Kamis, April 29, 2010

Spain downgraded, Europe debt crisis widens

Spain downgraded, Europe debt crisis widens

Germany says aid for Greece could be passed by May 7



ap
, On Wednesday April 28, 2010, 2:25 pm

BERLIN -- Europe's debt crisis spread its contagion to another country Wednesday when a major credit agency downgraded Spain's credit rating, even as Germany grudgingly moved closer to bailing out Greece from imminent collapse.

Chancellor Angela Merkel said Germany would speed up the approval process and could have its share of a euro45 billion joint bailout from other euro countries and the International Monetary fund for Greece rushed through parliament by next week.

That would beat a May 19 deadline when Greece has debt coming due -- debt it can't pay without the money promised.

"It's absolutely clear that the negotiations between the Greekgovernment and the European Commission and the IMF have to be accelerated now," Merkel said ahead of a meeting with IMF head Dominique Strauss-Kahn. "We hope that they will be completed in the next days."

Merkel's remarks and a promise from Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble that the package could be signed, sealed and delivered -- provided Greece promised to tough austerity measures -- helped shore up confidence in the markets that the country would not suffer a disastrous default that would make borrowing more expensive for governments across Europe.

But the downgrade for Spain and a lack of clarity about how much money Greece will really need unsettled investors again -- the IMF's managing director Dominique Strauss-Kahn would not confirm reports he had told German parliamentary deputies that Greece would need euro120 billion over several years.

A lot is at stake -- some say that the very future of the euro project hangs in the balance. At the very least, aGreek debt default that could also tear holes in the balance sheets of European banks holding Greek bonds.

More broadly, growing worries about shaky government finances in Europe could force indebted governments to pay more and more of their budgets to cover interest costs, crimping spending and stimulus for the economy and pushing them to increase taxes. That could make it harder for Europe to maintain its shaky economic recovery.

Once again though, the main actors in the Greek debt drama failed to provide complete clarity -- until that emerges the markets could well suffer further turmoil.

Royal Bank of Scotland analyst Jacques Cailloux said the statements by Merkel, Strauss-Kahn and European Central Bank president Jean-Claude Trichet "failed to provide groundbreaking information" and warned that Europe risked the "biggest coordination failure in modern history."

Until the German parliament backs the release of the funds, the markets will remain "very sceptical" that the powers that be have got a handle on the crisis, said Cailloux.

Merkel's government has balked at handing over the Germans' taxpayers money to a country that has admitted has massaged its debt figures for years -- and key regional elections in Germany on May 9 have not helped a swift resolution.

Merkel stressed that Germany was still insisting Greece commit to cutbacks.

"Germany will make its contribution but Greece has to make its contribution," she said.

Merkel would not comment on how much money Greece would need in the long run. "What is known ... is that it will be a three year program..." she said. "Let us talk about numbers when the program is finalized."

The clock is ticking -- Greece has to pay off some euro8.5 billion worth of debts by May 19, but cannot raise the money in the markets given current sky-high borrowing costs -- at one stage earlier, the yield on the two-year Greek bond spiked up to a massive 23 percent.

That means it needs its 15 partners in the eurozone and the International Monetary Fund to cough up the money promised earlier this month, including euro8.4 billion from Germany.

The downgrade for Spain was an ominous new blow, coming just as markets were recovering their poise after the double shock Tuesday of a Standard & Poor's downgrade for Greece -- to junk status -- and Portugal.

Greece and Portugal, up to now the focus of alarm, are relative economic minnows; Spain's economy is four times the size of Greece and is considered by some to be too big to rescue.

Though its overall debt burden is fairly modest at around 53 percent of national income compared to 115 percent for Greece, the country is running a high budget deficit and has done less than others to get a handle on its public finances.

The agency said it was cutting Spain's rating to AA from AA+ amid concerns about the country's growth prospects following the collapse of a construction bubble.

"We now believe that the Spanish economy's shift away from credit-fuelled economic growth is likely to result in a more protracted period of sluggish activity than we previously assumed," Standard & Poor's credit analyst Marko Mrsnik said.

Spain still has an investment grade rating but could wind up paying more to borrow and may find itself under pressure to take tougher steps to cut spending.

"Given its lack of competitiveness and the grim outlook for domestic demand the government will need to announce further fiscal measures if it is to make serious inroads into the deficit," said Ben May, European economist at Capital Economics. "Today's announcement may increase the pressure on it to do this sooner rather than later."

Speaking during a cabinet meeting Wednesday, Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou said that every EU member must "prevent the fire that intensified through the international crisis from spreading to the entire European and global economy."

Papandreou insisted Greece was determined to bring its economy into order. "We will show that we do not run away. In difficult times we can perform -- and we are performing -- miracles," he said, adding that "our government is determined to correct a course that has been followed for decades in a very short time."

Investors appeared to anticipate Athens would eventually have to default or restructure its debt payments at some point even if the bailout gets it past May 19, when it has debt coming due.

Authorities in Athens halted short-selling of stocks for two months, helping the exchange finally climb after a five-day losing streak. The ban will remain in force until June 28. It closed up 0.63 percent at 1,707.35.

Associated Press Writers Verena Schmitt-Roschmann, Melissa Eddy and David Rising in Berlin, Barry Hatton in Lisbon, Nicholas Paphitis and AP Television Producer Nathalie Rendevski Savaricas in Athens contributed to this report. Business Writer Pan Pylas contribued from London.

http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Spain-downgraded-Europe-debt-apf-1816859080.html?x=0

Rabu, April 28, 2010

Europe debt crisis spreads to Portugal

Europe debt crisis spreads to Portugal


Germany unwilling to help Greece out unconditionally: FMPlay VideoAFP – Germany unwilling to help Greece out unconditionally: FM
RELATED QUOTES
^DJI10,991.99-213.04
^GSPC1,183.71-28.34
^IXIC2,471.47-51.48
Unemployed school teachers chant slogans at an anti-government demonstration staged by civil servants outside the Greek Parliament in Athens, Tuesday,AP – Unemployed school teachers chant slogans at an anti-government demonstration staged by civil servants …

ATHENS – Greece was pushed to the brink of a financial abyss and started dragging another eurozone country — Portugal — down with it Tuesday, fueling fears of a continent-wide debt meltdown.

Stocks around the world tanked when ratings agency Standard & Poor's downgraded Greek bonds to junk status and downgraded Portugese bonds two notches, showing investors that Greece's financial contagion is spreading.

Major European exchanges fell more than 2.5 percent, and on Wall Street, the Dow Jones industrial average finished down more than 200 points. The euro slid more than 1 percent to nearly an eight-month low.

"We have the makings of a market crisis here," said Neil Mackinnon,global macro strategist at VTB Capital.

Greece is struggling with massive debt, and with prospects for economic growth weak it could end up in default. Its 15 eurozone partners and the International Monetary Fund have tried to calm the markets with a euro45 billion rescue package, but it hasn't worked.

Standard & Poor's warned that holders of Greek debt could take large losses in any restructuring, but a greater worry is that Greece's debt crisis is mushrooming to other debt-laden members of the eurozone.

One bailout can be dealt with but two will be stretching it, and there are fears that other weak economies could be pulled down in the Greek spiral — including Europe's fifth-largest, Spain. Can Germany, Europe's effective paymaster, continue to bail out the weaker members of the eurozone?

The crisis threatens to undermine the euro and make it harder and more expensive for all eurozone governments to borrow money.

It has also disrupted cooperation between eurozone governments, withGermany resisting the idea of bailing out Greece unless strict conditions are met.

Many investors think Greece will have enough money to avoid default in the coming weeks, but the future is cloudier.

Both Standard & Poor's and the Greek finance ministry insisted that the country will have enough money to make the euro8.5 billion bond payments due on May 19.

Even if it does, Greece faces years of austerity with living standards sharply reduced. Standard & Poor's warned that the Greek economy was unlikely to be as big as it was in 2008 for another decade.

Junk status sinks Greece's hopes even deeper. Losing investment-grade status for its bonds means that Greece will have to pay higher costs to borrow if it taps debt markets again, and increases the chances that existing debt will have to be restructured.

"The latest developments mean that the chances of Greece solving this situation without restructuring its debts are now dim," said Diego Iscaro, senior economist at IHS Global Insight.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel reiterated her position that Greece should first conclude the current negotiations with the IMF and the European Union about austerity measures for the coming years before receiving the international loan package.

Speaking at an election rally Tuesday afternoon, Merkel said it is appropriate to tell Greeks, "You have to economize, you have to become fair, you have to be honest; if not, nobody can help you," according to theGerman news agency DAPD.

A government spokesman said Tuesday evening he could not tell if Merkel was at that point aware of the latest downgrade. He declined to be named in line with government policy.

The FTSE 100 index of leading British shares closed down 2.6 percent, Germany's DAX slid 2.7 percent and the French CAC-40 in France ended 3.8 percent lower.

Greek and Portuguese stocks were pounded — down 6.7 percent and 5.4 percent, respectively — while their market borrowing costs went through the roof. The interest rate for Greek two-year bonds jumped to a massive 18 percent.

The interest rate gap, or spread, between Portugese and benchmark German 10-year bonds rose about half a percentage point Tuesday to reach its highest point since the euro came into circulation. The higher the gap, the less confidence in Portugal; its bonds on Tuesday had an interest rate 5.86 percentage points higher than German bonds.

Both the Portugese and Greek governments have imposed budget cutbacks against political resistance from unions at home. Markets have been skeptical that they can push through enough cuts, given political resistance, to put their finances in order.

Both governments responded with alarm at the downgrades.

"This decision will not help markets to calm down, but will, on the contrary, contribute for their turbulence," Portugese Finance Minister Fernando Teixeira dos Santos said.

Greek Finance Minister George Papaconstantinou said the downgrade "does not reflect the real state of our economy, nor the fiscal situation, nor the ongoing negotiations which have the very realistic propects that they will be completed successfully in the next few days."

Papaconstantinou said Greece will pull through.

"One wishes that Europe had acted a little differently. Three and four months ago we were saying that the mechanism must be ready and it must be detailed, that the markets must know what exactly is going. Unfortunately, for a series of political reasons, we are down to the wire," he said.

The crisis has highlighted the eurozone's inability to keep governments from undermining the euro by running up big debts. Rules that limit deficits to 3 percent of gross domestic product have been widely flouted, and EU officials are talking about ways to strengthen them.

___

AP Business Writer Pan Pylas contributed from London.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100428/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_greece_financial_crisis

IHSG Tertekan, Anjlok 50 Poin

IHSG Tertekan, Anjlok 50 Poin
Kekhawatiran investor meningkat akibat turunnya peringkat obligasi Yunani dan Portugal.
RABU, 28 APRIL 2010, 09:41 WIB
Arinto Tri Wibowo
Pialang sedih setelah BEI menghentikan perdagangan (AP Photo/Achmad Ibrahim)

VIVAnews - Indeks harga saham gabungan (IHSG) di Bursa Efek Indonesia (BEI) dibuka melemah tajam 50,29 poin (1,72 persen) ke level 2.889 pada awal transaksi Rabu 28 April 2010.

Penurunan indeks tersebut sesuai perkiraan beberapa analis yang menyatakan IHSG berpotensi melanjutkan pelemahan pada transaksi hari ini karena masih adanya tekanan jual oleh investor.

"Pada perdagangan hari ini IHSG diperkirakan turun," kata tim riset PT Reliance Securities Tbk dalam ulasannya yang diterima VIVAnews di Jakarta.

Menurut tim riset itu, kekhawatiran investor kembali meningkat akibat diturunkannya peringkat obligasi Yunani dan Portugal.

Namun, Reliance menilai penurunan hanya akan bersifat sementara, sehingga saat terjadi pelemahan IHSG, pelaku pasar dapat membeli saham dengan harga lebih murah.

Di bursa Asia, indeks juga bergerak melemah dengan Hang Seng turun 306,44 poin (1,44 persen) ke posisi 20.955,35, Nikkei 225 menjadi 10.935,99 atau melemah 276,67 poin (2,47 persen), dan Straits Times terkoreksi 42,31 poin (1,41 persen) ke posisi 2.949,37.

Sementara itu, di bursa Wall Street pada perdagangan Selasa sore waktu setempat atau Rabu dini hari WIB, indeks Dow Jones melemah 213,04 poin (1,9 persen) ke level 10.991,99, Nasdaq turun 51,48 poin (2,04 persen) menjadi 2.471,47, dan Standard & Poor's 500 terkoreksi 28,34 poin (2,34 persen) ke posisi 1.183,71. (hs)

arinto.wibowo@vivanews.com

• VIVAnews

Senin, April 26, 2010

Jika Perang, Cadangan Energi RI Cuma Cukup untuk 20 Hari

Senin, 26/04/2010 16:34 WIB
Jika Perang, Cadangan Energi RI Cuma Cukup untuk 20 Hari
Ramadhian Fadillah - detikNews

Jakarta
- Walau mempunyai banyak sumber daya alam, namun cadangan energi Indonesia mengkhawatirkan. Jika Indonesia menghadapi peprangan, cadangan energi dalam negeri hanya cukup untuk 20 hari pertempuran.

"Energi kita hanya cukup untuk 20 hari, bandingkan dengan Singapura yang cadangan energinya 120 hari," ujar Kasubdit Evaluasi Pelaksana kebijakan Dirjen Strahan Kementrian Pertahanan, Kol (Tek) Sigit Priyono.

Hal itu dikatakan Sigit dalam diskusi di Kemhan, Jl Medan Merdeka Barat, Jakarta Pusat, Senin (26/4/2010).

Sigit menambahkan, energi yang dimaksud adalah semua energi yang bisa mendukung pertempuran seperti BBM maupun nuklir.

Selain masalah energi, TNI juga belum memiliki kekuatan yang merata. Konsentrasi pasukan masih terpusat di Pulau Jawa. Bahkan untuk di Indonesia Timur, di sebagian Maluku, ada wilayah yang seolah-olah kosong melompong dan tidak tercover oleh radar TNI AU.

"Sementara ini kita menyiasatinya dengan radar dari angkatan lain dan juga bantuan radar sipil," pungkasnya.

(rdf/anw)


Minggu, April 25, 2010

Twitter Beli Perusahaan SMS Cloudhopper

Twitter Beli Perusahaan SMS Cloudhopper

Minggu, 25 April 2010 | 10:08 WIB
CLOUDHOPPER.COM

WASHINGTON, KOMPAS.com - Twitter membeli Cloudhopper, sebuah perusahaan start up yang mengembangkan software dan infrastruktur untuk mengubah pesan Twitter menjadi SMS. Solusi yang dibuat Cluodhopper telah digunakan di berbagai operator seluler di berbagai belahan dunia.

"Teknologi buatan Clodhopper digunakan di bergaia kampane berbasis SMS dan MMS yang paling besar dan sukses di Amerika Utara, Eropa, dan Afrika," ujar Kevin Thau, mobile platform director Twitter dalam blog. Akuisis tersebut diumumkan Jumat (23/4/2010) lalu.

Akuisisi ini sesuai dengan visi Twitter yang pada awalnya memang disiapkan agar bisa diakses melalui ponsel. Itulah mengapa Twitter hanya mengizinkan pesan dengan jumlah karakter maksimal 140 kurang dari batas karakter SMS standar yang umumnya 160 karakter.

Cloudhopper dirikan oleh Joe Lauer pada akhir 2008. Dengan akuisisi ini, Lauer akan bekerja sama dengan Thau untuk mendukung dan mengembangkan bisnis Twitter lewat SMS ke berbagai belahan dunia.


http://tekno.kompas.com/read/xml/2010/04/25/10085924/Twitter.Beli.Perusahaan.SMS.Cloudhopper-8

Penulis: WAH | Editor: wah |

Sabtu, April 24, 2010

Feds shuts down bank owned by Giannoulias

Feds shuts down bank owned by Giannoulias


Illinois Democratic senatorial candidate Alexi Giannoulias pauses as he reads a statement about the failing and takeover of his family's bank, the BroAP – Illinois Democratic senatorial candidate Alexi Giannoulias pauses as he reads a statement about the failing …

CHICAGO – Regulators shut down the bank owned by Illinois TreasurerAlexi Giannoulias' family on Friday, setting up an expected but daunting challenge in his bid to keep President Barack Obama's old Senate seat in Democratic hands.

Broadway Bank, which was heavy into real estate loans and lost $75 million last year, had been given until Monday to raise about $85 million in new capital, but the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. announced at the close of business Friday that Broadway was among seven banks, all in Illinois, that had failed.

Giannoulias, 34, worked at the bank as a senior loan officer until he ran for treasurer four years ago. He has tried to take some of the political and public relations sting out of a collapse, acknowledging the bank was likely to fail but blaming the bad economy. He also said it was financially healthy when he left four years ago.

Late Friday, Giannoulias voice broke as he talked about the collapse and vowed to work harder in his bid to win the Senate race. He said he knows first hand the impact that the economy has had on people and businesses in Illinois.

"There was no bailout for my father's bank. It is an incredibly sad and heartbreaking day for me and for my family. This bank has helped thousands of people when no one else would give them a chance," he said.

His Republican opponent, U.S. Rep. Mark Kirk, has made the bank's finances a central issue in the Senate race.

"While years of risky lending schemes, hot money investments and loans to organized crime led to today's failure, it's a sad day for Broadway Bank employees who may lose their jobs due to Mr. Giannoulias' reckless business practices," Kirk spokeswoman Kirsten Kukowski said in a statement Friday night.

Regulators planned to work through the night to close out Broadway's books and the branches would open normally on Saturday, said FDIC ombudsman's office spokesman Rickey McCullough.

Some leading Republicans seemed reticent to score political points over the closure immediately after the announcement. Illinois Republican Party chairman Pat Brady declined to comment, as did former Republican Gov. Jim Thompson.

"I know Alexi," Thompson said. "I'm sure this is not an easy time for him."

Giannoulias' campaign and Democratic insiders have maintained he can still beat Kirk, a moderate Republican and an officer in the Naval Reserves. Democrats outnumber Republicans in Illinois, and Obama remains a popular figure in the state.

And on Friday, the White House said Obama intends to help Illinois Democrats "up and down the ballot." Giannoulias campaign chairman, U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin, said Friday before the bank failure that the White House has asked about the state of Giannoulias' campaign. A spokeswoman contacted Friday evening said Durbin would not comment further.

Joey O'Neill, a Broadway customer for 20 years said Friday that he won't hold the bank's failure against Giannoulias.

"They've always been good to me," O'Neill said before the bank closure was announced.

Giannoulias' family could collect millions in tax refunds by writing off Broadway Bank's losses. Giannoulias said he wouldn't take advantage of a special provision made available in the stimulus bill for writing off businesses losses. He couldn't say if others in his family would, but said his family "will be taking a massive financial loss."

Kirk — who raised $2.2 million in the first quarter of the year compared to $1.2 million for Giannoulias — also has criticized some decisions made while Giannoulias worked at the bank, including revelations that it had loaned $20 million to two convicted felons.

The campaign portrayed the loans as old news that Giannoulias has addressed before. He has said the bank's relationship with one man started before he worked there.

But with the election nearly seven months away, the campaign has time on its side to try to repair any damage and change the focus of the race — and help Democrats avoid the embarrassing loss of another high-profile Senate seat.

"When I decided to run, I knew it was going to be tough," Giannoulias said this month in a speech to a Chicago civic club. "Examining my record is one thing, but putting your family in the line of fire is quite another. Believe me, it's not easy. But I didn't get into this race because I thought it was going to be easy."

Giannoulias said Friday that the bank's troubles are not what voters talk to him about when he travels the state. He says they are concerned with jobs and the economy.

All of Broadway's deposit accounts, excluding certain brokered deposits, were transferred to MB Financial. Former Broadway employees would become employees of MB Financial Bank, McCullough said.

Demetris Giannoulias, Alexi Giannoulias' brother and the bank's chief financial officer, issued a statement that said the family "fought to carry out the vision my father had when he founded Broadway Bank 30 years ago, but our bank — like many businesses — has struggled during these challenging times."

Six other banks also were closed in Illinois, the FDIC announced. Customer accounts are insured by the FDIC up to $250,000.

___

Associated Press Writer Michael Tarm contributed to this report from Chicago.

___

http://fdic.gov/

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100424/ap_on_bi_ge/us_illinois_senate_troubled_bank

Jumat, April 23, 2010

Utang Yunani Membuat Lemas Indeks Saham Asia

Utang Yunani Membuat Lemas Indeks Saham Asia
Krisis utang di Yunani dikhawatirkan bisa mewabah ke negara-negara lain
KAMIS, 22 APRIL 2010, 15:40 WIB
Renne R.A Kawilarang
Seorang fotografer mengambil gambar di depan grafik indeks saham di Korsel (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon)

VIVAnews - Indeks harga saham di sejumlah bursa utama di Asia bergerak turun menyusul cenderung stagnannya indeks di Wall Street. Penurunan terjadi di tengah cemasnya para investor atas krisis utang Yunani, yang bisa melemahkan kepercayaan akan pemulihan ekonomi global.

Dalam transaksi Kamis sore, indeks Nikkei 225 di Jepang turun 137,83 poin (1,2 persen) menjadi 10.952,22. Investor di sana kurang terpengaruh atas kabar bahwa tingkat ekspor Jepang Maret lalu kembali dan ini merupakan kenaikan selama empat bulan berturut-turut.

Indeks Hang Seng di Hong Kong melemah 0,7 persen menjadi 21.360,04 dan indeks Kospi di bursa Korea Selatan turun 0,9 persen menjadi 1.732,01. Bursa di Australia, Taiwan, dan Thailand juga melemah.

Menurut pengamat, para investor di Asia kali ini was-was dengan data bahwa beban utang yang ditanggung Yunani ternyata sangat besar saat pemerintah tengah memulai pembicaraan dengan para pejabat keuangan Eropa dan Dana Moneter Internasional yang sudah menyiapkan pinjaman talangan.

Krisis utang di Yunani dalam beberapa bulan terakhir menimbulkan keresahan karena bisa mewabah ke negara-negara lain sekaligus meruntuhkan kepercayaan atas nilai tukar euro.

"Situasinya dalam jangka waktu semalam sudah kian buruk dan menimbulkan sentimen yang agak negatif," kata Tim Condon, pengamat dari ING Financial Markets di Singapura. Menurut dia, program dari IMF tidak langsung dianggap bermujarab bagi Yunani, seperti yang diperkirakan banyak kalangan.

Dalam perdagangan valuta, nilai tukar dolar atas yen turun dari 93,15 menjadi 92,85. Kurs dolar atas euro pun menurun, dari US$1,3383 menjadi US$1,3388 per euro. (Associated Press)

• VIVAnews