In his budget address Wednesday, Rauner said a resolution was "literally days away." Madigan, also a Chicago Democrat, said after the speech he expected a deal "in a matter of days."

A Rauner spokeswoman said the governor continues to negotiate with legislative leaders and a Madigan spokesman said there is no agreement at this time.

But the Senate leader said the current budget problem needed to be solved before the fiscal year ends.

As for Rauner's first full-year budget, Cullerton said it contains "illusory" savings and pension changes that are "clearly not constitutional." Proposed cuts to Medicaid could raise costs by sending people to hospital emergency rooms, he added.

"If we passed this budget I think the rating agencies would downgrade us because it's not real," Cullerton said.

Illinois' credit ratings at A3 and A-minus at Standard and Poor's and Fitch Ratings are the lowest among the 50 states and have negative outlooks tipping toward triple-B - a low investment-grade rating level rarely assigned to U.S. states.

A structural budget deficit, a $105 billion unfunded pension liability and revenue loss from the partial rollback of temporary income tax rates are key factors.

Pension funding problems also plague Illinois' biggest city. Chicago's Mayor Rahm Emanuel has not disclosed how he plans to meet a $550 million state-mandated hike in payments to the city's police and fire pension systems.

Cullerton said any reduction in Chicago pension payments would need to be tied to statewide pension savings.

"Politically I don't think you want to just kick the can down the road for those people," he said. (Reporting by Karen Pierog and David Greising, editing by G Crosse)

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UPDATE 1-Russia finance minister says Moody's downgrade had 'political character'

Fri Feb 20, 2015 7:10pm EST

(Adds quotes, context)

MOSCOW Feb 21 (Reuters) - Moody's Investors Service's downgrade of Russia's sovereign rating was based on "factors of a political character," Russian Finance Minister Anton Siluanov said on Saturday following news that the credit ratings agency had cut the rating to below investment grade.

Siluanov also said that the downgrade was based on "unrealistic" forecasts with "no analogies", as the agency had made pessimistic assumptions that went well beyond forecasts by the IMF, World Bank and international banks.

"I consider the evaluation of Moody's not simply extremely negative, but based on extremely pessimistic forecasts that have no analogies today," he said.

Moody's downgraded Russia's sovereign rating to Ba1 from Baa3, citing the impact from the Ukraine crisis as well as the steep fall in oil prices and the rouble exchange rate.

Russian officials have repeatedly cast doubt upon the impartiality of major ratings agencies following recent downgrades of Russian ratings, describing their motives as political in reference to the East-West confrontation over Ukraine.

"I suppose that in taking the decision about lowering the rating, the agency was led first of all by factors of a political character," Siluanov said.

The decision "didn't take into account a whole range of positive factors, characterising the strong sides of the Russian economy and its financial system," he added, citing the country's large international reserves, low debt and a current account surplus.

The finance minister also said the downgrade would not have a serious additional impact on the capital market as Russia's local currency rating from two other major agencies remains at the investment-grade level of BBB-.

Local Treasury bonds are currently seen by Russia as the only source of borrowing, Siluanov added. (Reporting by Darya Korsunskaya, writing by Jason Bush; editing by G Crosse and Chris Reese)

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WRAPUP 1-Euro zone may need extra summit to clinch Greek deal

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 20 Februari 2015 | 18.12

Fri Feb 20, 2015 4:33am EST

* Berlin and Athens at odds

* Greece could run out of money by end of March

* Merkel and Tsipras hold 50-minute call

By Jan Strupczewski and George Georgiopoulos

BRUSSELS/ATHENS, Feb 20 (Reuters) - Euro zone finance ministers will try again on Friday to break a deadlock over Greece's urgent need for further financing but it may take an emergency summit of the currency bloc in the coming week to clinch any deal.

With EU paymaster Germany and the new radical leftist-led government in Athens digging their heels in over demands that Greece stick to strict austerity conditions in its international bailout programme, the two sides seemed far apart hours before a crucial Eurogroup meeting in Brussels.

The 240 billion euro bailout expires at the end of this month and Greece could run out of money by the end of March without new external funds, people familiar with the figures say, driving it nearer to the euro zone exit.

"The Greek government has done all it should at every level in an effort to find a mutually beneficial solution," government spokesman Gabriel Sakellaridis told Mega TV.

"We are not discussing the continuation of the (bailout) programme," he said. "The Greek government will maintain this stance today, although conditions have matured for a solution to be found at last."

Germany rejected a Greek letter on Thursday requesting an extension of its loan agreement from the euro zone as a "Trojan Horse", deceptively designed to enable Athens to dodge past commitments to austerity measures and economic reforms.

Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras, elected last month on a platform of scrapping the bailout, says austerity has strangled his country's economy and caused a humanitarian crisis.

Diplomatic efforts to avert a breakdown that could cause turmoil in world financial markets intensified, with German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Tsipras holding their first substantive telephone call on Thursday, when they spoke for 50 minutes.

French President Francois Hollande, one of several EU leaders trying to mediate, told Tsipras he would work on Merkel when they meet in Paris on Friday, a Greek official said.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Jack Lew weighed in to urge compromise in calls to his Greek, Dutch and French counterparts.

Washington, sympathetic to Greek demands for an easing of austerity, is worried that a breakdown in talks could affect an already weak global economy.

The German member of the European Commission, Guenther Oettinger, said he believed Greece and its creditors should be able to reach a deal but it might take another meeting of euro zone leaders next week.

"We are working so that Greece stays in the euro zone," Oettinger told Deutschlandfunk radio. "On this basis I think an agreement will still be possible in the next eight days -- if necessary via a further meeting of government leaders."

Oettinger is a member of Merkel's conservative Christian Democratic party and talks to her regularly.

DEADLINE?

Eurogroup chairman Jeroen Dijsselbloem has said this Friday is the deadline for Greece to reach a deal since any extension or change to the bailout agreement that expires on Feb. 28 would have to be approved by several national parliaments.

However, EU deadlines often slip and Merkel has in the past agreed financial rescues only at the very last moment when she could tell Germans the future of the euro zone was at risk.

Berlin is Greece's biggest creditor, owed 50 billion euros as its share of the EU/IMF bailouts. As Europe's biggest economy, it would take a hit in the turmoil that might ensue if Greece defaulted and left the euro area.

However, whether for tactical reasons or out of deep exasperation with Athens, Berlin has conveyed the message that a Greek exit, while not desirable, would be manageable. German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, who has taken the hardest line, has pointed to calm on world markets this week.

European shares inched up on Friday, trading close to Thursday's seven-year high, but borrowing costs for peripheral euro zone governments also rose in a sign of uncertainty about the outcome with Greece.

Senior euro zone officials worked late into Thursday evening to draft a statement for the finance ministers but it was not clear whether Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis would sign up to it. The text was being kept under wraps after previous documents were widely leaked.

Varoufakis rejected a Eurogroup text on Monday that explicitly called for an extension of the bailout and completion of the programme.

Greek officials have sought to convince the public at home that they are fighting hard in the national interest and rejecting austerity, accusing past governments of bowing to Berlin.

"Have you seen any other Greek government negotiating in such a tough and effective way in Europe in the last five years, a government that has caused rifts within the German government itself?" Deputy Labour Minister Dimitris Stratoulis told Greek television, saying the preparatory talks had brought "some light, an air of optimism".

Greek savers have continued to withdraw their money from the banks at an accelerating pace due to the uncertainty, despite government assurances that there is no plan to introduce capital controls to stem the outflows.

Deposit outflows picked up on Wednesday and Thursday to levels seen during January when an estimated 12 billion euros left the system, one banker told Reuters, speaking on condition of anonymity.

The banker said outflows topped 500 million euros in each of the two last days, with Greeks nervous ahead of a three-day weekend with memories of the way capital controls were imposed in Cyprus in 2013. Monday is a market holiday in Greece. (Writing by Paul Taylor; Editing by Giles Elgood)

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PRESS DIGEST- Canada-Feb 20

Fri Feb 20, 2015 5:07am EST

Feb 20 (Reuters) - The following are the top stories from selected Canadian newspapers. Reuters has not verified these stories and does not vouch for their accuracy.

THE GLOBE AND MAIL

** A Toronto-based market research firm that did work for Target Corp says it was told to switch an invoice from the retailer's U.S.-based parent to Target Canada just several days before the company filed for creditor protection, leaving the firm with what it says is now a C$232,328 ($186,384) unpaid claim. (bit.ly/1F1vDfe)

** Steve Laut, the president of Canadian Natural Resources Ltd, delivered a stern warning to the oil sands industry, telling a room full of Fort McMurray business people that they need to start cutting costs or the industry will fall into a "death spiral". (bit.ly/1AXAL5g)

** British Columbia's police complaint commissioner has reviewed hundreds of Abbotsford police search warrants and found problems that could put at least 43 cases in jeopardy. The investigation into the alleged misconduct of 17 Abbotsford officers dates as far back as 2008 and could stretch further. (bit.ly/1CRx4dG)

NATIONAL POST

** After three years of diligently trying to avoid the inevitable, the embattled board of directors at SNC Lavalin Group Inc went into full combat mode Thursday when the Royal Canadian Mounted Police charged the Montreal-based multinational in connection with a criminal investigation into its dealings in Libya. (bit.ly/1FBBvPS)

** In the face of new technology and budget cuts, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation is mulling the sale of its downtown Toronto headquarters, a move network officials admit may shake staff morale and its public image. (bit.ly/1EcyV1a)

** Bombardier Inc will sell C$750 million ($601.68 million) worth of shares at a 10 percent discount to its already beaten-down stock price as it seeks to bolster its balance sheet amid deteriorating financial results. (bit.ly/1zshdkX)

** The federal government is writing off another C$295 million in uncollected Canada student loans from more than 63,000 bad debts, leaving taxpayers on the hook for at least C

$837 million in write-offs over the last three years alone. (bit.ly/1FBEnfK) ($1 = 1.2465 Canadian dollars) (Compiled by Shivam Srivastava in Bengaluru)

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Greece, euro zone close to a deal before Friday's Eurogroup-Greek official

BRUSSELS Fri Feb 20, 2015 5:17am EST

BRUSSELS Feb 20 (Reuters) - Greece and the euro zone are close to a deal on a financing-for-reforms package, a senior Greek official said ahead of a crucial meeting of euro zone finance ministers later on Friday.

The official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said Greece had made a lot of concessions to reach an agreement and that the euro zone should show some flexibility too.

"We have covered four fifths of the distance, they also need to cover one fifth," the official said, adding Greece wanted to clinch a deal on Friday, but that it would not back down in the face of pressure from the Eurogroup. (Reporting By Renee Maltezou, writing by Jan Strupczewski)


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Euro zone ministers to meet on Greece at 1400 GMT on Friday

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 19 Februari 2015 | 18.12

BRUSSELS Thu Feb 19, 2015 5:18am EST

BRUSSELS Feb 19 (Reuters) - Euro zone finance ministers will meet on Friday at 1400 GMT in Brussels to discuss Greece's request for a six month extension of its bailout programme, the chairman of the ministers Jeroen Dijsselbloem said on Thursday.

"Eurogroup Friday in Brussels as of 15.00 (CET)," Dijsselbloem said in a message on Twitter. (Reporting By Jan Strupczewski)


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Eurogroup to meet on Friday on Greek bailout extension

BRUSSELS Thu Feb 19, 2015 5:19am EST

BRUSSELS Feb 19 (Reuters) - Euro zone finance ministers will meet in Brussels on Friday to discuss Greece's request for an extension of its bailout programme, a Greek finance ministry official and another euro zone source said on Thursday.

Greece's government has formally submitted a request for a six-month extension to its loan agreement with the euro zone, a government official told Reuters. (Reporting by)


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Greece pledges fiscal prudence over interim extension period-source

ATHENS Thu Feb 19, 2015 5:30am EST

ATHENS Feb 19 (Reuters) - Greece's loan extension request submitted on Thursday includes a pledge to maintain "fiscal balance" over the six-month interim period while it negotiates with euro zone partners on a long-term growth and debt reduction deal, the government said.

"The government, true to its commitments, did not ask for an extension of the bailout," a government official said.

"We submitted a proposal that respects the popular mandate, defends society's dignity and at the same time can be acceptable to our partners."

In its proposal submitted to the euro zone, Athens said it is seeking the extension to give it enough room needed without the threat of "blackmail and time deficits" to draw up a new agreement with Europe for growth over 2015-2019.

Greece wants that growth deal to also include a debt reduction deal along the lines of a pledge by euro zone finance ministers in 2012 for further debt relief, the official said.

The proposal also includes a pledge by Athens to take measures to tackle tax evasion, corruption, fight a "humanitarian crisis" in Greece and kickstart the economy.

(Reporting by Renee Maltezou and George Georgiopoulos, Writing by Deepa Babington)

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TPG to sell $462 mln stake in Indonesia's Bank Tabungan to Summit Global

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 18 Februari 2015 | 18.12

JAKARTA Wed Feb 18, 2015 5:16am EST

JAKARTA Feb 18 (Reuters) - Indonesia's PT Bank Tabungan Pensiunan Nasional Tbk said on Wednesday that a unit of private equity firm TPG Capital will sell a 17.5 percent stake in the lender to Summit Global Capital Management for 5.93 trillion rupiah ($461.8 million)

The transaction price is 5,800 rupiah per share, Bank Tabungan said in a stock exchange filing. Bank Tabungan shares last traded at 4,060 rupiah.

After the stake sale, TPG Nusantara will own 8.38 percent of Bank Tabungan and Summit Global will hold 20 percent, the Indonesian bank said.

Japan's Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group Inc held 40.4 percent of Bank Tabungan as of September 2014, according to Thomson Reuters data.

($1 = 12,840.00 rupiah) (Reporting by Eveline Danubrata and Fransiska Nangoy; Editing by Kim Coghill)


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U.S. to support Cameroon military in Boko Haram fight

YAOUNDE Wed Feb 18, 2015 5:04am EST

YAOUNDE Feb 18 (Reuters) - The United States will help Cameroon's army secure equipment to fight Boko Haram, its embassy in Cameroon said on Wednesday, as it deepens its commitment to countering the jihadist group.

Boko Haram militants have killed and kidnapped thousands in a six-year insurgency in Nigeria and are stepping up cross-border attacks on neighbours despite a major regional offensive against them.

In the latest strike, guerrillas ambushed an army patrol near the town of Waza in Cameroon this week and an intense gun battle ensued, killing five soldiers.

"My government is working on a logistic pipeline of material that will enhance Cameroon's ability to defend itself from Boko Haram," U.S. ambassador to Cameroon Michael Stephen Hoza said in a notice published in a local paper on Wednesday.

He did not elaborate on what would be provided, saying only that it would be "equipment necessary to defend the country".

Earlier this week, the commander of U.S. Special Forces operations in Africa pledged to help African nations in the fight against the group.

Major General James Linder said the United States would provide technology allowing African partners to communicate between cellphones, radios and computers. (Reporting by Tansa Musa; Writing by Emma Farge; Editing by Giles Elgood)

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Greek negotiations with euro zone at crucial stage - PM Tsipras

ATHENS Wed Feb 18, 2015 5:27am EST

ATHENS Feb 18 (Reuters) - Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras said on Wednesday that negotiations with the euro zone were at a crucial stage and he hoped difficulties could be overcome.

At a meeting with President Karolos Papoulias, Tsipras said his government's demands for an end to austerity were winning wide support.

"There were protests across Europe supporting the moves made by Greece and we have managed for the first time through contacts with foreign leaders to create a positive stance on our requests," he said in televised remarks.

"We are at a crucial point for these negotiations ... We are putting forward proposals and we hope to overcome this obstacle." (reporting by Costas Pitas; editing by David Stamp)


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REFILE-UPDATE 2-Greek stocks drop 1.5 pct, yields jump after debt deal talks collapse

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 17 Februari 2015 | 18.12

Tue Feb 17, 2015 5:35am EST

(Refiles to clarify size of stock market drop in headline) (Updates with Greek markets opening)

By Marius Zaharia

LONDON Feb 17 (Reuters) - Greek bond yields jumped by up to 130 basis points and stocks fell 1.5 percent on Tuesday after Athens rejected a proposal to extend its international bailout by six months, raising doubts about its future in the currency union.

The moves reflected heightened investor concern, but neither bonds nor stocks hit the extreme levels seen last week, with the underlying expectation in the market still being that a deal would eventually be reached.

The spillover into other markets was limited. Italian and Spanish borrowing costs rose 2-3 basis points on the day but remained within half a percentage point of their record lows.

"The risk of a collapse is more elevated now because time is running out," said Patrick Jacq, rate strategist at BNP Paribas.

"This is putting Greek government bonds under pressure but contagion effects will remain relatively limited ... Eventually a deal is likely to be reached."

Talks on Monday between Greece and other euro zone finance ministers broke down in less than four hours, far sooner than expected. On Tuesday, both parties said they were open to a resumption of talks.

Jeroen Dijsselbloem, who heads the euro zone's finance ministers' group, said Greece had until Friday to request an extension of its bailout. He said he was ready to work with the Greek government towards a deal.

Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis voiced confidence that a deal on different terms could be reached within days.

"The length of the meeting seemed alarmingly short," said Orlando Green, rate strategist at Credit Agricole.

"(But) comments following the meeting offered a glimmer of hope for a timely deal."

Greek 10-year bond yields rose 70 basis points to 10.62 percent, while three-year bond yields were up 130 bps at 19 percent.

Ten-year yields approached 12 percent last week and three-year yields topped 22 percent - levels not seen since Greece's default in 2012.

For a factbox of holders of new Greek debt see .

Athens' main ATG share index fell about 1.5 percent to 847.02 points - well above a trough of 708.61 touched after the leftist Syriza party won last month's Greek election. An index of Greek banking stocks dropped 1 percent.

Still, the cost of insuring Greek debt against default, as reflected by five-year credit default swaps, rose to 1,813 basis points from 1,526 bps, according to data from Markit. That implied investors saw a default probability of about 80 percent.

The European Central Bank will decide on Wednesday whether to maintain emergency lending to Greek banks that are bleeding deposits at an estimated 2 billion euros a week. If that pace were maintained, the lenders would run out of collateral for funds within 14 weeks, according to JPMorgan.

"A failure to reach an agreement in the coming weeks could easily trigger bank runs, ECB liquidity withdrawal, and even a Grexit," said Jan von Gerich, chief fixed income analyst at Nordea. "The stakes are thus high."

Yields on top-rated German Bunds fell 1 basis point to 0.34 percent, within touching distance of their 0.299 percent record low.

Spanish and Italian 10-year bond yields were up 2-3 basis points at 1.61 percent and 1.65 percent, respectively. They were up by roughly 10 bps earlier in the day, but next month's launch of an ECB programme to buy around 1 trillion euros of government bonds has effectively capped borrowing costs across the euro zone, apart from Greece. (Editing by Susan Fenton)

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Rebels in one part of east Ukraine pulling back big guns - TASS

MOSCOW Tue Feb 17, 2015 5:23am EST

MOSCOW Feb 17 (Reuters) - The leader of one of two regions held by pro-Russian rebels said on Tuesday his forces were complying with an agreement to withdraw heavy weaponry from the front line in east Ukraine, Russia's TASS news agency reported.

"Yesterday I was on the front line and our tanks, our artillery are leaving. In fact, we started fulfilling our obligations last night," said Igor Plotnitsky, leader of the self-proclaimed Luhansk People's Republic. Rebels in the other region, Donetsk, have said they will not yet withdraw big guns.


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Greece will not be blackmailed into keeping bailout-deputy minister

ATHENS Tue Feb 17, 2015 5:31am EST

ATHENS Feb 17 (Reuters) - Greece will not be blackmailed into accepting an extension of its bailout programme, the deputy foreign minister who holds the European affairs portfolio said on Tuesday, a day after talks with European partners broke down.

"We don't accept blackmail proposals, ultimatums about extending the bailout," Nikos Chountis, a senior official within the ruling Syriza party, told Greek television.

"I want to express my cautious optimism for a deal," he added. (Reporting by Angeliki Koutantou, Writing by Deepa Babington; editing by David Stamp)


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Euro zone Dec trade surplus higher than expected

Written By Unknown on Senin, 16 Februari 2015 | 18.12

BRUSSELS Mon Feb 16, 2015 5:00am EST

BRUSSELS Feb 16 (Reuters) - The euro zone had a bigger than expected unadjusted trade surplus in December, as exports surged eight percent year-on-year and imports edged just one percent higher, data showed.

The European Union's statistics office Eurostat said the trade surplus of the 18 countries sharing the euro last year was 24.3 billion euros, almost double the 13.6 billion in December 2013 and well above market expectations of 20.5 billion.

For the whole of 2014, exports rose 2 percent over 2013 while imports were flat, bringing the overall trade surplus for the whole year to 194.8 billion euros from 152.3 billion in 2013.

More detailed data for December was not yet available, but numbers for the January-November period showed that much of the improvement in trade balance was due to a sharp fall in the deficit in the energy trade, thanks to plummeting oil prices.

Eurostat said that in the first 11 months of last year, the energy trade deficit fell to 256.7 billion euros from 292.5 billion in the same period of 2013.

Adjusted for seasonal swings, the euro zone's trade surplus was only minimally smaller at 23.3 billion euros in December, as exports fell 1.1 percent month-on-month and exports declined 2.4 percent. (Reporting by Jan Strupczewski; editing by Adrian Croft)

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UPDATE 1-Nigeria cenbank asks lenders for dollar levels to shore up naira

Mon Feb 16, 2015 4:57am EST

(Adds background)

LAGOS Feb 16 (Reuters) - Nigeria's central bank asked commercial lenders to once again submit their dollar demand levels as the bank prepares to sell dollars to shore up the naira currency, dealers said on Monday.

The naira crashed through the psychologically important level of 200 to the dollar last week in a rout triggered by weak oil prices and escalating tension over the postponement of a presidential election in Africa's biggest economy.

Dealers said on Monday that the central bank had informed commercial banks that it would sell dollars to the interbank at 198 naira to the dollar, and that two-way trading on the interbank market will depend on the level of liquidity.

Lenders were also not allowed to resell central bank dollars among themselves on the interbank market to curb speculation, dealers said.

The central bank has pledged to stabilise the naira and has been deploying various measures. The bank injected large dollar supply on Friday to allow dealers fill their demand levels but banned them from reselling dollars bought at a currency auction to other banks.

The bank's spokesman Ibrahim Muazu told Reuters on Friday that the central bank will continue to intervene on a "need basis" to satisfy dollar demand and curb speculative attacks, which he said was the reason behind the currency weakness and not devalue the naira again. (Reporting by Oludare Mayowa and Chijioke Ohuocha; Editing by James Macharia)

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UPDATE 1-Greek markets hold steady as crucial debt talks approach

Mon Feb 16, 2015 5:23am EST

(Updates prices, adds comment)

By John Geddie and Sudip Kar-Gupta

LONDON Feb 16 (Reuters) - Greek bond yields hovered at pre-election levels and stocks held on to their recent gains on Monday on cautious optimism that Athens would reach a new debt deal with its euro zone partners at talks later in the day.

The euro also edged up on hopes that the shared-currency bloc's finance ministers can find common ground at the talks which begin at 1400 GMT.

The main Athens' bourse was just off a two-month high hit on Friday, while the country's borrowing costs were unchanged from before the vote in January that propelled its new anti-austerity government to power.

The market's confidence that an agreement between Greece and its euro zone creditors can be brokered appeared at odds with the message from many of the key players involved, however.

German finance minister Wolfgang Schaeuble on Monday echoed earlier comments from Jeroen Dijsselbloem, the Eurogroup president and chair of the meeting, saying he was not sure any deal could be reached on Monday.

The stakes are certainly high.

With Greece's current bailout due to expire on Feb 28, the European Central Bank may have little choice but to halt emergency funding for Greek banks - a move that could see Athens barrel out of the currency bloc.

"I'm not too worried for now. I don't think that Germany can afford to let Greece leave the euro zone, and the Greeks themselves will have to compromise a little bit. So I think we'll reach a half-way house compromise," said Clairinvest fund manager Ion-Marc Valahu.

Economists surveyed by Reuters last week gave a one-in-four chance of Greece leaving the currency area in 2015. This was the highest probability collected by Reuters polls - even those taken during the depths of the debt crisis between 2011-2012.

But a relative calm swept across markets. Ten-year bond yields edged up 25 bps to 9.77 percent, just above a two week low hit on Friday, while yields on other low-rated debt fell.

Portugal's 10-year yields were down 3 bps at 2.36 percent , while Spain and Italy's were down 1 bps at 1.57 and 1.62 percent, respectively. Yields on German bonds - which tend to fall in times of stress - were up 1 bps at 0.35 percent.

"Even though the Greek tragedy has been dominating newspaper headlines of late, causing many Cassandras to come forward and forecast the worst, financial-market investors have been looking decidedly relaxed," said DZ Bank analyst Christian Lenk.

Greece's benchmark stock index slipped back around 4 percent, a modest move given it fell as much as 9 percent in the days after January's election. It rose 5.6 percent on Friday.

The focus of investor concerns remain on the deposit outflows in Greek banks. The Athens Stock Exchange FTSE Banks Index dropped nearly 8 percent on Monday, with the ECB set to review the limits on the emergency assistance it approves for those banks on Wednesday. (Editing by Hugh Lawson)

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Greek economy shrinks 0.2 pct q/q in fourth quarter of 2014

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 13 Februari 2015 | 18.12

Fri Feb 13, 2015 5:24am EST

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  ATHENS, Feb 13 (Reuters) - Greece's economy contracted  slightly in the last quarter of 2014 compared to the previous  three-month period, a flash estimate by the European Union's  statistics service Eurostat showed on Friday.      The estimate on gross domestic product, based on seasonally  adjusted data, showed the 182 billion euro economy shrank 0.2  percent in the Sept-to-Dec. period from a 0.7 percent quarterly  growth pace in the third quarter.      Year-on-year, the economy grew 1.7 percent in the fourth  quarter, Eurostat said based on seasonally adjusted figures.      Greece's statistics service ELSTAT's flash estimate showed  the economy grew by 1.5 percent year-on-year in the fourth  quarter based on seasonally unadjusted data, from an upwardly  revised 2.0 percent pace in the third quarter, below an average  forecast of 2.2 percent growth by economists polled by Reuters.      Athens and its EU/IMF lenders have projected growth of 0.6  percent for 2014 as a whole. The latest official estimate by the  previous government's finance minister was 0.7 percent.  **************************************************************      KEY FIGURES    Q4 2014 Q3 2014 Q2 2014  Q1 2014  GDP (q/q, pct)*       -0.2    0.7    0.3***   0.7***    GDP (y/y, pct)**       1.5    2.0*** 0.3***  -0.5***  -----------------------------------------------------    * seasonally adjusted   ** seasonally unadjusted  *** revised      source: ELSTAT         (Reporting by George Georgiopoulos)  
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RPT-Greek economy shrinks 0.2 pct q/q in fourth quarter of 2014

Fri Feb 13, 2015 5:49am EST

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  (Repeats to link to alerts)      ATHENS, Feb 13 (Reuters) - Greece's economy contracted  slightly in the last quarter of 2014 compared to the previous  three-month period, a flash estimate by the European Union's  statistics service Eurostat showed on Friday.      The estimate on gross domestic product, based on seasonally  adjusted data, showed the 182 billion euro economy shrank 0.2  percent in the Sept-to-Dec. period from a 0.7 percent quarterly  growth pace in the third quarter.      Year-on-year, the economy grew 1.7 percent in the fourth  quarter, Eurostat said based on seasonally adjusted figures.      Greece's statistics service ELSTAT's flash estimate showed  the economy grew by 1.5 percent year-on-year in the fourth  quarter based on seasonally unadjusted data, from an upwardly  revised 2.0 percent pace in the third quarter, below an average  forecast of 2.2 percent growth by economists polled by Reuters.      Athens and its EU/IMF lenders have projected growth of 0.6  percent for 2014 as a whole. The latest official estimate by the  previous government's finance minister was 0.7 percent.  **************************************************************      KEY FIGURES    Q4 2014 Q3 2014 Q2 2014  Q1 2014  GDP (q/q, pct)*       -0.2    0.7    0.3***   0.7***    GDP (y/y, pct)**       1.5    2.0*** 0.3***  -0.5***  -----------------------------------------------------    * seasonally adjusted   ** seasonally unadjusted  *** revised      source: ELSTAT         (Reporting by George Georgiopoulos)  
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Fin min hopes Ukraine will get new IMF aid in early March - Interfax

KIEV Fri Feb 13, 2015 5:40am EST

KIEV Feb 13 (Reuters) - Ukrainian Finance Minister Natalia Yaresko said on Friday she hoped Ukraine would get its next tranche of financial aid from the International Monetary Fund in the first week of March, news agency Interfax Ukraine reported.

"In the first few days of March the IMF could approve the programme and by the end of the first week of March I would like to see the first tranche in the central bank's account," she was quoted as saying.

To get the cash, Kiev must implement changes in its budget, among other steps, by the end of February, she said. (Reporting by Pavel Polityuk; Writing by Alessandra Prentice; Editing by Larry King)


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