Hopes of securing agreement on reforms to the eurozone's bailout package will go down to the wire on Tuesday after the warring partners in Slovakia's ruling coalition failed to reach a deal on approving the plans, Guardian.co.uk reported. Despite threatening to quit if there was no compromise, prime minister Iveta Radicova will resume talks with her coalition partners ahead of the planned vote on expanding the powers of the euro's safety net in parliament later on Tuesday.
Read more
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
New bankruptcy provisions reducing the period of applying for discharge from bankruptcy from 12 to five years and providing for the automatic discharge of bankruptcy after 12 years have been commenced by the Minister for Justice, the Irish Times reported. Alan Shatter announced that the new measures, contained in the Civil Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2011, came into force Monday. Other, mainly technical, improvements in bankruptcy law have been in force since the beginning of August.
Read more
The National Asset Management Agency, Ireland's state-run "bad bank", has put two loan portfolios worth a total of 800 million euros ($1.1 billion) on the market, a source familiar with the matter said on Monday. The source told Reuters that NAMA was being advised by property consultancy Savills on the disposal of about 200 million euros of loans that had been made to housing and hotel developer Donal Mulryan. Separately, real estate consultancy CBRE was marketing about 600 million euros worth of loans to property developer Cyril Dennis. NAMA, CBRE and Savills all declined to comment.
Read more
Norske Skogindustrier ASA, the second-largest newsprint producer, is planning to sell assets and issue debt backed by its accounts receivable to stave off a default that credit markets judge is a 93 percent certainty, Bloomberg Businessweek reported. The Norwegian papermaker is in talks with potential buyers of at least 200 million kroner ($35 million) of assets it considers non-core and plans to raise as much as 125 million euros ($169 million) from the securitized debt transaction, Norske Skog Chief Financial Officer Audun Roeneid said in a telephone interview.
Read more
Trading in Dexia's stock was suspended Thursday as governments and the bank's management scrambled to figure out what to do with the Franco-Belgian lender, The Wall Street Journal reported. It has been clear for days that the bank would have to be broken up, given its heavy exposure to Greek and Italian sovereign debt—a factor that has made other financial institutions wary of lending to Dexia. But details of the plan have yet to be agreed upon.
Read more
Greece would be in much better shape now if it had never joined the euro zone, or if it had been kicked out in 2004 when it admitted that it had lied about its finances to join the club. So would the rest of Europe, the International Herald Tribune reported. One answer is the same one that was given when Greece’s cheating was revealed: Legally, there is no way out. The euro was designed to be the Roach Motel of currencies. Once you enter, you can never leave. There is no provision for departure. But, of course, there is a way out. It would be messy, and perhaps disastrous.
Read more
The Spanish government Thursday said it will use the country's deposit-guarantee fund to cover losses resulting from its banking industry clean-up, a move aimed at protecting its efforts to slash a gaping budget deficit, The Wall Street Journal reported. Spain has three separate deposit-guarantee funds, financed by annual contributions from the country's financial institutions but administered by the Bank of Spain.
Read more
The Bank of England has launched a second round of quantitative easing to defend Britain's faltering economy against the euro zone debt crisis, pledging to buy 75 billion pounds of assets with new money in a dramatic move to stave off recession, Reuters reported. Thursday's decision by the Bank to expand its asset purchase programme to a total of 275 billion pounds highlights the precarious state of Britain's economy as global growth slows, government spending cuts and tax hikes bite, and consumers face high inflation and slow wage rises.
Read more
Once an example of Finland's success in technology innovation, electronics manufacturer Elcoteq filed for bankruptcy on Thursday after failing to reverse a fall in sales and restructure its debt, Reuters reported. The assembler of cellphones and set-top boxes struggled after Nokia Oyj switched to cheaper Asian suppliers a few years ago. It also worked for Research In Motion , LG Electronics and others, but was unable to replace the lost business.
Read more
The Portuguese central bank warned Thursday that the government will have to take "significant" additional measures to meet the budget targets mandated by the terms of its international bailout, Reuters reported. This follows last week's statement by Finance Minister Vitor Gaspar that the government would take additional measures after data showed Portugal's budget deficit equaled 8.3% of GDP in the first half of the year, far from its year-end target of 5.9%.
Read more