Headlines

Wesfarmers’ annual profit halved as a result of more than A$1bn in write-offs linked to the sale of Homebase, the Australian retail-to-industrials conglomerate’s disastrous foray into the UK DIY market, the Financial Times reported. The company said on Wednesday that full-year profit for the 12 months through June fell 58 per cent to A$1.2bn (US$861.4m). But it posted strong results from its core Australia and New Zealand businesses, with profit at its continuing operations rising 5.2 per cent to A$2.9bn, slightly ahead of consensus forecasts.
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Italian Debt Hit by Fresh Sell-Off

The price of Italian government bonds dropped sharply on Wednesday afternoon in a renewed bout of selling amid wider woes for risk assets, the Financial Times reported. The yield on two-year Italian debt — which moves inversely to price — hit 1.435 per cent at one point, up 16 basis points from the day’s open to the highest level since early June. Meanwhile the 10-year yield rose by 12 basis points on the day to 3.2 per cent, also the highest level for two months.
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As Venezuela's state-owned oil company PDVSA saw its finances devastated by low oil prices and mismanagement, it funnelled millions of dollars to Petrolera del Conosur, a loss-making Argentine gas station operator it controls, the International New York Times reported on a Reuters story. PDVSA decided to cut off the support payments late last year, according to a person familiar with Petrolera del Conosur's operations, as the once-proud icon of Venezuelan oil production struggled with declining output aggravated by a worsening economic crisis.
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British home improvement retailer Homebase said on Tuesday it planned to close 42 stores, putting 1,500 jobs at risk, with new owner Hilco Capital seeking to reduce its cost base in a brutal trading environment, Reuters reported. Hilco acquired the struggling chain from Australian group Wesfarmers for a nominal 1 pound in May. Homebase said the proposed closures form part of a so-called Company Voluntary Arrangement (CVA) restructuring, allowing the business to avoid insolvency or administration.
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A rally in bonds from China’s local government finance vehicles, sparked by the recent easing measures, may be at risk of losing momentum after a surprise bond default by a state-owned firm on Monday, Bloomberg News reported. Xinjiang Production Construction 6th Shi State-owned Assets Management, a cotton trader owned by the local government, missed interest and principal on a 500 million yuan ($72.6 million) note on Monday. The company has features similar to an LGFV, which raises funds for local authorities and carries out infrastructure investments, according to analysts.
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Jet Airways India Ltd.’s lenders are reluctant to extend additional loans to the cash-strapped airline ahead of a key report by the company’s financial auditor, according to people with direct knowledge of the matter. India’s biggest full-service carrier, part-owned by Etihad Airways PJSC, had approached banks for emergency funding but the lenders prefer that the company raises money from a share sale before they would commit to any fresh credit, said one of the people, who asked not to be identified as the matter is confidential, Bloomberg News reported.
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As China girds for an escalating trade fight with the U.S., it is facing increasing trouble on the home front from a slowing economy, The Wall Street Journal reported. Spending on so-called fixed assets such as factory machinery and public works projects cooled to the lowest point in nearly two decades, the government reported Tuesday. Other data also pointed to economic challenges. Retail sales grew, but not as sharply as analysts had expected. And unemployment ticked up to 5.1% last month, from 4.8% in June, the National Bureau of Statistics said.
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Sports Direct International Plc says it will continue to operate most of House of Fraser Ltd.’s 59 U.K. and Ireland department stores after rescuing the chain from near collapse, Bloomberg News reported. “Our aim is to keep at least 80 percent of the stores open,” Liam Rowley, Sports Direct’s head of strategic investments, said Tuesday in an interview on Bloomberg TV with Anna Edwards and Manus Cranny.
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Struggling commodity trader Noble Group, which is trying to push through a debt-for-equity restructuring in a bid to secure its survival, slumped to another quarterly loss in the second quarter of this year as the Asia-focused commodity house paid out bumper fees to its advisers, banks and creditors, the Financial Times reported.
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An investment arm of western China’s Xinjiang region has failed to repay a Rmb500m ($73m) bond, marking the first public default by a Chinese government-linked holding company, the Financial Times reported. The default by the Sixth Agriculture State-Owned Assets Management Co is the first by an investment holding company and a signal to investors that even state-owned groups that are agents of fiscal policy — considered closer to Beijing than commercially operated state-owned enterprises— are not guaranteed to be bailed out by the state. Sixth Agricultural is a holding compa
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