Sweet Europe, sour America?

(Reuters) – Investors are finding themselves with a new kind of balancing act — one in which they have to juggle with three major regions posing three significantly different circumstances.

Europe’s bank stress testing, the focus of much of the past week’s market debate, may have some impact on Monday but may well pale into insignificance given the most recent numbers on the broader economy.

First there is the United States, which is believed to be facing another slowdown, if not a double-dip recession.

Then there is Europe, suffering a debt crisis and austerity-bound, yet suddenly surprising everyone with an unexpected burst of economic vigor.

Thirdly, comes Asia, growing away so merrily that investors are beginning to be concerned that too much zeal will be exercised in trying to slow things down.

On top of that there is the decoupling of economics and earnings — keeping bond yields down and lifting stocks. The latest investment flow data from EPFR Global showed “yield hungry but skittish” investors flooding into bonds, but world stocks .MIWD00000PUS .TRXFLDGLPU are up more than 7 percent for the month.

“We are really in a much more difficult stage of the recovery right now,” Michala Marcussen, head of global economics at Societe Generale, said at a briefing with Reuters journalists.

She described markets as struggling with a “rotating crisis” in which one problem in one region becomes the focus of concern, only to be quickly replaced by another in another region.

“That ping pong is likely to go on for some time,” she said.

EUROPEAN TIGER?

Entering the new week, investors will first have to deal with any fallout from the stress tests of 91 European banks, which showed just seven failed, confirming fears the criteria used had been too soft.

Markets had been fairly calm about the tests, which, with Greece and other peripheral euro zone economies in mind, were designed to see how banks would fare in serious future crises.

The health check on 91 banks in 20 countries was widely criticized as being too soft. It was also overshadowed somewhat by a slew of data on European economies that suggested the banks may face less pressure and loan defaults than earlier thought.

That leaves investors to make up their own minds about particular banks, armed with the extra data the tests provided, including on sovereign bond holdings, to judge where further weak spots may be.

“With so few banks failing, investors will question whether the economic scenarios are sufficiently severe,” said Jon Peace, analyst at Nomura in London.

“It will be natural for investors to consider the margin by which banks passed,” he added, citing a good pass margin for Scandinavian and British banks, but Greek, Spanish and Italian banks faring less well.

European purchasing managers’ indexes in the past week showed private sector business activity accelerating in July, surprising economists who had expected a slowdown.

They indicated third-quarter euro zone growth of around 0.6-0.7 percent, double the 0.3 percent forecast in the most recent Reuters poll.

This was followed up by German business sentiment posting a record jump in July to its highest level in three years.

Non-euro zone member Britain also surprised with its economy growing twice as fast as expected in the second quarter of this year propelled by a sharp pick-up in services and the biggest rise in construction in almost 50 years.

Investors being investors, of course, these robust numbers triggered some new concerns about monetary tightening — hence the spike in the euro and pound against the dollar.

WEAKLING AMERICA?

The biggest piece of data likely to focus investors’ attention in the coming week is U.S. second-quarter GDP, out on Friday.

The U.S. economy is clearly coming off the boil, if, indeed, it was boiling. After three quarters of solid growth it is showing signs of slowing with firms still reluctant to hire and the housing sector seemingly unable to exit a prolonged rut.

It was enough, during the past week to prompt promises from Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke for more action if there are further signs of faltering.

This would particularly be the case if jobs don’t pick up.

“We are ready and will act if the economy does not continue to improve, if we don’t see the kind of improvements in the labor market that we are hoping for and expecting,” he told the House of Representatives Financial Services Committee.

This admission that all is not well has broad implications for investors even if other global drivers — major emerging market economies, such as China, and now Europe — are still on the upswing.

The question could turn out to be whether markets and other economies can thrive without the U.S. engine. History suggests not.

(Additional reporting by Blaise Robinson; Editing by Patrick Graham)

Fini ally warns Berlusconi as confidence votes loom

(Reuters) – Italy’s Gianfranco Fini, the increasingly dissenting co-founder of Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s party, has enough support to bring the government down, a Fini ally warned Saturday.

Fini has publicly challenged Berlusconi’s policies and leadership style in recent months, fuelling speculation he might lead a faction against the embattled premier.

Comments published Saturday by Fini associate Italo Bocchino will add pressure on Berlusconi, who faces two confidence votes in parliament — the first is expected on July 15 — on an unpopular 25-billion euros austerity budget.

Berlusconi has said that he would resign, as required by the constitution, if he lost the votes.

Asked by independent news outlet CNR Media how many followers could Fini count on, Bocchino said in a video interview: “At least one more than the number needed to keep the ruling coalition afloat.”

The Italian media were quick to pick up on signs of a widening rift between Fini and Berlusconi. Bocchino later said his words, which were posted on CNR Media website (www.cnrmedia.com), were misinterpreted.

He said in a statement Fini’s backers were “decisive” to keep the government going and would vote with the ruling coalition “until the last day of the legislature.”

Ever since Fini and Berlusconi publicly clashed at a party congress in April, there has been much speculation about whether dissenters within Berlusconi’s People of Freedom party had the numbers to deprive him of his parliamentary majority.

Il Giornale newspaper, which is owned by the Berlusconi family, calculated this week that without Fini and his allies, the government could count on 316 votes in the lower house of parliament — a majority of just one vote.

In the Senate, Il Giornale said that the center right without Fini and his allies had a five-vote majority at 162, but that did not include seven life senators, all of whom are former heads of state or otherwise distinguished public figures.

Fini, who is speaker of the lower house, and Berlusconi have exchanged regular barbs through the media, fuelling speculation that their enmity could destroy the coalition and force the appointment of a new government or snap elections.

The rivalry has leaked into the battle Berlusconi faces to push through parliament the austerity package designed to shore up Italy’s public finances.

The package, including spending freezes and pay cuts in the public sector, faces opposition from groups ranging from the unions to cash-strapped regional governments, with critics saying it bleeds workers and spares the rich.

Even diplomats have called a strike against the measures.

Berlusconi’s approval rating fell nine points to 41 percent over the past six weeks, according to a survey in Corriere della Sera daily this week, and his government appears more vulnerable than it has been since it took office in May 2008.

Two ministers have resigned in as many months over corruption accusations, while protests have been growing over a draft bill that would limit the use of wiretaps by police and punish newspapers that print transcript leaks.

(Editing by Matthew Jones)

COLUMN-Inflation or Deflation, why settle for just one? – Saft

Ala, July 1 (Reuters) – If you are trying to decide whether to fret about inflation or deflation, don’t bother: you may just get both.

Yes, in the spirit of these austere times, it is a two for one offer; deflation comes first, followed by an almighty inflation after central banks press the “go nuclear” button on the quantitative easing machine.

It seems clear that, at least in the near term, the stars are aligned for deflation. Rather than lancing a massive debt bubble, policy-makers have added to it and the intense pressure to clean balance sheets has spread from corporations and households to nations.

As in 1937 in the U.S. or 1997 in Japan, a move to budget austerity has taken hold in large swaths of the global economy, adding to the intense downward pressure already being generated by very large unused economic capacity.

If neither banks nor governments are willing and able to stoke demand then prices will fall, and as we have seen, absent an outside shock this is a cycle which feeds on itself.

Consumers and businesses will pay down debts that are becoming heavier as money becomes more valuable and they will delay purchases as prices fall.

Of course in a system in which the government can create money at will, deflation should theoretically be an easy problem to solve; central banks can, in Chairman Bernanke’s famous image, simply drop money from helicopters.

That, of course, is a bit like saying that anyone can rid their house of termites, as long as they have enough gasoline and matches; it will work but there may be considerable collateral damage.

This difficulty of achieving a controlled burn, or printing just enough extra money to stop deflation but without unleashing very high inflation, is perhaps one of the reasons quantitative easing has such a chequered history. Unless you are in extremis, it is hard to commit to it wholeheartedly.

The U.S. rowed back from its efforts, at least in part because the Federal Reserve faced predictable political pressure from a policy of directing credit to the housing market, a move that usurped Congress’ check signing role and led to increased and unwelcome oversight of the central bank from the Fed’s viewpoint.

THE FIRE NEXT TIME

Adam Posen, a member of the Bank of England Monetary Policy Committee and an expert on Japan’s deflation experience, more or less nodded to the deflation first, then inflation theory in a speech on Wednesday, though he was quite confident in the banks’ ability to control the inflation genie once released.

Noting that inflation has remained above target in Britain and that inflationary expectations have risen, he concluded that this was in part the result of having had a very loose and very extreme monetary policy the face of quite dire threats.

Posen described Britain as being poised between “a recovery, which we are now in, albeit perhaps an initially weak one … and the renewal of a severe recession if not outright deflation”.

The creep of inflation expectations was then the “unsurprising result of having set monetary policy to prevent a terrible downside risk, and finding policy appears too loose if that risk thankfully does not come to pass.”

In short, the very real threat of deflation calls for policy that will, if successful, unhinge inflation expectations.

Of course, Britain is not the U.S., nor is it Japan, but even though the small island without a true reserve currency is being forced to take austerity steps that may call for extreme monetary measures, something similar could happen in the U.S. for slightly different reasons.

If political pressure for no new spending in the U.S. mounts, more quantitative easing by the Fed may be an achievable quick way to support the system.

The last time we had QE it was amid supportive fiscal policy and with a Europe that was not in a crisis of identity and form.

If European banks begin to fall, beyond the inevitable rescue it would be easy to foresee a coordinated and quite large programme of QE to fend off a generalized sovereign crisis.

This gets us back to inflation, but the question is where does it stop?

This is how we reconcile a world with U.S. 10-year bond yields below 3.0 percent and gold at $1244 per ounce. Many sensible people believe very much in the threat of deflation and a substantial minority think that contains within it the seeds of an inflation to come.

(At the time of publication James Saft did not own any direct investments in securities mentioned in this article. He may be an owner indirectly as an investor in a fund. For previous columns by James Saft, click on [SAFT/])

Romania – Factors to Watch on June 29

June 29 (Reuters) – Here are news stories, press reports and events to watch which may affect Romanian financial markets on Tuesday.

FINMIN

Finance Minister Sebastian Vladescu and Interior Minister Vasile Blaga hold news conference on fighting tax evasion at 0900 GMT.

ECONMIN

Economy Minister Adriean Videanu is expected to attend a seminar of bourse listing of shares owned by the state starting at 0600 GMT.

ROMANIA LEU DEEPENS LOSSES AFTER TAX HIKE

Romania’s leu currency hit an all-time low against the euro on Monday EURRON=, as the government struggled to quell concerns over public finances following a court ruling that could undermine its deal with the IMF. It continued to slide in early trade on Tuesday.

[ID:nLDE65R0EM]

LEU

The recent leu losses do not show a tendency for destabilisation of the currency market, central bank adviser Adrian Vasilescu said.

He also said now there is a big question mark that will receive an answer on Wednesday, when the IMF board meets.

Ziarul Financiar, Page 1,3

Leu depreciation on Monday had a very important psychological component and for sure is reversible as the Romanian economy has not changed that strongly from one day to the other, Romania’s representative to the IMF Mihai Tanasescu said.

He also said that according to IMF calculations the balance exchange rate for the leu is 4.1 – 4.2 per euro.

Gandul, Page 2

ROMANIA SEEN HOLDING RATES AFTER VAT HIKE

Romania’s central bank is seen ending its rate easing cycle on Wednesday, holding rates at 6.25 percent, after a government plan to hike value added tax increased uncertainty about the economy and IMF loans.

[ID:nLDE65R16O]

WAGE CUTS

Parliament meets to rework an austerity package that the Constitutional Court overturned on Friday when it ruled planned pension cuts were illegal. Cuts in state wages, which the court did not object to but were included in the package, must now be re-discussed.

VAT HIKE

The government decision to hike the value added tax by 5 percentage points was published in Romania’s official monitor on Monday.

Ziarul Financiar, Page 3

NOTE- For a diary of forthcoming Romanian events, double

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For other related news, double click on: ————————————————————— Romania Market Debt [RO-DBT] Romanian forex [RO-FRX] Romania Market Report [ROL/] Romanian money [RO-M] Emerging Market Debt [EMRG/DBT] Emerging forex [EMRG/FRX] All Emerging Markets news [EMRG] CEE indicators [CONV/DIARY] All East Europe News [EEU] E.Europe equities [.CEE] TOP NEWS — Emerging markets [TOP/EMRG] TOP NEWS — Convergence watch [TOP/EAST] Romanian indicators [RO/ECI] Main page of Reuters poll —————————————————————

UPDATE 2-Czech Civic Democrat leader Necas to become new PM

PRAGUE, June 27 (Reuters) – Czech President Vaclav Klaus will name Civic Democrat leader Petr Necas as the next prime minister on Monday, ushering in what should be the strongest government in a decade to tackle economic reforms.

The Civic Democrats are leading coalition talks with two other centre-right parties, TOP09 and Public Affairs, after the three won a combined 118 seats out of 200 in a May 28-29 election with pledges of austerity and fighting corruption.

If the three parties agree on a coalition government they would have a strong majority to kick-start key reforms in pensions and healthcare compared with previous cabinets over the last decade which lacked a strong enough majority and the will to reform.

Talks between the parties have dragged because of disputes over policy and ministerial posts, including who should run the important finance ministry. Necas has said he wants a deal by early July, in time to prepare the 2011 budget.

“Tomorrow at 10 a.m. I will name Petr Necas as prime minister,” Klaus said on Sunday in a live television interview.

Klaus accepted the resignation of caretaker Prime Minister Jan Fischer on Friday ending a year-old interim cabinet that led the country after the collapse of the previous centre-right government. He will stay on until a new cabinet takes power.

Investors, analysts and rating agencies cheered the centre-right victory as the best possible election outcome, and most-likely grouping to make pension and health reform — areas in which the country of 10.5 million has lagged neighbours.

TOUGH TALKS STILL

The Czechs and other central European countries have mostly kept public budgets under control in the economic crisis and have debt levels lower than the European Union average.

But to meet the EU’s 3 percent of GDP deficit ceiling in the coming years, they all must find more savings.

The parties have agreed to cut the 2011 fiscal deficit to at least 4.8 percent of economic output, from 5.3 percent planned for 2010, by reducing money for state salaries and ministry budgets across the board, among other measures.

The Civic Democrats would get six posts in the cabinet, while conservative TOP09 and centrist Public Affairs would get five and four seats.

However, TOP09 has pushed hard to have its vice-chairman and former finance minister, Miroslav Kalousek, as head of the finance ministry — which many Civic Democrats have resisted.

Public Affairs, which along with TOP09 entered parliament for the first time, has said it might not enter the coalition but would support it in votes.

Party Vice-Chairman Vit Barta was quoted on Sunday as saying there was still a chance of this.

“The chance that we will be directly in the government is now about 20 percent. The probability is directly correlated to an agreement on the government programme, and can grow,” Barta was cited as saying by online server iDnes.cz.

Another party official said on Sunday on Czech Television that the party would not enter the government if Public Affairs Chairman Radek John did not get the interior minister post. (Editing by Matthew Jones)

Romania court rules some cuts illegal – agency

June 25 (Reuters) – Romania’s Constitutional Court rejected some parts of a key austerity package related to pensions on Friday, endangering a vital IMF-led aid deal, local news agency Agerpres reported, citing judicial sources.

Bonds | Global Markets

The court said an official announcement would follow shortly.

Disbursement of about 2 billion euros in aid from the International Monetary Fund and the European Union depended on the court’s approval of a government move to slash state wages by a quarter and cut pensions by 15 percent.

The IMF deal is the main anchor for foreign investors, whose cash is vital to the struggling recession-hit economy. (Reporting by Luiza Ilie and Sam Cage; editing by Philippa Fletcher)

Romania – Factors to Watch on June 24

June 24 (Reuters) – Here are news stories, press reports and events to watch which may affect Romanian financial markets on Thursday.

Energy

AUSTERITY

Romania’s powerful Constitutional Court is expected to rule on challenges to planned government cuts in state wages and pensions, key to keeping afloat a 20 billion euros IMF-led aid package.

MAY MONEY SUPPLY

The central bank is expected to release money supply data for May.

ROMANIA PARLIAMENT DELAYS IMF-MANDATED PENSION BILL

Romania’s parliament postponed on Wednesday the approval of an IMF-mandated plan to reform the country’s communist-era pension system until September, missing a deadline agreed with the Fund.

[ID:nLDE65M19X]

ROMANIA LEVIES NEW TAXES ON STATE FIRMS, INDIVIDUALS

Romania’s government raised the amount state-owned companies must contribute from their profits to the state budget and enforced new taxes on individuals and employers as it seeks to cut its budget deficit.

[ID:nLDE65M1RQ]

FISCAL COUNCIL

Romanian official institutions, including the central bank, have nominated on Wednesday proposals for the country’s fiscal council set up to assess the government’s budget plans through an IMF-mandated fiscal responsibility law.

Parliament is expected to approve the nominations on Tuesday.

Agerpres

PUBLIC SECTOR LAYOFFS

The government would need to lay off about a quarter of its 1.4 million public sector employees to ensure enough resources next year to reverse a planned 25 percent cut in state wages for 2010, the central bank’s chief economist Valentin Lazea said.

Gandul, Page 4

NOTE- For a diary of forthcoming Romanian events, double

click [RO/DIARY], and a calendar of east European economic indicators, see [CONV/DIARY].

For other related news, double click on: ————————————————————— Romania Market Debt [RO-DBT] Romanian forex [RO-FRX] Romania Market Report [ROL/] Romanian money [RO-M] Emerging Market Debt [EMRG/DBT] Emerging forex [EMRG/FRX] All Emerging Markets news [EMRG] CEE indicators [CONV/DIARY] All East Europe News [EEU] E.Europe equities [.CEE] TOP NEWS — Emerging markets [TOP/EMRG] TOP NEWS — Convergence watch [TOP/EAST] Romanian indicators [RO/ECI] Main page of Reuters poll —————————————————————

Merkel-German govt to stick to austerity programme

June 24 (Reuters) – German Chancellor Angela Merkel said her government would stick to its austerity programme and said a record federal deficit of 80 billion euros this year meant there was no scope to relax.

Bonds | Global Markets

In an interview with German TV ARD broadcast on Thursday morning, Merkel also dismissed criticism that Germany is not doing enough on economic stimulus measures. She said Germany spends about 2.1 percent of its gross domestic product to reinforce economic growth.

Merkel said the government would stick to its austerity programme even though some leaders of her junior coalition partners, the Free Democrats, have called for tax relief.

“We’ll enact the measures that we’ve agreed upon,” Merkel said. “I believe we should not let up.”

Merkel said a federal deficit of 80 billion euros deficit this year in a budget totalling 320 billion euros made it imperative to continue looking for ways to reduce the deficit.

“Eighty billion euros in a budget of 320 billion euros — it would benefit everyone if we can save another 10 billion euros next year if the economy picks up,” she said, pointing out that would cut interest costs for future generations.

“I think one should be pleased with that but not let up as far as structural cost-cutting is concerned,” she said.

Merkel said she had told U.S. President Barack Obama in a phone call that Germany has done much to support economic growth with stimulus measures. Despite the austerity programme, she said Germany has done much to support a recovery.

“Germany is doing much more in 2010 for the worldwide economic recovery than (other countries) on average,” she said.

Economy Minister Rainer Bruederle had said on Wednesday on Wednesday that tax cuts the centre-right government agreed in a 2009 coalition deal were only delayed recently and not cancelled.

Bruederle, a member of the FDP, called for tax cuts for middle income wage earners before the end of the current legislative period that concludes in 2013.

Germany has launched its biggest programme of fiscal cutbacks since World War Two and Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble has said it does not have the leeway to carry out major tax reforms during the current legislature.

But there has been dissent within Merkel’s coalition over the 30 billion euros in savings over the next four years on welfare and slashing thousands of federal government jobs.

(Writing by Erik Kirschbaum; Editing by Kim Coghill)

Romania – Factors to Watch on June 16

June 16 (Reuters) – Here are news stories, press reports and events to watch which may affect Romanian financial markets on Wednesday.

Energy

GOVERNEMNT MEETING

The centrist coalition government holds weekly government meeting at 0600 GMT with no major items on the preliminary agenda.

FINANCIAL SEMINAR

Central bank governor Mugur Isarescu is expected to attend a seminar about small and medium sized enterprises.

Central bank chief economist Valentin Lazea and Isarescu’s adviser Lucian Croitoru are also expected to attend.

CURRENT ACCOUNT

The central bank is expected to release 4-month current account data.

ROMANIAN GOVT SURVIVES AUSTERITY CONFIDENCE VOTE

Romania’s centrist coalition government survived a no-confidence vote in parliament on Tuesday over planned drastic spending cuts, a key step towards securing international aid for its recession-hit economy.

[ID:nLDE65E06I]

ROMANIA’S IMF DEAL STILL AT RISK AFTER VOTE

Romania’s vital IMF deal could yet be derailed by legal challenges and investors will still worry about public finances, even after the coalition government survived a no-confidence vote on Tuesday.

[ID:nLDE65E29Q]

BUDGET REVISION

A budget revision tu cut spending could take place in the next two or three weeks, Finance Minister Sebastian Vladescu said.

Gandul, page 5

FITCH GDP FCAST

Romania’s economy will drop by 1 percent in 2010 and no significant improvement of the country’s rating is expected in the next period, Richard Hunter, Fitch Group Managing Director for European and Asian Corporates was paraphrased as saying.

Ziarul Financiar, Page 2

CARS

Car registrations dropped 49 percent on the year in January-May in Romania, to about 26,300 units.

Ziarul Financiar, Page 11

GOVERNMENT RESHUFFLE

A government reshuffle could take place in about two weeks, a minister who did not want to be named told daily Gandul.

Gandul, Page 1

*The number of ministries in the government could be reduced to 9 or 10, sources said. Also, at Wednesday’s government meeting the ministers are expected to come up with proposals to reduce the number of deputy ministers.

Evenimentul Zilei, Page 2

WIND TURBINES FACTORY

Swiss company Windex plans to build a 25-million-euro wind turbine factory in the south-eastern Constanta county in two months.

Romania Libera, Page 3

NOTE- For a diary of forthcoming Romanian events, double

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For other related news, double click on: ————————————————————— Romania Market Debt [RO-DBT] Romanian forex [RO-FRX] Romania Market Report [ROL/] Romanian money [RO-M] Emerging Market Debt [EMRG/DBT] Emerging forex [EMRG/FRX] All Emerging Markets news [EMRG] CEE indicators [CONV/DIARY] All East Europe News [EEU] E.Europe equities [.CEE] TOP NEWS — Emerging markets [TOP/EMRG] TOP NEWS — Convergence watch [TOP/EAST] Romanian indicators [RO/ECI] Main page of Reuters poll —————————————————————

Romania – Factors to Watch on June 15

June 15 (Reuters) – Here are news stories, press reports and events to watch which may affect Romanian financial markets on Tuesday.

Energy

ROMANIA GOVT FACES CONFIDENCE VOTE OVER AUSTERITY

Romania’s centrist coalition government looks likely to defeat a no-confidence vote in parliament on Tuesday over planned deep spending cuts, giving it greater scope to carry out reforms.

Boc’s centre-right coalition needs 236 votes to survive the vote, expected to take place in the early afternoon after a debate in parliament which starts at 0700 GMT.

Unions are hoping up to a million Romanians will support a planned one-day general strike on the day of the vote.

[ID:nLDE65D0ZT]

ROMANIA LIMITS DEBT SALE AHEAD OF CONFIDENCE VOTE

Romania sold less debt than planned in a tender on Monday, hoping it will create a more stable political backdrop and ease pressure on yields a day later by winning a no-confidence vote.

[ID:nLDE65D1CP]

ROMANIA FINMIN NOT DESPERATE TO SELL DEBT – PRESS

Romania can afford to reject bids at debt tenders if yields asked by investors are too high, Finance Minister Sebastian Vladescu was quoted as saying ahead of a T-bill auction on Monday.

[ID:nLDE65D0BX]

CONSTITUTIONAL COURT JUDGES

Romania’s senate appointed Iulia Antoanella Motoc and Mircea Stefan Minea as new judges in the nine-member Constitutional Court on Monday. Both were nominated by the ruling Democrat Liberal Party.

SOUTH STREAM

Economy Minister Adriean Videanu could meet Gazprom CEO Alexei Miller on June 16 in Moscow to discuss Romania’s possible participation in the South Stream project, Miller said last week.

Marcel Piteiu, head of Romania’s state-owned gas company Romgaz, said he believes Romania will be invited to join South Stream.

Ziarul Financiar, Page 8

IMF

Romania will decide after the present IMF deal is done if it needs further help from the Fund, but it should better stick to implementing reforms and not get a new loan, Mihai Tanasescu, Romania’s representative to the IMF was paraphrased as saying.

Gandul, Page 4

NOTE- For a diary of forthcoming Romanian events, double

click [RO/DIARY], and a calendar of east European economic indicators, see [CONV/DIARY].

For other related news, double click on: ————————————————————— Romania Market Debt [RO-DBT] Romanian forex [RO-FRX] Romania Market Report [ROL/] Romanian money [RO-M] Emerging Market Debt [EMRG/DBT] Emerging forex [EMRG/FRX] All Emerging Markets news [EMRG] CEE indicators [CONV/DIARY] All East Europe News [EEU] E.Europe equities [.CEE] TOP NEWS — Emerging markets [TOP/EMRG] TOP NEWS — Convergence watch [TOP/EAST] Romanian indicators [RO/ECI] Main page of Reuters poll —————————————————————

UPDATE 1-Greek March jobless rate eases to 11.6 pct, seen up

ATHENS, June 10 (Reuters) – Greece’s unemployment rate eased to 11.6 percent in March after hitting a six-year high of 12.1 percent in February but is seen worsening as austerity policies to slash deficits and debt deepen the economy’s downturn.

Greece’s jobless rate was the fourth-highest in the 16-member euro zone after Spain, Slovakia and Ireland and 1.6 percentage points above the bloc’s average in March. [ID:nBRLTFE60Y]

Official data showed a sharp deterioration in the labour market from March last year, when unemployment was 9.2 percent. Another 121,699 people lost their jobs over the year, a 26.6 percent increase in the officially unemployed to 578,723.

Investors are closely watching public reaction to government wage and pension cuts agreed as part of a 110 billion euro ($139.7 billion) EU-IMF funding deal, amid concerns that protests and social unrest may jeopardise fiscal consolidation.

“Plummeting activity levels and a dire economic outlook are clearly taking their toll on the labour market,” said economist Diego Iscaro at IHS Global Insight. “We expect unemployment to continue to increase during the rest of the year.”

Iscaro said a deteriorating labour market would exert more pressure on private consumption with households already being hit by higher taxes and inflation, tight credit and wage cuts in the public sector.

Greece’s 240 billion euro economy, which accounts for about 2.5 percent of the euro zone, shrank by 1.0 percent quarter-on-quarter in the first three months of the year.

Economists and the country’s central bank see the austerity-induced recession deepening to about 4 percent in 2010.

Sectors such as construction, retail and manufacturing have suffered the most from the ongoing crisis.

Since last year major Greek companies, such as cooler maker Frigoglass (FRIr.AT) and Emporiki Bank (CBGr.AT) have been slashing jobs to cope with the slowdown. Others like aluminium products maker Alumil (ALMr.AT) are reducing working hours and pay.

Data by the Hellenic Statistics Authority (HSA) showed that unemployment hit young people hardest with the jobless rate reaching 29.8 percent in the 15-24 age group and 15.4 percent for those aged 25 to 34.

It was also worse for women, with the jobless rate among females at 15.9 percent versus 8.5 percent for men.

HSA will release first quarter unemployment figures June 17.

(additional reporting by Tatiana Fragou)

Top Italy union to strike over budget on June 25

June 9 (Reuters) – Italy’s largest trade union has announced it will hold a national strike on June 25 over the government’s 25 billion-euro austerity package that includes cuts to funding for local governments and salary freezes.

Bonds | Global Markets

The left-wing CGIL said on Wednesday its state sector workers, which are hardest hit by the government’s package, will strike for 24 hours, while its other members will strike for just four hours.

The strike will be preceded on June 12 by CGIL protest marches and rallies around the country.

The CGIL has around 6 million members, more than half of whom are pensioners.

Its leader Guglielmo Epifani told Reuters last month that the union planned a national strike, probably on June 25, but gave no details on the separate plans for public and private sector workers. [ID:nLDE64U09O]

The two-year austerity budget is already taking a toll on the popularity of Silvio Berlusconi [ID:nLDE6520J7] but pressure on the prime minister is eased by trade union divisions.

The other two main unions, the CISL and UIL, have offered only muted criticism of the budget and refused to join the CGIL in strike action [ID:nLDE64Q17S].

Exclusive: EU debt crisis boosts chance of energy tax overhaul

(Reuters) – The greenest fuels would become the cheapest under plans for a pan-European energy tax which would also help governments tackle huge debts without raising taxes on workers, draft documents show.

Gulf Oil Spill

The European Union’s executive wants to overhaul Europe’s 240 billion euro ($294 billion) annual taxation of energy, which varies widely between countries and often creates paradoxical incentives that encourage the biggest polluters.

“Standard taxation rules discriminate against renewable energies,” said an EU briefing document seen by Reuters.

European countries have traditionally put up stiff resistance to interference from Brussels on tax matters.

But a window of opportunity has emerged for a tax overhaul because it could help governments such as Italy, Greece and Spain to cut deficits urgently and reduce public debts without raising unpopular income tax.

Trade unions are planning strikes and rallies across southern Europe this month to oppose deficit-cutting austerity plans as countries try to avoid suffering a debt crisis similar to the one facing Greece.

“The global financial and economic crisis has left deep strains on the public finances of most countries,” said the draft document. “This … should play an important role in offering member states a basis … to shift the tax burden away from labor or capital.”

Diplomats say the proposal’s chances of adoption are better now than ever before.

If approved by EU leaders, the new rules would be phased in between 2013 and 2018, laying down minimum rates of taxation for everything from coal, to heating oil to biodiesel.

Farmers might be granted exemptions, although discussions continue within the European Commission, which initiates EU law.

PROTECTION

Commission tax spokeswoman Emer Traynor said she could not comment on the draft document, but reiterated the philosophy behind the plans.

“The objective is not to raise taxes — it is to restructure them in a way that consumers can understand and manage,” she said. “Consumers would be able to reduce the amount of tax they pay by changing their behavior and being more energy efficient.”

Protections are being crafted in the policy for heavy industries, such as steel and chemicals, that face tough competition from their overseas rivals that enjoy lower costs because they can pollute for free.

Measures are also being drafted to help poor households, which usually pay a relatively high share of their income for heating.

The tax would have two components. The first is an energy tax based on fuels’ energy content rather than their volume as now. The second is a carbon tax, which is being discussed in the range of 4 to 30 euros per tonne of carbon dioxide.

Carbon taxation is already used by Denmark, Sweden and Ireland, and Britain, Germany and the Netherlands have various eco-taxes. But the idea met resistance from farmers, fishermen and haulers when French President Nicolas Sarkozy tried to push the idea through last year.

A diplomatic source said France supported the proposal, but Germany was expected to have problems with it.

EU sources say farmers might well win exemptions from the energy taxation, but they are less likely to avoid the carbon element as agriculture is such a key emitter. The EU’s various commissioners will debate the plan on June 23.

BIOFUELS

Over the next decade, the European Union plans to cut by a fifth its emissions of carbon dioxide, the gas most blamed for climate change. The main tool for doing that is its carbon market, the EU Emissions Trading Scheme, which forces polluters to buy a permit for each tonne of carbon they emit.

But about half of the EU’s polluters have not been tackled by the scheme, such as transport, which creates 23 percent of all EU emissions, and households which are responsible for 10 percent.

A carbon tax could solve that imbalance and at the same time make a 4 percent contribution to the EU’s climate change goals, the draft says.

Those climate goals are undermined by a system which makes the lowest tax demands on the biggest source of pollution, coal, and puts the highest tax on one of the greenest, bioethanol.

Bioethanol is taxed at a rate of 17 euros per gigajoule, 50 percent higher than normal gasoline and more than twice as much as normal diesel, the draft shows.

But under the new scheme, biofuels — which in theory can absorb almost as much carbon when they are grown as is released when they are burned — would enjoy a significant tax cut.

(Reporting by Pete Harrison, editing by Timothy Heritage)

UPDATE 1-Euro zone factory PMI sinks, output growth slows

LONDON, June 1 (Reuters) – Manufacturing in the euro zone expanded in May, but at a far slower rate than April’s 46-month high as cost pressures and tighter margins drove firms to take their feet off the production accelerator, a survey showed on Tuesday.

The 16-nation bloc and its common currency have been hit by waves of investor insecurity churned up by the region’s debt crisis and fears that troubles in Greece may be spreading to other peripheral euro zone economies.

“There has been a slowdown in growth globally and in the euro zone there is subdued domestic demand due to the austerity measure implemented in some countries,” said Luigi Speranza at BNP Paribas.

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For a graphic see: r.reuters.com/quj57k

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The Markit Eurozone Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index for May sank to 55.8 from 57.6 in April, nudged down from an earlier flash estimate of 55.9.

This is its eighth month above the 50.0 mark that divides growth from contraction, but markets were unmoved by the data.

Cost pressures were on the rise, with the price of factories’ raw materials forced up by the weaker euro.

The output index recorded its second fastest slide in the survey’s history — only surpassed in the aftermath of Lehman Brothers’ collapse — to stand well shy of April’s near 10-year high of 61.2 at 56.8. It inched up from a flash reading of 56.7.

“Importantly, however, the pace of growth remained robust, and the slowdown in May no doubt reflects a payback from April’s ultra-strong growth to some extent,” said Chris Williamson at data provider Markit.

In Germany, the bloc’s biggest economy, manufacturing activity slowed from the previous month’s survey’s record high. Neighbouring France, the second biggest, saw growth in its sector slow from April’s near 4-year high.

Spain and Italy also saw a dip in their main indexes. A separate survey on the UK showed manufacturing activity holding on to its strongest pace in 15 years.

Euro zone manufacturers were hit by rising input prices, with that index reaching its highest level since July 2008 at 73.7 last month, compared to 73.4 in April.

The euro has been battered in recent weeks, driving up costs of materials from outside the bloc, on fears that Greece’s debt problems will spread and in spite of a $1 trillion safety net set up by European policymakers earlier this month.

However, the output price index fell from last month, suggesting producers had more trouble passing on price rises to customers.

Flash data released on Monday showed prices in the bloc rose 1.6 percent in May, faster than the 1.5 percent seen in April.

Detailed PMI data are only available under licence from Markit and customers need to apply to Markit for a licence.

To subscribe to the full data, click on the link below: here

For further information, please phone Markit on +44 20 7260 2454 or email economics@markit.com

(Editing by Toby Chopra, John Stonestreet)

Greek seamen strike, ships stranded in ports

ATHENS, May 31 (Reuters) – Ferries and cruise ships were stranded at Greek ports on Monday as seamen staged a 24-hour strike against a government decision to lift restrictions on vessels docking with foreign crews, port officials said.

Bookings to Greece are already down this year following a wave of strikes and sometimes violent protests against government pay cuts and tax hikes imposed as a condition for receiving a 110-billion euro EU/IMF emergency loan.

Dozens of passenger ships were stranded at Greece’s largest port of Piraeus while traffic was halted between Athens and Greek islands due to the strike which started at 0300 GMT.

“Ships didn’t leave Piraeus this morning, there is no traffic between ports, nothing is moving,” said a coast guard official who declined to be named.

The Greek government said in April it would allow non-EU-flagged cruise ships with non-Greek crew to moor at its ports and travel between Greek islands so as to boost the number of ships arriving in Greece and help the vital tourism industry.

But unions say the move will lead to job cuts.

Tourism is the top contributor to Greece’s 240 billion euro ($294 billion) economy, accounting for about 18 percent of GDP. Shipping is usually the second or third biggest earner, with 5 percent of GDP.

Greece’s Socialist government has so far stood fast in the face of the public pressure and stuck to the austerity measures.

Greece can expect a period of calm now as many leave Athens for the stiflingly hot summer, but anger may grow again in September as the population returns, especially if earnings from the crucial tourist season have dropped dramatically.

Only three out of five cruise ships expected at Piraeus arrived on Monday morning. Passengers disembarked normally, but dozens of protesting seamen and members of the Communist labour group PAME blocked the gates of the port preventing other tourists from boarding the cruise ships.

But in a rare sign of opposition to the industrial action, dozens of shop owners, tourist guides and other tourism workers chanted “hands off tourism” and handed roses to the passengers. (Reporting by Renee Maltezou and Yiorgos Karahalis; Editing by Jon Hemming)

GLOBAL MARKETS-Euro inches up, stocks flat after China warning

LONDON, May 31 (Reuters) – The euro steadied from recent falls and world stocks were becalmed on Monday with a Chinese warning about risks to global growth and a downgrade of Spain’s credit heightening investor caution in holiday-thinned trade.

Europe’s common currency inched up, recovering modest losses suffered after a cut to Spain’s sovereign debt rating late on Friday, but the currency remained on the back foot as the downgrade served as a reminder about the euro zone debt crisis.

Fitch cut Spain’s credit rating by one notch, saying its recovery will be more muted than the government forecast due to its austerity measures. The downgrade helped send Wall Street lower ahead of a three-day weekend. [ID:nLDE64R1ZE]

Analysts said the move had largely been priced in and Fitch still rated it higher than fellow agency Standard & Poor’s.

“It’s just a reminder that the euro zone crisis hasn’t gone away. It’s still lurking,” said Bernard McAlinden, investment strategist at NCB Stockbrokers in Dublin.

By 0920 GMT, the euro EUR= was little changed on the day at $1.2300, pulling back from the day’s high of $1.2334 hit in early European trade.

The single currency looks set to end the month of May around 7.5 percent lower against the dollar as ongoing debt problems in euro zone countries have rocked confidence in the euro system.

A French government minister also said on Sunday keeping its top-notch credit rating would be “a stretch” without some tough budget decisions.

June Bund futures FGBLc1 were trading at 128.62, up 12 ticks from Friday’s settlement close. About 60,000 lots changed hands so far compared with a daily average of around one million lots seen this month.

German government bonds have been one of the main beneficiaries of investors seeking harbour from the euro zone debt crisis. The 10-year Spanish/German spread ES10YT=RREU10YT=RR widened about 3 basis points to 160 bps.

With market holidays in London and New York, investors needed few excuses to trade with caution but China provided another one.

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao warned that global economic growth remained vulnerable to sovereign debt risks and the possibility of a second downturn, but said his own nation’s growth remained on track. [ID:nTOE64U03S]

STOCKS STEADY AT END OF BAD MONTH

Global equities measured by the MSCI All-Country World Index .MIWD00000PUS were absolutely flat on the day but the index is down nearly 10 percent this month, heading for its worst monthly loss since February 2009.

European shares .FTEU3 were up 0.2 percent with trading set to remain subdued.

BP’s shares fell more than seven percent at one point in Frankfurt after U.S. government and BP (BP.L) officials warned that the blown-out oil well causing an environmental disaster on the Gulf Coast may not be stopped until August. [ID:nN31222759]

Japan’s Nikkei average .N225 inched up for a fourth straight day of gains — ending 5.72 points higher.

There was little major market reaction to renewed political tension after Israeli commandos intercepted Gaza-bound aid ships on Monday and at least 10 pro-Palestinian activists on board were killed. [ID:nLDE64U01P]

But Turkish stocks dropped nearly two percent. Some of the ships in the convoy were carrying Turkey’s flag. [ID:nLDE64U0OR]

“This is very serious,” said Tera Brokers in a research note. “We are not sure how bad things could get; the event is definitely not market friendly as Turkish-Israeli relations are now in uncharted territory.”

Oil rose above $74 a barrel on Monday as the euro steadied, although worries about euro zone economic stability saw the commodity record its biggest monthly loss in 18 months. [O/R] (Editing by Stephen Nisbet)

Nikkei edges lower, but shrugs off Spain

* Spain downgrade not a surprise, factored in – analyst

Stocks

* Charts tentatively signal chance of rebound

* Nikkei on track for worst monthly fall in over 1 yr

By Elaine Lies

TOKYO, May 31 (Reuters) – Japan’s Nikkei average slipped 0.2 percent on Monday, as trading firms lost ground after commodities prices fell following a downgrade in Spain’s credit rating that reinforced worries about euro zone debt issues.

But a number of exporters including Canon Inc (7751.T) edged higher as the yen fell back against the dollar and the euro, with market players saying investors were bargain hunting on any dips in stock prices.

Fitch cut Spain’s credit rating by one notch on Friday, saying the country’s economic recovery will be more muted than the government forecast due to its austerity measures. The downgrade helped send Wall Street lower ahead of a three-day weekend. [ID:nLDE64R1ZE] [ID:nN28218151]

Market players said however the impact of the rating cut on the broader market was limited for now, noting that many analysts had expected the move and only the timing was a surprise.

“While Fitch did cut Spain’s rating, S&P did the same thing in April, so it’s not as if the move was all that new,” said Takashi Ushio, head of the investment strategy division at Marusan Securities.

“There’s the sense that the Nikkei may be about to start a bit of a rebound. It’s held up quite well even though Wall Street fell. But gains will definitely be capped around 10,000 for now.”

The benchmark Nikkei .N225 shed 20.27 points to 9,742.71 while the broader Topix was flat at 828.14.

The Nikkei has lost 12 percent during May as of the end of trade on Friday, putting it on track for its worst one-month performance in well over a year.

But technical indicators are starting to point tentatively towards a possible rebound, with the Nikkei’s relative strength index (RSI) climbing above 30 late last week. Anything under 30 is considered oversold.

The Nikkei’s MACD has also stopped falling and appears to be inching upwards.

“The Fitch ratings cut on Spain shows that the European issues have not yet been cleared up at all, and this prompted selling of overseas stocks,” said Hiroichi Nishi, general manager at the equity division of Nikko Cordial Securities.

“Yet while there’s a trend towards a stronger yen, it isn’t pronounced, and it’s possible that Wall Street’s falls may have been exaggerated by investor desire to take profits ahead of a three-day weekend. All of this may limit falls.”

The euro rose 0.6 percent against the yen to 112.56 yen EURJPY=R while the dollar rose 0.3 percent against the yen at 91.38 yen JPY=

Canon rose 1.1 percent to 3,780 yen and TDK Corp (6762.T) crawled up 0.4 percent to 5,360 yen.

Honda Motor Co (7267.T) was slightly firmer at 2,783 yen. It said it expected production at a China parts plant, the centre of a labour dispute, to resume on Monday. [ID:nTOE64U029]

Trading houses slid after metals prices fell on Friday in the wake of the Spain ratings cut.

Mitsubishi Corp (8058.T) shed 1.5 percent to 2,042 yen and Mitsui & Co (8031.T) lost 2 percent to 1,295 yen. Itochu Corp (8001.T) fell 1.7 percent to 745 yen. (Reporting by Elaine Lies; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)

“White Material” a gripping story of war, delusion

SAN FRANCISCO (Hollywood Reporter) – With “White Material,” a taut, unforgettable film, French director Claire Denis returns to Africa. But it’s not the place she knew as a child or the comparatively innocent world of her debut feature, “Chocolat.”

Film

Instead, the unnamed country where the film’s story transpires is a ruined paradise overtaken by poverty and near mythic violence; human savagery has been unleashed and the unspeakable is primed to happen and does.

In her strongest work since “Beau Travail,” Denis creates the threat of imminent danger through stillness and austerity rather than action. She’s helped immeasurably by an astringent, fully committed performance from her leading lady, a gaunt, impossibly resolute Isabelle Huppert, who is as hard and unforgiving as the patch of land on which her character, a stranger in a strange land, has staked her claim and hacked out an existence.

Subtitled films have an especially difficult time gaining theatrical release in the U.S. but, Denis’s reputation coupled with the film’s high caliber and what is certain to be positive critical response could attract a modest art house audience.

Settlers in a territory torn apart by civil war and dead-eyed, machete-wielding child soldiers, French ex-pat Martha Vial (Huppert) and her family have been running a coffee plantation but production comes to an abrupt halt after war breaks out between the rebels and the government. Both sides may be brutal toward each other but they share a resentment of the white interlopers. Though Martha’s workers flee, she refuses to leave or acknowledge the gathering storm, a form of denial that escalates into delusion and jeopardizes those around her with inevitable, tragic consequences.

With tenacity bordering on madness and no small amount of courage, however misguided, Martha insists on operating the crippled plantation, even as her husband (Christophe Lambert) barters for their safety with the local mayor (William Nadylam), an ominous figure who, now that the tables have turned, holds all the cards. Denis has much to say here about the deadly game of power, those who have it and those who would take it away or take it back.

Martha’s willful blindness extends to her angelic looking lay-about teenage son (Nicolas Duvauchelle). He goes off the deep end following a terrifying incident in which he’s stripped and has his hair lopped off by a pair of African children.

Violence is the monster in the box, waiting to jump out, and no one is immune. Scruffy wild animals emerging from the woods seem civilized compared to the humans rampaging through the countryside. Scenes of the waif-like Martha, wandering on dusty clay roads in her pastel dresses, heighten the impression of a creature no longer at the top of the food chain.

The spartan script by Denis and Marie N’Diaye shifts back and forth in time while Guy LeCorne’s editing lends surreal transitions and ill-defined relationships the hazy logic of memory. Yves Cape’s handheld camera, like an unseen predator, stays uncomfortably close, stalking Martha as relentlessly as the danger she’s unwilling to face, and the mournful score of aching cellos and tribal rhythms by Denis’s frequent collaborator, Stuart Staples, marches toward unbearable loss

“I would never have to show courage in France,” says Martha of her preference to struggle and die in this godforsaken place rather than live a slack, meaningless existence in comfort. She hangs on when hope is gone and all signs point to the exit because she has nowhere else to go.

Nikkei edges lower, market mostly shrugs off Spain

* Spain downgrade not a surprise, factored in – analyst

Stocks

* Charts tentatively signal chance of rebound

* Nikkei on track for worst monthly fall in over 1 yr

* Coalition partner pullout not having an impact

By Elaine Lies

TOKYO, May 31 (Reuters) – Japan’s Nikkei average slipped 0.1 percent on Monday, weighed down by trading firms after commodities prices fell following a downgrade in Spain’s credit rating that reinforced worries about euro zone debt issues.

But a number of exporters including Canon Inc (7751.T) edged higher as the yen fell back against the dollar and the euro, with market players saying bargain hunting was likely on any dips.

Fitch cut Spain’s credit rating by one notch on Friday, saying the country’s economic recovery will be more muted than the government forecast due to its austerity measures. The downgrade helped send Wall Street lower ahead of a three-day weekend. [ID:nLDE64R1ZE] [ID:nN28218151]

Market players said however the impact of the rating cut on the broader market was limited for now, noting that many analysts had expected the move and only the timing was a surprise.

“In many ways, this is news that was already out there, so it doesn’t appear to have fed risk avoidance all that much,” said Nagayuki Yamagishi, a strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities.

The benchmark Nikkei .N225 shed 14.09 points to 9,748.89, while the broader Topix lost 0.1 percent to 878.10.

The Nikkei had lost 12 percent for May as of the end of trade on Friday, putting it on track for its worst one-month performance in well over a year.

But technical indicators are starting to point tentatively towards a possible rebound, with the Nikkei’s relative strength index (RSI) climbing above 30 late last week. Anything under 30 is considered oversold.

The Nikkei’s MACD has also stopped falling and appears to be inching upwards.

“The Fitch ratings cut on Spain shows that the European issues have not yet been cleared up at all, and this prompted selling of overseas stocks,” said Hiroichi Nishi, general manager at the equity division of Nikko Cordial Securities.

“Yet while there’s a trend towards a stronger yen, it isn’t pronounced, and it’s possible that Wall Street’s falls may have been exaggerated by investor desire to take profits ahead of a three-day weekend. All of this may limit falls.”

POLITICS, CURRENCY

Japan’s tiny Social Democratic Party decided on Sunday to leave the ruling coalition ahead of an upper house election but this was not having much of an impact on the Nikkei, market players said. [ID:nSGE64T00L]

“After all, it’s not as if the government is going to fall today, though as the July elections approach there may be more concern about politics overall,” said Yamagishi at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities.

The euro rose 0.6 percent against the yen to 112.33 yen EURJPY=R while the dollar rose 0.3 percent against the yen at 91.35 yen JPY=

Canon rose 0.9 percent to 3,775 yen and TDK Corp (6762.T) crawled up 0.8 percent to 5,380 yen.

Honda Motor Co (7267.T) was slightly firmer at 2,783 yen.

Honda is still trying to resolve a labour dispute at a China parts plant that led to the closure of all four of its car plants in the country and has no timetable for resuming production, a company spokesman said on Friday. [ID:nTOE64R06P]

Trading houses slid after metals prices fell on Friday in the wake of the Spain ratings cut.

Mitsubishi Corp (8058.T) shed 1.7 percent to 2,038 yen and Mitsui & Co (8031.T) lost 2.4 percent to 1,290 yen. Itochu Corp (8001.T) fell 1.9 percent to 743 yen.

Bearing and car parts manufacturer Jtekt (6473.T) fell 3.7 percent to 920 yen after it said it will raise up to 19.3 billion yen ($212 million) through a share offering to the market and a placement with Toyota Motor Corp. (7203.T). (Reporting by Elaine Lies; Editing by Charlotte Cooper)