italy

Sharp (TYO:6753) And Enel Green Power (BIT:EGPW) Completes 5 MW Photovoltaic Plant in Italy

January 21, 2011

Sharp (TYO:6753) And Enel Green Power (BIT:EGPW) Completes 5 MW Photovoltaic Plant in Italy

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Fiat CEO to invest in Italy

January 18, 2011

Fiat CEO to invest in Italy

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Parsons Appoints Price as Managing Director, Northern Mediterranean

December 21, 2010

PASADENA, CA–(Marketwire – December 21, 2010) – Parsons announces the appointment of William D. “Bill” Price as Managing Director for the Northern Mediterranean region (Portugal, Italy, Greece, Spain, and Turkey). In this capacity, he will be responsible for overseeing the sales and operations of Parsons’ work in these markets.

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Video: Ecclestone’s Rome F-1 Race Threatens Historic Grand Prix: Video

November 15, 2010

Nov. 15 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Flavia Rotondi reports from Rome about Bernie Ecclestone’s bid to bring Formula One car races to the Italian capital, and its potential impact on the future of the historic Grand Prix at Monza. Monza in Italy, opened in 1922, was among the seven circuits of the inaugural 1950 F-1 season that also included Silverstone in the U.K., Belgium’s Spa and the streets of Monaco. Plans by F-1 chief Ecclestone and Rome Mayor Gianni Alemanno to hold a race in the city may spell Monza’s end as the sport expands to full capacity with events in India and the U.S. on the horizon. (Source: Bloomberg)

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Bernie Madoff Auction Bidding Reaches Fever Pitch

November 14, 2010

NEW YORK — Anyone wanting to walk in the shoes of fallen financier Bernard Madoff was in luck Saturday: Thousands of belongings from his New York City penthouse, including his used shoes, went on the auction block. An anonymous bidder paid the highest price of the auction – $550,000 – for a 10.5-carat diamond engagement ring that belonged to Madoff’s wife, Ruth. The winning bid topped the $300,000 minimum pre-sale estimate. Ruth Madoff’s French diamond earrings fetched the next highest price. Valued at $100,000 to $137,500, they went for $135,000 to an undisclosed buyer. The man who became a symbol of greed and deceit on Wall Street also had a lavish collection of watches. One of his vintage steel Rolex “Moon Phase” watches sold for $67,500, topping a $60,000 minimum estimate. The sale started Saturday morning at the Sheraton New York Hotel & Towers, with an auctioneer from Texas-based Gaston & Sheehan rattling off lots at a tongue-twisting speed all day and into the evening. Buyers responded at fever pitch. They raised their hands to signal a bid – accompanied by bloodcurdling shouts from bid-spotters marking a winning price. Their swaggering style – as if herding bulls instead of selling Madoff’s artsy ones – seemed appropriate for an auction of the belongings of a Wall Street trader who cherished the winning bull in every form. He bought statues and paintings of them and even named his boats “Bull,” “Sitting Bull” and “Little Bull.” A leather bull foot stool – including a tail that had broken off – sold for $3,300, against a pre-sale estimate of $250 to $360. While many of the more than 400 lots included luxury items, the Madoffs’ penthouse did have touches of culture. A 1917 Steinway grand piano from their living room went for $42,000 – six times the minimum estimate of $7,000. The buyer was an 81-year-old Long Island real estate executive. “I’ve got loads of pianos, but this one has history – it’ll make an interesting conversation piece,” said John Rodger, an amateur pianist who will keep the Steinway in his home in East Islip. An oil painting by the late American artist Frederick Carl Frieseke sold for $47,500, against a pre-sale estimate of $20,000 to $45,000. The Manhattan sale is the last auction in New York of Madoff belongings. A third and final auction is to be held in Florida to sell off items from a Palm Beach home that went for more than $5.5 million last month. Madoff was arrested two years ago and quickly admitted his scheme. Investigators said he used billions of dollars in cash from new investors to pay old ones, cheating charities, celebrities and institutional investors. U.S. marshals seized everything in the Madoffs’ Manhattan apartment and Long Island beach house: worn socks, new monogrammed boxer shorts, Italian velveteen slippers bearing the initials “BLM” in gold embroidery. All of it was being sold – with morbid fascination for mundane articles from the couple’s daily life that also were on the block, from bed linens, clothing, cookware and luggage to intimate items like cuticle scissors and bottles of shampoo. Valued at $75 to $110, the lot with the slippers included Ruth Madoff’s monogrammed shirt. A young man paid $6,000 for all of it, saying he’ll never be able to wear the slippers because his shoe size is 13; Madoff wore a size 8. He declined to give his name. For $1,700, 11 pairs of boxers came with a pair of silk Armani pants and one of Prada pantyhose, along with dozens of pairs of used socks, in a lot estimated to be worth $960 to $1,370. Besides bulls and fine watches, Madoff loved shoes. He owned about 250 pairs, many never worn – made in Italy, France, Belgium and England. Ten pairs of Madoff’s used designer shoes sold for $900, against a minimum of $250. The disgraced 72-year-old trader is behind bars for life in a North Carolina prison, and his wife was ordered to leave their homes. Despite their vast wealth, the Madoffs didn’t seem to make much room for house guests. The auction included their early 19th-century bed with fabric hangings and “intense sun fading,” at a pre-auction estimate of $8,000 to $11,400. “Just $500?” the incredulous auctioneer, Bob Sheehan, said of the first bid, adding, “This was the only bed in the whole house, I’m not kidding! $500? My God, it’s not a pullout.” It sold for $2,250. Sheehan conducted the auction for the U.S. Marshals Service, which said it had grossed more than $2 million from the auction, far above the pre-sale goal of at least $1.2 million. Proceeds will go to more than 3,000 clients Madoff swindled in a multibillion-dollar Ponzi scheme. “All 489 lots of ill-gotten gains sold today and the proceeds will go towards something good for a change,” said Deputy U.S. Marshal Roland Ubaldo. Last year’s New York auction of Madoff’s property raised $1 million. The Manhattan penthouse went for $8 million, and his yacht and boats also were sold.

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Bernie Madoff’s Personal Items Go Up For Auction — Including A Tiny Bull (PHOTOS)

November 10, 2010

Bernie Madoff’s tiny bull is up for sale. (Scroll down for pictures of Madoff’s personal belongings that are up for auction) A miniature bronze statue and symbol of Wall Street optimism that once belonged the former financial adviser is among the 400 items U.S. Marshals are auctioning on Saturday to help compensate the convicted swindler’s victims. Made in Italy in 1927, the piece is 5.5 inches long and 2.75 inches tall — seemingly modest for a man who promised investors consistently high returns at extraordinary levels above the market but instead pocketed from them billions of dollars. He pleaded guilty last year and was sentenced to 150 years in prison. A previous auction of his personal property raised $1 million. U.S. Marshals displayed an array of jewelry, furniture, antiques, clothing and other personal effects on Wednesday ahead of Saturday’s auction in Brooklyn and simultaneous online bidding. A 10.54-karat diamond engagement ring that once belonged to wife Ruth Madoff and a pair of black velveteen slippers embroidered with Bernie’s initials will also go on sale, along with a 1917 Steinway grand piano and 15 luxury watches. The bronze bull was one of several sculptures including miniature busts of Plato and Aristotle and twin marble lions. Among the collectibles are a set of 120 rare postage stamps and 247 rare coins and banknotes from around the globe. Proceeds from the auction will go to the Department of Justice’s Asset Forfeiture Fund, which is used to compensate the victims of Madoff’s multibillion-dollar Ponzi scheme. Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

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Lloyd Chapman: Obama Rhetoric on Infrastructure Spending Doesn’t Match Administration Actions

October 12, 2010

On Monday, President Barack Obama emphasized the importance of putting Americans back to work using federal infrastructure projects. Yet, despite strong rhetoric on jobs, President Obama has failed to stop the purge of jobs caused by the diversion of billions of dollars a month in federal small business contracts to corporate giants. Since 2003, more than a dozen federal investigations have uncovered billions of dollars in federal small business contracts, actually flowing into the hands of Fortune 500 corporations and other clearly large businesses. In Report 5-15, the Small Business Administration (SBA) Office of Inspector General referred to the issue as, “One of the most important challenges facing the Small Business Administration and the entire Federal government today.” The most recent information released by the Obama Administration indicates that of the top 100 recipients of federal small business contracts, 65 percent of the dollars actually went to large businesses. Some of the firms the Obama Administration has allowed to be included as small businesses are: Lockheed Martin, Boeing, Raytheon, L-3 Communications, British Aerospace (BAE), Northrop Grumman, Dell Computer, French firm Thales Communications, Ssangyong Corporation headquartered in Seoul, South Korea and Finmeccanica SpA, which is located in Italy with 73,000 employees. Textron Inc., a Fortune 500 firm with 43,000 employees and annual sales over $14 billion, received approximately $775 million in federal small business contracts in a single year. In February of 2008, presidential candidate Barack Obama recognized the magnitude of the problem when he promised to , “End the diversion of federal small business contracts to corporate giants.” To date, President Obama has failed to honor that promise. In May, the ASBL conducted an examination of the Obama Administration’s track record for small businesses and uncovered a dramatic disparity between President Obama’s rhetoric and his actions. In addition to failing to stop the diversion of federal small business contracts to corporate giants, the Obama Administration has: 1. Reduced overall transparency in federal small business contracting data by eliminating fields such as the “small business flag.” 2. Failed to allocate more than 3 percent of stimulus funds to small businesses. 3. Failed to bring an end to the Comprehensive Subcontracting Plan Test Program, which allows prime contractors to circumvent their small business subcontracting goals.

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Etrion, Phoenix Solar to build plant in Italy

October 5, 2010

Etrion, Phoenix Solar to build plant in Italy

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Don McNay: Eat, Pray, Love and the Economic Crisis

October 3, 2010

When the moon hits you eye like a big pizza pie that’s amore -Dean Martin I could be the last person in America to read Eat, Pray, Love but the movie got me interested in the book. There is a segment in the book that keep running through my mind. The author, Elizabeth Gilbert, references Luigi Barzini’s book The Italians when explaining why a country that has “produced the greatest artistic, political and scientific minds of the ages” has not become a world power. Barzini’s conclusion is that after hundreds of years of corruption and exploitation by foreign domination, Italians don’t trust political leaders or big institutions. Gilbert said the prevailing thought is that “because the world is so corrupted, misspoken, unstable, exaggerated and unfair, one should only trust what one can experience with one’s own senses.” She added, “In a world of disorder and disaster and fraud, only artistic excellence is incorruptible. Pleasure cannot be bargained down.” I have pondered Gilbert’s insight for weeks. I keep asking myself the essential question. Is the United States headed the way of Italy? Survey after survey shows that Americans do not trust their elected officials and don’t trust the people on Wall Street. My parents grew up in a society where people trusted big companies to provide secure, long term jobs, excellent benefits and solid retirement plans. They trusted Wall Street to invest in those big companies and fuel America’s economy growth. They trusted political leaders to pass legislation that made the nation better, like the Civil Rights Act, even when the vote wasn’t politically expedient. We trusted our leaders to do the right thing. My children are growing up in a society where none of that is happening. Corporations dump loyal employees, cut benefits and wiggle out of paying for pensions. Wall Street rewards them for it. Wall Street has been based on a system of paying employees huge bonuses for gambling in silly trading games, rather than helping the economy produce growth. Washington seems more focused on the latest opinion poll or their lobbyist buddies than what is good for the average citizen. Long term thinking seems to occur around the “24 hour news cycle.” If the American people are following the path of the Italians, you can’t really blame them. On the other hand, I don’t want to see the United States become the next Italy. Three recently released books, Arianna Huffington’s Third World Nation, Charlie Gasperino’s Bought and Paid For , and Zac Bissonnette’s Debt Free U are different in philosophy but trace back to a central theme. You can’t trust what the powerful are telling us. Arianna writes that politicians have sold out the middle class. Zac punctures the myth that people have to rack up big student debt and Charlie makes the case that President Obama is in the pocket of Wall Street. I’ve been developing my own set of ideas on creating Wealth Without Wall Street and most of them stem from self preservation. Turning money and my life over to Washington and Wall Street seems to be a road to the poor house. Arianna has been pushing the concept of Move Your Money , where you stop doing business with Wall Street banks and start doing business with community banks and credit unions. Zac pushes the principals of no debt, just as I have been doing for a long time. Younger Americans are coping with an insane amount of debt in student loans that will be the flash point for our next economic crisis. I want to trust big institutions but that trust has to be earned. I trust many life insurance companies because they are heavily regulated and oriented towards safety. I’ve been in an associated industry for all my adult life, know the people who run the companies and believe in the concepts they sell. The culture is very different from Goldman Sachs. I want to trust government. I voted for President Obama in 2008 because I thought he would bring change to the economic system. Instead he gave us Geithner, Bernanke, Dr. Lawrence Summers and all the people who got us in this mess to begin with. Gasperino makes a well documented claim that there was never a plan to bring change and that Obama was in Wall Street’s pocket before he took office. I pray that Charlie is wrong but suspect he is not. There is a way to turn things around but the window is short. Arianna promotes public financing for elections. I’d like to see economic incentives for people who save and invest as opposed to bailouts for those who lack self control. America could completely become the Italian model, where we retreat to our own worlds and focus on immediate pleasure. Although there are a lot of downfalls, as Gilbert notes, the Italians can make one heck of a pizza. In the big scheme of life, that’s amore . Don McNay, CLU, ChFC, MSFS, CSSC of Richmond Kentucky is an award-winning financial columnist and Huffington Post Contributor.

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Brett King: Bye Bye Tellers – Hello Branch 2.0

September 26, 2010

Given the challenges of branch banking today, there’s a bunch of innovations taking place in respect to “Engagement Banking” within the branch property and it’s clear that many banks feel the branch environment has to change to stimulate different activity in the branch. In BANK 2.0 I classify this need to change the engagement in this way: “The core function of the branch moving forward will be about establishing the relationship with the customer at inception, and extending that relationship through an advisory sales process and excellent customer support systems. It is conceivable that all of the transactional elements within a branch will be moved to automated banking within electronic banking centres, automated branches, ATMs or the Internet within the next 10 years. What then is left? The face-to-face, value-add of a real, live human interaction.” Chapter 3 – Rebuilding the Branch One Customer at a Time, BANK 2.0 So I wanted to take a quick snapshot at some true innovation in branch design and deployment today. I’m not talking about a fresh repaint, some new plastic signage, and more laptops and kiosks around the branch, I’m talking about something fundamentally different for customers. The Flagship Luxury Engagement Model There’s something about walking into a Louis Vuitton or Versace Luxury store, the expansive space of Virgin’s flagship store in London (Oxford Street), or the wonderment of the Apple Store in Manhattan or London. A retail experience like this is just begging for customers to visit you. On the other hand the traditional branch is just not, well… attractive. Design is an under leveraged resource in attracting and engaging customers today. Some banks, however, have tried to change that. Have a look at these innovators in branch design, and say goodbye to the high-counter, bulletproof glass paradigm: CheBanca! – Milan, Italy Where’s the teller? Nope…not here either More great photos here… Deutsche Bank Q110 – Berlin, Germany Where’s the teller – not here either.. . Engagement Banking with Microsoft Surface Tech More great photos here… Some other great examples of branch design for the low-counter, sales engagement model include Jyske Bank ,and an innovative explanation of branch function redesign from Grey Architecture for “Info Bank”. The POD concept Clearly many banks see the “POD” or a customer engagement area as a key component of branch design moving forward. This will be either through ‘stations’ or sales pods designed for customers to sit in privacy with a relationship manager to discuss their needs. Here are demonstrations of the two core concepts in deployment today: The teller ‘pod’ with stations with some transactional capability The ‘sales’ pod – maximizing the face-to-face engagement Taking Design Too far?? But some take it too far – like this example from HSBC at Design Miami 08 where the temporary branch/vip lounge looked more like a farmyard than a bank…The point is – it’s not about design as the sole criteria, it’s about the engagement. The digitally-enabled branch We already saw Microsoft Surface technology enabled in Deutsche’s Q110 branch – there are a bunch of other banks who are doing the same. In the video below you can see a discussion from the Microsoft Surface team on a possible Financial Services application, or click through to the Razorfish app on Microsoft Surface. Microsoft Surface Financial Services Application – Razorfish Demo from Razorfish – Emerging Experiences on Vimeo . HSBC Premier in Hong Kong and YES Bank in India have given their customers RFID -enabled ATM and Debit cards, so that when you walk in the branch, they already know who you are and can start anticipating how best to serve you. YES Bank’s RFID readers are hidden behind brand signage We know Banco Santander has already deployed a very cool media wall in their corporate headquarters (along with Robot assistants), but I envisage that media walls will increasingly come into the branch to create both a super-dynamic advertising environment, along with a place for customers to interact in-branch. Jeffry Pilcher at Financial Brand has done a great piece on branch design and the use of interaction – The Future Of Branches . Check it out if you can… Conclusions The future of the branch is about engagement. The old thinking that was based on getting customers into a branch to do a transaction and cross-selling them is no longer a viable model, because the branch provides no value-add for a transaction. Thus, if the branch is about an excellent, high-quality face-to-face interaction, we need to build for that. Open up the branches, hire new staff and put new systems in place designed to support the conversation with the customer. The high-counter old teller stations and staff who are versed in transactional banking, won’t work in the BANK 2.0 world. See our work on engagement banking in more detail here…

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Lloyd Chapman: Obama Small Business Task Force Ignores Biggest Problem for Small Businesses

September 15, 2010

Today, President Barack Obama’s Small Business Task force released a series of 13 recommendations to “remove barriers to participation by small businesses in the federal market place.” As predicted by the American Small Business League (ASBL) in an April 27 press release titled, “Obama Small Business Task Force May Ignore #1 Problem,” the task force made no recommendations to end the diversion of federal small business contracts to many of the largest companies in the United States and Europe. Since 2003, a series of over a dozen federal investigations have found billions of dollars a month in federal small business contracts actually going to corporate giants around the world. Some of the firms the Obama Administration has awarded small business contracts to include: Lockheed Martin, Boeing, Raytheon, L-3 Communications, British Aerospace (BAE), Northrop Grumman, Dell Computer, Ssangyong Corporation headquartered in Seoul, South Korea and Finmeccanica SpA, which is located in Italy and has 73,000 employees. Every year since 2005, the Small Business Administration Office of Inspector General (SBA IG) has referred to the diversion of billions of dollars in federal small business contracts to large business as, “One of the most important challenges facing the Small Business Administration and the entire Federal government today.” President Obama promised to end the widely reported abuses when he released the statement, ” It is time to end the diversion of federal small business contracts to corporate giants. ” To date, President Obama has refused to offer any policies or legislation that would halt the diversion of over $100 billion a year in federal small business contracts to large businesses. The fact that President Obama has broken his campaign promise to end these abuses against legitimate small businesses is an excellent example of who he really is. This issue clearly shows Barack Obama is not the man the nation thought he was when he was elected. President Obama has lied to the American people and his record low approval ratings indicate the majority of voters realize it. The ASBL is preparing to file suit in Federal District Court Northern District of California to stop the Obama Administration from continuing to divert small business contracts to corporate giants. The ASBL currently has 6 federal lawsuits pending against the federal government, and plans to file six more before the end of 2010.

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Rabah Ghezali: There Is No Wealth but From Men: Why Immigration Is Good for the Economy

September 3, 2010

2010 has been rife with anti-immigrant rhetoric and action on both sides of the Atlantic. There were the atrocious anti-migrant riots in Italy and the passing of controversial Arizona law SB 1070. France has taken a demagogic turn, which some commentators dub xenophobic. Even Canada, which is celebrated for its progressive immigration policies, has experienced unprecedented immigrant-bashing rhetoric around the arrival of a boat carrying Sri Lankan self-proclaimed refugees. There is an emerging conventional wisdom across the Atlantic that increasingly characterizes immigrants as a prime source of the ills of our societies. But do economic studies back this up? In short, no. Immigration has an undisputed effect on economic growth. Migration reduces imbalance in the labor market without imposing a significant impact on public finances. Indeed, without immigration, the population of several European countries, particularly Germany, Spain and Italy, would have declined long ago. In Canada, over 70% of the growth in the labor force during the 1990′s is attributable to immigration, a figure that could someday reach 100%. Given the overrepresentation of young people among immigrants, immigration also brings down the age of the population, relieving pressure on the pensions systems. Moreover, migrants help grow a host country’s market access by creating valuable business networks with their countries of origin. The benefits continue. In most member countries of the Organization for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD), the proportion of immigrants with university degrees is greater than that recorded for the native population. A recent study demonstrates that immigration fuels innovation, an economic boon. From a historical point of view, the example of the great transatlantic migration, from Europe to the Americas of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century has amply demonstrated the salutary effect of immigration on growth. Conventional wisdom is also wrong in linking immigration and native unemployment. The notion that immigrants cause natives to lose their jobs is simply not supported by empirical results. There is not a fixed number of jobs in an economy, and immigrants often do not compete directly with native workers in the labor market. Migrants are first and foremost consumers who help expand the economy even before stimulating the labor supply. Their demand stimulates the supply of goods and services which in turn lead to job creation. Except in very special cases, immigrant inflows are extremely low compared to the workforce already available in a country. As such, the absorption of newly arrived migrant on the labor market generally proves to be relatively easy. In fact, when the economy is in a recession, migrants are the first to lose their jobs. Most studies in fact demonstrate the existence of a positive relationship between immigrant and native labor forces. In fact, people coming from earlier waves of migrants are most directly in competition with newly arrived immigrants rather than the natives. In time of expansion, workers tend to raise their expectations and to shy away from activities that are most painful and least valued, thus generating the need for the recruitment of low-skilled immigrants. Consequently, the idea that immigrants take the jobs of the natives seems to be simply xenophobic political posturing. Regarding the impact of immigration on wages, a recent meta-analysis of the available data concluded that the impact of immigration on the earnings of the native born population is statistically insignificant. Migrants are not responsible for alleged decrease of salaries or social dumping. Migrants are convenient scapegoats. In countries with limited sectoral and geographical mobility, foreign labor can alleviate the shortages. The foreign workforce, being more mobile than the native one — since migrants have relatively less material and family ties in their host country — helps diffuse tensions in the labor market and helps reinvigorate certain regions. Some shortages are already apparent on the labor markets of most OECD countries, particularly for specialties related to new technologies and health. Immigration has no significant impact on public spending. Indeed, the great majority of immigrants do pay taxes and add public revenue, particularly high-skilled immigrants. The consequences are positive for some public services, such as defense and interest on the national debt, for which immigrants do not impose costs. The bolstering effect of immigration on the U.S Social Security’s finances is particularly compelling. Economic data provide us with two certainties. First, immigration has positive effects on the overall prosperity of a nation. Second, with the ailing economy, migrants are used as scapegoats by uninspired politicians to scare up votes. Indeed, isn’t the United States, a country completely made up of immigrants, the boldest example of the benefits of immigration for a nation?

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EU warns Italy on high public debt

August 28, 2010

EU warns Italy on high public debt

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Video: Italian Tax Inspectors Track Down Cheats at the Beach

August 24, 2010

Aug. 24 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Elliott Gotkine reports on Italy’s crackdown on tax cheats. The summer holidays are an ideal hunting season for tax inspectors to target marinas, restaurants and resorts.

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Video: Italian Tax Inspectors Track Down Cheats at the Beach

August 24, 2010

Aug. 24 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Elliott Gotkine reports on Italy’s crackdown on tax cheats. The summer holidays are an ideal hunting season for tax inspectors to target marinas, restaurants and resorts.

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Sunil Sharan: Deregulation, the Forsaken Panacea for Climate Change

August 23, 2010

Congress has abandoned yet another climate bill. Gridlock in the august body looms large come November, dampening hopes of effective energy legislation in the foreseeable future. America is stuck. Yet deregulation, a concept all but renounced by the country a decade back in the wake of California’s energy crisis, holds the potential to unlock the gates to climatic heaven. Many American utilities have for long operated as virtual monopolies in their respective jurisdictions so much so that the service territory itself is quite often ingrained into their name. Georgia Power, Southern California Edison, Detroit Edison, Nevada Power, the list is seemingly endless. Aspiring utilities have traditionally found it prohibitive to enter the domain of incumbents. In such an uncompetitive environment, customers are relegated as “rate-payers,” with little choice of suppliers or services. Deregulation would herald competition and break down the bastions of utility protectionism. The European Union mandated liberalization (their term for deregulation) throughout the region four years ago. The fear of a behemoth like EDF of France coming into Italy and snatching a chunk of its customers made the Italian utility Enel roll out the largest grid modernization project in the world five years ago. It thereby transformed its one-trick energy delivery pipe into a multi-faceted platform for customer care. Countries like Germany and Spain have become global leaders in renewable energy. Competition has driven industry consolidation, with big fish such as EDF, Enel, E.ON, and Vattenfall snapping up smaller utilities and improving productivity through economies of scale. Choice now on tap, customers are finally able to dump dirty energy purveyors and switch to greener providers. No wonder Europe is far ahead of the rest of the world in deploying almost every type of clean energy. Currently only about a dozen states in the U.S. allow consumers a mostly-restricted form of choice of electricity providers, with Texas, the largest electricity market in the country, being the most free-wheeling. Deregulation there was phased in beginning in 2002 and is now implemented in over half the state. It is ascribed to have instigated large-scale deployments of smart-grid and wind-energy technologies. Companies like Green Mountain Energy that sell power generated purely from renewable sources have sprung up. Electricity prices in the state, after many years of hovering substantially above the national average, are trending downward, almost touching the mean this year, allaying the fear held by some that deregulation causes prices to rise unsustainably. Texas has become the bellwether for the rest of the country to open up electricity markets. What a contrast from how California went about deregulating itself in the late nineties. In fact, to even call its half-baked experiment as deregulation is a misnomer. The state allowed new entrants into electricity wholesaling while freezing consumer rates, setting the stage for wholesale prices to be manipulated by the likes of Enron when demand for electricity outstripped supply. For deregulation to succeed, both the retail and wholesale ends of electricity have to be opened up, just as Texas has done, so that demand and supply can track one another. Things went so awry for California that the entire nation stood spooked, effectively putting the idea of deregulation in cold storage. Some states still tinkered with the notion but Bush-era feds all but washed their hands off it. The Obama administration decided that clean energy in the country needed a jump start and proceeded to offer utilities a generous stimulus package. Deregulation would still remain off the agenda. Many utilities, already flush with cash, were now able to double dip into two set of pubic funds, the stimulus as well as “rate case” dollars, to enhance their operational infrastructure, without touching their own money. (A rate case transfers the cost of approved capital expenditure to rate-payers, typically as an ongoing monthly charge.) Most other industries have no such luxury; they have to leverage their cash flow for operational upgrades. With hopes fading for another round of clean energy stimulus, and other carbon-reduction schemes such as a capping of emissions or a federal standard for renewable energy generation subject to the vagaries of a squabbling Congress, America’s greening could soon grind to a halt. The stimulus provided utilities with a carrot, now it is time to pull up their socks. Deregulation, in effect, competition, would move the onus from already-strapped tax-payers squarely onto cash-rich utilities, and without the opprobrium that something like cap-and-trade seems to provoke. As has happened in Europe, deregulation in the US will make utilities more efficient, responsive, and hungry. It will release pent-up market forces, incentivizing fleet-footed utilities to thrive and forcing the dead-beats to mend their ways. It will transform rate-payers into customers, who would demand to be treated as such now that they would have the option of taking their custom elsewhere. With such obvious benefits, is it not high time that the US shed its fear of deregulation and brings it out of the closet? Europe, and at home, Texas, have both proven that it works, and that too on a large scale.

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Fred Whelan and Gladys Stone: What’s On Your Career Bucket List?

August 12, 2010

You may remember the hugely popular 2007 movie ,”The Bucket List” starring Jack Nicholson and Morgan Freeman about two terminally ill men who decide to do all of the things on their wish list before they “kick the bucket”. For many of us, there is a similar bucket list of things that we want to do in our career before we retire. The career bucket list has less to do with promotions and career advancement. It’s more about unique things you would like to try and experiences you would like to have in your career at least once before you retire. As you develop your list of the one or two or ten things you’d like to accomplish, put a time frame around it so you’re more apt to get it done. Here are some of the more common things we hear people say during coaching sessions: Living and working internationally -You’ve probably fantasized about this with your spouse: after work taking a long walk by the Seine or down the Champs-Élysées in Paris. Enjoying weekend getaways to Italy, Spain and Switzerland and taking in the sights. Experiencing the charm of learning a new language and gaining a real appreciation for another culture. If you’re part of a global company, chances are this may be an option for you. Many people dream about an international assignment but don’t take the necessary steps to make it happen. If your spouse works or if you have kids, there will be other considerations, all doable. There are thousands of families living abroad while working for US companies. If this is something you’ve always wanted to do, start the wheels in motion now. The sooner you begin the process the sooner you’ll be packing your bags! Starting your own company – Who hasn’t dreamed about being the boss, and we’re not talking about Bruce Springsteen. Maybe you have an idea for a product or service which you think is unique and different. Things may be holding you back from taking the leap even though you believe in its potential success. Starting a business is a major consideration. As a first step you may want to do some research and evaluate your idea. Then see where that leads. If starting your own company is a dream of yours, it’s important to take the initial steps or it will always remain a dream. Giving a big talk – How many of you have been part of a huge audience, impressed with a captivating speaker and thought, “I wish I could do that.” The thought of being able to inspire hundreds of people is exhilarating. There are organizations like Toastmasters that can help prepare you to be a dynamic speaker. The speaker you want to emulate didn’t start with an audience of 2,000. Most likely they started out by speaking up in meetings, then running meetings, giving office/client presentations, being a panel member, speaking at small conferences and working their way up to large events. As scary as it may seem, most people’s reaction to their first big speech is, “I can’t wait to do it again.” There is no greater feeling of satisfaction than accomplishing things that really matter to you – things that may not be connected to financial gain, but give you a terrific feeling for having done them. People tell us that achieving things on their career bucket list gives them a sense of fulfillment that lasts long after they have retired. Tell us what’s in your career bucket, “I’ve always wanted to…..” Fred & Gladys Whelan Stone Executive Search and Coaching Authors of GOAL! Your 30 Day Career Plan for Business & Career Success

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Video: Italy Takes Top Spot as Bank Robbery Capital of Europe

July 19, 2010

July 19 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Eric Coleman reports on how Italy’s reliance on cash has turned it into the bank robbery capital of Europe.

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Google Q2 2010 Earnings Up 24 Percent–But Short Of Target

July 15, 2010

SAN FRANCISCO — Google Inc.’s second-quarter earnings missed analysts’ target as higher expenses and the fallout from the European debt crisis dragged down the Internet search leader. The letdown announced Thursday stemmed from Google’s expanding payroll and a run-up in the U.S. dollar that has been driven by fears that the euro will crumble if governments in Greece, Spain, Portugal and Italy default on their perilously high debts. The worries hurt Google because about one-third of the company’s revenue comes from Europe, and customer payments made with the euro translated into fewer dollars than a year ago. Even so, the currency squeeze wasn’t as severe as some analysts anticipated. Meanwhile, Google is spending more to maintain its commanding lead in Internet search while it also tries to diversify by developing products in other promising niches such as online video and mobile devices. To help achieve its goals, the company added nearly 1,200 employees in the second quarter to end June with more than 21,800 workers. Despite the rising expenses, Google’s net income rose at a fast clip as second-quarter revenue came in slightly above analysts’ forecasts. But the earnings growth wasn’t quite as robust as analysts had hoped, a factor that seemed to amplify investor concerns already weighing on Google’s stock price. Google shares fell $19.56, or nearly 4 percent, in extended trading Thursday after the release of results. Earlier, the company finished the regular session at $494.02, up $2.68. Although Google remains the Internet’s most profitable company, investors have been fretting about signs of decelerating growth amid stiffer competition from Apple Inc., Facebook and Microsoft Corp. On top of those challenges, a showdown over online censorship in China that has muddied Google’s future prospects in the world’s most populous country. Thursday’s report offered some encouraging news, though. In a positive sign for the overall economy, marketers were willing to pay more for the online ads that generate virtually all of Google’s income, and people are clicking on the commercial messages more frequently. Those trends provide another indication that more companies and shoppers are feeling a little better as they recover from the worst economic downturn in more than 70 years. “We are really pleased with the way we are performing in this economy,” Patrick Pichette, Google’s chief financial officer, said during a Thursday conference call with analysts. “That’s why we feel confident about the future.” Google, which is based in Mountain View, earned $1.84 billion, or $5.71 per share, in the April-June period, up 24 percent from $1.48 billion, or $4.66 per share, a year ago. If not for expenses covering employee stock compensation, Google said it would have made $6.45 per share. That figure was below the average estimate of $6.52 per share among analysts polled by Thomson Reuters. Revenue climbed 24 percent to $6.82 billion, from $5.52 billion a year earlier. After subtracting commissions paid to its ad partners, Google’s revenue stood at $5.09 billion – about $10 million above analyst projections. In another key figure watched closely by investors, the number of revenue-generating clicks on Google’s ads in the second quarter increased 15 percent from the same time last year. The gain is in the same range as the increases in the past year. The average price per ad click in the second quarter edged up 4 percent from last year, but it’s slower than the growth seen during the previous two quarters. After clamping down on its costs most of last year, Google has been spending more freely because management believes the U.S. economy is steadily rebounding, with electronic commerce and the rest of the technology sector leading the charge. Google has brought in nearly 2,000 employees during the first half of this year, through both recruitment and a flurry of mostly small acquisitions. The company’s spending on data centers and other projects known as capital expenditures totaled $476 million, more than tripling from the same time last year. Pichette said the company plans to continue investing in more employees and technology as it tries to position itself to take advantage of an improving economy. To help pay for its ambitions, Google said Thursday that it will take on significant debt for the first time in its six years as a public company, even though it has $30 billion in cash. The company’s board of directors approved a plan to borrow up to $3 billion on the premise that the returns on Google’s investments will be higher than its borrowing costs.

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‘The European Way’ May Be Coming To End As Debt Crisis Mounts

July 2, 2010

MADRID — In the ashes of Europe’s debt crisis, some see the seeds of long-term hope. That’s because the threat of bankruptcy is forcing governments to implement reforms that economists argue are necessary to help Europe prosper in a globalized world – but were long viewed as being politically impossible because of entrenched social attitudes. Changes such as making it easier for companies to fire workers or stare down unions were until recently dismissed as simply not being the “European way.” Similarly, many were skeptical that European governments would or could tackle bloated public payrolls, trim entitlements or force people to retire later. When it became clear earlier this year that Greece’s debt crisis was rattling markets everywhere and dragging down Europe’s common currency, it was business as usual: European governments seemed to dither, disunited. Germany came in for particular criticism, appearing to hold up a bailout of Greece because it was unpopular with German voters. But over two months of hectic activity a new narrative has started to settle in, to the surprise of many a euro-skeptic: When the chips were truly down, the countries of the European Union found a way to strike hard and fast – and together. European leaders first joined with the International Monetary Fund in May and agreed on a $1 trillion rescue fund for financially troubled countries. Then Greece announced deep budget cuts, Spain cut employer costs and France raised its retirement age. France also joined Germany and the U.K in imposing harsh budget cuts. To Marco Annunziata, the London-based chief economist for Unicredit, those are signs that Europe is finally facing the reality that it must make structural changes. “Governments are reluctantly acknowledging that reforms are needed and there is no more room for delays and excuses,” he said. “It looks like perhaps we are past the longest stage of denial, which in Europe has lasted at least 20 years.” Annunziata said governments now face a crucial test of political will: Can they implement the reforms they have announced? Already in Italy, Premier Silvio Berlusconi has suggested he will reconsider some of the austerity measures he announced last month to trim the deficit after facing opposition and seeing his popularity dip. And France will have to steel itself for strikes. Still, there are signs that Europe may muster passing grades. In Spain, employers had long moaned that laying off workers is so expensive that they were wary of hiring in the first place. Political leaders felt no urgency as the economy grew at a healthy clip, buoyed by a construction boom and cheap credit. Nor did they when the boom ended and the jobless rate soared to 20 percent. Then came the May 28 decision by the credit rating agency Fitch to downgrade Spanish debt. Facing a growing risk of a debt default, the Spanish parliament quickly passed measures that make firing cheaper and even let companies talk their way out of collective bargaining agreements if times go bad. The changes were imposed by Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero’s government almost overnight, after nearly two years of state-sponsored talks between unions and management finally collapsed a few weeks ago. Sandalio Gomez, a professor of management at IESE Business School in Madrid, noted that the government also has enacted euro15 billion ($18.7 billion) in spending cuts to slash the deficit. The cuts reduce civil servants’ wages and public investment and freeze retirement pensions. “If we were not in the midst of a sovereign debt crisis they wouldn’t be doing it,” said Stephen Lewis, chief economist at Monument Securities. “They wouldn’t be inviting the negative reaction from their own labor forces.” Spain’s workplace package was passed as a fast-track decree and is now subject to amendments by Parliament over the next month or so. Under the old law, many workers have contracts that give 45 days of severance pay per year worked. These will remain for old contracts, but for new ones the figure goes down to 33 days of severance per year of work. Also, companies in economic trouble can now negotiate with workers to lower salaries and reduce shifts or other terms of employment, and call in an arbitrator for a binding ruling if the talks hit a deadlock. That’s still generous, compared with practices in the U.S. and other less regulated economies, but a start. Spanish unions are furious and have called a general strike, but not until Sept. 29, after the sacrosanct monthlong summer vacation ends. Like Spain, Greece is shaking up its stodgy, rule-bound practices on hiring and firing. The hope is to encourage hiring and stimulate economic growth that will be needed to help pay down a swollen debt load. Last year, the newly elected government revealed that its predecessors had fudged the country’s deficit numbers. Prohibitively high interest rates soon followed, prompting Greece to accept a euro110 billion ($138 billion) EU and IMF bailout, with policed austerity as the price. Last month, Greece announced that it would allow companies to lay off more people and make lower severance payments. The maximum notice period, if Parliament approves, would be reduced from 24 months to six months. The short-term response to those moves has been a wave of strikes and riots. Demonstrations also have been held in Spain and France. In fact, such measures were called for by the European Union in its Lisbon Strategy, an ambitious blueprint adopted in 2000 whose goal was to make Europe the world’s most competitive economic bloc. Little got done. One reason: the courage to enact change can be costly. Then-Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder loosened Germany’s heavily regulated labor market as part of social spending reforms he undertook in 2003 and implemented for the most part by 2005. Economists say the changes helped get the German economy on track before the recent financial crisis. But they hurt Schroeder and his Social Democrats politically – in 2005, voters dumped him and Angela Merkel became chancellor. Not everyone has the same sense of urgency. While Italy’s debt totals 115 percent of gross domestic product, higher than Spain’s, few structural reforms are being discussed there. One reason is that its unemployment rate of 8 percent is far better than in Spain, thanks to government-sponsored jobs support programs. Interest rates on Italy’s long-term debt also haven’t spiked as they did in Spain and Greece – at least not yet. ___ AP Business Writer Barry contributed from Milan.

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‘The European Way’ May Be Coming To End As Debt Crisis Mounts

July 2, 2010

MADRID — In the ashes of Europe’s debt crisis, some see the seeds of long-term hope. That’s because the threat of bankruptcy is forcing governments to implement reforms that economists argue are necessary to help Europe prosper in a globalized world – but were long viewed as being politically impossible because of entrenched social attitudes. Changes such as making it easier for companies to fire workers or stare down unions were until recently dismissed as simply not being the “European way.” Similarly, many were skeptical that European governments would or could tackle bloated public payrolls, trim entitlements or force people to retire later. When it became clear earlier this year that Greece’s debt crisis was rattling markets everywhere and dragging down Europe’s common currency, it was business as usual: European governments seemed to dither, disunited. Germany came in for particular criticism, appearing to hold up a bailout of Greece because it was unpopular with German voters. But over two months of hectic activity a new narrative has started to settle in, to the surprise of many a euro-skeptic: When the chips were truly down, the countries of the European Union found a way to strike hard and fast – and together. European leaders first joined with the International Monetary Fund in May and agreed on a $1 trillion rescue fund for financially troubled countries. Then Greece announced deep budget cuts, Spain cut employer costs and France raised its retirement age. France also joined Germany and the U.K in imposing harsh budget cuts. To Marco Annunziata, the London-based chief economist for Unicredit, those are signs that Europe is finally facing the reality that it must make structural changes. “Governments are reluctantly acknowledging that reforms are needed and there is no more room for delays and excuses,” he said. “It looks like perhaps we are past the longest stage of denial, which in Europe has lasted at least 20 years.” Annunziata said governments now face a crucial test of political will: Can they implement the reforms they have announced? Already in Italy, Premier Silvio Berlusconi has suggested he will reconsider some of the austerity measures he announced last month to trim the deficit after facing opposition and seeing his popularity dip. And France will have to steel itself for strikes. Still, there are signs that Europe may muster passing grades. In Spain, employers had long moaned that laying off workers is so expensive that they were wary of hiring in the first place. Political leaders felt no urgency as the economy grew at a healthy clip, buoyed by a construction boom and cheap credit. Nor did they when the boom ended and the jobless rate soared to 20 percent. Then came the May 28 decision by the credit rating agency Fitch to downgrade Spanish debt. Facing a growing risk of a debt default, the Spanish parliament quickly passed measures that make firing cheaper and even let companies talk their way out of collective bargaining agreements if times go bad. The changes were imposed by Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero’s government almost overnight, after nearly two years of state-sponsored talks between unions and management finally collapsed a few weeks ago. Sandalio Gomez, a professor of management at IESE Business School in Madrid, noted that the government also has enacted euro15 billion ($18.7 billion) in spending cuts to slash the deficit. The cuts reduce civil servants’ wages and public investment and freeze retirement pensions. “If we were not in the midst of a sovereign debt crisis they wouldn’t be doing it,” said Stephen Lewis, chief economist at Monument Securities. “They wouldn’t be inviting the negative reaction from their own labor forces.” Spain’s workplace package was passed as a fast-track decree and is now subject to amendments by Parliament over the next month or so. Under the old law, many workers have contracts that give 45 days of severance pay per year worked. These will remain for old contracts, but for new ones the figure goes down to 33 days of severance per year of work. Also, companies in economic trouble can now negotiate with workers to lower salaries and reduce shifts or other terms of employment, and call in an arbitrator for a binding ruling if the talks hit a deadlock. That’s still generous, compared with practices in the U.S. and other less regulated economies, but a start. Spanish unions are furious and have called a general strike, but not until Sept. 29, after the sacrosanct monthlong summer vacation ends. Like Spain, Greece is shaking up its stodgy, rule-bound practices on hiring and firing. The hope is to encourage hiring and stimulate economic growth that will be needed to help pay down a swollen debt load. Last year, the newly elected government revealed that its predecessors had fudged the country’s deficit numbers. Prohibitively high interest rates soon followed, prompting Greece to accept a euro110 billion ($138 billion) EU and IMF bailout, with policed austerity as the price. Last month, Greece announced that it would allow companies to lay off more people and make lower severance payments. The maximum notice period, if Parliament approves, would be reduced from 24 months to six months. The short-term response to those moves has been a wave of strikes and riots. Demonstrations also have been held in Spain and France. In fact, such measures were called for by the European Union in its Lisbon Strategy, an ambitious blueprint adopted in 2000 whose goal was to make Europe the world’s most competitive economic bloc. Little got done. One reason: the courage to enact change can be costly. Then-Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder loosened Germany’s heavily regulated labor market as part of social spending reforms he undertook in 2003 and implemented for the most part by 2005. Economists say the changes helped get the German economy on track before the recent financial crisis. But they hurt Schroeder and his Social Democrats politically – in 2005, voters dumped him and Angela Merkel became chancellor. Not everyone has the same sense of urgency. While Italy’s debt totals 115 percent of gross domestic product, higher than Spain’s, few structural reforms are being discussed there. One reason is that its unemployment rate of 8 percent is far better than in Spain, thanks to government-sponsored jobs support programs. Interest rates on Italy’s long-term debt also haven’t spiked as they did in Spain and Greece – at least not yet. ___ AP Business Writer Barry contributed from Milan.

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Video: Berlusconi Targets Fraudulent ‘Blind’ in Budget Cuts

July 1, 2010

July 1 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Flavia Rotondi reports on fraudulent disability benefit claims in Italy. Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi has declared war on welfare swindlers as he seeks to cut Italy’s budget deficit by about 25 billion euros. Disability benefits from Italy’s pension agency account for 16 billion euros a year, or 1 percentage point of the country’s gross domestic product.

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Sheldon Filger: Are European Banks on the Verge of Destruction?

June 30, 2010

In February 2009, my blog referred to a story that appeared in The Daily Telegraph, a leading UK newspaper, headlined, “European bank bail-out could push EU into crisis.” The essence of the story was that The Daily Telegraph was shown a top-secret document, leaked from the European Commission, the executive body that oversees the 27-nation European Union, which warned that the EU’s banking system was contaminated by an ocean of toxic assets. Though the story was ignored by the rest of mainstream media, for the most part, I think it is timely to look again at this secret EU document in the light of the current European debt crisis and growing rumors regarding the insolvency of many leading banks across the continent. The confidential 17-page European Commission document warned that the European banking system could be holding as much as 18.6 trillion euros in toxic assets. Furthermore, in the wake of the European bank bailout that followed the collapse of Lehman Brothers, the document warned that the cost of a second Eurozone and U.K. bank bailout would exceed the financial capacity of the European Union. In other words, if Europe’s banking system enters a meltdown in the face of the sovereign debt crisis now plaguing European economies, the EU will be powerless to stop the implosion of the European banking and financial system. Reviewing what the European Commission warned about more than a year ago, it appears that the document’s authors had an impressively prescient ability to forecast the current European sovereign debt and fiscal crisis. In stark terms, the EU document warned that, “It is essential that government support through asset relief should not be on a scale that raises concern about over-indebtedness or financing problems … Such considerations are particularly important in the current context of widening budget deficits, rising public debt levels and challenges in sovereign bond issuance.” With Greece essentially insolvent, Spain in the grips of its own sovereign debt crisis and the U.K. and Italy teetering on the edge, not to mention Ireland, Portugal and Eastern Europe, it seems to me that the worst case scenario hinted at in the leaked document more than a year ago is no longer a speculative possibility, but unfortunately a chillingly realistic forecast of what may very soon be the next great global banking crisis.

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Medvedev Shows Off Sample Coin of New &lsquoWorld Currency&rsquo at G-8

June 19, 2010

By Lyubov Pronina July 10 (Bloomberg) — Russian President Dmitry Medvedev illustrated his call for a supranational currency to replace the dollar by pulling from his pocket a sample coin of a “united future world currency.” “Here it is,” Medvedev told reporters today in L’Aquila, Italy, after a summit of the Group of Eight nations. “You can see it and touch it.” The coin , which bears the words “unity in diversity,” was minted in Belgium and presented to the heads of G-8 delegations, Medvedev said. The question of a supranational currency “concerns everyone now, even the mints,” Medvedev said. The test coin “means they’re getting ready. I think it’s a good sign that we understand how interdependent we are.” Medvedev has repeatedly called for creating a mix of regional reserve currencies as part of the drive to address the global financial crisis, while questioning the U.S. dollar’s future as a global reserve currency. Russia’s proposals for the G-20 meeting in London in April included the creation of a supranational currency. To contact the reporter on this story: Lyubov Pronina in L’Aquila, Italy at lpronina@bloomberg.net

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Unwed Daughters in Greece Catch &lsquoTime Bomb&rsquo in Pension Overhaul

June 18, 2010

By Maria Petrakis June 18 (Bloomberg) — Sophia Constantinidou works as a teacher in a private school in Athens. She also has a more lucrative job: remaining unmarried. The 52-year-old gets 400 euros ($496) a month from the Greek government, part of her late mother’s state pension. Under the current system, Constantinidou qualifies to receive the payment for life as the only surviving child of a deceased civil servant, provided she doesn’t tie the knot. “It’s not that I didn’t want to get married,” Constantinidou, whose mother died 20 years ago, said in an interview. “But after I turned 40, I realized I wouldn’t be getting married and that thankfully I had this.” As the European Union, International Monetary Fund and bond investors scrutinize debt-ridden Greece, they need look no further than the pension system for a prime example of how the country is living beyond its means. Greek pensioners on average live on 96 percent of the salary they had when they worked, more than twice the proportion of earnings as Germans, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development . Greece “is a classic case of entitlements granted by short-sighted governments that didn’t bother to secure financing sources,” said Miranda Xafa , a former director at the IMF and now a senior investment strategist at Geneva-based IJPartners. “The political benefit of pension entitlements granted is immediate, but the cost will be incurred later.” Arduous Jobs The OECD as long as three years ago described Greece’s state pension system as a “fiscal time bomb.” Led by Prime Minister George Papandreou , lawmakers will begin passing legislation this month to overhaul the system, which the EU and IMF say contributed to the country’s debt crisis. Under terms of last month’s 110 billion-euro ($123 billion) bailout agreement, Greece will increase the retirement age to 65 from as early as 58, curtail early retirement and calculate payments over a longer period of employment. The aim is to bring uniformity to a system riddled with exemptions granted over decades by governments yielding to pressure from trade unions and other groups. The bill will be the first enacted by Papandreou’s government since the May 6 package that pledged 30 billion euros of wage and pension cuts and tax increases over the next three years. There’s one pensioner in Greece for every 1.7 workers, compared with one for every four in 1950, according to a government study published on May 12. There are 637 occupations the Greek state deems to be arduous in nature and qualify to stop work earlier. They include hairdressers, car washers, steam-bath attendants and radio technicians. ‘Paramount Reform’ Constantinidou isn’t included because she’s paid by the hour and doesn’t have enough of a private pension to live on when she’s older. She’s reliant upon the stipend she inherited from her mother, who worked at a state hospital. Should the country keep its generous benefits, Greek pension spending will rise to 24 percent of gross domestic product in 2060, double the proportion of 2007, the European Commission estimated last year. Pensions are “going to be the paramount reform in terms of medium-term budgetary perspectives,” EU Monetary and Monetary Commissioner Olli Rehn said on June 11. With unions promising a “storm” of protests, the government is trying to push through the bill before the September deadline set by the EU and IMF and ahead of Greek municipal elections, tentatively scheduled for October. Extending Work Dina Karahali, 47, is waiting to see the final form of the bill to know whether she will be penalized by the new system or manage to escape with the early pension she expected when she began working as a childcare worker 25 years ago. With a 16-year-old son, Karahali said she could take early retirement now on less than a full payment. What she fears is the new law will make her work an extra 13 years. “It’s difficult,” she said by telephone in Athens. “Do I get a pension now and not receive any money until I am 50? Or, will I have to work till I am 60?” About 5,000 state workers, mostly women, have submitted applications for early retirement this year, said Despina Spanou, an official at the civil servants’ labor union, ADEDY . That’s almost double the number filed at the same time last year, she said. Concerns about Greece’s long-term pension finances have long played a part in the wider spread in Greek bonds over those of Germany or Italy, the OECD said in its July 2009 report. That was before the 58-year-old Papandreou revealed the country’s budget shortfall was more than twice the previous government’s estimate, stoking concern about Greece’s ability to avert default and prompting the bailout package. Bonds Collapse Greek 10-year government bond yields were about 1.4 percentage points, or 140 basis points, higher than benchmark German bunds at the beginning of October as Papandreou came to power. The so-called yield spread widened to as much as 965 points on May 7 and yesterday was at 665 points. Generous Greek pensions played prominently in Germany, where public opinion has been largely opposed to the bailout. Germany lifted the retirement age to 67 from 65 in 2007, affecting about half of the nation’s 82 million residents. While Greece has a statutory retirement age of 65, and 60 for women, exemptions and special rules can allow a full pension at 58. Former European Central Bank Chief Economist Otmar Issing said in February that German taxpayers can hardly be expected to support Greek pensions. Bild Zeitung , Germany’s biggest-selling tabloid, ran a front-page headline in April asking: “Why do we have to pay Greece’s luxury pensions?” Best Years Greeks get a pension calculated on the last five years of their working life, which tend to be the highest-paid. German, Italian and Portuguese pensions are based on wages worked over a lifetime. Spain bases them on the best 15 years of work. In the Greek civil service, the so-called replacement rate can be as much as 149 percent, according to a report by the European Commission in October. The rate is a measure of how effectively a pension system provides income during retirement. The EU-IMF agreement states that Greece should move to a system basing earnings on the entire lifetime and introduce a price-based indexation system, used by most OECD countries. Such a system, according to the Paris-based OECD , would allow Greece’s biggest retirement fund to scale back spending by some 20 percent by 2050 to 2055, equal to about 1 percent of GDP. Governments since the end of the military junta in 1974 have struggled to force through reforms the EU has long demanded to the pension system or opening up product and labor markets to make Greece more competitive. ‘Dramatic Worsening’ “The reasons for the dramatic worsening of the pension systems finances are demographic developments, the exhaustion of the abilities of the pay-as-you-go system and decisions of the political system of our country for the past 35 years,” Labor Minister Andreas Loverdos told the International Labor Organization in a June 14 speech. Civil servants didn’t pay anything towards their pensions until 1992. Female civil servants with children under 18 can get early retirement. Unmarried daughters of state workers say the payment became a factor in staying single. Unions argue that going after employers who don’t pay mandatory contributions to pension funds is preferable to cutting benefits and raising the retirement age. Non-payment of contributions to state pension funds, prevalent among the self-employed, is estimated by the OECD at between 20 percent and 30 percent of revenue collected. Constantinidou is one such worker. She never managed to secure a permanent post and doesn’t get state benefits in her job supplementing the studies of high-school students at a central Athens college. “I work in the private sector and would need to work till I’m 65 to get a pension but it’s not going to happen,” she said. “No-one is going to hire a 60- or 65-year-old woman. Thankfully I have this.” To contact the reporter on this story: Maria Petrakis in Athens at mpetrakis@bloomberg.net .

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Ferrari Designer Jason Castriota Hired by Saab Auto to Speed Turnaround

June 18, 2010

By Ola Kinnander June 18 (Bloomberg) — Jason Castriota, the U.S. designer known for creating the Ferrari P4/5 and Maserati GranTurismo, will head Saab Automobile’s design team to help the Swedish carmaker take on Bayerische Motoren Werke AG and Audi AG. The first assignment for Castriota’s design firm is to create an upscale version of Saab’s current 9-3 model, scheduled for release in 2012, the 36-year-old said in an interview. Aerodynamics will be a focus of the new design, he said. “It’s absolutely vital we get this car right,” Castriota said from New York late yesterday. “This is Saab returning to its roots, not having to worry about being part of a much larger machine that they were before in the GM organization.” Saab, sold by General Motors Co. to Dutch supercar maker Spyker Cars NV in February, aims to become profitable by 2012. The turnaround strategy includes releasing premium models more distinct and sporty in their design than when Saab was under GM, according to Spyker Chief Executive officer Victor Muller . Castriota will play a major role in fashioning the new 9-3 and other models, said Eric Geers , a spokesman for the Trollhaettan, Sweden-based Saab. “The 9-3 design as made by him is basically done, and I can tell you it is spectacular,” Muller said by telephone, adding that the design will be completed within weeks. “It is truly aircraft-inspired and Swedish-clean.” Benchmark Cars The 9-3 was first released in 1998. The second generation, still produced today, hit the streets in 2002. The new version intends to challenge BMW’s 3-series and Volkswagen AG ’s Audi A4, Castriota said. “Those are the benchmark cars,” he said by telephone. “They’re true premium vehicles and the 9-3 also needs to be a true premium vehicle.” Castriota started his career in 2001 at luxury-car designer Pininfarina SpA in Turin, Italy, where he stayed until 2008. He then worked for Stile Bertone in Italy until September 2009. Last December, he started his own firm, Jason Castriota Designs. The design house has five designers and is based in New York City and Turin. “I literally started sketching Ferraris when I was about five years old,” he said. “For whatever reason, some kids might kick around a soccer ball, I picked up a pencil and started sketching cars.” BMW Talks Castriota will become part of the leadership at Saab and will help “define the strategy for the new models,” he said. Saab is also planning to introduce a smaller car with a tear-drop shape inspired by the 92 model that was in production between 1949 and 1956. Saab is in talks with BMW about using its Mini platform, as well as engines and gearboxes, for that model, two people familiar with the situation said last week. “A small premium car from Saab is a very important vehicle and is something that could truly help the overall production volume of Saab in a great way,” Castriota said. To contact the reporters on this story: Ola Kinnander in Stockholm at okinnander@bloomberg.net ; Andreas Cremer in Berlin at acremer@bloomberg.net

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Milan Proving Bust for Italy’s Tallest Building as Luxury Lofts Go Begging

June 17, 2010

By Chiara Remondini and Sonia Sirletti June 17 (Bloomberg) — Milan’s $2.6 billion CityLife real estate project that includes the tallest building in Italy is struggling to attract buyers for luxury condominiums amid a slump in the country’s property market. CityLife, billed as the biggest urban development in the country’s business capital, has sold 90 of an initial 390 upscale apartments and penthouses in the 431,000 square-meter (4.6 million square foot) site at the city’s former fairgrounds. The plan’s biggest investors are insurers Allianz SE of Germany and Assicurazioni Generali SpA in Italy. “They’re flooding the market with such a large number of high-range properties that it can’t possibly absorb, especially in a period of economic slowdown,” said Rolando Mastrodonato, who leads the “ Live and Design a New Milan ” residents’ group that opposes the project. The worst financial crisis in six decades caused Italy’s residential and commercial property market to stagnate during 2008 and 2009. Real estate prices probably will fall this year, according to research from Milan-based Tecnocasa Group. CityLife asked Milan’s building regulators last month for permission to scale back the office and retail space for as much as 30 percent of the total because of the bearish outlook for the office market. According to the initial plan, as much as 45 percent of the area had been set aside for commercial buildings. ‘Lopsided’ Design International architects Daniel Libeskind , Zaha Hadid , designer of London’s Aquatic Center for the 2012 Olympics, and Arata Isozaki designed the CityLife development, which features three skyscrapers. Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi has scoffed at the towers’ design, calling them “ lopsided .” At 220 meters, Isozaki’s tower would be twice as tall as Milan’s landmark Il Duomo cathedral. Part of the building designed by Libeskind may be occupied by a hotel, making it the first mixed residential and lodging structure in the country. The homes will cost 1 million euros ($1.2 million) to 8 million euros and include penthouses with floor-to-ceiling windows, solariums and fitness areas. The condominiums will have fully-automated appliances, 24- hour security surveillance, a spa and private gardens, according to the CityLife website. As many as 1,200 units are scheduled to be built by 2015. The project, whose motto is “the new way of living in the city,” will also host Milan’s Contemporary Art Museum, which would be bigger than the Guggenheim Museum in New York, said CityLife Chief Executive Officer Claudio Artusi . ‘Long-term Value’ He says he’s confident the development will be a success. “Our investors are more concerned about long-term value than short-term returns,” Artusi said in an interview at the site. The project is aimed at “the top end” of the real estate market, so “it won’t be affected by the economical cycle,” he said. Munich-based Allianz, Europe’s largest insurer, and Milan- based Generali, No. 3 in the region, are increasing their stakes to 31.5 percent and 41.3 percent respectively after agreeing to purchase the interest held by Rome-based builder Pierluigi Toti , one of the four original investors in CityLife. Toti announced June 14 the sale of his stake for 45 million euros because he wants to focus on projects in Rome, Italy’s capital. “Since 2005, the economic and financial environment has radically changed,” Toti said in a statement. “Our strategy has to adapt to the different needs and opportunities for our company.” Bank Financing Reducing the number of investors in CityLife will make decision-making easier, Oliver Piani , CEO of Allianz Real Estate , said in an interview. “With the new investment, we have now reached an optimal partnership structure,” he said. Italy’s Ligresti family, owners of insurer Fondiaria-Sai SpA and one of the project’s founding investors, decided not to buy part of Toti’s holding and has an option to sell its stake to Generali by September 2011, a Fondiaria spokeswoman said. The Ligrestis still are backing the project, she added. CityLife’s partners reached an agreement last week on 1.4 billion euros of financing from a pool of lenders led by Eurohypo AG, Commerzbank AG’s property-lending unit, and including Credit Agricole SA, Mediobanca SpA and UniCredit SpA. “I don’t rule out further changes among the shareholders because the project is risky and a return is possible only in the long term,” said Wolfram Mrowetz , who oversees 200 million euros as chairman of investment firm Alisei SIM in Milan. “Without strong leadership, the project may go ahead very slowly.” Expo 2015 The development is designed to change Milan’s skyline as the city prepares to host Expo 2015, an international fair that’s being held this year in Shanghai. There currently are about 30 major residential and commercial projects in Milan, according to data from the city’s chamber of commerce. “In the next few years, building in Milan will approach 80 million square cubic meters, compared with one million a year in the last decade,” said Giuseppe Boatti, a professor of architecture at Milan’s Polytechnic University. “That means that the offer cannot be absorbed by demand.” Milan’s Santa Giulia residential and commercial project stalled last year after Risanamento SpA restructured its debt in a court settlement, leaving luxury homes by Norman Foster, boutiques such as Dolce & Gabbana and a green area as large as London’s Hyde Park unfinished. Daniela Percoco, an analyst at Bologna-based research firm Nomisma, said the “broad-shouldered” investors backing CityLife means the project won’t suffer the same fate as Santa Giulia. “CityLife doesn’t present the same risks of Santa Giulia because it’s near the center of the city in a well developed area,” she said. “CityLife investors are more solid.” Tax Amnesty Giancarlo Scotti , CEO of Generali’s real estate unit, said the sales of the luxury homes in recent months demonstrate that “there is rising demand for project, which is modern from both an energy and environmental point of view.” Artusi said Italians who repatriated money from abroad under the government’s recent amnesty program may increase sales of luxury apartments. Italians had repatriated or declared more than 100 billion euros as of April to take advantage of an amnesty that reduced government-imposed charges to as little as 5 percent and shielded individuals and companies from prosecution. “Our project will benefit from the tax amnesty because there is no doubt it’s a good investment for people who have money,” Artusi said. “Everybody knows how hard it is to find shelter investments.” To contact the reporters on this story: Chiara Remondini in Milan at cremondini@bloomberg.net ; Sonia Sirletti in Milan at ssirletti@bloomberg.net

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Google Wi-Fi Data Collection Discussed by Law Enforcement in 30 States

June 16, 2010

By Karen Freifeld and Joel Rosenblatt June 16 (Bloomberg) — Google Inc. ’s collection of data via Wi-Fi networks was the subject of a conference call among law enforcement officials from 30 U.S. states, according to Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal . “We’re looking to establish where, when, why, for how long and for what purpose there was this collection of information on wireless networks,” Blumenthal said yesterday in an interview. The call included representatives of the states’ attorneys general. The discussion reflects widening concern among law enforcement over the way Google handles user information. The company said last month it mistakenly gathered data from open wireless networks while it was capturing images of streets and houses for its Street View service, a product that lets users view photographs of an area online. Blumenthal has demanded that Mountain View, California- based Google inform his office of any data gathered from his state’s residents and businesses without permission, the attorney general said this month. Google owns the world’s largest search engine . “This was a mistake, but we don’t believe we did anything illegal,” Google said in an e-mailed statement. “We’re working with the relevant authorities to answer their questions and concerns.” Illinois was among the states that joined in last week’s call led by Blumenthal. Illinois in Talks “We did participate in a conference call with other attorneys general regarding Google,” said Robyn Ziegler, a spokeswoman for Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan . Additional information wasn’t immediately available, she said. The U.S. Federal Trade Commission said last month that it is reviewing Google’s data gathering. An Oregon judge has ordered the company turn over similar data collected in that state, including any e-mails, files or digital phone records, according to court documents. Also this month, Google said it was turning over to regulators in Germany, France and Spain data it mistakenly collected from unsecured Wi-Fi networks. Those countries are investigating Google’s data-gathering practices after the company said in May that its cars used to photograph roadsides for its Street View mapping service inadvertently recorded information. Prosecutors in the German city of Hamburg opened a criminal investigation. Authorities in Italy, Canada and the Czech Republic also have begun inquiries. The Oregon case is Vicki Van Valin v. Google, 10-00557, U.S. District Court, District of Oregon (Portland). To contact the reporters on this story: Karen Freifeld in New York at kfreifeld@bloomberg.net ; Joel Rosenblatt in San Francisco at jrosenblatt@bloomberg.net .

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EU Banks Holding Sovereign Debt Ignore Not-If-But-When Scenario of Default

June 10, 2010

By Niklas Magnusson, Elena Logutenkova and Aaron Kirchfeld June 11 (Bloomberg) — European banking shares indicate a Greek debt default may be just a matter of time. Investors have already pushed down financial stocks enough to imply the “erosion” in book value that may result from losses tied to a sovereign debt restructuring, said Dirk Hoffmann-Becking , an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein in London. A Bloomberg index of European financial firms dropped as much as 22 percent since April 15 to the lowest level since July. A $1 trillion aid package from the European Union and International Monetary Fund may delay a Greek default and give Spain, Italy and possibly Portugal time to get their finances in shape, averting a wider contagion, analysts said. Greece’s debt burden is likely to prove unsustainable, said Thomas Mayer , Deutsche Bank AG’s London-based chief economist. “Deficit reduction alone doesn’t solve the debt issue,” Mayer said in a telephone interview. He estimates Greece’s debt will rise to 150 percent of gross domestic product following the country’s austerity program, from 120 percent. “Hardly anyone I know believes they can carry it out and still not restructure. This is basically the expectation across all asset classes.” Writedowns stemming from a Greek default would total almost $200 billion, estimates Jon Peace , an analyst at Nomura Holdings Inc. in London. Banks globally could lose as much as $900 billion in a worst-case scenario where Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal and Spain all have to restructure their debt, Nomura estimates. ‘Prisoner’s Dilemma’ Banks holding sovereign debt are faced with a “prisoner’s dilemma,” said Hoffmann-Becking, referring to a mathematical theory that seeks to explain the behavior of two parties that can choose to either cooperate or pursue their own interests. “From an individual bank’s perspective, it would be great to get rid of the sovereign debt,” Hoffmann-Becking said by telephone. “However, if everybody did it you’d have a rapid collapse of the government bond market and then you’d have the default. And in the default, the fact that you have no sovereign debt actually doesn’t help you at all.” German financial companies including Deutsche Bank agreed in May to refinance maturing Greek debt and maintain existing credit lines to Greece and its lenders for the next three years. French banks made a similar pledge. A majority of European banks haven’t tendered their Greek sovereign debt to the European Central Bank, according to an informal survey by Morgan Stanley analysts. One reason may be that some banks bought their Greek bonds when they were trading at 20 percent above par, meaning a sale to the ECB would prompt a loss, Morgan Stanley’s London-based analyst Huw van Steenis said in a note to clients on June 9. Most See Default Deutsche Bank Chief Executive Officer Josef Ackermann said May 14 that Greece may not be able to repay its debt in full, adding that Spain and Italy are “strong enough” to service their debt following the EU aid plan, while this may be “slightly more difficult” for Portugal. Global investors have little confidence in Greece’s ability to solve its debt crisis, with 73 percent calling a default by the country likely, according to a quarterly poll of investors and analysts who are Bloomberg subscribers. Some 35 percent of those surveyed said a default by Portugal was likely, while more than a quarter said the same about Spain. A Spanish or Italian cancellation of payments would dwarf a potential Greek default. European banks’ claims on Spain totaled $832 billion at the end of 2009, while those on Italy stood at $1.02 trillion, according to figures from the Bank for International Settlements in Basel, Switzerland. That compares with claims on Greece and Portugal of $193 billion and $240 billion, respectively. Valuing ‘Armageddon’ While investors may have priced in the immediate costs of a Greek and possibly even a Portuguese default, they haven’t reckoned on the wider impact of such an event, analysts said. “If Greece defaulted in the near future, the ramifications wouldn’t just be banks holding Greek debt, but also Spain and Portugal and Italian bonds — and how do you value Armageddon?” said Gary Jenkins , head of credit research at Evolution Securities Ltd. in London. “The idea is to postpone reality. If it had happened in a disorderly manner in May, it would’ve been such a quick event that it would have been very difficult for authorities to control the reactions on Portugal and Spain.” Some analysts say the recent declines among European banks represent a buying opportunity on the grounds that a Greek default would be manageable and that Spain and Italy won’t have to restructure their debt. Nomura’s Peace said in a June 2 note that European bank shares are “attractive.” ‘Clear Message’ “The stocks are way too deep — I don’t think we’ll see restructuring and sovereign defaults,” said Dirk Becker , a Frankfurt-based analyst at Kepler Capital Markets. “Everything depends on making a bet on whether we’ll see a restructuring or a default or not, but the EU delivered a clear message and the IMF is in the boat and we have austerity measures.” Greece’s public finances began rattling investors late last year, when the country more than tripled its budget deficit forecast for 2009. Stock markets fell, credit default swaps to protect against a sovereign default rose, and borrowing costs climbed for indebted nations such as Greece, Portugal and Spain, as well as European banks. The euro dropped to a four-year low of $1.1876 on June 7. New York University Professor Nouriel Roubini said June 4 that an orderly restructuring of Greece’s public debt in the next 12 months may be necessary to avoid “massive losses” for the financial system. Orderly Plan He recommended stretching the maturities of the country’s debt by five to 10 years, capping the interest rate at a below- market level and maintaining the face value of the bonds at par to limit writedowns for banks. Further declines in the euro would also help sustain Europe’s economies, he said. Roubini, who predicted the global financial crisis, also remained gloomy on equity markets heading into a rally that lifted the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index by 80 percent last year. European financial firms trade at 0.85 times book value, compared with 1.06 times on April 15 and more than two times book value at the end of 2006, based on the 52-company Bloomberg Europe Banks and Insurance Index . Banks in Europe, on average, are pricing in an implied return on equity of 9.5 percent, below a “normalized” ROE of 12.5 percent, Hoffmann-Becking said in a May 26 note. Return on equity is a measure of profitability. The expectation for an erosion of book value is “particularly pronounced” for French lenders, Hoffmann-Becking said. Paris-based Credit Agricole SA and Societe Generale SA trade at an implied return-on-equity of 5.8 percent and 6.9 percent, respectively, he said in the note. Societe Generale published an after-tax ROE of 11.1 percent in the first quarter, while Credit Agricole didn’t report a figure. Priced In Both banks have subsidiaries in Greece. Credit Agricole’s Emporiki Bank of Greece SA had 22 billion euros ($26.6 billion) of loans at the end of March, according to company reports. Societe Generale owns 54 percent of Greece’s Geniki Bank SA, which had 4 billion euros of loans and advances at the end of the quarter, according to the Athens-based lender’s website. “If you look at some of the names like Credit Agricole or Societe Generale, they’re trading well below tangible book and so you’re looking at some 20 percent to 25 percent cuts to equity,” Hoffmann-Becking said in a telephone interview. “I think that certainly covers the primary effects of a potential writedown on Greek, Irish or Portuguese debt. The thing that we may not have priced in, in full, is secondary and tertiary effects.” French banks had claims on Greece of $78.8 billion at the end of 2009, the most of any country, according to BIS figures. In Germany, where banks’ Greek claims totaled $45 billion, the risks probably lie mostly with Landesbanks and government-owned lenders that aren’t publicly traded, Hoffmann-Becking said. To contact the reporters on this story: Aaron Kirchfeld in Frankfurt at akirchfeld@bloomberg.net Elena Logutenkova in Zurich at elogutenkova@bloomberg.net Niklas Magnusson in Stockholm at nmagnusson1@bloomberg.net

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Trichet Under Pressure as Clarity Sought on Bond Plan Dividing ECB Council

June 10, 2010

By Gabi Thesing June 10 (Bloomberg) — European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet is under pressure to explain how far he’s prepared to wade into government bond markets as the ECB’s purchases split policy makers and borrowing costs in some countries continue to climb. Since the ECB announced its bond program on May 10 to restore “normal functioning” on markets, the extra yield that investors demand to hold Spanish and Italian debt has advanced to euro-era highs. Portuguese and Irish yields are also rising. Trichet holds a press conference at 2:30 p.m. in Frankfurt today after a policy meeting at which economists predict the ECB will leave its benchmark rate at a record low of 1 percent. “There are so many questions, and Trichet must answer them convincingly,” said Christoph Kind , head of asset allocation at Frankfurt Trust, which manages $17 billion. “As investors we need a predictable and credible ECB.” Trichet has so far given no information about how much the ECB plans to spend on government debt or which countries’ bonds the central bank is buying. Critics say the purchases amount to bailing out governments and could fuel inflation , breaching two of the ECB’s founding principles and undermining its credibility. The move divided Trichet’s 22-member Governing Council, with Bundesbank President Axel Weber and Executive Board member Juergen Stark openly voicing concern. Global Concern The sovereign debt crisis has also forced the ECB to reverse its withdrawal of emergency stimulus measures and prompted economists to push back forecasts for higher interest rates until the second quarter of next year. While the Bank of Canada this month became the first central bank in the Group of Seven to raise rates since 2008, it signaled the decision won’t necessarily be repeated soon, reflecting concern among policy makers worldwide that Europe’s debt burden poses a risk to the global economic recovery. The Federal Reserve will hold off raising borrowing costs until 2011, a survey of economists shows. The Bank of England will probably keep its benchmark rate at a record low of 0.5 percent today and maintain its bond holdings at 200 billion pounds ($290 billion) to nurture growth as Britain braces for public spending cuts, another survey shows. That decision is due at noon in London. German Strength Budget cuts may also curb growth in the 16-nation euro region, even as latest reports suggest expansion is gaining pace. In Germany, Europe’s largest economy, factories are stepping up production and adding workers to meet booming export orders. The ECB will publish its latest economic and inflation projections today. By purchasing government bonds, Trichet is trying to win time for governments to get on top of their finances and prevent Europe’s monetary union from tearing apart. It’s far from certain the plan will work. While the difference in yield, or spread, over benchmark German bonds was 556 basis points in Greece yesterday, down from 965 on May 7, the Spanish spread was 199 basis points, up from 164, and the Italian spread was 157 against 149. Ireland’s spread was 254 compared with 306 and Portugal’s was 271 versus 349. Trichet is unlikely to reveal more details on the purchase program today, said Julian Callow , chief European economist at Barclays Capital in London. ‘Very Stretched’ “The ECB appears very stretched at the moment and it doesn’t want to give speculators any ammunition, so they just hunker down and keep the information as vague as possible,” Callow said. “Policy makers are also hoping that the implementation of the European rescue fund will calm markets, allowing them to exit the program.” European finance ministers this week agreed on the structure of a 440 billion-euro ($530 billion) European Financial Stability Facility, the main part of the 750 billion- euro rescue package announced on May 10 to counter the crisis. The euro has continued to tumble since then, taking its decline against the dollar to more than 20 percent since late November, when concern about Greece’s ballooning budget deficit intensified. It traded at $1.2051 this morning. “It will take more confirmation on the ground that some of the austerity programs are starting to bite and fiscal ratios are looking more sustainable” to bring yields down, said Christoph Rieger , co-head of fixed income strategy Commerzbank AG in Frankfurt. “I cannot think of a single event that could help spreads to recover sharply.” Waning Resolve? The ECB’s purchases, which totaled 40.5 billion euros on June 4, have slowed since it bought 16.5 billion euros of bonds in the first week of its program. It spent 5.5 billion euros last week, down from 8.5 billion euros the week before and 10 billion euros the week before that. “It looks like the ECB’s resolve is waning,” said Juergen Michels , chief euro-area economist at Citigroup Inc in London. “It doesn’t really have the backing of the entire Governing Council.” The program entails “stability risks” and “must be precisely targeted and limited,” Weber said last week. Bank of Italy Governor Mario Draghi said the purchases “will have to be discontinued as quickly as possible” once bond markets normalize. By contrast Ireland’s Patrick Honohan welcomed the program as an “important” new weapon in the ECB’s armory, and said the decision “was exactly the right kind of prompt initiative needed.” The split on the council is unsettling for investors and Trichet must do his upmost to restore confidence in the single currency, Frankfurt Trust’s Kind said. “The euro area is divided enough as it is,” he said. “The ECB is normally the only organization which lives by consensus. To have a split over something so fundamental is extremely unhelpful.” To contact the reporter on this story: Gabi Thesing in London at gthesing@bloomberg.net

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Stocks, Pound, U.S. Futures Drop on U.K. Debt Concern Gold Reaches Record

June 8, 2010

By Claudia Carpenter June 8 (Bloomberg) — European stocks fell for the third day and the pound weakened after Fitch Ratings said Britain’s deficit challenge is “formidable,” adding to concerns that the region’s fiscal crisis is spreading. U.S. futures, copper and oil erased gains, while gold climbed to a record. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index slipped 1.3 percent, dragged down by E.ON AG and Tesco Plc shares, at 10:39 a.m. in London. Futures on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index dropped less than 0.1 percent. Sterling declined 0.4 percent to $1.4414. Copper fell 0.3 percent, and oil retreated 0.4 percent. Gold futures for August delivery rose to $1,254.50 an ounce in New York. Fitch said the U.K. needs to accelerate plans to reduce its budget deficit. The warning came one day after Prime Minister David Cameron told Britons to expect years of spending cuts, while the European Union pledged tougher sanctions on governments that break deficit rules. “This is not a pretty environment for equity investors,” Dennis Gartman , economist and editor of “The Gartman Letter” said in a Bloomberg radio interview. “Prices are going to continue to more lower. We are revising down ‘guestimates’ for earnings. It’s the start of a bear market.” Benchmark indexes in the U.K., Spain, Germany, France and Italy declined more than 1 percent. E.ON and RWE, Germany’s biggest utilities, dropped more than 2 percent in Frankfurt after Germany signaled plans for levies on the nuclear power industry. BP Plc retreated 3.3 percent in London as the commander of the U.S. response team to the leaking Gulf of Mexico well said it’s still unknown how much crude continues to spill. Tesco, the U.K.’s biggest retailer, fell 2.8 percent after saying Chief Executive Officer Terry Leahy will retire next year. Asian stocks rose for the first time in three days after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said the U.S. recovery remains intact. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index gained 0.3 percent. To contact the reporter on this story: Claudia Carpenter in London at ccarpenter2@bloomberg.net

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EU to Speed Reviews of Budgets, Tighten Penalties for Excessive Deficits

June 7, 2010

By James G. Neuger June 8 (Bloomberg) — European Union governments vowed to police national budgets at an early stage and introduce a wider range of sanctions on excessive deficits to prevent a repeat of the Greece-fueled debt crisis that has undermined the euro. Finance ministers agreed to impose fines on countries that fail to deliver on deficit-cutting pledges even before shortfalls surpass the euro region’s limit of 3 percent of gross domestic product. “Up to now, you only got fined for driving through the red light of the 3 percent,” EU President Herman Van Rompuy told reporters late yesterday after meeting with EU finance ministers in Luxembourg. “From now on, you could also be in trouble for crossing the orange light.” To back up the planned tightening of the rules, the ministers also said they will press ahead with deficit cuts next year, balking at U.S. pleas for looser budget policies to help speed the recovery from the worst recession since World War II. The euro has fallen 17 percent this year as the debt crisis exposed cracks in the monetary union and prompted deficit cuts across Europe that may hobble the economic rebound. The euro slid as low as $1.1877 yesterday, the weakest since 2006, before recovering to $1.1917. Under the German-inspired Stability and Growth Pact, countries with deficits above the euro-area limit face fines of as much as 0.5 percent of GDP unless they get the budget back into compliance. Fiscal Crisis No country has been fined during the euro’s 11-year lifespan. Germany, which authored the rules in the 1990s and led the way in diluting them in 2005, is spearheading the campaign to stiffen them again after euro governments put up as much as 860 billion euros ($1 trillion) to contain Greece’s fiscal crisis. Under the revamped system, each government will present its broader assumptions for growth, inflation, taxing and spending in the spring, about six months before national budgets go through parliaments. “Timing is key,” Van Rompuy said. A government plotting a high deficit “will have to justify itself to its peers” and would come under pressure to change course. Countries with overall debt that exceeds the EU limit of 60 percent of GDP would come under extra scrutiny. Proposals to strip repeat deficit offenders of their rights to vote on EU policies are off the table for now because that would require a change to EU treaties, a process that took eight years for the bloc’s current treaty. In-Depth Discussion “We focused on what we can do in the short term and under the current treaty framework,” Van Rompuy said. The first in-depth discussion of the overhaul of EU fiscal legislation coincided with a renewed pledge to keep cutting deficits in 2011. Budgets will remain “neutral” in 2010, becoming “clearly restrictive as of 2011 when recovery is expected to gain momentum,” Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker told reporters after chairing yesterday’s meeting of euro-region finance ministers in Luxembourg. Europe’s determination to press ahead with belt-tightening measures defies a June 5 call by U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner for “stronger domestic demand growth” in countries like Germany with trade surpluses. The government of Germany, Europe’s largest economy, yesterday announced a four-year, 80 billion-euro package of tax increases and spending cuts, and pressed the rest of Europe to follow suit. “Solid finances are the best form of crisis prevention,” German Chancellor Angela Merkel told reporters in Berlin. Industrialized World European forecasts show the U.S. leading the recovery in the industrialized world, with an expansion of 2.8 percent in 2010 outpacing the euro region’s estimated 0.9 percent. The U.S. will remain ahead in 2011, with growth of 2.5 percent beating Europe’s 1.5 percent, the European Commission says. Europe’s economy expanded 0.2 percent in the first quarter, with exports and government spending pacing the third straight quarterly increase. The economy is strained by unemployment of 10.1 percent, the highest in the euro’s 11 1/2-year history, and spending cuts to prevent a Europe-wide debt shock. Investors concerned about the spread of the European debt crisis poured into German bonds yesterday, pushing the 10-year yield as low as 2.54 percent, the lowest since at least 1989, the year the Berlin Wall fell. European stocks dropped, leaving the benchmark Stoxx Europe 600 Index 11 percent below its year- to-date high on April 15. Austerity Programs Greece, Spain, Italy and Portugal are among euro countries with austerity programs in the works. France plans a three-year spending freeze. In the Netherlands, polls point to a victory in June 9 elections by Mark Rutte’s Liberals, which vow to cut spending by 20 billion euros by 2015. Europe-wide efforts “should not leave any doubt as to our determination to halt and to reverse the increase in the debt ratios,” Juncker said. In Britain, the largest of the 11 European Union countries not using the euro, Prime Minister David Cameron prepared voters for the deepest spending cuts in a generation, saying “the overall scale of the problem is even worse than we thought.” To contact the reporter on this story: James G. Neuger in Luxembourg at jneuger@bloomberg.net

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Michael Wolff: Why Economists Are Sexy and the Euro Won’t be Worth a Dollar

June 7, 2010

At the Festival Economia in Trento, Italy, yesterday, Nouriel Roubini, the New York-based globe-trotting economist, who has been a mighty and consistent voice of financial apocalypse, said that the only way Europe could save itself from certain catastrophe (which would, in turn, double dip the rest of the world) was to let the euro fall to below parity with the dollar. Roubini noted, not disapprovingly, the euro’s historic low of 82 cents–compared to its recent high of $1.50.

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Forint Rallies on Hungarian Government’s Pledge to Reduce Budget Deficit

June 7, 2010

By Piotr Skolimowski June 7 (Bloomberg) — The Hungarian forint rallied on a government pledge to stick to the budget deficit goal after comments that the country was at risk of a Greece-like crisis sparked the currency’s biggest two-day drop since 2008. The forint climbed 1.5 percent to 284.37 as of 5:15 p.m. in Budapest, poised for the biggest daily gain in four weeks and the best performance among 25 emerging markets worldwide. The currency tumbled last week to a year low and borrowing costs rose the most since October 2008 after a spokesman for Prime Minister Viktor Orban raised the prospect of a default. Hungary will “do everything” to achieve the deficit target of 3.8 percent of gross domestic product, approved by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund, Mihaly Varga , Orban’s chief of staff and a former finance minister, said today. Varga a week earlier estimated the shortfall may exceed 7 percent. “The government has moved to stop the rout,” said Nigel Rendell , senior emerging-market strategist at RBC Capital in London. “We are probably going to see it trading sideways with a firmer bid as the situation remains fragile. We still don’t know what cuts they are going to do in order to reach the deficit and that makes investments into Hungarian assets a risky propositions.” Investors should buy the forint against the euro after last week’s “heavy underperformance,” UniCredit SpA wrote in a report to clients today. The Hungarian currency may advance to 280 per euro, according to the bank. Yield Spread Narrows The extra yield investors demand to own Hungary’s external debt over U.S. Treasuries dropped 8 basis points to 4.11 percentage points, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s EMBI Global Index. The so-called yield spread widened 100 basis points on June 4. The benchmark BUX index closed 0.5 percent lower, paring an earlier decline of as much as 5.3 percent. In Hungary, “we’ve seen falls of 20 percent or more and in that kind of scenario there are great opportunities to buy from a longer-range point of view,” Mark Mobius , who oversees about $34 billion in emerging markets as Templeton Asset Management Ltd.’s Singapore-based chairman, said in a Bloomberg Television Interview. “Their numbers are not as bad as Greece.” Developing-nation stocks fell today, sending the MSCI Emerging Markets Index down the most in almost two weeks, and currencies weakened in Asia on concern slower-than-estimated employment growth in the U.S. and a spread in Europe’s sovereign-debt crisis will dent the global recovery. Orban, who spent eight years in opposition, swept to power in April elections after promising tax cuts and faster economic growth following the worst recession in 18 years. The economy contracted 6.3 percent last year. Fidesz’s landslide victory gave Orban a two-thirds majority in parliament. Deficit Target The budget deficit can’t exceed the 3.8 percent deficit target in 2010 and the government may launch a three-year “radical” tax-cut plan from July 1 and introduce a flat income tax in 2011, state news agency MTI cited Economy Minister Gyorgy Matolcsy as saying on commercial television station TV2 today said. Matolcsy ruled out austerity measures to reach the deficit target. The gap reached 84.6 percent of the annual target in the first five months of the year, the Economy Ministry said today. The “agenda now is to reassure the markets and regain a little bit of their confidence which is now close to zero,” said Luis Costa , an emerging-market strategist at Citigroup Inc. in London. “This is not a 100 percent recovery story yet and many questions are still on the table. So that will keep many investors in a defensive stance.” The government will probably struggle to meet the deficit target and may seek some leeway in talks with the EU and the IMF, Costa said. The IMF is currently on an unofficial visit in Hungary and its official delegation will come in August, the government said today. ‘Under Pressure’ The forint weakened 2.4 percent on June 4, extending the previous day’s 2.2 percent retreat, to a one-year low of 288.73 per euro. The slide pushed the forint’s 14-day relative strength index down to 30.9, according to Bloomberg data. A reading of 30 or below is a signal an asset may rise, according to some technical analysts. The forint “remains under pressure” and interest-rate cuts are “stalled indefinitely” even after the new government distanced itself from earlier statements that compared the country’s finances with that of Greece, Morgan Stanley said in a research note today. Default worries in Hungary are a “gross exaggeration” and the latest comments from the government saying the budget’s financing is assured is “more constructive,” Morgan Stanley said. Default Risk Peter Szijjarto , the prime minister’s spokesman, said last week it’s not “an exaggeration at all” to speculate that the nation may default. The comments sparked concern that Europe’s debt crisis is spreading after credit downgrades of Greece, Portugal and Spain. The European Union pledged almost $1 trillion to the bloc’s weakest economies last month after Greece’s widening budget deficit threatened to undermine confidence in the euro. Hungary received a 20 billion-euro ($24 billion) loan from the International Monetary Fund, the EU and the World Bank in October 2008 to help avert a default, becoming the first EU nation to receive an international bailout during the credit crisis. The country has the equivalent of $26.9 billion of debt coming due this year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The government reduced the deficit to 4 percent of GDP last year from 9.3 percent in 2006, the EU’s widest at the time. The country’s debt level may reach 79 percent of GDP this year, on par with Germany and making it the most indebted eastern EU member, according to the European Commission. The debt level is less than the 125 percent of GDP for Greece, 118 percent for Italy, and 86 percent for Portugal. First Surplus Hungary recorded its first annual current-account surplus last year since records started in 1995 as the country’s worst recession in 18 years curbed demand for import and EU transfers helped improve the balance, the central bank said on March 31. Danske Bank A/S kept its forecast for the forint strengthening to 265 per euro in 12 months based on its current account, Lars Christensen , the bank’s head of emerging-market strategy in Copenhagen, said on June 6. “This doesn’t have to develop more negatively and we should get some stability” this week in the markets, Christensen said. “Nothing has really changed for the Hungarian economy but the government doesn’t have much room for mistakes.” To contact the reporter on this story: Piotr Skolimowski in Warsaw at pskolimowski@bloomberg.net ;

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Hungary &lsquoIsn&rsquot Greece,&rsquo Moody&rsquos Says Following Tumble in Bonds

June 5, 2010

By Tal Barak Harif and Piotr Skolimowski June 5 (Bloomberg) — Hungary has “a good track record” managing fiscal crises and will take the steps needed even after a government official said the country may be at risk of defaulting, according to Moody’s Investors Service. “Hungary isn’t the next Greece,” Kristin Lindow , a senior vice president with the ratings company, said in a telephone interview yesterday from London. “Hungary has a good track record of doing what it needs to do when in trouble.” Hungarian bonds tumbled yesterday, pushing up borrowing costs by the most since October 2008, and the forint and stocks plunged after Peter Szijjarto , spokesman for Prime Minister Viktor Orban , said it’s not “an exaggeration at all” to speculate that the nation may be unable to pay its debt. The comments sparked concern that Europe’s debt crisis is spreading after credit downgrades of Greece, Portugal and Spain. The European Union pledged almost $1 trillion to the bloc’s weakest economies last month after Greece’s widening budget deficit threatened to undermine confidence in the euro. “It’s clear that the economy is in a very grave situation,” Szijjarto said at a press conference in Budapest yesterday. “I don’t think it’s an exaggeration at all” to talk about a default, he said. Orban took office May 29 after winning elections by pledging to cut taxes and stimulate the economy. He failed last week to get EU approval for looser fiscal policy. ‘Ill Considered’ Comments The extra yield investors demand to own Hungary’s debt over U.S. Treasuries rose 157 basis points, or 1.57 percentage point, to 476, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s EMBI Global Index . The BUX Index of equities tumbled 3.3 percent, while the forint fell 2.3 percent to 288.73 per euro, the weakest level since June 2009. “The politician was over-speaking, which is typical for a new government, but it was ill considered,” Lindow said. Moody’s lowered Hungary’s debt rating to Baa1, the third lowest investment grade, from A3 in March 2009 and has a negative outlook. Hungary, the first EU nation to receive an international bailout during the credit crisis, has the equivalent of $26.9 billion of debt coming due this year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The government’s budget deficit could grow to as high as 7.5 percent of gross domestic product this year, compared with a 3.8 percent target set with the International Monetary Fund by the previous government, Mihaly Varga , Orban’s chief of staff, told M1 television on May 30. Tax Reductions Orban is vowing to end austerity and cut taxes to help accelerate economic growth after the worst recession in 18 years. Former Hungarian Finance Minister Peter Oszko said yesterday the country is “in no way near default.” “While the outlook for that country remains poor, it does not quite have the potential to roil markets as much as Greece or the other peripheral euro zone members,” Win Thin , a senior currency strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman & Co., said yesterday in a report. “The Hungary story is bad, but the overall impact is likely to be limited.” Hungary, which received a 20 billion-euro ($24 billion) loan from the IMF, the EU and the World Bank in October 2008 to help avert a default, hasn’t drawn any funds from its standby program under the fourth and fifth previews, and the new government has raised the possibility of renegotiating this year’s deficit target to 5 to 6 percent of GDP, according to Thin. Manageable Situation “The new government is trying to say the picture is much uglier and we’re going to work to clean the house,” Luis Costa , an emerging market strategist at Citigroup Inc. in London, said yesterday in a phone interview. The comments “are probably more populist than anything else,” he said. “When it comes to the funding requirements, the situation in 2010 is still very manageable.” Credit-default swaps on Hungarian government bonds rose to 410 basis points from yesterday’s close of 308, according to CMA DataVision prices. An increase signals deterioration in investor perceptions of credit quality. “We still have a negative outlook because we don’t know when implementation will happen of the structural changes,” Moody’s Lindow said. The BUX index briefly extended its drop from this year’s high to more than 20 percent yesterday before paring it loss. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index of shares lost 1.2 percent yesterday, while currencies from Poland to Romania and Russia weakened against the dollar. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index tumbled 3.4 percent as a report showing slower-than-estimated American job growth worsened losses sparked by concern over Hungary’s debt. Reducing Expenses Hungary is in its fifth year of cost cutting and the government reduced the deficit to 4 percent of GDP last year from 9.3 percent in 2006, the EU’s widest at the time. The country’s debt level may reach 79 percent of GDP this year, on par with Germany and making it the most indebted eastern EU member, according to the European Commission. The debt level is less than the 125 percent of GDP for Greece, 118 percent for Italy, and 86 percent for Portugal. A fact-finding panel will probably present preliminary figures on the state of the economy this weekend, Szijjarto said. The government will publish an action plan within 72 hours after the committee reports its findings, he said. “The moment of truth has already arrived in Greece and it has yet to come to Hungary,” Szijjarto said. “The government is prepared to avoid the road that Greece has been down; in other words, we won’t hesitate to act after the truth becomes known.” Szijjarto’s comments “are extremely confusing and more market panic should be expected,” Elisabeth Andreew , chief foreign-currency strategist at Nordea Markets in Copenhagen, wrote in an e-mailed comment. “Beware of more spill-over effects on other currencies and asset classes.” To contact the reporters on this story: Tal Barak Harif in New York at tbarak@bloomberg.net ; Piotr Skolimowski in Warsaw at pskolimowski@bloomberg.net

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Sovereign Credit-Default Swaps Surge on Hungarian Debt Crisis

June 4, 2010

By Kate Haywood June 4 (Bloomberg) — Credit-default swaps on sovereign bonds surged to a record on speculation Europe’s debt crisis is worsening after Hungary said it’s in a “very grave situation” because a previous government lied about the economy. The cost of insuring against losses on Hungarian sovereign debt rose 63 basis points to 371, according to CMA DataVision at 3:30 p.m. in London, after earlier reaching 416 basis points. Swaps on France, Austria, Belgium and Germany also rose, sending the Markit iTraxx SovX Western Europe Index of contracts on 15 governments as high as a record 174.4 basis points. Hungary’s bonds fell after a spokesman for Prime Minister Viktor Orban said talk of a default is “not an exaggeration” because a previous administration “manipulated” figures. The country was bailed out with a 20 billion-euro ($24 billion) aid package from the European Union and International Monetary Fund in 2008. “The comments out of Hungary have really spooked the market,” said Rajeev Shah , a credit strategist at BNP Paribas SA in London. “Investors are interpreting it as bad sign for trying to tackle Europe’s debt crisis.” The euro dropped below $1.21 for the first time since April 2006, stocks tumbled and the cost of insuring against corporate default rose on speculation Hungary will weaken the EU’s willingness to rescue the region’s indebted nations. Credit markets were also roiled after data showed U.S. employers hired fewer workers in May than forecast, signaling slowing economic growth. ‘Something Serious’ Swaps on Spanish government debt were up 22 basis points at 278, after earlier reaching a record 295.5, according to CMA. Contracts on Portugal were 26 basis points wider at 364.8, while Ireland was up 32 basis points at 292, and Italy climbed 30 basis points to an all-time high of 264, before retreating to 253. Contracts on Greece were 57 basis points higher at 783, down from 798 earlier. The Markit iTraxx Crossover Index of swaps linked to 50 companies with mostly high-yield credit ratings jumped 27 basis point to 584, according to Markit Group Ltd. “Are we on the brink of something more serious?” Deutsche Bank AG strategist Jim Reid wrote in a note to clients today. “We’ve little doubt that the authorities have no appetite for imminent peripheral defaults but we do see the situation getting worse before it gets better. This leaves markets vulnerable until there is more certainty surrounding the structure of the peripheral funding bail-out.” Credit-default swaps pay the buyer face value in exchange for the underlying securities or the cash equivalent should a borrower fail to adhere to its debt agreements. A basis point on a contract protecting $10 million of debt from default for five years is equivalent to $1,000 a year. To contact the reporter on this story: Kate Haywood in London at khaywood@bloomberg.net

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EU urges Italy to raise female retirement age

June 4, 2010

EU urges Italy to raise female retirement age

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Covered Bond Sales Jump Amid Concern Over Creditworthiness Credit Markets

June 3, 2010

By Sonja Cheung and Caroline Hyde June 3 (Bloomberg) — Sales of covered bonds are accelerating as investors seek debt backed by collateral amid concern about the creditworthiness of governments and banks. About $7.7 billion of the securities have been sold or are being marketed this week worldwide, more than double last week’s total, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Bank of Montreal , Canada’s fourth-largest bank, sold $2 billion of the bonds due in 2015. Demand for securities backed by mortgages and public-sector loans with top ratings is rising as European governments from Greece to Spain struggle to cut record budget deficits, threatening the region’s banks. Covered bonds returned 0.25 percent in May, compared with a 0.4 percent loss on global investment-grade company debt, Bank of America Merrill Lynch index data show. “In this new world where volatility is high,” it’s “certainly an advantage to be holding bonds that have collateral backing,” said Georg Grodzki , head of credit research at Legal & General Investment Management in London. The company, which oversees almost 300 billion pounds ($439 billion), is a “selective buyer” of covered bonds, favoring notes sold by northern European issuers, he said. Yields have risen at a slower pace relative to government securities than corporate debt. Spreads on euro-denominated covered bonds have widened 9 basis points to 153 basis points since May 6, compared with an increase of 28 basis points to 196 for company debt, Bank of America Merrill Lynch indexes show. Company Bond Sales The increase in covered bond sales contrasts with a decline in corporate debt issuance to $70 billion last month, less than half April’s tally and the least since 2003, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Elsewhere in credit markets, BP Plc bonds rose the most since March 2009, rebounding from a record low, as investors assessed liabilities stemming from the worst oil spill in U.S. history. The 4.75 percent notes due in 2019, issued by the company’s finance unit, increased 2.7 cents to 92.9 cents on the dollar as of 12:28 p.m. in New York, according to Trace, the bond price reporting system of the Financial Industry regulatory Authority. The debt fell to 90.1 cents yesterday, the lowest ever. BP bonds had fallen as the London-based company’s efforts to plug its gushing well failed and the U.S. Justice Department said it’s investigating whether any criminal or civil laws were violated. The leak began after an April 20 explosion aboard the Deepwater Horizon rig, which BP leased from Vernier, Switzerland-based Transocean Ltd. BP Rating Cut “Investors are starting to get their hands around the potential exposures the spill companies may have,” said Joel Levington , managing director of corporate credit at Brookfield Investment Management Inc. in New York. BP’s credit ranking was cut one step to Aa2 by Moody’s Investors Service and is on review another possible downgrade, the New York-based rating company said today in a statement. Fitch Ratings cut BP’s ranking one notch to AA from AA+. A gauge of U.S. corporate credit risk fell for a second day as factory orders rose and the service industry expanded in May for a fifth straight month. The Markit CDX North America Investment Grade Index Series 14, which investors use to hedge against losses on corporate debt or to speculate on creditworthiness, dropped 0.3 basis point to a mid-price of 117.1 basis points as of 12:01 p.m. in New York, according to Markit Group Ltd. The index typically falls as investor confidence improves and rises as it deteriorates. European Risk Falls The cost of insuring against non-payment on European corporate bonds fell the most in a week today, according to traders of credit-default swaps, while indexes in Asia also declined. The rally in credit coincided with gains in Europe and Asia stock markets, with the DJ Stoxx 600 Europe index rising 1.4 percent. Default swaps on the Markit iTraxx Crossover Index of 50 mostly high-yield European companies fell 24.4 basis points to a two-week low of 558.8, according to Markit data. The decline signals an improvement in investor perceptions of credit quality. Credit-default swaps on European sovereign notes snapped three days of increases, with contracts tied to Italy dropping 10 basis points to 223, declining from a record, according to CMA DataVision. Default swaps linked to Greece’s government bonds fell 21 basis points to 717, Spain dropped 12 basis points to 238 and Portugal was 15 basis points lower at 330, CMA prices show. SovX Europe Index The Markit iTraxx SovX Western Europe Index of credit- default swaps linked to debt of 15 governments fell to 147 basis points, from yesterday’s all-time high closing price of 154.5, according to CMA. Credit-default swaps on BP’s debt were 13 basis points lower at 246. In emerging markets, spreads narrowed 7 basis points on average to 307, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s Emerging Market Bond index. Argentina’s new 2017 bonds sank in their first day of trading as the government began turning over the securities to investors as part of its restructuring of $18.3 billion of defaulted debt kept out of a 2005 settlement. The 8.75 percent notes tumbled to 80.85 cents on the dollar from their issue price of 90.11, Stone Harbor Investment Partners said. Argentina began issuing $738 million of the bonds yesterday to institutional investors who participated in an early tender period. The government is distributing the securities as compensation for past due interest. “Argentina came up with an issuance price which isn’t really in line with reality,” said Jim Craige , who helps manage $12 billion of emerging-market debt, including defaulted Argentine bonds, at Stone Harbor in New York. Covered Bond Sales Bank of Montreal yesterday sold U.S. dollar-denominated covered bonds in the first transaction in the currency in more than a month. BNP Paribas Home Loan Covered Bond SA, a unit of France’s largest bank, sold 1.5 billion euros ($1.8 billion) of five-year notes that yielded 42 basis points more than the swap rate, Bloomberg data show. Dexia SA in Brussels sold 500 million euros of 10-year bonds with a 15 basis-point spread. Bank of New Zealand , a unit of National Australia Bank Ltd., is meeting with investors this week before a possible sale of covered bonds, according to a person familiar with the plan. The lender has completed the documentation it needs to sell the covered notes, the person said, asking not to be named as the plans are private. A sale would be the first issue of such securities in New Zealand. ‘Flight to Safety’ “Investors are buying covered bonds rather than unsecured notes as a flight to safety,” said Florian Hillenbrand , a Munich-based senior analyst at UniCredit SpA, Italy’s biggest bank. Banks are “tapping the market now because it’s a nice window of opportunity and investors have money to put to work,” said Hillenbrand, who recommends buying German, French and Scandinavian covered bonds. Jose Sarafana , the Paris-based head of covered bond strategy at Societe Generale SA, said he expects another 60 billion euros of sales this year. “Covered bonds offer safer, more liquid assets than senior unsecured notes and therefore we’re seeing plenty of demand for new issues,” he said. Issues in the $2.9 trillion covered bond market get higher ratings than regular notes because they are backed by a pool of assets that can be sold in a default. The extra security typically allows lenders to pay less interest. Covered bonds, which date back to the 18th century, are mostly sold by banks and tend to originate from Europe. Lenders in the region are facing 195 billion euros of bad debts by the end of 2011 as governments cut spending to reduce budget deficits, the European Central Bank estimates. “Bond issuance was very low in May, so we’re now seeing banks looking to covered bonds to meet their growing refinancing needs,” said SocGen’s Sarafana. Borrowers are rushing to sell debt before the ECB’s year- long purchase program ends on June 30. The Frankfurt-based ECB said yesterday it has spent 55.1 billion euros of the 60 billion it set aside a year ago to support credit markets by buying covered bonds. To contact the reporters on this story: Sonja Cheung in London scheung58@bloomberg.net ; Caroline Hyde in London chyde3@bloomberg.net

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Netanyahu Calls Flotilla Raid Criticism Hypocrisy Amid Probe Calls

June 3, 2010

By Gwen Ackerman and Jonathan Ferziger June 3 (Bloomberg) — Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said criticism of Israel’s raid against a Gaza Strip aid shipment that left nine dead was “hypocrisy,” as international calls for a probe into the incident mounted. “Israel is told it has the right to defend itself, but when we do exercise that right we’re condemned for it,” Netanyahu said in a nationally televised address in Jerusalem. “Israel should not be held to a double standard.” Israel has faced international criticism over the May 31 raid by naval commandos on a flotilla of aid ships, as well as calls for it to lift restrictions on the flow of goods into Gaza. The incident has led to demands for Israel or others to investigate the raid on the ships that headed for Hamas- controlled Gaza in an effort to undermine Israel’s blockade. United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told reporters in New York that the blockade was “counter-productive, unsustainable and wrong,” and that it should end “immediately.” Israel “must provide as soon as possible a full and detailed accounting of the events surrounding this incident,” he said. Vice-President Joe Biden said Israel has “an absolute right to deal with its security interest” and a “right to know” what is being transported to Gaza. Biden said he supports a “transparent and open” investigation that is led by the Israelis and has “international participation.” He spoke in an interview on PBS television’s “Charlie Rose Show. Israel isn’t likely to agree to an international probe, said Jonathan Spyer , a political scientist at the Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya. Faulty Intelligence “There is a very strong sense that it is not that something actually wrong took place,” Spyer said in a telephone interview. “Rather, there was a mishap and a strong sense that the army made a mistake based on faulty intelligence. There is not a sense that Israel feels answerable to the world community.” At the same time, Israel has acted to end the crisis. All detained members of the flotilla were expelled yesterday, with the exception of seven people still in the hospital, said Interior Ministry spokeswoman Sabine Haddad. Three aircraft landed in Istanbul carrying 466 passengers and the bodies of nine people killed in the raid, Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said in comments carried by state-owned news agency Anatolia. Four of the dead have been identified as Turks and the nationality of the others isn’t clear. Nineteen injured people were flown to Ankara and were being given treatment. Supporters Welcome The planes were welcomed by hundreds of supporters and family members at Istanbul’s main airport. Arab foreign ministers meeting in an emergency session in Cairo urged their governments to defy the blockade, Arab League Secretary-General Amre Moussa said. The ministers called on Arab states to “work to provide the people of Gaza with whatever they need regardless of the blockade and using all means,” he told a news conference after a three-hour meeting that ended early today. Netanyahu spoke after the United Nations Human Rights Council adopted a resolution to authorize an independent international investigation of the Israeli raid on the flotilla. The U.S., the Netherlands and Italy voted against the measure. “Every Ship’ “Our responsibility is to examine every ship going to Gaza, to stop the weapons and to let other cargo enter,” Netanyahu said yesterday. “If we don’t do that, the result is going to be an Iranian port in Gaza.” The UN Security Council has also called for an investigation. French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner said in an interview yesterday on RTL Radio that any investigation should be overseen by the UN. In the past, Israel refused to participate in a UN panel led by former UN prosecutor and South African judge Richard Goldstone that investigated the 2008 Gaza war. Goldstone’s panel accused Israel and Hamas of war crimes and called on them to investigate the charges. Ban said after meetings with envoys of Israel, Turkey, the U.S., China, Russia and Arab nations that he would take “some time” to decide how an investigation of the raid should be conducted. He said he would “make it as impartial, credible and transparent as possible.” Stop Hamas Israel’s benchmark TA-25 Index was up 0.02 percent at the close in Tel Aviv yesterday. Israel said the Gaza war was meant to stop Hamas and other militant groups from firing rockets into its territory. About 330 rockets have been fired from Gaza into Israel since the end of the operation, killing one foreign worker last March, the army said. Alon Liel , former director general of the Foreign Ministry, said that unlike the Gaza probe, where many facts were unknown, photos and video footage of the flotilla incident was readily available on the Internet. “I don’t think it is an inquiry that should bother Israel too much except one thing, the fact that they acted 80 or 90 miles from the beach in international water,” Liel said in a phone interview. “I don’t know if an international inquiry will say Israel did something illegal. This is the soft belly.” Some Israeli opposition lawmakers called on the government to set up an official inquiry into the raid, the daily Haaretz said. A survey of Israeli Jews in the daily Ma’ariv newspaper found that 46.7 percent of those questioned want the government to establish a probe into the incident, while 51.6 percent say there is no need. Israeli Blockade The pro-Palestinian activists were attempting to sail into Gaza, which has been under Israeli blockade since the Islamic Hamas movement took control of the territory in 2007. A seventh ship has sailed for Gaza to try and breach the Israeli blockade. Hamas is considered a terrorist organization by Israel, the U.S. and the European Union. Palestinians, backed by the United Nations and human-rights groups, say the restrictions on food imports and construction materials have created a humanitarian crisis. Israel says it needs to control Gaza’s borders or Hamas will smuggle in material to make rockets and attack its territory. Israel said its soldiers were attacked with knives and clubs after boarding a vessel and seven soldiers were wounded, including by gunfire after activists aboard the ship managed to grab Israeli firearms. Kuwait lawmaker Waleed al-Tabtabai, who was on one of the ships, told reporters on his return home that the “Israelis started firing even before they landed on the ship. They killed two Turks, one was killed by helicopter fire and the other by fire from a ship.” To contact the reporter on this story: Gwen Ackerman in Jerusalem at gackerman@bloomberg.net ; Jonathan Ferziger in Jerusalem at jferziger@bloomberg.net

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Berlusconi Bets Money on Living Beyond 100 With Support for Drug Ventures

June 1, 2010

By Flavia Krause-Jackson and Chiara Remondini June 1 (Bloomberg) — When Silvio Berlusconi said he wanted to live forever, he wasn’t joking. Italy’s preternaturally tanned prime minister, who made his fortune in real estate and media , became the biggest investor in a cancer-drug company in December and supports a science venture whose research he says can help him live past 100. The 73-year-old Berlusconi has already fought off prostate cancer, dodged allegations of tax evasion, mafia association and sexual misconduct, and defeated younger rivals to become Italy’s longest-serving prime minister. He has overseen his party since 1993, while the opposition has had seven chiefs. “Silvio has defied all odds politically, now he’s trying to challenge science,” said James Walston , who teaches politics at American University in Rome. Berlusconi’s popularity dropped in a poll released May 18 to the lowest level since he won his third election in 2008. The billionaire raised his stake in Milan-based Molecular Medicine SpA through his holding company Fininvest SpA to 24 percent at the end of last year. He put his youngest son Luigi, a 21-year-old who studies economics at Bocconi University, on the board. The holding was worth 40.6 million euros ($50 million) on Dec. 22, the day Fininvest disclosed the increase. MolMed has two cancer drugs in the most advanced stages of clinical tests. Berlusconi also backs MolMed’s second-biggest shareholder, Milan foundation and clinic San Raffaele del Monte Tabor , which plans to build a research and treatment center this year devoted to fending off the effects of aging. The project is known as Quo Vadis, Latin for “where are you going.” San Raffaele While Berlusconi hasn’t invested directly in San Raffaele, the clinic was the biggest beneficiary of government funds for research from 2000 to 2008, and the only one whose annual allowance hasn’t been cut, according to the latest available figures from the Health Ministry. Berlusconi said in March at a political rally in Rome’s San Giovanni square that he expects “we will defeat cancer” before the end of his term. He told reporters gathered outside Milan’s Trattoria Giannino last August that he’s investing in a group that wants to raise average life expectancy to 120 years. “So maybe in 100 years, I’ll think of a successor,” Berlusconi said. He declined to be interviewed for this article. He isn’t the only aging industrialist invested in MolMed. Leonardo Del Vecchio , 75, founder of eyewear company Luxottica Group SpA , and Ennio Doris , 69, chief executive officer of the finance and insurance group Mediolanum SpA , 35 percent-owned by Fininvest, each own 8.2 percent of the biotechnology company. Taking a Snooze For all the talk about having the stamina of a 40-year-old, needing only three hours of sleep and dating young women, Berlusconi is the oldest of the G-7 leaders and during the 2006 election campaign he suffered fainting spells. When European leaders commemorated the fall of the Berlin wall last November, he was caught on camera falling asleep. Berlusconi’s ties to San Raffaele’s founder Luigi Maria Verze brought him to MolMed and Quo Vadis. Verze, a spry 90-year-old priest who still heads the clinic, befriended Berlusconi 40 years ago when both men were seeking to buy land near Milan. Verze has created a sprawling campus around San Raffaele in Milan’s northeastern suburbs that houses a university , research labs and several biotechs, including MolMed. The company, founded in 1996, has two potential cancer medicines . One attacks tumors and clinical tests are under way to measure its effects on malignancies of the liver, lungs, ovaries and rectum, as well as on mesothelioma, a form of cancer that develops on the organs’ protective lining. ‘Giant Leap’ The product “could help us make a giant leap,” MolMed Chief Executive Officer Claudio Bordignon told reporters May 12. He compared it with Roche Holding AG ’s Avastin, which had sales of 6.2 billion Swiss francs ($5.4 billion) last year. While Avastin works by choking off the blood supply to tumors, the MolMed treatment combines two tactics to fight malignant growths. Scientists fused a toxic substance known as a cytokine with a compound called peptide that guides it to cancer cells to avoid damaging healthy ones. MolMed’s other advanced drug helps rebuild the immune system of leukemia patients using stem cell transplants from family members who aren’t a perfect match, the company says. “They have a diversified approach with those two products,” said Rodolphe Besserve , an analyst at Societe Generale SA in Paris, who has a “buy” recommendation on MolMed. “There’s no domino effect if one fails.” SocGen helped arrange the company’s initial public offering in 2008. Besserve estimates the tumor-busting drug could have annual sales of 900 million euros a year, while the transplant treatment could bring in as much as 500 million euros. Drop Since IPO MolMed has dropped 38 percent to 1.33 euros since the IPO in March 2008 in Italian trading. Shareholders approved a plan in April to raise as much as 70 million euros in a stock sale. Berlusconi attended the 2007 groundbreaking of the Quo Vadis 150 million-euro clinic and research center, which will focus on preventing and curing the diseases of old age. The center will be built in Lavagno, just outside Verona and near Verze’s hometown. Quo Vadis plans to mine the connections between nutrition, exercise, heredity and disease history to establish a health plan. Patients won’t just get advice about what drugs to take, they will be able to consult with the clinic to choose what’s best to eat at a restaurant, San Raffaele said in an e-mailed statement describing plans for Quo Vadis. Sports to Biotech Before Fininvest purchased the holding in MolMed in 2004, it was focused on media, publishing and sports. “MolMed gave us the opportunity to diversify our investment portfolio,” Fininvest Chief Executive Pasquale Cannatelli said in an interview in April. “In December, we increased our stake, a signal of our confidence in MolMed, which we’ll continue to support financially.” Berlusconi selected San Raffaele in 1997 when he had surgery for prostate cancer. One of his personal doctors, Alberto Zangrillo , works at the clinic as a professor of anesthesiology and intensive care. Last year, he appointed one of the clinic’s doctors , Ferruccio Fazio , an expert in nuclear medicine, as health minister. With three years left in his term, Berlusconi has yet to appoint a political heir. Public confidence dropped last month to 41 percent, the lowest since he won his third election, after a public spat with Gianfranco Fini , his party’s co-founder. Broken Teeth With science on his side, Berlusconi’s career may hold more surprises, said Antonio Noto , director of Rome-based IPR, which conducts the monthly confidence poll. When a 42-year-old man struck him with a miniature replica of Milan’s cathedral in December, breaking two teeth and fracturing his nose, Berlusconi’s bodyguards shoved him into the safety of his car. He pushed back out of the vehicle to stand before the crowd and cameras, blood trickling from his nose and mouth, drawing sympathy from an initially hostile crowd. “Every time someone has tried to write him off, he’s come back bigger and stronger,” Noto said. “If I were a betting man, I wouldn’t bet against him.” To contact the reporters on this story: Flavia Krause-Jackson in Rome at fjackson@bloomberg.net ; Chiara Remondini in Milan at cremondini@bloomberg.net

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Ireland Shows Revival Signs, Offers Lesson to Greece

June 1, 2010

By Dara Doyle and Louisa Fahy June 1 (Bloomberg) — Ireland, which endured one of the worst recessions of any developed economy since the Great Depression, is showing signs of reviving. The economy may be expanding again after shrinking 7 percent in 2009, economists say. Growth will hit 3 percent next year, almost twice the euro-area average, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said on May 27. “We’re close to the bottom,” Irish central bank Governor Patrick Honohan said in a May 28 interview in his Dublin office. “Here at the central bank, we are projecting an upturn in the second half of 2010.” Irish exports will rise this year for the first time since 2007, the OECD said. That’s helping Ireland pull out of the slump even as it continues the spending cuts started in 2008 to reduce Europe’s biggest deficit. Ireland’s ISEQ benchmark stock index has risen 2 percent in the last six months those of while Greece, Portugal and Spain, which have been slower to tackle deficits, have fallen by an average 24 percent. “It’s a rebound, a significant signal to Greece to swallow the pill and move on,” said Carsten Brzeski , an economist at ING Group in Brussels. “Whether it means that the Celtic Tiger is back and the outlook rosy remains to be seen.” Wage Cuts Ireland’s economy shrank about 10 percent in the last two years as a decade-long real-estate boom imploded. The country’s financial system came close to collapse, unemployment surged to a 15-year high and the budget gap widened to 14.3 percent of gross domestic product in 2009. The government raised a sales tax in 2008, introduced an income levy and cut public workers’ pay by an average of 13 percent to tame the deficit. Now, 18 months on from the first fiscal measures, retail sales are increasing. Irish consumer confidence stayed close to a 2 1/2-year high in May, a report today showed. At Arnotts , Ireland’s largest department store, workers have returned to a full 37 1/2-hour week after losing 2 1/2 hours in February. It was “really terrible last year,” David Riddiford, chief executive officer of the downtown Dublin store, said in an interview. “Now there seems to be some kind of stabilization. We can’t keep the Irish depressed for very long.” Loss of Jobs Manufacturing employment increased in May for the first time since November 2007, a report today showed, and the OECD forecasts exports will rise 3.7 percent this year. Kilkenny, Ireland-based Glanbia Plc raised its 2010 earnings forecast last month, citing a recovery in dairy markets. Ireland still must deal with the legacy of the recession. More than 180,000 jobs were lost in the last two years, pushing unemployment to 13.4 percent. Real-estate prices have halved since 2007 and the government has pumped billions of euros into the country’s banks to help protect them from souring loans. About 30 percent of Irish homeowners with a mortgage will be in negative equity by the end of 2010, according to research by the Economic and Social Research Institute in Dublin. “Certainly the headline numbers, the big picture, is looking better,” James Forbes , senior equity strategist at Irish Life Investment Managers in Dublin, said by telephone. “However, the housing market will remain under pressure.” Gunshot Wounds The government last year injected 7 billion euros ($8.6 billion) into the country’s two biggest banks, Bank of Ireland Plc and Allied Irish Banks Plc . It also set up a so-called bad bank to buy, at a discount, toxic real-estate loans with an original value of 80 billion euros from lenders. “Ireland is like a patient bleeding from two gunshot wounds,” said Morgan Kelly , a University College Dublin economics professor dubbed Ireland’s “Doctor Doom” after forecasting the economy’s slump. “The Irish government has moved quickly to stanch the smaller, fiscal hole, while insisting that the liters of blood pouring unchecked through the banking hole are manageable.” After being burned by rampant lending before the slump, banks are now hoarding cash, which may curb consumer spending and company investment. “Two years ago we would have been selling 60 to 70 percent of cars on finance,” said Gerry Murphy, a salesman at Sarsfield Motor Company in Dublin. “That’s not happening at all.” Nonetheless, car sales are up, spurred in part by a cash- for-clunkers program. Some 57,900 cars were sold in the five months through May, more than all of last year. ‘On the Up’ “Things are on the up,” Murphy said. “I think the decisions the government have made are working.” Other European governments are now following the Irish lead in cutting spending amid concern that the mounting debt crisis in Greece would spread to other nations. European Union leaders set up a 750 million-euro financial lifeline last month to backstop the region and defend the euro, prompting Italy, Spain and Portugal to agree to additional deficit cuts. “I give Ireland credit,” said Joseph Quinlan , chief market strategist for the investment management unit at Bank of America Corp. “What Ireland did six months ago is what the markets are demanding now of Greece, Italy and Portugal.” To contact the reporters on this story: Dara Doyle in Dublin at ddoyle1@bloomberg.net ; Louisa Fahy at lnesbitt@bloomberg.net

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Asia Stocks Fall on China&rsquos Manufacturing Report Ringgit Drops

June 1, 2010

By Linus Chua and Saeromi Shin June 1 (Bloomberg) — Asian stocks fell, extending the biggest monthly decline since October 2008, and emerging-market currencies weakened after Chinese manufacturing growth slowed more than estimated. The euro dropped after consumer confidence in the region declined. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index sank 0.8 percent to 112.54 as of 4:07 p.m. in Tokyo. The Stoxx Europe 600 lost 0.9 percent to 242.90. The Malaysian ringgit and copper slid, while the euro weakened against the yen and the dollar. Futures on the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index decreased 0.3 percent. Chinese manufacturing expanded at a slower pace in May, raising concern the world’s fastest-growing major economy is losing steam. The European Commission said yesterday its gauge of executive and consumer sentiment in the 16 nations using the euro fell last month, while a separate report today may show the unemployment rate increased in Italy. “There seems to be a worry that China’s strong economic expansion may be held back, and that may affect countries that depend heavily on China’s demand,” said Lim Chang Gue , a fund manager at Samsung Asset Management in Seoul, which manages $30 billion. “Also, if economic figures in troubled European countries turn out to be clearly deteriorating, that could add anxiety to the markets.” More than two stocks fell for every one that rose on the MSCI Asia Pacific Index. The measure lost 9.8 percent in May, the biggest monthly drop since the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. more than 18 months ago. China’s Manufacturing China’s Purchasing Managers’ Index dropped to 53.9 from 55.7 in April, seasonally adjusted, the Federation of Logistics and Purchasing said, less than the median 54.5 estimate in a Bloomberg News survey of 18 economists. Japan’s Nikkei 225 Stock Average declined 0.6 percent on concern the nation’s political instability may slow the economic recovery, while South Korea’s Kospi index lost 0.7 percent as the country’s inflation accelerated in May. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index slid 0.4 percent. Toyota Motor Corp., which gets 71 percent of its revenue outside Japan, slipped 0.5 percent. Sony Corp. , which gets 69 percent of its sales outside Japan, dropped 1 percent. A stronger yen reduces the value of overseas sales at Japanese companies when repatriated. Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama said he will consider his political future and do “what’s best for the people of Japan” after polls showed four in five voters want him to step down six weeks before mid-term elections. Hitachi Hitachi Ltd. slumped 3.5 percent. President Hiroaki Nakanishi said the “financial confusion in Europe is affecting various parts of our business,” the Financial Times reported, citing an interview. Utilities gained after Goldman Sachs Group Inc. upgraded its recommendation on Japan’s power industry to “neutral” from “cautious,” saying current valuations are “reasonable.” Tokyo Electric Power Co. jumped 4.3 percent after Goldman Sachs boosted its rating to “buy” from “neutral.” The Malaysian ringgit weakened 0.8 percent to 3.2887 per dollar, the most in a week, following the manufacturing report from China, the nation’s biggest overseas market. The South Korean won slid 1.2 percent to 1,216.18 per dollar. “This could be the first sign of China feeling the slowdown in Europe,” said Wan Suhaimi Saidi , an economist at Kenanga Investment Bank Bhd. in Kuala Lumpur. “You can’t expect super-strong currency appreciation in the second half.” Euro, Aussie The euro weakened against 10 of 16 major counterparts, extending its longest monthly decline against the dollar in 10 years, after the index of executive and consumer sentiment in the nations sharing the euro tumbled. The euro fell to as low as $1.2245 in Tokyo from $1.2306 yesterday in New York. The common currency declined to as weak as 111.33 yen from 112.31 yen. The Aussie dollar sank as much as 0.9 percent to 83.84 U.S. cents. The Australian dollar weakened for a third day after the nation’s central bank left interest rates unchanged. The currency fell 0.8 percent to 83.91 U.S. cents from 84.59 cents in New York yesterday and 83.65 cents before the rate decision. Joblessness in Italy, Europe’s fourth-biggest economy , grew to a seasonally adjusted 8.9 percent in April from 8.8 percent the previous month, according to a Bloomberg News survey of economists before Istat releases the data today. Copper tumbled as metals extended their decline on the reports from China, the world’s biggest metals consumer. Copper for three-month delivery fell 2.4 percent to $6,770 a metric ton. The cost of insuring Asia-Pacific bonds from non-payment rose, according to traders of credit-default swaps. The Markit iTraxx Japan index increased 7 basis points to 144 basis points, according to Morgan Stanley prices, and the Markit iTraxx Asia index of 50 investment-grade borrowers outside Japan rose 9 basis points to 144, according to Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc. To contact the reporters on this story: Linus Chua at lchua@bloomberg.net ; Saeromi Shin in Seoul at sshin15@bloomberg.net .

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Euro Weakens on Concern Over Europe Spending Cuts, Bank Losses

June 1, 2010

By Anchalee Worrachate and Yasuhiko Seki June 1 (Bloomberg) — The euro extended its longest monthly decline versus the dollar in 10 years amid concern mounting writedowns at Europe’s banks and efforts to reduce budget deficits will hamper the region’s economic recovery. The decline erased 50 percent of the euro’s rally from its October 2000 low to the July 2008 high, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The European Central Bank said yesterday there may be more bank losses as the credit crisis spreads. Australia’s dollar weakened after the nation’s central bank kept borrowing costs unchanged amid concern slowing manufacturing growth in China will temper demand for its exports. “There are some complications in the euro area which have stopped us from jumping in until the euro gets closer to what we see as a fair value,” said Gareth Fielding , chief investment strategist at Zug, Switzerland-based Quantum Global Wealth Management, which oversees $2.5 billion for sovereign-wealth funds and central banks. “Although we are still convinced that, on a longer-term basis, the euro is very good value, it’s difficult to buy at the moment given market sentiment is very negative.” The euro fell to $1.2123 as of 10:25 a.m. in London, from $1.2306 yesterday in New York, and weakened to $1.2111, the lowest level since April 14, 2006. It declined to 110.04 yen, from 112.31 yen. Japan’s currency strengthened to 90.79 per dollar, from 91.26. Rally 50% Erased The European currency dropped below $1.2134, the 50 percent retracement between its all-time low of 82.30 U.S. cents in October 2000 and its peak of $1.6038, reached in July 2008. Joblessness in Italy rose as Europe’s fourth-biggest economy failed to create jobs, swelling to a seasonally adjusted 8.9 percent in April from 8.8 percent the previous month, according to a Bloomberg News survey of economists. The statistics office Istat releases the data today. An index of executive and consumer sentiment in the 16 euro nations fell to 98.4 from 100.6 in April, the European Commission in Brussels said yesterday. Europe’s currency dropped 7.4 percent against the dollar in May, its sixth straight monthly decline. That’s the longest since a seven-month streak ending in April 2000. Concern that countries such as Greece will default has sparked speculation the 16-nation euro may break apart. Fitch Ratings on May 28 removed Spain’s AAA credit grade, saying the nation’s debt burden is likely to weigh on economic growth. Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou has announced three rounds of deficit-reduction measures this year, spurring violent protests against cuts to wages and pensions. Fiscal Discipline European governments and the International Monetary Fund called for fiscal discipline under a rescue package worth almost $1 trillion aimed at stopping the Greek debt crisis from spreading. Following the lifeline, Spain announced a 5 percent cut in public sector wages and Portugal pledged to slash wages and raise taxes to trim its budget deficit . The Frankfurt-based ECB said in its bi-annual Financial Stability Report yesterday that euro area banks may see another 90 billion euros in net writedowns this year on loans and securities. The lenders will need to make provisions for losses of about 105 billion euros next year, which may be even bigger amid “heightened sovereign risks and possible second-round effects of the fiscal consolidation,” the central bank said. Europe’s currency slumped 8.4 percent this year against its major counterparts, according to Bloomberg Correlation Weighted Currency Indexes. The dollar appreciated 10 percent, while the yen advanced 13 percent. Still, the euro remains 8.6 percent overvalued against the U.S. currency, according to Bloomberg’s purchasing power parity, a measure of the relative cost of goods. Fibonacci Retracement Fibonacci analysis is based on a theory that prices rise or fall by certain percentages after reaching a high or low. Key percentages include 23.6, 38.2, 50 and 61.8. A break above resistance, where sell orders may be clustered, or below support, where there may be buy orders, indicates a currency may move to the next level. Asian currencies declined on concerns that a slowdown in China, the world’s third-largest economy, may cloud prospects for global growth and sap demand for higher-yielding assets. China’s Purchasing Managers’ Index fell to 53.9 in May from 55.7 in April, the Federation of Logistics and Purchasing said today. “This could be the first sign of China feeling the slowdown in Europe, and that’s going to affect the rest of Asia as well,” said Wan Suhaimi Saidi , an economist at Kenanga Investment Bank Bhd. in Kuala Lumpur. Rate Decision Malaysia’s ringgit dropped 0.9 percent to 3.2928 per dollar and Australia’s dollar tumbled 0.9 percent to 83.86 cents. Australia’s central bank left its benchmark interest rate unchanged as Governor Glenn Stevens sought to gauge fallout from Europe’s debt crisis. The Canadian dollar rose against 12 of its 16 most active counterparts amid speculation the central bank may raise its key interest rate from a record low today and become the first Group of Seven country to do so since last year’s recession. All but two of 27 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News predict the target rate for overnight loans between commercial banks will rise to 0.5 percent from 0.25 percent in a decision set for 9 a.m. New York time. The dollar rose 0.6 percent to C$1.0511. To contact the reporter on this story: Yasuhiko Seki in Tokyo at yseki5@bloomberg.net

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Euro Weakens Against Dollar on Speculation Crisis Hurting Region’s Economy

June 1, 2010

By Anchalee Worrachate and Yasuhiko Seki June 1 (Bloomberg) — The euro extended its longest monthly decline versus the dollar in 10 years amid concern mounting writedowns at Europe’s banks and efforts to reduce budget deficits will hamper the region’s economic recovery. The decline erased 50 percent of the euro’s rally from its October 2000 low to the July 2008 high, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The European Central Bank said yesterday there may be more bank losses as the credit crisis spreads. Australia’s dollar weakened after the nation’s central bank kept borrowing costs unchanged amid concern slowing manufacturing growth in China will temper demand for its exports. “There are some complications in the euro area which have stopped us from jumping in until the euro gets closer to what we see as a fair value,” said Gareth Fielding , chief investment strategist at Zug, Switzerland-based Quantum Global Wealth Management, which oversees $2.5 billion for sovereign-wealth funds and central banks. “Although we are still convinced that, on a longer-term basis, the euro is very good value, it’s difficult to buy at the moment given market sentiment is very negative.” The euro fell to $1.2123 as of 10:25 a.m. in London, from $1.2306 yesterday in New York, and weakened to $1.2111, the lowest level since April 14, 2006. It declined to 110.04 yen, from 112.31 yen. Japan’s currency strengthened to 90.79 per dollar, from 91.26. Rally 50% Erased The European currency dropped below $1.2134, the 50 percent retracement between its all-time low of 82.30 U.S. cents in October 2000 and its peak of $1.6038, reached in July 2008. Joblessness in Italy rose as Europe’s fourth-biggest economy failed to create jobs, swelling to a seasonally adjusted 8.9 percent in April from 8.8 percent the previous month, according to a Bloomberg News survey of economists. The statistics office Istat releases the data today. An index of executive and consumer sentiment in the 16 euro nations fell to 98.4 from 100.6 in April, the European Commission in Brussels said yesterday. Europe’s currency dropped 7.4 percent against the dollar in May, its sixth straight monthly decline. That’s the longest since a seven-month streak ending in April 2000. Concern that countries such as Greece will default has sparked speculation the 16-nation euro may break apart. Fitch Ratings on May 28 removed Spain’s AAA credit grade, saying the nation’s debt burden is likely to weigh on economic growth. Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou has announced three rounds of deficit-reduction measures this year, spurring violent protests against cuts to wages and pensions. Fiscal Discipline European governments and the International Monetary Fund called for fiscal discipline under a rescue package worth almost $1 trillion aimed at stopping the Greek debt crisis from spreading. Following the lifeline, Spain announced a 5 percent cut in public sector wages and Portugal pledged to slash wages and raise taxes to trim its budget deficit . The Frankfurt-based ECB said in its bi-annual Financial Stability Report yesterday that euro area banks may see another 90 billion euros in net writedowns this year on loans and securities. The lenders will need to make provisions for losses of about 105 billion euros next year, which may be even bigger amid “heightened sovereign risks and possible second-round effects of the fiscal consolidation,” the central bank said. Europe’s currency slumped 8.4 percent this year against its major counterparts, according to Bloomberg Correlation Weighted Currency Indexes. The dollar appreciated 10 percent, while the yen advanced 13 percent. Still, the euro remains 8.6 percent overvalued against the U.S. currency, according to Bloomberg’s purchasing power parity, a measure of the relative cost of goods. Fibonacci Retracement Fibonacci analysis is based on a theory that prices rise or fall by certain percentages after reaching a high or low. Key percentages include 23.6, 38.2, 50 and 61.8. A break above resistance, where sell orders may be clustered, or below support, where there may be buy orders, indicates a currency may move to the next level. Asian currencies declined on concerns that a slowdown in China, the world’s third-largest economy, may cloud prospects for global growth and sap demand for higher-yielding assets. China’s Purchasing Managers’ Index fell to 53.9 in May from 55.7 in April, the Federation of Logistics and Purchasing said today. “This could be the first sign of China feeling the slowdown in Europe, and that’s going to affect the rest of Asia as well,” said Wan Suhaimi Saidi , an economist at Kenanga Investment Bank Bhd. in Kuala Lumpur. Rate Decision Malaysia’s ringgit dropped 0.9 percent to 3.2928 per dollar and Australia’s dollar tumbled 0.9 percent to 83.86 cents. Australia’s central bank left its benchmark interest rate unchanged as Governor Glenn Stevens sought to gauge fallout from Europe’s debt crisis. The Canadian dollar rose against 12 of its 16 most active counterparts amid speculation the central bank may raise its key interest rate from a record low today and become the first Group of Seven country to do so since last year’s recession. All but two of 27 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News predict the target rate for overnight loans between commercial banks will rise to 0.5 percent from 0.25 percent in a decision set for 9 a.m. New York time. The dollar rose 0.6 percent to C$1.0511. To contact the reporter on this story: Yasuhiko Seki in Tokyo at yseki5@bloomberg.net

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Asia Stocks Drop as China Manufacturing Growth Slows Euro, Ringgit Weaken

May 31, 2010

By Linus Chua and Saeromi Shin June 1 (Bloomberg) — Asian stocks fell, extending the biggest monthly decline since October 2008, and emerging-market currencies weakened after Chinese manufacturing growth slowed more than estimated. The euro dropped after consumer confidence in the region declined. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index fell 0.8 percent to 112.53 as of 1:55 p.m. in Tokyo, and Standard & Poor’s 500 Index futures lost 0.6 percent. The Malaysian ringgit and copper declined, while the euro weakened against the yen and the dollar. Chinese manufacturing expanded at slower pace in May, raising concern imports by the world’s fastest-growing major economy is easing. The European Commission said yesterday its gauge of executive and consumer sentiment in the 16 nations using the euro fell last month, while a separate report today may show the unemployment rate increased in Italy. “There seems to be a worry that China’s strong economic expansion may be held back, and that may affect countries that depend heavily on China’s demand,” said Lim Chang Gue , a fund manager at Samsung Asset Management in Seoul, which manages $30 billion. “Also, if economic figures in troubled European countries turn out to be clearly deteriorating, that could add anxiety to the markets.” Three stocks fell for every one that rose on the MSCI Asia Pacific Index. The measure lost 9.8 percent in May, the biggest monthly drop since the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. more than 18 months ago. China’s Manufacturing China’s Purchasing Managers’ Index fell to 53.9 from 55.7 in April, seasonally adjusted, the Federation of Logistics and Purchasing said, less than the median 54.5 estimate in a Bloomberg News survey of 18 economists. Japan’s Nikkei 225 Stock Average declined 0.7 percent on concern the nation’s political instability may slow the economic recovery, while South Korea’s Kospi index lost 0.9 percent as the country’s inflation accelerated in May. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index dropped 0.7 percent. Toyota Motor Corp., which gets 71 percent of its revenue outside Japan, lost 0.8 percent. Sony Corp. , which gets 69 percent of its sales outside Japan, dropped 1.5 percent. A stronger yen reduces the value of overseas sales at Japanese companies when repatriated. Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama said he will consider his political future and do “what’s best for the people of Japan” after polls showed four in five voters want him to step down six weeks before mid-term elections. Hitachi Hitachi Ltd. slumped 4 percent. President Hiroaki Nakanishi said the “financial confusion in Europe is affecting various parts of our business,” the Financial Times reported, citing an interview. Utilities gained after Goldman Sachs Group Inc. upgraded its recommendation on Japan’s power industry to “neutral” from “cautious,” saying current valuations are “reasonable.” Tokyo Electric Power Co. jumped 4.4 percent after Goldman Sachs boosted its rating to “buy” from “neutral.” The Malaysian ringgit weakened 0.6 percent to 3.2810 per dollar, the most in a week, following the manufacturing report from China, the nation’s biggest overseas market. The South Korean won slid 0.9 percent to 1,212.75 per dollar. “This could be the first sign of China feeling the slowdown in Europe,” said Wan Suhaimi Saidi , an economist at Kenanga Investment Bank Bhd. in Kuala Lumpur. “You can’t expect super-strong currency appreciation in the second half.” The euro weakened against 10 of 16 major counterparts, extending its longest monthly decline against the dollar in 10 years, after the index of executive and consumer sentiment in the nations sharing the euro tumbled. Australia’s dollar was little changed after the Reserve Bank left its benchmark interest rate at 4.5 percent. The currency bought 83.9 U.S. cents from 83.65 cents before the statement and 84.59 cents yesterday in New York. Euro, Aussie The euro fell to as low as $1.2245 in Tokyo from $1.2306 yesterday in New York. The common currency declined to as weak as 111.33 yen from 112.31 yen. The Aussie dollar sank as much as 0.9 percent to 83.84 U.S. cents. Joblessness in Italy, Europe’s fourth-biggest economy , grew to a seasonally adjusted 8.9 percent in April from 8.8 percent the previous month, according to a Bloomberg News survey of economists before Istat releases the data today. Copper tumbled as metals extended their decline on the reports from China, the world’s biggest metals consumer. Copper for three-month delivery fell 2.1 percent to $6,795 a metric ton. The cost of insuring Asia-Pacific bonds from non-payment rose, according to traders of credit-default swaps. The Markit iTraxx Japan index increased 7 basis points to 144 basis points, according to Morgan Stanley prices, and the Markit iTraxx Asia index of 50 investment-grade borrowers outside Japan rose 9 basis points to 144, according to Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc. To contact the reporters on this story: Linus Chua at lchua@bloomberg.net ; Saeromi Shin in Seoul at sshin15@bloomberg.net .

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Asia Stocks Drop as China Manufacturing Growth Slows Euro, Ringgit Weaken

May 31, 2010

By Linus Chua and Saeromi Shin June 1 (Bloomberg) — Asian stocks fell, extending the biggest monthly decline since October 2008, and emerging-market currencies weakened after Chinese manufacturing growth slowed more than estimated. The euro dropped after consumer confidence in the region declined. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index fell 0.8 percent to 112.53 as of 1:55 p.m. in Tokyo, and Standard & Poor’s 500 Index futures lost 0.6 percent. The Malaysian ringgit and copper declined, while the euro weakened against the yen and the dollar. Chinese manufacturing expanded at slower pace in May, raising concern imports by the world’s fastest-growing major economy is easing. The European Commission said yesterday its gauge of executive and consumer sentiment in the 16 nations using the euro fell last month, while a separate report today may show the unemployment rate increased in Italy. “There seems to be a worry that China’s strong economic expansion may be held back, and that may affect countries that depend heavily on China’s demand,” said Lim Chang Gue , a fund manager at Samsung Asset Management in Seoul, which manages $30 billion. “Also, if economic figures in troubled European countries turn out to be clearly deteriorating, that could add anxiety to the markets.” Three stocks fell for every one that rose on the MSCI Asia Pacific Index. The measure lost 9.8 percent in May, the biggest monthly drop since the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. more than 18 months ago. China’s Manufacturing China’s Purchasing Managers’ Index fell to 53.9 from 55.7 in April, seasonally adjusted, the Federation of Logistics and Purchasing said, less than the median 54.5 estimate in a Bloomberg News survey of 18 economists. Japan’s Nikkei 225 Stock Average declined 0.7 percent on concern the nation’s political instability may slow the economic recovery, while South Korea’s Kospi index lost 0.9 percent as the country’s inflation accelerated in May. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index dropped 0.7 percent. Toyota Motor Corp., which gets 71 percent of its revenue outside Japan, lost 0.8 percent. Sony Corp. , which gets 69 percent of its sales outside Japan, dropped 1.5 percent. A stronger yen reduces the value of overseas sales at Japanese companies when repatriated. Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama said he will consider his political future and do “what’s best for the people of Japan” after polls showed four in five voters want him to step down six weeks before mid-term elections. Hitachi Hitachi Ltd. slumped 4 percent. President Hiroaki Nakanishi said the “financial confusion in Europe is affecting various parts of our business,” the Financial Times reported, citing an interview. Utilities gained after Goldman Sachs Group Inc. upgraded its recommendation on Japan’s power industry to “neutral” from “cautious,” saying current valuations are “reasonable.” Tokyo Electric Power Co. jumped 4.4 percent after Goldman Sachs boosted its rating to “buy” from “neutral.” The Malaysian ringgit weakened 0.6 percent to 3.2810 per dollar, the most in a week, following the manufacturing report from China, the nation’s biggest overseas market. The South Korean won slid 0.9 percent to 1,212.75 per dollar. “This could be the first sign of China feeling the slowdown in Europe,” said Wan Suhaimi Saidi , an economist at Kenanga Investment Bank Bhd. in Kuala Lumpur. “You can’t expect super-strong currency appreciation in the second half.” The euro weakened against 10 of 16 major counterparts, extending its longest monthly decline against the dollar in 10 years, after the index of executive and consumer sentiment in the nations sharing the euro tumbled. Australia’s dollar was little changed after the Reserve Bank left its benchmark interest rate at 4.5 percent. The currency bought 83.9 U.S. cents from 83.65 cents before the statement and 84.59 cents yesterday in New York. Euro, Aussie The euro fell to as low as $1.2245 in Tokyo from $1.2306 yesterday in New York. The common currency declined to as weak as 111.33 yen from 112.31 yen. The Aussie dollar sank as much as 0.9 percent to 83.84 U.S. cents. Joblessness in Italy, Europe’s fourth-biggest economy , grew to a seasonally adjusted 8.9 percent in April from 8.8 percent the previous month, according to a Bloomberg News survey of economists before Istat releases the data today. Copper tumbled as metals extended their decline on the reports from China, the world’s biggest metals consumer. Copper for three-month delivery fell 2.1 percent to $6,795 a metric ton. The cost of insuring Asia-Pacific bonds from non-payment rose, according to traders of credit-default swaps. The Markit iTraxx Japan index increased 7 basis points to 144 basis points, according to Morgan Stanley prices, and the Markit iTraxx Asia index of 50 investment-grade borrowers outside Japan rose 9 basis points to 144, according to Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc. To contact the reporters on this story: Linus Chua at lchua@bloomberg.net ; Saeromi Shin in Seoul at sshin15@bloomberg.net .

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ECB Heavyweights Weber, Draghi Urge Quick End to `Limited’ Bond Purchases

May 31, 2010

By Matthew Brockett May 31 (Bloomberg) — European Central Bank council members Axel Weber and Mario Draghi , the leading candidates to replace President Jean-Claude Trichet next year, urged a quick end to the bank’s government bond purchases. The program entails “stability risks” and “must be precisely targeted and limited,” Weber, who heads Germany’s Bundesbank, said in a speech in Mainz today. Bank of Italy Governor Draghi said in Rome that the purchases “will have to be discontinued as quickly as possible, as soon as the markets spontaneously resume trading of the securities of the countries involved.” The ECB’s unprecedented decision to start buying government debt on the secondary market this month wasn’t supported by all 22 of the bank’s policy makers, with Weber and Executive Board member Juergen Stark openly criticizing the move. While the ECB says its aim is to restore normal functioning on bond markets rocked by Europe’s spreading fiscal crisis, the asset purchases have exposed it to claims it is financing profligate nations at the behest of governments. “There is clearly a division” on the ECB’s Governing Council, said Nick Kounis , chief European economist at Fortis Bank Nederland NV in Amsterdam. “Weber and also Stark didn’t want this program in the first place. They now want to limit the size of it in order to limit what they see as negative side effects.” Purchases Slow The ECB reduced its bond purchases further last week. The Frankfurt-based central bank indicated in a market notice today it bought 8.5 billion euros ($10.5 billion) of bonds in the third week of its program, down from 10 billion euros in the second week and 16.5 billion euros in the first. “More market participants are questioning the central bank’s resolve,” said Christoph Rieger , co-head of fixed-income strategy at Commerzbank AG in Frankfurt, adding the comments by Weber and Draghi had bolstered that view. After initially falling on news of the ECB’s asset-purchase plan, announced on May 10, bond yields in some of the affected countries have risen again. The yield premium investors demand to buy Spanish debt over comparable German bonds, the European benchmark, rose 5 basis points to 158 basis points today, 15 points less than its post- euro high reached on May 7. The Italian spread is at 148 basis points, 11 points off the post-euro high of 159 also reached on May 7. Euro’s Plunge The euro has plunged 19 percent against the dollar in the past six months, to $1.23 today, amid concern that budget blowouts in Greece, Spain, Portugal and Ireland can’t be reined in and may eventually destroy the 16-nation monetary union. In a bid to shore up confidence, euro-area leaders unveiled a 750 billion-euro rescue fund on May 10. Within hours of that announcement, the ECB said it would buy bonds to help reduce yields and make it cheaper for embattled governments to borrow. Trichet, whose eight-year term expires in October next year, today said the ECB remains “fully independent,” and warned governments that budget indiscipline will no longer be tolerated. “We had a lot of difficulty with several governments during the last 10 years, both as regards their own national responsibilities and as regards their collegial responsibilities of peer surveillance,” he said in Vienna. “This period is over. We expect from governments strict respect for the principle of budgetary discipline and effective mutual surveillance.” To contact the reporter on this story: Matthew Brockett in Frankfurt at mbrockett1@bloomberg.net .

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Europe Economic Confidence Slips, Inflation Quickens

May 31, 2010

By Simone Meier May 31 (Bloomberg) — European confidence in the economic outlook unexpectedly worsened in May and inflation accelerated less than economists forecast as the euro region’s debt crisis shook markets. An index of executive and consumer sentiment in the 16 euro nations fell to 98.4 from 100.6 in April, the European Commission in Brussels said today. Economists had forecast an unchanged reading, based on the median of 25 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey. Consumer-prices rose 1.6 percent in May from a year ago, a separate report showed, below the 1.7 percent rate forecast by economists. Inflation was 1.5 percent in April. The euro-region economy may struggle to gather strength after the threat of contagion from Greece’s budget woes eroded investor sentiment and forced governments to step up spending cuts to reduce deficits. While a drop in the euro has helped bolster exports, it’s also pushing up import costs. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index has lost 7 percent over the past two months. “The worsening in economic confidence confirms that the sovereign-debt woes in the southern periphery have started to spill over into the real economy,” said Martin van Vliet , an economist at ING Group in Amsterdam. “Domestic recovery prospects in the euro zone are darkening.” The euro remained higher against the dollar after the reports were published and was up 0.3 percent to $1.2306 as of 10:21 a.m. in London. Consumer Sentiment Confidence among consumers fell to minus 18 in May from minus 15 in April, the commission report showed. Sentiment in the retailing, construction and services industries also declined. Manufacturing sentiment rose to minus 6 from minus 7. The commission said that the latest confidence reading is influenced by a “change of classification of economic activities,” affecting the level of business surveys. The consumer index wasn’t affected by the new method, it said. The euro-region economy may expand 0.9 percent this year and 1.5 percent in 2011, the commission forecast on May 5. Inflation may average 1.5 percent this year and 1.7 percent in 2011, while unemployment is seen rising to 10.4 percent from 10.3 percent this year, it said. To help contain the budget crisis, European policy makers earlier this month unveiled a 750 billion-euro ($922 billion) rescue package. Spain, Portugal and Italy have stepped up budget cuts as part of the plan. An index of economic confidence in Greece dropped to 61.9 in May from 69.1 the previous month, the commission report showed, while a gauge for Portugal fell to 91.1 from 93.8. Sentiment in Spain also declined. Euro Weakness The euro’s 14 percent drop against the dollar this year has helped support the region’s export-led recovery as rising unemployment weighs on consumer demand and companies hold back investment. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development on May 26 raised its global growth forecast for this year, citing a faster expansion in economies including China. Daimler AG , the world’s second-largest luxury carmaker based in Stuttgart, Germany, on May 28 raised its profit forecast for the Mercedes-Benz division for the second time in six weeks on reviving global demand. “Demand has stabilized on a lower level,” Stefan Fuchs , chief executive officer of Fuchs Petrolub AG , Germany’s largest maker of lubricants, said on May 3. “We still don’t know if this is just re-stocking. The question is if the recovery is sustainable.” The commission’s gauge measuring euro-region manufacturers’ confidence in their export orders rose to minus 30 this month from minus 32. An index of employment expectations advanced to minus 10 from minus 13 and a gauge of order books also increased, today’s report showed. Still, companies may struggle to raise prices as consumers hold back spending amid uncertainty about the recovery. “If you strip energy, there’s no great pressure there,” said Alan McQuaid , chief economist at Bloxham Stockbrokers in Dublin. “I don’t think inflation is a near-term problem.” Today’s inflation report is an initial estimate and the statistics office will release a breakdown of May consumer prices along with core inflation on June 16. To contact the reporter on this story: Simone Meier in Dublin at smeier@bloombert.net

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Italy Municipalities Face $1.4 Billion in Losses From Derivative Contracts

May 31, 2010

By Elisa Martinuzzi May 31 (Bloomberg) — Italian municipalities face losses of about 1.1 billion euros ($1.4 billion) on derivative contracts with the country’s banks, outstripping gains by 11 times. Combined losses at the end of March 2010 compared with an estimated 100 million euros of gains on derivatives among Italian regions, cities and towns, data from the Bank of Italy show. At 227 million euros, local authorities of Campania have the largest so-called mark-to-market losses among the country’s 20 regions, according to the data. Four banks are on trial in Milan for fraud in the sale of derivatives to the city, a case that may set a precedent for other municipalities, while Bari prosecutors are investigating Bank of America Corp. and a unit of Dexia SA for misleading the region of Puglia on swaps. Italy’s Senate Finance Committee in March proposed restricting derivatives to larger towns and banning some swaps altogether. The Bank of Italy data is based on derivative agreements with domestic banks and local units of foreign institutions. The mark-to-market losses, because theoretical, aren’t included in municipalities’ debt calculations, the central bank said. To contact the reporter on this story: Elisa Martinuzzi in Milan at emartinuzzi@bloomberg.net

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European Economic Confidence Unexpectedly Slips as Inflation Accelerates

May 31, 2010

By Simone Meier May 31 (Bloomberg) — European confidence in the economic outlook unexpectedly worsened in May and inflation accelerated less than economists forecast as the euro region’s debt crisis shook markets. An index of executive and consumer sentiment in the 16 euro nations fell to 98.4 from 100.6 in April, the European Commission in Brussels said today. Economists had forecast an unchanged reading, based on the median of 25 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey. Consumer-prices rose 1.6 percent in May from a year ago, a separate report showed, below the 1.7 percent rate forecast by economists. Inflation was 1.5 percent in April. The euro-region economy may struggle to gather strength after the threat of contagion from Greece’s budget woes eroded investor sentiment and forced governments to step up spending cuts to reduce deficits. While a drop in the euro has helped bolster exports, it’s also pushing up import costs. The Stoxx Europe 600 Index has lost 7 percent over the past two months. “The worsening in economic confidence confirms that the sovereign-debt woes in the southern periphery have started to spill over into the real economy,” said Martin van Vliet , an economist at ING Group in Amsterdam. “Domestic recovery prospects in the euro zone are darkening.” The euro remained higher against the dollar after the reports were published and was up 0.3 percent to $1.2306 as of 10:21 a.m. in London. Consumer Sentiment Confidence among consumers fell to minus 18 in May from minus 15 in April, the commission report showed. Sentiment in the retailing, construction and services industries also declined. Manufacturing sentiment rose to minus 6 from minus 7. The commission said that the latest confidence reading is influenced by a “change of classification of economic activities,” affecting the level of business surveys. The consumer index wasn’t affected by the new method, it said. The euro-region economy may expand 0.9 percent this year and 1.5 percent in 2011, the commission forecast on May 5. Inflation may average 1.5 percent this year and 1.7 percent in 2011, while unemployment is seen rising to 10.4 percent from 10.3 percent this year, it said. To help contain the budget crisis, European policy makers earlier this month unveiled a 750 billion-euro ($922 billion) rescue package. Spain, Portugal and Italy have stepped up budget cuts as part of the plan. An index of economic confidence in Greece dropped to 61.9 in May from 69.1 the previous month, the commission report showed, while a gauge for Portugal fell to 91.1 from 93.8. Sentiment in Spain also declined. Euro Weakness The euro’s 14 percent drop against the dollar this year has helped support the region’s export-led recovery as rising unemployment weighs on consumer demand and companies hold back investment. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development on May 26 raised its global growth forecast for this year, citing a faster expansion in economies including China. Daimler AG , the world’s second-largest luxury carmaker based in Stuttgart, Germany, on May 28 raised its profit forecast for the Mercedes-Benz division for the second time in six weeks on reviving global demand. “Demand has stabilized on a lower level,” Stefan Fuchs , chief executive officer of Fuchs Petrolub AG , Germany’s largest maker of lubricants, said on May 3. “We still don’t know if this is just re-stocking. The question is if the recovery is sustainable.” The commission’s gauge measuring euro-region manufacturers’ confidence in their export orders rose to minus 30 this month from minus 32. An index of employment expectations advanced to minus 10 from minus 13 and a gauge of order books also increased, today’s report showed. Still, companies may struggle to raise prices as consumers hold back spending amid uncertainty about the recovery. “If you strip energy, there’s no great pressure there,” said Alan McQuaid , chief economist at Bloxham Stockbrokers in Dublin. “I don’t think inflation is a near-term problem.” Today’s inflation report is an initial estimate and the statistics office will release a breakdown of May consumer prices along with core inflation on June 16. To contact the reporter on this story: Simone Meier in Dublin at smeier@bloombert.net

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