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China’s manufacturing growth inched lower in June, according to an independent gauge, the Financial Times reported. The Caixin-Markit China manufacturing purchasing managers’ index came in at 51 last month, still above the 50-point mark delineating growth from contraction but down 0.1 points from May’s level. The gauge, which concentrates on smaller and private companies, stood a half a point below its official counterpart, which is focused on larger and state-owned manufacturers and dropped 0.4 points in June.
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Debt at UK listed companies has soared to hit a record high of £390bn as companies have scrambled to maintain dividend payouts in response to shareholder demand despite weak profitability, the Financial Times reported.
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A United Arab Emirates court is expected to rule next week on a criminal case against Abraaj founder Arif Naqvi for issuing a check without sufficient funds, a lawyer involved in the case said on Thursday, Reuters reported. The Sharjah court case relates to a check for 177.1 million dirhams ($48 million), signed by Naqvi and fellow executive Muhammad Rafique Lakhani, and written to Hamid Jafar, another founding shareholder in private equity firm Abraaj, according to a prosecution document and a clerk at the prosecutor’s office.
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A Chinese company in a remote area near Tibet has had a dizzying month in the credit market, underscoring broader concerns about debt loads at local borrowers, Bloomberg News reported. Notes from Qinghai Provincial Investment Group Co. due later this year surged by a record on Wednesday after Bloomberg News reported that the firm plans to repay the securities. The bonds had tumbled to record lows just last week after S&P Global Ratings said the company’s short-term debt totals more than six times cash and that it lacks a plan to refinance the notes.
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The liquidators of Bella Vista Homes have just $28 with which to pay more than $4 million to creditors – unless they can recover money from two former directors and a series of related company transactions, The New Zealand Herald reported. Insolvency practitioners Rhys Cain and Rees Logan released their first report on Wednesday and outlined their plans to recover the millions owed. They have issued a letter of demand to former Bella Vista director and shareholder Danny Cancian, seeking to recover funds from his overdrawn shareholder current account.
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One of the UK’s leading insolvency practitioners, who generated more than £25 million in fees from the collapses of Woolworths, HMV and Comet, has resigned from Deloitte amid an investigation into his conduct, The Times reported. Neville Kahn is one of three Deloitte partners under investigation by the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales (ICAEW) over the administration of Comet, the electrical retailer which collapsed in 2012 at a cost to the taxpayer of £45 million.
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The number of companies and insolvency-licensed individuals increased by 11.97 percent in the first five months of this year, compared with the same period in 2017, to 3.686, according to data published on the National Trade Register Office (ONRC), Business Review reported. Most companies and sole traders in insolvency are in Bucharest, respectively 737 (plus 2,50 percent year-on-year) and in Bihor counties – 237 ( up by 22,16 percent year-on-year), Iasi – 213 (up by 4, 41 percent) and Timis – 181 (up by 27,46 percent). In May alone, 721 firms and PFAs went into insolvency.
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China’s top economic planning body has told the country’s heavily indebted property companies to curb their issuance of dollar-denominated bonds, a sign of Beijing’s concern about the side effects of the yuan’s recent slide, The Wall Street Journal reported. In a statement late Wednesday, the National Development and Reform Commission said it would ban property companies from selling bonds outside China, unless the proceeds were used to repay maturing debt or to prevent defaults.
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Signs are mounting that Argentina is headed toward recession in the next few months, less than two years after emerging from the latest one, Bloomberg News reported. A severe drought and currency crisis shook Latin America’s third-largest economy just as President Mauricio Macri sought to consolidate its incipient recovery. Economic activity fell 2.7 percent in April, the largest monthly decline since Macri took office in December 2015. Growth also declined on an annual basis for the first time in 14 months, the nation’s statistics agency reported Tuesday.
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Leonidas Bobolas, the scion of a powerful Athens business family, is battling to keep control of Greece’s largest construction company in a test of its willingness to adopt international corporate governance standards as the country emerges from a disastrous financial crisis, the Financial Times reported.
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