November 2009

Obama Pushes Lobbyists Off Federal Advisory Boards

November 27, 2009

In a little-noticed blog post published on the White House website in September, President Obama’s special counsel for ethics and government reform Norm Eisen announced that the administration no longer wanted federally-registered lobbyists appointed to agency advisory boards and commissions. These appointees to boards and commissions, which are made by agencies and not the President, advise the federal government on a variety of policy areas. Keeping these advisory boards free of individuals who currently are registered federal lobbyists represents a dramatic change in the way business is done in Washington. As has been reported, the President has made a commitment to close the revolving door that has in the past allowed lobbyists and others to move to and from full-time federal government service. In furtherance of this commitment, the President issued Executive Order 13490, which bars anyone appointed by the President who has been a federally-registered lobbyist within the past two years from working on particular matters or in the specific areas in which they lobbied or from serving in agencies they had lobbied. The aspiration we are announcing today builds on this commitment. While the letter of the President’s Executive Order on Ethics does not apply to federally-registered lobbyists appointed by agency or department heads, the spirit does and we have conveyed that to the agencies who are responsible for these appointments. On Friday, the Washington Post reported that the move “may turn out to be the most far-reaching lobbying rule change so far from President Obama,” resulting in “hundreds, if not thousands, of lobbyists” being ejected from federal advisory panels. Not surprisingly, lobby groups, corporations, and other K Street influencers are up in arms . The reaction from the lobbying community has been swift and overwhelmingly negative. Some of the loudest criticism has come from the Industry Trade Advisory Committees (ITACs), a collection of more than a dozen panels that provide policy advice and technical assistance to the Commerce Department and the U.S. Trade Representative. The ITACs, whose roughly 400 members include at least 130 lobbyists, officials say, have taken the lead in attacking the White House policy as misguided and harmful to U.S. business interests; a letter to Obama from committee chairs last month included executives from Boeing, IBM, Harley-Davidson and International Paper. “This action will severely undermine the utility of the advisory committee process,” the letter read. “. . . The characteristics that make many Advisors valuable to the Administration [are] the same characteristics that are being used to artificially disqualify them from participation in the Committee system.” Read the full Washington Post story here . You can read Norm Eisen’s full letter responding to lobbyists’ critiques of the decision here .

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Jim Rogers: Geithner "Has Been Wrong About Just About Everything," Will Lose His Job

November 27, 2009

Maria Bartoromo: Tim Geithner has been under attack lately. How’s he doing? Listen, I have been a critic for years. Geithner should never have been appointed to anything. He’s been wrong about just about everything for 15 years. Maria Bartorom: Do you think he’ll lose his job? Of course he’s going to lose his job, because as Mr. Obama realizes that Geithner doesn’t know what he’s doing, he’s going to look for somebody else because he doesn’t want to take the heat himself. So he’s going to look to blame somebody, and the obvious person is Geithner.

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Old Navy Black Friday Sales: Coupon Code, Deals Galore

November 27, 2009

An Old Navy coupon code providing $10 off a $50 order is no longer good (offer for Thanksgiving Day only), but there are still substantial sales and deals up for grabs. Deals for Black Friday include : $15 all adults jeans/sweaters and kids frost-free jackets, as well as Free LEGO RockBand Software with a $20 purchase. Some other coupon codes are usable and shipping is free for purchases over $20 without a coupon code at all. Old Navy is offering “3 days of rockin’ deals” and all of the special offers can be found at a central hub called Gobblepalooza .

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Emaar MGF sees no Dubai crisis fallout

November 27, 2009

The real estate firm says the Dubai debt crisis will have no impact on its business and funding plans

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Video: Cohan Discusses Bank of America, Goldman Sachs: Video

November 27, 2009

Nov. 27 (Bloomberg) — William Cohan, author of “House of Cards” and a Bloomberg Television contributing editor, talks with Erik Schatzker about the search for a chief executive officer for Bank of America Corp., the performance of Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and the risk strategy of Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Cohan Discusses Bank of America, Goldman Sachs: Video

November 27, 2009

Nov. 27 (Bloomberg) — William Cohan, author of “House of Cards” and a Bloomberg Television contributing editor, talks with Erik Schatzker about the search for a chief executive officer for Bank of America Corp., the performance of Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and the risk strategy of Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (This is an excerpt of the full interview. Source: Bloomberg)

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Dubai Debt Crisis: Will It Cause Another Financial Panic?

November 27, 2009

HONG KONG — The fallout from Dubai’s debt crisis rippled across the globe Friday, raising concerns of another wave of financial turmoil and showing how vulnerable the world economy remains despite signs of recovery. As global stock, commodity and currency markets went into a tailspin, the possible spillover effects from Dubai surfaced from London to South Korea, with banks big and small drawing concern for any losses they could suffer as a result of their exposure to the massively debt-laden emirate. A year after the global slump derailed Dubai’s explosive growth, the city-state’s main investment arm, Dubai World, revealed this week it was asking for at least a six-month delay on paying back its $60 billion debt. Major credit agencies responded by slashing debt ratings on Dubai’s state companies, saying they might consider the plan a default. In recent years, Dubai has expanded with ambitious, eye-catching projects like the Gulf’s palm-shaped islands and the world’s tallest skyscraper in hopes of becoming a tourist friendly and cosmopolitan Middle Eastern metropolis. In the process, however, the state-backed networks nicknamed Dubai Inc. have racked up $80 billion in red ink, and the emirate may now need another bailout from its oil-rich neighbor Abu Dhabi, the capital of the United Arab Emirates. Following a rout in Europe, Asia’s stock markets tumbled Friday while the dollar hit a fresh 14-year low against the yen as investors piled into currencies perceived as safer. Crude oil at one point fell more than 6 percent. With Dubai World hard pressed to pay its bills, banks could take the biggest hit, analysts said. Heavyweight London-based lenders HSBC Holdings and Standard Chartered could face losses of $611 million and $177 million respectively, according to early estimates from analysts at Goldman Sachs. Both have substantial Middle East operations. In Asia, Japan’s Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group, the country’s No. 3 bank, could be exposed to Dubai World’s indebted property arm to the tune of several hundred million dollars, according to a person familiar with the matter. South Korea estimated the country’s financial institutions have just $88 million exposure. Construction firms from Japan, Australia and South Korea behind Dubai’s recent development boom also might be on the hook. While most have the wherewithal to absorb any losses, Dubai’s troubles could lead banks to reevaluate and scale back their lending. That could make it more difficult for companies to borrow money and hold down a world economy still emerging from the throes of its deepest recession in decades, analysts said. Equally unsettling for investors was the uncertainty over which companies were exposed and how much money they might actually lose. European banks alone have $87 billion at risk in the U.A.E. “It touched investors’ sensitive nerves,” said Cai Junyi, an analyst for Shanghai Securities. “The world is watching whether that will have any substantial impact … Dubai World is just like a small window that might reflect another financial tsunami.” Emerging markets in the Middle East and elsewhere have attracted massive amounts of capital in recent years amid investor enthusiasm for regions with rapid economic growth. This year, financial markets in Asia and Latin America have vastly outperformed ones in the U.S. and Europe. But Dubai’s woes could bring a temporary end to the promiscuous buying behind the boom, analysts said. “I think it will make investors realize they need to be more discriminating about emerging markets,” said Arjuna Mahendran, head of Asian investment strategy at HSBC Private Bank in Singapore. “In the longer term we have no doubt that things are going to recover.” HSBC declined to comment. Calls to Standard Chartered representatives were not returned. Among other companies with Dubai ties, South Korean construction firms have about 40 projects there whose remaining work is valued at as much as $3 billion. South Korea’s government expected the problems to have minimal impact. ___ AP Researcher Bonnie Cao in Beijing and AP Business Writers Kelly Olsen in Seoul and Yuri Kageyama in Tokyo contributed to this report.

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Fergo Aisa renegotiates EUR 83m debt

November 27, 2009

Extract not available.

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Black Friday Internet Sales 2009: Get Details HERE On Online Deals

November 27, 2009

Instead of getting stuck in traffic, long lines, and crowds of unruly shoppers, why not check out some of the incredible Black Friday Internet sales — sales to be had for people shopping on the web? Here’s a line up of some of the major retailers having big Internet Black Friday sales. Most offer the added perk of free shipping on certain orders, or orders over a specified amount. Walmart is making a major push online for Black Friday. You can check out Walmart’s “Amazing Online Specials” here or here. Current deals include a $99 Nikon CoolPix L20 camera, $100 off a Dell Inspiron 1545 laptop, and $598 40″ Samsung LCD TV. Target has its lineup of Black Friday Interet sales listed on their website here and offers round-the-clock Daily Deals (with free shipping!) here . Amazon.com will be offering its daily Gold Box deals , to find good deals on the items on your list. Get the complete line-up of Toys R Us Black Friday sales on their website here. In addition to offering free shipping on thousands of items (or on purchases of $49 or more), the seller’s deals include discounts on Barbie products, Twilight games and books, Nintendo DS and PSP games, and more. JCPenney is offering major in-store sales for Black Friday, as well as free shipping on orders of $25 or more (get the code here. ) Their site will be featuring ads for upcoming sales here.

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Video: Harrison Sees Improvement in Consumer Optimism, Spending: Video

November 27, 2009

Nov. 27 (Bloomberg) — Gilbert Harrison, chief executive officer of Financo Inc., talks with Bloomberg’s Erik Schatzker about the outlook for U.S. consumer spending during the holiday shopping season. Harrison also discusses retailers’ strategy on Black Friday, the traditional beginning of holiday buying. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Harrison Sees Improvement in Consumer Optimism, Spending: Video

November 27, 2009

Nov. 27 (Bloomberg) — Gilbert Harrison, chief executive officer of Financo Inc., talks with Bloomberg’s Erik Schatzker about the outlook for U.S. consumer spending during the holiday shopping season. Harrison also discusses retailers’ strategy on Black Friday, the traditional beginning of holiday buying. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Dubai crisis may not impact remittances: Official

November 27, 2009

The finance ministry today said the financial crisis in Dubai, triggered by a slump in real estate, may not impact remittances sent by Indian expatriates in the Gulf. ‘Remittances from expats didn’t suffer during the period when the larger crisis was on.

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Real estate news (The Daily Commercial)

November 27, 2009

Ginnie Mae mortgage-backed securities continue to stabilize secondary market Washington, DC — The Government National Mortgage Association (Ginni …

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Dubai World Defaults on Debt

November 27, 2009

Economy Watch – Dubai has just announced that it will ask for a six months ’standstill’ in debt repayments for stated-owned holding company Dubai World, “as a first step towards restructuring”. Dubai World has $59 billion in outstanding debt, a

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Palm Jumeirah project under threat

November 27, 2009

EST L Mr. Hassan is a real estate agent who buys and sells properties on Palm Jumeirah, the man-made, palm-tree-shaped island where celebrities like David Beckham and Brad Pitt have bought luxury homes. When villas on the

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Rise and fall of Dubai real estate

November 27, 2009

much of the economic growth in the city-state in recent years, has asked for a moratorium on its debt

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Start of the Next Downturn?

November 27, 2009

Previous Video: The Good Entrepreneur Winner Next Video: The Nikkei Business Report Airtime: ET Dubai’s debt delay problems could prove to be a break point for the next downturn, Clive Hyman from Hyman Capital Services told CNBC Friday. Hyman advises

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A 2010 REIT recovery will only be first of five years of ripples

November 27, 2009

Americans commemorated Thanksgiving — the Pilgrim settlers’ gratitude after surviving a particularly harsh winter in 1621 Perhaps UK real estate should adopt this holiday. Six months ago the industry was in its own nuclear winter. A near-zero

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ICICI Bank says no material exposure in Dubai

November 27, 2009

Tags: debt crisis, Dubai World fiasco, ICICI Bank Amid fears of a debt crisis in Dubai, ICICI Bank on Friday said it does not have any significant exposure to Dubai corporates. “ICICI

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Review: UK banks should disclose top earners

November 27, 2009

Review: UK banks should disclose top earners

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Japan suffers surging yen, falling prices

November 27, 2009

Japan suffers surging yen, falling prices

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Peel Exploration Limited (ASX:PEX) Chairman Simon Hadfield Adress At Annual General Meeting

November 27, 2009

Peel Exploration Limited (ASX:PEX) Chairman Simon Hadfield Adress At Annual General Meeting

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Sam’s Seafood Holdings Limited (ASX:SSS) Secondary Listing On The Frankfurt Stock Exchange, Germany

November 27, 2009

Sam’s Seafood Holdings Limited (ASX:SSS) Secondary Listing On The Frankfurt Stock Exchange, Germany

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AuDAX Resources Ltd (ASX:ADX) Seismic Contractor Selected For The Kerkouane Permit, Tunisia

November 27, 2009

AuDAX Resources Ltd (ASX:ADX) Seismic Contractor Selected For The Kerkouane Permit, Tunisia

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Australian Market Report of November 27: Worries over Troubles in Dubai

November 27, 2009

Australian Market Report of November 27: Worries over Troubles in Dubai

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Sam’s Seafood Holdings Limited (ASX:SSS) Changes Name To Pan Asia Corporation Limited (ASX:PZC)

November 27, 2009

Sam’s Seafood Holdings Limited (ASX:SSS) Changes Name To Pan Asia Corporation Limited (ASX:PZC)

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Drillsearch Energy Ltd (ASX:DLS) Substantial Western Cooper Basin Unconventional Gas Prospective Resource Potential

November 27, 2009

Drillsearch Energy Ltd (ASX:DLS) Substantial Western Cooper Basin Unconventional Gas Prospective Resource Potential

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Galaxy Resources Limited (ASX:GXY) Finance Transferred To Banks And First Drawdown Achieved

November 27, 2009

Galaxy Resources Limited (ASX:GXY) Finance Transferred To Banks And First Drawdown Achieved

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Bauxite Resources Limited (ASX:BAU) Proposed Stage 2 Chittering Shire Extractive Industries Quarrying Licence Update

November 27, 2009

Bauxite Resources Limited (ASX:BAU) Proposed Stage 2 Chittering Shire Extractive Industries Quarrying Licence Update

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Regional Spotlight: Floridas Existing Home, Condo Sales Up in October 2009

November 27, 2009

owner's Toolkit Improvement The latest in homeownership tips and topics, brought to you by , the leader in real estate information systems Thursday, November 26, 2009 Click Here for Answers to All Your Buying, Selling & owership Questions Profit Center:

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Video: BNP’s Whichello Says Dubai Woes Won’t Spread Across Gulf

November 27, 2009

Nov. 27 (Bloomberg) — Robert Whichello, head of emerging market debt at BNP Paribas SA, talks with Bloomberg’s Rishaad Salamat about the impact of Dubai’s debt proposal on other states in the Gulf region

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Video: BNP’s Whichello Says Dubai Woes Won’t Spread Across Gulf

November 27, 2009

Nov. 27 (Bloomberg) — Robert Whichello, head of emerging market debt at BNP Paribas SA, talks with Bloomberg’s Rishaad Salamat about the impact of Dubai’s debt proposal on other states in the Gulf region

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Screaming Hot TVs Abound as Walmart, Kohls Pursue Shoppers

November 27, 2009
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Germany’s Top Nazi-Hunter Finds `Best Break’ in Years in Brazilian Archive

November 27, 2009

By Patrick Donahue and Brian Parkin Nov. 27 (Bloomberg) — German investigators trying to track down Nazi criminals before they die may have had their “best break” in years after discovering a trove of Brazilian immigration files more than half a century old. Kurt Schrimm , the top German justice official hunting Nazi fugitives, said his team stumbled on archives identifying “several hundred” Germans who moved to Brazil in the decade after World War II and who may be linked to Nazi crimes. Though only a fraction is still likely to be alive, Schrimm plans to follow up on the lead with Brazilian officials. “The discovery will probably be our most important find in recent times,” Schrimm said in an interview Nov. 24 from his office in the southwestern German city of Ludwigsburg. Schrimm kicked off research in Brazil in July and will report again on findings after his team returns there in March. The trial starting Nov. 30 of alleged death-camp guard John Demjanjuk in Munich underscores Schrimm’s effort to hunt down remaining Nazi criminals even if the search yields “order- takers, not givers” 76 years after Adolf Hitler took power. Demjanjuk, who is charged with aiding in the murder of 27,900 inmates in the Sobibor Nazi death camp in 1943, is the biggest catch yet for Schrimm, who took his job nine years ago expecting to close shop. Instead, Schrimm, 60, a senior prosecutor in Stuttgart, doubled staff at the Central Office of State Judiciaries for the Investigation of National Socialist Crimes from four to eight investigators — now down to seven. As the number of clues filed to the office dwindled through the 1990s, Schrimm pressed the Central Office to seek new leads. Soviet Archives Those leads included sifting through 1945 war trial documents from Soviet archives involving German prisoners of war and Soviet collaborators. A military-history archive in Prague was found to contain complete files on the Nazi Waffen-SS up to 1943. In 1990, Italian court documents on SS atrocities were discovered after having disappeared in the 1950s. The Brazilian files focus on suspected Nazi criminals entering on provisional passports. Schrimm and his team followed up leads from a Brazilian source who came across letters warning the authorities of Nazis trying to slip into the country with travel documents issued by the Red Cross . Little was done to bar their entry, Schrimm said. South American Refuge South America became the refuge of several high-ranking Nazi officers after the Third Reich’s collapse, including Holocaust architect Adolf Eichmann, death-camp doctor Josef Mengele and Gestapo member Klaus Barbie. While Eichmann and Barbie were caught and tried, Mengele died in Brazil in 1979. Eichmann, captured in Argentina, was hanged in Israel in 1962; Barbie, extradited by Bolivia, died in a French jail in 1991. “As hopeful as we are about the Brazil findings, just 5 percent of the suspects may still be alive and able to stand trial,” Schrimm said. “The Nazi commanders are all dead, but that doesn’t make the crimes of their younger subordinates any less prosecutable.” The Central Office conducts pre-investigations that are then handed over to state prosecutors once evidence is sufficient for a formal probe. Schrimm’s unit currently has about 20 investigations open. Efforts Graded Schrimm’s Central Office works alongside such organizations as the Los Angeles-based Simon Wiesenthal Center . The Wiesenthal Center graded Germany with a “B” in its 2009 ranking of efforts to bring Nazi criminals to justice. The U.S. received an “A.” Schrimm dismissed the rating, saying his Central Office doesn’t like “being graded like a school kid.” “As long as there’s a possibility that these people are alive, we’ll continue our work,” Schrimm said in an earlier, Aug. 21 interview in his office, a baroque structure built in 1790 to house a prison. “I never would have thought it’d be nine years already — and it will still be some time in the future.” Schrimm, whose team taps on computers in two work rooms, gave a tour of one of the dusty file spaces piled to the ceiling with dog-eared documents detailing Nazi crimes that took place more than six decades ago. The quiet setting was a far cry from the 1960s and 1970s, when the unit was at its busiest tracking down Nazis. Since its foundation in 1958, the Central Office has conducted more than 7,400 investigations. The case against Demjanjuk came about after an investigator accidentally stumbled on a report on the Internet that the U.S. was seeking to revoke his passport. Demjanjuk’s name was known because he had been convicted in 1988, charged with being the Treblinka death-camp guard known as “Ivan the Terrible” –only to be acquitted in 1993 by Israel’s Supreme Court after doubt about his identity emerged. The Central Office, suspicious about his true identity, followed up on clues gained from already scheduled visits to Israel and the U.S. Once Schrimm’s team assembled what it thought was enough information to convict, they turned it over to state prosecutors. “A few years ago nobody talked about Demjanjuk any more — he fell into the memory hole,” Schrimm said. To contact the reporter on this story: Patrick Donahue in Berlin at at pdonahue1@bloomberg.net , or Brian Parkin in Berlin at at bparkin@bloomberg.net .

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Spanish Bullrings, Fake Eiffel Towers Can’t Prevent 20% Unemployment Rate

November 27, 2009

By Emma Ross-Thomas Nov. 27 (Bloomberg) — Bullrings and fake Eiffel Towers may not be enough to hold back the tide of surging unemployment in Spain, Europe’s one-time engine of job growth. As an 8 billion-euro ($12 billion) stimulus program runs out, that will help destroy 250,000 jobs at the start of next year, according to the AGETT association of employment agencies, and push the jobless rate above 20 percent. Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero’s package, designed to fight Spain’s worst recession in 60 years, has kept people in work by funding a wave of building projects from a theme park of European monuments to sports complexes and bullrings. The risk is that a further jump in joblessness will delay the return to growth, boosting the budget deficit and borrowing costs. “What they’ve done is just put the unemployed on ice,” said Fernando Fernandez, a professor at IE business school in Madrid and former International Monetary Fund economist. “There’s been a series of transitory measures based on the idea the crisis would be short, and now we have to deal with the consequences.” Under the Plan E program, which created 422,298 jobs, builders in Torrejon de Ardoz , near Madrid, are erecting the collection of monuments among 5,000 trees. On the Mediterranean island of Ibiza, 3 million euros is being spent to build a swimming pool, while a bullring near the capital has a new roof. Christopher Columbus Across the euro area, unemployment has risen by 3.2 million people in the last year . As a larger share of temporary contracts than anywhere else in the region made it easier to cut payrolls, Spain accounted for half of the increase. Spain has the highest unemployment rate in the euro area, at 19.3 percent in September, as companies including Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria SA and Iberia Lineas Aereas de Espana SA cut jobs. The 16-nation region’s average was 9.7 percent. Victor Castellanos, 22, may be among those who join Spain’s 3.8 million unemployed in January. He’s been working for seven months on a 3.6 million-euro project to move a statue of Christopher Columbus in central Madrid. It ends next month and he has no plans. Only 11.5 percent of all projects have been completed, according to government data, signaling most of those hired will lose their jobs between now and year-end. “It’s bread today and hunger tomorrow,” Castellanos said in an interview on Paseo de la Castellana, one of the city’s main avenues, where the road works hold up traffic. Workers traditionally receive unemployment benefits for a maximum of two years. The government this year extended that with a 420 euro-a-month payment it pledged to maintain as long as unemployment remains above 17 percent. It may be paying that until at least 2011, according to Fernandez, putting further pressure on the budget. Debt Costs Spain lost its top AAA credit rating at Standard & Poor’s in January on concerns about public finances that pushed the extra interest investors charge to hold Spanish debt instead of German equivalents to 128 basis points, the most in the euro’s lifetime. While that spread has narrowed to 61 basis points, that’s still five times what it was at the start of 2008. “The Spanish deficit outlook is not very rosy,” said Michiel de Bruin , head of European government bonds in Amsterdam at F&C Asset Management Plc, which manages assets worth $145 billion and holds Spanish debt. “We are maybe a bit concerned on the Spanish spread, it might widen a bit from here.” Spain’s debt may rise to 74 percent of gross domestic product in 2011 from 36 percent before the crisis, European Commission forecasts show. ‘Problem’ “Rising unemployment is a significant factor and does suggest that Spain has a long-term competitiveness problem,” said Harvinder Sian , senior bond strategist at Royal Bank of Scotland Plc in London. He sees Spanish bond yields rising closer to levels on Italian debt. While the economy will continue to shrink next year, the government is raising taxes as well as trimming stimulus spending. It aims to reduce the budget deficit to the EU limit of 3 percent of GDP by 2013 from 11 percent this year. AGETT, which represents companies including Adecco SA , and Madrid-based Analistas Financieros Internacionales see payrolls falling by 1 million to 18.3 million in the year to January 2010. The unemployment rate will reach 20.5 percent next year, according to a Bloomberg survey. “At one point it seemed the world was coming to an end, jobs were being lost a frightening rate. Plan E stopped the bleeding a bit,” said Juan Rubio, a professor at Duke University. “But from the point of view of economics, it was crazy. It was almost throwing money away.” Even as the job crisis escalates, the mounting fiscal problems mean a new stimulus fund for 2010 is half the size of this year’s. The Ministry for Territorial Policy , which manages the plan, estimates it will still create 200,000 jobs. “Some people who were employed to dig holes in the morning and cover them up in the afternoon will be out of a job,” said Javier Diaz-Gimenez , a professor at business school IESE and former government adviser. “Is this a good thing or a bad thing? I think it’s a good thing in the long-run.” To contact the reporter on this story: Emma Ross-Thomas in Madrid at erossthomas@bloomberg.net

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Credit-Default Swap Reforms Roiled as Aiful, Cemex, Thomson Test Payments

November 27, 2009

By Abigail Moses and Shannon D. Harrington Nov. 27 (Bloomberg) — Wall Street’s system for determining payments on derivatives linked to the debt of defaulted companies is showing cracks less than a year after securities firms changed practices to avoid “Draconian” regulation. Credit-default swaps tied to Thomson SA , the Paris-based owner of film processor Technicolor Inc., paid some holders 30 percent less than those with contracts expiring a day later. In Japan, owners of swaps on Aiful Corp. haven’t been compensated, though one of its banks said the consumer lender skipped loan repayments. Dealers can’t agree whether to reimburse investors in Mexican cement maker Cemex SAB’s debt swaps. Disparities are arising in spite of practices adopted in April and July to standardize settlements and curb risk in a market that exacerbated the worst financial crisis since the 1930s by contributing to the downfall of American International Group Inc. Analysts at Bank of America-Merrill Lynch, Barclays Capital and UniCredit SpA say changes are needed as dealers examine how to interpret existing rules to maintain investor confidence. “The first cracks are being shown in the protocols,” said Edmund Parker, head of derivatives at Chicago-based law firm Mayer Brown LLP in London. The rules are being tested as the global default rate rises. The rate for companies ranked below investment-grade reached the highest since the Great Depression in October and will peak at 12.5 percent next month, Moody’s Investors Service said Nov. 5. Lawmaker Ammunition Flaws in the system may provide ammunition to President Barack Obama and lawmakers who want to rein in derivatives, including credit-default swaps, which rise in price as investor confidence decreases and pay off when a borrower fails to adhere to its debt agreements. Regulators demanded more transparency after the meltdowns 14 months ago of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and AIG, two of the largest traders, froze credit markets and worsened the first global recession since World War II. The swaps had been the world’s fastest-growing market, with contracts protecting against defaults on as much as $62 trillion at the end of 2007, almost 10 times the amount of the U.S. government’s debt outstanding, according to the International Swaps & Derivatives Association, a trade group based in New York. The swaps totaled less than $632 billion in 2001 and the figure is $26 trillion now. Hedge fund manager George Soros has called the market “unsafe,” and billionaire investor Warren Buffett once likened the derivatives to “financial weapons of mass destruction.” Revenue Stream Banks are making changes to avoid stricter rules imposed by regulators, said Atish Kakodkar , a CreditSights analyst in New York. “The risk of over-regulation is real,” Kakodkar said in a Nov. 15 research report. “Self-regulation in the credit derivatives market seems to be driven largely by the need to pre-empt any Draconian regulation.” Five U.S. commercial banks, including JPMorgan Chase & Co. , Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Bank of America Corp., were on track to earn more than $35 billion this year trading unregulated derivatives contracts of all types as of August, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Credit-default swaps are derivatives, contracts with values derived from assets or events, including stocks, bonds, commodities, currencies, interest rates or the weather. Banks, hedge funds and insurance companies use the swaps to insure bonds and loans against default or to speculate on the creditworthiness of countries and companies. Failure to Pay If a borrower fails to adhere to its debt commitments, bondholders who own swaps get paid the debt’s face value in exchange for the bonds. Those that don’t own the underlying bonds get the face value in cash minus the debt’s current market value as determined by industry-run auctions where holders of the securities sell them to the highest bidders. Dealers and investors standardized the contracts this year to make them easier to trade through clearinghouses , which act as buyers to sellers and sellers to buyers, preventing a single default tripping a domino-like financial system catastrophe. As part of that effort, ISDA formed regional committees of 15 dealers and investors in March to make binding decisions on when contracts are triggered. The committees base decisions on publicly available information such as regulatory filings, press releases and news articles. Swaps usually are triggered by one of three events in most countries: bankruptcy, failure to pay or debt restructuring, including a reduction or postponement in principal or interest. Under the new rules, traders eliminated restructuring as a credit event in the U.S. Successful Auctions Traders successfully auctioned debt to settle contracts linked to 41 companies and Ecuador’s government this year, with about half of those happening since ISDA created the committees. “The determinations committee provides one place where we can resolve a lot of these issues centrally,” said Athanassios Diplas , global head of counterparty portfolio management in New York for Frankfurt-based Deutsche Bank AG and co-chair of the ISDA panel that wrote the protocols. “Imagine if we were to face all of this in the world where we had to arbitrate potential disputes bilaterally. That would be complete chaos.” The new protocols helped eased the market’s stigma, with the net amount of protection bought and sold rising to $2.6 trillion as of Nov. 13, the highest since at least February, Depository Trust & Clearing Corp. data show. Thomson provided the first test of the procedures for settling contracts triggered by a restructuring in Europe when it said in August it was deferring payments on $72.5 million of 6.05 percent private notes due this year. Multiple Auctions The system for restructurings uses multiple auctions that set different payouts based on swap expiration dates. Dealers couldn’t settle the Thomson contracts with simpler failure-to- pay procedures that produce one recovery value because they were unable to prove the electronics company defaulted. Asked in a July conference call with investors whether Thomson still owed the money, Chief Executive Officer Frederic Rose responded, “Since I am not a qualified lawyer, I prefer not to answer that question.” Marine Boulot, a Thomson spokeswoman in Paris, declined to comment. To determine the size of the payouts on contracts covering $2 billion in debt, bonds and loans were split by maturity date ranges into three so-called buckets and sold at auction. Contracts that expired on June 20, 2012 — the first bucket’s latest date — sold for 96.25 percent of the face amount, meaning swap holders received 3.75 percent of the amount covered. Swaps expiring a day later paid 34.875 percent because the debt in that bucket went for 65.125 percent. Too Few Securities Holders of June 20 swaps covering 10 million euros in debt got 375,000 euros, while those with June 21 contracts received almost 3.5 million euros. Swaps that terminated after Oct. 24, 2014, paid the most, 36.75 percent. The disparity was a result of too few securities in the first bucket to settle swaps, according to Matthew Leeming , a London-based strategist at Barclays. “An imbalance of supply and demand for the deliverables can affect the recovery rate,” he said in a note. Because they were part of industry indexes, swaps referencing the company “dwarfed the amount of Thomson debt,” said Teo Lasarte , an analyst at Bank of America-Merrill Lynch in London. The more swaps there are, the more investors with stakes in the contracts need bonds to settle them. About 81 million euros- worth of debt was auctioned from the first bucket, compared with 221 million euros and 148 million euros from the second and third, according to data released by auction administrators Markit Group Ltd. and Creditex Group Inc. Sufficient Debt Lasarte favors changing rules governing indexes so companies in them have enough debt available to produce settlement auctions that don’t cause distortions. “To strengthen the robustness of this product, there are some issues to be solved,” said Tim Brunne , a UniCredit strategist in Munich. Leeming of Barclays said in a report to clients that the Thomson settlement “raises questions regarding the future of restructuring as a credit event.” Banks that bought contracts on loans to Kyoto-based Aiful aren’t being paid because ISDA’s determinations committee ruled that there isn’t sufficient evidence to trigger swaps as the company and its lenders hold confidential restructuring talks. Suspended Payments Aozora Bank Ltd., one of Aiful’s creditors, said in a statement to the ISDA committee that the company “suspended scheduled payments of loan principal to all of its lenders” on Sept. 30. The committee rejected the request on Oct. 19 because the protocols only allow it to consider “publicly available information.” If the “sole source” of that evidence bought or sold swaps, it isn’t deemed publicly available. Aozora has said it owns some Aiful swaps. Katsuyuki Komiya, a spokesman for Aiful, declined to comment. Contracts protecting a net $1.36 billion of Aiful’s debt were outstanding as of Nov. 6, more than any other Japanese company, according to New York-based DTCC. As much as $238 million more of Aiful’s debt is protected through credit swaps based on indexes in which the company is a member. Aiful is meanwhile seeking to secure a credit line from Sumitomo Trust & Banking Co., its main bank, two people familiar with the matter said. Aiful Swaps The value of Aiful credit-default swaps that mature in December plunged on speculation they may expire without being triggered. Contracts protecting 100 million yen ($1.2 million) of Aiful debt from default through Dec. 20 dropped to 10 million yen upfront, from 55 million yen on Oct. 15, according to a trader who asked not to be identified because the prices are private. The Japanese Association of Turnaround Professionals, which is mediating Aiful’s so-called alternative dispute resolution process, is forming a group of bankers, lawyers and government officials to study whether talks between companies and creditors on rescheduling debt payments should trigger swap payouts, said Miyako Hara , an executive secretary for the trade group. The ISDA determination committee was asked on Oct. 9 to rule that swaps linked to Monterrey, Mexico-based Cemex should be paid out after the company agreed with lenders to extend the maturity on about $15 billion of debt for five years. After four weeks of deliberations, the committee was deadlocked, and the issue will now be decided by an arbitration panel set up by ISDA. The panel will rule in December. Struggling With Debt The biggest cement maker in the Americas has struggled to repay debt since shipments started dropping in the second- quarter of 2006, before it paid $14.2 billion in July 2007 for Australian rival Rinker Group Ltd. Cemex has $19.67 billion of debt, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, and is rated B by Standard & Poor’s, five steps below investment grade. Cemex spokesman Jorge Perez declined to comment. The cost of credit-default swaps on Cemex surged as high as 1,500 basis points in March, or $1.5 million a year to protect $10 million of debt for five years, according to CMA DataVision, as the price of its 900 million euros of 4.75 percent bonds due 2014 dropped to 38 cents on the euro. Credit-default swaps are “not a perfect product,” said J. Paul Forrester , a Mayer Brown partner and co-head of its derivatives and structured products practice. “These are difficult questions, and unfortunately as we continue to use this product and explore it we’re going to find that it has these sorts of issues,” he said. To contact the reporter on this story: Abigail Moses in London at Amoses5@bloomberg.net ; Shannon D. Harrington in New York at sharrington6@bloomberg.net ;

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Philippines Mayor to Face Seven Murder Charges for Massacre of 57 People

November 27, 2009

By Francisco Alcuaz Jr. Nov. 27 (Bloomberg) — Philippine prosecutors are preparing to file murder charges today against a mayor allegedly linked to the massacre of at least 57 people on the southern island of Mindanao, the nation’s worst act of election-related violence. “I believe we have a very strong case,” Justice Secretary Agnes Devanadera told reporters late yesterday after Andal Ampatuan Jr. was flown from the island’s Maguindanao province to the capital, Manila, for questioning. The Ampatuan clan controls the province, where about 100 gunmen on Nov. 23 ambushed and killed backers of a politician intending to challenge the family for the post of governor in elections next year. Journalists traveling with the group were among the dead. The clan helped President Gloria Arroyo win election in 2004, when she took more than 75 percent of the vote in the province. Ampatuan, who is the mayor of Datu Unsay in Maguindanao, denied involvement in the killings after turning himself in yesterday. He said Islamic insurgents waging a separatist war in Mindanao were responsible, the Philippine Star newspaper reported today. Muslim insurgents have been fighting troops on the island for decades and the al-Qaeda-linked Abu Sayyaf militant group, blamed by the government for dozens of bombings and kidnappings, is also active there. Mindanao has the lowest per capita income of all the country’s regions. Economist Jomar Lacson , head of research at Campos, Lanuza & Co. in Manila, said while the killings may damage overseas tourism to the Philippines, the economy and financial markets won’t be affected because there’s little investment in the area. Private Militias The massacre has increased pressure on Arroyo’s administration to crack down on provincial politicians who maintain private militias. While armed to help police and the army fight Muslim and communist insurgents, the militias are often used by local leaders as private armies as they feud with rivals. The Makati Business Club , a Manila-based association of the nation’s biggest businesses, said in a statement yesterday Arroyo’s administration had allowed “warlord politics” to flourish in Maguindanao. Authorities yesterday detained 347 Maguindanao militiamen for questioning about their possible involvement in the killings and suspended civilians’ permits to carry firearms in the province, officials said. The ambushed convoy was mostly made up of supporters of Buluan City Vice Mayor Esmael Mangudadatu, who were on their way to file his candidacy for Maguindanao governor. Mass Graves Fifty-seven bodies have been recovered from mass graves, among them 27 journalists who were part of the convoy, Agence France-Presse reported today. Fifteen motorists who were driving past the area were killed as the gunmen sought to eliminate witnesses, according to the report. Mangudadatu wasn’t in the convoy because he’d received death threats and had sent his wife and two sisters to submit his papers in the belief that women wouldn’t be targeted. He filed his candidacy today in the provincial capital of Sharrif Aguak, escorted by soldiers, a police commander and army general, the Associated Press reported. “Only death can stop me from running,” AP cited Mangudadatu as saying. Maguindanao and the neighboring province of Sultan Kudarat are under a state of emergency to prevent further violence and police are on alert for attacks on the homes of Ampatuan and Mangudadatu family members living outside the province, including in Manila. Philippine elections are often marred by bloodshed. About 126 candidates and supporters were killed in the months leading to the 2007 elections and 186 in 2004, according to the Philippine Daily Inquirer . To contact the reporter on this story: Francisco Alcuaz Jr . in Manila at falcuaz@bloomberg.net .

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Fed, Treasury Examiners Faulted in Watchdog Reports on U.S. Bank Failures

November 27, 2009

By Alison Vekshin Nov. 27 (Bloomberg) — Treasury Department and Federal Reserve examiners should have done more to halt risky lending at U.S. banks that failed amid real-estate losses, reports by agency watchdogs show. Ten of the 12 bank-collapse reviews released by the Fed and Treasury inspectors general this year fault oversight weaknesses including failure to limit excessive concentration in commercial real-estate loans. Examiners from the Fed, and Treasury’s Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and Office of Thrift Supervision also failed to issue enforcement orders and hold banks accountable for recommended changes, according to reports posted to agency Web sites. “We found that regulators conducted regular and timely examinations and identified operational problems, but were slow to take enforcement action to correct the problems,” according to a statement from the Treasury’s Office of Inspector General. Regulators have closed 124 banks this year, the most since 1992, amid loan losses stemming from the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. The failures have pushed the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.’s insurance fund, used to pay customers for deposits of up to $250,000 when a bank fails, into an $8.2 billion deficit as of Sept. 30. Inspectors general at the Fed and Treasury are required to release autopsies for some failed banks to explain collapses and assess the effectiveness of oversight. The Treasury inspector general released five reports for the OTS and four for the OCC this year. The Fed’s watchdog released three reports this year. The FDIC’s inspector general released 26 reports in the same period, citing similar concerns. ‘Opportunity to Improve’ “We agree with the IG that in several cases we should have acted more quickly, and we have taken steps to ensure more appropriate responses,” OCC spokesman Robert Garsson said. “The OTS views the results of each material loss review as an opportunity to improve our supervision and regulation of savings associations and their holding companies,” said William Ruberry , a spokesman for the thrift regulator. Fed spokeswoman Barbara Hagenbaugh referred to central bank Chairman Ben Bernanke ’s Oct. 23 speech . “We are taking steps to strengthen oversight and enforcement, particularly at the firm-wide level, and we are augmenting our traditional microprudential, or firm-specific, methods of oversight with a more macroprudential, or systemwide, approach that should help us better anticipate and mitigate broader threats to financial stability,” Bernanke said. To contact the reporter on this story: Alison Vekshin in Washington at avekshin@bloomberg.net .

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Shipping Has `Trouble Building Behind Dam,’ Ex-Baltic Exchange Head Says

November 27, 2009

By Alaric Nightingale Nov. 27 (Bloomberg) — Ship prices may keep dropping for at least another year because banks have not yet dealt with the weaker loans they made to the industry, according to Michael Drayton , a former chairman of the Baltic Exchange. The cost of a second-hand capesize used to haul iron ore plunged 66 percent to $53 million since July 2008. The cost of a second-hand supertanker slumped 52 percent to $77 million, according to data from the London-based bourse. “There’s trouble building up behind the dam, and the dam is going to be breached,” Drayton, now an independent shipping consultant in London, said in an interview. “The market is blocking the natural flow to where it should be.” Drayton predicted in December 2007 that the supply of commodity carriers would exceed cargoes in 2008. The Baltic Dry Index , the benchmark for commodity shipping rates, fell 94 percent from May to December 2008 as Chinese steelmakers cut iron-ore purchases, trade finance dwindled and fleets expanded. Tankers and container ships are most overvalued, based on their current earning power, said Drayton, who was also previously a director at shipbroker Galbraith’s Ltd. and chairman of Hamilton, Bermuda-based Arlington Tankers Ltd. Earnings for commodity carriers may also drop because they are too reliant on Chinese demand, he said. China is the world’s biggest consumer of iron ore and coal. “My worry is: can China really prop up these rates single- handedly?” he said. “I just don’t think China can prop things up indefinitely.” Drayton said he has been approached by private-equity funds and institutional investors seeking advice on when to buy distressed loans and the ships tied to them. To contact the reporter on this story: Alaric Nightingale in London at Anightingal1@bloomberg.net

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Commodities Slump Most Since July on Stronger Dollar, Dubai Rescheduling

November 27, 2009

By Chanyaporn Chanjaroen Nov. 27 (Bloomberg) — Commodities slumped the most since July, led by a drop in crude oil and industrial metals, as Dubai’s attempt to reschedule its debt rattled investors and spurred a strengthening in the dollar. The S&P GSCI index of 24 commodities fell as much as 4.2 percent, the biggest drop since July 29. The index traded 3.6 percent lower at 496.164 as of 9:53 a.m. in London. Gold fell the most since January and oil retreated to a six-week low. The declines are “a correction reflecting the unfortunate timing of the Dubai news which spooked the markets,” Daniel Major , a London-based commodity analyst at RBS Global Banking and Markets, said by phone. “The sharp rally in the dollar is also driving gold.” Commodities, as measured by the S&P GSCI, jumped as much as 50 percent this year, amid the worst global recession since World War II. Copper and lead more than doubled and crude oil advanced as much as 82 percent as Chinese demand expanded and producers curbed supply. Investors are “chasing commodities” and there is a risk of bubbles emerging, Nouriel Roubini , the New York University professor who predicted the global financial crisis, said a week ago. The U.S. Dollar Index , a six-currency gauge of the greenback’s value, rose as much as 1 percent, strengthening for a second consecutive day. A stronger dollar makes commodities denominated in the currency more expensive for those holding other monies. Some investors also buy commodities as a hedge against a weaker dollar. Gold Declines Gold for immediate delivery lost as much 4.2 percent, the biggest intraday decline since Jan. 12. The metal traded at a record $1,195.13 yesterday and has advanced 32 percent this year, the best performance since 1979. Silver shed 3.6 percent to $17.9975 an ounce. Holdings in the SPDR Gold Trust, the biggest exchange- traded fund backed by bullion, reached a record 1,134 metric tons in June. At the time, it exceeded Switzerland as the world’s sixth-largest gold holding. Crude oil fell as much as 7.1 percent to $72.39 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, where markets didn’t settle yesterday because of a public holiday. That was the lowest compared with intraday prices since Oct. 12. Lower-than-average volumes are being traded in commodity markets, RBS’s Major said. “You can’t read too much into this,” he said. Copper Retreats Copper for delivery in three months fell 1.2 percent to $6,738 a metric ton on the London Metal Exchange, declining for a second day and paring its annual gain to 119 percent. Aluminum, nickel, zinc, tin and lead also dropped. “Base metals are the commodity category with the highest correlation to equity markets and therefore suffered more than other commodity categories from the equity market sell-off,” Tobias Merath , head of commodities research at Credit Suisse in Zurich, wrote today in an e-mailed report. In agricultural markets, wheat fell 2.6 percent to $5.565 a bushel in Chicago trading. Corn declined 2.1 percent to $3.995 a bushel and soybeans dropped 2.4 percent to $10.2875 a bushel. The market was closed yesterday for Thanksgiving Day. Dubai World, the government investment company with $59 billion of liabilities, sought to delay repayment on much of its debt. To contact the reporter on this story: Chanyaporn Chanjaroen in London at cchanjaroen@bloomberg.net

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Emerging Market Stocks Slide, Treasuries, Credit Risk Surge on Dubai Debt

November 27, 2009

By Mark Gilbert Nov. 27 (Bloomberg) — Emerging-market stocks fell for a second day, Treasuries jumped and credit default swaps surged as Dubai’s attempt to delay debt repayments unnerved investors. European stocks pared declines. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index of 22 developing countries dropped 2.6 percent at 10:11 a.m. in London, the most since Oct. 28. Ten-year Treasury yields fell nine basis points. The yen rallied as much as 2 percent against the dollar before trading little changed on speculation Japan may act to curb gains. Credit-default swaps tied to debt sold by Dubai rose 134 basis points to 675, according to CMA DataVision. “Emerging markets could suffer the most because we saw the biggest gains there,” said Henrik Drusebjerg , a senior strategist at Nordea Investment Management in Copenhagen, which oversees $220 billion. “Everyone had a good year,” he said. “We are one month short of finalizing 2009, so you could see quite a substantial amount of investors cutting any potential losses now. The doom scenario is that this could revive the whole financial crisis.” Dubai World, the government investment company burdened by $59 billion of liabilities, sought this week to delay repayment on much of its debt. The yen pared its advance after Japan’s Finance Minister Hirohisa Fujii said he may contact the U.S. and Europe to act on currencies, signaling his concern that the yen’s ascent will hurt the economy by crimping exports. Kospi, Taiex The MSCI Asia Pacific Index slid 3.3 percent, the biggest drop in three months. South Korea’s Kospi index slumped 4.7 percent, and Taiwan’s Taiex lost 3.2 percent. Russia’s Micex index slipped 1.7 percent, while the ruble fell 1.8 percent, headed for its biggest drop in three months. The MSCI World Index slid 0.8 percent. Futures on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index plunged 2.6 percent, after U.S. markets were closed yesterday. The Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index of European shares fluctuated between gains and losses, after earlier sinking as much as 1.8 percent. European shares pared declines as banking stocks rallied. Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc , which was Dubai World’s biggest loan arranger since January 2007 according to JPMorgan Chase & Co., gained 4.1 percent in London, having plunged 10 percent earlier. HSBC Holdings Plc , Europe’s biggest bank, slipped 0.6 percent, after falling as much as 4.2 percent. Dubai Slump Dubai, which borrowed $80 billion in a four-year construction boom to transform its economy into a regional tourism and financial hub, suffered the world’s steepest property slump in the worst global recession since World War II. Home prices fell 50 percent from their 2008 peak, according to Deutsche Bank AG. “If Dubai has to default, that could start a wave of defaults in other areas,” Mark Mobius , the chairman of Templeton Asset Management Ltd. who oversees $25 billion in emerging-market assets, said in an interview on Bloomberg Television from Hanoi. “This may be the trigger to allow for the market to take a rest and pull back.” Credit-default swaps on emerging-market government and corporate bonds jumped, with contracts on Qatar adding 15 basis points to 129 and Abu Dhabi rising 24 to 184, according to CMA DataVision prices. Default swaps on DP World Ltd., the Middle East’s biggest port operator, rose 201 basis points to 810, with the swaps settled with a 12 percent payment in advance, according to CMA. Swaps on Malaysian government bonds rose 16 basis points to 120 and those on Thailand climbed 14 to 124. Credit-default swaps pay the buyer face value in exchange for the underlying securities or the cash equivalent should a borrower fail to adhere to its debt agreements. ‘Contagion Effect’ “People are worried about the contagion effect,” said Nader Naeimi , a Sydney-based strategist at AMP Capital Investors, which holds $75 billion in assets. “Events like this bring back all the bad memories from the global financial crisis.” Writedowns and losses at banks around the world have risen to more than $1.7 trillion since 2007 as the credit crisis undermined the value of assets owned by financial institutions, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The yen climbed against 14 of the 16 most-traded counterparts. The Japanese and U.S. currencies rose more than 1 percent against the Australian dollar. The yen also climbed against South Korea’s won and 1.8 percent versus Russia’s ruble. Japan’s Fujii said Group of Seven nations “will do what is necessary.” Financial Services Minister Shizuka Kamei urged an international response to halt the currency’s gain. Yen Speculation “People are scared and concerned about possible intervention,” said Yasutoshi Nagai , chief economist at Daiwa Securities SMBC Co. in Tokyo. The Bank of Japan may sell the yen “and buy Treasuries, which will be a plus for Treasuries,” he said. Central banks intervene by buying or selling their currencies after sudden movements. Treasuries rose the most this month, with the yield on the 10-year note falling as low as 3.15 percent, a level not seen since Oct. 2, according to BGCantor Market Data. The German 10- year bund and U.K. gilts due in 2019 gained. The difference in yield, or spread , between Greek 10-year debt and bunds reached 211 basis points, the most since May 1, as investors demanded a higher premium to hold anything but the safest securities. Copper led a plunge in industrial metals, dropping as much as 1.8 percent to $6,700 a metric ton on the London Metal Exchange. Aluminum, nickel and zinc also fell. Gold for immediate delivery retreated 3 percent to $1,152.42 an ounce. It earlier fell as much as 4.2 percent, the steepest drop since January. Silver declined 4.1 percent to $17.8925 an ounce. Wheat fell 3.3 percent to $5.525 a bushel in Chicago trading, corn slumped 3 percent to $3.9575 a bushel and soybeans retreated 2.8 percent to $10.255 a bushel. The market was closed yesterday for the Thanksgiving Day holiday. Brent crude oil for January settlement fell 1.8 percent to $75.58 a barrel, after plunging as much as 4.3 percent earlier today on the London-based ICE Futures Europe exchange. On the New York Mercantile Exchange, where markets didn’t settle yesterday because of the public holiday, January U.S. crude futures were trading at $74.36 a barrel, down 4.6 percent from the closing price on Nov. 25. To contact the reporter on this story: Mark Gilbert in London at magilbert@bloomberg.net .

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Banks in distress: Foreclosure properties mount (Las Vegas Sun)

November 27, 2009

Problem loans and foreclosed properties are weighing on Las Vegas banks’ balance sheets, according to third-quarter filings released Nov. 24 by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.

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Video: Commerzbank’s Costa Sees Abu Dhabi Taking on Dubai Debt: Video

November 27, 2009

Nov. 27 (Bloomberg) — Luis Costa, an emerging markets debt strategist at Commerzbank AG, talks with Bloomberg’s Mark Barton about the ability of Dubai to repay its debt. Dubai World, the company’s state-owned parent, will ask creditors for a “standstill” agreement on debt including $3.5 billion in Nakheel bonds that mature on Dec. 14. It’s the biggest maturity for a Dubai entity since credit markets froze last year. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Commerzbank’s Costa Sees Abu Dhabi Taking on Dubai Debt: Video

November 27, 2009

Nov. 27 (Bloomberg) — Luis Costa, an emerging markets debt strategist at Commerzbank AG, talks with Bloomberg’s Mark Barton about the ability of Dubai to repay its debt. Dubai World, the company’s state-owned parent, will ask creditors for a “standstill” agreement on debt including $3.5 billion in Nakheel bonds that mature on Dec. 14. It’s the biggest maturity for a Dubai entity since credit markets froze last year. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Gain’s Foley Doubts Japanese Intervention in Yen’s Rise

November 27, 2009

Nov. 27 (Bloomberg) — Jane Foley, research director at Gain Capital Group LLC, talks with Bloomberg’s Rishaad Salamat about the possibility that Japanese may intervene in currency markets after the yen rose to a 14-year high against the dollar, hurting exports.

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Video: Gain’s Foley Doubts Japanese Intervention in Yen’s Rise

November 27, 2009

Nov. 27 (Bloomberg) — Jane Foley, research director at Gain Capital Group LLC, talks with Bloomberg’s Rishaad Salamat about the possibility that Japanese may intervene in currency markets after the yen rose to a 14-year high against the dollar, hurting exports.

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Video: Lebedev Maintains Criticism of Kremlin During Crisis

November 27, 2009

Nov. 27 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Ryan Chilcote reports on Russian billionaire Alexander Lebedev and his often critical stance against the government. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Video: Lebedev Maintains Criticism of Kremlin During Crisis

November 27, 2009

Nov. 27 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Ryan Chilcote reports on Russian billionaire Alexander Lebedev and his often critical stance against the government. (Source: Bloomberg)

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