Posts Tagged ‘today’

November 22, 2011 - 7:40 pm Comments Off

"Line of precaution and Liquidity" provides a credit of the member states to meet their emergency needs. This is one of the G20 commitments in Cannes.

The International Monetary Fund announced Tuesday, November 22 creating a new lending instrument to "break the chains of contagion" of financial and economic crises. The institution said in a statement that its board had given its green light to the "Line of precaution and liquidity" (LPL), which had been promised by the G20 at its summit in Cannes (South East of France) earlier this month. The TPA provides a credit of the member states to meet their emergency needs.It "can be used as a source of liquidity, allowing an agreement six months to meet the needs of short-term balance of payments," said the IMF.

This device replaces another established in August 2010, the precautionary credit line, which has a single member state, Macedonia. The difference is that the old line of credit was designed to be held in reserve, while the news is expected to eventually be used immediately. Countries that are eligible are the same: those with a crisis, and have sound economic policies and undertake to maintain. Executive Director of the IMF, Christine Lagarde, had said at the summit in Cannes that Italy could meet these criteria. To support this country, "the typical instrument we would use is a precautionary credit line.

Paris and Berlin are trying to agree on banks

October 9, 2011 - 7:05 am Comments Off

Nicolas Sarkozy was expected Sunday afternoon in Berlin for talks with Angela Merkel of crisis, with a priority to overcome their differences on how to recapitalize European banks.

In announcing the end of September it moves ahead in the German capital, the French president had indicated he would discuss with the Chancellor "ways and means to accelerate economic integration in the euro area and implement as soon as possible" the new aid plan for Greece approved July 21 by the Europeans.

The subject of a recapitalization of banks has been imposed to try to reassure markets worried about the resilience of the banking system facing the European financial and economic crisis due to its exposure to countries worse off.

The International Monetary Fund, one of the first to sound the alarm, said the overall needs of the sector between 100 and 200 billion euros.

The Irish Minister for the Economy, Michael Noonan, reported Saturday that there is a consensus on an amount "well above 100 billion."

The European Commission must present earlier this week proposals for a coordinated process of recapitalization of banks, which will be submitted to EU leaders at a summit on 17 and 18 October in Brussels.

As is always the case since the beginning of the crisis, France and Germany, the two heavyweights of the euro zone must first calibrate their positions.

Nicolas Sarkozy stressed on September 30 that there must be between the two countries "a perfect identity of views to resist speculation, to resist the excitement of the markets and to protect Europe".

But Germany and France have so far defended the differing approaches on the use of public funds to strengthen banks.

Paris would prefer to use the European Financial Stability Fund (EFSF), while Berlin insists on reserving the European emergency fund, which has $ 440 billion in shares last resort, such as support to Greece.

PUBLIC SHAREHOLDERS OF LAST RESORT

Friday receiving the Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte, Angela Merkel has reiterated that the EFSF should be activated "if a country can go it alone."

France, whose banks have the highest exposure to the debt of the peripheral countries of the euro area, has worked to minimize these differences by ensuring that the issue had not yet been discussed with Germany.

"Our position is no different from that of the Germans: it takes more capital for banks, banks must first find in themselves the resources, then if they find private investors outside and ultimately being considered injections of public capital, "it was said at Bercy.

The Ministry of Economy and Finance argued that it was first necessary to assess the level of capital required, by when, and it is then that will arise the question of "instruments of a possible recapitalization public ", which has not yet been addressed.

Meanwhile, France does not intend that the current debate among Europeans are limited to this single question."It will be among the topics discussed but the main thing about Greece and the euro area, since the banks is a consequence" of the crisis, stated there at Bercy Friday about the Sarkozy-Merkel talks Sunday.

The two leaders are expected to again argue for a rapid implementation of the agreement of July 21, which must still be ratified by Slovakia and Malta, and while the voices begin to rise enough to judge.

The Greek representative at the IMF has estimated Saturday that the financing needs of Athens will exceed current estimates and the difference will be made up "either by an increase in the loan of 109 billion decided July 21, or by restructuring the private debt. "

Air France hunting on the lands of "low cost"

October 2, 2011 - 8:35 am Comments Off

Air France, which opened its first Sunday "based province" in Marseille, comes directly hunt on the lands of the companies' low-cost "as Ryanair or Easyjet broken at prices of 13 destinations.

The first flight "new formula" of the French company took off Sunday at 9:35 of the tarmac from Marseille to Istanbul.Passengers paid 80 euros each way.

In total, Air France thus opens 13 new routes from Marseille-Provence – three in France (Mulhouse, Biarritz, Brest) and ten abroad (Athens, Copenhagen, Düsseldorf, Eindhoven, Milan, Moscow, Prague, Beirut, Casablanca and Istanbul).

"We create a mini-Marseille airline with its aircraft and personnel," said the CEO of Air France-KLM, Pierre-Henri Gourgeon, during his visit Thursday to Marseille airport for the official launch of the first "base province" of the French company.

After Marseille, which is the "size test", Air France plans to open bases in spring 2012 in Nice and Toulouse and Bordeaux.

To regain market share against the pressure of the TGV and low-cost airlines, which continue to gain ground on short and medium haul, the French company has set up an optimization of resources and a new organization negotiated with pilots and crews.

TEN AIRBUS based in Marseille

A total of ten Airbus A319 and A320 are now based at the airport in Marseille. Depending on the destination, they will perform at least two trips a day between 06:00 and 23:00.

On a voluntary basis, 120 pilots and 220 flight attendants were assigned to these new lines.The ground staff was also strengthened.

This device should allow the airline to tighten the price (50 euros for domestic flights to 110 euros one way on Moscow) maintaining the benefits typically offered by the French company on its other flights as the choice of place , newspapers and snacks on board or free luggage.

"This development meets one of the main expectations of our customers travel quickly at competitive prices," said the president of the Marseille-Provence airport, Jean-François Brando.

In five years, the airport Provence has surfed the wave of low-cost, doubling the number of scheduled airlines direct: 51 in 2006, 104 in 2011.

The opening of the first low-cost airport in Europe in 2006 allowed him to record a steady growth in passenger traffic, reaching 7.5 million passengers in 2010.

"With more than 150 companies and 5,000 employees on the platform, the airport is one of the leading employers in the area and generates more than three billion euros in economic benefits for the territory Marseille Provence," concludes Jean-François Brando.

35% of French say they have experienced poverty

September 22, 2011 - 8:40 pm Comments Off

Over a third of French say they have experienced "a situation of poverty" at least once in their lives, according to an Ipsos for the Secours Populaire. The respondents considered 92% as a "poverty" the fact of "regularly experience significant difficulties in obtaining a healthy, balanced diet."

Over a third of French (35%) say they have experienced "a situation of poverty" at least once in their lives, a proportion rising, says an Ipsos for the Secours Populaire announced Thursday. This rate of 35% is seven points higher than in the previous survey in 2010.

Nearly one in four French people (22%) also indicates that it is "ever had (to) say, at a time of (his) life, that (he was) on the verge of a situation poverty ", but he finally experience it.

Sign considered "alarming" by Secours Populaire, "young people are increasingly concerned", "ages 15-34 are almost a third of French (29%) who have experienced job insecurity." "They were only 22% in 2010."

And 85% of respondents believe that "the risk (their) children know one day a situation of poverty are higher than for (their) generation" for 50% risk is "significantly higher" for 35% they are "slightly higher". Only 11% consider them "lower".

The French set the poverty line at 1,031 euros per month for a single person, a figure "stable" compared to 2010, "a little below the minimum wage (1070.76 euros net per month), but always" superior to 954 euros the official poverty line calculated by INSEE. "

The respondents considered 92% as a "poverty" the fact of "regularly experience significant difficulties in obtaining a healthy, balanced diet." But they are also likely to discuss the fact of not being able to "send their children on holiday at least once a year" (73%) or not being able to "access goods or cultural activities and entertainment for himself or family "(71%).

Survey conducted by telephone August 19 and 20 with a sample of 1,016 people representative of the French population aged 15 and over, by the quota method.

Obama wants to tax the rich to fund his plan

September 13, 2011 - 5:56 am Comments Off

U.S. President plans to eliminate many tax loopholes that benefit high-income.

Barack Obama spoke for the first time Monday of tax increases to finance his plan. They would focus on eliminating the tax exonératons enjoyed by businesses and the wealthiest Americans. They would include the elimination of tax loopholes for oil and gas companies, owners of business aircraft and households with annual incomes exceeding $ 250,000.

Obama, candidate for re-election in November 2012, and Republicans have already clashed in December 2010 on the issue of tax breaks inherited from the era of George W. Bush. After a hard-won compromise, these measures were extended until the end of 2012.The announcement on taxation provoked an immediate reaction from the majority leader in the House, Eric Cantor: "I really hope that the president is not proposing that we pay for his proposals with a massive increase in taxes at the end of 2012 to create jobs that we rely on to reduce unemployment, "he warned.

"It is fair to say that this increase in taxes on job creators is the What kind of proposal rejected both parties in the past," said meanwhile Brendan Buck, spokesman for the president the House of Representatives John Boehner, leader of Republicans in Congress.

The job plan proposed Thursday by President Barack Obama is betting the recovery of consumption and public investment, at a time when the U.S. desperately needs growth drivers."Ultimately, our recovery is not caused by Washington, but our businesses and workers. But we can help," Obama said in Congress.

Growth in need of help. Fell to levels starving this year (0.7% annual rate in the first half), it is very far from being able to reduce unemployment, stuck at 9.1%. The presidential plan of $ 447 billion is allocated according to the encryption of the White House, from 57% of tax cuts and 43% of expenditure. Obama wants to invest just over $ 100 billion in the rehabilitation or construction of transport infrastructure and telecommunications, schools and homes or business premises vacant.

He also hopes to put more money into the pockets of employers and employees by giving up more than $ 250 billion in tax revenue. Hope this will help private consumption.The rest must supply targeted measures to job seekers or maintenance of public employment. Such a plan "would give a significant boost to GDP and employment in the short term," analysts have estimated the Macroeconomic Advisers, whose monthly estimates of GDP are used for dating recessions and expansions in the United States. For 2012, Macroeconomic Advisers estimated 1.3 percentage point contribution to growth, and 1.3 million jobs for the job.

Mark Zandi of Moody's Analytics, expects 2 percentage points and 1.9 million jobs. He sees "a commendable effort" of the president, but remember the risk that the plan be cut by Congress, which elected Republicans reject new spending. "There are compelling reasons why the Obama administration and Congress should provide more budgetary support to the economy," argued economist.For Goldman Sachs, instead of removing 1.1 percentage point of growth without the plan, fiscal policy in 2012 would add 0.4 percentage points with the plan.

"The private forecasters said in their initial assessment, it would make a very substantial contribution to growth at a time when we need it, and it would help to put hundreds of thousands or more Americans to work," welcomed the Treasury secretary, Timothy Geithner.

"We believe the prudent and responsible thing to do now is to do more for the short-term growth," he added, in an interview on Bloomberg TV channel from Marseille.

Economists noted that Obama had not discussed the financing of these measures at this point. "The president proposes to reduce social security contributions and the financing of social protection.Yet it remains the greatest threat to long-term solvency of the United States, "said Jason Schenker, Luxury Economics. To offset the cost of those measures, Obama announced for September 19" plan deficit reduction more ambitious "than the present. No details are known at this time. To M. Schenker, it shows" that the chances of a positive effect on the labor market and the economy are limited " .

Stiglitz urged the ECB to cut rates

August 30, 2011 - 1:40 am Comments Off

The current monetary policy of the ECB and the euro boosted hurt German exporters, said the Nobel Prize in economics. Joseph Stiglitz

The American economist Joseph Stiglitz, Nobel Prize in 2001, called the European Central Bank (ECB) to lower its key rate, in an interview published Monday in the German daily Handelsblatt. "The ECB should withdraw its previous increases" in April and July, which increased its key rate from 1% to 1.5%, said Stiglitz.

The economist, known for his critique of liberalism hardcore, says Frankfurt institution should take more account of its American counterpart, the Fed, which intends to maintain its rates at 0% for two years. "The current monetary policy of the ECB pushed the euro and hurt German exporters," he said.

Economists now expect the ECB no longer affects the rate of interest this year because of the new outbreak of the debt crisis, whereas before the institution seemed determined to further tighten its monetary policy in the fall.

Stiglitz has also reiterated its view that if the eurozone were to implode, "it would probably be better than Germany left the monetary union rather than to expel Greece."

The economist also expresses once again in favor of European bonds or "Eurobonds", "a good instrument to control the crisis."

Wall Street ended the session in style, the Dow gained 3.95%

August 11, 2011 - 5:05 pm Comments Off

Wall Street closed up nearly 4% Thursday's meeting, the figures better than expected U.S. employment combined with the strong performance of Cisco allowed to eclipse the fears of the day concerning the debt crisis in the euro area.

The New York Stock Exchange finished up 3.95% Thursday, the Dow Jones Industrial winning 30 points to 11143.31 423.37 points.

The S & P-500, wider, took 51.88 points, or 4.63% to 1172.64 points.

The Nasdaq Composite Index was up 111.63 points for his side (4.69%) to 2492.68 points.

The day before, heavy speculation about the systemic risk posed by the French banks and rumors of deterioration in the sovereign rating of France had the Dow Jones plunged 4.62% to a low of nearly a year, after a volatile session.

The U.S. Index Standard & Poor's 500 benchmark fund managers, lost alone more than 710 billion dollars of capitalization this week after clearing 850 billion the previous week.

The decline of greater than expected weekly jobless (395 000 against 400.000 expected) has brought relief to markets, while another statistic published simultaneously showed an unexpected widening of the trade deficit the United States, its highest level since October 2008, due to a decline in exports and imports indicating a slowdown in global demand.

Values, Cisco has jumped by more than 15.95% after announcing on Wednesday after-hours trading better than expected quarterly results.

The food group Sara Lee fell after reporting a decline in sales volumes, sealed by price increases to offset the rising costs of raw materials.

The title of Sara Lee has lost 1.27% after dropping to 7.6% during the session.

AOL has finally announced a program to repurchase up to $ 250 million, with the intention to revive investor confidence in its action, which fell 32% in two days.

After the announcement, soared as 22%. It closed up 12.23%.

Sodexo wins contract for 20 bases of U.S. Marines

August 8, 2011 - 7:35 pm Comments Off

Sodexo announced Monday it had won a new catering contract for 20 new bases for U.S. Marines representing a turnover of 766 million dollars (534 million) over a period of up to seven years.

The world number two catering, behind Britain's Compass, had already announced in February to renew its contract with 31 other Marines base, representing $ 926 million in sales for up to eight years .

Sodexo, which produces over a third of its sales in the United States, and will serve a total of 51 bases in the United States, located in Arizona, California, North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia and Washington.

Sodexo shares are virtually unchanged at 49.97 euros to 10.00, giving a market capitalization of 7.9 billion. She lost about 3% since the beginning of the year.

The Tel Aviv Stock Exchange plunged more than 6%

August 7, 2011 - 5:30 am Comments Off

The Tel Aviv Stock Exchange, one of the first to open since the downgrade of U.S. sovereign debt, plunged 6% on Sunday morning.

Transactions have started almost an hour late because the automatic interruption began on when the exchange of pre-market fell more than 5%.

For the first time that these "circuit breakers" trigger from 21 September 2008, after the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers, said a spokesman for the Exchange.

In mid-session, Tel Aviv 25 index showed a decline of 6.2%.

Stock traders fear that the United States, indispensable economic partner of Israel fall into a recession, which could promote the degradation of the sovereign rating by increasing the cost of borrowing.

Smaller drop in the French automotive market in July

August 1, 2011 - 7:55 am Comments Off

The new car registrations in France were charged in July the fourth consecutive month of decline, and the Committee of French Automobile Manufacturers (CCFA) maintains its forecast of a decline of 8% to 10% of the market this year with the end of scrapping.

The CCFA said Monday that new car registrations in France fell by 5.9% last month to 159,945 units. July 2011 had counted 20 working days, one fewer than in July 2010, the decline in comparable number of working days (CJO) stood at 1.2%.

"July is an important month for the market before the August break, performance remains quite good," said a spokesman for the CCFA."It turns well to a decrease of 8% to 10% throughout the year as it will be impossible to trace levels of late 2010."

The French market continues to nibble advance acquired in the first quarter, delivery period of the last cars ordered before the end of the scrapping. In the first seven months of the year, it remains still rising, but only just (0.2%).

Demand is traditionally strong in July before the last burst of holiday departures. In June, the market shrank from 12.6% in raw data – and 3.9% on CJO.

"No real surprise in July, a small decline.The market is now entering a phase worst, with a second half ahead mechanically more difficult, "said Philippe Barrier, industry analyst at Societe Generale.

THE PRODUCT MIX OF BENEFIT TO FOREIGN

The scrapping has benefited mainly small cars and French manufacturers, which is a great specialty, the 'product mix' has rebalanced toward larger models since the end of aid.Foreign manufacturers such as Volkswagen's German (7%) benefit.

In July, registrations French manufacturers have fallen by 9.3% – those of PSA Peugeot Citroen fell 7.0% and Renault's 12.4% – while sales of foreign manufacturers have declined only 1.2%.

Of these, however, Italy's Fiat showed a fall of 22.8% across the group because of its high exposure to the city car segment.

The performance of the Renault group in the past month hides a wide disparity between the low cost brand Dacia (-48.8%) and diamond brand (-2.7%).

Dacia continues to suffer from supply problems in diesel engines because many manufacturers in Spain and Turkey fail to keep up with demand, and the fall in sales of LPG Sandero since the abolition of the government bonus for this type of engine.

In contrast, commercial offers for motorists to shift to diesel fuel to alleviate the supply problems have borne fruit on the Renault brand.

The market for light trucks for its part, experienced declines of 11.8% unadjusted and 7.4% on CJO, reflecting the slowdown in economic activity during the summer.

However, registrations of trucks still rose 34.6%, this segment continued to benefit from favorable comparisons because the restart was later.