CORRECTED-Japan PM sticks to modest election goal after polls

TORONTO, June 26 (Reuters) – Japan’s prime minister tried to quell suggestions on Saturday he could be the next in line of revolving door leaders, sticking to a modest target in a forthcoming election after polls showed his party may miss a majority.

Speculation simmers that rivals in Naoto Kan’s ruling Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ) could try to oust him if the party fares poorly in the July 11 upper house election. The party needs a majority in the chamber to forge ahead with policies to boost the economy and cut huge debt.

The DPJ, which swept to power for the first time last year, will run the government regardless of the outcome given its dominance in the lower house, but control of the upper house would enable it to avoid policy deadlock.

Kan, who took over this month as Japan’s fifth premier in three years, said he was standing by a goal to win 54 of 121 seats in the election. That would fall short of a majority but analysts say Kan is setting the bar low to avoid being ousted in a party leadership vote in September.

“Before I became the party leader, the DPJ was in a tough position,” he told reporters in Toronto, where he was making his debut at a meeting of G8 and G20 leaders.

“I want to focus on winning the current number of seats we have, then how we can exceed that.”

SHORT OF A MAJORITY

Media have reported that the DPJ could well fall short of an outright majority and may need to find new allies to control the chamber, clouding the outlook for policies.

A June 24-25 survey by the Asahi newspaper showed the DPJ could win about 54 of the 121 seats up for grabs in the 242-member upper house, in line with Kan’s target but short of the 60 it needs for an outright majority. [ID:nTOE65P006]

Support for the DPJ-led government has rebounded since Kan took over from the unpopular Yukio Hatoyama. But ratings slipped after Kan made fiscal reform the heart of his campaign and floated the idea of doubling the 5 percent sales tax.

While many voters agree an increase in the sales tax is inevitable to pay growing social security costs and fix tattered public finances, others say the government should first do more to cut wasteful spending.

Kan said priorities would be established for spending cuts and pledged to drum up support for bold tax reforms from DPJ members, some of whom are wary that the idea could hurt the party’s election chances.

“Of course we will consider ways to not put too much burden on people with low incomes,” Kan said. “My proposal is to initiate debate, so I think I can win (the party’s) understanding.” (Editing by Ron Popeski)

Toyota plans to restart halted China plant Monday

June 24 (Reuters) – Toyota Motor Corp (7203.T) said it planned to resume production at a halted Chinese auto assembly plant on Monday, after workers at a factory owned by supplier Denso Corp (6902.T) returned to work. [ID:nHKU000032]

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Work at the Toyota factory in Guangzhou, which has an annual production capacity of 360,000 vehicles, had been suspended since Tuesday morning due to the strike at Denso (Guangzhou Nansha) Co.

A Denso spokesman said production at its factory had returned to normal in the afternoon, but negotiations over compensation still continued. (Reporting by Chang-Ran Kim)

Siemens to unveil new return targets in November

June 24 (Reuters) – German industrial bellwether Siemens (SIEGn.DE) will unveil new profitability targets in mid-November that will focus on earning greater returns for its shareholders than those offered by capital markets. Chief Executive Peter Loescher told reporters on Wednesday evening that he intends to switch the focus for his three core manufacturing businesses away from operating margins to parameters such as their return on capital employed (ROCE), which express how efficiently management allocates its funds.

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Revenue growth targets will be tailoured specifically to its sales markets, he explained. Previously Siemens aimed to increase its turnover at a rate that doubled global economic growth.

(Reporting by Jens Hack)

Russia’s LenspecSMU eyes $500 mln 2011 IPO-sources

June 24 (Reuters) – Russian construction company LenspecSMU is planning an initial public offering (IPO) next spring and hopes to raise $500 million, a source in financial markets told Reuters.

The St Petersburg-based firm has picked Credit Suisse, Renaissance Capital and VTB Capital to organise the placement, the source said.

Two other financial market sources confirmed the IPO plans of the company. In December LenspecSMU had said it could place 25-30 percent of shares via an IPO and that the company had been valued at $1 billion. (Reporting by Olga Popova; Writing by Toni Vorobyova)

Train kills 12 crossing tracks to Spanish festival

(Reuters) – Twelve people were killed when a high-speed train slammed into them as they tried to cross a railway line to get to a festival on a beach near Barcelona late on Wednesday.

World

Thirteen others were injured in the accident at about 11:30 p.m. (2130 GMT) as a group of mostly young people headed for the annual Saint John’s Day celebration at the town of Castelldefels, the Catalan government said.

Emergency services found dismembered bodies scattered at the scene, a short distance from the Castelldefels beach.

One youth told SER radio the revelers had just got off a train.

“At that moment a train came from the other direction and ran everyone over,” said the youth, who gave his name only as Fernando.

“The accident has taken 12 lives and there’s 13 injured, three in critical condition. I wish them a quick recovery,” said Joan Saura, the Catalan regional government’s interior minister.

Dozens of people had been trying to cross the track at an unauthorized point instead of using an underpass on the line between Barcelona and Alicante, the mayor of Castelldefels said.

Earlier reports suggested the underpass had been closed or not well signed, but the mayor said it had been open.

Railway operator Renfe said it would carry out a full investigation.

Spain’s public works minister Jose Blanco said he would cut short his visit to Luxembourg to go to the scene later on Thursday. He urged an investigation as soon as possible.

St. John’s Day, June 24, is a public holiday in many parts of Spain and bonfire celebrations traditionally begin the night before.

The accident was Spain’s worst rail accident since 2003, when 19 people died when two trains collided near the central town of Chinchilla.

(Reporting by Nigel Davies and Martin Roberts; editing by Andrew Roche)

Dollar falls to one-month low vs yen

June 24 (Reuters) – The dollar fell to a one-month low against the yen on Thursday as the greenback stayed pressured by the U.S. central bank’s pledge to keep rates low for some time. The dollar fell to 89.63 yen JPY=, its lowest since late May.

“Price action in the likes of dollar/yen remains poor, my order board suggests some more weakness to come in dollar/yen with an initial target 89.10 yen,” one London-based spot trader said. (Reporting by Neal Armstrong and Tamawa Desai)

FOREX-Dollar on defensive but euro gains limited

LONDON, June 24 (Reuters) – The dollar struggled on Thursday after the Federal Reserve reiterated its pledge to keep rates low, though its losses against the euro were limited by persistent doubts about the euro zone economy.

The dollar’s broad weakness helped sterling to extend gains to a six-week high and underpinned the euro, yet traders remained reluctant to chase those advances with more signs of fragile recovery tempering appetite for risky positions.

“There was a little disappointment in the market from the Fed statement but the euro has struggled to rally. The market remains sceptical about problems in Europe and that feeling won’t go away soon,” said Antje Praefcke, currency analyst at Commerzbank.

At 0720 GMT, the euro EUR= was broadly unchanged on the day at $1.2315 having stalled at $1.2351 in Asia.

Versus a basket of currencies .DXY, the dollar slipped to 85.595 in Asia, bringing it closer to a five-week low hit on Monday of 85.091. It later steadied to trade broadly unchanged at 85.829.

“If the market was hoping for re-assurance from the FOMC they would soon be disappointed as the Federal Reserve signalled that growth was likely to disappoint over the course of the next 12 months, due in no small part from the problems in Europe,” said Michael Hewson, currency analyst at CMC Markets.

In a statement at the end of a two-day meeting, the Fed scaled back its assessment of the pace of recovery, taking note of pockets of weakness, and also issued a cautionary note about volatile markets in light of Europe’s debt woes. [nN22150078]

The dollar was also undermined by data showing sales of new U.S. single-family homes tumbling more than expected in May.

NEW AUSTRALIAN PM

The Aussie dollar AUD=D4 rose as high as $0.8771 after Australia’s ruling Labor Party elected a new prime minister in Julia Gillard, in a bid to avoid election defeat later this year. [ID:nSGE65M0LY]

Gillard immediately offered to end a bitter dispute over a controversial “super profits” mining tax, saying she would throw open the door for fresh negotiations. But she stressed miners should pay more tax. [ID:nSGE65M0LY]

The Aussie later trimmed gains to stand at $0.8725, steady from late U.S. trading on Wednesday.

“We expect new PM Gillard to announce a watered down version of the Resource Super Profits Tax in the coming weeks,” said RBC analysts in a note to clients.

“The Australian dollar, resources, and equities will be the likely beneficiaries and should find immediate and longer term support from today’s change of PM,” they said.

Sterling rose to $1.5001 GBP=D4, the highest since May 12, extending gains made the previous day after a hint of an early rise in interest rates in the Bank of England’s minutes. The pound subsequently eased to trade with slight losses at $1.4940.

Against the yen JPY=, the dollar stood at 89.87 yen, stuck near a one-month low of 89.73 yen hit on Wednesday on trading platform EBS.

“Price action in dollar/yen remains poor and my order board suggests some more weakness to come, with an initial target of 89.10. Option related offers above 90.30 should see us capped,” said a London-based spot trader from a U.S. bank. (Additional reporting by Satomi Noguchi, editing by Mike Peacock)

Australia miners want tax rate cut-Minerals Council

June 24 (Reuters) – Mining companies will push Australia’s new prime minister to drop the rate on a new tax on the industry below the proposed 40 percent level, the Minerals Council of Australia said on Thursday.

Basic Materials

“The rate is very important. It’s a real destroyer of value,” the council’s chief executive Mitchell Hooke told a business forum.

He added the miners will also look closely at a “package deal,” indicating there were other areas where it hoped the new leader Julia Gillard will be open to negotiate. (Reporting by Sonali Paul; Editing by Ed Davies)

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

EURO GOVT-Bunds higher as periphery pressured, stocks fall

June 24 (Reuters) – Core German Bunds turned positive on Thursday as peripheral euro zone issuers remained under pressure and after cautious comments on the economy from the US Federal Reserve.

Bunds further extended gains as European equities .FTEU3 turned negative.

At 0727 GMT, September Bund futures FGBLc1 were 11 ticks higher at 128.73. Two-year German yields DE2YT=TWEB were 1.5 basis points lower at 0.582 percent, with ten-year yields DE10YT=TWEB down a similar amount at 2.632 percent.

European shares .FTEU3 reversed earlier gains to stand 0.24 percent lower on the day.

Peripheral yield spreads were steady in early trade, but held close to levels seen the previous session after a bout of widening.

European shares turn negative; miners fall

June 24 (Reuters) – European shares turned negative on Thursday morning, with miners giving up gains from early in the session, having risen on hopes Australia’s new Prime Minister would compromise on proposed taxes on resource firms.

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At 0730 GMT, the FTSEurofirst 300 .FTEU3 index of top European shares was down 0.4 percent at 1,035.76 points.

BHP Billiton (BLT.L), Kazakhmys (KAZ.L), Rio Tinto (RIO.L) and Xstrata (XTA.L) were between 1 and 2.7 percent lower. (Reporting by Brian Gorman)

UPDATE 1-Finnish government wins confidence vote as expected

HELSINKI, June 24 (Reuters) – The new Finnish government of Prime Minister Mari Kiviniemi won a parliamentary confidence vote on Thursday as expected.

The Nordic country’s four party coalition government, which holds a clear majority in parliament, won the vote 118-66 with 15 parliamentarians absent.

The vote ends a government reshuffle process that started last Friday when then prime minister Matti Vanhanen stepped down as planned. Kiviniemi won a parliament vote on Tuesday to become prime minister and was sworn in later that day.

The new government is largely unchanged from Vanhanen’s and will sit for less than a year, with parliamentary elections set for April 2011.

Kiviniemi, whose Centre Party is the country’s largest and anchors the government, has said she will continue to follow the previous coalition’s line of gradual fiscal tightening following a deep recession last year.

The Finance Ministry on Wednesday hiked its 2010 and 2011 growth forecasts for the country as the global economy picks up, but cautioned government finances would stay in deficit for the next two years as Finland recovers from recession.

(Reporting by Terhi Kinnunen, Writing by Brett Young)

UPDATE 1-Yule Catto sees H1 pretax profit up substantially

June 24 (Reuters) – British chemicals maker Yule Catto & Co Plc (YULC.L) said it expected first-half underlying pretax profit to be substantially ahead of a year ago, helped by its main polymer business, sending its shares up nearly 6 percent.

The company, which sees first-half operating profit in the polymers division well above year-ago levels, said the business enjoyed good volumes through the second quarter.

Yule Catto said its impact chemicals business William Blythe also saw better volumes and was trading strongly.

While the company’s pharma chemicals was expected to report a lower operating profit for the period, Yule Catto said the unit currently had a strong order book and was likely to see an improved product mix in the second half of the year.

The company also expects to lower net debt from 88 million pounds ($131.7 million) following the 11 million pounds sale of its downstream adhesives business in June.

Shares of the company were up 5.9 percent at 188 pence at 0708 GMT on Thursday on the London Stock Exchange. ($1=.6683 Pound) (Reporting by Aditi Samajpati in Bangalore; Editing by Aradhana Aravindan)

Finnish government wins confidence vote as expected

June 24 (Reuters) – The new Finnish government of Prime Minister Mari Kiviniemi won a parliamentary confidence vote on Thursday as expected.

Bonds

The Nordic country’s four party coalition government, which holds a clear majority in parliament, won the vote 118-66 with 15 parliamentarians absent.

The vote ends a government reshuffle process that started last Friday when then prime minister Matti Vanhanen stepped down as planned. Kiviniemi won a parliament vote on Tuesday to become prime minister and was sworn in later that day.

(Reporting by Terhi Kinnunen, Writing by Brett Young)

Danes turns ever colder towards euro, poll shows

June 24 (Reuters) – Danish resistance to swapping Denmark’s crown currency for the euro is stronger than ever, a new opinion poll for Danske Bank (DANSKE.CO) showed on Thursday.

The “No” camp’s lead grew to 11.3 percentage points in June, Danske Bank said, adding that there was little chance of a Danish vote on the euro this side of the next general elections due to be held before the end of November 2011.

Opposition to the euro increased to 54.6 percent in June from 47.4 percent in a similar poll in March.

“This is the largest ‘No’ lead since we launched our EMU poll in 1999,” the bank said in a research note to clients.

Danes rejected the euro in a referendum in 2000, instead pegging the crown to the single European currency within a narrow band EURDKK=. The financial crisis brought a brief groundswell of support for the euro, but that has now vanished.

Looking solely at those who were certain how they would vote, the ‘No’ side had an even more solid lead.

Only 32.1 percent of Danes polled were certain they would vote “Yes”, while 47.8 percent were certain ‘No’ voters — a difference of 15.7 percentage points, Danske Bank said.

“Comparing the results against our last survey in March 2010, the most noticeable shift is in the number of certain ‘No’ voters,” it said.

Furthermore, the Danish central bank’s interest rate cuts have narrowed the official interest rate spread to the euro zone to just 5 basis points over the past year.

“This makes the cost of not being a euro member appear considerably less than it did just 1.5 years ago, when the rate spread briefly rose to 175 bps,” Danske Bank said.

It remains uncertain when Danes might vote again on adopting the euro, Danske Bank said, adding that a referendum would be no easy matter politically for the current centre-right government which favours the euro.

It said there was a big risk that a vote would go against the government, and it noted that the government’s majority in parliament depends on the support of the Danish People’s Party, which opposes the euro.

“Therefore, the government will probably not call a referendum until after the next general election, which is due to take place by November 2011,” Danske Bank said.

Another opinion poll earlier this month by TNS Gallup found that only 36.3 percent would vote for the euro in a referendum while 54.8 percent would vote against, and 8.9 percent in the survey had no opinion [ID:nLDE65F0CI]. (Reporting by John Acher, editing by Mike Peacock)

European shares rise in early trade; miners gain

June 24 (Reuters) – European shares rose in early trade on Thursday, with miners leading on hopes that proposals for a super tax in Australia will be diluted after a change of prime minister.

Stocks | Global Markets

At 0706 GMT, the FTSEurofirst 300 .FTEU3 index of top European shares was up 0.3 percent at 1,043.16 points, after falling 1 percent in the previous session.

Miners gained on hopes that Australia’s new leader, Julia Gillard, will compromise on proposals for increased taxes on resource companies.

Antofagasta (ANTO.L), BHP Billiton (BLT.L), Kazakhmys (KAZ.L) and Xstrata (XTA.L) rose between 0.8 and 1.2 percent.

“It seems to be more confirmation that any plans for a 40 percent resources tax have been watered down significantly,” said Bernard McAlinden, investment strategist at NCB Stockbrokers in Dublin.

“The market is still in a range, and maybe it can trade towards the top of it. ”

The U.S. Federal Reserve renewed its vow to hold benchmark interest rates exceptionally low on Wednesday, but downgraded its assessment of the economic recovery. (Reporting by Brian Gorman)

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)

UPDATE 1-Resolution sets sub-underwriting fee-source

LONDON, June 24 (Reuters) – Sub-underwriters for Resolution’s (RSL.L) 2.75 billion purchase of AXA’s (AXAF.PA) British life insurance business will receive a commission fee of 1.75 percent, a person familiar with the matter said on Thursday.

Resolution said in a statement that leading shareholders had already underwritten 52 percent of the cash call, around 2 billion pounds, that will finance the acquisition.

The group is paying a total underwriting commission of 2.72 percent of the value of the new ordinary shares at the rights issue price.

(Reporting by Victoria Howley; Editing by David Cowell)

Putin calls for new gas transit talks with Minsk

June 24 (Reuters) – Russia’s Prime Minister Vladimir Putin called on Thursday on Belarus to hold new talks on gas transit after the head of Russia’s Gazprom told him a gas dispute with Minsk had yet to be solved.

Stocks | Global Markets | Energy

Alexei Miller, chief executive of Russia’s gas export monopoly, said Minsk was still demanding payment for gas transit in the amount which was not in line with the existing contract.

Earlier on Thursday, Gazprom said it had restarted gas supply to Belarus in full after Minsk repaid its debt for gas deliveries [ID:nnLDE65N06D.] (Reporting by Gleb Bryanski, writing by Dmitry Zhdannikov, Editing by Lidia Kelly)

UPDATE 1-Petrofac sees order backlog higher by year-end

LONDON, June 24 (Reuters) – Oil and gas services company Petrofac (PFC.L) said it expected its backlog of contracts to be higher at the end of the year than it was at the start as its bidding pipeline strengthened.

Group backlog is estimated to be around $6.9 billion on June 30 the FTSE 100 company said on Thursday and by the end of 2010 it expects it to be above the $8.1 billion level it stood at on December 31 2009.

The company said it was making good progress on the South Yoloten project in Turkmenistan and expects to make a decision on whether to convert it to a much larger contract in the near future.

Petrofac said its engineering and construction division, its largest unit, continued to bid for contracts in its core markets of the Middle East, Africa and around the Caspian Sea and was establishing a presence in Iraq, a new market for the company, as it sees near-term opportunities arising.

The company said its smaller engineering, training services and production solutions division continued to see subdued activity but was on track to secure its first production enhancement contract.

Shares in Petrofac closed at 1,251 pence on Wednesday, valuing the company at 4.3 billion pounds ($6.4 billion).

(Reporting by Sarah Young; Editing by Matt Scuffham)

($1=.6677 Pound)