Showing posts with label slovenia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label slovenia. Show all posts

Thursday, May 9, 2013

NEWS,08. AND 09.05.2013



Brazil wins race for next WTO director


The World Trade Organisation has settled on Roberto Azevedo of Brazil, a well-known diplomat and consummate insider in Geneva circles, to serve as its director general for the next four years, officials said on Tuesday.
The directorship is chosen by consensus in a complex and secretive process, and the runner-up is expected to concede afterward. Diplomats emerged from consultations Tuesday to rush past journalists out of the building, barely acknowledging that Azevedo had defeated Mexican former trade minister Herminio Blanco in the final round.
Two diplomats confirmed Azevedo's selection to journalists on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to reveal the winner ahead of the formal announcement, but Azevedo also re-tweeted that he has been chosen for the job and comments from various trade circles began trickling in.
A formal announcement on his selection is not expected until Wednesday.
In Washington, Jack Colvin, a vice president of the National Foreign Trade Council, said Azevedo's selection reflects "his extensive experience and deep familiarity with international trade institutions and processes on behalf of Brazil and the focus he has placed on consensus-building in Geneva."
Under WTO rules, a meeting of member-nations must be convened no later than May 31 to formally appoint Azevedo. The selection - not an election - spanned months of consultations among ambassadors from all 159 members, most of them nations but also some territories such as Hong Kong and Macau.
Azevedo is to take over the organisation on September 1 from Pascal Lamy of France, who has been the director-general for eight years.
He is poised to become the first Latin American to head the Geneva-based trade organisation since its creation in 1995. He won out in a field that originally had nine candidates at the start of this year.
Azevedo will be taking over an organisation whose role as a multilateral forum for negotiations is, according to insiders and observers, in growing doubt.
In recent years, the WTO has been used more as forum to settle trade disputes and monitor policy than as a host for serious trade negotiations. That tendency reflects the rise of regional and bilateral trade negotiations among the major powers.
Azevedo, who has insider knowledge of the WTO's workings, calls himself a consensus-builder between developed and developing countries. He says he will set aside his Brazilian hat to take on the global role.
But it has been no secret during the selection process that member nations wanted the next director to come from a developing nation after having a director from one of Europe's major economies.
The original nine candidates also included contenders from Ghana, Costa Rica, Indonesia, New Zealand, Kenya, Jordan and Korea.

China's exports jump 14.7% in April


China's trade accelerated in April in a possible positive sign for its shaky economic recovery.
Exports rose 14.7% over a year earlier, up from March's 10% growth, customs data showed Wednesday. Imports gained 16.8%, up from the previous month's 14.1%.
The stronger data suggest growth of the world's second-largest economy might be improving after an unexpected decline to 7.7% in the first three months of the year from the previous quarter's 7.9%.
Some analysts suggest Chinese trade data are distorted by reporting errors and unreliable as an economic indicator. Still, April's stronger numbers might help to reassure companies and investors after the weaker first-quarter growth jolted global financial markets.
"Subdued actual export growth in April points to sluggish global demand," said RBS economists Louis Kuijs and Tiffany Qiu in a report. "Reasonable import growth suggests domestic demand has held up better so far."
Surveys by HSBC Corp. and a Chinese industry group showed Chinese manufacturing growth weakened in April. HSBC said new export orders fell for the first time this year.
Some analysts have warned China's recovery is being shored up by state-led investment and bank lending and could be vulnerable if trade or investment weakens. The weaker-than-expected first quarter numbers prompted the World Bank and private sector analysts to trim forecasts for full-year growth, though to still robust levels of about 8%.
Chinese leaders are trying to nurture self-sustaining growth driven by domestic consumption instead of trade and investment. But consumer spending is growing more slowly than they want.
A Cabinet statement last month promised to improve the role of consumption as a driver of economic growth. It pledged changes in medical, pension and other policies but gave no details. Analysts say more government spending on such social programs will be required to free up household budgets for consumer spending.
April's stronger gains in imports compared with exports caused China's global trade surplus to narrow by about 1%, though to a still-wide $18.2bn.
China runs a deficit with most of its trading partners, which supply oil, other raw materials and industrial components, and makes up for it by running large surpluses with its US and European export markets.
China's exports to Europe, hurt by the continent's debt troubles, declined 6.5% to $25.9bn and the surplus with the 27-nation European Union narrowed by 32% to $7.9bn.
Trade with some European countries suffered even bigger declines. Germany's imports of Chinese goods fell 7.2% and France's by 6.7%.
Exports to the United States edged down by a fraction of 1% to $28.1bn while the trade gap with the US narrowed by 13% to $14.7bn.
China's data on exports have been under scrutiny since some analysts pointed out last year that they failed to match up with its trading partners' lower figures for their purchases of Chinese goods.
Some analysts suggested Chinese exporters might be inflating values on customs declarations as a way to evade Beijing's currency controls and bring money into the country for investment.
Kuijs and Qiu of RBS said that after factoring out irregularities, they estimated China's exports rose only by about 5.7% in April, about 9 percentage points lower than the reported level. They said they saw no obvious irregularities in import data and no reason to inflate the values of goods.

Slovenia scrambles to avert bailout


Slovenia pledged on Thursday to sell 15 state firms including its second-largest bank, biggest telecoms operator and the national airline under a crisis package to avert an international bailout.
Prime Minister Alenka Bratusek said value added tax would rise from 20% to 22% from July but that the government was still in talks with unions on planned cuts to the public sector wage bill.
She said the budget deficit would soar to 7.8% of national output this year but the government aimed to bring it down to 3.3% in 2014.

Finance Minister Uros Cufer said the package would result in total savings of around €1bn in spending cuts and revenues.

US jobless claims fall to 5-year low


The number of Americans filing new claims for unemployment benefits dropped to its lowest level in nearly 5-1/2 years last week, signaling labour market resilience in the face of fiscal austerity.
Initial claims for state unemployment benefits fell 4 000 to a seasonally adjusted 323 000, the lowest level since January 2008, the Labor Department said on Thursday.
Claims for the prior week were revised to show 3 000 more applications received than previously reported. Economists polled by Reuters had expected first-time applications to rise to 335 000 last week.
US stock index futures pared losses on the report, while Treasury debt prices trimmed gains. The dollar trimmed losses against the yen.
The third straight weekly decline in claims pushed them further below the 350 000 mark, which economists normally associate with a firming labour market.
Claims are showing no sign of a pick-up in layoffs even as other parts of the economy such as manufacturing start to show strain from tighter fiscal policy.
"It's nice to see improvement in claims. We are not worried about the separation side of the equation. We continue to be worried about the hiring side," said Jacob Oubina, senior economist at RBC Capital Markets in New York.
A Labor Department analyst said no states had been estimated and there was nothing unusual in the state-level data.
The four-week moving average for new claims, a better gauge of job market trends, dropped 6 250 to 336 750 - the lowest level since November 2007.
Coming on the heels of data last week showing surprising strength in the labor market, the claims report could further assuage fears of an abrupt slowdown in the economy.
Employers added 165,000 new jobs to their payrolls in April and hiring in the previous two months was stronger than initially reported. The unemployment rate dropped to a four-year low of 7.5%.
The improvement in employment contrasts sharply with other data, including retail sales and manufacturing, that have suggested a cooling in the economy at the end of the first quarter, which persisted early in the April-June period.
The slowdown in activity after the economy expanded at a 2.5% annual pace in the first three months of the year has been blamed on higher taxes which went into effect on January 1 and $85bn in government budget cuts known as the "sequester."
The claims report showed the number of people still receiving benefits under regular state programs after an initial week of aid dropped 27 000 to 3.0 million in the week ended April 27. That was the lowest level since May 2008.

Obama set to renew focus on jobs


President Barack Obama travels to Texas on Thursday to put his focus back on job creation and economic growth after giving intensive attention to gun control legislation and immigration reform.
The president is due to hold events around the country to draw attention to his efforts to boost economic growth through jobs that benefit the middle class, a White House official said.
The trip comes as a poll shows Americans say what they want most from politicians in Washington is job creation and helping the economy grow.
In a visit to the Austin, Texas, area, Obama is due to visit Applied Materials which makes semiconductors and other technology, and a high school focused on math and science. He will also meet local residents and entrepreneurs.
Obama's jobs tour follows some policy frustrations for him. The president failed to persuade Congress to accept expanded background checks for gun buyers, a disappointing setback to his efforts to toughen gun rules after the December murders of 20 children and six adults at an elementary school in Newtown, Connecticut.
He is also at an impasse with congressional Republicans over a deficit reduction deal that he insists should include higher tax revenues, which Republicans oppose.
The president does appear to be making headway in his efforts to change immigration laws to open a path to citizenship for a portion of the 11 million people who are in the United States without proper documentation. However, final legislation is months off.
In the meantime, a Gallup poll released Tuesday found 86% of those surveyed this month ranked creating more jobs as their top priority for action by Congress and the president, tied at 86% with helping the economy grow.
Lower on the priority list were reducing the federal deficit at 69%, reforming the tax code 59%, reducing gun violence 55% and reforming immigration 50%.
The U.S. economy is recovering slowly after the deep recession of 2007-2009. Despite some encouraging signs of economic resurgence, such as stock market record highs, the jobless rate, while falling, remains at an elevated 7.5%.
The president will announce a competition for locations to site three manufacturing institutes where businesses, government and educational institutions will get funding to develop new technologies, the White House official said.
He will also issue an executive order requiring that newly released government data be made freely available in easily readable formats.
The president's jobs tour is also likely be a chance for him to argue that across-the-board spending cuts referred to as sequestration that went into effect March 1 are slowing economic growth and should be replaced.
The spending reductions went into force after congressional Republicans balked at the president's insistence that any alternative spending cuts be offset by some tax increases.
Some Republicans have welcomed the cuts as necessary austerity measures to check government overspending.

Cameron: Britain must stay in EU


British Prime Minister David Cameron took on critics in his own Conservative party on Thursday, saying it would be wrong for Britain to leave the European Union.
Some pessimists "say there is no prospect of reforming the European Union, you simply have to leave", Cameron told an investment conference
"I think they are wrong ... I think it is possible to change and reform this organisation."
Cameron came under renewed pressure from EU sceptics this week when former finance minister Nigel Lawson said the prime minister's plan to renegotiate Britain's commitments to the EU before a planned membership referendum in 2017 were doomed to fail and the country should leave the bloc.
Cameron used his speech on Thursday to underscore his determination to keep on narrowing Britain's budget deficit at a "sensible and measured pace" and to help push for new trade deals between the EU and the United States and Canada.
He also said he would continue to defend Britain's financial services industry against some European measures such as a planned financial transaction tax which has been agreed by most countries in the eurozone and would affect the City of London.
"We shouldn't spend our time in politics endlessly bashing banks and financial institutions. If you want the economy to recover and if you want the economy to grow, you have got to play to your strengths," Cameron said.

G7 finance chiefs to discuss bank reforms


Some of the world's most powerful finance chiefs will meet in an English stately home on Friday and Saturday to try to speed up banking and finance reforms, with Cyprus' near meltdown fresh in their minds.
Finance ministers and central bank governors from the Group of Seven industrialized economies probably will not break new ground on how to fix the weak world economy as discussions at the International Monetary Fund took place just three weeks ago.
Officials from two of the G7 economies said the talks - on Friday and Saturday at a 17th-century country house 40 miles northwest of London - were likely to focus more on the slow progress of reforms to banking and finance around the world.
"It's very rare for a G7 to focus on financial regulation," one of the officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
The emergency rescue of Cyprus in March acted as a reminder of the need to finish an overhaul of the banking sector, five years after the financial crisis began.
"It makes sense for the G7 financial leaders to send out a message, from high up, that global efforts to ensure financial stability via appropriate regulation must continue," the official said.
Germany may come under renewed pressure to give more support to a banking union in the euro zone as it did at the recent IMF/G20 meeting in Washington.
The idea was proposed last year to help strengthen the single currency area but Berlin worries it may foot the bill for future bank bailouts.
While the first step - to create a single bank supervisor under the European Central Bank - looks set to be in place by mid-2014, a second pillar, a 'resolution' agency and fund to close failed banks, is in doubt. And there is little prospect that a third leg, a single deposit guarantee scheme, will ever see the light of day.
"We welcome those discussions," a senior US Treasury official told reporters in Washington. "I think Cyprus just further highlighted the importance of moving to break that feedback loop between sovereigns and bank balance sheets."
Another G7 official said new rules for derivatives trading and the Basel III plan for minimum bank capital levels were running behind schedule and would be among the issues the G7 would discuss, as well as the risk of a reversal in soaring share prices in some countries which contrasts with weak growth.
But some of the officials said they said they did not know why Britain, which is chairing the G7, had called the meeting.
"I am really annoyed that I've got to give up my weekend for this," one complained, adding the talks could have taken place on the sidelines of IMF's meetings in Washington in mid-April.
A British finance ministry official said there was value in informal talks among the world's biggest industrialized economies but declined to comment on the agenda.
Changed role for G7
G7 finance ministers and central bank governors used to hold global markets in their thrall when they met, given the combined financial firepower of the group's members - the United States, Germany, Japan, Britain, Italy, France and Canada.
But it lost its mantle as the main forum for thrashing out differences over the global economy in 2009 when responsibility was passed to the wider Group of 20 which includes emerging heavyweights such as China, Brazil and India.
Since then, the G7 has met on the sidelines of G20 and IMF meetings but has held few standalone meetings although officials say the smaller grouping makes for more open discussion.
"As often is the case, the G7 is a photo opportunity. But it's important that it stays together as a forum to address the issues," said Marc Chandler, global head of currency strategy at Brown Brothers Harriman in New York.
The U.S. official said Washington would keep up its calls on Europe to boost demand and maintain its focus on Japan's aggressive monetary policy which has raised US concerns about a weakening of the yen.
A Canadian official said discussions would again focus on the right degree of belt-tightening for debt-laden countries which are struggling to get their moribund economies growing and have relied heavily on massive central bank stimulus.
No communique and no formal decisions are expected at the meeting which would instead help prepare the way for a G20 leaders' summit in Russia in September.
It comes at a relatively good time for its host, UK finance minister George Osborne. He will be able to point to a few signs of life in Britain's stagnant economy that have taken some of the heat out of criticism of his austerity policies.
The meeting will also be a chance for the G7 to get to know new members of the group - such as the finance ministers of the United States and Italy - and to bid farewell to Mervyn King, who retires from the Bank of England in June.



Tuesday, May 7, 2013

NEWS,07.05.2013



EU targets banks to help consumers


The European Commission will propose new rules to make it easier for consumers to open and switch bank accounts, as well as see what banking fees they are being charged.

The proposal, to be published on Wednesday and which could become law in the European Union in three years, also requires banks to shoulder the administrative burden when clients switch accounts, such as transferring direct debits.

Officials with knowledge of the draft law said it would also oblige banks to spell out their charges in a standardised way, making it easier for customers to compare.

The Commission wants at least one bank in each country to offer a basic account, allowing people currently outside the banking system to deposit cash and pay bills.

The EU executive will also suggest giving citizens the legal entitlement to open an account, acting out of a growing sense of frustration that efforts to cajole banks into better self-regulation is not working.

Studies by Commission officials showed that banks did not offer enough information on switching accounts and that consumers did not know what fees they paid for banking services.

The studies also found that 58 million citizens in Europe had no bank accounts - including half the populations of Bulgaria and Romania.

The Commission hopes introducing a standard guide to fees for people opening an account, as well as an annual summary of charges and establishing a national comparison website will change this.

Under the new rules, consumers wanting to switch banks would only have to inform the new bank, which would then be obliged to tell gas, electricity and other providers of the changes to account payments.

The proposal will go to EU member states for their approval or possible change before the changes can be introduced.


China braces for surge in gold imports


Chinese gold imports are likely to swell further after rising strongly for a second straight month in March, as investors seek safety from economic uncertainty and after prices plunged to a two-year low last month.

"Physical demand picked up significantly over the last couple of weeks. Consumers and industrial users tend to see price drops as buying opportunities," Zhang Bingnan, secretary-general of the China Gold Association, told Reuters.

"Investment demand should continue to stay strong through the rest of the year because of limited investment alternatives," said Zhang, adding that gold sales and processing volumes both spiked in April. 

He said China's gold consumption in the first quarter probably rose 10% to 15% from 255.2 tonnes in 2012. Net gold flows from Hong Kong to China, the world's number two gold consumer after India, rose to 223.519 tonnes in March from 97.106 tonnes in February, data from the Hong Kong Census and Statistics Department showed on Tuesday (www.censtatd.gov).

In March, Shanghai gold futures fetched premiums of more than $30 to global prices, making it cheaper to buy the metal overseas. April could see imports swell further after the drop in international prices spurred frenzied buying in Asia, leading to a shortage of gold bars and coins in Singapore as well as Hong Kong, which is China's main source for gold imports.   

Demand for gold from India and China is a major factor in global prices, with the World Gold Council saying the two countries account for more than a third of global appetite. China produced 403 tonnes of gold in 2012, but consumption was more than double at 832.2 tonnes.

Gold tumbled to around $1 321 an ounce on April 16, its lowest in more than two years, after a fall below $1 500 and fears of central bank sales led to a sell-off that stunned investors and prompted them to slash holdings of exchange-traded funds.

It stood at around $1 460 on Tuesday.

 "April imports will be stronger than March," said Ronald Leung, chief dealer at Lee Cheong Gold Dealers in Hong Kong. "The world was buying gold and China was no different at all."

Heavy traffic 

The drop in gold prices has prompted a gold rush in China, with Chinese shoppers flocking to retailers to buy jewellery and gold bars.  

A spokesman for Hong Kong jewellery chain Chow Tai Fook , the world's largest jewellery retailer by market value, told that traffic at its China stores jumped by 50% during the May Day holidays.

The surge in Chinese travellers during the three-day May Day holiday also drove gold sales in Hong Kong to rise by an estimated 50%, with total gold sales from April 29 to May 2 reaching some 40 tonnes, local media quoted Haywood Cheung, president of the Hong Kong Gold and Silver Exchange, as saying. 

The jump in Chinese physical demand also prompted some banks to ship in more supplies from London and Swiss vaults, traders said.

With China's economy still on shaky ground, investors could increasingly be turning to gold as a so-called safe-haven investment. 

China's annual export growth may have picked up slightly in April due to a low comparison from a year ago, while import growth probably eased, a Reuters poll showed, suggesting the underlying momentum for both the domestic and global economies remains tepid. Gold exports to China from Hong Kong hit an all time high  of 557.478 tonnes in 2012.


Companies 'cooking books' to meet targets


Hard-pressed company bosses across much of the world are under so much pressure to deliver on growth that many have resorted to cooking the books, Ernst & Young says in its latest Fraud Survey published on Tuesday.
One in five of almost 3 500 staff quizzed in 36 countries in Europe, the Middle East, Africa and India said they had seen financial manipulation in their companies in the last 12 months, the accounting and consultancy firm said.
In addition 42% of board directors and top managers surveyed said they were aware of "some type of irregular financial reporting".
And despite scandals and regulatory failures in the wake of the credit crunch, almost a quarter of top financial services staff surveyed said they were aware of manipulation and almost 10% of all staff said their companies had understated costs, overstated revenues or used unprincipled sales tactics.
Meanwhile, almost half of the sales staff surveyed across all sectors did not consider anti-corruption policies to be relevant and more than a quarter thought it acceptable to offer personal gifts or services to win or retain business.
In India, over a third felt justified in offering cash - triple the number in Western Europe.
"Our survey shows that to find growth and improved performance in this environment, an alarming number appear to be comfortable with or aware of unethical conduct," said David Stulb, head of E&Y's fraud investigation and dispute services practice.
In Spain, ranked alongside Russia and just below Nigeria and Slovenia, 61% of staff believed companies often exaggerated results, compared with only 7% in Finland.
And E&Y said the vast majority of managers from Norway to Nigeria and Russia to Greece were feeling the pressure to deliver a good financial performance over the next 12 months, despite little optimism that business conditions would improve.
They were now forced to balance the risks of expanding into rapid-growth markets, where winning contracts can go hand-in-hand with corruption, cutting costs further and piling pressure on staff or suppliers - or distorting results, the firm said.
E&Y warned multinationals based in mature markets they could be more vulnerable to the risks of unethical behaviour. One quarter of those asked thought watchdogs in rapid-growth markets focussed more on the behaviour of foreign businesses.
The consultancy called on managers to ask more robust questions focus on key risks, such as poor due diligence accounting checks of intermediaries and associates, and punish unethical behaviour.

Egypt replaces economy ministers


Egypt announced a cabinet reshuffle on Tuesday that removed two ministers closely involved in talks with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and increased the representation of President Mohamed Mursi's Muslim Brotherhood in government.

The opposition had been demanding the installation of a politically neutral cabinet to oversee parliamentary elections later this year.

Prime Minister Hisham Kandil announced nine changes to his cabinet. These included the appointment of Amr Darrag, a senior official in the Brotherhood's Freedom and Justice Party, as planning minister.

The outgoing minister, Ashraf al-Arabi, had played a central role in talks with the IMF over a $4.8bn loan seen as crucial to easing a deep economic crisis. Egypt has yet to seal a deal with the IMF.

Fayyad Abdel Moneim, a specialist in Islamic economics, was appointed as finance minister, replacing Al-Mursi Al-Sayed Hegazy, another expert on Islamic finance who was appointed in January, the last time Kandil reshuffled the cabinet.

Abdel Moneim received a doctorate from Al-Azhar University in Islamic economics in 1999.

The government has been widely criticised for failing to revive an economy that is in deep crisis because of more than two years of political turmoil.

Another Brotherhood member, Yehya Hamed, was appointed investment minister. The new cabinet includes at least 10 politicians affiliated to the Muslim Brotherhood or the FJP, compared to eight in the old one.

Ahmed Suleiman was named as justice minister, replacing Ahmed Mekky, who resigned last month in protest at efforts by Mursi's Islamist allies to purge the judiciary.

The ministers of interior, defence and foreign affairs were left unchanged.


Crisis sees rise in German immigration


An influx of people from crisis-hit southern European countries like Spain, Italy and Greece has led to the biggest surge in German immigration in nearly 20 years.
The Federal Statistics Office said 1.081 million immigrants flocked to Germany last year, up 13% from 2011 and the highest number since 1995.
Leading the way were arrivals from countries in eastern Europe and from southern eurozone countries, struggling with recession and high unemployment as a result of the currency bloc's three-year old debt crisis.
The number of immigrants coming from Spain, Greece, Portugal and Italy rose by 40% or more compared to the prior year.
"The rise in immigration from EU countries hit by the financial and debt crisis is particularly strong," the Statistics Office said.
Safe haven
Germany has been a rare pillar of strength during the crisis, benefitting from deep structural reforms introduced a decade ago, competitive small-and-medium sized companies and record low interest rates resulting from its status as a safe haven.
Unemployment, at 6.9%, is hovering just above a post-reunification low.
By contrast, more than one in four workers in Spain and Greece are without a job, and youth unemployment in these countries is close to 60%.
This has made Germany, Europe's largest economy, an increasingly attractive destination, despite barriers like the language.
Still, the numbers from southern Europe remain fairly small in total terms compared to those from the east.
A total of 34 109 people came from Greece and 29 910 from Spain in 2012.
That compared to 176 367 from Poland and 116 154 from Romania.


Thursday, February 28, 2013

NEWS,27. AND 28.02.2013



News of the Day From Across the Globe


1 Premier ousted: Slovenia's Parliament ousted Prime Minister Janez Jansa and his conservative government Wednesday, designating a financial expert from the opposition to try to form a new administration. The moves come amid corruption allegations against Jansa and growing public anger over the struggling economy and austerity measures that have seen living standards fall and unemployment rise. The 55-33 no-confidence vote named Alenka Bratusek as prime minister-designate. Bratusek, 42, would be the first woman to lead Slovenia's government since its secession from Yugoslavia in 1991.

2 Iraq warning: Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki warned Wednesday that a victory for rebels in the Syrian civil war would create a new extremist haven and destabilize the wider Middle East, sparking sectarian wars in his own country and in Lebanon. The prime minister's remarks reflect fears by many Shiite Muslims in Iraq and elsewhere that Sunni Muslims would come to dominate Syria should President Bashar Assad be toppled. 

3 Corruption case: Vassilis Papageorgopoulos, the former mayor of Greece's second city, Thessaloniki, and two of his top aides were sentenced to life in jail Wednesday after being found guilty of embezzling almost $23.5 million in state funds. It's a rare conviction in a country where political corruption has contributed to Greece's dysfunction and economic decline.

4 Swiss shooting: A longtime employee opened fire at a wood-processing company in central Switzerland on Wednesday, leaving three people dead, including the assailant, in the country's second multiple-fatality shooting in two months, police said. Seven other people were wounded, six of them seriously, in the shooting at the premises of the company Kronospan, in the small town of Menznau. The incident occurred as the Swiss Parliament prepares to consider tightening some aspects of the country's famously lax gun legislation.

5 Shark attack: About 150 friends and family of 46-year-old Adam Strange wrote messages to him in the sand and stepped into the water Thursday at a New Zealand beach to say goodbye after he was killed Wednesday by a large shark. Strange, an award-winning television and short film director, was swimming near popular Muriwai Beach Wednesday when he was attacked by a shark that may have been 14 feet long. The fatal attack is one of only about a dozen in New Zealand in the past 180 years.

6 Lethal fire: A fire broke out at an illegal six-story plastics market in the Indian city of Kolkata on Wednesday, killing at least 19 people, police said. The blaze was likely caused by a short circuit, police said.

7 Lion gangster: Authorities have removed four lions and two bears from the Bucharest estate of a notorious Romanian gangster. Ian Balint, who reportedly used the animals to threaten his victims, was arrested Feb. 22 with dozens of others on charges of attempted murder, kidnapping, blackmail and possessing illegal weapons. Environmental authorities tranquilized the animals Wednesday and transported them to a zoo.

8 Tallest hotel: The JW Marriott's Marquis Dubai formally opened this week after gaining the title of tallest hotel from Guinness World Records. At 1,099 feet, the 72-story hotel towers over the skylines of most cities.

 

US economy shows strength

 

Even with automatic spending cuts looming, the outlook for the US economy brightened a bit Tuesday after reports showed that Americans are more confident and are buying more new homes.Home prices are also rising steadily, and banks are lending more. Such improvements suggest that the economy is resilient enough to withstand the deep government cuts that will kick in Friday.That's especially encouraging because uncertainty over the federal budget could persist for months."The stars are lining up for stronger private sector growth this year," said Craig Alexander, chief economist at TD Bank.Sales of new homes jumped nearly 16% in January to their highest level in 4 years, adding momentum to the housing recovery. Consumer confidence rose in February after three months of declines. And home prices increased in December from the same month in 2011 by the largest amount in more than six years.The upbeat economic news contributed to a rally on Wall Street. The Dow Jones industrial average jumped more than 100 points.Consumers still face numerous burdens. Among them is a sharp increase in gas prices. The national average for a gallon, $3.78 ($1 a litre), has surged 44 cents in a month.And Social Security taxes rose 2 percentage points beginning January 1. This year, the increase will cost a typical household that earns $50 000 about $1 000. Income taxes for the highest-earning Americans also rose.Both factors could reduce overall spending.On Friday, about $85 billion in automatic spending cuts are to kick in, and there's little sign that the White House and Congress will reach a budget deal to avoid them. The cuts will cause furloughs and temporary layoffs of government workers and contractors and sharply reduce spending on defense and domestic programs.For about 2 million long-term unemployed, benefits now averaging $300 a week could shrink by about $30. Payments that subsidize clean energy, school construction and state and local public works projects could be cut. Low-income Americans seeking heating or housing aid might face longer waits.Overall, the tax increases and spending cuts could shave up to 1.2 percentage points from growth this year, economists estimate. Alexander estimates that without the spending cuts or tax increases, the economy would expand more than 3 percent this year. Instead, he predicts growth of only 2%.But growth should accelerate later this year as the effects of the government cutbacks ease, he and other economists say. And several reports on Tuesday suggest that the economy's underlying health is improving despite the prospect of lower government spending and further budget stalemates:
  • The Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller 20-city home price index rose 6.8% in December from a year earlier. That was the biggest year-over-year increase since July 2006. Rising home prices tend to make homeowners feel wealthier and encourage more spending. They also cause more people to buy before prices rise further. And banks are more likely to provide mortgages if they foresee higher home prices.
  • Consumer confidence rose after three months of declines, according to the Conference Board, a business research group. Confidence had plunged in January after higher taxes cut most Americans' take-home pay. The rebound, though, suggests that some consumers have begun to adjust to smaller paychecks. The consumer confidence index rose to 69.6 in February from 58.4 in January. That's higher than last year's average of 67.1.
  • Bank lending rose 1.7% in the October-December quarter, the Federal Deposit Insurance said. It was the sixth rise in seven quarters. Banks made more commercial and industrial loans to businesses and auto loans to consumers. More lending means the Federal Reserve's policy of keeping interest rates at record lows will benefit more people. Chairman Ben Bernanke reiterated to Congress on Tuesday that the Fed's efforts are helping the economy and signaled that they will continue.
  • Sales of new homes rose to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 437 000, the Commerce Department said. That's the highest level since July 2008. The gain will likely encourage more construction. Higher sales are keeping the supply of new homes low, even as builders have tried to keep up. At the current sales pace, it would take only 4.1 months to exhaust the supply of new homes for sale. That's the lowest such figure in nearly eight years.
"Builders are not putting up homes fast enough to meet underlying demand," said Patrick Newport, an economist at IHS Global Insight.New homes have an outsize impact on the economy. Each home built creates an average of three jobs for a year and generates about $90 000 in tax revenue, according to data from the National Association of Homebuilders.Construction hiring has picked up in recent months. The industry has gained 98,000 jobs since September, its best stretch since the spring of 2006 - before the housing bubble burst.

Will Italian Politics Be a Threat for International Financial Stability?


Mr. Grillo and the Five Star movement is part of a trend across the developed world, as electorates become disenchanted with established parties and vote for a protest party. From Occupy Wall Street to the Tea Party to the EU's Pirate Party, an increasing number of transatlantic voters tire of the options presented by established two party systems. This may be driven by the failure of governing parties to adapt to societal tensions raised by the current economic crisis. In that light, the strong protest vote in Italy should not be seen as an outlier.Despite the current uncertainty in the composition of the next government, Italy remains an important ally for the United States, and a key strategic partner in all future discussions about Europe and transatlantic relations. For this reasons America should follow carefully what happens in Italy. The demand for renewal and change that is the real message of recent elections is something too important to be considered just a local case. Understanding the political process of how Italian governments are formed is therefore key.On February 25th the results of the political elections in Italy stunned all commentators by presenting a country apparently deeply divided and a parliament that seems not to allow any reasonably stable coalition for leading the country.The polls gave a limited majority to the leftwing coalition (29.5% in the lower house) leading on Silvio Berlusconi's rightwing coalition (29.1%). But the surprise was the significant result of the "Five Stars movement" of Mr Beppe Grillo (25.5%) and the relatively low result achieved by current Prime Minister Mario Monti (10.5%).The new electoral law (approved late in 2012, just few months ahead of the elections), allows the left to gain a solid majority in the lower house (with 55% of the legislature, although they led the right-wing coalition by only 0.4% of the vote), but in the upper house, there is an apparent stalemate, as the left elected 123 senators, the right 117, Five Stars 54 and Monti 18. A coalition government must include two of the first three parties mentioned, as a government requires a majority in both houses.The problem is that, at the moment, there is not much appetite for an agreement. The left-wing coalition does not seem interested in a deal with Berlusconi and the Five Stars leader, Mr Beppe Grillo, suggested that he would not make any deal with anyone at all. It now appears that Mr Bersani would like to open a bridge to Mr Grillo rather than trying a grand coalition with Mr Berlusconi. It is unclear if he will succeed, but in any case it will be hard to imagine that Italy will have a strong government in this situation.As the new parliament assumes office on March 15th, there is time for negotiations and compromise. But in the meantime, talks need to be held also in order to designate the new leadership of the lower house and Senate and its constituent committees and to elect the new president of the Republic, as the incumbent's mandate is expiring in May.Who will govern Italy in the meantime? Currently, there is still a caretaker government in office, which is the existing cabinet of Prime Minister Monti. It is nevertheless expected that after the new parliament is fully operational, the president of the republic, Mr Giorgio Napolitano, will try to facilitate the forming of a government and is likely to give a mandate to a designate Prime Minister. As Bersani's leftwing coalition has the majority in the lower house, unless the coalition otherwise indicates, Bersani remains the likely next Prime Minister. But with no agreements for a majority, he will be rather unlikely to succeed.The Italian system is a parliamentary democracy, and the new government, that formally takes office at the moment the ministers are sworn in, needs to win a vote of confidence from both houses of the parliament immediately after taking office. In the past, the tradition has been that, if the designated Prime Minister, after having made his consultations, realizes that there is no support for his government, he will indicate so to the President and resign his post. That meant that the previous government remained as caretaker until a new Prime Minister was selected and then formed the government, or, if no solution was available, the president of the republic called for new elections and dissolved the government.Currently, Monti stays in office as Prime Minister until an alternative is selected, and the need for stability would suggest that until a solution is found the best is for him to stay. However, things are so uncertain, no one can predict when or if a new government would be formed.

Wall Street gains despite IMF warning


Wall Street advanced, with gains tempered by expectations that Congress will not act to stop automatic federal spending cuts that are widely expected to put the brakes on the pace of expansion in the world's largest economy.The International Monetary Fund warned it will downgrade its economic forecast for the US if US$85 billion of schedule federal spending cuts take effect on March 1.If all cuts go ahead, the IMF would lower its current estimate for a 2% expansion for US gross domestic product this year by at least 0.5%, IMF spokesman William Murray told reporters at a news briefing. Global growth also would be hit.In afternoon trading in New York, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.14%, the Standard & Poor's 500 Index gained 0.18%, while the Nasdaq Composite Index climbed 0.37%.Expectations of a slowdown in the pace of growth buoyed US Treasuries.Commerce Department data released today showed GDP expanded at an annual rate of 0.1% in the final three months of 2012, compared with a previously estimated 0.1% contraction. That was below the 0.5% growth forecast by economists polled by Reuters."It's pretty well baked into the cake that no action is likely to be taken on the sequestration tomorrow," Thomas Simons, a government debt economist in New York at Jefferies Group, one of 21 primary dealers that trade with the Fed, told Bloomberg. "GDP was weaker than expected. It's nice to see the negative sign go away, but it's still pretty weak."The negative sentiment was offset by the latest news on the labour market. Applications for jobless benefits surprisingly dropped 22,000 last week to 344,000. Economists polled by Reuters had expected first-time applications to fall to 360,000.Shares of JC Penney sank, last down 14%, after the company reported a net loss of US$552 million in the quarter ended February 2, compared with US$87 million a year earlier.In Europe, the Stoxx 600 Index finished the day with a 1% gain from the previous close. The index has advanced for the ninth straight month and is up 3.7% so far this year, according to Bloomberg.Good news on Europe's largest economy helped as German unemployment posted a surprise drop February.Benchmark stock indexes rose in Frankfurt and Paris, both advancing 0.6%, while the UK's FTSE 100 added 0.6%.The political impasse in Italy remains a concern for all of Europe. In Berlin, Italian President Giorgio Napolitano said the formation of a new government would take time and that it's important to keep in mind that the Monti government remains in office for now.