Katona’s ‘hubby wants to leak couple’s sex tape on net to ease cash crisis’

London, Sept 16 (ANI): Already troubled Kerry Katona fears getting into more mess as hubby Mark Croft wants to sell off a steamy sex tape of the couple to alleviate their cash crunch, it has emerged.

Pals say Katona’s former taxi driver hubby tried to sell the idea to her, which has made the ex-Atomic Kitten even more anxious about losing the custody of her two daughters, Molly and Lilly Sue, to their father and divorced hubby Brian Nicholas McFadden.

“Mark’s not given up hope by any means. He thinks it’s a guaranteed earner, which could make them anything up to half-a-million,” a pal was quoted by the Daily Star, as saying.

Friends say the 39-year old Croft has no plans to change his mind and he intends to use the cash from the tape’s sale to fund his extravagant lifestyle.

A friend said: “Mark thinks he knows it all and is determined to take over every aspect of Kerry’s life. He thinks that a sex tape of them, which somehow found its way on to the internet, would earn them a lot of cash – at least 250,000 pounds and possibly as much as 500,000 pounds.

“Mark is absolutely obsessed with money and has told Kerry that it could be a life-saver for them, but at the moment she’s having nothing to do with it.

“She’s scared stiff of anything so tacky being the last stop in her attempts to hold on to her two little girls by Brian McFadden.” (ANI)

Cash strapped Aussie company to unveil 800 grams shotguns

Sydney, May 20 (ANI): An Australian weapon developer company, which could be sold off to foreign interest due to a cash crunch, is all set to launch an 800 grams shotgun this week.

Metal Storm Ltd will unveil the MAUL weapon – a lightweight 12-gauge shotgun – at a small arms symposium in Las Vegas.

The conventional shotgun normally weighs four kilograms.

The low weight of the Metal Storm shotgun makes it attractive to the military, security and law enforcement industries, the company says, news.com.au reports.

“We think we have set the bar for a five-shot semi-automatic shotgun. The MAUL was conceived with a great deal of influence from the US operational community,” said Peter Faulkner, General Manager of Metal Storm Incorporated (US arm of the company).

The battery-powered shotgun has been designed for use as a door breacher and less lethal force issions, functions that usually require two weapons.

“The MAUL is a disruptive technology that will forever change the way the small arms community thinks about how and when to use a shotgun,” Metal Storm CEO Dr Lee Finniear said.here are speculation doing round that the company could be sold off to foreign interests.t the company’s annual general meeting in Brisbane last week, Dr Finniear called for financial help from the Australian Government and shareholders.

The meeting was told that the company risked running out of money at the end of August unless it could secure 30 million dollars cash injection.

“I would say there’s a risk the company could be owned by foreign interests,” Dr Finniear said.I’m also hopeful, but not confident, that the Australian

Government will recognise the potential of Metal Storm in time for it to provide assistance,” he added. (ANI)

S.Korea’s IBK selling 5-year dollar bonds-sources

HONG KONG, April 15 (Reuters) – Industrial Bank of Korea (024110.KS) is selling benchmark five-year dollar bonds, or typically meaning of at least $500 million, two sources familiar with the sale said on Wednesday.

IBK aimed to price the deal, which could raise as much as $1 billion, at around mid-500 basis points over midswaps, said one of the sources. No official guidance has been released, and the deal is expected to price by Thursday morning in New York hours.

The debt will not carry a government guarantee since IBK, which specialises in lending to small and medium-sized enterprises, is already majority owned by South Korea, the two sources said.

Both sources declined to be identified because they were not authorised to talk publicly about the sale.

Barclays Capital, Citigroup (C.N), Merrill Lynch, and Morgan Stanley will be the lead managers for the sale, the source said.

IBK follows on the footsteps of the South Korean government, which last week raised $3 billion in a two-tranche dollar bond deal, while others including Hana Bank and steelmaker POSCO (005490.KS) have also recently sold debt.

South Korea’s two other government-owned lenders, Korea Development Bank and Export-Import Bank of Korea, have already raised $2 billion each in overseas markets early this year.

South Korean issuers are expected to continue tapping global markets, driven by the need for dollars in a country that has about $194 billion in foreign debt falling due this year, compared with just over $200 billion in foreign reserves.

Banks in South Korea averted a cash crunch after the government made billions of dollars available to the sector and took other steps such as guaranteeing some types of overseas borrowing, although lenders are still encouraged to find their own foreign funding sources.

However, concerns about profitability remain. IBK’s profit last year declined 36 percent to 764.4 billion won ($579.3 million) from 2007.

IBK is rated A by Standard and Poor’s and A2 by Moody’s, or the sixth-highest investment-grade rating. The lender is rated one notch above that at A-plus by Fitch, but with a negative outlook. (Reporting by Rafael Nam; Editing by Chris Lewis)

Asia looks to G20 credit pledge to revive trade, AS

BEIJING (AP) The G-20 summit’s promise to Asia of money to help credit-starved exporters and a bigger voice in global finance should help the region revive growth, business leaders and economists said Friday. The London summit on the financial crisis ended Thursday with a promise of $250 billion from major governments to pump up global trade credit, which has shriveled as lenders hoard cash, worsening a double-digit drop in Asian exports.

Many of the region’s export-dependent economies have tipped into recession not only because demand from the West has crumbled amid the global slump but also because financing for trade has become scarce. “Short-term financing is important now for the world economy to grow and trade to take place,” said Li Wei, an economist at Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business in Beijing.

In Southeast Asia’s biggest economy, Indonesia, where industries from textiles to auto parts have been paralyzed by a lack of credit, the money should play a role in restoring normal production, said Sofyan Wanandi, head of the Gemala Group, a conglomerate. “This should really help,” he said.

“The most important contribution will be tackling problems within the banking system, so it works normally again.” In India, where trade is 35 percent of the economy, the money should help textile and diamond exporters that have been hit by falling demand, said Amit Mitra, secretary general of business group FICCI. “They are under a severe cash crunch,” he said.

Hong Kong and Singapore, both major traders, should benefit as easier credit helps to boost exports, analysts said. In Hong Kong, exporters are avoiding taking large orders for fear cash-strapped buyers cannot pay.

There was also optimism that Asian economies would be helped by the summit’s promise to triple the resources of the International Monetary Fund to $750 billion and to create a $250 billion IMF fund to help members’ foreign reserves. China, the world’s third biggest economy, should benefit as the measures restore demand in export markets, said Standard Chartered economist Stephen Green.

China’s economy is expected to grow by at least 5 percent this year, though that would be a dismal performance compared with the past few years. A drop in exports has already thrown at least 20 million people out of work.

“Given that some 30 percent of China’s GDP growth in recent years has been driven by external demand, we believe that China will benefit significantly from these measures,” Green said in a report. Beijing also succeeded in its campaign for more influence in managing the global economy, winning a pledge at the summit to give developing countries a bigger role in the IMF and other finance bodies.

That might make Asian governments more willing to turn to the Washington-based group for help in a crisis, said Cheung Kong’s Li. He said that would free them to spend more of their foreign reserves instead of saving for emergencies.

Asian leaders have been reluctant to deal with the IMF since the 1997 financial crisis, when reforms recommended by its experts prompted a public backlash. “This is a very significant reform for the globe.

It recognises globalization of very important international financial institutions,” Australian Treasurer Wayne Swan told Australian Broadcasting Corp. radio in London.

“If you look at what’s been done in terms of supervision and regulation of the banking system and international financial system, people couldn’t have dreamed of this outcome only some weeks ago.” But others expressed concern that the London summit failed to take more dramatic action.

Richard Koo, chief economist at Nomura Research Institute in Tokyo, pointed to Japan’s experience of its 1990s slump and said leaders appear not to understand that the current downturn is not a typical recession. “The only thing that can keep the economy from weakening further is increasing government spending,” Koo said.

Tokyo has joined the United States, China and Britain in rolling out massive spending to drive a recovery. But that failed to persuade debt-averse Germany and other European nations to follow suit.

“We in Japan felt it, therefore we know what the monster looks like,” he said. “The Europeans perhaps haven’t reached that stage yet.

” ___ AP Business Writers Jeremiah Marquez in Hong Kong, Tomoko A. Hosaka in Tokyo and Erika Kinetz in Bombay and Associated Press Writers Alex Kennedy in Singapore and Ali Kotarumalos and Irwan Firdaus in Jakarta contributed to this report.

Sands looks to resume Macau construction this year, 1st Ld-Writethru, AS

HONG KONG (AP) Struggling casino giant Las Vegas Sands Corp. hopes to resume construction on its stalled multibillion-dollar mega resorts in the Chinese gambling city of Macau later this year, a top executive said Thursday.

The company was in early discussions with possible investors about financing the rest of its work on the projects along Macau’s Cotai Strip, said Stephen Weaver, president of Sands’ operations in Asia. “We’re certainly looking to resume in this calendar year,” Weaver told reporters in Hong Kong.

“Our imperative is to get the construction workers back to work as quickly as we can.” Weaver would not identify the potential investors, though the company previously said they include two construction companies interested in financing and building the projects in exchange for equity.

A massive cash crunch, caused by the global credit crisis and tumbling revenues amid the economic slump, forced Sands to halt construction on the projects in November. As many as 1,000 workers many of them employed by contractors and subcontractors were laid off as a result.

The Macau sites, including hotel towers and three casinos, could cost another $2 billion, the company has estimated. The Marina Bay Sands in Singapore is among the few sites that Sands has continued work on since its finances were thrown into turmoil last fall.

Company officials said they were confident they had the funding to finish the resort. The $5.4 billion project is set to open in staggered phases around the end of the year, fully opening sometime next year, Sands executives say.

Sands aims to resume Macau construction this year, 2nd Ld-Writethru, AS

HONG KONG (AP) Struggling casino giant Las Vegas Sands Corp. hopes to resume construction on its stalled multibillion-dollar mega resorts in the Chinese gambling city of Macau later this year, a top executive said Thursday.

The company was in early discussions with possible investors about financing the rest of its work on the projects along Macau’s Cotai Strip, said Stephen Weaver, president of Sands’ operations in Asia. “We’re certainly looking to resume in this calendar year,” Weaver told reporters in Hong Kong.

“Our imperative is to get the construction workers back to work as quickly as we can.” Weaver would not identify the potential investors, though the company previously said they include two construction companies interested in financing and building the projects in exchange for equity.

A massive cash crunch, caused by the global credit crisis and tumbling revenues amid the economic slump, forced Sands to halt construction on the projects in November. As many as 11,000 workers many of them employed by contractors and subcontractors were laid off as a result.

The Macau sites, including hotel towers and three casinos, could cost another $2 billion, the company has estimated. The Marina Bay Sands in Singapore is among the few sites that Sands has continued work on since its finances were thrown into turmoil last fall.

Company officials said they were confident they had the funding to finish the resort. The $5.4 billion project is set to open in staggered phases around the end of the year, fully opening sometime next year, Sands executives say.