Today's Headlines
Bloomberg:
- French Industrial Output Tumbles as Recession Looms. French industrial production fell
more than expected in January as Europe’s second-largest economy
teetered on the brink of its third recession in four years. Output from factories, mines and utilities fell 1.2 percent
in the month from December, national statistics office Insee
said today. Economists had expected a 0.2 percent drop,
according the median 25 estimates in a Bloomberg survey. The decline
underlines difficulty President Francois Hollande faces in trying to
revive an economy that fell back
into recession early last year and shrank again in the fourth
quarter. Factory output fell 1.4 percent in January and 4.6
percent in the three months through January, led by a slump in
car production. “France remains stuck in a recessionary mode,” said
Philippe Gudin, an economist at Barclays in Paris. “The
unemployment rate is flirting with historical highs and
household income is hit by higher taxes. The stabilization we
had expected from the beginning of 2013 does not seem to have
taken place.”
- Italy’s Grillo Threatens to Quit Politics If Members Support PD. Beppe
Grillo, the comedian-turned politician whose Five-Star Movement won 25
percent of the vote in last month’s Italian elections, said he would
quit politics if his party members support a government led by Pier
Luigi Bersani’s Democratic Party. “If there were a confidence vote
by the parliamentary group of the Five-Star Movement in favor of the
ones that have destroyed Italy, I
would retire from politics,” Grillo said late yesterday in a post
on Twitter.
- China's Inflation Fight Starts to Squeeze Consumers.
While Japanese leaders have been making headlines by trying to end
years of deflation and achieve an inflation target of 2 percent, their
counterparts in China have a different fight on their hands. Far from
promoting inflation, the Chinese are fighting to contain it—and the
battle may get rougher in the months ahead. Consumer prices in China
rose 3.2 percent last month, up from 2 percent in January.
- Florida Lawmakers Reject Obama Medicaid Program Sought by Scott.
Florida legislative committees rejected an expansion of Medicaid for
the poor under President Barack Obama’s health-care law, a defeat for
Republican Governor Rick Scott from members of his own party. A Senate
panel voted today against expanding Medicaid, an option for states under
Obama’s Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. A House
committee made the same decision on March 4.
Wall Street Journal:
- Pressure Rises on Korean Peninsula. North Korea cut off a phone hot line to the South and "declared
invalid" the Korean War armistice as the South Korean and U.S.
militaries began Monday a second phase of their annual joint winter
exercises. Later Monday, the U.S. Treasury put new sanctions on North Korea's
primary foreign-exchange bank to step up pressure on the country's
nuclear-weapons programs.
- SEC Charges Illinois Over Pension Funding. Brazil's Vale Shelves $5.9 Billion Potash Project.
MarketWatch:
CNBC:
- 'Major Political Storms' Holding Back US: GE's Immelt. The explosion of new regulations on business and the "unprecedented"
level of uncertainty about Washington's budget negotiations will keep
the the U.S. from achieving its "full growth potential," General Electric CEO Jeff Immelt said in a letter to shareholders Monday.
- Why Italy Could Be the Next 'Bad Boy of Europe'. Italy could see its borrowing costs rise above those of troubled
Spain this week, analysts told CNBC on Monday, with a credit rating
downgrade on Friday and continued political deadlock posing an ever
larger threat. "Italy is really going to blow it up this week,"
Joe Rundle, head of trading at ETX Capitol, told CNBC. "There is the
downgrade that happened on Friday but now there is the Italian yield and
the spread narrowing to the Spanish yield and there is the possibility
that Italy gets more expensive than Spain. The last time we saw that we
were in the middle of a euro zone crisis," Rundle told CNBC Europe's
"Squawk Box".
Zero Hedge:
Business Insider:
Reuters:
- Paper Trail Goes Cold in Case Against S&P. In early 2007, as signs of distress began
appearing in securities backed by residential mortgages, executives at
Standard & Poor's began advising analysts responsible for rating
mortgage bonds that they should put the phrase "privileged and
confidential" on emails to one another.
- Banks halt European share rally on Italian debt scare. Banking stocks held European
shares below 4-1/2 years highs on Monday, depressed by a
worsening outlook for Italy's public finances.
The STOXX euro zone banking index shed 0.8 percent, as a downgrade of Italy's sovereign
debt rating late on Friday triggered a selloff in the country's banks,
which own much of Rome's public debt.
Milan-listed Mediobanca, BP Emilia and
Banco Popolare led sector fallers, shedding between 3
percent and 5 percent, after Fitch warned that inconclusive
elections last month threatened to delay much-needed economic
reforms.
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