Showing posts with label switzerland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label switzerland. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

NEWS,27.,28.,29. AND 30.08.2013



UK banks allowed to cut cash holdings


Britain's eight top lenders can cut their cash reserves by a collective £90bn ($140bn) 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% 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% of where they should be if in full compliance with the global Basel III accord, not due until 2018.
This would release £70bn but, by extending the change to the eight main lenders, a further £20bn can potentially be released.
The British Bankers' Association said banks would be re-assessing how much of the £90bn 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% 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% of the buffers could in future be in corporate bonds, shares and retail mortgage-backed securities, giving them greater flexibility.

Corporate suicides highlight stresses


The suicides of two top executives in Switzerland has prompted calls for greater support for boardroom high-fliers.
Heavy workloads, frenetic schedules and extensive overseas travel has obliterated the so-called "work-life balance" for many bosses and the financial crisis has piled on the pressure with job cuts, fire sales and the scramble to survive.
"It has always been tough at the top and it has always been lonely at the top and certainly since the global financial crisis, it's got even lonelier and even tougher," said executive mentor David CM Carter, author of self-help book Breakthrough.
"That's why it's really important that those people at the top pay attention to the need for balance," he said, pointing to entrepreneurs such as Richard Branson and Bill Gates, who have teamed glittering careers with a successful family life.
"They do hot air ballooning, they save the planet as well as running their fantastic empires. They have holidays and hobbies or they focus on their family and their relationships and on their health."
But career chief executives often face more pressure from shareholders and their boards than company founders such as Branson and Gates.
And while they usually have a coterie of staff running around them, chief executive officers often feel isolated by their position and the high-stakes decisions they have to take. The need always to present a "game face" can inhibit them from confiding in colleagues.
Zurich Insurance Group's chief financial officer Pierre Wauthier was found dead at his home on Monday in what police said appeared to be a suicide.
Just weeks earlier, Carsten Schloter, the chief executive of telecoms group Swisscom, killed himself.
The deaths shocked Switzerland's corporate community and have highlighted the sometimes lonely existence of high-ranking executives.
In media interviews, Schloter expressed regret about the distance between him and his three children in Germany, whom he saw far less frequently due to the breakdown of his marriage. He also said he found it "difficult to unwind".
Executives often spend large amounts of time away from their friends and family and it is not uncommon for bosses to live in a different city or even country for work and commute home at weekends.
Schloter had also faced pressure after an acquisition he championed led to €1.3bn euros of writedowns. More recently, Switzerland's competition body said it had opened a probe into Swisscom after a rival suggested it abused its market position.
Burn out
Corporate over-achievers are often reluctant to seek help in managing their professional burdens until too late, according to Jenny Gould, executive coach and life coach with Oxford-based stress management and coaching company STP Consultancy.
"Stress is something that's very insidious - you can deal with it for quite a long time before you then begin to find yourself burning out from it," she said.
In 2011, Lloyd's Banking Group Chief Executive Antonio Horta-Osorio took a temporary leave of absence to recover from overwork, sleep deprivation and exhaustion.
Horta-Osario was just eight months into his role at the bailed out lender, where he had embarked on a large scale restructuring programme. He returned after two months off.
"Stress is often caused by a lack of control and a lack of support. If you feel like you can't control certain outcomes and don't have anybody to discuss your worries and feelings with... that's potentially a toxic mix," Gould said.
In the past year, the chief executive of energy giant Shell has quit and the chairman of luxury goods group Richemont has taken a year-long sabbatical despite facing no obvious pressure to leave.
They cited a desire for a change of lifestyle or simply a break from the life at the top.
But companies need to watch for signs that all staff, junior and senior, are coping with their increasingly demanding roles.
Bank of America Merrill Lynch said last week it would review the working conditions for junior employees after a 21-year old intern, Moritz Erhardt, died after allegedly working 72 hours without sleep.
The cause of his death is not yet known.
Neil Shah, director at Stress Management Society, a non-profit organisation dedicated to helping people tackle stress, said firms who turn a blind eye to the pressures on overworked executives are exposing themselves to commercial risk.
"We need to view stress as a health and safety risk hazard," Shah said. "In the UK, we are legally required to risk assess for display screen equipment but you're not at this stage legally required to assess for stress.
"This is a major issue not just causing, in the worst case scenario, loss of life, but it has an impact on productivity, efficiency and causes absences. Those are real financial costs."

UK patients pay too much - watchdog


Private healthcare patients in Britain are paying too much because of a lack of competition, the country's market regulator said in a ruling that could lead it to force some operators to sell hospitals.
The Competition Commission (CC) said on Wednesday it had identified 101 private hospitals that faced little local competition, some of them in clusters owned by one of the major hospital groups BMI Healthcare, Spire and HCA International.
It could force operators to sell some hospitals in areas where they dominated, it said, adding that it had pinpointed about 20 such sites.
Asked about the discrepancy between the two figures, a commission spokesman said many areas had local monopolies or duopolies, so forcing sales would make no difference.
The state-run National Health Service (NHS) is by far the leading provider of treatment in Britain, where the market for privately funded healthcare was worth £6.4bn ($10bn) in 2011, according to consultants Laing and Buisson.
The major private hospital groups denied the assertion that they made excessive profits from their dominance of the market, But Bupa, one of the insurers which fund most private treatments through employee-medical insurance schemes, welcomed the report.
Mark Jackson, special adviser at advisory and restructuring practice Zolfo Cooper, said forced hospital sales would create uncertainty for lenders and investors in the sector which was already under pressure from a decline in the take-up of private medical insurance and an increase in lower-margin NHS work.
The CC said that the major health insurance groups, Bupa and AXA PPP, did not have the power to fully offset the dominance of the big private hospital groups.
Presenting the provisional findings of an investigation into the sector, it said this dominance raised insurance costs for all private patients because premiums, often paid by employers, are set nationally.
"The lack of competition in the healthcare market at a local level means that most private patients are paying more than they should either for private medical insurance or for self-funded treatment," said Competition Commission chairman Roger Witcomb.
"The lack of available and comparable information, often less than is available to NHS patients, also makes informed choices - which could help drive competition - for these patients difficult."
HCA charges highest
BMI, partly owned by South Africa's Netcare and private equity group Apax Partners, is the biggest private operator, with 69 hospitals, while Spire, owned by private equity group Cinven, owns 38.
HCA International, owned by US group HCA Holdings , charged significantly higher prices than other operators, the CC said, even allowing for higher costs of running its six London-based hospitals.
The three operators also faced little competition from new entrants in the market because of the high costs of setting up a hospital and flat demand for private healthcare services in recent years, it said.
The top five healthcare providers, which also include Ramsay Health Care UK and Nuffield Health, accounted for about 77 percent of the market by revenue in 2010, according to a 2011 report by the Office of Fair Trading. Smaller providers include Abbey, Aspen Healthcare, The London Clinic and The Horder Centre.
BMI said it disagreed with many of the findings of the investigation, and said it did not "hold the whip hand" in its relationship with insurers.
"We reject absolutely any assertion that BMI Healthcare and its hospitals exercise market power or that we make excess profits at the expense of patients," Chief Executive Stephen Collier said in a statement.
"The vast majority of BMI's 69 facilities, in a UK market with over 500 rival facilities, face very significant local competition from other private hospitals and, increasingly, from the NHS."
HCA International said it was disappointed in some of the findings. "London has witnessed a strong record of new entry and expansion of private health providers in recent years, demonstrating that barriers to entry are low," it said.
Spire disagreed with the CC's view that its hospitals faced little competition, made excess profits and had a disproportionate bargaining power over insurers.
"We believe these findings, and the remedies proposed, are based on an unrealistic assessment of the markets in which we operate and the level of investment necessary to operate a high-quality hospital," Chief Executive Rob Roger said in a statement.
But insurer Bupa said the findings were good news for patients.
"By tackling the lack of competition that has damaged the sector for too long, the Commission has understood the need for strong action and has put patients first," said Damien Marmion, managing director of Bupa Health Funding.
The Competition Commission's consultation is open until next month and a final report will be published by April 2014.

Luxury housing to be built on painter's grave


The burial place outside Moscow of the great Russian artist Kazimir Malevich, famed for his avant-garde works of the early Soviet era, has been paved over to make way for a luxury gated community, activists said on Wednesday.
A new construction project in the village of Nemchinovka near Moscow was allowed to cover the grave of the painter of the iconic "Black Square" composition, despite tireless petitions, local activist Alexander Matveyev told AFP.
Matveyev heads the group "Nemchinovka and Malevich" which researches the artist's life in the village and he said had provided authorities with the precise coordinates of the location of the grave.
Several well-known Russian cultural figures flocked to Nemchinovka in the 1920s, including Malevich and visionary Soviet filmmaker Sergei Eisenstein.
Malevich, an artist, sculptor and writer, who died in 1935 in what is now Saint Petersburg, was cremated and buried in Nemchinovka as per his wishes. The exact location of the grave was lost during World War II.
By the late 1980s, the area was an agricultural field so a plaque was erected on the edge of the field, about two kilometres away from the spot.
Two more decades passed before Matveyev and other activists in Nemchinovka were able to pinpoint the exact coordinates through surviving witnesses, radar equipment and military maps.
They even joined forces with German banker and Nemchinovka resident Jochen Wermuth in 2011 to build a memorial and museum centre in the area, only to see the area closed off by the construction company.
"The culture ministry ordered to stop construction works, but they only stopped for a few hours," Matveyev said.
"Now the spot has been covered with concrete."
He said that the exact location of the grave has now been paved over and is surrounded by housing which will form a gated community.
Moscow region culture official Oleg Rozhnov told RIA-Novosti news agency this week that by the time the grave was precisely located, it was too late to change the project, since "it was already inside the gated territory".
But Matveyev dismissed this as misinformation.
Once a bucolic country setting lying just west of the capital, Nemchinovka and the surrounding scenery that inspired Malevich is now covered with gated communities and housing complexes populated by affluent Moscow commuters.
The website of the complex, called Romashkovo City, boasts a "fenced territory and 24-hour video surveillance monitored by our own security team". Residents access the premises via electronic keys and will have their own private school and kindergarten.
Matveyev has now written to President Vladimir Putin asking to move the grave beyond the premises to a plot of land that is still available, with the dream of some day building a centre of avant-garde art.
"We need land to build the memorial," he said. "I think Malevich would approve."
He added that not all was lost since the precise spot has no housing built on top of it, just paving.
By the time of his death at 57 in 1935, Malevich had become a persona non-grata in the Soviet art establishment which had returned to conservatism after the bold experiments of the early 1920s. He had asked to be laid in a "Suprematist" coffin shaped like a cross.
A Moscow crematorium burned his body, and his ashes were buried under his favourite oak tree in Nemchinovka, marked with a black square.
In his will he asked that a monument on top of his grave contain a telescope pointed at Jupiter.

Costs threaten Merkel's energy overhaul


Angela Merkel's "green revolution" risks becoming a victim of its own success.
Seduced by generous subsidies, Germans are embracing the ambitious project with such fervour - installing solar panels on church roofs and converting sewage into heat - that instead of benefiting from a rise in green energy, they are straining under the subsidies' cost and from surcharges.
Merkel's ambitious experiment to wean Europe's biggest economy off nuclear and fossil fuels is being closely watched around the world. Should it work, others will follow. But her priority if, as expected, she wins a third term on September 22 will be finding a way to cap the rising cost of energy.
"Germany's dilemma is how to keep industry's energy prices low enough to remain competitive and meet ambitious (green) targets while also maintaining a balanced budget," said Will Pearson, head of global energy at the Eurasia Group in London. "Addressing these will pose a political challenge."
So attractive are the incentives, or feed-in tariffs, that the rapid expansion of renewable power has driven up the surcharges which fund them and are paid for by consumers. The charge rose by 47% this year alone.
Both households and industry are feeling the pain and exporters complain that the energy shift has driven up power prices so much that their competitiveness is being eroded.
Cost worries aside, polls show broad public support for the shift, announced by Merkel after Japan's Fukushima disaster in 2011. Responding to public fears, she accelerated Germany's nuclear exit and introduced targets for renewables to make up 35 percent of the power mix by 2020 and 80 percent by 2050.
Given that consensus, the struggling opposition finds it difficult in the election campaign to present energy policies that differ significantly from those of Merkel's conservatives.
No one advocates a dismantling of the project.
"The energy transformation is a bit like putting man on the moon - it offers Germany huge opportunities for future decades. I have nothing against the idea," said Peer Steinbrueck, the Social Democrat (SPD) candidate for chancellor. "But Mrs Merkel is messing up the implementation and we will change that."
The SPD, which introduced the first incentives for green energy more than a decade ago when it ruled with the Greens, wants to help consumers by cutting energy taxes.
Grass roots
While politicians squabble over how to keep a lid on costs - put at €1 trillion in the long run by the environment minister - voters are taking matters into their own hands.
Take projects like GruenEnergie, a scheme launched two years ago by city utility Stadtwerke Guetersloh in western Germany under which the local cooperative bank and turbine maker Enercon each match citizens' investments in a nearby wind park.
After just three weeks, it had raised enough, mainly from locals offering between 1,000 and 25 000 euros, to fund a park which produces power for 2 400 households a year. The project has expanded to buy a solar park in eastern Germany.
Investors get dividends from the project linked to the guaranteed prices paid for the power generated by the turbines
"Customers are motivated by an investment in green energy which is considered trendy," said the utility's head of energy services, Uwe Poeppelmann.
Such grass-roots activism is, say experts, one of the most striking results of Merkel's energy shift.
Some 1.3 million solar photovoltaic units are on stream, mostly owned by single households, and about 23,000 wind plants have been bought, mainly by groups of farmers who club together.
However successful she has been at fostering a new culture, Merkel would face tough decisions in a third term: namely how to reform a subsidy system which is a victim of its own success.
Households take a direct hit on their electricity bills and do not expect this year's jump in the surcharge to be the end of it - creating a source of anxiety for voters.
"Surveys show people are concerned that the costs of the energy transformation will drive down living standards," said Emnid pollster Klaus-Peter Schoeppner.
Industry
Export-oriented German industry, already disappointed that shale gas is being shunned due to environmental fears, is angry about high energy costs, although exemptions help many firms in the cement, steel, paper and glass sectors.
Although wholesale power prices have plunged by about a fifth this year due to renewable supplies, end users have to pay the second highest prices in Europe thanks to fees and charges.
"Energy-intensive industry, which employs over 900,000 people, will have to leave Germany in the medium term if it does not get sustainably competitive energy prices," said the head of the BDI industry association last month.
Utilities like E.ON and RWE, hit by plunging prices for wholesale power which they sell, are also piling on pressure to reduce green incentives. Some have threatened to shut thousands of megawatts worth of plants unless there is a big rethink.
Merkel, who has promised to change but not abolish the incentive system right after the election, faces a delicate balancing act to ensure renewables continue to grow and keep consumers happy. Much will depend on her coalition partner.
If she renews her alliance with the business-friendly Free Democrats, who want a radical overhaul of the Renewable Energy Law, deep cuts to feed-in-tarifs may come. But if she switches to a "grand coalition" with the SPD, her scope may be smaller.
Whether her next coalition is centre right again or centre left, Merkel is set to scale back exemptions from the renewable surcharge and grid fees, as the European Union has urged.
She also needs to boost offshore wind, which was meant to be part of the energy switch but has proved costly, and the power grid needs to be expanded by up to 4 600 km and overhauled to cope with bursts of supply from renewables. But some local communities fiercely resist more power masts.

Australian opposition outlines budget savings


Australia's conservative opposition, heavily favoured in next month's election, outlined A$31bn ($27.8bn) in savings on Wednesday and promised to breathe new life into the economy by abolishing environment taxes polarising voters.
But Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said the opposition planned big cuts to key services and predicted voters would return to his Labor Party in the final week of campaigning. Most polls give the opposition under Tony Abbott a 53 to 47% lead, enough to give them a sizeable majority in parliament.
Opposition finance spokesman Joe Hockey, who would become treasurer of the world's 12th biggest economy if the polls prove true, said the conservatives were determined to better Labor's spending record, seen as one of Rudd's biggest electoral weaknesses.
"After six years of Labor getting every single budget number wrong, enough is enough," Hockey told reporters. "The coalition is absolutely committed to living within its means."
Labor, he said, had presided over a "dysfunctional" budget after ousting the conservatives in 2007.
The opposition has long made the abolition of a "carbon" tax on pollution and a tax on mining company profits the cornerstone of its bid to drive Labor from office, blaming the carbon tax for pushing up the price of electricity and other services.
Voters concerns over budget cuts, jobs
But budget cuts and their impact on jobs amid a slowdown remain a major concern among many of the 14 million voters. An Australian National University survey found jobs and management of the A$1.5 trillion economy to be the most important issue.
Rudd told a campaign event that Abbott planned in secret to "cut, cut and cut" health and education programmes, austerity measures that could hurt confidence and propel the country into its first recession for a generation.
"He is the master of the big cuts," the prime minister said.
He predicted Labor would make a big comeback despite the polls, as it did in the 1993 election.
"Mr Abbott thinks he's a shoo-in," Rudd said. "I think the Australian people don't like political leaders who arrogantly assume that they have their vote already in the bag."
Hockey, a former financial markets lawyer, went out of his way to say there would no cuts in social spending.
The conservatives, he said, would deliver a centrepiece promise of a A$9.8bn paid parental leave scheme, paid for in part through abolition of business compensation associated with the carbon and mining taxes to be eliminated. A further A$5.2bn would be saved by axing 12 000 government jobs.
As well, the opposition would keep savings adopted by Rudd in a pre-election budget statement that lowered growth forecasts to 2.5% from 2.75% this fiscal year, and forecast the jobless rate rising to 6.25%.
The one exception would be Labor's cuts to tax breaks for the automotive sector, still struggling to adjust to the Australian dollar's high levels in recent years and local costs which prompted a pullout this year by Ford, he said.
In response to the weakening economy, the Reserve Bank of Australia has cut its benchmark interest rate to a record low of 2.5%, while a A$33bn drop in tax revenue saw a forecast budget deficit this fiscal year of $A30.1bn, returning to a A$4.0bn surplus by 2016-17.
Global demand for iron ore, coal and other natural resources supported the economy for most of the past decade, but falling commodity prices and slowing growth in China, the country's top export market, have rattled confidence.
Hockey said the conservatives would more quickly wind back net government debt, now expected to peak at 13% of GDP by 2014-15, or A$212bn, up from the May forecast of A$191.6bn, or 11.4% of GDP in 2014-15.
"This is the most important election in a generation," he said.

Libya seeks end to crippling oil strikes


Libya is seeking a peaceful way to end oil strikes that have crippled its crude exports but will take alternative action if needed, Prime Minister Ali Zeidan said on Wednesday.
"We will take other measures if these peaceful measures do not succeed," he told a news conference, without elaborating.
Libya's oil production has fallen to about a fifth of the highs reached since its 2011 civil war due to a month-long disruption by armed security guards who shut the country's main export ports.
Zeidan said he had talked to tribal leaders in the east, the focus of oil sector disruption, and they rejected calls for partition of the country.
"They respect the legality and unity of the nation," he said.
Oil Minister Abdelbari al-Arusi on Tuesday blamed mainly non-oil workers and agitators pushing for federalism in Libya for the strikes, which he said had cost the country $2bn in lost revenues so far.
"These groups announced federalism and they don't recognise the government nor the general national council," the minister said.
The oil ports of Es Sider, Ras Lanuf, Zueitina and Marsa al Hariga, which are in the east where most of the country's oil production lies, remained closed.
Zeidan said he hoped there would be a breakthrough soon in talks to resolve the crisis but gave no indication of when oil output might be restored.
Libya's oil production has been cut to 250 000 barrels per day, he said, from prewar levels of 1.6 million bpd.
The latest fall in Libyan output was caused by an armed group that shut a pipeline linking the El Feel and El Sahara fields to ports late on Monday. The two fields have a combined output capacity of around 500 000 bpd.
Zeidan said the eastern Hamada field was also closed. The field had been pumping 10 000 bpd.

Swiss govt ready to sign tax deal


Switzerland said it is ready to end a long-running dispute with US prosecutors over Swiss banks that have sheltered tax evaders, without disclosing any terms of the deal.
The two governments have been at loggerheads over a tax evasion crackdown which has ensnared around a dozen Swiss banks, is threatening a raft of others, and earlier this year felled Wegelin, Switzerland's oldest bank, following an indictment.
The Swiss government said on Wednesday the signing of the joint statement with the US should enable Swiss banks to resolve the dispute with the United States while complying with existing Swiss laws. It gave no further details, and the finance ministry was absent at a weekly government press conference.
A Swiss newspaper reported the host of banks not yet under formal investigation in the US could face fines of as much as 50% of their American client assets. Government spokesperson Andre Simonazzi said the terms and conditions of the programme would not be immediately released, but would be communicated "as soon as possible".
While Switzerland's banking lobby and a banking employees association welcomed the move, a spokeswoman for the US justice department didn't immediately comment on the Swiss statement.
The agreement deals mainly with a settlement for the roughly 100 Swiss banks that had US clients, but are not yet being investigated by US justice authorities.
"The SBA welcomes the positive outcome of the Federal Council's decision, as this means that the final step towards a solution has been taken and the US can now launch the programme," the SBA said in a statement.
Around a dozen banks are under US investigation, including Credit Suisse, Julius Baer, the Swiss arm of Britain's HSBC, privately held Pictet and state-backed regional banks Zuercher Kantonalbank and Basler Kantonalbank .
Several of those banks have said they are preparing information of client withdrawals demanded by US investigators, after the Swiss government said it would allow them to circumvent secrecy and privacy laws to do so.
Last week, a Swiss government source told Reuters the US government had ratcheted up the pressure on Switzerland to strike a deal after the Swiss parliament rejected an accord in June, tightening its negotiating terms after the rebuff.

US pending home sales drop in July


US pending home sales dropped for the second month in a row in July as rising mortgage interest rates hit demand, an industry group said Wednesday.
The National Association of Realtors' index for pending sales of previously owned homes, based on contract signings, fell 1.3% to 109.5 in July.
The index was 110.9 in June, after an unexpectedly strong jump to 112.3 in May, its highest level since December 2006.
The second straight monthly decline surprised analysts, who on average had predicted the index would rise 0.2% in July.
Although the housing market is still rising - pending sales were up 6.7% from July 2012 - higher mortgage rates are slowing the market, NAR said.
Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, downplayed the July figure, saying "the modest decline in sales is not yet concerning."
"However, higher mortgage interest rates and rising home prices are impacting monthly contract activity in the high-cost regions of the Northeast and the West," he said.
The NAR data points to existing-home sales dipping in both August and September, said Ian Shepherdson of Pantheon Macroeconomics.
"Mortgage applications and mortgage lending are now trending downwards in the wake of the surge in mortgage rates over the past three months, and housing transactions will follow," he said.
"We are inclined to see the May surge as a signal that people were rushing to lock-in before rates rose further, rather than an indication of a further sustained pick-up in sales."

G4S boss seeks over $900m for turnaround


G4S, the world's largest security services firm, plans to raise about £600m 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 09:05 GMT, G4S shares were up 3.7% 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% from 5.9% 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 £1.95bn 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% of its existing share capital with new and existing investors via an accelerated bookbuild.
That equates to around £350m 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 £250m 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 £100m. The sale of its US business was ongoing, it added.
G4S said it had taken a one-off charge of £180m 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 £30-35m over 2013 and 2014
Almanza declined to give an operating margin target.
First-half operating profit came in at £201m, little changed from a restated £202m a year earlier, with turnover up 7.2% to £3.65bn.
The firm also named Misys's Himanshu Raja as its new chief financial officer on Tuesday.


Friday, June 21, 2013

NEWS,21.06.2013



EU to scale back tobacco curbs


European Union health ministers agreed on Friday to ease tough planned restrictions on tobacco products to overcome opposition from some governments to the draft rules.
The ministers rejected a ban on slim cigarettes proposed by the bloc's executive, the European Commission, but said they should be sold in normal-sized packets to reduce their appeal. They also agreed to outlaw menthol cigarettes and other tobacco flavourings.
The bloc's health commissioner said that, despite the need for compromise in order to reach an agreement, the spirit of the Commission's original proposals has been retained.
"The main thrust is that tobacco should look like tobacco not like perfume or candy and that it should taste like tobacco as well," the Maltese commissioner Tonio Borg told a news conference in Luxembourg after the ministerial talks.
Cigarette sales in the 27-nation EU bloc have fallen sharply in recent years but at about 33%  Europe still has a higher proportion of smokers than any other region of the globe, according to data from the World Health Organization.
The Commission proposed a crackdown on attractive tobacco branding in December, saying such branding was designed to recruit a new generation of younger smokers to replace the estimated 700 000 Europeans who die of smoking-related illnesses each year.
The discussions pitted western European nations that favour tough tobacco controls against a group of central and eastern member states led by Poland one of Europe's top cigarette producers who fear the impact on tobacco industry jobs.
The Commission's proposal that graphic visual and written warnings should cover 75% of the surface of all cigarette packets in future leaving just 25% or less for the brand - was weakened to 65% by ministers on Friday.
Poland, Bulgaria, Romania and the Czech Republic did not support the compromise, but their opposition is not enough to prevent the law from being adopted.
Irish Health Minister James Reilly, who led Friday's talks, dismissed economic arguments against tougher tobacco controls.
"It can never be never a choice between jobs and lives," he told reporters.
Holding up a slim metallic cigarette packet designed to look like a lipstick, Reilly said: "That is advertising. That is entrapment of young people."
In 2010, the world's four leading tobacco companies British American Tobacco, Imperial Tobacco, Japan Tobacco, and Philip Morris produced more than 90 percent of the cigarettes sold in Europe, the Commission said.
Plain packaging
Last month, Ireland became the first European country to agree a ban on all branding on cigarette packs in favour of plain packaging and uniform labelling, following the example of Australia.
While the EU proposals stop short of a full ban on branding, ministers agreed that countries such as Ireland should be free to impose plain packaging if they choose.
The proposals must also get the approval of the European Parliament before becoming law, and the lawmaker leading the debate in the assembly has called for a total ban on branding.
Friday's agreement means the rules could be finalised before the start of European Parliament elections next May, allowing them to enter force in 2016.
The draft rules have been in development for more than two years and were the focus of intense lobbying by the tobacco industry.
They played a part in the October resignation of former EU Health Commissioner John Dalli, after one of his associates was accused of seeking bribes from Swedish Match, a producer of moist oral-snuff known as "snus", in return for lifting a sales ban on the product outside Sweden.
Under the agreement, the sale of snus would remain illegal across the EU except in Sweden. But a proposal that would have forced snus producers to reformulate their products to remove distinctive flavourings was dropped.
As concerns grow over the unregulated use of increasingly popular electronic cigarettes, ministers tightened proposed controls by agreeing that those containing 1 milligram (mg) of nicotine or more would be classified as medicinal products requiring prior EU marketing approval.
That also applied to e-cigarettes containing 2 mg or more per millilitre for those that mix nicotine with water.

Switzerland delays settling US tax dispute


The Swiss government will consider ways to allow its banks to hand over information to US authorities either next Wednesday or a week later, a spokesperson said on Friday, later than previously indicated.
The government is under pressure to find a way to save its banks from criminal charges for helping wealthy Americans evade tax after parliament blocked a bill on Wednesday that would have allowed the banks to sidestep strict secrecy laws.
Finance Minister Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf had said the government could consider issuing an executive order on Friday to allow banks to comply with US demands, but the government spokesperson said her ministry was still working on the plans.
The spokesperson told a regular news conference that the finance ministry now planned to present a solution at the next cabinet meeting on Wednesday or a week later.
US authorities have more than a dozen banks under formal investigation, including Credit Suisse, Julius Baer, the Swiss arm of Britain's HSBC, privately held Pictet in Geneva and local government-backed Zuercher Kantonalbank and Basler Kantonalbank.

 

EU to decide who pays when banks fail


The European Union sought on Friday to forge rules to force losses on large savers when banks fail, a divisive reform that will shape how the eurozone deals with its sickly lenders.
Finance ministers in Luxembourg are trying to resolve one of the most difficult questions posed by Europe's banking crisis - how to shut failed banks without sowing panic or burdening taxpayers.
"We are in for a very tough negotiation," Sweden's Finance Minister Anders Borg told reporters as he arrived for the meeting, saying a one-size-fits-all rule for all EU countries was "dangerous".
The European Union spent the equivalent of a third of its economic output on saving its banks between 2008 and 2011, plundering taxpayer cash but struggling to contain the crisis and in the case of Ireland almost bankrupting the country.
But countries are divided over how strict the new rules should be, with some worried that imposing losses on depositors could prompt a bank run while others argue the rules of the game must be made clear from the start.
While there is no immediate deadline for a deal, dithering could undermine confidence in the ability of Europe's politicians to repair the financial system, encourage banks to lend again and help the continent emerge from its economic stagnation.
"Midsummer is the longest day of the year so we have plenty of time," said Olli Rehn, the European Commission's top economics official, referring to the northern hemisphere's June 21 summer solstice.
A 300-page draft EU law that forms the basis of discussions recommends a pecking order in which first bank shareholders would take losses, then bondholders and finally depositors with more than €100 000 ($132 000) in their account.
That would make the harsh treatment of savers that was part of Cyprus's bailout in March a permanent feature of Europe's response to future banking crises. EU countries would be required to follow these rules when closing banks.
The rules to impose losses on savers, whether wealthy individuals or companies, could be made stricter within the euro zone, in particular for banks seeking help from the single currency's rescue fund.
'Nothing is insurmountable'
A central element to ensure the eurozone's long-term survival is a system to supervise, control and support its banks, known as banking union.
Although not part of the same project, common rules in the wider European Union are considered a stepping stone towards the eurozone's banking union.
Agreeing EU-wide norms would address Germany's demand that European rules on closing banks be in place before the 17-nation eurozone's bailout fund can help banks in trouble.
Eurozone finance ministers agreed late on Thursday to set aside €60bn to help banks via the fund, the European Stability Mechanism, but with tough conditions.
If agreed, the new EU rules would take effect at the start of 2015 with the provisions to impose losses coming as late as 2018.
Still, the idea divides countries with big banking sectors who have the most at stake in any financial crisis.
Sweden, Britain and France say countries should have the final word in deciding how to close banks and not be tightly bound by any new EU rules.
But Germany, the Netherlands and Austria want regulations that will be applied in the same way across all 27 countries in the European Union. They fear that granting too much national leeway would undermine the new law.
While Sweden is adamant it must have as much control as possible over how it deals with its banks, France's Finance Minister Pierre Moscovici signalled Paris is open to compromise.
"France wants flexibility but it is willing to agree to some limits," Moscovici said. "Nothing is insurmountable."

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

NEWS,18 AND 19.06.2013



Ranks of the rich swelling - report


The number of millionaires in the world jumped 9.2% to 12 million last year, in part because of simultaneous strength in the stock, bond and real estate markets, according to a study of the high-net-worth population.
The survey, released on Tuesday by RBC Wealth Management and Capgemini Financial Services, tracked high-net-worth people, whom it defined as those with more than $1m that they can invest.
North America was home to the highest number of millionaires - 3.7m. But the study projected that the Asia-Pacific region, which held the top spot in 2011, would reclaim it.
Part of the strength in North America came from rising equities markets - the Standard & Poor's 500 stock index gained 13% in 2012. North American investors put 37% of their money into stocks, a higher proportion than people in the Asia-Pacific region, where investors tend to be more conservative, the study said.
The amount of wealth held by the world's richest people also increased substantially, rising 10% to $46.2 trillion, well above the pre-economic crisis level of $40.7 trillion in 2007.
The study forecast high-net-worth wealth would increase 6.5% annually to $55.8 trillion by 2015, mainly because of growth in the Asia-Pacific region.
The survey found that 53% of wealthy US individuals would prefer to have a single firm handle their financial accounts.
However, a 2011 study from Boston-based research firm Aite Group showed more than half of high-net worth investors held their money in four or more financial institutions.
"Having one super-adviser would be preferred, but finding someone who can do that well is hard," said Aite analyst Sophie Schmitt.
The RBC-Capgemini survey polled more than 4 000 high-net-worth people globally in February and March, including 736 Americans.

Switzerland buries US tax law


Swiss lawmakers dealt a death blow on Wednesday to a draft law which aimed to protect the country's banks from criminal charges in the United States for helping wealthy Americans evade tax.
The Swiss government has warned that the bill's failure could prompt impatient US prosecutors to indict banks, though it could still use an executive order to allow them to hand over data to try to avoid criminal charges.
The bill, which lawmakers from both the centre-left and right opposed for widely differing reasons, was designed to let banks sidestep Swiss secrecy laws by disclosing their US dealings so they could avoid prosecution. With or without the law, they will still seek out of court settlements with US authorities that could cost the industry as much as $10bn.
Parliament's lower house voted 123 to 63 against debating the legislation, effectively killing the law, even though the upper house had confirmed its support earlier in the day.
Switzerland's banking lobby expressed regret about the vote and urged the government to do everything possible to help banks reach settlements under a US Department of Justice programme.
"Switzerland must not take the risk of a further indictment of a bank lightly," the Swiss Bankers Association said in a statement.
Finance Minister Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf said the government would do everything in its power but its options were limited without the bill.
The protection of client information has helped to make Switzerland the world's biggest offshore financial centre, with $2 trillion in assets. But the haven has come under fire as other countries have tried to plug budget deficits by clamping down on tax evasion, with authorities investigating Swiss banks in Germany and France as well as the United States.
Experts were divided over the threat posed to Swiss banks by parliament's decision to oppose the law.
"The Americans will get the data they want. They will not stop until they have it," said Martin Naville, head of the Swiss-American Chamber of Commerce. "It is taxing the patience of our American friends. When their patience is over, there will be indictments, perhaps just one or two, but it will be more than enough to create chaos."
No one was immediately available for comment at the US Department of Justice.
Wegelin precedent
Earlier this year a U.S. indictment felled Switzerland's oldest private bank, Wegelin. It paid a $58m fine and closed its doors for good after pleading guilty to helping wealthy Americans evade taxes through secret accounts.
Shares in Basler Kantonalbank, one of the banks under US investigation seen at immediate risk, closed down 2.5%, compared with broadly positive Swiss stocks.
But Peter V. Kunz, professor for business law at Berne University, was more sanguine.
"I think bankers will be indicted, but I don't really see banks getting indicted... as there may not be enough evidence to accuse them of systematically violating US law," he said.
"Wegelin was indicted and settled but in my view this was a singular case. I don't see it as a model case for Swiss banks."
The government's attempt to fast-track the legislation through parliament to meet a US ultimatum angered many lawmakers in the fiercely independent country.
Right-wing lawmakers opposed the bill on the grounds that it could set a precedent that might prompt other countries to seek concessions from Switzerland. The centre-left also rejected it for different reasons, believing Swiss banks should be forced to face the music for aiding tax evasion.
Lawmakers from both the lower and upper house endorsed a statement saying they supported a solution to the long-running tax dispute despite the defeat, and called on the government to allow banks to cooperate under existing laws.
Protracted negotiations
Switzerland's biggest bank, UBS, was forced to pay a $780m fine in 2009 and deliver the names of more than 4,000 clients to avoid indictment, giving the US authorities information that allowed them to pursue other banks.
Since then, the government has tried to reach a settlement for the whole financial industry, but has been hamstrung by Swiss secrecy laws and bickering among banks over who should pay the heavy fines.
US authorities have more than a dozen banks under formal investigation, including Credit Suisse, Julius Baer, the Swiss arm of Britain's HSBC, privately held Pictet in Geneva and local government-backed Zuercher Kantonalbank and Basler Kantonalbank.

UK backs jail time for reckless bankers


Bankers who are reckless with customers' or taxpayers' money could face criminal charges and have bonuses and pensions clawed back, according to proposals backed by Britain's prime minister on Wednesday.
Many Britons blame bankers' risk-taking for the 2008 financial crisis and subsequent economic slump and were furious when the former boss of RBS left the bank with a pension of almost £17m even after a state rescue.
He later agreed to a cut and was stripped of his knighthood but it was one in a series of banking scandals that increased pressure on Prime Minister David Cameron to get tougher on a sector contributing billions of pounds to the British economy.
The parliamentary commission on banking standards he set up last year after Barclays was fined for manipulating interest rate benchmarks said on Wednesday the law should be changed so that bankers found guilty of "reckless misconduct in the management of a bank" could face jail.
The UK Treasury said the new rules could be in place before the end of 2015 but lawyers said it would be hard to prove when a banker had taken too much risk or simply made a mistake.
Asked in parliament whether he supported the report's recommendations on criminal penalties and pay, Cameron said: "Penalising, including criminal penalties ... bankers who behave irresponsibly, I say yes."
Lawyers doubted that new laws would be effective.
"There is likely to be a considerable burden of proof - merely miscalculating or being negligent in an assessment of risk most likely won't be enough," said Michael Isaacs, head of banking litigation at law firm Pinsent Masons.
The commission also recommended a new pay code to better balance risk and reward, with bonuses deferred for up to ten years with the aim of preventing bankers taking risks for short term reward, one of the factors blamed for the crisis.
It also proposed that the UK financial regulator would be granted a new power enabling it to cancel all bonuses and pension rights not yet paid out to senior executives in the event of their banks needing taxpayer support.
Watered down
Banking industry sources said banks were likely to accept many of the proposals in principle, including the threat of criminal sanctions, but will lobby for some to be watered down, including the 10-year deferral on bonuses.
"The commission's conclusions contain many constructive proposals to help fix the issues which have afflicted the industry, most importantly in the emphasis on personal responsibility and accountability," said HSBC Chairman Douglas Flint.
The cross-party commission, which includes former British finance minister Nigel Lawson and Justin Welby, head of the Anglican church, recommended senior bankers are held personally responsible and regulators granted greater powers.
Commission member Pat McFadden said it would be "pressing the government very hard in the coming weeks" to make sure the proposals are implemented. The government has set itself a four week deadline to give a formal response.
"I think all of us who were engaged in this process over the last year very much hope this is not a report which is going to gather dust," he told Reuters.
The British Bankers Association, a lobby group, said it would work with government and regulators to take forward proposals from what it described as the "most significant report into banking for a generation".
Unpopular
Bankers are deeply unpopular in Britain where the economy has narrowly avoided a triple-dip recession and is expected to show tepid growth at best through next year.
"I think jail sentences would be suitable," Ben Stewart, a 34-year-old cabinet maker said in Whitechapel, not far from the City of London, the traditional financial heartland.
"It's fraud a lot of what they've done. Even if it's not legally fraud, I think by most people's moral compass, they'd find it quite distasteful."
The commission recommended the industry adopt two new registers for senior bankers and other employees to make sure the most important responsibilities within banks were assigned to specific individuals.
The 'Senior Persons Regime' would enable those responsible for failures to be identified more easily and provide a stronger basis for action to be taken against them, the report said.
The Financial Conduct Authority, the financial services industry watchdog which took over regulation of banks in April, said it was "learning from the regulatory mistakes of the past".
The commission also urged the government to immediately consider a range of strategies for RBS, which is 81% state-owned, including a possible break-up.
Some commission members, including Lawson, have advocated hiving off RBS's toxic loans into a 'bad bank' leaving the remaining 'good bank' better able to lend to British businesses and households. But Finance Minister George Osborne said such a move would be complicated, time consuming and costly.
The report said the government had interfered in the running of RBS and Lloyds Banking Group, in which it holds a 39% stake, and said RBS was being held back by having the government as its main shareholder.
The level of the government's influence over RBS has come under scrutiny since chief executive Stephen Hester was ousted last week with the Treasury's approval.
Osborne is set to lay out strategies for returning RBS and Lloyds Banking Group to full private ownership in his annual speech to financiers in the City of London on Wednesday.

Big expectations for Obama Berlin speech


Five years and 50 years. As President Barack Obama revisits Berlin, he can't escape those anniversaries and the inevitable comparisons to history and personal achievement.

His 26-hour whirlwind visit to the German capital caps three days of international summitry for the president and marks his return to a place where he once summoned a throng of 200 000 to share his ambitious vision for American leadership.

That was 2008, when Obama was running for president and those who supported him at home and abroad saw the young mixed-race American as a unifying and transformational figure who signified hope and change.

Five years later, Obama comes to deliver a highly anticipated speech to a country that's a bit more sober about his aspirations and the extent of his successes, yet still eager to receive his attention at a time that many here feel that Europe, and Germany in particular, are no longer US priorities. A Pew Research Centre poll of Germans found that while their views of the US have slipped since Obama's first year in office, he has managed to retain his popularity, with 88% of those surveyed approving of his foreign policies.

Obama also has an arc of history to fulfil.

Fifty years ago next week, President John F Kennedy addressed a crowd of
450 000 in that then-divided city to denounce the Soviet bloc and famously declare "Ich bin ein Berliner", German for "I am a Berliner". Since then, presidents from Ronald Reagan to Bill Clinton have used Berlin speeches to articulate broad themes about freedom and international alliances.

Need for activism

Obama, fresh from a two-day summit of the Group of Eight industrial economies, will speak at the
Brandenburg Gate, a symbol of Germany's division and later reunification. It is a venue that German Chancellor Angela Merkel denied him in 2008, saying only sitting presidents were granted such an honour.

The past context and the weight of it are not lost on the White House.

"This is a place where US presidents have gone to talk about the role of the free world essentially," said Obama's deputy national security adviser, Ben Rhodes. "He is seeking to summon the energy and legacy of what's been done in the past and apply it to the issues that we face today."

Rhodes said Obama will make the case that even though the Berlin Wall came down 23 years ago and the threat of nuclear war has dissipated, the type of activism apparent during the Cold War needs to be applied to such current challenges as climate change, counterterrorism and the push for democratic values beyond the United States and Europe.

A senior administration official said Obama will also renew his call to reduce the world's nuclear stockpiles, including a proposed one-third reduction in US and Russian arsenals. He is not expected to outline a timeline for this renewed push. The official insisted on anonymity in order to preview the issue before the president's speech.

Obama will also hold a joint news conference with Merkel.

Merkel surprised by scope of spying

The visit was attracting widespread attention in
Germany. People waved and snapped photos as Obama sped by after his arrival and a thick cluster awaited the motorcade as it passed the Brandenburg Gate. An evening news show in Berlin devoted itself to the president's visit, highlighting "Das Biest", or "The Beast", as the president's armoured limousine is called.

There have been a few small protests, including one directed against the National Security Agency's surveillance of foreign communications, where about 50 people waved placards taunting, "Yes, we scan."

Merkel has said she was surprised at the scope of the spying that was revealed and said the
US must clarify what information is monitored. But she also said US intelligence was key to foiling a large-scale terror plot and acknowledged her country is "dependent" on co-operating with American spy services.

For Merkel, the visit presents an opportunity to bolster her domestic standing ahead of a general election in September.

The
US and the Germans have clashed on economic issues, with Obama pressing for Europe to prime the economy with government stimulus measures, while Merkel has insisted on pressing debt-ridden countries to stabilise their fiscal situations first.

But the two sides have found common ground on a trans-Atlantic trade pact between the European Union and the
US At the just-completed G8 summit, the leaders agreed to hold the first talks next month in the US.

Obama calls for nuclear reductions


Issuing an appeal for a new citizen activism in the free world, President Barack Obama renewed his call on Wednesday to reduce US and Russian nuclear stockpiles and to confront climate change, a danger he called "the global threat of our time."
In a wide-ranging speech that enumerates a litany of challenges facing the world, Obama said he wanted to reignite the spirit that Berlin displayed when it fought to reunite itself during the Cold War.
"Today's threats are not as stark as they were half a century ago, but the struggle for freedom and security and human dignity, that struggle goes on," Obama said at the city's historic Brandenburg Gate before a crowd of 6 000 invited guests under a bright, hot sun.
"And I come here for this city of hope because the test of our time demands the same fighting spirit that defined Berlin a half-century ago."
He called for a one-third reduction of US and Russian nuclear stockpiles, saying it is possible to ensure American security and a strong deterrent while also limiting nuclear weapons.
Obama's address, delivered from behind bullet-proof glass, comes nearly 50 years after John F Kennedy's famous Cold War speech in this once-divided city.
The president has previously called for reductions to nuclear stockpiles. But by addressing the issue in a major foreign policy speech, Obama signalled a desire to rekindle an issue that was a centrepiece of his early first-term national security agenda.
The president discussed non-proliferation with Russian President Vladimir Putin when they met on Monday on the sidelines of the Group of 8 summit in Northern Ireland. During Obama's first term, the US and Russia agreed to limit their stockpiles to 1 550 as part of the New START Treaty.
In Moscow, Russian foreign policy aide Yuri Ushakov said that plans for any further arms reduction would have to involve countries beyond Russia and the United States.
"The situation is now far from what it was in the '60s and '70s, when only the USA and the Soviet Union discussed arms reduction," Ushakov said.
Withdrawal
Obama's calls for co-operation with Moscow come at a time of tension between the US and Russia, which are supporting opposite sides in Syria's civil war. Russia also remains wary of US missile defence plans in Europe, despite US assurances that the shield is not aimed at Moscow.
Germany's foreign minister, Guido Westerwelle, is a strong advocate of nuclear disarmament and has long called for the removal of the last US nuclear weapons from German territory, a legacy of the Cold War.
The Buechel Air Base in western Germany is one of a few remaining sites in Europe where they are based.
Under an agreement drawn up when they formed a coalition government in 2009, Merkel's conservatives and Westerwelle's Free Democratic Party agreed to press Nato and Washington for the nuclear weapons to be withdrawn, but did not set any time frame.
Nuclear stockpile numbers are closely guarded secrets in most nations that possess them, but private nuclear policy experts say no countries other than the US and Russia are thought to have more than 300.
The Federation of American Scientists estimates that France has about 300, China about 240, Britain about 225, and Israel, India and Pakistan roughly 100 each.

Obama defends terrorism tactics in Berlin


President Barack Obama defended US intelligence methods on a visit to Berlin on Wednesday, telling Chancellor Angela Merkel and wary Germans that Washington was not monitoring the e-mails of ordinary citizens or damaging civil liberties.

Obama is popular in Germany but revelations before the trip that the United States has a covert internet surveillance programme, codenamed Prism, have caused outrage in a country where memories of the eavesdropping East German Stasi secret police are still fresh.

Merkel said at a joint news conference that also touched on Afghanistan, Syria and the global economy, that the two leaders had held "long and intensive" talks on the spying issue, and pointed out that some questions still need to be cleared up.

"This is not a situation in which we are rifling through the ordinary e-mails of German citizens or American citizens or French citizens or anybody else," said Obama, on his first visit to the German capital as president.

"This is not a situation where we simply go into the internet and start searching any way we want. This is a circumscribed system directed at us being able to protect our people and all of it is done under the oversight of the courts."

Obama was later due to speak to a crowd of roughly 4 000 invited guests at the Brandenburg Gate, which used to stand alongside the Berlin Wall dividing communist East Berlin from the capitalist West of the city.

Tension in
Afghanistan

His visit comes on the 50th anniversary of John F Kennedy's famous Ich bin ein Berliner speech. Seizing on the Cold War theme, Obama is expected to announce plans to sharply reduce nuclear arms stockpiles, an initiative he kicked off with a speech in
Prague in 2009 but which involves complex negotiations with Russia.

At the news conference, he touched on tensions with Afghan President Hamid Karzai over US plans to begin talks with the Taliban to try to seek a negotiated peace after 12 years of war, acknowledging "huge mistrust" between the Western-backed government in
Kabul and its arch-foes.

"We do think that ultimately we're going to need to see Afghans talking to Afghans about how they can move forward and end the cycle of violence there so they can start actually building their country," Obama said.

As a sign of displeasure with the
US move, Karzai has suspended talks with Washington on a troop agreement. But Obama said he welcomed Karzai's announcement that Afghan forces would soon take responsibility for security from the US-led Nato peacekeeping force.

On
Syria, Obama said reports that the United States was ready to "go all in" to war in the country were exaggerated. He reiterated his view that President Bashar Assad's government had used chemical weapons, while acknowledging that Russia was sceptical on this point.

For her part, Merkel said
Germany would not deliver weapons to the rebels, even though a European Union arms embargo on Syria has lapsed.

Pragmatic relationship


Obama arrived in
Germany from a two-day summit with Group of Eight leaders in Northern Ireland where he and other leaders clashed with Russian President Vladimir Putin over Syria.

He last came to
Berlin in 2008, during his first campaign for the presidency. Back then, Merkel refused to allow him to speak at the Brandenburg Gate. Instead he spoke down the road in Berlin's Tiergarten park, attracting a crowd of 200 000 - largely enthusiastic admirers.

The Democrat has forged a pragmatic - if not warm - relationship with the conservative Merkel, who is hoping to get a boost out of the visit months before a German election.

In a message which seemed designed for her domestic audience, she told Obama at the news conference that balance was essential in government monitoring of Internet communications.

"I made clear that although we do see the need for gathering information, the topic of proportionality is always an important one and the free democratic order is based on people feeling safe," said Merkel, who grew up in the communist East and experienced the Stasi first hand.

Obama said the US had thwarted at least 50 threats because of its monitoring programme, including planned attacks in
Germany.

Reassurance on drones


"So lives have been saved and the encroachment on privacy has been strictly limited," he said.

A poll last week showed 82% of Germans approve of Obama, but the magic of 2008, when he was feted like a rock star, has faded amid concerns about his tactics in combating terrorism.

In a nod to the criticism, Obama defended his failure to close the
Guantanamo Bay prison on Cuba that his predecessor George W Bush opened after the invasion of Afghanistan in 2001, shortly after the 11 September attacks in New York and Washington.

He also reassured Germans that the
US military was not using German bases to launch unmanned drone attacks.

For Obama, who grew up in
Hawaii and spent part of his childhood in Indonesia, Europe has sometimes seemed an after-thought. The signature foreign policy initiative of his first term was his "pivot" to Asia.

But analysts say plans to create a free-trade zone between the
United States and European Union are a sign that he is repositioning policy to focus on Europe.

Enduring bonds


"The Obama administration has found it harder than expected to work with emerging powers and has fallen back to a more traditional reliance on European allies," said Charles Kupchan, professor of international affairs at
Georgetown University.

"
Washington doesn't have better options. And when it comes to who to engage in Europe, Germany grows stronger and stronger."

Obama spoke of "enduring bonds based on common values" that linked the
United States to Europe.

Peacekeeping: Ban warns of new threats


UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said on Wednesday the world body's peacekeeping efforts face growing dangers from non-traditional threats such as suicide bombers and improvised explosive devices.

Ban told reporters on a visit to a peacekeeping training base near the Chinese capital that the UN must ensure that peacekeepers have the necessary training and specialised skills to face the threats.

These threats "are not new to the UN, but they are more intense," Ban said.

Ban's comments came at the start of a three-day visit to
China to meet with newly appointed President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Keqiang. Their discussions are expected to include China's growing involvement in UN affairs, along with international topics including tensions on the Korean Peninsula.

He said peacekeepers need to react rapidly and gather and analyze information on remote areas. In order to ensure that capability, the UN is deploying drones for the first time to its mission in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ban said.

Ban also praised
China's commitment to peacekeeping efforts. China has dispatched 22 000 troops to 23 missions, more than the other four permanent members of the UN Security Council combined.

"I applaud this solidarity," Ban said, noting 14 Chinese peacekeepers have died while serving.

Threatened

In all, nearly 3 000 peacekeepers have died in the line of duty since the first were deployed 65 years ago - 103 of them last year in Congo, Darfur, Sudan, Ivory Coast and other countries. Eight more civilian contractors, such as pilots, also died during deployment with peacekeeping missions in 2012.

The United Nations currently has more than 113 000 personnel serving in 16 UN peacekeeping and political missions.

In the latest crisis to hit peacekeeping efforts,
Austria announced it would pull out its 377 peacekeepers from the 911-member UN force in the Golan Heights after fighting from the Syrian civil war threatened their positions earlier this month.

That will leave just 341 Philippine soldiers and 193 from
India in the strategic area along the border with Israel.

Philippine Foreign Secretary Albert del Rosario told reporters on Wednesday that his country will keep its peacekeepers in place at least until 3 August. It will then consider a request from Ban to stay on, del Rosario said.