Borse Dubai, a government-owned exchanges group, is expected to close a $2.5 billion loan today, a vote of support for the emirate amid fears that the commercial hub of the Gulf could default, the Financial Times reported. The company, which controls Dubai's two equity markets and has stakes in the London Stock Exchange and Nasdaq, needs to pay off a $3.4 billion (€2.7 billion, £2.4 billion) loan next week, the first major test in 2009 of Dubai's ability to refinance $20 billion in loans that mature this year. Dubai's globalised economy has been hit hard by the credit crunch.
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The German government is set to adopt a law allowing it to temporarily nationalise troubled banks through the seizure of shares, according to a draft text obtained by Agence France-Presse Wednesday. The law is seen paving the way for the total nationalisation of stricken Germany property lender Hypo Real Estate (HRE), which would be the first time in modern German history the state has taken control of a bank. Nationalising banks "is only permissible when there are no other reasonable legal and economic solutions available to safeguard financial market stability," the draft says.
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General Motors Co. is trying to line up $6 billion in financial support from five governments in addition to the U.S. federal aid outlined in its restructuring plan late Tuesday, Dow Jones Newswires reported. The U.S. automaker said it is in talks with authorities in Germany, the U.K., Sweden, Canada and Thailand to secure the aid by March 31, in line with a U.S. government deadline for continuing and extending support to keep the company out of bankruptcy protection.
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Russia has won $25 billion in loans from China in return for agreeing to supply oil from new fields in eastern Siberia for the next 20 years as Moscow seeks funds to see its oil industry through the financial crisis, the Financial Times reported. Transneft, Russia’s oil pipeline monopoly, said on Tuesday China had agreed to lend it $10 billion (€8 billion, £7 billion) and Rosneft, Russia’s state-controlled oil giant, $15 billion in return for 20 years’ worth of oil supplies.
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Bank analysts predict that Ukraine is heading for a historic default on its national debt, in a scenario that could complicate EU-Ukraine relations and have an impact on the recent Russia-Ukraine gas transit deal, BusinessWeek reported. "The market is pricing in a probability of sovereign default of almost 90 percent," Commerzbank analyst Ulrich Leuchtmann told EUobserver on Monday. "It could happen in the next couple of quarters." Ukrainian industrial production has plunged 26 percent compared to last year.
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Australia’s ailing car industry has taken another blow, with Albury manufacturer Drivetrain International Systems falling into receivership with debts of $30 million to $40 million, SmartCompany.com.au reported. Production has been suspended for a week, with the company’s 400 workers stood down. Receivers and manager Stephen Longley from PricewaterhouseCooopers will assess the company’s financial position and attempt to sell the business as a going concern. Production is expected to resume next week in a reduced form.
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Fears are growing that Ireland could default on its national debt after the cost to insure against possible losses on loans to the country rose to record highs at the end of last week, The Guardian reported. Credit ratings agency Moody's recently followed rival Standard & Poor's in warning it might downgrade Irish debt, amid fears that one of Europe's former success stories is falling into a deepening recession.
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The European Union's emergency summit on March 2 to discuss growing protectionism is a make-or-break moment for the 27-nation bloc. At stake is its greatest achievement -- the single market for goods, people and capital. A row over France's latest car-industry bailout plan threatens to drive a wedge between member states. How the EU responds will have consequences not just for the EU but for global free trade. Unfortunately, the omens don't look promising. On the face of it, the French plans look like a clear case of state aid--illegal under EU rules.
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Moody's Investors Service placed the bond ratings of Estonia and Lithuania on review for possible downgrade Tuesday, citing severe deterioration in the regional macroeconomic environment. Analysts said a downgrade was likely. The three Baltic Sea-hugging neighbors Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia face an uphill struggle to resuscitate their economies, mired in recession or headed there, rein in their current-account deficits and maintain their currency pegs, MarketWatch reported. Within the emerging-markets universe, Eastern Europe is the region most vulnerable to economic and financial risk.
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Swiss bank UBS AG said it has appealed a recent ruling by a Luxembourg court ordering it to reimburse a French fund-management company €30 million ($38.6 million) that had been invested with New York financier Bernard Madoff, The Wall Street Journal reported. UBS is appealing the ruling because it doesn't agree with "the decision's rationale," according to a UBS spokeswoman. The French fund-management firm, Oddo & Cie.--which has already received the €30 million--said it had been notified of the appeal.
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