UPDATE 1-Bayer profit misses estimates on generic rivalry

FRANKFURT, July 29 (Reuters) – Bayer’s (BAYGn.DE) quarterly earnings fell short of market expectations because generic competition for its two best-selling drugs overshadowed a rebound at its plastics unit.

In the second quarter, group underlying profit — or earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) before special items — rose 8.6 percent to 1.92 billion euros, Germany’s largest drugmaker, said on Thursday.

Analysts had expected adjusted EBITDA, which serves as the group’s main gauge of success, to rise to 1.98 billion. [ID:nLDE66P093] Quarterly net income of 525 million euros at the maker of cancer drugs, weed killers and car coatings also missed the 768 million estimated by analysts.

Generic-drug industry leader Teva (TEVA.TA) has brought a copycat version of Bayer’s YAZ birth-control pill to U.S. markets earlier than expected, while a generic version by Novartis (NOVN.VX) is chipping away at sales of blockbuster multiple sclerosis drug Betaferon. [ID:nLDE6501SV] [ID:nN29138356]

Bayer, the inventor of Aspirin and synthetic rubber, is meanwhile pinning its hope on potential blockbuster Xarelto, an experimental blood thinner for stroke prevention for which crucial test results are expected this year.

The group reiterated it expected 2010 core adjusted operating profit above 7 billion euros ($9.1 billion) as a rosier outlook for its plastics and foams unit MaterialScience offset expected weakness in drugs and crop chemicals sales.

The group’s CropScience division, one of the world’s largest makers of conventional pesticides, was hit by an unusually cold winter, followed by a hot and dry summer in the Northern Hemisphere.

(Reporting by Ludwig Burger)

Daiwa posts Q1 loss on underwriting slump

July 27 (Reuters) – Daiwa Securities Group (8601.T), Japan’s second-biggest brokerage, posted a second consecutive quarterly loss, hit by a drop in fees to manage share and bond offerings.

Daiwa, which competes with Nomura Holdings Inc (8604.T), posted a 1.19 billion yen ($13.7 million) net loss in April-June, compared with a 2.8 billion yen loss in the previous quarter and a 17.9 billion yen profit in the same period a year earlier.

The result was roughly in line with market expectations. The average of three analysts surveyed by Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S had estimated a loss of 410 million yen.

Daiwa’s earnings mirrored those of bigger U.S. rivals, including Goldman Sachs (GS.N) and JPMorgan Chase & Co (JPM.N), which also suffered from lower trading revenue and investment banking fees in the latest quarter.

Japanese companies sold $5.2 billion worth of shares in the quarter, less than half the $13.8 billion in the same period a year earlier, according to Thomson Reuters data, cutting into underwriting fees across the investment banking industry.

Prior to the announcement, shares of Daiwa rose 0.3 percent to 375 yen, in line with the securities sector subindex .ISECU.T, which gained 0.5 percent. (Reporting by Junko Fujita; Editing by Lincoln Feast)

EU bank stress tests face their own test in markets

(Reuters) – EU tests of banks’ ability to withstand financial shocks, criticized as too easy after only 7 out of 91 failed, face their own stress test in the markets on Monday with early signs pointing to a more positive response.

European Union policymakers and regulators voiced relief at Friday’s results but some market analysts and many media commentators derided an exercise in which all listed banks passed as lacking in credibility.

“I see nothing stressful about this test. It’s like sending the banks away for a weekend of R&R,” said Stephen Pope, chief global equity strategist at brokers Cantor Fitzgerald.

There was skepticism about EU regulators’ conclusion that banks need only a total of 3.5 billion euros ($4.5 billion) in extra capital. Market expectations had ranged from 30 to 100 billion euros, although many European banks have already raised capital during the financial crisis.

Only five small Spanish banks, Germany’s state-rescued Hypo Real Estate and Greece’s Atebank failed outright. More than a dozen others scraped through with just over the required 6 percent of Tier 1 capital in the most stressful scenario and are likely to come under market scrutiny.

However, the wealth of data disclosed by banks representing 65 percent of assets, and the commitment of banks, regulators and governments to follow-up action may well outweigh doubts about the stringency of the tests.

In a first market reaction in New York late on Friday, the cost of insuring the debt of large European banks fell further and the euro rose against the dollar despite worries about the tests’ credibility.

Better-than-expected economic data and business confidence surveys suggesting the euro zone will avoid a double-dip recession despite fiscal austerity measures are also helping revive investor confidence in Europe.

HAGGLING

Given the haggling among EU governments and regulators about the stress tests right up to the last moment, the degree of transparency was greater than had been expected a few weeks ago.

Sources familiar with the discussions said Germany fought hard behind closed doors to limit the extent of disclosure.

In the end, most banks — except Deutsche — issued a detailed breakdown of their exposure to the sovereign debt of EU countries, enabling investors to run their own risk simulations to gauge a counterparty’s solidity.

“We have all the sovereign exposure data, and we can go ahead and do our own tests,” said Nial O’Connor, a banking analyst at Credit Suisse.

That should help reopen the interbank lending market, which partially froze at the height of the euro zone debt crisis in May and has remained tight due to fears that banks have been hiding big exposures.

It also responds to one of the major criticisms of the exercise — that the scenario assumed a “haircut” on sovereign debt of countries such as Greece held in banks’ trading books, but not on a longer-term basis in their banking books.

The EU authorities were chastised for refusing to test the impact of a default by Greece.

But European Central Bank governing council member Christian Noyer said euro zone states “have put several hundreds of billions of euros on the table with the support of the IMF to make this hypothesis completely excluded.”

TRANSPARENCY

Spain, which spearheaded the drive for transparency, tested a larger part of its banking system and disclosed more data than any other country, hoping to clear away lingering market suspicion of its smaller banks’ solvency.

However economist Nicolas Veron of the Bruegel think-tank said Madrid had underplayed the recapitalization needs of the cajas, regional savings banks, although its bank resolution fund (FROBE) is well on the way to meeting those needs.

“The Spanish wanted to be seen as the most transparent and deserve praise for the catalyst role they played, but in the end they clearly understated what the cajas need,” he said in a telephone interview.

Veron said follow-up actions by governments and regulators should include pressing weaker banks to recapitalize, if necessary with state help and facilitating cross-border takeovers of weaker banks.

Even before the results were published, National Bank of Greece, Slovenia’s NLB and Civica in Spain announced plans to raise capital.

Italy said it would reopen an offer of government-backed bonds to support its banks, although none failed. Monte dei Paschi di Siena squeaked through with 6.2 percent of Tier 1 capital under the most stressful scenario, and UBI Banca with 6.8 percent.

Veron said the success of the exercise would depend partly on whether European regulators adopt a more cooperative approach after the stress tests than they did before them.

“If this is the start of a beautiful friendship among EU supervisors, then that’s not the same as if the united front crumbles next week and they start criticizing each other again,” he said.

(Editing by Andrew Roche)

LG Display Q2 profit up on firm TV sales; meets fcast

July 22 (Reuters) – Quarterly profit at South Korea’s LG Display (034220.KS) more than doubled and broadly met market expectations on Thursday, helped by solid sales of flat-screen TVs.

The world’s No.2 maker of liquid crystal display (LCD) screens reported a 726 billion won ($603.2 million) operating profit in April-June versus a forecast of 744 billion won from 22 analysts polled by Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

The result marked a sharp improvement from a revised profit of 352 billion won a year ago, but fell 8 percent from the previous quarter as sales of flat-screen TVs grew less than expected during the World Cup soccer event.

The second half is seasonally strong, but LCD makers face shrinking order books, as TV sales, which account for more than half of the industry’s total demand, lose momentum on concerns a debt crisis in Europe will crimp overall IT spending.

Shares of LG Display, which competes with home rival Samsung Electronics Co (005930.KS) and Taiwan’s Chimei Innolux (3481.TW), fell 17 percent over the past three months, lagging a flat KOSPI . (Reporting by Miyoung Kim and Seo Ji-won; Editing by Jonathan Hopfner and Anshuman Daga)

Nikkei slips 0.9 percent but off earlier lows

TOKYO, July 20 (Reuters) – Japan’s Nikkei average fell 0.9 percent but was off earlier lows on Tuesday, with tech shares hit by worry over the pace of U.S. economic recovery, disappointing U.S. corporate results and a strong yen.

Traders returned from a three-day weekend and were playing catch-up with other Asian markets that fell on Monday due to a sharp drop in U.S. consumer sentiment.

Charts suggested a further dip may still lie ahead, with the Nikkei’s MACD, a measure of market momentum, nearing a bearish cross while its slow stochastic — a measure of how oversold the market is and whether it is in a short-term up or down trend — continued to fall.

On Monday, Wall Street rose on hopes for earnings from Texas Instruments (TXN.N) and fellow tech firm International Business Machines (IBM.N), but shares of both slumped in after-hours trade as Texas Instruments’ revenue failed to impress and IBM’s revenue missed expectations. [ID:nN19191611] [ID:nN19215910]

But the dollar edged up against the yen JPY= after falling to a seven-month low on Friday, helping the Nikkei pare losses as short-covering emerged after the benchmark sustained its worst one-day percentage fall in over a month on Friday. [FRX/]

“It’s a sign that the economic recovery is slowing down when companies report profits that are above market expectations but their sales figures remain sluggish,” said Kazuhiro Takahashi, general manager at Daiwa Securities Capital Markets.

“Still, the market had risen on expectations towards strong profits, and things about sales numbers could have been used as an excuse to sell for now. Companies are at least in a position to produce profits now and hopes for the earnings season are continuing.”

Eyes remain on moves in the currency markets and U.S. earnings results, market players said, with Goldman Sachs (GS.N), Apple Inc (AAPL.O) and Yahoo Inc (YHOO.O) set to report later on Tuesday.

The benchmark Nikkei .N225 shed 81.09 points to 9,327.27 after earlier falling as much as 1.7 percent, while the broader Topix lost 0.8 percent to 834.22.

Japanese markets were closed on Monday for a holiday and on Friday the Nikkei fell nearly 3 percent as investors took profits.

On Monday, the NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market index fell more than expected in July to its lowest level since April 2009 after a popular tax credit for homebuyers expired in April, underlining fears about the economic recovery ahead of housing data including housing starts on Tuesday.

“There’s a slight ebbing of risk avoidance but some of the U.S. results are cause for concern, especially some not very good forecasts for later in the year, and this is affecting the Nikkei,” said Nagayuki Yamagishi, a strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities.

“A substantial break below 9,200 would leave us with few real support levels until around 9,000, but we’d probably need a substantial drop in either overseas stock markets or a surge in the yen for this to happen.”

Market players said support for the Nikkei was likely to hold for now at 9,200, just under its July 1 close, which was a seven-month closing low.

While charts look bearish, the benchmark is also approaching oversold levels on some fronts. Its relative strength index (RSI) hit 40, its lowest in roughly two weeks, with anything from 30 and below considered oversold, and its slow stochastic was approaching oversold territory.

TECH TROUBLES

Tech shares were hit by disappointment over U.S. corporate results, but pared earlier losses. The dollar was up 0.3 percent against the yen at 86.98 yen.

Chip gear manufacturer Tokyo Electron (8035.T) lost 2.6 percent to 4,695 yen and electronic components maker TDK Corp (6762.T) shed 2 percent to 5,000 yen. Sony Corp (6758.T) fell 2.5 percent to 2,344 yen.

Other exporters also fared poorly. Investors fret about a stronger yen since it eats into exporters’ profits when they are repatriated.

Toyota Motor Co (7203.T) slid 2.2 percent to 3,065 yen and Honda Motor Co (7267.T) fell 2 percent to 2,600 yen.

Shares of Daiwa Securities Group (8601.T), Japan’s second-largest brokerage, declined 2.6 percent to 378 yen after the Nikkei business daily reported the company likely suffered a loss in April-June, as financial market turmoil stemming from the Greek debt crisis took a toll.

The loss was likely between several billion yen and 10 billion yen ($115 million), marking a second consecutive loss for the company, which trails Nomura Holdings Inc (8604.T) in Japan’s mature brokerage market, the Nikkei said.

But shares of Leopalace21 Corp (8848.T) rose 2.7 percent to 232 yen after Credit Suisse lifted its rating on the developer and operator of apartments and hotels to “neutral” following its tumble close to the broker’s target price of 230 yen.

Leopalace’s stock had lost more than half its value over the past three months. Credit Suisse attributed the recent slide to a deterioration in occupancy rates, dwindling orders and unrealised losses on apartments. (Editing by Joseph Radford)

EURO GOVT-Bonds higher after Moody’s downgrades Ireland

July 19 (Reuters) – German Bunds advanced nearly a fifth of a point early on Monday after Moody’s Investors Service downgraded Irish debt. [ID:nSYU010299]

Bunds had opened flat after Germany’s Finance Ministry said the euro zone’s biggest economy is likely to have grown more robustly in the second quarter than the first three months of the year.

The German prediction countered pre-market expectations of a safe-haven rally by Bunds in the face of news that Hungary failed to agree with lenders on its economic plans and risked putting Austrian debt yield spreads under pressure. [ID:nLDE66H021]]

Austria’s banking sector is highly exposed to Hungary.

By 0626 GMT, the September Bund future FGBLc1 was up 13 ticks at 129.29 since the settlement close on Friday.

The two-year Schatz yield DE2YT=TWEB was down 0.6 basis points at 0.779 percent.

Bunds are likely to be supported by expectations that equities will open weaker .FTEU3 at 0700 GMT as markets continued to absorb some poor U.S. earnings data.

On Friday, Bank of America (BAC.N), the biggest U.S. bank, slid more than 9 percent after its quarterly earnings disappointed and the S&P financial index .GSPF dropped 4.4 percent as investors fretted about how banks will make money going forward.

(Reporting by George Matlock; editing by John Stonestreet)

UPDATE1-Private equity considers bidding for NBTY – source

NEW YORK, July 14 (Reuters) – Private equity firms Blackstone Group LP (BX.N) and Carlyle may acquire U.S. nutritional supplements maker NBTY Inc (NTY.N), a source familiar with the situation said on Wednesday.

The private equity firms are working separately from each other, not as a consortium, the source said. It was unclear how advanced the plans were.

News of a potential deal was earlier reported by the Wall Street Journal which said Blackstone and Carlyle are in talks to buy the firm.

The companies could not be immediately reached for comment by Reuters outside regular U.S. business hours.

NBTY, which has a market value of about $2.3 billion, posted a quarterly profit in April and missed market expectations by a wide margin, hurt by increased spending on television advertising.

Private equity deals, put on hold when the credit crisis shut off access to cheap debt, have been making a revival.

Earlier in July, BC Partners [BCPRT.UL] and Silver Lake Partners [SILAK.UL] announced a deal to buy U.S. healthcare services firm MultiPlan from two other buyout shops. That deal was worth about $3.1 billion, sources said at the time.

(Reporting by Megan Davies in New York and Sakthi Prasad in Bangalore; Editing by Valerie Lee)

UPDATE 1-Tech firm IQE sees H1 ahead of market view

July 15 (Reuters) – British technology firm IQE Plc (IQE.L) said it expected first-half performance to be significantly ahead of market expectations, driven by robust wireless product sales and increasing demand for optoelectronic and silicon-based wafers.

IQE also remained positive on its outlook for the second half, with sales volumes expected to grow further, driven by increasing demand for smartphones and high-speed wireless technology, the company said in a statement.

Analysts on average are expecting the company to post a pretax profit of 4.2 million pounds ($6.41 million) on revenue of 61.7 million pounds for fiscal 2010, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

IQE, whose semiconductor wafer products are used in mobile handsets, Wi-Fi, WiMAX, DVDs, laser printers and photocopiers, said it expects first-half revenue to grow over 50 percent to about 32.8 million pounds.

Shares of IQE, whose customers include TriQuint Semiconductor Inc (TQNT.O), RF Micro Devices Inc (RFMD.O) and Anadigics Inc (ANAD.O), were indicated up 9 percent at 20.5 pence at 0653 GMT on Thursday on the London Stock Exchange. ($1=.6550 Pound) (Reporting by Anirban Sen in Bangalore; Editing by Roshni Menon) ((anirban.sen@thomsonreuters.com; within UK +44 207 542 7717; outside UK +91 80 4135 5800; Reuters Messaging: anirban.sen.reuters.com@reuters.net))

Nikkei slips from 3-wk highs on investor economy worry

TOKYO, July 15 (Reuters) – The Australian dollar fell on Thursday, as selling by model-based funds weighed on the currency against the yen, while it took in stride data that pointed to a mild slowdown in China, rather than a deeper one as some had feared.

The Australian dollar slid in early Asian trade after the China Securities Journal reported the economy may lose momentum more than expected later this year. [ID:nTOE66E019]

It temporarily pared losses following the release of Chinese official data but soon started to ease again on the selling by model-based funds, traders said.

“The data has attracted much attention but at the end of the day it wasn’t far from market expectations. It showed the Chinese economy is slowing down, but that’s what markets have been looking for,” said Hideaki Inoue, manager of foreign exchange at Mitsubishi Trust and Banking Corp.

The Australian dollar stood at $0.8772 AUD=D4, down 0.7 percent on the day. It hit a two-month high of $0.8871 on Wednesday.

It also dropped 1 percent to 77.28 yen AUDJPY=R.

The euro erased its losses to change hands at $1.2722 EUR=, not far from its two-month high of $1.2778 hit on Wednesday as traders bought back the currency. Long dogged by worries over euro zone debt problems the euro tends to benefit from rising risk appetite.

China’s economic growth slowed to 10.3 percent in the second quarter from 11.9 percent in the first quarter in response to the fading effect of government fiscal and monetary stimulus as well as a high base of comparison a year earlier. [ID:nTOE66D060]

With Chinese data out of the way, the market’s focus is likely to shift back to the strength of the U.S. economy, traders said.

Investors will look to a raft of U.S. data due later in the day, including industrial output, jobless claims and regional business activity, for clues to the health of the world’s biggest economy. [ECI/US]

“U.S. data will be a very important market-moving factor today, especially after the minutes from the Federal Reserve’s last meeting fanned speculation of further policy easing,” said Hideki Hayashi, a global economist at Mizuho Securities.

Fed officials slightly revised down their outlook for economic growth in the second half of the year, while minutes from the central bank’s June 22-23 meeting said the officials would need to consider whether “further policy stimulus might become appropriate if the outlook were to worsen appreciably”. [ID:nWALEIE6D2]

The Commerce Department reported on Wednesday that U.S. retailers’ June sales declined 0.5 percent — more than twice the 0.2 percent drop forecast by economists polled by Reuters.

That sapped some of the optimism triggered by strong U.S. corporate earnings being released this week, leaving the U.S. dollar near a two-month low on a basket of currencies.

The dollar index .DXY stood at 83.344, down 0.1 percent on the day and not far from a two-month low of 83.205 hit on Wednesday.

The index is holding just above support at around 83.15, a 38.2 percent retracement of its rise from a low of 74.17 in November 2009 to a high of 88.59 on June 8.

Against the yen, the dollar slipped 0.3 percent to 88.13 yen JPY=.

Charts looked increasingly bearish for the dollar after the greenback failed the previous day to rise above 89.23 yen — a 38.2 percent Fibonacci retracement of the dollar’s fall from its June high of 92.68 yen to a July 1 low of 86.96 yen, traders said.

The Bank of Japan said on Thursday it expected the economy to grow at its fastest pace in a decade in the year to March 2011, but said the euro zone debt crisis could pose a risk to the outlook.

The central bank kept interest rates unchanged at 0.1 percent, as widely expected. [ID:nTOE66E03G]

Sterling was little moved on the day at $1.5266 GBP=D4, staying near a 10-week high of $1.5298 hit the previous day. Better-than-expected British employment data released on Wednesday added to speculation that the Bank of England may have to start considering raising interest rates. [ID:nLDE66D0NP] (Additional reporting by Anirban Nag and FX analyst Krishna Kumar in Sydney and Hideyuki Sano and Masayuki Kitano in Tokyo; Editing by Joseph Radford)

UPDATE1-Private equity considers bidding for NBTY – source

NEW YORK, July 14 (Reuters) – Private equity firms Blackstone Group LP (BX.N) and Carlyle may acquire U.S. nutritional supplements maker NBTY Inc (NTY.N), a source familiar with the situation said on Wednesday.

The private equity firms are working separately from each other, not as a consortium, the source said. It was unclear how advanced the plans were.

News of a potential deal was earlier reported by the Wall Street Journal which said Blackstone and Carlyle are in talks to buy the firm.

The companies could not be immediately reached for comment by Reuters outside regular U.S. business hours.

NBTY, which has a market value of about $2.3 billion, posted a quarterly profit in April and missed market expectations by a wide margin, hurt by increased spending on television advertising.

Private equity deals, put on hold when the credit crisis shut off access to cheap debt, have been making a revival.

Earlier in July, BC Partners [BCPRT.UL] and Silver Lake Partners [SILAK.UL] announced a deal to buy U.S. healthcare services firm MultiPlan from two other buyout shops. That deal was worth about $3.1 billion, sources said at the time.

(Reporting by Megan Davies in New York and Sakthi Prasad in Bangalore; Editing by Valerie Lee)

UPDATE 1-Dunelm profit to top forecasts, outlook tougher

LONDON, July 13 (Reuters) – British homewares retailer Dunelm (DNLM.L) forecast a tougher outlook for both sales and profit margins on Tuesday, even as it said profits for the year ended July 3 would be a little ahead of analysts’ expectations.

The group, which sells products such as curtains, bedding, blinds, rugs and lighting from mostly out-of-town stores, said sales at stores open at least a year rose 0.8 percent in the second half of its financial year, down sharply from a 15.4 percent increase in the first half.

The gross profit margin over the full year rose 190 basis points to 46.8 percent, ensuring that annual operating profit would be “a little ahead of current market expectations.”

But Dunelm also warned of tougher times ahead, as Britain takes steps to reduce record government borrowing.

“We do not anticipate that it will be possible to maintain last year’s rate of like-for-like sales growth in the coming twelve months as consumer spending has to absorb tax increases, public sector cuts and, potentially, interest rate rises,” Chief Executive Will Adderley said.

“We also think it will be hard to achieve further gross margin gains, with uncertainty over sterling and recent increases in freight costs affecting imported products.”

Dunelm shares have performed broadly in line with the UK general retail index .FTASX5370 this year. They closed at 358 pence on Monday, valuing the business at about 709 million pounds ($1.1 billion). (Reporting by Mark Potter; Editing by Louise Heavens)

Romania – Factors to Watch on July 13

July 13 (Reuters) – Here are news stories, press reports and events to watch which may affect Romanian financial markets on Tuesday.

PALESTINIAN PRESIDENT

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas ends a two-day official visit to Romania. He is expected to meet the speaker of parliament’s lower house.

CURRENT ACCOUNT

The central bank is expected to release current account data for May.

ROMANIA JUNE INFLATION FLAT AT 4.4 PCT AS EXPECTED

Romania’s annual inflation ROCPI=ECI held steady at 4.4 percent in June, in line with market expectations, data from the National Statistics Board showed on Monday. [ID:nBCR000049]

ROMANIA JAN-MAY TRADE DEFICIT SHRINKS 3.2 PCT Y/Y

Romania’s trade deficit ROTBAL=ECI shrank by 3.2 percent to 3.8 billion euros in January-May from the previous year, as exports’ growth rate outpaced that of imports, data showed on Monday. [ID:nBCR000050]

* For an instant view of analysts’ comments on the date releases, please see [ID:nLDE66B0DM].

ROMANIA SELLS LITTLE DEBT, EVEN AT HIGHER YIELD

Romania sold a fraction of what it had planned at a tender for one-year treasury bills on Monday, sticking to a self-imposed cut-off yield of 7 percent and heightening concerns over budget funding. [ID:nLDE66B1OG]

ROMANIA INDICTS CHAIRMAN OF BANCA TRANSILVANIA

Banca Transilvania (BATR.BX), Romania’s second-largest listed bank, has denied any knowledge of wrongdoing after the bank’s chairman was indicted by prosecutors on charges of money laundering and manipulating the market. [ID:nLDE66B0XV]

CZECH GROUP CEZ QUITS ROMANIA GAS-FIRED POWER PROJECT

Czech power group CEZ (CEZPsp.PR) has withdrawn from a partnership with Romania to build a new 400 megawatt gas-fired power plant citing unforseen costs, central Europe’s biggest utility said on Monday.

[ID:nLDE66B180]

CHINA THE ANSWER FOR BALKAN POWER REVAMP

Faced with dwindling interest from cash-strapped and cautious European investors, the Balkans’ creaking electricity infrastructure is happily soaking up more money from China. [ID:nLDE6660I5]

CARS

New car registrations dropped 42 percent on the year in January-June in Romania, to about 37,000 units.

Ziarul Financiar, page 12

LAYOFFS

Romania’s farm ministry plans to lay off about 3,500 people out of its total 13,300 employees, according to a government draft bill.

Ziarul Financiar, Page 2

NOTE- For a diary of forthcoming Romanian events, double

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

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

UPDATE 1-KSK Power posts higher profit

July 12 (Reuters) – KSK Power Ventur Plc (KSK.L) posted a higher full-year pretax profit, driven mainly by forex gains, and said it remained on course to meet market expectations in 2011.

Analysts on average are expecting a pretax profit of $78.1 million on revenue of $186.4 million for fiscal 2011, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

KSK, which operates power projects in India, said the pretax profit included a forex gain of $31.8 million, mainly due to a restatement of its foreign currency facilities.

For the year ended March 31, the company posted a pretax profit of $76.9 million, compared with $8.6 million in the year-ago period.

Operating profit increased nearly 118 percent to $23.1 million, while revenue was nearly flat at $52.9 million.

Shares of KSK were up 3.1 percent to 500 pence at 0715 GMT on Monday on the London Stock Exchange. (Reporting by Anirban Sen in Bangalore; Editing by Roshni Menon)

JGBs edge down on stock rebound, soft auction

TOKYO, July 6 (Reuters) – Japanese government bonds slipped for the third straight session on Tuesday, hurt by a China-led rebound in Tokyo shares and tepid demand at a 10-year JGB auction.

Uncertainty over Japan’s upper house election on Sunday also gave investors reasons to wait rather than buy now, as a fall in support for Prime Minister Naoto Kan has raised doubts about whether he can push through his fiscal reform agenda.

The market did not react to news that China has increased purchases of JGBs so far this year as the country’s buying is concentrated in short-term notes, and thus seen as a short-term escape from the euro, rather than long-term investments in JGBs.

“I think market players were a bit wary of the high pricing on bonds we have now,” said Takeo Okuhara, fund manager at Daiwa SB Asset Management.

September JGB futures dropped 0.13 point to 141.44 2JGBv1, slipping for three days in a row since they hit a seven-year high of 141.95 last Thursday. The benchmark 10-year JGB yield rose 2.0 basis points to 1.125 percent JP10YTN=JBTC.

JGBs slipped after Japanese share prices turned positive on a rise in Shanghai shares.

Bond traders were also mildly disappointed after the government’s offer of 2.2 trillion yen in 10-year bonds generated tepid demand.

The auction drew bids 2.76 times the offers, down from 3.85 at the previous auction in June and below the average of 3.02 in the past year.

The coupon rate was set at 1.1 percent, in line with market expectations but the lowest since bonds sold in August 2003.

“The result was a bit weak. The bid-to-cover ratio dropped from the previous auction. The market had been supported by quarter-end buying and a lack of auctions in late June but now we don’t have these supporting factors,” said Katsutoshi Inadome, fixed income strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities.

“The weekend election could change the government’s stance on fiscal reform, which has made it difficult to aggressively buy now,” Inadome added.

Japanese media said the country’s main ruling party could fall short of a majority. [ID:nTOE66403S]

The yield curve steepened slightly as traders tried to cheapen the 30-year sector ahead of the government’s 30-year bond tender on Thursday.

The 30-year bond yield rose 3.0 basis point to 1.875 percent, now 8.0 basis points above a 1 1/2-year low of 1.795 percent hit last week.

Still, worries about slower global growth are likely to limit falls in JGBs in the near future, traders said.

“Stock charts look ugly,” said a prop trader at a Japanese bank. “The S&P 500 has just had a “death cross”. About half of the time death crosses occur, the U.S. economy enters recession, so people are worried about a double-dip, even though no one is fully convinced.”

The JGB market did not respond to the news that China increased the amount of JGBs it buys.[ID:TOE66501F]

Market players said the purchases do not represent a shift in the country’s long-term investment stance but more a short-term move to park funds in yen while sovereign debt concerns buffet the euro.

“If they want to move some money out of the euro, U.S. and Japanese debt are the best alternative as there are not many markets with high liquidity,” said Daiwa SB’s Okuhara. (Reporting by Hideyuki Sano; Editing by Joseph Radford)

Euribor market rates push higher after ECB super-payback

July 5 (Reuters) – Key euro-priced bank-to-bank lending rates hit their highest levels in 10 months on Monday, days after banks paid back 442 billion euros to the European Central Bank.

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 — climbed to 0.793 percent from 0.790 percent the previous day, the highest level since early September.

Shorter-term one-week rates EURIBORSWD= hit 0.456 percent from 0.452 percent, the highest level this year, while six-month rates EURIBOR6MD= and one-year rates EURIBOR1YD= remained at 1.060 percent and 1.329 percent respectively.

Banks paid back 442 billion euros worth of one-year loans to the ECB on Thursday and reborrowed just over half in shorter-term maturities, reducing the overall amount of liquidity in the system.

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)

S.Korea official: June CPI roughly as expected

July 1 (Reuters) – South Korea’s June inflation, although below market expectations, came in line with the government’s projection, and rising core inflation deserves watching, a senior finance ministry official said on Thursday.

“We had expected 2.7 percent (growth in consumer prices in June), and so (the actual 2.6 percent growth) is roughly in line with our projection,” Yoon Jong-won, head of the ministry’s economic policy bureau, told a small group of reporters. (Reporting by Yoo Choonsik; Editing by Jonathan Hopfner)

UPDATE 1-Keller sees FY results within expectations

LONDON, June 25 (Reuters) – British ground engineer Keller (KLR.L) said on Friday it expected its full year results to fall within current market forecasts adding that there would be no significant change to its trading outlook.

“The expected results for the full year remain within the current range of market expectations,” Keller, which laid the foundations for the London Olympic Stadium, said in a statement.

In May the company, which will release its full year results in August, warned earnings could be well below expectations because falling construction sales and volumes would wipe out first half profits in the United States.

Revenues at its U.S. unit, the largest part of its business with 40 percent of group sales, were down about 20 percent in the first four months of the year.

Concerns about public spending cuts in Britain hitting building and construction companies were soothed earlier in the week when the new coalition government announced a regional growth fund to finance capital projects in its budget.

Shares in the company closed at 550 pence, giving the company a market value of about 350 million pounds. (Reporting by Golnar Motevalli; Editing by Myles Neligan)

UPDATE 1-Irish engineer Kentz says trading in line with mkt view

(Reuters) – Irish engineering group Kentz Corp Ltd (KENZ.L) said on Friday it was trading in line with market expectations for 2010.

The company, which focuses on the oil and gas industry worldwide, also expects to see a similar ratio of revenue between the first half and the second half of the year as was reported in 2009, it said in a statement.

Analysts on average were expecting a pretax profit of $54.1 million on revenue of $868.2 million for the full year 2010, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Kentz said it had a strong pipeline of additional prospects and expected to convert a number of these prospects into backlog during the second half of the year.

At the end of April, the company’s backlog stood at $1.59 billion, up from $1.5 billion in December. Backlog from its engineering, procurement and construction business rose 1.7 percent to $851.2 million, helped by growth in Australasia.

Shares of the company, whose customers include Royal Dutch Shell (RDSa.L) and Exxon Mobil (XOM.N), were up 1.7 percent at 237 pence at 0921 GMT on the London Stock Exchange. (Reporting by Anirban Sen in Bangalore; Editing by Prem Udayabhanu)

Key Euribor rates edge higher amid euro stresses

June 11 (Reuters) – Key euro-priced bank-to-bank lending rates continued to edge higher on Friday despite the European Central Bank’s promise of extra liquidity to keep supplies flush until the end of the year.

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, inched up to 0.719 percent from 0.718 percent, the highest level since mid-December.

Six-month rates EURIBOR6MD= rose to 1.003 percent from 1.001 percent, having broken through the ECB’s benchmark interest rate level of 1.0 percent on Thursday for the first time since last November.

One-year rates EURIBOR1YD= also edged up marginally to a new nine-month high of 1.271 percent from 1.270 percent.

On the other hand shorter-term one-week rates EURIBORSWD= eased a tad to 0.367 percent from 0.368 percent.

The debt troubles hitting Greece and other financially strained euro zone countries, have reignited fears about region’s banks and forced the ECB to reintroduce extra lending operations and abandon a long-held resistance to buying government bonds.

Markets are also bracing themselves for July 1 when banks have to pay back 442 billion euros worth of one-year loans borrowed from the ECB last year, although the transition will be smoothed after the ECB announced three extra batches of unlimited three-month funds on Thursday. [ID:nLDE6590CW]

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)

U.S. jobless claims fell 10,000 last week

June 3 (Reuters) – The number of U.S. workers filing new applications for unemployment insurance fell as expected last week, government data showed on Thursday, but the number of people still receiving benefits unexpectedly rose to its highest level in nearly two months.

Global Markets

Initial claims for state unemployment benefits dropped 10,000 to a seasonally adjusted 453,000 in the week ended May 29, the Labor Department said.

Analysts polled by Reuters had expected claims to fall to 450,000 from the previously reported 460,000, which was slightly revised up to 463,000 in Thursday’s report.

The four-week moving average of new claims, considered a better measure of underlying labor market trends, rose 1,750 to 459,000.

A Labor Department official said there were no special factors affecting the report. The claims data has no impact on the government’s closely watched employment report for May due on Friday as it falls outside the survey period.

Nonfarm payrolls probably increased 513,000 last month, buoyed by hiring for the decennial census, after a 290,000 increase in April, according to a Reuters survey. That would mark five straight months of job gains.

Although the economy has now grown for three straight quarters following the worst downturn since the 1930s and the recovery is broadening, stubbornly high unemployment is eroding President Barack Obama’s popularity.

It threatens to damage the Democrats at the midterm congressional elections in November.

While other indicators support views the labor market recovery is firming, claims for jobless benefits remain above levels usually associated with sustainable employment growth.

The number of people still receiving benefits after an initial week of aid unexpectedly rose 31,000 to 4.67 million in the week ended May 22, the highest since early April, the Labor Department said. The level was above market expectations for 4.60 million.

The insured unemployment rate, which measures the percentage of the insured labor force that is jobless, was unchanged at 3.6 percent for a seventh straight week. (Reporting by Lucia Mutikani; Editing by Andrea Ricci)