Hungary bond yields jump as IMF/EU talks shelved

July 19 (Reuters) – Hungarian government bond yields jumped by 20-25 basis points across the curve in illiquid trade at the open on Monday after government talks with international lenders ended inconclusively at the weekend.

Dealers said yields could rise further still and prevailing uncertainty in the absence of an agreement with the International Monetary Fund and the European Union would continue to weigh on the market. [ID:nLDE66G0AP]

(Reporting by Krisztina Than and Gergely Szakacs; editing by John Stonestreet)

E.ON could invest in EDF nuclear reactors – press

July 9 (Reuters) – German utility E.ON (EONGn.DE) could take a partial stake in some of EDF’s (EDF.PA) nuclear reactors as part of a plan to extend the life of the plants, E.ON told a newspaper on Friday.

French parliamentarians last month passed a bill that will force former power monopoly EDF to sell a quarter of its nuclear output to rivals to foster greater competition in the electricity market.

The bill will now have to be examined by the upper house in an extraordinary parliamentary session in July or September, but a senator of the UMP ruling party has proposed instead that EDF invite shareholders into the country’s 58 nuclear reactors.

“E.ON would be very interested. But this objective must be clearly written in the law. Otherwise, the historical operator would have excessive leverage in negotiations,” said Luc Poyer, the head of E.ON France in an interview with daily Le Figaro.

“If 500 million euros are needed to extend the life of a reactor, a part of that investment could come from a player that has the technical and economic expertise. In exchange, it would get a share in the output,” he added.

Poyer also said France should further open its electricity market, which was liberalised in July 2007 in line with European Union demands, but EDF’s competitors are struggling to attract customers because of scarce access to baseload output. (Reporting by Michel Rose and Benjamin Mallet; Editing by Hans Peters)

Euro zone May retail sales up despite debt worries

July 5 (Reuters) – Euro zone retail sales rose in May after a sharp decline in April, despite the sovereign debt crisis that generally weakened consumer morale, data showed on Monday. European Union statistics office Eurostat said euro zone retail sales, a good indication of households’ propensity to spend, rose 0.2 percent month-on-month for a 0.3 year-on-year gain.

Economists polled by Reuters had expected a 0.4 percent monthly increase in retail sales in the 16 countries using the euro and a 0.3 percent year-on-year decline.

For full details and table see: here

Eurostat revised up April retails sales figures to -0.9 percent month-on-month and -0.5 percent annually from previous readings of -1.2 percent and -1.5 percent respectively.

Consumer demand is weak because unemployment in the euro zone is at an almost 12-year high of 10 percent and may rise further, which keeps a lid on wage growth and limits households’ spending power.

Retailers in Europe have been struggling with weak consumer morale despite signs of economic recovery as many government ordered spending cuts to alleviate the sovereign debt crisis.

Eurostat said food drinks and tobacco sales increased 0.2 percent month-on-month in the euro zone in May while non-food products were up 0.4 percent. Year-on-year, the figures were 0.3 and 1.0 percent respectively.
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* Roubini sees eurozone 2010 growth closer to zeroJul 4, 2010

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.

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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)

UPDATE 1-Northern Petroleum to raise 10 mln via share placement

(Reuters) – Northern Petroleum (NOP.L) on Friday said it planned to raise 10 million pounds ($14.92 million) through a share placing, as the oil and gas explorer sought to raise additional funds to develop assets in Netherlands and Italy.

The European Union-focused explorer also plans to sell off its non-core UK assets and said it hired UK-based marketing company Envoi Ltd to handle the sale. Northern Petroleum said it planned to sell a total of 11.8 million shares at 85 pence apiece. The price represents a discount of 8.6 percent to Thursday’s mid-market closing price of 93 pence.

In the Netherlands, the company has proven and probable (2P) reserves of 42.7 million barrels of oil equivalent (boe), with four gas fields in production, and two gas fields and two oil fields in development.

In Italy, the company has 53.2 million boe of net probable oil reserves from 32 Italian licences, while in the UK it has 2P reserves worth 7.0 million boe.

At June 23, the company had about 13.4 million euros ($16.52 million) of net cash.

Shares of AIM-listed Northern Petroleum closed at 93 pence on Thursday on the London Stock Exchange. ($1=.8112 Euro) ($1=.6701 Pound) (Reporting by Anirban Sen in Bangalore)

German FinMin confident of EU short-sale ban -paper

June 25 (Reuters) – European countries are moving towards a joint ban of naked short-selling, Germany’s Finance Minister was quoted on Friday as saying.

Germany surprised its European Union partners last month by announcing a unilateral ban on the speculative trades in top financial stocks, euro zone government bonds and related credit default swaps (CDS).

“I am confident of a ban on naked short-selling (on the EU level),” Wolfgang Schaeuble told German daily Boersen-Zeitung.

“And in financial sector taxation, we are also making progress.” (Reporting by Sakari Suoninen and Jonathan Gould; editing by Patrick Graham)
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* UPDATE 2-IMF sees slow Irish recovery, risk to fiscal reformsJun 24, 2010

EU opens investigation into Syngenta sunflower deal

June 22 (Reuters) – European Union competition authorities said on Tuesday they have opened an investigation into Swiss group Syngenta’s (SYNN.VX) proposed acquisition of the sunflower seed business of U.S. company Monsanto (MON.N).

“The Commission’s initial market investigation indicated potential competition concerns with respect to the breeding and commercialisation of sunflower seeds and sunflower seed treatment products in Europe,” the European Commission, which regulates EU-wide competition, said in a statement.

The Commission now has 90 working days to take a final decision on the proposed acquisition of Monsanto’s global sunflower seed operations.

EU draft sees private debt as parameter-Italy formin

June 17 (Reuters) – A European Union draft document foresees the inclusion of private debt among parameters for the stability pact, Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini told reporters on Thursday. “The reference to private debt was inserted into this morning’s document,” Frattini said. “The biggest resistance was expressed by Germany which has a very large private debt, but no other country so far has voiced such strong concern,” Frattini added.

(Reporting by Francesca Piscioneri, writing by Jo Winterbottom)

UPDATE 1-Hungary govt eyes new IMF/EU deal – PM aide

June 17 (Reuters) – Hungary’s new government will start negotiations in July with the International Monetary Fund and EU about a new loan agreement, a chief aide to the prime minister told television M1 on Thursday.

Hungary secured a $25.1 billion financing deal with the IMF, the European Union and the World Bank in October 2008 to avert a meltdown amid a market crisis. The agreement will expire in October.

When asked if there would be a new agreement with lenders, Gyprgy Szapary, chief aide to Prime Minister Viktor Orban, said:

“I hope there will be (an agreement)…The delegations (of IMF and EU) will come here in early July; we will sit down to negotiate then so that there can be a new agreement.”

“We are thinking about possibly extending (the current aid deal) until December so that there is no break in the programme, because we think that potentially we could get another agreement for 2011,” Szapary added.

He said Hungary did not plan to draw down the currently available tranches of the existing loan for now, but said the funds may have to be used if the global sentiment turns unfavourable.

“For the time being the decision is that we will not drawn down the remaining amount…but there may be a scenario later under which these funds need to be used as something may happen in the global economy which could force Hungary to draw down the remaining part of the loan,” Szapary said.

The state has so far drawn about 12.8 billion euros from the credit facility secured in 2008, but some of these funds have not been spent. The central bank has called down 1.4 billion euros from the package, placing it in its reserves.

Hungary still has access to a further financing of about 5 billion euros from the original facility, pending agreement with lenders at the next loan programme review.

The country has not drawn fresh funds from the IMF/EU this year as last year it successfully returned to market financing after the previous Socialist government stabilised finances with spending cuts and regained investors’ confidence.

Hungary, which has a new centre-right government since April elections, had a budget deficit of 4 percent of gross domestic product last year and targets a 3.8 percent deficit in 2010.

The country’s public debt at around 80 percent of GDP is still the highest in central Europe.

Earlier this month, highly confusing comments from some Hungarian government officials drawing comparisons between Hungary and debt-laden Greece triggered a selloff in the forint currency EURHUF=D2 and global financial markets.

The government announced a quick set of measures and pledged to meet the deficit target which has calmed markets, but analysts warned that implementation risks remain, especially linked to a planned big new tariff on the financial sector.

For analysis on Hungary’s govt pls see [ID:nLDE65F1SB]

For a factbox on Hungary’s debts [ID:nLDE65509Z]

For analysis on Hungary economy [ID:nLDE65924H]

(Reporting by Marton Dunai; Editing by Kim Coghill)

EU, IMF, US mull 250 bln euro credit line for Spain-report

June 16 (Reuters) – The European Union, the IMF and the U.S. Treasury are drawing up a liquidity plan for Spain which includes a credit line of up to 250 billion euros ($335 billion), newspaper El Economista reported on Wednesday, citing sources which it said were “close to the issuing entity”.

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The report said the decision had been discussed at a special IMF board directors meeting and was aimed at avoiding a rescue plan similar to that offered to debt-laden Greece.

A Spanish government spokesman said on Tuesday that talks between the Spanish Prime Minister and International Monetary Fund chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn set for Friday are unconnected with media reports that Madrid may seek a Greek-style bailout. [ID:nLDE65E2FH] (Reporting by Elizabeth O’Leary; Editing by Kim Coghill) elizabeth.oleary@reuters.com; +34 91 585 8295; Reuters Messaging: elizabeth.oleary.reuters.com@reuters.net ($1=.7453 Euro)

Polish c.bank head sees zloty strengthening-report

June 15 (Reuters) – Poland’s newly appointed central bank governor Marek Belka expects the zloty EURPLN= to strengthen driven by a recovering economy and its convergence with the European Union, Belka was quoted by Rzeczpospolita daily on Tuesday.

Belka added a longer term weakness of the zloty could fuel a rise in inflation. (Reporting by Patryk Wasilewski)

Swiss businessman arrives in Zurich from Libya

June 14 (Reuters) – Swiss businessman Max Goeldi, at the centre of a political row between Libya’s ruling Gaddafi family and Switzerland, arrived at Zurich airport on Monday after serving a four-month sentence in Libya.

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The spat began two years ago when Swiss police briefly arrested Hannibal Gaddafi, a son of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, and it later escalated into a conflict that drew in the European Union, the United States and major energy firms.

Libyan officials deny the Swiss man’s case had anything to do with Hannibal Gaddafi’s arrest, but Goeldi’s supporters say he was an innocent pawn caught up in Libya’s retaliation against Switzerland.

(Reporting by Arnd Wiegmann and Jason Rhodes)

Lloyds considers listing 600 branches in new bank: report

(Reuters) – Britain’s largest retail bank Lloyds Banking Group (LLOY.L) is considering a stock market flotation of the chain of 600 branches that it is forced to sell by European Union regulators, the Sunday Times reported.

Deals

The listing would create a new British bank worth between 3 and 4 billion pounds ($5.8 billion) that would account for about 5 percent of the retail banking sector, the paper said.

“The group has until November 2013 to complete the divestment program agreed with the EU. We are therefore only in the preliminary stages of this process,” Lloyds said in a statement e-mailed to Reuters.

“Our objective is to sell this business to a third party rather than to float it.”

Lloyds is being forced to sell hundreds of branches to satisfy EU regulators and compensate for state aid. The bank was rescued by taxpayers during the financial crisis and is now 41 percent owned by the state.

(Reporting by Julie Crust; editing by Louise Heavens)

($1=.6865 Pound)

ECB’s Orphanides: Inflation not a concern -press

June 13 (Reuters) – Inflation in the euro zone is not a worry despite the slightly higher forecasts in the recent European Central Bank staff projections, Governing Council member Athanasios Orphanides was quoted as saying on Sunday.

Orphanides also told the Dow Jones news agency that once the European Union’s facility to help troubled members is in place, the need for the ECB to buy bonds might end as those market segments would probably improve.

“The upward revision in the inflation forecast is primarily driven by energy and other commodity price increases. It does not reflect an underlying inflation concern,” Orphanides said in an interview with Dow Jones.

“Indeed, core inflation in the euro area has been trending down. In light of these developments, I do not view high inflation as a concern.”

Inflation expectations also remained well anchored, he said.

Orphanides also commented on the ECB’s Securities Markets Programme, through which it is buying bonds in segments hit particularly hard, indicating the ECB could end this soon, if the European Union rescue package calms markets.

“I could envision that, when the European Financial Stability Facility is fully operational, there will be improvements in the market segments that have not been functioning well over the past several weeks,” he said.

“Clearly, once these improvements are in place, there would no longer be a need to continue with a specific program. (Reporting by Sakari Suoninen; Editing by Louise Heavens)

Lloyds considers listing 600 branches in new bank – paper

LONDON, June 13 (Reuters) – Britain’s largest retail bank Lloyds Banking Group (LLOY.L) is considering a stock market flotation of the chain of 600 branches that it is forced to sell by European Union regulators, the Sunday Times reported.

The listing would create a new British bank worth between 3 and 4 billion pounds ($5.8 billion) that would account for about 5 percent of the retail banking sector, the paper said.

“The group has until November 2013 to complete the divestment programme agreed with the EU. We are therefore only in the preliminary stages of this process,” Lloyds said in a statement e-mailed to Reuters.

“Our objective is to sell this business to a third party rather than to float it.” Lloyds is being forced to sell hundreds of branches to satisfy EU regulators and compensate for state aid. The bank was rescued by taxpayers during the financial crisis and is now 41 percent owned by the state. [ID:nL3540088] (Reporting by Julie Crust; editing by Louise Heavens) ($1=.6865 Pound)

Italy sees budgets set at EU level from next year

(Reuters) – European Union countries will coordinate budget plans starting next year, rather than making their own national choices, Italy’s Economy Minister Giulio Tremonti said on Sunday.

“This year is the last in which national budgets will be made,” Tremonti told a conference, according to Italian news agencies. “The economic policies will all be done at the same time of the year, all together in the same way. There will no longer be a country that makes choices different from others.”

The European Union is trying to toughen up the rules of the Stability Pact governing public finances, and Tremonti’s comments lend Italy’s support to proposals for national budgets to be coordinated at the EU level before being approved by national parliament.

The economic crisis had set in motion the transfer of power from individual nations to European bodies, Tremonti said.

“Perhaps what’s not been seen yet, but is very clear is that a colossal devolution of powers of European nations is happening,” he said, according to the Ansa news agency.

(Writing by Deepa Babington; Editing by Louise Heavens)

UPDATE 1-ECB’s Wellink: EU should have helped Greece earlier

June 11 (Reuters) – The European Union should have stepped in earlier than it did with a rescue package for Greece, European Central Bank board member Nout Wellink said on Friday.

“They should have stepped in earlier. Let me also say, they should have stepped in years ago. Greece ran a budget deficit for years,” Wellink told reporters.

“There should have been peer pressure on Greece years ago… The whole country lived beyond its means and the public sector lived beyond its means,” Wellink said.

But Wellink, who is also governor of the Dutch central bank, said it was too early to talk about further expansion of the European Union’s massive package to aid countries unable to cope with ballooning debt.

“It seems to me a little bit early to talk about further expansion,” Wellink said.

He said the most important part of the package is that “the Germans decided to really support the euro. Otherwise they wouldn’t have been prepared to take part in this huge programme”.

Current market uncertainty was reflected in increased use of the ECB’s deposit facility, but inflation expectations in the euro zone were better anchored than in the United States, he also said.

“For a fair assessment you have to consider that inflation expectations are anchored more solidly in Europe than in the U.S.,” Wellink said. (Reporting by Boris Groendahl, editing by John Stonestreet)

EU Barroso says no “conspiracy” against euro, debt is the target

June 11 (Reuters) – European Comission President Jose Manuel Barroso said on Friday he did not believe in a conspiracy against the euro, blaming a market attack on some EU member states’ debt for the currency’s recent slide.

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“There is an attack on the sovereign debt of some states … which has to be faced with an enormous determination,” he told an event in Lisbon, adding that the response of European states so far has been positive despite some slowness in decision-making and passing the necessary legislation.

“I don’t believe in a conspiracy against the euro,” Barroso said. He said the crisis was giving the European Union a signal “that we have to be better organised”.

“I believe that a better integration can come from this crisis,” he added. (Reporting by Andrei Khalip; Editing by Susan Fenton)

EU to rule on BA, Iberia merger by July 15

June 11 (Reuters) – EU competition regulators will decide by July 15 whether to clear or block a planned $8 billion merger between British Airways (BAY.L) and Spain’s Iberia (IBLA.MC), the European Commission said on Friday.

Stocks | Regulatory News | Mergers & Acquisitions | Global Markets | Airlines

The Commission could also ask the carriers, which notified European Union regulators of their merger plans the previous day, to provide concessions — such as giving up airport slots — to ease possible concerns that the deal may dent competition.

The airlines aim to complete the merger by December and hope it will enable them to compete better with rivals Lufthansa (LHAG.DE) and Air France (AIRF.PA) as well as low-cost carrier Ryanair (RYA.I). It will also clear the way for a tie-up with American Airlines (AMR.N). The Commission, competition watchdog of the 27-country EU, is expected to seek views from customers and rivals on the BA-Iberia merger. It can extend its review by 35 working days if it has concerns or if the two carriers offer concessions. (Reporting by Foo Yun Chee, editing by Dale Hudson)

Euribor rates climb to five-month high

June 2 (Reuters) – Key euro-priced three-month bank-to-bank lending rates rose to a new five-month high on Wednesday as worries about the euro zone debt crisis continued to weigh on confidence in the region’s banking sector.

The three-month Euribor rate EURIBOR3MD=, traditionally the main gauge of interbank euro lending and a mix of interest rate expectations and banks’ appetite for lending, rose to 0.704 percent from 0.702 percent, hitting its highest level since late December.

Six-month rates EURIBOR6MD= climbed to 0.994 percent from 0.991 percent while one-year rates EURIBOR1YD= rose to 1.266 percent from 1.262 percent. One-week rates EURIBORSWD= edged up to 0.363 percent from 0.361 percent.

The debt troubles hitting Greece and other financially strained euro zone countries have reignited fears about the region’s banks and forced the European Central Bank to reintroduce extra liquidity measures and abandon a long-held resistance to buying government bonds.

Euribor rates are fixed daily by the Banking Federation of the European Union (FBE) shortly after 0900 GMT.

* For a table of the latest Euribor fixings for terms of one week to one year, double click on EURIBOR=

* For a table of the previous day’s fixings of EONIA swap rates, which show market expectations for future overnight lending rates, double click on EONIAINDEX

* For graphs of historic Euribor and EONIA swap rates, right click on the links in angle brackets below, and select ‘Related Graph’ 1 week EURIBORSWD= EONIAINDEXSW= 2 week EURIBOR2WD= EONIAINDEX2W= 3 week EURIBOR3WD= EONIAINDEX3W= 1 month EURIBOR1MD= EONIAINDEX1M= 2 month EURIBOR2MD= EONIAINDEX2M= 3 month EURIBOR3MD= EONIAINDEX3M= 4 month EURIBOR4MD= EONIAINDEX4M= 5 month EURIBOR5MD= EONIAINDEX5M= 6 month EURIBOR6MD= EONIAINDEX6M= 7 month EURIBOR7MD= EONIAINDEX7M= 8 month EURIBORS8M= EONIAINDEX8M= 9 month EURIBOR9MD= EONIAINDEX9M= 10 month EURIBOR10MD= EONIAINDEX10M= 11 month EURIBOR11MD= EONIAINDEX11M= 1 year EURIBOR1YD= EONIAINDEX1Y=

(Reporting by Frankfurt newsroom; editing by John Stonestreet)