Sweeping spending cuts and tax increases will be required across the industrialized world
November 6th, 2009 by tom | 0 Comments | Filed in Central banks, Daily News, Employment, Recession, Retail, Stocks and shares, UK Banks, UK employment, World Banks
Sweeping spending cuts and tax increases will be required across the industrialized world over the next decade to bring public finances under control following the economic crisis, the International Monetary Fund warned on Tuesday. The IMF projected that on current trends, even assuming some discretionary fiscal tightening next year, government debt in the advanced G20 economies would reach 118 per cent of gross domestic product in 2014.
The Fund warned against assuming that current low borrowing rates for these nations in the bond market would prevail forever, releasing research suggesting that the projected increase in government debt would result in a roughly 2 percentage point increase in government bond yields.
HSBC is to shed another 4 per cent of its UK workforce as pressure mounts across the banking industry to cut costs. The global bank said it would cut about 1,700 jobs in back-office functions, affecting mainly collections and credit card operations, in the next 12 to 18 months. The jobs would mostly be lost from regional centres in southern England. It also aims to add 400 to 500 jobs in Birmingham in that time. HSBC had previously announced the loss of 1,200 jobs in March and 500 in December last year. Of these, the bank said it had redeployed some 500 staff and would hope to redeploy a similar proportion from the latest round of job cuts.
Legal & General (LGIM) sought to defend itself against the idea of a break-up of its businesses as it reported its lowest level of quarterly sales figures for at least seven quarters on Tuesday.
The life and pensions said that keeping its annuity, protection and asset management businesses under one roof brought valuable “synergies” across all three.
Tim Breedon, chief executive, said that about 30 per cent of its new business either came from cross-selling or was business the company would not have won if it did not have all three elements.
Mr Breedon highlighted stronger-than-expected cash flow at the group and the performance of LGIM, the group’s asset management arm, which attracted net inflows of £12.2 bn ($20bn) over the first nine months, outstripping the £11.1 bn seen at M&G, Prudential’s asset management arm.
Marks and Spencer has confirmed it will start selling branded goods at its stores across the UK.
It will mean 400 household brands, such as Kellogg’s and Coca-Cola, will be sold alongside M&S’ own products in areas such laundry, beer and pet food.
The decision comes after successful trials in stores in the north-east and south-east of England.
The announcement came as M&S reported profits of £306.7 million for the six months to September.
The figure was little-changed on the profit of £307.8 million made in the same period last year.
Associated British Foods (ABF LN): The maker of Silver Spoon sugar reported a 12 percent rise in full-year group revenue. The company also said it’s cautious about the outlook for the U.K. consumer. The shares gained 5.5 pence, or 0.7 percent, to 833.
Aviva Plc (AV/ LN): The U.K. insurer raised 1.02 billion euros ($1.5 billion) selling stock in its Dutch insurance unit Delta Lloyd NV, pricing the shares near the low end of its forecast range after insurance companies slumped.
The U.K.’s biggest insurer by market value sold 63.5 million Delta Lloyd shares at 16 euros each. Aviva had sought 15.50 euros to 19 euros a share. Delta Lloyd will begin trading today in Amsterdam.
The shares rose 5.5 pence, or 1.4 percent, to 389.1.
British Airways Plc (BAY LN): Europe’s third-biggest carrier may face its first cabin-crew strike since 1997 before the end of the year as the union representing flight attendants at Europe’s third-largest airline prepares to vote on a walkout.
Members of the Unite union will meet on Dec. 14, by which time union leaders aim to have the results of a strike vote. The stock dropped 1.9 pence, or 1 percent to 179.9.
GlaxoSmithKline Plc (GSK LN): The U.K.’s largest drugmaker received a letter from Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal saying he was investigating allegations of price gouging, according to a faxed statement. The shares fell 3 pence, or 0.2 percent, to 1,247.
Cadbury Plc (CBRY LN): The U.K. confectioner is targeting an “unrealistic” price as a starting point for talks about a merger with Kraft Foods Inc., the Sunday Telegraph said, citing people it didn’t name. Kraft will probably make a hostile takeover bid if Cadbury’s management doesn’t support a tie-up. Reports have it that Kraft is preparing another bid for Cadbury which will be put to investors within the next 10 days. The newspaper did not say where it obtained the information. The stock fell 2.5 pence, or 0.3 percent, to 770.5.
DUTCH parcel firm TNT, which is trying to cash in on the disruption caused by the UK’s postal strikes, yesterday posted better-than-expected quarterly results due to cost-cutting and highlighted signs of revival in its business parcels arm. TNT, which has lobbied the government to allow it to launch a door-to-door postal service to challenge the strike-hit Royal Mail, said third quarter profits dipped 14.4 per cent to €179m (£162m), although margins recovered to nearly match last year’s levels. The group uses the Royal Mail for the so-called “final mile” of its British postal network, but has been trialling its own door-to-door letter deliveries in several areas including Merseyside, using orange-clad postmen. TNT said UK business-to-business parcel volumes had increased about 10 per cent in the few couple weeks since the strikes by the Communication Workers Union kicked in, but a spokesman said the rise had come too late to affect the third quarter numbers.
General Motors (GM) has cancelled plans to sell a majority stake in its European car business Opel, including its UK brand Vauxhall.
The US giant said in a statement that its board had made the decision because of "an improving business environment for GM over the past few months".
GM had agreed to sell Opel and Vauxhall to Canadian car parts firm Magna.
It added that it would now be seeking aid for Opel from the German government and other European states. GM added that it had also come to its decision because of the importance of Opel and Vauxhall to its global strategy. General Motors (GM) has confirmed that it plans to cut 10,000 jobs across its European car unit Opel, which includes the Vauxhall brand in the UK. The announcement comes a day after GM said it was cancelling its deal to sell Opel to Canadian car parts firm Magna. Unions in Germany said workers would begin walk-outs from Thursday in protest at GM’s decision.
The German government, which had backed the sale of Opel, demanded GM repayment of a 1.5bn euro ($2.2bn; £1.3bn) loan.
The pound fell for a second day against the dollar and snapped a five-day gain versus the euro on speculation that forced asset sales by banks may weaken the country’s financial institutions.
Billionaire Warren Buffett’s investment firm is to take control of the second-biggest US railroad, in what is said to be his biggest deal yet.
Berkshire Hathaway agreed to buy the 77.4% of Burlington Northern Santa Fe (BNSF) it does not already own for about $26bn (£16bn) in cash and stock.
BNSF is the biggest US hauler of products such as corn and coal.
Mr Buffett said that the deal was "an all-in wager on the economic future of the United States". Including past investment and the assumption of $10bn of BNSF debt, the deal is valued at $44bn. Warren Buffett on Tuesday struck the biggest deal of his life with the $26.6bn purchase of Burlington Northern Santa Fe, one of the largest US railroad operators, in what the billionaire investor called an “all-in wager” on America’s economic future. The cash-and-shares deal by Mr Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway, which already has a 22.6 per cent stake in BNSF, caps a long search by the legendary investor for an “elephant” deal to deploy his vast cash pile. The takeover deepens Mr Buffett’s exposure to the US-focused old-economy sectors that have long been the backbone of his empire alongside financial services, and underlines his confidence in a rebound in domestic growth

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Tags: Associated British Foods, Attorney General, Aviva PLC, Bank, Bank of England, Berkshire Hathaway, BNSF, British Airways Plc, British Economy, Burlington Northern Santa Fe, Cadbury Plc, Coca-Cola, Credit Crunch, Delta Lloyd, Economics, Economy, Employment, Financial News, General Motors, GlaxoSmithKline Plc, GM, HSBC, International Monetary Fund, Kellogg's, Kraft Foods Inc, Legal & General, LGIM, M&G, M&S, Marks and Spencer, Money, Opel, Prudential, Recession, Retail, Richard Blumenthal, Royal Mail, Silver Spoon, Sunday Telegraph, Tim Breedon, TNT, UK Banks, UK Economy, UK government, UK Recession, Unite, Vauxhall, Warren Buffett
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