Stemcor Holdings Ltd. said its creditors voted to approve the U.K. steel trader’s plan to restructure its debt, Bloomberg News reported. Lenders voted “overwhelmingly” in favor of the plan, according to Charles Armitstead, a spokesman for Stemcor employed by Pendomer Communications LLP. The debt deal, which includes converting $1.1 billion of credit facilities into term loans and borrowing an additional $1.15 billion, will be taken to a U.K. court for approval this month, he said.
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Resources Per Country
- Albania
- Austria
- Belarus
- Belgium
- Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Bulgaria
- Croatia
- Czech Republic
- Denmark
- Estonia
- Finland
- France
- Germany
- Gibraltar
- Greece
- Guernsey
- Hungary
- Iceland
- Ireland
- Isle of Man
- Italy
- Jersey
- Kosovo
- Latvia
- Liechtenstein
- Lithuania
- Luxembourg
- Macedonia
- Malta
- Moldova
- Monaco
- Montenegro
- Netherlands
- Norway
- Poland
- Portugal
- Romania
- Russia
- San Marino
- Serbia
- Slovakia
- Slovenia
- Spain
- Sweden
- Switzerland
- Ukraine
- United Kingdom
- Vatican City
France and Germany have pledged to reach a deal on a European financial transaction tax by the end of May in a bid to give some impetus to efforts to find accord on the issue, the Financial Times reported. But the two governments have yet to bridge divisions on how the so-called “Robin Hood” levy would be applied in the 11 EU states that have signed up to implement the tax. François Hollande, the French president, said after a joint Franco-German government meeting in Paris that trying to find the perfect formula for an FTT would only help those who wanted to neutralise it.
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Insolvency practitioners are facing a crackdown after the Government proposed to cap the “excessive fees” they charge creditors of failed companies, The Times reported. The Insolvency Service has started a consultation on whether to stop insolvency practitioners charging by the hour . They could instead be forced to fix their fees as a percentage of the property dealt with or the amounts realised from a liquidation. The regulator said that the changes could be the difference between creditors getting a fair deal or losing out through “excessive charges”.
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The International Monetary Fund has urged the European Central Bank to consider cutting interest rates to below zero as it warned that deflation in the eurozone was a key new risk facing the world economy, The Guardian reported. In its assessment of global prospects published ahead of the meeting of G20 finance ministers in Sydney, the IMF said recovery from the deep global recession had been disappointingly weak and urged stronger co-operation between developed and developing countries to promote growth and financial stability.
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The euro zone's struggling countries are making progress in an effort to reform their economies and boost competitiveness, while other parts of the bloc risk lagging behind, a European Central Bank executive board member said, The Wall Street Journal reported. Peter Praet also said that the job of reforming wasn't only limited to the countries that have suffered the worst during the euro zone's four-year old debt crisis, but rather all countries in the bloc need to change. Mr.
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A court in the German town of Bonn has begun hearings in the insolvency case of utilities discounter Teldafax. Three of the firm’s former executives stand accused of running a Ponzi-like scheme to finance the business, Deutsch Welle reported. Teldafax's former senior executives Klaus Bath, Gernot Koch and Michael Josten were facing charges of delayed filing of insolvency, unlawful book-keeping and organized fraud to cover up a bankruptcy, the state court in Bonn announced ahead of opening the trial on Tuesday.
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Codere SA (CDR) formally rejected a final restructuring proposal from bondholders less than three months before the Spanish gaming company’s deadline to agree to a restructuring or request full creditor protection, Bloomberg News reported. The plan bondholders submitted Feb. 2 doesn’t treat shareholders equally by allowing minority shareholders to have 3.2 percent of Codere and the founding Martinez Sampedro family 14.3 percent, the company said in a statement. The proposed debt structure is not the best solution for the company, which needs to lower its interest payments, Codere said.
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House prices in Germany’s biggest cities are overvalued as much as 25 per cent, the Bundesbank warned on Monday, stoking fresh fears that a wave of international investment has helped to fuel a property bubble in the eurozone’s largest economy, the Financial Times reported. The German central bank said that residential real estate prices in 125 cities rose by 6.25 per cent on average last year. In October, it reported that property prices in the biggest German cities were 20 per cent overvalued, suggesting the problem is getting worse.
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Austria has not ruled out letting nationalised lender Hypo Alpe Adria go bust even though this option poses many risks, Finance Minister Michael Spindelegger told parliament on Monday, Reuters reported. He was speaking after ratings agency Moody's fired a shot across the government's bows late on Friday by downgrading the bank and its home province of Carinthia. "I do not exclude any option but I warn against shooting from the hip," Spindelegger told a debate about the government's handling of the bank it had to nationalise in 2009.
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The eurozone's banks are about to get greater insight into the European Central Bank's landmark review of their books, as national experts and their advisers meet in Frankfurt on Monday to hammer down details of the next phase of the tests. The ECB is carrying out a wide-ranging review of 128 of the region's largest banks in an effort to address lingering doubts about their health before it becomes their supervisor in November.
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