Saturday, October 12, 2013

RPT-REUTERS SUMMIT-Expect more Norwegian firms to go public - state fund boss

(Repeats to add FUND to story slug)

By Terje Solsvik and Gwladys Fouche

OSLO, Sept 30 (Reuters) - Investors should expect more Norwegian companies to go public in the near future as they search for capital to grow their business, the head of Norway's largest domestic-focused investment fund said on Monday.

"We will see more companies coming to the stock exchange now, new companies coming and seeing some capital there," Olaug Svarva, managing director of Folketrygdfondet, said in an interview at the Reuters Nordic Investment Summit.

The state-owned fund, which has some $25 billion under management, invests mostly in Norwegian bonds and stocks, including all the major companies in the Nordic country such as Statoil and telecoms group Telenor.

"Given the return you get on the fixed income markets, the stock market still looks interesting - even though we have had more than a doubling (in value) over the last five years," Svarva said at the summit, held at the Reuters office in Oslo.

She expected Norwegian companies to be generally averse to risks as the world economy slowly picks up from the doldrums, however.

"I think the companies will generally be careful with their balance sheets and their risk profile," she said.

Folketrygdfondet has investments in the other Nordic countries too, accounting for some 15 percent of its portfolio.

The fund is separate from Norway's $780-billion sovereign wealth fund, the so-called oil fund, which invests exclusively in stocks, bonds and property outside Norway.

Follow Reuters Summits on Twitter @Reuters_Summits . (Editing by Mark Trevelyan)


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UPDATE 1-KKR buys stake in appliance maker in biggest China deal

* Third Asian deal in the past week

* China's home appliance market expected reach $105 bln in next two years

* Qingdao trades at historic P/E of 10.6 times

By Stephen Aldred and Denny Thomas

HONG KONG, Sept 30 (Reuters) - Investment company KKR & Co LP said it had agreed to buy a 10-percent stake in Qingdao Haier Co Ltd, gaining exposure to China's home appliances market with its biggest investment in the country to date.

The acquisition, which is subject to shareholder and regulatory agreement, is KKR's third Asian deal in a week as it begins to invest its new $6 billion Asia fund, the region's largest ever.

The companies did not disclose the deal value, but a person familiar with the matter said New York-headquartered KKR paid around $550 million.

For the Chinese maker of washing machines and refrigerators the deal means a link to a global investment firm that could help it expand beyond its local market.

For KKR, the deal offers a stake in a firm that is inexpensive compared with peers and part of China's booming consumer market.

Foreign firms have been keen to access China's home appliance sector, which is forecast to grow by about one-fifth in the next two years to $105 billion, according to data from consultancy Euromonitor.

KKR's purchase comes less than two months after Whirlpool Corp, the world's largest maker of home appliances, agreed to buy a majority stake in China's Hefei Rongshida Sanyo Electric Co Ltd for $552 million.

In 2011, Carlyle Group paid $468 million for a 9.4 percent stake in Haier Electronics Group, a company controlled by Qingdao.

Qingdao Haier, which makes and distributes washing machines, refrigerators, air-conditioners and other appliances, has a market value of some $5.8 billion. Trade in its shares was halted on Sept. 12, pending an announcement.

Founded in 1984, Haier Group was a collection of factories on the verge of bankruptcy before transforming itself into a global consumer brand with 70,000 employees.

Qingdao Haier owns a 47.9 percent stake in Hong-Kong listed Haier Electronics Group, according to Thomson Reuters data.

UNDER VALUED

For KKR, the purchase comes at a low point in Qingdao Haier's valuations. The stock trades at a trailing price-to-earnings ratio of 10.6, making it the second-least expensive home appliance maker in the Asia-Pacific behind Gree Electric Appliances Inc of Zhuhai, Thomson Reuters data showed.

The Chinese home appliance industry is battling higher labour and operating costs and Chinese consumers are unwilling to pay a premium for local products.

Despite the sluggish retail market, KKR believes Qingdao Haier's stock is undervalued, and sees room for growth in China's home appliances market, according to a source with knowledge of the firm's investment strategy.

"If you look at the market today, the penetration of white goods is about the same level as Japan and the U.S. 30 years ago," the source said.

The source added that in China, 87 out of every 100 homes has a fridge, but the ratio in the US is 150 fridges to every 100 homes. KKR also expects to help Qingdao Haier with acquisitions, the source added.

KKR said last week it would lead a joint venture with China Modern Dairy Holdings Ltd and a Chinese private equity firm that would invest $140 million in two large dairy farms.

KKR said on Friday it had agreed to pay $1.7 billion for Panasonic Corp's healthcare unit, in the largest private equity offer in Asia this year.


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Britain has agreed fees, capital relief for mortgage plan-source

MANCHESTER, England, Sept 30 | Mon Sep 30, 2013 8:53am EDT

"We expect the majority (of the) lenders will ultimately participate," the source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said. "We expect other lenders to confirm in the weeks and months ahead - between now and January - that they will be participating - probably not all of them but the vast majority.

"House prices are basically flat in most of the country so this is a broad recovery from an extremely low base," the source said.


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Latin America most vulnerable to higher U.S. rates-IMF

WASHINGTON, Sept 30 | Mon Sep 30, 2013 8:59am EDT

WASHINGTON, Sept 30 (Reuters) - Latin America is likely to suffer most if U.S. interest rates rise more quickly than economic conditions merit, the International Monetary Fund said on Monday.

But higher rates could also hit output in Europe and Asia, as any shock in the United States, the world's biggest economy and a large financial hub, usually reverberates around the world, the IMF said in a report.

The IMF said it was concerned rates may rise before the U.S. economy has fully recovered, which would most hurt countries that peg their exchange rates to the dollar.

But the global impact of a slower pace of bond-buying by the U.S. Federal Reserve is harder to gauge, the IMF said in the analytical chapters of its World Economic Outlook. The full report is due out Oct. 8.

The Fed earlier this month surprised markets when it postponed reducing its $85 billion a month worth of bond purchases, saying it needed to wait for more evidence of solid economic growth. Expectations that the U.S. central bank would start pulling back on its bond buying had prompted capital outflows from many emerging markets, as investors anticipated higher yields in advanced economies.

"A stronger-than-expected slowdown of growth in China is a major concern at present," the IMF added, though that would most likely hurt China's close trading partners in Asia and Latin America and would be less harmful to the world as a whole.

The IMF was tasked with assessing how problems in one country spread to another in the wake of the 2007-2009 global financial crisis, which showed how quickly and easily policies cascaded across borders and destabilized the global economy.

In its report, the Fund said the recent financial crisis was one of those rare periods when all the world's economies moved in lock-step, as the collapse of the U.S. investment bank Lehman Brothers spread widespread panic and uncertainty.

That period has ended but could return, as policymakers have still not finished addressing the problem of institutions that are "too big to fail," the Fund warned.

"A large financial shock could again induce the world's economies to rise and fall in tandem," the IMF said. "There are still many systemically important financial institutions whose reach spans the globe."

The IMF also said most emerging markets in Latin America and other regions were hit by volatile capital flows in the midst of the crisis, but some were better at dealing with the problem than others.

Economies like Malaysia and Mexico, with flexible exchange rates, lower inflation and better fiscal policy and economic institutions were able to counter the destabilizing flows, usually through private financial adjustment.

But less resilient countries like Indonesia, Pakistan and Turkey still suffered from the "boom and bust" cycle of sudden inflows and outflows that had bedeviled emerging markets in the past, the IMF said.


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REUTERS SUMMIT-Finnish Grand Cru looks beyond Supernauts launch

(For other news from Reuters Nordic Investment Summit, click here)

* Grand Cru to launch first mobile game, Supernauts

* Already eyeing second and third games

* Angry Birds, Clash of Clans pave way for Finnish start-ups

By Ritsuko Ando

HELSINKI, Sept 30 (Reuters) - Grand Cru, widely seen as the next big player in Finland's gaming industry which has spawned the likes of Rovio's Angry Birds and Supercell's Clash of Clans, is already working on a new game although it has yet to launch its first.

Chief Executive Markus Pasula started the company in 2011 with seven other gaming industry veterans. The founders' experience has helped them secure nearly 13 million euros ($18 million) in funding, including 8.5 million euros in July from a group led by French private equity investor Idinvest Partners and including Qualcomm Ventures and Nokia Growth Partners.

The funding has meant there is no hurry to launch its first game, Supernauts, which includes challenges such as saving people from flooding as polar ice caps melt.

"It could be this year but it might not be this year," Pasula said of the launch. Speaking to Reuters as part of the Reuters Nordic Investment Summit, he said it was still in limited beta mode and would soon be tested more widely.

"We're looking to do a bigger beta launch almost this week," he said in an interview at Grand Cru's office in Helsinki's working class Kallio district, with views over the harbour and neighbouring industrial warehouses.

Pasula said he was also starting to look beyond Supernauts.

"We have one new team already starting, it's still looking for a lead programmer for that team, but they have a really good designer," he said, adding that there were also ideas for a third game.

The gaming industry is considered one of the few bright spots in the small Nordic economy, with previous tech flagship Nokia selling off its struggling handset business to Microsoft and traditional industries such as paper shutting mills and cutting jobs amid a decline in global demand.

MOBILE CULTURE

Pasula said Finland's gaming companies may have been successful due in part to an early understanding of the importance of mobile gaming.

While he does not recall hiring any of his 32-member staff from Nokia, he said Nokia's success and the culture it created helped encourage developers to focus on mobile games.

"Nokia definitely supported that. Nokia was spreading the message in the local scene that mobile gaming is going to be a big thing," he said. "Every signal shows that mobile gaming, especially the free-to-play gaming on mobile, is going to grow every year significantly."

Supernauts is being built for Apple's iOS system. Pasula said the primary target was the regular, rather than hardcore, game player using a mobile device like the iPad. Games for Android software may come later, he said.

Pasula previously headed Mr.Goodliving, a Finnish video game company that specialised in games for mobile phones and was acquired by RealNetworks in 2005.

While U.S. gaming companies such as Zynga Inc and Electronic Arts have grown through acquisitions, Pasula said he had no interest in selling Grand Cru.

"We don't have any particular exit plan in mind," he said, adding that big players did not appear to have much advantage over small, unique startups. "We do plan taking Supernauts as far as it's possible, so when the game is successful we'll start looking at how do we take the universe of Supernauts further, and how do we improve the game as a service."

Finnish startups often have trouble securing seed investment due to a lack of venture capital at home, but Pasula said the need to appeal to overseas investors has meant they often aim for a global, rather than just local, business.

"They are more international from the get-go," he said.

He said Rovio and Supercell have helped to boost recognition of Finnish gaming companies overseas.

"It is so fantastic that we have the reputation now," he said. "All of my visits with Grand Cru to San Francisco to go meet all marketing partners we have there - Apple and Google and Facebook - they all just instantly recognise that we are a gaming company from Finland." ($1 = 0.7385 euros) (Additional reporting by Jussi Rosendahl and Terhi Kinnunen; Editing by Mark Trevelyan)


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Britain to introduce mortgage guarantee scheme within days - PM Cameron

LONDON, Sept 28 | Sat Sep 28, 2013 4:54pm EDT

LONDON, Sept 28 (Reuters) - Britain will introduce a mortgage guarantee scheme aimed at helping people buy their own home three months earlier than planned, Prime Minister David Cameron said on Saturday.

"I won't stand by while hardworking people can't afford a home. That's why I'm bringing forward 'Help to Buy' scheme," Cameron said in a statement on the eve of the Conservative party conference.

Cameron said the scheme, which will offer guarantees for 95-per-cent mortgages for homes up to 600,000 pounds ($967,300), would start next week. It had been due to begin in January 2014.

Critics of the government have said it is stoking a housing bubble in London by backing mortgages.


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Friday, October 11, 2013

Top SEC lawyer on 'Fabulous Fab' trial to depart agency

By Sarah N. Lynch

WASHINGTON, Sept 27 | Fri Sep 27, 2013 5:53pm EDT

WASHINGTON, Sept 27 (Reuters) - Matthew Martens, the top trial lawyer at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission who led the agency to victory in its blockbuster civil fraud case against Goldman Sachs Vice President Fabrice Tourre, is leaving the SEC at the end of September.

The SEC said its current deputy chief litigation counsel, Matthew Solomon, will take over the top position.

The SEC's case against Tourre was one of the most high-profile matters to emerge out of the 2007-2009 financial crisis. At the heart of the SEC's case was whether Tourre had misled investors in a synthetic collateralized debt obligation (CDO) called Abacus 2007-AC1.

The SEC said Tourre, who once referred to himself as "the fabulous Fab" in an email, should have let investors know that Paulson & Co Inc, the hedge fund run by billionaire John Paulson, had helped choose the subprime mortgage securities underlying the CDO and was betting against it.

Leading up to the trial against Tourre, many critics openly questioned the strength of the SEC's case, saying the agency was wrong to target a low-level Goldman employee.

Goldman Sachs had previously settled the matter with the SEC for $550 million; no high-level executives were charged in the case.

Martens was able to convince a jury that Tourre was liable for fraud, marking what most consider to be the highlight of his three years working at the SEC.

Martens' plans to leave the SEC this fall were widely expected.

Reuters first reported in May, well before the Tourre trial began, that Martens was testing the waters for prospective employment at several law firms

At that time, he was inquiring internally about whether certain firms including Kirkland & Ellis; Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison; WilmerHale; Latham & Watkins, and Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton were representing clients in SEC cases.

In some instances, Martens recused himself from working on those cases in order to comply with strict ethics rules that prevent employees from working on matters involving prospective employers.

The SEC's announcement on Friday did not say where Martens plans to go next. Martens could not be immediately reached for comment.

Solomon has served as second in command in the SEC's trial unit since June 2012.

Before working at the SEC, Solomon was a federal prosecutor for more than 10 years.


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U.S., Panama in talks on tax evasion pact -Treasury

By Patrick Temple-West

Sept 27, WASHINGTON | Fri Sep 27, 2013 3:47pm EDT

Sept 27, WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States and Panama are in talks on a tax evasion agreement, the U.S. Treasury Department said on Friday, a sign of U.S. progress in implementing a crackdown on U.S. tax cheats.

The Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA), enacted in 2010, takes effect in July 2014. It requires foreign financial institutions to tell the U.S. Internal Revenue Service about Americans' offshore accounts worth more than $50,000.

The United States does not have a full tax treaty with Panama, which has been listed in recent years by global authorities as a tax haven. But the United States and Panama did sign a tax-information exchange agreement in 2010.

The Panama talks mark a significant step for FATCA implementation because they demonstrate Treasury officials are going to the heart of the offshore tax evasion problem, said Alan Granwell, a former Treasury official now with law firm DLA Piper who is advising foreign governments on FATCA deals.

FATCA was enacted after a Swiss banking scandal showed U.S. taxpayers hid sizeable fortunes overseas from tax authorities. The Treasury has said previously it is in varying stages of FATCA negotiations with more than 50 countries.

The United States is Panama's largest trading partner. The Panamanian government said on Sept 18 on its website that it is working on a draft proposal for a FATCA deal, which it hopes to finish as soon as possible.

Banks, funds and other financial institutions that fail to comply with FATCA face a 30 percent U.S. withholding tax on their U.S. source income, a penalty that could effectively freeze them out of U.S. financial markets.

Panama, Belize and Costa Rica are three Central American countries the Organization for Economic Development and Co-operation has tagged as tax havens in the past.

Panama and other countries with very low taxes "historically may have had bank secrecy," Granwell said.

In August, the U.S. Treasury completed a FATCA deal with the Cayman Islands, perhaps prompting other low-tax nations to accelerate their talks with Treasury.

The United States already has FATCA deals with big trading partners such as Britain and Germany. The pacts are expected to help banks in those countries comply, Granwell said.

The Treasury has concluded nine FATCA intergovernmental agreements (IGAs) with foreign governments, but it is struggling to complete deals with China and Canada, leaving two potentially gaping holes in the FATCA dragnet, tax experts said

"There is a lot of tension between the U.S. and Canada," said Bruce Zagaris, a partner with the firm of Berliner, Corcoran & Rowe LLP who is advising foreign governments on FATCA.

"The Canadians have been really exasperated by the inability of the U.S. to have more concessions" for FATCA, he said.

The Canadian Department of Finance told Reuters this month that it hoped to sign an IGA in the near future.

In July, the Treasury postponed the start of FATCA to July 2014 from January 2014, in part to give U.S. negotiators more time. (Additional reporting by Louise Egan in Ottawa; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Steve Orlofsky)


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Mexico floods will not affect proposed 2013, 2014 budget deficits -government

MEXICO CITY, Sept 28 | Sat Sep 28, 2013 3:13pm EDT

MEXICO CITY, Sept 28 (Reuters) - Mexico's proposed budget deficit goals for this year and 2014 will not be affected by some of the worst storm damage in decades, the Finance Ministry said on Saturday.

Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto had previously said Congress would revise its proposed 2014 budget in the wake of the storms this month, which killed at least 147 people and left large swaths of the country under water, buckling bridges and destroying highways.

However, the Finance Ministry said the government would now shuffle existing funds to pay for the cleanup - estimated by Mexico's insurers' association to top 75 billion pesos ($5.7 billion), the highest bill ever from a natural disaster in the country.

"The costs associated with reconstruction will be met with available resources through the reorientation of some funds, but without affecting in any way the public deficit proposed for this year, or next," the ministry said in a statement.

The government has a 12.5 billion peso emergency fund, but will seek to divert 5 billion pesos from road-paving to spend on reconstruction, it ministry said.

Mexico's government will therefore stick to its aim, announced earlier this month, of widening the budget deficit next year to 1.5 percent of gross domestic product.

The government has also asked Congress to approve a deficit of 0.4 percent of GDP for 2013 after an economic slowdown this year hurt government revenue. Congress had passed a balanced budget for 2013 last year.

Finance Minister Luis Videgaray said on Friday that tropical storms Ingrid and Manuel will likely knock off about 0.1 percentage point from growth in 2013 and would temporarily boost inflation by no more than 0.15 percentage points.

Videgaray also said the economy, which contracted between April and June, would see stronger growth in the third quarter.

Mexico's economy is heading for its weakest performance since 2009, barely growing in the first half of the year and sparking fears that the country is flirting with recession.

Pessimism about prospects for Latin America's second biggest economy has increased due to the flooding, a poll of analysts this week by Reuters showed. ($1 = 13.17 Mexican pesos) (Reporting by Gabriel Stargardter; Editing by Simon Gardner and Christopher Wilson)


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UPDATE 6-Penney stock plunges on share sale, lower cash forecast

By Phil Wahba and Olivia Oran

Sept 27 (Reuters) - J.C. Penney Co Inc's decision to shore up its cash reserves by issuing almost $1 billion in new shares sent its stock tumbling more than 13 percent Friday.

Earlier in the day, the struggling U.S. department store chain had cut its forecast of year-end cash reserves, suggesting that it is burning through money faster than expected.

Penney said the 84 million shares in the offering had priced at $9.65 each. Underwriters have the option to buy another 12.6 million shares.

The board decided Thursday afternoon to sell shares after discussing in recent weeks various options to raise cash. As of Sept. 6, Penney had total debt of $5.82 billion, according to the stock offering prospectus, making it difficult to raise new money through debt.

"We could not risk losing the confidence of our Associates or our supplier partners, both of whom are paramount to our long-term success," Chief Executive Myron Ullman said in a note sent to all store employees on Friday and obtained by Reuters.

Penney spokeswoman Kristin Hays said the company was concerned that "shares could not handle much more pressure" if the company wanted to be able to sell new stock at some point.

The company has been struggling to improve sales after a failed attempt by Ullman's predecessor Ron Johnson to take the store more up-market sent sales down 25 percent in 2012.

On Friday, in their first session since the sale was announced, shares closed at $9.05, down from a February 2007 high of $87.18. About 35 percent of Penney shares are held short by investors betting on its decline, making them very volatile.

Penney said in the prospectus it would have about $1.3 billion in cash by the end of the year. In August, it had forecast $1.5 billion.

"While an equity raise improves (near-term) liquidity, we remain concerned that JCP will continue to burn cash in '14 and beyond," UBS analyst Michael Binetti, who has a "sell" rating on the stock, wrote in a note.

UBS' Binetti said the pre-holiday capital-raising, along with cautious comments from other retailers, increased concerns that near-term trends were not improving as anticipated.

So far some financing companies, known as factors, are not changing terms on the short-term loans they provide Penney suppliers.

Michael Stanley, the managing director at Rosenthal & Rosenthal, a large factor, said his firm has kept approving orders to Penney.

"We feel they have enough liquidity, especially with this share sale," Stanley said.

A TURBULENT WEEK

Penney's offering confirmed an exclusive Reuters report on Wednesday that the company aimed to raise as much as $1 billion in new equity to build its cash reserves.

Penney on Thursday denied a CNBC report that said Ullman had told investors there was no need to raise more money before the end of the fourth quarter, which ends in early February.

The company's shares had climbed on the CNBC report.

Earlier this year, Penney had a $2.25 billion loan arranged by Goldman Sachs, which is also the sole book-running manager for the stock offering.

Goldman said in a research note this week that poor business fundamentals, the need to rebuild inventory of goods popular with long-time customers and the weak performance of its home goods department would likely put pressure on Penney's liquidity.

Penney's shares have been on a wild ride in the past three days: plunging on the Goldman research, and declining further on the Reuters report about a capital raising, before recovering some of those losses on the company statement about trading conditions and the CNBC report. The shares fell again on the share sale announcement on Thursday, and continued their slide on Friday.


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Vietnam Air to buy 19 Boeing 787s, listed over $4 bln -sources

NEW YORK, Sept 27 | Fri Sep 27, 2013 2:36pm EDT

The order is in addition to the airline's existing orders for eight Boeing 787 Dreamliners, the sources said. All of the airline's 787s, including the new jets, will be powered by General Electric Co engines, the sources said. GE already is a significant supplier to the airline.

Boeing declined to comment.


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US CFTC fines Vision Financial for second time this week

By Tom Polansek

CHICAGO, Sept 27 | Fri Sep 27, 2013 5:35pm EDT

CHICAGO, Sept 27 (Reuters) - The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission fined Vision Financial Markets $525,000 on Friday for illegally commingling customer money with company funds.

It was the second penalty this week against the broker, which raised its profile in the futures industry last year by absorbing the accounts of former customers of bankrupt brokerage Peregrine Financial Group.

David Stein, Vision's general counsel, could not be reached for comment. The firm agreed to settle with the CFTC in both instances without admitting or denying wrongdoing.

From August 2008 to June 2009, Vision used funds from commodity futures and options customers to buy corporate notes and bonds and then commingled those assets with its own funds and the funds of its securities customers, the CFTC said.

Customer funds are supposed to be "segregated," or kept separate, so the money can be available for clients to trade with or withdraw.

Vision's violations went undetected because the broker did not notify regulators that the amount of money in segregated accounts did not meet requirements, according to the CFTC.

The agency requires that customer funds be separately accounted for and that brokers hold sufficient funds in customer segregated accounts to meet their obligations to clients.

Vision "misstated in monthly segregation statements filed with the commission the location and manner in which the customer funds were being held," the CFTC said.

The violations were discovered during a regulatory check in June 2009, according to the CFTC, which did not explain why it did not impose the fine until now.

The CFTC on Tuesday fined Vision $140,000 for failing to supervise employees handling futures accounts in 2012.

Peregrine's trustee, Ira Bodenstein, selected Vision to take on customer accounts last year because Vision offered the highest bid, said Robert Fishman, a lawyer for the trustee. Vision paid about $325,000.

"We'd never heard of them before," Fishman said about Vision on Friday. "Their bid was the best bid and that was all we needed to know about it."

Peregrine collapsed in July 2012 after founder Russell Wasendorf Sr. attempted suicide and confessed to stealing tens of thousands of dollars from customers over two decades.


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Thursday, October 10, 2013

UPDATE 1-ANZ, Singapore's UOB eye Hong Kong's Wing Hang Bank -sources

HONG KONG, Sept 28 | Sat Sep 28, 2013 1:43am EDT

HONG KONG, Sept 28 (Reuters) - Singapore's United Overseas Bank Ltd and Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd are considering a bid for Hong Kong's Wing Hang Bank Ltd, according to people familiar with the matter.

Wing Hang, with a market capitalisation of $4.7 billion, announced earlier this month that its controlling shareholders had received preliminary offers from independent third parties to purchase their shares in the bank. It did not name the bidders.

People familiar with the matter told Reuters on Saturday that ANZ and UOB were among the companies considering a bid for the Hong Kong bank. The Wall Street Journal also cited people familiar with the matter as saying UOB and ANZ had shown interest.

Wing Hang Bank is the second family-run Hong Kong lender to get a takeover offer since August. Chong Hing Bank Ltd said that it had received offers from multiple parties, without naming the suitors.

A UOB spokesman on Saturday said the bank does not comment on market speculation. An ANZ spokesman said: "From time to time we look at opportunities as part of our super regional strategy however we don't comment on market speculation."

Wing Hang Bank could not be reached for comment.

China's economic clout and the growth of the offshore yuan fixed income market has made Hong Kong's mid-sized banks increasingly attractive to foreign lenders seeking a gateway to the mainland market and seeking growth outside home markets.

New capital rules and competition from bigger rivals like HSBC Plc and Standard Chartered Bank Plc have also given controlling shareholders of Hong Kong banks more incentive not to hold out for more lofty premiums that other city lenders commanded before the global financial crisis.

Hong Kong's Fung family, along with BNY International Financing Corp, control about 45 percent of the Wing Hang Bank, whose stock has soared since takeover talk started.

The Wall Street Journal reported earlier this month that ANZ dropped its over $900 million bid for the main Australian businesses of British lender Lloyds Banking Group.

ANZ was among four parties shortlisted to buy Lloyds's asset finance and commercial lending units but withdrew on concerns about its ability to integrate the units with its Esanda financing arm, the Journal reported, citing people familiar with the matter.

ANZ, Australia's third largest bank by value, has been seeking to expand its business across Asia for several years, a vision held by current CEO Mike Smith, a former top executive at HSBC.

Banks across Asia, from Japan to Singapore, are also aggressively expanding beyond their borders, looking for higher growth markets.


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UPDATE 1-Top SEC lawyer on 'Fabulous Fab' trial to depart agency

By Sarah N. Lynch

WASHINGTON, Sept 27 (Reuters) - Matthew Martens, the top trial lawyer at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission who led the agency to victory in its blockbuster civil fraud case against Goldman Sachs Vice President Fabrice Tourre, is leaving the SEC at the end of September.

The SEC said its current deputy chief litigation counsel, Matthew Solomon, will take over the top position.

The SEC's case against Tourre was one of the most high-profile matters to emerge out of the 2007-2009 financial crisis. At the heart of the SEC's case was whether Tourre had misled investors in a synthetic collateralized debt obligation (CDO) called Abacus 2007-AC1.

The SEC said Tourre, who once referred to himself as "the fabulous Fab" in an email, should have let investors know that Paulson & Co Inc, the hedge fund run by billionaire John Paulson, had helped choose the subprime mortgage securities underlying the CDO and was betting against it.

Leading up to the trial against Tourre, many critics openly questioned the strength of the SEC's case, saying the agency was wrong to target a low-level Goldman employee.

Goldman Sachs had previously settled the matter with the SEC for $550 million; no high-level executives were charged in the case.

Martens was able to convince a jury that Tourre was liable for fraud, marking what most consider to be the highlight of his three years working at the SEC.

Martens' plans to leave the SEC this fall were widely expected.

Reuters first reported in May, well before the Tourre trial began, that Martens was testing the waters for prospective employment at several law firms

At that time, he was inquiring internally about whether certain firms including Kirkland & Ellis; Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison; WilmerHale; Latham & Watkins, and Cleary Gottlieb Steen & Hamilton were representing clients in SEC cases.

In some instances, Martens recused himself from working on those cases in order to comply with strict ethics rules that prevent employees from working on matters involving prospective employers.

The SEC's announcement on Friday did not say where Martens plans to go next. Martens declined to comment. A source familiar with the matter said he had not decided.

Solomon has served as second in command in the SEC's trial unit since June 2012.

Before working at the SEC, Solomon was a federal prosecutor for more than 10 years.


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Race to get Obamacare online sites running goes to the wire

By Sharon Begley

NEW YORK, Sept 28 | Sat Sep 28, 2013 11:47am EDT

NEW YORK, Sept 28 (Reuters) - Just days before the launch of the new U.S. state health insurance exchanges that are the centerpiece of the Affordable Care Act, a nationwide push is still under way to test and patch the technology behind the online sites.

Officials working on the sites have acknowledged that information technology (IT) failures will prevent many of them from functioning fully for weeks, and perhaps longer. That will slow the government's drive to enroll millions of uninsured Americans under President Barack Obama's healthcare reform law starting Tuesday.

From a political standpoint, a successful opening day will shape perceptions of Obama's signature policy initiative. But the system's functioning is to a large extent beyond the control of politicians and policy experts, and instead sits in the hands of the battalions of coders working for IT sub-contractors.

Six months ago, people involved in setting up the exchanges were more hopeful that everything would be ready on time, said Cristine Vogel, an associate director at Navigant Consulting.

"I don't think there were enough hours in the day, or enough people with the skills," she said. "When we look back, I think we'll see that we missed an opportunity to share technology."

Opponents of the healthcare reform known as Obamacare say the computer problems bolster their view that the 2010 law is a "train wreck" and should be delayed or repealed. The Obama administration insists the exchanges will be open for business on Oct. 1, even if some uninsured Americans may not be able to buy coverage right away. More importantly, they say, the new health plans will begin to provide health coverage on Jan. 1, as planned.

"So long as the website is accessible and the plans and the plan information are displayed properly so a consumer can shop for coverage and compare the plans, they will claim victory," said Chris C1ondeluci, an employee benefits attorney at Venable LLP and a former staffer at the Senate Finance Committee who helped draft the Affordable Care Act.

FIRST-DAY CRASH?

This week, the Obama administration said its Spanish-language website would not be ready in time, and that it would be weeks before small businesses and their employees could sign up online for coverage on exchanges operated by the federal government.

The exchanges in Colorado and the District of Columbia, meanwhile, cannot calculate the amount of federal subsidies customers qualify for.

In New York, the exchange is not able to transfer data to some insurers instantaneously, as planned, one carrier told Reuters. Instead, the data will be sent in batches once a day or so. The glitch will not affect customers, but it raises questions that New York might have other IT problems.

Oregon had sufficient qualms about its online insurance marketplace that no one can enroll unless they use a trained, certified agent or other "community partner."

As late as this week, Oregon also had trouble correctly displaying information about insurance plans on a test site. The problem could mislead customers about deductibles, prices and other details if it occurs on the live site Tuesday.

In Ohio, Lieutenant Governor Mary Taylor, a fierce opponent of the healthcare law, said in a radio interview this week that her state's online exchange, which is being run by the federal government, could well crash on its first day.

In testing, she said, some plans filed by insurers "sat in a queue for the federal government for a week, so my concern is something similar is going to happen on October 1 because of the amount of (online) traffic."

WORKAROUNDS OFFERED, TAKE TIME

In most cases, exchanges will offer workarounds that will take time to execute. In Washington, D.C., off-line contractors will calculate federal subsidies and inform applicants what they qualify for in November, by which time the online calculator might be working.

In Colorado, until at least November, customers will have to call phone service centers, where representatives will manually take them through the calculations to determine what subsidies they qualify for.

Even before the exchanges open, the finger-pointing has begun, with states blaming contractors for glitches and contractors blaming states or other contractors.

The system to calculate federal subsidies for the D.C. exchange was built by Curam Software, which IBM acquired in 2011. In tests of complex family situations, the software was getting subsidies wrong 15 percent of the time, said exchange spokesman Richard Sorian.

In a statement, IBM spokesman Mitchell Derman said the city "decided that a phased-in approach best meets the needs of its citizens." He pointed out that Curam also built the eligibility software in Maryland and Minnesota, "two states that plan to have full functionality on Oct. 1."

In other words, a company that achieved its goal on time in two states fell short in a third. The reasons, said outside experts, include relationships among contractors and the specifics of existing computer systems in a state.

In Washington, Infosys, the giant Bangalore, India,-based technology company, is the system integrator - the contractor that takes software from sub-contractors like Curam and puts it all together. The fact that Curam's calculation software is working on other exchanges suggests the glitch may not lie in its integration with the D.C. exchange's other IT.

"A software package like Curam's is put into the system by the system implementer, not the software provider," said an IT expert not involved in the D.C. exchange. A spokesman for Infosys was not able to comment on its D.C. work.

MEDICAID SYSTEMS POSE HUGE HURDLE

One of the most difficult IT jobs has been to integrate each health insurance exchange with its state Medicaid system. These legacy systems are typically decades old. In Massachusetts, for instance, the system runs on the COBOL programming language, which is to today's languages like a rotary phone is to an iPhone-5.

"These legacy systems are old and difficult to configure and re-configure," said Tom Dehner, managing principal at Health Management Associates, a healthcare consultant, in Boston and former director of Massachusetts Medicaid.

"To change how eligibility is calculated," as federal law now requires, he said, "you need to modify your Medicaid system, and that's not something you can do by buying software off the shelf."

The difficulty of interfacing with Medicaid will keep Colorado's exchange from calculating subsidies online.

To determine eligibility for federal subsidies, explained Nathan Wilkes, a member of the board of Connect for Health Colorado, the system "first goes through Medicaid determination. That means connecting to a legacy system," he said.

"Six or nine months ago we got an early warning that the way we wanted to integrate these systems wouldn't work, and then time got away from us."

Colorado's exchange tested 100,000 scenarios to see how its software calculated subsidies, and got error after error.

"It's an IT nightmare," Wilkes said.


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Bank of America fraud trial spotlights whistleblower awards

By Nate Raymond

NEW YORK, Sept 27 | Fri Sep 27, 2013 5:16pm EDT

NEW YORK, Sept 27 (Reuters) - The former executive who blew the whistle on questionable mortgage lending at Countrywide Financial Inc could reap up to $1.6 million under a law dating from the 1980s savings-and-loan crisis.

Edward O'Donnell filed a whistleblower lawsuit last year, the basis for a U.S. Justice Department case against Countrywide's parent, Bank of America Corp, that went to trial this week.

The Justice Department accuses Countrywide of fraudulently selling thousands mortgages it knew were bad to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which suffered losses when the loans defaulted.

The lawsuits say a Countrywide program called the "High Speed Swim Lane," also called "HSSL" or "Hustle," starting in 2007 eliminated quality checkpoints and compensated employees based on loan volume.

O'Donnell filed his lawsuit under the False Claims Act, which allows whistleblowers to bring cases on behalf of the government against companies that defraud the United States.

Before the trial, the judge dismissed the government's claims under the False Claims Act, which eliminated O'Donnell's ability to recoup 15 percent to 30 percent of the up to $848.2 million in penalties the Justice Department has said it would ask for.

But in court on Tuesday, a lawyer from the U.S. Attorney's Office confirmed that O'Donnell also filed a whistleblower claim directly with the Justice Department under the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act (FIRREA).

FIRREA is a savings-and-loan-era law that has become a key tool in efforts to pursue institutions over the financial crisis. Among other provisions, the 1989 law has a 10-year statute of limitations, longer than the limit of other laws used in financial fraud cases.

Less publicized is the ability of whistleblowers to bring claims asserting violations of FIRREA. Under a process set up in a separate law in 1990, the Justice Department has a year to investigate claims under FIRREA submitted by whistleblowers.

O'Donnell filed a FIRREA declaration in February 2012, the same day as he filed his lawsuit in federal court in New York. The Justice Department intervened in the case in October 2012.

In testimony Friday, O'Donnell said he filed the lawsuit because he did not believe anyone in the government was aware of Countrywide's "Hustle" program.

"Because they were not aware of it, no one was being held accountable," O'Donnell said.

'GET RICH QUICK'

But in opening statements Tuesday, a lawyer for Bank of America sought to cast O'Donnell in different light, saying he entered, "into a little bit of a get-rich-quick scheme."

"He had read about the fact maybe as a whistleblower he might collect some money by going back five or six years and saying that, you know what, this is a fraud," said Brendan Sullivan of the law firm Williams & Connolly.

With FIRREA complaints, whistleblowers such as O'Donnell are entitled to a range of awards. But they are capped at $1.6 million, much less than the multimillion-dollar prizes whistleblowers in False Claims Act cases have earned.

O'Donnell's potential recovery, for example, pales in comparison to the $31 million earned by Sherry Hunt, a former employee who filed a complaint against Citigroup Inc under the False Claims Act. The Justice Department intervened in her case and obtained a $158.3 million settlement in February 2012.

Plaintiffs lawyers say they have been giving more attention lately to whistleblower awards under FIRREA. But the small size of the potential award for FIRREA complaints makes it less attractive for potential whistleblowers to step forward and risk their careers and reputations on a case, some lawyers say.

"If it was a 15 to 30 percent bounty provision for whistleblowers bringing claims under FIRREA, you'd see more," said Shayne Stevenson, a lawyer at Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro, who has brought other False Claims Act cases against Bank of America.

O'Donnell's strategy of filing both a False Claims Act case and a FIRREA declaration might be becoming more common. Mark Labaton, a lawyer at Motley Rice, said he was considering doing the same for at least one purported whistleblower soon.

"Often it makes sense to do both because often you do not know which is the more practical statute to use to get damages," Labaton said.

A spokeswoman for the Justice Department could not immediately provide statistics on how many FIRREA whistleblower claims it had received. A lawyer for O'Donnell did not respond to request for comment.

The case is U.S. ex rel. O'Donnell v. Bank of America Corp et al, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, No. 12-01422.


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UPDATE 1-Shares of Santander Brasil jump on $2.7 bln dividend plan

(Updates with share performance, analyst comments in paragraphs 1-5)

By Guillermo Parra-Bernal

SAO PAULO, Sept 27 (Reuters) - Banco Santander Brasil SA , seeking to jumpstart its flagging return on equity, will modify its capital structure by paying shareholders a one-off dividend of 6 billion reais ($2.7 billion) and issuing foreign currency-denominated debt.

The plan will allow the Brazilian subsidiary of Spain's Banco Santander SA to tap a cheaper source of capital. The dividend payout will be followed by a sale of Tier I and II debt in the same amount that the parent company could subscribe to in its entirety.

Units of the São Paulo-based bank, a blend of common and preferred shares, jumped as much as 10 percent on the news. Friday's gain helped pare back Santander Brasil's year-to-date decline to 1.3 percent.

While the one-off dividend payout should improve Santander Brasil's return on equity readings, analysts were concerned the move could have an impact on earnings per unit. Santander Brasil's return on equity, a gauge of profitability that measures how well banks use shareholders' money, is the lowest among Brazil's largest listed lenders, mainly because the bank has lagged behind rivals in terms of lending growth, margin expansion and default controls.

"Without any additional change to underlying operations, the final impact on earnings per share and return on assets is negative, which could hurt prospects for the shares after the extraordinary dividend is paid out," Goldman Sachs Group analysts led by Carlos Macedo wrote in a client note.

Once among the world's most profitable companies, Brazilian lenders have struggled in recent years with a flagging economy, a decline in interest rates and the impact of competition between private-sector and state-run lenders that led to steep margin compression.

Changes in the bank's capital structure would leave Santander Brasil's regulatory capital ratio unchanged at 21.5 percent, although its Tier 1 ratio may fall by a full percentage point to 19.3 percent. Tier 1 capital consists primarily of common stock and retained earnings.

Santander Brasil by law has a capital structure independent of parent Santander, limiting the means by which it can return funds. Analysts have said the parent, Europe's largest lender, may need capital to offset losses incurred in recession-hit Spain.

"The goal of this is to augment the efficiency of the bank's capital structure and put it in line with the necessities and the realities of the market," the bank said in a securities filing late Thursday.

Santander Brasil has for years held capital in excess of central bank requirements. The plan also includes a reverse split of its common and preferred shares, with no impact to unit value. (Reporting by Guillermo Parra-Bernal; Writing by Reese Ewing; Editing by Christopher Cushing, David Holmes and Diane Craft)


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Wednesday, October 9, 2013

CORRECTED-Vietnam Air to buy General Electric engines for 787s

(Corrects to show order is for engines, not aircraft, in headline and text)

NEW YORK, Sept 27 (Reuters) - Vietnam Airlines has agreed to order General Electric engines to power its Boeing Co 787 Dreamliners, according to Vietnamese government officials.

The number of engines in the order couldn't be learned. The order is due to be formally announced next month in Brunei, Vu Huy Hoang, Minister of Industry and Trade for Vietnam, told Reuters. (Reporting by Daniel Bases and Alwyn Scott; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick)


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Palantir Technologies raises $196.5 million

SAN FRANCISCO, Sept 27 | Fri Sep 27, 2013 7:25pm EDT

SAN FRANCISCO, Sept 27 (Reuters) - Data-analytics company Palantir Technologies has raised $196.5 million, the company disclosed Friday in a regulatory filing.

The Palo Alto-based company, founded by former PayPal executives, builds analytics software for the armed forces, intelligence agencies, and financial-services companies.

The cash will be used for growth capital, a spokeswoman said.

Since its founding in 2004, it has raised almost $500 million. Peter Thiel, a co-founder of both PayPal and Palantir, is an investor, as are fellow PayPal alumni Keith Rabois, Jeremy Stoppelman, and Ben Ling. The declined to comment on the investors in this latest round.


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UPDATE 2-UK's Cameron speeds up launch of controversial housing plan

By William Schomberg and Estelle Shirbon

LONDON, Sept 28 (Reuters) - Britain's prime minister launched a critical week for his party's run-up to the 2015 elections by unexpectedly bringing forward the launch of a mortgage guarantee programme that critics say risks stoking a housing bubble.

Conservative leader David Cameron said on Saturday that the plan would be up and running next week, three months earlier than previously planned.

The "Help to Buy" plan is aimed at people who have been frozen out of the property market by the soaring size of deposits required to get a mortgage.

"Young people who've got a decent job and have got decent earnings - they cannot buy a house or a flat, because they have to have a 30,000-pound ($48,400), 40,000-pound or 50,000-pound deposit," Cameron said in a statement.

"Now, if you haven't got rich parents, you can't get that sort of money. So we're going to launch the Help To Buy Scheme - it's not coming in next year, it's coming in next week, because I'm passionate about helping people who want to own their own flat or home."

The initiative involves the government providing 12 billion pounds in guarantees to encourage lenders to provide mortgages of up to 95 percent of the value of properties being bought.

It had been due to launch in January and key details such as the fees banks will pay to participate have yet to be announced.

Cameron's announcement comes on the eve of the start of the Conservative Party's annual conference in Manchester. Such occasions are used by British political parties to make eye-catching announcements and this year offer the chance for them to set out their programmes before a general election due in 2015.

Earlier this month, opposition leader Ed Miliband said a government run by his centre-left Labour Party would freeze energy bills for 20 months, a move aimed at winning over British voters, many of whom have seen their living standards fall during the slow economic recovery from the financial crisis.

Signs that Britain's economy is on the mend had boosted the Conservatives' standing among voters, but Labour's support has risen in opinion polls since the announcement by Miliband. A YouGov poll for the Sunday Times puts Labour at 42 percent, with the Conservatives at 31 percent. Cameron's coalition partners, the Liberal Democrats, languish at 9 percent.

CONCERNS IN THE COALITION

Seeking to give a boost to homeownership carries risks for the government. Since the mortgage guarantee component of Help to Buy was announced in March, house prices have picked up, raising questions about whether it is still needed.

Britain's business minister, Vince Cable, a Liberal Democrat, has expressed his concerns about the programme.

House prices rose at their fastest pace in more than three years in September, one set of housing data showed on Friday. In London, prices have jumped by nearly 10 percent over the past 12 months, although other regions have seen barely any increase

In a nod to the concerns about a new boom, Britain's finance minister, George Osborne, last week asked the Bank of England to keep a closer eye on the impact of Help to Buy.

Both Osborne and Bank of England Governor Mark Carney have pointed to activity in the housing market that is well below its pre-crisis peak as a sign that there is no new housing boom.

Ed Balls, Labour's would-be finance minister, responded to Cameron's announcement on Saturday by saying the government should bring forward investment to build more affordable homes, denouncing what he said was the lowest rate of house-building since the 1920s.

"Unless David Cameron acts now to build more affordable homes, as Labour has urged, then soaring prices risk making it even harder for first time buyers to get on the housing ladder, Balls said in a statement.


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UPDATE 2-U.S. Treasury official named lead on Detroit bankruptcy

By Joseph Lichterman

DETROIT, Sept 27 (Reuters) - The executive director of President Barack Obama's Council on Jobs and Competitiveness was named on Friday to manage more than $300 million in federal, state and private aid packages given to Detroit, which has filed for bankruptcy.

Gene Sperling, director of the president's National Economic Council, announced the appointment of Don Graves, who is also a deputy assistant secretary at Treasury, during a press conference with Obama administration, state and city officials in Detroit.

The aid package is a far cry from the $80 billion in financing extended to the U.S. auto industry during the 2008-2009 financial crisis that saved General Motors Co and Chrysler Group LLC from collapse.

But the White House has already ruled out a similar bailout for the city of 700,000, a reflection of both a more constrained federal budget and increased infighting in Washington.

"It's no secret that things have never been tighter in Washington," Sperling said, making note of gridlock in Congress and the potential shutdown of the government next week.

Detroit became the largest U.S. city ever to file for bankruptcy a little more than two months ago and reported $18.5 billion in debt. The city, led by Emergency Manager Kevyn Orr, has been unable to provide many basic services to residents.

A large portion of the more than $300 million in aid, which comes from federal, state and private sources, was previously earmarked for Detroit, but delivery of the funds was slowed by red tape and other issues.

"Put the bankruptcy aside, we're talking about reinvestment and revitalization for the city and getting at some long standing issues that everyone has said needs to be gotten at for the better part of at least a decade," Orr told reporters after the meeting.

Orr said the city also plans to revamp the way it manages its federal grants and has hired consultants to improve the process. The White House's chief technology officer and a team is to be sent to Detroit to improve Detroit's outdated IT systems.

Sperling and cabinet officials discussed the proposals in a closed-door meeting at Wayne State University with Orr, Michigan's Republican Governor Rick Snyder, the city's mayor, Dave Bing, and members of the state's congressional delegation.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency pledged to expedite $25 million that will allow the city to hire 150 new firefighters and purchase equipment to prevent and detect arson.

The U.S. Department of Transportation also pledged nearly $140 million to assist the city's transportation system.


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UPDATE 2-U.S. FHA to tap $1.7 billion in taxpayer funds

* FHA needs cash to maintain required capital cushion

* Shortfall stems from loans backed from 2007 to 2009

* Republicans: FHA was irresponsible in propping up market

* White House predicted $943 million draw in April

* Obama administration officials see finances improving

By Margaret Chadbourn

WASHINGTON, Sept 27 (Reuters) - The U.S. Federal Housing Administration said on Friday it will draw $1.7 billion in cash from the U.S. Treasury to help cover losses from troubled loans, marking the first time in its 79-year history that it has needed aid.

The agency, which offers mortgage lenders guarantees against homeowner defaults, told Congress it does not have enough cash to cover projected losses on the loans it backs. It said it needs the subsidy to shore up its insurance fund to maintain a required capital cushion.

White House officials projected in April that the FHA would face a shortfall of $943 million in the fiscal year that ends on Monday, but rising mortgage rates cut its loan volume and curbed a hoped-for increase in revenues from higher loan premiums.

FHA Commissioner Carol Galante said her agency was required to draw money based on loan performance assumptions that were locked down in December, but she said those assumptions did not capture improvements that would have likely canceled out a need for aid.

"In the next few months, we expect updated data and economic forecasts to reflect what we already know to be true - the health of the (FHA insurance) fund has improved significantly," she told lawmakers in a letter.

The cash infusion marks what could be considered a book end to the 2007-2009 financial crisis, which started with the U.S. subprime mortgage crisis.

Most of the damage to the FHA was caused by loans that were made during those years as the real estate market cratered and it expanded its book of business to support the mortgage market. Officials said those loans are projected to cost the agency $70 billion.

Loans originated in the past few years have performed much better. The number of loans seriously delinquent at the end of July was 15 percent below the level of a year earlier and at the lowest point in almost three years.

In addition, the amount of money the FHA is recovering on foreclosed properties is up sharply. "It is estimated that the improvement in recovery rates alone is worth more than $5 billion," Galante said.

POLITICAL TENSIONS

While the FHA had been expected to draw from the Treasury, the size of the cash infusion, which Republicans have dubbed a bailout, will heighten the political tension over the government's pervasive role in the mortgage market.

Taxpayers have already propped up mortgage finance giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to the tune of $187.5 billion, although those government-controlled companies are now profitable and will have returned $146 billion in dividends to the Treasury by the end of the month.

Including Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, federal housing agencies support about nine in 10 new U.S. mortgages.

Idaho Republican Senator Mike Crapo said the announcement reinforced the need for Congress to revamp the housing finance system to reduce the government's footprint.

"Taxpayer liability could come to fruition if we do not act on serious reform now," he said.

$30 BILLION ON HAND

The FHA said it has more than $30 billion in cash and investments on hand to pay potential claims, but that it does not have enough to meet a legally required 2 percent capital ratio, which is a measure of its ability to withstand losses.

The FHA has not met its capital ratio since 2009, but the ratio only sank below zero this budget year.

"Although this one-time transfer of funds from the Treasury is legally necessary, it's important to note that FHA is far from bankrupt," said Representative Maxine Waters, a California Democratic who supports programs that help low-income borrowers.

Since the cash draw from Treasury will not be disbursed by the FHA, it will not impact how quickly the government runs out of money to pay its bills under the nation's $16.7 trillion debt ceiling. In addition, the Treasury has the authority to take the $1.7 billion back once the FHA rebuilds its reserves.

After an independent audit in November found that its insurance fund could face losses as high as $16.3 billion, the FHA raised the amount it charges borrowers to insure mortgages against default and tightened underwriting. The changes, coupled with rising home prices, helped shrink the projected gap.

The FHA has said its cash needs were mainly driven by losses from reverse mortgages, which allow homeowners age 62 or older to withdraw equity and repay it only when their homes are sold. The agency, which is expected to spend $2.8 billion this year insuring reverse mortgages, backs 90 percent of such loans.

It has already announced new guidelines for potential reverse mortgage borrowers, including lower limits on the amount seniors can withdraw, higher mortgage insurance fees and tougher vetting of applicants. Those changes, however, do not go into effect until Tuesday.

Republicans have argued the FHA needs to take more aggressive action to protect taxpayers, including reducing maximum loan limits and raising minimum down payments.

The Obama administration contends some of those steps would undermine the agency's mission to provide credit to first-time home buyers and needy communities.

The FHA has played a critical role supporting the housing market by insuring mortgages for borrowers who make down payments of as little as 3.5 percent. The FHA insures about $1.1 trillion in mortgages and now backs about one third of all new loans used to purchase homes, up from about 5 percent in 2006.


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U.S. SEC settles fraud case against former Vitesse executives

NEW YORK, Sept 27 | Fri Sep 27, 2013 6:15pm EDT

NEW YORK, Sept 27 (Reuters) - The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission said on Friday it reached a settlement with two former Vitesse Semiconductor Corp executives accused of inflating company earnings and backdating stock option grants.

The settlements with former Chief Executive Louis Tomasetta and former Executive Vice President Eugene Hovanec followed two mistrials in a related criminal case on similar claims. The two men pleaded guilty to a lesser charge in August.

Under the SEC settlements announced on Friday, Tomasetta will pay $100,000 and Hovanec will pay $50,000 in civil penalties. Both men agreed to be barred from serving as an officer or director of any public company for 10 years.

They have also agreed to orders requiring them to disgorge nearly $2.91 million, although those sums are being deemed by the SEC as satisfied by amounts they previously paid to resolve a separate class action.

Tomasetta and Hovanec neither admitted nor denied the allegations in settling with the SEC. The settlements are subject to the approval of U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff in Manhattan.

The accord would resolve one of the last remaining cases with roots in a scandal beginning in 2005 over allegations that companies and their executives manipulated stock option dates. A number of civil and criminal cases were launched in the United States as a result.

The SEC in 2010 accused Tomasetta and Hovanec and two other former Vitesse employees of scheming from 2001 to 2006 to inflate Vitesse's revenues.

The SEC also accused Tomasetta and Hovanec of backdating stock option grants from 1995 to 2006 and later attempting a cover-up by fabricating the meeting minutes of a Vitesse board committee.

Illegal backdating occurs when companies tie stock options to an earlier date when share prices are low, but do not properly account for it.

Dan Marmalefsky, a lawyer for Tomasetta, declined to comment, as did Gary Lincenberg, a lawyer for Hovanec.

The SEC case had been on hold while prosecutors in New York sought since 2010 to obtain the conviction of the two men on a broad set of criminal charges including securities fraud and making false statements to auditors.

But after jurors failed to reach a verdict in April 2012, a judge dismissed much of the case. Prosecutors took Tomasetta and Hovanec to trial again on a single count each of conspiracy to commit securities fraud, but jurors again deadlocked in February.

Plea negotiations followed and Tomasetta and Hovanec pleaded guilty in August to an entirely different charge, admitting to altering company records to impede a contemplated investigation by the SEC.

In 2010, Vitesse agreed to pay $3 million to settle with the SEC.

The SEC said on Friday it decided not to impose civil penalties on two other former Vitesse executives, Yatin Mody, a former chief financial officer, and Nicole Kaplan, a former director of accounting.

The SEC cited their cooperation in the investigation. Both pleaded guilty to securities fraud and other charges in 2010.

The case is Securities and Exchange Commission v. Vitesse Semiconductor Corporation, et al, U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, 10-9239.


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Tuesday, October 8, 2013

UPDATE 2-Vietnam Air to buy General Electric engines for 787s

NEW YORK, Sept 27 (Reuters) - Vietnam Airlines has agreed to order General Electric engines to power its Boeing Co 787 Dreamliners, according to Vietnamese government officials.

The number of engines in the order could not be learned. The order is due to be formally announced next month in Brunei, Vu Huy Hoang, Minister of Industry and Trade for Vietnam, told Reuters.

For the 787 deal, "President Obama wants to witness the signing ceremony in Brunei," Hoang said.

General Electric declined to comment. Boeing said that Vietnam Airlines has existing orders for eight 787s and orders for another 11 787s through leasing companies.

The Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung, speaking through a translator, said he wanted to formally announce the details of the engine deal on Friday, but the White House had asked for the delay until October.

Separately, Dung said Vietnamese budget airline VietJet is in talks to buy Boeing 737 airplanes and that the contract should be signed soon.

"The initial agreement, which is of Boeing 737 between VietJet and Boeing, is also another contract to be signed shortly," Dung said.

The officials spoke at a Vietnam investment forum in New York sponsored by the International Economic Alliance and the Asia Society.

The prime minister's comments highlighted questions around Vietnam's expansion into regional aviation markets, coming just days after the country's first privately owned airline placed a $9 billion Airbus order. Following the comments about a possible Boeing purchase by VietJet, the airline itself dampened the prospect of an imminent order with Boeing.

VietJet Managing Director Luu Duc Khanh said after signing the $9 billion Airbus order in Paris on Wednesday that the airline had so far opted to use a single aircraft type. A spokeswoman for the airline reaffirmed the comments on Friday.

Most low-cost carriers prefer to stick to one type of aircraft to contain the cost of training and spare parts, but long delivery lead times in the wake of a boom in aircraft orders has forced some to split their orders.

According to Khanh, Vietnam has 0.7 passenger aircraft for every 1 million people in its population, compared with 7 in Malaysia and 15 in Australia.

Vietnam Airlines, the traditional national flag carrier, has a mixed fleet of Airbus and Boeing jets and has ordered both the Boeing 787 and its future competitor, the Airbus A350.

It has also expressed interest in the Airbus A380 superjumbo.


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SAILING-For America's Cup, return to San Francisco no sure thing

By Ronnie Cohen

SAN FRANCISCO, Sept 27 | Fri Sep 27, 2013 2:48pm EDT

SAN FRANCISCO, Sept 27 (Reuters) - After a spectacular America's Cup regatta capped by home-team Oracle's thrilling comeback victory, there should be little question about the event returning to San Francisco.

Yet the Cup has many critics in this famously liberal city, and they had plenty to say as controversies dogged the event in the long run-up to the exciting final series. It's far from certain that Oracle boss Larry Ellison - who, as the Cup holder, has the right to choose the venue - will be able to reach an agreement with the city for the next Cup, which is likely to take place four years from now.

Some local officials and political activists have objected from the beginning to city support for what critics deride as a rich man's yacht race. While most of the direct costs were born by the America's Cup Event Authority or recouped as part of complicated deals on infrastructure improvements, the city agreed to spend $20 million on policing, facilities and other services. City officials planned to raise the money from private donors but have so far come up about $4 million short.

"We would love to come back to San Francisco," Ellison said at a news conference Wednesday.

"San Francisco's a great place. This has been a spectacular regatta. But we're going to sit down and talk with the officials in San Francisco and see if it's going to be possible to come back."

For the city, the economic benefits in the form of increased tourism, temporary jobs and the payoff from the images of San Francisco that formed a perfect backdrop for TV coverage are hard to calculate and have not yet been tallied.

Still, the Cup was not the boon to local businesses that officials had predicted. With only three challenger teams rather than the 12 to 15 once anticipated, the summer-long preliminary matches were interesting mainly for the wrong reasons - including a fatal accident and a cheating scandal - and crowds were far smaller than expected. Until the dramatic finale, local merchants complained that they hadn't seen much additional business.

Even after the finals began on Sept. 7, San Francisco Supervisor John Avalos quipped that there were "more California seals than people" taking in the action along the waterfront.

San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee and California Lieutenant Governor Gavin Newsom, who was instrumental in negotiating the Cup deal when he was mayor, rejected the idea that the event had not been worth it for the city.

Newsom said the Cup's economic benefits would come in "well north" of the $480 million in economic activity generated by the most recent Super Bowl. He said it would be substantially more the next time around.

"All that heartache, all the lessons learned, all that's banked now," Newsom told Reuters. "We're uniquely positioned to take it to a whole 'nother level. Then the economic benefits are extraordinary."

If organizers change the boat design rules to lower entry costs and attract more challengers, as they have pledged to do, all agree that the economic benefits for the host city would be greater.

'VERY, VERY COMPLEX'

Yet plenty of political and practical challenges remain. A new cruise ship terminal built by the city was the primary onshore venue for the event, housing a media center for some 550 journalists along with shops, restaurants, a concert arena and docking areas for officials boats and visiting mega-yachts.

Whether the city could make other arrangements for cruise ships so Ellison could use the terminal during a subsequent regatta is expected to be subject to negotiations. Another pair of piers that housed two of the challenger teams is set to become the home of a new arena for the NBA's Golden State Warriors basketball team - a franchise that Ellison, ironically, tried and failed to buy three years ago.

Newsom said finding locations wouldn't be a problem. "This is a huge waterfront," he said. "There'll be plenty of options if they choose to stay."

Ellison alluded Wednesday to lessons he had learned from the often-contentious 2010 negotiations with the city, which ended with one major part of an initial agreement - a deal in which Ellison would have renovated crumbling piers in exchange for development rights - being scrapped. Many local political leaders feared the city was giving too much away.

Ellison said he and the city had unrealistic expectations when they signed "very, very complex development deals," with neither anticipating how difficult it would be to obtain federal and state development permits along the waterfront, or how costly it would be to repair city piers.

"There are so many different government agencies having to approve the development of the piers, and getting all of that done in a very short period of time was probably an overly ambitious ask on our part and very difficult for the government of San Francisco to actually deliver," he said.

Ellison insisted that he did not take the criticism directed his way by Cup opponents personally. Yet the city has long had a love-hate relationship with its billionaires, and local crowds appeared to be cheering for New Zealand until Oracle mounted its epic comeback from an 8-1 deficit to keep the trophy.

"My hope is that Larry Ellison will give the good people of San Diego the opportunity to subsidize his race the next time," quipped Aaron Peskin, a former supervisor and an influential Democratic power broker - though he conceded that he enjoyed the races.

Ellison certainly has plenty of choices. He joked at the press conference about racing around Lanai, the Hawaiian island that he purchased almost in its entirety last year. San Diego has hosted the Cup in the past, and for decades the races were run in Newport, Rhode Island, which unsuccessfully offered Ellison a sweet deal for this year's Cup. (Editing by Jonathan Weber and Douglas Royalty)


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US CFTC warns against some derivatives documents, after investors balk

By Karen Brettell

NEW YORK, Sept 27 | Fri Sep 27, 2013 4:33pm EDT

NEW YORK, Sept 27 (Reuters) - The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission has warned against the use of controversial documents that have been at the center of disputes in the $300 trillion derivatives market in recent weeks, after some fund managers accused big banks of trying to use the proposed agreements to maintain their market control.

The derivatives market is nearing a deadline next week that will kick-start a trading regime in which the majority of the market is expected to gradually shift to new electronic trading platforms which are meant to help promote price transparency and draw in new market entrants.

The CFTC, the main U.S. derivatives regulator, has been rushing through approvals for companies planning to offer trading platforms, called swap execution facilities (SEFs), that will go live Wednesday, as part of an overhaul of Wall Street after the financial crisis.

But the process has been marred by disputes over some terms regarding trading.

Some of the trading platforms have asked investors to sign documents that specify what happens to trades in the event they are not accepted into clearinghouses, known as "breakage agreements," said four people familiar with the situation. Other platforms have been pressured by banks to require the documents, but have refused, the people said.

Fund managers balked at signing the agreements, saying they were unnecessary and were meant to benefit the largest banks that already dominate trading. The fund managers said they would struggle to finalize paperwork with trading partners beyond the largest banks that already offer the most liquidity.

"If there (are) 1,000 participants that come into this market, you need 1,000 participants to have arrangements with 1,000 participants, which would mean a million agreements," which would benefit the incumbent banks, CFTC Chairman Gary Gensler told reporters at a conference in Washington on Friday.

Some banks have also tried to require that the documents be enforced on order-book platforms, where trades are meant to be anonymous, said one person familiar with the requests.

The CFTC, in a letter sent on Thursday to trading platforms, clearing organizations, and banks that act as clearing agents for the trades, said that the use of the documents would go against rules that require SEFs to allow investors impartial access to trading.

A rejection of a trade by a clearinghouse is also rare because banks and trading platforms use credit checks before trades to ensure that they will be accepted to clearing, and because trades are accepted by clearinghouses within seconds, the CFTC said in the letter.

Clearinghouses stand between trading partners and guarantee trades. By removing the credit risks associated with trade counterparties, central clearing is the first step to opening the market to new competition. Open trading platforms that hook into clearing will now enable any investor to trade with any other, and to bypass the banks as intermediaries.

The dispute was the latest in a series of arguments between market participants as the CFTC implements rules mandated by the 2010 Dodd-Frank legislation to reduce the risks of the markets. Though rare, it's not the first time that the CFTC has intervened on a documentation issue.

The regulator last year banned the use of triparty documentation for clearing that was being pushed by banks through the International Swaps and Derivatives Association and futures trade group the Futures Industry Association, after critics alleged that the documents would have a coercive effect of restricting investors to trading only with the largest banks.


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U.S. watchdog allows delay to smooth transition to swaps trading

By Douwe Miedema

WASHINGTON, Sept 28 | Sat Sep 28, 2013 2:58pm EDT

WASHINGTON, Sept 28 (Reuters) - The U.S. derivatives regulator late on Friday gave a new and untested type of trading platform a bit more time to comply with some of its rules, to smooth the transition to regulated trading next week.

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) has been rushing through permits for the platforms - called Swap Execution Facilities - that must open their doors for customers on Wednesday.

The agency wanted to be ahead of a possible U.S. government shutdown next week, but has refused to give in to industry demands to delay the Oct. 2 deadline by which the newly created SEFs have to comply with its rules.

Swaps are complex financial contracts that can be used to offset financial risk, but are predominantly a favorite speculation tool for hedge funds, and were widely blamed for exacerbating the 2007-09 global financial crisis.

The new platforms are one measure to regulate the $630 trillion market - dominated by investment banks such as JP Morgan Chase & Co, Bank of America and Citigroup - to make it more transparent and less risky.

Late on Friday, the CFTC issued three letters delaying some of the strict new rules for the SEFs, which are run by large derivative brokers such as ICAP and GFI but also by Bloomberg LP and Thomson Reuters.

They can now delay trade reporting by one month for foreign exchange swaps, and by two months for equity and other commodity swaps, one of the letters said.

CFTC Chairman Gary Gensler said on Friday that there would be no delay for data reporting for fixed income and credit swaps, the bulk of the market.

The companies can also delay certain documentation and technological connectivity requirements, collectively known as onboarding, by up to a month.

A spokesman for Gensler said the onboarding delay would be for two weeks, but Commissioner Bart Chilton pushed for a two-month delay and the period was then extended at the last minute.

The delay in onboarding will be welcomed by SEF clients such as large asset managers who had complained there wasn't enough time to go through all the rule-books and make an informed choice who they wanted to do business with.

The third letter granted swap counterparties the same reporting delay as the SEFs, because the reporting by the former can depend on that by the latter.

The SEF rules ban the practice of privately negotiating swap deals - something that was largely done over the phone and was therefore hard to control.

Deals must now be entered into systems that are more like stock exchanges, though negotiating over the phone will still be allowed as long as buyers and sellers can prove that they have spoken to more than one counterparty. (Editing by Christopher Wilson)


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UPDATE 2-Petrobras IBV Brazil offshore oil find 'beautiful' -CEO

* Reuters reported on Thursday that area holds more than 1 bln barrels

* Petrobras declines to give estimate for discovery size

* CEO says Sergipe offshore to produce oil in 2018

By Jeb Blount

RIO DE JANEIRO, Sept 27 (Reuters) - Brazil's state-led oil company, Petroleo Brasileiro SA, and its Indian partners have made a "beautiful" oil discovery off Brazil's northeast coast and it will produce a minimum 100,000 barrels of petroleum a day starting in 2018, the company's chief executive officer said on Friday.

Maria das Graças Foster, the chief executive, declined to say how big the discovery is but said it was an important new oil "province" for Brazil and that its large potential reserves would create a rush of jobs and activity to the area that will need to be managed carefully.

On Thursday, Reuters exclusively reported that the discovery, centered on the SEAL-11 offshore exploration block, likely holds more than 1 billion barrels of oil and that the region will soon become Brazil's biggest new oil frontier.

The SEAL-11 block is 60 percent-owned by Petrobras and 40 percent-owned by IBV Brasil, a 50-50 joint venture between India's Bharat Petroleum Corp (BPCL) and Videocon Industries Ltd.

"In 2008 we decided to do a very extensive investigation of the area, and the results we have got have been very good," Foster told reporters at company headquarters in Rio de Janeiro. "This is a beautiful discovery, beautiful discoveries."

In addition to light, high-quality crude oil, the region has important quantities of gas, she added.

Two prospects in the area, known as Farfan and Muriu, are expected to be developed as a single or integrated unit, with at least one floating production, storage and offloading ship (FPSO) producing oil and gas from the area in 2018, Foster said.

Foster said that was the minimum outlook for the area based on spending in the company's $237 billion 2013-2017 investment plan drawn up before the latest drilling and tests in the area.

If confirmed, the new find could make the region the country's biggest new oil frontier since the government unveiled the massive subsalt discoveries off the coast of Rio de Janeiro and Sao Paulo states in 2007.

REFINERY PLANS

Foster also said that Petrobras is totally reforming its plans to build two low-sulfur diesel refineries in Brazil's northeast. The so-called premium refineries planned for the states of Maranhao and Ceara were showing signs they would not be profitable.

The Maranhao refinery is expected to cost about $20 billion to build.

Petrobras, however, has reworked the projects with the help of U.S. based consultants, Foster said, and those projects are now looking stronger. The company hopes to start putting the refineries out to tender as early as March, she said.

The company is also in talks with a Chinese company to take a stake in the Maranhao project, Foster said. The project could lead to the Chinese partner taking a majority stake, she added.


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JPMorgan nears multibillion-dollar mortgage settlement- NY Post

CHICAGO, Sept 28 | Sat Sep 28, 2013 1:08pm EDT

CHICAGO, Sept 28 (Reuters) - JP Morgan Chase & Co could reach a multibillion-dollar deal as early as Tuesday, putting an end to the bank's woes from mortgage securities related investigations, the New York Post reported on Saturday.

The bank and government officials met earlier this week to try to negotiate a settlement in the $11 billion range to resolve many of the probes into how it sold mortgage bonds before the financial crisis, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters.

Negotiations have involved the possibility of JP Morgan paying up to $7 billion in cash and $4 billion in consumer relief - a large sum, but representing little more than half the bank's 2012 profit of $21 billion.

JP Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon met with U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder on Thursday. While it is unusual for a company CEO to meet with the head of the U.S. Justice Department, the bank is seeking to tamp down its legal difficulties.

The settlement, if it goes ahead, would likely include claims from the regulator of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which has sought some $6 billion from the bank over risky mortgage securities sold to the government-sponsored entities, according to two people familiar with the matter, Reuters reported.

JPMorgan was saddled with about 70 percent of the debt in nonperforming home loans during the financial crisis.


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Monday, October 7, 2013

Canada burger chain A&W taps demand for hormone-free beef

By Rod Nickel

WINNIPEG, Manitoba, Sept 27 | Fri Sep 27, 2013 3:48pm EDT

WINNIPEG, Manitoba, Sept 27 (Reuters) - Privately owned Canadian hamburger chain A&W will buy only beef from cattle raised without added growth hormones or steroids, a move that adds costs but taps into growing consumer interest in how food is prepared.

Vancouver, British Columbia-based A&W Food Services of Canada, known for its Teen Burger, dancing bear mascot and root beer, launched its "Better Beef" promotional campaign this week.

"What we've observed from our customers is there is a lot more interest in the food they're eating, where it comes from," A&W chief marketing officer Susan Senecal said in an interview on Friday.

"We've discovered that things like no hormones, no steroids are very, very important to our customers, remarkably so."

Privately held A&W, which has annual sales of about C$850 million ($825 million), said it is the only national burger restaurant in Canada to source only hormone-free beef. Its burger rivals include McDonalds Corp, Burger King Worldwide Inc and The Wendy's Co.

A&W calls itself Canada's second biggest burger chain with 791 outlets. It is separate from the U.S. restaurants that operate under the same name and it licenses the A&W trademarks from A&W Revenue Royalties Income Fund.

A&W's campaign comes as the way food is produced becomes an increasingly prominent issue for restaurants, grocers and consumers. Denver-based burrito chain Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc is one of the most well-known restaurant companies that uses organic ingredients and antibiotic-free meat when possible.

"You see more and more companies trying to go that route," said Steve West, a restaurant industry analyst at ITG, based in St. Louis. "We've seen hamburger chains in the past like Hardee's and Jack In The Box realizing, 'we can't compete with McDonald's and Burger King on this low-quality, cheap food - we've got to take it up a notch.'"

Growth promotants help ranchers and feedlots raise more beef using less feed.

The company has worked on its plan for 18 months, lining up suppliers in Canada, the United States and Australia. Senecal said A&W's beef costs will climb, but it has no plans to raise burger prices. "I think we'll get lots more customers and sell lots more burgers," she said.

But West said A&W will have to raise prices at some point to reflect its higher costs unless it's willing to absorb a slimmer margin, which is unlikely.

Canada is the world's 11th biggest beef producer, according to U.S. Department of Agriculture data.

The Canadian Cattlemen's Association says all Canadian beef is "safe, wholesome and nutritious." In a statement, it said Canadian ranchers have used growth promotants for more than four decades, and the products are approved by the country's health department.

"Science shows that the amount of hormone in a serving of meat from a treated animal is virtually indistinguishable from the amount of hormone in an untreated animal," said CCA spokeswoman Gina Teel.

The decision is aimed to satisfy a consumer preference, and A&W makes no claims that beef without added hormones or steroids is more healthy or nutritious, Senecal said.

Meat processors have also been examining how cattle are raised.

Tyson Foods Inc, the largest U.S. meat processor, and Cargill Inc said in August that they would halt purchases of cattle fed the growth enhancer Zilmax. Tyson said it was worried about cases of cattle with difficulty walking.


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Ind. school grade review to be 'fair, transparent'

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — The co-chairs of a panel working on a new school grading formula for Indiana promised Thursday that their work will be "fair and transparent."

Democratic School Superintendent Glenda Ritz and Southwest Allen County School Superintendent Steven Yager said they plan to meet weekly in order to recommend a new scoring system to the State Board of Education ahead of the Nov. 1 deadline. The two are leading a 17-member group assessing...

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Conn. school superintendent fighting to keep job

HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — Paul Vallas was hailed by his supporters as a proven reformer who would turn around Bridgeport schools when he took over the superintendent's job in January 2012, after having led troubled, big city school districts in Chicago, Philadelphia and New Orleans.

Less than two years later, however, he's fighting to keep his job in battles being waged on two fronts: a lawsuit challenging his credentials that has reached the state Supreme Court and a city Board of Education election in November that could change the majority from pro-Vallas to anti-Vallas and lead to a vote on his ouster.

The Supreme Court will hear arguments Monday on whether Vallas, who is not certified to be a school superintendent in Connecticut, properly fulfilled requirements in state law that allow a certification waiver. He is appealing a ruling in July by Bridgeport Superior Court Judge Barbara Bellis, who said Vallas didn't meet the waiver condition because the course he took on...

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Debate surrounds review of Ga. education standards

ATLANTA (AP) — As Georgia education officials prepare to set guidelines for a review of national academic standards, some worry that calls for change are being driven by...

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Ky. leads in implementing Common Core curriculum

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Education officials in Kentucky say the state has become a leader in instituting the new Common Core standards.

Kentucky became the first state to implement the more rigorous curriculum in math and reading lessons two years ago. The Courier-Journal (http://cjky.it/1gb10Xm) reports that teachers in the state have embraced the changes and are offering encouragement to educators in other states who have hesitated in adopting them.

"Our teachers have been strong leaders," Kentucky Education Commissioner Terry Holliday said. "They have worked collaboratively to share resources, assessment...

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Analysis: Racial gap persists on Ohio state tests

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — The gap between black and white students' scores on Ohio's standardized exams persists even when economic advantages are considered, according to a data analysis by The Columbus Dispatch.

The scores of black students from affluent families and highly rated schools still lag far behind those of their white peers, the review published Sunday (http://bit.ly/18LGMVk ) found.

The newspaper analyzed data from more than two dozen state tests given last year to kindergarten through high school students. It found the average passage rate was 64 percent among black students, and 87...

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Sunday, October 6, 2013

'Reading Rooster' offers vibrant video book ideas

COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — During her 50 years of literacy work in South Carolina, Helen Fellers has been a storyteller, bookmobile driver and branch librarian in the effort to get children to read. Now the 79-year-old uses You Tube videos to put her vibrant-for-books persona on display with "Reading Rooster" book recommendations for children, teachers and librarians.

With a luscious Southern accent and more than a dollop of dramatic flair, Fellers declares books "scrumptious," ''delicious," or "A find for fairy tale fans."

Sometimes she dons a feathered mask, colorful coats or fringed capes to deliver her three-minute, twice-monthly book reviews, always accompanied by one or more of her beloved...

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