Sunday, June 30, 2013

Reuters: Regulatory News: RPT-Fund firms' boycott threat could hurt Lloyds stock sale

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RPT-Fund firms' boycott threat could hurt Lloyds stock sale
Jul 1st 2013, 06:35

Mon Jul 1, 2013 2:35am EDT

By Sinead Cruise and Kylie MacLellan

LONDON, June 30 (Reuters) - Just as Britain's government is trying to clear a path for the politically sensitive sale of its 39 percent stake in Lloyds bank, resentment is brewing among the investors who would be expected to buy the stock.

Some fund managers say they are wary of buying stock released in staggered sales until banks and regulators clarify the rules on how quickly company owners are allowed to sell more shares - a dispute that could hurt large stock offers such as Lloyds.

They say they have been burned before by banks allowing owners to bypass lock-up agreements, which are meant to prevent too much stock hitting the market too fast and pushing the share price down.

Any boycott could complicate the privatisation of Lloyds Banking Group, one of the government's most high-profile strategies to show it is improving Britain's national finances and getting banks to lend more to businesses.

"Decisions to blacklist are on people's agenda," said one fund manager at a UK investment house running around 80 billion pounds in assets. "This goes right to the heart of whether we have trust in the markets in which we operate."

This shareholder and the other investors who talked to Reuters all declined to be named because of the sensitivity of the situation.

The debate was prompted by a deal in May, where Lloyds sold 15 percent of wealth manager St James's Place, just over 10 weeks after a previous sale, despite having agreed not to reduce its stake further for at least a year.

The lock-up was waived by bookrunner Bank of America Merrill Lynch. Lloyds and BoAML declined to comment.

Although lock-ups are waived relatively often, and investors are warned that the timetable for additional share sales can change, it usually happens closer to the expiry date than in the St James's case.

A person familiar with the matter said the sale had the backing of the Treasury and of UKFI, the organisation which manages the government's stakes in banks, because Lloyds needed to boost its capital, and the offer drew strong demand.

However, investors say they want clarity on the terms and conditions under which such agreements can be waived.

The government has flagged it is ready to start offloading shares in Lloyds and on Friday began the process of appointing advisors for the sale, which is expected to take place incrementally over many months.

Further down the line, the government will also look to sell down its even larger stake - 81 percent - in Royal Bank of Scotland.

"It is very important the authorities do what they can to shore up investor confidence before the likes of Lloyds and RBS come to market. They will be some of the biggest partial stake sales seen for a long time," said a second UK investor at a fund management firm running around 50 billion pounds ($76 billion) of assets.

UNDERMINES INTEGRITY

The Association of British Insurers (ABI) has written to regulator the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) asking them to look at the issue of lock-ups and their importance in maintaining an orderly market, three people familiar with the matter said. The ABI declined to comment.

Some investors are waiting for the outcome of the ABI's discussions with regulators and bankers on whether Lloyds and its advisers behaved appropriately before deciding whether to impose boycotts.

A spokesman for the FCA said the regulator was aware of the issue and was looking into whether this comes under its remit.

People working in equity capital markets say waiving a lock-up is not a decision which is taken lightly, and is only usually done when a stock price has performed strongly, investors want more shares and the seller has a legitimate reason for wanting to raise money.

"While exercising waivers does undermine the integrity of any other lock-ups, generally such early sales are only likely to happen when there is reasonable market demand, thus clearing share overhangs when the market has the appetite," a third investor said, echoing this sentiment.

St James's Place shares had risen 25.5 percent between the first and second sales. The second sale was done at a 9.4 percent discount and after the sale the shares opened nearly 11 percent below the previous day's closing price.

"There is a requirement on companies to take all reasonable care to make sure that any announcement they make to the market is not misleading, false or deceptive and doesn't omit anything that is likely to impact the significance of what they are announcing," the first investor said.

"There is a real question here about whether this contravenes the rules and the FCA needs to clarify this."

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Reuters: Regulatory News: PRESS DIGEST - Financial Times - July 1

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PRESS DIGEST - Financial Times - July 1
Jul 1st 2013, 00:26

July 1 | Sun Jun 30, 2013 8:26pm EDT

July 1 (Reuters) - The following are the top stories in the Financial Times. Reuters has not verified these stories and does not vouch for their accuracy.

Sovereign wealth fund Kuwait Investment Authority is looking to invest as much as $5 billion in infrastructure mainly in the United Kingdom over the next three to five years.

Apple Inc did not pay any corporation tax in the United Kingdom last year, according to its latest filings.

Energy secretary Ed Davey has dismissed talk of Britain potentially facing blackouts, saying the government had a well thought-through plan to keep the lights on.

Barclays has come under criticism from a former member of the Financial Policy Committee after Chief Executive Anthony Jenkins warned the bank may have to cut lending to meet stricter capital requirements imposed by regulators.

Onyx Pharmaceuticals has rejected a $10 billion bid from rival Amgen but has given the nod to its bankers to solicit other offers.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: PRESS DIGEST - British Business - July 1

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PRESS DIGEST - British Business - July 1
Jul 1st 2013, 00:34

July 1 | Sun Jun 30, 2013 8:34pm EDT

July 1 (Reuters) - The following are the top stories on the business pages of British newspapers. Reuters has not verified these stories and does not vouch for their accuracy.

The Telegraph

HELP TO BUY 'COULD BE HAZARD TO ECONOMY'

The boss of Taylor Wimpey, one of Britain's biggest housebuilders, has warned that the government's Help to Buy scheme could be a "genuine hazard" to the economy unless a time limit is imposed on the scheme immediately. ()

SENIOR MURDOCH LIEUTENANT LEAVING AFTER 24 YEARS

One of Rupert Murdoch's most long-serving lieutenants, Richard Caseby, is understood to be leaving his job as the managing editor of The Sun and The Sunday Times newspapers. ()

THE LIGHTS WILL STAY ON, INSISTS ENERGY MINISTER

Britain will not be hit by 1970s-style industrial blackouts, Michael Fallon, the energy minister, insisted on Sunday. ()

CHINESE POLICE PROBE GSK MANAGERS FOR 'ECONOMIC CRIMES'

A group of managers at Britain's biggest drug maker GlaxoSmithKline are being investigated by Chinese police for alleged "economic crimes". ()

The Guardian

MARK CARNEY URGED TO KICK START LENDING TO SMALL BUSINESSES

Business leaders urged Mark Carney on Sunday to back a 1 billion pound investment bank at his first meeting as governor of the Bank of England to kickstart lending to small businesses. ()

RAIL FRANCHISE TIMETABLE ALREADY SHOWING SIGNS OF DELAY

Train operators fear the revised rail franchise timetable announced in the wake of the west coast fiasco is already slipping as documents for the first contest appear likely to be delayed until autumn. ()

The Times

SHALE GAS REVOLUTION 'COULD HALVE OIL PRICE'

The price of oil could halve within the next decade because of a shale revolution, according to industry experts. ()

TWO SIDES OF BUMI ROW PLAY BLAME GAME

The bitter spat between Nat Rothschild and the banker who introduced him to the wealthy Bakrie family of Indonesia deepened yesterday amid claim and counter-claim. ()

The Independent

BARCLAYS BACKS 'BIG FOUR' AGAINST AUDIT SHAKE-UP

Barclays has ridden to the rescue of the Big Four accountants as they face the threat of market-revolutionising reform from the Competition Commission. ()

CARNEY ROLLS UP HIS SLEEVES AS BANK OF ENGLAND BEGINS NEW ERA

Mark Carney will hit the ground running at the Bank of England today as he takes on "one of the toughest central banking jobs in the world". ()

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Reuters: Regulatory News: Obamacare 1.0: States brace for Web barrage when reform goes live

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Obamacare 1.0: States brace for Web barrage when reform goes live
Jun 30th 2013, 10:59

By Sharon Begley

NEW YORK, June 30 | Sun Jun 30, 2013 6:59am EDT

NEW YORK, June 30 (Reuters) - About 550,000 people in Oregon do not have health insurance, and Aaron Karjala is confident the state's new online insurance exchange will be able to accommodate them when enrollment under President Barack Obama's healthcare reform begins on Oct. 1.

What Karjala, the chief information officer at "Cover Oregon," does worry about, however, is what will happen if the entire population of Oregon - 3.9 million - logs on that day "just to check it out," he said. Or if millions of curious souls elsewhere, wondering if Oregon's insurance offerings are better than their states', log on, causing Cover Oregon to crash in a blur of spinning hourglasses and color wheels and an epidemic of frozen screens.

Multiply that by another 49 states and the District of Columbia, all of which will open health insurance exchanges under "Obamacare" that same day, and you get some idea of what could go publicly and disastrously wrong.

Obamacare, formally known as the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA), could fail for many reasons, including participation by too few of the uninsured and a shortage of doctors to treat those who do sign up. But because its core is government-run marketplaces selling health insurance online, the likeliest reason for failure at the opening bell is information technology snafus, say experts who are helping with the rollout.

Although IT is the single most expensive ingredient of the exchanges, with eight-figure contracts to build them, experts expect bugs, errors and crashes. In April, Obama himself predicted "glitches and bumps" when the exchanges open for business.

"This is a 1.0 implementation," said Dan Maynard, chief executive of Connecture, a software developer that is providing the shopping and enrollment functions for several states' insurance exchanges. "From an IT perspective, 1.0's come out with a lot of defects. Everyone is waiting for something to go wrong."

Two states that intended to build their own exchanges, Idaho and New Mexico, announced this spring that because of the tight timeline and daunting challenges they would have the federal government operate their IT systems.

"Nothing like this in IT has ever been done to this complexity or scale, and with a timeline that put it behind schedule almost before the ink was dry," said Rick Howard, research director at the technology advisory firm Gartner .

WHAT COLOR WAS YOUR VOLVO?

The potential for problems will begin as soon as would-be buyers log onto their state exchange. They'll enter their name, birth date, address and other identifying information. Then comes the first IT handoff: Is this person who she says she is?

To check that, credit bureau Experian will check the answers against its voluminous external databases, which include information from utility companies and banks on people's spending and other history, and generate questions. The customer will be asked which of several addresses he previously lived at, for example, whether his car has one of several proffered license plate numbers, and what color his old Volvo was.

It's similar to the system that verifies identity for accessing personal Social Security information. If someone gets a question wrong, he will be referred to Experian's help desk, and if that fails may be asked to submit documentation to prove he is who he claims to be.

The next step is determining if the customer is eligible for federal subsidies to pay for insurance. She is if she is a citizen and her income, which she will enter, is less than four times the federal poverty level. To verify this, the exchange pings the "federal data services hub," which is being built by Quality Software Services Inc under a $58 million contract with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS).

The query arrives at the hub, which does not actually store information, and is routed to online servers at the Internal Revenue Service for income verification and at the Department of Homeland Security for a citizenship check.

The answers must be returned in real time, before the would-be buyer loses patience and logs off. If the reported income doesn't match the IRS's records, the applicant may have to submit pay stubs.

These federal computer systems have never been connected before, so it's anyone's guess how well they'll communicate.

"The challenge for states," said Jinnifer Wattum, director of Eligibility and Exchange Solutions at Xerox's government healthcare unit, is that they have to build "the interfaces needed with the federal data services hub without knowing what this system will look like." That makes the task akin to making a key for a lock that doesn't exist yet.

CMS's contractors are working to finish the hub, but "much remains to be accomplished within a relatively short amount of time," concluded a report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO), the investigative arm of Congress, in June. CMS spokesman Brian Cook said the hub would be ready by September, and that the beta version had been tested for its ability to interact with the exchanges Oregon and Maryland are building.

The federal hub has to verify even more arcane data, such as whether the insurance offered to a buyer through his job is unaffordable, in which case he may qualify for federal subsidies, and whether the buyer is in prison, in which case she is exempt from the mandate to purchase insurance.

If someone's income qualifies him for Medicaid, or his children for the Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP), software has to divert him from the ACA exchange and into those systems. Many of the computers handling Medicaid and CHIP enrollment are, as IT people diplomatically put it, "legacy systems," meaning old, even decades old.

Many are mainframes, lacking the connectivity of cloud computing. They typically process eligibility requests in days, not seconds.

The legacy systems "rely on daily or weekly batch files to pass information back and forth," and often require follow-up phone calls, said Wattum of Xerox, which is working to configure Nevada's exchange so it can interface with the federal hub.

'NO WRONG DOOR'

A "we'll call you" message is unacceptable under Obamacare, which has a "no wrong door" goal: A buyer must never come to a dead end. If she is diverted to Medicaid, for instance, she must not be required to resubmit information, let alone wait a week for an answer about whether she's now enrolled.

State IT systems must therefore "be interoperable and integrated with an exchange, Medicaid, and CHIP to allow consumers to easily switch from private insurance to Medicaid and CHIP," said an April report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO), the investigative arm of Congress.

To make all those systems communicate, the state exchanges must either develop entirely new systems or use application programming interfaces (APIs) that work with the legacy systems to exchange data in real time. APIs are programming instructions for accessing Web-based software applications.

GAO's Stan Czerwinski compares the necessary connectivity to adapters that let American electronics work with European outlets.

State officials told the GAO that verifying eligibility, enrolling buyers and interfacing with legacy systems are the most "onerous" aspects of developing their exchanges, "given the age and limited functionality of current state systems."

A key goal for exchange officials is keeping would-be buyers in the portal so they don't give up and use a state's ACA call center, which could quickly be swamped.

To avoid this, Oregon brought in potential users to test design prototypes, recorded what people did and where they had trouble, and tweaked the consumer interface to make it as user-friendly as possible, said Karjala.

"Even with that, if you have a family of four and you're eligible for a tax credit to offset your premium," he said, "you could be sitting at the computer for a long time."

What everyone hopes to avoid is a repeat of the early days of the Medicare prescription-drug program in 2006. Some seniors who tried to sign up for a plan were mistakenly enrolled in several, while others had the wrong premium amounts deducted from their Social Security checks.

Another challenge is capacity. Websites regularly crash when too many people try to access them.

"I had no choice but to be extremely conservative" in estimates of how many simultaneous users Cover Oregon has to be prepared for, Karjala said. "Building capacity is the only way to avoid the spinning hourglass or the site freezing, so in our performance testing we're seeing what happens if the whole U.S. population came to Cover Oregon to check it out."

This summer, state exchanges will test their ability to communicate with the federal data hub, whose security frameworks and connectivity protocols are still works in progress. But whether Obamacare 1.0 flies won't be known until the new health plans take effect on Jan. 1. Robert Laszewski, president of Health Policy and Strategy Associates Inc, a consulting firm, said he wouldn't be surprised if some patients showing up at doctors' offices next year with Obamacare policies are told their insurers never heard of them.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: Fund firms' boycott threat could hurt Lloyds stock sale

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Fund firms' boycott threat could hurt Lloyds stock sale
Jun 30th 2013, 08:00

By Sinead Cruise and Kylie MacLellan

LONDON, June 30 | Sun Jun 30, 2013 4:00am EDT

LONDON, June 30 (Reuters) - Just as Britain's government is trying to clear a path for the politically sensitive sale of its 39 percent stake in Lloyds bank, resentment is brewing among the investors who would be expected to buy the stock.

Some fund managers say they are wary of buying stock released in staggered sales until banks and regulators clarify the rules on how quickly company owners are allowed to sell more shares - a dispute that could hurt large stock offers such as Lloyds.

They say they have been burned before by banks allowing owners to bypass lock-up agreements, which are meant to prevent too much stock hitting the market too fast and pushing the share price down.

Any boycott could complicate the privatisation of Lloyds Banking Group, one of the government's most high-profile strategies to show it is improving Britain's national finances and getting banks to lend more to businesses.

"Decisions to blacklist are on people's agenda," said one fund manager at a UK investment house running around 80 billion pounds in assets. "This goes right to the heart of whether we have trust in the markets in which we operate."

This shareholder and the other investors who talked to Reuters all declined to be named because of the sensitivity of the situation.

The debate was prompted by a deal in May, where Lloyds sold 15 percent of wealth manager St James's Place, just over 10 weeks after a previous sale, despite having agreed not to reduce its stake further for at least a year.

The lock-up was waived by bookrunner Bank of America Merrill Lynch. Lloyds and BoAML declined to comment.

Although lock-ups are waived relatively often, and investors are warned that the timetable for additional share sales can change, it usually happens closer to the expiry date than in the St James's case.

A person familiar with the matter said the sale had the backing of the Treasury and of UKFI, the organisation which manages the government's stakes in banks, because Lloyds needed to boost its capital, and the offer drew strong demand.

However, investors say they want clarity on the terms and conditions under which such agreements can be waived.

The government has flagged it is ready to start offloading shares in Lloyds and on Friday began the process of appointing advisors for the sale, which is expected to take place incrementally over many months.

Further down the line, the government will also look to sell down its even larger stake - 81 percent - in Royal Bank of Scotland.

"It is very important the authorities do what they can to shore up investor confidence before the likes of Lloyds and RBS come to market. They will be some of the biggest partial stake sales seen for a long time," said a second UK investor at a fund management firm running around 50 billion pounds ($76 billion) of assets.

UNDERMINES INTEGRITY

The Association of British Insurers (ABI) has written to regulator the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) asking them to look at the issue of lock-ups and their importance in maintaining an orderly market, three people familiar with the matter said. The ABI declined to comment.

Some investors are waiting for the outcome of the ABI's discussions with regulators and bankers on whether Lloyds and its advisers behaved appropriately before deciding whether to impose boycotts.

A spokesman for the FCA said the regulator was aware of the issue and was looking into whether this comes under its remit.

People working in equity capital markets say waiving a lock-up is not a decision which is taken lightly, and is only usually done when a stock price has performed strongly, investors want more shares and the seller has a legitimate reason for wanting to raise money.

"While exercising waivers does undermine the integrity of any other lock-ups, generally such early sales are only likely to happen when there is reasonable market demand, thus clearing share overhangs when the market has the appetite," a third investor said, echoing this sentiment.

St James's Place shares had risen 25.5 percent between the first and second sales. The second sale was done at a 9.4 percent discount and after the sale the shares opened nearly 11 percent below the previous day's closing price.

"There is a requirement on companies to take all reasonable care to make sure that any announcement they make to the market is not misleading, false or deceptive and doesn't omit anything that is likely to impact the significance of what they are announcing," the first investor said.

"There is a real question here about whether this contravenes the rules and the FCA needs to clarify this."

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Saturday, June 29, 2013

Reuters: Regulatory News: U.S. investigating brake problem with some Honda Odysseys

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U.S. investigating brake problem with some Honda Odysseys
Jun 29th 2013, 21:55

CHICAGO, June 29 | Sat Jun 29, 2013 5:55pm EDT

CHICAGO, June 29 (Reuters) - The U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration is investigating a potential braking issue with Honda Motor Co's Honda Odyssey minivans that could cause them to brake without the driver touching the brake pedal.

Earlier this week, the vehicle safety arm of the U.S. Department of Transportation said it was opening an investigation of the issue, which could affect nearly 344,000 vans from the 2007 and 2008 model years.

According to a report on the administration's website, the agency has received 22 complaints alleging incidents of unexpected braking, including some complaints in which the car suddenly brakes by itself while the driver is accelerating, causing the car speed to quickly fall by as much as 30 miles per hour.

So far, there have not been any crashes or injuries attributed to the problems, which appear to be related to the car's vehicle stability assist system, a safety feature that automatically applies the brakes on sharp turns or when the car is accelerating on loose or slippery surfaces.

A Honda spokeswoman was not immediately available for comment.

In March, Honda recalled nearly 250,000 vehicles globally due to similar braking problems. In the United States, the recalls affected the Acura RL sedan, Acura MDX crossover SUV and the Honda Pilot SUV, but in Japan, the recall included the Legend sedan and three types of minivans, including the Odyssey.

Most of those vehicles were made between 2004 and 2005.

As with the current issues seen in the Odyssey, the issue involved the vehicle stability assist system, which in some cases could malfunction and apply the brake even when the driver was not pressing the brake pedal.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: ECB "looking carefully" at forward guidance-report

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ECB "looking carefully" at forward guidance-report
Jun 29th 2013, 10:31

By Costas Pitas

LONDON, June 29 | Sat Jun 29, 2013 6:31am EDT

LONDON, June 29 (Reuters) - The European Central Bank is looking carefully at forward guidance but it is too early to say whether it will be used more extensively, executive member of the ECB's executive board Benoît C÷uré told The Times.

The method used by the U.S Federal Reserve and being considered by Britain's incoming Bank of England governor involves central banks spelling out in advance future indications for monetary policy.

"The ECB is looking carefully at what has been done elsewhere, in particular the U.S. experience with forward guidance," C÷uré said in an interview published on Saturday.

"It is too early to say if we are going to take a bigger step in that direction."

The ECB also needs to be ready to act and consider all possible options if the euro zone economy weakens, C÷uré told the newspaper.

"We have to be ready to cope with more negative scenarios, particularly in an environment of higher global volatility and risk-aversion," he said, arguing the most likely outcome would be very gradual recovery.

"We will... keep an eye on all possible measures - standard and non-standard - to react if needed."

Coeuré predicted the euro zone economy will recover gradually, with positive growth expected in the second half of 2013 and picking up in 2014.

But he warned that conditions on the continent were different to those in the United States.

"Economic conditions in the euro area are not in any sense the same as in the US. The economy remains weak."

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Friday, June 28, 2013

Reuters: Regulatory News: Merkel says Germany blocked EU car emission law to save jobs

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Merkel says Germany blocked EU car emission law to save jobs
Jun 28th 2013, 14:01

Fri Jun 28, 2013 10:01am EDT

* Vote on new carbon limits postponed at Germany's behest

* Berlin seen trying to stall decisions until after election

* Similar delays to EU banking union rules, Turkey talks

BRUSSELS, June 28 (Reuters) - Germany blocked a deal on tougher carbon emission limits on new cars sold in the European Union to protect jobs in its powerful auto sector, Chancellor Angela Merkel confirmed on Friday.

EU officials say Merkel, who faces elections on Sept. 22, has sought to delay EU decisions on issues sensitive for Germany - including banking union and EU membership talks with Turkey - until after the vote.

An agreement earlier this week to enforce an average limit of 95 grams per kilometre (g/km) across the EU fleet by 2020 had the backing of most member states, EU sources said.

But Germany, home to premium brands such as Daimler and BMW, was unhappy with the deal. A vote by EU ambassadors to approve the compromise, scheduled for Thursday, was delayed by lobbying as Berlin played for time.

"It is true that we worked to prevent a vote on this," Merkel told reporters in Brussels at the end of a two-day summit of EU leaders, which focused on boosting growth and combating youth unemployment.

"Jobs are at stake here. At a time when we are spending days talking about employment, I think we need to ensure that in our drive to protect the environment we are not damaging our own industrial base."

Those who support tougher carbon limits for cars say they protect jobs by generating demand for highly-skilled technicians to implement the necessary innovation.

Also, because more efficient, low emission vehicles require less fuel, consumers are left with more spending power to feed into the wider economy.

Senior German politicians contacted EU governments to warn them that German car firms could scale back or scrap production plans in their countries unless they supported Berlin's efforts to weaken the emission rules, EU sources told Reuters earlier this month.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 1-EU leaders push banking union despite German reluctance

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UPDATE 1-EU leaders push banking union despite German reluctance
Jun 28th 2013, 14:32

Fri Jun 28, 2013 10:32am EDT

* EU leaders want agreement on single resolution mechanism by December

* Resolution law to be agreed with European Parliament by April 2014

* Germany says central bank resolution authority will need treaty change

* Mechanism to have funding from bank fees, backstopped by bailout fund

By Jan Strupczewski

BRUSSELS, June 28 (Reuters) - European Union leaders said on Friday they want agreement by the end of the year on a way to resolve failed banks at European rather than a national level, signalling work should go on despite German objections ahead of elections in September.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel cast doubt on whether that timetable could be respected, saying the creation of a European authority with such powers would require a change to the EU treaty - a lengthy and politically risky process.

EU finance ministers agreed on Thursday on an intermediate step towards what is known as European banking union, which involves tighter oversight of banks and coordinated resolution of any problems. Under the deal, investors and wealthy savers will share the costs of future bank failures before taxpayers.

That moves the EU closer to drawing a line under years of taxpayer-funded bailouts that have caused public outrage.

But the law only sets common rules that national authorities in the 27-nation bloc have to follow when dealing with their own banks. It does not allow for sharing power or the financial costs of closing down or rescuing banks at EU level.

It is only a stepping stone to creating a central EU body to deal with failing banks, including big financial institutions that operate across national borders.

The European Commission, the EU's executive arm, is to propose how to create such a central agency, called the Single Resolution Mechanism (SRM), in July, although some officials indicate that it could be delayed beyond that date.

Merkel insisted that setting up a central authority with powers to close down banks in euro zone countries would require changing the EU's treaty, or else it could be challenged in Germany's constitutional court.

The European Commission believes no treaty change is needed and has floated the idea that it could itself take on the role of the resolution authority, to avoid the need to change laws for the creation of a completely new body.

But Berlin rejected that too.

"Germany has made clear that under the current treaties the Commission does not have the competence to run such a central authority or act as a resolution body. If we want new competencies then they must be linked to treaty changes," Merkel told a news conference after the summit.

France said work on the banking union should go as far as possible under existing treaties before considering any treaty change, but a treaty amendment could be done if necessary.

"If it appeared legally necessary to amend the treaty, we would do so, but it would only be from a legal perspective, and in no case from a political perspective," French President Francois Hollande told journalists after an EU summit in Brussels.

"Before we get there I think we must go as far as possible in the framework of existing treaties," he added.

WORK ON SRM SEEN STALLED BY GERMAN ELECTIONS

In an indication of acute political sensitivity on the issue, EU officials said Germany tried to have the term "banking union" removed from the final summit statement altogether.

"In this morning's draft conclusions the term banking union had disappeared and was replaced with more vague terms. We re-proposed our commitment towards a banking union," Italian Prime Minister Enrico Letta told a press conference after the summit.

But there will be little progress on the SRM until after the September parliamentary elections in Germany, which wants to avoid discussions that could involve any form of financial support for institutions in other countries.

Taxpayers across much of Europe have had to pay for a series of deeply unpopular bank and government rescues since the financial crisis erupted in Greece in 2010 and spread across the bloc and even threatened the survival of the euro.

The European Union spent the equivalent of a third of its economic output on saving its banks between 2008 and 2011, using taxpayer cash but struggling to contain the crisis and - in the case of Ireland - almost bankrupting the country.

The SRM is to complement the work of the European Central Bank as the Single Supervisory Mechanism (SSM), responsible for looking after all euro zone banks.

"A fully effective SSM requires a Single Resolution Mechanism (SRM) for banks covered by the SSM. The European Council looks forward to the Commission's proposal establishing an SRM with a view to reaching agreement in the Council by the end of the year so that it can be adopted before the end of the current parliamentary term," the leaders said, using the careful legal language employed in summit declarations.

The final version omitted at German insistence a reference to the features the SRM should have that were enumerated in earlier drafts.

The deleted phrase said that the SRM should have "strong resolution powers, allowing quick, effective and coherent decision-making at central level".

The European Parliament has its last plenary session in mid April 2014.

The SRM is to have access to funds that it may need to help finance the restructuring or closure of banks, if losses imposed on shareholders and bondholders or even large depositors are not enough to cover the needs.

The central fund is to be built from fees paid in annually by banks, just like the national resolution funds created under the intermediate law. But until enough money accrues over the next 10 years, it may need to resort to the euro zone bailout fund for help.

The leaders remained vague on how the fund would work.

"It should include appropriate funding arrangements, based on contributions by the financial sector itself, and an appropriate and effective backstop which should be fiscally neutral over the medium term," they said.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 1-Biosimilar versions of Remicade given EU green light

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UPDATE 1-Biosimilar versions of Remicade given EU green light
Jun 28th 2013, 12:52

Fri Jun 28, 2013 8:52am EDT

* EMA backs Celltrion's Remsima and Hospira's Inflectra

* First recommendation for copycat versions of antibody-based drugs

* Biotech medicines harder to copy, need more tests

LONDON, June 28 (Reuters) - European regulators have recommended approval of two copycat versions of the blockbuster rheumatoid arthritis drug Remicade, the first time a green light has been given for such antibody-based medicines.

The European Medicines Agency (EMA) said on Friday that its experts had backed approval of Remsima, made by South Korea's Celltrion, and Hospira's Inflectra, both of which are so-called biosimilar versions of Johnson & Johnson and Merck & Co's injectable drug

Both of the biosimilars have been recommended for a range of auto-immune diseases including rheumatoid arthritis, Crohn's disease and psoriasis among others.

Celltrion President Seo Jung-jin, who has put his controlling stake in Celltrion up for sale, said in April that European approval of the company's product was imminent.

Hospira has a distribution deal for biogeneric products that Celltrion is developing.

Until now, complex biotechnology medicines such as Remicade - given by injection or infusion - have been largely immune from generic competition, unlike conventional pills.

But the picture is starting to change as regulators set out a clearer path for the evidence needed to secure approval of such products. That poses a threat to makers of multibillion-dollar drugs for diseases such as cancer and rheumatoid arthritis - and an opportunity for the likes of Celltrion.

Europe has already approved some simpler biosimilars, including copycat versions of human growth hormone and the anaemia treatment EPO, but it has yet to approve an antibody drug such as Remicade, which is known generically as infliximab.

Unlike traditional chemical drugs, biotech medicines consist of proteins derived from living organisms that cannot be replicated exactly. Biosimilars, therefore, are more difficult to develop and need more tests to prove they work properly.

Recommendations for marketing approval by the agency's Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CHMP) are normally endorsed by the European Commission within a couple of months.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: Canada says to review all wireless spectrum transfer deals

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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
Canada says to review all wireless spectrum transfer deals
Jun 28th 2013, 12:56

TORONTO, June 28 | Fri Jun 28, 2013 8:56am EDT

TORONTO, June 28 (Reuters) - The Canadian government said on Friday it will review all commercial transfers of wireless airwave licenses, including option agreements, and reject any deals that leads to undue concentration of the valuable resource.

The policy framework comes after two of Canada's biggest telecom companies - Rogers Communications Inc and Telus Corp - made moves to acquire spectrum owned by smaller operators and ahead of a auction of more airwaves that could entice Verizon Communications Inc to enter the market.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: Merkel insists EU bank resolution body needs treaty change

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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
Merkel insists EU bank resolution body needs treaty change
Jun 28th 2013, 12:18

BRUSSELS, June 28 | Fri Jun 28, 2013 8:18am EDT

BRUSSELS, June 28 (Reuters) - German Chancellor Angela Merkel insisted on Friday that a single European authority to deal with failed banks would require a change in the European Union's treaty, raising an obstacle to the planned next step towards EU banking union.

European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said the EU executive will issue proposals for such a banking resolution mechanism in the next two weeks. EU officials dispute the need to amend the treaty, but Berlin is sensitive because of the scrutiny of its constitutional court.

"Germany has made clear that under the current treaties the Commission does not have the competence to run such a central authority or act as a resolution body. If we want new competencies then they must be linked to treaty changes," Merkel said.

She also confirmed that Germany, home of Europe's biggest automobile industry, opposed a tentative EU agreement on stricter carbon emissions curbs for cars, arguing that Europe must be careful not to harm its own industry.

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