Thursday, October 8, 2015

Goldman to release results on website, not BusinessWire: source

Goldman to release results on website, not BusinessWire: source

[NEW YORK] Goldman Sachs Group Inc will release its third-quarter results next week through its website and Twitter, not through BusinessWire, as it seeks more control over the handling of sensitive information, a person familiar with the matter said.
Goldman's decision follows several incidents involving inadvertent or early releases of press statements and hacking of companies that provide such services.
The bank declined to comment. "They're not necessarily pulling away," a BusinessWire spokesman said on Thursday. Goldman is just testing a new concept for disclosure this time and BusinessWire still has a good relationship with the bank, he said.
The US Department of Justice charged nine people in August over allegations of hacking at three leading newswire services - BusinessWire, which is owned by Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc, Marketwired and PR Newswire. The hackers stole more than 150,000 unpublished press releases containing financial information.
Goldman is often at the forefront when it comes to Wall Street's presence on social media. The bank's former technology banker, Anthony Noto, is now Twitter Inc's chief financial officer.
The bank rolled out a series of recruiting ads on Snapchat last month, becoming the first major US lender to turn to the instant-but-fleeting messaging app for potential hires.
REUTERS

Ex-Deutsche Bank trader pleads guilty in US to Libor manipulation scheme

Ex-Deutsche Bank trader pleads guilty in US to Libor manipulation scheme

[NEW YORK] A former senior trader at Deutsche Bank AG pleaded guilty to engaging in a scheme to manipulate Libor, the benchmark interest rate at the center of global investigations into misconduct at various banks, the US Justice Department said Thursday.
Michael Curtler, 43, pleaded guilty in federal court in Manhattan to a conspiracy charge for participating in a scheme to manipulate Libor, which was tied to the profitability of trades that he and others in which he and others had financial interest.
REUTERS

Singaporean sentenced to 30 months' jail for match-fixing, cheating

Singaporean sentenced to 30 months' jail for match-fixing, cheating

SINGAPOREAN Selvarajan s/o Letchuman was on Friday sentenced to 30 months' imprisonment for match-fixing and cheating offences, said a press release issued by the Corrupt Practices Investigation Bureau (CPIB).
He had on Sept 15, 2015, pleaded guilty to the following three charges:
i. One count of corruptly offering gratification to Shokri Bin Nor (Shokri), a soccer referee with the Football Association of Malaysia, amounting to RM15,000 (S$5,100), as a reward to fix the outcome of the football match between Lions XII and Sarawak FA; and
ii. Two counts of abetment by conspiracy with Thana Segar S Sinnaiah and Shokri to cheat Singapore Pools.
Said CPIB in its statement: "Singapore adopts a zero tolerance approach towards corruption and other criminal activities, and match-fixing of any form is not condoned in Singapore. CPIB will not hesitate to take action against any party involved in match-fixing related activities."

Cash awards for hotels, workers signing up for training under Hotel SMP

Cash awards for hotels, workers signing up for training under Hotel SMP

By
CASH incentives will be given to Singapore hotels and workers who sign up for training under the government's Sectoral Manpower Plan (SMP) for the hotel industry launched on Friday by Manpower Minister Lim Swee Say.
SMP is an integral part of SkillsFuture, a government initiative to equip Singapore workers with skills for jobs in the future. In the five-year plan for hotels, employers who join the SkillsFuture Earn and Learn Programme will get up to S$15,000 per head.
A "substantial" number of hotels - 32 - and one hotel group have signed up for the programme, a work-study scheme which provides fresh hospitality graduates from ITEs and polytechnics with a head-start in careers and builds on the skills and knowledge acquired.
Workers will receive up to S$5,000 as a sign-up award, according to the Singapore Tourism Board and Workforce Development Agency which started the Hotel SMP.
The SkillsFuture Earn and Learn Programme is one of five key initiatives under the Hotel SMP, which will also help deal with the prevailing labour shortage problem. The other initiatives under the plan are Enhanced Internships, SkillsFuture Leadership Development Initiative, SkillsFuture Study Awards and Galvanising Interest in Hotel Careers.
Mr Lim said the Hotel SMP is the first of many SMPs to be rolled out and for them to succeed, a strong tripartite partnership is necessary. He said a Hotel Sectoral Tripartite Committee has been set up to drive the Hotel SMP.

Emerging currencies, Asia equities rally on Fed minutes

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Emerging currencies, Asia equities rally on Fed minutes

[HONG KONG] Malaysia's ringgit and Indonesia's rupiah led an emerging market rally against the dollar Friday while Asian equities also pushed higher after minutes from the Federal Reserve's latest policy meeting suggested it could keep borrowing costs at record lows into next year.
Energy firms tracked a surge in oil prices as hopes for crude demand picked up and ongoing crises in the Middle East fanned supply worries.
The gains across assets come after a painful July-September quarter that saw trillions wiped off global markets owing to worries about the state of China's economy and an expected US interest rate hike.
On Thursday, minutes from the Fed's closely watched September policy board meeting showed some members were concerned about China's struggles, the strong dollar and persistently low inflation.
"Recent global and financial market developments might restrain economic activity somewhat as a result of the higher level of the dollar and possible effects of slower economic growth in China and in a number of emerging market and commodity producing economies," the minutes said.
Expectations through most of the year had been for the Fed to hike rates by 2016 as the world's number two economy picks up pace.
However, with China suffering a growth slowdown - to levels not seen in a quarter of a century - and other developed and developing economies under pressure, policymakers have held off firing the gun.
The chances of a move were hammered in August when Beijing surprisingly devalued its yuan currency, fuelling worries about the Asian economic giant while last Friday's below-par jobs data also struck a blow.
The minutes lit a fire under struggling emerging market currencies, with the ringgit surging 2.3 per cent and rupiah more than three percent higher. The ringgit has soared about eight percent this week, its best five-day run in 17 years.
Talk of a Fed rate rise has hurt emerging markets - particularly struggling Malaysia and Indonesia - as dealers have for months been withdrawing cash to the United States looking for better, safer returns.
"The latest minutes clearly suggest that international factors are an unusually large determinant of US policy deliberations," Matthew Sherwood, head of investment strategy at Perpetual Ltd in Sydney, wrote in an email to clients.
"This, combined with the weak September US nonfarm payrolls report indicate that the hurdle for a US rate hike has increased further, which was music to the ears of investors." The South Korean won climbed almost one percent, the Australian dollar was 0.12 per cent higher, the Thai baht edged up 0.30 per cent and the Taiwan dollar gained 1.0 per cent.
Share markets also extended a run of gains as confidence returns to trading floors. Tokyo was up 0.78 per cent by lunch while Hong Kong rose 1.6 per cent in the morning, Sydney added 0.81 per cent and Singapore gained 1.3 per cent.
Markets have been rallying for years on the back of loose monetary policies introduced by central banks during the global financial crisis and economists fear any tightening will cut off the money tap, halting a stuttering recovery and lead to another downturn.
Among the stand-out winners on equities markets were energy companies, made more attractive by the advance in crude prices.
Sydney-listed Santos surged more than five percent while in Hong Kong CNOOC was almost seven percent higher and PetroChina added 4.5 per cent. Inpex and JX Holdings in Tokyo also rallied.
Crude prices have seen healthy advances in the past week, surging more than 10 per cent to multi-month highs as worries about a stronger dollar, a supply glut and weak demand ease.
The market got a shot in the arm Thursday when the head of the OPEC cartel of crude producers - which represents almost half of output - said demand will rise more than projected this year.
On Friday, US benchmark West Texas Intermediate was up 0.50 per cent and Brent was 0.53 per cent higher, with continuing strife across the oil-rich Middle East providing support.
AFP

Australia in talks with Philippines to resettle refugees

Australia in talks with Philippines to resettle refugees

[SYDNEY] Australia said Friday it is in talks with the Philippines to send refugees there, but refused to confirm reports of a A$150 million (S$153 million) deal to expand its controversial resettlement policy.
Under Australia's hardline policy to stop asylum-seeker boats reaching its shores, those arriving by sea are denied resettlement in Australia, even if found to be genuine refugees.
They are sent to much-criticised camps on the Pacific island nations of Nauru and Papua New Guinea and in recent months Australia has been seeking new countries to settle the refugees in.
A front-page report in The Daily Telegraph said Foreign Minister Julie Bishop had agreed the deal with her Philippines counterpart in New York and that it was awaiting sign-off by President Benigno Aquino.
"We have had bilateral discussions with other countries, including the Philippines at an officials level and ministerial level over a number of months and the foreign minister obviously spoke with her counterpart in New York recently," Immigration Minister Peter Dutton told reporters.
"I am not going to publicly comment in relation to where some of the negotiations are at. I think we're best to discuss those issues in private with those partners." Canberra has already struck a deal with Cambodia to accept refugees in exchange for millions of dollars in aid over the next four years.
Only four asylum-seekers have so far opted to take up the offer of a new life in impoverished Cambodia, while the deal itself has been condemned by rights groups.
"We will continue the negotiations (with the Philippines) because there is good faith on both sides," Mr Dutton said.
"If we can strike an agreement that is in the best interests of our country and from the Philippines' perspective, their country, we will arrive at that point." It has been more than a year since a boat carrying asylum-seekers arrived in Australia and Canberra has declared its hardline policy a success, despite intense criticism from rights groups.
Before it was introduced, boats were arriving almost daily, with hundreds drowning en route.
Ms Bishop's office would not confirm the report on the Philippines deal, but a spokeswoman said the two governments had "long cooperated on irregular migration, people-smuggling and human trafficking".
AFP

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