We were not ever trying to urge people to pay their credit card bills tomorrow, Downing Street says David Cameron has hastily rewritten his conference speech to remove any suggestion that he is either urging or instructing the public to pay off their credit card bills – a move that could dampen consumer demand and worsen the recession. The prime minister’s aides said the speech would now read: “That is why households are paying down the credit card and store card bills”. The pre-briefed version of the speech on Tuesday read: “The only way out of a debt crisis is to deal with your debts. That means households – all of us – paying off the credit card card and store card bills.” A Downing Street aide said: “We are putting our hands up on this. It has been misinterpreted, and the only way to deal with it is to change the wording. We are not going to carry on when it is fairly obvious that it needed to be clarified. “People at home who are struggling cannot afford to pay off their debts, so to have an instruction from on high to do so would have been wrong. We were not ever trying to urge people to pay their credit card bills tomorrow. It was intended as a metaphor or an observation, as opposed to an instruction.” Downing Street also denied that Treasury forecasts showed household debt was set to rise, saying these figures included mortgages. A variety of papers had written up the speech as a haughty instruction from Cameron to the public to pay off their debts for the sake of the economy. On Wednesday morning, economists suggested the plan for a collective pay-off of credit card debts, if interpreted literally, would be economically disastrous as well as politically inept. The episode shows the delicate balancing act Cameron faces in trying to offer some optimism in the middle of the deepening recession. The prime minister does not want the entire Tory message to be one of gloom, deficits and debt, but fears he will be regarded as out of touch if he strays from those areas of concern. Conservative conference 2011 Conservative conference David Cameron Economic policy Conservatives Borrowing & debt Credit cards Consumer affairs Economics Patrick Wintour guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Poll results pose dilemma for Obama administration as it tries to bolster support for continued presence in Iraq and Afghanistan One in three US veterans of the post-9/11 military believes the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan were not worth fighting, and a majority think that, after 10 years of combat, America should be focusing less on foreign affairs and more on domestic problems, according to an opinion poll. The findings pose a dilemma for the Obama administration and Congress as they struggle to reduce the huge budget deficit and reconsider defence priorities while trying to bolster public support for the continued presence in Iraq and Afghanistan. Nearly 4,500 US troops have been killed in Iraq and some 1,700 in Afghanistan. Combined war costs since the September 11 terrorist attacks have exceeded $1 trillion. The results of the survey, presented by the Washington-based Pew research centre on Wednesday, portray the war veterans as proud of their work, scarred by warfare and convinced that the American public has little understanding of the problems that wartime service has created for military members and their families. They were more likely than other Americans to call themselves Republicans, and to disapprove of Barack Obama’s performance as commander in chief. They also were more likely than previous generations of veterans to have no religious affiliation. Pew, a nonpartisan organisation that studies attitudes and trends, called the study the first of its kind. The results were based on two surveys conducted between late July and mid-September. One polled 1,853 veterans, including 712 who had served in the military after 9/11 but were no longer on active duty. Of the 712, 336 had served in Iraq or Afghanistan. The other survey questioned 2,003 adults who had not served in the military. Nearly half of post 9/11 veterans said deployments had strained their relationship with their spouses and a similar number reported problems with their children. However, some 60% said they and their families benefited financially from having served in a combat zone. Asked for a single word to describe their experiences, the veterans suggested: “rewarding”, “nightmare”, “eye opening” and “lousy”. There are about 98,000 US troops in Afghanistan, where the conflict began with a US-led invasion on 7 October 2001. Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign centred on a pledge to withdraw from Iraq and strengthen the military campaign in Afghanistan. He is on track to have US troops out of Iraq by the end of this year, and in July he announced that he would pull 10,000 troops out of Afghanistan this year and 23,000 more by next September. The Pew survey found that veterans were ambivalent about the net value of the wars, although they were generally positive about Afghanistan, which has been a more protracted but less deadly conflict for US forces. One in three veterans said neither war was worth the sacrifice; a view shared by 45% of the public polled. Some 50% of veterans said the campaign in Afghanistan had been worthwhile; 41% of civilians agreed. Among veterans, 44% said the war in Iraq was necessary; 36% of civilians shared that view. Of the former service members who were seriously wounded or knew someone who was killed or seriously wounded, 48% said the war in Iraq was worth fighting, compared with 36% of those with no personal exposure to casualties. Exposure to casualties had an even larger impact on attitudes toward the war in Afghanistan. Some 55% of those exposed to casualties said the military campaign in Afghanistan had been worth the cost to the US, whereas 40% of those who were not exposed to casualties held that view. Pew said its survey results found “isolationist inclinations” among the war veterans. About six in 10 said the US should pay less attention to problems overseas and instead concentrate on issues at home. In a survey it conducted earlier this year, a similar share of the public agreed. The results also reflected what many view as a troublesome cultural gap between the military and the public. Although numerous polls have shown that Americans hold troops in high regard, the respondents in the Pew research admitted to a lack of understanding of what military life entails. Only 27% of adult civilians said the public understood the problems facing those in uniform, while the proportion of veterans who said so was even lower at 21%. United States US military Obama administration US politics Iraq Afghanistan Middle East guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• ONS halves its GDP estimate for Q2 • 2008-9 recession deeper than thought • Business groups lobbying for more QE • But services sector bounced in September • Economics blog: fresh UK double-dip fears The UK economy barely grew in the second quarter as consumers cut spending, compounding more downbeat news from the eurozone and fuelling fears that Britain could soon slip back into recession . Official data also showed the 2008-2009 recession was deeper than orginally thought. Revising previous numbers, the Office for National Statistics halved its GDP estimate for April to June this year to just 0.1%, suggesting the economy had already ground to a halt before the European debt crisis escalated in the summer. Household spending dropped 0.8%, its sharpest decline since the depths of the recession at the start of 2009. With a bleak European outlook the Bank of England is expected to step in soon with another £50bn in electronic money to shore up the economy. But after separate news this morning that Britain’s dominant services sector defied market expectations and enjoyed a mild pick-up last month, the decision over whether to extend quantitative easing (QE) right away is likely to be finely balanced. Growth across the UK services sector – which accounts for more than 70% of the UK economy – quickened in September recovering from a sharp slowdown in August, according to a monthly survey of purchasing managers conducted by Markit and the Chartered Institute of Purchasing & Supply. The seasonally adjusted index, which measures activity across the sector, rose to 52.9 in September from 51.1 in August. Economists had been predicting a reading of 50.5, barely clear of the 50-point mark that separates expansion from contraction. But companies remain deeply worried about spending cuts and the general economic outlook with business confidence at it lowest since early 2009 when Britain was mired in recession. Meanwhile, similar surveys in the eurozone this morning showed deeper woes. Italy’s services sector shrunk at its sharpest pace for more than two years in September while Germany’s service industries have slipped into contraction territory for the first time since July 2009. The BoE’s monetary policy committee meets Wednesday and Thursday but analysts say it may wait until next month when it has its latest economics forecasts to hand to launch more QE. “We believe it is only a matter of time before we see more QE,” said James Knightley at ING Financial Markets. “We favour November as the announcement point … given close proximity to the Fed and ECB policy meetings and the Cannes G20 summit. Being seen to act in some kind of coordinated fashion may also give the stimulus “more bang for its buck” rather than going it alone currently in what are very volatile markets and a mixed environment for data.” The services survey is closely watched given the services sector dominates the UK economy, with businesses ranging from hairdressers to insurers. Commenting on the details of the PMI survey, Chris Williamson, chief economist at Markit said the headline reading “masks the fact that all is not well in the UK services economy.” “Growth of new business will need to pick up in the coming months to prevent a downturn in both business activity and employment in the final quarter of 2011. Companies are already reluctant to take on extra staff, with employment more or less stagnating in September, as worries about the economic outlook at home and abroad intensified.” With the threat of a double-dip recession worrying their members, some of Britain’s biggest business lobby groups have urged the MPC to step in with more QE, which involves the bank buying government bonds from banks to boost their finances and improve lending rates. Policymakers with have to weigh growth concerns against persistently high inflation, but several members of the committee have indictaed in recent speeches that more QE will come soon. Economic growth (GDP) Economics Services sector Recession Quantitative easing Bank of England European debt crisis Katie Allen guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …At 10.45 BST the Nobel Prize in Chemistry will be announced in Stockholm. Get the news first here, with reaction from the scientific community to follow 10.56am: From the twittersphere: @simon_frantz writes: When Daniel Shechtman made his qusaicrystal disc. he said to himself “Eyn chaya kazo”/”There can be no such creature” He adds: In the course of defending his findings, Shechtman was asked to leave his research group. 10.50am: From the Nobel committee material: When Daniel Shechtman entered the discovery awarded with the Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2011 into his notebook, he jotted down three question marks next to it. The atoms in the crystal in front of him yielded a forbidden symmetry. It was just as impossible as a football – a sphere – made of only six-cornered polygons. Since then, mosaics with intriguing patterns and the golden ratio in mathematics and art have helped scientists to explain Shechtman’s bewildering observation. 10.48am: The prize has gone to Daniel Shechtman at Technion – Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa, Israel ” for the discovery of quasicrystals ” 10.45am: Time to find out who is the Bob Dylan of chemistry… Here’s the live webcast of the announcement. 10.22: The last of the science Nobel prizes is announced today for contributions to chemistry. To complete our coverage of the week’s awards, we will be following events live here. We expect to have the name of the winner, or winners, by around 10.45am UK via the live-streaming video of the announcement from Stockholm which you can watch below. This has already been a fascinating year for the science Nobels, and not only for the breakthroughs and researchers the awards honoured. On Monday, the Nobel committee awarded the medicine prize to three researchers whose work on the immune system has opened up new avenues for tackling diseases. Unknown to the committee at the time, one of the recipients had died only days earlier. The prize stands . Yesterday, the Nobel Prize in Physics went to three scientists who observed exploding stars in faraway galaxies and deduced that the expansion of the universe was accelerating. This striking and counterintuitive result introduced the concept of “dark energy”, a mysterious force that apparently drives the universe apart. While scientists applauded the award, the astronomer royal, Lord Rees, cautioned that in honouring only three people, the prize failed to recognise the work of the teams involved. So who will win the chemistry prize? The Washington Post
Continue reading …John Demjanjuk’s conviction set a precedent under which hundreds of suspects could be charged, say prosecutors Prosecutors in Germany have reopened hundreds of investigations of former Nazi death camp guards and others who might now be charged under a precedent set by the conviction of John Demjanjuk, a guard at Sobibor camp in Poland in 1943. Given the advanced age of the suspects – the youngest is in his 80s – the head of the German prosecutors’ office dedicated to investigating Nazi war crimes said authorities would not wait for the Demjanjuk appeal process to finish. “We don’t want to wait too long, so we’ve already begun our investigations,” Kurt Schrimm said. The Simon Wiesenthal Centre’s chief Nazi-hunter, Efraim Zuroff, said he would launch a campaign in the next two months – a successor to his Operation Last Chance – to track down the remaining war criminals. He added that the Demjanjuk conviction had opened the door to prosecutions that were never thought possible. “It could be a very interesting final chapter,” he said by telephone from Jerusalem. “This has tremendous implications, even at this late date.” Demjanjuk, now 91, was deported from the US to Germany in 2009 to stand trial. He was convicted in May of 28,060 counts of accessory to murder for serving as a guard at the Sobibor death camp . It was the first time prosecutors were able to convict someone in a Nazi-era case without direct evidence that the suspect participated in a specific killing. He has appealed against his conviction. In bringing Demjanjuk to trial, Munich prosecutors argued that if they could prove he was a guard at a camp like Sobibor, which had been established for the sole purpose of extermination, it would be enough to convict him of being an accessory to murder. After 18 months of testimony a Munich court agreed and found Demjanjuk guilty, sentencing him to five years in prison. Demjanjuk, a retired car worker who denies having served as a guard, is currently free and living in southern Germany as he waits for his appeal to be heard. Schrimm said his office was poring over its files to see if others fit into the same category as Demjanjuk. He could not give an exact figure, but said there were probably “less than 1,000″ possible suspects living in Germany and elsewhere who could face prosecution. “We have to check everything – from the people who we were aware of in camps like Sobibor … or also in the Einsatzgruppen,” he said, referring to the death squads responsible for mass killings, particularly early in the war before the camps were established. It has not yet been tested in court whether the Demjanjuk precedent could be extended to guards of Nazi camps where thousands died but whose sole purpose was not necessarily murder. Murder and related offences are the only charges that are not subject to a statute of limitations in Germany. Even the narrowest scenario – investigating the guards of the four death camps: Belzec, Chelmno, Sobibor and Treblinka – plus those involved in the Einsatzgruppen could lead to scores of prosecutions, Zuroff said. “We’re talking about an estimated 4,000 people,” he said. “Even if only 2% of those people are alive, we’re talking 80 people – and let’s assume half of them are not medically fit to be brought to justice – that leaves us with 40 people, so there is incredible potential.” Immediately after the war senior Nazis such as Hermann Göring were convicted at war-crimes trials run by the allied powers, while investigations of lower-ranking officials fell to German courts. But there was little political will to aggressively pursue the prosecutions, and many of the trials ended with short sentences or the acquittal of suspects in greater positions of responsibility than Demjanjuk allegedly had. For example, Karl Streibel, the commandant of the SS camp Trawniki where Demjanjuk allegedly was trained, was tried in Hamburg but acquitted in 1976 after judges ruled it had not been proved that he knew what the guards being trained would be used for. But the current generation of prosecutors and judges in Germany has shown a willingness to pursue even the lower ranks, something applauded by Zuroff. “Our goal is to bring as many people to justice as possible,” Zuroff said. “They shouldn’t be let off if they’re less than Mengele, less than Himmler … in a tragedy of this scope their escaping justice should not in any way mean that people of a lesser level would be ignored.” Working in favour of the new investigators is the fact that most suspects would probably have lived openly and under their own names for decades, believing they had no prosecutions to fear. Those who are harder to locate will be the focus of the Wiesenthal centre’s new appeal, which Zuroff said would include unspecified reward money for information that helps uncover a suspect. However, Schrimm said it makes sense to try to bring new cases to trial once the Demjanjuk case is through the appeals process, rather than expend the resources needed to charge a suspect only to have the case thrown out if Demjanjuk wins. “The suspects are old, that’s why we’re preparing everything now so that as soon as there is a final decision, we can move immediately with charges,” he said. Zuroff said he hoped the appeal would be fast-tracked so new charges could be filed. “This is a test for the German judicial system to see if they can expedite this in an appropriate manner to enable these cases to go forward,” he added. Germany War crimes Europe guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …• FTSE trading 90 points higher • UK services show surprise rebound while contraction in eurozone deepens • Britain’s 2008/09 recession was shorter but deeper than previously thought • General strike in Greece • Dexia rescue should happen by Thursday, says French finance minister 10.07am: Here is ING economist James Knightley’s take on the improvement in Britain’s services sector. Today’s report shows the biggest rise in the headline index since March. It is possible that the PMIs were negatively affected by concerns over the August riots and now the fears of wider civil unrest have faded the surveys are recovering. Indeed, the global macro backdrop continues to deteriorate and the expectations component of the index fell to its lowest level sine March 2009 – the depths of the recession. Consequently we believe it is only a matter of time before we see more QE. We favour November as the announcement point for more QE from the BoE given close proximity to the Fed and ECB policy meetings and the Cannes G20 summit. Being seen to act in some kind of coordinated fashion may also give the stimulus “more bang for its buck” rather than going it alone currently in what are very volatile markets and a mixed environment for data. With the Fed consistently highlighting that QE2 was less effective than QE1 in the US we suspect QE2 in the UK will amount to around an extra £300bn of asset purchases. This would bring the total spend to half a trillion pounds. 10.00am: Jonathan Loynes, chief European economist at Capital Economics, can’t get very excited about the bounceback in Britain’s service industries, and reckons the Bank of England should pump more money into the economy. He says: Coupled with the equivalent indices of the construction and manufacturing reports, this points to GDP growth of about 0.1% per quarter – positive at least. However, the average reading in Q3 as a whole suggests that GDP may well have fallen during the quarter. Meanwhile, the national accounts give a very downbeat picture of the economy’s past performance. Not only was growth nudged down in Q2 (from +0.2% q/q to +0.1%), but revisions to the back data left a bigger drop in output during the recession (7.1%) than previously estimated (6.4%). This would seem to contradict recent suggestions that there might be less spare capacity in the economy than previously thought. Overall, further justification for the MPC to launch QE2 either tomorrow or next month. 9.53am: And we’ve had another surprise, this time a positive one. The UK service industries bucked the worsening European trend and improved this month, with the PMI rebounding from August’s eight-month low to 52.9 in September. The FTSE is now up 90 points at 5035, an 1.84% increase. 9.38am: It turns out Britain’s 2008-09 recession was shorter but deeper than previously thought. After changing its methodology, the ONS carried out a major recalculation of its historical data and now reckons the slump was 7.1% from peak to trough, rather than 6.4%. 9.36am: Alas, we had some technical problems just as the Office for National Statistics published revised GDP figures. In a surprise revision, it said the UK economy grew by just 0.1% in the second quarter, less than the 0.2% previously estimated. This is the slowest quarterly growth rate since the end of last year, when the economy contracted by 0.5%. “We’ve had some new data in, but the majority of the change is due to new methods and some new industrial weights,” a statistician said. 9.17am: The euro slipped on Wednesday, hovering near a nine-month low against the dollar, as investors grew more sceptical over EU finance ministers’ willingness to act quickly to beef up the banks. It was trading at $1.3290 after hitting $1.3260 earlier. Kasper Kirkegaar, currency strategist at Danske Bank in Copenhagen, told Reuters: At this point, there’s just been news of discussions about possible bank recapitalisations, there’s no details yet. There’s a high risk of a further sell-off if we don’t get details on this soon. 9.12am: Here is some reaction to the eurozone services PMIs from Howard Archer, chief UK and European economist at IHS Global Insight. Eurozone service sector activity contracted for the first time in 25 months in September according to the purchasing managers, and at a deeper rate than first reported. Furthermore, the deterioration was widespread in September, with Germany seeing the first contraction in services activity since July 2009 and French expansion slowing sharply to a 25-month low. Worryingly, there was deeper services contraction in both Spain and Italy, adding to the concerns over their economy. Ireland bucked the trend, seeing marginally faster expansion. Contraction in the Eurozone’s key services sector during September, coupled with a marked decline in new business, heightens concern that the Eurozone could be heading back into recession and puts pressure on the ECB to cut interest rates as soon as Thursday. Indeed, with manufacturing activity contracting in September for a second month running, Markit’s composite output indicator for the two sectors sank to 49.1 from 50.7 in August, thereby indicating overall contraction in services and manufacturing output for the first time since July 2009. Eurozone economic activity is clearly being held back by tighter fiscal policy increasingly kicking in across the region, squeezed consumer spending power and the major hit to confidence coming from the heightened Eurozone sovereign debt tensions and global financial market turmoil. Also critically, slower global growth is now hitting foreign demand for Eurozone goods and services hard. Furthermore, falling prices charged in the services and manufacturing sectors combined in September supports the view that Eurozone consumer price inflation will soon head downwards on a sustainable basis despite spiking up to 3.0% in September. While an ECB interest rate cut is a possibility on Thursday, latest comments by policymakers suggest that it is more likely than not that the central bank will keep interest rate at 1.50% for now. Indeed, there was no hint of a rate cut on Thursday from ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet when he addressed the European Parliament earlier this week. 8.52am: The PMI services surveys for the eurozone paint a troubling picture. Italy’s services sector has shrunk at its sharpest pace for more than two years, and rather worryingly, Germany’s service industries have slipped into contraction territory for the first time since July 2009, with the index falling to 49.7 in September from 51.1 in August. Italy’s PMI dropped to 45.8 from 48.4, the lowest since July 2009, and Spain also posted its weakest reading since then, with the PMI at 44.8, indicating a sharper contraction. In the eurozone as a whole, the services sector has worsened with the index falling to 48.8, which indicates a faster contraction than previously. The UK PMI will be released at 9.30am and is expected to show services still expanded this month, albeit at a weaker pace. 8.51am: The FTSE is now only up 60 points at 5005, a 1.2% gain. 8.37am: In Greece, airlines have been grounded, trains halted and tax offices shut as public workers walked out to protest against the government’s harsh austerity measures – defying the prime minister’s plea to rally behind its effort to fend off the country’s bankruptcy. Hospitals ran on emergency staff and state schools shut in the first nationwide strike since the summer lull. In Athens’ airport, more than 400 domestic and international flights were cancelled, Reuters reported. The country’s unions expect hundreds of thousands of people to strike. “Unfortunately the new measures are just extending the unfair and barbaric policies which suck dry workers’ rights and revenues and push the economy deeper into recession and debt,” Stathis Anestis, spokesman for the GSEE union told Reuters. “With this strike, the government, the EU and the IMF will be forced to reconsider these disastrous policies.” 8.28am: This is what is happening today: • 9.30am The UK services PMI should show further weakening; European services PMI also out • 9.30am The UK Blue Book is expected to show massive revisions to past GDP data • Bank of England’s two-day monetary policy committee meeting begins • General strike in Greece 8.16am: Here are Tuesday’s comments on shoring up the banks from Olli Rehn, European commissioner for economic affairs, in full. He spoke to the Financial Times . There is an increasingly shared view that we need a concerted, co-ordinated approach in Europe while many of the elements are done in the member states. There is a sense of urgency among ministers and we need to move on. Capital positions of European banks must be reinforced to provide additional safety margins and thus reduce uncertainty. This should be regarded as an integral part of the EU’s comprehensive strategy to restore confidence and overcome the crisis. 8.11am: Shares in Dexia have leapt nearly 10% to €1.106, after the French finance minister promised a rescue by Thursday, while Bank of France governor Christian Noyer said the central banks of France and Belgium would ensure the troubled lender has enough liquidity. The FTSE is still up over 100 points at 5045, a 2% gain. Barclays is the biggest riser, up 7.6% at 151.9p, followed by miners Rio Tinto, Eurasian, BHP Billiton, Cairn Energy, Kazakhmys and Xstrata. Oil, which fell below $100 a barrel on Tuesday, is back up over $100. 8.07am: Here’s more on the EU bank plan. Gary Jenkins, head of fixed income at Evolution Securities, sums it up: The markets are not so much driven by fear and greed nowadays as they are by hope and despair. For most of yesterday the latter had the upper hand with further concerns about the European banks leading equity markets sharply lower; the Eurostoxx 50 closed down 2.21% and the FTSE 100 was down 2.58%. However the last hour of US trading saw a remarkable turnaround as the S&P 500 gained 4% to close up 2.25% on the day. This was on the back of an FT story that European finance ministers discussed the need to recapitalise Europe’s banks at yesterday’s meeting. Olli Rehn said “There is an increasingly shared view that we need a concerted, co-ordinated approach in Europe……there is a sense of urgency….capital positions of European banks must be reinforced to provide additional safety margins and thus reduce uncertainty…”. Note however that there has been “no formal decision” to commence a co-ordinated recapitalisation of the banks… The recapitalisation of banks is a fine idea, but if the politicians could solve the sovereign crisis that would go a long way to solving the banking crisis. Recapitalising the banks would be positive and it would no doubt help risk assets in the short term. But it would not solve the sovereign problems and thus unless the EU is happy to just keep buying Italian bonds (via the ECB / EFSF) then at some stage the market will focus on the sovereigns rather than the banks. 8.01am: The FTSE has opened 120 points higher at 5064, a 2.4% gain, as markets digest the EU bank plan . There was also some reassuring news on troubled Franco-Belgian bank Dexia this morning. The French finance minister Francois Baroin said “tomorrow a solution should be found”. He added that Dexia could not stay in its current form. “It’s indisputable,” he said on RTL radio. He also said a solution involving French state-owned banks Caisse des Dépôts and Banque Postale, the finance arm of its postal service, would be the most “solid”. Meanwhile, the Belgian caretaker prime minister Yves Leterme said nationalisation of Dexia’s Belgian activities was one possibility being considered. Later this morning markets will be looking at the key UK services PMI data for September, which is expected to slip back from August’s 51.1 to 50.6. It’s out at 9.30am London time. At the same time, the Office for National Statistics will be releasing its annual “Blue Book”. New methodology will mean massive revisions to past GDP data, while the final estimate for the second quarter is expected to be reaffirmed at GDP growth of 0.2%. No doubt the figures will give the Bank of England’s monetary policy committee plenty of food for thought when it starts its two-day meeting today. And Greece faces a general strike. 7.49am: Good morning. After lively trading on Wall Street on Tuesday – the Dow Jones was down about 2% but surged 4% in the last hour of trading to close 1.4% higher at 10808.71, a gain of 153 points – the FTSE 100 index in London is expected to open 60-70 points higher. On Tuesday US shares rallied on news that EU finance ministers were examining ways of co-ordinating recapitalisations of financial institutions. Not all Asian markets followed Wall Street’s lead, however. Japan’s Nikkei slid 0.86% to 8382.98 while Hong Kong’s Hang Seng lost 3.4% to 16,250.27. Dampening any euphoria over EU plans to shore up banks, Moody’s downgraded Italy by three notches last night, to A2 from Aa2 with a negative outlook – giving Italian bonds a lower rating than Estonia and putting them on a par with Malta. The credit ratings agency said it saw a “material increase” in funding risks for highly indebted eurozone countries, and warned of possible further downgrades. “The negative outlook reflects ongoing economic and financial risks in Italy and in the euro area,” Moody’s said in a statement . “The uncertain market environment and the risk of further deterioration in investor sentiment could constrain the country’s access to the public debt markets.” Michael Hewson market analyst at CMC Markets explains: The fluidity of the situation in Europe was aptly illustrated last night in the space of a fraught sixty minutes with stocks rallying sharply on reports that European finance ministers were examining ways of co-ordinating large scale recapitalisations of banks on a local level in an attempt to convince markets that governments would do all they could to safeguard and support the European banking sector. Just as they market had begun to digest that little nugget, ratings agency Moody’s with impeccable timing finally delivered on its ratings downgrade for Italy, downgrading them three notches to A2, with a negative outlook, citing increased risk in long term funding as well as increased downside risks to economic growth and to fiscal consolidation. European debt crisis Europe Julia Kollewe guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Remains of ex-leader arrive in Caracas nine months after his death in Miami sparked family feud over his final resting place The remains of former president Carlos Andrés Pérez has arrived in Venezuela, nine months after his death in Miami set off a bitter family feud over his final resting place. The embalmed body of Venezuela’s former leader had remained in limbo, kept for a time in cold storage in a Miami mortuary then in a Florida mausoleum, while the families of his wife and his longtime mistress battled in court over whether he should be buried in Venezuela or the United States. Edgar Zambrano, one of Pérez’s former confidants, said a casket bearing the remains arrived on a plane that departed from Atlanta, Georgia. Caracas mayor Antonio Ledezma, a one-time friend of Pérez who escorted the casket to Venezuela, said: “It’s a burdensome mission: retrieving a friend who left us. We must understand that friendship does not die along with the men who leave us physically.” Pérez died on 25 December aged 88. Dozens of relatives, friends and politicians, many of whom wore black suits and dresses, sang Venezuela’s national anthem as the coffin was carried from the airport to a hearse that transported the ex-president’s body to the headquarters of the Democratic Action political party in central Caracas. Henry Ramos, secretary-general of Democratic Action, praised Pérez for “his great achievements” and “contribution to Venezuela’s democracy.” Pérez will be buried on Thursday following a funeral mass, Ramos said. His estranged wife, Blanca Rodriguez de Pérez, insisted she had the right under Florida law as surviving spouse to bring her husband’s body home. But his longtime companion in Miami, Cecilia Matos, contended that Pérez had vowed repeatedly never to return as long as political arch-nemesis Hugo Chávez was president. After months of negotiations, a confidential settlement was reached in August that led to sending Pérez back to his homeland. The settlement also covered papers, computer files, memorabilia and other presidential artifacts that Pérez had in Miami when he died. A court-appointed curator has been cataloguing all of the material, but no details have been released on where it will end up. Pérez was president from 1974-1979 and from 1989-1993, surviving two failed coup attempts, including one led by Chavéz. He left the country in 2000, facing the threat of arrest on corruption accusations, and did not return. Alex Gonzalez, attorney for Pérez’s wife and family in Venezuela, said on Monday that a public viewing is scheduled for Wednesday. There are no plans for Venezuelan government involvement or any kind of state funeral. Pérez was born on 27 October, 1922, near the town of Rubio in western Tachira state. He started his political career as a youth leader and founder of Democratic Action, a centre-left party that dominated politics for decades before Chavéz’s rise to power in 1999. In his first term in the 1970s, Pérez won popularity by nationalising Venezuela’s oil industry, paying off foreign oil companies and then capitalising on a period of prosperity that allowed his government to build subway lines and bankroll new social programmes. He became one of Latin America’s most prominent political leaders, popularly known after his initials as “CAP.” Venezuelans elected him for a second time in 1988, hoping for a return to good times after a decade of economic decline. But his popularity plunged when he tried to push through an economic austerity programme that included increasing the subsidised prices of petrol. Anger among the poor boiled over in riots in 1989 and more than 300 people were killed in the unrest known as the Caracazo. Venezuela United States guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …