Sunday, September 30, 2012

Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 1-INSIGHT-Chicago Fed warned on high-frequency trading, SEC slow to respond

Reuters: Regulatory News
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UPDATE 1-INSIGHT-Chicago Fed warned on high-frequency trading, SEC slow to respond
Oct 1st 2012, 01:36

Sun Sep 30, 2012 9:36pm EDT

* Chicago Fed warned of need for "kill switch" in 2010

* SEC can't impose limits on HFT without consensus-official

* Some traders are trying to build HFT-free trading zone

* Retail investors looking for SEC to lead on HFT reform

By Emily Flitter and Sarah N. Lynch

NEW YORK, Sept 30 (Reuters) - More than two years ago, the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago was pushing the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to get serious about the dangers of superfast computer-driven trading. Only now is the SEC getting around to taking a closer look at some of those issues.

Critics of the SEC say the delay is part of a pattern of inaction in dealing with the fallout from high frequency trading and shows that the regulator doesn't yet fully appreciate how fears of machine-driven market meltdowns are driving investors away from U.S. markets.

Even as the SEC gears up for a meeting on Tuesday to discuss software glitches and how to tame rapid-fire trading, the eighth public forum it has had in two years on market structure issues, regulators in Canada, Australia and Germany are moving ahead with plans to introduce speed limits to safeguard markets from the machines.

One item up for discussion is whether regulators should require trading firms and exchanges to deploy a "kill switch" so that they can quickly shut down a runaway high-speed computer program. That's one of the seven recommendations the Chicago Fed made to the SEC in its March 25, 2010, letter.

The Chicago Fed said exchanges and other trading platforms should install more risk controls, even if it slowed down trading, including a "kill switch" at the trader workstation level. "The competitive quest for greater and greater speed must be balanced with appropriate risk controls so that a clearly erroneous trade does not destabilize markets by precipitating a cascade of other trades in response," the Chicago Fed's then Financial Markets Group Senior Vice President David Marshall said in the submission.

Less than two months later, the Dow Jones Industrials would plunge 700 points in a matter of seconds. The May 6, 2010, flash crash sparked a national debate over the merits of stock trading that takes place in fractions of a second, but it only led to modest action from the regulators.

Since then, there have been a series of smaller - though still frightening - events for investors, including the near-collapse of major market maker Knight Capital after a software glitch led to violent price swings in more than 100 stocks on August 1 this year. That problem lasted for at least half an hour, leading to questions about why a "kill switch" wasn't quickly employed.

And still the move towards reforms has been slow.

"So far, the SEC hasn't seemed to think high-frequency trading is a problem," said Edward Kim, a former senior vice president at the NASDAQ Stock Market and now a consultant with audit firm Grant Thornton.

INVESTORS FRUSTRATED

Kim, who testified on Sept. 7 before an SEC panel in San Francisco on the potential pitfalls of high-frequency trading, said he's seen first-hand the fallout that the flash crash has had on investor confidence. Kim noted his father was so rattled by the rapid market meltdown he subsequently sold most of his stocks.

Institutional buy-and-hold investors also remain frustrated.

Mutual fund manager O. Mason Hawkins, who met with the SEC a month after the flash crash in June 2010 to provide evidence about how rapid-fire machine trading was destabilizing the market, has the same view today, according to a representative for his firm, Southeastern Asset Management.

Even proponents of algorithmic trading, which uses computer model-based probability theories and analysis of market data to formulate trading strategies and execute them automatically, are coming out and saying speed isn't everything.

High-frequency trading effectively treats orders from retail investors like a tip sheet to be harvested and discarded, said Andrew Van Hise, managing director at the investment management firm SEQA Capital Advisors in New York and the designer of the algorithmic trading program for Steven A. Cohen's $14 billion SAC Capital Advisors hedge fund.

"By the time a standard retail or institutional order reaches an exchange, it's been looked at in essence by a number of algorithms which have cherry picked it," said Van Hise. "What finds its way to the traditional exchanges is viewed by market participants as exhaust."

To be sure, it's not as if the SEC has simply stood idly by and allowed the machines to run amok. The agency did put in place some new safeguards such as circuit breakers on stocks, after the May 2010 flash crash.

The circuit breakers are intended to prevent a market wide crash by briefly halting trading in particular stocks displaying sharp price moves within a five-minute window, giving the algorithms a chance to let go of trading patterns that may have turned into vicious cycles.

In a move that some say is long overdue, the SEC has begun setting up a new analytical and research team to examine the trading patterns of high-frequency firms. The new group, which will receive and process the same data feeds that high frequency traders get, will enable the SEC to better police the markets.

And recently, the SEC fined the New York Stock Exchange's operator, NYSE Euronext, $5 million for allegedly giving some customers "an improper head start" on proprietary trading information.

FINE-TUNING

But U.S. securities regulators, noting that high-frequency trading has brought trading costs down for many investors by pumping more liquidity into the system, do not seem to be operating under any sense of urgency.

"We are into a space now where there aren't any massive changes to be made," said Daniel Gallagher, a Republican commissioner at the SEC who also previously worked in its Trading and Markets division. "There are fine-tuning and dials,"

In January 2010, the SEC published a 74-page "concept release" on restructuring the markets, in part because of the rise of high-frequency trading. The SEC uses concept releases as a blueprint for future regulation. The concept release included ideas like a "trade-at" rule, which would give preference to the price in a proposed trade rather than to its position in the queue, as well as limitations on when high-frequency traders could suddenly pull out of the market.

The proposal generated more than 200 comments, including many from money managers complaining that high-frequency trading was making stock trading more volatile. The Chicago Fed submitted its letter to the SEC in response to the proposal. But the concept release has not given rise to much new regulation.

Gregg Berman, who is one of the SEC's leading experts on stock market structure, said regulators found most of the complaints from the public and money managers about high-frequency trading to be anecdotal.

"I've heard many suggestions for how we might slow down the markets. But I think some ideas have ignored the fact that we have markets in which investors demand the ability to trade on an immediate and continuous basis, not at discrete intervals," said Berman.

He continued: "It's like saying 'let's use the rules of train travel, in which every train is on a specific track, to try to dictate how cars should behave, even though cars can drive between the lanes and on the shoulder.'"

A more aggressive approach by the SEC on high-frequency trading cannot come soon enough for those who say the SEC's inaction is hurting both Main Street and Wall Street. They note that even as the Dow Jones Industrial index creeps closer to its all-time high of 14,000, trading volumes remain near the low levels reached as the financial crisis began to hit in 2007-2008.

Retail investors have withdrawn more than $313 billion from the U.S. stock market since 2008, meaning ordinary investors have not participated broadly in the market recovery. Some market experts attribute fear of another flash crash, and concerns that the playing field is far from level, for making investors wary of stocks.

RAGE AGAINST THE MACHINE

A few enterprising high-frequency trading pioneers are taking matters into their own hands by designing new trading platforms that are being billed as trading zones that are protected from high-frequency programs. But that could lead to further fragmentation of the market, given U.S. stocks are now traded on a myriad of exchanges and electronic platforms.

Keith Ross Jr., a former chief executive officer of GETCO, one of the largest high-frequency firms, is now running a trading platform that bills itself as one that is not subject to abusive trading by high-frequency firms.

Ross' company, PDQ ATS, processes orders by imposing a 20 millisecond delay on them and then holding an auction. The delay may not seem like much, but it's enough to deter high-frequency traders from jumping in front of other traders, or trying to influence trading by flooding the market with bids and offers for stocks they don't actually intend to trade.

PDQ, which launched in 2008, is gaining traction with both asset managers and high-frequency firms that Ross says are willing to play by the rules and still see room to make a profit. But the new platform is small, processing just under 100 million shares of marketable orders a day, 30 percent of which get filled.

"My expectation and my hope would be that the market has an opportunity to solve the problem itself," Ross said.

Similarly, Bradley Katsuyama, a former top trader in the U.S. for RBC Capital Markets, recently left the bank to launch an exchange he says will employ a strategy that will prevent high-frequency trading firms from gaining an unfair advantage over mutual funds and other retail investors. He declined to provide specifics of his start-up firm, IEX Group Inc.

Still, plenty of individual investors are looking for the SEC to do something more.

One of those is Jim Sutton, who has been managing his own pension payout for the past 12 years. The 69-year-old Des Moines, Iowa, resident wrote a letter to the SEC on July 4, asking for a new rule that would slow down trading in the stock market to keep it within the realms of human perception.

He said slowing down the markets, just a bit, would improve investor confidence. Sutton says he is still waiting for a response from the regulator.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: INSIGHT-Chicago Fed warned on high frequency trading, SEC slow to respond

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
INSIGHT-Chicago Fed warned on high frequency trading, SEC slow to respond
Sep 30th 2012, 23:51

Sun Sep 30, 2012 7:51pm EDT

* Investors, researchers expressed concerns over HFT in 2010

* SEC advisor says it can't impose limits on HFT without consensus

* Some traders are trying to build HFT-free trading zone

* Retail investors looking for SEC to lead on HFT reform

By Emily Flitter and Sarah N. Lynch

NEW YORK, Sept 30 (Reuters) - More than two years ago, the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago was pushing the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to get serious about the dangers of superfast computer-driven trading. Only now is the SEC getting around to taking a closer look at some of those issues.

Critics of the SEC say the delay is part of a pattern of inaction in dealing with the fallout from high frequency trading and shows that the regulator does not yet fully appreciate how fears of machine-driven market meltdowns are driving investors away from U.S. markets.

Even as the SEC gears up for a meeting on Tuesday to discuss how to tame rapid-fire trading - the eighth public forum it has had in two years on market structure issues - regulators in Canada, Australia and Germany are moving ahead with plans to introduce speed limits to safeguard markets from the machines.

One item up for discussion is whether regulators should require trading firms and exchanges to deploy a "kill switch" to shut down a runaway high-speed computer program. That is one of the seven recommendations the Chicago Fed made to the SEC in its March 25, 2010 letter.

Less than two months later, the Dow Jones Industrials would plunge 700 points in a matter of seconds. The May 6, 2010 "flash crash" sparked a national debate over the merits of stock trading that takes place in fractions of a second, but it only led to modest action from the regulators.

Since then, there have been a series of smaller - though still frightening - events for investors, including the near collapse of major market maker Knight Capital after a software glitch led to violent price swings on Aug. 1 in more than 100 stocks. And still the move toward reforms has been slow.

"So far, the SEC hasn't seemed to think high frequency trading is a problem," said Edward Kim, a former senior vice president at the NASDAQ Stock Market and now a consultant with auditing firm Grant Thornton.

Kim, who testified on Sept. 7 before an SEC panel in San Francisco on the potential pitfalls of high frequency trading, said he has seen firsthand the fallout the flash crash has had on investor confidence. Kim noted his father was so rattled by the rapid market meltdown, he subsequently sold most of his stocks.

Institutional buy-and-hold investors also remain frustrated.

Mutual fund manager O. Mason Hawkins, who met with the SEC a month after the flash crash in June 2010 to provide evidence about how rapid-fire machine trading was destabilizing the market, has the same view today, according to a representative for his firm, Southeastern Asset Management.

Even proponents of algorithmic trading, which uses sophisticated computer programs to trawl the markets for orders to trade on, are coming out and saying speed isn't everything.

High frequency trading effectively treats orders from retail investors like a tip sheet to be harvested and discarded said Andrew Van Hise, managing director at the investment management firm SEQA Capital Advisors in New York and the designer of the algorithmic trading program for Steven A. Cohen's $16 billion SAC Capital Advisors hedge fund.

"By the time a standard retail or institutional order reaches an exchange, it's been looked at in essence by a number of algorithms which have cherry picked it," said Van Hise. "What finds its way to the traditional exchanges is viewed by market participants as exhaust."

To be sure, it is not as if the SEC has simply stood idly by and allowed the machines to run amok. The agency did put in place some new safeguards, such as circuit breakers on stocks, after the May 2010 flash crash.

The circuit breakers are intended to prevent a marketwide crash by briefly halting trading in particular stocks displaying sharp price moves within a five-minute window, giving the algorithms a chance to let go of trading patterns that may have turned into vicious cycles.

In a move that some say is long overdue, the SEC has begun setting up a new analytical and research team to examine the trading patterns of high-frequency firms. The new group, which will receive and process the same data feeds that high frequency traders get, will enable the SEC to better police the markets.

And recently, the SEC fined the New York Stock Exchange's operator, NYSE Euronext, $5 million for allegedly giving some customers "an improper head start" on proprietary trading information.

But U.S. securities regulators, noting that high frequency trading has brought trading costs down for many investors by pumping more liquidity into the system, do not seem to be operating under any sense of urgency.

"We are into a space now where there aren't any massive changes to be made," said Daniel Gallagher, a Republican commissioner at the SEC who also previously worked in its Trading and Markets division. "There are fine-tuning and dials."

In January 2010, the SEC published a 74-page "concept release" on restructuring the markets, in part because of the rise of high frequency trading. The SEC uses concept releases as a blueprint for future regulation.

The concept release included ideas like a "trade-at" rule, which would give preference to the price in a proposed trade rather than to its position in the queue, as well as limitations on when high frequency traders could suddenly pull out of the market.

The proposal generated more than 200 comments, including many from money managers complaining that high frequency trading was making stock trading more volatile. The Chicago Fed submitted its letter to the SEC in response to the proposal. But the concept release has not given rise to much new regulation.

Gregg Berman, a nuclear astrophysicist who is one of the SEC's leading experts on stock market structure, said regulators found most of the complaints from the public and money managers about high frequency trading to be anecdotal.

"I've heard many suggestions for how we might slow down the markets. But I think some ideas have ignored the fact that we have markets in which investors demand the ability to trade on an immediate and continuous basis, not at discrete intervals," said Berman.

He continued: "It's like saying 'Let's use the rules of train travel, in which every train is on a specific track, to try to dictate how cars should behave, even though cars can drive between the lanes and on the shoulder.'"

A more aggressive approach by the SEC on high frequency trading cannot come soon enough for those who say the SEC's inaction is hurting both Main Street and Wall Street. They note that even as the Dow Jones creeps closer to its all-time high, trading volumes remain near the low levels seen during the 2008-09 financial crisis.

Retail investors have withdrawn more than $313 billion from the U.S. stock market since 2008, meaning ordinary investors have not participated broadly in the market recovery. Some market experts attribute fear of another flash crash as well as concerns that the playing field is far from level for making investors wary of stocks.

RAGE AGAINST THE MACHINE

A few enterprising high frequency trading pioneers are taking matters into their own hands by designing new trading platforms that are being billed as trading zones that are protected from high frequency programs.

But that could lead to further fragmentation of the market, given U.S. stocks are now traded on a myriad of exchanges and electronic platforms.

Keith Ross Jr, a former chief executive officer of GETCO, one of the largest high frequency firms, is now running a trading platform that bills itself as one that is not subject to abusive trading by high frequency firms.

Ross' company, PDQ ATS, processes orders by imposing a 20-millisecond delay on them and then holding an auction. The delay may not seem like much, but it is enough to deter high frequency traders from jumping in front of other traders, or trying to influence trading by flooding the market with bids and offers for stocks they don't actually intend to trade.

PDQ, which launched in 2008, is gaining traction with both asset managers and high frequency firms that Ross says are willing to play by the rules and still see room to make a profit. But the new platform is small, processing just under 100 million shares of marketable orders a day, 30 percent of which get filled.

"My expectation and my hope would be that the market has an opportunity to solve the problem itself," Ross said.

Similarly, Bradley Katsuyama, a former top trader in the U.S. for RBC Capital Markets, recently left the bank to launch an exchange he says will employ a strategy that will prevent high frequency trading firms from gaining an unfair advantage over mutual funds and other retail investors. He declined to provide specifics on his start-up firm, IEX Group Inc.

Still, plenty of individual investors are looking for the SEC to do something more.

One of those is Jim Sutton, who has been managing his own pension payout for the past 12 years. The 69-year-old Des Moines, Iowa, resident wrote a letter to the SEC on July 4 asking for a new rule that would slow down trading in the stock market to keep it within the realms of human perception.

He said slowing down the markets, just a bit, would improve investor confidence. But Sutton says he is still waiting for a response from the regulator.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: Europe focused on union rather than breaking up banks

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
Europe focused on union rather than breaking up banks
Oct 1st 2012, 00:00

Sun Sep 30, 2012 8:00pm EDT

* Expert group examines division of retail, investment banking

* Finland's Liikanen to submit report to EU Commission on Tuesday

* Brussels to focus first on establishing banking union

By John O'Donnell

BRUSSELS, Oct 1 (Reuters) - Experts may recommend this week that European banks should separate retail banking from their riskier investment arms to make them safer and soften the impact of financial crises.

But European Union regulators are unlikely to pursue such a radical reform at a time when they are trying to build a banking union to underpin the euro currency and the financial sector.

The European Commission asked the group of experts, led by Bank of Finland Governor Erkki Liikanen, to explore a reform of bank structures in the wake of the 2007 global financial crisis.

Making a separation between retail and high-risk businesses such as trading could be among the proposals Liikanen will make on Tuesday to stop crises in investment banking hurting high street banks and the consumers and small businesses who depend on them.

But European policymakers, struggling to contain the regional debt crisis and associated banking troubles, are already working on creating a banking union that would eventually allow euro zone countries to jointly support banks.

This means there would be little time to pursue complicated structural banking changes and Brussels is likely instead to opt for safeguards such as larger capital reserves for risky business.

"I have doubts on what can be done in the short run given the priority of the banking union," said Nicolas Veron, a regulatory expert with think tank Bruegel.

"Europe faces issues of immediate crisis management. Those issues should be front loaded - this includes the (supervision) package as its adoption is the condition for European Stability Mechanism intervention in the banking sector. This should have absolute priority."

One source familiar with the group's work recently said that making a separation between retail banking and high-risk business, dubbed "casino" banking by critics, would be part of the proposals although this could change in the final report as opinions have differed on the committee.

The European Commission, which writes the first draft of all regulation before it goes to the bloc's countries and parliament for approval, will not rush its response.

"I would expect that the Commission will need some time to examine the recommendations, and draw policy conclusions from the report," said one EU official.

Earlier this month, the Commission proposed that the European Central Bank (ECB) take charge of supervising banks in the euro zone, as a first step towards creating this union.

The next step would be for a single fund to be created to close down and settle the debts of failed banks and then a comprehensive scheme to protect savers' deposits would be put in place, both politically complicated steps and a far way off.

As well as establishing better control of banks, the union is important because it had been expected to allow the euro zone's rescue fund, the European Stability Mechanism (ESM), to directly inject capital into banks.

SAFEGUARDS

The United States, is pursuing its own structural reforms through the introduction of the Volcker rule, to curb proprietary trading, where banks trade for their own benefit on their own account. Paul Volcker, a former Federal Reserve chairman, had argued against such risks.

Britain chose safeguards for depositors by shielding that part of a bank's business after Royal Bank of Scotland's rush to extend its investment arm resulted in the largest state bailout of the crisis in Europe.

A panel of experts headed by John Vickers, a former chief economist at the Bank of England, recommended that the retail arms of banks be "ring-fenced" by a cushion of extra capital beyond the international norm and with an "independent governance to enforce an arm's length relationship".

The British government has said it will implement his recommendations.

Legally separating investment banking would make it easier for the part of the bank that holds savers' deposits and lend to business to stay open in the event of a crisis, even if other parts of the group go bankrupt, some banking experts say.

It would affect European banks, such as Barclays, Germany's Deutsche Bank or France's BNP Paribas, who combine high street banking alongside riskier trading of stocks, debt and other securities.

But EU officials believe using rules that dictate how much capital banks have to keep to cover the risk of losses or relying on new powers to be granted to the ECB will prove more useful in keeping banks in check in the short term.

Setting aside capital by holding back profits, for example, makes banks less risky for shareholders and host countries.

"One objective (of the report) was to get rid of the implicit guarantee of the taxpayer for banks," said a second person familiar with the committee's work.

Graham Bishop, a consultant on EU regulatory issues, said a scandal over the manipulation of the London interbank offered rate (Libor) would add to pressure to make structural changes.

"There is a feeling that banks have let society down," he said. "Libor is going to further inflame public anger over how banks work."

"The current structure hasn't worked - If ever there was a moment to try something else, then this would be it."

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Reuters: Regulatory News: News Corp hires U.S. compliance officials - FT

Reuters: Regulatory News
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News Corp hires U.S. compliance officials - FT
Sep 30th 2012, 23:33

LONDON | Sun Sep 30, 2012 7:33pm EDT

LONDON Oct 1 (Reuters) - Rupert Murdoch's News Corp has hired a senior official from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and a former federal prosecutor to lead new compliance units, the Financial Times reported on Monday.

Gerson Zweifach, News Corp's general counsel and new chief compliance officer, is set to announce five appointments on Monday, the FT said.

They include John McCoy, the associate regional director of the SEC's enforcement arm in Los Angeles, and Brian Michael, a former federal prosecutor for the U.S. Attorney's Office in New York.

News Corp had moved to a more centralised compliance structure with five officers reporting to Zweifach and responsible for the company's activities in different geographical regions.

"They will study internal controls, figure out how to make them stronger, test them and report directly to me on anything that needs further examination," the newspaper quoted Zweifach as saying.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: FEATURE-Indonesia digs hole for itself with new mining laws

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
FEATURE-Indonesia digs hole for itself with new mining laws
Sep 30th 2012, 21:01

By Fergus Jensen and Neil Chatterjee

JAKARTA | Sun Sep 30, 2012 5:01pm EDT

JAKARTA Oct 1 (Reuters) - One evening in late September, Peter Wesser and his club of veteran minerals explorers met at Jakarta's Hotel Kristal to swap stories and exchange news. Beer and roast beef were on the menu - on the agenda was trying to figure out how to stay in business.

For decades explorers have enjoyed a place on the cutting edge of the country's mining boom as they scoured the earth for fresh mineral deposits, a process that can take years and cost hundreds of millions of dollars before payback.

But now they complain that new rules aimed at boosting state revenue from natural resources have slashed investment in mineral prospecting and could threaten the entire $93 billion sector.

"Exploration is by nature optimistic," said Wesser, 73, an Indonesian, born to Dutch parents, with decades of mining experience. "The government doesn't understand the importance of exploration ... Mining without exploration is an industry that goes downhill."

The explorers are not the only ones struggling with the impact of the regulations that have caused industry-wide uncertainty in Indonesia, compounding the effects of a global commodities downturn.

Small miners in particular have been hit, leading to mine closures and lay-offs in regions such as Sulawesi island, with some resorting to bribing central government officials to continue to export, according to interviews with four mining executives.

An analysis of official data shows the rules have also caused a slump in exports of ore, leading key buyer China to seek supplies from elsewhere.

The government of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono is reforming the minerals sector in a plan to propel the G20 country into a global top-10 economy by 2025.

Mining already contributes 12 percent to GDP, and Indonesia is a world leader in nickel ore, thermal coal and refined tin exports, while bauxite exports have spiked in recent years.

"If we do not begin the efforts to increase mining added value, we will be economically colonized forever," said Deputy Energy and Mineral Resources Minister Rudi Rubiandini.

The regulations restrict the export of raw ores, force foreign miners to divest over half their assets after 10 years of production and require domestic processing of ore by 2014.

SURGE THEN PLUNGE

The most dramatic effect of the new rules has been on mineral exports, which surged as companies fought to beat a May 6 export tax deadline and plunged thereafter.

In August Chinese imports of nickel ore from Indonesia dropped 39 percent to 1.48 million tonnes, following steep falls in July and June, Chinese data shows. China's imports from the Philippines nearly doubled over the same period.

Nowhere is the human impact of the slide more visible than in the remote mining communities of Sulawesi, an island east of Borneo and the country's main source of nickel.

Prior to the regulations coming into force in May up to a dozen ships could be seen standing off the port of Kolaka, waiting to collect nickel ore as fleets of trucks scooped mud from nearby hills and transported it down to the docks.

Now the rudimentary ports stand idle and only security guards patrol the abandoned piles of mud. Workers in Sulawesi said the situation for miners was worse now than in 2009 when the global financial crisis hit commodity exports worldwide.

The plight of Rasiun, a father-of-three, illustrates the impact on miners. The former fisherman and farmer sold his land to miner Prima Nusa Sentosa, who offered him $5 a day to pull tarpaulins over ore to protect it from rain.

When the mine closed because of the new regulations he lost his job, but mining pollution has stained the sea red and made it impossible to go back to fishing.

"We thought we could change our fate with the company. Our land is now owned by the company and run-off from the company has flowed into the sea, so now we are unemployed," he said, adding he was "half-dead" with worry over how he would feed his family.

WORLD-CLASS DISCOVERIES

Thousands of firms are affected by the laws and there is a backlog at the mining ministry in Jakarta as many seek the licence, quota and recommendations needed to resume exports.

To cut red tape it helps to pay the ministry between $500,000 and $1.5 million, said a senior mining executive, who declined to be identified. Three other executives at different mining firms also said bribes were required.

"Miners have to get a recommendation from the Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry. What does the word 'recommendation' mean here? You can work that out by yourself," said Juanforti Silalahi, a spokesman for miners' union Spartan.

The mining ministry denies there is corruption in the permit process.

The new regulations do not apply to miners who hold older Contracts of Work (CoW), including some of the most prominent industry names such as the Indonesian units of Freeport McMoRan Copper & Gold Inc, Newmont Mining Corp and Vale .

They also do not apply to coal producers, although for both groups the rules have caused unease that the government's regulatory drive will extend to them through higher royalties.

It is not clear whether the export slump, which coincides with a general downturn that has lopped about a quarter off iron ore and thermal coal prices this year and halted major mining investments in Australia, is a blip or part of a realignment that will hurt mining for a generation.

As they ate and drank at the Jakarta hotel, the members of the Forum for Exploration and Mineral Development were pessimistic about their business, which is crucial for long-term industry growth.

Wesser's last firm, Oxindo, a copper explorer owned by Chinese mining group MMG, closed its Jakarta office in September, one of five members of the group to quit since May.

"There will be no more world-class discoveries in Indonesia," said forum head Malcolm Baillie, about a country that is home to a mine with the world's biggest gold reserves.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: UK's Labour to impose "real" bank split if elected - Miliband

Reuters: Regulatory News
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UK's Labour to impose "real" bank split if elected - Miliband
Sep 30th 2012, 10:45

By Matt Falloon

MANCHESTER, England, Sept 30 | Sun Sep 30, 2012 6:45am EDT

MANCHESTER, England, Sept 30 (Reuters) - Britain's Labour opposition leader launched an offensive against banks on Sunday ahead of his party's annual conference, promising a "real separation" of retail and investment banking and to raise the top rate of personal income tax.

The Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition government has said it will implement the recommendations of an independent review by Oxford University economist John Vickers into how banks should be structured in the wake of the global credit crisis.

But critics, including Vickers, have lamented the watering down of some of the proposals - including the definition of the ring fence between retail and investment arms and the ratio of loans to capital that banks can hold on their books.

Britain's banks - including Barclays, RBS, Lloyds and HSBC - will have until 2019 to make the changes with the government committed to write the new rules into law by 2015.

Labour accuses the government of caving in to fierce lobbying by the financial sector.

"Either they can do it themselves - which frankly is not what has happened over the past year - or the next Labour government will, by law, break up retail and investment banks," Labour leader Ed Miliband said.

"The banks and the government can change direction and say that they are going to implement the spirit and principle of Vickers to the full - that means the hard ring-fence between retail and investment banking. We need real separation, real culture change. Or we will legislate."

Some in the Conservative-led government had been concerned that punishing the financial sector could damage the competitiveness of the City of London, a major global financial centre, and potentially harm a crucial part of Britain's recession-hit economy.

Miliband's warning to the banks comes ahead of his party's annual conference in the northern English city of Manchester, where he is under pressure to explain to voters how it would govern if elected in 2015.

Miliband, who replaced former prime minister Gordon Brown as Labour leader after that defeat, has struggled to make a good impression on voters so far. While opinion polls show Labour would win an election tomorrow, his own personal approval ratings languish below those of Prime Minister David Cameron.

Seeking to capitalise on a perception of Cameron's government as too friendly to the wealthy in an era of austerity, Miliband said Labour would reverse a tax cut for the highest earners in this year's budget which saw the highest rate of income tax drop to 45 percent from 50 percent.

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Friday, September 28, 2012

Reuters: Regulatory News: MGIC updates on Freddie Mac conditions

Reuters: Regulatory News
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MGIC updates on Freddie Mac conditions
Sep 29th 2012, 00:47

Sept 28 | Fri Sep 28, 2012 8:47pm EDT

Sept 28 (Reuters) - MGIC Investment Corp said mortgage financier Freddie Mac has reduced the capital the mortgage insurer will need to add to its main unit, MGIC, in order to continue writing insurance throughout the United States.

Freddie Mac now requires the company to contribute $100 million, down from $200 million, to allow its new unit MIC to temporarily write mortgage insurance in more states.

The mortgage titan also extended the date by which the holding company has to pay the money to Dec. 1, 2012. Previously it was the end of September.

MGIC has been writing insurance after receiving waivers on its capital requirements from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and a number of state regulators over the last two years.

As of June 30, the preliminary risk-to-capital ratio of the company's combined insurance operations was 30-to-1, above the permissible limit set by most states.

MGIC's main unit also falls short of the minimum policyholder position - the amount needed to pay off claims - used by its primary regulator, the Wisconsin Insurance Commissioner (OCI), to gauge the health of an insurer.

The company said it would use its new unit MIC to write insurance in the jurisdictions in which it has not received capital waivers for the main unit. Mortgage insurers have been creating new units to find a way around soaring risk ratios.

Freddie Mac has also approved MGIC's new unit MIC to write new business in 16 states besides Wisconsin that have specific regulatory capital requirements.

The regulator has also extended MIC's approval to Dec. 31, 2013, from the end of 2012, offering a possible breathing space to the company. However, the extension is subject to certain conditions, including that the $100 million capital infusion be made by the specified date.

Freddie Mac also requires that the mortgage insurer settle the case it filed against the government-backed entity by Oct. 31.

MGIC Investment had sued Freddie Mac and the Federal Housing Finance Administration in May to settle a dispute over coverage limits on certain insurance policies.

Freddie Mac also wants the OCI, MGIC Investment's primary regulator, to provide written confirmation that MIC's capital will be available to pay off MGIC's claims, a suggestion that the OCI has objected to in the past.

MGIC Investment, Radian Group Inc and life insurer Genworth's mortgage unit protect lenders in cases where homebuyers make down payments below a certain threshold.

They have been struggling to recoup their losses after the housing bubble burst and foreclosures soared, saddling them with large claims on unpaid home loans and thin capital cushions.

MGIC Investment's shares closed at $1.53 on the New York Stock Exchange on Friday. They rose 13 percent to $1.74 in extended trading.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 2-Google can't enforce German Microsoft injunction-ruling

Reuters: Regulatory News
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UPDATE 2-Google can't enforce German Microsoft injunction-ruling
Sep 28th 2012, 23:49

Fri Sep 28, 2012 7:49pm EDT

By Dan Levine

SAN FRANCISCO, Sept 28 (Reuters) - A U.S. appeals court on Friday ruled that Google Inc's Motorola Mobility unit cannot enforce a patent injunction that it obtained against Microsoft Corp in Germany, diminishing Google's leverage in the ongoing smartphone patent wars.

The injunction would have barred Microsoft from "offering, marketing, using or importing or possessing" in Germany some products including the Xbox 360 and certain Windows software.

The ruling against the German injunction came from the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco.

Microsoft deputy general counsel David Howard said the company was pleased with the ruling. A representative for Google's Motorola unit declined to comment.

Brian Love, a professor at Santa Clara Law school in Silicon Valley, said the decision helps Microsoft counteract a favorable dynamic for Google in Germany.

"To some extent Germany has a reputation as place you can go and get an injunction relatively easy," Love said.

The current Xbox 360 is the market-leading console in the United States. Microsoft is expected to unveil its next generation Xbox video game console in 2013.

Microsoft has said that Motorola's patents are standard, essential parts of its software and that Motorola is asking far too much in royalties for their use. Google closed on its $12.5 billion Motorola Mobility acquisition this year.

Microsoft sued Motorola in the United States in 2010, and Motorola then filed a lawsuit in Germany. Earlier this year, Microsoft announced plans to move its European distribution center to the Netherlands from Germany ahead of a possible injunction.

After a court in Mannheim issued the sales ban, U.S. District Judge James Robart in Seattle granted Microsoft's request to put the German order on hold earlier this year. According to Robart, the ruling would remain in effect until he could determine whether Motorola could appropriately seek a sales ban based on its standard essential patents.

In its ruling on Friday, a three-judge 9th Circuit unanimously upheld Robart's order. Since Microsoft had already brought a lawsuit against Motorola for breach of contract in the United States, U.S. courts have the power to put the German injunction on hold, the 9th Circuit said.

"At bottom, this case is a private dispute under Washington state contract law between two U.S. corporations," the court ruled.

European regulators are investigating claims that Motorola over-charged Microsoft and Apple Inc for use of its patents in their products and thereby breached antitrust rules.

The case in the 9th Circuit is Microsoft Corporation vs. Motorola Inc, Motorola Mobility Inc and General Instrument Corporation, 12-35352.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: US Postal Service regulator questions cost-saving plan

Reuters: Regulatory News
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US Postal Service regulator questions cost-saving plan
Sep 29th 2012, 00:05

Fri Sep 28, 2012 8:05pm EDT

* Postal regulator says plan would save less than USPS projects

* USPS could save about as much without changing delivery - PRC

WASHINGTON, Sept 28 (Reuters) - The U.S. Postal Service's regulator on Friday questioned the potential savings from a plan to shut mail processing sites and slow mail delivery, saying the mail agency could save about the same amount without making major changes to delivery times.

The Postal Service plans to close nearly half its mail processing sites over the next few years, part of its response to tumbling mail volumes as Americans use email more.

But postal officials' assumption that the best response to lower volume was to slow delivery caused it to overlook other cost-cutting options, the Postal Regulatory Commission said in a non-binding opinion.

"The commission's range of potential net savings estimates is lower than that projected by the Postal Service," according to the advisory opinion.

"The vast majority of mail processing savings that the Postal Service expects to attain can be captured without significantly changing service," the PRC said.

The critique is the latest backlash to the Postal Service's cost-cutting ideas. Lawmakers from rural communities, as well as big mailers, have pushed back against plans to close facilities. A Postal Service plan to close thousands of post offices was derailed earlier this year.

The Postal Service says it no longer handles enough mail to justify its current number of facilities and workers.

In May, the mail agency said it would consolidate 140 of its 461 processing sites by February 2013, with more to follow. The plan involved shrinking the area where customers can expect mail to be delivered the next day, with the eventual expectation that delivery would slow further.

The PRC opinion said that at most, that plan would save about $2 billion, slightly less than the Postal Service has projected. But if the move depleted mail volumes by driving advertisers and other mailers online, savings would be much lower, the PRC said.

It also said the Postal Service focused on moving processing from small plants to large ones, but the PRC found that it could save more by looking at productivity rather than size.

Using a model that would close the less productive sites first, the PRC said the USPS could save about $1.8 billion with minimal revenue loss and fewer changes to delivery times.

The Postal Service said when it announced the plan that its second phase of closings and service changes would begin in early 2014. The PRC recommended the USPS use that time to study the initial changes and consider other cost-cutting options.

A Postal Service spokeswoman said the agency is reviewing the advisory opinion.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 2-US court throws out landmark commodity trading crackdown

Reuters: Regulatory News
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UPDATE 2-US court throws out landmark commodity trading crackdown
Sep 28th 2012, 20:43

Fri Sep 28, 2012 4:43pm EDT

* CFTC passed rule as part of 2010 Dodd-Frank reform law

* Industry challenged CFTC's authority on position limits

* Judge rules that Dodd-Frank did not mandate limits

* Tosses rule back to CFTC for further consideration

* Marks victory for traders weeks before effective date

By Alexandra Alper

WASHINGTON, Sept 28 (Reuters) - A U.S. judge handed an 11th-hour victory to Wall Street's biggest commodity traders on Friday, knocking back tough new regulations that would have cracked down on speculation in energy, grain and metals markets.

Judge Robert Wilkins of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia threw out the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission's new "position limits" rule, and sent the regulation back to the agency for further consideration.

In a sharply worded opinion, Wilkins found that the CFTC misinterpreted the 2010 Dodd-Frank financial reform law that includes the position limits language.

He ruled that Dodd-Frank does not include a "clear and unambiguous mandate to set position limits" and the CFTC was required to prove caps are necessary to diminish or prevent excessive speculation.

"The agency failed to bring its expertise and experience to bear when interpreting the statute and offered no explanation for how its interpretation comported with the policy objectives of the Act," Wilkins wrote.

CFTC Chairman Gary Gensler said he was disappointed by the ruling, and the agency is considering ways to proceed. He also stated his view that the CFTC has clear authority to make position-limit rules.

"I believe it is critically important that these position limits be established as Congress required," Gensler said in a statement.

The ruling hands traders a major victory just two weeks before parts of the position limits rule were to take effect.

It is the second Dodd-Frank reform to be knocked out by the courts, and the first such setback for the CFTC. A U.S. appeals court last year rejected the Securities and Exchange Commission "proxy access" rule that would have made it easier for shareholders to nominate directors to corporate boards.

That court ruled that the SEC had failed to properly weigh the economic consequences of the rule, an argument that had also been used to challenge the CFTC's position limits.

The Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association and the International Swaps and Derivatives Association brought the suit against the CFTC, arguing that the regulations would force their members to drastically alter their businesses, cost them tens of millions of dollars, and send customers fleeing.

Wall Street has also long argued that regulators have not proven that position limits would curb speculation in markets and prevent disruptive price spikes.

SIFMA and ISDA said in a statement that they are "extremely pleased" that the rule has been vacated.

The agency passed the position limit rule in October 2011, in a bid to limit the number of contracts traders can hold in 28 commodities, including oil, coffee and gold.

For Wall Street's biggest banks like JP Morgan and Morgan Stanley, the rule threatened to put a lid on one of their biggest growth areas: selling commodity derivatives to investors.

The CFTC approved the position limits by a 3-2 vote, with the Republican commissioners questioning the agency's authority to pass the reform.

The ruling comes just as the agency shows it is getting tough with excess speculation through enforcement. In the past month alone, the CFTC has penalized firms and individuals more than $2 million for violations in cotton, oilseed and grain markets that area already subject to limits.

Position limits have a heavily politicized issue for years, with lawmakers and President Barack Obama arguing that regulators should be doing more to rein in traders who may be driving up the price of oil for consumers.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: Ashford University not to appeal WASC's denial of accreditation

Reuters: Regulatory News
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Ashford University not to appeal WASC's denial of accreditation
Sep 28th 2012, 20:53

Sept 28 | Fri Sep 28, 2012 4:53pm EDT

Sept 28 (Reuters) - For-profit education company Bridgepoint Education Inc said its Ashford University will withdraw its appeal against the decision of Western Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC) to deny it accreditation.

Ashford University was denied accreditation to WASC in July, prompting another agency - the Higher Learning Commission - to review its accreditation to the for-profit college.

Ashford University said it expects to re-apply for accreditation by Oct. 11.

Ashford University cut 450 jobs dealing solely with admissions and re-assigned another 200 admissions personnel to the student services department earlier this month after the WASC said the college spends more money on recruiting students than on teaching them.

Loss of accreditation can deny the college access to federal student aid, which makes up for most of its parent company's revenue.

Shares of San Diego, California-based Bridgepoint Education closed at $10.15 on the New York Stock Exchange on Friday.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 2-Federated CEO says would support some money fund reform

Reuters: Regulatory News
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UPDATE 2-Federated CEO says would support some money fund reform
Sep 28th 2012, 21:22

Fri Sep 28, 2012 5:22pm EDT

* Support could ease way to compromise with regulators

* Federated's Donahue still opposed to "floating" net asset value

By Ross Kerber

BOSTON, Sept 28 (Reuters) - Federated Investors Inc Chief Executive Christopher Donahue, who has fought increased regulation of money market funds, said on Friday he would support a limited reform proposal.

Donahue, whose Pittsburgh-based firm is one of the largest sponsors of money funds, said in an interview that he would back allowing funds to limit customer withdrawals in times of stress, a practice the industry calls "voluntary gates."

"That would work," he said. "It would be enhancing the resilience of the funds."

Forcing funds to adopt other reforms such as a floating net asset value would still be unacceptable, however, he said.

Donahue's comments come as federal regulators this week renewed their efforts to strengthen regulation of the $2.5 trillion money fund industry following the financial crisis, when dozens came under stress amid rapid withdrawals.

The revived talk of regulation hit Federated's share price, which dropped 5.4 percent this week, more than double the decline of competitors like BlackRock and Franklin Resources.

One member of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Daniel Gallagher, who had opposed a prior reform effort in August, said on Friday he hoped his agency would consider a fresh approach, even as the new U.S. risk council is exploring ways to also tighten regulations on the industry. Gallagher's openness to an alternative proposal may greatly increase the chances for new rules.

SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro and others have called for reforms that include requiring the funds to hold capital against potential future losses or move away from the traditional $1 per share fixed net asset value.

The changes proposed by Schapiro, a Democrat, faced strong industry opposition from Federated and other firms. Ultimately, Schapiro could not garner enough support from Gallagher and fellow Republican Commissioner Troy Paredes and Democrat Luis Aguilar last month.

Gallagher and Paredes have described optional withdrawal limts like those favored by Donahue as a way that money fund boards could avoid rapid and destabilizing withdrawals. Under a 2010 rule change, such limits could only be imposed if the fund was closed and put into liquidation.

Donahue said his firm has backed "voluntary gates" in the past, and that the device helped preserve capital at a $12 billion fund run by Putnam Investments before it was taken over by Federated at the peak of the crisis.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: FDA approves Boston Scientific's unique heart device

Reuters: Regulatory News
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FDA approves Boston Scientific's unique heart device
Sep 28th 2012, 21:25

Sept 28 | Fri Sep 28, 2012 5:25pm EDT

Sept 28 (Reuters) - U.S. health regulators approved Boston Scientific Corp's first-of-its-kind heart defibrillator that does not require leads to be inserted into the heart.

Defibrillators help control heart rhythm by applying an electric shock to the heart when it beats abnormally fast, reducing the risk of cardiac arrest.

Traditional defibrillators require electrical conductor wires or leads to be inserted into the heart through a vein in the upper chest.

Boston Scientific's Subcutaneous Implantable Defibrillator (S-ICD) requires the wires to be implanted under the skin along the bottom of the rib cage, making the procedure accessible to more patients.

It is the first such device to get approval from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. The S-ICD System is commercially available in many countries in Europe, as well as New Zealand.

"Some patients with anatomy that makes it challenging to place one of the implantable defibrillators currently on the market may especially benefit from this device," FDA official Christy Foreman said in a statement.

The device is manufactured by Cameron Health Inc, which was acquired by Boston Scientific in June.

The FDA said it requires Cameron Health to conduct a postmarket study to assess the long-term safety and performance of the device.

Shares of Boston Scientific closed at $5.74 on Friday on the New York Stock Exchange.

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