Financial life in a big town

May 9, 2012

U.S. economy has a ‘royal straight flush’ - Jamie Dimon

Filed under: Australia, stocks — Tags: , , , — Silver @ 7:20 am

JP Morgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon was overwhelmingly optimistic Monday — but was quick to say things would be even better were it not for government policies.

His reasons for optimism: the world’s strongest military, best businesses, most entrepreneurial workforce and deepest capital markets. "We have the royal straight flush," Dimon told Fortune.

So what’s the problem? Dimon cited three examples of where the government went wrong: The debt ceiling crisis, the failure to adopt Simpson-Bowles and what he calls the "constant attack on business."

When asked why, at a time of record profits, Corporate America isn’t hiring more, Dimon said American businesses had added 4 million jobs in the past two years no fax needed payday loans. "I don’t think government policy had anything to do with it," Dimon said. "It should have been 8 million.

More video on Jamie Dimon and the economy:

Dimon on lending, taxes and Romney

Buffett: Obama beats Romney on economy

Obama: Trickle down doesn’t work

Munger on Occupy: ‘I hate that’ 

Source

April 22, 2012

Energy crisis provokes Argentine YPF expropriation

Filed under: legal, stocks — Tags: , , , — Silver @ 3:52 pm

Less than a decade ago, Argentina was an exporter of oil and natural gas. Now the government has to spend billions of dollars to import fuel.

This dramatic reversal of fortune is why Argentina, already a global financial rogue after its historic debt default, is willing to risk becoming even more of a pariah by seizing control of its leading oil company from Spanish hands, analysts say. President Cristina Fernandez infuriated Spain, its largest foreign investor, but elated many Argentines by expropriating Repsol YPF SA’s majority stake in Argentina’s formerly state-owned YPF energy company.

Only two months earlier, Repsol YPF had upped its estimate for the shale oil and gas it found in Argentina to nearly 23 billion barrels, enough to double the country’s output in a decade .But the Spanish company said it would cost $25 billion a year to develop, and warned that Argentina would need to overhaul its energy policy to attract the necessary investment.

Instead, Fernandez simply seized the company, giving her government access to billions of dollars’ worth of cash, enough energy to answer domestic demand in the short term, and potentially even solving Argentina’s chronic money woes in the future.

She accused Repos of draining YPF since gaining control in the 1990s, underinvesting in its oil and gas fields and failing to keep pace with the needs of Argentina’s growing economy even as it paid huge dividends to shareholders.

Repos blames Argentina’s ever-changing mix of subsidies, price caps and export taxes for depressing production as the country’s demand for energy soared since 2003, when her husband, President Nestor Kirchner, came to power.

Both are partly right, says Eduardo Fernandez, an independent consultant and former fuels director in Argentina’s energy ministry.

The problem was a government approved practice of allowing Repos to use profits to pay shareholder dividends rather than invest that money in the company’s future. “That led to a lack of reinvestment in utilities, little exploration and dwindling reserves, as oil fields dried up and productivity fell,” Fernandez said.

Argentine oil production plunged 22 percent from 2000 to 2010, even as demand surged more than 40 percent, according to data from the Argentine Oil and Gas Institute and the Energy Ministry compiled by a former energy secretary, Emilio Apud.

Argentina’s production has fallen so low that the government now spends billions of dollars a year on expensive imported fuels that it provides at a loss to companies and consumers.

Cheap energy helped Argentines rebuild after a world-record debt default and devaluation in 2002 left the economy in ruins. It makes less sense now, after nearly a decade of growth, but letting consumer energy prices rise too quickly could cause already high inflation to spiral, and provoke popular discontent in a country where pot-banging street protests have driven other presidents from office.

The energy subsidies spiked by 63 percent in 2010 to $5.6 billion, according to a former energy secretary, Alieto Guadagni. At the time, oil traded at about $80 a barrel internationally. With oil now going for more than $100 a barrel, this year’s bill could be nearly $10 billion, even as the economy cools with less demand from China and Brazil.

Fernandez squarely blamed a Repose’s lack of investment for a $3 billion energy deficit when she announced the takeover.

“The worst thing is that if we don’t do this, we’ll turn into an unsustainable country, because of its business policies and not because of a lack of resources,” she said, noting that Argentina holds the world’s third largest reserves of shale oil and gas, after China and the United States _ a resource that remains entirely untapped.

“Our model is one of recovering our sovereignty,” she added, noting that the company will not be state-owned, but run as a mixed entity, able to bring in new private shareholders.

But rather than raise fuel prices that are now about five times lower than in Brazil and Uruguay, her expropriation measure insists that oil companies must serve Argentines first, even if it means selling the energy they produce at a loss.

In the lead up to the nationalization, as prospects for quick returns diminished in Argentina, Repos YPF sought to protect its shareholders by diversifying and making long-term investments elsewhere in Latin America.

Other oil companies did the same. With oil capped at $55 a barrel in Argentina while trading above $100 on the world market, they followed the money, Eduardo Fernandez said.

“So there’s no interest in making investments in Argentina when in other countries they’re paying in full. So Repos went to Brazil, Trinidad and Tobago, Bolivia. All of this provoked the disinvestment,” he said.

Repos President Antonio Bureau said Repsol invested billions of dollars in Argentina, and tried to head off the expropriation with promises to spend more. But by then, the Argentines were already determined to regain control. All Brufau could do in the end was demand $10.5 billion, which he said was the market price of the shares Argentina seized.

Deputy Economy Minister Axel Keillor accused Repos of hiding the true value of its Argentine unit, and said a thorough review of its books now that he’s in control of the company’s offices in Buenos Aires will affect whatever compensation is eventually paid.

“These morons think that the government is stupid enough to buy everything” that Repsol demands, the 40-year-old Kicillof said, sporting an open shirt and long, Elvis-like sideburns in a heated senate session this week.

Latin America’s third-biggest economy hasn’t been able to tap international debt markets since its default, but has been able to manage with dollars rolling in from taxes on grains, nationalizing private pension funds and the flagship airline, and by tapping central bank reserves.

By re-nationalizing YPF _ and not paying Repsol until international courts resolve the case years from now, if then _ Argentina can reinvest profits to develop new reserves and use the fuel Repsol was exporting to save consumers from price shocks as it weans them off the subsidies.

The shale deposits trapped deep under the “Vaca Muerta” (”Dead Cow”) basin of Neuquén province could increase Argentina’s oil reserves by at least 750 million barrels, and probably three times that much, said Michael Lynch, president of Strategic Energy and Economic Research.

Strategic partners will be key, and the Argentines aren’t waiting for them to come knocking. Planning Minister Julio de Vido assured Brazilian officials Friday that Argentine assets of their state-run oil giant Petrobras would not be expropriated, and secured a promise to increase their Argentine market share from 8 percent to 15 percent this year. Brazilian Energy Minister Edison Lobao called Petrobras’s current investment of $500 million in Argentina “good business.”

De Vido also secured promises of increased natural gas production from French-owned Total Austral, and planned meetings Monday with executives from Chevron and Exxon.

He said he had not heard from China’s No. 2 Sinopec oil company, “but that doesn’t mean that we won’t have contacts in the future.”

Source

February 13, 2012

Australia Home Loans Gain More Than Forecast on Jump in Investor Borrowing - Bloomberg

Filed under: legal, stocks — Tags: , , , — Silver @ 2:32 am

Australian home-loan approvals jumped in December by the most in seven months and exceeded economists

February 9, 2012

South Africa Plans

Filed under: Banks, stocks — Tags: , , , — Silver @ 2:16 pm

South Africa is planning a

February 8, 2012

13,000 is next Dow milestone, with record in sight

Filed under: legal, stocks — Tags: , , , — Silver @ 8:00 am

It was just last summer that the Dow Jones industrial average shed 2,000 points in three terrifying weeks. Investors had a host of things to worry about, including the possibility of another recession.

Now the Dow is within reach of the rarefied 13,000 mark _ a level it hasn’t seen since May 2008, four months before the financial system almost came apart.

A strong one-day rally _ caused by a deal on bailout money for Greece, perhaps, or an unexpectedly positive economic report _ could put it over the top.

What’s more, the average is just a 10 percent rally from an all-time high. And 10 percent rallies can happen fast these days.

The stomach-turning summer is a bad memory. Europe appears to be getting its act together, last summer’s downgrade of the U.S.’ credit rating was quickly forgotten, Washington is mostly behaving, and recession fears are gone.

“There are signs that the economy is getting back on its feet and the market is reacting to that,” says John Prestbo, executive director of Dow Jones Indexes. “The mood is just better in this country than it has been for a while.”

On Wall Street, too. The Dow traded Tuesday at 12,878, a 21 percent rally from Oct. 3, its low point for last year. In January, the average rose more or less in a straight line and added 3.4 percent, its best start to a year since 1997.

From here, the record is tantalizingly close _ 14,164.53, reached Oct. 9, 2007, when the investment houses Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers still existed and the unemployment rate was 4.7 percent.

A 10 percent surge may seem like a lot, but it’s really not. The Dow has gained almost 15 percent since Nov. 25, just 10 weeks ago.

Though there’s a long way to go to get the country back to economic health, there are pockets of encouragement. Unemployment is still 8.3 percent, but it’s the lowest since February 2009. Economic output grew every quarter last year.

Corporate earnings growth has slowed, but analysts think it will pick up again later this year. Investors, always wary of uncertainty, may even be encouraged by some clarity in the Republican presidential nominating race.

Investors are no longer just trying to stem their losses, says Mark Lehmann, president of JMP Securities in San Francisco: “They’re playing a little offense. Six months ago, they were playing defense.”

There’s evidence that the rally has room to run. In a popular measure of how expensive stocks are, the 30 companies that make up the Dow are trading at an average of about 13 times their annual earnings per share.

The last time the Dow was at 13,000, in May 2008, stocks were trading for about 15 times earnings. Stock-market research firm Birinyi Associates estimates Dow stocks have traded at an average of 16 times earnings over the past two decades.

The fire-sale discounts have already come and gone, though. Those were back in early 2009, when the Dow bottomed at 6,547.05, its Great Recession low _ a little more than half the level now. Back then, Dow stocks traded at nine times earnings quick payday loans.

Not everyone believes the rally will last. Joe Gordon, managing partner at Gordon Asset Management in North Carolina, is dubious. He cites the unresolved European debt crisis, the U.S.’ historically high national debt and the millions of people who have given up looking for work, part of the so-called underemployed.

“This is like drinking a lot of coffee in the afternoon,” says Gordon. “It perks you up, then once it fades 45 minutes later you’re even more tired.”

Another wrinkle is that the Dow tracks just 30 companies, so it doesn’t take the full pulse of the market. The Standard & Poor’s 500, with its much larger roster, is still 16 percent away from its all-time high.

“It’s 30 stocks,” says Rob Leiphart, an analyst at Birinyi. “It doesn’t give you a representation of anything.”

But despite its size, the Dow is the market gauge that penetrates the public consciousness, generating headlines and water cooler buzz more than the less publicized S&P.

That’s important because the stock market, even if it has no direct bearing on the fundamentals of the economy, is a psychological motivator of spending because of something known as the wealth effect.

Even people with no stock investments will let their decisions be influenced by swings in the Dow. When it’s up, we tend to feel richer and spend more. When it’s down _ think back to the 500-point daily declines of 2008 _ we tend to feel poorer and spend less.

There’s good reason the Dow has pull over the financial mood of the country. Its 30 stocks account for 25 to 30 percent of the market value of all U.S. public companies, and about 40 percent of the dividends, Dow Jones Indexes estimates.

“Nothing of substance can happen in this economy without these companies feeling it,” Prestbo says.

A handful of companies have an outsized impact on the index. The Dow is a price-weighted average, which means companies with more expensive stocks have more power to drive the average higher or lower.

If you invest $30 in a mutual fund tracking the Dow, you don’t have a dollar riding on each company. Four times as much of your money would end up on Home Depot, which is trading around $45, than Alcoa, trading around $11.

IBM, the highest-priced stock in the Dow, had a giant influence last year. The Dow rose 5.5 percent in 2011, but without IBM it would have risen only 3.4 percent, according to Leiphart’s calculations.

If you were to cut out the next three stocks on the list, McDonald’s, Chevron and ExxonMobil, then the Dow would have finished down 0.25 percent for the year.

The flip side is that stocks like Chevron, Exxon Mobil, Microsoft and Intel trade well below the 13 times earnings for the full Dow. If they catch up, it could be enough to power the average to a record.

Source

January 21, 2012

Novartis drug investigated after 11 deaths

Filed under: Loans, stocks — Tags: , , , — Silver @ 7:24 am

A multiple sclerosis drug made by industry giant Novartis is under investigation after at least 11 patients taking the medicine died.

The drug, Gilenya, was licensed last year in the European Union to treat patients with a severe type of multiple sclerosis.

The deaths raise concerns Gilenya could trigger heart problems after patients take their first dose, according to a statement issued Friday by the European Medicines Agency. The agency, which is now investigating the drug, said it isn’t clear if it caused the deaths.

One of the deaths was in the U.S., where a patient died within 24 hours of taking the first dose.

The European agency said it didn’t know where the other 10 deaths occurred, but that they were reported to its drug database, which monitors side effects from medicines in the European Union.

A spokeswoman at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration said it also is conducting a data analysis but has not made any definitive conclusions and does not know when its review will be complete.

More than 30,000 patients have taken Gilenya worldwide payday loan. The European Medicines Agency advised doctors to increase their monitoring of patients after the first dose of the medicine. The agency said the risk of a slow heart rate after the first dose of Gilenya was known when it was approved.

Novartis AG said it was advising doctors of new recommendations on using Gilenya. They had previously recommended all patients be monitored for six hours after their first dose, but are now tightening that to include continuous heart monitoring using electrocardiograms and measuring blood pressure and heart rate every hour. In certain patients, that monitoring should be extended, the drug maker said in a statement.

This new guidance applies only to patients taking their first dose, Novartis said in a statement.

The EU drug regulator hopes to finish its review of the drug by March.

Source

December 30, 2011

Stocks rebound: Dow up 136 points, S&P back in black

Filed under: legal, stocks — Tags: , , , — Silver @ 6:48 pm

U.S. stocks rose Thursday in a thinly-traded session as investors focused on signs of strength in the economy before calling it a year.

The Dow Jones industrial average () rose 136 points, or 1.1%, to end at 12,287. The S&P 500 () added 13 points, or 1.1%, to 1,263. The Nasdaq () gained 24 points, or 0.9%, to 2,614.

Thursday’s rebound put the S&P 500 back on track for a modest 0.4% gain in 2011, after the broad market index fell sharply Wednesday. The Dow is currently up 6.1% for the year, while the Nasdaq is set for a 1.5% loss.

Stocks were supported by reports on housing, manufacturing and employment that raised hopes about the U.S. economy.

"Today’s last round of major U.S. reports before the weekend New Year’s celebration provided a decidedly positive spin to the outlook," wrote Michael Englund, chief economist at Action Economics, in a note to clients.

Traders said low volume, typical of the holiday week, has led to more pronounced swings, and some of the moves are coming from year-end portfolio rebalancing rather than convictions over the trajectory of the market or particular stocks.

Are you a markets whiz?

"We expect light trading through today and tomorrow, and any noise can create wild swings," said Doug Cote, chief market strategist at ING Investment Management.

Looking ahead, many investors expect stocks to move higher in the first few months of 2012.

The U.S. economy has shown signs of improvement recently, with economists forecasting a 3.3% increase in gross domestic product in the final three months of 2011. In addition, corporate profits are expected to rise in the fourth quarter, continuing an 11-month streak.

But the outlook for next year remains clouded by the debt crisis in Europe, which continues to weigh on demand for risk assets such as stocks.

On Thursday, an auction of Italian 10-year bonds, which have seen yields continue to flirt with the 7% danger zone, provided muted results. While yields were reported below prior levels, demand was short.

The euro fell to a 17-month low and analysts warn the currency could fall even further in 2012.

"Europe is a powder keg and could explode at any time, and likely will when we are the most complacent," said Keith Springer, president of Springer Financial Advisors in Sacramento cash advance america.

Economy: Jobless claims rose 15,000 to 381,000 in the latest week, according to the U.S. Labor Department. Analysts surveyed by Briefing.com had expected 368,000 claims.

But the figure remained below 400,000, giving investors hope that the labor market will strengthen in the new year.

The National Association of Realtors index of pending home sales, which measures signed sales contracts but not closed sales, rose 4% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.42 million in November from 4.25 million in October.

Economist had expected the a 0.6% increase in pending home sales.

The report boosted shares of homebuilders, including Pulte (, Fortune 500), Masco (, Fortune 500), Lennar () and DR Horton (, Fortune 500).

An index of manufacturing activity in the Chicago area eased slightly in December but held near a 7-month high, according to the Institute for Supply Management.

Companies: Amazon (, Fortune 500) eased after analysts at Goldman Sachs (, Fortune 500) suggested that the online retailer’s sales growth for the holiday period may fall short of expectations.

Shares of Yahoo (, Fortune 500) gained 2.7% after reports that China’s Alibaba Group has hired a lobbying firm to prepare a bid for Yahoo.

BP () edged higher despite reports that employees could face criminal charges in relation to last year’s Gulf of Mexico oil spill.

World markets: European stocks closed higher. Britain’s FTSE 100 () added 0.8%, the DAX () in Germany rose 0.9% and France’s CAC 40 () rose 1.1%.

Asian markets ended mixed. The Shanghai Composite () edged up 0.2%, the Hang Seng () in Hong Kong fell 0.7% and Japan’s Nikkei () lost 0.3%.

Betting on the dollar in 2012

Currencies and commodities: The dollar gained strength against the euro and the British pound but fell versus the Japanese yen.

Oil for February delivery rose 31 cents to $99.05 a barrel.

Gold futures for February delivery fell $23.20 to $1,540.90 an ounce.

Bonds: The price on the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury rose, with the yield easing to 1.89% from late Wednesday.  

Source

December 26, 2011

King Says Crisis Threatens Europe

Filed under: online, stocks — Tags: , , , — Silver @ 2:42 am

+%3Cp%3EMervyn+King%2C+vice+chairman+of+the+European+Systemic+Risk+Board%2C+said+Europe%92s+sovereign+debt+crisis+is+threatening+to+hurt+the+real+economy+and+the+outlook+for+financial+stability+has+worsened.+%3C%2Fp%3E+%3Cp%3EGrowth+prospects+%93have+deteriorated%94+since+September%2C+King%2C+who+is+also+governor+of+the+Bank+of+England%2C+said+at+a+briefing+hosted+by+the+European+Central+Bank+in+Frankfurt+yesterday.+%93Investors+lack+confidence+to+continue+to+provide+normal+levels+of+funding.+Dependence+on+central+banks+has+risen.%94+%3C%2Fp%3E+%3Cp%3EThe+ECB+loaned+banks+a+record+489+billion+euros+%28%24636+billion%29+for+three+years+on+Dec.+21+to+avert+a+credit+crunch+from+the+sovereign+debt+crisis.+The+central+bank+said+earlier+this+week+that+the+turmoil+has+taken+on+systemic+proportions+not+seen+since+the+2008+collapse+of+Lehman+Brothers+Holdings+Inc.+%3C%2Fp%3E+%3Cp%3EKing+said+the+outlook+for+financial+stability+has+%93worsened%94+since+the+last+ESRB+meeting+in+September%2C+and+while+intervention+by+the+ECB+is+expected+to+%93assuage+funding+problems+in+the+near+term%2C+in+the+longer+term+private+funding+markets+must+be+revitalized.%94+%3C%2Fp%3E+%3Cp%3EBank+shares+have+suffered+this+year+as+borrowing+costs+surged+in+the+euro+region.+The+Stoxx+600+Banks+Index+has+fallen+28+percent+since+the+end+of+June%2C+compared+with+a+12+percent+decline+by+the+Stoxx+Europe+600.+%3C%2Fp%3E+Capital+Plea++%3Cp%3EKing+also+appealed+to+banks+not+to+%93reduce+lending+to+the+real+economy%94+as+they+increase+their+capital+levels+to+meet+new+standards+set+by+regulators.+%3C%2Fp%3E+%3Cp%3E%93We+are+very+conscious+there+is+extreme+risk+aversion+in+private+financial+markets%2C%94+he+said+%3Ca+href%3D%22http%3A%2F%2Fus-fast-cash-now.com%22%3Ecash+advance%3C%2Fa%3E%3C%21–+.+–%3E.+%93We+want+a+more+robust+banking+system+so+that+whatever+risks+crystallize%2C+whatever+their+source%2C+the+banking+system+is+in+a+better+position+than+2008.%94+%3C%2Fp%3E+%3Cp%3EThere+was+%93no+discussion%94+at+the+ESRB+meeting+of+any+country+leaving+the+euro+area%2C+King+said.+Still%2C+%93all+financial+institutions+are+advised+to+prepare+for+a+wide+range+of+contingencies%2C%94+he+said.+%3C%2Fp%3E+%3Cp%3EAndrea+Enria%2C+the+second+ESRB+vice+chair+who+is+also+the+chairman+of+the+European+Banking+Authority%2C+said+he+is+%93disappointed%94+by+European+leaders+dithering+over+putting+rescue+measures+in+place%2C+effectively+delaying+Europe%92s+bank+recapitalization.+%3C%2Fp%3E+%3Cp%3E%93We+have+always+been+quite+adamant+in+all+occasions%2C+also+in+the+debate+running+up+to+the+decision%2C+that+this+should+have+been+a+comprehensive+package%2C%94+Enria+said.+This+includes+%93recapitalization%2C+some+measures+–+funding+guarantees+–+addressing+the+funding+problems+and+strengthening+of+the+European+Financial+Stability+Facility+and+of+the+tools+to+deal+with+the+sovereign+crisis.%94+%3C%2Fp%3E+%3Cp%3EThe+ESRB%2C+which+aims+to+warn+of+brewing+risks+in+the+financial+system%2C+was+set+up+in+January+as+part+of+a+new+European+architecture+designed+to+ward+off+another+financial+crisis+such+as+that+which+followed+the+Lehman+collapse.+Its+65-+member+board+is+headed+by+ECB+President+Mario+Draghi.+%3C%2Fp%3E++%3Cp%3E%3Ca+href%3D%27http%3A%2F%2Fwww.bloomberg.com%2Fnews%2F2011-12-23%2Fking-says-crisis-threatens-europe-s-economy-as-stability-outlook-worsens.html%27+rel%3D%27nofollow%27%3ESource%3C%2Fa%3E%3C%2Fp%3E+

November 29, 2011

Americans in November more confident about economy

Filed under: economics, stocks — Tags: , , , — Silver @ 3:08 pm

Americans’ confidence in the economy in November bounced back to its highest level since July, the latest sign that they are beginning to feel more cheerful about spending during the holiday shopping season.

The Conference Board, a private research firm, says Tuesday that its Consumer Confidence Index rose 15 points to 56.0. That’s up from a revised 40.9 in October _ the lowest level since the recession _ and the biggest jump since the 59.2 reading in July. The November number is encouraging, but far below the reading of 90, which indicates an economy on solid footing.

The confidence numbers are widely watched by economists because consumer spending accounts for 70 percent of economic activity. The confidence of U.S. consumers slipped after the summer amid renewed fears about a second recession. But Americans, who have been grappling with high unemployment and a weak housing market, have shown that they are feeling much more comfortable spending. Over the past weekend, for instance, they spent more than they ever have before during Black Friday weekend, the traditional start of the holiday shopping season.

“Consumers appear to be entering the holiday season in better spirits, though overall readings remain historically weak,” said Lynn Franco, director of The Conference Board Consumer Research Center in a statement low fee cash advance.

Franco noted that consumers’ assessment of current conditions improved after six months of steady declines. Consumers’ anxiety regarding the short-term outlook for business conditions, jobs and income prospects eased considerably.

One barometer of the index, which measures how shoppers feel now, rose to 38.3 from 27.1. The other gauge, which measures how shoppers say they will feel over the next six months, rose to 67.8 from 50.0.

Consumers have several reasons to be more confident as there have been some signs of improvement in the economy. Earlier this month, for instance, the Labor Department reported that the job market improved modestly as unemployment rate nudged down to 9 percent in October from 9.1 percent in September. The month marked the 13th consecutive month of job gains.

Source

November 13, 2011

Berlusconi ally won’t back a Monti govt in Italy

Filed under: Loans, stocks — Tags: , , , — Silver @ 7:44 am

Umberto Bossi, the longtime ally of former Italian premier Silvio Berlusconi, says his Northern League party won’t back any government led by economist Mario Monti “for now.”

Bossi says he told Italy’s president that his party will be a “vigilant” opposition to any Monti government until the economist spells out his program to rescue Italy’s troubled economy.

Berlusconi resigned Saturday after Italy came under enormous pressure for its sovereign debt.

Bossi says “for now, we said no online pay day loans.” He adds when Monti reveals his policies, the League will decide on a measure-by-measure basis.

Italy’s president could ask Monti to try to form a government to rescue Italy from looming financial disaster after talks with all parties Sunday.

Source

Newer Posts »

Powered by WordPress