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UPDATE 1-Cyprus to lift all capital controls on Monday - President Anastasiades

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 03 April 2015 | 18.12

(Adds detail, updates throughout)

NICOSIA, April 3 (Reuters) - Cyprus will lift on Monday all the capital controls it imposed in 2013 amid a chaotic bailout, President Nicos Anastasiades said on Friday.

"The lifting of the last restrictions marks the final restoration of confidence in our banking system," Anastasiades said in a statement.

Cyprus introduced the controls in April 2013 to prevent outflows after one bank was closed and a second seized deposits to recapitalise.

Since then controls have been gradually eased. The last remaining, included in a finance ministry decree last month, required authorities' approval for businesses sending large remittances overseas, and individual travellers moving more than 10,000 euros ($11,000) out of the country.

Asked about the timing of the easing while Greece was in crisis over its own bailout programme, Anastasiades said: "We want to hope that there will be no further deepening of the crisis with Greece."

Cypriot banks, he said, had fully severed their links with the Greek banking system following the 2013 crisis. ($1 = 0.9194 euros) (Reporting by Michele Kambas; Writing by Karolina Tagaris; Editing by Ruth Pitchford)


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Greece ready to make IMF payment on April 9- deputy finmin

ATHENS, April 3 (Reuters) - Greece will pay a 450 million euro ($489 million) loan installment to the International Monetary Fund due on April 9 on time, its deputy finance minister said on Friday, despite a cash crunch.

"We strive to be able to pay our obligations on time, Dimitris Mardas told Greece's Skai TV. "We are ready to pay on April 9."

He said state revenue in March had topped targets without providing figures and added that progress had been made in talks with the country's international lenders. (1 US dollar = 0.9194 euro) (Reporting by George Georgiopoulos; Editing by Renee Maltezou)


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UPDATE 1-Greece says ready to make IMF payment on April 9

* Athens insists will pay a 450 million euro loan tranche on time

* Says state revenue in March topped targets

* Greece told euro zone will run out of money by April 9 (Adds background)

ATHENS, April 3 (Reuters) - Greece will pay a loan tranche due on April 9 to the International Monetary Fund on time, its deputy finance minister said on Friday, seeking to quell fears of default after a flurry of contradictory statements on the issue in recent days.

Greece is fast running out of cash and its euro zone and International Monetary Fund lenders have frozen bailout aid until the new leftist-led government reaches agreement on a package of reforms.

That prompted the interior minister to suggest this week that Athens would prioritise wages and pensions over the roughly 450 million euro ($489 million) payment to the IMF, though the government denied that was its stance.

Euro zone officials then said Greece told them it will run out of money on April 9, which the finance ministry denied saying.

"We strive to be able to pay our obligations on time, Dimitris Mardas told Greece's Skai TV. "We are ready to pay on April 9."

Athens has not received bailout funds since August last year and has resorted to last-ditch measures such as borrowing from state entities via repo transactions to tide it through the cash crunch.

The government is hoping approval of its latest reforms package will unlock remaining aid of 7.2 billion euros under its EU/IMF bailout and lead to the return of about 1.9 billion euros in profits made by the European Central Bank on Greek bonds.

Mardas said state revenue in March had topped targets without providing figures, adding that progress had been made in talks with the country's official international on its latest the reforms list.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has said Greece would receive fresh funds only once its creditors approve the comprehensive list of reforms Athens has presented. (1 US dollar = 0.9194 euro) (Reporting by George Georgiopoulos; Editing by Deepa Babington/JeremY Gaunt)


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INSIGHT-Iceland prepares to come in from the financial cold

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 02 April 2015 | 18.12

REYKJAVIK, April 2 (Reuters) - After more than six long and lonely years, Iceland is hoping its financial isolation will soon be over.

The North Atlantic nation, whose spectacular 2008 meltdown came to symbolise the greed and mismanagement of the global financial system, is expected to begin unwinding the bankruptcies of its three main banks and lifting controls on the movement of capital in and out of the island within months.

For Iceland, these moves will signal rehabilitation and a return to the international financial community after the collapse of a banking system which at one time held assets worth a staggering ten times the nation's gross domestic product.

The collapse infuriated some European countries which were left on the hook for billions of dollars in compensation to depositors in failed Icelandic banks, and left Iceland shunned by Western nations in its hour of need.

At the low point in October 2008, Britain used anti-terrorism legislation against the country - forcing international bankers to pick up their bags in the middle of crisis meetings and head to the airport.

Now, Iceland hopes that by finally lifting capital controls it can draw a line under the crisis, restore its credit rating, lower its borrowing costs, boost its economy and revive the living standards of its 330,000 people. But to do so, it must find a way to let investors withdraw funds without provoking a catastrophic stampede.

Officials say they will put rules in place to ensure a managed, not free, float of the currency. The government is considering taxing the removal of cash to prevent an exodus. And it will clip the wings of domestic banks to make sure a similar crisis can never happen again.

"We're talking here about the third largest bankruptcy in the history of mankind being unwound in one of the smallest countries," the country's central bank governor, Mar Gudmundsson, told Reuters in a recent interview in Reykjavik.

"That is just a huge complication in its own right so we shouldn't be surprised that it is taking some time," he said.

OBJECT LESSON

Iceland was the object lesson of the economic crisis, brought to ruin through regulatory mismanagement, wilful ignorance, aggressive lending and a huge currency bet. It had already begun to unravel before U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers crashed in September 2008, causing turmoil through global markets and bring Iceland's financial system down.

Its three main banks, Glitnir, Landsbanki and Kaupthing, all collapsed. Landsbanki had big retail operations abroad, accepting deposits particularly in Britain and the Netherlands under the brand name "Icesave". When it failed, Iceland's banking insurance scheme was unable to cover those deposits, setting the stage for years of international litigation.

Back home, residents still have trouble understanding how a tiny island country of glacier-topped volcanoes, which survived for centuries mainly on fishing, came to grow a gargantuan financial industry whose collapse its taxpayers could never have afforded to bear.

"It was not growth, it was cancer. It was ridiculous and it was using the naivety of the Icelandic public," 52-year-old Thorhallur Vilhjalmsson, now a cafe owner in Reykjavik, said of the boom before the crisis.

Iceland turned to banking at the start of the 21st century, modelling itself on "Celtic Tiger" Ireland as a low-tax island economy that could serve as a base for offshore investment and finance.

In 2008, Vilhjalmsson was working in marketing for the Harpa concert hall - a mammoth project owned by Landsbanki that became a half-finished symbol of what he called "hocus pocus" money when the bank and its project collapsed.

The giant hall, billed as Europe's biggest glass structure, now towers over Reykjavik's harbour, a symbol of the excesses of its era at odds with the low rise capital, where even the prime minister's residence is a modest two-storey Nordic villa. The state finally completed the gleaming concert hall in 2011, but a surrounding hotel, luxury apartment complex, restaurants and new Landsbanki headquarters were never built.

NO NEGOTIATIONS

Since the crash, Iceland has been on a slow path to recovery. Unlike in countries in the euro zone that hit trouble and could not devalue their currencies, a fall in the crown helped restore Iceland's competitiveness. Despite the capital controls, foreign businesses were allowed to repatriate profits, tempting them to stay.

Iceland's GDP exceeded pre-crisis levels for the first time last year - in crowns if not dollars. Unemployment is less than 5 percent, inflation is below a 2.5 percent target and state finances reached a surplus last year - signs that the time to relax capital controls has arrived.

That means allowing investors with assets in crowns to sell them for hard currency and take their money abroad. But to avoid a new run on the crown, the central bank needs to act carefully.

Officials say they will deal separately with three categories of investors: creditors of the estates of the three failed banks, other foreign investors with assets trapped in Iceland and domestic savers looking to invest abroad.

First up will be the creditors of the failed banks, mostly hedge funds that bought obligations on the secondary market. Iceland wants to avoid a long legal fight, but officials say ultimately rules will be imposed and not negotiated, noting it is private debt, not sovereign.

To keep all the funds released in the settlement from leaving the country at once, Iceland is considering an exit tax, or "stabilisation tax", officials said.

They hope to make an announcement on the estates of the banks within weeks, or at least before the end of May when the world's oldest parliament, which would have to approve the deal, breaks for recess.

A separate deal will be offered to foreign investors whose capital has been stuck in Iceland since controls were imposed in 2008. Foreign capital has leaked out over the years via currency auctions, partly in exchange for long-term investment into Iceland, and now amounts to 15 percent of GDP, or around $2.2 billion, from 40 percent five years ago.

Investors may be offered various schemes to keep their capital in Iceland, with "an option for currency, an option for different bonds in different currencies with different maturity dates", Finance Minister Bjarni Benediktsson told Reuters.

Officials said it was too early to say if they would also be offered physical assets, such as Iceland's giant geothermal industry. The government says privatisation is not on the table.

Those who want to withdraw immediately would have to sell their crowns at a discount through the central bank's foreign currency auctions. The bank said it had not yet ascertained which proportion of the $2.2 billion would exit early.

Finally, domestic institutions will be permitted to invest abroad. While this comes last on the list, officials say it is important to allow institutions and the state's own big pension fund to diversify away from Icelandic assets.

MANAGED CURRENCY, CLIPPED BANKS

With a series of announcements due by the end of the year, officials have painted a picture of the kind of outcome they would like, but are wary of committing themselves to details.

"We're going to have a flexible exchange rate but it doesn't mean it will be a free-floating exchange rate," said Gudmundsson, the central banker. Tools such as intervention on the foreign exchange market and limits on foreign currency borrowing would be used to control capital flows.

"We're basically going to restrict our banks to being domestically-orientated crown-based banks with limited international activities," he added.

Ratings agencies could upgrade Iceland's sovereign rating if capital controls are removed in an orderly way. A rise of two or three notches would give it a similar rating to Ireland and lower borrowing costs for banks and companies.

Arion Bank, the new bank to emerge from Kaupthing, issued a 10-year 300 million eurobond recently with 3.25 percent interest, compared to a Bank of Ireland bond paying a third of that interest.

Away from banks' boardrooms and ministers' meeting rooms, distrust of the government remains and a culture of protest has grown. The collapse was so sudden, so shocking and its impact felt so widely that many still feel betrayed.

The suspicion is reflected in the sudden rise of the Pirate Party, now the most popular political force in Iceland espousing roots-level democracy and transparency.

Cafe owner Vilhjalmsson said he had no faith that the authorities would manage Iceland's financial rehabilitation any better than they managed its catastrophic boom.

"I have no trust in those people or the forces behind them. They are demagogues and are, in my opinion, the corrupted."

($1 = 0.9309 euros) (Additional reporting by Ragnhildur Sigurdardottir in Reykjavik and Steve Slater in London; Editing by Peter Graff)


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GLOBAL MARKETS-Doubts over U.S. growth cool dollar rally

* Currency pulls back ahead of key jobs data on Friday

* Dollar dip gives boost to emerging markets

* Mood more muted in Europe

* Many markets set to be shut for Easter weekend

By Lionel Laurent

LONDON, April 2 (Reuters) - The U.S. dollar lost ground on Thursday, the last trading day of the week for many markets ahead of Easter, after disappointing economic data on Wednesday raised doubts over the growth outlook ahead of key jobs data due Friday.

Although non-farm payrolls are expected to show an increase of 245,000 jobs in March, according to economists polled by Reuters, Wednesday's data hit U.S. equities and reinforced concerns that the dollar's recent rally has weighed on exports.

Thursday's pullback in the U.S. dollar index, which is still up some 8 percent year-to-date, gave a boost to emerging-market stocks -- trading at a one-month high -- as main emerging currencies strengthened against the dollar.

The mood was more muted in Europe, where the pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 equity index slipped 0.1 percent and eurozone bond yields traded flat to higher. Shares of British retailer Marks & Spencer outperformed after posting its best non-food sales performance for nearly four years.

"People are reluctant to chase the market higher today because of the U.S. payrolls coming tomorrow when Europe will be closed," FXCM market analyst Vincent Ganne said.

"Following (Wednesday's) figures, there are some worries that the payrolls could be soft."

Most U.S. markets will be closed on Friday, with some European markets closed Friday through Monday and reopening on Tuesday. Indian markets were closed on Thursday.

Asia shrugged off the U.S. doubts, with MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan up 0.8 percent.

Australian shares finished up 0.7 percent, on growing expectations that the Reserve Bank of Australia will announce its second rate cut of 2015 when it meets on Tuesday, the first trading day after markets close for the Easter long weekend.

Japan's Nikkei stock average ended 1.5 percent higher, after skidding to a three-week low in the previous session.

U.S. crude oil and Brent crude futures were down about 24 cents per barrel, to $49.85 and $56.85 respectively, as the prospect that any deal in nuclear talks with Tehran and a possible increase in its crude exports helped to keep pressure on prices.

Gold hovered above $1,200 an ounce, clinging to gains from the prior session when it rose the most in two months, while London nickel climbed nearly 2 percent on technical buying, sparked after traders brought more into China following a steep price drop earlier in the week. (Reporting by Lionel Laurent; Additional reporting by Blaise Robinson, Karin Strohecker, Marius Zaharia and Anirban Nag; Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky)


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EMERGING MARKETS-Dollar, U.S. data lift emerging stocks to 1-month high

(ADVISORY: There will be no emerging market report from London on Friday and Monday as many European and African financial markets are closed for Easter holidays. Reuters will resume coverage of emerging markets on Tuesday.)

By Karin Strohecker

LONDON, April 2 (Reuters) - Emerging market shares hit a one-month high on Thursday thanks to disappointing U.S. data stemming investment flows lured away by dollar assets.

MSCI's emerging equity index rose 0.9 percent, with Russia and Hungary clocking some of the biggest gains after Wednesday's data on U.S. jobs and the pace of manufacturing growth came in short of expectations, weighing on the dollar .

Russian dollar-denominated stocks rose 1.6 percent and their rouble peers added 0.3 percent. The rouble gained more than 1 percent against the dollar, riding the tailwind of a 5 percent jump in oil prices on Wednesday even though crude traded a touch lower early on Thursday.

"For quite a long time, the market was driven by the risk of a (Federal Reserve interest rate) hike, the situation in Russia and Ukraine, the ECB and the oil price move," said Regis Chatellier, EM credit strategist at Societe Generale.

"But now all these things are behind us, the market is looking for the next driver and that's kindling some risk appetite."

Trade was thin in many markets, with India closed for a holiday and many markets in Europe and Africa due to shut on Friday for a long holiday weekend.

In Turkey, stocks added 0.49 percent and the lira strengthened 0.18 percent against the dollar as the government confirmed its 4 percent economic growth target for this year. It also pledged that a 7.5 billion lira ($2.9 billion) package to boost employment, industrial investment and production would have no negative impact on the budget.

Many eastern European stock markets still enjoyed the glow of Wednesday's healthy PMI data, with Hungary shares up 0.70 percent.

The picture looked more mixed for currencies across eastern Europe, where many traded flat to slightly higher.

Meanwhile in Poland, the zloty weakened against the euro after the central bank governor criticised a regulator's proposal to let holders of Swiss franc denominated mortgages convert their debt into local currency at historical exchange rates, saying it would be "fatal" for lenders.

In Nigeria, dollar-denominated sovereign debt and some hard-currency corporate issues traded lower following two days of strong gains after opposition leader Muhammadu Buhari won a largely peaceful presidential poll.

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 ) ($1 = 2.5924 liras) (Additional reporting by Sujata Rao; Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky)


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World Bank sees protracted recession in Russia

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 01 April 2015 | 18.12

MOSCOW, April 1 (Reuters) - Russia faces a protracted economic recession as the impact of Western sanctions will linger for many years and oil prices will stay low, the World Bank said on Wednesday.

In its baseline scenario, the World Bank said it saw Russian gross domestic product (GDP) contracting by 3.8 percent in 2015 and by 0.3 percent in 2016.

Those forecasts were considerably more pessimistic than ones made in December, when the Bank expected the economy to shrink by 0.7 percent this year and grow by 0.3 percent in 2016.

The World Bank added that it saw a continued dearth of investment as a major risk for medium-term economic growth. (Reporting by Alexander Winning, editing by Jason Bush)


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GLOBAL MARKETS-Solid start to Q2 for Euro stocks, dollar after blowout Q1

* European shares push higher as Q2 gets under way

* Dollar regains footing after wobble in Asia

* Oil remains under pressure as talks on Iran continue

By Marc Jones

LONDON, April 1 (Reuters) - European stock markets made solid starts to the second quarter on Wednesday as data pointing to a gradual recovery in the euro zone economy gave investors fresh impetus after their blowout first few months of the year.

Europe's benchmark FTSEurofirst 300 recovered from a early wobble to put London's FTSE Germany's DAX and France's CAC up 0.5, 0.3 and 0.5 percent higher respectively as core bond markets yields nudged higher.

Crude oil prices maintained their decline as an extension of talks between Iran and world powers on Tehran's nuclear capabilities drove hopes of an agreement that could also ease export sanctions on the OPEC member.

Currency markets were mostly knocking about in recent ranges after a tumultuous few months. The star of Q1, the dollar, edged up to 120.15 versus the yen and to $1.0750 per euro after the currency shared by 19 countries made its worst ever start to a year.

"I would be surprised if we had a similar quarter again considering the performances of the dollar and the euro over the last few quarters," said Derek Halpenny, European head of global markets research at Bank of Tokyo Mitsubishi in London.

"With no policy (rate hike) announcement likely in the second quarter from the Federal Reserve, that reduces the scope for significant moves... Also the bulk of global easing that has helped fuel the dollar is probably behind us now."

There were more signs that the European Central Bank's 1 trillion euro stimulus programme -- which has driven the huge currency market shifts -- is bearing fruit.

Manufacturing activity across the euro zone accelerated faster than previously thought last month and hit a 10-month high, revised data showed, adding to signs the bloc's economy is recovering.

DELICATE CHINA

Data from China was less robust, bolstering the view that Beijing will have to provide more stimulus to keep growth on track, with some analysts eyeing moves to directly push down the value of the yuan.

The HSBC/Markit China Manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) came in at 49.6, slightly higher than a preliminary "flash" reading of 49.2 but still below the 50-mark which separates contraction from expansion.

An employment subindex contracted for a 17th straight month, falling to its lowest since August 2014.

"The latest data indicate that domestic and foreign demand remains subdued amid weaker market conditions," said Annabel Fiddes, an economist at Markit.

Shares in Shanghai gained 1.4 percent on the hope of more stimulus but the rest of Asia was subdued.

Bourses that ended in the red included Japan, South Korea, Australia, Malaysia and Indonesia. Japan's Nikkei sank 0.9 percent after a lacklustre Bank of Japan business survey.

After Greece failed on Tuesday to reach an initial deal on reforms with its lenders, Athens was the only bourse in the red in Europe and its government bond yields inched close at 12 percent.

The rising dollar helped drive nickel to its lowest in 6 years before a bounce, copper slipped and gold struggled at $1,180 an ounce after ending March with a loss of 2.4 percent.

The Iran talks kept the squeeze on oil markets. Brent crude for May delivery, which fell 8 percent over the last week, was down 8 cents at $55.03 a barrel. U.S. crude was 25 cents lower at $47.35. (Additional reporting by Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen in Singapore; Editing by Eric Meijer/Ruth Pitchford)


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UPDATE 1-World Bank sees protracted recession in Russia

* World Bank sees Russian economy contracting in 2015 and 2016

* Sanctions may inflict long-term economic damage

* Dearth of investment is major medium-term challenge (Adds details and quotes)

MOSCOW, April 1 (Reuters) - Russia faces a protracted recession as the impact of Western sanctions lingers and oil prices stay low, the World Bank said in a report published on Wednesday.

In its baseline scenario, the bank expected Russia's gross domestic product to contract by 3.8 percent in 2015 and a further 0.3 percent in 2016, describing medium-term growth prospects as dim.

The World Bank's lead economist for Russia, Birgit Hansl, said "adjustment to the new oil price reality and the sanctions environment" was a key policy challenge.

"If we look more into the medium term, the main challenge for Russia is the continued dearth in investment," she said, presenting the report.

The bank's latest forecasts are more pessimistic than those made in December, when it expected the economy to shrink by 0.7 percent this year and grow by 0.3 percent in 2016.

The new baseline forecasts assume that the oil price will recover only marginally over the next two years, averaging $53 per barrel in 2015 and $57 per barrel in 2016, reflecting ample global supplies and moderate demand.

Under a more optimistic scenario, with oil averaging $65.5 per barrel in 2015 and $68.7 per barrel in 2016, the economy would contract by 2.9 percent this year and grow by only 0.1 percent in 2016, the World Bank said.

Its latest forecasts assume that sanctions imposed against Russia because of its role in the Ukraine conflict would stay in place in 2015 and 2016.

The sanctions could have damaging long-term consequences that may last even after the sanctions are lifted, the bank said, citing the case of South Africa where sanctions imposed in the 1980s caused a major slump in investment.

In Russia's case, sanctions were likely to exacerbate an existing investment shortage.

"Low investment demand hints at the deeper structural problems of the Russian economy and has already initiated a new era of potentially small growth," the report said.

The bank also warned that a projected 3.8 percent budget deficit this year could "severely deplete" the budget's Reserve Fund, currently equal to around 4.7 percent of GDP.

Hansl said, however: "One could argue that it is prudent to use fiscal buffers at these times as a counter-cyclical measure."

The Bank also foresaw a $122 billion capital and financial account deficit this year, reflecting continuing heavy capital outflows, only partially covered by a $74 billion current account surplus. (Reporting by Alexander Winning, writing by Jason Bush, editing by Elizabeth Piper)


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Credit bureau TransUnion files for IPO

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 31 Maret 2015 | 18.12

March 31 (Reuters) - TransUnion, one of the largest credit bureaus in the United States, filed with U.S. regulators on Tuesday for an initial public offering of common stock.

The company, which sells credit reports and services to business, listed Goldman Sachs, J.P. Morgan Securities, Deutsche Bank Securities Inc and Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith among underwriters to the IPO. (1.usa.gov/1Dkj4xZ) (Reporting by Neha Dimri in Bengaluru; Editing by Saumyadeb Chakrabarty)


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