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Anglo Irish Bank chairman Alan Dukes has said the bank will be able to pursue former chief executive David Drumm through the Irish courts again if its objection to his discharge from bankruptcy in Boston is successful, the Irish Times reported. The bank expected a decision on its objection in the “relatively near future”, Mr Dukes told the Oireachtas Joint Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform. “If that goes in the way we hope, that will leave it open to us to pursue actions here,” he said.
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Analysts are predicting a new wave of pre-pack administrations amid the increasingly grim conditions on Britain’s high streets, as debate rages over whether they are unfair to the competitors and trade creditors of companies that use them, the Financial Times reported. Carpet-maker Brintons and womenswear chain Jane Norman were both recently rescued via pre-packs, through which a company enters and leaves an administration process almost instantly.
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Kuwait's Global Investment House requested its creditors Thursday to delay repayment of debt due in December citing ongoing challenges in the financial markets, Agence France-Presse reported. "Global requested the lending banks’ support for the near-term deferral of principal repayments due in December 2011 and deferral of any increase in rate of interest from December 2011 onwards," the company said following a meeting with creditors. Under a restructuring plan signed in December 2009, Global was expected to repay more than $340 million of debt plus interest.
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A rise in Britons' expectations of the future rate of inflation will do little to strengthen the case for higher interest rates, but may deter some Bank of England policy makers from voting for a fresh round of stimulus, The Wall Street Journal reported. A survey conducted for the U.K. central bank published Thursday found inflation expectations for the year ahead rose in August to their highest level in three years.
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German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy are convinced that Greece's future is within the euro zone, Mrs. Merkel's spokesman said after the two leaders held a three-way conference call with Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou.The Wall Street Journal reported. But Mrs. Merkel and Mr. Sarkozy also stressed during the call the need for Greece to put into practice in a strict and effective way the already-agreed measures of its austerity program under a current bailout package, the spokesman, Steffen Seibert, said.
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European banks are losing deposits as savers and money funds spooked by the region’s debt crisis search for havens, a trend that could worsen economic and financial conditions, Bloomberg reported. Retail and institutional deposits at Greek banks fell 19 percent in the past year and almost 40 percent at Irish lenders in 18 months. Meanwhile, European Union financial firms are lending less to one another and U.S. money-market funds have reduced their investments in German, French and Spanish banks.
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Mexican airline Interjet said on Wednesday it has opted against taking over the operations of troubled carrier Mexicana, which stopped flying a year ago due to financial difficulties, Reuters reported. In a newspaper announcement, Interjet said its board had been asked to consider taking on Mexicana's business by a third party, and had decided not to after reviewing the possibility. "We're aware of the difficult situation Mexicana's workers are going through, and we sincerely hope that their rights are safeguarded in the process," Interjet said.
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Allied Irish Banks has written-off mortgage debts in a small number of cases where it has repossessed houses but is working on industry-wide long-term solutions to lessen the debt burden for struggling borrowers to help them stay in their homes, the Irish Times reported. Speaking to the Oireachtas Joint Committee on Finance, Public Expenditure and Reform, AIB executive chairman David Hodgkinson said he was consulting with the Department of Finance and the Central Bank on a wide range of solutions to assist distressed customers.
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Millions of public sector workers plan strikes and rallies nationwide in November over public-sector pensions, union leaders said on Wednesday, adding to pressure on a government struggling with rising unemployment and weak growth, Reuters reported. Unions are locked in a bitter row with the Conservative-led coalition over controversial plans to raise public-sector pension contributions as spending cuts bite. The dispute mirrors those in continental European nations where governments are trying to rein in spending.
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Scott's Real Estate Investment Trust says it supports a motion to transfer the court-supervised restructuring of Priszm Income Fund to the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act, the Canadian Press reported. Canada's largest operator of KFC restaurants has been operating under the Companies' Creditors Arrangement Act since March but Priszm's secured creditors say the income trust can't be salvaged as a going concern.
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