Monday, April 30, 2012

Reuters: Regulatory News: Mexico regulators rule on $1 bln fine against Slim's Telcel

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Mexico regulators rule on $1 bln fine against Slim's Telcel
May 1st 2012, 01:24

Mon Apr 30, 2012 9:24pm EDT

MEXICO CITY, April 30 (Reuters) - Mexico's competition watchdog said it had reached a decision on whether to uphold a fine of almost $1 billion against Telcel, the mobile phone company owned by billionaire Carlos Slim, and would reveal details of the ruling in coming days.

The federal competition commission known as Cofeco slapped Telcel, the cash cow of Slim's telecoms giant America Movil , with the record sanction in April last year after concluding that the company charged excessive prices to rivals to connect to its network.

Cofeco was tasked to decide whether to ratify, drop or modify the fine against the brand Telcel, which dominates about 70 percent of Mexico's mobile market. The sanction against Telcel has been bogged down in legal appeals and disputes.

Telcel challenged the fine and even managed to block Cofeco's President Eduardo Perez Motta from taking part in Monday's vote, after arguing he had made biased comments to the media.

Cofeco said it was notifying the affected parties of its decision. A spokesman for America Movil said the company had not yet been informed of Cofeco's decision and could not comment.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 1-Key Freddie Mac executive steps down -filing

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UPDATE 1-Key Freddie Mac executive steps down -filing
May 1st 2012, 02:05

Mon Apr 30, 2012 10:05pm EDT

April 30 (Reuters) - A top executive at Freddie Mac is leaving the mortgage buyer a year after he was appointed to head its single-family business.

The regulator for Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae responded to political pressure in March by slashing salaries for the chief executives of the two firms and ruling out bonuses for many top executives.

The companies, which guarantee half of all U.S. mortgages, have soaked up about $170 billion in taxpayer aid since they were taken over in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis.

Freddie Mac said in a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission that Anthony Renzi, a member of the company's management committee reporting directly to the Chief Executive, would leave the company on May 11.

Charles Halderman Jr, Freddie Mac's CEO, has also expressed his desire to step down from the government-controlled mortgage firm.

Revelations that Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, the two largest sources of U.S. mortgage finance, were paying out $12.79 million in bonuses for 10 executives caused an uproar on Capitol Hill last fall among Democrats and Republicans.

Before joining Freddie Mac, valued at $187.1 million, Renzi worked at GMAC Mortgage for 25 years.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: WRAPUP 1-Fed officials, hawk and dove, agree: no more easing

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WRAPUP 1-Fed officials, hawk and dove, agree: no more easing
May 1st 2012, 01:42

Mon Apr 30, 2012 9:42pm EDT

* Fisher says he doesn't see need for Fed to raise rates yet

* Williams more optimistic on economy, sees no need to ease

* Fisher says further easing like giving cookies to Congress

By Ann Saphir

LOS ANGELES, April 30 (Reuters) - Two top Federal Reserve officials - one with a dovish, employment-focused bent, and the other a self-avowed inflation hawk - on Monday both said they see no need for the U.S. central bank to ease monetary policy any further.

But the comments, from San Francisco Fed President John Williams and Dallas Fed President Richard Fisher, do not mean they believe the central bank should quickly move to raise rates, which it has kept near zero for more than three years.

The economy grew at a 2.2 percent pace last quarter, down from its 3 percent growth rate in the final three months of the year. Recent economic data, including a gauge of business activity in the U.S. Midwest, signal growth may slow further this quarter.

"I don't think we are ready to exit yet," Fisher, an inflation hawk, told Reuters at the Milken Institute Global Conference in Los Angeles.

Fisher said he would oppose the extension of Operation Twist, the Fed bond-buying program that is set to end in June, but stopped short of calling for outright monetary tightening.

"We'll have to see how the year works out," he said.

Speaking to the German financial daily Handelsblatt, San Francisco Fed's Williams suggested the Fed might need to push rates still lower if the U.S. unemployment rose substantially and growth slowed.

"But I'm today more optimistic about the economy than in January," Williams, a voter this year on the Fed's policy-setting panel, was quoted as saying.

"So far there is no need for further monetary measures," he said, pointing to an improvement in U.S consumption and available income as well as positive signs in the property market.

Fed policymakers have been at odds for months over whether continued high unemployment - which registered 8.2 percent in March - and a moderate pace of economic growth should force them to try to push rates down further in hopes of boosting the recovery.

Doves like Chicago Fed President Charles Evans have called for further action, while hawks like Richmond Fed President Jeffrey Lacker have opposed it.

Last week, the Fed held its policy line, reiterating its expectation that it will need to keep rates low through late 2014. And while Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke held the door open to further easing, he did not suggest it was imminent.

'EAT YOUR VEGETABLES'

Fisher's opposition to further easing is rooted less in a conviction that the recovery has strengthened than in his long-held view that lower rates are doing little to boost jobs and may simply be giving Congress an excuse not to tackle the difficult job of reining in deficits and the national debt.

"By providing monetary accommodation, we are saying, in essence, 'Congress, you better eat your vegetables, or we are going to serve you a big plate of monetary cookies,'" Fisher said at a panel on job creation at the Global Conference.

The Fed's program of bond purchases is pushing down the price of debt, interfering with a pricing mechanism that would otherwise force Congress to come to terms with its "fiscal misfeasance," he said.

"We have children in Congress," he said. "They need to be disciplined.

Williams is due to speak to the conference on Tuesday, along with fellow doves Chicago Fed's Evans and Atlanta Fed President Dennis Lockhart.

Philadelphia Fed President Charles Plosser, an opponent of further easing, is also scheduled to speak on Tuesday in Southern California.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: Judge denies request to block MF Global execs from insurance

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Judge denies request to block MF Global execs from insurance
May 1st 2012, 01:41

Mon Apr 30, 2012 9:41pm EDT

* Judge had allowed release of up to $30 mln insurance funds

* Customers lose bid to put order on hold pending appeal

* Policies cover liability from acts of directors, employees

* Jon Corzine ran MF Global before its October bankruptcy

By Jonathan Stempel

NEW YORK, April 30 (Reuters) - A U.S. judge refused to block former MF Global Holdings Ltd Chief Executive Jon Corzine and other company officials from tapping as much as $30 million of insurance money to defend lawsuits over the futures brokerage's collapse.

Judge Martin Glenn of the U.S. bankruptcy court in Manhattan on Monday rejected a request by three plaintiffs including Sapere Wealth Management LLC to put the funds' release on hold while they appeal his April 10 decision allowing officials to access the money.

Many onetime customers of MF Global, which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection six months ago, believe the funds should be set aside for them and not go to executives they hold responsible for the company's bankruptcy.

"Settled case law...establishes that the individual insureds cannot be denied contractually provided insurance protection when their employers are insolvent because others may have claims on the insurance policies," Glenn wrote in a brief order.

A lawyer for Sapere did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

In his April 10 decision, Glenn wrote that MF Global officials facing lawsuits would "suffer significant hardships" if they could not tap their insurance policies.

Last Monday, the U.S. Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation consolidated more than 20 lawsuits by MF Global shareholders and customers into a single case in Manhattan federal court.

MF Global filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection amid a liquidity crunch prompted by worries over its $6.3 billion bet on European sovereign debt.

About $1.6 billion of customer money remains missing, the trustee for the MF Global Inc brokerage unit has estimated. Corzine testified before the U.S. Congress in December that he did not know where the missing money is.

The cases are In re: MF Global Holdings Ltd et al, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York, No. 11-15059; and In re: MF Global Inc in the same court, No. 11-02790.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 1-IRS looking at Chesapeake's CEO well program-filing

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UPDATE 1-IRS looking at Chesapeake's CEO well program-filing
Apr 30th 2012, 23:42

Mon Apr 30, 2012 7:42pm EDT

April 30 (Reuters) - Chesapeake Energy Corp said on Monday the Internal Revenue Service was reviewing issues related to the company's perk that grants its chief executive officer a stake in thousands of wells the company drills, according to a regulatory filing.

In a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Chesapeake disclosed "the IRS is reviewing certain issues" related to its Founders Well Participation Program (FWPP) granting CEO Aubrey McClendon the right to take a 2.5 percent interest in every well the company drills.

Reuters reported on April 18 that McClendon has mortgaged his interest in those wells for at least $1.1 billion, a fact previously undisclosed to shareholders.

Since then, the program has come under the scrutiny of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and the company's board of directors said they would negotiate an early termination of the plan.

Chesapeake, based in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, said the IRS review relates to its 2008 and 2009 tax returns and the company believes "that resolution of these issues will not have a material impact on the company," the filing said.

A spokesman for the company said Chesapeake's talks with the IRS are ongoing.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 1-Fed is sugar-coating Congress's task -Fisher

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UPDATE 1-Fed is sugar-coating Congress's task -Fisher
Apr 30th 2012, 23:24

Mon Apr 30, 2012 7:24pm EDT

By Ann Saphir

LOS ANGELES, April 30 (Reuters) - The U.S. Federal Reserve's super-easy monetary policy is doing little to spur job creation and is giving Congress license to avoid tackling looming fiscal problems and the towering national debt, a top Fed official said on Monday.

"By providing monetary accommodation, we are saying, in essence, 'Congress, you better eat your vegetables, or we are going to serve you a big plate of monetary cookies,'" Richard Fisher, president of the Dallas Fed, told the Milken Institute Global Conference.

The Fed's program of bond purchases is pushing down the price of debt, interfering with a pricing mechanism that would otherwise force Congress to come to terms with its "fiscal misfeasance," he said.

"We have children in Congress," he said. "They need to be disciplined."

Unless Congress acts to reduce uncertainties around fiscal policy, the Fed's low-interest-rate policy will remain powerless to boost jobs, he said, reprising a theme he revisits often in speeches around the country.

The U.S. central bank last week kept its policy on hold, reiterating its expectation that it will need to keep rates near zero through late 2014 to support a weak recovery.

Fisher, who is not a voter this year on the Fed's policy-setting panel, has been a staunch opponent of further Fed easing and identifies as an inflation hawk.

While the Fed has been successful in keeping inflation in hand, he said, its easy money policy has not succeeded in bringing unemployment down to acceptable levels.

Unemployment registered 8.2 percent in March, well above the 5.5 percent rate that is typically seen as representing full employment in the United States.

Asked to explain why low rates have not pushed unemployment down faster, Fisher said, "My argument is because of fiscal policy."

Uncertainty over taxes and regulation are keeping businesses from hiring, Fisher added.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: UK lawmakers to give verdict on Murdochs

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UK lawmakers to give verdict on Murdochs
Apr 30th 2012, 23:10

Mon Apr 30, 2012 7:10pm EDT

* Parliamentary select committee to publish hacking report

* Ties to Murdoch threaten politicians

* Media watchdog Ofcom will examine report

By Georgina Prodhan and Kate Holton

LONDON, May 1 (Reuters) - Newspaper magnate Rupert Murdoch and his son James will be in the firing line on Tuesday when a British parliamentary committee issues its verdict on a phone-hacking scandal that has made the family name politically toxic.

Committee members have said they were obstructed and put under surveillance by Murdoch's News Corp during their five year investigation into the hacking of the phones of celebrities, murder victims, politicians and soldiers for newspaper stories.

Their report could force James Murdoch to sever his last ties with Britain's biggest satellite TV firm BSkyB, which News Corp had sought to take over before the scandal broke.

It will also embarrass Prime Minister David Cameron, who acknowledged again on Monday that politicians were in thrall to the Murdochs and whose Conservative Party faces local elections across much of Britain on Thursday.

The committee was likely to criticise James Murdoch for failing to get to the bottom of the scandal, and Rupert Murdoch for the wider culture at the company, a source familiar with the situation told Reuters, adding that Conservative members on the committee were reluctant to criticise James Murdoch any further.

Cameron was summoned to parliament on Monday to explain why he would not investigate emails revealing that a ministerial aide had assured News Corp its bid for BSkyB would be approved.

He insisted there was no need to refer the case to his independent adviser on ministerial conduct, noting the emails had been handed to a judicial inquiry into press ethics, but did concede that politicians had been too keen to please the media.

"I am perfectly prepared to admit that the relationship between politicians and media proprietors got too close," he said during a rowdy debate, blaming politicians of both main parties for the failing.

PARLIAMENT MISLED

Committee Chairman John Whittingdale opened its hearing of James and Rupert Murdoch last year saying his committee found it inconceivable that only one reporter at News Corp's News of the World weekly had been involved in the hacking scandal.

"In the last few weeks, not only has evidence emerged that I think has vindicated the Committee's conclusion, but abuses have been revealed that have angered and shocked the entire country," he said. "It is also clear that Parliament has been misled."

Audiences around the world witnessed the 81-year-old Rupert Murdoch - whose newspapers could make or break British politicians - saying it was the most humble day of his life and saw him hit with a foam pie at the height of the scandal last July.

He answered many of the questions in monosyllables, sometimes flummoxing the committee members, while James Murdoch infuriated them at times with lengthy management-speak.

The committee is expected to say that James Murdoch was incompetent at best for asking few questions about a payoff he approved of more than half a million pounds ($800,000) to a hacking victim who had evidence the practice was widespread.

Its report, which may run to 100 pages, is also expected to criticise Rupert Murdoch, the chief executive of the News of the World's parent company News Corp, for allowing a culture of illegality to flourish. Murdoch shut down the paper last year.

Les Hinton, the former head of News Corp's British newspaper arm, Tom Crone, a legal executive at the News of the World, and the paper's former editor, Colin Myler, will also come under the spotlight, the source said.

Media regulator Ofcom will take the report's findings into consideration in its continuing assessment of whether BSkyB's owners and directors are "fit and proper" persons to hold a broadcast licence.

James Murdoch resigned last month as chairman of BSkyB, saying he did not want to be a "lightning rod" for damage from the phone-hacking scandal, but remains a director of the broadcaster, in which News Corp owns 39 percent.

He admitted last week he had raised the issue of the takeover with Cameron at a Christmas dinner in 2010.

The committee will present its report to parliament, which is likely to hold a debate on its findings, and the government then has 60 days to respond.

A previous critical report by the committee came before last July's revelation that people working for the News of the World had hacked into the voicemail of murdered schoolgirl Milly Dowler, which fuelled public anger and led to more revelations.

Relations between News Corp and Cameron, who once employed an ex-News of the World editor as his spokesman, will face more scrutiny in the coming months when Rebekah Brooks, a former Murdoch confidante and News Corp executive, reveals her text messages and emails with Cameron, a neighbour and former friend.

As the committee has to be careful not to prejudice any criminal trials of figures involved in the scandal, it has focused more on the Murdochs and others who have not been arrested.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 2-Judge halts Texas ban on Planned Parenthood funding

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UPDATE 2-Judge halts Texas ban on Planned Parenthood funding
Apr 30th 2012, 22:59

Mon Apr 30, 2012 6:59pm EDT

* Big victory for Planned Parenthood

* Texas appeals federal judge's injunction

* Ban would have affected thousands of women

AUSTIN, Texas, April 30 (Reuters) - A federal judge on Monday temporarily blocked a new Texas rule that would have banned state funding for Planned Parenthood clinics and ended their health services for poor women because the organization provides abortions.

The ruling by U.S. District Judge Lee Yeakel in favor of Planned Parenthood means thousands of women enrolled in the Texas Women's Health Program who go to its clinics will not have to find new healthcare providers, at least for now.

"The court is particularly influenced by the potential for immediate loss of access to necessary medical services by several thousand Texas women," Yeakel said in a 24-page ruling.

The preliminary injunction is a big victory for Planned Parenthood, which has been under siege in several states by abortion opponents. In the past year alone, states including Wisconsin, North Carolina, Tennessee and Indiana, in addition to Texas, have moved to block Planned Parenthood from receiving taxpayer money.

"For many women, we are the only doctor's visit they will have this year," Cecile Richards, president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said in a statement. "This ruling affirms what women have known all along: politics simply doesn't have a place in women's health."

Texas Governor Rick Perry and some Republican lawmakers have said they would rather eliminate the women's healthcare program entirely than direct money to Planned Parenthood clinics.

Texas immediately appealed the federal judge's decision.

"Texas has a long history of protecting life, and we are confident in Attorney General Abbott's appeal to defend the will of Texans and our state law, which prohibits taxpayer funds from supporting abortion providers and affiliates in the Women's Health Program," the governor's press secretary Catherine Frazier said in a statement.

The Texas program, which is part of the federal-state Medicaid program, provides cancer screenings, birth control and other health services to more than 100,000 low-income women.

The program does not pay for abortions or allow abortion providers to participate in the program. The new Texas state rule would ban program money from going to affiliates of abortion providers.

BAN ON AFFILIATES

State law has included that ban on affiliates since the program began in 2007, but the state did not enforce it. Texas notified the federal government last year that it intended to begin enforcing the ban, effectively excluding Planned Parenthood from the program.

On March 9, the administration of President Barack Obama announced that it would no longer provide funding for the Texas program if Planned Parenthood was excluded. Texas then filed suit against the federal government. The ruling on Monday was on the Texas suit.

According to Planned Parenthood, about 49 percent of the women who received services through the program in 2010 obtained some services through a Planned Parenthood provider. Planned Parenthood said it would lose about $13.5 million of annual funding for preventive care and family planning if the rule is applied, forcing it to close clinics and lay off staff.

Texas has already made deep cuts in other family-planning programs. As a result, state subsidies that once provided low-cost birth control to 220,000 women a year now cover fewer than 60,000 women a year.

The federal government pays for 90 percent of the cost of the Texas Women's Health Program, which serves low-income women of reproductive age who do not qualify for regular Medicaid coverage. Texas puts up just $4 million a year.

Critics object to Planned Parenthood receiving taxpayer money, which cannot be used to provide abortions, arguing that a steady stream of government grants provide an indirect subsidy by helping pay utility bills and keep doctors on staff.

Planned Parenthood is the nation's largest abortion provider, terminating about 330,000 pregnancies a year.

It gets about a third of its revenue - $360 million in 2009 - from government grants to provide birth control, gynecological exams and care for sexually transmitted diseases to low-income women.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: TIMELINE-Canada's TMX Group in play

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TIMELINE-Canada's TMX Group in play
Apr 30th 2012, 22:21

April 30 | Mon Apr 30, 2012 6:21pm EDT

April 30 (Reuters) - A consortium bidding for TMX Group , the operator of Canada's biggest stock exchange, extended its C$ 3.8 billion offer for the seventh time on Monday as it works to resolve regulatory concerns.

Maple also said it has reached agreements to buy Alpha Group, TMX's biggest competitor in stock trading, as well as clearing system Ca nadian Depository for Securities Ltd .

Following is a list of the major events related to Maple Group's efforts to take over TMX, owner of the Toronto Stock Exchange and other Canadian markets.

2011

Feb. 9 - TMX and the London Stock Exchange announce a $3 billion friendly deal that they characterize as "a merger of equals".

May 14 - TMX says it has received an approach from a consortium of Canadian banks and funds called the Maple Group. LSE says it remains committed to the deal. Maple submits its formal bid the following day and says its C$3.6 billion proposal offers a 24 percent premium on the LSE's deal.

May 20 - TMX rejects Maple's bid and asks its shareholders to support the LSE plan.

June 22- Maple raises its hostile bid to C$3.8 billion.

June 28 - TMX and LSE terminate their proposal after it becomes obvious that the deal will not win the necessary two-thirds support at a TMX shareholder vote.

July 21 - TMX authorizes its board to hold takeover discussions with Maple Group.

Oct 30 - TMX agrees to support Maple's bid of C$3.8 billion, or C$50 a share, which is now set to expire on Jan. 31, as Maple seeks regulatory approvals.

Nov 29 - In a late-night statement, TMX Group says the federal Competition Bureau has "serious concerns" about the deal, including the impact it would have on equities trading as well as clearing and settlement services.

Dec. 1 - Maple tells an OSC public hearing that it could give regulators the right to supervise clearing and settlement prices to ease competition concerns.

2012

Jan-April - The deal is extended three more times, including Monday's extension.

March 15 - Quebec's regulator says it intends to approve the proposed takeover, which will also put Alpha Group and the Canadian Depositary for Securities, a clearing house run by some of the banks that form Maple Group, under the TMX umbrella. Maple Group says Ontario regulators will publish draft orders for a 30-day public comment period before a final decision.

April 27 - Maple says it hopes to extend its $3.8 billion offer but is working to resolve regulatory concerns. TMX shares rise 6 percent as investors interpret the statement as a cautiously optimistic sign that the deal might go through.

April 30 - Maple extends for the seventh time its bid offer to May. 31. It also says it reached deals to buy Alpha Group for C$175 million, as well as CDS for C$167.5 million.

It also extended its support agreement with TMX to July 31, after which parties can walk away from talks.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 1-Maple extends bid for Canada's TMX Group; to buy Alpha

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UPDATE 1-Maple extends bid for Canada's TMX Group; to buy Alpha
Apr 30th 2012, 21:28

Mon Apr 30, 2012 5:28pm EDT

TORONTO, April 30 (Reuters) - Maple Group, the consortium of Canadian financial institutions bidding to buy the operator of the Toronto Stock Exchange, extended its C$3.8 billion ($3.85 billion) offer for a seventh time on Monday.

Extending its bid for TMX Group to May 31, Maple also said it had agreed to buy Alpha Trading Systems, Canada's second biggest stock trading venue, and the Canadian Depository System for Securities clearing system.

TMX also runs the TSX Venture Exchange and the Montreal Exchanges for derivatives. The buyers are waiting for several provincial regulatory bodies and the federal Competition Bureau to sign off on the deal before it can go ahead.

Maple, whose 13 members include most of Canada's biggest banks as well as pension funds, a giant insurer and other financial groups, has always said it wants to combine TMX with bank-owned Alpha. It also wants to wrap in the CDS, the clearing system for trades.

Critics have argued that the deal would concentrate too much power in the hands of a single player, creating a near monopoly of stock market trading and clearing operations, and TMX shares have consistently traded below Maple's C$50 a share offer.

TMX shares closed up 40 Canadian cents, or 0.9 percent, at C$45.10 on the Toronto Stock Exchange on Monday.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: Maple renews bid for Canada's TMX Group, buys Alpha

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Maple renews bid for Canada's TMX Group, buys Alpha
Apr 30th 2012, 21:10

TORONTO, April 30 | Mon Apr 30, 2012 5:10pm EDT

TORONTO, April 30 (Reuters) - Maple Group, the consortium of 13 Canadian financial institutions bidding for buy the operator of the Toronto Stock Exchange, ex tended i ts C$3.8 billion ($ 3.85 billion) of fer for a seventh time on Monday.

Maple also said it had agreed to buy Alpha Trading Systems, Canada's second biggest stock trading venue, and the CDS clearing system.

Its bid for TMX Group, which also runs the TSX Venture Exchange and the Montreal Exchanges for derivatives, now expires on May 31

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Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 3-US EPA official resigns after crucifixion comment

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UPDATE 3-US EPA official resigns after crucifixion comment
Apr 30th 2012, 21:08

Mon Apr 30, 2012 5:08pm EDT

* Republicans had railed against the 2010 comments

* Obama administration has been easing back on rules

* Sen Inhofe says EPA tarnished reputation of companies

By Timothy Gardner

WASHINGTON, April 30 (Reuters) - A regional Environmental Protection Agency chief based in Dallas resigned on Monday, days after Republican lawmakers uncovered comments in which he compared his enforcement of energy companies with crucifixion.

Al Armendariz, who was the chief of EPA's Region 6 office, which includes refinery-rich Texas, Louisiana and three other states, sent a letter of resignation to EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson late on Sunday. She accepted it on Monday.

"I have come to the conclusion that my continued service will distract you and the agency from its important work," Armendariz said in the letter.

He became a casualty in a war Republicans in Congress have waged against a raft of EPA rules on pollution from fossil fuel plants they say risk damaging the economy.

Lawmakers including Senator James Inhofe, a Republican and long-time critic of the EPA, circulated a link to a video of an Armendariz speech in May 2010, in which he compared his enforcement strategy on energy companies that had broken the law to that of Romans taking over towns in the Mediterranean.

"They'd go into a little Turkish town somewhere, they'd find the first five guys they saw, and they'd crucify them," he could be heard saying in the video, shot months after he had taken the job. "And that town was really easy to manage for the next few years."

He said his strategy was to make an example of companies that were not complying with the law, in the comments made at a council meeting in a small Texas town.

Republicans in the House of Representatives have battled the EPA this year, introducing bills that would slow or stop the agency's rules on pollution.

They say the rules will lead to shutdowns of power plants and refineries and higher energy costs for consumers as they struggle to recover from the weak economy. The measures have faced an uphill battle in the Democratic-led Senate.

EPA EASING UP

Still, as businesses and Republicans have complained, the EPA has delayed several of its measures on energy. This month the EPA delayed until 2015, part of a rule that requires natural gas drillers that do hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, to add equipment to tackle air pollution.

Ahead of the Nov. 6 election, President Barack Obama has been walking a fine line between promoting drilling of vast new resources of gas that can be accessed through fracking and regulating an industry environmentalists say can pollute air and water supplies.

Armendariz was in charge when his office brought several actions on drillers that were fracking for natural gas. In one case his office brought an emergency order on Range Resources alleging its operations had polluted drinking water in Parker County, Texas.

But in the past two months the EPA has backtracked on at least three pollution claims related to fracking, including dropping the charges against Range.

This year the EPA conducted tests on water at 61 homes in the small Pennsylvania town of Dimock, where Cabot Oil & Gas Corp had fracked for gas in 2008. Since mid-March, the agency has released test results from most of the homes showing that the water was safe.

But Inhofe, the ranking member of the Senate Committee on Energy and Public Works, said resignation did not go far enough. "His resignation in no way solves the problem of President Barack Obama and his EPA's crucifixion philosophy," Inhofe said in a release.

Inhofe is conducting an investigation into the EPA which "tarnished the reputation of companies" by accusing them of water contamination, he said.

The Sierra Club, an environmental group that has fought the building of new coal plants and gas export terminals, was unhappy with the resignation.

"The only people who will celebrate this resignation are the polluters who continue to foul Texas air and the politicians who serve those special interests," said Ken Kramer, director of the Sierra Club in Texas.

An industry group said Armendariz was the one serving special interests. "There's a role for activists and there's a role for regulators," said Steve Everley, a spokesman for Energy in Depth, an industry-backed group that promotes natural gas drilling. "When one becomes the other, that's when you can run into problems."

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Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 1-FDA extends review for Salix diarrhea drug

Reuters: Regulatory News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
UPDATE 1-FDA extends review for Salix diarrhea drug
Apr 30th 2012, 19:10

April 30 | Mon Apr 30, 2012 3:10pm EDT

April 30 (Reuters) - Salix Pharmaceuticals Ltd said U.S. health regulators have extended the review date by three months for its experimental pill for HIV therapy-related diarrhea.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration was to review the drug, crofelemer, on June 5.

The FDA has notified Salix that it requires additional time for a full review but did not seek any additional studies, the company said in a statement.

Salix holds the North American and European rights to the drug.

India's Glenmark Pharmaceuticals Ltd holds the rights to sell the drug in 140 other countries but is in arbitration to retain them after initial developer U.S.-based Napo Pharamaceuticals Inc terminated their agreement in November.

Shares of Salix Pharmaceuticals were trading down about 3 percent at $49.28 on Monday afternoon trade on the Nasdaq.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: REFILE-Industry cries for leniency on fee disclosure

Reuters: Regulatory News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
REFILE-Industry cries for leniency on fee disclosure
Apr 30th 2012, 18:26

Mon Apr 30, 2012 2:26pm EDT

* Providers ask for one-year transition

* With two months left, firms fret

By Jessica Toonkel

NEW YORK, April 30 (Reuters) - The retirement planning industry is asking once again for leniency from federal fee disclosure regulations that take effect July 1.

The American Society of Pension Professionals and Actuaries (ASPPA) sent a letter to the U.S. Labor Department on Monday requesting a one-year transition period by which the agency would allow for "good faith efforts" by the service providers to comply with the regulations.

The Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, the brokerage industry trade group, sent the department a similar letter on April 16.

The two groups, which represent thousands of financial advisers, are worried that even though the rule takes effect in 60 days, there are a lot of unknowns about the details, officials said.

The SPARK Institute, the trade group for retirement plan administrators, sent the Labor Department a similar letter in March. The American Bankers Association has also asked for a one-year transition period in conversations, said Tim Keehan, vice president and senior counsel of the ABA.

This is not the first time the industry is pushing back on the fee disclosure rules.

The Labor Department issued the current rule in July 2010 and gave providers 12 months to comply. After industry opposition, the department extended the deadline to April 2012. The final rule was released in February.

Under the rule, starting in July service providers will have to disclose all of their fees to retirement plan sponsors. In August, retirement plan sponsors will have to disclose their fees to plan participants.

Retirement plan advisers worry the rules require advisers to disclose historical performance and fees for model portfolios, which are customized managed accounts designed for specific plans.

The way the rules are written, it is unclear whether it is sufficient to just disclose the performance and fees of the funds that make up these model portfolios, said Craig Hoffman, general counsel of ASPPA. Trying to disclose the performance and fees of the actual model portfolios is "expensive and problematic," he said.

ASPPA's members have voiced concerns that regulators could construe the historical investment performance of their model portfolios "as misleading advertising," Hoffman said.

A one year "good faith transition period," would allow firms to try to comply with the new regulations with the promises that the agency will have "an understanding of the ambiguities present and take that into account," Hoffman said.

The agency could still enforce against poor practices, but any enforcement action "would be tempered with a more liberal application," he said.

A Labor Department spokesman declined to comment.

But the department seems to recognize these issues. Speaking at ASPPA's annual 401(k) conference in March, Michael Davis, deputy assistant secretary of the department's Employee Benefits Security Administration, said it would provide some answers that would address the industry's concerns about model portfolios "within weeks".

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Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 1-Ignite Restaurant sees IPO at $12-$14/share

Reuters: Regulatory News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
UPDATE 1-Ignite Restaurant sees IPO at $12-$14/share
Apr 30th 2012, 17:39

April 30 | Mon Apr 30, 2012 1:39pm EDT

April 30 (Reuters) - Joe's Crab Shack operator Ignite Restaurant Group said it expects its initial public offering of 5.8 million shares to be priced at $12 to $14 per share.

The company, which intends to list its shares on the Nasdaq under the symbol "IRG," expects to raise about $65 million in net proceeds, at the midpoint of the price range.

The company, in its initial filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in July, had said it intended to raise $100 million in the IPO.

Ignite Restaurant, which plans to use the net proceeds to repay debt, is offering 5.6 million shares, while its private equity owner J.H. Whitney is selling 196,528 shares.

Credit Suisse, Robert W. Baird and Piper Jaffray are acting as the lead underwriters for the offering.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: Spain Cenbank consulting with experts on toxic assets - sources

Reuters: Regulatory News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
Spain Cenbank consulting with experts on toxic assets - sources
Apr 30th 2012, 15:29

MADRID, April 30 | Mon Apr 30, 2012 11:29am EDT

MADRID, April 30 (Reuters) - Spain's Central Bank is consulting with international bankers and with real estate experts for recommendations on how to set up a holding company that will evaluate and sell off toxic real estate assets from the country's troubled financial sector, two sources told Reuters on Monday.

The process will last a few weeks, one of the sources said.

"When we have those opinions we will use them for input on the formula for the entity," the source said.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 1-Oil pricing agencies propose self-regulatory code

Reuters: Regulatory News
Reuters.com is your source for breaking news, business, financial and investing news, including personal finance and stocks. Reuters is the leading global provider of news, financial information and technology solutions to the world's media, financial institutions, businesses and individuals. // via fulltextrssfeed.com
UPDATE 1-Oil pricing agencies propose self-regulatory code
Apr 30th 2012, 15:47

Mon Apr 30, 2012 11:47am EDT

* PRAs seek comment on price reporting code

* PRAs face prospect of more regulatory oversight

LONDON, April 30 (Reuters) - Oil price reporting agencies Platts, Argus and ICIS have launched a draft price reporting code to avoid conflicts of interest and ensure transparency, moving to head off increased scrutiny proposed by international regulators.

The proposal comes as the International Organisation of Securities Comissions (IOSCO) decides whether to increase oversight of the agencies, whose prices are used for the world's biggest traded commodity.

Price assessments for over-the-counter oil trade and derivatives produced by industry reporters are used to settle billions of dollars worth of physical oil deals and to help settle trade on benchmark futures exchanges.

The draft independent price reporting organisations, or IPRO, code "provides for robust monitoring and compliance", the companies said on Monday. They believe the code will keep regulators at bay.

"This is a serious piece of work that really codifies what we've put in place over the years," said Adrian Binks, Chairman and Chief Executive of privately held Argus Media.

"Many of our customers are telling us they do not want to see us regulated - they are vehemently opposed to it. And it's essential that we be seen as completely neutral in the work that we do."

IOSCO, whose members regulate more than 95 percent of the world's securities markets, said last month that price reporting agencies (PRAs) might be regulated in an attempt to prevent market manipulation and increase transparency.

It asked for responses by March 30.

A top industry consultant said earlier this month that Platts, which is owned by McGraw-Hill, has too much power in the physical oil markets.

In a 16-page response, Liz Bossley, chief executive of Consilience Energy Advisory Group, said PRAs set high standards and by and large uphold them, but problems lie in the scope - rather than the quality - of their work.

But Platts President Larry Neal argues that market rivalry acts as a sufficient check to any one company's dominance.

"There's a lot of competition among PRAs and there are plenty of examples of where customers have switched," he said. "And the competition is really important to keep the firms on their toes."

IOSCO is looking at the role of price reporting agencies (PRAs) following a request last year by the Group of 20 (G20) top economies, under pressure to curb speculation blamed for rapid increases in oil prices.

Journalists at reporting agencies assess prices by calling up as many traders as possible and contacting them via instant messaging to ask where they see the market, trying to avoid pitfalls such as reflecting only a buyer's or seller's view.

That process has evolved over time and Platts and Argus publish methodologies detailing how they assess prices. But those steps have not satisfied some market participants who say it is still easy to influence reporters' price discovery.

"Trying to police this market is a thankless and very difficult task," said a physical oil products trader. "It's a problem the governments have let happen. There's been a lack of investment in regulation."

Veteran oil market commentator, Phil Verleger, has praised Platts and Argus price reports for their high quality and argued against the need for regulation of PRAs.

"Quite simply, IOSCO seeks to cure a nonexistent problem," Verleger wrote in an eight-page response to IOSCO.

The three companies are seeking comments from the industry on their draft code. Neal said the IPRO code has been sent to IOSCO for its feedback.

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