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European Business News (96-06-17)European Business News (EBN) Directory - Previous Article - Next ArticleFrom: The European Business News Server at <http://www.ebn.co.uk/>Page last updated June 17 11:00 CETCONTENTS
[01] Russian share prices jump as investors bet on YeltsinRussia's stock market was sharply higher in early trading Monday, boosted by expectations that President Boris Yeltsin will be able to patch together a coalition to win the second round of presidential elections, expected in July.Traders said blue chip stocks, which are expected to benefit from any future buying by western fund managers, were posting the biggest gains. AO Lukoil, the country's largest oil company, was trading at $9.33, compared to $8.73 at the close of trading Friday. Mosenergo, a favorite of western managers, traded at $0.87, compared to $0.78 late Friday. Irkutskenergo, was at $0.78, compared to $0.67 on Friday. Though he apparently got a halfhearted endorsement from voters Sunday, Yeltsin was immediately at work Monday to win over a key ally for a climactic showdown - a two-man runoff against his Communist rival for Russia's presidency. With 82% of the vote counted, 35% of voters were backing Yeltsin, whose political and economic reforms have also spawned crime and corruption. Zyuganov, who promises a return to the global might and controlled economy of the Soviet era, had 32%, the Central Election Commission reported. [02] German M3 growth doesn't pose inflation threat, says BundesbankGermany's M3 money supply is still growing too rapidly, but it doesn't pose a threat of resurgent inflation at this time, the Deutsche Bundesbank says in its June monthly report published Monday.And despite the high rates of growth in M3 thus far in 1996, the Bundesbank stresses that 'the liquidity situation in the economy is in no way exceptionally high.' Indeed, 'from the monetary side, there isn't any threat at this time of inflationary pressures,' the Bundesbank said. 1996 budget deficit projections by the Bundesbank are more negative than the government's forecasts. In its June monthly report published Monday, the German central bank projected that the country's budget deficit would near 4% of gross domestic product (GDP) in 1996, well beyond a requirement that a nation's deficit-to- GDP ratio be 3% or less for entry into the planned 1999 European currency union. [03] US and China push anti-piracy talks to the brink of sanctionsU.S. and Chinese trade negotiators went down to the wire on Monday, apparently reaching an agreement on copyright piracy just under a deadline for imposing sanctions.An agreement was likely, the official Xinhua News Agency reported shortly after a noon (0400 GMT) deadline imposed by Washington. Progress has been made during the past two days of talks, it said. Acting U.S. Trade Representative Charlene Barshefsky went to meet with Vice Premier Li Lanqing in the early afternoon, said a U.S. official who declined to be identified. Barshefsky earlier told reporters she planned to meet with Li. A state department official said such a meeting would be a strong indication an agreement had been reached. Negotiators worked until 2:30 a.m. (1830 GMT) and then resumed the talks later Monday morning. [04] UK supermarket forges alliance with British AirwaysFood retailer J. Sainsbury PLC Monday launched a customer loyalty card that allows shoppers to earn air miles on British Airways.The 'Reward Card' is seen as a defense against a loyalty card launched June 3 by Tesco PLC, another food retailer, that functions like a cash card and pays 5% interest on unspent balances. That card was launched in alliance with National Westminster Bank. [05] German upper house blocks telecoms billThe upper house of parliament Friday blocked a proposed law aimed at opening Germany's telecommunications market to competition by 1998, saying it does not give states enough input in drawing up the new rules.The bill, passed late Thursday by the law-making lower house, the Bundestag, now goes to a mediating committee, expected to meet June 20. A lengthy delay could cause problems for Deutsche Telekom, which plans to begin selling shares in November in Germany's biggest ever privatization. [06] BA and American Airlines link faces scrutinyBritish Airway PLC's proposed link with U.S. carrier American Airlines is facing U.K. regulatory scrutiny for the first time as the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) confirmed Friday that Secretary Ian Lang has written to the Office Of Fair Trading to ask if there is a case for investigating the alliance.Previously, industry observers had believed that no U.K. regulatory body had the authority to approve or reject the proposed agreement between the airlines to coordinate passenger and cargo activity between the U.S. and Europe. [07] UK Serious Fraud Office investigates losses at SumitomoU.K.'s Serious Fraud Office (SFO) has launched an investigation into Japan's Sumitomo Corp. at the request of Britain's leading watchdog the Securities and Investments Board (SIB), an SFO spokeswoman told AP-Dow Jones Friday.Late Thursday, Sumitomo said it might have to absorb losses of $1.8 billion because of unauthorized trading in the U.K. and the U.S. over a 10-year period by its former head of copper trading. 'Following contact with the SIB, the SFO has taken up an investigation in conjunction with the City of London police,' the spokeswoman said. [08] Finnair's profit jumps 27% to 533m markkaaThe national airline Finnair reported Friday that its profit jumped by more than 27 percent in the last fiscal year, to 533 million markkaa ( 113 million dollars).The company said that the main reasons for the increase in the fiscal year that ended in March were a 10-percent increase in passenger traffic, to 6 million people, and a 5-percent increase in cargo transport. The profits came on revenues of 7.18 billion markkaa (dlrs 1.52 billion), up from 6.65 billion markkaa (dlrs 1.41 billion). From the European Business News (EBN) Server at http://www.ebn.co.uk/European Business News (EBN) Directory - Previous Article - Next Article |