Tuesday, August 4, 2015

US Department of Justice probes Deutsche trades worth billions: source

US Department of Justice probes Deutsche trades worth billions: source


[NEW YORK] The US Department of Justice (DoJ) is investigating trades worth billions of dollars that Deutsche Bank AG made on behalf of Russian clients, a person familiar with the situation told Reuters on Tuesday.
US DoJ officials have demanded information from Germany's biggest lender about the transactions because they involved the use of the dollar, the person said.
Deutsche Bank declined to comment. It had said in its second-quarter financial report that it was investigating equity trades by Deutsche Bank clients in London and Moscow that offset one another, adding that the volume of these trades was "significant".
The quarterly report also said Deutsche Bank had informed financial regulators and law enforcement in Germany, Russia, Britain and the United States of its investigation and had taken disciplinary measures against some people in the case, which came to light in early June.


Last month, The New York State Department of Financial Services (DFS) sought detailed information from Deutsche on possible money-laundering transactions by some of its clients in Russia that could exceed US$6 billion, a source familiar with the matter told Reuters.
Bloomberg, citing people familiar with the matter, reported on Monday that the DoJ is examining so-called mirror trades, where Deutsche's Russian clients bought stocks in roubles, and through simultaneous transactions in London, bought the same stocks in US dollars, thereby moving funds out of Russia without informing authorities.
REUTERS

Monday, August 3, 2015

Harper calls Oct 19 election, sluggish economy expected to be key topic

Harper calls Oct 19 election, sluggish economy expected to be key topic

HarperJune2013
Prime Minister Stephen Harper on Sunday called an election for Oct 19, kicking off a marathon 11-week campaign likely to focus on a stubbornly sluggish economy and his decade in power.
Polls indicate that Harper's right-of-center Conservative Party, which has been in office since 2006, could well lose its majority in the House of Commons.
That would leave Harper at the mercy of the two main center-left opposition parties, who could unite to bring him down. Minority governments in Canada rarely last more than 18 months.
Harper, 56, says only he can be trusted to manage an economy that is struggling to cope with the after-effects of a global economic slowdown and a plunge in the price of oil, a major Canadian export.
Opposition parties say Harper has mishandled the economy and should boost government spending, a move he says would spark a crisis like the one ravaging Greece.
Harper announced the election after visiting Governor General David Johnston - the representative of Queen Elizabeth, Canada's head of state - to formally request the dissolution of parliament.
"Our well-being depends on the economy and the wrong leader will do real harm," he said.
"Now is not the time for the kinds of harmful economic schemes that are doing so much damage elsewhere in the world."
Polls show the Conservative are slightly ahead of the left-leaning New Democrats (NDP), who have never governed Canada. The Liberals of Justin Trudeau are well behind in third.
Both parties say Canada needs a change from Harper, who has cut taxes, increased military spending, toughened the country's criminal laws and streamlined regulations governing the energy industry.
Ipsos Public Affairs pollster John Wright said the race was "very competitive" and chances of the Conservatives winning any kind of government were 50 percent, down from 88 percent last year.
Data released on Friday showed gross domestic product shrank in May, the fifth decline in a row. The figures suggest the economy was likely in a technical recession in the first half of 2015.
Five of Canada's last six election campaigns have lasted the minimum length of just over five weeks.
The Conservatives have deep pockets and the campaign - the longest in modern Canadian history and the third longest on record - will benefit their chances as it will allow them to run a wave of attack ads. Opposition parties say this is an abuse of the system.

Comments

Korea Inc struggles to keep it in the family

Korea Inc struggles to keep it in the family  


[SEOUL] With bitterly feuding siblings, attempted boardroom coups and an act of corporate patricide, the family squabble currently engulfing one of Korea's largest conglomerates makes for compelling drama.
And it is very much being played to an audience, with the three main protagonists issuing almost daily threats and accusations on television - sometimes of a deeply personal nature.
In a warped interpretation of Walt Disney's axiom that "a man should never neglect his family for business" the 92-year-old founder of the Seoul-based Lotte Group and his two sons have been tearing chunks out of each other with little or no apparent concern for the impact on the country's largest retail giant.
Squabbles for control of South Korea's family-run conglomerates, known as "chaebol", have long been staple plotline fare for the country's popular K-dramas, but the real-life Lotte dispute is setting new standards for in-fighting and intrigue.



Not since a similar clan brawl ripped through the Hyundai Group about 15 years ago, has such a significant corporate power struggle been played out in the public eye.
"It's further evidence that these chaebol families think they can just do whatever they want," said Kim Woo Chan, an analyst at the watchdog, Centre for Good Corporate Governance (CGCG).
LIVING IN THE PAST
"They are still living in the 20th century, running and fighting over their companies as if it's their own personal property and the shareholders don't exist," Kim said.
At stake in the Lotte feud is control of a sprawling conglomerate with 80 units across Korea - spanning retail, amusement parks, hotels and chemicals - and total combined assets of around US$90 billion.
The company was founded in Japan in 1948 by South Korean-born Shin Kyuk Ho and grew from a seller of chewing gum to become a confectionary giant.
After Tokyo and Seoul normalised relations in 1965, it expanded to South Korea where its operations now dwarf the Japanese side of the business in terms of revenue.
But the key to control of the group still lies with the Japan-based Lotte Holdings Co.
At the beginning of last week, Mr Shin and his eldest son, Shin Dong Joo, flew to Tokyo and sought to dismiss a group of senior Lotte Holdings executive board members, including the CEO and Shin's younger son, Shin Dong Bin.
But Dong Bin fought back and, a day later, the board not only nullified the dismissals but also removed the father as co-CEO.
MANIPULATING THE FATHER?
In a statement apparently dictated by Dong Bin, the Lotte Group suggested that the eldest son had taken advantage of his father's frailty and advancing years to try and stage a boardroom coup.
He took the chairman "who is aged and has difficulty in making judgements, to Japan and pushed him into making the verbal dismissal announcement," the statement said.
It is unclear exactly where the loyalties of the patriarch lies when it comes to his two sons.
After Dong Joo was stripped of key positions with Lotte's Japan-based affiliates back in January and Dong Bin was appointed Lotte Holdings CEO last month, it was widely assumed that the younger son was the chosen successor.
But in a halting statement read to Korean broadcaster SBS on Sunday, Shin Kyuk Ho insisted he had never appointed his younger son as the Lotte heir, and added that he would never forgive being ousted from the holding company.
The dispute should come to a head at a Lotte Holdings shareholder meeting expected to be held in Tokyo this week, at which the eldest son has said he will call for the sacking of the entire executive board.
Both sons claim they have the shareholder backing to swing the vote their way.
The situation is further complicated by the byzantine structure of the Lotte Group, with myriad circular shareholdings that make it difficult to decipher who exactly owns and controls what.
"That is a feature of many chaebols, but the Lotte Group's cross-holdings dwarf the others in their number and complexity," said CGCG's Kim.
"As far as decent corporate governance goes, the family really ought to sort things out themselves first and then win shareholder approval for whatever they decide," Mr Kim said.
"But in this case, it looks like they have just skipped both steps. They failed to work things out in the family and then completely ignored shareholders as they set about ordering dismissals," he added.
SUCCESSION POLITICS
The Lotte drama comes at a time when the issue of dynastic corporate succession is very much in the South Korean news.
Last month, the country's largest and wealthiest chaebol, Samsung, barely scraped through a shareholder vote on the proposed merger of two affiliates, aimed at boosting the founding Lee family's control over the conglomerate ahead of a generational power transfer.
In a watershed moment for shareholder activism in South Korea, the US hedge fund Elliot Associates led an unprecedented - although eventually unsuccessful - investor revolt against the deal.
AFP

Asia crude trade hits record volume on Chinese oil giants' deals

Asia crude trade hits record volume on Chinese oil giants' deals 


[SINGAPORE] Trade volume in Asia's crude market hit a daily record on Monday after close to 6 million barrels of Dubai partials were sold to meet strong demand from a Chinese trader, traders said.
Chinaoil, the trading arm of PetroChina Co Ltd swept up most of the partials from fellow Chinese state trader Unipec during the Platts Market on Close price assessment process, they said.
The trades will result in Unipec, the trading unit of Asia's largest refiner Sinopec, delivering 10 Middle East crude cargoes or 5 million barrels to Chinaoil, the largest volume ever to be delivered in a single day off of Platts' price assessment process, traders said.
REUTERS



728 X 90

336 x 280

300 X 250

320 X 100

300 X600