India’s cbank tightens monetary policy more than expected

July 27 (Reuters) – India’s central bank raised interest rates more forcefully than expected on Tuesday in the face of inflation that has held stubbornly above 10 percent for the past five months.

The RBI lifted the repo rate, at which it lends to banks, by 25 basis points to 5.75 percent, which was in line with expectations, but raised the reverse repo rate, at which it absorbs excess cash from the system, by 50 basis points to 4.50 percent.

Economists and investors had expected a 25 basis point increase in the reverse repo rate.

As expected, it left the cash reserve ratio (CRR) for banks at 6.00 percent, amid ongoing tight liquidity in the banking system.

Inflation in India emerged last year in the wake of a poor monsoon that drove up food prices but has spread broadly throughout the economy, spawning protest against a government whose voter base is predominantly poor and rural.

New Delhi’s decision to increase fuel prices is expected to add nearly a percentage point to wholesale price index (WPI) inflation starting in July and led the opposition to call a one-day nationwide strike early this month.

The government is counting on normal summer monsoon rains to results in better crop yields and ease pressure on food prices, and has said inflation should decline to 6 percent by December, a figure private economists put closer to 8 percent. (Reporting by Tony Munroe)

China Dalian also shuts berths for ore, grains -source

July 19 (Reuters) – China’s Dalian has shut 80-90 percent of its berths, including for iron ore and grain imports, after explosions at oil pipelines at its Xingang port spilled oil to the sea, a Dalian-based shipping agent said on Monday.

Xingang port operates berths for both oil and ore. Reuters has earlier reported that the oil port was closed.

Dalian customs authority handled 15.2 million tonnes of iron ore imports in the first five months of this year, 16 percent up from Jan-May 2009.

(Reporting by Chen Aizhu; editing by Ken Wills)

Chile bank system profit up 53.3 pct in Jan-May

June 30 (Reuters) – Chile’s banking sector profit for the January-May period rose 53.3 percent from a year earlier on greater loans and interest margins, the Banking and Financial Institutions Superintendency said on Wednesday.

Financials

Bank earnings totaled 690.117 billion pesos ($1.297 billion) in the first five months of 2010. However earnings fell 9.3 percent in May compared to April due to lower returns from financial operations, and higher operating costs and provisions.

Santander Chile (SAN.N)(STG.SN), Chile’s largest bank, posted a net profit of 206.676 billion pesos ($388 million) in the period. The superintendency did not provide a year-ago figure.

The country’s No. 2 bank, Banco de Chile CHI.SN, earned 170.163 billion pesos ($320 million) in the five-month period, the superintendency said. ($1=532 pesos at end-May) (Reporting by Antonio de la Jara; Editing by Brad Haynes)

Mexican stocks jump on Chicago PMI, America Movil

June 30 (Reuters) – Mexico’s IPC stock index rose on Wednesday after data showed business activity in the U.S. Midwest grew slightly more than expected, tempering concerns of a slowdown in the United States, Mexico’s top trading partner.

Financials

The IPC stock index .MXX jumped 1.01 percent to 31,790, bouncing back from its steepest one-day loss in a year in the previous session.

Tuesday’s gains also were supported by a 1.5 percent gain in share of America Movil (AMXL.MX) as Latin America’s top wireless provider recovered some ground after its steepest fall in more than five months on Tuesday. (Reporting by Michael O’Boyle; Editing by Theodore d’Afflisio)

COLUMN-The $5 trillion rollover: James Saft

Ala, June 29 (Reuters) – Banks around the world must refinance more than $5 trillion of debts in the coming three years, a massive rollover that poses threats to financial stability and growth.

The need to replace these debts, which are medium and long term, will place pressure on bank profit spreads and in turn may either prompt deleveraging, where banks sell assets that they can no longer economically finance, or simply lead to a bout of credit rationing, where borrowers must pay more to borrow, thus crimping investment and economic growth.

For banks in the UK, according to the Bank of England Financial Stability Report (here), the refinancings amount to about $1.2 trillion by the end of 2012.

If banks in Britain raise funds at the same pace they have been this year, they will only collect half of their needs in time. This is even before the fact that the banks need desperately to turn some of their riskier short-term funding into more reliable funding with a longer maturity.

“If funding costs increase dramatically, which is perfectly possible in what could be pretty febrile market conditions, that will hit profitability (and the banks ability to raise capital organically) until they are able to re-price loans and facilities,” according to Richard Barwell, an economist at the Royal Bank of Scotland in London.

“And to the extent that banks are unwilling or unable to roll over funds that would trigger forced deleveraging. Both outcomes imply a sharp contraction in credit conditions for those within and outside financial markets, putting considerable downward pressure on activity and asset prices.”

Banks outside of Britain are perhaps doing marginally better in meeting their needs, but still face an uphill struggle.

U.S. banks have issued $230 billion of debts in the first five months of the year, about 60 percent of the rate they need to achieve over the three year period. Euro zone banks have issued $133 billion, or about 70 percent of their needed run rate.

One easy to see consequence is that, all things being equal, the cost for banks to issue debt should rise, as should competition among banks for consumer deposits. It is possible that a global desire to save more helps to blunt this effect, but even so the macroeconomic effect and the effect on asset prices will both be strongly downward.

BANKS WILL HAVE THEIR FUNDS

The track record of the past three years tells us one thing is likely: the banks will get their money, courtesy of government support if needed.

Unless there is a profound sovereign debt crisis, we can count on governments taking the needed steps to see that the banking system does not fall over for lack of funding. So, if liquidity or support schemes need to be extended or invented anew, they will be.

But a banking system that has not fallen over, while a precondition for strong economic growth, is not in and of it self sufficient to cause strong economic growth. Expensive funding and a rising term premium will stunt growth and they will impose a haircut on risk asset prices.

Viewed another way, however, higher funding costs for banks is really nothing other than the market demanding a different capital structure from banks.

It is not simply that a lot of money needs raising all at the same time, but rather that the people who have in the past supplied the money have a new appreciation of the risks in lending to banks, or should that simply be of the risks of lending.

The Financial Stability Report also looks at the costs and benefits of higher amounts of capital in banking. The benefits are straightforward: a reduced chance of systemic crises. Costs are thornier, but also quite high. The BOE used an assumption that for every 7 basis points of additional lending spread charged by banks should create a 0.1 percent permanent reduction of GDP. On their estimates upping capital in banking by one percent then equates to present value cost of about 4.0 percent of UK GDP.

This puts into perspective not just how challenging it will be to create growth going forward, but just how artificially growth during the boom was goosed by very loose and easy lending.

For the UK and for Europe, this will be happening at the same time that fiscal austerity programmes will be dampening growth.

Something has to give, and it will probably be monetary policy. Look for extraordinarily low rates for a very long time, and for new and bigger quantitative easing programmes.

(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/])

Russia’s Dixy revenues up 15 pct in Jan-May y/y

June 24 (Reuters) – Russian retailer Dixy (DIXY.MM): * Revenues up 15 pct y/y in the first five months of 2010, to 25.69 billion roubles * In dollar terms revenue increased by 28.5 pct to $860.7 million

UPDATE 1-D1 says Bromborough sale doubtful, shares fall

June 24 (Reuters) – Biofuels company D1 Oils (DOO.L) said on Thursday it was doubtful about the completion of the sale of its Bromborough site, after the third-party buyer cited issues regarding timing and structure of the deal.

Shares of the company were down 10.3 percent at 7 pence at 0705 GMT on the London Stock Exchange.

D1 cited “material uncertainty” over the closing of the transaction, and said it intended to remarket the biodiesel production and distribution site, if the sale is not completed.

The company was told by the buyer on Wednesday that it would still not be able to fund the deal, even under a revised payment structure, D1 said.

“Accordingly the board has decided to continue discussions for a further short period with the buyer, whilst taking legal steps to enforce its contractual rights,” the company said in a statement.

In February, the company announced that contracts had been exchanged for the sale of its Bromborough site for 2.6 million pounds ($3.89 million).

As part of the deal, 1.8 million pounds was to be paid in cash on completion of the sale, with 400,000 pounds to be paid about five months later and a royalty of 400,000 pounds payable over two to three years, based on biodiesel production from the site. ($1=.6683 Pound) (Reporting by Anirban Sen in Bangalore; Editing by Kavita Chandran)

Greece 2010 deficit reduction on target – PDMA slides

June 22 (Reuters) – Greece’s plan to reduce its budget deficit in 2010 is on target, prepared slides for the head of the country’s debt management agency (PDMA) at a bond conference in London showed on Tuesday.

Stocks | Bonds

The slides for PDMA chief Petros Christodoulou showed the government had already achieved a 40 percent reduction in deficit in first five months of 2010.

This was before the full implementation of the additional measures introduced in March and May, according to the slides. (Reporting by Emelia Sithole-Matarise and Ian Chua)

NORDIC STOCKS-UPDATE 2-Factors to watch on June 16

June 16 (Reuters) – The following stocks may be affected by newspaper reports and other factors on Wednesday:

VOLVO (VOLVb.ST)

The world number two truck maker said on Wednesday shipments of its trucks rose 44 percent year-on-year in May as markets recovered from the worst downturn in decades.

Volvo said shipments rose 25 percent in Europe from a year ago while they climbed 35 percent in North America.

For a full story, double click on [ID:nLDE65F0AG]

For more on the company, double click [VOLVb.ST]

VESTAS WIND SYSTEMS (VWS.CO), DONG ENERGY [DONG.UL]

Denmark’s state-owned DONG Energy says offshore wind turbines are too expensive and wants prices to be cut by 30 percent through large framework deals with suppliers, financial daily Borsen said.

DONG has said it is willing to look at turbines from others than its preferred supplier, Siemens (SIEGn.DE), which opens the door for Danish turbine manufacturer Vestas, the newspaper said.

For more on the company, double click [VWS.CO]

ELECTROLUX (ELUXb.ST)

North American shipments of the six top categories of white goods, AHAM 6, rose 10.4 percent in May compared to the same month last year, data from industry organisation the Association of Home Appliance Manufacturers (AHAM) showed.

Shipments have increased 9.3 percent in the first five months of the year.

For more on the company, double click [ELUXb.ST]

SAS (SAS.ST) (SAS.CO) (SASNOK.OL)

The Swedish Airline Pilots Association took out its members on strike on Wednesday, basically grounding all domestic flights in the Nordic country through much of the day.

The union said in a statement it had not been able to agree with employers on the size of pay cuts at airline Avia Express, the issue at the centre of the conflict. However, employees at other airlines were also taken out on strike.

For more on the company, double click [SAS.ST]

** For a summary of upcoming results and forecasts, double click on [NORD/EQTY]

** For the western European company diary covering earnings, shareholder meetings, news conferences and analysts’ meetings, click on [WEU/EQUITY] or type in the code and hit the f9 button.

** Double click on <0#.INDEX.ST> for Swedish indices, <0#.INDEX.CO> for Danish indices, <0#.INDEX.HE> for Finnish indices and <0#.INDEX.OL> for Norwegian indices

** For real-time moves on Nordic blue-chip indices double click on .OMXS30, .OMXH25, and .OBX

** For constituent stock moves highlight the above codes in the command box and press the f3 button on your keyboard

** For Nordic top news items, double click on [TOP/NORD]

** For the latest news on Nordic stock price moves double click on [HOT-NORD-RTRS]

(Additional reporting by Copenhagen, Oslo and Stockholm newsrooms) (Helsinki Newsroom; +358-9-6805-0244)

Obama: U.N. sanctions “unmistakable message” to Iran

(Reuters) – President Barack Obama on Wednesday said fresh U.N. Security Council sanctions against Iran send an “unmistakable message” to that country over its nuclear program.

Barack Obama

“This resolution will put in place the toughest sanctions ever faced by the Iranian government,” Obama said after the 15-nation council passed a fourth round of sanctions against Iran, which the West suspects of developing the means to build atom bombs.

“It sends an unmistakable message about the international community’s commitment to stopping the spread of nuclear weapons,” he told reporters at the White House.

The resolution followed five months of talks between the United States, Britain, France, Germany, China and Russia.

With 12 votes in favor, it received the least support of the four Iran sanctions resolutions adopted since 2006, but Obama vowed to make them stick.

“We will ensure that these sanctions are vigorously enforced, just as we continue to refine and enforce our own sanctions on Iran,” he said.

“There is no double standard at play here. We’ve made it clear, time and again, that we respect Iran’s right, like all countries, to access peaceful nuclear energy,” Obama said.

(Reporting by Alister Bull; Editing by Jackie Frank)

Obama: UN sanctions “unmistakable message” to Iran

WASHINGTON, June 9 (Reuters) – U.S. President Barack Obama on Wednesday said fresh U.N. Security Council sanctions against Iran send an “unmistakable message” to that country over its nuclear program.

“This resolution will put in place the toughest sanctions ever faced by the Iranian government,” Obama said after the 15-nation council passed a fourth round of sanctions against Iran, which the West suspects of developing the means to build atom bombs.

“It sends an unmistakable message about the international community’s commitment to stopping the spread of nuclear weapons,” he told reporters at the White House.

The resolution followed five months of talks between the United States, Britain, France, Germany, China and Russia.

With 12 votes in favor, it received the least support of the four Iran sanctions resolutions adopted since 2006, but Obama vowed to make them stick.

“We will ensure that these sanctions are vigorously enforced, just as we continue to refine and enforce our own sanctions on Iran,” he said.

“There is no double standard at play here. We’ve made it clear, time and again, that we respect Iran’s right, like all countries, to access peaceful nuclear energy,” Obama said.

(Reporting by Alister Bull; Editing by Jackie Frank)

White House: still open to talks with Iran

June 9 (Reuters) – The White House said on Wednesday that the United States was still open to talks with Iran following fresh U.N. Security Council sanctions against the country over its nuclear program.

“The United States remains open to dialogue, but Iran must live up to its obligations and clearly demonstrate to the international community the peaceful nature of its nuclear activities,” the White House said in a statement.

The 15-nation council earlier passed a fourth round of sanctions against Iran over a nuclear program the West suspects is aimed at developing the means to build atom bombs. The resolution that was the product of five months of talks between the United States, Britain, France, Germany, China and Russia.

(Reporting by Alister Bull; Editing by Jackie Frank)

The Web will unify fragmented mobile OS world, says Opera

Norwegian browser maker Opera has high hopes for the combination of mobile browsers and HTML 5, which will let web-based applications compete better with native applications, according to co-founder Jon von Tetzchner.

Today, the combination of fragmentation and native applications on smartphones is bad for both consumers and developers, von Tetzchner said in an interview. For consumers it becomes more difficult to switch to a new phone based on a different operating system and at the same time keep all of their applications, and developers almost have to start from scratch when they develop an application for different platforms, von Tetzchner said.

Using the Web is an antidote to both those issues, and just like Google, Opera is betting that HTML 5 will make Web-based applications more competitive compared to native applications. The browser wasn’t designed to build applications, but the introduction of HTML 5 changes that, according to von Tetzchner.

“If you want to build actual applications, not Web sites, this matters,” said von Tetzchner.

Developers will be able to add rich graphics and local storage, which lets programs based on Web standards work just like a native application, he said.

Implementing HTML 5 is still a work in progress, especially on mobile browsers. Opera’s Mobile 10 and Mini 5 come with support for some parts of HTML 5, including graphics. However, support for important parts like video and local storage is still missing, but von Tetzchner said he wouldn’t be surprised if storage is added before the end of the year.

For Opera, the first five months of 2010 were busy: It acquired mobile advertising company AdMarvel, signed a deal with Vodafone to bring mobile Internet access to inexpensive phones in developing markets and had its Mini browser approved for use on the iPhone.

That Apple approved the Opera Mini browser came as a surprise to many, but not to Opera, which after looking at Apple’s SDK license was convinced that it would be approved, according to von Tetzchner.

“There were other browsers there … and the fact that we don’t run Javascript and things like that on the client side meant that it was natural for Apple to allow [the application],” said von Tetzchner, underscoring that Opera went through the normal application approval process and negotiated with Apple.

More than 2.6 million people used Opera Mini on their iPhones in the two weeks following the April launch, according to Opera.

Opera Mini for iPhone also works on the iPad, but Opera has done nothing to customize the browser for Apple’s tablet, which would be a natural next step, von Tetzchner said.

Apple won’t get any sympathy from Opera on two burning issues in the mobile browser world.

Von Tetzchner has only good things to say about Adobe Systems, which has been quarreling with Apple about Flash on mobile phones. Opera has a good relationship with Adobe and Flash is apart of the Web, he said.

However, he isn’t saying if and when the company will implement the latest version of Flash on Opera Mobile. Opera Mini won’t be getting support for Flash. It speeds up browsing and consumes less data by compressing and rendering Web sites on Opera’s servers, but that also means some things won’t work, including Flash. Opera Mobile, on the other hand, connects directly to the Internet.

Opera is also a big fan of Google’s open source video codec VP8, and has already implemented it on its desktop browser.

“When Google chooses to buy a company for a significant amount of money and then make the codec available freely, a lot of companies have jumped,” said von Tetzchner.

Today, Opera, Mozilla and Adobe are backing the codec, and even Microsoft has said that at least it won’t fight it, which leaves Apple basically alone on the opposing side, he said.

As for Opera’s other ventures so far this year, by buying AdMarvel and signing deals with an operator like Vodafone, the company laid the groundwork for how it will make money in the future. Operators are in a good position to use their billing relationships with subscribers to build a working m-commerce ecosystem. Buying things over a mobile phone is currently too difficult, but the operators can do something about that, according to von Tetzchner.

“The test for me is if you can order pizza and bill it to your mobile phone bill,” he said.

For that to work, the operator either needs to become a bank or work with a bank, but that will fall into place, he said. If the users can buy things over their mobile phones, there will be revenue to share, he said.

But privacy remains an issue in the burgeoning mobile advertising market — everyone involved has to be careful when it comes to end-user privacy.

“We want to provide reasonably relevant ads, but … we don’t want to overstep any bounds,” von Tetzchner said.

Sarah Palin vents fury about exposé seeking neighbour on Facebook

New York, May 26 (ANI): Former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin has vented her fury on Facebook regarding author Joe McGinniss becoming her neighbour so he can write an exposé about her.

Palin, 46, made the discovery May 24 after she asked her husband, Todd, to “introduce himself to the stranger who was peering in” from her neighbour’s deck in Wasilla, Alaska.

“He’s rented the place for the next five months or so,” the New York Daily News quoted Palin as writing on Facebook on May 25.

“He moved up all the way from Massachusetts to live right next to us – while he writes a book about me.

“Wonder what kind of material he’ll gather while overlooking Piper’s bedroom, my little garden and the family’s swimming hole?” she stated.

Piper Palin is the former GOP vice presidential nominee’s 9-year-old daughter.

McGinniss, 67, would not comment, but his publisher, Broadway Books, said the author “will be highly respectful of his subject’s privacy as he investigates her public activities”.

McGinniss, who wrote “Fatal Vision” and “The Selling of the President”, has tried to get up close and personal with the former Alaska governor before.

Last year, he offered to pay 59,999 dollars to dine with Palin at a charity auction but was outbid.

Palin says she might try to sweeten up McGinniss with some “homemade blueberry pie so he’ll know how friendly Alaskans are”, and if that did not work out she would go to plan B.

“You know what they say about ‘Fences make for good neighbours?’ Well, we’ll get started on that tall fence tomorrow,” she added. (ANI)

Asian stocks weak, euro gives ground

The euro struggled to hold on to gains on Monday as investors sold into its latest bounce, while Asia stocks fell to hover just above eight-month lows hit on Friday on fears the euro-area debt crisis will hit world growth.

Although Wall Street was firm on Friday, investors in Asia weren’t so bullish.

They sold exporters in Japan to pull the benchmark Nikkei average down to its lowest level in more than five months, taking the view that a strong yen was undermining their earnings prospects. That added to the average’s 6.5 percent fall last week, its worst weekly drop in over a year.

The euro fell to $1.2490 in Asian trade from around $1.2570 in late New York dealings on Friday.

The currency had posted its first weekly gain against the dollar in six weeks last week as investors bought back the currency following its long slide.

Dealers said the health of the European banking sector weighed on the euro, already hurt by worries about the impact of deep public spending cuts in Greece, Spain and Portugal.

At the weekend, the Bank of Spain said it was taking over the running of Spanish savings bank CajaSur after its planned merger with another of the country’s small lenders failed.

The Australian dollar eased as carry trades funded in the single currency continued to be unwound on fears of a global slowdown.

“The euro is still vulnerable structurally as the short covering that we saw last week seems to have run its course,” said Tony Morriss, senior currency strategist at ANZ Bank.

“Also, the unwinding of carry trades that lifted the euro against the Aussie last week could run into some resistance.”

* The MSCI index of Asia-Pacific shares outside of Japan inched down 0.2 percent, hovering just above an eight-month low hit on Friday.

* Japan’s Nikkei average fell 0.5 percent, after earlier falling as much as 0.93 percent to 9,693.07, its lowest since early December.

* The euro rebounded sharply against the high-yielding Aussie last week, hitting three-month highs of A$1.5456, on the back of a huge sell-off by hedge funds. On Monday, the pair was trading at A$1.5188, just above late levels in New York on Friday.

* The Australian dollar fell 1.2 percent against the yen to 74.08 yen .

* The Aussie dollar extended its broad slide after global miner Rio Tinto said it is reviewing all capital spending plans in light of the Australian government’s proposed resource super profits tax.

* Australian stocks rose, buoyed by bargain hunters picking up banks and miners, following a slight recovery on Wall Street. The benchmark S&P/ASX 200 index gained 0.5 percent to 4,328.3, moving away from 10-month lows on Friday.

* Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange inched up $5 to $6,850, extending gains of more than 3.5 percent from the previous session.

* U.S. crude futures was steady to trade around $70.00 a barrel. An oil price of $65 per barrel is still reasonable for all producers, but a price below that will be a “disadvantage,” the chief executive of Saudi Basic Industries Corporation (SABIC) said on Sunday.

* U.S. benchmark 10-year Treasury notes edged up about 5/32 in price to yield 3.218 percent , down about 3 basis points from late U.S. trading on Friday.

(Additional reporting by Anirban Nag in Sydney; Editing by Neil Fullick)

(For more business news on Reuters Money visit http://www.reutersmoney.in)

American judge gives green signal for use of slang terms in sex ed class

New York, May 20 (ANI): An American court has backed a teacher who was suspended from a public school for using words such as “furburger”, “schmeckle” and “blow job” while teaching her sex ed/HIV/AIDS class.

Brooklyn federal judge Jack Weinstein allowed the Staten Island teacher to sue the Education Department, saying she acted correctly.

“If the Board of Education wants its teachers to instruct adolescents about HIV using Latinism of the academy, excluding vulgarism of the street, it should tell them so, plainly,” the New York Post quoted Judge Weinstein”s decision statement, as saying.

Faith Kramer, 48, sued the Education Department for 1 million dollars in 2009 after she was suspended from IS 72 and placed in a “rubber room” for five months after parents, who saw their children”s classroom notes complained to officials.

The guidelines for teaching sex ed in the city”s public schools do not prohibit a teacher from using slang terms to teach the class.

Judge Weinstein said: “The regulation relied upon by the Board did not prohibit Ms. Kramer”s conduct.

“It appears to have been selected post hoc, long after her suspension, to justify the measures that had been taken in response to parents” complaints.”

Kramer”s lawyer, Duane Felton said: “The words used are a frequent part of our language and the language of school children.”

Kramer has now been reinstated and is back to teaching the class. (ANI)

China stymied eight terror threats before Beijing Olympics

New Delhi, May 19 (ANI): China averted as many as eight terror attacks before its spectacularly executed Beijing Olympics got underway.

The potential terrorist attacks involved subway and airport bombings and bioterrorist attacks on Olympic venues during the five months leading up to the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games, the Beijing Evening News reported Tuesday.

The information was given in a book released by the World Health Organization and mentioned how China had set up a sound anti-terrorism medical-aid system as well as detection techniques for terrorism sources before the Beijing Games started, the China Daily reports. (ANI)

Tiger confirms he will compete in the Open at St Andrews

London, May 18 (ANI): Tiger Woods has confirmed his participation in the prestigious Open in St Andrews known as the �Home of Golf�.

Fans feared that Tiger would not be able to compete following an inflamed joint in his neck that rendered him out of action for the Players� Championship a little over a week ago.

However the ace golfer is expected to make a full recovery by the time the Open starts in mid-July, and has confirmed his participation on his website.

The troubled star who is still ranked no.1 and was triumphant at the Home of Golf by eight shots in 2000 and by five in 2005, returned to the game at The Masters last month after five months out because of a sex scandal.

If he wins this year�s Open, he will become the first player in golf�s history to claim the title three times the Daily Express reports. (ANI)

Kubica hails Renault return to front row

Poland’s Robert Kubica celebrated Renault’s return to the quick end of the Formula One starting grid on Saturday after he qualified on the front row for the Monaco Grand Prix.

The French manufacturer, world champions in 2005 and 2006, failed to win a race last year and ended the season in turmoil with a suspended permanent ban from the sport after a race-fixing scandal.

Although Fernando Alonso took pole in Hungary last July, before the scandal broke, and finished third in Singapore, the team’s future was up in the air until a takeover was agreed in December with Luxembourg-based businessman Gerard Lopez.

Since then, Kubica has helped revive their fortunes with some determined drives and Saturday’s qualifying was his best grid placing of the year so far.

“It’s a great day for us,” he told reporters. “Five months ago the team was not sure whether we would exist and we are here in Monaco on the front row.”

Kubica finished second in Australia, fourth in Malaysia and fifth in China and is now a challenger again for what would be only the second win of his career.

In Spain last weekend he had qualified only seventh, well adrift of Australian Mark Webber’s Red Bull on pole. Webber was again on pole in Monaco but the gap was reduced to less than three tenths of a second this time.

“If the same car (Webber’s) is one and a half seconds quicker in Barcelona, there is no reason why we should qualify in front of them,” Poland’s first and only F1 driver said of his performance.

“I was already surprised by our pace in free practice and qualifying but miracles don’t happen from one day to another.

“Of course when you are so close you are a bit upset but we have to be realistic and it was a great day for all of Renault.”

Kubica, always at home on a street circuit and winner in Canada in 2008 with BMW Sauber, was confident for the race.

“Generally the characteristic of the car is similar to two days ago and to this morning, actually this morning I felt the car was a bit better with changes more for the race,” he said.

“I was scared with a lot of fuel we would have too much bottoming, so we put up a bit the ride height and raised the car a bit…in qualifying we were slightly at a disadvantage but I think for the race it will be a bit better.

“Of course in Monaco the race is a bit different, it is not about race pace but bringing the car home, pitting at the right moment, getting out of pitstop without traffic,” said the Pole.

(Editing by Alison Wildey

To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

BJP likely to take final call on Jharkhand government today

New Delhi, May 14 (ANI): The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) is likely to arrive at a consensus over who will be Jharkhand’s new chief minister on Friday.

Senior BJP leaders are meeting here to finalise the name.

After the meeting, the party is likely to send observers to Ranchi to convey its decision to party MLAs.

Interacting with media in Chandigarh on Thursday, BJP president Nitin Gadkari said the party would take a final call on Friday.

“I had only a brief meeting with party observers in Delhi yesterday as I was flying to Chandigarh. Tomorrow evening, when I will return to Delhi, I will be meeting them and other senior leaders,” Gadkari said.

Meanwhile, the lack of consensus among BJP leaders has led to a delay in arriving at a solution to the crisis.

The JMM is insisting on a rotational power sharing arrangement.

Under that scheme, the BJP would get to head the state government for 28 months followed by the JMM for another 28 months.

Apparently, the JMM has agreed to let the BJP the first chance at chief ministership although the JMM has already been heading the government for the last five months.

The JMM-BJP coalition government plunged into a political crisis after the BJP withdrew support to government in the wake of Chief Minister Shibu Soren voting in favour of the UPA during the cut motion in parliament on April 27.

The BJP first announced it would immediately withdraw support from the JMM-led government, which would have brought it down and effectively led to the imposition of President”s Rule or attempts by the Congress to form an alternative government.

However, by April 29 when the party received a letter from Hemant Soren, son of the Chief Minister Shibu Soren, offering to support the BJP in leading the coalition, the withdrawal of support was “put on hold” and a dialogue was opened. (ANI)