Ireland expects debt restructuring in 3 years

Ireland’s government expects the country’s debts will be restructured within the next three years, The Irish Mail on Sunday reported, citing an unnamed senior minister. The newspaper said the Irish government was hoping a possible restructuring deal for fellow euro zone struggler Greece would pave the way for a rethink about Ireland, which entered into an 85 billion euros ($123.5 billion) bailout package with the EU and IMF last... [more]

No euro deal behind Holland’s back

The French and German Finance ministers have telephoned their Dutch counterpart Jan Kees de Jager to fill him in about a semi-official policy meeting to which the Netherlands had not been invited. Mr De Jager was reassured that Friday’s talks in Luxembourg about the Greek debt crisis did not lead to any decisions. “Things can only be decided in the presence of all eurozone member states,” they said, according to a Dutch... [more]

Europe faces up to boomerang Greek debt chaos

Europe faced the spectre of Greek calls for new financial aid Saturday as Athens’ “catastrophic” finances returned to haunt stressed eurozone states. Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou urged “the EU in particular, to leave Greece in peace to do its job”, but Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou later warned that Athens may need more hard cash support. “We need to plan our next steps for 2012... [more]

Japan’s Iwate wins World Heritage endorsement

Japan’s Iwate prefecture, whose coastline was hard hit by the March 11 tsunami, on Saturday won endorsement for its historic Hiraizumi area to be listed as a World Heritage site, the government said. Japan’s Agency for Cultural Affairs announced that an International Council on Monuments and Sites panel recommended that the Buddhist architecture, gardens and archaeological sites in Hiraizumi be listed. UNESCO’s World Heritage... [more]

Eurozone mulling easier recovery terms for Greece

Eurozone members are debating milder recovery terms for debt-hitGreece as it struggles to stick to a harsh austerity plan, Greek media said Saturday after emergency talks in Luxembourg. The reports said Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou had flown to a “secret” meeting among G20 eurozone states that debated giving Athens more time to repay a 110-billion-euro ($157 billion) EU-IMF loan and easier deficit reduction targets. The... [more]

China says not deliberately seeking trade surplus with U.S

China reiterated on Friday that it is not deliberately seeking a trade surplus with the United States, Chinese Vice Finance Minister Zhu Guangyao said, days before talks with the United States. “China’s position is clear — that we are not deliberately pursuing a large trade surplus,” Zhu told a news briefing ahead of the annual Strategic and Economic Dialogue in Washington D.C. from Monday. “This is a mutually... [more]

Portugal raises $1.67B as it awaits bailout cash

Portugal has raised euro1.12 billion ($1.67 billion) in an auction of 3-month Treasury bills, a day after officials said the cash-strapped country had agreed on a euro78 billion bailout. The steep increase in the interest rate on the T-bills Wednesday underscored Portual’s financial plight as investors demanded a 4.65 percent interest rate_ up from 4.05 percent on the same debt two weeks ago. More positively, the government debt agency... [more]

Spyker forms Chinese alliance to save cash-strapped Saab

Swedish car maker Saab has agreed to form a strategic partnership with Chinese company Hawtai Motor, Dutch owner Spyker confirmed on Tuesday. Hawtai is to put some €150m into Saab – €120m in the form of share capital (29.9%) and the rest in a convertible bond. The two companies will also work together in both production and technological developments. The deal is still subject to approval from certain Chinese government agencies,... [more]

Pierre Cardin ready to sell business for 1bn euros

French fashion legend Pierre Cardin is ready to sell his group and will seek one billion euros (1.4 billion dollars), he said in an interview with the Wall Street Journal published Tuesday. “I want to sell it now,” Cardin, 88, told the US business daily. “I know I won’t be here in a few years and the business needs to continue.” The report noted that banks estimate the value of the group, founded in 1949, at... [more]

Portugal needs over 100 billion euros in aid

Portugal needs over 100 billion euros (89 billion pounds) in EU/IMF loans, including up to 10 billion euros for its banks, but there are doubts whether Brussels will allow the bailout to exceed its initial target of 80 billion euros, Diario Economico newspaper said on Tuesday. The business daily said the technical team from the European Commission, European Central Bank and International Monetary Fund working in Lisbon had concluded that... [more]

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