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Superfast Broadband Roll-Out Running Late

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 06 Juli 2013 | 14.47

The Government programme to roll out superfast broadband to 90% of the population is running late and lacks strong competition to protect public value, the National Audit Office has reported.

It has already announced that superfast broadband will reach 95% of the population by 2017, just two years after the original target of 90%.

Just nine out of 44 local projects are expected to reach the original target, according to the report, with the delay partly attributed to the EU State Aid process taking six months longer than expected.

The NAO said that competition among suppliers had been "limited", leaving BT as the only active participant and expected to win all 44 local projects.

It warned that the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) had "secured only limited transparency" over the costs in BT's bids.

And it said the DCMS now expected BT to provide just 23% of the overall projected funding of £1.5bn - £207m less than expected.

Amyas Morse, head of the NAO, said: "The rural broadband project is moving forward late and without the benefit of strong competition to protect public value.

"For this we will have to rely on the department's active use of the controls it has negotiated and strong supervision by Ofcom."

Public Accounts Committee chairwoman Margaret Hodge said. "The DCMS has not had a good enough grip on its rural broadband programme."


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Samsung Posts Disappointing Profits Forecast

Samsung has forecast weaker than expected profits for the last quarter, fuelling concerns about flagging demand for high-end smartphones.

The South Korean firm is predicting £5.5bn in operating profit for the period April to June.

That would be a record result for the electronics giant - but lower than the £6bn forecast by analysts.

Samsung shares dropped nearly 3% after the company issued the profit guidance on Friday.

Concerns about sales of Samsung's new phones and tablets have seen the electronic giant's share price drop almost 18% in the last month.

Mobile phones and IT account for 70% of the company's profits.

Despite robust sales of its Galaxy S4 in the first month, new rivals have emerged to eat away at its market share.

It has also become harder for the industry to impress buyers with new features in upgraded models as most smartphones offer similar functions.

Fewer wow factors in new smartphones mean people will not upgrade as quickly as they did when the devices were still a novelty, forcing device makers such as Samsung to spend more on splashy advertising and marketing.

Analysts say high marketing costs probably weighed on Samsung's mobile business despite sales of the S4 hitting the 10 million mark about 20 days faster than the previous model.

"Because of the marketing costs, the telecommunications business was probably weaker than expected," said CW Chung, an analyst at Nomura Financial Investment in Seoul.

Samsung will announce its net income and final quarterly financial results later this month.


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Slump In Pound Signals Gloom For Holidaymakers

The pound has fallen heavily against the dollar for the second time this week after key US jobs figures showed better than expected evidence of an economic recovery.

While stock markets rallied, seemingly shrugging off recent fears about US stimulus being slowly withdrawn, sterling lost two cents against the world's reserve currency when news of the positive employment data from the US emerged.

The pound, which had also dropped heavily the previous day when the Bank of England confirmed the base rate of interest was to remain at its current level for at least two years, fell below the $1.48 mark.

While such exchange rates are good news for exporters, it will hit the spending power of British holidaymakers heading to America.

The euro has also strengthened against the pound.

The US payroll rose by 195,000 in June and the jobless rate remained the same at 7.6% - raising hopes for a stronger economy in the second half of 2013. The forecast was for around 165,000.

Hiring was more robust in the two previous months than earlier estimated, with some 70,000 net new jobs in May and April.

The positive data was seen as suggesting that the US Federal Reserve may start to ease off its support for the economy as early as this autumn - while quantitative easing and low interest rates will continue to push down the pound in the UK.

The US job market and the economy have proved surprisingly resilient this year. Hiring and consumer confidence have remained steady despite higher taxes and federal spending cuts.

The US economy has added an average of 202,000 jobs a month for the past six months, up from 180,000 in the previous six. That suggests businesses are growing more confident in the economy.

If the gains continue, the Federal Reserve might start to scale back its bond purchases before the year ends.


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Portugal: Deal Saves Coalition Government

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 05 Juli 2013 | 14.47

A deal has been reached to save Portugal's centre-right coalition government, the country's prime minister Pedro Passos Coelho has said.

The coalition was threatened with break-up because of a dispute over austerity policies but Mr Passos Coelho said "a formula" had been found that secures its survival.

The policies squeezing the bailed-out nation had led markets to plunge on Wednesday.

But they rallied after Mr Passos Coelho said he was "convinced" he could maintain government stability despite his finance and foreign ministers saying they were quitting.

European Central Bank chief Mario Draghi sought to soothe market nerves, saying Portugal's economy was "in safe hands" with finance minister Vitor Gaspar's successor, Maria Luis Albuquerque.

The Portuguese reform process has been a "painful route and the results achieved have been quite significant, remarkable, if not outstanding", Mr Draghi told a news conference in Frankfurt.

The Portuguese stock market's PSI-20 index rose to close 3.73% higher on Thursday, after plunging 5.31% on Wednesday.

Pressure on the bond market eased, too, with the Portuguese benchmark 10-year government bond yield sliding to 7.40% in the afternoon, having soared to 8.106% the day before.

Foreign minister Paulo Portas's resignation had threatened to sink the government because he is also leader of the junior partner in the governing coalition, the small conservative CDS-PP party.

But the PM, desperate to hold together the coalition led by his Social Democratic Party (PSD), refused to accept Mr Portas' resignation.

The prospect of a deal emerged when the CDS-PP leadership asked Mr Portas to meet with the premier to find "a viable solution for the government of Portugal".

Mr Passos Coelho and his foreign minister held talks in a "very positive atmosphere", the premier's office said earlier.

Portuguese newspapers said the prime minister could reshuffle the cabinet to give Mr Portas the post of deputy premier in charge of the economy.

"The prospect of a snap election is so terrifying for the PSD that the prime minister will do anything to save the coalition," said Antonio Costa Pinto, a political scientist at Lisbon University.

Socialist opposition leader Antonio Jose Seguro had urged the Portuguese president to call snap elections in a meeting on Wednesday.

European Union leaders, fearing a resurgence in tension in the eurozone's debt-laden periphery, pressed Lisbon to resolve the crisis.

"The political situation should be clarified as soon as possible," the European Commission's Portuguese president, Jose Manuel Barroso, said on Wednesday.

The government has imposed unpopular spending cuts and tax rises under the 2011 bailout deal agreed with the "troika" of creditors - the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund.

It is now under pressure to present a further 4.7 million euros (£4m) in spending cuts to the troika when its delegates visit on July 15.

The austerity measures have plunged Portugal into a deeper recession with higher unemployment than had been expected, sparking mass protests and strikes.

In his resignation letter, Mr Portas had said he disapproved of the prime minister's naming of Treasury Secretary Maria Luis Albuquerque as the new finance minister.

Her appointment was seen as an indication that Mr Passos Coelho intended to push on with austerity despite protests.

"The big fear is this country has failed to demonstrate economic growth since its bailout and its government has also been unable to meet targets set out by the troika," said Ishaq Siddiqi, strategist at London-based brokerage ETX Capital.

"Now, without a stable government in power, investors are concerned Portugal will be unable to meet its debt obligations."


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Superfast Broadband Roll-Out Running Late

The Government programme to roll out superfast broadband to 90% of the population is running late and lacks strong competition to protect public value, the National Audit Office has reported.

It has already announced that superfast broadband will reach 95% of the population by 2017, just two years after the original target of 90%.

Just nine out of 44 local projects are expected to reach the original target, according to the report, with the delay partly attributed to the EU State Aid process taking six months longer than expected.

The NAO said that competition among suppliers had been "limited", leaving BT as the only active participant and expected to win all 44 local projects.

It warned that the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) had "secured only limited transparency" over the costs in BT's bids.

And it said the DCMS now expected BT to provide just 23% of the overall projected funding of £1.5bn - £207m less than expected.

Amyas Morse, head of the NAO, said: "The rural broadband project is moving forward late and without the benefit of strong competition to protect public value.

"For this we will have to rely on the department's active use of the controls it has negotiated and strong supervision by Ofcom."

Public Accounts Committee chairwoman Margaret Hodge said. "The DCMS has not had a good enough grip on its rural broadband programme."


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Rolls-Royce Accused Of Hiding Engine Defects

Two former Rolls-Royce employees have alleged the engine maker "cut corners on quality control requirements" and "lied to" customers.

Thomas McArtor and Keith Ramsey have also accused the company of hiding internal records of defects in engines it sold to commercial and military clients.

They claim that the company collated these alleged defects into a "secret set of books".

The ex-quality control officers in the United States are challenging a court order that prevents them from releasing information they say reveals potentially serious defects in its manufacturing processes, according to reports in The Financial Times and The Daily Telegraph.

Rolls-Royce has denied the claims and said the lawsuit is "without merit", adding that a US district judge had already thrown out two of the four claims before the "discovery" phase of the litigation had been entered.

"This lawsuit is entirely without merit," a Rolls-Royce spokesman said.

"Judge Lawrence did not find that Rolls-Royce engaged in any wrongdoing, failed to follow its quality system, concealed anything from the US government or even that a jury is entitled to hear the allegations.

"Rolls-Royce categorically rejects the other claims and will defend itself vigorously. Any and all facts of the case will be presented in court, where we are confident it will be found the lawsuit is without merit."

The lawsuit comes at a difficult time for the firm.

Last month an Australian safety regulator reported that Rolls-Royce had failed to identify a defect that caused one of its engines to explode on a Qantas Airways Ltd flight over Indonesia in November 2010.

In its final report on the incident, the Australian Safety Transport Bureau (ASTB) said the company missed multiple opportunities to detect a faulty component.

Rolls-Royce is also the subject of an investigation by the Serious Fraud Office (SFO) into claims that company representatives paid bribes to win airline engine contracts in China and Indonesia.


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Miliband Summons Top Bankers For Reform Talks

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 04 Juli 2013 | 14.47

By Mark Kleinman, City Editor

Ed Miliband held talks on Wednesday with senior bankers just days after the industry faced fresh criticism for lobbying senior politicans and regulators.

Sky News has learnt that the Labour leader met a delegation from the British Bankers' Association (BBA) including representatives of major high street lenders including HSBC and Lloyds Banking Group.

Sir Nigel Wicks, the BBA chairman, who was a former aide to Lady Thatcher, and Anthony Browne, the lobbying group's chief executive, were also present at the meeting.

The meeting, described by one person who attended as "lively", saw Mr Miliband reiterate Labour's support for the establishment of a network of local banks as well as a new British Investment bank.

Others who were at the summit included James Leigh-Pemberton, a senior executive at Credit Suisse's UK operations, and Colin Grassie, chief executive of Deutsche Bank's UK business. Chris Leslie, the shadow City minister, was also present.

Mr Miliband has been a consistent critic of the banking sector since he became Labour leader in 2010, but is keen to build more constructive relations with industry executives ahead of the next general election, according to one insider.

The meeting, however, came just days after MPs and regulators outlined criticisms of the banking industry for its intensive lobbying in an effort to slow the pace of reforms.

Andrew Bailey, chief executive of the Prudential Regulation Authority, said this week that rules defining appropriate lobbying were desirable, while Andrew Tyrie, chair of the Parliamentary Commission on Banking Standards and Treasury Select Committee, said the extent of their lobbying underlined the need for independent rules on issues such as capital and leverage ratios.

A BBA spokesman said: "It is important that there is a dialogue between industry and politicians of all parties, just as consumer groups and trade unions quite properly speak to elected representatives on a regular basis."


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Stronger Economy 'Puts Brakes On Carney'

Evidence that the UK's economic recovery is gathering pace is widely expected to result in the Bank of England maintaining its support at current levels today.

The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC), which has been meeting for the first time under the leadership of new bank governor Mark Carney, announces its decisions on the base rate of interest and quantitative easing (QE) at midday.

While the base rate has not been changed since March 2009 - and will not be adjusted today - there has been a school of thought that Mr Carney may have favoured extending QE, also known as asset purchases, in the nearer term to help support growth efforts.

But recent economic data has suggested in unison that the speed of recovery has accelerated - with the British Chambers of Commerce the latest group to upgrade its growth expectations for the second quarter of the year and 2013 as a whole.

The closely-watched Purchasing Managers' Index surveys also pointed to growing output in manufacturing, construction and the crucial service sector - which recorded its fastest rise in activity in two years last month.

The slew of positive news is likely to have dispelled any immediate pressure for the bank to increase its QE programme beyond its £375bn level - allowing Mr Carney some breathing room.

Other members of the nine-strong Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) repeatedly thwarted his predecessor Sir Mervyn King's efforts to boost QE by £25bn during his final months, as five times he was defeated by a 6-3 majority.

Despite his aim to achieve "escape velocity" for the economy, it is thought that Mr Carney will not want to go out on a limb and face a defeat just four days into the job.

Sir Mervyn pointed out last week that while his Canadian successor may be more "persuasive", he only holds one vote on the MPC.

Some economists expect that Mr Carney will begin to take action to pull the UK out of the doldrums from August.

Vicky Redwood of Capital Economics said he was likely to introduce "forward guidance", which helps reassure markets that interest rates will remain low in the future while she predicted there was a 50% chance of QE also being resumed.


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Twitter To Show Users Tailor-Made Adverts

The social networking site says it will be experimenting with a way to make adverts on Twitter more useful.

It plans to display promoted content from brands and businesses a user has shown interest in.

According to a post on its blog, the company - which allows people to send public messages of up to 140 characters - said: "Users won't see more ads on Twitter, but they may see better ones".

It said the move - which technology experts say will bring Twitter in line with other social networking sites that tailor adverts - will be trialled in the US "soon".

A spokesman said: "The ad pilot is US-only and we don't have a timescale for roll-out more widely."

Twitter will tailor adverts to the individual user's browsing information - although their personal email addresses will be unreadable, Twitter said.

It also confirmed it will not receive browser-related information from its ad partners for tailoring adverts if users have DNT (Do Not Track) technology enabled.


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RBS Orders Lending Review Over Untapped £20bn

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 03 Juli 2013 | 14.47

Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) is reviewing its small business lending practices and standards after uncovering £20bn in untapped cash.

The excess money, RBS said, was a result of having £20bn more in small business deposits than being loaned out to such firms.

The group - which is 81% owned by the taxpayer - said it wanted to put this surplus to use by supporting small and medium-sized companies and playing its part in "securing the recovery".

The investigation - to be led by former Bank of England deputy governor Sir Andrew Large and management consultancy Oliver Wyman - will take in both RBS and Natwest and follows widespread criticism that the lenders are not doing enough to support economic recovery.

The banking sector is subject to a separate probe by the Office of Fair Trading into small business lending.

It was demanded by the Parliamentary Commission on Banking Standards which found that a lack of competition was leaving firms with little or no choice in accessing finance.

The bank's net lending fell by £1.6bn in the first quarter of 2013, despite tapping the State's Funding for Lending Scheme (FLS) for £750m worth of cheap finance.

Sir Andrew said: "There is a disconnect between what the bank says it is doing on lending, and what many businesses say they experience on the ground.

"That is why we have been asked to conduct an independent review to establish what is going on, and what steps can be taken."

Banks have been arguing that small business lending levels have continued to shrink due to low demand, but it is thought that firms are struggling to secure reasonable terms and cheaper rates in spite of the boost from the FLS.

Chris Sullivan, head of UK corporate banking at RBS, said: "Demand for lending remains a challenge, but we want to do more than just wait for demand to materialise.

A dedicated website will be set up for the duration of the RBS inquiry through which small business customers can provide their perspectives and experiences on the group's lending.

The review's recommendations are due to be published in the autumn.


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Heywood: 20-Year Battle To Fix UK Economy

Britain is in a "20-year generational battle" to rescue the economy, according to the country's most senior civil servant.

Cabinet Secretary Sir Jeremy Heywood has suggested drastic austerity measures implemented by the coalition may have to go further.

In a speech to officials at a Civil Service Live event in west London, he reportedly declared there was still an "enormous amount of work to be done" to tackle the deficit.

His stark comments come after Chancellor George Osborne unveiled a further £11.5bn in spending cuts, extending his austerity regime into the next parliament.

They will take the edge off increased optimism sparked by new figures showing Britain never sank into a double-dip recession.

Sir Jeremy Heywood at Public Administration Select Committee Sir Jeremy Heywood warned full economic recovery will take decades

"This is not a two-year project or a five-year project. This is a 10-year project, a 20-year generational battle to beef up the economy in ways that we have not seen for many, many decades," Sir Jeremy said.

The mandarin cited last week's economic figures indicating UK plc was still 4% smaller than in 2008 showed there was a "very, very long way to go", according to The Daily Telegraph.

"Five years on from the bottom of the recession we have still not even near recovered all the output we lost in that terribly deep recession that we suffered in 2007-08," he added.

"Those are really daunting numbers that just show the size of the challenge; there is no alternative."

Sir Jeremy said that rebalancing the economy away from financial services towards manufacturing was "much easier said than done".

"All the civil servants in the room will be well aware that the last three or four years have been tough," he said.

"There have been years of austerity, years of pay freezes, of pay restraint; every part of government has been told by ministers - and rightly so - to hunt out waste and tackle inefficiencies.

"But despite all these efforts we have made over the last three years ... our debt/GDP ratio is still rising, debt interest payments are rising.

"There is still an enormous amount of work to get that deficit down to a balanced level to get the debt/GDP level falling rather than rising."

Sir Jeremy praised the "remarkably smooth" spending round for 2015-16, unveiled by Mr Osborne last week.

Measures in the Chancellor's statement included more swingeing cuts to Whitehall departments, a welfare cap and further action to curb public sector pay.


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Electricity Theft: Ofgem Urges Crackdown

The energy regulator could force electricity suppliers to tackle power theft because of a growing cost to households.

Ofgem estimates that 25,000 cases of electricity theft annually cost law-abiding consumers £200m - or £7 per household - with a third of the loss blamed on cannabis farms.

The watchdog said its proposals would require energy suppliers to bring in measures to detect, investigate and prevent cases of theft - with fines for those companies which fail to comply.

A code of practice would be compiled, Ofgem said, through companies sharing information on investigations between themselves and agencies including the police while a 24 hour public hotline is also planned to help identify offenders.

Andrew Wright, Ofgem's chief executive, said: "Ofgem wants to make sure that consumers are paying no more than they need to for their electricity, and lives are not put at risk.

"It's critical that suppliers do all they can to clamp down on electricity theft.

"The reforms build on similar obligations we introduced at the start of this year for suppliers to address gas theft more vigorously."

Energy UK, the trade association of the energy industry which represents more than 80 companies, welcomed the proposals.

A spokesman said: "Electricity theft is dangerous and illegal. Contact with live electricity cables can kill and tampered meters cause fires.

"Electricity theft also costs honest customers money which is why energy companies take this - and gas theft - very seriously.


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China's ICBC Bank Now Bigger Than US Giants

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 02 Juli 2013 | 14.47

A Chinese bank has been ranked as the world's largest, overtaking two American finance giants.

Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) leapfrogged the US banks to top the global ranking of banks with the most capital.

The shock ranking has highlighted the growing size and importance of Chinese lenders.

ICBC topped The Banker magazine's annual list of the top 1,000 banks for the first time.

The magazine relegated the Bank of America to third from first, while JPMorgan Chase remained in second slot.

China's ICBC was ranked third last year by the magazine, which is owned by the Financial Times.

The rankings are based on Tier 1 capital as a measure of a bank's ability to lend on a large scale and endure shocks.

ICBC has for some time ranked as the top bank by market value.

Britain's HSBC, which gains much of its earnings from Asia, was fourth in The Banker's list, with China Construction Bank (CCB) ranked fifth.

China had four banks in the top 10 and 96 in the Top 1,000.

Its top four lenders - ICBC, CCB, Bank of China and Agricultural Bank of China - filled the top positions for profit in 2012.

ICBC's $49bn (£32bn) profit put it top of the profit table for a third successive year.

Total profit for the biggest 1,000 banks is now back close to levels achieved before the 2007/09 financial crisis, but the regional share has shifted significantly,

The Banker said that in 2006 European banks accounted for 46% of global profits and 58% of assets, but last year that had dropped to less than 2% of profits and 43% of assets.

Asia's banks have lifted their share of profits to 56% from 19% in the same time and increased their share of assets to 35% from 22%.

Spain's Bankia posted the biggest loss last year at £21bn , with six of the 10 biggest losses coming from Spain, the magazine estimated.


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RBS Plots £500m Debt Collector Float

By Mark Kleinman, City Editor

One of Britain's biggest debt collectors is targeting a £500m stock market flotation that would loosen its ownership by the state-backed Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS).

Sky News has learnt that Arrow Global, which is based in Manchester and has nearly four million customer accounts, is being groomed for a public listing that could take place as early as this year.

ROYAL BANK OF SCOTLAND CHAIRMAN SIR GEORGE MATHEWSON AND CHIEF EXECUTIVEFRED GOODWIN TALK AT THE GROUP'S AGM. Arrow Group chairman Sir George Mathewson

Investment banks including Goldman Sachs, Canaccord Genuity and Lazard are understood to have been lined up to work on a flotation, although people close to RBS's Special Opportunities Fund, which is the owner of Arrow Global, said no final decision had been taken about the move.

Last year, RBS held detailed talks about a merger of Arrow Global with Lowell, another debt collection agency, but the discussions faltered over the owners' valuations of the two companies.

The RBS Special Opportunities Fund is a private equity vehicle managed by the bank but in which it has only a minority stake. People close to RBS have suggested that a sale of Arrow Global would be "reputationally helpful" given the controversy that stalks debt collection businesses.

News of RBS's plans to float the company emerged on the same day that another contentious segment of the financial services sector, the payday lending industry, came under fire at a Government-organised summit.

Arrow Group, which negotiated a new £110m debt facility last year, claims to be "committed to facilitating positive outcomes, and strongly believes that what is good for the customer is also good for business".

The company is run by Tom Drury, former chief executive of Shanks, the waste management group.

Its chairman is Sir George Mathewson, the former chief executive and chairman of RBS, who has been a prominent figure in the debate about the reshaping of Britain's banks.

Arrow Global's asset portfolio consists of consumer and commercial credit including credit card, personal loan, retail, motor, mortgage, telecommunication and utility receivables. More than 80 per cent of Arrow Global's assets are in the UK with the remainder in continental Europe.

The business buys outstanding consumer debt at a discount from lenders who have written it off, then collects it. The average individual debt under its management is £3,000.

Arrow Global made £19m in profit in the first quarter of the year and now has more than £8.5bn under management.

RBS declined to comment on its plans.


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Business Confidence 'Back At 2007 Level'

British business confidence has hit its highest level since 2007, in fresh evidence that the economy is recovering from the financial crisis.

The finding, in the British Chambers of Commerce's quarterly economic survey, was backed by a pick-up in exports and a strong rise in firms' domestic and overseas sales over the past three months, boding well for official data due later this month.

Other surveys have shown a similar pattern.

Markit's June manufacturing Purchasing Managers' Index was the highest in more than two years, as was last week's GfK consumer confidence barometer.

"The UK economy is slowly strengthening," said David Kern, the BCC's chief economist.

"If recent progress can be sustained, there are realistic hopes that growth forecasts will be revised up further," he added.

Britain's recovery since the 2007-08 financial crisis has been the slowest since modern records began, and weaker than in any Group of Seven economy apart from Italy.

At the end of May the BCC forecast that the economy would grow 0.9% this year, but based in part on Tuesday's data, it now expects growth of 0.6% in the second quarter alone.

This compares to 0.3% growth in the first three months of the year.

The BCC survey showed that in the service sector, domestic sales and orders were growing at the fastest pace since the fourth quarter of 2007, while export sales had grown at the fastest rate since the survey began in 1989.

For manufacturers, domestic sales growth was the strongest in two years and export order growth the best in a year.

The data is seen as easing immediate pressure on new Bank of England governor Mark Carney to restart asset purchases through the bank's quantitative easing programme.


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Croatia Celebrates European Union Membership

Written By Unknown on Senin, 01 Juli 2013 | 14.47

Croatia has become the 28th member of the European Union, a major milestone which comes some 20 years after the small country won independence in a bloody civil war.

Croatia's formal entry on Monday is the bloc's first addition since Bulgaria and Romania joined in 2007.

The Republic joins the EU two decades after declaring independence from federal Yugoslavia, a step that triggered four years of war in which some 20,000 people died.

Though enthusiasm for the country's achievement has been dampened by the EU's financial turmoil, it is a historic turning point for the Balkan nation of 4.2 million.

Among those gathering in the capital Zagreb to celebrate the membership are the European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso and European Council President Herman Van Rompuy.

President Ivo Josipovic told Croatia's Nova TV that journalists from EU countries had repeatedly asked him why the nation wanted to join the bloc.

"My counter question was: 'You come from the EU. Is your country preparing to leave the bloc?' They would invariably reply: 'Of course not.' Well, there you go, that's why we are joining, because we also believe the EU has a future," he said.

But few Croatians are in the mood to party as they face a fifth year of recession and record unemployment of 21 percent.

Most of the 3,700 fishermen who ply their trade in Croatia's eastern Adriatic fear that the country's accession to the bloc and strict laws and regulations that come with it will damage their trade.

Fisherman Latin poses for a picture near his fishing boat in Savudrija Fisherman Danilo Latin fears EU accession could put an end to his business

"I'm afraid we're in for a lot of unpleasant surprises," said Danilo Latin, whose family have been fishermen for four generations.

"We'll lose the subsidies, we'll have to change our nets, fish further from the shore, there will be more competition and new restrictions, so we're looking at harder times," he said.

But for some Croatians the merits of accession were undeniable, despite the lukewarm mood.

"I know many people in Croatia are very sceptical but I think EU entry is the best thing that could have happened and it's an injustice we should have waited since 1990," said Zeljko Kastelan, a businessman whose hotels employ 70 people.

"What we need to do now is work hard to make up for the lost time."

Croatia has gone through seven years of tortuous and often unpopular EU-guided reform.

It has handed over more than a dozen Croatian and Bosnian Croat military and political leaders charged with war crimes to the United Nations tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in The Hague.

It has sold shipyards, steeped in history and tradition but deep in debt, and launched a fight against corruption that saw
former prime minister Ivo Sanader jailed.

Some EU capitals remain concerned at the level organised crime.

The country of 4.4 million people, with a coastline that attracts 10 million tourists each year, is one of seven that emerged from the ashes of Yugoslavia during a decade of war in the 1990s.


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Cameron In Kazakhstan For Trade Mission

David Cameron will hold talks with Kazakhstan's President Nursultan Nazarbayev today as part of a controversial trade mission to the country.

The official visit, the first by a serving British premier, is aimed at building strong business links and deals worth £700m to UK firms are set to be signed.

But Mr Cameron has been forced to reject assertions he was putting economic ties with the mineral-rich nation ahead of concerns over human rights abuses.

The Prime Minister insisted that "Britain always stands up for human rights wherever we are in the world" and said the allegations would be raised in the talks.

He said: "We will raise all the issues including human rights. That's part of our dialogue and I'll be signing a strategic partnership with Kazakhstan.

British Prime Minister Cameron talks with his Pakistani counterpart Nawaz Sharif David Cameron recently met with Pakistan's PM Nawaz Sharif

"We need for Britain to get out there and win. We need our businesses to win.

"We need that growth and investment. Countries like Kazakhstan are rapidly growing and one day will be among the top 10 producers."

Campaign group Human Rights Watch have claimed there is a "serious and deteriorating" situation in Kazakhstan.

This includes "credible allegations of torture, the imprisonment of government critics, tight controls over the media and freedom of expression and association, limits on religious freedom, and continuing violations of workers' rights".

Amnesty International UK's head of policy and government affairs Allan Hogarth said: "Kazakhstan might be knee-deep in oil and gas wealth, but David Cameron shouldn't let lucrative energy deals prevent him from raising human rights during his trip."

The Prime Minister is leading a 30 strong business delegation to the country as he seeks to open a new chapter in the relationship with Kazakhstan.

Downing Street has acknowledged Mr Cameron is playing "catch-up" because other Western leaders have already visited the country.

Kazakhstan is experiencing rapid growth due to its vast oil and mineral reserves.

The Government believes British firms could secure contracts in Kazakhstan worth up to £85bn over the coming years.

Mr Cameron and Mr Nazarbayev began talks last night during a two hour flight on the presidential jet.


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Carney Starts As Bank Of England Governor

Things We Learned About Mark Carney

Updated: 7:19pm UK, Thursday 07 February 2013

By Ed Conway, Economics Editor

Here's what we learned about the incoming Bank of England Governor Mark Carney in his testimony before MPs at the Treasury Select Committee, in more or less descending order of importance.

1. This is a man who wants a shake-up and, most notably, to have the Bank of England's remit to be reconsidered on a regular basis.

This is perhaps the first and most important takeaway: the Bank has had its inflation target and a more-or-less unchanged remit for more than two decades.

The 2% target may well be the best scheme under which it monitors and hence controls the economy, but there hasn't been a formal move to reconsider it. Mr Carney wants that to change.

2. He doesn't really want to adopt an NGDP target.

Mr Carney had talked so approvingly of this alternative to inflation-targeting - targeting the total amount of cash generated by the economy - that a lot of people thought he wanted to ditch the inflation target altogether.

However, Mr Carney said that while there are plenty of things to recommend nominal GDP as a guide for how much, on a long-term basis the Bank needs to stimulate the economy.

He added: "From what I know given the research I have seen, as I sit here today, then flexible inflation targeting, deployed in a different way would remain a superior alternative to a shift in framework."

3. "Flexible inflation targeting" could well involve a Fed-style employment target.

Mr Carney spoke approvingly of the Federal Reserve's new so-called threshold guidance - under which it has committed to carrying out more quantitative easing until (in its case) unemployment gets down beneath 6.5%.

He also made clear his support for giving long-term guidance on interest rates (for instance, committing to keeping interest rates at a particular level for an extended period of time). Both would represent a major shift in monetary policy in the UK.

4. He wants to distinguish himself from Sir Mervyn King, in terms of leadership style.

He talked repeatedly in his lengthy written submission to the committee about his consensual leadership style.

Although he was careful not to make the comparison himself, some will likely contrast this to the existing Governor's management style, which some have characterised as dictatorial.

Mr Carney told the committee he did not intend to be "an emperor" or a "super-governor" - he characterised himself as a "managing partner".

5. He is potentially in favour of more quantitative easing.

Now, Mr Carney himself didn't say anything as brazen as the above. He is, after all, a central banker who's well aware of the risks of publicly committing oneself to a particular policy.

However, he got about as close as one can get to doing so, saying that when he "comes to the table", if the UK economy remains as weak as it is today, "this will merit for a period of time considerable monetary policy stimulus."

6. He is young and charming.

This isn't an entirely shallow point. The Bank of England has been in dire need of some re-energising.

Its relationship with Parliament has suffered. Many economists are critical of its conduct during the crisis (well, specifically Sir Mervyn's conduct).

The sight of a young (well, by central bankers' standards), dynamic character like Mr Carney is a breath of fresh air.

For me, the most significant moment of the hearing came after it had finished and a number of the MPs rushed over to Mr Carney to congratulate him.

And the committee formally approved his appointment a few hours later. They aren't an easily-influenced bunch and, in short, he charmed the socks off them. The real question is how long the honeymoon will last.

7. He doesn't want a "helicopter drop".

There has been a lot of talk recently about whether central banks could go one step further than their current quantitative easing, and help finance a tax cut by printing money.

Milton Friedman likened this to dropping cash out of a helicopter, and it's something the FSA chairman Lord Turner raised in a speech on Wednesday night.

Well, Mr Carney's having none of it.

He said: "I do not envisage circumstance where I would support that."

8. He is already having an effect on the Bank of England.

Perhaps it's Sir Mervyn getting demob happy, perhaps the Bank sees the way the wind's blowing.

Either way, the Bank has already, subtly, started to change. And there was rather significant evidence of this even as Mr Carney gave his evidence.

In its monthly meeting, the Monetary Policy Committee voted to leave interest rates and asset purchases on hold.

Normally, unchanged monetary policy wouldn't merit a formal statement from the committee, but this time around the MPC issued a pretty lengthy explanation for its decision.

As I understand it, this was a conscious effort on the part of the Bank to improve how it communicates its decisions.

Hitherto we've had to wait a fortnight to get the full minutes of each month's meeting. This is a sign that there may be more instant explanation after each and every decision.

It's also worth dwelling, for a moment, on one particular sentence from the statement.

"Attempting to bring inflation back to target sooner by removing the current policy stimulus more quickly than currently anticipated by financial markets would risk derailing the recovery and undershooting the inflation target in the medium term."

This is a clear indication to financial markets ahead of the closely-watched Inflation Report next week: don't expect the Bank to want to start raising interest rates any time soon. You have been warned.


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Facebook To Remove Adverts From Adult Pages

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 30 Juni 2013 | 14.47

Facebook will stop advertisements appearing on pages containing sexual or violent content after a number of companies suspended their campaigns.

Marks and Spencer and BSkyB, the parent company of Sky News, were among those to pull their adverts from the social networking site because of concerns about placement.

It led Facebook to announce a tightening of its review process, preventing promotions from appearing on pages and groups which contain offensive content.

"Our goal is to both preserve the freedoms of sharing on Facebook but also protect people and brands from certain types of content," a spokesman said in a blog post.

"We know that marketers work hard to promote their brands and we take their objectives seriously.

"While we already have rigorous review and removal policies for content against our terms, we recognise we need to do more to prevent situations where ads are displayed alongside controversial pages and groups."

In the first three months of the year, 85% of Facebook's revenue came from advertising - up 43% on the same quarter in 2012.

Advertisers paid a total of $1.25bn (£820m) to promote their products and services to the website's reported 665 million daily active users.

The company is paid around 3% more per advert than it was 12 months ago.

Facebook said its advertising review process will be manual at first but an automated system is expected to launch within weeks.

The spokesman added: "Like any digital platform, we're not going to be perfect but we will be much better.

"We'll continue to work aggressively on this issue with advertisers.

"We're confident the immediate steps we're taking will result in a significantly improved approach to preventing these instances from occurring, and we're committed to making this process work for everyone who uses Facebook."


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The Sky News Business Look Ahead

Sky's Naomi Kerbel offers a look ahead to what's coming up in the week's business news.

:: Monday July 1

Bank of England - Mark Carney's five-year term begins

Croatia - European Union accession

:: Tuesday July 2

Ocado Group interim results

OECD Consumer Price Indices

:: Wednesday July 3

Bowie memorabilia auction at Bonhams

:: Thursday July 4

Monetary Policy Committee Meeting - interest rate decision

European Central Bank Governing Council - interest rate decision 

:: Friday July 5

MPs vote on the EU Referendum Bill


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Crown Post Office Staff Stage Strike Action

By Emma Birchley, East of England Correspondent

Post Office workers have gone on strike over plans to close 70 state-owned branches and a dispute over pay.

The closing Crown branches - which are currently directly managed by Post Office Ltd - would be franchised and put within retailers such as WH Smith, which has already happened in some towns.

Debbie Spiteri, who works at the Dagenham branch in Essex, has been employed by the Post Office for 32 years and said she thought she had a job for life.

"I thought I would be here until I retired in my 60s, but now it looks like I may be made redundant, looking for another job and at my age I didn't want to be doing that," she said.

"I feel sorry for the local people. A lot are elderly and if they have to go somewhere else, they won't. They won't go into a shop to do their business because to them they want the personal touch."

The Post Office insists staff will be transferred to a new employer or offered voluntary redundancy, but the Communication Workers Union predicts 800 jobs will be lost.

Roger Gale, general manager of the Post Office's Crown and WH Smith network, said the changes are needed.

"It's absolutely not a programme of closing post offices," he said.

"We want to retain post office services on the high street but we have to do it in a way that doesn't lose tax-payers' money.

"What we're trying to do is get the Crown Network to a point where it breaks even. It currently loses £37m a year of tax-payers' money and what we're trying to do is to remove that loss."

The 373 Crown offices, which are usually the larger ones, represent just 3% of the total post office network.

But the CWU says its staff deal with a fifth of all customers and handle 40% of financial transactions involving things like banking and credit cards.

Clive Tickner, the CWU's representative for the Dagenham area, questions the timing as the Post Office launches its new current account.

"Ironically, if they close down Crown offices there will be less outlets to transact the current account so I'm very, very concerned that they are eroding away at the Post Office so that there will be nothing left in a few years' time," he said.

There is also concern about the impact on the high street.

Deborah Satchell works at Heathway Dry Cleaners in Dagenham.

She said: "It will affect the local shops because people will go elsewhere to do what they have got to do and it will take the business away from the local community."

The strikes are the seventh round of action in the current dispute and will only affect the Crown branches.

Staff are also calling for a pay rise of 3.5% for 2012/13 and a further rise this financial year, but the Post Office says that is not possible when it is making losses.

Instead, it is offering a series of cash payments totalling up to £3,400 before April 2015.


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