Sunday, May 27, 2012

Social media stocks hammered as Facebook debuts

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The corporate logo of Zynga Inc, the social network game development company, is shown at its headquarters in San Francisco, California April 26, 2012. REUTERS/Robert Galbraith

The corporate logo of Zynga Inc, the social network game development company, is shown at its headquarters in San Francisco, California April 26, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Robert Galbraith

By Alistair Barr

NEW YORK | Fri May 18, 2012 6:59pm EDT

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Social media stocks, led by Zynga Inc (ZNGA.O), slumped in volatile trading as traders used the securities to hedge or bet against the star of the sector, Facebook Inc (FB.O), which went public in a disappointing debut on Friday.

Facebook shares rose to a high of $45 in early trade but lost steam and closed at $38.23, up less than 1 percent. Analysts blamed the poorer-than-expected first-day showing on the vast number of shares floated, a rich valuation and market weakness.

"This starlet tripped on the red carpet," said Max Wolff, a senior analyst at GreenCrest Capital. "They started out with a fairly aggressive price range, then jacked it up and threw a lot more shares into the hopper. You either juice the number of shares or the price, you don't usually do both."

Shares of Zynga, the leading social gaming company which gets much of its revenue from Facebook, fell about 20 percent at one point, and were halted twice. Zynga closed down 13 percent at $7.16.

Other social media stocks, including LinkedIn (LNKD.N), Groupon (GRPN.O), Pandora Media (P.N) and Yelp (YELP.N), fell more than 5 percent on Friday, with Yelp losing 12 percent.

GSV Capital (GSVC.O), a listed investment vehicle that bought Facebook shares before the IPO, slumped 18 percent to $13.15.

"It was a disappointment. Most people, including myself, expected Facebook shares to trade better today," said Mike Moe, co-founder and chief investment officer of GSV Capital.

"We're lucky. We own the shares at a very good price. Our shares were bought below $30," Moe added, while noting GSV Capital did not sell any of its Facebook shares in the IPO.

Some traders who cannot short Facebook shares early may be betting against other social media stocks instead, according to Wolff and others.

Zynga accounts for more than 10 percent of Facebook's revenue, so traders may be focusing mostly on Zynga shares and options as an alternative to Facebook.

"Somebody obviously tried to blow that thing out of the water using it as an inorganic hedge against Facebook," Wolff said.

"There's nothing going on that was released - no Zynga-specific news," he added. "There are no senior personnel talking, no new numbers that would explain a movement, let alone a movement of that size."

A Zynga spokesman declined to comment.

Zynga options have high "skew," which refers to the pricing difference between out-of-the-money puts and out-of-the-money calls, according to Ralph Edwards, director of derivatives strategy at ITG.

"This typically means people are looking for Facebook to kind of spill over to Zynga," Edwards said. "If Facebook catches a cold, then Zynga gets pneumonia."

Cowen and Company analyst Doug Creutz said some investors may have owned Zynga and other social media shares as a proxy for Facebook before Friday's IPO.

"Now they can own Facebook directly," he said. "You may simply be seeing people sell Zynga to buy Facebook."

(Editing by Bernadette Baum, Bernard Orr and Richard Chang)



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Saturday, May 26, 2012

STOCKS NEWS THAILAND-Advanced Info Service up on 3G hopes

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Shares in Advanced Info Service Pcl climbed to a one-week high amid expectations that the country's biggest mobile phone operator would win the most spectrum lots of 3G spectrum licences in an auction scheduled for September or October.

Advanced shares were up 1.1 percent at 185 baht ($5.88), having hit 190.5 baht, the highest since May 9. The stock has gained 32 percent so far this year.

The National Broadcasting and Telecommunications Commission (NBTC) finalised on Wednesday the 3G spectrum licence auction method, dividing the spectrum into nine slots, each containing 5 megahertz of bandwidth, local newspapers reported.

The telecoms regulator has decided to cap the total bandwidth available to each bidder at 20 megahertz (MHz) while

cash-rich bidders are expected to be able to afford to grab the maximum 20MHz bandwidth.

1520 (0820 GMT)

(Reporting by Viparat Jantraprap in Bangkok; Editing by Jacqueline Wong, viparat.jantraprapaweth@thomsonreuters.com)

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14:08 STOCKS NEWS THAILAND: Lam Soon surges on crude palm oil quota report

Shares in cooking palm oil producer Lam Soon (Thailand) gained as much as 10.3 percent to their highest in almost a year after a report that it was among a list of firms receiving allocation of the government's low price crude palm oil import.

Lam Soon was up 9.36 percent at 4.44 baht ($0.14), climbing at one point to 4.48 baht ($0.14).

The government had imported low-price crude palm oil and allocated it to 10 cooking palm oil producers to sell to consumers at a controlled price, Thansettakij newspaper quoted a source as saying.

Lam Soon was not available for comment.

1401 (0701 GMT)

(Reporting by Viparat Jantraprap in Bangkok; Editing by Nick Macfie;)

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13:07 STOCKS NEWS THAILAND: Aira raises Bangkok Chain Hospital target price

Aira Securities raised its target price on hospital firm Bangkok Chain Hospital Pcl to 9.80 baht ($0.31) from 9.2 baht ($0.29), reflecting a better-than-expected quarterly earnings and an earnings upgrade for the year.

The broker reiterated a speculative buy rating on the stock. At the midsession break of 0530 GMT, Bangkok Chain shares were up 1.1 percent at 9.2 baht ($0.29).

The broader SET index .SETI was up 0.62 percent.

Its January-March net profit rose by half to 224 million baht ($7.12 million), 13 percent above the broker's estimate, thanks to strong earnings from patients insured under the government's social security scheme.

"To reflect the profitability from the social security section, we revise up 2012 and 2013 earnings forecasts to 864 million baht ($27.5 million) and 1 billion baht ($31.8 million), up 28 percent and 16 percent, respectively," Aira said in a report.

For the company statement, click (nSETlVk8pa)

1258 (0558 GMT)

(Reporting by Viparat Jantraprap in Bangkok; Editing by Jacqueline Wong; viparat.jantraprapaweth@thomsonreuters.com)

($1 = 31.48 baht)



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Intelsat Global files for $1.75 billion IPO

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By Sharanya Hrishikesh

Fri May 18, 2012 6:19pm EDT

n">(Reuters) - Intelsat Global Holdings S.A., the world's biggest operator of satellite services, filed with U.S. regulators on Friday to raise up to $1.75 billion in an initial public offering of its common stock.

The company filed for its IPO on a day Facebook Inc's eagerly awaited debut fell short of expectations.

Technology stocks have had a good run in an otherwise lackluster IPO market, and companies such as Audience Inc and Millennial Media Inc have benefited from the market's soft spot on their debut.

Payday lender Community Choice Financial Inc and energy company New Source Energy Corp pulled their prospective offerings over the past two weeks as market conditions remained unpromising.

Luxembourg-based Intelsat told the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in a preliminary prospectus that Goldman Sachs, J.P. Morgan and Morgan Stanley were underwriting the IPO.

Intelsat posted net loss of $400 million on revenue of $2.6 billion for the year ended December 31, according to the regulatory filing.

The company, which had operated as an intergovernmental organization for more than 30 years, became a private company in 2001.

Intelsat, which transmitted television images of Neil Armstrong's landing on the moon, was in 2008 bought by Serafina Acquisition Ltd, which is backed by private equity firm Silver Lake among other funds.

Intelsat, which assumed debt of about $3.7 billion after the leveraged buyout (LBO), said it may use part of the proceeds from the offering to redeem and repay debt.

The company's revenue has been relatively flat and the offering seems to be a way to pay back debt, said Francis Gaskins, a partner at IPOdesktop.com.

In February, debt-laden casino operator Caesars Entertainment Corp went public, to make up some of the losses made by its private equity owners after its 2008 LBO.

LBOs, in which the acquisition is financed with a large amount of debt, have been criticized for saddling the companies with debt and leaving them with little options to pay them back.

Gaskins said the Intelsat offering was not "particularly exciting".

The filing did not reveal how many shares the company planned to sell or their expected price.

The company, which will change its name to Intelsat S.A before it goes public, intends to list its common stock on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol "I".

The amount of money a company says it plans to raise in its first IPO filings is used to calculate registration fees. The final size of the IPO could be different.

(Reporting by Sharanya Hrishikesh in Bangalore, additional reporting by Sinead Carew in New York; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila, Maju Samuel)



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UK's Cameron, France's Hollande clash on Tobin tax

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By Adrian Croft

WASHINGTON | Fri May 18, 2012 6:56pm EDT

WASHINGTON May 18 (Reuters) - British Prime Minister David Cameron and new French President Francois Hollande clashed on Friday over the need for a financial transactions tax to fund growth but played down other differences over how to respond to the euro zone debt crisis.

Both leaders said after a first 35-minute meeting at the British ambassador's residence in Washington that they backed measures to cut deficits and spur growth in Europe, glossing over differences between Hollande's pro-growth stance and Cameron's emphasis on reducing debt.

But Cameron said he would maintain his staunch opposition to a tax on financial transactions that Hollande backs as a way to raise revenue to boost growth.

"On the financial transactions tax, I'm very clear, we are not going to get growth in Europe or Britain by introducing a new tax that would actually hit people as well as financial institutions," Cameron told reporters before his meeting at the elegant ambassador's residence, designed by famous British architect Edwin Lutyens in the 1920s.

"I don't think it is a sensible measure. I will not support it," he said.

Cameron, keen to prevent damage to Europe's leading financial centre in the City of London, has previously threatened to veto a European-wide financial transaction tax unless it was adopted globally, setting him on a collision course with France and Germany which back the idea.

A British government source said Hollande and Cameron agreed they had "different positions" on the financial transaction tax, also known as the Tobin tax.

Hollande also repeated to Cameron that he intended to pull France's combat troops out of Afghanistan this year, two years earlier than a NATO timetable for ending combat operations.

Cameron understood this was an election promise Hollande had made, the British source said.

On the euro zone economic crisis, Cameron said Hollande and he both wanted to see "stability in international markets."

"We both want to see countries deal with their deficits and we both want to see economic growth," Cameron said.

Hollande said the two leaders were "convinced we need to continue improving our public accounts while restoring growth."

On Greece, Hollande said he would like Greece to remain in the euro zone but it would be for the Greek people to "answer the question."

"My position is we should do everything possible so that they say yes to that," he said.

Cameron earlier called for "decisive action" to tackle the euro zone crisis.

"Britain wants to have a successful euro zone, that is where 40 percent of our trade goes. We need decisive action from euro zone countries in terms of strengthening euro zone banks, in terms of a strong euro zone firewall and decisive action over Greece. That has to be done," Cameron told reporters.

"Clearly the Greeks have to make their minds up, they have to make their decision. Decisive action needs to be taken. That's absolutely vital that it is because that will affect the stability not only of the euro zone economies. It affects our economy and it affects the world economy too," Cameron said.

The EU trade commissioner said earlier on Friday that European officials are working on contingency plans in case Greece bombs out of the euro zone

Cameron, a centre-right Conservative who built a close relationship with Hollande's predecessor Nicolas Sarkozy, snubbed Hollande when the Socialist leader visited London during his election campaign, but at Friday's meeting he invited Hollande to visit London soon.

Hollande made ironic reference to the snub, saying that since he had not been able to visit London before the election he would be "all the happier" to meet Cameron afterwards.



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STOCKS NEWS THAILAND-Minor International at 1-month low; earnings outlook seen unattractive

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The country's top listed hotel and fast-food operator, Minor International Pcl, slumped 4.44 percent to its lowest in a month, while second and third quarters' earnings outlook remained unattractive, brokers said.

The share price fell to 12.9 baht, having hit 12.8 baht at one point. The broader SET index was down 1.89 percent.

Bualuang Securities said in addition to unattractive profit outlooks for upcoming quarters, the euro zone crisis may also drag down share prices in the near-term.

The broker gave the shares a hold rating with a target price of 14.50 baht.

However, Bualuang maintained the company's food business was still performing strongly, while its acquired Australian hotel chain, Oaks Hotels & Resorts Limited, would support the company's net profit for the first 5 months of this year.

On Thursday, Minor International's vice president for strategic planning Chaiyapat Paitoon said he expected the company's profit and revenue for the second quarter to outperform the previous year's thanks to a rise in the average occupancy rate, while the company also planned to up its room rates by about 12 to 14 percent.

1220 (0520 GMT)

(Reporting by Sinsiri Tiwutanond in Bangkok; sinsiri.tiwutanond@thomsonreuters.com) (Editing by Robert Birsel)



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Obama pledges tough enforcement of Wall Street reforms

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WASHINGTON | Sat May 19, 2012 5:59am EDT

WASHINGTON May 19 (Reuters) - President Barack Obama on Saturday called on the U.S. Congress to back his efforts for tough new financial industry oversight, saying a $2 billion trading loss at JPMorgan underscored the need for such regulation.

"We've got to finish the job of implementing this reform and putting these rules in place," Obama said in a weekly radio address that accused some on Wall Street of causing the 2007-2009 economic crisis because they "treated our financial system like a casino."

In a jab at Republicans who have been critical of banking industry reforms his administration is in the process of implementing, Obama said lawmakers should "stand on the side of reform, not against it."

The Democratic president is seeking re-election on Nov. 6 seeking to show he is willing to take a hard stance against Wall Street excesses but without being seen as discouraging investment.

Many Republicans in Congress have taken aim at Wall Street reform measures, saying they are unwieldy and could end up slowing investment and economic growth.

Obama said that while JPMorgan had the resources to handle losses of more than $2 billion, smaller banks might not have been able to do so. Without the new banking industry reforms, Obama said U.S. taxpayers could again "be on the hook for Wall Street's mistakes."

The deep economic recession the United States has recently begun climbing out of brought U.S. government bailouts of some large financial institutions, as well as heavy job losses, business failures and home mortgage foreclosures as the downturn spread.

The Dodd-Frank financial oversight law enacted in response to the financial crisis includes the Volcker rule, which bans banks from making speculative bets with company money. But it includes an exemption for trades done to hedge risk.

The Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday that the JPMorgan loss prompted the White House to encourage Treasury Department officials to ensure tough enforcement of Dodd-Frank.

Obama complained that Republicans in Congress, in tandem with financial industry lobbyists, "have actually been waging an all-out battle to delay, defund and dismantle Wall Street reform."

Saying he backed free-market forces, Obama said some safeguards needed to be put in place to guarantee fair play.

"Unless you run a financial institution whose business model is built on cheating consumers or making risky bets that could damage the whole economy, you have nothing to fear from Wall Street reform," he said.



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CANADA FX DEBT-C$ hits 4-month low on euro zone fears

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Friday, May 25, 2012

Shoe retailers to benefit from tight inventory control

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By Meenakshi Iyer and Arpita Mukherjee

Fri May 18, 2012 1:30pm EDT

n">(Reuters) - The warmest U.S. winter in years fueled higher sales at footwear retailers Brown Shoe Inc (BWS.N) and Foot Locker Inc (FL.N), and the companies are expected to benefit from tight inventory management in the next few quarters.

The warmer weather helped drive sales at many retailers of footwear and sporting goods, including Hibbett Sports Inc (HIBB.O) and Dick's Sporting Goods Inc (DKS.N), which posted better-than-expected quarterly results earlier this week.

Shares of Brown Shoe were up 19 percent at $10.44, while those of Foot Locker were up 10 percent at $30.84. The stocks were among the top percentage gainers on Friday afternoon on the New York Stock Exchange.

Strong demand for athletic footwear is likely to spur sales at Foot Locker, Canaccord Genuity analyst Camilo Lyon said.

Brown Shoe also said sales of running shoes and sandals were strong in the first quarter.

"The whole light weight running product category is just terrific," Brown Shoe Chief Executive Diane Sullivan told Reuters.

Brown Shoe, which has introduced several new styles and brands in recent years to attract younger shoppers, said sales of its contemporary fashion brands rose about 21 percent during the quarter.

Sullivan expects sales of fashion footwear to remain strong for at least another 12-18 months.

"I am either in my athletic shoes, or a great pair of heels or a wedge," Sullivan said.

Foot Locker and Brown Shoe have also kept lean inventories, which could boost margins.

"(Inventory management) bodes well for product margins in the second and third quarter," CL King analyst Steven Marotta said about Brown Shoe.

Inventory at Brown Shoe was down 4.1 percent compared to last year.

Foot Locker, which sells branded shoes of Nike (NKE.N), Reebok and Adidas (ADSGn.DE), posted first-quarter net income of 83 cents per share, handily beating analysts' expectations of 74 cents per share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

Brown Shoe, which owns the Naturalizer brands, posted an adjusted net income of 23 cents per share, while analysts had expected 9 cents per share.

(Reporting by Meenakshi Iyer and Arpita Mukherjee in Bangalore; Editing by Viraj Nair)



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Burkle funds distributing some Barnes & Noble stock

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Cristobal Carrasco, 4, of Mamaroneck, New York, looks at a toy in the toy section of a Barnes & Noble store in the Bronx borough of New York November 10, 2010.

Credit: Reuters/Jessica Rinaldi



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UPDATE 1-CFTC opens probe into JPMorgan trading loss - source

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n" readability="56">May 18 (Reuters) - The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) has opened an investigation into possible wrongdoing at JPMorgan Chase & Co in connection with the bank's multi-billion-dollar trading loss, a source familiar with the probe told Reuters.

The agency will soon disclose the existence of the investigation, the source said on Friday.

Earlier on Friday, the New York Times reported that the CFTC had opened an enforcement case, quoting people briefed on the matter.

The CFTC would join the FBI and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission among federal agencies examining the loss, which the largest U.S. bank said last week was at least $2 billion.

The CFTC has disclosed an investigation into last October's collapse of MF Global Holdings Ltd, a futures and commodities brokerage from where large sums of customer money remain missing.

JPMorgan spokesman Joe Evangelisti declined to comment. The CFTC did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The bank has not been accused of wrongdoing, and the newspaper said all of the investigations into its trading loss are preliminary.

CFTC Chairman Gary Gensler is expected to reveal his agency's investigation when he testifies before the Senate Banking Committee on Tuesday, the newspaper said.

JPMorgan Chief Executive Jamie Dimon is also expected to testify before that committee, after hearings on Wall Street reforms that are expected to end on June 6.

The CFTC began tracking JPMorgan's trading in April, the newspaper said, when reports surfaced that London-based trader Bruno Iksil was taking big bets in credit derivatives.

Its probe may examine whether the bank's trading affected that market, the newspaper said.



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STOCKS NEWS THAILAND-S Khonkaen surges on profit, dividend hopes

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Shares in S. Khonkaen Foods Pcl, a producer of meat products, surged nearly 30 percent on active volume with expectations of a strong earnings outlook for the year and high dividend income from subsidiaries.

At the midsession break of 0530 GMT, S. Khonkaen shares were up 29.67 percent at 67.75 baht ($2.15), putting them up nearly 80 percent for the year, compared with a 12 percent rise of the broader market.

About 4.2 million shares were traded which was 11.16 times the average volume over the last 30 sessions.

The main SET index was down 2.03 percent.

"Investors may expect our good earnings along with our strong expansions," CEO Charoen Rujirasopon told Reuters.

The company forecast dividend income from subsidiaries of at least 40-50 million baht ($1.27-$1.59 million) this year, similar to last year's, Charoen said.

1241 (0541 GMT)

(Reporting by Viparat Jantraprap and Kochakorn Boonlai in Bangkok; viparat.jantraprapaweth@thomsonreuters.com)

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12:27 STOCKS NEWS THAILAND: Minor International at 1-month low; earnings outlook seen unattractive

The country's top listed hotel and fast-food operator, Minor International Pcl MINT.BK, slumped 4.44 percent to its lowest in a month, while second and third quarters' earnings outlook remained unattractive, brokers said.

The share price fell to 12.9 baht, having hit 12.8 baht at one point. The broader SET index .SETI was down 1.89 percent.

Bualuang Securities said in addition to unattractive profit outlooks for upcoming quarters, the euro zone crisis may also drag down share prices in the near-term.

The broker gave the shares a hold rating with a target price of 14.50 baht.

However, Bualuang maintained the company's food business was still performing strongly, while its acquired Australian hotel chain, Oaks Hotels & Resorts Limited, would support the company's net profit for the first 5 months of this year.

On Thursday, Minor International's vice president for strategic planning Chaiyapat Paitoon said he expected the company's profit and revenue for the second quarter to outperform the previous year's thanks to a rise in the average occupancy rate, while the company also planned to up its room rates by about 12 to 14 percent.

1220 (0520 GMT)

(Reporting by Sinsiri Tiwutanond in Bangkok; sinsiri.tiwutanond@thomsonreuters.com)

(Editing by Robert Birsel)

($1 = 31.44 baht) (Editing by Michael Perry)



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Historic Facebook debut falls flat

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Recent activity lists ''Mark listed FB on NASDAQ'' in this image taken from Mark Zuckerberg's Facebook page on May 18, 2012. REUTERS/Staff

Recent activity lists ''Mark listed FB on NASDAQ'' in this image taken from Mark Zuckerberg's Facebook page on May 18, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Staff

By Alexei Oreskovic

SAN FRANCISCO | Fri May 18, 2012 8:53pm EDT

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - The historic initial public offering of Facebook Inc did not go as planned on Friday, as the social networking company's sky-high valuation combined with trading glitches left the stock languishing near its offering price at the market close.

Facebook shares began trading late Friday morning and opened 11 percent above the $38 offering price, but after peaking at about $45 slid rapidly at the end of the day to close at $38.23. The IPO was the third-largest in U.S. history and valued eight-year-old Facebook at $104 billion.

The surprisingly weak debut of a stock that analysts had predicted would climb between 10 and 50 percent is not likely to dent the business prospects of Facebook, which boasts 900 million users and is upending business practices and social relationships around the world.

But the unexpected developments were a clear setback for Morgan Stanley, the lead underwriter on the deal, which sources said was forced to defend the $38 price level by buying shares on the open market. Many market participants said they expected the stock to remain under pressure next week.

The offering also proved an embarrassment for the NASDAQ: the opening was delayed as the exchange struggled with a huge volume of orders, and for much of the day there were long delays in order confirmation. The SEC said late Friday that it was reviewing the situation.

Social media companies and Internet companies that had hoped to benefit from a Facebook halo effect were instead dragged down Friday, with social gaming giant Zynga dropping almost 15 percent.

Analysts said Facebook may simply have over-reached in raising the IPO price range, pricing at the top of the range and increasing the size of the offering earlier in the week.

"The underwriters got greedy on behalf of selling shareholders and bumped the price high enough that they didn't get much of a bump on the first day," said Bill Smead, chief investment officer at Smead Capital Management, which did not buy Facebook shares in the IPO. "They increased the size of the deal and that really did a number on it."

Skeptics have argued all along that a valuation of more than $100 billion -- about equivalent to Amazon.com Inc and exceeding that of Hewlett-Packard Co and Dell Inc combined -- was far too high for a company that posted $1 billion in profit and $3.7 billion in revenue in 2011.

Concerns about Facebook's earnings potential were highlighted by General Motors' announcement this week that it would no longer buy paid advertising on Facebook.

"You don't need more than a small pencil and napkin to do a valuation on this, to say there are heroic assumptions in earnings growth to keep this at $100 billion, much less $115 billion or $120 billion," said Dave Rolfe, fund manager at River Park Wedgewood Fund, which does not own shares in Facebook.

"I know there's a lot of excitement and exuberance, but it seemed today that the market is starting to do some hard valuation math early on."

Facebook's opening day on Wall Street does not bode well for the stock's performance in the days ahead, said Channing Smith, portfolio manager at Capital Advisors Growth, which does not own shares in Facebook.

"If you're an investment banker or if you're long the stock, I would definitely be a bit worried as we walk away to the weekend," he said.

The weak IPO may also give pause to private investors in Silicon Valley who have been pouring money into next-generation Internet companies at very high valuations in the hope of eventually taking them public.

MEDIA CIRCUS

At Facebook's headquarters in Silicon Valley, the day began with company founder and Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg, 28, symbolically ringing the opening bell for stock trading on Friday morning.

Wearing his trademark black hoodie, Zuckerberg, whose shares are worth nearly $20 billion and who retains voting control over the company, hugged and high-fived Sheryl Sandberg, Facebook's chief operating officer, who is credited with bringing crucial business discipline to a company founded in a Harvard dorm room.

The area outside Facebook's offices was packed with photographers, more than a dozen television trucks, and a TV news helicopter hovering overhead.

Outside Nasdaq headquarters in New York, crowds also gathered, even as exchange officials struggled to sort out trading problems that left investors guessing whether their buy and sell orders had actually been executed.

The IPO minted thousands of new paper millionaires among Facebook's 3,500 employees -- and a handful of billionaires among its founders and early investors. More than half of the proceeds of the IPO will go to existing shareholders, including early backers such as Accel Partners and Russia's DST Global.

In the run-up to the IPO, demand from institutional investors was strong, and many analysts had expected an influx of retail investors keen on owning a slice of a cultural phenomenon regardless of price. But that did not materialize.

"Flippers who waited all day for a pop that did not come decided to throw in the towel and get out," said Mohannad Aama, managing director at Beam Capital Management LLC in New York.

"That group also includes people who over-extended themselves in getting more shares than they can afford to hold -- whether they got it from the syndicate or from the open market once it opened around noon."

Still, from Facebook's perspective, the stock performance could be seen as reflecting smart pricing: Zuckerberg and early investors pocketed maximum gains and left little of the easy money on the table.

"You want to price the offering correctly. Institutional buyers get a little bump and the company raises the right amount of money," said Kevin Hartz, co-founder and CEO of Eventbrite, an online ticketing startup that is integrated with Facebook's platform. "If the stock has a massive bump on day one, that means you misread market demand and the company could have raised more money with the same amount of dilution, or could have raised the same amount of money with less dilution."

BATTLE OF THE GIANTS

Facebook faces many challenges as it takes its place beside Google, Apple and Amazon as one of the giant public companies defining the next-generation Internet economy. Google in particular views Facebook as a mortal threat and is moving aggressively to integrate social networking features across its products.

At the same time, scores of young companies are building new products and services, in some cases on top of the Facebook platform and in some cases in competition with it, and attracting huge amounts of investment capital.

A handful of such so-called Web 2.0 companies, including Zynga Inc, LinkedIn Corp, Yelp Inc and Groupon Inc, have already gone public, and others have been acquired by the industry giants. All of those stocks fell on Friday in sympathy with Facebook's weaker-than-expected debut.

In an indication of the land grab now under way in the Internet world, Facebook in April spent $1 billion to acquire Instagram, a tiny photo-sharing company with lots of users but no revenue. A Facebook rival, social scrap-booking site Pinterest, raised money earlier this week at a valuation of $1.5 billion in a sign that venture capitalists and other private investors still see enormous potential in Web 2.0 companies.

Many of Facebook's users spend hours a day on the site and share enormous amounts of personal information. That in turn enables Facebook to target its advertising to people's specific interests, and many analysts believe the huge store of personal information gives Facebook an advantage that Google and other cannot match.

"Literally everything you see on the Internet, you could see inside Facebook -- but done with much more of the social graph built into it," said Siva Kumar, CEO of e-commerce company TheFind. "In a way, they operate the mall, and everybody in the mall will pay some way or the other to Facebook."

Analysts say the company has vast untapped opportunities in mobile computing, where it has been weak thus far, and potentially in other Internet services such as email and search. Zuckerberg, though unproven as a public company CEO, is widely admired as a product visionary who has done a masterful job in continually improving the Facebook experience.

Skeptics, though, note that only a small percentage of Facebook users respond to advertising on the site. Google retains a big advantage in that regard, because advertising related to specific Internet searches is by nature far more relevant and thus more valuable.

In Silicon Valley, though, the conventional wisdom is that Facebook and its social media brethren will be an increasingly important force in the business world for many years to come.

And no matter how the industry dynamics unfold over the long term, the influx of wealth arising from Facebook's extraordinary growth has already helped drive a mini-boom in San Francisco Bay Area real estate. Income tax revenues related to the IPO will cut the state of California's budget deficit by an estimated $2 billion.

(Additional reporting by Alistair Barr, Noel Randewich, Sarah McBride, Gerry Shih and Edwin Chan in San Francisco, Jennifer Hoyt Cummings, Jessica Toonkel, John McCrank, David Gaffen, Liana Baker, Yinka Adegoke, Ed Krudy and Olivia Oran in New York; Editing by Jonathan Weber, Steve Orlofsky and Tiffany Wu; Editing by Gary Hill)



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WRAPUP 1-Europe's economic woes dominate G8 gathering

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By Jeff Mason and Laura MacInnis

CAMP DAVID, Md. | Sat May 19, 2012 5:12am EDT

CAMP DAVID, Md. May 19 (Reuters) - U.S. President Barack Obama will press European leaders to ease up on fiscal austerity and focus on economic growth at a summit on Saturday that will discuss ways to stem turmoil in the euro zone and head off the risk of global contagion.

At the wooded Camp David retreat in Maryland's Catoctin Mountains, Obama and leaders from other large economic powers will try to forge a common approach to tackling a crisis that threatens the future of Europe's 17-nation single currency.

Though no major policy decisions are expected from the Group of Eight summit, leaders hope they can bridge enough of their differences to soothe rattled financial markets after worries about the risk of a Greek exit from the euro zone sent European stock prices to their lowest level since December.

"Hopefully we'll get some stuff done," Obama told Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti as he and other summit participants arrived for Friday evening dinner at a lodge at the secluded presidential retreat.

Obama earlier in the day aligned himself with Monti and new French President Francois Hollande by urging a solution to the euro zone crisis that combines fiscal belt-tightening measures with a "strong growth agenda."

On the other side of the debate is German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who has pushed fiscal austerity as a means of bringing down huge debt levels that are burdening European economies.

Voters in euro zone countries have shown frustration with that approach, ejecting governments such as that of Nicolas Sarkozy, who was defeated by Hollande, a socialist, in the May 6 French presidential election.

A draft of the summit communiqué shown to Reuters will stress an "imperative to create growth and jobs."

Also on the summit agenda are concerns about oil and food prices as well as Afghanistan, Iran, Syria and North Korea.

Speculation has grown that Obama will use an energy session at the G8 to seek support to tap emergency oil reserves before a European Union embargo of Iranian crude takes effect in July.

But with oil prices already sliding, a move by Obama to tap the Strategic Petroleum Reserve - alone or along with other countries - could expose him to criticism that the emergency supply should only be touched in a supply crisis.

The Camp David summit kicked off four days of intensive diplomacy that will test leaders' ability to quell unease over the threat of another financial meltdown as well as plans to wind down the unpopular war in Afghanistan.

After the Camp David talks wrap up late on Saturday afternoon, Obama will fly to his home town of Chicago where he will host a two-day NATO meeting at which the Afghanistan war will be the central topic.



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Thursday, May 24, 2012

UPDATE 5-Troubled Brazil economy shrinks again in March

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* March IBC-Br activity index down 0.35 percent, below forecast

* Brazilian activity hardly picked up in first quarter

* Weak recovery likely to prompt more interest rate cuts

* Government prepares more stimulus to support activity

By Alonso Soto and Tiago Pariz

BRASILIA, May 18 (Reuters) - Economic activity in Brazil fell in March for the third straight month, data showed on Friday, a surprisingly weak performance that may lead the central bank to slash its benchmark interest rate to all-time lows and prompt further stimulus measures from President Dilma Rousseff.

The central bank's IBC-Br economic activity index , a closely watched proxy for gross domestic product, contracted 0.35 percent in March from February, the bank said on Friday. Most analysts had expected activity to rise 0.5 percent.

The weak reading means Brazil's economy has remained stagnant since nearly falling into recession in the second half of 2011. In the fourth quarter, the economy expanded just 0.30 percent, a figure that could be easily revised downward when fresh GDP data are released on June 1.

In addition to more interest rate cuts from the central bank, Rousseff is likely to announce new stimulus measures next week to offer cheaper credit to buy construction materials as well as tax breaks on consumer loans, senior government officials told Reuters.

Economic activity also contracted in January and February in what is expected to be a very weak quarter for the economy despite a barrage of stimulus measures to revive growth.

Concerned with market sentiment after the weak data, one senior official said the administration forecasts growth of around 0.4 percent in the first quarter from the fourth quarter, in line with many analysts' expectations.

"Growth this year will be low, without a doubt. We will see the effects of the stimulus in the second half of the year and in 2013," said Andre Perfeito, chief economist with Gradual Investimentos in Sao Paulo. "Lower growth will ultimately give the green light for the central bank to be more aggressive."

Brazil's economy is widely seen growing in full-year 2012 slightly above the meager 2.7 percent posted last year as robust domestic demand only partially offsets a sluggish industrial sector. Brazil's GDP grew a staggering 7.5 percent in 2010.

In the first quarter of the year, activity grew only 0.15 percent from the previous quarter, according to Reuters calculations based on the central bank's data. Activity in February versus January was revised down to a drop of 0.38 percent from the previously reported 0.23 percent slide.

The struggling recovery effort in the world's No. 6 economy will likely prompt the central bank to bring its benchmark Selic interest rate to a record low from the current 9 percent. The bank, which has already trimmed 350 basis points off its Selic rate since August, will make its next rate decision on May 30.

Yields on Brazil's interest rates futures fell across the board on Friday as more investors expected the central bank to keep the size of its rate cuts at 75 basis points per meeting.

MORE STIMULUS AHEAD

Earlier this week, Mantega scrapped his initial economic growth forecast of 4.5 percent for the year and senior officials now see expansion closer to 3 percent.

The government is also considering slashing the financial operations tax, or IOF, on consumer credit of over one year to 2 percent from the current 2.5 percent plus a new credit line of up to 20,000 reais ($10,000) for people to buy construction material, government sources said.

The officials, who declined to be named, said the government could also extend tax breaks on some construction materials.

Many of the country's economic woes stem from what is known as the "Brazil cost" - a mix of high taxes, interest rates, labor costs and infrastructure bottlenecks that strangle businesses facing stiff competition abroad.

Even as manufacturers struggle, domestic demand remains surprisingly strong as Brazilians continue to spend on foreign-made clothes and home appliances.

A worsening debt crisis in Europe also poses a challenge for Brazil as international credit lines dry up and global demand for local products falls.

Rousseff, a career economist, is sticking to fiscal austerity to allow the central bank to continue easing monetary policy. She is also pressing private-sector banks to slash rates in tandem with the central bank's falling benchmark rate.

The stimulus will likely pay off in the second half of the year but will not be enough to bring back the high growth rates that made Brazil one of the world's most dynamic economies.

Rousseff, who enjoys record-high popularity since she took office in January 2011, may face years of mediocre growth ahead as the former star of the BRICS group of major emerging economies quickly loses its shine. The grouping also includes China, Russia, India and South Africa.



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FOREX-Euro rallies from 4-month low versus dollar

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UPDATE 2-G8 leaders broadly united on Iran and Syria-U.S. official

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CAMP DAVID, Md. May 18 (Reuters) - Group of Eight leaders agreed in their initial discussions at Camp David on Friday that Iran needs to disclose more about its nuclear ambitions and that it was time to focus on a political transition in Syria, a U.S. official said.

The leaders, including newly elected French President Francois Hollande and Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, also stressed North Korea needed to adhere to international norms on nuclear issues and said it would face more isolation if it "continues down the path of provocation," the official said.

The Friday evening dinner, hosted by U.S. President Barack Obama, was the first opportunity for the G8 leaders to discuss global security concerns. They will talk about the euro zone crisis and other economic issues, including oil market pressures at the summit on Saturday.

The U.S. official described "a sense of optimism" about conditions in Myanmar, and said the leaders gathered at Camp David, in the Maryland countryside, pledged to cooperate on providing aid to the former Burma.

The Camp David summit comes days before the next round of Iran talks, to be held in Baghdad. The G8 leaders "affirmed the importance of having a uniform effort in approaching those Baghdad talks next week," the U.S. official said.

"Each of the leaders noted the urgency for Iran to take concrete steps to assure the international community of the peaceful purpose of its (nuclear) program," the official said.

On the crackdown by Damascus, the official described broad agreement on "the need to move rapidly toward a plan for political transition within Syria" and said that while Medvedev did not outright support that call, he did not oppose it either.

Medvedev is standing in for Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Friday-Saturday G8 meeting, which also draws together leaders from the United States, Canada, Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Japan.

At the end of the Friday night dinner, Obama had a chocolate birthday cake delivered for Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda, whose birthday is on Sunday. The G8 at Camp David will end on Saturday afternoon, at which time Obama and several of the other leaders will head to Chicago for a NATO summit.



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STOCKS NEWS SINGAPORE-Index futures down 1.7 pct

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Tokyo and Seoul shares are down sharply, weighed by concerns about an escalating banking crisis in Spain and political uncertainty in Greece.

(Reporting by Eveline Danubrata in Singapore; eveline.danubrata@thomsonreuters.com)



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GLOBAL MARKETS-World stocks erase year's gain; Brent at 2012 low

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* Euro zone crisis fears intensify flight to safety

* German 2-yr bond yield hits record low, close to zero

* U.S. stocks end down after Facebook messy debut

* Brent crude at lowest level in 2012

By Caroline Valetkevitch

NEW YORK, May 18 (Reuters) - World stocks erased the year's gains o n F riday as investors fled risky investments for safe-haven assets on concerns about the euro zone's deepening debt woes, while U.S. stocks lost ground after the debut of Facebook's failed to ignite optimism.

Brent crude closed at its lowest in 2012 as the euro zone crisis raised fears of a global slowdown that could dent oil demand, while German borrowing costs hit record lows.

World stocks, as measured by the MSCI index, dropped 1.1 percent and gave up all of their gains for the year to date fueled by the European Central Bank's injection of more than 1 trillion euros. It was a sixth day of losses for the index, which is now down 0.4 percent for the year.

Riskier assets were all heading for big weekly losses.

Investors were unnerved by a ratings downgrade of 16 Spanish banks by Moody's Investors Service, which deepened worries about the euro zone contagion. But market speculation that regulators could reinstate a ban on short selling of financial stocks sparked a rally in banking shares, with Spain's Banco Santander up 3 percent. U.S.-listed shares of Banco Santander rose 3.6 percent to end at $5.76.

Spain's banks, saddled with bad loans after a property boom collapsed, may need a bailout that would strain Madrid's already stretched finances and possibly require an international bailout regardless of any contagion threat from Greece.

"Sentiments are still pretty negative," said Francis Rodilosso, portfolio manager with Market Vectors in New York. "People are definitely seeing the glass half-empty."

Ongoing political and financial turmoil in Greece has kept investors worried about its ability to remain in the euro zone.

A G8 meeting of leaders of major industrial economies this weekend is expected to tackle the crisis in Europe and look for ways to promote growth.

FACEBOOK'S LACKLUSTER DEBUT

On Wall Street, U.S. stocks fell after a sloppy debut by Facebook spoiled hopes that a spectacular open for the most-anticipated stock sale in years would brighten investors' mood. The benchmark S&P 500 posted a weekly loss of 4.3 percent.

Facebook's debut was hit with glitches, including a delay in initial trading. The stock closed at $38.23, barely above its $38 offering price.

For the day, the Dow Jones industrial average ended down 73.11 points, or 0.59 percent, at 12,369.38. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index was down 9.64 points, or 0.74 percent, at 1,295.22. The Nasdaq Composite Index was down 34.90 points, or 1.24 percent, at 2,778.79.

The FTSEurofirst 300 of leading European shares slid 1.1 percent, falling for a fifth day.

In the foreign exchange market, the euro rose from a four-month low against the dollar. It tumbled to $1.2640, not far from its trough of 2012, before recovering to trade slightly higher.

Europe's woes kept pressure on oil prices.

ICE July Brent crude settled at $107.14 a barrel, down 35 cents, the lowest close for front-month Brent since the Dec. 20, 2011 settlement. Brent is down 3.7 percent for the week.

NYMEX crude for June delivery settled at $91.48 a barrel, falling $1.08, or 1.17 percent. For the week, it slid 4.84 percent.

"The problems in Europe, highlighted by the political instability in Greece, remain as the primary factor for today's slide in oil prices," said Kyle Cooper, managing partner at IAF Advisors in Houston.

GERMAN BOND YIELDS HIT RECORD LOW, GOLD GAINS

Benchmark 10-year German bond yields hit a record low of 1.396 percent and two-year yields also fell to their lowest-ever level at just 0.028 percent.

Safe-haven gold prices rose more than 1 percent, with spot gold at $1,588.96 an ounce.

In the U.S. Treasury market, however, prices slipped as investors took profits a day after benchmark yields flirted with their lowest level in at least 60 years. Benchmark 10-year Treasury notes last traded down 5/32 at 100-12/32 in price to yield 1.71 percent, up 2 basis points from Thursday.



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Yahoo shares climb on report Alibaba deal near

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n">(Reuters) - Yahoo Inc shares rose as much as 6.7 percent on Friday after a report that it was close to selling part of its valuable stake in the Alibaba Group.

Shares of Yahoo climbed as high as $15.87 before easing to $15.64, up 5.2 percent.

Yahoo and Alibaba Group, the Chinese Internet group that runs e-commerce site Alibaba.com, are close to an agreement that could happen as soon as Monday, according to a report in All Things D, citing unnamed sources.. Yahoo would sell one-half of its 40 percent stake back to Alibaba.

Representatives from both Yahoo and Alibaba said they do not comment on rumor or speculation.

Yahoo's Asian assets, which also include a stake in Yahoo Japan, are considered the crown jewels of the company and its fate is on top of mind for investors.

Talks between Yahoo and Alibaba over the stake have been ongoing for some time.

Stifel Nicolaus analyst Jordan Rohan estimated Yahoo could receive $4.6 billion in after-tax cash proceeds, or $3.75 per share, he wrote in a note.

Rohan said the deal would be a positive for shareholders since "Yahoo shares become a less risky investment through this deal."

He also noted the transaction could reduce the amount of capital necessary to take the company private -- a "likely scenario."

The potential sale of the asset is especially noteworthy against the backdrop of Yahoo's struggles over the past decade as it tries to regain relevance in the face of competition from the likes of Google Inc and Facebook Inc.

In the latest in a string of executives departures over the past several years, Yahoo Chief Executive Scott Thompson stepped down on May 13 after a controversy over a fake computer science degree -- unearthed by hedge fund Third Point.

Third Point, run by Daniel Loeb, is the one of Yahoo's biggest shareholders and pushing for changes.

(Reporting By Jennifer Saba; editing by Jeffrey Benkoe)



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Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Greece confirms June 17 election date

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ATHENS | Sat May 19, 2012 6:09am EDT

ATHENS May 19 (Reuters) - Greece confirmed on Saturday that it would a hold a repeat general election on June 17, after party leaders failed to form a coalition government following an inconclusive election.

"We are calling a general election for June 17. The new parliament will convene on June 28, Thursday," said a statement from the parliament's press office.

The statement said President Karolos Papoulias had dissolved the parliament elected on May 6, two days after it was convened. The date of the new election was released last week but was not official until Papoulias issued Saturday's decree.

The May 6 election produced a hung parliament divided between supporters and opponents of Greece's 130 billion euro international bailout, with political leaders unable to agree a cabinet.

The need for a new election caused political uncertainty and rekindled fears the debt-laden country may be forced out of the euro zone. After days of failed coalition negotiations with party leaders, Papoulias named senior judge Panagiotis Pikrammenos as the caretaker prime minister until the new vote.



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STOCKS NEWS SINGAPORE-OCBC starts CapitaRetail China at buy

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OCBC Investment Research has initiated coverage on CapitaRetail China Trust (CRCT) with a buy rating and price target of S$1.44 a unit.

CRCT, which owns malls in China, was last traded at S$1.265, down 0.8 percent from Thursday. The trust has gained about 10 percent so far this year.

OCBC said CRCT offers growth through both acquisition and asset enhancement.

Its mall, which are positioned as one-stop family-oriented shopping, dining and entertainment destinations for areas with large population catchment, also benefit from rising consumption.

From 2011 fiscal year figures, CRCT's portfolio has an average property yield of 6.5 percent based on book valuation, which OCBC said is attractive compared to Singapore retail property yields of around 5-6 percent.

"Consumption is likely to overtake investment as China's largest driver of growth in 2012 for the first time in over a decade," OCBC said.

1132 (0332 GMT)

(Reporting by Eveline Danubrata in Singapore; eveline.danubrata@thomsonreuters.com)

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09:35 STOCKS NEWS SINGAPORE-Singapore shares drop to 4-mth low (Adds move in commodity stocks)

Singapore shares fell to a four-month low early on Friday, in line with the regional trend, weighed by concerns about an escalating banking crisis in Spain, political uncertainty in Greece and sluggish economic data from the United States.

The Straits Times Index .FTSTI dropped as much as 1.9 percent to around 2,769 points, the lowest since Jan 17. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan shed 2.2 percent.

The biggest drag on the index were local banks DBS Group Holdings, Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp and United Overseas Bank.

Commodities stocks were hit hard. Wilmar International and Golden Agri-Resources fell more than 4 percent each, while Olam International gave up 2.3 percent.

0927 (0127 GMT)

(Reporting by Eveline Danubrata in Singapore; eveline.danubrata@thomsonreuters.com)

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08:41 STOCKS NEWS SINGAPORE-Index futures down 1.7 pct

Singapore index futures fell 1.7 percent early on Friday, indicating a weak start for the benchmark Straits Times Index.

Tokyo and Seoul shares are down sharply, weighed by concerns about an escalating banking crisis in Spain and political uncertainty in Greece.

0839 (0039)

(Reporting by Eveline Danubrata in Singapore; eveline.danubrata@thomsonreuters.com)



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WRAPUP 6-Obama presses ailing Europe to focus on growth

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* Obama weighs in against too much focus on austerity

* President to isolated Merkel: "You have a few things on your mind"

* France's Hollande signals sticking to Afghan pullout vow

By Laura MacInnis

CAMP DAVID, Maryland, May 18 (Reuters) - A growing chorus of world leaders on Friday pushed for a shift toward more pro-growth policies to help ease a European crisis that threatens to oust Greece from the euro zone and reverberate throughout the global economy.

Setting the tone for a weekend G8 summit, President Barack Obama aligned himself with the new French president's drive for more economic stimulus in recession-plagued Europe, in a swipe at the tough austerity programs that have been spearheaded by German Chancellor Angela Merkel.

Obama's stance reflects his worries that the euro zone contagion, which threatens the future of Europe's 17-nation single currency, could hurt the fragile U.S. economic recovery and his own re-election chances in November.

The Camp David summit kicked off four days of intensive diplomacy - including a NATO meeting in Obama's home town of Chicago - that will test leaders' ability to quell unease over the threat of another financial meltdown as well as plans to wind down the unpopular war in Afghanistan.

Over dinner Friday at the presidential retreat, the leaders discussed still other intractable global problems. The group, which included Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, agreed ahead of world powers' talks next week with Iran that Tehran must answer questions about its suspected nuclear weapons program, a U.S. official said.

North Korea, Syria and Myanmar were also on the dinner agenda, but it was the global economy that dominated the day.

After White House talks with French President Francois Hollande, Obama said the two agreed that tackling the euro-zone crisis was "an issue of extraordinary importance, not only to the people of Europe, but also to the world economy."

"We're looking forward to a fruitful discussion later this evening and tomorrow with the other G8 leaders about how we can manage a responsible approach to fiscal consolidation that is coupled with a strong growth agenda," Obama said before flying to Camp David and greeting fellow leaders for an opening dinner.

Merkel, who has insisted on the need for tough fiscal discipline to bring down suffocating debt levels even as angry voters have toppled some euro zone governments, seemed certain to find herself increasingly alone.

As Obama welcomed his guests one-by-one outside a rustic lodge at the presidential retreat in Maryland, he asked Merkel: "How have you been?"

She shrugged and offered a strained smile. "Well, you have a few things on your mind," he said in a brief exchange captured by a boom microphone.

Her predicament could be underscored in the summit's final communique that, according to a draft shown to Reuters, will stress "our imperative to create growth and jobs."

GREECE MUST "MAKE UP THEIR MINDS"

Reflecting growing frustration as Greece's post-election turmoil shakes global markets, British Prime Minister David Cameron called on euro members for decisive action and said the Greeks must "make their minds up" whether to stay in the euro zone.

No major economic policy decisions are expected from the talks but Obama will urge the Europeans to work harder at forging a comprehensive approach to their debt troubles.

World stocks fell to levels below where they began the year, depressed by the prospect that a Greek euro exit would spread upheaval in the currency bloc and engulf much larger economies such as Spain's.

The European Union's trade commissioner said for the first time that European officials were working on contingency plans in case Greece bombs out of the euro zone.

While Obama and Hollande found common ground on economics, their meeting also showed differences over France's commitment to the NATO military mission in Afghanistan, which will be the focus of the alliance's summit in Chicago starting on Sunday.

Hollande, a socialist sworn in this week as president, told Obama he would stick by his campaign pledge to withdraw French combat troops from Afghanistan by year's end, earlier than the alliance's 2014 timetable. But Hollande said France would continue to support the NATO effort in a "different way."

U.S. officials hope to convince Hollande to rethink the French pullout plan.

GERMANY 'QUITE ISOLATED'

But the two leaders, meeting for the first time since Hollande's election victory earlier this month, were more in sync on the euro zone crisis.

Hollande said he spoke to Obama about the need to put a priority on growth, and that they also agreed it was important to find a way for Greece to stay in the euro zone.

Obama's administration spent heavily to try to tackle the 2007-2009 U.S. recession, and has long urged Europeans to do more to boost growth. Hollande is seeking to take the edge off austerity with more job-creating infrastructure investments.

Like Cameron, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper has been a frequent critic of euro zone G8 members' handling of their debt woes. Italian premier Mario Monti was calling for growth measures even before Hollande did.

That could leave Merkel, who has used Germany's status as Europe's biggest economy to pressure others to keep a tight rein on debt, cutting a lonely figure at Camp David.

"Germany is absolutely quite isolated," said Domenico Lombardi, a former International Monetary Fund official who now is a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution think tank.

Lombardi said that while Germany had the upper hand when controlling debt was the focus, "it is now clear that Greece has become a systemic crisis" and this must now become the center of the debate.

A SOFTER APPROACH

While Merkel wants Greece's continued membership in the euro zone tied to Athens meeting tough austerity measures laid out in its bailout program, Hollande was seeking a softer approach.

Hollande also said he favors Europe recapitalizing Spain's troubled banks, which would mark a significant shift toward Europe taking over wider responsibilities from individual nations.

Backing calls for a concerted effort to boost economic activity, Jose Manuel Barroso, president of the European Commission, said there was a need to promote growth while putting public finances in order and this should be center stage at the summit. He insisted, however, that "we want Greece to stay in the euro area."

The G8 summit comes as Greeks are pulling cash from banks amid growing fears about its euro zone membership. Financial markets are deeply concerned about the future of the entire currency zone, with Spain's banking sector also under pressure.

Nearly two-thirds of Greeks voted on May 6 for parties of the radical left and far right, which oppose the austere terms of an EU/IMF assistance program. Talks failed to avert a repeat election, which is now set for June 17.

The "balanced approach" that Obama is pushing for in the euro zone is similar to his domestic efforts combining short-term stimulus and longer-term cuts to try to heal the U.S. economy and stoke hiring that has not recovered from the financial crisis. But the U.S. economy continues to struggle, posing problems for Obama's re-election.

Mitt Romney, the presumptive Republican nominee to face Obama in the Nov. 6 election, has made reducing the U.S. debt load, which has escalated during Obama's tenure, one of his key campaign messages.

Also on the G8 agenda will be the price of oil. Obama may secure support to essentially pre-authorize a release of strategic oil reserves later this summer, just as U.S. and European sanctions on Iran come into force -- this despite Brent crude hitting a 2012 low on Friday.

While the secluded Camp David setting discouraged protests nearby, an estimated 2,500 people demonstrated peacefully in a downtown Chicago plaza under the watchful eye of police, chanting mostly about economic issues that have little to do with the coming NATO summit.



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STOCKS NEWS SINGAPORE-CIMB says Singapore REITs attractive

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CIMB Research said, amid volatile markets, Singapore real estate investment trusts (S-REITs) are compelling due to attractive yield spreads, a stable outlook and defensive property portfolios and debt profiles.

CIMB said it prefers office S-REITs due to their relative valuations and a bottoming of the office cycle. Office landlords' bargaining positions have strengthened on sustained strong occupancy, rental stability and leasing take-up.

CIMB maintained its overweight rating on the S-REITs sector. Its top picks are Suntec REIT, CapitaCommercial Trust and Frasers Commercial Trust.

1218 (0418 GMT)

(Reporting by Leonard How in Singapore; leonard.how@thomsonreuters.com)

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09:35 STOCKS NEWS SINGAPORE-Singapore shares drop to 4-mth low

Singapore shares fell to a four-month low early on Friday, in line with the regional trend, weighed by concerns about an escalating banking crisis in Spain, political uncertainty in Greece and sluggish economic data from the United States.

The Straits Times Index dropped as much as 1.9 percent to around 2,769 points, the lowest since Jan 17. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan shed 2.2 percent.

The biggest drag on the index were local banks DBS Group Holdings, Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp and United Overseas Bank.

Commodities stocks were hit hard. Wilmar International and Golden Agri-Resources fell more than 4 percent each, while Olam International gave up 2.3 percent.

0927 (0127 GMT)

(Reporting by Eveline Danubrata in Singapore; eveline.danubrata@thomsonreuters.com)

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08:41 STOCKS NEWS SINGAPORE-Index futures down 1.7 pct

Singapore index futures fell 1.7 percent early on Friday, indicating a weak start for the benchmark Straits Times Index.

Tokyo and Seoul shares are down sharply, weighed by concerns about an escalating banking crisis in Spain and political uncertainty in Greece.

0839 (0039)

(Reporting by Eveline Danubrata in Singapore; eveline.danubrata@thomsonreuters.com)



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WRAPUP 1-Europe's economic woes dominate G8 gathering

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By Jeff Mason and Laura MacInnis

CAMP DAVID, Md. | Sat May 19, 2012 5:12am EDT

CAMP DAVID, Md. May 19 (Reuters) - U.S. President Barack Obama will press European leaders to ease up on fiscal austerity and focus on economic growth at a summit on Saturday that will discuss ways to stem turmoil in the euro zone and head off the risk of global contagion.

At the wooded Camp David retreat in Maryland's Catoctin Mountains, Obama and leaders from other large economic powers will try to forge a common approach to tackling a crisis that threatens the future of Europe's 17-nation single currency.

Though no major policy decisions are expected from the Group of Eight summit, leaders hope they can bridge enough of their differences to soothe rattled financial markets after worries about the risk of a Greek exit from the euro zone sent European stock prices to their lowest level since December.

"Hopefully we'll get some stuff done," Obama told Italian Prime Minister Mario Monti as he and other summit participants arrived for Friday evening dinner at a lodge at the secluded presidential retreat.

Obama earlier in the day aligned himself with Monti and new French President Francois Hollande by urging a solution to the euro zone crisis that combines fiscal belt-tightening measures with a "strong growth agenda."

On the other side of the debate is German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who has pushed fiscal austerity as a means of bringing down huge debt levels that are burdening European economies.

Voters in euro zone countries have shown frustration with that approach, ejecting governments such as that of Nicolas Sarkozy, who was defeated by Hollande, a socialist, in the May 6 French presidential election.

A draft of the summit communiqué shown to Reuters will stress an "imperative to create growth and jobs."

Also on the summit agenda are concerns about oil and food prices as well as Afghanistan, Iran, Syria and North Korea.

Speculation has grown that Obama will use an energy session at the G8 to seek support to tap emergency oil reserves before a European Union embargo of Iranian crude takes effect in July.

But with oil prices already sliding, a move by Obama to tap the Strategic Petroleum Reserve - alone or along with other countries - could expose him to criticism that the emergency supply should only be touched in a supply crisis.

The Camp David summit kicked off four days of intensive diplomacy that will test leaders' ability to quell unease over the threat of another financial meltdown as well as plans to wind down the unpopular war in Afghanistan.

After the Camp David talks wrap up late on Saturday afternoon, Obama will fly to his home town of Chicago where he will host a two-day NATO meeting at which the Afghanistan war will be the central topic.



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UPDATE 4-Troubled Brazil economy shrinks again in March

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* March IBC-Br activity index down 0.35 percent, below forecast

* Brazilian activity hardly picked up in first quarter

* Weak recovery likely to prompt more interest rate cuts

* Government prepares more stimulus to support activity

By Alonso Soto

BRASILIA, May 18 (Reuters) - Economic activity in Brazil fell for the third straight month in March, a surprisingly weak performance that may lead the central bank to slash its benchmark interest rate to all-time lows and prompt further stimulus measures from President Dilma Rousseff.

The central bank's IBC-Br economic activity index , a closely watched proxy for gross domestic product, contracted 0.35 percent in March from February, the bank said on Friday. Most analysts had expected activity to rise 0.5 percent.

The weak reading means Brazil's economy has remained stagnant since almost falling into recession in the second half of 2011. In the fourth quarter, the economy expanded just 0.30 percent, a figure that could be easily revised down once fresh GDP data are released on June 1.

In addition to more interest rate cuts, Rousseff is ready to take further measures to cheapen consumer credit and breathe new life into struggling industries.

Finance Minister Guido Mantega told Brazilian newspaper Valor Economico on Friday that the government is studying measures to bolster credit, without elaborating. The new measures could be announced next week, Mantega told Valor.

Economic activity also contracted in January and February in what is expected to be a very weak quarter for the economy despite a barrage of stimulus measures to revive growth.

Concerned with market sentiment after the weak data, a senior government official said the administration forecasts growth of around 0.4 percent in the first quarter versus the fourth quarter, in line with many analysts' expectations.

"Growth this year will be low, without a doubt. We will see the effects of the stimulus in the second half of the year and in 2013," said Andre Perfeito, chief economist with Gradual Investimentos in Sao Paulo. "Lower growth will ultimately give the green light for the central bank to be more aggressive."

The Brazilian economy is widely seen growing slightly above the meager 2.7 percent posted last year as robust domestic demand only partially offsets a sluggish industry. Brazil's GDP grew a staggering 7.5 percent in 2010.

In the first quarter of the year, activity rose only 0.15 percent from the previous quarter, according to Reuters calculations based on the central bank's data. Activity in February versus January was revised down to a drop of 0.38 percent from the previously reported 0.23 percent slide.

The struggling recovery effort in the world's No. 6 economy will likely prompt the central bank to bring its benchmark Selic interest rate to a record low from the current 9 percent. The bank, which has already trimmed 350 basis points off its Selic rate since August, will make its next rate decision on May 30.

Yields on Brazil's interest rates futures fell across the board on Friday as more investors expected the bank to keep the pace of rate cuts at 75 basis points per meeting.

MORE STIMULUS AHEAD

Earlier this week, Mantega scrapped his initial economic growth forecast of 4.5 percent for the year and senior officials now see expansion closer to 3 percent.

The government is considering slashing the financial operations tax, or IOF, on car loans to help automakers unwind inventories, which in April climbed to their highest since the 2008 global financial meltdown, a local newspaper reported on Friday.

Many of the country's economic woes stem from the so-called "Brazil cost" - a mix of high taxes, interest rates, labor costs and infrastructure bottlenecks that strangle businesses facing stiff competition abroad.

Even as manufacturers struggle, domestic demand remains surprisingly strong as Brazilians continue to spend on foreign-made clothes and home appliances.

A worsening debt crisis in Europe also poses a challenge for Brazil as international credit lines dry up and global demand for local products falls.

Rousseff, a career economist, is sticking to fiscal austerity to allow the central bank to continue easing monetary policy. She is also pressing private-sector banks to slash rates in tandem with the central bank's falling benchmark rate.

The stimulus will likely pay off in the second half of the year but will not be enough to bring back the high growth rates that made Brazil one of the world's most dynamic economies.

Rousseff, who enjoys record-high popularity since she took office in January 2011, may face years of mediocre growth ahead as the former star of the BRICS group of major emerging economies quickly loses its shine. The grouping also includes Russia, India, China and South Africa.

In contrast, the economy of regional peer Mexico grew at its fastest pace in 18 months in the first quarter.



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Tuesday, May 22, 2012

CFTC opens probe into JPMorgan trading loss -NYT

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n" readability="53">May 18 (Reuters) - The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) has opened an enforcement case to examine possible wrongdoing at JPMorgan Chase & Co in connection with the bank's multi-billion-dollar trading loss, The New York Times said late on Friday, citing people briefed on the matter.

The CFTC would join the FBI and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission among federal agencies examining the loss, which the largest U.S. bank said last week was at least $2 billion.

Members of the CFTC also voted on Friday to publicly disclose the existence of its investigation soon, a rare step it reserves for the most serious cases, the newspaper said.

The CFTC has disclosed an investigation into last October's collapse of MF Global Holdings Ltd, a futures and commodities brokerage from where large sums of customer money remain missing.

JPMorgan spokesman Joe Evangelisti declined to comment. The CFTC did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The bank has not been accused of wrongdoing, and the newspaper said all of the investigations into its trading loss are preliminary.

CFTC Chairman Gary Gensler is expected to reveal his agency's investigation when he testifies before the Senate Banking Committee on Tuesday, the newspaper said.

JPMorgan Chief Executive Jamie Dimon is also expected to testify before that committee, after hearings on Wall Street reforms that are expected to end on June 6.

The CFTC began tracking JPMorgan's trading in April, the newspaper said, when reports surfaced that London-based trader Bruno Iksil was taking big bets in credit derivatives.

Its probe may examine whether the bank's trading affected that market, the newspaper said.



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Gap raises profit outlook, shares rise

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n">(Reuters) - Gap Inc (GPS.N) raised its yearly profit forecast, prompted by first-quarter earnings that topped Wall Street estimates and rising sales, and its shares rose 8 percent after hours.

For the full year, Gap estimated earnings of $1.78 to $1.83 a share, above the $1.75 to $1.80 it forecast in February.

"It's important to remain measured in our outlook given that our biggest selling seasons are still ahead of us," said Chief Financial Officer Sabrina Simmons.

Given the first quarter beat, "the current forecast does appear to be conservative," said Betty Chen, an analyst with Wedbush Securities.

She said that while the company appeared to be on the right track, "We're all waiting to see some sustainability."

For the first quarter ended April 28, the owner of the Gap, Old Navy and Banana Republic chains earned $233 million, or 47 cents a share, compared with $233 million, or 40 cents a share, a year ago.

Analysts, on average, had been expecting Gap to earn 46 cents a share, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

After years of being accused of selling boring clothes, Gap has regained an edge in fashion, following a prolonged turnaround that included a change in top management.

The company's spring merchandise is selling well, and its website has been revamped.

Gap, the third biggest clothes retailer in the world after Zara owner Inditex (ITX.MC), and H&M owner Hennes & Mauritz AB (HMb.ST), had preannounced that sales rose 6 percent to $3.49 billion, while comparable store sales were up 4 percent.

During the quarter, sales at established North American stores rose 5 percent each for the Gap and Banana Republic brands. Sales at Old Navy stores rose 4 percent, the company said.

Gap shares rose to $28.50 after the bell. They closed down 2.9 percent at $26.31 on Thursday on the New York Stock Exchange.

(Reporting by Nivedita Bhattacharjee in Chicago; Editing by Andre Grenon, Phil Berlowitz and Richard Chang)



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UPDATE 3-German IG Metall get highest pay rise in 20 years

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* Major German union gets 4.3 percent pay rise

* Biggest pay rise for IG Metall union since 1992

* Even German government pushed for higher wages

* Big German pay gains could give eurozone relief

By Hendrik Sackmann

SINDELFINGEN, Germany, May 19 (Reuters) - Germany's largest industrial union IG Metall will get its biggest pay rise in 20 years after agreeing to a 4.3-percent pay increase deal with employers at the end of marathon talks that ended just before dawn on Saturday.

The wage deal, which is more than double Germany's inflation rate of about 2 percent, will give some 3.6 million engineering workers a 4.3 percent pay rise for 12 months from May 1 and set a high benchmark for other unions in Europe's largest economy.

It will be the biggest annual increase since IG Metall won a 5.4 percent pay rise in 1992, according to union officials.

The agreement for the sector at the heart of the German economy came after all-night negotiations. Officials from the two sides confirmed the breakthrough at a news conference after Reuters had earlier reported the outlines of the deal.

The talks between the giant union and officials representing Germany's leading manufacturing sector that includes carmaking powerhouses such as Volkswagen, Daimler and BMW were closely followed across Europe, which is battling to overcome a sovereign debt crisis that has been exacerbated by imbalances linked to low wage growth in Germany in the last decade.

The size of the deal is a signal that Germany is willing to tolerate higher wages, even if that pushes up inflation, in order to help weak euro members on Europe's southern periphery.

German government leaders, including Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, have made unusual forays into the wage talks this year, urging employers to give workers larger increases after a decade of restraint.

More money in the wallets of German consumers could boost demand for imports from European partner even though Germans have had a visceral aversion to higher prices ever since hyperinflation under the Weimar Republic in the early 1920s wiped out the savings of an entire generation.

Economists believe higher labour costs in Germany could, over time, also make products manufactured elsewhere in Europe more competitive relative to those made here.

STRIKES AVERTED

More immediately, the IG Metall deal ends a disruptive series of partial walk-outs and warning strikes across the country by the union to press demands for a 6.5 percent pay rise. Employers had offered a rise of just under 2.6 percent.

Union officials had threatened a full-fledged strike in the weeks ahead, which would have harmed the sector that is thriving thanks to solid economic growth in Germany and the country's coveted export goods.

Labour unions in Germany this year are getting above-average pay increases after a decade of wage deals that even failed to keep pace with the country's inflation rate. The moderate deals had improved the country's competitiveness and helped the unemployment rate fall to a two-decade low.

"We have hit the upper limit of what the companies can deal with," said Rainer Dulger, who led employers through five rounds of talks totalling 37 hours at a news conference in the southwest town of Sindelfingen near Stuttgart.

The deal will cost employers an estimated seven billion euros a year.

"This was a fair compromise," said Berthold Huber, head of the IG Metall union. "You don't always get what you want in wage talks. Both sides had to give ground and this agreement wasn't easy for either side to accept."

Martin Kannegiesser, head of the employers association, said: "A strike in the sector has now been avoided with this agreement that will give workers a real increase in pay."

The 4.3 percent wage increase will be for the 12 months from May 1 to April 30, 2013, officials said. But the agreement formally takes effect from April 1, 2012 and covers a 13-month period. Workers will get no raise for the month of April 2012.

The officials said even though their deal only nominally covers the important southwest district of Baden-Wuerttemberg it will be used as a basis for identical increases for IG Metall workers nationwide.

Baden-Wuerttemberg is home to German manufacturers including Daimler and Heidelberger Druck, and engineering wage deals there traditionally set the tone for agreements across the rest of the country.

It is difficult to compare IG Metall deals because they sometimes cover periods longer than or less than a year and often include one-off payments. For 2011 IG Metall workers got a 2.7 percent wage increase. The 4.3 percent deal for 2012 surpassed the most recent high of 4.1 percent in 2007 when workers also got a one-off payment of 400 euros.

While wages in the crisis-hit euro zone periphery are falling, German workers are enjoying the benefits of a robust economy and a healthy labour market after a decade of wage restraint, in turn fuelling the economic divergence that has underpinned the currency area's debt crisis.

In Germany this year, the wages of around 9 million workers are up for negotiation and deals agreed so far have outstripped inflation. In March, the 2 million workers in Germany's public sector won a 6.3 percent pay rise over a 24-month period and Schaeuble has said wages in Germany can afford to grow faster than in other parts of the European Union.



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UK's Cameron urges action on euro, opposes Tobin tax

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WASHINGTON | Fri May 18, 2012 4:10pm EDT

WASHINGTON May 18 (Reuters) - British Prime Minister David Cameron called on euro zone countries on Friday to take decisive action to stem a debt crisis and said Greeks must decide if they want to stay in the euro.

He also said that he maintained his opposition to a financial transactions tax, backed by new French President Francois Hollande as a way to raise revenues.

"We need decisive action from euro zone countries in terms of strengthening euro zone banks, in terms of a strong euro zone firewall and decisive action over Greece. That has to be done," he said, speaking in Washington before a G8 summit. "Clearly the Greeks have to make their minds up, they have to make their decision."



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G8 leaders: Iran must disclose more about nuclear program

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CAMP DAVID, Md. | Fri May 18, 2012 11:16pm EDT

The leaders also stressed the importance of having North Korea adhere to international norms with its nuclear program and said it would face more isolation if it "continues down the path of provocation," the official said.

The Friday evening dinner, hosted by U.S. President Barack Obama, was the first opportunity for the G-8 leaders to discuss global security concerns. They will talk about the eurozone crisis and other economic issues, including oil market pressures at the summit on Saturday.



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MGIC sues Freddie Mac in insurance dispute

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The headquarters of mortgage lender Freddie Mac is seen in Mclean, Virginia, near Washington, in this September 8, 2008 file photo.

Credit: Reuters/Jason Reed/Files



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Monday, May 21, 2012

STOCKS NEWS SINGAPORE-Shares fall more, down 4 pct this week

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Singapore shares extended their fall on concerns about growing instability in Spanish banks and political turmoil in Greece, with banks, property and commodities stocks in the city-state among the hardest hit.

The Straits Times Index dropped as much as 2.1 percent to 2,762.81 points, the lowest since Jan 16. The Singapore bourse has lost more than 4 percent so far this week.

Southeast Asia's largest property firm CapitaLand Ltd dipped 4.6 percent. United Overseas Bank lost 2.7 percent, while DBS Group Holdings and Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp shed around 2 percent each.

Palm oil firms Wilmar International and Golden Agri-Resources dipped 3.9 percent and 4.5 percent, respectively.

"With the return of macro headwinds, we turn our attention towards stocks which have positive earnings dynamics which have not been fully reflected and stocks which we believe have been unfairly sold down," Deutsche said in a report.

Deutsche said its top picks included energy, water and marine group Sembcorp Industries Ltd and aircraft ground handling and food services firm SATS Ltd.

1408 (0608 GMT)

(Reporting by Eveline Danubrata in Singapore; eveline.danubrata@thomsonreuters.com)

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12:25 STOCKS NEWS SINGAPORE-CIMB says Singapore REITs attractive

CIMB Research said, amid volatile markets, Singapore real estate investment trusts (S-REITs) are compelling due to attractive yield spreads, a stable outlook and defensive property portfolios and debt profiles.

CIMB said it prefers office S-REITs due to their relative valuations and a bottoming of the office cycle. Office landlords' bargaining positions have strengthened on sustained strong occupancy, rental stability and leasing take-up.

CIMB maintained its overweight rating on the S-REITs sector. Its top picks are Suntec REIT, CapitaCommercial Trust and Frasers Commercial Trust.

1218 (0418 GMT)

(Reporting by Leonard How in Singapore; leonard.how@thomsonreuters.com)

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09:35 STOCKS NEWS SINGAPORE-Singapore shares drop to 4-mth low

Singapore shares fell to a four-month low early on Friday, in line with the regional trend, weighed by concerns about an escalating banking crisis in Spain, political uncertainty in Greece and sluggish economic data from the United States.

The Straits Times Index dropped as much as 1.9 percent to around 2,769 points, the lowest since Jan 17. MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan shed 2.2 percent.

The biggest drag on the index were local banks DBS Group Holdings, Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp and United Overseas Bank.

Commodities stocks were hit hard. Wilmar International and Golden Agri-Resources fell more than 4 percent each, while Olam International gave up 2.3 percent.

0927 (0127 GMT)

(Reporting by Eveline Danubrata in Singapore; eveline.danubrata@thomsonreuters.com)

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08:41 STOCKS NEWS SINGAPORE-Index futures down 1.7 pct

Singapore index futures fell 1.7 percent early on Friday, indicating a weak start for the benchmark Straits Times Index.

Tokyo and Seoul shares are down sharply, weighed by concerns about an escalating banking crisis in Spain and political uncertainty in Greece.

0839 (0039)

(Reporting by Eveline Danubrata in Singapore; eveline.danubrata@thomsonreuters.com)



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