Thursday, 29 August 2013

Hackers: Pro-Assad Group Targets US Websites

Pro-Assad regime hackers claim to have targeted leading US media websites, shutting down the New York Times for 30 minutes.

The Syrian Electronic Army said it had hacked sites belonging to Twitter and the Huffington Post, making them unstable, as well as closing down the NYT.

The NYT attributed the meltdown to a "malicious external attack".

When users attempted to visit www.nytimes.com, the only message that appeared was "Hacked by the SEA".

Meanwhile, Twitter confirmed the hack saying "viewing of images and photos was sporadically impacted", but added that "no user information was affected".

The SEA boasted in a tweet: "Hi @Twitter, look at your domain, its owned by #SEA :)"  

The tweet The boasting tweet from the SEA hacking group

While the Twitter site continued to function as normal, the SEA claimed to have changed domain details, redirecting social media traffic to its own server.

The shadowy hacker collective has also claimed to have changed domain details belonging to the Huffington Post news site.

The latest attacks come weeks after the Twitter feed of the Associated Press news agency was targeted.

The feed falsely reported that Barack Obama was injured in an attack on the White House.

The Washington Post website was also hacked this month in an attack blamed on the same group.

The SEA infiltrates organisations it perceives to be aligned against the Assad government.

The string of cyber attacks comes as US leaders have publicly discussed the possibility of launching an attack against the Assad government.

The potential for military action comes amid claims Mr Assad deployed chemical weapons on the Syrian people, two years into the nation's civil war.

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Holiday Autos Owner Accelerates £150m Sale

The owner of the Holiday Autos car rental brand is close to hiring bankers to oversee a sale that could value the business at more than £150m.

Sky News understands that ECI Partners, the private equity group which owns a controlling stake in CarTrawler, a Dublin-based provider of online car rental distribution systems, is on the verge of appointing PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) to advise on an auction which is expected to get underway by the end of the year.

The development comes weeks after it emerged that ECI was plotting a sale of the business just two years after it bought CarTrawler for about £80m.

That deal earned multimillion pound windfalls for Greg and Niall Turley, the brothers who founded the business and oversaw its expansion into more than 170 countries.

Such a rapid change of ownership is not unusual in the private equity industry, although it is possible that ECI will decide against a sale if prospective buyers fail to meet its valuation expectations. PwC also advised ECI on its acquisition of the company.

CarTrawler announced the acquisition of the online assets of Holiday Assets earlier this summer, buying them from Travelocity Global, the immediate parent company of Lastminute.com, the online leisure bookings company.

That deal reunited ECI with Holiday Autos, which it had owned for several years before selling to Lastminute while it was a publicly-listed company in London in 2003.

CarTrawler, which has become a popular platform for companies to rent cars online, has annual bookings of around 5m vehicles, and sales of more than £425m.

ECI declined to comment.

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Jobless Households Drop To 17.1%

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11:36am UK, Wednesday 28 August 2013 Jobcentre Plus Video: ONS On Workless Household Figures

Enlarge The number of jobless households in the UK has dropped to 17.1% in the three months to June, according the the Office for National Statistics (ONS).

Households with at least one person aged 16-64 out of work was down from 17.9% in the same period last year.

It is the lowest percentage since comparable records began in 1996 and brings the total number of workless households to 3.5m.

Overall the number of people aged 16-64 living in jobless households fell to 4.9m, the first time it has been below 5 million since 2008.

At 23%, the north east continues to be the area with the highest percentage of homes containing unemployed residents.

The south east has the lowest at 13%.

It comes as the latest ONS figures showed that unemployment in the UK fell by 4,000 to leave 2.51m out of work in the three months to June.

The unemployment rate remains at 7.8%, still well above the 7% target rate set by the Bank of England.

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JPMorgan Chase 'Faces $6bn Mis-Selling Fine'

JPMorgan Chase is facing the prospect of paying a near-record fine for a bank relating to its behaviour before the financial crisis.

According to Reuters, US authorities are pressing JPMorgan to settle allegations it mis-sold $33bn (£21bn) of securities to government-backed mortgage companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

Regulators are said to be demanding a penalty of $6bn (£3.9bn), though the Financial Times said the bank was resisting such an amount.

The potential fine underlines the growing pressure on JPMorgan over its past.

The bank is also expected to face demands for billions of dollars to settle regulatory action over the $6.2bn "London Whale" trading loss while alleged manipulation of commodities markets is under scrutiny too.

The New York Times reported on Wednesday that federal regulators were preparing to impose a fine of $80m on JPMorgan relating to its dealings with US retail customers during the recession.

But it is the potential penalties over the mis-selling allegations and "Whale" loss that will be the greatest concerns for the Wall Street bank's chief executive, Jamie Dimon.

He is understood to argue that the bank should not be punished so severely for the securities because many were sold by two companies which JPMorgan bought amid the financial crisis with US government support.

Mr Dimon had previously apologised to shareholders over the trading losses in London, calling them a "terrible mistake" which had led to an overhaul of investment procedures.

Spanish police arrested and bailed former trader Javier Martin-Artajo on Tuesday after he was charged in connection with the case by US authorities.

Martin-Artajo and another man, Julien Grout, are accused of wire fraud and conspiracy to falsify books and records related to the trading losses, which were executed by Bruno Iksil.

Iksil, who was nicknamed the "London Whale" for his large bets on derivatives markets, is cooperating with US prosecutors and has not been charged.

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Oil Hits Six-Month High Amid Syria Tensions

Oil prices have reached their highest level since February after markets reacted to the threat of military action in Syria.

Following their biggest one-day rally in six months on Tuesday, London Brent oil prices rose another 0.3% in early trading to reach $115 a barrel.

Meanwhile, the price of US crude soared to a two-year high of over $110 a barrel.

Global stock markets took the blow as investors shifted to safe-haven assets, such as gold and government bonds.

As a result gold prices increased, hitting a three-and-a-half month record of $1,433,850 an ounce.

Airlines were also hit, with shares dropping for British Airways owner International Airlines Group and budget carrier easyJet.

In London the FTSE 100 declined, while European markets were also down.

Oil Price One Week Chart The price of brent crude oil at 1.28pm on Wednesday

Ishaq Siddiqi, market strategist at ETX Capital, warned that tensions in the Middle East could trigger major disruption to oil supply.

He said: "Once filtered through to the real global economy, the increase in oil prices will put a halt to the current pace of economic momentum we are currently experiencing in major parts of the world.

"It's plausible that Brent oil prices could be over $120 a barrel in the coming days - and, if oil prices spike even higher, it wouldn't be out of the question for the Federal Reserve to hold off on tapering stimulus measures this year."

Although Syria is not a major oil producer, there are concerns that the conflict could spread, disrupting the flow of oil from the Middle East, including oil rich countries such as Iran and Iraq.

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Private Healthcare: Patients 'Paying Too Much'

An investigation by the Competition Commission (CC) has found most patients pay too much for private healthcare.

The provisional findings of the inquiry into the £5.5bn sector - dominated by three firms - could lead to the sell-off of up to 20 individual hospitals to boost competition, the CC said.

It found that a lack of choice in local areas across the UK meant private patients were having to pay higher private medical insurance premiums than would otherwise be the case.

The CC said the three major players' dominance caused "consumer detriment" of £173m to £193m annually between 2009 and 2011.

It identified 101 hospitals which it said faced little local competition, some of them clusters of hospitals under the common ownership of one of the major groups - BMI, Spire and HCA - which were found to have earned high profits in recent years.

It said competition was being hampered by high costs, the response from existing operators and flat demand and the lack of choice meant insurers had little choice but to use the incumbent operator - meaning higher premiums for all patients.

Patients who funded their own care were also hit with higher charges in areas with little competition, the CC concluded.

The regulator found HCA charges significantly higher prices to insurers than other operators, with BMI the next most expensive for insurers.

hacking commission victoria house The Competition Commission found high barriers to private market entry

The CC's findings - which now go out to consultation - followed a market referral by the Office of Fair Trading (OFT).

It had discovered that some parts of the country, such as Edinburgh, Exeter and Hull, only had one private hospital or healthcare facility.

The OFT said it believed the industry "could work better for patients" and reduced choice could also have an impact on the quality of patient care.

The Commission ruled that incentives to doctors could also be slashed and private hospitals barred from further tie-ups with NHS hospitals in areas where there is little competition.

CC Chairman and Chairman of the Private Healthcare Inquiry Group Roger Witcomb said: "Curing these ills and trying to get a better deal for patients is not going to be straightforward.

"High costs and other factors mean that new competing facilities are not going to spring up so we may look to increase competition and require sales of hospitals to other operators where we can.

"We will also look at ways that will stop hospital operators using local strength in one area as leverage in their negotiations nationally.

"Although many patients don’t pay directly for the services as they do in other markets, we think that greater comparable information of the sort that is available elsewhere would help drive greater competition on price and quality, potentially improving both.

"We now want to discuss which of these measures and in what form will be most effective in bringing about the change this market needs," he added.

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Ryanair Ordered To Sell 25% Of Aer Lingus Stake

Ryanair has been ordered to sell nearly 25% of its shares in Aer Lingus.

The Competition Commission said the budget airline must cut its stake in its Irish rival from 29.8% to 5%.

Ryanair said it will appeal against the decision to the UK Competition Appeal Tribunal.

The Commission ruled that Ryanair's shareholding "had led or may be expected to lead to a substantial lessening of competition between the airlines on routes between Great Britain and Ireland."

It follows a lengthy probe which Ryanair boss Michael O'Leary claimed was "bizarre and manifestly wrong."

In a statement he said:  "From the first meeting with the UKCC it has been clear to us that Simon Polito’s and Roger Davis’ minds had been made up in advance and no truth or evidence was going to get in the way of their story.

"This prejudicial approach to an Irish airline is very disturbing, coming from an English government body that regards itself a model competition authority."

But in its final report the watchdog added: "We consider that there is a tension between Ryanair’s position as a competitor and its position as Aer Lingus’s largest shareholder, and that Ryanair has an incentive to weaken its rival’s effectiveness as a competitor."

Ryanair has made three attempts to buy Aer Lingus, with its latest bid blocked by the European Commission.

Mr O'Leary told Sky News: "Just 5 months ago the EU prohibited our third offer for Aer Lingus on the very basis that competition had intensified between Ryanair and Aer Lingus.

"So here we have this crazy situation where the EU prohibits our offer because competition has intensified and 5 months later the UK Competition Commission says we should be forced to sell down our stake because competition has lessened."

He added: "They clearly have no evidence for that ruling."

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America Movil plans to keep current KPN strategy - unions

The logo of America Movil is seen on the wall of the reception area in the company's corporate offices in Mexico City February 13, 2013. REUTERS/Edgard Garrido

The logo of America Movil is seen on the wall of the reception area in the company's corporate offices in Mexico City February 13, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Edgard Garrido

BRUSSELS | Wed Aug 28, 2013 6:41pm BST

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Mexican telecoms group America Movil (AMXL.MX) will keep KPN's (KPN.AS) current strategy if its proposed 7.2 billion euro ($9.6 billion) bid for the telecoms company is successful, the group told unions on Wednesday.

Mexican billionaire Carlos Slim's America Movil sent its CEO Daniel Hajj to meet with union representatives and Dutch economic affairs minister Henk Kamp to give more details about its planned bid for KPN.

"They made clear to us that the current strategy of the management in terms of investments and employment would be kept. There would be no changes in those matters in the short term," a spokesman for union Abvakabo-FNV said.

America Movil, which already owns close to 30 percent of KPN, did not give any job guarantees to the unions.

"I don't know whether America Movil will make any promises or give guarantees in the coming period ahead of the official bid. As a union we hope so because it would make it easier for us to be positive about the takeover," a spokesman for union Qlix said.

America Movil said earlier this month that its financing for the bid was in place and it expected the bid of 2.40 euros per share to proceed in September.

A spokesman for the Dutch economic affairs ministry said that the talks with America Movil were fruitful and that contacts between the minister and the Mexican group would continue.

A spokeswoman for America Movil did not comment on the meetings.

(Reporting by Robert-Jan Bartunek, additional reporting by Sara Webb; Editing by Louise Heavens)


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Austria's Fekter takes hard line on more Greek aid

Austrian Finance Minister Maria Fekter speaks to journalists during an interview in the western Austrian village of Alpbach August 28, 2013. REUTERS/Dominic Ebenbichler

1 of 2. Austrian Finance Minister Maria Fekter speaks to journalists during an interview in the western Austrian village of Alpbach August 28, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Dominic Ebenbichler

By Michael Shields

ALPBACH, Austria | Wed Aug 28, 2013 6:07pm BST

ALPBACH, Austria (Reuters) - Greece must meet terms of its existing international bailout before it can hope for any more external aid, Austrian Finance Minister Maria Fekter said on Wednesday, taking a hard line before Austrian national elections next month.

"Before it comes to additional help, I will surely demand compliance with the (existing programme's) terms," she told Reuters in an interview.

She declined comment on the potential extent of more aid until international lenders get a report back on how well Athens has met current loan terms, noting Greece was well behind its original target to raise 50 billion euros via privatisations.

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble has said an estimate by the International Monetary Fund that Greece will need an additional 11 billion euros to see it through to 2015 was "not completely unrealistic".

Schaeuble provoked a storm last week when he said more explicitly than before that Greece would need a third bailout, going much further than Chancellor Angela Merkel had done. The government then sought to play down his remark.

Fekter, a conservative hardliner under fire from opposition parties for euro zone bailouts before elections on September 29, would not comment on the 11 billion figure or say whether Austria could accept a writedown on Greek sovereign debt as a way to give Athens more breathing room.

"I will not comment on that because that is fantasising about something that is not now on the table," she said.

Fekter said the summer months appeared to mark a turning point for the fortunes of the broader euro zone economy even though some countries still faced difficulties.

"In Italy we have a strong north/south divide but this is nothing new. There have to be structural reforms here to narrow this divide," she said.

Asked about neighbouring Slovenia's delays in setting up a "bad bank" to handle toxic assets in its financial sector, Fekter said the former Yugoslav republic had so far managed to resolve on its own the sector's problems.

"The Slovenians - at least the finance minister - have the will to reform. We will see if he gets this through. It is good for us as a neighbouring country if Slovenia can achieve on its own stability in its financial sector again."

Asked if she were optimistic Slovenia could manage without resorting to outside help, she said:

"We will of course support the Slovenians as much as possible. So far they have done well at crisis management."

(Reporting by Michael Shields; editing by Stephen Nisbet)


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BoE's Carney says rates pressure might trigger more money printing

Bank of England governor Mark Carney addresses business leaders in Nottingham, central England August 28, 2013. REUTERS/Nigel Roddis/Pool

1 of 3. Bank of England governor Mark Carney addresses business leaders in Nottingham, central England August 28, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Nigel Roddis/Pool

By David Milliken

NOTTINGHAM, England | Wed Aug 28, 2013 4:24pm BST

NOTTINGHAM, England (Reuters) - Bank of England Governor Mark Carney warned financial markets on Wednesday that the bank would pump more money into Britain's economy if they bet against it and choked off recovery.

In his first speech since taking over the bank, Carney said the recent economic pick-up was broad-based but remained "solid not stellar". He announced a relaxation of rules for banks which could help boost lending.

The initial reaction of investors was muted with market expectations essentially unchanged that the bank will raise interest rates earlier than it has flagged.

Financial markets have challenged the BoE's new plan to keep interest rates on hold for possibly three more years, and Carney spent much of his speech explaining why unemployment was unlikely to fall quickly to the 7 percent level at which the bank would consider tightening monetary policy.

"The upward move in market expectations of where Bank Rate will head in future could, at the margin, feed into the effective financial conditions facing the real economy. The MPC (Monetary Policy Committee) will be watching those conditions closely," Carney said.

"If they tighten, and the recovery seems to be falling short of the strong growth we need, we will consider carefully whether, and how best, to stimulate the recovery further."

Sterling initially weakened but recovered its losses against the dollar and British government bond prices fell after Carney's speech.

Philip Rush, an economist with Nomura, said the comments on more stimulus did not appear to signal any imminent new move.

"Easing is not ruled out if higher rates start to impair recovery but that point does not seem upon us," Rush said. "While higher rates reflect stronger growth, easing would constitute a negative confidence shock - i.e. the opposite of what the BoE is trying to achieve."

The Bank of England spent 375 billion pounds ($582.73 billion) on government bonds between 2009 and last year to try to steer Britain's economy out of the stagnation in the wake of the financial crisis.

Carney said the option of further stimulus was part of the forward guidance plan announced by the BoE earlier this month and which mentioned the possibility of further asset purchases.

He made forward guidance a hallmark of his time running the Bank of Canada before coming to Britain.

Most of the bank's nine top policymakers are opposed to a revival of the bond-buying programme since late last year although it was supported by Carney's predecessor Mervyn King.

And if there were more stimulus the bank would also need to persuade British investors, businesses and households that the BoE can keep its foot on the stimulus pedal for another three years without pushing up already above-target inflation.

That challenge was made all the greater after differences of opinion emerged among the bank's top policymakers.

Martin Weale voted against forward guidance earlier this month. He has since voiced concern about it fuelling inflation.

UNEMPLOYMENT

Carney dedicated much of his speech to explaining why the central bank believed unemployment would fall only slowly, given expected further job losses for public workers and large numbers of part-time workers who want to work full-time.

The BoE estimated only a one-in-three chance of it hitting 7 percent by mid-2015, as markets appeared to believe, he said.

Carney said the BoE remained committed to fighting inflation but it was right for it to allow it to come back down to its 2 percent target only slowly, given the weak state of the economy and temporary factors pushing up price growth.

Carney announced a widening of a planned relaxation of rules on banks and building societies, on condition they meet new requirements on capital buffers.

Under the change, eight major lenders in Britain would be allowed to reduce their required liquid asset holdings - cash and safe but low-yielding investments - by 90 billion pounds if they meet the minimum 7 percent capital requirement, freeing up more money for lending and in turn spurring growth.

In an apparent nod to concerns about the property market heating up again, Carney said the BoE was "acutely aware of the risk of unsustainable credit and house price growth but said gauges of the housing market and household borrowing costs were not at historically high levels.

British house prices are set to rise at their fastest pace in three years in 2013, outstripping inflation and raising concerns that government action may lead to a new price bubble, a Reuters poll found on Wednesday.

Among the risks for the recovery, Carney said a few less well-managed financial institutions still had a long journey to get back to health. He also noted the strain on emerging economies which have seen big outflows of capital back to recovering richer countries and said progress on Europe's debt crisis would remain uneven.

(Additional reporting by London markets and economics teams; writing by William Schomberg; editing by Jeremy Gaunt)


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Egyptian cabinet approves $3.2 billion economic stimulus plan

CAIRO | Wed Aug 28, 2013 3:59pm BST

CAIRO (Reuters) - Egypt's cabinet approved on Wednesday an additional 22.3 billion Egyptian pounds ($3.19 billion) in investment projects to boost the economy over the coming 10 months, Deputy Prime Minister Ziad Bahaa el-Din said.

Despite the new spending, the government aims to reduce the budget deficit to 9 percent of gross domestic product in the fiscal year to end-June 2014 from 14 percent last year, Finance Minister Ahmed Galal said.

This it would do by streamlining spending, especially on energy subsidies, Galal said.

The two ministers were speaking to reporters after a cabinet meeting.

(Reporting by Patrick Werr; Editing by John Stonestreet)


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Exclusive: 2016 Ford Edge will be sold in Europe, China - sources

The Ford logo is pictured on the rooftop of Austria's Ford head branch in Vienna March 19, 2013. REUTERS/Heinz-Peter Bader

The Ford logo is pictured on the rooftop of Austria's Ford head branch in Vienna March 19, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Heinz-Peter Bader

By Paul Lienert

DETROIT | Wed Aug 28, 2013 6:19pm BST

DETROIT (Reuters) - Ford Motor Co (F.N) expects to sell its Edge midsize crossover utility vehicle in global markets when the car is redesigned in early 2015, two sources familiar with the automaker's plans said on Wednesday.

Ford will build versions of the new Edge in North America and China for local customers, according to U.S. automotive suppliers familiar with the program. For the European market, the Edge would be imported from North America and sold in Ford's European showrooms alongside the redesigned S-Max and Galaxy.

The Edge, the S-Max and the Galaxy will all share a common architecture, known inside Ford as CD4.2, according to suppliers, and all three are slated to go into production about the same time.

In the United States, the new Edge is expected to go on sale in spring 2015 as a 2016 model, supplier said.

Neither the new S-Max nor the new Galaxy will be sold in the United States, a Ford spokesman confirmed.

Regarding the convergence of the three vehicles on a shared platform, Ford said, "We don't comment on rumour and speculation regarding future products."

On Tuesday, Ford previewed a concept version of the new S-Max that will be displayed next month at the Frankfurt Auto Show.

The new Edge and the new S-Max have been developed simultaneously, according to U.S. supplier sources, and share the same engineering program code, CD391, used by automakers and suppliers.

While their underpinnings are similar, the two vehicles will look different both inside and outside, sources said.

The new Edge and the new S-Max "will not be mirror images" of one another, as Ford's Escape and Kuga utility vehicles are, one source said.

The 2016 Edge will be wider and taller than the S-Max, but will be fitted with just two rows of seats. The Edge will have more rugged styling cues and be aimed at utility-vehicle buyers in both Europe and the United States.

The new S-Max will get three rows of seats and be targeted in Europe toward a different audience, including young families shopping for a multipurpose vehicle.

(Reporting by Paul Lienert in Detroit; Editing by Jeffrey Benkoe)


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Fiat seen extending temporary layoffs at Mirafiori - sources

People work at Fiat's Sevelsud plant in Atessa, central Italy, July 9, 2013. REUTERS/Remo Casilli

People work at Fiat's Sevelsud plant in Atessa, central Italy, July 9, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Remo Casilli

MILAN | Wed Aug 28, 2013 4:03pm BST

MILAN (Reuters) - Italian carmaker Fiat (FIA.MI) will ask workers at its largest factory in Italy to work reduced hours for another 12 months when a temporary layoff scheme expires at the end of September, two people familiar with the matter said on Wednesday.

Currently, workers at the Mirafiori plant go to the factory for three days per month to make the Alfa Romeo MiTo.

"At the end of September the layoffs at Mirafiori factory expire, and the matter will need to be dealt with," said a union source. "The layoffs are likely to be renewed for 12 more months."

Another union source confirmed the view that the layoffs will be renewed for another year.

Fiat declined to comment.

Fiat Chief Executive Sergio Marchionne said in February he wants to build new Alfa Romeo and Maserati models at Mirafiori, where 5,500 workers are currently laid off awaiting a recovery in Europe's car market.

The company had planned to invest about one billion euros in re-vamping the ageing factory.

But Fiat's future investments have been put on hold until it gets a clearer idea of the impact of a court ruling that a portion of Italy's labour rules are unconstitutional, the company said in July.

(Reporting by Stefano Rebaudo, writing by Jennifer Clark; editing by David Evans)


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FTSE drops, pressured by Syrian risks

A trader monitors the screen on a trading floor in London January 22, 2010. REUTERS/Stefan Wermuth

1 of 3. A trader monitors the screen on a trading floor in London January 22, 2010.

Credit: Reuters/Stefan Wermuth

By Alistair Smout

LONDON | Wed Aug 28, 2013 4:25pm BST

LONDON (Reuters) - The FTSE 100 fell on Wednesday, pressured by the risks of possible Western military action against Syria, but with energy stocks supporting the market after an oil price spike.

The FTSE 100 was down 12.40 points, or 0.2 percent, at 6,428.57 points by 1440 GMT, as the United States and its allies appeared to be gearing up for a strike against Syria, pushing oil prices to multi-month highs on concerns about Middle Eastern crude supply.

Falls were seen across the board, with the rising oil price increasing costs for companies in a still-fragile economy. Airline IAG was the biggest FTSE faller, down 4.4 percent, while easyJet dropped 1.7 percent.

However, the index pared losses towards the close after U.S. markets opened higher. Thierry Laduguie, stock market analyst at e-Yield, said the market was now factoring in that intervention would take place.

"A U.S. strike on Syria would push oil higher but I am not sure it would have a big impact on stocks," he said.

"Investors anticipate a strike, this is already priced in"

Heavyweight energy stocks BP and Royal Dutch Shell were among the top FTSE 100 risers, with respective gains of 1.2 percent and 2 percent.

The FTSE 100 has fallen some 3 percent since mid-August on concerns over a reduction in U.S. monetary stimulus and over Syria, and is just 0.2 percent off setting a two-month low.

"There's not just Syria ... with possible tapering at the next Fed meeting and the German election in September, people are stepping aside or buying protection," Ioan Smith, managing director at KCG, said.

Stock market reaction was mixed after new Bank of England governor Mark Carney recommitted to an extended period of lower rates and said he could pump more money into the British economy. Stocks initially pared losses then fell to an intraday low, before rallying in tandem with U.S. stocks.

NEXT WAVE DOWN

The FTSE 100 remained trapped in a recent range, and charts indicated there could be future falls even if worries over Syria subside.

"On the daily chart the index is below the 50-day moving average and above the 200-day moving average, the directional movement index has given a sell signal. Any rally should lead to the next wave down," e-Yield's Laduguie said.

Stocks trading without the attraction of their latest dividend, including CRH, Glencore Xstrata and Legal & General, took 2.3 points off the FTSE 100 on Wednesday.

(Editing by Ruth Pitchford)


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Highest-paid U.S. CEOs are often fired or fined - study

By Nadia Damouni

NEW YORK | Wed Aug 28, 2013 6:51pm BST

NEW YORK (Reuters) - About 40 percent of the highest-paid CEOs in the United States over the past 20 years eventually ended up being fired, paying fraud-related fines or settlements, or accepting government bailout money, according to a study released on Wednesday.

The report by the Institute for Policy Studies, a left-leaning think tank, said that chief executives for large companies received about 354 times as much pay as the average American worker in 2012. That gap has soared since 1993, when CEOs for big companies received about 195 times as much.

But the best-paying companies do not necessarily receive the best performance from their CEOs, the report said.

For example, Enron's Kenneth Lay was one of the 25 highest-paid chief executives for four years, before his company collapsed in an accounting fraud in 2001. In May 2006, a Houston federal jury found Lay guilty of fraud and conspiracy. His death two months later led to his conviction being thrown out.

The think tank looked at the 25 best-paid CEOs for each of the last 20 years. There were 241 executives on the list in total, because many appeared for multiple years. That means that the 40 percent average includes many chief executives who have appeared on the lists several times.

To be sure, all of the biggest financial services companies during the 2008 financial crisis received bailouts, whether they wanted them or not. But many chief executives on the list, including Lehman Brothers' Dick Fuld, were at the helm when their company either went under or accepted a government rescue package. Fuld received $466.3 million (300.4 million pounds) of compensation from 2001 through 2007, the report said. Fuld was not immediately available for comment.

The 2010 Dodd-Frank Act took steps to encourage more rational pay levels. The law, for example, requires all financial companies to disclose the ratio between the CEO's pay and median annual compensation for employees. But a number of the mandates have yet to be finalized by regulators, said Sarah Anderson, who co-authored the think tank's report.

"The Dodd-Frank Act was signed three years ago, and it is time for these very modest reforms in that legislation to be rigorously implemented," Anderson told Reuters.

"We see CEO-worker pay ratio disclosure as an important step forward toward corporate compensation common sense," the report said.

(Reporting by Nadia Damouni; editing by Dan Wilchins and Matthew Lewis)


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IMF says Brazil recovering from slowdown, backs more reforms

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) logo is seen at the IMF headquarters building during the 2013 Spring Meeting of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank in Washington, April 18, 2013. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) logo is seen at the IMF headquarters building during the 2013 Spring Meeting of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank in Washington, April 18, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Yuri Gripas

BRASILIA | Wed Aug 28, 2013 4:47pm BST

BRASILIA (Reuters) - Brazil's economy is recovering gradually from the slowdown that began in mid-2011, but more efforts to boost productivity, competitiveness and investment are critical for spurring growth, the International Monetary Fund said on Wednesday.

In a report based on annual consultations with Brazilian economic authorities, the IMF praised Brazil's focus on reforms to ease supply-side constraints, saying it would boost investment and alleviate infrastructure bottlenecks.

Latin America's largest economy, which rode high on a decade-long commodities boom, is in its third year of slow growth that has defied stimulus efforts by President Dilma Rousseff's government through tax breaks and other incentives aimed at spurring industrial output.

"After a protracted period of weakness, investment has begun to recover in recent quarters while business confidence has firmed," the IMF report said.

Low unemployment and hefty real wage gains have kept consumption strong and, with the economy operating at close to potential, supply constraints have held back growth and fuelled inflation, the report said.

The IMF welcomed the initiation of a monetary tightening cycle by Brazil's central bank, which is expected to hike its benchmark Selic rate by another 50 basis points later on Wednesday. The bank started in April an aggressive rate tightening cycle that brought rates from record low of 7.25 percent to 8.50 percent in July.

"In addition to headwinds from external conditions, domestic supply-side constraints and policy uncertainties may be holding back near-term growth," the IMF said.

The IMF said it will be important for Brazil to increase domestic saving, improve the minimum wage indexation mechanism and continue to reform its pension system.

"Other efforts to foster private investment should include streamlining taxation and improving business conditions," it said.

The IMF said Brazil's banking system is sound and well placed to implement Basel III capital requirements ahead of schedule. But it warned that household credit and mortgage loan levels remain risky and warrant vigilance.

Brazil's flexible exchange rate remains the best shock absorber to cushion the country from external financial turbulence, as long interventions in the foreign exchange market are limited to moderating excessive volatility, the IMF said.

In a bold move, the central bank last week launched a $60 billion (38 billion pounds) forex intervention program to ease the depreciation of the real that has lost about 15 percent of its value since May.

(Reporting by Anthony Boadle; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)


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India central bank to sell dollars to oil companies to shore up rupee

A currency trader is pictured through the symbol for the Indian Rupee on the floor of a trading firm in Mumbai May 31, 2013. REUTERS/Vivek Prakash

A currency trader is pictured through the symbol for the Indian Rupee on the floor of a trading firm in Mumbai May 31, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Vivek Prakash

By Neha Dasgupta and Suvashree Dey Choudhury

MUMBAI | Wed Aug 28, 2013 6:46pm BST

MUMBAI (Reuters) - India's central bank will provide dollars directly to state oil companies in its latest attempt to shore up a currency that has slumped to a record low, reflecting the stiff economic challenges facing the country in an uncertain global environment.

The Reserve Bank of India announced late on Wednesday a special window "with immediate effect" to sell dollars through a designated bank to Indian Oil Corp Ltd (IOC.NS), Hindustan Petroleum Corp (HPCL.NS), and Bharat Petroleum Corp "until further notice".

The RBI last opened such a window during the 2008 global financial crisis, although it had been widely expected to re-implement the measures after last month telling oil companies to buy dollars from a single bank.

The steps are the latest in a series of extraordinary measures undertaken by the RBI to combat a currency fall of more than 20 percent this year, by far the biggest decline among the Asian currencies tracked by Reuters.

State-run companies are the biggest source of dollar demand in markets - worth $400 million (257 million pounds) to $500 million daily - and directing them to a special window is meant to reduce pressure on the rupee, which fell as much as 3.7 percent to an all-time low of 68.85 on Wednesday, recording its biggest one-day fall in 18 years.

Rupees traded in markets outside of India recovered after the measures, with one-month forward contracts dealt at 68.30 from levels of around 70 rupees before the announcement.

"Immediately it should help the spot market and improve sentiment," said A. Prasanna, an economist at ICICI Securities Primary Dealership in Mumbai.

"But then we have to see how global markets move because some of fall in the last few days is also because of global developments."

The rupee fell on Wednesday on worries that foreign investors will continue to sell out of a country in the midst of domestic woes and a global environment marked by fears of a possible U.S.-led military strike against Syria and the looming end to the Federal Reserve's period of cheap money.

Officials familiar with RBI thinking told Reuters the dollar sales for state-run oil companies would be offset by positions in forward markets.

That means that although the RBI would need to dip into its currency reserves, it had the prospect of replenishing the lost dollars at a future date by redeeming the forward contracts from oil companies when the rupee stabilises.

The offsetting positions would essentially make these dollar loans, designed to reduce concerns about reserves that at $279 billion, cover only about seven months of imports.

The action further cements the role the central bank is taking to combat the fall in the rupee, as the government has yet to unveil steps that can convince markets it can stabilise the rupee and attract foreign investment.

India badly needs this capital as it struggles with a record high current account deficit, growing fiscal pressures and an economy growing at the slowest in a decade.

LACKING CONFIDENCE

The failure to address India's economic challenges is becoming an increasing source of tension at a time when rising domestic bond yields threaten to raise borrowing costs across the already slowing economy, while global prices of oil and gold - the country's two biggest imports - have surged this week.

Foreign investors have sold almost $1 billion of Indian shares in the eight sessions through Tuesday - a worrisome prospect given stocks had been India's one sturdy source of capital inflows with net purchases so far this year still totalling nearly $12 billion.

India's main National Stock Exchange index .NSEI fell as much as 3.2 percent on Wednesday, although suspected buying by state-run insurer Life Insurance Corporation - often the buyer of last resort - led the index to recover by the close.

In bond markets, foreign investors have sold more heavily, with outflows reaching nearly $4.6 billion so far this year.

"If steps are not taken to implement the reforms necessary to tackle the structural issues, the government will be left with the so-called "3D options": debt default, devaluation, deflation," said Angelo Corbetta, head of Asia equity for Pioneer Investments in London.

"In India, devaluation is happening now and deflation could be about to start. The good news is that the debt default is highly unlikely."

BNP Paribas on Wednesday slashed its economic growth forecast for India for the fiscal year to March 2014 to 3.7 percent from its previous 5.2 percent - the weakest growth since 1991-92 when India buckled under a balance of payments crisis that required a loan from the International Monetary Fund.

"India's parliament remains toxically dysfunctional with little, if any, business conducted," BNP said.

"And, with next year's general election looming ever nearer, the government's willingness to instigate a politically unpopular fiscal tightening is close to nil."

The government has tried but failed to provide a coherent response, analysts said.

Its approval of infrastructure projects on Tuesday was trumped by concerns about the fiscal deficit after the lower house of parliament this week approved a 1.35 trillion rupee ($19.6 billion) plan to provide cheap grain to the poor.

India is due to post April-June gross domestic product data on Friday, with analysts estimating the economy grew at an annual rate of 4.7 percent, roughly in line with the previous quarter. It will also post July federal fiscal deficit figures.

(Writing by Rafael Nam; Additional reporting by Swati Bhat, Himank Sharma, and Abhishek Vishnoi; Editing by Kim Coghill, Nick Macfie and David Evans)


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JPMorgan may settle U.S., UK 'Whale' probes for $600 million - source

A sign stands in front of the JPMorgan Chase & Co bank headquarters building in New York, March 15, 2013. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson

A sign stands in front of the JPMorgan Chase & Co bank headquarters building in New York, March 15, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Lucas Jackson

By Emily Flitter

NEW YORK | Wed Aug 28, 2013 5:55pm BST

NEW YORK (Reuters) - JPMorgan Chase & Co is in talks with a group of regulators, including U.S. prosecutors, to settle probes of the bank's "London Whale" trading losses last year for about $600 million (386 million pounds), according to a person familiar with the talks.

Regulators, including the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and the UK Financial Conduct Authority, are in intense negotiations with lawyers for JPMorgan to reach a global settlement, the source said.

Prosecutors from U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara's office were also involved in the talks, the source said. Their role in the talks was unclear.

Julie Bolcer, a spokeswoman for Bharara, declined to comment. The SEC and JPMorgan did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The global settlement talks are expected to address events surrounding the losses JPMorgan incurred when London-based traders in the bank's chief investment office amassed an oversized stake in an illiquid derivatives market, building positions so big they earned one trader, Bruno Iksil, the nickname "the London Whale."

JPMorgan Chief Executive Jamie Dimon initially dismissed the London Whale losses as a "tempest in a teapot," but the remark came back to haunt him. The bank had to quickly unwind the trades, incurring a loss of more than $6 billion, and had to restate a quarterly earnings report.

An internal investigation concluded the traders in London had mismarked some of the prices of the positions they held to try to hide losses.

U.S. prosecutors charged Spaniard Javier Martin-Artajo and a junior colleague, Frenchman Julien Grout, with wire fraud and conspiracy to falsify books and records related to the trading losses, which were executed by Iksil.

(Reporting By Emily Flitter)


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Lira, rupee at forefront as Syria tension pounds emerging assets

By Sujata Rao

LONDON | Wed Aug 28, 2013 4:12pm BST

LONDON (Reuters) - Emerging stocks, bonds and currencies took another hammering on Wednesday as mounting expectations of Western action against Syria pushed up oil prices and drove investors to seek shelter in dollar assets.

The United States and its allies appeared to be gearing up for a military strike against Syria, perhaps within days, as punishment for last week's chemical weapons attacks which they have blamed on President Bashar al-Assad's government.

The Turkish lira and the Indian rupee - already under heavy pressure due to their large current account deficits and an imminent rollback in U.S. money printing - were at the forefront of selling, with both hitting new record lows as oil prices surged to six-month highs above $117 (75.30 pounds) a barrel.

The higher cost of oil will make it even more difficult for the two energy importers to contain their current account gaps.

"Syria is raising the level of uncertainty and those closest to Syria such as Turkey will be on the receiving end of the selling," said Ashok Shah, CIO of asset manager London & Capital. "It's another round of bad news."

"In (energy-importing) countries such as India, if you look at the oil price in rupees you can see how they are getting impacted - it's a double whammy for them."

The rupee tumbled 3.6 percent to 68.80 per dollar, its biggest one-day fall in 18 years, bringing 2013 losses to 20 percent. The lira fell 1.6 percent, while Turkish credit default swaps inched to new 14-month peaks.

The Syrian crisis has aggravated a selloff in emerging market assets that was triggered by expectations the U.S. Federal Reserve will start scaling back its massive stimulus programme, as soon as next month.

U.S. stimulus had flooded developing economies with cheap cash and concerns those flows may now reverse are especially hitting the currencies of countries with large funding gaps - India, Turkey, Brazil, South Africa and Indonesia.

As the Middle East prepared for the impact of a strike on Syria, stock markets in the region plunged and the Israeli shekel extended losses, easing to a near three-month versus the dollar.

One of the best-performing emerging currencies this year, the shekel has shed almost half its 2013 gains on concerns that U.S.-led action in Syria may lead to wider conflict in the area.

Emerging currencies are so far shrugging off central banks' efforts to stem the rot and in Turkey investors have taken the central bank's refusal to aggressively raise rates as a green light to sell the lira.

"The lira is just going one way unless the (central bank) reveals its hand more clearly - it needs a bit ticket interventionist plan," Standard Bank analyst Tim Ash said.

Brazil's real has eased off five-year lows and rose 0.8 percent due to a $60 billion currency intervention plan and expectations of a half point rate rise later on Wednesday - the fourth in a row.

Investors are now waiting to see what Indonesia's central bank does at an extraordinary meeting it has called for Thursday. Markets reckon a rate rise is in the cards to lift the rupiah off four-year lows.

Bond yields have risen across the board.

OUTFLOWS

Losses on emerging currencies come as investors stampede to exit emerging stocks and bonds, raising concerns of a vicious circle that will induce more investors to sell out.

Dubai's .DFMGI stock market dived 7.5 percent at one point, after a 7 percent slide on Tuesday, although it later recovered.

Early on Wednesday, stocks in the Philippines .PSI tumbled 6 percent, while Indonesian and Thai bourses fell 2.5-3 percent .JKSE .SETI in tandem with a fierce currency selloff.

Foreign investors sold $1 billion of Indian shares in the eight sessions through Tuesday while dumping almost $3 billion in debt over 13 successive sessions. Indonesia has seen equity outflows of $1.3 billion in the past seven sessions.

"Some emerging markets were overbought and they needed a selloff to bring them to more reasonable levels," said Julian Mayo a portfolio manager at Charlemagne Capital. "But at the moment, sentiment seems to have taken over from fundamentals."

Latin American stocks fared slightly better however, with Mexico .MXX and Brazil .BVSP up 0.2 percent.

Eastern European currencies, so far resilient to the emerging markets malaise, thanks to a recovering euro zone and relatively small funding needs, also saw selling due to dovish signals from policymakers.

The Polish zloty fell 1 percent to five-week lows after the finance minister called for more rate cuts. The Hungarian forint was flat following the previous session's 1 percent fall that was caused by a 20 bps rate cut.

"Such policy steps look increasingly inappropriate in a market where investors require higher risk premiums," analysts at BNP Paribas said.

(Editing by Jeremy Gaunt)


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New G4S boss seeks over $900 million for turnaround drive

Members of G4S security and a police officer open a gate at the Alexander Stadium in Birmingham, central England, July 18, 2012. REUTERS/Darren Staples

Members of G4S security and a police officer open a gate at the Alexander Stadium in Birmingham, central England, July 18, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Darren Staples

By Neil Maidment

LONDON | Wed Aug 28, 2013 11:24am BST

LONDON (Reuters) - G4S, the world's largest security services firm, plans to raise about 600 million pounds ($932 million) by selling shares and assets as its new boss seeks to restore its battered reputation by cutting debt and focusing on emerging markets.

Chief Executive Ashley Almanza, a former executive at oil and gas firm BG Group, was promoted from finance chief in June after a string of blunders by his predecessor, including a failed takeover bid in 2011, a botched contract to staff the 2012 Olympic Games and a profit warning in May.

He said on Wednesday he would give a detailed plan in November, but that the initial measures he was putting in place should help to avoid a costly credit-rating downgrade, improve profit margins and start to deliver tangible benefits in 2014.

Panmure Gordon analyst Mike Allen welcomed Almanza's debut announcement as chief executive. "We applaud the quick work undertaken by management to re-structure the group and shore up the balance sheet," he said.

At 0905 GMT, G4S shares were up 3.7 percent at 255.14 pence, the biggest rise by a UK blue-chip company and reversing early losses. Shares often fall following the announcement of equity fundraisings, as these cut earnings per share for investors.

G4S, which runs services from managing prisons and transporting cash to guarding the Wimbledon tennis championships, aims to benefit from a trend among cash-strapped governments and businesses to outsource security work.

However, it has come under pressure as governments in developed markets in particular have cut back services.

The company said its first-half operating profit margin slipped to 5.5 percent from 5.9 percent in the same period last year, reflecting a lost prison contract in the Netherlands and squeezed pricing in Britain and elsewhere in Europe.

Net debt rose to 1.95 billion pounds as of June 30, some 3.2 times earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation compared with a target of 2-2.5 times.

However the group, which wants to grow revenue in developing markets in Asia, Africa and Latin America from a third to half of its total, said it had a global sales pipeline of 4 billion pounds. It did not provide details, but noted strong demand from financial services, mining and government sectors in Africa.

"G4S has excellent market positions, particularly in developing markets and as a result of which we have very material growth opportunities," Almanza said.

RAISING MONEY

G4S, which leads rival Sweden's Securitas by sales, said it would place 140.9 million new ordinary shares representing up to 9.99 percent of its existing share capital with new and existing investors via an accelerated bookbuild.

That equates to around 350 million pounds at current prices.

The company said its largest shareholder, Invesco, supported the placing and intended to participate in it. Citigroup, JP Morgan and Barclays are joint bookrunners for the share sale.

G4S also said it would sell a number of businesses, likely to be in developed markets, which could raise up to 250 million pounds in the next year, and would restructure other units in a group which spans 125 countries in order to improve margins.

On Wednesday - and included in the asset sale total - G4S said it had agreed to sell its Canadian cash security and Colombia Data solutions businesses for 100 million pounds. The sale of its U.S. business was ongoing, it added.

G4S said it had taken a one-off charge of 180 million pounds following a review of its assets and that it had started restructuring programmes - including cutting staff numbers and ending some lower-margin services - in Britain, Ireland and Europe at a cost of 30-35 million pounds over 2013 and 2014

Almanza declined to give an operating margin target.

First-half operating profit came in at 201 million pounds, little changed from a restated 202 million a year earlier, with turnover up 7.2 percent to 3.65 billion pounds.

The firm also named Misys's Himanshu Raja as its new chief financial officer on Tuesday.

(Editing by Mark Potter)


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Paddy Power eyes bumper World Cup as profit guidance dents shares

By Padraic Halpin

DUBLIN | Wed Aug 28, 2013 4:28pm BST

DUBLIN (Reuters) - Irish bookmaker Paddy Power held out the prospect of bumper takings from next year's soccer World Cup after full-year profit guidance for 2013 disappointed investors.

Shares in the group, hit by punter-friendly results in what is a quiet year for major sporting competitions, were down 0.3 percent at 59.9 euros by 1514 GMT, continuing a falling trend from highs above 70 euros earlier in the year.

Davy Stockbrokers cut its rating on Paddy Power to 'underperform' in late April when its shares traded at 67 euros, saying fair value was 57.80 euros. The stock has since fallen 11 percent.

Paddy Power, which has posted stellar top-line profit growth in recent years, said on Wednesday that operating profit rose 12 percent to 75.4 million euros (64 million pounds) in the first half with revenues up 22 percent, driven by the group's market-leading online division.

The Dublin-based group said it was on track for low- to mid-double-digit full year operating profit growth in constant currency terms.

Chief Executive Patrick Kennedy forecast turnover from the 2014 World Cup of over 100 million euros, compared with 86 million in 2010, and expected the competition to deliver a major boost to its new business in soccer-mad Italy.

In contrast to rival William Hill, which suffered a slow start to its expansion into Australia, turnover at Paddy Power's Sportsbet brand grew at its fastest rate to date with profit and customers also growing by over 30 percent.

The bookie, which is set to be hit by new betting taxes in Ireland at the end of 2013 and Britain a year later, is seeking to capitalise further on fast-growing online and smartphone markets which now account for over 75 percent of its profit.

This week it begins trialling the first real money sports betting product on Facebook with a view to rolling it out across the social network in a matter of weeks.

"For operators who get this right, it is an enormous opportunity," Kennedy said.

(Editing by David Cowell)


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South African gold producers gear up for strikes from Sunday

Members of the National Union of Mine (NUM) take part in a strike in the central business district area of Johannesburg, August 27, 2013. REUTERS/Ihsaan Haffejee

1 of 3. Members of the National Union of Mine (NUM) take part in a strike in the central business district area of Johannesburg, August 27, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Ihsaan Haffejee

By Ed Stoddard and Sherilee Lakmidas

JOHANNESBURG | Wed Aug 28, 2013 4:50pm BST

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - South African gold producers are preparing for bruising strikes that could start as early as Sunday, with some companies planning for stoppages of up to three months in a high-stakes fight between capital and labour in Africa's biggest economy.

The National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) will give gold producers on Friday 48-hours' notice of its members' intention to strike over deadlocked wage talks, a source with direct knowledge of the matter said on Wednesday.

"The decision to issue a strike notice on Friday has now been taken," the source, who asked not to be identified, told Reuters. Workers could then begin stoppages from the Sunday night or Monday morning shifts in the country's gold mines.

A complete shutdown of the gold sector could cost South Africa more than $35 million (22 million pounds) a day in lost output, according to calculations based on the spot price.

This will pile pressure on a struggling economy already weighed down by a slew of ongoing strikes in auto manufacturing, construction and aviation services, and facing threatened stoppages by textile workers and petrol station employees.

On Saturday, NUM gave bullion producers, including AngloGold Ashanti (ANGJ.J), Gold Fields (GFIJ.J), Sibanye Gold (SGLJ.J) and Harmony Gold (HARJ.J), a seven-day ultimatum to meet its demand for pay rises of up to 60 percent or face strike action.

The country's Chamber of Mines, which negotiates on behalf of gold producers, said on Tuesday it had made a final offer to unions to increase basic wages by between 6 and 6.5 percent.

NUM, which represents 64 percent of the country's gold miners, dismissed this offer. Another more militant mining union is seeking pay hikes as high as 150 percent.

The companies say these demands are unrealistic as they are being badly squeezed by rising costs and falling bullion prices.

South Africa's declining gold industry was caught off guard last year when violent wildcat strikes spread from platinum to gold shafts, costing 5 billion rand ($500 million) in lost output. The strife in the mines, rooted in a union turf war, dented economic growth and led to sovereign credit downgrades.

This time round, the companies plan to be better prepared.

"We have planned for a three-month strike ... are prepared for that level of disruption," said James Wellsted, spokesman at Sibanye Gold (SGLJ.J).

Experts say producers can shut down costly power-intensive functions such as underground ventilation, mine high-grade deposits with skeleton staff and maintain some surface activity.

The gold companies are also increasing security, preparing for the possibility of violence after more than 50 people were killed last year in clashes in the mines, including 34 striking miners shot dead by police at the Marikana platinum mine.

The labour mayhem raised questions about the ability of President Jacob Zuma's ANC government to manage social tensions fuelled by poverty, inequality and unemployment affecting millions of South Africans 19 years after the end of apartheid.

CASH CUSHIONS

Wage talks are deadlocked with other unions as well, including NUM's more hardline rival the Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union (AMCU), which wants wage hikes of up to 150 percent for the lowest-paid miners.

"We're not ruling out a strike but we need to consult with members first," AMCU General Secretary Jeffrey Mphahlele said.

Of the producers, Sibanye is the more exposed, because South Africa accounts for all of its production. But it said in its first half results it had $200 million in cash resources, which can help it to ride out a prolonged stoppage.

Its rivals also have deep pockets and capital resources. "All of them have enough cash to get through this," said David Davis, banking investment analyst at SBG Securities.

Zuma's government, which denies charges by critics that it has paid more attention to the country's wealthy business elite than to the masses of workers, poor and unemployed, has called for all sides in the labour disputes to avoid violence.

"Parties must engage and negotiate in good faith," said Nkosinathi Nhleko, director general in the Department of Labour.

South Africa has some of the most conflict-ridden labour relations in the world, studies show, reflecting big inequalities between a super-rich elite and comfortable middle class and a large majority of citizens struggling to get by in the face of rising costs of transport and living essentials.

The country ranks last among a list of 144 countries in terms of cooperation in labour-employer relations, according the World Economic Forum's Global Competitive Index for 2012-13.

The index also ranks South Africa as having some of the world's most rigid laws in terms of hiring and firing, a factor which puts off foreign investors who could create needed jobs.

Productivity measured against global competitors has also suffered. The South African government's own data shows that since 2000, real after-inflation wages in South Africa have risen 53 percent, while productivity fell by 41 percent.

(Additional reporting by Jon Herskovitz; Editing by Pascal Fletcher and Alison Williams)


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Tortuous extradition process awaits Spaniard in JPMorgan 'Whale' case

By Sarah White and Clare Hutchison

MADRID/LONDON | Wed Aug 28, 2013 6:30pm BST

MADRID/LONDON (Reuters) - By getting arrested in his native Spain rather than his former London workplace, ex-JPMorgan Chase (JPM.N) trader Javier Martin-Artajo has gained time in his struggle to avoid being extradited to New York over a $6.2 billion (3.9 billion pounds) trading scandal.

But he may just be postponing the inevitable, extradition lawyers say.

Martin-Artajo, detained in Madrid on Tuesday and later granted a conditional release, has said he will resist being sent to the United States, where prosecutors accuse him of hiding hundreds of millions of dollars in losses.

The Spaniard was the London supervisor of Bruno Iksil, nicknamed the "London Whale" for the big derivatives bets that led to last year's losses at JP Morgan.

The scandal dented the reputation of the bank, the largest in the United States, which had weathered the global financial crisis better than most competitors. Its problems have since grown, and it is also embroiled in a federal bribery investigation and is facing multi-billion dollar lawsuits over subprime mortgages.

Iksil is cooperating with U.S. prosecutors and has not been charged, while Frenchman Julien Grout, a junior colleague, has been charged but not arrested. Martin-Artajo is the most senior figure arrested so far.

Lawyers expect the case to drag out, though in principle he is eligible for extradition because the alleged offences are also punishable in Spain.

"Whilst the extradition process is known to be slow and tortuous .... it is difficult to see at this stage how extradition can realistically be avoided," said James Carlton, a partner at London-based law firm Fox Williams.

But lawyers say being arrested in Spain was Martin-Artajo's best option, short of fleeing to a country like Cuba with no diplomatic ties with the United States.

Spain, according to its extradition treaty with the United States, is not obliged to hand him over. And any decision by Spanish authorities is normally preceded by a detailed review of whether there is a case to be answered.

That would not have been so in Britain, where authorities first received a warrant for Martin-Artajo's arrest but were unable to find him, according to a Spanish police source.

Having family ties in Spain has also helped his treatment by the law so far, according to a Spanish lawyer who asked not to be named. The lawyer added that the High Court might otherwise have deemed him a flight risk and jailed him.

"We made it clear there were some advantages to being detained in Madrid, ... he has family here, roots," said an inspector at the Spanish police unit that contacted Martin-Artajo's family to persuade him to hand himself in.

COURT FILINGS

Some Spaniards have been successfully extradited to the United States, court filings show, including in drug-related cases. Other requests have been denied on medical grounds or in cases eligible for the death penalty.

Ultimately, Spanish government officials and the cabinet have the final say. They, rather than the High Court, will consider reciprocity, the balance of whether the United States responds to Spanish requests in equal measure, the Spanish lawyer said.

"This looks like it could end up being more of a government decision," she added. A source at Spain's justice ministry said the cabinet had not gone against court decisions in recent years.

If tried in Spain, Martin-Artajo could face lesser penalties than the term of up to 25 years he risks in the United States.

New York prosecutors, however, have been buoyed by successes in other European extraditions, and have been using one recent case involving a former British trader at Credit Suisse as a template for the "London Whale" one.

There the British citizen, one of three charged with fraud for mismarking prices in their portfolio of credit-default swaps, was extradited to New York and pleaded guilty.

While Martin-Artajo worked at JPMorgan in London, prosecutors have been poring over communications between the London team and U.S. regulators or bank employees, which they believe give them jurisdiction in the case.

But the fact U.S., rather than British, authorities are bringing the charges could be one weakness in the extradition case, some lawyers said.

"It's foreseeable that the defence team will dispute...the competence of the United States over this case," said another Spanish lawyer, on condition of anonymity.

The United States now has just under 40 days to provide the Spanish High Court with evidence to back up its request. Martin-Artajo, who is not allowed to leave Spain, will also have to formally declare his position on extradition before a judge.

A London lawyer for Martin-Artajo could not be reached for comment. Earlier this month Martin-Artajo had said through lawyers that he was away on a long-planned vacation and that he expected to be cleared of wrongdoing.

Grout, the other employee charged, cannot be extradited if he remains in France, although a source with knowledge of the matter has said Grout would offer to face the charges in the United States on condition he is granted bail.

(Additional reporting by Paul Day in Madrid; Editing by Mark Trevelyan)


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UK banks allowed to cut their cash holdings

Bank of England governor Mark Carney arrives to attend the bank's quarterly inflation report news conference at the Bank of England in London August 7, 2013. REUTERS/Simon Dawson/POOL

Bank of England governor Mark Carney arrives to attend the bank's quarterly inflation report news conference at the Bank of England in London August 7, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Simon Dawson/POOL

By Huw Jones

LONDON | Wed Aug 28, 2013 6:26pm BST

LONDON (Reuters) - Britain's eight top lenders can cut their cash reserves by a collective 90 billion pounds and use the funds to support economic growth, the Bank of England's new governor Mark Carney said on Wednesday.

Britain's lenders were forced to build up buffers of cash and UK government bonds far earlier than required under a globally-agreed timetable.

The buffers help cushion them from short-term market shocks so they can keep operating for a month even if markets freeze, as they did during the 2007-09 financial crisis.

UK government bonds, known as gilts, fell after Carney's announcement as investors factored in the likelihood that the banks will sell off some of their holdings.

Carney, in his maiden speech as governor of the Bank of England, said it "will help to underpin the supply of credit, since every pound currently held in liquid assets is a pound that could be lent to the real economy".

In a separate statement, the central bank's Prudential Regulation Authority, which supervises UK lenders, said banks could scale back the liquidity buffers on condition they have a separate, minimum core capital ratio of 7 percent - a new requirement.

The watchdog has said it expects the lenders to meet this capital ratio by the end of the year after some had to take steps to find more capital.

The eight are: HSBC, Barclays, Co-op, Lloyds, RBS, Standard Chartered, Santander UK and Nationwide.

The PRA is implementing a policy that the BoE's Financial Policy Committee decided on in June. The policy would allow the four biggest banks to scale back their liquidity buffers to 80 percent of where they should be if in full compliance with the global Basel III accord, not due until 2018.

This would release 70 billion pounds but, by extending the change to the eight main lenders, a further 20 billion pounds can potentially be released.

The British Bankers' Association said banks would be re-assessing how much of the 90 billion pounds can be redeployed into lending to small and medium businesses and households, as they are committed to doing.

NO MISSION ACCOMPLISHED

The banks are under political pressure to increase lending to business following criticism that they are focusing on home mortgages and consumer credit rather than productive industry, encouraging a lop-sided economic recovery.

The banks argue that lending levels reflect the amount of demand.

Carney signalled that banks face having to hold more capital against mortgages if house price growth becomes unsustainable.

Like his predecessor Mervyn King, he insisted that well-capitalised banks are in a better position to lend, saying U.S. banks have rebuilt their capital bases and now lend far more than their British peers.

But Carney avoided some of King's harsh rhetoric towards the British banks, striking a more conciliatory tone that was welcomed by Philip Hampton, chairman of Royal Bank of Scotland, during a visit to Reuters.

"Most people like Mark Carney and they think they can do business sensibly with him," Hampton said.

Britain's banks will face further capital requirements because of their size or market dominance, but Carney said his task would be to manage this transition "in a gradual way that supports continued confidence in growth".

With a 7 percent core capital ratio, banks would be "adequately capitalised" to start that transition, he said.

"There is no mission accomplished banner that the banking system is fixed," Carney added.

Banks have been using cash and top-quality government bonds such as UK gilts in their liquidity buffers. The PRA said on Wednesday that up to 40 percent of the buffers could in future be in corporate bonds, shares and retail mortgage-backed securities, giving them greater flexibility.

(Reporting by Huw Jones; editing by Matt Scuffham and Tom Pfeiffer)


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UK banks allowed to cut their cash holdings

Bank of England governor Mark Carney arrives to attend the bank's quarterly inflation report news conference at the Bank of England in London August 7, 2013. REUTERS/Simon Dawson/POOL

Bank of England governor Mark Carney arrives to attend the bank's quarterly inflation report news conference at the Bank of England in London August 7, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Simon Dawson/POOL

By Huw Jones

LONDON | Wed Aug 28, 2013 6:26pm BST

LONDON (Reuters) - Britain's eight top lenders can cut their cash reserves by a collective 90 billion pounds and use the funds to support economic growth, the Bank of England's new governor Mark Carney said on Wednesday.

Britain's lenders were forced to build up buffers of cash and UK government bonds far earlier than required under a globally-agreed timetable.

The buffers help cushion them from short-term market shocks so they can keep operating for a month even if markets freeze, as they did during the 2007-09 financial crisis.

UK government bonds, known as gilts, fell after Carney's announcement as investors factored in the likelihood that the banks will sell off some of their holdings.

Carney, in his maiden speech as governor of the Bank of England, said it "will help to underpin the supply of credit, since every pound currently held in liquid assets is a pound that could be lent to the real economy".

In a separate statement, the central bank's Prudential Regulation Authority, which supervises UK lenders, said banks could scale back the liquidity buffers on condition they have a separate, minimum core capital ratio of 7 percent - a new requirement.

The watchdog has said it expects the lenders to meet this capital ratio by the end of the year after some had to take steps to find more capital.

The eight are: HSBC, Barclays, Co-op, Lloyds, RBS, Standard Chartered, Santander UK and Nationwide.

The PRA is implementing a policy that the BoE's Financial Policy Committee decided on in June. The policy would allow the four biggest banks to scale back their liquidity buffers to 80 percent of where they should be if in full compliance with the global Basel III accord, not due until 2018.

This would release 70 billion pounds but, by extending the change to the eight main lenders, a further 20 billion pounds can potentially be released.

The British Bankers' Association said banks would be re-assessing how much of the 90 billion pounds can be redeployed into lending to small and medium businesses and households, as they are committed to doing.

NO MISSION ACCOMPLISHED

The banks are under political pressure to increase lending to business following criticism that they are focusing on home mortgages and consumer credit rather than productive industry, encouraging a lop-sided economic recovery.

The banks argue that lending levels reflect the amount of demand.

Carney signalled that banks face having to hold more capital against mortgages if house price growth becomes unsustainable.

Like his predecessor Mervyn King, he insisted that well-capitalised banks are in a better position to lend, saying U.S. banks have rebuilt their capital bases and now lend far more than their British peers.

But Carney avoided some of King's harsh rhetoric towards the British banks, striking a more conciliatory tone that was welcomed by Philip Hampton, chairman of Royal Bank of Scotland, during a visit to Reuters.

"Most people like Mark Carney and they think they can do business sensibly with him," Hampton said.

Britain's banks will face further capital requirements because of their size or market dominance, but Carney said his task would be to manage this transition "in a gradual way that supports continued confidence in growth".

With a 7 percent core capital ratio, banks would be "adequately capitalised" to start that transition, he said.

"There is no mission accomplished banner that the banking system is fixed," Carney added.

Banks have been using cash and top-quality government bonds such as UK gilts in their liquidity buffers. The PRA said on Wednesday that up to 40 percent of the buffers could in future be in corporate bonds, shares and retail mortgage-backed securities, giving them greater flexibility.

(Reporting by Huw Jones; editing by Matt Scuffham and Tom Pfeiffer)


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Analysis: After mega-LBO boom, a massive private equity cleanup

An exterior shot of the Hilton Midtown in New York June 7, 2013. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly

An exterior shot of the Hilton Midtown in New York June 7, 2013.

Credit: Reuters/Andrew Kelly

By Greg Roumeliotis

NEW YORK | Wed Aug 28, 2013 3:31am EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - According to Blackstone Group LP's (BX.N) books, the private equity firm's investment in Hilton Worldwide Inc was worth 50 percent more this year than when it took the international hotel chain private in 2007.

While that might not seem like much compared to private equity's historical record of doubling or tripling its investments, it is a remarkable turnaround for a $26.7 billion deal that has come to epitomize the leveraged buyout boom and bust of the past decade.

Hilton is one of many cleanup acts that have been quietly going on in the world of private equity, as the industry atones for a debt binge in the years before the financial crisis.

Many of the largest buyouts from 2005 to 2008 were based on revenue and profit expectations that proved too optimistic when the recession hit. Companies such as casino operator Caesars Entertainment Corp (CZR.O) and Texas utility Energy Future Holdings were saddled with huge piles of debt and had difficulty meeting interest payments when business declined.

Just months after Blackstone closed the Hilton deal, the financial crisis forced the firm to dock the value of its investment by half, according to fund documents seen by Reuters.

In 2010, Blackstone persuaded Hilton creditors to agree to a restructuring that cut the company's total debt by nearly $4 billion and pushed back debt maturities by two years to 2015. The restructuring was notable for both its scale and impact: Hilton was allowed to keep more of its cash flow, which is projected to be up 58 percent this year compared to 2009.

With the U.S. economy growing again, Blackstone is now looking to refinance another $12 billion of Hilton debt and plans to take the company public next year.

Blackstone's final returns on the deal are not yet known. On paper, the firm valued Hilton at around 1.5 times its investment, a person familiar with the matter said, citing figures as of the end of March. Blackstone declined to comment.

Private equity investment group Hamilton Lane Advisors LLC conducted a study on 19 LBOs between 2005 and 2008, each with an enterprise value (which includes debt) of more than $10 billion. It found that the average deal was up 1.17 times as of the end of December.

A similar investment in MSCI's world equity index .MIWD00000PUS would have been worth just 1.01 times more by the end of December, the study shows.

Yet the returns are subpar by private equity standards. These firms charge hefty fees to manage money for pension funds, endowments and other institutional investors, and typically deliver between two and three times their investment.

The experience has injected a new sense of conservatism in the industry, and put off a whole generation of private equity executives and their investors, said Harvard Business School professor Josh Lerner, whose research focuses on private equity.

"There has been increasing awareness that really big deals done at peak periods have not been a recipe for success, particularly on the limited partner side," Lerner said.

VARIED PERFORMANCE

A Reuters review of the largest deals from the buyout boom shows that private equity firms have been extending and restructuring debt obligations and selling or spinning off assets to boost the value of their investments.

To be sure, the performance of deals varied widely.

For example, hospital operator HCA Holdings Inc (HCA.N), which was taken private by KKR & Co LP (KKR.N) and Bain Capital LLC for $32.2 billion in 2006, has proved extremely profitable. The HCA investment was marked at 4.3 times higher or more as of the end of June, according to people familiar with the matter. But Energy Future, taken private in 2007 for $45 billion by KKR, TPG Capital LP and Goldman Sachs Capital Partners (GS.N), has said it is now preparing for bankruptcy.

HCA, Energy Future Holdings, and the private equity firms involved either declined to comment or did not respond to requests for comment.

Some other mega-LBOs are struggling as debt payments sap cash flow or because profits are not growing.

Computer software maker SunGard Data Systems Inc, which was taken private in 2005 for $11.4 billion and is trying to revive its profit growth, is exploring a sale of its data managing operations that could fetch up to $2 billion, people familiar with the matter told Reuters in June.

As of the end of December, SunGard had barely increased in value for the private equity firms, according to two people familiar with the matter.

In a starker example, First Data Corp, the world's largest payment processing company taken private by KKR for $29 billion in 2007, explored the possibility of selling its financial services business, seeking up to $6 billion, people familiar with the matter told Reuters in April.

The company, which is struggling with a roughly $24 billion debt burden, was worth only 70 percent of KKR's investment as of the end of June, according to people familiar with the matter.

KKR in April appointed former JPMorgan Chase & Co (JPM.N) co-chief operating officer Frank Bisignano as First Data's CEO. Last month Bisignano named JPMorgan's former chief information officer Guy Chiarello as First Data's President.

"Even if they think they have gone through multiple rounds of cost cutting prior to the LBO, they all have the opportunity to shed a few more pounds," said A.T. Kearney partner Robert Haas, who leads the consultancy's private equity practice in the Americas.

First Data, SunGard and the private equity firms involved either declined to comment or did not respond to requests for comment.

BIG TEMPTATION

Because of their size, an IPO is often the only option available for private equity to exit, and that is a gradual process that can take years with uncertain outcomes. (For a graphic on share performance of firms that have already been taken public, click on link.reuters.com/jer32v)

Meanwhile, the temptation to do large, splashy deals remains. Private equity firms are raising multi-billion-dollar funds, creating a challenge for managers to find good investments.

Private equity firms have not led a $10 billion-plus deal since the crisis, but they have participated in two deals worth more than $20 billion each: the proposed buyout of Dell Inc (DELL.O) by Michael Dell and Silver Lake, and the takeover of H.J. Heinz Co by Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc (BRKa.N) and 3G Capital.

Lerner, the Harvard professor, said some private equity executives are constrained by skepticism from their fund investors, as well as little appetite from some banks to underwrite huge deals.

They are also concerned that a rise in interest rates could increase financing costs for buyers of their companies down the road, making exit strategies more difficult, Lerner added.

(Reporting by Greg Roumeliotis in New York; Editing by Paritosh Bansal, Tiffany Wu and Tim Dobbyn)


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