Wednesday, August 5, 2015

Fired HSBC executive sues for US$23 million amid racism allegation

Fired HSBC executive sues for US$23 million amid racism allegation 


[LONDON] HSBC Holdings Plc was sued by a manager who said he was underpaid and ultimately dismissed because senior staff had a problem with the fact he was Turkish and a Muslim.
Habib Kaya Biber, the former co-head of the bank's industrials unit, was treated with "utter disrespect" after 10 years at the bank, his lawyers said in documents filed at a London employment tribunal Tuesday. He is seeking 15 million pounds (S$31.8 million), HSBC said in its own filing.
HSBC "has not offered a consistent or coherent explanation as to why it sought to remove one of the co-head positions," Mr Biber's lawyer, Richard Leiper, said in documents prepared for a trial that started this week. He was fired because of his religious, "national or ethnic origins," Leiper said.
Mr Biber's compensation for unfair dismissal would be capped at about 80,000 pounds by UK employment laws, but claims for discrimination on the grounds of race, sex, disability, orientation, religion or age are unlimited.




Mr Biber, who holds German and Turkish citizenship, was in charge of building an investment banking business in the industrials area. He was paid 23,000 pounds a month, rising to 40,000 pounds, including bonuses, according to his lawsuit. This was less than colleagues with the same job title, he said.
His revenue figures were "low" in 2011 and 2012, and dropped to zero in 2013, according to the bank's opening statement. His target was US$10 million.
Mr Habib, who was fired in May of last year, "was a poor performer whose bonus payments and ultimate dismissal were the direct results of his own failure to develop a revenue-rich investment banking business within Industrials," the bank said in its response filed to the tribunal.
HSBC also said in court documents that Mr Biber was warned that his behavior toward junior colleagues was "overly aggressive." "I have killed many an associate in my time, one more won't matter," Mr Biber replied, HSBC said in the filing.
A bank spokeswoman said HSBC would defend itself vigorously. Mr Habib's lawyers didn't respond to e-mails seeking comment.
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Buffett's celebration tempered by 50th anniversary stock slump

Buffett's celebration tempered by 50th anniversary stock slump


[NEW YORK] Berkshire Hathaway Inc shares traded near record highs at the beginning of Warren Buffett's 50th year running the company. More recently, the stock has begun to sag.
Shares have slumped 5.2 per cent since Dec 31 and are headed for their first annual decline since 2011, even as Buffett pulled off one of the biggest coups of his career last month. By backing HJ Heinz's merger with Kraft Foods Group Inc, he now holds a stake valued at about US$26 billion, more than twice what he paid.
There's less to celebrate about some other Berkshire investments and businesses. Mr Buffett's railroad has had to spend heavily to come back from service delays in 2014. His reinsurance business, a main source of funding for the company, is facing increased competition. And some of his biggest equity investments - like International Business Machines Corp and American Express Co - have lagged the market.
"We're talking about a large, diversified portfolio of companies," said Jim Shanahan, an analyst at Edward Jones. "Some will underperform and some will outperform." Over the past five decades, Buffett has built Berkshire into a sprawling operation and amassed one of the best investing records in history. Through 2014, the company's share price averaged annual gains that were more than double the Standard & Poor's 500 Index. The equity benchmark is up 1.7 percent this year.




Berkshire's dozens of subsidiaries include insurers, manufacturers, retailers, electric utilities and the railroad, BNSF. Mr Buffett also oversees a stock portfolio valued at more than US$100 billion.
The diversity of those investments could help the company post operating earnings per share of US$3,038 when results are released on Friday, according to the estimates of three analysts surveyed by Bloomberg. That's a 15 per cent increase from a year earlier.
Mr Buffett's favoured yardstick - book value - could have risen by about 2 percent to around US$150,000 a share during the second quarter, according to an estimate from Cliff Gallant, an analyst at Nomura Holdings Inc. The billionaire Berkshire chairman and chief executive officer has said the metric is a good, though understated, proxy for the company's true worth. Berkshire's Class A shares closed at US$214,150 on Tuesday.
Book value per share will get a boost in the current quarter as Berkshire records a gain on the bet on Kraft and Heinz, said Mr Gallant. The food companies completed their merger in July to create Kraft Heinz Co.
'He's Executing' "It seems like he's executing," Mr Gallant said of Mr Buffett. "The stock price doesn't always follow that." Berkshire faces challenges.
Carloads at Buffett's railroad slipped 0.1 per cent in the second quarter from a year earlier. While that's a narrower decline than at its Western US competitor Union Pacific Corp, some costs have been climbing at BNSF. Buffett pledged to spend US$6 billion on upgrades in 2015 following delays last year that were tied to a surge in oil shipments and harsh winter weather.
"Outlays of this magnitude are largely unheard of among railroads," he wrote in his annual letter to shareholders in February. "Our huge investments will soon lead to a system with greater capacity and much better service. Improved profits should follow." Mr Buffett has been less sanguine about the future of Berkshire's reinsurance operations. For decades, he's used the premiums held by these businesses until paying claims, called "float," to fund his stock picks and takeovers. In May, he said the prospects for that business had "turned for the worse" as hedge funds and other investors piled into the industry, driving down the price of coverage.
To counteract that trend, Berkshire has begun to focus on underwriting policies directly for businesses. The company's reinsurance chief, Ajit Jain, has been overseeing the effort even as he hunts for new deals. In June, Insurance Australia Group Ltd. agreed to cede a fifth of its premiums and risk to Berkshire, as part of a decade-long tie-up. IAG had more than A$9 billion (S$9.14 billion) in premium revenue in 2014.
Mr Buffett has less control over the companies in his stock portfolio - and some of them have been struggling.
He invested almost US$11 billion to amass a stake in IBM in 2011. Since then, the computer-services provider has worked to transform itself into a seller of cloud-computing technology and data analytics. Revenue has slipped for 13 straight quarters. IBM shares now trade below the price that Mr Buffett paid to acquire them.
AmEx, another of Berkshire's largest stock investments, has plunged about 19 per cent this year. It is nearing the end of a partnership with retailer Costco Wholesale Corp, a relationship that accounted for 20 per cent of worldwide loans and 8 per cent of customer spending.
Berkshire's cash pile has been growing in recent quarters and stood at a record US$63.7 billion at the end of March. While that money is earning almost nothing, long-term shareholders will wait for Mr Buffett to make his next big investment, said Meyer Shields, an analyst at Keefe Bruyette and Woods.
"I don't think they or their investor base care if it takes another five years for things to be attractively valued," he said. "Berkshire is very disciplined in terms of what it's going to pay."
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Australian inquiry says digital currencies are real money

Australian inquiry says digital currencies are real money


[SYDNEY] An Australian government inquiry will recommend treating digital currencies as money, simplifying tax for people who trade with them while forcing bitcoin exchanges to monitor customers for potential money laundering and terrorism financing activities.
The Senate committee recommendations, included in a report to be tabled in parliament next week and obtained in advance by Reuters, underscore governments' growing acceptance of the role of so-called "cryptocurrencies" around the world.
If implemented, the changes would align Australia with the United Kingdom and Spain by having people pay sales tax just once if they buy something with bitcoin, while leaving other nations like Sweden to fret over its true legal status.
The changes would also match Australia with Canada and Singapore, which have in the past 18 months changed their anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing (AML/CTF) laws to apply to digital currency and traditional currency equally.



Treating bitcoin as a tradable commodity, rather than a currency, "creates a double taxation effect that has placed an additional burden on Australian digital currency businesses,"the Senate report says, noting that Australians pay sales tax when they buy digital currency and again when they buy something with the digital currency. "Digital currency should be treated as money for the purposes of the goods and services tax," the report adds. It notes that all eight state governents and the Federal government must agree to any change to the country's sales tax.
The report meanwhile calls for Australia to change its anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism finance laws to include all digital currencies. It notes that the laws as written a decade ago apply only to digital currencies "backed by a precious metal or bullion", and not to the most popular digital currency, bitcoin.
Seven per cent of the world's US$5 billion worth of supply of bitcoin is in circulation in Australia.
The change would force all digital currency companies to register with the Australian Transaction Reports and Analysis Centre and run due diligence on customers, enabling "businesses to better identify and mitigate money laundering and terrorism financing risks in the conduct of their transactions".
Digital currencies are creating just part of a broader headache for governments as they scramble to re-set their regulatory systems to cope with internet-driven disruptive technology. Online ride-share service Uber has filed a lawsuit against the Australian government claiming it should not have to pay sales tax. The government is yet to file a response.
REUTERS

Malaysia says Middle East donors gave Najib about US$700 Million

Malaysia says Middle East donors gave Najib about US$700 Million


[KUALA LUMPUR] The Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission said 2.6 billion ringgit (S$927 million) that ended up in Prime Minister Najib Razak's personal accounts were from donors in the Middle East.
The contributors confirmed their donations after the anti-graft agency traced them through documents seized from banks, it said in an e-mailed statement Wednesday. The MACC said it won't disclose the identities of the donors and plans to question Mr Najib to seek an explanation on the funds.
The Wall Street Journal reported on July 3 that US$700 million may have moved through government agencies and state- linked companies to accounts bearing Mr Najib's name. The premier has denied taking money for personal gain and has described the furor as part of a campaign to remove him from office.
Debt-ridden state investment company 1Malaysia Development Bhd. is the subject of overlapping probes by agencies including the central bank and the police. Controversy over 1MDB's finances has dogged Mr Najib for months, though an initial audit report didn't reveal any suspicious activity.

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Mr Najib chairs the advisory board of 1MDB and has resisted calls from ex-premier Mahathir Mohamad to step down over the fund's performance as it amassed about 42 billion ringgit of debt in less than five years.
The task force investigating 1MDB comprises the central bank, police, the anti-corruption commission and attorney general's office. MACC said Wednesday that it was told by the attorney general that the task force was no longer needed and that each investigating party can conduct its own probe using its respective authority.
Facing his biggest crisis in six years in power, Mr Najib last week removed his deputy prime minister Muhyiddin Yassin, who had called for answers on the 1MDB imbroglio including its investment decisions. The government said it also was replacing attorney general Abdul Gani Patail for health reasons, with former Federal Court judge Mohamed Apandi Ali taking the role.
BLOOMBERG

ECB leaves stopgap funding for Greek banks unchanged




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ECB leaves stopgap funding for Greek banks unchanged


[FRANKFURT] The European Central Bank decided on Wednesday to leave its emergency credit lifeline for Greece unchanged for the next two weeks, said a source close to the matter who asked not to be identified.
The official said the Frankfurt-based bank's executive board would maintain its Emergency Liquidity Assistance (ELA) for Greece's struggling banks at 90.5 billion euros (US$98.7 billion).
The ECB, which declined to comment Wednesday, had boosted the ELA to that level last month after Athens and its creditors reached an agreement in principle for a third bailout in return for tough reforms.
The source said the Greek central bank had not requested another increase.


Greece is feverishly negotiating with creditors on a deal that would unlock bailout funds by August 20, when it must repay some 3.4 billion euros due to the ECB.
European Commission head Jean-Claude Juncker told AFP on Wednesday that agreement on the bailout was possible by this date.
During the months-long crisis, ELA has kept ailing Greek banks afloat, and by extension prevented the Greek economy from sinking.
Greek banks were closed for three weeks under capital controls imposed by the government of Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras to prevent the collapse of the credit institutions.
The restrictions were eased July 20, but withdrawals and money transfers abroad remain limited.
Mr Tsipras said on Wednesday the negotiations with creditors were now in the "final stretch."
AFP

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