Monday, June 6, 2016

BREXIT POLLS: 'Leave' is winning — and the pound is getting pulverised

BREXIT POLLS: 'Leave' is winning — and the pound is getting pulverised

YouGov poll for Good Morning Britain:
  • Leave: 45%
  • Remain: 41%
New TNS Poll reported by Reuters:
  • Leave: 43%
  • Remain: 41%
The pound has fallen to a 3-week low against the dollar after two opinion polls pointed to a widening lead for the "Vote Leave" campaign in the upcoming referendum on Britain's European Union membership.
A YouGov poll for ITV's Good Morning Britain programme on Monday showed that 45% of voters would currently chose to leave the EU, compared to just 41% to remain in the 28-nation bloc, Bloomberg reports. Meanwhile, another survey conducted by pollster TNS showed support for "Leave" at 43% to 41% pipping for "Remain," according to Reuters.
Public opinion appears to be moving in favour of Leave, in recent weeks:
brexitBI
The signs of growing support for a so-called Brexit — a British exit from the European Union — have sent sterling tumbling against the dollar.
The pound was down over 1% against the dollar in early trade, touching a 3-week low of 1.4365 at 7.30 a.m. BST (2.30 a.m. ET). It's rebounded somewhat at 1.50 p.m. BST (8.50 a.m. ET), here's how it looks:gbpInvesting.com
Michael Hewson, chief market analyst at CMC Markets, says in an emailed statement on Monday morning: "Friday's rebound through the 1.4500 level to 1.4580 proved to be somewhat short lived and as such the risk remains for a return towards the May lows at 1.4330. Below that we have trend line support at 1.4270 from the lows this year."

Friday, June 3, 2016

BP agrees to pay $175 million to settle shareholders claims over 2010 oil spill

BP agrees to pay $175 million to settle shareholders claims over 2010 oil spill

Bob Dudley BPREUTERS/Andrew WinningBob Dudley, Group Chief Executive of BP, gives a keynote address at the Oil & Money conference in central London, October 29, 2014.
(Reuters) - BP Plc agreed on Thursday to pay $175 million to shareholders who brought a class-action lawsuit that accused the oil company of misleading them by understating the severity of the 2010 oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.
BP said the claims will be paid during 2016-2017.
However, the company said in a statement this settlement does not resolve other securities-related litigation in connection with the spill.
In 2014, U.S. District Judge Keith Ellison in Houston said investors who bought BP's American depositary shares soon after the explosion could pursue claims as a group that BP publicly "lowballed" the oil flow rate, and that the share price "did not reflect the magnitude of the disaster facing the company."
In separate legal action, U.S. Judge Carl Barbier in April 2016 granted final approval to the company's civil settlement over the Gulf of Mexico oil spill after it reached a deal in July 2015 to pay up to $18.7 billion in penalties to the U.S. government and five states.
The rig explosion on April 20, 2010, the worst offshore oil disaster in U.S. history, killed 11 workers and spewed millions of barrels of oil onto the shorelines of several states for nearly three months.
(Reporting by Diane Craft in New York and Vishal Sridhar in Bengaluru; Editing by Diane Craft and Ed Davies)
Read the original article on Reuters. Copyright 2016. Follow Reuters on Twitter.

REPORT: Twitter and Yahoo held merger talks

REPORT: Twitter and Yahoo held merger talks

Marissa MayerGetty ImagesYahoo CEO Marissa Mayer.
Twitter has been in talks with Yahoo about a possible merger, according to a report in the New York Post.
The social-media company, whose user growth has plateaued, held a management-level meeting with Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer in recent weeks, according to the report.
Yahoo is on the market and has received bids from at least 10 companies including Verizon and TPG for its core business, with some bids in the $8 billion range.
Twitter's market value is about $10 billion based on its share price.
The Post's report suggests that Twitter's newsy output combined with Yahoo's huge audience reach had some appeal to strengthening the value of both companies.
Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey was reportedly not in attendance at Mayer's meeting, however, casting some doubt on how serious the talks really were.

From the Post:

… Twitter and Yahoo execs spent several hours hashing out Yahoo's financials, and whether a strategic combo might make sense, according to sources close to the talks.
"Twitter is the destination for instant news, and Yahoo has a lot of eyeballs on its site," said one source. "The idea isn't as crazy as you might think."
Nevertheless, Twitter appeared mainly interested in sucking information out of Yahoo, as it bowed out of the bidding process soon thereafter, sources said.
Indeed, one source noted that Twitter CEO Dorsey didn't even bother to show up for the Yahoo meeting.
"When your CEO doesn't show up for a management meeting, you have to wonder how serious it was," the source said, adding that Twitter's interest wasn't driven by "some huge thesis — it was a flyer."
The future of Yahoo may become clearer next week, when a second round of bids is due.

There's more at the New York Post

Read the original article on Business Insider Australia. Copyright 2016. Follow Business Insider Australia on Twitter.

Citigroup CEO points to 25 percent drop in quarterly results

Citigroup CEO points to 25 percent drop in quarterly results

People walk by a Citibank branch in Buenos Aires, Argentina, February 19, 2016. REUTERS/Marcos BrindicciThomson ReutersPeople walk by a Citibank branch in Buenos Aires
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Citigroup IncCEO Mike Corbat on Wednesday indicated that the company's second-quarter net income will be roughly 25 percent lower than the same period a year earlier.
Corbat, speaking at an investor conference in New York, said he expects second-quarter net income to be roughly flat with the first quarter of this year. In the first quarter, the company reported $3.5 billion of profits, about 25 percent less than the $4.65 billion it reported on an adjusted basis in the second quarter of 2015.
Citigroup is to post second-quarter results on July 15.
Citigroup has been grappling with a long-term decline in capital markets revenue and higher costs to comply with regulation. The company has been spending to reduce staff and office space, while also beefing up its credit card business.
Corbat was questioned repeatedly at the conference about the company's push to promote its "Double Cash" credit card that pays users 2 percent of what they spend, and about its aggressive bidding to take the Costco store co-branded card business from American Express.
He said the card investments will pay off because the card business is expected to provide a return on assets of about 2.25 to 2.35 percent over the economic cycle, or twice the target for the entire company.
(Reporting by David Henry in New York; Editing by Tom Brown and David Gregorio)
Read the original article on Reuters. Copyright 2016. Follow Reuters on Twitter.

Investors pull $1 billion from Pimco Total Return Fund in May

Investors pull $1 billion from Pimco Total Return Fund in May

The offices of Pacific Investment Management Co (PIMCO) are shown in Newport Beach, California August 4, 2015. REUTERS/Mike BlakeThomson ReutersThe offices of PIMCO are shown in Newport Beach
By Jennifer Ablan
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Investors pulled approximately $1 billion from the Pimco Total Return Fund, one of the world's largest bond funds, in May following cash withdrawals of the same amount the previous month, the Newport Beach, Calif-based firm said on Thursday.
Pimco said the Total Return Fund's assets under management stood at $86.1 billion as of month-end May, down from $87 billion as of the end of April and $89.9 billion at the end of 2015, Pimco said in a statement.
May's cash withdrawals from the Pimco Total Return Fund marks the portfolio's 37th month of consecutive outflows, according to Morningstar data.
"Investors continue to wait for more evidence of a strong record of performance under current management of Pimco Total return before reinvesting," said Todd Rosenbluth, director of exchange-traded and mutual fund research at S&P Global Market Intelligence.
"Assets have gravitated toward funds with both strong records and long tenured management both at Pimco and at other asset managers such as DoubleLine Capital," he said.
Indeed, the Pimco Income Fund, overseen by Group CIO Dan Ivascyn, saw $1.8 billion in inflows in May and has received inflows of $21.5 billion collectively for all of 2015 and so far in 2016, according to the Pimco.
For May, the Pimco Total Return Fund returned 0.27 percent after fees, outperforming the benchmark return of 0.03 percent. But through May, the Pimco Total Return Fund has posted year-to-date returns of 2.51 percent after fees, trailing the benchmark which has returned 3.45 percent year-to-date.
Like BlackRock Inc and Janus Capital Group Inc, Pimco adds dividend reinvestments into its inflow figures. Research organizations such as Morningstar and the Investment Company Institute, along with many fund managers, including Vanguard, Fidelity and DoubleLine, exclude reinvestments and treat only fund share purchases as inflows.
Pimco said in a statement that credit positioning among corporates, municipals and (Emerging Markets) hard currency debt added to performance of Pimco Total Return Fund. "Interest rate strategies, particularly non-U.S. positions in Mexico and the United Kingdom, hurt performance," Pimco said.
(Reporting by Jennifer Ablan; Editing by James Dalgleish)
Read the original article on Reuters. Copyright 2016. Follow Reuters on Twitter.

The eurozone economy is stuck in 'low gear'

The eurozone economy is stuck in 'low gear'

Stuck in the mudREUTERS/Stringer
Growth in the European economy remaining subdued in May suggesting that the continent's recovery is still struggling to get out of "low gear", according to the latest PMI data released by Markit on Friday morning.
The eurozone economy had a PMI reading of 53.1, according to Markit, marginally better than the 53 reading seen in April and above the 52.9 preliminary reading.
The purchasing managers index (PMI) figures are given as a number between 0 and 100 and are a measure of economic activity. Anything above 50 signals growth, while anything below means a contraction  — so the higher the better. Wednesday's data is the final data of the month, following on from Markit's flash readings in late April.
Markit's statement alongside the data said (emphasis ours):
Eurozone economic growth remained subdued during May, with the rate of expansion achieved so far during the second quarter a touch below that seen in quarter one.
The upturn was again led by the service sector, which saw a modest growth acceleration. Manufacturing production also continued to rise, albeit at a slightly lesser pace than in April.
Here's what Chris Williamson, Markit's chief economist had to say (emphasis ours):
The final PMI numbers for May have come in slightly ahead of the earlier flash readings, but still point to a eurozone economy which seems unable to move out of low gear.
The survey data are signalling a GDP rise of 0.3% in the second quarter, suggesting the growth spurt seen at the start of the year will prove frustratingly short-lived.
June looks likely to prove equally disappointing, as inflows of new business slowed in May to the weakest for almost one-and-a-half years.
Such a lacklustre performance in the second quarter points to an ongoing lack of growth momentum, which in turn raises the prospect of policymakers seeking new ways to stimulate growth.
 Here are the headline eurozone figures:
  • Composite PMI: 53.1, up from the flash estimate of 52.9, and ahead of April's 53 reading.
  • Services PMI: 53.3, up from the 53.1 flash estimate, and above April's 53.1.
Markit's chart shows just how much Europe is struggling to find substantially, sustainable growth right now. Take a look:Markit eurozone pmi May 2016Markit
As well as the headline figures, Markit released data individually on the eurozone's four biggest economies. Here's how things look across Europe's individual economies.
  • German Composite: 54.5, up from April's 11-month low of 53.6, but below the expected 54.7.
  • German Services: 55.2, up from 54.5 in April to a three-month high.
  • French Composite: 50.9, up from 50.2 in April, a six-month high.
  • French Services: 51.6, a seven-month high. The April reading was 50.6.
  • Italian Services: 49.8, a huge fall from April's 52.1, and well below the 51.1 flash reading.
  • Spanish Services: 55.4, up from 55.1 last month, and substantially higher than the 53.5 flash reading.
The PMI figures come just a day after ECB president Mario Draghi struck a dovish tone at the bank's latest meeting, revising medium-term economic forecasts down, and admitting that the bank could get involved in further monetary easing in the coming year to address Europe's low growth cycle.

A crucial part of the Chinese economy is starting to weaken

A crucial part of the Chinese economy is starting to weaken

ice fall slide skateMaddie Meyer/Getty Images
Growth in China’s services sector, tasked with powering economic growth in the decades ahead, slowed to a crawl last month.
The Caixin-Markit services purchasing managers’ index (PMI) fell by 0.8 points to 51.2 in May, leaving the index at the equal lowest level seen since December 2015.
A PMI index measures changes in activity levels across an individual sector from one month to the next.
A 50 reading indicates that activity levels are growing while a sub-50 figure indicates that activity levels are contracting.
The higher the number the better, in other words. 
At 51.2, activity levels are growing at a moderate pace, and decelerating. Not an outcome that inspires confidence for the near-term economic outlook.
Caixin Markit services PMI May 2016Business Insider Australia
According to Markit, new orders rose at a slower pace than April with the rate of increase “modest and slower than the historical average”. 
Despite the slowdown, employment grew for a second straight month although it “remained marginal overall”. 
“Some companies mentioned that restructuring plans had acted as a brake on staff hiring,” noted Markit.
There was also mixed news on the inflation front with input costs rising at a slower pace, and below the survey average, while output costs increased at the same pace as April.
Suggesting that activity levels may decelerate even further in the months ahead, sentiment towards the 12-month business outlook fell to the lowest level seen this year.
“A number of companies forecast that improving client demand and planned company expansions will support higher business activity over the next year, but there were reports that an uncertain economic outlook weighed on the overall level of business confidence,” noted Markit.
The decline in the Caixin-Markit index mirrors that seen in the official services PMI report released by China’s National Bureau of Statistics earlier this week.
That NBS PMI slid 0.4 points to 53.5 in May, although it still remains well above the level indicated by the Caixin-Markit survey.
Helping to explain the variance, the NBS survey is larger than that conducted by Markit, capturing responses from firms of all sizes from both the public and private sectors. 
The Markit survey looks at activity levels at smaller Chinese services firms, and only those from the private sector.
Read the original article on Business Insider Australia. Copyright 2016. Follow Business Insider Australia on Twitter.

Fed likely to avoid rate hike before Britain votes on leaving EU

Fed likely to avoid rate hike before Britain votes on leaving EU

Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen speaks at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Studies at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S. May 27, 2016.  REUTERS/Brian SnyderThomson ReutersFederal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen speaks at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Studies at Harvard University in Cambridge
By Howard Schneider and Ann Saphir
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Federal Reserve may be forced to delay a rate hike at its June meeting because of mounting concern over the economic fallout from Britain's vote on whether to leave the European Union.
The geopolitical risk likely will push any rate increase until at least July, despite apparent consensus among Fed officials that a hike is warranted by stronger U.S. growth and tight labor markets.
The Fed's June 14-15 rate-setting meeting comes just a week before the British vote on June 23. A "leave" vote is expected to roil financial markets, cause credit spreads to widen, trigger a rush into safe assets and bolster the dollar.
The dollar’s recent stability is one reason the Fed has become more comfortable with raising rates, and officials may want to let the threat of Brexit pass before moving to tighten financial conditions.
Fed Board Governor Daniel Tarullo on Thursday joined the chorus of those warning of his concerns over the British vote, telling Bloomberg that Brexit would be a "factor" he would consider at the Fed's June policy meeting and said that the British vote's impact on markets would be key.
The most recent poll found that voters in Britain - Europe's second biggest economy and its most influential financial center - were evenly split on whether to stay in the EU or to leave.
By the time the Fed meets on June 14 and 15, at least four of the five Washington-based governors will have aired their views on the outlook for rates, with Lael Brainard due to speak Friday and Chair Janet Yellen appearing in Philadelphia next week.
Fed officials will release their latest economic projections at the June meeting along with a policy statement, and Yellen is scheduled to hold a post-meeting news conference.
The two governors who have addressed the Brexit vote so far have sounded notes of caution.
"I do see the possibility of a real hit to economic growth both in the U.K and the EU," Fed Board Governor Jerome Powell said last week. "I can imagine the upcoming Brexit vote as presenting a factor in favor of caution about raising rates.”
Secret meetings across Europe reveal uncertainty over what would follow a vote that British Prime Minister David Cameron calls a "leap in the dark" - and also concern about what happens if Britain stays in.
If Britain remains in the EU, it could lead to continued infighting in the ruling Conservative party and destabilizing battles with the rest of the EU.
Waiting on the Brexit vote is a "no-brainer," said Jon Faust, a former Fed staffer and now a professor of economics at Johns Hopkins University. "Why move now as opposed to a few weeks from now?"
CONSENSUS ON CAUTION
With few exceptions, the message from regional Fed bank presidents has been consistent: the upcoming Brexit vote may tip the scales against a June increase.
This is only the latest obstacle to the Fed's two-year struggle to normalize U.S. monetary policy after dropping rates dramatically during a protracted downturn.
In 2014, the crash in oil prices and a rapid spike in the value of the dollar crushed U.S. exports and drove inflation into a ditch.
Last year, a surprise slowdown in China’s economy, alongside the malaise in Europe and Japan, sparked global market turbulence and broader concerns about a worldwide recession. That vexing landscape kept the Fed on hold until December.
Now, Brexit aside, the prospect of a rate hike soon appears all but certain. Unemployment dropped to 5 percent in April; inflation appears to be gaining traction as the drag from cheap oil and a strong dollar fades; and the lull in growth over the past few months has proved temporary, with consumer spending and the housing market showing particular strength.
The probability of a June rate increase is now about 17 percent, according to Fed funds futures trading data compiled by the CME Group, compared to 57 percent for July.
While the impact of a vote to leave the EU is uncertain, one widely expected and immediate result is likely to be a jump in the value of the dollar - a further blow to U.S. exporters and another drag on inflation that the Fed still considers too low.
JULY OVER JUNE
If the Fed does indeed take a pass at its June meeting, officials have signaled they’ll be ready to move in July.
Minutes of the Fed’s March policy meeting showed officials preparing the ground for higher rates sometime in the summer months. After July, the next option would be September, in the middle of a U.S. election campaign, in which the Fed and Yellen could well become targets of debate.
Four of the Federal Reserve’s 12 regional bank presidents have asked to raise the interest rate charged to commercial banks for short-term loans - a proxy for saying the target rate should move higher.
If the board defers a rate hike at its June meeting, Yellen will face a rhetorical challenge in explaining why global factors are again trumping domestic economic data - when Fed officials have tried to convince the public that their decisions are "data dependent."
One approach she could take, economists said, is to flag the Fed officials' agreement in favor of gradual rate rises over the next couple of years, but to emphasize that low inflation means there is no urgent need to start raising rates right away, especially ahead of such a one-time and potentially critical world event.
"Even if Brexit were seen to be an unlikely outcome, we think this extremely cautious Fed Chair might see relatively little cost to waiting another seven weeks to act," RBS economists Michelle Girard and Kevin Cummins said in a note.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider and Ann Saphir, additional reporting by Jason Lange)
Read the original article on Reuters. Copyright 2016. Follow Reuters on Twitter.

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