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When Ayuka Tserenov lost his job as a loan officer at the giant Kremlin-run lender Sberbank three years ago, he found himself staring at nearly Rbs3.5m ($52,760) in debt, the Financial Times reported. He had taken out a Rbs2.5m loan from his employer to buy an apartment in his southern hometown of Elista when he and his wife had their first child. Mr Tserenov’s Rbs40,000 monthly wage was not enough to cover the down payment, so he took out another Rbs250,000 from another bank, then went deeper into debt to cover further living expenses.
Argentina’s government is seeking to extend maturities on tens of billions of dollars of debt and delay repayments to the International Monetary Fund after a collapse in the peso and its bonds, Bloomberg News reported. The government will postpone $7 billion of payments on short-term local notes held by institutional investors this year and will seek the “voluntary reprofiling‘’ of $50 billion of longer-term debt, Economy Minister Hernan Lacunza said. It will also start talks over the repayment of $44 billion it has received from the IMF.
Credit analysts are keeping a watchful eye on signs of stress in Indian household debt after unemployment rose to a 45-year high and as lenders grapple with the worst soured debt levels of any major economy, Bloomberg News reported. India’s bad debt malaise has centered on corporate debt, and loans to individuals have been seen as safer and a growth opportunity for banks. Given the slowdown in the economy and a drying-up of credit from shadow banks, analysts are signaling potential risks, though publicly available data on personal loan arrears is sparse.
A combination of business taxes and higher staff costs hit first-half profits at PizzaExpress, prompting the UK chain to scale back its expansion plans, the Financial Times reported. The group, which helped pioneer casual dining in the UK, pinned the blame on “industry-wide cost pressures” as it reported that earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation fell almost 8 per cent to £32.4m in the six months to the end of June.
British banks need “a generation” to fix the cultural issues that led to the payment protection insurance mis-selling scandal, according to the UK’s most senior retail banking regulator, as he warned that bad behaviour could return during the next economic downturn, the Financial Times reported. Jonathan Davidson, director of supervision for retail and authorisations at the Financial Conduct Authority, said lenders had made genuine efforts to reform since they were forced to set up a PPI compensation schemes in 2011.
Turkey may have the wrong cure for what really ails its economy. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s government has rolled out measures to break credit bottlenecks still holding back growth after recession, in the hope of generating the kind of spark that produced double-digit economic leaps only a few years ago. But this time is proving to be different, Bloomberg News reported. Lending remains subdued as banks fearing for their asset quality tread carefully after last year’s currency shock.
Argentina investors scorched by one of the worst sell-offs in the history of emerging markets are banking on the International Monetary Fund to buy the country some time, Bloomberg News reported. IMF officials are visiting Buenos Aires and will give their recommendation within weeks on whether to disburse another $5.3 billion to the country from a record bailout approved in 2018.
Bankrupt German wind turbine manufacturer Senvion said on Wednesday is that has not been successful in finding a buyer for all of its turbine business, and that layoffs are expected to occur from September, Reuters reported. “We are now close to having a solution for significant core parts of the business,” Chief Executive Yves Rannou said in a statement, adding that the company had the means to keep afloat until the M&A process is concluded. Creditors will be allowed to vote on the investor concepts at a 10 September gathering, Senvion said.
Investors in Europe’s biggest airline aren’t sitting comfortably in their cabins. German carrier Lufthansa —the top European airline by number of passengers—has seen its stock fall more than 40% over the past six months, The Wall Street Journal reported. European airlines are collectively down 30% due to a weakening economy, labor strikes and cutthroat competition in short-haul markets. Lufthansa’s market value including debt now amounts to just 2.6 times earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, compared with 3.2 times for all European airlines.
Zambia should show that it is taking measures to fight corruption to unlock donor aid and investments that have been withheld due to graft concerns, the British High Commissioner to the country said on Tuesday, the International New York Times reported on a Reuters story. Britain, Finland, Ireland and Sweden withheld nearly $34 million in aid to Zambia's social welfare and education sectors in September last year because of concern over financial mismanagement.