miercuri, 27 aprilie 2011

European shares rise for 3rd day; earnings support

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LONDON, April 21 | Thu Apr 21, 2011 3:08am EDT

LONDON, April 21 (Reuters) - European shares advanced for a third straight session to a one-week high on Thursday as strong company results improved sentiment, with technology shares gaining further after Apple (AAPL.O) smashed forecasts.

At 0706 GMT, the FTSEurofirst 300 .FTEU3 index of top European shares was up 0.1 percent at 1,138.73 points after touching 1,140.62, the highest since April 12.

"After a slow start, earnings have improved quite rapidly and results from the companies such as Intel and Apple have certainly boosted investor sentiment," said Keith Bowman, equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown.

"There is some nervousness in the background, particularly in relation to the situation in Japan and what that means for the supply chain, but as of today the markets have concentrated on good corporate results."

Technology shares extended the previous session's sharp gains, supported by forecast-beating results from U.S. firm Apple (AAPL.O). The European sector index .SX8P was up 0.8 percent, while ASML (ASML.AS) rose 2.3 percent. (Reporting by Atul Prakash)


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LONDON, April 21 | Thu Apr 21, 2011 3:08am EDT

LONDON, April 21 (Reuters) - European shares advanced for a third straight session to a one-week high on Thursday as strong company results improved sentiment, with technology shares gaining further after Apple (AAPL.O) smashed forecasts.

At 0706 GMT, the FTSEurofirst 300 .FTEU3 index of top European shares was up 0.1 percent at 1,138.73 points after touching 1,140.62, the highest since April 12.

"After a slow start, earnings have improved quite rapidly and results from the companies such as Intel and Apple have certainly boosted investor sentiment," said Keith Bowman, equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown.

"There is some nervousness in the background, particularly in relation to the situation in Japan and what that means for the supply chain, but as of today the markets have concentrated on good corporate results."

Technology shares extended the previous session's sharp gains, supported by forecast-beating results from U.S. firm Apple (AAPL.O). The European sector index .SX8P was up 0.8 percent, while ASML (ASML.AS) rose 2.3 percent. (Reporting by Atul Prakash)


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UPDATE 1-BP sues Halliburton over oil spill, alleges fraud

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LONDON, April 21 | Thu Apr 21, 2011 2:54am EDT

LONDON, April 21 (Reuters) - BP Plc (BP.L) has filed a lawsuit against Halliburton, the company which cemented the blown out well which caused the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, saying Halliburton concealed critical information which could have prevented the disaster.

"Halliburton's improper conduct, errors and omissions, including fraud and concealment, caused and/or contributed to the Deepwater Horizon incident," BP said in a court filing.

"Halliburton knew and understood it was misrepresenting material information," BP added.

The suit was filed on Wednesday, one year to the day after the Deepwater Horizon rig exploded, killing 11 men. On Wednesday, BP also filed a $40 billion lawsuit against rig operator Transocean (RIGN.VX)(RIG.N)


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LONDON, April 21 | Thu Apr 21, 2011 2:54am EDT

LONDON, April 21 (Reuters) - BP Plc (BP.L) has filed a lawsuit against Halliburton, the company which cemented the blown out well which caused the Gulf of Mexico oil spill, saying Halliburton concealed critical information which could have prevented the disaster.

"Halliburton's improper conduct, errors and omissions, including fraud and concealment, caused and/or contributed to the Deepwater Horizon incident," BP said in a court filing.

"Halliburton knew and understood it was misrepresenting material information," BP added.

The suit was filed on Wednesday, one year to the day after the Deepwater Horizon rig exploded, killing 11 men. On Wednesday, BP also filed a $40 billion lawsuit against rig operator Transocean (RIGN.VX)(RIG.N)


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Sinopec signs deal to buy Australian LNG, stake in project

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MELBOURNE, April 21 | Thu Apr 21, 2011 2:31am EDT

Sinopec will also take a 15 percent stake in the project, Origin Energy Chief Executive Grant King told reporters at a joint news conference.


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MELBOURNE, April 21 | Thu Apr 21, 2011 2:31am EDT

Sinopec will also take a 15 percent stake in the project, Origin Energy Chief Executive Grant King told reporters at a joint news conference.


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CORRECTED - UPDATE 4-Switzerland presses ahead with stricter bank rules

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(Corrects name of spokesman for bankers' association to James from Jason in paragraph 11 in story transmitted Wednesday)

* Big banks will need Tier 1 capital of 10 pct

* Benefit to economy to outweigh costs to banks -govt

* Watch out for competitive disadvantage - bankers group

* Legislation to enter into force in 2012 at earliest

* Parliament could still delay, amend proposals

(Adds reaction, more comments)

By Catherine Bosley

BERNE, April 20 (Reuters) - The Swiss government pushed ahead on Wednesday with plans to make UBS (UBSN.VX) (UBS.N) and Credit Suisse (CSGN.VX)(CS.N) reach tough new capital standards, saying the benefit to the economy outweighed costs to the banks.

As it finalised legislation to go to parliament, the Swiss cabinet said the general thrust of a draft law it issued in December was unchanged but it had made a few minor changes following a consultation period.

Finance Minister Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf said Switzerland was compelled to take a tougher line on bank regulation than other countries as UBS and Credit Suisse were so big that any failure could bring down the small Alpine economy.

"There will be adjustment costs for the banks but all in all the net effect will be positive," she told a news conference. "I am convinced that the Swiss banking sector will be the winner."

The government has proposed both big banks will need an equity Tier 1 capital ratio of at least 10 percent, versus the 7 percent minimum set under the Basel III global standards which begin to take effect in 2013. [ID:nLDE73D1EK]

Both UBS and the powerful right-wing Swiss People's Party (SVP) have warned the plan risks making UBS and Credit Suisse less competitive, raising questions about whether the rules might still be watered down during the legislative process.

Widmer-Schlumpf rejected suggestions the government was rushing ahead with the proposals, saying they had taken more than two years of consultation since the Swiss government was forced to bail out UBS at the height of the financial crisis.

She said the plans had been broadly endorsed by experts and the banking industry -- including Credit Suisse -- and said only the SVP and UBS had expressed fundamental opposition.

Widmer-Schlumpf said the government addressed concerns raised by the SVP and others about powers proposed for the FINMA regulator in a crisis, saying FINMA would only intervene to impose an emergency plan if a failing big bank did not do so. <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

For a Breakingviews column, click on [ID:nLDE7351TR]

Scenarios on Swiss political process [ID:nLDE73H117]

Factbox on proposed Swiss bank rules [ID:nLDE73J1B2]

Factbox on the various Swiss parties' views [ID:nLDE73H10X]

Factbox on Britain's proposed regulations [ID:nLDE73A0L9]

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>

COMPETITIVE DISADVANTAGE?

The government proposed publishing a report on international developments every year to address concerns about Switzerland forging ahead and Widmer-Schlumpf said she expected other countries would enact similar regulations.

James Nason, spokesman of the Swiss Bankers Association, criticised the formulation of the review provision as too vague.

"The Swiss authorities should clearly commit themselves to reviewing and adapting the regulation should Switzerland's two globally-active universal banks find themselves placed at any serious competitive disadvantage," he told Reuters.

Britain too is considering capital standards more stringent than Basel III, though these would apply only to big retail banks and its comparatively lenient treatment of investment banks has provided ammunition to opponents of the Swiss rules. [ID:nLDE7371AX]

UBS Chief Executive Oswald Gruebel has said the stiff Swiss standards could force UBS to move units abroad. In response, Widmer-Schlumpf noted the bank benefited from Switzerland's other advantages such as low taxes plus political stability.

Credit Suisse said it wanted to study the proposal in detail before commenting but referred to a recent interview by CEO Brady Dougan in which he reiterated his broad support.

"I fear that people may have forgotten what happened in 2008. The financial system needs to be made more robust and secure," he said, adding he assumed regulators elsewhere would also demand other global banks hold more capital.

"If that is the case, we will see the emergence of a reasonable competitive landscape around the world."

Helvea analyst Peter Thorne said the fear the rules would make Swiss banks uncompetitive was "a gross exaggeration" but they would have to cut their investment banking businesses.

"Implementation of the rules should see CS and UBS downsize their investment banking operations ... and this should liberate capital which is probably not earning its cost of capital for the benefit of shareholders," he said.

The government said parliament could vote on the matter before the end of the year so the plans could come into force by the start of 2012 at the earliest, with a transition period up to 2018 to allow implementation.

However, in a taste of a likely heated debate to come ahead of Swiss elections on Oct. 23, the centre-left Social Democrats and Greens both said they wanted the proposals made still tougher, suggested they may still be amended or delayed. (Additional reporting by Martin de Sa'Pinto) (Writing by Emma Thomasson; Editing by David Holmes and Mike Nesbit)


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(Corrects name of spokesman for bankers' association to James from Jason in paragraph 11 in story transmitted Wednesday)

* Big banks will need Tier 1 capital of 10 pct

* Benefit to economy to outweigh costs to banks -govt

* Watch out for competitive disadvantage - bankers group

* Legislation to enter into force in 2012 at earliest

* Parliament could still delay, amend proposals

(Adds reaction, more comments)

By Catherine Bosley

BERNE, April 20 (Reuters) - The Swiss government pushed ahead on Wednesday with plans to make UBS (UBSN.VX) (UBS.N) and Credit Suisse (CSGN.VX)(CS.N) reach tough new capital standards, saying the benefit to the economy outweighed costs to the banks.

As it finalised legislation to go to parliament, the Swiss cabinet said the general thrust of a draft law it issued in December was unchanged but it had made a few minor changes following a consultation period.

Finance Minister Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf said Switzerland was compelled to take a tougher line on bank regulation than other countries as UBS and Credit Suisse were so big that any failure could bring down the small Alpine economy.

"There will be adjustment costs for the banks but all in all the net effect will be positive," she told a news conference. "I am convinced that the Swiss banking sector will be the winner."

The government has proposed both big banks will need an equity Tier 1 capital ratio of at least 10 percent, versus the 7 percent minimum set under the Basel III global standards which begin to take effect in 2013. [ID:nLDE73D1EK]

Both UBS and the powerful right-wing Swiss People's Party (SVP) have warned the plan risks making UBS and Credit Suisse less competitive, raising questions about whether the rules might still be watered down during the legislative process.

Widmer-Schlumpf rejected suggestions the government was rushing ahead with the proposals, saying they had taken more than two years of consultation since the Swiss government was forced to bail out UBS at the height of the financial crisis.

She said the plans had been broadly endorsed by experts and the banking industry -- including Credit Suisse -- and said only the SVP and UBS had expressed fundamental opposition.

Widmer-Schlumpf said the government addressed concerns raised by the SVP and others about powers proposed for the FINMA regulator in a crisis, saying FINMA would only intervene to impose an emergency plan if a failing big bank did not do so. <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

For a Breakingviews column, click on [ID:nLDE7351TR]

Scenarios on Swiss political process [ID:nLDE73H117]

Factbox on proposed Swiss bank rules [ID:nLDE73J1B2]

Factbox on the various Swiss parties' views [ID:nLDE73H10X]

Factbox on Britain's proposed regulations [ID:nLDE73A0L9]

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>

COMPETITIVE DISADVANTAGE?

The government proposed publishing a report on international developments every year to address concerns about Switzerland forging ahead and Widmer-Schlumpf said she expected other countries would enact similar regulations.

James Nason, spokesman of the Swiss Bankers Association, criticised the formulation of the review provision as too vague.

"The Swiss authorities should clearly commit themselves to reviewing and adapting the regulation should Switzerland's two globally-active universal banks find themselves placed at any serious competitive disadvantage," he told Reuters.

Britain too is considering capital standards more stringent than Basel III, though these would apply only to big retail banks and its comparatively lenient treatment of investment banks has provided ammunition to opponents of the Swiss rules. [ID:nLDE7371AX]

UBS Chief Executive Oswald Gruebel has said the stiff Swiss standards could force UBS to move units abroad. In response, Widmer-Schlumpf noted the bank benefited from Switzerland's other advantages such as low taxes plus political stability.

Credit Suisse said it wanted to study the proposal in detail before commenting but referred to a recent interview by CEO Brady Dougan in which he reiterated his broad support.

"I fear that people may have forgotten what happened in 2008. The financial system needs to be made more robust and secure," he said, adding he assumed regulators elsewhere would also demand other global banks hold more capital.

"If that is the case, we will see the emergence of a reasonable competitive landscape around the world."

Helvea analyst Peter Thorne said the fear the rules would make Swiss banks uncompetitive was "a gross exaggeration" but they would have to cut their investment banking businesses.

"Implementation of the rules should see CS and UBS downsize their investment banking operations ... and this should liberate capital which is probably not earning its cost of capital for the benefit of shareholders," he said.

The government said parliament could vote on the matter before the end of the year so the plans could come into force by the start of 2012 at the earliest, with a transition period up to 2018 to allow implementation.

However, in a taste of a likely heated debate to come ahead of Swiss elections on Oct. 23, the centre-left Social Democrats and Greens both said they wanted the proposals made still tougher, suggested they may still be amended or delayed. (Additional reporting by Martin de Sa'Pinto) (Writing by Emma Thomasson; Editing by David Holmes and Mike Nesbit)


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joi, 21 aprilie 2011

Nikkei up on Apple; parts woes keep market jittery

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WRAPUP 2-Japan nuclear evacuation ring will be no-go zone, PM visits

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* Penalty charge for entering no-go zone

* PM Kan harangued by homeless quake survivors

* Engineers struggle to control Fukushima plant (Adds comment by PM Kan, evacuees, Australian PM)

By Yoko Kubota and Kazunori Takada

TOKYO, April 21 (Reuters) - Japan said on Thursday it would ban people entering the 20-km (12-mile) evacuation zone around the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant north of Tokyo, weeks after the tsunami-wrecked facility began leaking radiation.

Tens of thousands of people left the zone after the March 11 quake smashed the power station, operated by Tokyo Electric Power (TEPCO), but some have since returned to their homes to collect belongings as the utility struggles to contain the world's most serious nuclear crisis since Chernobyl in 1986.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano told a news conference that as of midnight on Thursday, people will only be allowed into the zone under government supervision.

"The setting of the no-entry zone and (last month's) evacuation instruction are aimed at securing the safety of the people," Edano said.

"We will take strict legal measures against those trying to enter the area," he said. "For residents, all I can say is I ask for their understanding so that no legal action will be taken against them."

Those breaking the ban can be fined up to 100,000 yen ($1,200) or face temporary detention by police.

TEPCO has said it may take the rest of the year or longer to bring the plant under control.

More than 130,000 people are still living in school gymnasiums and other shelters more than a month after the March 11 quake and tsunami that left some 28,000 dead or missing.

"HOW DO YOU THINK WE FEEL?"

Prime Minister Naoto Kan taste d their ire when he visited a Fukushima evacuation centre on Thursday.

"Are you leaving? shouted a man as Kan and his entourage headed for the door. "We are evacuees. Are you just going to ignore us?"

Kan turned back, apologised and was berated.

"You should bring cabinet ministers here and let them try living here themselves. How do you think we feel? We want you to somehow get the nuclear plant under control," one woman said.

A subdued Kan replied: "The government as a whole is doing our best to implement the timetable without delay or speed it up." He then tried to depart but was again called back.

"We want you to exercise much more leadership and quickly bring (the crisis) to a conclusion," said another evacuee.

Kan, already unpopular before the disasters hit, has come under fire from inside his own party as well as the opposition for his handling of the crisis as it drags on.

TEPCO wants a "cold shutdown" of the plant, 240 km (150 miles) from the capital, within six to nine months, a timeline experts say will be tough to meet.

This week it began pumping highly contaminated water from one of the reactors, a key step towards repairing the cooling system that regulates the temperature of radioactive fuel rods.

But water levels were unchanged, the latest in a litany of problems engineers have faced since the crisis began, which has included pumping radioactive water into the sea, to the concern of Japan's neighbours.

French nuclear plant maker Areva (CEPFi.PA) will supply a water treatment plant that uses a process called "co-precipitation" -- which isolates and removes radioactive elements from water -- to speed up decontamination. TEPCO hopes to begin the water treatment before the end of May.

TEPCO insists that while fuel rods at three of its six reactors were damaged when they partially melted after the quake, they are not in "meltdown".

Later on Thursday, Kan will meet Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard, who is visiting Japan.

Gillard expressed confidence that Japan could rebuild and promised A ustralia w ould stay a reliable energy source for Tokyo , which must compete with an insatiable China.

"Japan can rely on Australia at a time when you have never needed these resources more," Gillard told Japanese business leaders, adding Australia would become Japan's most important supplier of liquefied natural gas (LNG) in the next few years.

Japan is keen to secure Australian energy resources, especially LNG to compensate for reduced power since the disaster. Besides the damage at Fukushima Daiichi, several other nuclear power plants were shut down after the quake.

Resultant power shortages have exacerbated the disruption to manufacturing supply chains and overall economic activity. ($1 = 82.465 Japanese Yen) (Writing by Daniel Magnowski and Linda Sieg; Editing by Jonathan Thatcher and Sugita Katyal)


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* Penalty charge for entering no-go zone

* PM Kan harangued by homeless quake survivors

* Engineers struggle to control Fukushima plant (Adds comment by PM Kan, evacuees, Australian PM)

By Yoko Kubota and Kazunori Takada

TOKYO, April 21 (Reuters) - Japan said on Thursday it would ban people entering the 20-km (12-mile) evacuation zone around the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant north of Tokyo, weeks after the tsunami-wrecked facility began leaking radiation.

Tens of thousands of people left the zone after the March 11 quake smashed the power station, operated by Tokyo Electric Power (TEPCO), but some have since returned to their homes to collect belongings as the utility struggles to contain the world's most serious nuclear crisis since Chernobyl in 1986.

Chief Cabinet Secretary Yukio Edano told a news conference that as of midnight on Thursday, people will only be allowed into the zone under government supervision.

"The setting of the no-entry zone and (last month's) evacuation instruction are aimed at securing the safety of the people," Edano said.

"We will take strict legal measures against those trying to enter the area," he said. "For residents, all I can say is I ask for their understanding so that no legal action will be taken against them."

Those breaking the ban can be fined up to 100,000 yen ($1,200) or face temporary detention by police.

TEPCO has said it may take the rest of the year or longer to bring the plant under control.

More than 130,000 people are still living in school gymnasiums and other shelters more than a month after the March 11 quake and tsunami that left some 28,000 dead or missing.

"HOW DO YOU THINK WE FEEL?"

Prime Minister Naoto Kan taste d their ire when he visited a Fukushima evacuation centre on Thursday.

"Are you leaving? shouted a man as Kan and his entourage headed for the door. "We are evacuees. Are you just going to ignore us?"

Kan turned back, apologised and was berated.

"You should bring cabinet ministers here and let them try living here themselves. How do you think we feel? We want you to somehow get the nuclear plant under control," one woman said.

A subdued Kan replied: "The government as a whole is doing our best to implement the timetable without delay or speed it up." He then tried to depart but was again called back.

"We want you to exercise much more leadership and quickly bring (the crisis) to a conclusion," said another evacuee.

Kan, already unpopular before the disasters hit, has come under fire from inside his own party as well as the opposition for his handling of the crisis as it drags on.

TEPCO wants a "cold shutdown" of the plant, 240 km (150 miles) from the capital, within six to nine months, a timeline experts say will be tough to meet.

This week it began pumping highly contaminated water from one of the reactors, a key step towards repairing the cooling system that regulates the temperature of radioactive fuel rods.

But water levels were unchanged, the latest in a litany of problems engineers have faced since the crisis began, which has included pumping radioactive water into the sea, to the concern of Japan's neighbours.

French nuclear plant maker Areva (CEPFi.PA) will supply a water treatment plant that uses a process called "co-precipitation" -- which isolates and removes radioactive elements from water -- to speed up decontamination. TEPCO hopes to begin the water treatment before the end of May.

TEPCO insists that while fuel rods at three of its six reactors were damaged when they partially melted after the quake, they are not in "meltdown".

Later on Thursday, Kan will meet Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard, who is visiting Japan.

Gillard expressed confidence that Japan could rebuild and promised A ustralia w ould stay a reliable energy source for Tokyo , which must compete with an insatiable China.

"Japan can rely on Australia at a time when you have never needed these resources more," Gillard told Japanese business leaders, adding Australia would become Japan's most important supplier of liquefied natural gas (LNG) in the next few years.

Japan is keen to secure Australian energy resources, especially LNG to compensate for reduced power since the disaster. Besides the damage at Fukushima Daiichi, several other nuclear power plants were shut down after the quake.

Resultant power shortages have exacerbated the disruption to manufacturing supply chains and overall economic activity. ($1 = 82.465 Japanese Yen) (Writing by Daniel Magnowski and Linda Sieg; Editing by Jonathan Thatcher and Sugita Katyal)


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Europe Factors-Shares set to gain on earnings optimism

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PRESS DIGEST - New York Times business news - April 21

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April 21 | Thu Apr 21, 2011 3:04am EDT

April 21 (Reuters) - The following were the top stories in The New York Times business pages on Thursday. Reuters has not verified these stories and does not vouch for their accuracy.

* Food marketers are pitching their products to children via Web sites that critics say blur the line between activities and advertising.

* Industry and safety advocates are sparring over whether enough is being done to prevent fatal accidents.

* In what may be the strongest signal yet of the new pro-labor orientation of the National Labor Relations Board under President Obama, the agency filed a complaint Wednesday seeking to force Boeing Co to bring an airplane production line back to its unionized facilities in Washington State instead of moving the work to a nonunion plant in South Carolina.

* Plenty of people want to build a popular Web site and become the next Mark Zuckerberg. But some technology entrepreneurs have a more old-fashioned goal: they want to make something you can hold in your hand.

* Apple Inc faced questions on Wednesday about the security of its iPhone and iPad after a report that the devices regularly record their locations in a hidden file.

* A hospital said that patients benefited when cardiologists there switched to heart devices made by a company that paid it consulting fees.

* Wells Fargo & Company posted a 48 percent increase in first-quarter profit on Wednesday, but investors were not impressed by the results, given fears that sluggish mortgage loan growth would erode the bank's earnings power.

* Apple's winning streak extended through another quarter as a new partnership with Verizon for the iPhone - along with updated products like the iPad and MacBook - sent consumers on a shopping spree, the company reported Wednesday.

* The price of gold rose above $1,500 an ounce on Wednesday for the first time, pushed higher by investor concerns about global inflation, government debt and turmoil in the Arab world.

* AT&T , the nation's largest telecommunications company, reported a 39 percent increase in its first-quarter profit on Wednesday, despite losing the exclusive rights to sell the iPhone in the United States midway through the period.

* In the largest unionization vote involving federal employees, the nation's airport screeners voted in favor of unionizing, but federal officials said on Wednesday that there would be a runoff because neither union on the ballot received a majority of the votes cast.

* It's not quite the stuff of bragging rights, but Arkansas and Mississippi find themselves at the top of a new state ranking: They have the highest concentrations of people in the nation who have abandoned landlines in favor of cellular phones.

* In the end, prosecutors said, the most powerful evidence of Raj Rajaratnam's guilt during his insider trading trial was his own voice.

* Spain and Portugal on Wednesday managed to raise the targeted amounts in their latest debt auctions, an important test of market confidence amid Lisbon's negotiations for a financial bailout and Madrid's attempts to avoid needing one. ((Compiled by Mary Meyase; Bangalore Equities Newsdesk +91 80 4135 5800; within U.S. +1 646 223 8780)


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April 21 | Thu Apr 21, 2011 3:04am EDT

April 21 (Reuters) - The following were the top stories in The New York Times business pages on Thursday. Reuters has not verified these stories and does not vouch for their accuracy.

* Food marketers are pitching their products to children via Web sites that critics say blur the line between activities and advertising.

* Industry and safety advocates are sparring over whether enough is being done to prevent fatal accidents.

* In what may be the strongest signal yet of the new pro-labor orientation of the National Labor Relations Board under President Obama, the agency filed a complaint Wednesday seeking to force Boeing Co to bring an airplane production line back to its unionized facilities in Washington State instead of moving the work to a nonunion plant in South Carolina.

* Plenty of people want to build a popular Web site and become the next Mark Zuckerberg. But some technology entrepreneurs have a more old-fashioned goal: they want to make something you can hold in your hand.

* Apple Inc faced questions on Wednesday about the security of its iPhone and iPad after a report that the devices regularly record their locations in a hidden file.

* A hospital said that patients benefited when cardiologists there switched to heart devices made by a company that paid it consulting fees.

* Wells Fargo & Company posted a 48 percent increase in first-quarter profit on Wednesday, but investors were not impressed by the results, given fears that sluggish mortgage loan growth would erode the bank's earnings power.

* Apple's winning streak extended through another quarter as a new partnership with Verizon for the iPhone - along with updated products like the iPad and MacBook - sent consumers on a shopping spree, the company reported Wednesday.

* The price of gold rose above $1,500 an ounce on Wednesday for the first time, pushed higher by investor concerns about global inflation, government debt and turmoil in the Arab world.

* AT&T , the nation's largest telecommunications company, reported a 39 percent increase in its first-quarter profit on Wednesday, despite losing the exclusive rights to sell the iPhone in the United States midway through the period.

* In the largest unionization vote involving federal employees, the nation's airport screeners voted in favor of unionizing, but federal officials said on Wednesday that there would be a runoff because neither union on the ballot received a majority of the votes cast.

* It's not quite the stuff of bragging rights, but Arkansas and Mississippi find themselves at the top of a new state ranking: They have the highest concentrations of people in the nation who have abandoned landlines in favor of cellular phones.

* In the end, prosecutors said, the most powerful evidence of Raj Rajaratnam's guilt during his insider trading trial was his own voice.

* Spain and Portugal on Wednesday managed to raise the targeted amounts in their latest debt auctions, an important test of market confidence amid Lisbon's negotiations for a financial bailout and Madrid's attempts to avoid needing one. ((Compiled by Mary Meyase; Bangalore Equities Newsdesk +91 80 4135 5800; within U.S. +1 646 223 8780)


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UPDATE 2-AkzoNobel price hikes lift profit, promises more

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* EBITDA 437 mln euros vs forecast 416 mln

* Sales up 16 pct to 3.76 bln euros vs forecast 3.56 bln

* Says confident it can pass on higher raw materials costs

(Recasts lead, adds details)

By Aaron Gray-Block

AMSTERDAM, April 21 (Reuters) - Dutch chemicals group AkzoNobel (AKZO.AS) pledged more price rises to offset higher metals and oil-based raw materials costs as it lifted first quarter core profit 10 percent and kept its full-year forecast.

"We do have pricing power and are able to use our brands and market positions to do this. We are committed to an unchaged outlook," Chief Financial Officer Keith Nichols told reporters.

Nichols said raw materials prices were up 15 percent year-on-year, more than expected, and he did not see input costs easing in the near term.

ABN AMRO analyst Mark van der Geest said AkzoNobel's results were "very strong", backed by volume growth at decorative paints in Europe and the company's new contract to supply U.S. retail giant Walmart (WMT.N).

"Fasten your seatbelts, AkzoNobel has lift off," he said, pointing also to higher volumes at AkzoNobel's specialty chemicals unit.

The world's biggest paint company had earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) excluding one-offs of 437 million euros, up 10 percent, and ahead of the average forecast of 416 million from a Reuters poll.

Group margins fell slightly year-on-year as the company's decorative paints and performance coatings units had EBITDA in line with forecasts, but the specialty chemicals unit beat forecasts. Margins rose quarter-on-quarter.

Quarterly sales rose 16 percent to 3.76 billion euros, due to 7 percent volume growth and 4 percent price rises, beating the average forecast of 3.56 billion and ahead of its target of 5 percent revenue and EBITDA growth for the full year.

AkzoNobel is facing higher costs for raw materials such as titanium dioxide, which is used as a paint pigment, metals and oil-related materials for resins due to the crisis in Libya.

United States rivals PPG (PPG.N) and Sherwin-Williams (SHW.N) had already forecast strong quarterly earnings due to price hikes, improved demand and cost cuts. Both firms will report later on Thursday. [ID:nSGE70I0DF] [ID:nN30122809] (Reporting by Aaron Gray-Block; Editing by Sara Webb and David Cowell)


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* EBITDA 437 mln euros vs forecast 416 mln

* Sales up 16 pct to 3.76 bln euros vs forecast 3.56 bln

* Says confident it can pass on higher raw materials costs

(Recasts lead, adds details)

By Aaron Gray-Block

AMSTERDAM, April 21 (Reuters) - Dutch chemicals group AkzoNobel (AKZO.AS) pledged more price rises to offset higher metals and oil-based raw materials costs as it lifted first quarter core profit 10 percent and kept its full-year forecast.

"We do have pricing power and are able to use our brands and market positions to do this. We are committed to an unchaged outlook," Chief Financial Officer Keith Nichols told reporters.

Nichols said raw materials prices were up 15 percent year-on-year, more than expected, and he did not see input costs easing in the near term.

ABN AMRO analyst Mark van der Geest said AkzoNobel's results were "very strong", backed by volume growth at decorative paints in Europe and the company's new contract to supply U.S. retail giant Walmart (WMT.N).

"Fasten your seatbelts, AkzoNobel has lift off," he said, pointing also to higher volumes at AkzoNobel's specialty chemicals unit.

The world's biggest paint company had earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) excluding one-offs of 437 million euros, up 10 percent, and ahead of the average forecast of 416 million from a Reuters poll.

Group margins fell slightly year-on-year as the company's decorative paints and performance coatings units had EBITDA in line with forecasts, but the specialty chemicals unit beat forecasts. Margins rose quarter-on-quarter.

Quarterly sales rose 16 percent to 3.76 billion euros, due to 7 percent volume growth and 4 percent price rises, beating the average forecast of 3.56 billion and ahead of its target of 5 percent revenue and EBITDA growth for the full year.

AkzoNobel is facing higher costs for raw materials such as titanium dioxide, which is used as a paint pigment, metals and oil-related materials for resins due to the crisis in Libya.

United States rivals PPG (PPG.N) and Sherwin-Williams (SHW.N) had already forecast strong quarterly earnings due to price hikes, improved demand and cost cuts. Both firms will report later on Thursday. [ID:nSGE70I0DF] [ID:nN30122809] (Reporting by Aaron Gray-Block; Editing by Sara Webb and David Cowell)


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joi, 14 aprilie 2011

Fiat targets 46 pct of Chrysler by June -report

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* Talks on refinancing govt debt at advanced stage

* CEO wants to buy additional 16 pct of Chrysler by end H1

MILAN, April 14 (Reuters) - Italian car maker Fiat (FIA.MI) wants to hike its stake in Chrysler to 46 percent by June, as soon as the U.S. group manages to repay $7 billion of government debt, an Italian daily said on Thursday.

Sergio Marchionne, who runs both Fiat and Chrysler, said on Monday that the U.S. auto maker would refinance its onerous U.S. and Canadian government debt by June. [ID:nLDE73A0CS]

Also on Monday, he confirmed Fiat, which currently owns 30 percent of Chrysler, wanted to get a majority stake in the U.S. group by the end of 2011, but did not elaborate on the steps needed to achieve this goal.

In an unsourced report published on Thursday, newspaper Corriere della Sera said talks with international investment banks on refinancing the debt were at an advanced stage, paving the way for Fiat to buy a further 16 percent of Chrysler.

"This is the real goal Sergio Marchionne is working at," Corriere della Sera said. "He wants to do it by June. He might be able to do it a bit earlier."

Fiat declined to comment on the report.

Fiat, part of Italy's biggest industrial group, took over management and a stake in Chrysler under a 2009 bailout accord.

It must pay back government money before it can exercise the option to pay for a 16 percent stake in Chrysler.

"It is certainly a possible outcome," a source with knowledge of the situation told Reuters when asked about the prospect of Fiat getting 46 percent of Chrysler by June. "But it all depends on how talks with the banks turn out."

A further 5 percent can be added for free once Fiat reaches the last of three milestones agreed with the U.S. government -- namely, producing a new fuel-efficient car capable of reaching 40 miles per gallon, and Marchionne has said it will only be reached in the fourth quarter of this year. (Editing by Will Waterman)


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* Talks on refinancing govt debt at advanced stage

* CEO wants to buy additional 16 pct of Chrysler by end H1

MILAN, April 14 (Reuters) - Italian car maker Fiat (FIA.MI) wants to hike its stake in Chrysler to 46 percent by June, as soon as the U.S. group manages to repay $7 billion of government debt, an Italian daily said on Thursday.

Sergio Marchionne, who runs both Fiat and Chrysler, said on Monday that the U.S. auto maker would refinance its onerous U.S. and Canadian government debt by June. [ID:nLDE73A0CS]

Also on Monday, he confirmed Fiat, which currently owns 30 percent of Chrysler, wanted to get a majority stake in the U.S. group by the end of 2011, but did not elaborate on the steps needed to achieve this goal.

In an unsourced report published on Thursday, newspaper Corriere della Sera said talks with international investment banks on refinancing the debt were at an advanced stage, paving the way for Fiat to buy a further 16 percent of Chrysler.

"This is the real goal Sergio Marchionne is working at," Corriere della Sera said. "He wants to do it by June. He might be able to do it a bit earlier."

Fiat declined to comment on the report.

Fiat, part of Italy's biggest industrial group, took over management and a stake in Chrysler under a 2009 bailout accord.

It must pay back government money before it can exercise the option to pay for a 16 percent stake in Chrysler.

"It is certainly a possible outcome," a source with knowledge of the situation told Reuters when asked about the prospect of Fiat getting 46 percent of Chrysler by June. "But it all depends on how talks with the banks turn out."

A further 5 percent can be added for free once Fiat reaches the last of three milestones agreed with the U.S. government -- namely, producing a new fuel-efficient car capable of reaching 40 miles per gallon, and Marchionne has said it will only be reached in the fourth quarter of this year. (Editing by Will Waterman)


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BRIEF-Moody's assigns B3 CFR to Dematic SARL; positive outlook

birou notarial


April 14 | Thu Apr 14, 2011 4:06am EDT

Sorry, I could not read the content fromt this page.

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April 14 | Thu Apr 14, 2011 4:06am EDT

Sorry, I could not read the content fromt this page.

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Volkswagen says Q1 China auto sales up 19.9 pct yr-on-yr

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BEIJING, April 14 | Thu Apr 14, 2011 3:50am EDT

BEIJING, April 14 (Reuters) - Volkswagen AG said on Thursday it sold 548,400 cars in mainland China, Hong Kong and Macau in the first quarter, up 19.9 percent from a year earlier, more than doubling the overall growth rate of China's car market.

A total of 429,517 Volkwagen cars were delivered in the three-month period, up 18.4 percent, with Audi sales up 24.6 percent to 64,122 units, it said in a statement.

Volkswagen makes cars in China in tie-ups with SAIC Motor and FAW Group.

Rival General Motors , which makes cars, light trucks and mini vans in China, sold 685,583 vehicles in the country, up 10 percent from a year earlier. [ID:nL3E7F1135] (Reporting by Fang Yan and Ken Wills)


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BEIJING, April 14 | Thu Apr 14, 2011 3:50am EDT

BEIJING, April 14 (Reuters) - Volkswagen AG said on Thursday it sold 548,400 cars in mainland China, Hong Kong and Macau in the first quarter, up 19.9 percent from a year earlier, more than doubling the overall growth rate of China's car market.

A total of 429,517 Volkwagen cars were delivered in the three-month period, up 18.4 percent, with Audi sales up 24.6 percent to 64,122 units, it said in a statement.

Volkswagen makes cars in China in tie-ups with SAIC Motor and FAW Group.

Rival General Motors , which makes cars, light trucks and mini vans in China, sold 685,583 vehicles in the country, up 10 percent from a year earlier. [ID:nL3E7F1135] (Reporting by Fang Yan and Ken Wills)


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Indonesian woman sues Citibank over husband's death

birou notarial


JAKARTA, April 14 | Thu Apr 14, 2011 3:38am EDT

JAKARTA, April 14 (Reuters) - An Indonesian woman has filed a civil suit against the local unit of Citigroup after her husband died following questioning by debt collectors over bills run up on a credit card issued by the bank.

Citibank Indonesia is already embroiled in another scandal in the country involving the alleged embezzlement of $2 million from customers by one of its wealth managers.

A Citi spokesman said it was not aware of a civil lawsuit being filed and would be inappropriate to comment.

It has said previously that it was cooperating fully with police to determine if external agency staff had adhered to its code of conduct on debt collection and that it did not believe physical harm was done to the client when he came to the bank's office. [ID:nL3E7F61B3]

Esi Ronaldi is seeking a total 3 trillion rupiah ($347 million) in damages for the death of her husband, Irzen Octa, on March 29, a document filed with the Central Jakarta court showed.

"The husband of the plaintiff was the head of the family of two children, so the acts of the employees and debt collectors of the accused who took his life has caused the loss of a husband and father and a breadwinner to the family," the dossier said.

The filing also said Citibank's method of collecting debts in Indonesia had violated official regulations.

Debt collection agencies are frequently used by banks in Indonesia. The sector is unregulated and debt collectors can be verbally aggressive but physical violence is seldom reported.

The central bank has stopped Citibank Indonesia from recruiting new customers to its premium Citigold service while the alleged embezzlement is being investigated and has asked the bank not to add new credit card customers while police look into the cardholder's death. [ID:nJKB004451]

The U.S. bank is also in hot water elsewhere in Asia, saying in January it would compensate customers at one of its Indian branches after alleged fraud by an employee.[ID:nSGE70E01R]

In December it was fined by regulators in Japan for failing to make the required filings on changes in stock holdings. [ID:nTOE6BG05S] ($1 = 8,656 Rupiah) (Reporting by Rieka Rahadiana; Writing by Olivia Rondonuwu; Editing by Alan Raybould and Lincoln Feast)


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JAKARTA, April 14 | Thu Apr 14, 2011 3:38am EDT

JAKARTA, April 14 (Reuters) - An Indonesian woman has filed a civil suit against the local unit of Citigroup after her husband died following questioning by debt collectors over bills run up on a credit card issued by the bank.

Citibank Indonesia is already embroiled in another scandal in the country involving the alleged embezzlement of $2 million from customers by one of its wealth managers.

A Citi spokesman said it was not aware of a civil lawsuit being filed and would be inappropriate to comment.

It has said previously that it was cooperating fully with police to determine if external agency staff had adhered to its code of conduct on debt collection and that it did not believe physical harm was done to the client when he came to the bank's office. [ID:nL3E7F61B3]

Esi Ronaldi is seeking a total 3 trillion rupiah ($347 million) in damages for the death of her husband, Irzen Octa, on March 29, a document filed with the Central Jakarta court showed.

"The husband of the plaintiff was the head of the family of two children, so the acts of the employees and debt collectors of the accused who took his life has caused the loss of a husband and father and a breadwinner to the family," the dossier said.

The filing also said Citibank's method of collecting debts in Indonesia had violated official regulations.

Debt collection agencies are frequently used by banks in Indonesia. The sector is unregulated and debt collectors can be verbally aggressive but physical violence is seldom reported.

The central bank has stopped Citibank Indonesia from recruiting new customers to its premium Citigold service while the alleged embezzlement is being investigated and has asked the bank not to add new credit card customers while police look into the cardholder's death. [ID:nJKB004451]

The U.S. bank is also in hot water elsewhere in Asia, saying in January it would compensate customers at one of its Indian branches after alleged fraud by an employee.[ID:nSGE70E01R]

In December it was fined by regulators in Japan for failing to make the required filings on changes in stock holdings. [ID:nTOE6BG05S] ($1 = 8,656 Rupiah) (Reporting by Rieka Rahadiana; Writing by Olivia Rondonuwu; Editing by Alan Raybould and Lincoln Feast)


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GLOBAL MARKETS-Dollar at low, world stocks weaker

birou notarial


* Dollar at 16-month low

* Stocks weaker despite corporate activity

* Japan's Tankan points to supply chain problems

By Jeremy Gaunt, European Investment Correspondent

LONDON, April 14 (Reuters) - The dollar sank to a 16-month low against a basket of currencies on Thursday as investors bet U.S. monetary policy would continue to be loose, while a report that Chinese inflation will rise dragged on equities.

World stocks .MIWD00000PUS were flat to lower despite a burst of corporate activity that would usually lift investors' spirits.

Glencore [GLEN.UL], the world's largest commodities trading company, plans to raise up to $12.1 billion in a London and Hong Kong stock market floatation that is London's biggest ever. Shares in Japan's Isuzu Motors (7202.T) jumped on a report that Volkswagen (VOWG.DE) was considering buying all or part of it.

But European shares, as measured by the FTSEurofirst 300 .FTEU3 were down a half a percent, partly out of concern that Chinese inflation is returning.

Hong Kong's Phoenix TV, citing an unnamed source, said China's annual rate of inflation in March was likely to be 5.3-5.4 percent, a 32-month high and just above an estimate in a Reuters poll. [ID:nL3E7FE0EO]

Investors are particularly concerned about Chinese inflation in case government attempts to restrain it prompt a so-called hard landing for the economy.

"Inflation in emerging economies has become a serious issue, as the impact from high commodity prices is stronger for those countries," said Arnaud Scarpaci, fund manager at Paris-based Agilis Gestion.

Earlier, Nikkei benchmark .N225 closed up 0.1 percent, held back by continued worries about the impact of its earthquake, tsunami and nuclear disasters.

The Reuters Tankan survey of 400 large firms found on Thursday that power shortages caused by the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant had hit nearly 60 percent of local companies, disrupting production and supply chains. [ID:nnLME7DP00Q]

WEAK DOLLAR


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* Dollar at 16-month low

* Stocks weaker despite corporate activity

* Japan's Tankan points to supply chain problems

By Jeremy Gaunt, European Investment Correspondent

LONDON, April 14 (Reuters) - The dollar sank to a 16-month low against a basket of currencies on Thursday as investors bet U.S. monetary policy would continue to be loose, while a report that Chinese inflation will rise dragged on equities.

World stocks .MIWD00000PUS were flat to lower despite a burst of corporate activity that would usually lift investors' spirits.

Glencore [GLEN.UL], the world's largest commodities trading company, plans to raise up to $12.1 billion in a London and Hong Kong stock market floatation that is London's biggest ever. Shares in Japan's Isuzu Motors (7202.T) jumped on a report that Volkswagen (VOWG.DE) was considering buying all or part of it.

But European shares, as measured by the FTSEurofirst 300 .FTEU3 were down a half a percent, partly out of concern that Chinese inflation is returning.

Hong Kong's Phoenix TV, citing an unnamed source, said China's annual rate of inflation in March was likely to be 5.3-5.4 percent, a 32-month high and just above an estimate in a Reuters poll. [ID:nL3E7FE0EO]

Investors are particularly concerned about Chinese inflation in case government attempts to restrain it prompt a so-called hard landing for the economy.

"Inflation in emerging economies has become a serious issue, as the impact from high commodity prices is stronger for those countries," said Arnaud Scarpaci, fund manager at Paris-based Agilis Gestion.

Earlier, Nikkei benchmark .N225 closed up 0.1 percent, held back by continued worries about the impact of its earthquake, tsunami and nuclear disasters.

The Reuters Tankan survey of 400 large firms found on Thursday that power shortages caused by the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant had hit nearly 60 percent of local companies, disrupting production and supply chains. [ID:nnLME7DP00Q]

WEAK DOLLAR


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PRESS DIGEST - New York Times business news - April 14

birou notarial


April 14 | Thu Apr 14, 2011 4:01am EDT

April 14 (Reuters) - The following were the top stories in The New York Times business pages on Thursday. Reuters has not verified these stories and does not vouch for their accuracy.

* It is a question asked repeatedly across America: why, in the aftermath of a financial mess that generated hundreds of billions in losses, have no high-profile participants in the disaster been prosecuted? Several years after the financial crisis, no senior executives of major financial institutions have been charged, and a collective government effort has not emerged.

* A voluminous report on the financial crisis by the United States Senate - citing internal documents and private communications of bank executives, regulators, credit ratings agencies and investors - describes business practices that were rife with conflicts during the mortgage mania and reckless activities that were ignored inside the banks and among their federal regulators.

* Banks did a poor job of handling the flood of foreclosures over the last several years, in some cases even moving ahead with evictions when they clearly should not have, according to a long-awaited report released Wednesday by federal regulators.

* U.S. President Barack Obama proposed a mix of long-term spending cuts, tax increases and changes to social welfare programs as his opening position in a fierce partisan budget battle.

* The United States and its allies, frustrated in their efforts to pressure China directly to change its economic policies, are seeking to enlist other developing nations in an international campaign that China may find more palatable. At a meeting of finance ministers from the Group of 20 nations on Friday, the United States hopes to advance a set of proposed standards for judging the risks that individual nations pose to the global economy.

* JPMorgan Chase & Co kicked off bank earnings season on Wednesday, reporting a first-quarter profit of $5.6 billion, even as problems in its mortgage lending business continued to mount.

* The market for drugs to correct erectile dysfunction has passed $5 billion a year from sales to tens of millions of men. And it is increasingly being driven by novel applications to compete with the lower-priced generics on the horizon.

* In the weeks before his death, Sidney Harman acted every bit the proud new business owner he was. Until last Friday he was still discussing the business affairs of Newsweek and The Daily Beast. Associates of Harman, who died Tuesday, said Newsweek would remain in the family's hands and continue its venture with The Daily Beast.

* BP struggled Wednesday to salvage its deal with the Russian oil company Rosneft before a deadline to complete the pact expired on Thursday.

* Economic activity in the United States continued to improve over the last month, helped by the manufacturing and retail sectors, but the disaster in Japan and higher energy prices created new uncertainty about the outlook, according to a survey of the Federal Reserve's 12 districts released on Wednesday. (Compiled by Tenzin Pema; Bangalore Equities Newsdesk +91 80 4135 5800; within U.S. +1 646 223 8780)


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April 14 | Thu Apr 14, 2011 4:01am EDT

April 14 (Reuters) - The following were the top stories in The New York Times business pages on Thursday. Reuters has not verified these stories and does not vouch for their accuracy.

* It is a question asked repeatedly across America: why, in the aftermath of a financial mess that generated hundreds of billions in losses, have no high-profile participants in the disaster been prosecuted? Several years after the financial crisis, no senior executives of major financial institutions have been charged, and a collective government effort has not emerged.

* A voluminous report on the financial crisis by the United States Senate - citing internal documents and private communications of bank executives, regulators, credit ratings agencies and investors - describes business practices that were rife with conflicts during the mortgage mania and reckless activities that were ignored inside the banks and among their federal regulators.

* Banks did a poor job of handling the flood of foreclosures over the last several years, in some cases even moving ahead with evictions when they clearly should not have, according to a long-awaited report released Wednesday by federal regulators.

* U.S. President Barack Obama proposed a mix of long-term spending cuts, tax increases and changes to social welfare programs as his opening position in a fierce partisan budget battle.

* The United States and its allies, frustrated in their efforts to pressure China directly to change its economic policies, are seeking to enlist other developing nations in an international campaign that China may find more palatable. At a meeting of finance ministers from the Group of 20 nations on Friday, the United States hopes to advance a set of proposed standards for judging the risks that individual nations pose to the global economy.

* JPMorgan Chase & Co kicked off bank earnings season on Wednesday, reporting a first-quarter profit of $5.6 billion, even as problems in its mortgage lending business continued to mount.

* The market for drugs to correct erectile dysfunction has passed $5 billion a year from sales to tens of millions of men. And it is increasingly being driven by novel applications to compete with the lower-priced generics on the horizon.

* In the weeks before his death, Sidney Harman acted every bit the proud new business owner he was. Until last Friday he was still discussing the business affairs of Newsweek and The Daily Beast. Associates of Harman, who died Tuesday, said Newsweek would remain in the family's hands and continue its venture with The Daily Beast.

* BP struggled Wednesday to salvage its deal with the Russian oil company Rosneft before a deadline to complete the pact expired on Thursday.

* Economic activity in the United States continued to improve over the last month, helped by the manufacturing and retail sectors, but the disaster in Japan and higher energy prices created new uncertainty about the outlook, according to a survey of the Federal Reserve's 12 districts released on Wednesday. (Compiled by Tenzin Pema; Bangalore Equities Newsdesk +91 80 4135 5800; within U.S. +1 646 223 8780)


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