Thursday, October 31, 2013

Reuters: Regulatory News: Canada panel says revised Taseko mine plan may harm environment

Reuters: Regulatory News
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Canada panel says revised Taseko mine plan may harm environment
Nov 1st 2013, 05:40

By Nicole Mordant

Fri Nov 1, 2013 1:40am EDT

Nov 1 (Reuters) - A revised mine plan for Taseko Mines' New Prosperity copper-gold project in British Columbia still poses significant threats to the environment and nearby communities, a Canadian federal review panel said late on Thursday.

Water quality in a trout-bearing lake beside the proposed mine, fish in the lake, land and resources used for traditional purposes by certain Aboriginal groups, and their cultural heritage would be most at risk from the project, the panel said.

The grizzly bear population in south-central British Columbia will also suffer unless mitigation steps are taken, the three members of the panel said in their 323-page report.

"Fish in Fish Lake and wetland and riparian ecosystems near Fish Lake and Wasp Lake might not meet the needs of future generations," said the panel, set up by Canada's environment minister in 2011.

The panel is not a decision-making body but its report will play a key role in the final decision by Canada's environment minister on whether the project should go ahead.

The Canadian government is expected to decide whether the open pit mine can go ahead within 120 days, meaning a decision is likely by the end of February.

Taseko could not immediately be reached for comment.

Ottawa in 2010 overruled British Columbia's provincial government and blocked the development of the Taseko project because of worries over its environmental impact.

Taseko has said the revised plan addresses regulators' concerns. But aboriginal groups and other opponents of the project say the revised proposal, if approved, would still harm Fish Lake and the rights of indigenous groups in the area.

Taseko, a mid-sized copper producer, expects the project to create close to 2,000 jobs and generate more than $1 billion in government revenue, the report said.

Taseko submitted its environmental impact statement to the panel in 2012, and public hearings on the project were held this year.

The panel made several recommendations if the project does get approved, among them urging Taseko to re-route a transmission line to avoid areas of cultural significance to an Aboriginal group.

CIBC analyst Tom Meyer estimates the development of New Prosperity could cost C$1.8 billion ($1.72 billion) and a mine could produce 44,000 tonnes of copper as well as 206,100 ounces of gold a year.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: Wynn-Okada lawsuit halted another 6 months for Okada criminal probe

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Wynn-Okada lawsuit halted another 6 months for Okada criminal probe
Nov 1st 2013, 03:26

TOKYO | Thu Oct 31, 2013 11:26pm EDT

TOKYO Nov 1 (Reuters) - A civil lawsuit between Wynn Resorts Ltd and Japanese billionaire Kazuo Okada has been put on hold for another six months to allow U.S. prosecutors to continue investigating Okada and his companies for possible bribery in the Philippines.

Clark County District Judge Elizabeth Gonzalez granted a request made by federal prosecutors to extend the stay on discovery in the civil proceedings so as not to interfere with the ongoing criminal probe, according to lawyers present at the hearing on Thursday.

The Justice Department had requested an extension earlier this week, presenting new evidence to the court under seal which they argued warranted further investigation.

The ruling marked a reversal of stance for Gonzales, who had told lawyers when the first six-month stay was granted in May that she would not approve an extension. Gonzales cited concerns for the safety of witnesses cooperating with the probe in making her decision, according to media reports.

For nearly two years, Okada has been locked in a legal battle with Wynn Resorts Chief Executive Steve Wynn, during which the former business partners have exchanged allegations of illegal conduct.

Wynn forcibly redeemed Okada's 20 percent stake in the U.S. casino operator last year at a steep discount, alleging Okada had made improper payments to Philippine government officials to advance his planned $2 billion casino project there.

Okada, who founded and controls Japanese pachinko gaming machine maker Universal Entertainment Corp, has denied any wrongdoing and filed a counterclaim to nullify the share redemption.

Eric Andrus, a spokesman for the Japanese company at RLM Finsbury, declined to comment on the court ruling.

A Wynn Resorts spokesman declined to comment.

U.S. federal prosecutors have been investigating Okada and his companies for potential violations of anti-bribery laws in relation to his casino development on Manila Bay.

The Philippine government has also been investigating $40 million in payments made by Universal affiliates to a politically-connected consultant in 2010 around the time Universal was lobbying for concessions for its casino resort.

Universal has filed a defamation suit against Reuters in Tokyo for its reporting on the $40 million in payments.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: PRESS DIGEST - Wall Street Journal - Nov 1

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PRESS DIGEST - Wall Street Journal - Nov 1
Nov 1st 2013, 04:34

Fri Nov 1, 2013 12:34am EDT

Nov 1 (Reuters) - The following are the top stories in the Wall Street Journal. Reuters has not verified these stories and does not vouch for their accuracy.

* Before JPMorgan acquired the banking operations of Washington Mutual, the bank's lawyers tangled with regulators over the wording of the agreement. Five years later, JPMorgan and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp are still fighting over the meaning of those words. The question of who bears responsibility for Washington Mutual's legal liabilities is taking on increasing urgency as J.P. Morgan negotiates a pact with the Justice Department that would end probes of soured mortgage bonds issued by J.P. Morgan and Washington Mutual during the housing boom. ()

* By the year-end, most airline passengers will be able to use their tablets, e-readers and other gadgets during all stages of flight. The Federal Aviation Administration's decision, its first big shift on electronic devices since it restricted their use in flight in 1966, caps years of debate over whether electronic emissions from devices can interfere with cockpit instrument.()

* The CFTC is so cash starved that it is being forced to delay cases, shelve certain probes and decided not to file charges against two men in the "London whale" trading mess, a top official said. ()

* Euro-zone inflation fell to its lowest in almost four years, raising pressure on the ECB to ease money supply and support the recovery. ()

* Germany described as "incomprehensible" U.S. criticism of its export-led economic policies, saying the country's domestic economy is the main pillar of its growth. ()

* Goldman Sachs Group Inc scored some points with regulators with a loan to a New York City bicycle-sharing program named after rival Citigroup Inc. The $41 million loan to the Citigroup bike program was part of $2 billion in loans and investments made by the Wall Street bank from October 2010 until December 2012 to comply with U.S. rules designed to ensure financial services reach low- and middle-income neighborhoods, according to a recent regulatory review of the bank's adherence to the Community Reinvestment Act. ()

* The way things are going, the term "cable TV" may have to be replaced by "phone TV." Nearly a decade after Verizon Communications Inc and AT&T Inc began building pipelines to carry TV service to U.S. homes, they are nearing the market share of cable operators in areas where they operate, according to third-quarter results released by cable and phone companies in recent days. ()

* In the wake of a major immigration-law violation case involving Indian outsourcing giant Infosys Ltd, federal agents are investigating other companies for possible similar alleged misdeeds, according to an official with the Department of Homeland Security. ()

* Fannie Mae sued nine of the world's largest banks over alleged manipulation of interest rates, joining the legal battles in the rate-rigging scandal. The lawsuit, filed Thursday in U.S. District Court in Manhattan, said that the mortgage-finance giant sustained an estimated $800 million in damages from banks that allegedly manipulated the London interbank offered rate and other financial benchmarks. Fannie also sued the British Bankers' Association, a private association of large British banks. ()

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Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 3-Mexican Congress passes watered-down tax reform

Reuters: Regulatory News
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UPDATE 3-Mexican Congress passes watered-down tax reform
Nov 1st 2013, 01:52

Thu Oct 31, 2013 9:52pm EDT

By Miguel Gutierrez, Michael O'Boyle and Dave Graham

MEXICO CITY Oct 31 (Reuters) - Mexico's Congress on Thursday passed a package of measures aimed at bolstering the country's weak tax revenues, but only after watering down a plan that is expected to have a moderate impact at best.

The bill, which includes higher taxes on the rich as well as levies on junk food and stock market gains, is a central plank of an economic program spanning energy to telecoms that aims to ramp up growth in Latin America's No. 2 economy.

Facing a Thursday deadline, the ruling Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) pushed the package through with the help of leftist lawmakers, making final tweaks in the Senate to pare back a planned income tax increase.

The lower house then gave final approval to the bill that President Enrique Pena Nieto is now expected to sign into law.

Mexico has the lowest tax revenue in the 34-nation Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), restricting its ability to spend on health, infrastructure and social programs needed to boost living standards and growth.

Before the bill was presented last month, senior PRI officials said it would seek to raise the tax take by 4 percent of gross domestic product. Yet even before the Senate changed the bill, the government was admitting it was likely to bring in added revenues of barely 2.7 percent of GDP by 2018.

"The (reform) was reduced to a simple tax code focused on more, bigger taxes for those who have always paid," said Alfredo Coutino, Latin America director for Moody's Analytics.

The government stepped back from bolder reform after the economy suffered a shock contraction in the second quarter, and sidestepped the unpopular option of levying sales tax on food and medicine, which could have substantially improved revenues.

Lawmakers in the conservative National Action Party (PAN) condemned the bill as a menace to Mexico's stumbling economy and this week walked out of the Senate in protest when their attempts to change the plan were ignored by the PRI.

The political spats over the tax plan has heightened tensions between the parties just as the government seeks to push major reforms of the oil industry and the telecoms market.

The PRI lacks a majority in Congress and is banking on PAN help to pass the energy reform, which aims to lure investment to the state-controlled sector and reverse sliding oil output.

The leftist Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD), which gave the PRI enough votes to pass the fiscal reform, opposes breaking the grip of state oil monopoly Pemex on the industry.

TOP RATES

This month the PRI, supported by the PRD, modified the fiscal reform to lift top income tax rates, placing more of the burden onto the wealthiest in Mexico, who include telecoms mogul Carlos Slim. Slim began 2013 as the world's richest man.

The top income tax rate stands at 30 percent. The reform sets out a sliding scale of higher rates capped at 35 percent for those earning more than 3 million pesos ($233,000) a year.

On Thursday PRD and PRI lawmakers rolled back a plan to apply a 31 percent income tax rate on people earning between 500,000 pesos and 750,000 pesos. They will now stay at 30 percent and a 32 percent rate kicks in above 750,000 pesos.

Lawmakers also increased the percentage of workers' benefits that companies can deduct from their total tax bill. Separately, the Senate voted to raise a levy on high-calorie foods including chocolate from 5 percent to 8 percent.

The bill had already been scaled back this month when the lower house threw out plans to apply sales tax to rents, mortgages, property transactions and school fees.

Tweaks to the tax bill in the lower house in mid-October also created a shortfall in the budget plan for next year.

Lawmakers then raised the government's oil revenue estimate and made other changes to close the gap. The tax bill is tied to the budget, which must be approved by mid-November.

PRI lawmakers concede in private that the reform leaves Mexico with plenty of work to do if it wants to generate more public funds to help tackle chronic social problems. Nearly half of Mexico's population live in poverty.

Mexico's total tax take, a big chunk of which comes from Pemex, was less than 19 percent of GDP in 2010, compared with nearly 26 percent for Turkey, around 31 percent in Greece and 36 percent in Germany, OECD data shows.

OIL REFORM

The PAN pulled out of the Senate debate on proposed amendments to the fiscal bill on Wednesday after accusing the PRI of not taking its concerns seriously.

The party was upset when it failed to stop the standard rate of value-added tax of 16 percent from being extended to states on the U.S. border, which now pay an 11 percent rate.

All eyes will now be on the president's efforts to reform the oil industry, which aims to bring in fresh private capital from oil majors with profit-sharing contracts.

The PAN argues Pena Nieto's model does not go far enough to attract investment, and lawmakers in the party have pledged to pressure the PRI into providing greater incentives to oil companies, such as production-sharing contracts.

That could put the president under attack from leftists who accuse the government of wanting to sell out Mexico's oil wealth to foreigners, and could spark large protests.

The government hopes the energy reform will spur major investment and boost economic growth. Analysts say that could help the country's international credit rating.

Mexico is just one rung short of A territory on the scales of two ratings agencies, Fitch and Moody's. Among the major Latin American economies, only Chile is rated in the A category. Standard & Poor's has Mexico two notches below A.

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

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PRESS DIGEST- British Business - Nov 1
Nov 1st 2013, 01:20

Thu Oct 31, 2013 9:20pm EDT

Nov 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

RBS PREPARES TO UNVEIL NEW 'BAD BANK'

Royal Bank of Scotland is expected to confirm on Friday that it is to create a "bad bank" with more than 30 billion pounds ($48.20 billion) of assets following a review of its operations ordered by the Treasury. ()

BARCLAYS AND RBS NAMED IN $800M US LIBOR LAWSUIT

Barclays and Royal Bank of Scotland are among nine banks being sued for $800 million by Fannie Mae over their alleged involvement in attempts to manipulate global borrowing rates. ()

BAE WINS $688 MLN DEAL FOR U.S. ARMY HOWITZERS

BAE Systems has shrugged off concerns about America cutting defence spending, winning a $688 million deal to supply nearly 70 self-propelled 155mm howitzers and their support vehicles to the U.S. Army. ()

The Guardian

GEORGE OSBORNE 'CONSIDERS CAPITAL GAINS TAX FOR OVERSEAS BUYERS'

The government is reported to be considering a tax for overseas investors buying UK properties, in a move to stop house prices rushing out of reach of home buyers. ()

The Times

RATE CUT EXPECTED IN EUROZONE AS INFLATION PLUNGES

Eurozone inflation has plummeted to its lowest level in four years while unemployment has hit another record high, piling pressure on the European Central Bank to cut interest rates further to protect the fragile economic recovery. ()

The Independent

SHELL VOWS TO RETURN TO THE ARCTIC AS PROFITS SLIDE BY 31 PERCENT

Shell has pledged to return to the Arctic as soon as possible after revealing a further $200 million hit from the grounding of its Kulluk oil rig off the Alaskan coast on New Year's Eve. ()

BANK OF ENGLAND BACKS BETTER LIQUIDITY SUPPORT

Commercial banks will have full-time access to liquidity support in five different foreign currencies, the Bank of England announced on Thursday. ()

ASTRAZENECA'S DRUG HEADACHE LEADS TO PROFITS SLUMP

AstraZeneca's profit slumped 24 percent to $4 billion during the first nine months of the year. News that the struggling drugmaker has appointed a new finance boss - ex-GlaxoSmithKline executive Marc Dunoyer will take over from the departing Simon Lowth - could not stop its shares falling 21 percent. ()

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Reuters: Regulatory News: REFILE-UPDATE 1-U.S. ramps up efforts to lure foreign investment

Reuters: Regulatory News
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REFILE-UPDATE 1-U.S. ramps up efforts to lure foreign investment
Nov 1st 2013, 01:00

Thu Oct 31, 2013 9:00pm EDT

* Obama says U.S. must do more to court investors

* U.S. global share of investment shrinks

* Embassies to focus on investment promotion

* Plan to create single point of contact for investors

By Mark Felsenthal and Elvina Nawaguna

WASHINGTON, Oct 31 (Reuters) - President Barack Obama on Thursday pledged an aggressive expansion of U.S. efforts to draw foreign investment by clearing away red tape and having U.S. diplomats court investors who want to break into the market.

"We know we can do more. We know we can do better," Obama said at a conference his administration organized that attracted business representatives from around the world.

While the United States drew $166 billion in direct investment dollars in 2012, more than any other country, the U.S. share of foreign direct investment has fallen to 17 percent from more than a third in 2000, according to the Organization for International Investment, a trade group that represents the U.S. operations of global companies.

Seeking to reverse that trend, Obama said the United States would start to coordinate efforts at the federal level to attract investment in a way it has not before. Until now, states and cities have been responsible for making pitches for business from abroad.

"As a country, we don't always make our case in a coordinated way that links our teams overseas to the right senior officials in Washington," he said. "And we're going to change that, make our advocacy more efficient, more effective, more connected."

The president's plug comes at a time of sluggish U.S. economic growth and uncertainty over the country's fiscal outlook as the president and congressional Republicans fight over cuts to government spending and how much deficit cutting is necessary to put the country on a sustainable fiscal course.

Obama said U.S. officials would seek to make it easier for foreign firms to navigate the thicket of federal, state and local requirements for doing business in the United States. He promised "a single point of contact" for interested investors.

The decline of U.S. market share of global foreign direct investment is due in part to rapid growth in emerging economies, OFII President Nancy McLernon said. But the United States has also failed to market itself aggressively and has lagged Europe in attracting investment from developing nations, she added.

Obama promised that top administration officials will play a more active role in pitching the United States as an attractive place to invest.

"Officials at the highest levels, up to and including me, are going to do even more to make the case for investing in America," he said.

The remarks were made at the inaugural SelectUSA Investment Summit, a two-day conference designed to promote direct investment and job creation in the United States.

The conference drew more than 1,200 business leaders from nearly 60 countries, and top U.S. executives, including Wal-Mart Inc's Bill Simon, Deloitte's Joe Echevarria and Samsung Electronics North America's David Steel.

Obama said he was making it a formal part of the portfolios of embassies around the world to woo investors. The administration said it will focus diplomatic outreach efforts on 32 countries it believes are potentially particularly attractive sources of investment.

It is also going to increase the amount of information that is available to states and localities to prepare them better to attract investors, Obama said.

Since much of foreign direct investment in the United States reflects firms buying up U.S. companies, there at times has been public resistance.

White House National Economic Council Director Gene Sperling sought to combat any such concerns.

"We want to make clear, this is not a xenophobic nation," he said at the conference. "If you want to come here and make your fortune playing by the rules, investing in the United States, creating jobs, we don't just tolerate it, we welcome you with open arms."

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Reuters: Regulatory News: Mayor in Hawaii vetoes measure curbing pesticides, GMO crops

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Mayor in Hawaii vetoes measure curbing pesticides, GMO crops
Nov 1st 2013, 00:55

By Christopher D'Angelo

LIHUE, Hawaii | Thu Oct 31, 2013 8:55pm EDT

LIHUE, Hawaii Oct 31 (Reuters) - The mayor of the tropical island of Kauai, Hawaii, vetoed a measure on Thursday that reins in pesticide use by agricultural companies and limits where they can plant genetically modified crops, saying the bill was "legally flawed."

The Kauai County Council voted 6-1 on Oct. 16 in favor of the bill that would require buffer zones around schools, hospitals and homes where no crops can be grown and limits pesticide use. The bill also requires the companies to disclose what GMO crops they grow and what pesticides they use.

Kauai County Mayor Bernard Carvalho Jr. said in a statement that while he agrees with the intent of the bill, he is not going to allow it to go into effect. Instead, Carvalho said, he wants the council to fund a study of the environmental and health impacts of pesticide use on the island.

"We can and will find legal means to address these important health and safety issues," Carvalho said.

The council can override the mayor's veto with five votes.

This latest twist comes after months of protests by islanders and mainland U.S. groups who want to see a range of broad controls on the global agrichemical companies that have found Kauai's tropical climate ideal for year-round testing of new biotech crops.

Among those testing biotech crops on Hawaii's "Garden Isle," as Kauai is known, are DuPont, Syngenta AG, BASF, and Dow AgroSciences, a division of Dow Chemical Co. Kauai Coffee, the largest coffee grower in Hawaii, also opposed the measure.

Critics claim the biotech crops contribute to extensive pesticide use, which in turn causes environmental damage and health concerns for people and animals.

But the industry says the biotech crops are crucial for increasing global food production and improving environmental sustainability, and they say the pesticide use is already well regulated by state and federal officials. They said the Kauai measure is bad policy.

Alicia Maluafiti, executive director Hawaii Crop Improvement Association, said the bill was "severely flawed," and her group was glad to see it vetoed.

"This measure, although intended to be good for the community, would have had long-term negative effects on all agriculture in Kauai and our state, not just the seed industry or big agriculture," she said.

Concerns about pesticide use on the island have been mounting in recent years and some allege health problems, including increased rates of cancer, are tied to the farm chemicals on the experimental crop fields.

"Kauai residents are exposed to pesticides at every turn - their homes, their schools, their gardens, their hospitals," said Paul Achitoff, an attorney with Earthjustice, a nonprofit public interest law group based in California that supports the measure. "It's outrageous the mayor has chosen to disregard their health and instead pander to industry."

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

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PRESS DIGEST- Financial Times - Nov 1
Nov 1st 2013, 01:31

Thu Oct 31, 2013 9:31pm EDT

Nov 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.

The Royal Bank of Scotland has suspended two traders in its foreign exchange division amid global investigations into the possible manipulation of the $5.3 trillion-a-day forex market, sources said.

Wells Fargo, the fourth-largest U.S. bank, has settled claims with the U.S. Federal Housing Finance Agency over bad mortgages the bank sold ahead of the financial crisis, according to sources.

Insurer American International Group said it had completed its first share buyback since its $182 billion government bailout during the financial crisis.

Japanese consumer electronics company Sony on Friday morning slashed its full-year profit forecast by 26 percent, hit by weakness in its struggling TV operation.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: NY's Barclays Center box holders claim shabby treatment due to race

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NY's Barclays Center box holders claim shabby treatment due to race
Nov 1st 2013, 00:12

By Ellen Wulfhorst

NEW YORK | Thu Oct 31, 2013 8:12pm EDT

NEW YORK Oct 31 (Reuters) - A group of Barclays Center luxury box holders sued the giant events center in Brooklyn on Thursday, claiming they have been treated badly because they are black.

The federal lawsuit filed by Ludwig's Drug Store, which seeks $4 million in damages, claims its manager and two other staffers who bought into the box have been "harassed, followed and questioned."

The three men say they are the only black box holders at Barclays, which opened in September 2012 and can hold as many as 19,000 people. It has 101 luxury suites, according to its website.

The Brooklyn-based drug store signed a three-year lease for nearly $1 million for a luxury box three weeks ago, according to the lawsuit.

Since then, the three say in the lawsuit they have been treated with suspicion, ignored by staff, forced to wait long times for orders that sometimes never arrive and once were billed $1,000 for a pizza that arrived late and was cold. Their luxury box is rarely cleaned, they say.

The complaint is the latest in a string of accusations of racism at commercial spots in New York.

Several black customers complained in recent days that they were stopped by police after making luxury purchases at Barneys New York and at Macy's Inc, and Barneys and the police were named in a lawsuit filed by a student who said he was detained after buying an expensive belt.

The complaints against the stores have prompted an investigation by the state attorney general into their security practices.

The treatment by Barclays is "unlawful discriminatory practice because of race," said the lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in Brooklyn.

Barclays spokesman Barry Baum said in a statement that it would "immediately and thoroughly" investigate the claims.

"We have a zero tolerance policy for any type of discriminatory behavior. It is against everything that Barclays Center stands for," Baum said, noting that Barclays had not received legal papers nor complaints from the box holders.

The attorney representing the three men declined to speak to the media, his office said.

In the year since it has opened, Barclays has hosted shows by such top performers as Jay Z, Barbra Streisand, the Rolling Stones and Paul McCartney. It is home to the Brooklyn Nets and will be home to the New York Islanders professional hockey team starting in 2015.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: U.S. Senate panel passes plan to restrict, not end, surveillance

Reuters: Regulatory News
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U.S. Senate panel passes plan to restrict, not end, surveillance
Oct 31st 2013, 22:57

By Patricia Zengerle

WASHINGTON | Thu Oct 31, 2013 6:57pm EDT

WASHINGTON Oct 31 (Reuters) - The U.S. Senate Intelligence Committee approved legislation on Thursday to tighten controls on the government's sweeping electronic eavesdropping programs, but allows them to continue.

In a classified hearing, the panel voted 11-4 for a measure that puts new limits on what intelligence agencies can do with bulk communications records and imposes a five-year limit on how long they can be retained.

Despite growing national concern about surveillance, the "FISA Improvements Act" would not eliminate the program, which became public earlier this year when former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden leaked information that the government collects far more internet and telephone data than previously known.

"The NSA call-records program is legal and subject to extensive congressional and judicial oversight, and I believe it contributes to our national security. But more can and should be done to increase transparency and build public support for privacy protections in place," Senator Dianne Feinstein, chairwoman of the Intelligence Committee, said in a statement.

The act also requires the special court that oversees the collection programs to designate outside officials to provide independent perspective and assist in reviewing matters that present novel or significant interpretations of the law.

It also requires Senate confirmation of the National Security Agency director and inspector general.

It was not clear whether the Intelligence Committee's bill would become law. It must pass the full Senate, as well as the House of Representatives before it could be sent to President Barack Obama for his signature.

It also faces formidable opposition.

Democratic Senator Patrick Leahy and Republican Representative James Sensenbrenner this week introduced a bill to end what they termed the government's "dragnet collection" of information.

Sensenbrenner and Leahy, the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, which also oversees the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, were the primary authors of the USA Patriot Act implemented after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks to improve the government's ability to protect its citizens.

Democratic Senator Ron Wyden, one of the four committee members who voted against the intelligence committee's legislation, said the measure codifies surveillance practices that he thinks are too broad.

"More and more Americans are saying that they refuse to give up their constitutionally guaranteed liberties for the appearance of security; the intelligence committee has passed a bill that ignores this message," Wyden said in a statement.

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Reuters: Regulatory News: UPDATE 3-AstraZeneca names Dunoyer CFO as drug sales, profits drop

Reuters: Regulatory News
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UPDATE 3-AstraZeneca names Dunoyer CFO as drug sales, profits drop
Oct 31st 2013, 11:02

Thu Oct 31, 2013 7:02am EDT

* Marc Dunoyer appointed to replace Simon Lowth as CFO

* Q3 sales $6.25 billion vs consensus $6.44 billion

* Q3 core EPS $1.21 vs consensus $1.22

* 2013 spending to increase at upper end of guided range

* Shares down 2 percent

By Ben Hirschler

LONDON, Oct 31 (Reuters) - AstraZeneca promoted Marc Dunoyer to be its new chief financial officer on Thursday, plugging a gap in the British drugmaker's top management team as it grapples with falling sales and profits.

Dunoyer, 61, who joined from rival GlaxoSmithKline in June and currently heads portfolio and product strategy, will replace well-respected finance chief Simon Lowth, whose departure to join BG Group had been announced.

Hit by generic competition to key drugs, sales and profits at AstraZeneca continued to slide in the third quarter, underscoring the challenge facing Chief Executive Pascal Soriot, who has been in the job for just over a year.

Lowth has been viewed as a steady hand on AstraZeneca's finances and the appointment of Dunoyer, who lacks recent direct CFO responsibility, may concern some investors.

"AstraZeneca's heavy income-focused investor base will likely be concerned over the news of Mr. Dunoyer's appointment," Citi analyst Andrew Baum said in a note.

"While a very talented and experienced industry executive, in our view, investors could fear increased risk to near-term EPS (earnings per share) and AstraZeneca's flat dividend commitment through either increased internal investment or a greater propensity to M&A."

Dunoyer, who is a French national like Soriot and takes over on Nov. 1, is a qualified accountant, but his most recent roles at GSK were as head of rare diseases and Japan.

Soriot told reporters Dunoyer offered a blend of strategic thinking and financial expertise, adding his appointment did not signal any change in dividend policy or acquisition strategy, which has so far focused on smaller deals.

Panmure Gordon analyst Savvas Neophytou said the company, at its current stage, probably needed a CFO who was "more strategic than technocratic".

Soriot and Dunoyer have their work cut out to turn around AstraZeneca after years of failure to come up with new drugs to replace those reaching the end of their patent life.

Improving AstraZeneca's record in drug research is Soriot's top priority, but he told Reuters in June that turning around the company would take three to four years.

SPENDING MORE

It will also require investment in the science behind new medicines and AstraZeneca said it expected to spend more, with 2013 spending increasing at the upper end of its prior guidance range of a low-to-mid single digit percentage rise on 2012.

Mark Clark of Deutsche Bank said higher operating costs suggested there would be "minor" downgrades in earnings forecasts.

The shares fell 2 percent by 1045 GMT following news of Dunoyer's appointment and the latest weak results.

Sales in the quarter slid by 6 percent to $6.25 billion, weighed down by the loss of patent protection on several drugs - including, in some markets, its top-selling cholesterol fighter Crestor - while EPS tumbled 28 percent.

"Core" operating profit of $2.03 billion, which excludes certain items, generated EPS of $1.21. Analysts had, on average, forecast core EPS of $1.22 and sales of $6.44 billion, according to Thomson Reuters.

The group reiterated its expectation for a mid-to-high single digit percentage fall in revenue this year, with earnings expected to decline significantly more, due to rising research and marketing costs.

Near-term hopes are pinned on new heart drug Brilinta, although its progress to date has been slow, with sales in the quarter edging up to $75 million from $65 million in the three months to end-June.

A U.S. inquiry launched this month into a clinical trial involving the drug also raises uncertainties.

Growth in drug sales in China, where destocking and an anti-corruption drive disrupted business, slowed to 13 percent from 21 percent in the second quarter. But AstraZeneca fared a lot better than GlaxoSmithKline, the company at the centre of the scandal, whose China sales crashed 61 percent in the third quarter.

Overall revenue in emerging markets was up 5 percent and AstraZeneca said it expected a high single digit revenue increase in emerging markets for the full year.

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