Saturday, June 9, 2012

Reuters: Financial Services and Real Estate: Eurogroup ends call to discuss Spanish rescue package - spokesman

Reuters: Financial Services and Real Estate
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Eurogroup ends call to discuss Spanish rescue package - spokesman
Jun 9th 2012, 16:59

BRUSSELS, June 9 | Sat Jun 9, 2012 12:59pm EDT

BRUSSELS, June 9 (Reuters) - A euro zone conference call to discuss a rescue of Spain's banks ended after 2-1/2 hours on Saturday and a spokesman for Eurogroup chairman Jean-Claude Juncker said a statement would be issued after the Spanish government has spoken.

Spain's finance minister is scheduled to hold a news conference at 1930 CET (1730 GMT).

One source said that Spain had not formally requested aid from its euro zone partners, but would "more than likely do so in the coming days", once an audit of its banking sector showing more precisely what its capital needs are is completed.

That audit is expected by June 21.

Earlier sources told Reuters that euro zone finance ministers had agreed that up to 100 billion euros could be released to Spain if it requests, although they emphasised that was an upper limit, not an indication of the amount Spain needs.

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Reuters: Financial Services and Real Estate: UPDATE 2-Euro crisis response disappointing: Italy minister

Reuters: Financial Services and Real Estate
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UPDATE 2-Euro crisis response disappointing: Italy minister
Jun 9th 2012, 16:53

Sat Jun 9, 2012 12:53pm EDT

* Italy emergency not over-Bank of Italy

* Government credibility at stake on reforms-Passera

* Italian banks resilient to Spain crisis-UniCredit DG

By Antonella Ciancio and Jennifer Clark

SANTA MARGHERITA LIGURE/VENICE, Italy, June 9 (Reuters) - I taly must push on with reforms to resolve its economic crisis, the industry minister said on Saturday, expressing disappointment at the euro zone's efforts to resolve the wider sovereign debt troubles plaguing the bloc.

Speaking at two conferences in northern Italy, Industry Minister Corrado Passera and Bank of Italy governor Ignazio Visco said the crisis in Italy was not over.

"The situation is not like it was at the end of last year, when there was an emergency, but remains very critical," Passera told a conference of young entrepreneurs on the Italian riviera.

"Europe was more disappointing than we expected, it was less capable of tackling a relatively minor problem such as Greece," the former banker said.

When Prime Minister Mario Monti took power from Silvio Berlusconi at the end of last year, the Mediterranean country was on the brink of a Greek-style default, and he was given full support to pass a severe austerity package and sweeping reforms to spur growth.

Italy - the world's fourth largest sovereign debtor - is however coming under growing pressure as the euro crisis sucks in Spain, which looks set to become the fourth country in the bloc to seek assistance.

A bailout for Spain's teetering banks, once requested by Madrid, could amount to as much as 100 billion euros, two senior EU sources told Reuters on Saturday.

Recent public disputes between Italian ministers have dented Monti's authority domestically despite him retaining strong international credibility.

Echoing earlier remarks by Italian deputy finance minister Vittorio Grilli, Passera played down on Saturday reports about bickering within the government over funding reforms.

"We put our credibility at stake on reforms, and I guarantee that we will carry them out," Passera said.

Visco urged Monti's government to continue with its economic agenda even if it didn't show immediate results.

"For Italy, the emergency is not over," the central banker said in a keynote speech to the Council for the United States and Italy.

"Structural reforms, if seen within a consistent and comprehensive strategic framework, can provide the basis for a surge in confidence in our potential for sustained economic growth."

SOVEREIGN RISK

Moody's Investors service said on Friday the Spanish banking sector crisis is not threatening other euro zone economies except for Italy, which shares Madrid's reliance on European Central Bank funding through its banks.

A top executive of Italian bank UniCredit dismissed these concerns.

"Italian banks are strong," UniCredit's General Manager Roberto Nicastro told the conference of industry lobby Confindustria.

"Spain can be in a delicate situation, but substantially we do not have to be scared about Spanish banks," the banker said.

Monti is at the start of an intensive week for European diplomacy. He is due to attend the G20 in Mexico on June 18-19, the weekend after the Greek election.

He is also hosting a meeting between Germany, France and Spain in Rome on June 22 to set the stage for a June 28-29 EU summit that is supposed to map out the future of the euro zone.

UniCredit's Nicastro said Italy would not resist proposals for a political and banking union requiring nations to cede more sovereignty in order to stabilise the euro bloc.

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Reuters: Financial Services and Real Estate: Spain's EconMin to hold news conference at 1930 local

Reuters: Financial Services and Real Estate
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Spain's EconMin to hold news conference at 1930 local
Jun 9th 2012, 16:47

MADRID, June 9 | Sat Jun 9, 2012 12:47pm EDT

MADRID, June 9 (Reuters) - Spain's Economy Minister, Luis de Guindos, will hold a news conference to discuss the outcome of the euro zone finance ministers conference call at 1930 (1730 GMT), the ministry said in a statement on Saturday.

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Reuters: Financial Services and Real Estate: UPDATE 1-ECB's Visco says economic outlook "daunting"

Reuters: Financial Services and Real Estate
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UPDATE 1-ECB's Visco says economic outlook "daunting"
Jun 9th 2012, 14:43

Sat Jun 9, 2012 10:43am EDT

(Adds detail on global economic outlook)

VENICE, June 9 (Reuters) - Global economic and market conditions are worrying and a renewed slowdown could threaten the sustainability of public debts in Europe and elsewhere, Bank of Italy Governor Ignazio Visco said on Saturday.

"The European and global economic outlook and financial market conditions are daunting," Visco said in a speech to the Council for the United States and Italy in Venice.

"A new global economic slowdown would pose additional risks to already fragile financial systems and threaten the sustainability of public debts, in Europe and elsewhere," he said.

He added that the political deadlock in Greece and difficulties in the Spanish banking sector were aggravating tensions in markets and increasing uncertainty.

Euro zone finance ministers were due to meet on Saturday to discuss a bailout of Spain's banks, lumbered with bad debts from a burst property bubble.

Visco urged leaders of G20 countries and emerging economies to pursue policies aimed at boosting growth.

He said support from monetary policy, such as the European Central Bank's cheap 3-year loans which helped calm markets earlier this year, was also essential but only temporary.

"A complete exit from the crisis will be achieved only if all actors properly shoulder their responsibilities," he said.

Visco said the crisis that has plunged Italy into recession and that sent its borrowing costs spiralling to record levels last year was still serious and urged Mario Monti's government to press on with economic reforms.

Italy is the world's fourth largest sovereign debtor.

"For Italy, the emergency is not over," Visco said. "Preserving and sustaining fiscal responsibility is essential, even if at the cost of some short-run difficulties," he said.

Visco, who is also a member of the ECB's Governing Council, reiterated his call for common oversight of Europe's banks, even if it means "a shift of some elements of national sovereignty."

"The reform of economic governance must be accelerated, in order to break the linkage between sovereign risk and bank risk," he said. Banks have been major buyers of euro sovereign bonds, once widely regarded as 'risk-free' securities.

Visco urged European countries to take steps towards fiscal and financial union, and warned that monetary union was difficult to sustain without appropriate governance.

The general manager of Italian bank UniCredit, Roberto Nicastro, also said on Saturday that Italy would not resist proposals for a political and banking union requiring nations to cede more sovereignty in order to stabilise the euro bloc.

"Italy is more oriented to accept this passage. We see resistance from other countries and not necessarily only in Germany," Nicastro said.

He backed the idea of creating a joint deposit guarantee and a bank resolution fund. "But this cannot be done without a centralised surveillance of all banks," he told a conference of young entrepreneurs. (Reporting by Jennifer Clark; Writing by Catherine Hornby; Editing by Ruth Pitchford)

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Reuters: Financial Services and Real Estate: Germans spending more at shopping malls -paper

Reuters: Financial Services and Real Estate
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Germans spending more at shopping malls -paper
Jun 9th 2012, 14:22

FRANKFURT, June 9 | Sat Jun 9, 2012 10:22am EDT

FRANKFURT, June 9 (Reuters) - Germans are spending more money at shopping malls thanks to higher disposable incomes and inflation fears, the chief executive of mall operator Deutsche Euroshop told the Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung.

"We have the impression that the high (collectively-bargained) wage deals are providing a lift to shopping. There also might be some people that would rather spend their money before it's not worth anything any more," Claus-Matthias Boege said in an interview with the Sunday weekly.

Germany is under pressure from other euro zone countries to tolerate higher inflation and spend more on goods and services from elsewhere in the bloc to help ease pressures on weaker euro economies. Its inflation rate was running at 2.1 percent in May using the EU measure.

Boege added that there was a chance his company could exceed its targets of a 10 percent gain in both revenue and profits.

"So far we're a tick above our planned targets," Boege said.

Euroshop owns stakes in 19 large shopping malls in Germany, including the Main-Taunus-Zentrum outside of Frankfurt. (Reporting by Christiaan Hetzner; Editing by Ruth Pitchford)

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Reuters: Financial Services and Real Estate: WRAPUP 3-Spanish bailout could reach 100 bln euros - sources

Reuters: Financial Services and Real Estate
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WRAPUP 3-Spanish bailout could reach 100 bln euros - sources
Jun 9th 2012, 14:11

Sat Jun 9, 2012 10:11am EDT

* Euro zone finance ministers hold conference call Saturday

* Statement expected afterwards on Spanish aid request

* Upper limit seen at 100 billion euros - source

* IMF advises seeking well over 40 billion euros

By Jan Strupczewski and Luke Baker

BRUSSELS, June 9 (Reuters) - A bailout for Spain's teetering banks, once requested by Madrid, could amount to as much as 100 billion euros, two senior EU sources told Reuters on Saturday.

Spain has not yet made a formal request for European aid but it could come during a conference call of euro zone finance ministers, the sources, who were both on an earlier call to discuss the technicalities of a rescue, said.

"A decision on Spain will only be taken ... by the ministers (in a second call). Madrid has not officially asked for help yet," one of the officials said. "The statement will mention 100 billion euros as an upper limit."

The Eurogroup of finance ministers is scheduled to begin its call at 4 p.m. Brussels time (1400 GMT). Earlier, its chairman, Jean-Claude Juncker, called for a "quick solution".

Several EU sources told Reuters on Friday that Madrid was expected to ask the currency bloc for help with recapitalising its banks this weekend, becoming the fourth country to seek assistance since Europe's debt crisis began.

Asked if he expected Spain to request help, Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt told public service radio: "I think that is everybody's assessment. There is even talk about amounts up to 80 billion euros."

It is not clear whether bailout numbers will be finalised on Saturday but the International Monetary Fund gave a clear guide to what it thought was needed, saying that under a stress scenario a number of Spanish banks would need to increase capital by 40 billion euros ($50 billion) in total. It advised seeking significantly more than that.

One of the sources who was on the earlier Saturday call said Spain did not want IMF involvement in the package for its banks.

Euro zone policymakers are eager to shore up Spain's position before June 17 elections which could push Greece closer to a euro zone exit and unleash a wave of contagion.

Spanish Industry Minister Jose Manuel Soria repeated on Saturday the government's argument that it should not act until it sees a separate audit of the banking system due by June 21 from two independent assessors, Oliver Wyman and Roland Berger.

But officials in Spain also said the parameters for the IMF and the private sector audits were effectively the same, meaning Spain could make the request for aid on the basis of the IMF figures rather than having to wait for the other assessment.

"If the government decides to seek a rescue, whatever the formula being used, we need to say two things: first the innocent should not suffer for the guilty, second public money should come back to public coffers," said Socialist opposition chief Alfredo Perez Rubalcaba after speaking with Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy on Saturday morning.

The government has already spent 15 billion euros bailing out small regional savings banks that lent recklessly to property developers.

Spain's biggest failed bank, Bankia, will cost 23.5 billion euros to rescue and its shareholders have been wiped out.

"I'm not particularly keen on a bank bailout because it's totally unfair. Banks should work like any other business. If they have profits they can keep them, if they lose money they have to assume the losses," said Javier, a Madrid resident who did not want to give his name or age.

Bundesbank president Jens Weidmann said Spain should turn to the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) rescue fund if it could not afford the bank recapitalisation bill.

In an interview to appear in Sunday's Welt am Sonntag newspaper, Weidmann said: "If Spain sees itself overwhelmed by financing needs, it should use the instruments that were created for that."

EFSF FUNDS

The race to resolve the banks' troubles comes after Fitch Ratings cut Madrid's sovereign credit rating by three notches to BBB, highlighting the Spanish banking sector's exposure to bad property loans and to contagion from Greece's debt crisis.

It said the cost to the Spanish state of recapitalising banks stricken by the bursting of a real estate bubble, recession and mass unemployment could be between 60-100 billion euros ($75-$125 billion). The higher figure would be in a stress scenario equivalent to Ireland's bank crash.

Italy could yet get dragged in too. Its industry minister, Corrado Passera, said the economic situation in Italy had improved since the end of 2011, but remained critical.

"Europe was more disappointing than we had expected, it was less capable of tackling a relatively minor problem such as Greece," Passera told a conference.

If a request is made, Spain is expected to ask for help from the 440 billion euros EFSF.

The process is likely to involve bonds from the EFSF being injected into Spanish banks with no new capital raised, a euro zone official said on Friday. The bonds can then be used as collateral, allowing the banks to access ECB liquidity.

While Spain would join Greece, Ireland and Portugal in receiving a European financial rescue, officials said the aid would be focused only on its banking sector, without taking the Spanish state out of credit markets.

That would be crucial to avoid overstraining the euro zone's rescue funds, which would struggle to cover Spanish government borrowing needs for the next three years plus possible additional assistance for Portugal and Ireland.

Conditions in the plan would be related to the banks and would probably not add to the austerity measures and structural economic reforms which Rajoy's government has already put in place, EU and German sources said.

A "bailout lite" would help salve Spanish pride. Spain is the world's 12th largest economy and No. 4 in the euro zone. EU and German officials have cited national pride as a barrier to requesting a full assistance programme.

The European Commission and Germany both agreed in principle last week that Spain should be given an extra year to bring its budget deficit down below the EU limit of 3 percent of gross domestic product because of a deep recession.

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Reuters: Financial Services and Real Estate: Credit Suisse seeking private banking deals-paper

Reuters: Financial Services and Real Estate
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Credit Suisse seeking private banking deals-paper
Jun 9th 2012, 13:07

ZURICH, June 9 | Sat Jun 9, 2012 9:07am EDT

ZURICH, June 9 (Reuters) - Credit Suisse continues to seek private banking acquisitions such as its purchase of Brazilian asset manager Hedging Griffo, the unit's head Hans-Ulrich Meister was quoted as saying on Saturday.

Credit Suisse's private bank gives priority to international deals, such as its December purchase of HSBC's private bank in Japan for an undisclosed sum, Meister told Swiss weekly Finanz und Wirtschaft.

Swiss deals could be more problematic because of the issue of market dominance, he said.

Credit Suisse was among the suitors that put in initial bids for the non-U.S. wealth management business of Bank of America, sources told Reuters last month. Credit Suisse has otherwise been relatively quiet on the private banking deal front. (Reporting by Katharina Bart; Editing by Ruth Pitchford)

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