Do you have your own treasure at home?

Since the begging of time, mankind was purely attracted to this precious metal named gold, mainly for its bright yellow colour. Gold is a metal that can be found in the form of nuggets or veins in rock formations. It is considered one of the most malleable metals because one gram of gold can be beaten into one square meter sheet.

In the last year approximately three thousand tons of pure shiny gold was “harvested” all over the globe. Nowadays people tend to invest money in gold jewelleries just for the lust that it brings. Women especially love buying gold items for their personal collections, a collection that grows larger with every piece of jewellery bought.

When wearing this kind of jewellery many factors can contribute to the tear down of a gold item. In fact, when a gold earring is lost from his set, you end up with a random piece of gold that cannot be matched with ease. So don’t get discouraged if you end up with some gold “residue” because there are lots of people that might be interested in buying your “gold leftovers”.

An easy but highly profitable way is to sell jewellery to a gold buyer that will accept your broken pieces.  The damage of the gold piece doesn’t matter what so ever, because the gold items will be melted and transformed into new gorgeous pieces of jewellery. For people who are still in doubt about the money to be received, be assured that your gold pieces or gold jewelleries will be priced solely by weight.

So if your damaged gold pieces take up to much space in your jewellery boxes, maybe it’s time for you to consider selling jewellery online for extra cash (for instance visit http://www.goldbuyers.co.nz a service run by goldsmart.co.nz). It’s fast, easy and will absolutely astonish you when you will find out how much money your treasure is worth.

Fitch cuts Sony, Panasonic debt ratings to “junk” status

A Sony logo is seen as customers look at Sony digital cameras at an electronics shop in Tokyo, in this May 10, 2012 file photo. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon/Files

Ratings agency Fitch downgraded the debt ratings of Japan’s Sony Corp and Panasonic Corp to “junk” status citing weakness in their consumer electronics and TV operations, further diminishing the luster of the once-great Japanese brands.


The cut to below investment grade, the first by a ratings firm, comes as the floundering Japanese tech giants face weak demand and fierce competition from Apple Inc and Samsung Electronics.


A strong yen and bumps in China, where growth has slowed and Japanese goods have been targeted in sometimes violent protests recently, have also weighed on their earnings.


The two companies, along with Sharp Corp, racked up combined losses of $20 billion last year, leading them to axe jobs, sell assets and close facilities.


“Both Sony and Panasonic are struggling to generate operating profits, but each is restructuring and I don’t envision the current situation continuing,” said Masahi Oda, Chief Investment Officer at Sumitomo Mitsui Trust Bank.


“A collapse of their core business would be a problem, but we are not at the point yet, and to me Fitch looks too negative,” Oda added.


Fitch downgraded Sony by three notches to BB-minus from BBB- minus, saying meaningful recovery will be slow. The move came after Sony, the maker of PlayStation game consoles and Vaio laptops, last week announced plans to raise 150 billion yen ($1.82 billion) through the sale of convertible bonds.


“Fitch believes that continuing weakness in the home entertainment and sound and mobile products and communications segments will offset the relatively stable music and pictures segments and improvement in the devices segment which makes semiconductors and components,” it said in statement.


In a separate statement, Fitch cut Panasonic to BB from BBB-minus, a two-notch downgrade, citing weakened competitiveness in its TVs and display panels as well as weak cash generation from its operations. It has a negative outlook on both the companies.


The downgrade sent Sony’s five-year credit default swaps (CDS), insurance-like contracts against debt default or restructuring, 5 basis points wider to 382.5/402.5 basis points.


Panasonic’s CDS for the same maturity were quoted at 295/315 basis points, 15 basis points wider than in Thursday morning Asian trade.


Standard & Poor’s rates the two consumer electronics makers at BBB, the second lowest of the investment grade, while Moody’s Investors Service has Baa3 on them, the lowest of the high-grade category.


With two of the three major ratings agencies still having the two companies as investment grade, institutional investors won’t face too great a pressure to cut their debt holdings in them, analysts said.


SONY SHARES TUMBLE


Sony shares shed 4.4 percent in Frankfurt on Thursday. The shares ended 1.8 percent higher at 834 yen in Tokyo before the Fitch announcement, trading not too far from their 32-year closing low of 793 yen hit on November 15. Sony stock is down 40 percent so far this year.


Panasonic shares were down 0.6 percent in Frankfurt in low volume. The stock inched up 0.7 percent to close at 407 yen in Tokyo trading, near its 34-year closing low of 385 yen reached on November 13.


Last month, Panasonic cut its forecast and warned it will lose close to $10 billion in the year to March, as it writes off billions of yen in tax-deferred assets and goodwill related to its mobile phone, solar panel and small lithium battery businesses.


Ahead of its earnings revision, Panasonic won $7.6 billion in loan commitments in October from banks including Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group and Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, a funding backstop it says will help it avoid having to seek capital from credit markets.


Sony made a small operating profit in the July-September quarter, helped by the sale of a non-core chemicals business, and kept its forecast for a full-year profit of $1.63 billion.


(Additional reporting by Dominic Lau in Tokyo and Umesh Desai in Hong Kong; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)


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Global shares gain as global economic outlook improves

A general view of the German stock exchange in Frankfurt November 7, 2012. REUTERS/Lisi Niesner

1 of 5. A general view of the German stock exchange in Frankfurt November 7, 2012.


Credit: Reuters/Lisi Niesner


LONDON (Reuters) – World share markets extended a week-long rally on Thursday as manufacturing surveys in China and the United States boosted confidence in global growth and euro zone data at least did not worsen the already weak outlook for that region.


The euro hit a three high against the dollar on optimism that a funding deal for debt-crippled Greece will ultimately be agreed – and despite data indicating the region’s economy is on course for its deepest recession since early 2009.


“The driving factors behind euro/dollar are that the global macroeconomic backdrop seems to be improving and people are pricing out the tail risk on Greece,” said Arne Lohmann Rasmussen, head of currency research at Danske Bank.


The euro rose 0.4 percent to $1.2880, its highest since November 2.


The view there will be a deal to help Athens was bolstered on Wednesday when German Chancellor Angela Merkel said after the failure of the latest talks, that an agreement was possible when euro zone ministers meet again on Monday.


The hopes for a Greek deal, combined with the better economic data and a growing view that a solution can be found to the U.S. fiscal crisis, lifted the MSCI world equity index 0.4 percent to 326 points, putting it on track for its best week since mid-September.


Europe’s FTSE Eurofirst 300 index rose 0.4 percent to a two-week high of 1,101.70 points, with London’s FTSE 100, Paris’s CAC-40 and Frankfurt’s DAX between 0.3 and 0.7 percent higher.


However, trading was subdued, with U.S. markets closed for the Thanksgiving holiday.


CHINA BOOST


Confidence in the global economic outlook got its biggest boost from the HSBC flash Manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) for China, which pointed to an expansion in activity after seven consecutive quarters of slowdown.


The Chinese data followed a report on Wednesday showing U.S. manufacturing grew in November at its quickest pace in five months, indicating strong economic growth in the fourth quarter.


“There are questions over whether the Chinese economy is really that bad or if the U.S. will take a long time to recover, but we are getting signs that the situation is not as bad as assumed,” said Peter Braendle, head of European equities at Zurich-based Swisscanto Asset Management.


PMI data on the manufacturing and services sectors in Europe’s two biggest economies, Germany and France, added to the better tone, revealing that conditions had not worsened in November, though both economies are still contracting.


However, the PMI numbers for the wider euro zone remain extremely weak, pointing to the recession-hit region shrinking by about 0.5 percent in the current quarter – its sharpest contraction since the first quarter of 2009.


“The weak PMI outturn for November is a major disappointment in light of the increases in the German and French PMI surveys, and suggest the recession on the euro zone’s periphery is gathering further pace,” said ING economist Martin van Vliet.


BOND DEMAND


In the fixed-income markets, the improving tone enabled Spain to sell 3.88 billion euros ($4.97 billion) of new government bonds on Thursday, even though it has already raised enough funds for this year’s needs.


The average yield on the three-year bonds in the auction was 3.617 percent, compared with 3.66 percent at a sale earlier in November and a 2012 average of 3.79 percent.


Ten-year Spanish yields were 6 basis points lower on the day at 5.67 percent, having traded above 6 percent at the start of the week.


“It’s a clear reflection that sentiment in Spain has improved markedly,” RIA Capital Markets bond strategist Nick Stamenkovic said, adding that the market was expecting Madrid to ask for an international bailout early next year.


Expectations Greece will soon get more cash set Greek yields on course for their 10th consecutive daily fall. The February 2023 bond yield dropped to 16.16 percent, its lowest since it was issued during a debt restructuring in March.


COMMODITIES STEADY


Commodity prices had some support from the improving outlook for world demand, but the prospect of only modest global growth in 2013 kept the gains in check.


Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange rose 0.6 percent to $7,735.25 a metric tonne, and spot gold inched up to $1,730.30 an ounce.


Oil prices were more mixed as the ceasefire between Israel and Gaza’s Hamas rulers on Thursday eased concerns over the impact the unrest might have had on supply from the region, offsetting support from the prospect of more Chinese oil demand.


Brent slipped 7 cents to $110.90 a barrel, while U.S. crude was up 2 cents at $87.40.


($1 = 0.7801 euros)


(Additional reporting by Jessica Mortimer and Marius Zaharia; Editing by Will Waterman and Alastair Macdonald)


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Spain starts 2013 funding with 3.9 billion-euro bond sale

By Paul Day


MADRID | Thu Nov 22, 2012 11:15am EST


MADRID (Reuters) – Spain sold nearly 4 billion euros of bonds with ease at an auction on Thursday that kicked off its funding program for a daunting 2013 when Madrid must shoulder regional debt needs and will struggle to meet deficit targets.


The Treasury beat the top end of the target of 2.5-3.5 billion euros at borrowing costs that were slightly down on previous outings of the same paper but remain too high for comfort.


The average yield on the 2021 bond was 5.517 percent, compared with around 5.6 percent for the benchmark 10-year on the secondary market, a long way from over 7 percent levels in July.


“It’s a clear reflection that sentiment in Spain has improved markedly,” said bond strategist at RIA Capital Markets Nick Stamenkovic.


“They are already funded for 2012 and the market is betting that Spain will ask for a bailout early next year when they face a (wall of issuance).”


Madrid faces some 28 billion euros in debt redemptions in January while in 2013 the country’s funding needs rise to 207 billion euros from 186 billion euros this year.


This could go higher still if it overshoots its deficit target of 6.3 percent this year and 4.5 percent next year, which the Bank of Spain warned on Wednesday was possible.


Spain sold 3.6 billion euros of a bond maturing October 31, 2015, 645 million euros of a bond due July 30, 2017 and 1.5 billion euros of paper maturing April 30, 2021.


Concerned that the welfare system could slip into deficit this year, from a balanced budget target, the economy ministry said separately that the social security reserve fund will subscribe a new 3.3 billion euros 5-year sovereign bond.


Madrid is also expected to help struggling regional governments, cut out of debt markets, which could add a further 40 billion euros to its debt bill.


Spain’s economy has been in recession for a year, the second since 2009, and is not expected to return to growth until late next year at the earliest. Some 25 percent of Spanish workers are unemployed and deep spending cuts and tax hikes have fuelled increasingly violent protests across the country.


However, Spain’s risk premium versus Germany has fell to around 423 basis points from above 650 bps since the European Central Bank said it would buy up debt on the open market to hold down interest rates for any country that signs up for aid.


Madrid has said it wants to be sure the ECB measure would reduce financing costs, citing a spread of 200 bps as more representative of economic fundamentals, though the central bank’s head, Mario Draghi, said he could not make such a promise. ($1 = 0.7801 euros)


(Additional reporting by Marid Newsroom, London debt desk; Writing by Paul Day, editing by Mike Peacock)


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Santander may sell U.S. car finance arm to raise cash

MADRID (Reuters) – Santander (SAN.MC) may list its U.S. car financing division to squeeze yet more cash out of overseas businesses to shore up its defenses against weakness in Spain.


The Spanish bank said on Thursday it was still too early to discuss timing for a share sale of the business – Santander Consumer USA – something already proposed in a deal signed last year with its other shareholders.


“The possibility of an IPO (initial public offering) of Santander Consumer USA (SCUSA) is included in the shareholders’ agreement signed in October 2011 with our partners,” a spokeswoman for Santander in Madrid said.


The bank is under pressure from financial regulators to raise capital to cushion against potential troubles at home, even though it has weathered Spain’s property market crash better than its rivals.


Santander has benefited from overseas expansion, which means it makes less than a fifth of its profit in Spain.


“Overall, selling off divisions is a right decision in order to avoid other costly ways of raising capital,” said Maria del Paz Ojeda, banking analyst at the brokerage of Grupo Banco Sabadell. “But spinning off profitable business will contribute to making the group less profitable.”


Spain became the focal point of the euro zone debt crisis earlier this year as it became clear its banks would need financial support to rid balance sheets of around 185 billion euros ($237.15 billion) of toxic real estate assets.


Santander’s provisions for real estate exposure rose to 5 billion euros by the end of September, around 90 percent of the requirements required under Spanish law.


The bank has already listed its Mexican, Brazilian and Chilean arms and its Argentine and British businesses are expected to follow.


Santander’s chairman Emilio Botin said during the $4 billion share sale of its Mexican business in September that the bank’s goal was to list all its large units within five years.


COUNTING ON US RECOVERY


The bank is counting on expectations of a recovery of the U.S. car market to make the sale of the car financing business attractive to potential investors.


“Santander is trying to take advantage of a slight recovery in the U.S. consumer market to give its business a greater value and visibility,” said Maria Lopez, analyst at Espirito Santo.


Santander Consumer USA could be worth as much as $6 billion, according to the Wall Street Journal, which reported that the bank was planning a sale in the first half of 2013.


“Taking into account a $6 billion valuation for the Santander Consumer business in the USA this would imply a three times net asset value which seems a little bit high,” Lopez said.


The Spanish bank said on Thursday the valuation would depend on the share price at the time of the sale.


The bank controls 65 percent of the Fort Worth, Texas-based SCUSA through a holding company. Private equity firms KKR & Co.(KKR.N), Warburg Pincus WP.UL, and Centerbridge Partners have a combined 25 percent stake. The remaining 10 percent belongs to Dundon DFS.


When Santander incorporated new partners in the subsidiary in October 2011 it valued the company at $4 billion.


Santander Consumer USA had assets of more than $24 billion at end-June and a second quarter profit of $459 million.


Santander shares were up 0.9 percent at 5.763 euros at 1500 GMT, while blue-chip index Ibex-35 .IBEX was up one percent. Santander’s shares have lagged other European banks as Spain drags its feet on requesting a sovereign bailout after it signed up for a credit line from the European Union worth up to 100 billion euros ($128.19 billion) to rescue its banks.


(Reporting by Jesus Aguado; Editing by Fiona Ortiz, Jane Merriman and Giles Elgood)


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Holiday shopping marathon starts as consumer sentiment remains shaky

Forget that Turkey trot. Thanksgiving is now the start of the annual holiday shopping endurance race, as more stores open on Thursday’s national holiday to seek a bigger share of spending that is expected to grow slowly this season.


Target Corp has joined Wal-Mart and Gap Inc in being open at least part of the day, and some retailers will be open throughout the day, a trend that began to take hold in 2011.


Traditionally, retailers enticed shoppers with “doorbuster” deals early Friday morning. Then they shifted to midnight following Thanksgiving.


Now Walmart’s U.S. discount stores, which will already be open during the day, will offer some “Black Friday” deals at 8 p.m. and special deals on some electronics at 10 p.m. Target has moved its opening from midnight to 9 p.m. on Thursday and Toys R Us is opening at 8 p.m.


Other retailers, like J.C. Penney Co Inc are holding out and will not open until Friday morning, so shoppers trying to get all the deals will need a lot of stamina.


“The retailers are taking what was a very plannable sport that was four or five hours where you can get things done and turned it into a marathon,” Trutina Financial Chief Investment Officer Patty Edwards said. “I think the retailers have diluted the sport.”


The stakes are high for U.S. retailers, which can earn more than a third of their annual sales in the holiday season. Investors hope holiday sales will help retail stocks cap a strong year. The Standard & Poor’s retail index is up almost 27 percent this year, compared with a 10.6 percent increase for the broader S&P 500.


The National Retail Federation, an industry trade group, forecast a 4.1 percent increase in retail sales during the November-December holiday period this year, down from the 5.6 percent increase seen in 2011.


Consumers heading into the holiday shopping season remain worried about high unemployment and possible tax increases and government spending cuts in 2013.


According to a Reuters/Ipsos poll, two-thirds of shoppers said they were planning to spend the same amount as last year or were unsure about spending plans, while 21 percent plan to spend less and 11 percent plan to spend more.


On Wednesday, The Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan’s final reading on consumer sentiment fell from its initial reading earlier in the month.


One element in favor of retailers this year is the calendar, as there are two more days between Thanksgiving and Christmas than last year and Christmas falls on a Tuesday instead of a Sunday, giving shoppers an extra full weekend before Christmas.


Lazard Capital Markets analyst Jennifer Davis estimated the additional two days will benefit December comparable sales by 3 percent to 4 percent.


But “the extra weekend before Christmas this year will likely amplify the post Black Friday lull and result in even more back-end loaded sales,” she said in a note to clients.


Cooler weather could boost apparel sales from last year, when unseasonably warm weather left many stores stuck with winter clothes they had to sell at drastic discounts.


But analysts and economists also said superstorm Sandy, which lashed the densely populated East Coast in late October, could cut into how much shoppers can spend on the holidays.


While the holiday season is important for all retailers, two will be under especially close watch this year – J.C. Penney and Best Buy Co Inc.


J.C. Penney is in the middle of a radical transformation under CEO Ron Johnson, who is trying to turn 700 of the retailer’s stores into collections of boutiques by 2015.


But while some of the new shops in its stores have been performing well, overall the retailer has turned customers off with its plan to eliminate coupons and most sales. Friday will be the company’s only sales event of the year.


“I think eventually it will work. It is going to be a lot of pain until it works,” Edwards said.


At Best Buy, new chief executive Hubert Joly is trying to devise a plan to stem falling sales and stave off cutthroat competition from the likes of Walmart and Amazon.com. At the same time, the company’s largest shareholder and founder, Richard Schulze, is trying to put together a bid to take Best Buy private.


“They haven’t been very price savvy, haven’t really known how out of whack they’ve been or if they’ve known, they haven’t really responded to it,” Liz Ebert Director, Advisory at KPMG, LLP, said.


(Additional reporting by Nivedita Bhattacharjee in Chicago and Phil Wahba in New York; Editing by David Gregorio)


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Euro zone faces deepest downturn since early 2009

An employee of German car manufacturer Mercedes Benz works on a Mercedes B-class car at the Mercedes plant in Rastatt July 16, 2012. REUTERS/Alex Domanski 


LONDON (Reuters) – The euro zone economy is on course for its weakest quarter since the dark days of early 2009, according to business surveys that showed companies toiling against shrinking order books in November.


Service sector firms like banks and hotels that comprise the bulk of the economy fared particularly badly this month, and laid off staff at a faster pace.


While the monthly rate of decline that manufacturers reported eased far more than economists anticipated, Markit’s latest Purchasing Managers’ Indexes (PMIs) pointed to little change overall for a recession-hit euro zone this month.


The flash service sector PMI fell to 45.7 this month, its lowest reading since July 2009, the survey showed on Thursday, failing to meet the expectations of economists who thought it would hold at October’s 46.0.


It has been rooted below the 50 mark that divides growth and contraction for 10 months now, and survey compiler Markit said it was too soon to say if this marked the nadir.


With more austerity on the way, and a reminder of the festering sovereign debt crisis in this week’s failure of lenders to agree more aid for Greece, prospects for next year look ominous.


“The concern about the outlook is getting worse as we move towards the end of the year,” said Chris Williamson, chief economist from Markit.


He added that German companies especially have become more pessimistic about the year ahead.


“If the domestic economy of Germany, the largest euro zone nation, is weakening, then that bodes ill for the rest of the region, especially as there’s little trade picking up outside the region.”


Overall, the PMIs were consistent with the economy shrinking around 0.5 percent in this quarter, Markit said.


That would be the sharpest contraction since the first quarter of 2009.


While they also suggested the economy shrank by a similar amount in the third quarter, instead of 0.1 percent shown in last week’s official data, Williamson said it was very likely the fourth quarter would see a larger downturn.


“The factors that were helping to prop up the official data in the third quarter won’t be apparent in the final quarter of the year. So you are going to see a deterioration in those official numbers.”


Economists pointed to stronger industrial production data early in July and August as a reason why the euro zone economy did not contract as badly as many feared in the third quarter.


PESSIMISM PREVAILS


There was little conviction among businesses that things will get better soon.


Service sector companies are now more pessimistic about the year ahead than at any time since March 2009, when the expectations index last plumbed 48.6 and the region was in the midst of its worst post-war recession.


The manufacturing PMI edged up to 46.2, its best showing since March, from 45.4 in October. That was better than even the most optimistic forecast for 46.0, from 40 economists polled by Reuters.


Similarly, the factory output and new orders indexes crept higher, but still signalled steep rates of decline.


The composite PMI, which groups together the services and manufacturing survey, pointed to an almost unchanged rate of decline for the economy in November, rising to 45.8 from 45.7 in October.


It also showed inflation pressures are easing quickly for companies, as both output and input prices indexes dropped.


Economists polled by Reuters remain divided over whether the European Central Bank will cut its main refinancing rate from 0.75 percent to a new record low 0.5 percent.


“I think the ECB consider their policy to be suitably accommodative at the moment and will continue to put the ball in the court of national governments to work on structural issues,” said Williamson.


Detailed PMI data are only available under license from Markit and customers need to apply to Markit for a license. To subscribe to the full data, click on the link below: http://www/markit.com/information/register/reuters-pmi-subscriptions For further information, please phone Markit on +44 20 7260 2454 or email economics@markit.com


(Editing by Hugh Lawson)


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Advisory group says raised Autonomy auditor concerns

LONDON (Reuters) – Shareholder group PIRC said on Thursday it had warned that auditors Deloitte did too much non-audit work for Autonomy to be sufficiently independent from the software firm that Hewlett Packard (HPQ.N) bought last year and now accuses of inflating its accounts.


HP bought the British company for $11.1 billion last year, a price many analysts considered more than it was worth, and announced on Tuesday that it was writing off about $5 billion due to “serious accounting improprieties” that inflated the unit’s numbers before the deal.


Autonomy has denied any wrongdoing, but the software group’s accounts are now at the center of a bitter dispute between the firm’s founder, Mike Lynch, and HP.


“Prior to its takeover, Autonomy raised a number of red flags on the governance front,” said PIRC, which advises funds investing 1.5 trillion pounds ($2.4 trillion).


“In PIRC’s view it lacked proper independent representation, which led us to oppose the election of numerous directors over years. Its auditor also raked in significant non-audit fees, which we found problematic.”


PIRC said the sums Autonomy paid the accountancy firm for other services such as legislation, tax and corporate finance advice made up more than 25 percent of the total the group paid Deloitte, a level PIRC considers significant in its assessment of whether an auditor is properly independent from its client.


Autonomy paid Deloitte $2.7 million in 2010, with $1.5 million described as total audit fees and the rest described as non-audit fees.


PIRC’s managing director Alan MacDougall told Reuters that paying unrelated fees to auditors undermined their independence, though it was fairly common practice, with about 40 companies in the FTSE 350 crossing its threshold.


“We conducted our audit work in full compliance with regulation and professional standards,” Deloitte said in a statement on Wednesday, having “categorically denied” it had any knowledge of any improprieties or misrepresentations in Autonomy’s financial statements.


The Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales, of which Deloitte is a member, says on its website that ethical guidance in the UK does not impose limits on the types of income an auditor can generate from a client.


It says independence is ensured by stipulating “that income from any one client, for whatever service, is kept to no more than a certain proportion of that firm’s overall practice income”.


“We are unable to discuss our audit work further due to client confidentiality. We will cooperate with the relevant authorities with any investigations into these allegations,” Deloitte said.


The firm also said it was not engaged by HP or Autonomy to provide any due diligence in relation to the acquisition. HP has said it relied on Deloitte for vetting Autonomy’s financials.


A spokesman for Deloitte said the trend at Autonomy in terms of audit fees relative to non-audit fees had been rising.


(Reporting by Paul Sandle; Editing by Will Waterman)


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China’s manufacturing growth quickens; HSBC flash PMI at 13-month high

An employee inspects the newly-made optical cables at a factory in Wuhan, Hubei province July 25, 2012. REUTERS/Stringer

An employee inspects the newly-made optical cables at a factory in Wuhan, Hubei province July 25, 2012.



China’s vast manufacturing sector saw expansion accelerate in November for the first time in 13 months, preliminary results from a factory survey showed, a sign that the pace of economic growth has revived after seven consecutive quarters of slowdown.


The China HSBC Flash Manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) rose to a 13-month high of 50.4 in November, the latest indicator of recovery in the real economy after data showing solid credit growth, firmer exports and rising industrial output in the previous month.


A sub-index measuring output rose to 51.3, also the highest since October 2011.


“This reflects that conditions for smaller firms, especially exporters, are looking up,” said Li Wei, a Shanghai-based economist for Standard Chartered. “The consensus in the market is already for a small, gradual improvement.”


An uptick in key economic activity indicators in October, following encouraging signs in September, cemented the view of many analysts and investors that a rebound in the world’s second largest economy gathered momentum as it entered the fourth quarter, thanks to a raft of pro-growth policies rolled out by the government over recent months.


China is currently shuffling its senior officials after the seven top leaders of the ruling Communist Party were selected at a congress last week. The new appointments should end months of uncertainty in the highest ranks, although economic policy is not expected to change abruptly in the near-term.


Even before the congress, the central bank had moved to ease liquidity by pumping short-term cash into money markets rather than resorting to the interest rate cuts or reduction in banks’ required reserve ratios that many investors had expected.


STEADY THROUGH YEAR-END


This month’s PMI reading above 50 is likely to be seen as a turning point by the market, particularly if it is born out by the final reading due on December 1 and by official indicators.


Asian shares extended gains slightly after the data to stand up nearly 1 percent on the day and the Australian dollar, sensitive to demand from the biggest customer for Australia’s resources, rose as far as $1.04.


“This confirms that the economic recovery continues to gain momentum towards the year-end,” Qu Hongbin, chief China economist at index sponsor HSBC, said in a statement accompanying the data.


“However, it is still the early stage of recovery and global economic growth remains fragile. This calls for a continuation of policy easing to strengthen the recovery.”


With a one-month exception in October 2011, the HSBC PMI — which largely reflects the private manufacturing sector — has remained stubbornly below the 50-point level separating accelerating from slowing growth since June 2011.


Unlike the patchy results seen in previous months, in November almost all the sub-indices in the HSBC survey concurred in showing an improving economy.


The one exception was a fall in the sub-index measuring output prices, demonstrating that manufacturers are still struggling with overcapacity and relatively weak domestic demand.


That could also reflect the weight in the survey of exporting firms, which have less ability to raise sales prices, said Standard Chartered’s Li.


Indeed, China’s exporters are increasingly squeezed by rising domestic costs and competition from new international suppliers, Zhou Haijiang, head of Chinese textile exporter Hodo Group, told reporters this month.


“Not only Western countries manufacture industrial goods, but also a lot of developing countries including former socialist countries who now have market economies are all exporting, thus creating a global surplus that cannot be changed,” Zhou said.


“Because of this it is hard to raise sales prices, everyone is selling and it is hard for manufactured goods prices to rise. In some cases prices have even fallen.”


Analysts expect no further cuts to interest rates this year or next after back-to-back cuts in June and July, and only one more 50 basis point cut to banks’ required reserve ratios (RRR) in 2012 after three since late 2011 that have freed an estimated 1.2 trillion yuan for new lending.


Chinese banks are on course to make new loans worth more than 8.5 trillion yuan ($1.4 trillion) in 2012, expansionary versus the 7.5 trillion of new loans extended in 2011 and above the 8 trillion yuan that sources told Reuters back in February was the target for 2012.


Total social financing aggregate, a broad measure of liquidity in the economy, weakened to 1.29 trillion yuan in October, down from 1.65 trillion yuan in September, but still remained on track to hit a record 14 trillion yuan this year.


China also opened many previously-closed sectors to private investment with a view to funding new infrastructure projects and supporting economic growth without piling on more debt that local governments can ill-afford.


Although analysts expect fourth quarter GDP growth to outpace the 7.4 percent seen in the third quarter, full-year expansion for 2012 is expected to be the slowest in 13 years.


(Editing by Alex Richardson)


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Analysis: Greek economy pays high price for its high prices

ATHENS (Reuters) – Signs across Athens advertise property for rent or sale. One in three shops has closed. At those still open for business, turnover has slumped.


So it is one of the mysteries of Greece’s economic depression that prices of some things – milk and the new iPhone, for example – are among the highest in Europe.


The riddle matters hugely. If costs and prices were lower, exporters would be more competitive and people’s shrinking pay packets and pensions would stretch farther, cushioning a sharp drop in consumption.


Increases in value added tax and other indirect levies are part of the answer. Greece is also hostage to the cost of imported oil and food.


But another set of reasons goes to the heart of Greece’s political and economic malaise: collusion among producers, the state’s complicity in shielding protected professions and businesses, and a thorough lack of competition that allows a favored few to extract economically unjustified profits from a long-suffering populace.


Much of the economy, in a word, is diseased. And until the disease is cured, sustainable growth cannot resume even if euro zone finance ministers finally agree – after two failed meetings in successive weeks – how to lighten Greece’s unsustainable debt burden.


The good news is that Athens is implementing some deep-seated administrative reforms and its trade deficit is receding.


But the clock is ticking: the burden of austerity and reform has fallen disproportionately on the man in the street, and his patience is all but exhausted. Protests over inequality and austerity are proliferating, fomenting political radicalism.


“Greece is on the edge right now. That’s why 2013 will be a crunch year for the economy and society,” said Dimitris Asimakopoulos, who owns one of the oldest pastry shops in Athens.


Asimakopoulos, who also heads the GSEVEE small business confederation, said his turnover had fallen 35 percent since the crisis struck. Profits were one-fifth of what they were then.


“The economy here is not an advanced capitalist economy,” he said. “But you can’t change an economy by pressing a button. You need time, and right now we don’t have time.”


LOW WAGES, HIGH PRICES


One button that a country living beyond its means has to press is marked ‘cost cutting’. Greece has done that. Wages are plunging at the behest of international creditors who are keeping the country alive on a drip-feed of aid.


By the end of this year, the entire surge in the average cost of labor per unit of output from 2001 to 2009 will have been unwound, according to a draft European Commission paper.


The drop in nominal unit labor costs this year alone is projected to be 8.7 percent – not surprising given that the unemployment rate is 25 percent.


But wages are only one input among many that determine prices. The most comprehensive gauge of a country’s cost competitiveness is its real, or inflation-adjusted, effective exchange rate (REER) relative to its main trading partners.


And in 2011, Greece’s REER was still 18-20 percent above its 2000 level, according to Eurostat, the EU statistics agency.


“Of course the issue of prices concerns us. There’s a problem, and we’re aware of it,” Athanasios Skordas, deputy minister for economic development and competitiveness, told Reuters.


Inflation is falling – it was 0.9 percent in the year to September – and economists expect it to come down further.


But to thoroughly convert wage to price competitiveness will entail a daunting array of reforms, such as making it easier to start a business and removing barriers to competition in key markets such as energy.


Platon Monokroussos, head of financial markets research at Eurobank in Athens, said these market rigidities were one reason why falling wages had not translated into a quicker drop in inflation.


FAT PROFITS


Another reason, Monokroussos said, is rent-seeking – making excessive profits.


Eurostat figures show average food prices in Greece are higher than in the rest of the EU except for meat, fruit and vegetables. Milk, cheese and eggs are 31 percent more expensive than the EU average; cereals and oils cost 16 percent more.


The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development says profit margins exceed the EU average in many key sectors, especially retailing, due to a lack of competition.


“This is a structure as old as the Greek state,” said George Zombanakis, an economist with the Bank of Greece, the central bank. He stressed that he was speaking in a personal capacity.


“This is something that can only be tackled by structural reforms, and everybody tries to do anything and everything except structural reform because then it becomes a political matter,” said Zombanakis.


Firms across the EU are frequently fined for price-fixing. But in the case of Greece, ending what the Commission calls “price rigidity and collusion in prices” means breaking a particularly strong nexus between politics and business.


“They’ve cut wages but haven’t touched monopolies,” said Costas Lapavitsas, an economics professor at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London.


“And the reason they haven’t intervened is because of the strength of the incumbents. The strength of big business is paramount, and it will take profound political change to alter this,” he said.


FISHING FOR CARTELS


Dimitris Kiritsakis, the head of Greece’s Competition Commission, acknowledged the lack of competition and said his watchdog, with just 120 professional staff, was probing 30 sectors to see if cartels operated.


“You can’t just make cartels disappear,” Kiritsakis told Reuters. “People think I can say ‘Come out, cartel, so I can catch you’. But you need to be lucky. It’s like fishing: you need to be in luck for the shoal to swim past in front of you.”


Other nefarious practices keep prices high.


Since March, doctors have been required to prescribe, and pharmacies to dispense, generic drugs instead of expensive brand names. But, as is often the case in Greece, the regulation has not been fully implemented.


This is costing patients money and leaving room “for wrong incentives to doctors, overprescription and outright fraudulent prescription behavior”, according to the European Commission.


What’s more, as part of their strategy to minimize taxation, multinational companies export goods to their Greek subsidiaries at inflated prices, said Vassilis Korkidis, president of the National Confederation of Hellenic Commerce.


Skordas, the deputy development minister, said he had filed an official complaint with the local representative of Apple Inc (AAPL.O), charging that the company’s new iPhone 5 sells for more in Greece than anywhere else in the EU.


THE DRACHMA NIGHTMARE


Addressing all the reasons for Greece’s high price levels and lack of competitiveness will take a decade or more, the International Monetary Fund reckons.


But Greece does not have that time. Korkidis said one in five of the 300,000 small trading firms that he represents might not make it through the winter.


Companies are starved of credit, but, just as importantly, they and their customers are unnerved by the specter that Greece might yet be forced out of the euro.


Why invest and spend hard euros if they might suddenly be converted into devalued drachmas?


“If this drachma nightmare goes away, the situation will probably be much better,” Korkidis said.


Asimakopoulos, the cake shop owner, agreed. Every quarterly inspection by Greece’s international lenders is the harbinger of more austerity and fresh doubts whether the country will stay in the euro, he said. Uncertainty is asphyxiating the economy.


“The most crucial thing is that there is no hope,” he said. “If we had light at the end of the tunnel, we could invest in our businesses.”


Which is why, though reforms to tame prices are imperative, it is more urgent to agree on a plan to put Greece’s massive debt on a stable long-term footing and banish the threat of ‘Grexit’, or exit from the euro.


“Greece is making big adjustments, but without a credible solution to the issue of debt sustainability, all that effort is going to be undermined. We need to end the uncertainty,” said George Pagoulatos, a professor of European politics and economy at Athens University.


(Editing by Giles Elgood)


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