italy

menafn.com…

(MENAFN) Italy’s Prime Minister, Mario Monti, said that due to strict austerity measures followed by his government, the country will see “less recession” in 2012, reported AP. Monti said that …

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Italy to see "less recession" in 2012: Monti

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Huffington Post…

Nearly a hundred warehouse workers in California who spoke up about alleged wage violations and unsafe working conditions fear they now may lose their jobs. The workers, most of whom load and unload goods destined for Walmart stores, filed a class action lawsuit in the fall against staffing company Rogers-Premier Unloading Services, their employer, and against Schneider Logistics, the company that’s contracted by Walmart to oversee the Riverside County warehouse. The workers contended that they often weren’t paid the legal minimum wage or overtime and were threatened with termination when they complained. Now, the workers say they’ve been notified by management that their jobs will be end on Feb. 24, when a contract between Rogers-Premier and Schneider apparently comes to a close. Erin Elliott, a spokeswoman for Schneider, said that the move was “solely the decision of Rogers-Premier” and that the company will no longer provide workers to the Schneider facilities in Elwood, Ill., or Savannah, Ga., either. Rogers-Premier did not respond to a request for comment. Daniel Lopez, who has been loading trucks at the warehouse since 2009, said he was notified both orally and in writing that his job would end next month. “They just asked us to stay on with them until that day,” said Lopez, 32. Problems at the warehouse first came to light in October, when the California labor department announced it had launched an investigation into alleged labor law violations. Two staffing operations at the facility were cited for not properly maintaining time records for their workers and hit with fines totaling more than $1 million. Six workers filed the class action lawsuit on the heels of the state inspections, alleging they were routinely short-changed on their paychecks and required to work in excessively hot conditions. Warehouses like the Schneider facility commonly use temporary workers who are paid low wages and labor without benefits. As HuffPost detailed in an article last month, allegations of wage theft and other workplace abuses are common at the warehouses in the Inland Empire area of Southern California, one of the largest distribution nexuses in the world. The workers at such facilities — many of whom are Latino immigrants — may be employed directly by small labor agencies, but they often move products for the benefit of mega-retailers like Walmart. Officials with Warehouse Workers United , an advocacy group leading a unionization effort in the Inland Empire, predict that the Rogers-Premier workers will ultimately lose their jobs because they spurred a state investigation and sued their employer. “Either they’re getting fired as retaliation or because the company can’t make any money” while under scrutiny from investigators, argued Sheheryar Kaoosji, an organizer with the group. “Either way, it shows a problem.” Some of the workers held a demonstration with members of Occupy Riverside outside the warehouse on Wednesday morning. The group is calling on Schneider to make sure that the workers find continued employment at the warehouse through another staffing firm. Schneider spokeswoman Elliott says, “If we have openings, we would deal with them in the ordinary fashion, through screening and hiring.” In the lawsuit filed in October, the workers contended that they “spend their workdays performing strenuous, unskilled physical labor in an environment where the temperature often exceeds 90 degrees.” When they questioned their paychecks, their bosses “routinely responded with threats of retaliation and actual retaliation, including by sending the inquiring workers home without pay, refusing to give them work the next day … and imposing other forms of discipline on them,” according to the lawsuit. Lopez said that there were times in 2009 when he worked double shifts several days in a row and never received overtime pay. He added that when he started at the warehouse he was paid at an hourly rate, but he was eventually switched to a “piece rate” under which he was compensated based on the number of trucks he loaded. In the lawsuit, the workers say that they were told their pay would rise under the piece rate plan, but that, in fact, it went down. Lopez said he has been looking for work at other warehouses, although he hasn’t had any luck yet. “Because we know our rights, we spoke up,” Lopez said. “And I’m glad we spoke up. We’re not going to have a job, but I don’t regret it.”

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Warehouse Woes: Workers Say They’re Losing Jobs For Speaking Up

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Italian Prime Minister: No Nation Can Fight Debt Crisis Alone

January 7, 2012

ROME — No European nation is strong enough to ride out the continent’s debt crisis alone, Italy’s new premier insisted Saturday, urging fellow EU members to develop a common growth policy. Premier Mario Monti, leader of the eurozone’s third-largest economy, is an economist who was appointed in November with a mandate to pull Italy back from the brink of financial disaster. “Italy, in order to develop economically and socially, needs Europe, and Europe to be stronger needs Italy,” Monti said in a speech in the northern city of Reggio Emilia at a ceremony honoring the Italian flag. “No European country is so strong that it can go forward alone in facing the great global economies,” he added. “Europe needs to put into action common and coordinated growth policies on financial stability.” With Italy making what he called a “decisive contribution” to euro-zone stability, “now it’s the time for everyone to do their homework. No one can think they can do less than the others. Europe will overcome the crisis only with the determined and united action of all members,” said Monti, a former EU commissioner. Monti didn’t single out any country, but some critics have felt that Germany has been putting its own economic policy ahead of EU-wide interests. Monti will meet with German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Berlin on Wednesday and at a major European summit in Brussels at the end of the month. EU leaders at that summit will be wrestling with a worsening economic outlook, as more European nations tip over into recession, skepticism keeps rising over many EU countries’ bonds and the survival of the euro remains in doubt. “The eurozone must continue to represent an anchor and a secure reference point in all its geographic extensions,” Monti said. Monti has successfully prodded Italy’s often slow-moving parliament into approving quick spending cuts, new and higher taxes and reforms to the long-generous pension system that will see Italians working longer and retiring later. He singled out two factors in Italy’s favor: the fact that many of its families and business “are among the least indebted among industrialized nations.” But the premier tried to rally Italians to combat two chronically stubborn problems: corruption and widespread tax evasion by companies and citizens alike. Foreign investors are frequently discouraged from operating in Italy, where bureaucrats and politicians are often involved in corruption when it comes to securing permits, contracts or funding. Monti’s next priority is spurring growth in Italy, where the economy is stagnant, women have one of the EU’s lowest rates of employment and youth joblessness rates run 30 percent nationally and much higher in the underdeveloped south. But unions have vowed strikes and rallies to protest the government’s plan to overhaul labor laws protecting workers, including abolishing a provision that makes it very difficult to fire workers. Lawmakers, with an eye on 2013 elections, may also be nervous about demanding their voters make financial sacrifices.

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Best And Worst G7 Economies Of 2011 (Hint: Canada Isn’t Number 1)

December 28, 2011

OTTAWA – The Bank of Montreal says Canada’s economy was the second best in the Group of Seven big industrial nations this year. The bank says in its annual report card that only Germany, with a lower unemployment rate and a current account surplus, did better than Canada. Italy, which is facing a major sovereign debt crisis, fared worst in the group. The scorecard suggests that the Harper government’s contention that Canada leads the G7 in economic performance is a bit of an exaggeration. While Canada is performing better than the G7 average, Germany scores higher in four of five major categories — jobless rate, inflation, government fiscal health and the current account balance with the rest of the world. In the fifth category — credit rating — the two countries are tied with the top AAA rating. In a separate report, the Canadian Chamber of Commerce says Canada’s economy is likely to continue to experience growth, if moderate, in 2012. It predicts Canada’s gross domestic product will rise by two per cent next year, followed by a 2.6 per cent expansion in 2013 — both numbers similar to the consensus reading of economists.

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Italy Approves Austerity Budget, Stymieing Crisis

December 22, 2011

ROME — Italian Premier Mario Monti easily won a vote of confidence in the Senate on Thursday, signaling parliamentary approval of the government’s euro30 billion ($39 billion) package of tax hikes and pension changes. The austerity package is intended to save the country from financial disaster and follows rising concerns in the markets that Italy will find it difficult to pay off its massive debts, which stand at around euro1.9 trillion ($2.5 trillion). The vote passed 257-41, following passage in the lower Chamber of Deputies last week. Had it been defeated, Monti and his government of technocrats would have been forced to resign. The new government is tasked with making sure that Italy did not become the next victim of Europe’s debt crisis. In remarks to lawmakers prior to the vote, Monti said the package was “of extreme urgency and will allow Italy to face the European crisis with its head held high.” Among the most disputed measures in the legislation is a reform to Italy’s generous pension system, which will require Italians to work longer. Many of former premier Silvio Berlusconi’s loyalists, who make up Parliament’s largest party, also opposed Monti’s decision to revive a home property tax that Berlusconi had eliminated. Unions staged strikes and demonstrations last week to protest the measures. Monti has said his package of tax hikes, reforms and growth-boosting measures was the only way to save Italy financially and give young Italians a foundation for economic recovery and growth. Data released Wednesday showed that Italy, the eurozone’s third-largest economy, contracted 0.2 percent in the third quarter, furthering predictions of a mild recession in 2012.

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Credit Agency Warns Debt Could Lead To U.S. Downgrade

December 22, 2011

NEW YORK (Daniel Bases) – Fitch Ratings on Wednesday warned again that the United States’ rising debt burden was not consistent with maintaining the country’s top AAA credit rating, but said there would likely be no decision on whether to cut the rating before 2013. Last month, Fitch changed its U.S. credit rating outlook to negative from stable, citing the failure of a special congressional committee to agree on at least $1.2 trillion in deficit-reduction measures. “Federal debt will rise in the absence of expenditure and tax reforms that would address the challenges of rising health and social security spending as the population ages,” Fitch said in a statement. “The high and rising federal and general government debt burden is not consistent with the U.S. retaining its ‘AAA’ status despite its other fundamental sovereign credit strengths,” the ratings agency said. In a new fiscal projection, Fitch said at least $3.5 trillion of additional deficit reduction measures will be required to stabilize the federal debt held by the public at around 90 percent of gross domestic product in the latter half of the current decade. Fitch, when it lowered its outlook to negative, had said it was giving the U.S. government until 2013 to come up with a “credible plan” to tackle its ballooning budget deficit or risk a downgrade from the AAA status. “A key task of an incoming Congress and administration in 2013 is to formulate a credible plan to reduce the budget deficit and stabilize the federal debt burden. Without such a strategy, the sovereign rating will likely be lowered by the end of 2013,” Fitch reiterated. Rival ratings agency Standard & Poor’s cut its credit rating on the United States to AA-plus from AAA on August 5, citing concerns over the government’s budget deficit and rising debt burden as well as the political gridlock that nearly led to a default. On November 23, Moody’s Investors Service, warned that its top level Aaa credit rating for the United States could be in jeopardy if lawmakers were to backtrack on $1.2 trillion in automatic deficit cuts that are set to be made over 10 years. The plan for automatic cuts was triggered after the special congressional committee failed to reach an agreement on deficit reduction. Moody’s said any pullback from the agreed automatic cuts to take effect starting in 2013 could prompt it to take action. (Reporting By Daniel Bases; Editing by Leslie Adler) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Investors Falling Out Of Love With Hedge Funds

December 16, 2011

(Laurence Fletcher and Sinead Cruise) – Deep cracks are starting to show in the love affair between hedge funds and their investors, after another year of paltry returns on expensive investments leaves many feeling cheated and close to bailing out. An asset class once feted for its ability to make money in all markets is back under the spotlight after the average fund lost 4.4 percent in the first 11 months of the year, data from Hedge Fund Research shows. That tepid performance comes just three years after hedge funds lost an average 19 percent in 2008′s market chaos, and raises serious questions about the industry’s future growth, particularly in light of the huge fees the managers often earn. “I’m disappointed at the level of returns,” said one large institutional investor who asked not to be named. “The hedge fund industry has once again been underwhelming people’s expectations. “It’s an expensive asset class … They’re going to have to have another 2001 or 2003 in the next three-to-five years if they expect the industry to grow,” the investor said. Hedge funds, which made money both in 2001′s tumbling markets and 2003′s rally, have been caught out this year by whipsawing markets and high volatility amid the euro zone’s prolonged and deepening debt crisis. Equity funds — which often rely on fundamental stock analysis — have been particularly hurt, while macro funds, which bet on stocks, bonds, currencies and commodities, have also left some investors disappointed. Star managers have suffered, notably John Paulson, whose main Advantage fund was down 47 percent to the end of November, while Crispin Odey’s European fund is down around 15 percent to end-October, despite big gains in the autumn rally. “Most hedge funds have a cash benchmark so one really wants to ask — have they been better than cash after fees? My sense is that many have not,” said Patrick Rudden, head of blend strategies at AllianceBernstein. A review of hedge fund performance compiled by HSBC seen by Reuters shows huge variance of more than 80 percentage points across the industry during 2011. While the Paulson Advantage Plus fund was seen the worst performer this year, the Renaissance Institutional equities fund had advanced 32 percent by December 9. “Hedge fund performance figures this year should be seen in the context of exceptionally challenging circumstances for all market participants,” one industry source said. REDEMPTIONS Despite the humble returns, clients faced with volatile equity markets and meager returns on cash and government bonds markets aren’t pulling out wholesale from hedge funds because they do not know where to re-allocate to. However, Man Group and Polar Capital have both recently reported outflows from their funds and data from BarclayHedge and TrimTabs Investment Research on Monday showed investors asked funds to return $9 billion in October, more than three times the amount they pulled in September. “Obviously investors (across the industry) are not happy with performance … but many know why (funds have lost money) and they know you’re paid to manage risk,” Fabrice Cuchet, global head of alternative investments at Dexia Asset Management, told Reuters in a recent interview. However, dissatisfaction is certainly growing. Data from research group Preqin show the proportion of investors who say hedge fund returns have fallen short of their expectations has risen to 40 percent, compared with 28 percent last year and the 38 percent recorded in 2008′s market chaos. “In 2008 people were calling the end of the hedge fund industry, but in retrospect people scratched their heads and said, ‘the equity market is down 40 percent and hedge funds are down 20 percent. Have they done a good job? Yes,’” the large institutional investor said. “This (year) isn’t that. This isn’t a ‘down 40 percent’ year. It’s a totally different situation,” he said. Guy Saintfiet, senior hedge fund researcher at pensions consultant Aon Hewitt, which has $3.8 trillion in assets under advice, said new and existing clients were still allocating to hedge funds but were far more picky about the funds they backed. “But I think what you have seen is that the average hedge fund out there is probably not a good investment and that is the main lesson, not that the hedge funds our clients are investing in are not doing what they are supposed to be doing,” he said. Nevertheless, one head of hedge funds at a U.S. bank said the overall industry performance has been “unimpressive” since 2007 and a broad shake-up is needed if managers want to hold onto jittery investors chastened by recent volatility. “Not only is this a second down year in four, but the up years have been in line with the market. So you’ve had four years that have been in line or horrific,” the manager said, speaking anonymously to avoid souring business relationships. “In the new paradigm they should be aiming for capital protection. They should be trying to minimize down-capture and offer a decent amount of up-capture…I do have a genuine worry for the industry,” he said. (Additional reporting by Chris Vellacott; Editing by Jon Loades-Carter) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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World Leader In Tears Over Austerity Sacrifices

December 4, 2011

ROME (Reuters / December 4) – Italy’s welfare minister Elsa Fornero was reduced to tears at a news conference on Sunday as she outlined tough reforms to pensions contained in the government’s plan to regain control of strained public finances and help solve Europe’s debt crisis. Under the austerity plan unveiled on Sunday, Italy will raise the minimum pension age for women and men to 66 by 2018, and will scrap annual inflation adjustments for many pensions. “We had to… and it cost us a lot psychologically… ask for a…” Fornero said, but was unable to complete her sentence as she wiped tears from her eyes. Prime Minister Mario Monti finished the sentence for her, speaking the word “sacrifice” that she’d been unable say. (Reporting By Catherine Hornby; Editorial Michael Roddy) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Italian Borrowing Rates Surge, As Pressure Mounts For Reforms

November 28, 2011

MILAN — Italy’s borrowing rates skyrocketed at a bond auction Monday for the second straight business day, as pressure mounted on the eurozone’s third-largest economy to come up with quick reforms to keep the euro from breaking up. The interest rate Italy had to pay to get investors to part with their cash for 12 years soared to 7.20 percent, a full 2.7 percentage points higher than the last similar auction. In the auction, Italy raised euro567 million ($750 million). While there were enough bids to cover the maximum sought of euro750 million ($1 billion), the high borrowing rates persuaded the Italian Treasury to stick closer to the lower end of its planned issuance range. Premier Mario Monti is under enormous pressure to convince markets that his new technocratic government has a strategy to get a grip on its debts and balance the budget by 2013. He is expected to announce additional austerity measures later this week. A bigger test will come Tuesday, when Italy plans to auction up to euro8 billion ($10.6 billion) in debt of three varying maturities, including the benchmark 10-year issues. Last Friday, Italy had to pay sharply higher rates in a pair of auctions, stoking renewed fears that the country is heading toward a potentially devastating debt spiral that could bankrupt the country and potentially bring down the euro. Driving market fears is the knowledge that Italy is too big for Europe to bail out, and must refinanceeuro200 billion ($267 billion) by the end of April alone. The bond yields also reflect grim economic data that suggest Italy will be in a recession no later than the first quarter of 2012. The OECD on Monday forecast Italian growth a 0.7 percent of GDP in 2011, followed by a contraction of 0.5 percent next year. That’s a sharp cut in previous forecasts of 1.1 percent growth in 2011 and 1.6 percent growth in 2012. Italian business confidence improved somewhat in November, to 94.4, after hitting a 21-month low of 94.2 last month. Despite the increase, “it remains very low and alongside other industry-related indicators signal that the economy is facing serious headwinds,” said Raj Badiani, an economic analyst at IHS Global Insight. Earlier Monday, the International Monetary Fund denied reports that it’s readying a rescue fund for Italy. The Italian daily La Stampa reported that the IMF was preparing a euro600 billion ($794 billion) bailout fund for Italy, which is struggling to manage its enormous public debt of euro1.9 trillion, or nearly 120 percent of GDP. But an IMF spokesman said there are “no discussions with Italian authorities on a program for IMF financing.” And EU spokesman Amadeu Altafaj Tardio also said there have been no such discussion with the European Union. Italy’s banking association, ABI, on Monday inaugurated its first sovereign debt day, during which customers could buy Italian bonds on the secondary market without paying commission. The goal is to create trust in Italian debt – about half of which is in Italian hands – rather than directly influencing borrowing costs. ABI said it was too early to gauge a response to the promotion announced just Friday, but one bank in Rome said it had three or four takers. Customers can save euro2 to euro4 euros on every euro1,000 invested. Another is planned for the Dec. 12 auction. “This initiative seems to be positive, but it probably is just a drop in the ocean, because people are very cautious and are waiting to see what will happen,” said Giuseppe di Bartolomeo, outside a bank in central Rome. Monti was appointed earlier this month to replace Silvio Berlusconi, whose fractious conservative coalition squabbled for months over measures to inject growth into the flagging Italian economy. Monti has pledged a two-track strategy: urgent austerity measures followed by deeper reforms that will be painful for voters to accept. They include revamps of the pension system, doing away with a class of privileged closed professions that discourage competition, cutting political costs, simplifying bureaucracy and selling off state assets. Monti must obtain approval for the measures from the same Parliament that hamstrung Berlusconi. To make the new austerity more palatable, Monti intends to balance sacrifices from the various political camps – and has promised a spending review of political costs starting with the premier’s office. _____ Don Melvin contributed from Brussels.

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Meet Italy’s Likely New Leader

November 13, 2011

MILAN — The man tapped to be Italy’s next premier earned the moniker “Super Mario” in the halls of the European Commission, stopping such corporate giants as Jack Welch and Bill Gates in their competitive tracks. Elegantly attired with a formal demeanor, Mario Monti proved his mettle as a tough negotiator when he blocked the merger of General Electric and Honeywell and levied a euro500 million fine against Microsoft for abusing its dominant position. “He moves with caution and speaks with nuances. But he moves,” said Carlo Guarnieri, a political scientist at the University of Bologna. A leading economist, Monti is among the most respected men in the country and the most admired Italians in Europe. That will be no guarantee for success in the Herculean task before him: building a majority large enough to push painful structural reforms through a fractured Parliament to prevent Italy from being dragged into the burgeoning debt crisis. But he has some clear assets: he is part of the Italian financial establishment, has strong ties to European institutions and governments and enjoys the clear support of President Giorgio Napolitano, who gave Monti a mandate Sunday to form a new government. Providing a sober contrast to the audacious Silvio Berlusconi, who resigned Saturday, Monti also is the favorite of the financial markets, which eased pressure on Italian borrowing costs after his candidacy gained currency. Monti, 68, cuts an austere and serious figure, which people who know him say defies a subtle wit. He is multilingual and moves easily among European capitals. Now the president of Milan’s prestigious Bocconi University, he spent 10 years at the European Commission, about half in the powerful post of competition commissioner, and is one of the founders of the Brussels-based Bruegel think tank, which blends research with policy recommendations. Monti is fully engaged in the European conversation on the common currency and the role of its institutions. The night Napolitano named him senator for life in Rome this past week, Monti was sitting on a panel discussing the euro’s future in Berlin. “A person on the flight from Milan this morning asked me, ‘Mr. Monti, are you sure your are taking the right flight?’” he quipped. While there is no question Monti is part of the political elite and travels in the rarified circles of European policymakers, he does not give the impression of being out of touch with ordinary Italians. TV clips show Monti filling his car with gas – a clear contrast with fumbling responses by lawmakers asked recently by TV satire programs the price of fuel. In perk-filled Italy, the image of Monti at the gas tank carries more meaning than that of a powerful figure engaged in ordinary tasks, but that of a powerful man who does not seek privilege – something he says he wants to stamp out. “By introducing more competition, we will in due course introduce more merit and less of a role for nepotism, clientism, corruption, whatever,” Monti said in Berlin this week. Monti was born in the town of Varese, north of Milan, the son of a bank manager. As a teen, his father took him to see the U.S. and the Soviet Union at the height of the Cold War so he could form a personal view of the two powers. He earned an economics and management degree at Bocconi and later studied in the U.S. at Yale, and spent years teaching economics at several Italian universities. He is recognized as a champion of the free market and reduced government spending, who has been influential in setting European and international antitrust standards. “I have always been considered to be the most German among Italian economists, which I always received as a compliment, but which was rarely meant to be a compliment,” Monti told a panel on the euro crisis hosted by the Dahrendorf Symposium in Berlin. He has called the German culture of stability one of its “better exports” – a view which certainly will help Rome’s relations with powerful Berlin as he tackles Italy’s enormous debt and stagnant growth. But associates say he also is confident to stand up to European institutions – something the Berlusconi government has lacked. Monti is well aware of the negative prejudices faced by Italians in the European arena, a view only exacerbated in recent years by Berlusconi’s sex scandals, numerous trials for business dealings and public gaffes, sometimes at the expense of other leaders. Although well-known in his own right, the contrast with Berlusconi is playing well across Europe. ZDF German television this week described Monti as a “sober finance expert – the opposite of Berlusconi.” “I think Mario is viewed as a breath of fresh air which would immediately garner that kind of positive sense from other major European leaders,” a former U.S. ambassador to Italy, Ronald Spolgi, said on the sidelines of a conference at Stanford University. Fellow Milan resident Giorgio Armani thinks Monti “is physically perfect for being premier,” praising his “cerebral elegance.” Monti has managed a difficult feat in polarized Italy: He has respect both of the left and the right. Few would be able to court favor from both Berlusconi and archrival Romano Prodi, but Monti did just that. Berlusconi’s government nominated Monti to the European Commission in 1994, while Prodi, at the time EU president, made him EU competition commissioner in 1999. Berlusconi this week offered his congratulations to Monti on his appointment as senator for life, recognizing his “outstanding achievements in the field of science and social work.” Only in recent months has Monti openly said it was time for Berlusconi to go in the occasional commentaries he has published in Corriere della Sera since 1978. While his lack of political strings has gained him widespread trust, it could also work against him as the head of a government of technocrats. “There is concern being voiced here in some quarters about whether it is a good move to install a government which is not anchored in partisan politics in Italy. You need politics in Italy,” said Paris-based Thomas Klau of the European Council of Foreign Relations. “Leaving that objection aside, I think there is no other figure currently in Italy enjoying so much cross-border respect as Mario Monti.” Monti has indicated his strategy for governing a politically divided Italy in editorials on the crisis he has written for Corriere, said Francesco Giavazzi, an economics professor at Bocconi. Recognizing that structural reforms will be unpopular in vast segments of the population, Monti’s philosophy is to spread the pain: balance reforms harmful to voters on the left with those harmful to voters on the right. “At the end of the day, you are at the same point. That is his philosophy to avoid the deadlock in the reform process,” Giavazzi said. “You can argue that his theory will be very hard to implement. I think the strong point of the government is that it would have a very clear idea of what to do.” ___ Brooke Donald contributed from Palo Alto, California.

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Silvio Berlusconi Resigns

November 12, 2011

ROME — Italy’s presidential palace has confirmed that Premier Silvio Berlusconi has resigned, setting in motion a transition aimed at bringing Italy back from the brink of economic crisis. Cheers broke out in front of the palace by the hundreds of people who gathered to witness Berlusconi’s final act in office, ending a 17-year political era. THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP’s earlier story is below. ROME (AP) – An Italian news report says Premier Silvio Berlusconi’s political party will conditionally support a technical government headed by economist Mario Monti. Italy’s president is expected to ask Monti to try to form a new government once Berlusconi’s resignation is confirmed Saturday night. Monti will be tasked with trying to bring Italy back from the brink of a Greek-style economic crisis. The LaPresse news agency quotes a statement issued after Berlusconi chaired a meeting of his People of Liberties Party, saying the party would tell President Giorgio Napolitano that it would back Monti. But it said the party would meet again to ensure that Monti’s Cabinet, legislative agenda and the timeframe of his government meet its requirements.

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Tim Chen: Are Bank Fees Too Complex? The Case for Fee Transparency

November 11, 2011

Now that Bank of America has scrapped their plan to charge a $5 debit card usage fee, and Chase and Wells Fargo have followed suit, you might think banks have learned their lesson about excessive fees. Well, they have, and that lesson is “be less obvious.” Banks are still looking for new ways to squeeze extra money out of you, and they have been for a while. They’ve just had much better luck with subtle fee hikes. You may have noticed that most “free” checking accounts now have a higher minimum balance requirement than they did before, or maybe they require you to perform more types of transactions each month. Your account’s still free… if you can keep up with the changing rules. More fees to come There are plenty more surprise fees on the horizon. If you have an account at a big bank, expect to be charged more for services you already pay for, and get used to paying for services that used to be free. TD Bank recently announced that they’ll be adding a new fee and hiking some existing fees in December. Savings account customers will become subject to a $9 excessive withdrawal fee, wire transfers will be $15 instead of $10, and certified checks will be $8 instead of $4, just to name a few examples. TD Bank is in good company. Also in December, Citibank will start charging its mid-level account holders $20 a month if they don’t maintain a minimum balance of $15,000. The minimum balance requirement was previously raised to $6,000, which is already a stretch for many people. And if you think you’re off the hook for having a “simple” checking account, think again. Bank of America’s new e-banking account charges $8.95 a month for the privilege of talking to a teller at your local branch when you need to make a transaction or deposit. This is just the tip of the bank fee iceberg. It all adds up to bad news for struggling consumers. Nothing to see here! Move along While the new fees may be upsetting, there’s absolutely nothing wrong with them from a legal standpoint. Banks are required by law to inform their customers every time there’s a new fee or account requirement, and they do. They just don’t go out of their way to make sure you’ve read their emails, opened their letters or checked your account statements. When consumers skim or skip these important messages, they don’t hear about new fees until they have to pay them, and they feel like they’ve been had. But even diligent customers are getting frustrated with fees. The debit fee backlash has made that perfectly clear. Nevertheless, if you ask the banks why they keep adding fees, they’ll tell you they have no choice. They’re just trying to make up for their lost profit margin. Sneaky fees are big business Banks have always made money off fees that many consumers don’t notice. These fees have always been disclosed, but never prominently advertised. Many of them took advantage of customers who had difficulty making payments. Take overdraft fees, for example. Before the Federal Reserve banned automatic overdraft protection , banks could always count on charging customers a hefty fine each time they didn’t have enough funds to cover a transaction. Now customers must opt-in for this service. Consumers also don’t notice the fees they don’t have to pay. Many of the “free” bank products they enjoy, such as debit cards, are paid for by other people (in this case, the merchant who accepts your card). With new financial regulations putting restrictions on these fees, banks have gotten creative and added others. This is why it’s way more common to see checking account fees, and perks like debit rewards have disappeared at many institutions. The ongoing push for fee transparency All this begs the question: is it people’s responsibility to sift through paperwork and keep tabs on every little fee, or should banks be required to simplify things for their customers? In April 2011, long before the debit fee hullabaloo, the Pew Health Group’s Safe Checking in the Electronic Age Project released a study of checking account terms and conditions. The median length of bank disclosures (all the policy and fee information) was a whopping 111 pages. U.S. Senators Jack Reed and Dick Durbin have recently taken notice, and declared that bank paperwork needs to be simpler. On November 3rd, they asked America’s banks to voluntarily adopt the Pew’s sample checking account disclosure form in order to make account terms easy for consumers to understand. Credit card terms and conditions: a good role model? It wouldn’t be unprecedented for banks to adopt a short, standardized format for checking account terms. They already have something like that for credit card disclosures: that ubiquitous black and white table with your APR, foreign transaction fee , and other payment disclosures is called the Schumer Box. It’s just a few pages long, and it makes it much easier for consumers to compare credit card offers from multiple banks. In a Schumer Box, you’ll find the same important information in the same place each time, and it will always be written in a 12-point font, minimum. Former New York congressman Charles Schumer drafted the legislation that took effect in 2000. Not a perfect solution, but a good start Of course, the Schumer Box could also be a case against the Pew disclosure box. Even with a comparison chart, many consumers still don’t understand how their credit cards work. An APR doesn’t provide a clear picture of what your debt payments will be, even when it’s in 18-point font. Furthermore, clear credit card disclosures can’t force people to spend within their means or fix bad credit . In order to create real reform, America needs to teach its citizens how to manage their finances, and give the disadvantaged a real means to pull themselves out of the poverty cycle. A checking account disclosure box will not fix these problems. Nevertheless, it’s a step in the right direction. Anything that helps consumers make more informed choices is a good idea. Even if banks don’t adopt the Pew form, let’s hope they pay attention to consumer concerns. In the mean time, do your best to read every bit of bank paperwork that comes your way, and take responsibility for understanding your account terms. If you don’t understand something, or don’t like a new fee, don’t wait to ask about it.

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How Is The European Debt Crisis Affecting Your Business?

November 11, 2011

Main Street can feel pretty far away from, say, the piazzas of Rome and the platias of Athens. But the recent political and economic turmoil in Italy, Greece and elsewhere across Europe has shaken global markets — and the aftershocks are eventually felt right back here at home. For better or worse — and there are cases to be made for both — the world is indeed becoming flatter and more interconnected. Which is great during boom times, providing a huge potential market that simply wasn’t possible to reach just a generation ago. Problem is, in the financial markets and beyond, trouble can spread much more quickly as a result. Entrepreneurs in general are wise to keep a close eye on global news and trends, even if they still do all of their business in the good ol’ US of A, because the reality is that at least something in your supply chain inevitably comes from somewhere else these days. And for entrepreneurs that already do direct business overseas in some capacity, you’re probably already feeling it. From revised investment strategies to a drop in customer demand, the members of our Board of Directors are doing just that. So we asked them to weigh in the unfolding crises in Europe — and what it means for their businesses.

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Lynn Forester de Rothschild: Restoring Capitalism — Restoring America

November 10, 2011

Although portrayed as opposites, the Tea Party and Occupy Wall Street protesters are essentially kissing cousins, both with important contributions to make to America. Neither movement believes that our nation is working for them. They see a society rigged by big government, big labor and big business against the people. They have a point. Ironically, they would each be more persuasive if they acted together, instead of allowing themselves to be exploited by the squabbling and ineffective political parties. Engagement in a war of attrition dilutes the power of both groups. However, the two movements could claim victory if they force our nation to rethink and rebuild our economy and our civil society based on a shared belief in the best of our democratic values and capitalist roots. President Obama has broken trust with the American people. Not only has he left us more bitterly divided than ever imaginable, but since the beginning of his presidency, 1.3 million more Americans are unemployed, 913,000 private sector jobs have been destroyed, 13 million people have been added to food stamp dependency and over 6 million have lost their homes. While our economy needs 90,000 new jobs each month just to keep up with our national birth rate, we have reached that threshold only 9 times since February 2009. All that is bad enough, but at the same time our government has increased our debt burden from $5.8 trillion in 2008 (40.3% of GDP) to over $9 trillion in 2011 (67% of GDP). And, our annual federal government budget deficit has grown from $458 billion in 2008 to $1.4 trillion in 2011. Only 19% of Americans “always” or “mostly” trust the government to do what is right, down from 75% in 1958. Millions are fed up and are opting to “starve the beast”. That is not crazy. In light of all this, the government’s disproportionate protection of the financial sector is appalling. The implied guarantee for “too big to fail” banks, a tax regime that levies lower tax rates on financial engineers making millions at hedge funds and private equity funds than on earners in any other industry, and the failure of banks to loosen financing for small and medium sized businesses hurts the majority. Lending to small and medium businesses has fallen to $607 billion from $711 billion in 2008. This is in spite of the June 2011 report by the Federal Reserve that excess reserves at banks totals nearly $1.57 trillion — 20 times what banks need to satisfy their reserve requirements. These realities provide evidence of collusion between the political and financial elites. Frustration, even anger, with this state of our country is not insane or unreasonable. But, to blame either a duplicitous government or a greedy private sector is too simple. Instead, we need to ask all sides to put aside their divisive rhetoric and work together to restore the shared greatness of America. Although abused in recent years, capitalism has been the bedrock of our prosperity and our fairness. In order for our economy to lift all of our citizens, our economy will need to be powered by the private sector and government will have to take actions that are anathema to the vested interests of both parties. We must find common ground to reform our tax system, eliminate most tax subsidies, recalibrate our regulations, restructure our entitlement programs, re-create a smaller and wiser government and establish private-public partnerships for many essential tasks. We have had leadership in America in the past that has brought us together in this way. Bill Clinton had it right in his State of the Union Address in 1996 when he said, “the era of big government is over. But we cannot go back to the era of fending for yourself. We have to go forward to the era of working together as a community, as a team, as one America, with all of us reaching across these lines that divide us — the division, the discrimination, the rancor — we have to reach across it to find common ground. We have got to work together if we want America to work”. The Occupy Wall Street and the Tea Party movements both have legitimate gripes. We need to be what we have always been; a nation that creates better opportunities for a greater number of people. It is through the hopes and dreams and hard work of the believers in the American Dream that our differences will disappear and our confidence will return. After all, deep down in our soul we know that with inspired leadership, which we sorely lack right now, success, and even outrageous fortune, should be available to anyone who works hard and plays by the rules in America. Lynn Forester de Rothschild is CEO of EL Rothschild, LLC and the co-Chair of the “Better Values, Better Markets” Task Force at the Henry Jackson Society in London.

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1,200 Retailers Cited For Violating Tobacco Rules

November 10, 2011

RICHMOND, Va. — The Food and Drug Administration said Thursday it has issued about 1,200 warning letters to retailers in 15 states for violating federal tobacco regulations since beginning inspections under a 2009 law giving it authority to regulate the industry. The agency’s Center for Tobacco Products, using state contractors, has conducted more than 27,500 inspections of stores selling tobacco products. It is combating underage use of tobacco products, while also seeking to reduce tobacco-related diseases, which are responsible for about 443,000 deaths a year in the U.S. “We all recognize that almost all smokers start smoking when they are kids, and those kids have to get those tobacco products somewhere,” Dr. Lawrence Deyton, director of the Center for Tobacco Products, said in an interview with The Associated Press. “The retail community really is on the front line of helping to prevent our kids from initiating tobacco use. … It’s very important for every neighborhood to know that their retailers are enforcing this new law.” Inspectors visiting retailers nationwide were looking for violations of federal laws barring the sale of cigarettes or other tobacco products to anyone under 18 years old. There are also laws against the sale of flavored cigarettes or of cigarettes in packs that contain the words like “light,” “mild,” or “low-tar.” Other laws bar retailers from selling single cigarettes, giving away free samples or promotional items like hats and T-shirts with cigarette and smokeless tobacco brands or logos. Most of the warning letters were for retailers selling tobacco to minors, who were sent into stores to make undercover purchases. Once they receive a warning letter, retailers then have 15 days to respond on how they plan to address the violations. After one violation, retailers can be fined for breaking tobacco laws during follow-up inspections. Retailers with a second violation within a year can be fined up to $250, with penalties growing to $10,000 for six or more violations within four years. They also can be banned from selling tobacco products. Over the last two years, the FDA has contracted with 37 states and the District of Columbia to do retail compliance checks with at least 20 percent of stores in each state. The data released by the agency is only for the 15 states which the agency initially contracted in fiscal year 2010. States are trained by the FDA and paid by fees charged to the tobacco companies. How much the FDA pays states to participate varies on factors including the size of their enforcement plan and how many retail locations they have in the state. The agency says the contracts total $24 million have led to more than 265 jobs. The FDA collected nearly $260 million in user fees from tobacco companies for fiscal 2009 and 2010 combined, and should collect $450 million this year. User fees will grow to $712 million by 2019. Fees are collected quarterly and based on each company’s share of the U.S. tobacco market. The agency won the authority in 2009 to regulate tobacco products, including the ability to ban certain products, regulate marketing, reduce nicotine in tobacco products and block labels such “low tar” and “light.” About 46 million Americans – one out of every five – smoke, and more than 3 percent of American adults use smokeless tobacco, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The agency also says 17 percent of high school students smoke and 6 percent of them use smokeless tobacco. ___ Michael Felberbaum can be reached at . http://www.twitter.com/MLFelberbaum

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Toyota Recalls Over Half A Million Vehicles For Possible Steering Problems

November 9, 2011

TOKYO — Toyota Motor Corp. said Wednesday it is recalling about 550,000 vehicles worldwide – mostly in the United States – for problems that could make it harder to steer. The recall affects 447,000 vehicles in North America, as well as 38,000 in Japan and another 25,000 in Australia and New Zealand, said Toyota spokesman Dion Corbett. In Europe some 14,000 vehicles are being recalled along with 10,000 in the Middle East and 14,000 in Asia outside Japan. There have been no reports of accidents or injuries related to the problems, Corbett said. Toyota’s reputation has taken a hit over the last two years due to a string of huge recalls that have ballooned to 14 million vehicles over that time, including millions recalled last year for acceleration problems. It faces damage lawsuits and lingering doubts in the U.S. about whether it had been transparent enough about the recall woes. Japan’s largest automaker has been trying to communicate better with customers and empower regional operations outside Japan to make safety decisions. The news comes a day after Toyota said its July-September profit slid 18.5 percent to 80.4 billion yen ($1 billion) on plunging sales caused by parts shortages from the tsunami disaster in northeastern Japan. It now faces such uncertainties from flooding in Thailand, where it has many suppliers and three assembly plants, that it declined to release an earnings forecast for the full year through March. The latest recall is due to the possibility that the outer ring of the engine’s crankshaft pulley may become misaligned with the inner ring, causing noise or a warning signal to light up, the company’s U.S. sales unit said in a press release. If the problem isn’t corrected, the belt for the power steering pump may become detached from the pulley, making it suddenly more difficult to turn the driving wheel. In the United States, the automaker is recalling 283,200 Toyota brand cars, including the 2004 and 2005 Camry, Highlander, Sienna and Solara, the 2004 Avalon and the 2006 Highlander HV. Its recall of 137,000 Lexus vehicles includes the 2004 and 2005 ES330 and RX330 and 2006 RX400h. The recall notification process varies from country to country. In the U.S., Toyota will mail owners a notification to make an appointment with an authorized dealer to have their car inspected once replacement parts have been produced in sufficient quantities. If needed, parts will be replaced for no charge, the company’s American sales unit said. Notifications will be mailed starting in January. In the meantime, if an abnormal noise is heard coming from the engine compartment, the owner is asked to make an appointment with any Toyota or Lexus dealer to have the vehicle inspected for this condition, the release said.

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The Most Mentioned Wall Street Firm In Media This Year

November 8, 2011

The story is just one of many the media stories published about Goldman Sachs this year. For the third time in a row, the investment bank was mentioned more than any other Wall Street firm by global media outlets this year, according to a study by HighBeam Research, cited in DealBook. Goldman netted nearly 16 percent of all media mentions of Wall Street firms during the first 10 months of 2011, followed by HSBC, Deutche Bank and Morgan Stanley, the survey found. With so much controversy surrounding the financial industry, Goldman’s top ranking may not be such a good thing for the investment bank. Goldman may have received the bulk of media mentions because it’s often targeted as a major symbol of Wall Street’s worst tendencies . Regardless of reputation, Goldman has been associated with some notable media stories this year. A former director at the investment bank, Rajat Gupta surrendered last month in a high-profile insider trading case. The bank also suffered its second loss ever as a public company last quarter , posting a total revenue decline of 60 percent since the same period last year. Jon Corzine, former CEO of MF Global — the securities firm that’s come under scrutiny after filling for bankruptcy — also used to head Goldman . Another big story that may have boosted Goldman’s presence in the media: Occupy Wall Street. The investment bank reportedly told its employees last month to stay away from the protests in Zuccotti Park. In addition, Goldman dropped out of backing and attending a credit union fundraiser after finding out that Occupy Wall Street would be an honoree. Coverage of the Occupy movement reached the same level as that of the Tea Party in early October, according to a study by the Pew Research Center cited in The New York Times . In addition, the protests took up 7 percent of national media coverage during the first week of October. Though Goldman ranked number one of Wall Street firms in mentions in traditional media, another bank has been getting slammed on social media recently. Eighty-seven percent of Bank of America mentions on social media in the past year were negative, according to Marketwire. BofA was roundly criticized by consumers and law makers after announcing that it would charge customers $5 per month to use their debit cards starting in 2012. The bank ultimately back-tracked from the fee earlier this month.

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G20 Branded ‘A Failure’ With Greek Crisis Showing No Signs Of Ending

November 5, 2011

The G20 Summit in Cannes has largely been branded a failure by political pundits, with David Cameron warning the continued uncertainty surrounding the bailouts for Greece and the wider Eurozone risks damaging the British economy. UK ministers have used interviews to warn growth is likely to remain sluggish following the breakup of talks in France. A communique issued by the heads of government following the talks describes the G20 summit as “successful”, but the claim was almost immediately rubbished by Britain’s prime minister, who warned the problems within the Eurozone hadn’t been fixed. David Cameron told reporters: “This is having a chilling effect on our economy. Every day that it goes on unresolved is a day that’s not good for our economic prospects.” The only political relief for Cameron is he now has a good explanation when the growth figures for the final quarter of 2011 come in. Most analysts predict that the modest gains seen over the summer will be wiped out. Expect the narrative now coming from Downing Street of the Eurozone crisis providing a “chilling effect” on the UK economy to be expanded. The heads of government hoped the Greek political crisis would have moved towards a resolution last night but instead prime minister George Papandreou survived a confidence motion at the parliament in Athens . He has suggested he could now become the head of a government of national unity, but the fractious nature of Greek politics makes this unlikely. The main opposition party says they won’t enter into government with him , prompting speculation that Papandreou will have to resign anyway in the next few days. Although the UK has signalled it is ready to increase its IMF contributions, how much those payments might be – and where that money might be needed – remains unclear. The Italian government has been told the IMF will be monitoring its austerity agenda closely, amid fears Italy could be the first major European economy to come under the kind of pressure that has afflicted Ireland, Portugal and Greece. One British official told The Guardian of their frustration : “We cannot have the Italians meeting in crisis every three days. We need some action.” David Cameron has confirmed that any rise in British IMF contributions won’t require a Commons vote because the money will fall within potential funds already agreed on in June – that vote saw a significant Tory rebellion, although by no means as large as the one seen a fortnight ago on the EU referendum motion. But many Tories are disturbed by the idea of Britain putting more money into the IMF. Tory 1922 Committee Secretary Mark Pritchard told HuffPost UK yesterday that the limited measures agreed at the G20 amounted to “a back-door bailout in all but name.” In an interview with The Daily Telegraph employment minister Chris Grayling signalled support for the Euro rebel Tory MPs, saying, “I understand where our colleagues were coming from,” and suggested that whatever happens within the Eurozone will require “significant renegotiation” of Britain’s place within the EU.

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Euro zone crisis set to dominate G20 Paris meeting

October 14, 2011

By Catherine Bremer and Daniel Flynn PARIS (Reuters) – G20 finance chiefs and central bank heads from the world’s biggest economies meet in Paris on Friday needing to find a solution to a deepening euro zone debt crisis that has fanned fears of a global recession. Underlining the challenge for European policymakers, Standard and Poor’s cut Spain’s long-term credit rating, citing the country’s high unemployment, tightening credit and high private sector debt. “This meeting takes place in a context where the absolute priority for the success of the G20 is to find the elements for the stability of the euro zone,” a source at the French finance ministry said. French and German officials are battling to flesh out the bones of a crisis resolution plan in time for a European Union summit on October 23. Fears about the damage a default by Greece — and possibly others — could inflict on the financial system have driven a confidence-sapping bout of market volatility since late July, with global stocks falling 17 percent from their 2011 high in May. With impatience growing over the crisis, and its implications for the rest of the world, finance chiefs from outside the bloc are expected to speak frankly. “This meeting is an important staging point before (a G20 summit in) Cannes and a valuable opportunity to put pressure on the euro zone,” said a non-euro zone G20 delegate. Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty set the tone late on Thursday, telling reporters before leaving Ottawa that euro zone actions were short of what is needed. Japan would urge its European partners to support the continent’s banks, Finance Minister Jun Azumi said. RISK OF DIVISION Unlike in 2009 when the G20 launched a coordinated stimulus to pull the world out of crisis, the forum is at risk of division as the rest of the world chafes at Europe’s dithering over a debt crisis that started two years ago in Greece, and as Washington and Beijing spar over the yuan currency. Paris and Berlin are taking time to agree on how to recapitalize banks and while Germany favors a second round of losses for Greek bondholders, Paris is reluctant. The two euro heavyweights also differ on the idea of joint bond issuance for the euro zone, with Germany loath to see its debt costs rise. The Franco-German crisis plan is likely to ask banks to accept big losses on their Greek debt and should lay out a system for recapitalizing troubled banks, whose shares have been pounded by fears about Greek exposure. At its core will be an agreement on how to increase the firepower of the EFSF rescue fund, and it should also set out a timeframe for ramping up economic coordination, with closer governance and explicit national laws on balancing budgets. A key concern has been that, whilst the EFSF has the resources to cope with bailouts for Greece, Portugal and Spain, it would be overwhelmed by the need to rescue a bigger economy such as Italy or Spain. The latter two countries, the bloc’s third and fourth biggest economies respectively, have seen their bond yields pushed up by markets worried at high public and private debt levels and weak growth. In Spain, some banks are seen as vulnerable after the bursting of a property bubble, and the country is still struggling with labor market reforms. “Despite signs of resilience in economic performance during 2011, we see heightened risks to Spain’s growth prospects due to high unemployment, tighter financial conditions, the still high level of private sector debt, and the likely economic slowdown in Spain’s main trading partners,” S&P said. The agency’s downgrade of the nation’s long-term rating to AA- from AA mirrored a similar move last week by rival Fitch. The G20 may refer to the euro crisis in its communique and in closing news conferences on Saturday evening, but little else of substance is likely to be inked in. CHINA MAY OFFER GROWTH, NO YUAN SHIFT This week’s talks may give the green light to regulators for new rules on banks deemed ‘too big to fail’, including capital surcharges, due to be officially approved in Cannes. Yet any concrete progress on bigger goals such as setting parameters to measure global imbalances and reining in commodity market volatility and speculative capital flows is unlikely to come before a November 3-4 summit in Cannes, where France passes the G20 baton to Mexico. The finance ministry source said that for Cannes, France hoped to have two or three measures agreed for countries showing imbalances: consolidation measures for those with high deficits and stimulus measures for those with surpluses. “We are going to try to make some progress and obtain, perhaps not tomorrow or Saturday but by Cannes, a list of measures country by country which corresponds to what is needed to relaunch global economic activity,” he said. “These must be measures which will have an impact on the real economy.” A separate G20 source said after preparatory talks late on Thursday that China would commit in Paris to boost its consumption through a five-year plan, via households and companies as well as infrastructure, as the G20 seeks tough fiscal commitments from the euro zone and the United States. The G20 countries make up 85 percent of global output. An April G20 meeting placed seven large economies under review — the debt-burdened United States, export-rich China, France, Britain, Germany, Japan and India. Officials have said privately the aim was to get Beijing to discuss the yuan, and China’s cooperation is essential to the success of the process. France has dangled the prospect of the yuan entering the basket of currencies making up the IMF’s Special Drawing Right (SDR) in a bid to divert the debate away from its value and onto the criteria of free “usability” required for this. But the euro zone crisis has derailed French President Nicolas Sarkozy’s hopes of using his G20 presidency to launch a fundamental rethink of the global financial system and its reliance on the U.S. dollar. China and the United States sparred this week over a U.S. Senate bill to press Beijing to raise the yuan’s value, and the issue is likely to create a sideshow at the G20 talks, even if the euro zone crisis pushes it off center stage. (Additional reporting by Randall Palmer, David Milliken, Francesca Landini, Kevin Yao and Abhijit Neogy; Editing by Louise Ireland and Alex Richardson)

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UTX exploring Goodrich takeover: sources

September 18, 2011

By Andrea Shalal-Esa and Soyoung Kim (Reuters) – Diversified manufacturer United Technologies Corp is exploring a takeover of aerospace company Goodrich Corp but the two sides are not yet close to a deal, according to a source with knowledge of the situation. Reuters reported on Friday that United Technologies was lining up $10 billion to $20 billion in financing for a U.S. acquisition that could shape up as its biggest takeover in a decade. Investors bid up shares of aerospace companies on the news, with speculation increasingly focused on Goodrich. The stock rose to as high as $112 in after-hours trading on Friday, valuing Goodrich at $14 billion. A move by United Tech could mark the start of a more aggressive phase of consolidation in the aerospace sector to prepare for cuts in defense spending in the United States and Europe. Mergers could help the industry lower costs and boost capacity to meet booming demand for components used in commercial aircraft. Goodrich is benefiting from rising demand for equipment for large planes and sales tied to servicing and parts. The company has solid exposure to growing commercial aircraft programs. For instance, it supplies a host of parts to EADS unit Airbus, and will design the nacelle and thrust reversers for the Pratt & Whitney geared turbofan engine that is an option for the A320neo aircraft family. Charlotte, N.C.-based Goodrich also supplies electronic braking and a host of other critical systems to the Boeing 787 Dreamliner, which got U.S. government approval to enter into commercial passenger service last month (August 2011). Defense and space accounts for about one-third of total Goodrich sales. The company has focused its military strategy on products that guide missiles and gather and process intelligence data. CEO Marshall Larsen, a 34-year company veteran, told Reuters in June that he’ll reach Goodrich’s mandatory retirement age of 65 in a couple of years. He was named chairman, president and CEO in October 2003. Officials at United Tech, which makes products ranging from air-conditioners to helicopters, declined to comment, as did those at Goodrich. (Reporting by Andrea Shalal-Esa in Washington, Soyoung Kim in New York and Philipp Halstrick in Frankfurt; Writing by Michael Erman in New York; editing by Gunna Dickson)

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ECB’s Trichet presses Italy on budget targets

September 3, 2011

By Francesca Landini and Stephen Jewkes CERNOBBIO, Italy (Reuters) – ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet stepped up warnings over Italy’s strained public finances on Saturday, telling the struggling center-right government it must act quickly to reassure nervous markets. Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, hit by a renewed bout of scandal this week, has caused growing alarm over the failure of his divided government to pass clear measures to cut back Italy’s 1.9 trillion euro ($2,726 billion) debt mountain. Speaking after a week of steadily rising market pressure on Italian bonds, Trichet repeated that the government had to meet last month’s pledge of a clear plan to balance the budget by 2013 and pass reforms to boost Italy’s stagnant economy. “This is absolutely decisive to consolidate and reinforce the quality and the credibility of the Italian strategy and its creditworthiness,” he told a conference in the northern Italian town of Cernobbio. The European Central Bank, which has been buying Italy’s bonds in the market to try to hold down yields and stop its borrowing costs spiralling out of control, has been stepping up warnings that Rome must act quickly. There has been some speculation that it might reduce its purchases to put pressure on Rome to act more quickly to pass a much disputed 45.5 billion euro package of austerity measures now going through parliament. However, any sign of the ECB cutting back its bond-buying programme would risk triggering a market selloff that could tip the euro zone’s third economy into a Greek-style emergency. According to participants at a closed-door session in Cernobbio, Trichet declined to speak about the programme. “I’m not going to tell you what we’re doing on bond buying but we have a meeting next week,” Trichet told the conference, according to three different witnesses, apparently referring to next week’s regular Governing Council meeting. Underlining the growing urgency of the situation, the premium investors demand to hold Italian debt rather than benchmark German bonds rose on Friday to 331 basis points, the highest since the ECB started buying Italian paper in August. Yields on 10-year Italian bonds ended the week at 5.29 percent, creeping back up toward the 7 percent level generally regarded as unmanageable. POLITICAL DIVISIONS Italian President Giorgio Napolitano said successive governments had failed to prevent a mountainous public debt from getting out of control, and swift action was essential. “We have hesitated from resolutely and coherently addressing constraints that should have been loosened and broken from the heavy weight of accumulated public debt,” he told the meeting. Napolitano has played a prominent role in the crisis, using his authority as head of state to cut through political rivalries and broker a series of agreements on budget measures. But cabinet divisions have hampered efforts to finalize the package. Economy Minister Giulio Tremonti appears increasingly at odds with Berlusconi and the rest of the government. Speculation persists that the government may fall before the end of its term in 2013, perhaps to be replaced for a limited time by a government of technocrats. Napolitano declined to comment when asked if the current government was in a position to tackle the situation. “Should there one day be a government crisis … I will take my responsibility, as per my mandate, of proposing a solution,” he told a question-and-answer session. On Saturday, Berlusconi’s office denied a report in the daily Corriere della Sera that he had attacked Tremonti’s insistence on budget rigour even at the expense of economic growth, the latest in a long series of such reports. Disagreements over taxes and pensions have led to a series of U-turns over the past week. A tax on high earners and a rise in the pension age have been proposed, then dropped within days. Doubts about Berlusconi’s focus on the austerity plan were heightened this week when magistrates arrested a businessman linked to a 2009 prostitution scandal on suspicion of trying to extort as much as half a million euros from the premier. Berlusconi has denied making any illicit payments, accusing what he calls politically motivated magistrates of trying to bring him down and dismissing the case as absurd. He has survived dozens of scandals over issues ranging from tax fraud to underage prostitution and the impact of the latest affair is unclear but newspapers have printed extensive extracts of wiretapped conversations which could prove damaging. (Writing by James Mackenzie; Editing by Kevin Liffey)

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Georges Ugeux: Could Europe Provoke a World Crisis?

August 23, 2011

For the past few weeks, I have been observing reactions (from all sides) about Europe’s debt crisis, and its responsibility for the U.S. market decrease. It has made me wonder: could a worsening of the European crisis drag the United States and the world into a catastrophe worse than the 2008 collapse of Lehman Brothers? The European sovereign debt crisis has far-reaching implications: if it were only Greece, or even Portugal and Ireland, it would probably have a limited impact. Unfortunately, the contagion of other countries seems to be spreading to Spain and Italy. The market reaction to rumors of a possible downgrading of France’s sovereign debt rating in August showed how sensitive world markets would be to such an event. The brave attempts of the European summit of July 21 and the Sarkozy-Merkel meeting of Aug. 8 were lacking in both substance and action, and investors were deeply disappointed. The credibility deficit of the European leadership seems insurmountable at this point, as their statements and subsequent actions are simply contradictory The European banking situation is much more troubling. It is actually scary. The largest Eurozone banks lost between 30 and 50 percent of their market capitalization since July 1. Since the July 21 summit that was supposed to have resolved the European crisis, Eurozone banks lost the following: A risk of European economic recession is not excluded. France and Germany announced a zero growth rate for the second quarter, and Greece is currently suffering from a 5-percent recession. The combination of these three factors explains the apprehension of investors and capital markets toward Europe. Although it is a European problem, could it create issues outside Europe? The most immediate risk is through the banking system. Should the current banking situation lead to a liquidity crisis, we would revert back to August 2007, when banks no longer trusted one another. The interbank financing reached unbearable levels of interest rates at that time, and Central Banks were the only substantial liquidity provider. What ammunition would be available to counter such a crisis? The Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank are not in the same position as in 2007. Both have grown their balance sheets at record levels. The assets they hold are not all of prime quality. Their situation is far from being as solid as it was four years ago. Last but not least, at the current levels of indebtedness, government financing is no longer available for bailouts. In Europe, the guarantees of the European Fund of Financial Stability are increasing the indebtedness of the guarantors: 37 percent of those guarantees are granted by Italy, Spain, Portugal and Ireland, who themselves are in difficulty. The importance of France (20 percent) and Germany (27 percent) as guarantors is therefore crucial. Unfortunately, the French indebtedness (82 percent of GDP) and budget deficit (7 percent in 2010) make its own creditworthiness vulnerable. This short review of the European situation cannot hide the risk of further deterioration. European countries ought to make serious improvements to their fiscal situations in their 2012 budgets. Their failure to do so would not only aggravate the European decline but start a new global crisis. Will they have the courage and the consensus to do so? Based on the last 18 months of Greek crisis, one is allowed to have doubts.

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France’s Economic Growth Grinds To Halt, Reinforcing Recession Risks

August 12, 2011

PARIS — The French government was put under further pressure to cut deeper into spending after figures Friday showed growth in Europe’s second biggest economy ground to a halt in the spring, in another sign that the global economy is facing rising recessionary threats. With the worse-than-expected French growth figures suggesting a possible budget shortfall this year, government ministers may have to find additional savings ahead of a key meeting with President Nicolas Sarkozy on Aug. 24. The flat growth reported in the second quarter of the year was attributable to a slump in consumer spending and exports, and came as policymakers scramble to soothe investor concerns that the country could be the next major economy to lose its coveted triple-A credit rating. A move Friday by stock market regulators in France and elsewhere across Europe to ban short selling – a form of stock market speculation that some are blaming for the turbulent trading in recent days – looked to be having some impact. But economists stressed that any rebound was very fragile, and some derided the ban as misguided and ineffective. French bank shares were performing solidly in Paris, with Societe Generale up nearly 3 percent and Credit Agricole up over 1 percent. Over the past couple of days, French bank stocks, and Societe Generale in particular, have been hugely volatile amid rumours of their financial health. The European Union’s markets supervisor, the ESMA, announced the short selling ban late Thursday night after boosting surveillance of stormy markets earlier in the day. In a short sale, a trader hopes to make a profit by betting on the decline in the price of a share. Regulators in France, Italy, Spain and Belgium are each implementing the bans, whose details vary from country to country. Several countries banned short selling during the financial crisis of 2008 to try to tame volatility. But some experts said the bans actually contributed to a feeling of uncertainty. “The decision (of short-selling ban) is more psychological as it seems to strengthen the position of the regulators compared to the speculators,” said Dominique Dequidt, a fund manager at KBL Richelieu trading house in Paris. “But the speculators have found ways to by-pass this shorting ban for the last two years, when it was in place in the past so this measure seems more like a complete waste of effort towards the speculators.” News that French economic growth sputtered to a halt in the second quarter may raise concerns that the European economy is being impacted by the debt crisis that has afflicted a number of countries and has fueled the turmoil in the markets. Separate figures from Eurostat, the EU’s statistics office, showing that industrial production across the 17-country eurozone fell by 0.7 percent are likely to add to market concerns over the pace of the economic recovery in Europe. The French economy posted zero growth in the second quarter, national statistics agency INSEE said. Government economists had forecast growth of around 0.2 percent in the period. Consumer spending slumped 0.7 percent and exports stagnated during the second quarter. Growth in the first quarter was nearly 1 percent. Views on the weak performance were mixed, with warnings that a stagnant economy will make it harder to reduce the deficit. “As for France itself, Q2′s 0.7 percent drop in consumer spending was the sharpest in nearly 15 years, suggesting that the household sector can no longer be relied upon to support the economy,” said Jennifer McKeown, an economist at Capital Economics in London. However, Laurence Boone of Bank of America Merrill Lynch remained “positive on France overall” based on its careful handling of debt in the past. “Gradual reforms should bear fruit in coming years, but more needs to be done,” Boone said. France’s finance minister took to the airwaves again Friday in a bid to put a positive spin on the weak second-quarter numbers. “It’s not a surprise that the second quarter is worse than the first, we anticipated this,” Francois Baroin said on French radio station RTL. He said the government is sticking with its deficit reduction targets despite the lower growth. Baroin also pledged France would still achieve its target of 2 percent growth this year, which many economists are skeptical about. Flagging growth may mean France has to come up with new budget cuts if it is to bring its deficit down to 5.7 percent this year as planned. In Greece, where Europe’s debt crisis began, statistics released Friday show the country is mired in a deep economic recession, contracting by 6.9 percent in the second quarter compared to the same period last year, on lower consumer spending. And in Italy, Premier Silvio Berlusconi’s government is holding an emergency meeting Friday to approve new measures to balance the budget by 2013 and calm market concerns over Italy’s public finances.

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Who Bears The Burden Of A Broken Global Economy?

August 10, 2011

With Greece and Ireland in economic shreds, while Portugal, Spain, and perhaps even Italy head south, only one nation can save Europe from financial Armageddon: a highly reluctant Germany. The ironies—like the fact that bankers from Düsseldorf were the ultimate patsies in Wall Street’s con game—pile up quickly as Michael Lewis investigates German attitudes toward money, excrement, and the country’s Nazi past, all of which help explain its peculiar new status.

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Greece’s Prime Minister: ‘It Is Time For Europe To Wake Up’

July 16, 2011

ATHENS, July 16 (Reuters) – Greece’s Prime Minister George Papandreou ruled out bankruptcy for his debt-choked country and said it was time for Europe to wake up and take brave decisions, according to a newspaper interview to be published on Sunday. Ahead of a summit of euro zone leaders on July 21 to discuss a second bailout for Greece, Papandreou said his government had taken the necessary decisions, however difficult they were, to deal with the crisis, and it was Europe’s turn to do the same. “We managed not to let Greece go bankrupt, and neither will it go bankrupt,” Papandreou was quoted as saying by Greek newspaper Kathimerini, referring to whether credit rating agencies could find Greek debt to be in “selective default.” “For a year and a half now, I’ve been continuously reiterating to our partners that we must collectively take brave decisions, not just for the future of Greece but of Europe as a whole. It is time for Europe to wake up,” he added. With sovereign debt jitters having reached Italy, the euro zone’s third-largest economy, Europe’s leaders are struggling to agree on how to provide new aid for Greece to prevent contagion from spreading further in financial markets. Papandreou said that several of the options that he had suggested and were rejected a year and a half ago, such as buying back debt, issuing common euro zone bonds and keeping credit rating agencies in check, were now on Europe’s negotiating table. “In an ultraconservative Europe, I would even say phobic, the truth is it took time for these thoughts to mature with our partners and for them to be convinced that these proposals are not an alibi in order to avoid our own responsibilities,” Papandreou said in the interview. Greece’s total outstanding debt is around 370 billion euros ($523 billion). Most economists regard the debt burden, at around 160 percent of gross domestic product, to be unsustainable as it stifles growth, with the economy seen contracting by nearly 4 percent this year after a 4.5 percent slump last year. “Now everybody understands that Greece needs to be helped to exit recession as soon as possible. The relevant negotiations are making progress, and I hope they are completed as soon as possible,” Papandreou said. A bond buyback is more likely than the other options that euro zone finance ministers have discussed and would allow Greece to cut its public debt by 20 billion euros if purchases were made at market prices, German magazine der Spiegel said on Saturday. (Reporting by Greg Roumeliotis, editing by Jane Baird) Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Gordon Brown: Why Europe Slept

July 12, 2011

When the history of the 21st century is written, people will rightly ask why it was that Europe was found wanting during its most intractable economic crisis. They will ask why Europe slept as an undercapitalized banking system floundered, unemployment remained unacceptably high, and the continent’s growth and competitiveness plummeted. Worse still, if a reconstruction plan does not come soon, Europe’s leaders will be charged with “the decline of the West” and then face accusations for being, in the words of Churchill about the 1930s, “resolved to be irresolute, adamant for drift, solid for fluidity and all-powerful for impotence.” There is, of course, no shortage of European meetings. Hardly a day goes by without a summit of European leaders discussing the latest crisis facing a member state. But each time they talk as though they are dealing with a calamity confined to the nation in the headlines — the Greek problem, or the Irish problem, sometimes the Portuguese or the Spanish problem — without an agreement on the true nature of the emergency, which is pan-European. By wrongly analyzing Europe’s woes, they end up implementing the wrong remedies too. For Europe’s deficit crisis is a real concern but just one of its concerns. Europe has in fact three deep-rooted problems, each of which is entwined with the other, and each of which reaches systemically into every corner of the continent. Alongside the deficit problem is also a banking problem — not confined to a handful of banks or countries — and a chronic growth problem. First, banks: I was present in Paris in October 2008 at the first meeting ever held of the euro zone heads of government. The diagnosis of the banks I presented was of problems of liquidity but also of structure. But most in Europe at the time believed they were dealing only with the indirect consequences, the fallout, from an Anglo-Saxon financial crisis, and of course thought that a wayward Britain had allowed itself to be locked into the American financial boom. They did not then know that HALF the sub-prime assets had been bought by banks across Europe. No one had yet fully appreciated the depth of the entanglements between European banks and other global financial institutions, or how big the banks’ exposure to falling property markets was. I remember the shocked looks which passed along the table when I argued that European banks were even more vulnerable than American banks because they were far more highly leveraged — and indeed still are. And even now a fundamental truth about the current state of European banks remains unspoken: that German, French, Italian and British banks who have lent recklessly to the periphery are owed billions not just by the Greeks but by the Irish, Portuguese and Spanish, and have losses still to take from toxic assets and the real estate collapse. And when, years from now, people explain why Europe slept, they will also explain how, out of short-sighted self-interest, we treated the Greeks’ problems as if they were ones of liquidity (addressed by giving loans), not solvency, and how by short-term maneuvers to delay the necessary denouement, we maximized the risk of a disorderly end-game. Indeed, with interest rates on the rise, capital outflows from all the periphery countries to the core are already making funding more difficult in each troubled country, dragging us into even higher interest rates, longer recessions and, possibly, higher deficits. The third side of the triangle is, of course, low growth itself, which threatens to condemn the whole continent to a decade of high unemployment. The deficit reduction and bank stabilization we need to see cannot become entrenched without economies which generate trade, jobs and growth. Yet, suffering from anemic levels of growth, Europe is slipping further and further down the world league — not acutely but chronically, which is more serious and much harder to reverse. Today European unemployment is stuck around 10 percent with youth unemployment rising above 20 percent and as high as 40 percent in Spain. And it cannot come down fast. Europe now has a trend rate of growth which is almost one-half that of the USA and one-quarter that of China and India. Once, Europe represented half the output of the world. By 1980 this had fallen to one-quarter. Now it is less than one-fifth — just 19 percent. Soon it will be little more than a tenth — 11 percent by 2030 — and then it will fall to 7 percent. By 2050 — less than four decades from now — the European economy could be smaller than that of Latin America. If European growth continues to run so far behind its competitors, then by mid-century it may be as small as Africa’s. Yet Europe is only half as well equipped as America to export our way to growth. Despite Germany’s success in China, only 8 percent of our exports (in contrast to America’s 15 percent) go to the eight fastest-emerging market economies, what are now called the growth generators, who will account for the majority of future growth. It is clear that each of these three concerns — deficits, banking instability and low growth — is interwoven with the other in a way that makes policies designed to focus on only one issue much less effective than a comprehensive strategy aimed at simultaneously resolving all three. And a pan-European strategy is all the more necessary because the euro was constructed without any mechanisms for averting or resolving crises — and with no agreement on who is ultimately responsible for financing crisis costs. While a strong and passionate pro-European, I stood out from conventional economic opinion in doubting whether Britain’s best interests lay in joining the euro. The UK Shadow Chancellor Ed Balls led 19 separate assessments of the euro. Our major finding was that inside the euro there was insufficient flexibility to achieve sustainable and durable convergence between nations. But we also demonstrated that the euro had no crisis prevention or crisis resolution plan in the event of convergence not being achieved. For under a single currency no nation — even one completely uncompetitive with the rest of the euro zone — can adjust its exchange rate, or benefit from an interest rate tailored to their specific needs. But nor had Europe adopted the U.S. crisis-prevention model for damping down disparities in a single currency area — by labor mobility and wage adjustments, or by transfers to areas of need. So, if I am right, we must now exchange panic-driven responses for a long-term reconstruction, or we will face a lost decade of high unemployment with social discontent, anti-immigrant feeling and secessionist movements. We must now achieve for Europe the same “moment of truth” that the world found with the pivotal G20 summit in 2009. As happened with the G20, Europe’s politicians should lead market sentiment by boldly and simultaneously agreeing to a Brady-bond-style solution for Greece and a European bank recapitalization; a new Euro area debt facility (responsible for, say, the first 60 percent of each country’s debt) as part of a coordinated fiscal and monetary policy that permits, like the U.S., fiscal transfers; and, above all, a pro-growth, pro-enterprise strategy I call GLOBAL EUROPE: Europe’s energies redirected outwards to exporting to the emerging economies, and re-equipping ourselves to do so with a clear timetable for — and inbuilt incentives and penalties to guarantee — labor, capital and financial market flexibilities. Why would Germany support this? Because far from being against their interests, they now have a European reason to restructure their banks; can set tough terms on economic reform; and, by acting now, they avoid far bigger costs later. Indeed, I would argue that without my concurrent plan to restructure Europe’s banks and insurance companies and to go for growth, the status quo or even a Brady plan for Greece still risk Europe-wide financial contagion. History books about the “decline of the West” are not inevitable. But only a reconstruction that attacks deficits, banking liabilities and low growth together will avoid the deadening grip of an inward-looking protectionism — and barren but avoidable years of unemployment and wasted lives. © 2011 GLOBAL VIEWPOINT NETWORK; DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES

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As Greek Default Appears Increasingly Likely, European Markets Tumble

June 20, 2011

Amid falling European markets and mounting fears of a Greek government default, European financial ministers gave Greece an ultimatum Monday: approve stricter budget cuts or default. Greece had been relying on the promise of a $17.1 billion bailout — a critical piece of a promised $158 billion lifeline — in order to avoid being forced to default in mid-July. Now, European financial ministers have taken their hardest line against Greece yet, handing down a two-week deadline. Greece must sell state assets and implement steeper budget cuts and tax hikes by July 3, or risk defaulting. The ultimatum from European financial leaders, coupled with Greece’s own political instability, could quicken the country’s seemingly inevitable march toward admitting that it cannot meet all of its obligations. If that admission comes too soon, it could roil international markets and cause a string of major bank failures and government defaults across Europe, endangering the euro and the American economic recovery , according to economists. Even as Greece’s new finance minister urged Parliament to pass new budget cuts, a no-confidence vote is approaching , in which Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou could get voted out of office. If Papandreou is replaced, it remains unclear whether the politicians that would replace him would have the mandate to rein in the debt as much as European financial leaders are demanding. Papandreou’s proposed measures fall short of what is necessary, according to some economists . The unemployment rate in Greece remains above 16 percent , and protestors continue to fill the streets of Athens clapping and shouting at the Parliament building, “Thieves! Thieves!” With the turmoil in Greece escalating, investors avoided risky investments Monday. Although U.S. stock markets rose modestly Monday morning, stock prices for American banks such as Goldman Sachs, J.P. Morgan, Bank of America, Citigroup and Wells Fargo plunged more than one percent soon after trading began. The cautious upward rise of Wall Street stocks on Monday helped lift European stocks, which had plummeted more than one percent earlier on Monday. As of early Monday afternoon, the FTSE 100 in Britain had fallen 0.38 percent and the CAC 40 in France had fallen 0.63 percent. Italy’s FTSE Italia All-Share had plummeted 1.97 percent, in light of a recent threat by the ratings agency Moody’s Investors Service to downgrade Italy’s credit ratings because of its exposure to Greek debt. A downgrade could effectively increase Italy’s debt burden if panicked investors demanded higher interest rates, increasing the likelihood of default by the Italian government. The euro, after declining earlier on Monday , made up for its losses against the dollar after European officials announced that the lending capacity of its bailout fund would be increased. If Greece suddenly defaults, it could very well cause a chain of government defaults and major bank failures across Europe, scaring American banks from lending and endangering the American economic recovery. “If Greece is just unable to pay its debts, we are going to see finance suddenly freeze up,” Gus Faucher, an economist at Moody’s Analytics, a research firm independent of the ratings agency, told The Huffington Post on Friday. “We are going to see huge drops in stock prices. Firms are going to get very cautious, very anxious again. They’re going to lay people off. It’s going to be very similar to what we saw in late 2008, early 2009, on top of what we already had. So it would be really disastrous for the American economy.” The International Monetary Fund warned Monday that the debt crisis in Greece and other indebted countries, such as Ireland and Portugal, threatens the European economic recovery and could cause a global financial crisis. The IMF implored countries that have received aid to show “a determined commitment” to cutting their deficit and returning to solvency, while also urging European leaders not to abandon indebted countries. The IMF warned that a sudden default by any members of the European Union could lead to “large global spillovers.” Recent reports released by the economics research firms Roubini Global Economics and MKM Partners have warned that Greece still is very much in danger of default. In a report released on Friday, MKM Partners warned France and Germany’s proposed mix of budget cuts and bailouts would not work for Greece unless the European Central Bank starts to devalue the euro, effectively reducing the debt burdens of troubled European countries. The European Central Bank has taken a hard line against inflation, leaving countries like Greece with fewer and more extreme options to address their debt — steep budget cuts, sudden default or leaving the European Union altogether. The recent report by Roubini Global Economics suggested that Europe’s current approach likely will prove itself ineffective. The report said that since the debt burdens of countries like Greece are unsustainable, bailouts by other European countries — “the preferred crisis-management tool so far” — have not generated enough benefits to ease the fears of either investors or the indebted countries.

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Janet Tavakoli: Wall Street’s Advice to the IMF: Control Your Alleged Rapists!

May 22, 2011

We are outraged at your lack of empathy for your victims! We’re not talking about the targets of your sexual advances, of course. We mean us. You’re supposed to be bailing out trading partners, bankers in weak foreign countries bankrupted by bailouts. Remember, you pigs are supposed to be financially raping the citizens of the PIIGS (Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Greece and Spain). We’ll get back to that shortly, but first we have to address some housekeeping. Jeopardizing Our Health Condoms aren’t foolproof, and the HIV virus doesn’t care how much you paid for a hooker in Thailand. It has come to our attention that you have allegedly been customers of our New York based suppliers of prostitutes , and we’re furious. We need you to stick to the job. Moreover, if you had just listened to our advice to Joran van der Sloot , you wouldn’t be caught allegedly doing anything in the wrong place at the wrong time. Targets Can Shoot Back As for the handling of your internal matters, it was a nice touch to call newly resigned IMF head and alleged sex offender Dominique Strauss-Kahn’s 2008 affair with a subordinate a “serious breach of judgment” and impose no real consequences. It was a great move to reportedly decline investigations and consequences for other managers involved in suspect activities. It’s well known that a permissive atmosphere enables harassment (and more) and dismays the targets who perceive they will get no support. This is exactly the kind of thing we do all the time, but you have to save all this good stuff for your next high profile job in finance or politics. Until now, your internal targets felt so intimidated you were able to sweep all this under the rug. You can’t count on that anymore with all the new publicity you’ve brought on yourselves. Targets have caught on that they have nothing to lose and at least can gain back the self-esteem you’ve tried to destroy. Targets’ careers are already embattled, so it is in their interest to take action, and they’re not going to apologize for standing up for themselves. Moreover, it’s a snap to see through the flaws in the IMF’s new “policy.” You say that when it comes to intimate relationships, you will investigate if there is evidence of harassment. Obviously, the complainer will have to produce the evidence. But how has letting you handle things worked out so far for targets? Targets will never buy that nonsense now. They’ll tell you to stuff it and act independently. Targets have a right to treat this as a matter of personal safety. When it comes to the topic of their personal safety, you have nothing to add. The IMF Can’t Even Negotiate “Consensual Sex” Even when sexual relations between your bosses and subordinates apparently begin as consensual, the IMF inspires targets to rebel. According to the New York Times : “One woman is said to have slept with her supervisor, who then gave her poor performance reviews to pressure her into continuing with the relationship.” We must point out that if you want someone to continue a sexual relationship, tell them their performance was great. In the battle of the sexes, he declared thermonuclear warfare! Remember Who You’re Supposed to Be Screwing This may sound as if we’ve developed a conscience, but don’t worry, we haven’t. The truth is that we need you do as we say and not as we do for a change. We need you to keep bailing out weak countries like Ireland. Many of Ireland’s bankers fled the country, and the people of Ireland are drowning in their debt. We love the way the IMF forced a loan on the Irish to pay off the government debt that was forced on them to pay off the bankers’ debts. To get the bailout loan, the Irish government had to slash spending, lay off tens of thousands of public workers, lower wages, increase taxes, and cut health care budgets. The bankers got away with financial murder, and the citizens are paying for it, just the way we like it. Instead of letting banks fail or restructuring banks, we need you to do the same thing to Greece and possibly other countries, too. The Greeks are already protesting: “We’re not Ireland!” Your recent scandals may encourage them to get even more insistent and come up with an alternative of their own. We do lots of business with these foreign banks and governments. So stop spending so much energy trying to screw each other and spend it screwing the citizens of countries with governments that need bailouts because they bailed out bankers. Clean up your act, so that we don’t have to clean up ours!

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Italy’s Ratings Outlook Lowered To Negative On Debt Fears

May 22, 2011

ROME — Standard & Poors cut its ratings outlook for Italy’s debt from stable to negative Saturday, citing the country’s poor growth prospects and concerns about the government’s ability to reduce public borrowing. The revision means there’s a one-in-three chance that Italy’s debt ratings could be downgraded in the next two years, raising fears that the debt crises that have struck Greece, Portugal and Ireland could be threatening Italy. But with a ratings outlook still at A+/negative, Italy remains in far better shape than Greece, which had its debt grade ratings dowgraded to junk status Friday by the Fitch agency. In a statement, S&P said Italy’s current growth prospects were “weak” and that there was a faltering commitment on the part of the government to undertake necessary reforms to revive the econoomy. It cited “potential political gridlock” as a concern for Italy’s finances and predicted weaker growth than the current estimated GDP of 1.3 percent over the 2011-2014 period. Premier Silvio Berlusconi’s forces suffered a setback in local elections this week, failing to win an outright victory for the mayor of the financial capital of Milan. The premier is also squabbling with his main coalition partner the Northern League, which is opposed to Italy’s involvement in the NATO campaign in Libya. Finally, the premier is on trial on corruption and prostitution charges, which he denies. In response, the Italian Treasury dismissed the notion that political gridlock would get in the way of reforms, saying it would “intensify” its efforts to implement its debt reduction plan and would maintain all its financial commitments. It noted that recent evaluations by the International Monetary Fund, and other bodies were “very different” from that of S&P.

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S&P cuts credit outlook for Italy to ‘negative’

May 22, 2011

S&P cuts credit outlook for Italy to ‘negative’

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Chinese Tech Giants Fight Over 4G Phones

May 5, 2011

BEIJING — Two of China’s biggest technology companies have launched a court battle in Europe over mobile phone patents in a rare public clash between firms Beijing is promoting as national champions. The fight between Huawei Technologies Ltd. and ZTE Corp. highlights the challenge for communist leaders who need to manage Chinese corporate ambitions as they try to create global competitors in telecoms, energy and other fields. It is the first case of its kind between major Chinese companies, which usually settle disputes in private. “We’re going to see more of this in this industry and others,” said David Wolf, a technology marketing consultant in Beijing. “The government will find, wow, we’ve got these national champions, but now they’re trying to kill each other.” The dispute centers on fourth-generation mobile technology, which companies that are developing it say will deliver more stable connections, wireless broadband and other advances. It is in limited use in the United States and being tested elsewhere. Control of key patents could help decide which equipment suppliers are positioned to reap billions of dollars in sales once it is rolled out in other markets. Huawei and ZTE make network gear, the core of phone systems. They have multibillion-dollar annual sales in China, Africa and Latin America and see themselves as potential global 4G leaders. That fits with Communist Party hopes to transform China from a low-cost factory into a creator of profitable technology. Huawei announced last week it filed patent infringement lawsuits against ZTE in France, Germany and Hungary. ZTE rejected the claims and said it has asked a French court and Chinese regulators to invalidate a Huawei patent. Huawei and ZTE are among China’s first wave of fledgling multinational companies. They compete with Nokia-Siemens Networks, Ericsson and Alcatel-Lucent and have a small but growing U.S. and European presence. Their dispute comes amid mounting complaints by foreign business groups about Beijing’s industrial policy. They say China is improperly supporting favored companies by limiting market access and providing low-cost loans and other support. Huawei’s lawsuits accuse ZTE of infringing patents for data cards and improperly using a Huawei-registered trademark on some of its products. “We will do whatever is required to ensure that the use of Huawei’s intellectual property by any company is based on internationally accepted protocols and practices,” said Huawei’s chief legal officer, Song Liuping, in a statement. ZTE said its lawsuit accused Huawei of infringing its 4G patents. The company said it also has asked a French court and China’s State Intellectual Property Office to invalidate Huawei’s patents for a rotary USB connector used to exchange data between devices. “ZTE respects the intellectual property rights of other companies, but it will not stop protecting its own intellectual property rights,” said a company statement. Huawei, founded in 1987 by a former Chinese military engineer, has 110,000 employees and reported 2010 revenues of 182 billion yuan ($28 billion). ZTE, founded in 1985, has 70,000 workers and reported 2010 revenues of 70 billion yuan ($10.8 billion). Their status as industry leaders gives both high-level political influence. But Chinese leaders want both to succeed – a possible reason for a stalemate and the decision to go to court. An impartial ruling by a European court also might add to the winner’s appeal for potential customers by reinforcing its status as a technology creator, rather than a Chinese policy tool. “They are making an interesting statement by filing those lawsuits not in Chinese courts but overseas, because Chinese courts are perceived to be very political, and they want this matter obviously adjudicated on the legal merits,” said Wolf, CEO of Wolf Group Asia. Huawei and ZTE are unusual among major Chinese companies because they compete directly with each other, offering similar products in the same markets. Authorities who want China’s potential global companies to focus their competitive energies on foreign rivals have tried to head off clashes in other industries by assigning different markets or products to individual enterprises. In aerospace, a plan to create a homegrown jetliner to compete with Boeing Co. and Airbus Industrie was assigned to one state-owned company while a potential rival was told to develop a smaller regional jet instead. Huawei has suffered setbacks as it tries to expand in the United States. It was forced in February to unwind its acquisition of 3Leaf Systems, a maker of cloud computing technology, after it failed to win approval from a U.S. security panel. In a separate case, Huawei won a court order that temporarily blocked the sale of Motorola Solutions Inc.’s network business to rival Nokia-Siemens Networks. Huawei said the deal might reveal business secrets because Motorola sold Huawei equipment. Motorola settled with Huawei for an undisclosed fee. Also this month, Ericsson said it has filed lawsuits against ZTE in Britain, Germany and Italy accusing the company of infringing patents for handset and network technology. The Swedish company asked the courts to block ZTE from selling mobile phones that contain the disputed technology and some network products. ___ Array Array

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Todd Akin: Cutting Defense Would Deal With ‘Wrong Problem’

April 21, 2011

By Colin Clark Editor, AOL Defense WASHINGTON — The battle over the defense budget took a new turn, with The New York Times issuing a rare lead editorial about defense in which it called for steep cuts to some of the Pentagon’s biggest weapons programs. In reply, one of the most senior House experts on defense rebutted the paper’s call for major weapons cuts. The Times editorial said the Pentagon should: terminate the Marine Corps version of the Joint Strike Fighter; cut the rest of the Joint Strike Fighter buy in half; kill the V-22 Osprey tilt-rotor program; slice one carrier group and reduce the number of air wings by one. At the same time, the paper did not call for any cuts to the number of military personnel. It did call for a cut of 10 percent to the civilian Defense Department workforce. Rep. Todd Akin (R-MO), chairman of the House Armed Services seapower and projection forces, dismissed the Times ‘ reasoning. “If you took a look at the numbers from 1990 to the present, what you find is that in military strength in macro numbers, the number of soldiers, the number of ships, the number of aircraft is 50 percent of where we were in 1990,” Akin said. The real budget problem, Akin said, is that civilian entitlements “are out of control.” You could cut the entire defense budget, as well as all non-defense discretionary spending — which does not include entitlements — and you would just get to a balanced budget at the cost of “no prisons, no state parks, no House, no Senate, no departments of Energy, Commerce, Justice…” Entitlements, Akin said yesterday at a ceremony at Boeing’s F/A-18 plant here to celebrate delivery of the 500th Boeing Super Hornet, have grown from 4 percent of the Gross Domestic Product in 1965 to 13 percent now. Over the same period, defense spending dropped to 4 percent of GDP from 9 percent. Akin’s conclusion: “So cutting defense is dealing with the wrong problem. Defense is down; defense has been cut. ” Last week’s GOP budget plan called for virtually no cuts to the defense budget. The man in charge of the F-35 program, which would suffer most grievously should the Times ‘ recommendations be adopted, replied very carefully today that the decision to cut would have to come from someone above his pay grade. Vice Adm. David Venlet told me that large cuts would increase the price of each plane, something the eight allied countries that plan to buy substantial numbers of the plane, would find painful. When a country reduces the number of a weapon it buys, that often dramatically increase the politically sensitive unit cost of the system. That can set up a death spiral where the price becomes politically unsupportable and the system is killed. Venlet met yesterday with the senior acquisition official from each of the nine: the United Kingdom, Italy, the Netherlands, Turkey, Canada, Australia, Denmark, and Norway. Israel also plans to buy F-35s but is not considered a program partner since it is not helping to fund the research and development phase. Britain has already pulled out of the short takeoff and vertical landing (STOVL) variant of the F-35, as part of its defense budget scrub. Italy, which plans to buy substantial numbers of the more expensive and complex STOVL version, is especially concerned about any more reductions to that program. The admiral noted that the test program has accelerated substantially since the beginning of the year. The three models of the F-35 have collectively flown 1092 hours. The air force version, known as the F-35A, has logged 295 flights for 520 hours. The carrier version, known as the F-35C, boasts a more modest 53 flights with 81 hours, but the carrier version is quite similar to the air force version. Its greatest testing will come during carrier takeoffs and landings. The complex and troubled Marine version of the plane, the F-35B, has made 379 flights for 490 hours in the air, Venlet said. The program faces an important Defense Acquisition Board meeting at the end of May and the Pentagon has begun talks with maker Lockheed Martin about the fifth early production contract. “We are going to need to show that costs are under control,” said Venlet, who is becoming a master of the careful answer as he guides the largest defense program in American history. Launching in Spring 2011, AOL Defense will provide news, insight and tools about the defense sector. Follow Colin on Twitter at @colinclarkaol . Follow defense news on Twitter at @aoldefense .

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Video: Marchionne Sees Chrysler Refinancing Completed by July

April 18, 2011

April 18 (Bloomberg) — Sergio Marchionne, chief executive officer of Fiat SpA, talks about plans to complete the refinancing package for Chrysler by the end of the second quarter. He spoke with Bloomberg’s Tommaso Ebhardt and Flavia Rotondi at the Fiat track at Balocco, near Turin, Italy, on April 11.

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Video: Gang Says ECB Rate Rise Would Make China Increase Easier

April 1, 2011

April 1 (Bloomberg) — Fan Gang, a former Chinese central bank adviser, talks about the outlook for the Chinese economy and interest rates. He speaks with Ryan Chilcote in Cernobbio, Italy, on Bloomberg Television’s “On The Move.”

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Video: Brunnermeier Says Portugal’s Problem Is Economic Growth

April 1, 2011

April 1 (Bloomberg) — Markus Brunnermeier, a professor at Princeton University, talks about the stress tests of Irish banks and the outlook for the Portuguese economy. He speaks with Ryan Chilcote in Cernobbio, Italy, on Bloomberg Television’s “Countdown.”

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Video: Rome Fights to Stop Parmalat Falling Into French Hands

April 1, 2011

April 1 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Olivia Sterns reports on the opposition to Italy’s biggest dairy company falling into foreign hands.

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Sheldon Filger: Portugal Faces Severe Fiscal and Economic Crisis As Eurozone Sovereign Debt Fears Grow

March 28, 2011

The weakest links in the Eurozone chain are known as the PIIGS. This acronym represents five fiscally vulnerable members of the European monetary union: Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece and Spain. Already, two of the five members of this august club have capitulated to the dismal reality of their public finances and are receiving a Eurozone bailout, which comes from a fund consisting of borrowed money, borrowed that is by slightly less indebted Eurozone partners. Now, it would appear, Portugal is likely to be the third affiliate of the PIIGS to get a bailout. Portugal’s Prime Minister Jose Socrates has resigned after Lisbon’s parliament rejected his proposed austerity package. Socrates claimed that Portugal did not need financial aid , and could resolve its fiscal problems through its own austerity measures. That hope appears now to have been abandoned, and the expectation is that Lisbon will soon come crawling for a bailout, as the spread on its bonds gets ever wider. Standard & Poor’s, S&P and Fitch have all severely downgraded their ratings on Portuguese government debt. In the meantime, a new government in Ireland is stating that it wants to negotiate a less severe austerity package than the one accepted by the previous Dublin government in exchange for a Eurozone and IMF bailout. As Portugal wobbles, Ireland confounds while continuing to bankrupt its citizens as the price for bailing out its reckless banks. In the meantime, the Greek economy is deflating, making it ever more likely that Athens will eventually default on its public debt. That still leaves the two biggest PIIGS without a bailout. After Portugal, Spain is the next likely candidate for the bond vigilantes. The most significant problem with Spain is that it is so much larger an economy than the previous candidates for a bailout, it is unlikely that the Eurozone and its already indebted taxpayers could sustain the massive public borrowing required to rescue Madrid from its own fiscal follies. The sovereign debt crisis in the Eurozone is spinning out of control. And not far behind in entering this vortex of doom is the United Kingdom, which despite massive public spending cuts retains an unsustainable deficit as its economy contracts. And then there is the United States, with a national debt now virtually at parity with its annual GDP, and projected to have a record deficit in the current fiscal year, exceeding ten percent of its annual GDP. In my book, Global Economic Forecast 2010-2015: Recession Into Depression , I predict that by 2012 a massive sovereign debt crisis in the major advanced economies will plunge the world into a global economic depression. All the recent developments regarding fiscal issues in the Eurozone, UK and U.S. do not give me any reason to alter my forecast.

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Marshall Auerback: We Aren’t Greece — But We Could Be Japan if Flawed Logic Persists

March 28, 2011

Influential journalists are making persuasive cases that austerity is the wrong approach in fragile economies. That’s good news. But discussions still get muddled in ways that can have perverse effects. Take the case of Japan. Last week Bill Mitchell wrote an excellent blog post discussing Martin Wolf’s article on Japan’s fiscal position following the earthquake. Wolf suggested that the “national insolvency” threat allegedly posed by the earthquake was vastly overstated. He argued that the sums involved were too small to matter. Mitchell agreed, but went further, challenging Wolf’s implicit suggestion that the Japanese government faced a solvency risk of any kind : The reality is that the Japanese government has no solvency risk at all in relation to its net spending position and the debt issuance that matches it (nearly). It is grossly misleading to leave the impression that it is just because the reconstruction sums are small that there is no insolvency risk. As Mitchell put it, Wolf’s assessment was so close to comprehension, and yet so far. I had a similar sensation reading Paul Krugman’s latest challenge to the prevailing fiscal austerity mania now gripping most of today’s leading policy makers in the global economy. Krugman rightly exposes the central flaw inherent in the deficit reduction hysteria: Why not slash deficits immediately? Because tax increases and cuts in government spending would depress economies further, worsening unemployment. And cutting spending in a deeply depressed economy is largely self-defeating even in purely fiscal terms: any savings achieved at the front end are partly offset by lower revenue, as the economy shrinks. The article moves along swimmingly until Professor Krugman invokes the dreaded example of Greece: But couldn’t America still end up like Greece? Yes, of course. If investors decide that we’re a banana republic whose politicians can’t or won’t come to grips with long-term problems, they will indeed stop buying our debt. But that’s not a prospect that hinges, one way or another, on whether we punish ourselves with short-run spending cuts. No, no, no! There is no debt crisis in sovereign nations such as the U.S., Japan, the U.K., or Canada. Barring a decision by Congress to give up the dollar and adopt, say, the Mexican peso, we can never end up like Greece. Nor will Japan, which does not need to “dip into its rainy day fund,” as Carmen and Vince Reinhart wrongly suggested last week. To clarify, the nations of the European Monetary Union have given up their monetary sovereignty by giving up their national currencies and adopting a supranational one, the euro. By divorcing fiscal and monetary authorities, they have relinquished their public sector’s capacity to provide high levels of employment and output. Non-sovereign countries are limited in their ability to spend by taxation and bond revenues, and this applies perfectly well to Greece, Portugal, and even countries like Germany, which continues to champion the cause of fiscal austerity under the respectable sounding guise of “sound finances.” This distinction is key, but it gets lost in our economic debates. Happily, Dean Baker gets it , but for the most part our inability (whether through misunderstanding or ideology) to distinguish between issuers and users of currency continues to provoke perverse policy responses, notably in the countries that remain sovereign in regard to their monetary/fiscal operations, such as the U.S. As my friend Warren Mosler always likes to say, “Because we believe we can be the next Greece, we continue to work to turn ourselves into the next Japan.” The only public debt problems that have emerged in the current crisis have been in non-sovereign countries. Even then, with appropriate “fiscal support,” those crises were managed largely through the expedient of the ECB’s ongoing purchases of PIIGS’ debt in the secondary bond markets — which amounts to a fiscal act within a flawed monetary system. But blurring the distinction between sovereign and non-sovereign nations is the starting gate for this muddled discussion that persists when we invoke Greece as an example of what we could become. Those of us who make the key distinction between a non-sovereign country like Greece and a sovereign one like the U.S. accept that the prevailing concern about Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece and Spain (PIIGS) and even other Euro nations is justified. But using PIIGS countries as analogues to the U.S. is a result of the failure of deficit critics to understand the differences between the monetary arrangements of sovereign and non-sovereign nations. Greece is a user of the euro. It is not an issuer. In that respect, it is more like California or even New York City, which are users of the U.S. federal government’s dollar. The hysteria, which Paul Krugman rightly decries, comes from a flawed understanding of how the monetary system works. It also partly explains why even in sovereign monetary/fiscal systems, conservatives continue to impose arbitrary constraints on our government’s ability to provide policies that generate full employment. Which is precisely what we need right now. Sovereign governments have been led to believe that they need to issue bonds and collect taxes to finance government spending and that good policies should be judged by their ability to enforce fiscal austerity. The guardians of the status quo know that the fear of rising public debt can be politically manipulated and demonized, and they do this to put a brake on government spending. But there is no operational necessity to issue debt in a fiat monetary system. In fact, in the case of sovereign nations, it is a logical impossibility for households and nonbank firms to finance the budget deficit by paying taxes and buying government bonds. The private sector cannot create money (and bank-created money is not a net financial asset for the private sector, as the private deposit holders cancel out the private borrowers). The domestic private sector has to first earn the money by net selling goods and services (to the federal government) and net selling assets (to the central bank) before it is in a position to pay taxes or buy government bonds. Mainstream economics has guided policymakers into imposing artificial constraints on fiscal policy and government finances, such as issuing bonds when running deficits, debt ceilings, forbidding the central bank from directly buying treasury debt, allowing the markets to set interest rates on government bonds, etc. This is a huge conceptual flaw that is currently paralyzing the Governor of the Bank of Japan, even as his country reels from its greatest disaster since World War II. It is also destroying the U.K. economy, as both Krugman and John Cassidy have recently highlighted. All these constraints, sadly, are self-imposed and voluntary. As my colleague Randy Wray has put it , it is as if someone would tie his/her feet together and then complain about the inability to walk. It may seem petty to criticize otherwise strong critiques of the current thrust of self-styled deficit hawks. But we have to be on guard against conceptual confusion that can hamper our ability to act decisively to do what it is certainly in our power to do: namely to stop choking our economy and put Americans back to work. Cross-posted from New Deal 2.0 .

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Gemma Godfrey: EU Bonds: Portugal Proving the Point & How You Can Profit

March 23, 2011

First the bank bail-outs, then countries joined the queue. Talks of Greece defaulting, Irish riots and Spanish air-staff simultaneously taking a ‘sick-day’. Just what is at the root of the EU’s troubles? And how do last week’s events with Portugal exemplify the problem? A Flawed Strategy Einstein summed up the challenge being faced within the EU succinctly when he proclaimed “you can’t solve a problem with the same kind of thinking that created it.” In Europe today, many countries are struggling under the burden of too much debt and the problem is being tackled with the issuance of yet more debt. Crucially, without growth, debt as a percentage of GDP will continue to worsen even before new debt is added to the equation. Investors are losing patience. Portugal Proves the Point… According to central bank forecasts, Portugal’s economy will contract by 1.3% this year, pushing the country into its second recession in three years. In reaction to this poor growth outlook, Moody’s downgraded its bond rating not one but two notches on Tuesday night. The very next day it sold €1bn in short-term government debt. Unsurprisingly, investors asked for a higher interest rate on their loan — exacerbating Portugal’s problem. As the finance minister conceded , servicing debt at current yields is “unsustainable over the long term”. …but Presents Opportunities A downgrade in a country’s government debt may trigger a wave of forced sellers. Pension funds, insurance companies and ETFs are focused on matching their liabilities to their assets. Therefore, they may be restricted in holding debt rated below a certain level. With Portugal’s government debt downgrade (again let me emphasize by not just one but by two notches), these investors may have to sell certain Portuguese debt holdings. Any forced selling may be exploited with the purchasing power in your hands. Misunderstood Markets In addition, as Christine Lagarde, the French economy minister, admitted “Europe is difficult to understand for markets. They work in an irrational way sometimes,” and it is possible to profit from this ‘irrationality’. Companies located in an EU periphery country, with strong balance sheets and demand insulated from worries about their homeland (i.e. international exposure etc), may suffer from illogical moves in the markets that punish anything connected to the country regardless. This debt can be picked up ‘cheaply’. United They Stand; Divided They Fall The problem with the “EU” banner is that it links together economies that are quite different from each other. Much press has been dedicated to the fate of the ‘PIIGS’ — Portugal, Italy, Ireland, Greece and Spain but it is interesting to compare journalistic exposure with economic impact. Greece Ireland and Portugal account for less than 5% of EU GDP. It is wise to remember that often overreaction offers the most profitable investment opportunities.

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BP: Libya State Oil Contract Still Valid

March 17, 2011

LONDON (Alex Lawler/Reuters) – BP Plc said on Thursday it saw its contract with Libya’s National Oil Corporation as still valid, a day after Italy’s Eni became the first Western oil and gas firm to try to rebuild bridges with NOC. BP has no oil and gas production in Libya and in February was preparing for the start of exploratory drilling in western Libya when it suspended the effort due to the uprising against Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi. “At the moment we just have to wait and see. We’re monitoring the situation. We have a contract with NOC and as far as we know it is still in place,” a BP spokesman said. Oil firms pulled out staff and shut operations in what is usually Africa’s third-largest producer and holder of the continent’s largest oil reserves. The revolt against Gaddafi is now struggling to hold its ground one month after it started. Eni, which produces oil and gas in Libya, on Wednesday called on Europe to abandon sanctions against Libya and Austria’s OMV, also an important player there, said it still saw Libya’s NOC as its partner. “Europe is the main importer of Libyan oil and its chemical composition and proximity makes it very attractive, which is one of the reasons you have some companies indicating that they are keen to go back to normal and cement cordial ties perhaps regardless of whether their governments do so or not,” said Henry Smith, Libya analyst at risk consultancy Control Risks. Some Libyan officials have sent signals that foreign companies would be welcome back. The head of NOC, Shokri Ghanem, said on Wednesday Libya’s government will honour existing contracts with Western oil companies, although this appeared at odds with earlier remarks from Gaddafi. Royal Dutch Shell Plc, which like BP was also doing exploration work in Libya and has no production there, said on Thursday its foreign staff remained outside the country. “Shell has temporarily relocated its expatriate staff from Libya. The safety and security of all our staff remain our primary concern and we are in touch with our staff in country on a regular basis,” a Shell spokesman said via email. “Shell offices remain closed.” Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Bank of Italy to lend USD11.17b to IMF

March 15, 2011

Bank of Italy to lend USD11.17b to IMF

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Libya’s Largest Gas Exporter Nears Complete Production Halt

March 10, 2011

LONDON — The chief of Eni, the biggest gas exporter from Libya, said Thursday that oil production across the battle-torn country is near a complete halt and that the Italian company’s output is down to little more than supplying power to Libyan households. Libyan exports normally account for around 2 percent of world supplies, but the violent clashes between forces loyal to longtime leader Moammar Gadhafi and rebels have split the country in half and crippled its lucrative energy sector. Paolo Scaroni told analysts in London that he nevertheless expects the production disruptions to be temporary as all sides in the fight have an interest in resuming exports. Eni’s own production was down by two-thirds, Scaroni said. What is still running is mostly gas extraction to generate electricity, and turning that off would just create more problems for civilians, he said. “The electricity is not for Mr. Gadhafi. It is for the Libyan people,” Scaroni said. Eni executives are in touch with Italian officials, who are in turn consulting with the European Union. “So far, we have been encouraged to continue production,” Scaroni said. The company has nevertheless suspended activity at offshore gas facilities as well as production at its Bu Attifel oil field due to insufficient staff, Scaroni said. During normal periods, Eni exports about 12 percent of its natural gas from Libya via the Greenstream pipeline, which also has been suspended. Before the crisis, Eni’s normal daily production of both oil and gas was 280,000 barrels of oil equivalent. The split was roughly 40 percent oil, and 60 percent gas. Scaroni said OPEC’s secretary-general, Abdulla Salem El-Badri, a Libyan, had called to find out how much Libyan crude – and not just Eni’s production – is missing from the market due to the conflict. “This gave me the impression that OPEC wants to react to the lack of Libyan crude in order to avoid excessive hikes in the price of crude and disruption of refineries that are using Libyan oil,” Scaroni said. Oil prices soared above $100 per barrel last week as the uprising in Libya essentially shut down the country’s exports. Nearly all of Eni’s foreign staff has left the country, and many Libyan workers have taken leave, Scaroni said. Eni facilities have not been damaged, and Scaroni said the company will be able to resume operations when the situation has stabilized. In terms of earnings, he said the short-term production losses will be offset by higher oil prices. At a news conference later, Scaroni said that any damage from fighting – though not terrorism – would be covered by insurance. “We are more in the war situation,” he said. Scaroni downplayed any Libyan financial investment in Eni – an issue since the EU has issued an asset freeze against senior Libyan officials – calling it “a legend.” He said 0.5 percent of Eni shares belongs to an entity with Libya in its name based in Bahrain – a figure he called “not essential.” “Until today, as far as the Europe Union and Italy are concerned, we can make any business in Libya. There is no restriction whatsoever,” Scaroni said. “That may change. We are not doing it because we are not producing oil.” Eni would react, he said, if the rules change. In the meantime, Scaroni emphasized that Eni has been encouraged to continue making gas for the domestic market “for the well-being of the Libyans because I don’t think anyone wants the whole of Libya to stay without electricity.” Scaroni addressed investors during a presentation of Eni’s four-year business plan, which will focus on production in Iraq, Venezuela, Angola and Russia. The company, he said, has limited investments planned in Libya over the next two years, and no major startups there over the course of the four-year plan. Eni, which has operated in Libya for more than 50 years, expects the production halts in Libya to be temporary due to the importance of the energy industry to the nation’s economy, Scaroni said. “On this assumption, we do not expect impact on our long-term production profiles,” Scaroni said. ____ Barry reported from Milan.

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House prices in Italy stable at pre-crisis levels

March 8, 2011

Unlike most countries in Europe, Italy did not experience sharp house price falls with the global financial crisis.

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Information Builders Strengthens Its Global Presence in the Business Intelligence Market With a New Subsidiary in Italy

March 7, 2011

Independent BI Leader Appoints Jose Ma Garcia-Soto as General Manager and Vice President of Information Builders Italy

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Video: Italy’s Berlusconi Faces Pressure to Sever Libya Ties

March 7, 2011

March 7 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Olivia Sterns reports on Italy’s ties with Libya, which have strengthened under Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi. Libya has invested in Italian companies including Fiat SpA, UniCredit SpA and Juventus Football Club SpA.

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Dan Dorfman: On the Trail of the Next Revolution

March 2, 2011

From Tunisia to Egypt to Libya. So where does the parade of revolutions head next? Did I hear someone blurt out Bahrain, Yemen or maybe Oman? Sounds reasonable to me since all three have been stung by recent protests and riots. Or maybe, suggests Jordan militant and trader Caise Hassan, even Saudi Arabia, the world’s biggest oil exporter, whose stock market slumped to a nine-month low on a hefty 11.6 percent loss in just the past three days alone on fears the demonstrations in Libya could spread there. But wait. Bryan Rich, editor of the World Currency Trader, a Florida-based investment newsletter that tracks the action in currencies around the globe, offers another perspective. “Don’t rule out Europe, especially Ireland and Greece,” he says. Surprisingly, he thinks the social unrest could also strike China and India, the planet’s two fastest growing economies. Why so? Because despite the growth, he feels both countries are vulnerable to such strife as they have the world’s largest poor populations where the distribution of wealth has become increasingly disparate. Russia and Brazil are also included in his candidates for social unrest. “But before we see social unrest in China and India choke off global growth, Europe may derail the world’s economic recovery first,” says Rich. His warning about fresh European unrest sounds like old news, since riots and demonstrations have already happened there. What’s more, they’ve been widely reported. Rich, though, looks at it as new news. In essence, he sees a resumption of the protests and riots that occurred in a number of Eurozone countries during the past few years as a result of the sovereign debt crises, possibly within the next three months. “Unrest begets more unrest; it’s contagious,” he says. Judging from last year’s $1 trillion rescue package from the European Union and the nonstop climb in stock prices here, Wall Street is clearly viewing future European risks as ho-hum. Rich, though, isn’t yawning. In contrast, he expresses concern, essentially arguing that Europe’s financial dilemma remains serious and explosive and could resurface in a major way at any time. Why could we see renewed chaos in Greece and Ireland (Rich also tosses in Spain and Portugal)? Because all the ingredients in Europe are there, explains Rich, such as high unemployment, stagnant growth, austerity measures, and little hope of restoring the standards of living of three to five years ago. He also points to Europe’s fractured fiscal policies, flawed structures and the lack of a unified monetary policy. Given the massive $2 trillion exposure European banks have to Eurozone sovereign debt, “government defaults,” warns Rich, “could easily send the global financial system back into a dangerous tailspin.” He also believes that if people in the weak Eurozone countries get fed up with the reality of austerity and rising food costs, they could well stand up to their governments and scream “no more.” That implies, as well, a call for a reduction of the interest on their debt and the need for bondholders to be willing to accept losses. What does all all of this mean? Some of the ominous possibilities, as Rich sees them, economic shocks that threaten stability, runs on European banks, which we’re already seeing to some degree in Ireland and Greece, the withdrawal from the European Union of some PIIGS (Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece and Spain), a big decline in the Euro and a massive sell off of equities around the globe, including the U.S. Viewed as yet another likely result: a flight into the dollar as a safe haven. What do you think? E-mail me at Dandordan@aol.com.

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Russia- Gasprom Increases Gas Shipments to Italy

March 2, 2011

Russia- Gasprom Increases Gas Shipments to Italy

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No End In Sight For Libyan Oil Supply Fears

February 27, 2011

MADRID — Libya’s oil industry is in chaos – and there’s no telling when that will end. Armed men loot equipment from oil field installations. British commandos execute secret raids in the Libyan desert to rescue stranded oil workers as security disintegrates rapidly in remote camps. Libyan port workers, frightened of being caught up in Moammar Gadhafi’s violent crackdown on protesters, fail to show up for work, leaving empty tankers floating around the Mediterranean Sea waiting to load crude. And the European oil companies extracting Libya’s black gold are operating in crisis mode, trying to get stranded expatriate workers out and safe amid conflicting information on how much oil is still being pumped and just where it all is. That was just this week. The situation is not expected to get better in the near future. No one knows whether Gadhafi or the rebels trying to oust him will end up controlling Africa’s biggest oil reserves. Fears abound that Libya could turn into a fractured nation with competing armed groups ruling over rich and remote desert fields lying hundreds of miles (kilometers) apart from each other. The chaos in Libya as it descends into virtual civil war has sent international oil prices skyrocketing despite a pledge from Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest oil exporter, to ramp up exports. And that volatility is likely to continue, because it could take weeks or even months for Libyan production and exports to return to normal levels, experts said. That has sent already over-caffinated oil traders into a frenzy that won’t calm down until there’s more clarity about what is happening on the ground in Libya. The International Energy Agency reported late Friday that Libya is probably still producing about 850,000 barrels of oil daily, down from its normal capacity of 1.6 million barrels – but acknowledged the estimate is based on “incomplete, conflicting information.” Libya produces just under 2 percent of the world’s oil, but its customers are overwhelmingly European. Hardest hit by the sudden oil shortage are European refiners that receive 85 percent of Libya’s exports, turning the country’s highly valued crude into diesel and jet fuel. The biggest buyers are Italy, France, Germany and Spain – and Spain is so concerned it announced Friday that highway speed limits will be reduced in March in a desperate bid to cut fuel consumption. The biggest problem facing oil companies and European consumers who depend on Libyan oil is a near-complete breakdown in solid information. Phones in Libya rarely work, Internet is intermittent, workers are fleeing and looters are grabbing what they can or pose a threat until order is restored. While British military planes staged a daring desert rescue Saturday of 150 oil workers, hundreds of other workers were heading across the Sahara Desert in bus convoys toward the Egyptian border – a grueling trip. One evacuee said the military plane he boarded in Libya was supposed to carry around 65 people, but quickly grew to double that. “It was very cramped but we were just glad to be out of there,” Patrick Eyles, a 43-year-old Briton, said at Malta International Airport. Spain’s Repsol-YPF oil company announced Tuesday it had suspended operations in Libya, only to find out a day later that the oil fields it operates with other firms were still producing 160,000 barrels of crude daily. Still, that was less than half of the 360,000 barrels produced before the crisis began. Despite reports that production was still under way in the vast Saharan desert Amal fields, Libyans never before permitted to approach the oil fields under Gadhafi’s reign showed up armed and took anything they could – four-wheel drive vehicles, pumps, generators. One group came with a trailer and tried to remove a huge crane, said Gavin de Salis, chairman of Britain’s OPS international oil field services company. “Nobody shot anyone,” De Salis. “But people were wandering around with guns saying ‘Thanks, we’ll take your vehicle since you’re leaving anyway.’” Two buses arranged by De Salis’ company were ferrying 117 expatriate workers toward Egypt on Sunday, a trip expected to last 24 hours or more, and he said another bus was expected to take 25 expatriates out. Even though production appears to be limping along – with Repsol reporting that Libyan oil workers are increasingly running operations as expatriates leave – the oil isn’t getting out. The 320-mile (520-kilometer) natural gas pipeline under the Mediterranean from Libya to the Italian island of Sicily has been shut down for a week, with no guidance from its owner, the Italian energy firm Eni SpA, on when it might start pumping again. “Most Libyan ports are closed due to bad weather, staff shortages, or production outages,” the IEA reported. Ports are key because Libya’s crude heads abroad on tankers. Major container ship companies have suspended deliveries or pickups from Libyan ports with no word on when shipments might resume. Tanker ships that deliver to Europe have been told to stay more than 100 miles (160 kilometers) offshore from some Libyan ports and await information on whether they can safely dock and take on oil. The massive oil terminal at Brega, Libya’s second-largest hydrocarbon complex, was nearly deserted over the weekend, with operations scaled back almost 90 percent because employees had fled and ships were not showing up. The Brega complex, about 125 miles (200 kilometers) west of the rebel stronghold of Benghazi, collects crude oil and gas from Libya’s fields in the southeast and prepares it for export. Since the crisis began Feb. 15, however, General Manager Fathi Eissa said production had dropped from 90,000 barrels of crude a day to 11,000. With huge spherical storage containers and reservoirs rapidly filling up with oil and natural gas and no ships to take it away, production in the southern fields has been throttled back until Brega can clear some of its capacity. The big oil companies have been mum on how the political situation may pan out, because they want to produce oil whether Gadhafi or someone else ends up in charge, and it’s not worth it for them to risk alienating any of the groups vying for power, said Mohammed El-Katiri, a Middle East analyst at the Eurasia Group risk consulting group. In a worst-case scenario, El-Katiri predicted it could take between four to six months to for Libya’s domestic unrest to ease. “Such a scenario bodes poorly from an oil production point of view on two counts: Not only will it compromise production with Gadhafi still in power, but ongoing violence could further complicate the ability of a post-Gadhafi political order to emerge in a manner that creates a stable domestic security environment,” El-Katiri said. Repsol’s chairman, Antonio Brufau, told reporters he would get his last expatriate workers out using bicycles if necessary – and El-Katiri said oil companies won’t send them back in until they know it’s safe. De Salis said some expatriates could return without a functioning central government but only if local security situations improve. Leaving oil fields deserted in Libya creates even more security problems. In Nigeria, opportunistic villagers, rebels or pirates often tap pipelines in a dangerous bid to steal fuel, leaving many killed or maimed in accidents and pipelines compromised by sabotage. About the only positive sign for Libya’s oil future is that experts believe both Gadhafi and the rebels want to restart suspended oil operations as quickly as possible because they covet Libya’s oil wealth. “For Gadhafi, the money helps because he can keep on paying his militias and mercenaries to keep them fighting and loyal,” El-Katiri said. The rebels, meanwhile, don’t want to alienate Western governments that depend on Libyan oil, he said, and also need money to be strong enough “to resist attacks by Gadhafi.” ___ Paul Schemm in Brega, Libya; Chris Kahn and Jon Fahey in New York and Cassandra Vinograd in London contributed to this report.

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Video: Italian Mafia Probed for Driving Up Cherry Tomato Prices

February 11, 2011

Feb. 11 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Nejra Cehic reports on an investigation by Italy’s anti-mafia commission into whether the Casalesi crime family controls the commerce of Sicilian cherry tomatoes and is driving up prices by 10-fold.

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Joint business council between India, Italy

February 2, 2011

Joint business council between India, Italy

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