RPT-GLOBAL MARKETS-Asian stocks rise on US data, euro inches up

HONG KONG, July 27 (Reuters) – Asian stocks rose to their highest in two and a half months on Tuesday, boosted by solid U.S. housing data, while the euro inched up towards two-month peaks on relief over stress tests on European banks.

High-yielding currencies like the Australian and New Zealand dollars held near recent highs and the dollar stabilised after retreating against the yen on Monday.

“The environment is gradually improving, after U.S. new home sales data and European banks’ stress tests, but investors are still not entirely convinced that the recovery is solid,” said Soichiro Monji, chief strategist at Daiwa SB Investments.

“The yen has yet to weaken properly either.”

The dollar was trading just below 87 yen JPY= after falling 0.7 percent in the previous session.

The euro crawled up above key resistance of 1.30 EUR= with sentiment buoyed after the stress tests. Analysts are now eyeing a 2-month high of $1.3029 hit last week as the next test.

The MSCI index of Asia Pacific ex-Japan stocks .MIAPJ0000PUS was up 0.4 percent, led by gains in the technology .MIAPJIT00PUS and consumer durables .MIAPJCD00PUS sectors.

The index is down just 2 percent in the year to date, and could return to the black this week, although earnings from Asian corporate heavyweights hold the key to further gains.

Japan’s benchmark Nikkei .N225 edged up above 9,520, a key technical resistance, but slipped back amid worries about a firm yen hitting exporters..

Overnight, Wall Street finished higher after new home sales in June logged a surprising jump and package delivery and business services company FedEx Corp’s (FDX.N), an economic bellwether, upgraded its quarterly and full-year earnings forecasts.

Asian corporate reporting season enters its busy phase this week amid expectations of robust results for the April-June reporting period, though the picture in the months ahead looks murkier. [ID:nSGE66J00X]

Among those reporting during the day are Indian energy major Reliance Industries (RELI.BO) and Japan’s Canon Inc (7751.T) and Daiwa Securities (8601.T).

Bucking the trend, Shanghai’s composite .SSEC, already the worst performer in Asia this year, fell 0.4 percent after a report the city’s banks are facing rising default risks on loans to real estate developers. [ID:nTOE66Q003]

The mood was already jittery after a report the previous day that almost a quarter of China’s local government debt is at risk of defaulting [ID:nTOE66P032].

Shanghai’s index is down more than 21 percent in the year to date despite a six-session rising streak which has taken it to month highs.

The Aussie AUD= was trading at $0.9020 close to an 11-week peak and the kiwi NZD= hovered at $0.7344, not far from a six-month high. (Editing by Kazunori Takada)

FOREX-Euro dips, pulls away from 2-month high

TOKYO, July 19 (Reuters) – The euro pulled back from two-month highs on Monday, as investors booked profits on its rally while lingering concerns about Europe’s sovereign debt problems looked likely to keep a lid on future gains.

High-yielding currencies like the Australian and New Zealand dollars were also under pressure as subdued U.S. data and falling equities .SPX led investors to shun risky trades.

Trade was light in Asia with Tokyo shut for a holiday.

The euro EUR= dipped 0.2 percent to $1.2904, pulling back from a two-month high of $1.3008 hit on Friday on trading platform EBS, with news that the International Monetary Fund and the European Union have suspended a review of Hungary’s funding programme putting some pressure on the single currency.

This means Hungary will not have access to remaining funds in its $25.1 bln package. [ID:nLDE66H021]. Dealers said this reminded investors of the region’s sovereign debt problems just days ahead of the results of stress tests on euro zone’s banks. The results are due out of Friday.

“While European leaders believe that the tests will bring confidence, the markets may not believe the sugar-coated figures with the euro primed for another leg down in the weeks ahead,” said David Scutt, forex trader at Arab Bank, Australia.

“Heavy selling pressure is expected to emerge ahead of resistance at $1.3100-10.”

Near term support for the euro is seen around the $1.2850 area, the 50 percent retracement of the euro’s fall from a high near $1.3820 on March 17 to a four-year low of $1.1876 hit in early June. Traders said there was talk of light stops around $1.2880.

The dollar edged up 0.1 percent against the yen to 86.64 yen JPY= but was not far from a seven-month low of 86.27 yen hit on Friday on EBS.

Latest data from the Commodity Futures Trading Commission showed speculators have been increasing long positions in the yen and cutting longs in the U.S. dollar. .

EYES ON YEN

Traders said with U.S. yields heading lower, the dollar could break past support near its seven-month low.

Such a drop could spark speculation of potential Japanese intervention to restrain the yen, especially if the dollar drops to a 15-year low by breaching the November 2009 trough of 84.82 on EBS.

With the yen’s latest rise having brought it to levels that could cause pain to Japanese exporters, a focal point is whether Japanese authorities will take steps to curb the yen’s rise, through measures such as verbal or actual intervention, or additional monetary easing measures.

“We’re getting into the territory where the MOF will start to get a little bit more vociferous,” said Gareth Berry, a currency strategist with UBS in Singapore.

Berry said the Ministry of Finance (MOF) may start to express concern over the exchange rate, adding that such rhetoric could help limit the dollar’s downside.

“I think there is plenty of scope for further downside beyond 85 before we actually see an actual act of intervention,” he said.

Japan has not conducted any foreign exchange intervention in more than six years, having last intervened in March 2004.

When the dollar slid to the 84.82 yen trough against the yen in late November, the BOJ stepped closer to currency intervention than at any time in the preceding five years by checking exchange rates with commercial banks. [ID:nT35213]

Soon after, the BOJ called an emergency meeting in early December and decided to pump 10 trillion yen ($115.5 billion) in three-month funds into the banking system.

On Friday, a private survey showed U.S. consumer sentiment weakened in early July to an 11-month low and capped a week which saw U.S. data printing on the softer side, raising questions about the sustainability of a U.S. recovery. [ID:nN15208925].

A resulting slide in U.S. stocks .SPX hit growth-linked currencies like the Australian dollar, which dipped 0.2 percent to $0.8680 AUD=D4. Earlier, traders said a model fund was seen selling the Aussie, which shed 1.6 percent on Friday. (Additional reporting by Anirban Nag and FX analyst Krishna Kumar in Sydney; editing by Kazunori Takada)

England fan makes 17,500 mile trip to World Cup

South Africa (Reuters) – England fan Dave Barrett has made possibly the longest and most expensive detour of some 17,500 miles to support his team at the World Cup finals.

World | Sports

Dave, 33, a pharmaceutical salesman, originally from Bristol in southwest England but now living in New Zealand, began his trip when he went to Auckland last Saturday (June 5) with his girlfriend and checked in for his flight to Johannesburg.

Instead of boarding a plane to South Africa, however, he found himself cancelling his ticket, buying a new one and that evening taking a different flight — to London — because he did not have a blank page in his passport.

Told that without a spare page, he would not be allowed into South Africa and then informed by the British Embassy in Wellington that it would take four weeks to process a new one, he weighed up his options.

“I thought about going to Honk Kong,” he said. “But in the end decided the best thing to do was to cancel my original flight and go to London for a new passport.”

He flew to London, transferred to Peterborough where the United Kingdom’s main passport office is located, and after three hours queuing up for a new passport, returned to Heathrow airport and flew to Johannesburg, South Africa the same day.

“I arrived on Tuesday in the end, and I was glad to get here,” he said on Friday as he prepared to travel his final journey from Pretoria to Rustenburg for Saturday’s opening group C clash between England and the United States.

“It was a long trip and expensive, yes,” he added. “The new ticket cost me 5,000 New Zealand dollars ($3,430), but I think it was all I could do. I had no option.

“My girlfriend was there with me in the airport and she just told me to go and do it. Luckily, she was very supportive!”

(Editing by Michael Holden)

FOREX-Euro, yen crosses lifted by round of short covering

TOKYO, June 8 (Reuters) – The euro edged up but was still near four-year lows against the dollar on Tuesday as a short squeeze showed signs of waning and funds were expected to resume selling on persistent worries about Europe’s financial system.

Higher-yielders such as the Australian and New Zealand dollars bounced 1 percent up against the yen as investors covered some of their extreme short positions after Asian stock markets .MIAPJ0000PUS gained, despite Wall Street’s tumble on Monday.

The euro also rose against the yen after hitting its lowest in more than 8 years at 108.06 yen EURJPY=R on Monday, and one trader said it had technical scope to rebound towards 111 yen.

But the market remains bearish on the euro generally, with Monday’s four-year low of $1.1876 EUR= still a downside target, followed by expected options triggers around $1.1850.

U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said European leaders were committed to ensuring the survival of the euro and had enough money to meet obligations of heavily indebted member countries. [ID:nWEN5603]

But traders remained sceptical.

“The market is seriously concerned about the possibility of the euro disappearing as a currency system,” said an options trader for a Japanese bank

“The euro’s fall has become a big trend that will continue for a long time. What we’re seeing today with the euro is only a temporary pause in that trend after sharp downward moves since late last week.”

The euro EUR= rose 0.3 percent to $1.1960, with support expected at Monday’s $1.1876 low.

Portfolio managers like pension funds and sovereign accounts have been purchasing euro put options constantly over the past one to two months to hedge against a fall in the euro.

The euro’s break below key chart support at $1.20 on Friday suggests this hedging will continue, the options trader said, although there has been no scramble to hedge in the past few days. Euro puts for three to six months are in regular demand and three-month euro puts with strikes at $1.15 or $1.12 are popular, he said.

Typically, managers use those options to hedge against the euro’s fall while they dump euro assets, and then get rid of those hedges as soon as they’re done with the sale, he said.

Traders say the next option trigger for the euro comes at $1.1850, with another likely target at about $1.1825, its March 2006 low. Below that, traders saw little support until its November 2005 low around $1.1640, although its 1999 launch level of $1.1747 was also a potential key marker.

It rose 0.6 percent to 109.55 yen EURJPY=R after falling 0.9 percent on Monday. Immediate support is seen at about 107.95 yen, the 76.4 percent retracement of its move up from a low in October 2000 to a high of 170 yen in July 2008.

Finance ministers from the debt-stricken euro zone agreed to set up a safety net arrangement on Monday. [ID:nLDE65612T]

Germany’s government agreed a package of austerity measures and Hungary promised cuts to meet budget targets, but financial markets continued to fret over the region’s banking systems.

“The near-term market driver should be developments in European peripherals with particular focus on Hungary,” JP Morgan said in a morning note.

“As there are many auctions in the euro area countries this week, results from these auctions would affect government bond yield spreads between European peripherals and Germany and their impact on risk assets and forex.”

Euro zone governments will issue about 27.5 billion euros worth of new bonds this week, with Spain, Portugal and Italy all due to hold auctions. [GVD/EUR] Spain faces redemptions and coupon payments worth more than 20 billion euros in July, raising worries it may face a difficult month of refunding.

Meanwhile, the dollar index .DXY slipped 0.1 percent to 88.276 after hitting a 15-month high of 88.708 on Monday. The focus is on 89.624, the high hit in early March 2009 when the global financial crisis was still playing out.

The dollar climbed 0.2 percent to 91.61 yen JPY=, having lost some ground on Monday as yen gains against riskier currencies weighed on the pair.

Japan’s new leader Naoto Kan appointed his cabinet on Tuesday, and deputy finance minister, Yoshihiko Noda, was named finance minister, in line with expectations. There was little impact on the yen, with market players awaiting more information on the government’s policies. [ID:nTOE65702H]

The Australian dollar AUD=D4 jumped more than 1 percent to $0.8204, with talk of hedge fund buying. Against the yen, it rose 1.2 percent to 74.86 yen AUDJPY=R.

But the outlook for the Aussie remains difficult. Aussie one-month 25 delta risk reversals AUD1MRR=ICAP — seen by many as a barometer for short term fear — were once again showing an extreme bias for puts, sitting at 4.4/5.4 percent, up from around 3.50 percent on June 3.

The New Zealand dollar climbed 0.7 percent to $0.6628 NZD=D4, having slid more than 1.7 percent on Monday. It rose 0.8 percent to 60.70 yen NZDJPY=R. (Additional reporting by Anirban Nag in Sydney, Satomi Noguchi in Tokyo and Reuters FX analyst Krishna Kumar; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)

NZ Cricket to get a million dollars from IPL franchises

Wellington, May 5 (ANI): New Zealand cricket will get a million dollars if Central Districts’ three Indian Premier League players are wanted by their franchises for Champions League in South Africa.

Ross Taylor (Royal Challengers Bangalore), Jacob Oram (Chennai Super Kings) and Graham Napier (Mumbai Indians) are eligible to play for both their IPL teams and New Zealand representatives Central Districts, but a clause in the IPL players’ contracts means the Indians get the first choice.

In return, the IPL teams would have to pay NZC 342,000 New Zealand dollars per player as compensation.

Taylor is a regular for Bangalore and is almost certain to be protected in their squad, The Dominion Post reports.

He has also qualified for Victoria and may do the same with English county Durham but has said that he will play for Central Districts in the Champions League if not required by Bangalore.

Oram was injured and didn”t play a match for IPL winners Chennai but his all-round qualities make him a valuable performer when in form.

“If his home team in England qualify, then that’s where the payment would be made,” Players Association boss Heath Mills said.

If Essex didn’t qualify and Mumbai want Napier, Mills said he would doubt if Central would profit, Stuff.co.nz reports.

Mills is negotiating a new collective bargaining agreement with NZC and it had not yet been decided how Champions League money would be split up between the provinces. (ANI)

Euro jumps on Greek package, Aussie at 5-mth high

(Reuters) – The euro jumped to its highest in nearly a month in early Asian trade on Monday, after European Union leaders agreed to a rescue package for Greece which traders said could drive investors to cover short positions.

The euro was up at $1.3616, from $1.3488 in New York on Friday, having tested the 55-day moving average at around $1.3637. The move confirmed an interim bottom on the euro, leaving it open for a test of $1.3817–the March 17 high– this week.

EU leaders agreed a 30 billion euros aid package of loans for Greece if needed, plus at least 10 billion euros from the IMF. The interest rate of 5 percent is considered a little steep for debt-strapped Greece but better then the 7-plus yields it was currently paying for three-year debt.

The rise in the euro, underpinned broad risk appetite and pushed up commodity-linked currencies like the Australian and New Zealand dollars. The Aussie was trading at a 5-month high of $0.9365, while the kiwi was up at $0.7180.

The dollar index .DXY was down 0.85 percent at 80.41, while the U.S. dollar was steady at 93.20 yen.

Euro/yen jumped to 126.88 yen from 125.69 yen while the Aussie/yen was up at 87.25 yen from around 86.88 yen late on Friday in New York.

(Editing by Wayne Cole)

Utilities lead market higher

The utilities sector has led modest gains on the local stock exchange, with some consumer-related stocks also higher.

The All Ordinaries closed nine points higher at 4,983 and the ASX 200 gained seven points to finish the day at 4,961.

Prime Infrastructure picked up 2.3 per cent to $4.00 and AGL was up more than 1 per cent to $15.22.

Gaming operators such as Crown and Tabcorp drove the consumer-related sector higher and were both up more than 1.5 per cent.

Flight Centre climbed more than 2 per cent to $21.15.

The rise may have been linked to the Australian dollar’s ascent to a fresh record above 69 euro cents, which makes European holidays more attractive.

Shareholders in Gloucester Coal might be able to afford such a holiday after the company surged 26 per cent to $11.70.

Singapore’s Noble Group offered $12.60 a share to buy out the company if Macarthur Coal’s bid fell through.

Sigma Pharmaceuticals regained a small part of last week’s losses, climbing 12 per cent after the firm responded to ASX queries about the timing of its results announcement.

ANZ climbed 6 cents to $25.51 after it crept a step closer to being able to open a wholly owned Chinese subsidiary.

NAB also climbed 6 cents to $28.00 after its chief executive said he was confident of gaining approval for the planned AXA Asia Pacific takeover.

Shortly after the market’s close, West Texas crude oil was fetching $US86.92 a barrel and Tapis was worth $US86.44.

Spot gold had climbed strongly as investors looked for safe havens away from Greece’s debt problems and outside the European Union. It was fetching $US1,137 an ounce.

The Australian dollar had also risen to a fresh record against the euro, hitting 69.4 euro cents.

It was also fetching 92.71 US cents, 87.12 Japanese yen, 60.84 British pence and 1.317 New Zealand dollars.

Speculators raise US dollar longs in latest week-CFTC

NEW YORK, April 2 (Reuters) – Currency speculators
increased their bets on the U.S. dollar in the latest week,
according to Commodity Futures Trading Commission data
released on Friday.

The value of the dollar’s net long position totaled $12.28
billion in the week ending March 30, compared with a net long
of $4.08 billion the previous week, according to CFTC and
Reuters data. The latest week’s net long dollar position was
the largest since Feb. 23, according to Reuters estimates.

The Reuters calculation for the aggregate U.S. dollar
position is derived from the net positions of International
Monetary Market speculators in the yen, euro, British pound,
Swiss franc, Canadian and Australian dollars.

Speculators, meanwhile, further raised their short
positions on the euro to a new record of -85,326 contracts,
according to CFTC data. The single currency has been under
selling pressure on persistent concerns over debt troubles in
Greece.

JAPANESE YEN (Contracts of 12,500,000 yen)

3/30/10 week 3/23/10 week

Long 17,174 41,030

Short 48,040 30,869

Net -30,866 10,161

EURO (Contracts of 125,000 euros)

3/30/10 week 3/23/10 week

Long 35,205 39,953

Short 120,531 114,870

Net -85,326 -74,917

POUND STERLING (Contracts of 62,500 pounds sterling)

3/30/10 week 3/23/10 week

Long 11,965 11,349

Short 79,038 82,973

Net -67,073 -71,624

SWISS FRANC (Contracts of 125,000 Swiss francs)

3/30/10 week 3/23/10 week

Long 6,735 9,239

Short 13,275 10,327

Net -6,540 -1,088

CANADIAN DOLLAR (Contracts of 100,000 Canadian dollars)

3/30/10 week 3/23/10 week

Long 88,595 90,278

Short 18,299 17,251

Net 70,296 73,027

AUSTRALIAN DOLLAR (Contracts of 100,000 Aussie dollars)
-6,367,492,200.00

3/30/10 week 3/23/10 week

Long 79,698 84,248

Short 10,358 9,909

Net 69,340 74,339

MEXICAN PESO (Contracts of 500,000 pesos)
-4,430,170,985.08

3/30/10 week 3/23/10 week

Long 113,370 114,686

Short 3,772 4,824

Net 109,598 109,862

NEW ZEALAND DOLLAR (Contracts of 100,000 New Zealand
dollars) -412,109,880.00

3/30/10 week 3/23/10 week

Long 13,049 13,621

Short 7,243 8,132

Net 5,806 5,489
(Reporting by Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss; Editing by Jan
Paschal)

New Zealand government ditches tax cuts in recession budget

New Zealand government ditches tax cuts in recession budgetWellington – New Zealand’s new conservative government Thursday ditched a campaign pledge to cut income taxes in the next two years in its first budget statement as it faced up to the realities of an economic recession.

Finance Minister Bill English told parliament that after 15 years of budget surpluses the country was facing a decade of deficits and the tax cuts promised to follow a first tranche which took effect in April were unaffordable and would be shelved indefinitely.

English said New Zealand was in the sixth consecutive quarter of recession and the effects would strip 50 billion New Zealand dollars (31 billion US dollars) off the economy over the next three years.

Giving what analysts described as a very bleak assessment of the economy, English said unemployment was tipped to reach 8 per cent next year and the deficit to peak at 9.3 billion New Zealand dollars in 2010/2011.

He said the minority National Party government, which came to power in November after nine years of Labour Party rule, would borrow 35 billion New Zealand dollars over the next three years to maintain economic activity and prevent more job losses.

This will see the country’s gross debt – until now anchored at 20 per cent of gross domestic product – more than double by 2016.

Preview speeches in recent weeks stressing that the country was experiencing the worst economic conditions since the Great Depression of the 1930s had primed New Zealanders to expect few handouts from the budget.

The main proposal to revive part of the economy and preserve jobs was a scheme to give 180,000 homeowners grants of up to 1,800 New Zealand dollars to insulate their homes and install clean heating devices like heat pumps.

Substantial increases in spending on the big-ticket state sectors of health and education were announced but analysts said the bleak medium-term outlook and clamps on spending growth meant they would suffer in years to come.

Pensioners were relieved with confirmation that state superannuation would be maintained at 66 per cent of the average wage for all over-65s, though English suspended automatic contributions to a fund established by the former government which was intended to guarantee pensions for future generations.

Prime Minister John Key said the budget would help put New Zealand on the road to recovery, putting in place policies to ensure that the economy emerged strongly from the current recession.

“While the measures in the budget may be the first steps along that journey, it paints a picture of a bleak landscape along the way,” said Jan Dawson, chief executive of the international accountancy firm KPMG.

Noting rising unemployment, with more than 1,250 New Zealanders joining dole queues last week, Phil Goff, leader of the opposition Labour Party, said, “It should have been a budget for jobs – it’s not.

“It will not stem the dramatic increase in job losses happening right now in New Zealand’s cities and towns.”(dpa)

Bank chasing millionaire runaways sues casino chain

Wellington – Westpac Bank, which is chasing a couple who fled New Zealand to Hong Kong with millions of dollars after an overdraft error, is suing a company that owns a casino in Macau, as well sas several people connected to the case, a newspaper reported on Wednesday.

Westpac sued Leo Gao, who fled to Hong Kong with his girlfriend and nearly 3.8 million New Zealand dollars (2.4 million US dollars) of the bank’s money, Lei Gao, is believed to be Leo Gao’s mother, Huan Di Zhang and Heights Service Ltd.

Heights Services is the firm jointly owned by Leo Gao and Zhang, which operated a petrol station in Rotorua at the centre of the bank’s error.

The New Zealand Herald reported Wynn International Marketing Ltd, a wholly owned subsidiary of Wynn Resorts Ltd, which owns casinos and hotels in Las Vegas and Macau, has been named as a defendant in court papers filed by Westpac, but did not give a reason for the lawsuit, saying judge has sealed the court file on the case.

Westpac confirmed that the hotel company was named as a defendant but declined to elaborate why, the Herald said.

In formalising an overdraft of 100,000 New Zealand dollars for the petrol station, the bank mistakenly approved 10 million New Zealand dollars.

New Zealand police have appealed to Leo Gao and his girlfriend Kara Hurring to give themselves up with the 3.8 million New Zealand dollars still unaccounted for. (dpa)

Gloomy news for New Zealand farmers, economy

Gloomy news for New Zealand farmers, economyWellington – The New Zealand economy, which has been in recession since early last year, suffered a 780-million-New-Zealand- dollar (483.6-million-US-dollar) hit Wednesday when farmers were told how much their milk will be worth next season.

The Fonterra Co-Operative, which is New Zealand’s biggest single exporter, said it would pay its 11,000 farmer-shareholders 4.55 New Zealand dollars for every kilogram of milk solids – down from 5.20 a kilogram for the season ending Sunday.

“This is the day the recession hit home,” said Federated Farmers’ spokesman Lachlan McKenzie.

Dairying is the critical driver of the New Zealand economy, with exports of milk powder, butter and cheese accounting for 25 per cent of foreign-exchange earnings.

“These numbers are bleak,” McKenzie said. “If you live in the city and think you’re immune from this, think again. It’s a hell of a lot of money that isn’t coming through the front door of the economy.”

Fonterra Chairman Henry van der Heyden blamed low international dairy prices and the rising value of the New Zealand dollar for the slump in milk money, which reached a record 7.90 New Zealand dollars a kilogram only two years ago.

He said moves by the European Union and United States to subsidize their dairy exports would delay the recovery of international prices, already depressed by the recession in key markets.

Van der Heyden said he recognized that many dairy farmers faced a very tough year in the new season, starting Monday. (dpa)

China’s Haier Group takes 20-per-cent stake in New Zealand company

China's Haier Group takes 20-per-cent stake in New Zealand companyWellington – China’s Haier Group Corporation, one of the world’s biggest makers of home appliances and electronics, is taking a 20-per-cent cornerstone stake in New Zealand’s Fisher & Paykel Appliances Holdings Limited (FPA), it was announced Wednesday.

FPA told the New Zealand Stock Exchange that Haier was investing about 80 million New Zealand dollars (nearly 50 million US dollars) in the company, which shocked the market in February when it revealed plunging sales figures and a big rise in overseas debt because of the falling New Zealand dollar.

It said sales to Europe had fallen 19 per cent and to the United States 13 per cent as a result of the recession.

FPA announced it was raising a minimum of 189 million New Zealand dollars, including a pro rata renounceable rights issue, and had agreed to a 575-million-New-Zealand-dollar debt refinancing package.

The company reported a loss of 95 million New Zealand dollars in the last fiscal year, but its shares rose 44 per cent to 95 New Zealand cents on news of the deal with Haier, after a two-day trading halt.

FPA told the stock exchange: “Based on its current outlook, the directors are confident that the proceeds from the capital raising, together with the other debt reduction initiatives being undertaken, will be sufficient to meet the challenges of the current economic climate and the capital needs of the company.”

The 75-year-old company, which makes refrigerators, washing machines, cooking stoves and dishwashers, has been one of New Zealand’s most successful manufacturers and also makes appliances in Italy, the United States and Thailand.

Haier is China’s largest manufacturer of household appliances and the third largest in the world. (dpa)

Bank-mistake millionaires have split up, police say

Wellington – A runaway New Zealand couple who fled the country with millions of dollars thanks to a bank’s mistake appear to have split up, police said on Tuesday.

A woman who flew home on Monday after being with the pair told police that Kara Mary Jo Hurring, 30, was still in Hong Kong where they went from New Zealand, but she did not know where her boyfriend, Leo Gao, 29, had gone.

Although police did not name the woman, but she was widely reported to be the female fugitive’s sister, Aroha Hurring, 22, who was interviewed for hours by police but not charged.

Detective David Harvey said police were still working on a formal request to the Chinese government to arrest Gao, who left the country with 3.8 million New Zealand dollars (2.3 million US dollars) belonging to the Westpac Bank.

He repeated a call to the couple to return home and face the music.

The bank mistakenly gave Gao, part owner of a struggling auto service station in Rotorua, access to 10 million New Zealand dollars when it was formalising a temporary overdraft of 100,000 dollars.

He tried to withdraw 6.7 million dollars but the bank blocked access to 2.9 million, leaving him with 3.8 million.

The pair’s escapade has captured headlines around the world with people divided between those who say it was the bank’s fault and they should keep the money and others who say they will never get away with it. (dpa)

Police urge bank-mistake millionaires to return home

Wellington – New Zealand police appealed Monday to the couple who flew to Hong Kong after a bank mistakenly gave them a 10- million-New-Zealand-dollar (6.1-million-US-dollar) overdraft to return home before they spend all their ill-gotten gains.

A police statement said the Chinese government was being formally asked to arrest Leo Gao, 29, and his girlfriend, Kara Mary Jo Hurring, 30, who is also known by the surname Yang. They left the country with 3.8 million New Zealand dollars belonging to the Westpac Bank.

Gao, part owner of a struggling auto service station in Rotorua, was mistakenly given access to 10 million New Zealand dollars when the bank was formalizing a temporary overdraft of 100,000 dollars.

He tried to withdraw 6.7 million dollars but the bank blocked access to 2.9 million, leaving him with 3.8 million.

“We are well aware of the events that have been associated with this opportunistic offending,” Detective David Harvey said. “This pair still have families in New Zealand and at some stage they may want to return to see them.

“I would suggest that they take the opportunity to return to this country to resolve this matter before the outstanding sum of up to 3.8 million dollars is spent.”

Harvey said a family member who was travelling with them returned to Auckland from Hong Kong at lunchtime Monday and was speaking to police.

This is thought to be Aroha Hurring, 22, a sister of Kara.

“I urge the pair to reflect on the consequences of what they are doing and make arrangements to come back to New Zealand,” Harvey said.(dpa)

Bank-mistake millionaires not as rich as was thought

Wellington – Fugitives who fled New Zealand after a bank mistakenly gave them a 10-million-New-Zealand-dollar (6.1-million-US- dollar) overdraft are not as rich as they might have thought, according to news reports on Saturday.

And there appears to be more people to share their ill-gotten gains than the two people police have said are at the centre of a manhunt, which is centred on Hong Kong.

The drama began when the Westpac Bank accidentally gave Leo Gao, part owner of a struggling auto service station in Rotorua access to 10 million New Zealand dollars when formalizing a temporary overdraft of 100,000 dollars.

He tried to withdraw 6.7 million dollars, but the bank blocked access to 2.9 million, leaving him with 3.8 million.

Cutting its losses, the bank has since seized mortgaged properties owned by Gao and his business partner Huan Di Zhang worth more than 1.9 million dollars, the Weekend Herald reported.

Police and the bank have not named the suspects who are now being sought by Interpol, but the mother of Gao’s girlfriend, Kara, or Cara, Young, told the TV3 channel on Friday that she knew her daughter was “somewhere in Asia”.

Suzanne Hurring said Young was with Gao and had taken her 7-year- old daughter, Lena, with her.

News reports said Young’s sister Aroha was also with them and the Weekend Herald said Gao’s mother and brother had disappeared.

It reported that Gao’s rundown utility vehicle was found in the long-term parking at Auckland International Airport and the whereabouts of Huan Di Zhang, who owned 60 per cent of the service station, were also unknown.

Hurring appealed to her daughter to come home, saying, “This was the craziest thing she’s ever done. She’s never pinched a thing in her life – probably when she was a little girl, yes. She’s honest, so honest.”

She said Leo Gao was an “OK guy” but she would like to wring his neck and he could stay away. (dpa)

Accidental millionaire couple in Hong Kong: NZ police

Wellington: Two people who fled New Zealand with millions of dollars obtained through a bank’s mistake were believed to have gone to Hong Kong, police said on Friday.

Interpol was alerted and inquiries were being made in Hong Kong and Beijing, a statement from national police headquarters said.

The Westpac Bank admitted giving a customer an overdraft facility of 10 million New Zealand dollars ($6.1 million) when he had asked for 10,000 New Zealand dollars.

It said he tried to transfer 6.7 million New Zealand dollars out of the country but the bank recovered 2.8 million dollars, leaving it out of pocket by 3.9 million dollars.

Police and the bank did not identify the couple, but news reports named the customer as Leo Gao, who owned an auto service station in Rotorua with a man called Huan Di Zhang.

Gao reportedly was running the struggling station, which is now in receivership, with his girlfriend, Cara or Kara Young.

Although initial reports Thursday identified them as the couple who had disappeared with the money, Detective David Harvey said police would not confirm the identities of anyone involved at this stage of the investigation.

He said officers were working with the family of “one of those individuals who were shocked at their name being associated with the case”.

The whereabouts of Huan Di Zhang, who owned 60 percent of the service station, was unknown, the New Zealand Herald reported.

Thieves rob vets while they march to honour dead comrades

Wellington – Thieves robbed a group of New Zealand war veterans Saturday as they marched in honour of their dead comrades on the country’s most sacred day of remembrance, known as Anzac Day. When the vets got back to their Returned and Services’ Associations’ (RSA) club rooms at Waitakere, near Auckland, after the annual dawn service they found 2,600 New Zealand dollars (1,456 US dollars) they collected the day before by selling remembrance poppies on the streets had been stolen.

The money was intended to be spent on welfare benefits for poor veterans of two world wars.

“I just can’t believe they took that from people who gave so much,” local RSA president David Bell told Television New Zealand.

“It’s akin to robbing a soldier’s grave,” said a woman relative of a veteran. (dpa)