Bloomberg:
- Euro-Area Recovery Stutters as China’s Factory Weakness Persists. The euro area’s economic recovery stuttered in May as Germany lost
momentum, while weakness in China’s manufacturing industry persisted. Markit Economics said its composite index of services and
manufacturing in the euro zone slipped to 53.4 from 53.9 in April. While
that’s above the 50 mark that divides expansion from contraction, it’s
less than the 53.9 forecast by economists in a Bloomberg survey. A
Chinese factory gauge came in at 49.1, missing the median estimate of
49.3.
- Merkel Says Russia Can’t Return to G-7 as Ukraine Festers. German Chancellor Angela Merkel said Russia can’t rejoin Group of
Seven meetings unless it respects international law, underscoring
President Vladimir Putin’s exclusion from the G-7 summit she’s hosting
next month. Addressing Germany’s lower house of parliament in Berlin on her
summit agenda, Merkel said Putin’s encroachment on Ukraine signals that
Russia isn’t part of the group of advanced economies’ “community of
values.” Resolving the Ukraine conflict will require “patience and
staying power,” she said.
- Germany Loses Further Momentum as Manufacturing, Services Weaken. Germany’s economy stuttered again this month, with a gauge of output
falling more than economists forecast to the lowest this year. Markit Economics said its composite index of services and
manufacturing dropped to 52.8 from 54.1 in April. While that’s above the
50 mark that divides expansion from contraction, it’s the second
straight decline and was less than the reading of 53.8 forecast by
economists in a Bloomberg survey.
- Lenovo Posts Slower Profit Growth as PC, Smartphone Market Slump. Lenovo Group Ltd. posted its slowest full-year profit growth in five
years amid weak demand for PCs and slowing growth in smartphone
shipments. Net income for the the year ended March 31, was $829 million compared
with the $830.2 million average of 26 analyst estimates compiled by
Bloomberg. Sales climbed to $46.3 billion, with analysts expecting $46.9
billion.
- Obama Dismisses Fall of Ramadi in Iraq as ‘Tactical Setback’. The
fall of the Iraqi city of Ramadi to Islamic State was only a
“tactical setback” and not a sign the U.S. and its allies are failing in
the fight against extremists, President Barack Obama said in an
interview published Thursday in the Atlantic magazine. “I don’t think we’re losing,” Obama said in the interview conducted
by Jeffrey Goldberg Tuesday at the White House. “There’s no doubt there
was a tactical setback, although Ramadi had been vulnerable for a very
long time, primarily because these are not Iraqi security forces that we
have trained or reinforced.” Obama also defended his pursuit of a nuclear deal with Iran, saying
he has a personal stake in resolving a conflict with “profound national
security” implications. “Twenty years from now, I’m still going to be around, God willing,”
he said. “If Iran has a nuclear weapon, it’s my name on this.”
- Emerging Stocks Slide as Eastern Europe Declines Outweigh China. Emerging-market stocks fell for a fourth day as markets from Turkey
to the Czech Republic slumped after data showed growth in manufacturing
and services in the euro zone expanded less than forecast, outweighing
gains in China. Brazilian stocks slid as unemployment rose more than forecast and a
gauge of gross domestic product contracted more than estimated. Equities
in Istanbul sank the most this month. Taiwan Semiconductor
Manufacturing Co. led declines in the Taiex index. A measure of
developing-nation technology companies slid the most among 10 industry
groups. Chinese shares jumped 1.9 percent on bets sluggish manufacturing
will spur more stimulus.
The MSCI Emerging Markets Index slid 0.4 percent to 1,032.31 at 10:51
a.m. in New York, pushing the decline this week to 1.1 percent.
- European Stocks Extend Three-Week High as Energy Producers Climb. European stocks rose for a fourth day, led by energy companies, as
weaker-than-forecast U.S. data fueled speculation the Federal Reserve
won’t rush to raise rates.
The Stoxx Europe 600 Index added 0.4 percent to 407.87 at the close of trading, reversing an earlier drop of 0.4 percent.
- Consumers’ Expectations for U.S. Economy Drop Most Since 2013. Americans’ expectations for the economy slumped in May by the most
since October 2013, casting doubt on consumers’ ability to revive
growth. A measure tracking the economic outlook fell by 6 points to 44 this
month, data from the Bloomberg Consumer Comfort Index showed Thursday.
Thirty-nine percent said the U.S. economy is getting worse, the largest
share since the federal government shutdown 19 months ago.
Fox News:
ZeroHedge:
Business Insider:
Reuters:
Les Echos:
- Germany's Schaeuble Doesn't Rule Out Greek Bankruptcy. "I would
consider for a long time before repeating that Greece won't go
bankrupt," German finance minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said in an
interview. Schaeuble said in October 2012 that there would be no Greek
bankruptcy; the situation today is very different, he said. Far too
little progress has been made in talks with Greece, Schaeuble said.
Economic Times:
- Tata Steel Falls as Q4 Results Disappoint. Shares
of Tata Steel plunged as much as 5.56 per cent in early trade as the
company disappointed on bottomline and topline figures in Q4FY15 due to
weakening commodity prices and low volumes.
ISIS
has built near-impregnable base and mass appeal: New book - See more
at:
http://www.straitstimes.com/news/world/europe/story/isis-has-built-near-impregnable-base-and-mass-appeal-new-book-20150205#sthash.TSyXsl7s.dpuf
ISIS
has built near-impregnable base and mass appeal: New book - See more
at:
http://www.straitstimes.com/news/world/europe/story/isis-has-built-near-impregnable-base-and-mass-appeal-new-book-20150205#sthash.TSyXsl7s.dpuf