Headlines

Debt-ridden Mozambique has no chance of meeting its year-end deadline for a restructuring deal, according to investors who are preparing to dig in their heels until the country comes clear on what it owes and to whom, Reuters reported. The southern African country, one of the world's poorest, has seen its currency and investor confidence collapse since April, when the International Monetary Fund halted a loan after uncovering previously undisclosed debts that had not been approved by parliament.
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Italian banking shares strengthened on Tuesday on expectation that the European Central Bank will extend its quantitative easing programme when its governing council meets on Thursday in Frankfurt, the Irish Times reported. Amid reports that Italy’s third-largest bank, Monte dei Paschi di Siena, may be preparing for a state bailout, the European Central Bank is expected to signal that it will extend its asset-purchase programme beyond March 2017.
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A U.S. subsidiary of Spanish renewable energy firm Abengoa SA pressed a judge on Tuesday to approve its plan to exit bankruptcy over objections from a holdout creditor, who said the plan violated U.S. law by favoring the company's foreign parent, Reuters reported. After more than three hours of testimony and arguments, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Kevin Carey in Wilmington, Delaware, said he wanted additional written submissions from the parties. He did not say when he would rule. Abeinsa Holding Inc is one of dozens of global Abengoa subsidiaries that filed for U.S.
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More Perils Lie In Wait For The Eurozone

Events are testing the eurozone yet again. The latest shock comes from Italy, where Matteo Renzi’s comprehensive defeat in the constitutional referendum has caused his resignation. Italy, which has the eurozone’s third-largest economy, is an important country. Mr Renzi’s departure may not prove a decisive event. But, so long as the eurozone fails to deliver widely shared prosperity, it will be vulnerable to political and economic shocks. Complacency is a grave error. Read more. (Subscription required.)
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President Michel Temer moved to lift Brazil’s retirement age to 65 from an average of about 54 as he tried to shore up market confidence in his government by reforming one of the world’s most generous social security systems, the Financial Times reported. The pension plan, presented to Congress on Tuesday, is an attempt by Mr Temer to regain the initiative after several weeks of scandals, protests and poor economic data that have threatened to loosen the president’s grip on power.
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The European Central Bank may run out of room to buy Irish Government bonds within weeks under its massive €1.7 trillion quantitative easing programme if its president, Mario Draghi, does not move on Thursday to ease the terms of the plan, according to analysts, the Irish Times reported. Cantor Fitzgerald’s head of fixed income strategy in Dublin, Ryan McGrath estimates that the ECB, Irish Central Bank and other euro-zone monetary authorities currently hold about €31.34 billion of eligible Irish bonds under the quantitative easing plan.
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The European Union’s Brexit point man signaled an uncompromising stance on talks, laying out a tight timetable for the U.K.’s exit from the bloc and sticking to its warning that the country couldn’t freely pick and choose its future relationship with the bloc, The Wall Street Journal reported. In his first public comments since taking the job, Michel Barnier kept up the pressure on U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May, who has suggested her country wants both migration control and economic access—a stance many in the EU say is unrealistic. Mrs.
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The eurozone and the International Monetary Fund are at loggerheads in their attempts to reach a deal that would allow the IMF to join the EU’s €86bn bailout of Greece, the Financial Times reported. Talks between euro area ministers and the IMF on Monday broke up with little headway having been made in resolving splits over the programme, despite ministers approving a set of “short-term” debt relief measures for Greece.
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Bankers were scrambling on Monday to secure a €5 billion recapitalisation of Monte dei Paschi di Siena (MPS), the world’s oldest lender, after prime minister Matteo Renzi’s decisive loss in Italy’s referendum on constitutional reform added more uncertainty over the deal, the Irish Times reported. Italy’s troubled banking system and a complex rescue and restructuring of MPS has lurched into investor focus after Mr Renzi confirmed he would step down after a worse than expected defeat in Sunday’s vote.
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Cleaning up Italy’s banks is an opportunity ripe for the wasting, the International New York Times DealBook blog reported. The failed referendum on Sunday need not cause a crisis if UniCredit completes its rights issue and fellow lender Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena can be quickly stabilized. Political turmoil and weak growth, though, could push up bad loan levels, and the political will to fix them may be lacking.
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