Weaker Europe starts to lose appetite for US goods

A sign that Europe’s crisis has begun to weigh on the U.S. economy emerged Friday from a report that exports to the continent sank in November — far more than overall U.S. exports did. Europe, which consumes nearly one-fifth of America’s exports, may already be in a recession. A weakening Europe could further shrink demand for American goods and slow the U.S. economy just as the job market has started to strengthen. “The... [more]

Japan PM says must tackle debt to avoid rate cut

 Japan’s prime minister, attempting to build support for painful fiscal reforms, said Saturday that the country should be alarmed by ratings cuts in Europe and must tackle its massive public debts to avoid becoming the next target. Japan’s debt is more than twice its gross domestic product, higher than any of the struggling European economies whose fiscal problems have set off a eurozone crisis that has reverberated in markets... [more]

Woman put in jail for being poor

The recession ruined Linda Ruggles’ business and she has been selling plasma twice a week since to make ends meet. The blood bank couldn’t bail her out from behind bars though, which is where she ended up after she couldn’t pay a $480 fine. That fine, say cops in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina, came about because Linda Ruggles had a messy yard. Barely getting by in recent years, Ruggles, 53, has been stockpiling scraps to pawn off... [more]

Lens makers focus on smartphone cameras

Smartphone cameras have been getting better all the time and accessory makers are now offering a variety of lens options for the devices, intensifying their rivalry with the compact “point-and-shoots.” Some of the lens attachment makers have been displaying their products at the annual Consumer Electronics Show (CES) which closed on Friday. Apple, in launching the latest model of the iPhone, the 4S, in October, sang the praises... [more]

Banks say no deal on Greek debt

THE group of major banks negotiating on a write-down of Greek sovereign debt say they have not reached a deal on its debt, including any new write-down. “There has been no agreement on any Greek deal or a specific ‘haircut’,” said Charles Dallara, the head of the Institute of International Finance which is representing the banks in EU negotiations. “We remain open to a dialogue in search of a voluntary agreement.... [more]

S&P downgrades nine euro zone countries

Standard & Poor’s downgraded the credit ratings of nine euro- zone countries, stripping France andAustria of their coveted triple-A status but not EU paymaster Germany, in a Black Friday the 13th for the troubled single currency area. “Today’s rating actions are primarily driven by our assessment that the policy initiatives that have been taken by European policymakers in recent weeks may be insufficient to fully... [more]

Banker in Olympus scandal steps into public view

A Japanese banker who is a key figure in the Olympus accounting fraud came into public view for the first time since the scandal broke, appearing on Friday at his divorce hearing in a Florida court. Hajime “Jim” Sagawa ran a U.S. investment firm that earned a massive $687 million fee for advising Olympus in a 2008 acquisition deal that ranks as the largest advisory payment in history. Olympus has admitted the deal along with... [more]

France loses AAA-rating

SStandard & Poor’s has decided to downgrade France’s top-notch credit rating but will spare Germany, Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands, an EU government source told AFP on Friday. “France loses its triple-A rating,” the source said on condition of anonymity.   Standard and Poor’s Corp earlier on Friday declined to comment on rumours on the markets that it was about to downgrade several eurozone... [more]

Asia stocks up after successful Europe bond issue

Asian stock markets rose Friday, driven higher by a successful bond issue inEurope that eased worries over the continent’s sovereign debt crisis. Benchmark oil rose to nearly $100 per barrel and the dollar fell against the euro but was steady against the yen. Japan’s Nikkei 225 index gained 1.1 percent to 8,479.24 and South Korea’s Kospi index edged up 0.2 percent at 1,867.17. Australia’s S&P ASX 200 was 0.4... [more]

UK faces stagnation after cut-price Christmas

The economy risks contraction in the first half of 2012 and better-than-expected retail sales over Christmas are unlikely to offer much respite, as shoppers were only lured by margin-eroding discounts, business leaders warned on Tuesday. A survey from the British Chambers of Commerce showed Britain’s economy was “very likely” to contract in the first half of 2012 after stagnating in last year’s final quarter... [more]

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