US STOCKS-Index futures off on China worries, France caution


* China growth slows more than expected* IBM falls after earnings fail to impress* Futures: Dow off 21 pts, S&P off 3.9 pts, Nasdaq up 11.25By Edward KrudyNEW YORK, Oct 18 (Reuters) - S&P 500 stock index futures eased modestly on Tuesday after a Moody’s warning on France’s credit rating and a slowdown in China’s growth revived concerns over a worsening debt crisis in Europe and a hard landing for Asian economies.* Adding to market anxiety, International Business Machines Corp’s quarterly results failed to impress investors used to a robust showing from the technology bellwether. That added to worries over lackluster corporate information technology spending. IBM shares fell 4.6 percent to $178 in premarket trade.* China’s economic growth slowed in the third quarter to its weakest pace since early 2009. Gross domestic product rose 9.1 percent in the quarter from a year earlier, but was down from 9.5 percent in the previous period.* Moody’s cautioned it may slap a negative outlook on France’s Aaa credit rating in the next three months if the costs for helping to bail out banks and other euro zone members stretch its budget too much.* “Growth concerns in China along with renewed euro debt concerns are bringing some hesitation into the futures market,” said Andre Bakhos, director of market analytics at Lek Securities in New York. “However, investors are looking for some key earnings reports that could change investor perception.”* S&P 500 futures fell 3.9 points and were below fair value, a formula that evaluates pricing by taking into account interest rates, dividends and time to expiration on the contract. Dow Jones industrial average futures dropped 21 points, but Nasdaq 100 futures rose 11.25 points.* Investors awaited September’s Producer Price Index, due at 8;30 a.m. EDT (1230 GMT).* Corporate earnings remained in high gear, with results coming early Tuesday from Bank of America Corp .* Results are also due from Apple Inc , Intel Corp , Goldman Sachs Group Inc , and Johnson & Johnson.* U.S. planemaker Boeing Co predicted more sales cancellations for its delayed Dreamliner 787 after a Chinese airline scrapped 24 orders, but said the overall order book for the new long-range aircraft remained strong.* U.S. stocks suffered their worst loss in two weeks on Monday after comments from Germany’s finance minister renewed investor fears over Europe.

A path through Europe’s minefield


By George Soros The opinions expressed are his own. Earlier this week, a group of almost 100 prominent Europeans delivered an open letter to the leaders of all 17 eurozone countries. The letter said, in so many words, what the leaders of Europe now appear to have understood: they cannot go on “kicking the can down the road.” And, just as importantly, they now understand that it is not enough to ensure that governments can finance their debt at reasonable interest rates; they must also address the weakness of Europe’s banking system. Indeed, Europe’s banking and sovereign-debt problems are mutually self-reinforcing. The decline in government bond prices has exposed the banks’ undercapitalization, while the prospect that governments will have to finance banks’ recapitalization has driven up risk premiums on government bonds. Facing the prospect of having to raise additional capital at a time when their shares are selling at a fraction of book value, banks have a powerful incentive to reduce their balance sheets by withdrawing credit lines and shrinking their loan portfolios. Europe’s leaders are now contemplating what to do, and their next move will have fateful consequences, either calming the markets or driving them to new extremes. All agree that Greece needs an orderly restructuring, because a disorderly default could cause a eurozone meltdown. But, when it comes to the banks, I am afraid that the eurozone’s leaders are contemplating some inappropriate steps. Specifically, they are talking about recapitalizing the banking system, rather than guaranteeing it. And they want to do it on a country-by-country basis, rather than on the basis of the eurozone as a whole. There is a good reason for this: Germany does not want to pay for recapitalizing French banks. But, while Chancellor Angela Merkel is justified in insisting on this, it is driving her in the wrong direction. Let me stake out more precisely the narrow path that would allow Europe to pass through this minefield. The banking system needs to be guaranteed first, and recapitalized later. Governments cannot afford to recapitalize the banks now; it would leave them with insufficient funds to deal with the sovereign-debt problem. It will cost much less to recapitalize the banks after the crisis has abated and both government bonds and bank shares have returned to more normal levels. Governments can, however, provide a credible guarantee, given their power to tax. A new, legally binding agreement – not a change to the Lisbon Treaty (which would encounter too many hurdles), but a new agreement – will be needed for the eurozone to mobilize that power, and such an accord will take time to negotiate and ratify. But, in the meantime, governments can call upon the European Central Bank, which the eurozone member states already fully guarantee on a pro rata basis. In exchange for a guarantee, the eurozone’s major banks would have to agree to abide by the ECB’s instructions. This is a radical step, but a necessary one under the circumstances. Acting at the behest of the member states, the ECB has sufficient powers of persuasion: it could close its discount window to the banks, and the governments could seize institutions that refuse to cooperate. The ECB would then instruct the banks to maintain their credit lines and loan portfolios while strictly monitoring the risks they take for their own account. This would remove one of the two main driving forces of the current market turmoil. The ECB could deal with the other driving force, the lack of financing for sovereign debt, by lowering its discount rate, encouraging distressed governments to issue treasury bills, and encouraging the banks to subscribe (an idea I owe to Tommaso Padoa-Schioppa). The T-bills could be sold to the ECB at any time, making them tantamount to cash; but, as long as they yield more than deposits with the ECB, the banks would find it advantageous to hold them. Governments could meet their financing needs within agreed limits at very low cost during this emergency period, and the ECB would not violate Article 123 of the Lisbon Treaty. These measures would be sufficient to calm markets and bring the acute phase of the crisis to an end. Recapitalization of the banks should wait until then; only the holes created by restructuring the Greek debt would have to be filled immediately. In conformity with Germany’s demand, the additional capital would come first from the market and then from individual governments – and from the European Financial Stability Facility only as a last resort, thereby preserving the EFSF’s firepower. A new agreement for the eurozone, negotiated in a calmer atmosphere, should not only codify the practices established during the emergency, but also lay the groundwork for an economic-growth strategy. During the emergency period, fiscal retrenchment and austerity are unavoidable; but, in the longer term, the debt burden will become unsustainable without growth – and so will the European Union itself. This piece comes from Project Syndicate. Photo: A demonstrator from Spain’s 15M movement rolls a giant wheel symbolizing euro through a crosswalk during a protest against the economic crisis, banks, rating agencies, and austerity measures in Europe in central Madrid, July 28, 2011.

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US STOCKS-Wall St eyes 2nd week of gains on data, Europe hopes


NEW YORK Oct 14 (Reuters) - U.S. stocks rose on Friday as better-than-expected retail sales further relieved fears of another recession while optimism kept growing that the euro zone was making progress on a solution to its debt crisis.Tech shares rallied after a blowout quarter from Google Inc , putting the S&P 500 on track for back-to-back weekly gains for the first time since early July.The benchmark S&P index is up 13 percent from the Oct. 4th intraday low of 1,074.77, which had temporarily tipped it into bear market territory.French and German officials are trying to put flesh on the bones of a crisis resolution plan in time for a European Union summit on Oct. 23, overshadowing Standard and Poor’s cut of Spain’s credit rating, a move that underlined the challenges facing Europe’s finance ministers.Adding to the positive tone, U.S. Commerce Department data showed September retail sales rose 1.1 percent from a month earlier, beating the median forecast in a Reuters poll for a 0.7 percent rise. Sales growth during August was revised upward to 0.3 percent.”The foggy picture in Europe is becoming slightly more clear, with governments talking about some constructive things that could potentially stop the trouble,” said David Smith, chief investment officer of Rockland Trust’s Investment Management Group in Rockland, Massachusetts.”And with retail sales being the kind of data that lessens the possibility of another recession, people are feeling good.”The Dow Jones industrial average was up 88.14 points, or 0.77 percent, at 11,566.27. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index was up 11.10 points, or 0.92 percent, at 1,214.76. The Nasdaq Composite Index was up 23.18 points, or 0.88 percent, at 2,643.42.The recent rally since the S&P 500 briefly hit bear market territory on an intraday basis on Oct. 4 has pushed the benchmark index near 1,220, a key resistance point it’s been unable to cross since early August.”So long as things don’t deteriorate, this is a good buying opportunity for investors,” Smith said.Google Inc led the Nasdaq higher as shares jumped 5.7 percent to $591.09 a day after its results blew past Wall Street’s expectations, helped by strong advertising sales and deft cost controls.Apple Inc rose 2.2 percent to $417.36 as the newest version of its iPhone went on sale across the country.On the downside, Mattel Inc fell 1.2 percent to $27.46 as higher costs hurt its margins in the third quarter.Consumers remained pessimistic, despite the growth in retail spending. The Thomson Michigan’s preliminary October reading on consumer sentiment slipped to 57.5 from 59.4 the month before. It fell short of the median forecast of 60.2 among economists polled by Reuters.The Labor Department said overall import prices increased 0.3 percent, after falling 0.2 percent in August. Economists polled by Thomson Reuters had expected prices to drop 0.3 percent last month.

US STOCKS-Wall St eyes 2nd week of gains on data, Europe hopes


NEW YORK Oct 14 (Reuters) - U.S. stocks rose on Friday as better-than-expected retail sales further relieved fears of another recession while optimism kept growing that the euro zone was making progress on a solution to its debt crisis.Tech shares rallied after a blowout quarter from Google Inc , putting the S&P 500 on track for back-to-back weekly gains for the first time since early July.The benchmark S&P index is up 13 percent from the Oct. 4th intraday low of 1,074.77, which had temporarily tipped it into bear market territory.French and German officials are trying to put flesh on the bones of a crisis resolution plan in time for a European Union summit on Oct. 23, overshadowing Standard and Poor’s cut of Spain’s credit rating, a move that underlined the challenges facing Europe’s finance ministers.Adding to the positive tone, U.S. Commerce Department data showed September retail sales rose 1.1 percent from a month earlier, beating the median forecast in a Reuters poll for a 0.7 percent rise. Sales growth during August was revised upward to 0.3 percent.”The foggy picture in Europe is becoming slightly more clear, with governments talking about some constructive things that could potentially stop the trouble,” said David Smith, chief investment officer of Rockland Trust’s Investment Management Group in Rockland, Massachusetts.”And with retail sales being the kind of data that lessens the possibility of another recession, people are feeling good.”The Dow Jones industrial average was up 88.14 points, or 0.77 percent, at 11,566.27. The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index was up 11.10 points, or 0.92 percent, at 1,214.76. The Nasdaq Composite Index was up 23.18 points, or 0.88 percent, at 2,643.42.The recent rally since the S&P 500 briefly hit bear market territory on an intraday basis on Oct. 4 has pushed the benchmark index near 1,220, a key resistance point it’s been unable to cross since early August.”So long as things don’t deteriorate, this is a good buying opportunity for investors,” Smith said.Google Inc led the Nasdaq higher as shares jumped 5.7 percent to $591.09 a day after its results blew past Wall Street’s expectations, helped by strong advertising sales and deft cost controls.Apple Inc rose 2.2 percent to $417.36 as the newest version of its iPhone went on sale across the country.On the downside, Mattel Inc fell 1.2 percent to $27.46 as higher costs hurt its margins in the third quarter.Consumers remained pessimistic, despite the growth in retail spending. The Thomson Michigan’s preliminary October reading on consumer sentiment slipped to 57.5 from 59.4 the month before. It fell short of the median forecast of 60.2 among economists polled by Reuters.The Labor Department said overall import prices increased 0.3 percent, after falling 0.2 percent in August. Economists polled by Thomson Reuters had expected prices to drop 0.3 percent last month.

Ukraine ties jailed Tymoshenko to new criminal investigation


But in a new twist on Thursday, only two days after she was jailed for seven years for abuse-of-office in a trial that has outraged Western governments, the SBU named her and another former prime minister Pavlo Lazarenko in connection with the new case.The SBU’S announcement, so soon after the popular opposition leader’s imprisonment, appeared in line with efforts by the leadership of President Viktor Yanukovich to present her prosecution as part of a drive to end high-level malpractice.Yanukovich, who beat his arch-rival narrowly for the presidency in February 2010, denies Western charges that her trial was politically motivated.Tymoshenko, who denies any wrongdoing, has said the trial was a “lynching” by Yanukovich and by those whom she describes as the “criminal oligarchy” backing him.”The main investigative department of the SBU has opened a criminal case in respect of citizens Tymoshenko and Lazarenko,” the department’s head, Ivan Derevyanko, was quoted by Interfax news agency as saying.Lazarenko, who was prime minister for just over a year from mid-1996, is currently serving a prison sentence in the United States for money laundering and other offences.Derevyanko was quoted as saying that Tymoshenko “conspired” with Lazarenko to run up a debt of $405 million to Russia’s Defense Ministry from the Ukrainian state budget.She had been formally charged with the offence in her police detention cell on Wednesday, he said.Tymoshenko ran Unified Energy Systems of Ukraine, which once imported Russian gas for resale in Ukraine, in 1995-96 long before she became prime minister. It was that link which earned her the nickname of “gas princess.”(Writing By Richard Balmforth)

UPDATE 1-U.S. sanctions BP, contractors for Gulf oil spill


* Face fines of up to $35,000 a day, per incidentBy Ayesha RascoeWASHINGTON, Oct 12 (Reuters) - The U.S. offshore drilling regulator on Wednesday formally issued sanctions against BP and the major contractors for the 2010 explosion on the Deepwater Horizon rig that killed 11 workers and unleashed more than 4 million barrels of oil into the Gulf of Mexico.The newly formed Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement filed 15 “incidents of non-compliance” to the companies. It did not release details of how much the companies may face in fines.By law, the companies face fines of up to $35,000 a day, per incident for the violations.The infractions uncovered during the federal probe of the accident were outlined in the Interior Department’s final report on the disaster, released last month.BP, owner of the ruptured Macondo well, received the lion’s share of the sanctions, with seven notices for violations ranging from failure to protect health and property to failing to keep well under control at all times.In a first for the department, BP’s contractors Transocean , which owned the Deepwater Horizon rig, and Halliburton , which carried out cementing on the well, also face sanctions.The contractors each received four notices of violations.Traditionally, the department has only gone after a well’s operators for rule infractions. But after last year’s spill, the department has asserted its has authority to regulate contractors.The decision to sanction Transocean and Halliburton reflects the “severity of the incident, the findings of the joint investigation, as well as Secretary Ken Salazar and Director (Michael) Bromwich’s commitment to holding all parties accountable,” the regulator said in a statement.

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