Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 1-China launches trade probes on EU solar products

Reuters: Regulatory News
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UPDATE 1-China launches trade probes on EU solar products
Nov 1st 2012, 04:17

Thu Nov 1, 2012 12:17am EDT

BEIJING Nov 1 (Reuters) - China said on Thursday that it would launch anti-dumping and anti-subsidy investigations into imported European Union solar-grade polysilicon, in the latest instance of tit-for-tat trade tensions in the global solar industry.

The move comes as the EU's executive body mulls duties targeting Chinese solar producers, a probe launched in September after companies accused Chinese rivals of "dumping", or deliberately selling products for less abroad than at home.

The Commerce Ministry, in two statements posted to its website, said it would "merge" the EU investigations into ongoing probes of U.S. and South Korean-made solar products "to evaluate the accumulated impact of products from the three regions".

In October, China's largest state-owned utility, the State Grid Corp, said it was working on policies to help ailing solar power producers, including subsidies and easier access to the grid.

China's export-focused solar panel industry has been hit hard by excess manufacturing capacity and waning foreign demand as European nations cut back subsidies for green power.

Companies have slashed prices 30 percent this year as stockpiles grow, virtually erasing the industry's profits.

The Commerce Ministry said the probe was in response to complaints made by several Chinese companies, including Jiangxi LDK PV Silicon Technology Co., a subsidiary of LDK Solar ., one of China's hardest hit solar manufacturers.

Major producers, including Suntech Power Holdings and Trina Solar, are turning to the domestic market, now one of the world's biggest, for solar energy development.

Western solar firms have been at odds with their Chinese counterparts for years, alleging they receive lavish credit lines to offer modules at cheaper pricing.

EU solar firms have said Chinese solar panel makers benefited from low interest rates thanks to government policy, and if loans could not be paid back they might be written off, extended indefinitely or paid off by government-controlled entities.

The United States levelled steep final duties on Chinese-made solar products in October, a move Beijing warned would provoke greater trade frictions in the new energy sector.

Chinese companies sold about 21 billion euros ($27.1 billion) in solar panels and components to the EU in 2011 - about 60 percent of all Chinese exports of the products and some 7 percent of all Chinese exports to the EU.

Europe is the top market for solar products, accounting for 74 percent of global installations in 2011, according to industry association EPIA.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: Market Chatter-Corporate finance press digest

Reuters: Regulatory News
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Market Chatter-Corporate finance press digest
Nov 1st 2012, 04:03

Thu Nov 1, 2012 12:03am EDT

Nov 1 (Reuters) - The following corporate finance-related stories were reported by media on Thursday:

* A subsidiary of China Investment Corp, the country's sovereign wealth fund, is buying a 10 percent stake in the UK's Heathrow Airport, state news agency Xinhua reported.

* Telenor has opened the door to a potential sale of its $6.4 billion stake in VimpelCom, the world's sixth-largest telecoms group by subscribers, the Financial Times reported.

* JPMorgan Chase & Co has filed suit against the former boss of Bruno Iksil, the trader known as the London Whale for the outsized derivatives positions he took that cost the bank $6.2 billion this year, Bloomberg News reported.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 2-U.S. eases clean gasoline rules in East after Sandy

Reuters: Regulatory News
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UPDATE 2-U.S. eases clean gasoline rules in East after Sandy
Nov 1st 2012, 02:33

Wed Oct 31, 2012 10:33pm EDT

* EPA waives clean gasoline rules for 16 states

* Waivers last through Nov 20

* Also waives diesel rule for generators in NJ

* Gasoline crunch could linger amid 2 refinery outages

By Timothy Gardner

WASHINGTON, Oct 31 (Reuters) - The U.S. environmental regulator waived clean gasoline requirements through Nov. 20 on the eastern seaboard to help ease a supply crunch after Hurricane Sandy ripped across the region's energy system.

"I have determined that an 'extreme and unusual fuel supply circumstance' exists that will prevent the distribution of an adequate supply of gasoline to consumers," Lisa Jackson, the head of the Environmental Protection Agency, said in a letter on Wednesday to governors of the states.

New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania and 13 other states had requested a waiver in requirements to sell reformulated gasoline, or RFG, in smog-plagued regions of the country. The waiver also applies to states in the mid-Atlantic including Maryland and states in the South including Tennessee, North Carolina and South Carolina.

Sandy damaged petroleum storage facilities and caused pipeline delays that are projected to prevent the distribution of RFG in areas hit by the storm, Jackson said in the letter.

East Coast fuel supplies could be tight into next week as flooding and downed power lines slowed the recovery of two New Jersey refineries, including the Phillips 66 Bayway plant, the region's second largest.

On Wednesday some drivers in New Jersey were forming long lines to buy gasoline and causing traffic delays on several highways. On Route 17 in the north of the state lines to buy gasoline were backing up onto the road.

"Route 17 is like a parking lot with cars lined up in the slow lane on both sides," said Erin Gardner Myers, a motorist coming home from work. "It's really bad out here."

Under the waiver the EPA will allow fuel retailers to sell conventional gasoline in place of RFG effective immediately. It also allows some states to mix conventional and RFG to ease supply issues.

A copy of the letter can be seen here:

Earlier on Wednesday, the EPA granted a waiver for operators of generators and pumps in New Jersey to use heating oil in place of ultra low sulfur diesel to help ease a supply crunch of that fuel.

An energy expert said fuel waivers were one of the things the few things the Obama administration could do to help people with energy problems after the storm.

"There's not much they can do about getting the power back on, but the government can at least lead on this so people know things are going to get better," said Lucian Pugliaresi, president of the Energy Policy Research Foundation, Inc.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: China launches trade probes on EU solar products

Reuters: Regulatory News
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China launches trade probes on EU solar products
Nov 1st 2012, 02:42

BEIJING | Wed Oct 31, 2012 10:42pm EDT

BEIJING Nov 1 (Reuters) - China said on Thursday that it will launch anti-dumping and anti-subsidy investigations into imported European Union solar-grade polysilicon, in the latest instance of tit-for-tat trade tensions in the global solar industry.

China's Commerce Ministry said in two statements posted to its website that it would roll the investigations into ongoing probes of U.S. and South Korean made solar products.

The European Union's executive body launched an investigation into Chinese solar products in September after companies accused Chinese rivals of "dumping", or deliberately selling products for less abroad than at home.

The United States levelled steep final duties on Chinese-made solar products in October, a move Beijing has warned would provoke greater trade friction in the new energy sector.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 3-US power market watchdog seeks record $470 mln from Barclays

Reuters: Regulatory News
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UPDATE 3-US power market watchdog seeks record $470 mln from Barclays
Nov 1st 2012, 01:43

Wed Oct 31, 2012 9:43pm EDT

* Potentially the largest penalty imposed by FERC

* Commission granted extended powers after 2005 scandal

* Sets up potential precedent over "loss-leader" strategy

By Scott DiSavino and Jonathan Leff

WASHINGTON/NEW YORK, Oct 31 (Reuters) - U.S. regulators threatened to fine Barclays roughly $470 million to settle allegations that the bank and four traders manipulated California electricity markets, reviving the specter of a sector-wide crackdown on energy trading.

It could possibly be the biggest penalty ever levied by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), and potentially exceeds the fine Barclays paid over the Libor bid-rigging scandal that cost Chief Executive Robert Diamond his job.

The bank has 30 days to show why it should not be penalized for an alleged scheme of manipulating physical electricity prices at a loss in order to make profits in related positions in the swaps market, a strategy known as a "loss-leader".

British bank Barclays said it would fight the agency, likely setting up a landmark legal battle that could set a precedent over whether the once-common trading ploy in commodity markets is illegal or simply ill-advised.

It will have huge implications across the market, as the FERC - - w hich won expanded powers to tackle manipulation in 2005 after the California power trading scandal and related Enron meltdown -- pur sues similar investigations against companies including BP and Deutsche Bank.

The FERC also said four of the company's power traders -- Daniel Brin, Scott Connelly, Karen Levine, and Ryan Smith -- have 30 days to show why they should not be assessed a total of $18 million in civil penalties.

It said their activity accounted for nearly a quarter of all trading in the next-day power market during the period, accruing gains of an estimated $34.9 million. Bank documents showed how the traders bragged about how they would "crap on" certain markets to profit in other ones, the order shows.

Barclays "strongly disagreed" with the order, which it said was "by nature a one-sided document, and does not reflect a balanced and full description of the facts."

"We believe that our trading was legitimate and in compliance with applicable law," Barclays spokesman Mark Lane said in an email. "We have cooperated fully with the FERC investigation, which relates to trading activity that occurred several years ago. We intend to vigorously defend this matter."

The four traders left Barclays over the past five years for reasons unrelated to the investigation, according to a source familiar with the matter. The bank closed its Portland office in 2011 and effectively quit the Western power market this year.

It is the latest blow for Barclays, which has fired staff, clawed back pay and taken other disciplinary action after being fined $450 million by U.S. and British regulators over Libor.

New CEO Antony Jenkins, who took over at the end of July, is in the middle of a review to change the bank's culture and lift profitability. The changes are due to be unveiled in February.

Earlier on Wednesday, Barclays announced that the U.S. Department of Justice and the Securities and Exchange Commission were investigating whether it was complying with U.S. laws in its ties with third parties who help it win or retain business.

The FERC order is tantamount to an indictment, suggesting the issue may go to court after settlement talks were unsuccessful, said Craig Pirrong, a University of Houston professor and expert in energy trade regulation.

EMBOLDENED FERC

The order threatens to stir up memories of the California power crisis, but the allegations involve a far more subtle trading strategy that industry veterans say had been common in global markets: using loss-making trades in benchmark physical commodity markets in order to profit from derivatives positions.

The "loss leader" gambit had until recently been viewed as outside the bounds of regulators, whose purview typically covered either physical markets or derivatives, but rarely both. Although the practice has diminished greatly in recent years as regulators get tougher, many veterans fear that old deals could come back to haunt them.

As well as the return of $34.9 million gains plus interest, the commission is also seeking a $435 million civil penalty.

"Scary stuff," said one senior executive at a trading firm. "Which I guess is the point."

The FERC first flexed its muscles earlier this year with a record $245 million settlement with power company Constellation Energy over similar allegations. Other agencies pursued larger fines against power merchants after the California debacle.

"FERC is getting tougher," said Pirrong. He cautioned that there are "factual and conceptual challenges" in proving manipulation in court, but that isn't stopping the agency.

"It is going to town on this theory of manipulation, and I would wager that any firm that traded both physical and financial power is at risk of a similar FERC action," he said.

WARNING IGNORED

The FERC Office of Enforcement staff alleged Barclays engaged in a coordinated scheme to manipulate trading at four electricity trading points in the Western United States.

The order alleges that Connelly, hired in May 2006 to start a North American power market desk, hired a team of traders who ultimately came to dominate the market, making up 24 percent of all next-day fixed-price trading on the IntercontinentalExchange trading platform during the months in question.

The bank's "total market concentration" was as much as 58 percent and no less than 10 percent in any given month, it says.

It then engaged in "loss-generating trading of next-day fixed-price physical electricity" at a number of key electricity hubs in order to pay off positions in the swaps market, where contracts are settled based on physical market prices.

The traders were aware that the trading was "likely unlawful", and ignored the warning of the head of Americas commodity trading Joe Gold, who "made clear the practice was unacceptable", according to the FERC order.

Experts say one of the biggest challenges in winning any manipulation cases is demonstrating that traders intentionally engaged in a losing trade to make bigger profits.

But, just as recorded telephone conversations between California power traders about driving up power prices for " g randma Millie" proved damning a decade ago, the agency used instant messages and emails to bolster its case.

Smith, for instance, described how he manipulated the Palo Verde market, according to the FERC order, and the "NP light" -- or off-peak power ('light') in the North Path 15 (NP) market in northern California in an attempt to "drive the SP light lower."

Levine asked colleagues to "keep the PV index up and the SP daily index down" while she was on vacation.

Mike Masters, co-founder of Better Markets and a frequent advocate for stronger rules, said it could be the "tip of the iceberg" as regulators probe more deeply into commodities.

"It's a very significant fine and not just because of the dollar amount. It also highlights how banks and swap dealers were combining financial and physical positions in a predatory way to manipulate commodity markets," he said.

"If it's happened in power markets you can be sure it was also going on in crude oil and other markets like refined oil products," Masters said.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 1-U.S. power market regulator seeks $470 mln from Barclays

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-U.S. power market regulator seeks $470 mln from Barclays
Oct 31st 2012, 22:34

Wed Oct 31, 2012 7:31pm EDT

Oct 31 (Reuters) - U.S. federal energy regulators threatened to fine Barclays roughly $470 million to settle allegations that the bank and four traders manipulated California energy markets from November 2006 to December 2008.

In a potentially record penalty that could eclipse fines over rigging the inter-bank lending rate known as Libor, the U.S. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission said Barclays has 30 days to show why it should not be penalized for an alleged scheme of manipulating physical electricity markets in order to benefit from related positions in the swaps market.

Barclays reiterated that it "strongly disagreed" with the findings and was ready to fight the order, which it said was "by nature a one-sided document, and does not reflect a balanced and full description of the facts."

"We believe that our trading was legitimate and in compliance with applicable law," Barclays spokesman Mark Lane said in an email. "We have cooperated fully with the FERC investigation, which relates to trading activity that occurred several years ago. We intend to vigorously defend this matter."

It is the latest blow for the British bank, which has fired staff, clawed back pay and taken other disciplinary action after being fined $450 million by U.S. and British regulators over Libor.

Earlier on Wednesday Barclays announced that the U.S. Department of Justice and the Securities and Exchange Commission were probing whether it was complying with U.S. laws in its relationships with third parties who help it win or retain business.

The FERC order suggests the agency was unable to reach a settlement with Barclays through negotiations, indicating the issue is likely to head toward an administrative court, says Craig Pirrong, an expert in energy trade regulation.

BOLD FERC

Wednesday's order is the boldest move yet from the FERC, which won expanded powers to tackle manipulation in 2005 after the California power trading scandal and Enron meltdown.

Just months after reaching a record $245 million settlement with power company Constellation Energy over similar allegations, the agency is pursuing advanced enquiries into several big energy firms and banks, including BP, JP Morgan and Deutsche Bank, according to notices.

"FERC is getting tougher," said Pirrong. He cautioned that there are "factual and conceptual challenges" in proving manipulation in court, but that isn't stopping the agency.

"It is going to town on this theory of manipulation, and I would wager that any firm that traded both physical and financial power is at risk of a similar FERC action."

The FERC Office of Enforcement staff alleged Barclays engaged in a coordinated scheme to manipulate trading at four electricity trading points in the Western United States.

Specifically, Office of Enforcement staff allege that "Barclays engaged in loss-generating trading of next-day fixed-price physical electricity on the IntercontinentalExchange at the locations of Mid-Columbia, Palo Verde, South Path 15 and North Path 15 to benefit Barclays' financial swap positions in those markets."

FERC also said four of the company's power traders - Daniel Brin, Scott Connelly, Karen Levine, and Ryan Smith - have 30 days to show why they should not be assessed a total of $18 million in civil penalties.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 4-Barclays hit by fresh U.S. investigations

Reuters: Regulatory News
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UPDATE 4-Barclays hit by fresh U.S. investigations
Oct 31st 2012, 22:58

Wed Oct 31, 2012 4:03am EDT

* Bank unveils new probe by DoJ, SEC into relationships

* Barclays also under investigation on past U.S. power prices

* Pretax profit down 23 pct to 1 bln stg, hit by PPI charge

LONDON, Oct 31 (Reuters) - Beleaguered UK bank Barclays , already rocked by an interest rate rigging scandal, unveiled two new U.S. regulatory investigations into its financial probity and said third quarter profits fell by a fifth due to charges for the mis-selling of insurance.

Barclays said the U.S. Department of Justice and U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission were investigating whether its relationships with third parties who help it win or retain business are compliant with the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.

The bank is already under investigation by Britain's financial regulator and fraud prosecutor into payments to Qatar investors after the bank raised billions of pounds from them five years ago to save it from taking a taxpayer bailout.

Barclays said it is also being investigated by the U.S. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission about the manipulation of power prices in the western United States from late 2006 until 2008.

FERC could notify the bank of proposed penalties as early as Wednesday, it said. Barclays said it will "vigorously" defend this matter.

New Barclays Chief Executive Antony Jenkins, who took over at the end of July when his predecessor Bob Diamond quit after the bank admitted rigging Libor interest rates, is in the midst of a review aimed at overhauling culture and boosting profitability, which is expected to cut jobs and the size of investment banking.

"While we have much to do to restore trust among stakeholders, our universal banking franchise remains strong and well positioned," Jenkins said.

The bank said its adjusted pretax profit in the three months to the end of September was 1.73 billion pounds ($2.8 billion), in line with analysts' forecasts and up from 1.34 billion a year ago, thanks to strong profits from investment banking.

But including a 700 million pound charge for mis-selling payment protection insurance would have left profits down 23 percent at 1.03 billion.

Including a 1.1 billion pound loss on the value of its own debt would have dragged Barclays to a statutory loss of 47 million pounds for the quarter.

The bank said performance during October had been affected by the "challenging economic environment and subdued market volumes".

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Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 1-US eases clean gasoline rules in East after Sandy

Reuters: Regulatory News
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UPDATE 1-US eases clean gasoline rules in East after Sandy
Oct 31st 2012, 22:04

Wed Oct 31, 2012 6:04pm EDT

* EPA waives clean gasoline rules for 16 states

* Waivers last through Nov 20

By Timothy Gardner

WASHINGTON, Oct 31 (Reuters) - The U.S. environmental regulator temporarily waived clean gasoline requirements through Nov. 20 across the eastern seaboard to ease a supply crunch after Hurricane Sandy.

"I have determined that an 'extreme and unusual fuel supply circumstance' exists that will prevent the distribution of an adequate supply of gasoline to consumers," Lisa Jackson, the head of the Environmental Protection Agency, said in a letter on Wednesday to governors of the states.

The governors of 16 states, including New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, had requested a waiver in requirements to sell reformulated gasoline, or RFG, in smog-plagued regions of the country. The waiver also applies to states in the mid-Atlantic including Maryland and states in the South including Tennessee, North Carolina and South Carolina.

Sandy damaged petroleum storage facilities and caused pipeline delays that are projected to prevent the distribution of RFG in areas hit by the storm, Jackson said in the letter.

On Wednesday some drivers in New Jersey were forming long lines to buy gasoline and causing traffic delays on at least one highway. On Route 17 in the north of the state lines to buy gasoline were backing up onto the road.

"Route 17 is like a parking lot with cars lined up in the slow lane on both sides," said Erin Gardner, a motorist coming home from work. "It's really bad out here."

Under the waiver the EPA will allow fuel retailers to sell conventional gasoline in place of RFG effective immediately.

A copy of the letter can be seen here:

Earlier on Wednesday, the EPA granted a waiver for operators of generators and pumps to use heating oil in place of ultra low sulfur diesel to help ease a supply crunch of that fuel.

An energy expert said fuel waivers were one of the things President Barack Obama can do to help people after the storm.

"There's not much they can do about getting the power back on, but the government can at least lead on this so people know things are going to get better," said Lucian Pugliaresi, President of the Energy Policy Research Foundation, Inc.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: US Senate likely to revisit cyber bill when Congress returns

Reuters: Regulatory News
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US Senate likely to revisit cyber bill when Congress returns
Oct 31st 2012, 22:04

Wed Oct 31, 2012 6:04pm EDT

* Information sharing with private sector a key goal

* Recent cyber attacks add to sense of urgency

By Andrea Shalal-Esa

WASHINGTON, Oct 31 (Reuters) - Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid hopes to reintroduce cyber security legislation opposed by business groups once lawmakers return after Tuesday's election, a Senate aide said, adding that a White House executive order might pave the way for a compromise on the bill.

Senator Joe Lieberman, one of the authors of the bill, would consider dropping a provision aimed at shoring up protection of critical infrastructure that had raised concerns among Senate Republicans, if that issue could be addressed in an executive order, Jeffrey Ratner, senior adviser for cybersecurity on the Senate Homeland Security Committee, said Wednesday.

Lieberman, who heads the committee, "wants legislation, but he's willing to focus on the rest of this bill, because there are important things there that he believes need to be implemented," Ratner said after a cyber security event hosted by the Washington Post.

"That is the easiest mechanism but we're open to other things," Ratner said, noting that Lieberman viewed it as critical to move ahead on a measure that would increase information-sharing between intelligence agencies and private companies.

He said final decisions on how to proceed would be made depending on the outcome of the election, but the cyber security bill was one of the first items Reid wanted to tackle when lawmakers came back to Washington.

The Senate bill floundered in August after just 52 of the 60 votes needed to advance the bill to a final vote were secured. Business groups opposed what they viewed as over-regulation, while privacy groups worried that the measure would open the door to Internet eavesdropping.

But congressional aides and cyber experts say the bill could get some fresh momentum given a spate of cyber attacks in recent weeks targeted at banks and financial institutions, as well a virus that disabled more than 30,000 computers at Saudi Arabia's state oil company, ARAMCO.

Defense Secretary Leon Panetta gave a major policy speech earlier this month about cyber threats, and the White House is expected to issue an executive order to increase oversight of security measures in the private sector.

CONCERN ON VULNERABILITIES

Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano on Wednesday again urged Congress to pass legislation that would help expand information-sharing between the government and private industry, noting that U.S. financial institutions and stock exchanges had already been targeted.

"We know there are  vulnerabilities. We are working with them on that," Napolitano told executives at the Washington Post event. She said her agency was trying to adopt a more proactive approach to anticipate the next sector that could be targeted, noting that the U.S. energy sector was a particular concern.

James Lewis, cyber expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said one possibility might be to conference the Senate bill and a separate, bipartisan measure introduced in the House of Representatives by Chairman of the House Intelligence Committee Mike Rogers and the top Democrat on that panel, C.A. Ruppersberger.

The idea, he said, would be to come up with some "minimally acceptable, passable thing."

Dmitri Alperovitch, chief technology officer of CrowdStrike, said passing legislation was only part of the solution and congressional passage of a watered-down bill might make it tough to get other needed changes enacted in coming years.

He said private companies and the government already shared information, but the bigger issue was that the government had been unwilling to take action against cyber attackers, even in cases involving major penetrations of private networks.

"We're having the wrong debate," he said, noting that private companies were also nervous about sharing information with the government given leaks in previous cases. "What's the benefit of information-sharing if you're not going to act on the information?"

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Reuters: Regulatory News: U.S. FERC seeks $470 mln from Barclays in manipulation case

Reuters: Regulatory News
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U.S. FERC seeks $470 mln from Barclays in manipulation case
Oct 31st 2012, 22:17

WASHINGTON | Wed Oct 31, 2012 6:17pm EDT

WASHINGTON Oct 31 (Reuters) - The staff of the U.S. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has recommended that Barclays should pay roughly $470 million to settle allegations that the bank and its traders manipulated California energy markets from November 2006 to December 2008.

FERC said in an order issued on Wednesday that Barclays and the accused traders have 30 days to show why they should not be penalized.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: US grants clean gasoline waiver to 16 states in Sandy's wake

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US grants clean gasoline waiver to 16 states in Sandy's wake
Oct 31st 2012, 21:16

WASHINGTON | Wed Oct 31, 2012 5:16pm EDT

WASHINGTON Oct 31 (Reuters) - The U.S. environmental regulator temporarily waived clean gasoline requirements through Nov. 20 for 16 states on the eastern seaboard including New York and New Jersey to help ease a supply crunch after super storm Sandy hit the region.

"I have determined that an 'extreme and unusual fuel supply circumstance' exists that will prevent the distribution of an adequate supply of gasoline to consumers," Lisa Jackson, the head of the Environmental Protection Agency, said in a letter on Wednesday to governors of the states. They had requested a waiver of requirements to sell reformulated gasoline (RFG) sold in smog-plagued regions of the country.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: US FCC: Cell sites coming back on line slowly after storm

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US FCC: Cell sites coming back on line slowly after storm
Oct 31st 2012, 20:24

WASHINGTON | Wed Oct 31, 2012 4:24pm EDT

WASHINGTON Oct 31 (Reuters) - Fully 25 percent of cell sites in the broad area hit by former hurricane Sandy were off-line earlier this week, and the outages have been reduced by only "a few percentage points" at this point, a federal official on Wednesday.

Cell sites, which can be towers or smaller facilities to relay wireless calls, were knocked out by power cuts, floods and debris, said David Turetsky, the head of the Federal Communications Commission's Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau.

The FCC had estimated that one-quarter of cell sites in the counties that Sandy hit were out of service on Tuesday.

Turetsky said outages by 10 a.m. ET on Wednesday were down by roughly three or four percentage points from the peak.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: Bank of Canada chief-"A lot" of headwinds hitting economy

Reuters: Regulatory News
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Bank of Canada chief-"A lot" of headwinds hitting economy
Oct 31st 2012, 21:06

Wed Oct 31, 2012 5:06pm EDT

* Central bank has signaled rate hike not imminent

* Warns that bond markets can also influence mortgage rates

* Says Canada's financial sector not too big

By Randall Palmer

OTTAWA, Oct 31 (Reuters) - Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney, on the heels of telling markets that an interest rate hike was not imminent, offered several reasons on Wednesday for why the central bank has kept rates exceptionally low.

"There are a lot of headwinds against the Canadian economy from the rest of the world, there's a challenge to encourage business to invest, there are pressures on the currency," Carney told a parliamentary committee.

"There are a variety of reasons why it's advantageous to have very accommodative monetary policy and that's what we have here in Canada, very accommodative monetary policy."

The Bank of Canada is the only central bank in the Group of Seven leading industrialized nations which has hinted at raising interest rates. But Carney has effectively cautioned that it will be some time before it withdraws monetary stimulus.

That message was reinforced on Wednesday by data showing the Canadian economy shrank in August for the first time in six months, an unexpected contraction that pointed to a sharp slowdown in third-quarter growth.

HOUSING MARKET, DEBT GROWTH COOLING

Carney, who was testifying to the Senate banking committee following the release of the bank's quarterly Monetary Policy Report, was asked what could be done to contain what has been a hot housing market and high household debt levels.

He repeated his line that moving rates higher should be the last line of defense, though he said that ideally monetary policy should be complementary to other government measures.

Carney said condominium markets remained hot while other parts of the housing sector were adjusting to government measures to tighten mortgage insurance rules.

He warned that even if the central bank does not raise its main policy rate, individuals face the risk of higher mortgages rates because of what happens to the bond market.

"There are scenarios where there could be an increase over time in government bond rates, not because of monetary policy but because of just the sheer level of borrowing and uncertainty that develop on a global scale about the sustainability, so a credit premium coming into those bonds, and so that would also affect mortgage rates as well over time," he said.

Carney is also chairman of the international Financial Stability Board, and he addressed the issue of banks being considered too big to fail.

"There are two broader issues for a country like Canada that need to be considered. The first is relative size of the financial sector versus the economy as a whole ... We don't think this is the case in Canada but there were other economies in the world where the size of their financial sector was multiples of their GDP," he said.

"Every economy has to think about this question of ending too big to fail, and ending the perception of too big to fail and ... ending too big to fail is central to the agenda of the Financial Stability Board and by extension to Canada as a whole."

Carney said he did not believe there should be a specific cap on the size of banks in Canada, as there is in some other countries. But he said there was an effective limit on concentration and size, with the ultimate responsibility held by the finance minister.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 4-Potash eyes ICL takeover as a road to China, India

Reuters: Regulatory News
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UPDATE 4-Potash eyes ICL takeover as a road to China, India
Oct 31st 2012, 21:20

Wed Oct 31, 2012 5:20pm EDT

* Israel has rejected Potash approaches in the past

* Analysts: Deal unlikely in near term, if at all

* ICL, Israel Corp shares jump; Potash up slightly

By Steven Scheer and Rod Nickel

JERUSALEM/WINNIPEG, Manitoba, Oct 31 (Reuters) - Potash Corp , the world's No. 1 fertilizer producer, is ramping up efforts to buy Israel Chemicals Ltd so it can shore up its leverage with China and India, top consuming countries that are expected to drive much of the industry's growth.

Although a deal is likely a long way off, acquiring ICL , the world's sixth-largest fertilizer producer, would give Canada's Potash Corp better shipping access to China, India and other Asian economies. Rising Asian incomes and populations are expected to trigger greater fertilizer use to produce more food.

Potash Corp confirmed on Wednesday it has been in talks with Israeli officials on acquiring ICL. To get a deal done it would need approvals from Israel's Government Companies Authority, the prime minister and the Antitrust Authority to increase its 13.84 percent stake in ICL. If it does win approval in Israel, it would still likely need further antitrust approvals from a range of global regulators.

"This deal cannot be ruled out. However it is unlikely to happen in the near term," said Virginie Boucher-Ferte, an analyst at Deutsche Bank, in a note to clients.

About 34 percent of ICL, which has a market value of about $15 billion, is traded on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange and a deal would be the largest foreign takeover of an Israeli company.

Potash Corp, which kept its Canadian status in 2010 after Ottawa vetoed a $39 billion bid from Anglo-Australian miner BHP Billiton Ltd, has a market value of around $35 billion.

Conglomerate Israel Corp, which owns a majority in ICL, said Potash Corp Chief Executive Bill Doyle has met Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to push for a deal, while financial daily Calcalist said Netanyahu has instructed his staff and the finance ministry to examine it.

"The company confirms it is aware that Canada's Potash is in talks with various government agencies that included a meeting with the prime minister regarding examining the possibility of merging ICL with Potash," Israel Corp said in a statement.

A year ago, Potash sought to raise its stake in ICL - which also produces a third of the world's bromine - to 25 percent. The Israeli government gave initial approval, but Potash pulled the request when regulators took too long to respond.

According to Calcalist, Potash now seeks 100 percent of ICL, which has potash and phosphate mining rights on Israeli state-owned land.

CHANGE IN FOCUS

Taking control of ICL would boost Potash's projected 2015 capacity of 17.1 million tonnes by about one quarter, folding in a company that Bank of America Merrill Lynch says controls about 20 percent of India's potash imports, and 15 percent of China's.

ICL would give Potash low-cost assets and boost the clout of marketing group Canpotex, even if the agency didn't formally expand its mandate to Israeli potash, said National Bank Financial analyst Robert Winslow.

"At the end of the day, they would control that supply, so effectively it would be part of the (Canpotex) oligopoly."

Canpotex currently sells potash produced in Saskatchewan by Potash Corp, Mosaic Co and Agrium Inc and is owned by the three companies.

Potash Corp, already the world's largest producer of the crop nutrient potash, has long acted as the swing producer within the sector, cutting production when demand is weak to stabilize prices and boosting output when prices are strong.

It currently ships the bulk of its output into North and South America, but China and India are critical to its fortunes. The Saskatoon, Saskatchewan-based company last week reported a 22 percent drop in third-quarter profit, largely due to stalled talks between the two countries and Canpotex.

Shares of ICL gained 5.2 percent, while Israel Corp's shares rose 5.6 percent on Wednesday. Potash Corp shares gained 0.6 percent in New York and 0.5 percent in Toronto.

EQUITY ASSETS

Potash CEO Doyle said last week that the company's equity investments are the second-best potash assets after its own.

"We own them with the long-term goal of having a majority position in each one. It doesn't happen overnight, but we think they're a very, very valuable part of our company, and it's more than just a monetary thing," he told analysts.

Potash Corp also has stakes in Arab Potash Co Plc in Jordan, Sinofert Holdings Ltd in China and SQM in Chile.

Boucher-Ferte said it was not clear whether Potash would offer ICL shareholders a premium for their stock. She said Potash would have to give Israel the right to repatriate licence rights if a hostile country or entity took control of Potash.

Analysts believe the deal would benefit Israel Corp, which could stand to win a 20 percent stake in Potash and become a more recognised international player.

Potash Corp will soon have cash to spend as it winds down a nine-year, $8-billion expansion plan in 2013. It could also sell down its equity investments, Joel Jackson, an analyst at BMO Capital Markets, said in a note.

But with Israel headed for elections in January, discussions will likely be on hold for a while.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: Massachusetts treasurer blasts federal online-gambling bill

Reuters: Regulatory News
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Massachusetts treasurer blasts federal online-gambling bill
Oct 31st 2012, 21:12

Wed Oct 31, 2012 5:12pm EDT

Oct 31 (Reuters) - Massachusetts' state treasurer on Wednesday blasted an online-gambling bill backed by U.S. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, saying the proposed federal law threatened the Massachusetts lottery that last year yielded nearly $1 billion in profits.

Steven Grossman, who is also chair of his state's Lottery Commission, said in a letter to Reid and co-sponsor Republican U.S. Senator Jon Kyl of Arizona that the bill sharply limits states' abilities to regulate online gambling inside their borders.

The bill, which would bar most types of Internet gambling but not off-track horse wagers and licensed online poker, would also give an unfair edge to gambling companies in Nevada, Reid's home state.

"The proposed act would effectively limit participation in the online gaming marketplace to gaming operations with a presence in Nevada and sharply constrain the ability of state lotteries to offer online products," Grossman said.

Reid has said the bill, if passed, would create a needed regulatory framework that would protect minors and others and make online poker operators accountable.

Lottery officials in Massachusetts are studying selling tickets online and have yet to make a decision for the state operation, which last year had $4.7 billion in revenue and profit of $982 million that was largely turned over to the state's cities and towns.

But, Grossman said, the Reid-Kyl bill would forbid online sales of instant scratch and Keno chances "that are responsible for more than 85 percent of the Lottery's sales."

Grossman, a Democrat like Reid, said the bill's limits served no business purpose.

"Accordingly, we can only assume that the act is a blatant, unwarranted and inappropriate attempt to secure first-mover advantage in the online gaming space for Nevada," Grossman said.

U.S. state governors, through a letter from the National Governors Association, last week criticized the Reid-Kyl bill.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: Shell finishes Arctic drilling for season, plans more in 2013

Reuters: Regulatory News
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Shell finishes Arctic drilling for season, plans more in 2013
Oct 31st 2012, 19:52

Wed Oct 31, 2012 3:52pm EDT

* Drilling this year was more limited than planned

* Federal plan allows 10 wells over two seasons

By Yereth Rosen

ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Oct 31 (Reuters) - Royal Dutch Shell Plc said on Wednesday it has finished exploration drilling for the season in Arctic waters off Alaska and was moving drill ships and equipment south for the winter, in accordance with federal permits.

Its work was the first in two decades in the federal Arctic program, even though it ended up being much more limited than initially planned. This was due to setbacks for the company that environmentalists seized upon as potential pitfalls inherent in drilling in the Arctic.

Shell capped the two wells it started in the Chukchi and Beaufort seas and was moving equipment out, while also preparing to return for more drilling next year, said Shell spokesman Curtis Smith.

"We will revisit these wells as soon as the ice permits in 2013," Smith said. Shell expects to complete the two wells to oil-bearing depths and then drill additional wells in both seas next year, he added.

Shell had hoped to drill up to three wells in the Chukchi and up to two in the Beaufort. But lingering pack ice delayed vessel movement into Arctic waters, and problems with a mandatory oil-spill barge also curbed this year's efforts.

The barge, the Arctic Challenger, failed to win U.S. Coast Guard approval until this month, while its oil-containment system was damaged in September sea trials in the Puget Sound.

With the barge unavailable, Shell was only allowed to do "top-hole" drilling, or down to about 1,500 feet, thousands of feet short of geologic zones known to contain oil and gas.

With Coast Guard approval now in hand and repairs under way, the Arctic Challenger is expected to be at the drill sites next year, allowing Shell to penetrate deep into the oil-bearing rock and to make and evaluate discoveries, Smith said.

The federally approved exploration plan allows up to a total of 10 wells over the two seasons, he said, but it has yet to be seen whether Shell will be able to drill that many. "It's not a number that we're fixated on," Smith said. "Our goal is to drill safely and responsibly, but also to gather data."

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